PS…it is a point of great sadness and contention that I have over this issue…find it self serving for priestly class (clergy) to interpret scripture that sets up exclusive " doing" for only themselves, and even interpret said transubstantiation as a sacrifice, further justifying clergy in circular fashion.
Just pointing out
Who wrote the scriptures?
Who preserved those scriptures?
Who called certain works scripture vs others NOT scripture?
Who collected ONLY those books that were called scripture?
Who copied those works before there was a printing press?
Who changed fishermen into priests and bishops?
etc etc etc
One such ordination, took place ~68 a.d. Ignatius, who knew the apostle,s and was ordained by the apostles, was a direct disciple of John the apostle. Since John died ~100 a.d. that means Ignatius was John’s disciple for 30+ yrs. In ~ 107 a.d., Ignatius was arrested for being a Catholic bishop, and was sent to Rome to be thrown to the lions in the coliseum, for sport. Before he suffered martyrdom, in a horrific way, he wrote an
Epistle to the Romans. It’s NOT a long read. It shows his mind set. He wrote 5 other letters to the Church in various locations. To your point about rules. And Church rules. See his
Epistle to the Smyrnæans and his
Epistle to the Philadelphians
mcq72:
My charity is strained over this , but I am sure I have said nothing new, and that you havent heard before.
All I can say, life is like going to school. We progress grade through grade, taking tests, pop quizes, mid terms, final exams, then we move on to the next grade. Each grade is a challenge… and we all have different challenges.
All I can say, I don’t make the rules. But I pass on what I learn (properly referenced)
So
All I can do then, is try my hardest to pass the tests, ergo advance through life’s challenges, and in the end, pass the final final exam … right?
