J
Jaberwocky
Guest
I am not sure I am communicating what I want to say properly.Because of what they wrote about themselves? Well, all I can say is that unless there is evidence that can concretely convince me that some Jewish fisherman and a tax collector orchestrated the entire affair under the pretenses of being the messengers of the incarnate God, the evidence as it exists says otherwise. There are numerous resources out there that give reasons as to why we can consider the apostles trustworthy. Dying for their message, the way they include even negative representations of themselves, that history affirms their historical observations, etc. But I don’t see any reason to rehash every reason here.
Lets say the Apostles died attesting that he rose from the dead. But how do we know that they were told to teach? What if the whole thing was just about Christ coming to earth, doing some business of his own, everything was done and he left and we were just suppossed to continue on with our lives?
In essence, all I am asking is what makes you go from “Jesus rose from the dead” to trusting his Apostles? Is there some logical rule of inference you use to do that? Assuming you lived at that time, what reasoning leads you to turn to the Apostles as teaching what Christ taught?
So the Trinity is not important?INo.
Well what you are forgetting here is that the Trinity itself has no evidence of being defined by the Apostles with specifics we have today. In fact, there is no evidence (of writings from them) that the first Apostles held a Trinitarian belief in the sense we have come to define it. Does that mean the defined concept of the Trinity is false?I
Does the Trinity accord with Scripture and the witness of the very earliest Christian sources and continuing down the succeeding years all the way to Nicea to today?
Does purgatory?
Does papal infallibility?
Does the treasury of merit?
Does the assumption?
Apostolic succession as defined by the modern Catholic Church? No, I don’t think so. At least, not the specifics.
I think you have to ask yourself why you think that anything that was not explicitly and completely defined at the time of the Apostles cannot be defined at a later time. Why do you think that?