Hi, Radical,
I was beginning to wonder about the delay in your responses date…but, I see you have managed very wll!
As I see it, you are simply offering moral relativism as your answer. You are effectively dening not only the existence of objective truth… but that man can act on it. The criteria for moral relativism is, "Whatever I believe … today … is my belief. It has become obvious that you are only interestd in providing your opinion - and ths post is devoid of any references to back up your multiple statemtnts.
Equally obvious is your total reliance on Trrtulia because you rely on him most heroically to the exclusin of all of the other ECFs. Not many ECFs left the Catholic Church to join up with a heresy - could this be the reason for your interest i this man?
God bless
QUOTE=Radical;9540136]the person(s) to whom the claim is addresse
d…one decides for oneself what it is that one will believe.
I wouldn’t suggest that
you had asked:
Are there writings that match the earliest of writings yet contradicts the later, yet still early, writings?
And I pointed to Tertullian and his views on Mary….by all means reference an earlier ECF to show the existence of the Catholic doctrines regarding Mary…or reference later ones and then properly explain why Mary was given such little consideration prior to those later references and why those later references should not be seen as being part of a post-apostolic innovation.
well, in your case it would seem that you have decided that you will believe that they are the unfolding of doctrines.
I think it comes down to the study of history, the study of scripture and the application of sound reasoning
that is pretty impressive….how about providing your working definition of “apostolic succession” and then showing where the ideas behind that definition are clearly expressed in scripture.
well, why don’t you tell me. I would suggest that for an addition, the following would be needed:
- A fellow with enough pious imagination to come up with an idea;
- That fellow to have the ego to put forward that idea; and
- That fellow to have enough of a reputation for others to listen.
How much time is necessary for those things to fall into place?
are you thinking about Acts 15 where the scriptures indicate that it was James who rendered the judgement?
the letter that is sent out is from the apostles, elders and the congregation and they claim that the decision seemed good to the Holy Spirit. So it seems that we should be looking for the presence of the Holy Spirit, and as indicated before, the apostles backed up their claim to speak on behalf of God with signs and wonders….and it would seem that they also ran the decision passed the congregation. Is that the precedent that you would like to follow?
Actually you said:
Why not go straight to the source that is infallible…teh Church that Christ promised would never fall to the gates of hell and which the Holy Spirit would guide in truth?
The self-serving bit would be:
a) Identifying the CC as the Church of Christ’s promise;
b) Then interpreting the promise to mean that the CC is infallible
“guiding into truth” could be understood to mean “providing with scripture”…interpreting it to mean “ensuring that the official teachings of the CC are kept free of error” is reading a whole lot between the lines to arrive at a subjective opinion. If you are going to insist that a passage establishes your claim, then the passage must actually make that claim in no uncertain words.
and why should one believe that the doctrine in question wasn’t just someone else’s opinions?
this seems to be your logic:
a) As per John 17:23 Christ desired unity for all who would believe in Christ through the apostles’ message
b) w/o an authority in place to define all doctrine, believer’s would be left with their subjective opinions to define the doctrine
c) with subjective opinions defining doctrine the inevitable result is numerous divisions (see the numerous protestant denominations as proof)
d) therefore, Christ for the sake of and to enable unity, established the needed authority(being the magisterium of the CC)
This reasoning, however, is really just your subjective opinion as to how God would work……and I don’t see how it is superior to this:
A) As per John 17:23 Christ desired unity for all who would believe in Christ through the apostles’ message(please note that it is unity for all those who believe in Christ)
B) an infallible teaching authority (ITA) could be the means of achieving the unity Christ prayed for.
C) an ITA could only effectively serve as the means of achieving unity if it was established by Christ in an irrefutable manner, otherwise the truth as to the identity of the ITA becomes subjective …and Christ would have known of this need and would have acted to fulfill it
D) conservative Catholics recognize the Catholic magisterium as being that ITA and, in contrast, far more than half of all believers in Christ do not recognize the magisterium of the CC as the ITA (see the Orthodox, Protestants and all those non-conservative Catholics who reject teachings from the Catholic magisterium as proof) establishing that the ITA was not established in an irrefutable manner; and
E) therefore, an ITA was not the means Christ employed to achieve the unity among all believers.
The above, of course, merely builds on what Contarini wrote:
I haven’t claimed that truth is dependent on a lack of corruption…I said that from the evidence that we have (scripture) of how God works, we can see a very, very strong correlation between speakers of truth and a lack of corruption
again what you need to show is a period of corruption overlapping with a period where they were infallible/ kept from making errors
and a reformer’s argument is: The CC has diverged from the Church Christ founded by adding erroneous doctrine (including claiming an inappropriate authority for itself). Therefore, given that the CC refuses to eliminate the doctrinal error, to remain with the CC (and affirm that wrongly claimed authority) would be to reject the truth and embrace error