R
Radical
Guest
I note that Catholic doctrine keeps developing with more and more being added. As such, the catholic/universal Church of the 3rd century would have held less truth than the Catholic Church of the 19th century…yet you would insist that both held the fullness of truth and were thus both were the pillar and foundation of truth….so I guess a Church can hold less truth than another and both are still considered to be the pillar and foundation of truth.Truth can not vary by definition, so certain churches must hold more truth than others, or in the Catholic teaching, it holds the fullness of truth.
Perhaps you would suggest that the difference is that the Catholic church of any century would never have taught error, but when I look at the Catholic Church of history it taught some very harsh stuff about the Orthodox and about Protestants of various stripes…stuff that is at odds with the more friendly stuff of Vatican II. Those at the top of the Catholic Church of centuries ago taught that the Greeks and Protestants were damned, whereas now, according to the leadership of the CC, the Greeks are the other lung and Protestants are separated brethren. If I follow Catholic practice correctly, they deal with the harsh stuff by dramatically redefining its meaning and/or by classifying it as unofficial teaching that can be disregarded. The thing is, the earlier CC didn’t know that what it was teaching needed redefining or was unofficial. They believed what they taught …plain and simple….yet you would insist that the earlier CC was the pillar and foundation of truth….so I guess a Church can hold to teachings that are at odds with the teachings of the modern CC (regarding a matter as important as salvation) and still be considered to be the pillar and foundation of truth….the respective teachings are at odds, but both have the fullness of truth. So why again is some variety amongst protestants such a troubling thing?
and if I were a time traveller trying to find a CC within its history that “supports the gospel”, then that effort could lead me to a lot of different Catholic churches and imho, ones with wildly different views on truth, both in faith and in moralSo if I were atheist, finding a church that “supports the gospel” can lead me to a lot of different churches and imho, wildly different views on truth, both in faith and in morals.
so a traditional Catholic, trying to envision what approach an atheist would take in his search for the Christian God, concludes that the atheist would value exactly what Catholics value….go figure. Neither tradition nor the magisterium would be any use w/o God being behind them…w/o that they would add to the problem and not be part of the solution. So then, riddle me this, what would cause a sceptical atheist to conclude that God’s hand was on either the magisterium or on tradition to the point of ensuring that error was eliminated?The books of bible while inspired and infallible were put together in a canon by the church to be used for reading at Mass. It was not put together as a compendium of all faith which is why tradition and the magisterium become so important, because the bible needs both to be interpreted correctly. So if I were aethiest, I would look for a church, Catholic by name that has all three: bible, tradition and magisterium so that I could be assured that on faith and morals I was being taught the fullness of truth.