Does that mean that you accept all people self identifying as Christian as Christians?
I don’t think I understand what this has to do with my words which you quoted. I was challenging “self-interpretation does tend to produce differing opinions” as evidence against self-interpretation.
Short answer: no.
Long answer: 1 John can be seen to outline three litmus tests: faith (in accord with good doctrine), love, and obedience. A professing Christian can be shown to not be a Christian if they fail these tests.
Indeed do you accept Catholics as Christians?
I’m tempted to plead the fifth. I will simply say I would not be surprised to see some Catholics in heaven
Followed by what’s stopping you from being Catholic?
We’re straying off topic, but I’ll give a quick answer.
I’m convinced that the authorities of the Catholic Church contradict one another, leading me to believe that Roman Catholicism is internally inconsistent. For example, I believe the scriptures teach:
- God created and thus owns me
- I deserve God’s wrath and judgment to hell because I have failed to live up to his standards and have otherwise profaned him
- Christ died as my substitute, propitiating God and expiating my sin directly on my behalf
- Because Christ lives, I too will live
- My works ought to be done in the process of growing up into a salvation already mine, not in order to maintain it or more firmly establish it
Yet the Catholic Church appears to teach something different, while at the same time claiming scripture as an authority.
Again, these are my personal beliefs. Don’t be surprised if I dodge anything unrelated to authority in interpretation
Come on in the doors wide open.
I can also recommend many good Protestant churches
the authority to judge the correctness of the Word of God was given by God to the Catholic Church
I think this gets to the core of things. So please allow me to drill in here.
It sounds like you’re saying two things:
- The Word of God is objectively and inherently correct, independent of any organization’s thoughts about it
- The Word of God requires a judge to determine its correctness
If that’s correct, those two things seem to contradict one another.
If #2 is true, then a judge is required over the Word of God. Therefore, the judge has authority over it. Therefore, if the judge determines that something in it is not correct, then he can declare it to be false. However, #1 states that it started as objectively true. So what was objectively true has been turned into something false, which is impossible. Therefore, #1 isn’t true.
However, if #1 is true then the Word of God is objectively true. Therefore it cannot be declared false. Therefore, no one is able to judge it, meaning a judge is not allowed, meaning a judge is not necessary. Therefore #2 isn’t true.
Can you elaborate?