So, i hear...

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where was the Church borne? when was she borne? do you know?
The ultimate evading of the question. The Church was born in Jerusalem. On Pentecost. But what does that have to do with the question? The Catholic and Orthodox were the same. WE have added doctrines different from the original Church.
 
Anything we offer you as proof you ignore…If you want facts go ask the apologist but I am sure you won’t believe them either
You haven’t offered a bit of proof. If you can’t provide proof to someone who believes the same but is playing “devils” advocate…then who can you convince?
 
So we are not a 100% carbon copy of the early church then? Things have changed! Would you say that Protestants have nothing at all in common with the early church? Absolutely and completely nothing at all? Not even a belief in Jesus? Not even some sacred scriptures? Nothing?
i think you are misunderstanding the whole meaning of my post.

believing in Jesus doesnt mean they are the Church of the Bible. does it?

**
“Without truth, charity ends up in sentimentalism. Love becomes an empty shell, to be filled arbitrarily. It is the fatal risk of love in a culture without truth. It falls prey to the emotions and contingent opinions of the individuals, an abused and distorted word, to the point of signifying the contrary.” BXVI**
 
The ultimate evading of the question. The Church was born in Jerusalem. On Pentecost. But what does that have to do with the question? The Catholic and Orthodox were the same. WE have added doctrines different from the original Church.
We have defined doctrines that were endangered by new thinking over the years.
 
Anything we offer you as proof you ignore…If you want facts go ask the apologist but I am sure you won’t believe them either
BTW…I prefer herbal tea…they didn’t have red rose tea in the early Church. 😃
 
You haven’t offered a bit of proof. If you can’t provide proof to someone who believes the same but is playing “devils” advocate…then who can you convince?
Care to enlighten us? :rolleyes:
 
You reject the writings of the church fathers and the CCC and call yourself faithful to tradition…You don’t even understand what tradition is

I am not going to waste time on you because you don’t want to discuss things you want to blowviate…find someone else to fight with I am not interested in your half baked theories with no proof at all the back them up
 
Both Churches…Catholic and Orthodox…had no belief in purgatory from the beginning. And there were in complete communion. The Orthodox believe in praying for the dead…but NOT in the sense of purgatory. The Orthodox pray for the dead so that they may become closer to God in eternity.
That’s a bold statement to make without any evidence. I’m glad that you feel you have more knowledge than the Catholic Church on this subject. As for the Orthodox, why would praying for the dead bring you closer to God if it had no efficacy. Now you don’t even make sense. Are you Catholic? Its hard to tell.
 
We have defined doctrines that were endangered by new thinking over the years.
Darn it! But were they part of the early Church???

Answer the question and show proof.

Apparently you are not able to. Maybe we should bring this up with the Orthodox. They might have something to say. They were/are a part of the early Church. Their doctrines have not changed.
 
Black by Prodigal Son; Blue original by Dokimas;Dk red new Doki:It seems that way to you because you see the Church as an organization; I see it as an organism of all believers, some more obedient than others. I’d have to admit I need to be much more obedient.

How do you know for sure that some of the traditions you hold are not the positive traditions of the verses you have cite but are the negative traditions of the verses I’ve cited?

I like to think it’s common sense. **As I look at passages in the Bible and think logically, it is common sense that Mary not only consumated her marriage but may have had children. ** What should we do, throw out all traditions? A rethorical question? Of course not. They don’t have the same weight as the Bible, IMO.
That’s why I look to the 27 books of the NT.

Yes, but as we’re discussing, they don’t list everything point by point. They may have all we need to serve our God and Savior.

You don’t think the teaching of the CC about Mary is important enough for the original apostles to have made comment about it? You don’t think the host actually being the real presence of Jesus is important enough for the original apostles to spell it out for us? If the church Jesus set up was called the Catholic Church, don’t you think the original apostles would have spelled it out for us?

Do you think anyone of those times said some of the things we see Protestants say about Mary today? Could you be specific? I’ll apologize if I’ve said something about Mary not consistent with the Bible. Also, if something was widely believed, or widely known, it was widely accepted and didn’t require documentation then. **Sure it did. Our discussion today may prove it. ** Would it?

I think Paul spells out the real presence clearly in 1 Corinthians 11. People who argue against it, pick verse to cast against another verse, as opposed to trying to get the context of all the verses together, or so it seems to me. The shoe fits both sides of all these issues, IMO.

I showed you the origin of the term ‘Catholic’ as it was used in scriptures. I also showed you where the term was used in 110AD, as an understood term and not an introduction to the term.

In the beginning, they called themselves ‘The Way’, **Why not keep the old name??? other places we see them referred too as the believers. The Church was ‘brand new’ and went through normal growing pains of distinction. The term Christians was not introduced by Christians, it was something they called the Apostles and is only used once in the New Testament.
** Ac 11:26 And when he had found him, he brought him to Antioch. So it was that for a whole year they assembled with the church and taught a great many people. And the disciples were first called Christians in Antioch.
Ac 26:28 Then Agrippa said to Paul, “You almost persuade me to become a Christian.”
1Pe 4:16 Yet if anyone suffers as a Christian, let him not be ashamed, but let him glorify God in this matter.


It’s not sacred tradition?

Some is, but even those writings don’t hold all the details of Christianity, specifically detailed for ‘modern’ thinking. Modern is something that applied to each new generation and upto present day.

Not true; it’s just not taken as 100% accurate

The question one has to asked themself is, am I discarding accurate by comparing it to today’s beliefs? **Are you assuming I’m comparing it to today’s beliefs or am I wrestling the Scriptures for myself? **Which would be more accurate, practices relayed through those closest to the birth of the Church, or practices known today?

nor do I

If no Churches of today are similar to the Church Christ started, where is His Church today? Universally among many Christian churches, as it was in the 1st century.

so do I and some great books have been written over the last century, too .

Who has more insight to the real truth, those men of the early Church, or modern day theologians trying to piece it all together and some seemingly to fit a theology of today?

early Church fathers

But not infallible, IMO

Are those writings you mentioned written in the last century by infallible men? Another rhetorical question? ** Of course not. ** The Bible itself was written by fallible men. The definition of the canon was defined by fallible men. The men who preserved the Bible from it’s beginning to present day were fallible men. Translations were performed by fallible men. ** Thank God for the infallible Holy Spirit!!!** Christ knew who and what He was leaving His Church in the hands of.
 
I’m not sure I understand your post.
JL: If purgatory was not a teaching in the early Church as you posted, then tell us when it was INVENTED and by whom, also name those who objected to adding this false teaching.
 
Darn it! But were they part of the early Church???

Answer the question and show proof.

Apparently you are not able to. Maybe we should bring this up with the Orthodox. They might have something to say. They were/are a part of the early Church. Their doctrines have not changed.
SPN, be patient with my friend Prodical Son, please.
 
That’s a bold statement to make without any evidence. I’m glad that you feel you have more knowledge than the Catholic Church on this subject. As for the Orthodox, why would praying for the dead bring you closer to God if it had no efficacy. Now you don’t even make sense.
A bold statement? Maybe you should investigate the beliefs of the Orthodox Church. You obviously are lacking in knowledge of their theology. THEY NEVER HAD A BELIEF IN PURGATION! THEY AND THE CATHOLIC CHURCH WERE ONE FOR 1000 YEARS. EDUCATE YOURSELF.
 
Darn it! But were they part of the early Church???

Answer the question and show proof.

Apparently you are not able to. Maybe we should bring this up with the Orthodox. They might have something to say. They were/are a part of the early Church. Their doctrines have not changed.
Yes, prove a negative.

The early Church was new and small in the beginning. Beliefs were the same and accepted, and sad to say but possibly taken for granted. That’s why they didn’t write a point by point book stating everything. As time passed and things were challenged with new ideas, definitions were explictily spelled out.
 
and just how this is going to change the fact that the CC is the Church of the Bible?

"Without truth, charity ends up in sentimentalism. Love becomes an empty shell, to be filled arbitrarily. It is the fatal risk of love in a culture without truth. It falls prey to the emotions and contingent opinions of the individuals, an abused and distorted word, to the point of signifying the contrary." BXVI
Thank you for your opinion.
 
I’d rather you all pick on me and not be upset with each other. PLEASE!!!
 
you mean that the Church to be the Church of the Bible she has to be a carbon copy of the first century?
No.
has not the world grown larger with different costumes and traditions?
Yes, it has grown larger and different.
how are you questions going to change the fact the CC is the Church of the Bible?
I’m simply illustrating a point. I’m not arguing about any core elements that remain, but has change occurred at all? Is the Catholic Church today completely and absolutely indistinguishable to the early church at all?
 
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