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Mannyfit75
Guest
My ancestry is also Scotch/Irish but they came here very early. And my church believes that we are the remnant of the real Catholic Church, the one that Jesus founded, not the one that Rome took over and introduced paganism into it. We believe the Scriptures tell us all we need to know about faith and morals, in fact the Scriptures themselves tell us that.
The Catholic Church in the beginning consisted on Rome, Antioch, Jerusalem, Alexandria, and Constantinope. There were no introduction into paganism as such. The only thing incorporated was pagan customs but not beliefs. Such as the introduction of Eastern into the Liturgy. So whatever your Church professed is not supported by history.
That is hardly a true statement. The New Testament is part of the Oral Tradition. Jesus didn’t write any text. He told his disciple to preached the Gospel. It was not until the 3rd century that local African Synod compiled a list of books that should be canonical.In the first two centuries, the Catholic Church taught that if it can’t be proven by Scripture, then tradition is false. In fact most of the early church fathers as late as the 4th and 5th century believed that. The Catholic Catechism today still states that. The problem is that they interpret Scripture falsely. With the dogmas and doctrines present today, Scripture has to be changed too much to be true. It is being translated wrong and Christ Himself warned about that. He also warned about the “traditions” of men and that is what the RCC is founded on.
Rev. Henry G. Graham wrote in his book, Where We Got the Bible: Our Debt to the Catholic Church stated the following:
((Continue))Before the collection of New Testament books was finally settled at the Council of Carthage, 397, we find that there were three distinct classes into which the Christian writings were divided. This we know (and every scholar admits it) from the works of early Christian writers like Eusebius, Jerome, Epiphanius, and a whole host of others that we could name. These classes were:
(1) the books “acknowledged” as Canonical
(2) books “disputed” or “controverted”
(3) books declared “spurious” or false. Now in class (1) i.e., those acknowledged by Christians everywhere to be genuine and authentic and to have been written by Apostolic men, we find such books as the Four Gospels, 13 Epistles of St Paul, Acts of the Apostles. These were recognized East and West as “Canonical”, genuinely the works of the Apostles and Evangelists whose names they bore, worthy of being in the “Canon” or sacred collection of inspired writings of the Church, and read aloud at Holy Mass