“Tent maker” – is that how you refer to Saint Paul?
When St Paul is speaking as a man of his time and culture, to me, he is just a tent maker: when he speaks as a Saint, uttering the words of Our Lord, then to me, he is St. Paul.
The two are not always the same.
Mother Church, in failng to illuminate this fact, adds to the confusion.
Paul’s epistles are the Magisterium. He was an apostle, and he taught with his epistles.
When the Magisterium utters words which conflict with some of the teachings of Paul, then they supercede that teaching. That is, as I understand, the principle of the Magisterium. That goes to the heart of infallibility.
What the Magisterium is saying, is that these words of Paul were not the words of Christ, but were his human judgement of the time, and circumstances thereof.
Show me where any authoritative Catholic document denies Paul was an apostle!
I do not deny that Paul was an apostle, and that some of his words rank as Gospel. What I am saying is that Paul was also a human being, and a fallible one at that. He himself said so.
I am a heretic
That makes me feel a little better – I cannot imagine a Catholic dismissing Saint Paul as “your tent maker.”
Have you read the Epistles of the Apostle Paul? He frequently refers to his teaching as “my gospel.”
Some I have read, some I have had read to me.
Some I accept as verbum Dei, some I do not.
This dual personality of Paul troubles me. To me he is a double agent. His primary aim seems to be to make Our Lord’s Gospel palatable to Rome, even if that makes that Gospel unrecognisible to Our Lord.
But it is not the judgement of the Catholic Church!!
Sorry, I forgot what that was about.
I find that offensive and unChristian – when did I “deify the almighty dollar?” Give me a quote where I did that.
Not in so many words, but your line of attack is that everything should be controlled by monetary principles, and any concern which is not ecconomically viable should be allowed to fail and disappear.
He also spoke ill of those who under pretext of serving took money for it – like the money changers in the temple.
I think I here said that Monetarism is Mammon.
When Our Lord talks of Mammon, he is comparing her with GOD. Thus she is an entity of a similar if not like kind as GOD. for Our Lord does not compare apples and oranges.
So she is a god, and like all gods she represents a set of ruling principles which must be obeyed, and preferably loved.
Mammon seen in this light is in no way different from Monetarism.
You need to use special pleading and weasel words to hide that conclusion, but if you worship capitalism, you worship Mammon, and Our Lord said: You cannot serve GOD and Mammon.
The man who called Saint Paul “your tent maker” accuses** me** of weasel words?
I try to be truthful, and to describe things as I see them. I try not to be offensive, sometimes, I fail.
And who gave you the Kharisma of Infallibility?
I claim neither Charisma nor infallibilty. I find claims of infallibility troublesome.
So you agree with the Ayatollahs – and disagree with Saint Paul?
Sometimes I find truth in the words of my enemies, and sometimes I find falsehood in the words of my friends. All is not perfect.
And I showed you the Epistles of Paul. Who clearly says we must pay our own way and support our families, not throw them on the goverment to support.
And a quotation of the Magisterium was shewed to you which clearly superceded those words of Paul. Your denial of the superiority of the more recent words of the Magisterium in favour of your superceded words of Paul is the cause of me coming to this thread.
Methinks you doth protest too much.
Grammatically incorrect: ‘doth’ is 3rd sing archaic: not 2nd plur archaic.
Correct phrase reads:
Methinks my lord doth protest too much.
Pax vobiscum