Short of the minute details of Transub., we do.=joe370;6035177]Hey Jon…
We seem to be in agreement regarding the Eucharist!![]()
Sure I would, just as I believe that some of the actions of Rome, particularly since the Great Schism, has also played a part. Of course, as a Lutheran, I do not practice individual interpretation.Jon, wouldn’t you consider the the fact that the bible as the Christians only authority, via individual interpretation, has played a role in the fracture of Jesus’ Body, the church?
First, sola fide and “faith without works is dead” are not in opposition. How can we know who is right and wrong is the question I have been asking for quite a while. I am told that Rome and Orthodoxy teach basically the same thing, that they both have apostolic succession, and yet they are not in communion with each other. Which Tradition should be believed? Of all the patriarchs, do you want me to believe the one that stands alone, vs. all the others?As I mentioned before: Regarding things such as the Eucharist (true presence vs a symbol) - Baptism (by water vs water baptism being unnecessary) - justification by faith alone (vs "faith without works is dead) - the blessed mother Mary’ perpetual virginity, (believed by Martin Luther) - etc. etc. - all Protestant churches defer to sacred scripture as their final authority for these things, yet come away with opposing truths, and there can only be one truth regarding these doctrines, or any doctrine for that matter. How can we know who is right and who is wrong? All these church leaders, speaking authoritatively, insist that their interpretation of Sacred Scripture is the correct one?
Then are you willing to say that the Magisterium and pope can and possibly do contradict scripture?Not at all! Just because it conforms to sacred scripture does not mean that I believe that sacred scripture is my final authority vis-a-vis faith and morals.
The bible tells us that Jesus left us with a teaching church:
Agreed.*“All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in[a] the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”
*
The key phrase is bolded. I ask your question back: How do you know that Rome is that Church? How do you know it isn’t in Antioch, or Jerusalem? Or Wittenburg?The Magisterium is this teaching office of the Church **in my humble opinion. **Authentic interpretation of the Word of God, whether these traditions are written or oral, have been entrusted to the living, teaching office of Jesus’ Church, as per Jesus Christ. The magisters of the CC are servants to the word of God and teach only what has been handed on to it. Catholic teachers do not view themselves as being on a level with sacred scripture. However, If God is the author of Sacred Scripture and the divinely revealed realities, which are contained and presented in the text of Sacred Scripture, have been written down by the fledgling church leaders of Jesus’ established church, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, then surely under the inspiration of the same Holy Spirit, Jesus’ established church had/has the authority to interpret what was written down under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit?
The problem with this argument is the false idea that Protestantism is or was some single Church, at one time united and now splintered. This is not the case. For example, Baptists generally come out of the anabaptist movement, condemned in the earliest Lutheran writings. If anything, most of the early noncatholic western Churches splintered directly from Rome, not from each other. IOW, virtually none of them splintered off of Lutheranism.Surely the same applies to all of the Protestant churches as well? Until all of the protestant churches are on the same page regarding the interpretation of the bible, I cannot know which one is right, or where truth can be found? Surely the one stands in stark contrast to the other.
Regularly here at CAF, this appears not to be the case. There seem many differences.The CC and the EOC are truly united when it comes to belief with one exception, and that is because they both embrace Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture.
And then unsettled since, because of what the Orthodox call Rome’s innovations.By the time Jesus’ one church split, (thanks to the sin of fallible humans) - giving way to the CC and the EOC, matters of doctrine were settled.
Who should I believe?
Jon