T
TOmNossor
Guest
Karen,Hi Tom, I read the other responses and they are basically saying the same thing though mine in more laymans terms…
I’ll try to help you see again in more of a laymans terms…
The Holy Spirit of God that was breathed upon the Church is unchanging. God never changes but people do… and so God cannot contradict Himself…We believe the bible to be the inspired word of God so that is true so is the teaching of those scriptures which the Church holds true…The scriptures themselves aren’t the teacher, the Church is the teacher of the truths of God and these truths can be found in the Catechism so we all share in the same faith as the Apostles holding to the truths of the faith taught by Jesus Christ and given to the Apostles and passed down through the Church with the help of the Holy Spirit who is the advocate keeping the truths of our faith… The scriptures themselves support the beliefs of the Church in order to increase the faith of those who read it…
Sooo… if whatever revelations come to people after the scriptures were written contradicts the scriptures or the belief contradicts the faith of the Apostles and the holy men of the Church who were inspired to put the bible together, than it is unreliable prophesy and would not be acceptable as public prophesy of the Church or a doctrinal belief… But if you have many many many people of the Church who believe in something and it is inline with the basic beliefs of the apostolic faith and it bears fruit…Like the apparitions of Mary which have shown to have caused people to heal or change in a positive way and does not contradict the basic beliefs of the Church from the start, than that prophesy can be of merit as a true prophesy of God and may be added as a doctrinal belief… If one person experiences some revelation, it wouldn’t be an acceptable public prophesy of the Church but a revelation of that persons alone… So might be considered unreliable because the personal thoughts of that individual man came into play which could interfere with Gods revelation…All that said, each person has the ability to prophesy on any of the mysteries of God, like the trinity, the Eucharist, delving them deeper into the spirit of God and allowing them to see more than they could into Gods life if they didn’t have the eyes of faith (while still holding onto the basic truths found in the Church)…So prophesy without denying the basic truths of our faith can lead us more into Gods life so we have a relationship with Him with our being able to see the truths of God more clearly and deeply…
Oh I know that was a mouthful… I hope you can understand what I am saying…![]()
Thank you very much. I understood what you said much better this time.
My understanding of Catholic teaching aligns well with all you said here with one area in which I either disagree or do not understand.
I question the statement “be added as doctrinal belief.”Like the apparitions of Mary which have shown to have caused people to heal or change in a positive way and does not contradict the basic beliefs of the Church from the start, than that prophesy can be of merit as a true prophesy of God and may be added as a doctrinal belief…
I understand that some miracles like “Our Lady of Lourdes” can receive official approval from the church (I am certain that local Bishops approve of such things, I am certain that Popes speak approvingly of such things, but I am not sure the Pope’s approval is as formal as the local Bishop’s approval. However assuming it is). Even when officially approved a miracle like Our Lady of Lourdes is not “added as a doctrinal belief” in that it becomes part of the faith. It can become a feast day or …
It IMO would be unfair to say that Catholics who believe in Marian and Eucharistic miracles believe “the heavens are closed.” That being said, I still believe what Patrick Madrid said in Pope Fiction is true:
From Apologist Patrick Madrid (Pope Fiction p. 140):
To the extent that ANYONE thinks there is a contradiction between the acceptance of Eucharistic or Marian Miracles with the statement in Patrick Madrid’s book I would align them as follows. The Catholic authority (local Bishop and even Pope) can approve a miracle, but they do not do so via divine inspiration for the whole Church. This is true in two ways. First, the faithful are not required to believe these approved apparitions are truly from God. And second the approval of these apparition is by study of the miracles not by revelation from God concerning the validity of the miracles.The only pope who was inspired and who received revelation from God to be given to the whole Church was Simon Peter. After he went home to his heavenly reward, all the subsequent popes have had to do their job of teaching and preserving the deposit of faith the old fashion way: They learned it.
I hope that makes sense. Do I understand correctly? And if not, what is Patrick Madrid just wrong or ?
Charity, TOm