What about those doctrines not taught by Jesus and the Apostles i.e. indulgences, purgatory and the marian doctrines? Must a catholic believe those to?
JA4, do you believe in the Virgin Birth of Christ? The Gospels do not record Jesus ever having mentioned it to the multitude who followed him to hear his teachings or be cured by him. And why should he mention it, or his mother’s Immaculate Conception or Perpetual Virginity for that matter? Perhaps you can tell us, since you believe Jesus would have mentioned these truths to the Jews if they were true. I doubt our Lord’s followers would have been able to grasp the significance of it all at that time. The Paraclete hadn’t yet descended on the Christian community while Jesus was still with us on earth.
“I have much more to tell you, but you cannot bear it now. But when he comes, the Spirit of truth, he will guide you to all truth…and will declare to you the things that are coming.”
{John 16, 12-13}
Jesus certainly alludes to Purgatory. On one occasion he tells the scribes and Pharisees that anyone who speaks against the Son of Man can be forgiven, but anyone who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit cannot be forgiven in this life or the next. In heaven there is no need of forgiveness, and in hell nobody can even hope for forgiveness. So this place in the afterlife is between heaven and hell, namely Purgatory. {cf. Mt 12, 32}. There are several other NT passages, also in Luke, that allude to Purgatory.
Concerning Indulgences, I don’t think you understand what they actually mean. The Catechism of the Catholic Church states: "An indulgence is obtained through the Church who, by virtue of the power of binding and loosing granted her by Jesus Christ, intervenes in favour of individual Christians and opens for them the treasury of the merits of Christ and the saints to obtain from the Father of mercies the remission of the ‘termporal’ punishment due for their sins (CCC #1478). Indulgences are of no benefit for the souls who have been eternally damned in hell. They benefit the souls in Purgatory in their temporal state of existence between heaven and earth. The Church also grants indulgences for Christians in this life, not only as an aid, but to encourage them to works of “devotion, pennance, and charity.” Jimmy Akin points out that the granting of an indulgence is illustrated in the Gospel account of the Canaanite woman asking Jesus for the healing of her child in Matthew 15, 22-28. The blessing of some people as a reward to others is one of several aspects of indulgences. Jesus himself sets an example of granting an indulgence for his Church to follow. Indeed, Jesus did transfer the authority he received from the Father to his apostles and their validly ordained successors. This is one instance of the power to bind and loose. :yup:
Pax vobiscum
Good Fella
