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Can you give me the actual New Testament quote that references that only things contained in scripture are to be believed in? (didn’t think so).Can you give me the actual New Testament quote that references purgatory by name please?
Would that be before or after the New Testament quote that references the Trinity by name?![]()
Very well put - if you don’t trust the messengers, how can you trust the message?But, I am sure some will say they can’t trust things unless they are in print. Maybe that is why Jesus never asked anyone to write things down, because he asked for trust in the men he chose.![]()
I don’t mean to start another sola scriptura thread, but this begs the question:
Can YOU support your idea of accepting the Bible alone within the pages of the Bible?
My answer (along with every Catholic) is, of course, no. That being said we’d have to go into yet another big discussion on whether or not we should take the Bible by itself or with Tradition but this is not the thread for that. QUOTE]
The Bible clearly warns us against adding to it. So to say tha traditions are equal to the Bible is to add to the Bible and that is a sin.
zach dunn;5522612:
thread, but this begs the question:I don’t mean to start another sola scriptura
Can YOU support your idea of accepting the Bible alone within the pages of the Bible?
My answer (along with every Catholic) is, of course, no. That being said we’d have to go into yet another big discussion on whether or not we should take the Bible by itself or with Tradition but this is not the thread for that. QUOTE]
The Bible clearly warns us against adding to it. So to say tha traditions are equal to the Bible is to add to the Bible and that is a sin.
Where?
By all means show me these passages then, but if you do you had best insure that they specify what you are saying they mean or your argument will fall apart.The Bible clearly warns us against adding to it. So to say tha traditions are equal to the Bible is to add to the Bible and that is a sin.
I think you might be misunderstanding me, I didn’t mean to seem like I was saying that the only thing needed to believe in Christ is the Bible, sorry!zann dunn, I have to agree that bringing up sola scriptura is pertinent, because that’s the initial basis for rejecting prugatory. "if it’s not in the Bible…(fill in the blank). The only problem with this (well, not the only problem) is that the Apostles were teaching and preaching the faith well before any of the New Testament scriptures were written. In fact, much of what was written was to *already established communities *of believers. If one needed only the Bible to inform his faith, how did these first Christians do it without the entire canon of scripture (which didn’t come about for over 300 years after the birth of Christ? There’s gotta be something else that fills in that blank (hint: The Church
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Nonetheless, this is all beside the point because the “not in the Bible” argument doesn’t even work for Purgatory anyway, as you show.![]()
I’ll ask just as others have, where in the Bible does it say this? I’m assuming you mean Revelation 22:18-19. If that’s the case I’ll discuss it now. The Catholic, and obvious, “answer” to this verse is that St. John is talking about his own book, Revelation. NOT the whole Bible, when you consider that the New Testament we have today wasn’t compiled until the fourth century, St. John couldn’t have possibly been talking about the Bible with the New Testament, because there simply wasn’t a New Testament at all. All of the scriptures in the New Testament we have today were most likely written, but they weren’t together and called the New Testament.zach dunn;5522612:
thread, but this begs the question:I don’t mean to start another sola scriptura
Can YOU support your idea of accepting the Bible alone within the pages of the Bible?
My answer (along with every Catholic) is, of course, no. That being said we’d have to go into yet another big discussion on whether or not we should take the Bible by itself or with Tradition but this is not the thread for that.
The Bible clearly warns us against adding to it.
You, like most non-Catholics, seem to not know what Catholics mean by “Tradition” which is different than “traditions”. Catholic Tradition (yes, with a capital “T”) is the oral teachings of the Apostles, their preaching. So technically, the Bible was added to Tradition!So to say that traditions are equal to the Bible is to add to the Bible and that is a sin.
I require facts to believe and evidence to trust. Likewise, the only stuff I trust the authenticity of, in terms of biblical stuff, are the words of the prophets. The bible is just a collection of records. Those records are only good when there is evidence to back them up. The only claim of “self infallibility” in the bible is the words of the prophets. The bible’s self standard for identifying and trusting the words of the prophets is that they must foretell things and none of them ever fail to happen as foretold. Not only is that highly convincing, but I would be utterly surprised if Science can find an Atheistic explanation for them, other then mass coincidence.What is the big push for everything having to be in the bible explicitly? I don’t understand these types of demands
If you are talking about biblical accuracy, even the claim in Revelation IS NOT a claim that the words in it are sacred and infallible. They are a warning against those who attempt to tamper with it. Such a warning is by it’s vary nature an acknowledgment that there is a motivation to tamper with it and a reasonable possibility that someone will.I’ll ask just as others have, where in the Bible does it say this? I’m assuming you mean Revelation 22:18-19. If that’s the case I’ll discuss it now. The Catholic, and obvious, “answer” to this verse is that St. John is talking about his own book, Revelation. NOT the whole Bible, when you consider that the New Testament we have today wasn’t compiled until the fourth century, St. John couldn’t have possibly been talking about the Bible with the New Testament, because there simply wasn’t a New Testament at all. All of the scriptures in the New Testament we have today were most likely written, but they weren’t together and called the New Testament.
Hi:Can you give me the actual New Testament quote that references purgatory by name please?
Oops, my bad.He must have posted something somewhere else that was objectionable - I don’t really see anything here - unless the moderators nixed it before it got posted…
Zach dunn, In an earlier post you thought I misunderstood you - I think you misunderstood meI was agreeing that sola scriptura is relevant to this conversation because that’s usually the path that many use to try and refute doctrines such as prugatory. But I think the posts here demonstrate that Purgatory IS Biblical, it’s just not called purgatory - just like communion isn’t called communion, and Holy Orders isn’t called Holy Orders, and the Trinity isn’t called the Trinity - they’yre still all there in black and white.
’ OKOops, my bad.
Zach