The mere fact a church defines something as true doesn’t make it so. The reason that we believe the HS is God because we have support from the scriptures that this is the case. Its not because your church says so.
How do you know what is and isn’t true in the scriptures? Do you arrive at the truth by interpreting the texts according to your liking? Keep picking and choosing what you want to believe in; that’s why Protestantism is a divided house.
Christ did not just give the church just the scriptures but teachers who are to teach them correctly to the members of Christ.
The teachers who interpret the scriptures correctly are Peter and the apostles and their successors, the pope in union with the college of bishops. The apostolic tradition protects the Church from falling into grave errors. Of course, you prefer not to believe that.
Without the Scriptures we would know the HS is God or the way of salvation. Without the scriptures we would not be able to grow in respect to salvation. See I Peter 2:2
You say that “without” the scriptures we would know the Holy Spirit is God. Yet you also say elsewhere that the scriptures provide excellent support for the belief in the divinity of the Holy Spirit. I don’t follow. Anyway, the Catholic Church refers to the scriptures when declaring dogmas. The scriptures do serve to help us better understand the Faith given to us through the apostles, but they alone are not sufficient. The divisions in the Protestant tradition attest to this fact.
What do you mean by sacraments?
The seven Sacraments of the Catholic Church which were given to us by Christ and initially administered by the apostles as shown in the New Testament. This is a different issue with Protestants. Perhaps you can do a search on it.
If this is true, then why did they write down the accounts of Christ i.e. the gospels? Why did Paul write letters which the churches considered important and evenually called them scripture?
To establish and preserve Church unity and a single identity as the People of God. Also, in response to heretical teachings which had sprung up and for pastoral guidance. But the apostles and their successors had sole custody of the truths contained therein. The faithful had to accept what the apostles and the ordained elders were preaching in light of what they had eventually put down in writing. They were warned not to pay heed to the false teachers who had corrupted their doctrines. The oral tradition alone could not last because the apostles would eventually die and the Church would expand too far and wide. One thing is certain, the authors of the sacred texts had no intention of putting a book together for publication and public use.
The problem with the cults is that they don’t take the contexts into their understanding of scripture nor how words and phrases are used elsewhere in Scripture. They use just those verses that they think supports their belief and ignore those that don’t. They particularly do a bad job with the doctrine of God i.e. the Trinity.
I agree. The Protestant reformers did the same thing. How do they know which of them put the scriptures into proper context? They couldn’t agree with each other on many essential doctrines. Which of them could lay claim to apostolic authority? None of them. It all boils down to begging the question when doctrines are formed based on scriptures outside the Magisterium of the Catholic Church and the apostolic Tradition.
Huh? If you look at the various passages your church uses for this you won’t see this.
You mean to say that you refuse to see this. I clearly do.
We know its true because this is what the scriptures teach and not because your church says so on its authority alone.
Again, you are speaking in hindsight, and you are begging the question. The Bible does not explicitly tell us that the Holy Spirit is God or a Person in the Holy Trinity. You are looking at the Bible with a preconceived notion as you always do.
It may teach it but that doesn’t mean its true. The claim for her assumption must either be grounded in scripture (it is not) or have historical evidence from the 1st century that tells who saw her assumed. Again there is none.
There is enough implicit scriptural evidence that the Assumption is true. You choose to reject it. It is a matter of faith.
Pax vobiscum
Good Fella