G
Gorgias
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No worries… no insult taken!Again, I’m sorry if my question was taken as an insult
No worries… no insult taken!Again, I’m sorry if my question was taken as an insult
I’m not sure I’d call these “instructions”, let alone “rubrics”, no?These are the instructions for worship. They are filled out with he Beatitudes, the Prodigal Son, the preaching of John the Baptist, etc. instead of the rubrics we have come to expect.
It is a document which gives the teachings of the Catholic Church, which come from both the Bible and the Tradition handed down by Jesus to the Apostles (which is what the New Testament is). There have been many catechisms in the Church. We can say that St. Paul wrote catechetical texts. The Catechism explains Infallible Dogmas, as well as non-infallible theological propositions.Okay so if its not equal to the Bible, what exactly is it?
How is it suppose to be used?
When something is in the Catechism but not in the Bible which is correct?
Is everything in the Catechism in the Bible?
^should I add these questions to the original post^
This is why there’ve been several editions of the Catechism over the years. It gets edited and updated from time to time. I still have my edition with the tan-colored cover, and I have the dark green one, which came along later. The latest edition, I believe, has a blue cover. The basic teachings are still the same in all of them, because the basic teachings draw directly from Scripture and from Sacred Tradition. I find the Catechism a great reference in helping to understand what is in the Bible, and also in understanding what the Church teaches.annad347:![]()
The Catechism is a document that tells you what Catholics believe. It draws from the Bible and from Sacred Tradition. The Bible and Tradition are infallible. The Catechism is not. When something that is in the Catechism is not in the Bible, we can still be reasonably sure that it is correct. This is because it draws from Sacred Tradition, which is equal to the Bible. However, when something from the Catechism isn’t in either the Bible or Sacred Tradition, we have no guarantee that it is correct. The Catechism is only guaranteed to be correct when it draws directly from the Bible or Sacred Tradition. The catechism is a fallible work that can be revised and edited, unlike the Bible or the dogmatic decrees of the Ecumenical Councils.Okay so if its not equal to the Bible, what exactly is it?
How is it suppose to be used?
When something is in the Catechism but not in the Bible which is correct?
Is everything in the Catechism in the Bible?
They are instructions. “ I received from the Lord what I also handed on to you” is instruction language.Dovekin:![]()
I’m not sure I’d call these “instructions”, let alone “rubrics”, no?These are the instructions for worship. They are filled out with he Beatitudes, the Prodigal Son, the preaching of John the Baptist, etc. instead of the rubrics we have come to expect.
I’d have to disagree. Instructions would be something like what we see in the Didache and other documents. This is merely a reminder of previous instructions that Paul had provided in his oral preaching to the Corinthians – kind of like a “don’t you remember what I taught you? ‘Do this in memory of me’ and all that?” And, the passage from Luke is the original narrative, and not a set of instructions of how the early Church fulfilled that command.They are instructions. “ I received from the Lord what I also handed on to you” is instruction language.
Bill, the Church does encourage Prayerful Study of the Bible - Lectio Divina…The Catechism is an interpretation of the Bible. It is the companion of the Bible, enabling us to understand it correctly.
A catechism is like the preaching of the Popes and Bishops through time - necessary for understanding the Bible.
Reading the Bible outside of Catholic doctrine (the Catechism) is certain to lead to error.
EndTimes - yes, the Church does encourage us and it is important. The vast majority of the Bible can be freely interpreted by us as we read it also. What I meant was that if a person doesn’t know any Catholic doctrine and just reads the Bible, eventually they will make a mistake on interpreting something essential, as they do it on their own, with no guidance of Catholic teaching.Bill, the Church does encourage Prayerful Study of the Bible - Lectio Divina…
True. Especially when those answers lead to more questions.As we see, only questions are quick. Answers drag on interminably.
I kind of think those are some very powerful instructions. Turn your life… get ready for the Lord.The preaching of John the Baptist? Really? His teaching was merely “turn your life around and get ready for the messiah”…
How do you know, where the Holy Spirit leads someone?The Holy Spirit cannot lead to division. Impossible.
They all have the truth of Christ but are not part of Christ?They all have truth in them, good people, but Christ established just one.
John the Baptist’s message was “merely” to Obey the Son of God?Gorgias:![]()
I kind of think those are some very powerful instructions. Turn your life… get ready for the Lord.The preaching of John the Baptist? Really? His teaching was merely “turn your life around and get ready for the messiah”…
A pretty good start to a set of instructions given to us for what God wants you to do.
@Bill_B_NY, just as the Holy Spirit used the Bible to lead you to the Catholic church, it can lead others to a different church. It lead me to both a Catholic and Lutheran church… both have very similar teachings and understandings of the Bible.
Not true because you are never be lead by the Holy Spirit to anything built on the work of Satan. so if its is the works of Satan, its not a christian ‘sect’ that was built on the foundation of Jesus Christ, that will teach you the truth of Jesus Christ or the truth of God. You will not be baptized in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. You will not be doing anything that will praise or glorify God. So its not a house of God, its not Christian.Differing Christian ‘sects’ came about through the work of Satan
I’m not saying being Protestant leads one to Satan per se…If you are in a christian sect that leads you Satan
or part of God’s amazing plan, that man will never understand.I am saying that splits and divisions are indeed the work of Satan
Nope. God is never behind Sinor part of God’s amazing plan
You don’t think that’s important instructions?John the Baptist’s message was “merely” to Obey the Son of God?
Didn’t say God was behind sin, I said the separation could have been part of God’s plan that goes beyond man’s understanding.Nope. God is never behind Sin