A
Agathon77
Guest
@Margaret_Ann,
By the way: Thank you so very much for sharing with me the link to Christ Our Pascha. The sections on Spirituality of the Heart, apatheia and living in the Holy Spirit were very helpful in my spiritual life.
As for your question:
The Old Law was basically a set of conditions that Israel had to meet, under human will power alone and without grace; in order to merit justification and God’s blessings. The liturgical laws in Leviticus were animal sacrifices to atone for and restore the broken covenant relationship offended by sin.
IMHO, I believe the only relationship the Old Law has with Christ is that the Law shows how human effort alone will fail to merit justification and that we need the perfect Victim of Christ Our Pascha to atone for us, reconcile us to the Father and grant us the access to grace and the interior helps of the Holy Spirit we need in our struggle for salvation against sin.
@mcq72,
Four quotes from Scripture that explicitly teach intercession of the saints:
Tobit 12:15:
“ I am Raphael, one of the seven holy angels who present the prayers of the saints and enter into the presence of the glory of the Holy One. “
RSV-CE
Revelation 5:8
Revelation 8:3
Revelation 8:4
Before you argue about Tobit, please recognize that Christians used the Septuagint, which was the Alexandrian Canon; and indeed the NT quotes from the Septuagint and references the deuterocanonical books and the Jews in the Council of Jamnia in 90 AD adopted the Palestinian Canon in opposition to the Christian use of the Septuagint.
The Protestant canon is the Palestinian Canon of the Jews; not a Church canon. As post Christ, Jewish councils are no longer authoritative for Christians.
My reference is Fr Oscar Lukefahr, CM’s “ What We Believe: A Survey of the Catholic Faith “
Quoting Saint Augustine:
“ A Christian people celebrates together in religious solemnity the memorials of the martyrs both to encourage their being imitated and so that it can share in their merits and aided by their prayers. “
Against Faustus the Manichaean, 400 AD
I can supply further references upon request.
By the way: Thank you so very much for sharing with me the link to Christ Our Pascha. The sections on Spirituality of the Heart, apatheia and living in the Holy Spirit were very helpful in my spiritual life.
As for your question:
The Old Law was basically a set of conditions that Israel had to meet, under human will power alone and without grace; in order to merit justification and God’s blessings. The liturgical laws in Leviticus were animal sacrifices to atone for and restore the broken covenant relationship offended by sin.
IMHO, I believe the only relationship the Old Law has with Christ is that the Law shows how human effort alone will fail to merit justification and that we need the perfect Victim of Christ Our Pascha to atone for us, reconcile us to the Father and grant us the access to grace and the interior helps of the Holy Spirit we need in our struggle for salvation against sin.
@mcq72,
Four quotes from Scripture that explicitly teach intercession of the saints:
Tobit 12:15:
“ I am Raphael, one of the seven holy angels who present the prayers of the saints and enter into the presence of the glory of the Holy One. “
RSV-CE
Revelation 5:8
Revelation 8:3
Revelation 8:4
Before you argue about Tobit, please recognize that Christians used the Septuagint, which was the Alexandrian Canon; and indeed the NT quotes from the Septuagint and references the deuterocanonical books and the Jews in the Council of Jamnia in 90 AD adopted the Palestinian Canon in opposition to the Christian use of the Septuagint.
The Protestant canon is the Palestinian Canon of the Jews; not a Church canon. As post Christ, Jewish councils are no longer authoritative for Christians.
My reference is Fr Oscar Lukefahr, CM’s “ What We Believe: A Survey of the Catholic Faith “
Quoting Saint Augustine:
“ A Christian people celebrates together in religious solemnity the memorials of the martyrs both to encourage their being imitated and so that it can share in their merits and aided by their prayers. “
Against Faustus the Manichaean, 400 AD
I can supply further references upon request.
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