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Inego_de_Loyola
Guest
I skipped a lot of thread to reply, so i’m sorry if i’m being redundant.Thanks 1AS7 for the correct teaching from the CCC, but don’t you see? One reason I decided to return home to the Catholic Church was the writings of the earliest of Church fathers. My thought was that they would know the truth better than the fathers of the Protestant Reformation. For the early fathers were closer in time to the one who said he is the truth.
But these words of Justin Martyr give me pause and cause me to question my decision. If we cannot trust this early Church father to teach the truth on such a fundamental concept as who Jesus is, then how can I trust my decision to return based on other words of this saint? This is why I’ve started this discussion thread.
Your intuition that the Church fathers should know better than Martin Luther or Billy Graham is correct, but not a complete statement of the truth. All that was taught by the Apostles is considered divinely revealed and has dogmatic weight (Fides Divina dogma.) but the same is not true of every saint or bishop who came after them, or even in their own times. What the Apostles taught is called the deposit of faith which the Church guards by the charism of infallibility granted to her by the Holy Spirit. When the early church fathers are of one accord in a teaching, and do attribute it to another source it is usually considered an apostolic teaching, but as we have shown Justin Martyr’s confusion about the trinity is I) Not unanimous with other teachings of the fathers and II) is generally considered to be the result of a faulty application of popular philosophy. From this (besides, of course, infallible pronouncements on the subject.) we can say with near certainty that it is not an apostolic teaching but a later innovation. On the other hand his teachings on the Eucharist are unanimously held by all fathers who mentioned the subject, and this teaching is not attributed to an external source, so we can say with near certainty that the Eucharist is from the deposit of faith. Even Aquinas was wrong about the immaculate conception, and that in a fallible but official teaching of the ordinary magisterium, and origen was wrong about almost anything he cared to write about.
I hope this clarification helps.
In Christ,
Iggy.
P.S. Even his flawed teachings on the trinity do not make him a Mormon. Mormons believe that a man like us became God, that Satan was Jesus’ brother, that the American Indians are the lost tribes of Israel, (which DNA proves false.) that Joseph smith was a legitimate prophet of God despite his numerous false prophecies, that the successors of Joseph smith are also prophets with a direct line to God even though their official teachings are contradictory, and a slew of other laughable falsehoods that all the tortures of hell could not have brought Justin Martyr to affirm.
P.P.S. Also, again, that quote of Spock is actually from Spock quoting Sherlock Holmes. It’s the same as if I attributed it to you in my sig.