B
Bannan
Guest
I don’t think Christians must accept the doctrines that have been defined by the Catholic Church, at least not on this side of Heaven. I believe that Church dogma is protected from error by God himself, so that it is a help to us Christians who trust in him so, but its only positive, not a negative.Of course, it just hit me that you would say that christians must accept the doctrines that have been defined by the catholic church.
I feel that if you differ with the Church, Satan has more room in your life because of the confusion people go through when some of the truth God intended all to posses goes missing. I cannot express how much Mary the Mother of God helps us, words don’t do any justice.
Confession to a priest is a perfect example. God is not limited by those priests and you can confess to God himself directly. But isn’t it better when you can actually take the time to go and submit yourself before a holy man of God, confess your sins, and know that God granted authority to that individual to forgive you on his behalf? There is no wondering, you know your forgiven. God can forgive you outside the confessional, but when it happens this way, in our fallible human nature, Satan can creep in and sow discord. Priests are also granted gifts in the confessional, like being able to say the right things to help you overcome your sin. Because us Catholics can go to a priest and have our sins authoritatively removed, it doesn’t follow that that everyone else experience with God was lessened.
I’ll be honest here, being Catholic to me means setting the bar as high as it can be set. I actually think its easier in worldly terms to be considered Holy by God if you aren’t Catholic, because to whom much has been given, much is expected. If you aren’t Catholic but you behaved like Mother Theresa, your very fruitful indeed. But, if you see the truth and you recognize it as I have, you do it simply because it’s the right thing to do, and your heart will convict you before God if you see his truth but reject it.
And besides, I have recognized my own shortcomings and I submit to the graces of the Catholic Church because I know I’m not as fruitful as I should be. I need more growth. To do more for God, I need a good push off the starting line. To be Catholic, if I can use a metaphor, is to get the perfect amount of spiritual light, water, and nutrients to grow into a saint.
Mark my words here, and make no mistake. God does not need scripture to save a man. The earliest apostles had no Bible, most of the new testament wasn’t even wirtten. I know of a person whom God favored far more than the rest, and he didn’t even know God existed when he first met Him. The scriptures are helpful, but they don’t contain all the faith, and the Bible says as much whenever an apostle says, “By word or by letter”. The Bible doesn’t exclude the verbal traditions of the Church, it includes it. I think the Bible is sufficient to realize that the spoken word of God is just as important as the written word.I believe that Christ’s church has everything God wants us to know on earth and it can be found in the scriptures.
There are no requirements to believe anything in the bible for salvation. God is not limited by the Catholic Church. God started the Catholic Church as the primary vehicle for salvation. He gave us the keys through Peter so as to protect and spread the deposit of faith in its entirety, by word or letter. It is inclusive, not exclusive. Those who in this life never come to believe in the Churches’ teachings are not judged for lack of their knowledge. They are judged just as we all are judged, by the content of our hearts.Do you think that there is anything that we must believe to obtain salvation that is not found in the bible?
The last point I will make concerns how I think it may be ‘easier’ in terms of sheer human effort to become Holy in the eyes of God outside the Church. I think this does disservice to the Church because it doesn’t paint the whole picture. Worldly effort is worth nothing without the right intentions of the heart. Mother Theresa said something to that effect, I don’t know the words exactly but it was something like, “It is not how much good we do for God that matters, but how much love we do it with.” It is the Church that speaks to our hearts that enables us to love more perfectly.