L
lyrikal
Guest
This says it all, right there. If a Jehova’s Witness can take the Scriptures and tell us Jesus was not God, then anyone can take any text and make it say anything they desire it to say. Where does that lead? What does that tell us? It tells us that there MUST be an authority to settle disputes and controversies.OK, that its just circular logic. Exactly how do you know that it was never fulfilled. It seems that you are assuming your conclusion.
IOW the “different discernment” being the protestant one? Sorry, but no matter how bad you wish the early Church was like modern protestantism, doesn’t make it so. The ECF’s were clear, “oneness” necessitated communion with the Bishop of Rome. He was the sign and the instrument of the unity that God wanted. And if you weren’t in communion with Rome, you were not in the Church, you did not have Christ as your Lord, you did not have God as your Father, you did not have the Holy Spirit-no matter how well your intentions.
Whatever you have that is true, came from the Church. Whatever you have that is false, came from the “Reformers”(or as I call them Revolutionaries).
What I don’t understand is how someone could be a minimalist Christian. Why would you only want a little of Christ here and a little of Christ there? Yet that is exactly what protestants imply by remaining protestant.
Why not have all of Christ-or the “fullness” of Christ, that is found in His Church?
True. And since the divisions are doctrinal they can and should be-and in the case of the Church have already been-answered. Divisions don’t remain because of the doctrines themselves, they remain because of the pride and disobedience of those protestants who steadfastly hold those false doctrines because they don’t want to submit to what they perceive as an “earthly” authority. Protestantism has taught them that they are their own authority, that their interpretation of scripture is just as valid as anyone else’s, including any theologian, or some group of bishops, or even that bishop in Rome.
Of course this is very appealing to modern minds fresh out of the Enlightenment, yet it is completely antithetical to the very work which they hold to be their only authoritative source-the Bible.
The bottom line is that there has to be One Church which is right and the others, in one way or many, are wrong.
I didn’t read history as a Catholic to reinforce my preconceptions. I read history as an atheist/agnostic in my search for God and found the Catholic Church as the only true Christian Church. I didn’t have any preconceptions, just and open mind and a docile heart.
**I came from evangelical protestantism to atheism. And nowhere did I find anything close to it in the early Church. Anyone who does is committing eisegesis. They’re reading protestantism into history, or reading history through their protestant colored glasses. They were taught that the Early Church was protestant, so all that they read they impose their terms, experiences, and understandings upon all that they read. And when they find other passages-sometimes contained within the same work which they claim justifies their beliefs-that is too “catholic” for their tastes they either completely ignore it or explain it away as if the writer didn’t really mean what he wrote.
And for someone who loves history as I do, I find such acts highly offensive. It borders on intellectual dishonesty.**
Example:
Person A believes that Christ taught the Real Presence of Himself in the Eucharist and quotes the Bible and the Early Church Fathers to prove this.
Person B believes that Christ taught the symbolic view of the Eucharist and quotes the Bible and the Early Church Fathers to prove this.
Now what? Is Christ dumb to leave it at that? Is He dumb to let us walk around disagreeing with one another without setting an authoritative system? Heck, even in our own HUMANLY made systems, we recognize that there HAS to be authority in order for there to be order. Look at the Court System, the Government (President, Senators, Governors), Police, etc. If us humans can think of something so logical, how much more would God do the same?
Can a father and a mother leave their 5 kids (who are all under the age of 12) alone forever by handing them a book with instructions on how they are to live? There would be chaos from the get go and disorder. What if one kid disagrees with another on how to interpret a certain text from that book? Now what? There is no authority. No authority, no unity. Authority CANNOT be based on a book alone, especially since that book is the Word of God. Since it is the Word of God and inspired by the Holy Spirit, we would think that it would be interpreted by the Holy Spirit primarily through the Church. The Early Church Fathers were not Sola Scripturalists and never taught such a thing. They never interpreted Scripture outside of Tradition and the Church. To the Fathers, these three things worked together perfectly to bring upon Truth and unity.
The Fathers believed in:
1.) The Scriptures
2.) Oral Traditions
3.) The Authority of the Church
How many Protestants today believe those three things? Anyone who thinks the Early Church Fathers were Protestants or had Protestant beliefs (such as Sola Scriptura and Sola Fide) is kidding themselves.
God bless.