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Old_Scholar
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Mannyfit 75
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You are entitled to your opinion. Mine is that it is the RCC that misintreprets Scripture, as is proven by the fact that certain things they teach cannot be found in Scripture.
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** Iagree that the word pope was used later—much later. And if you hold strongly to your own Tradition, then you must know that Peter himself said it was Paul who ordained Linus as the first Bishop of Rome.
Since the church can’t place Peter in Rome with Scripture, then how can it make the claim that Peter was the first when Peter himself says otherwise? And the first big church was at Jerusalem and we know James was bishop there. Not Peter.
Also the “joint agreement” you mentioned about the Orthodox and the RCC was the fact that the Orthodox does not accept the primacy of the pope or papal primacy at all. That is still the biggest difference between the two churches. **
The New Testament came from oral tradition alright but once it was written down(in the first century also), it no longer was oral tradition that was used but the written word of God.
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**The first two centuries, the Church of Christ is the Catholic Church. It has been proven in Scripture. The Catholic Church does not falsely interpret Scripture. I think Protestants are the one who misterpret Scripture.
You are entitled to your opinion. Mine is that it is the RCC that misintreprets Scripture, as is proven by the fact that certain things they teach cannot be found in Scripture.
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**Another false premise. The word Pope was indeed used later. The first Pope is Peter. He was succeeded by Linus, Anacletus, Clement I down to our present Pope, Benedict XVI. By the Second Century, the Church was knowned to be called the Catholic Church by St. Ignatius of Antioch and then by other ECF. The early Church in fact did believe that the ECF believe that Rome was the Proto or the first amongst equal. This was confirmed at Ravena, Italy, where both the Eastern Orthodox Church and Catholic made a join agreement on Papal Primacy.
** Iagree that the word pope was used later—much later. And if you hold strongly to your own Tradition, then you must know that Peter himself said it was Paul who ordained Linus as the first Bishop of Rome.
Since the church can’t place Peter in Rome with Scripture, then how can it make the claim that Peter was the first when Peter himself says otherwise? And the first big church was at Jerusalem and we know James was bishop there. Not Peter.
Also the “joint agreement” you mentioned about the Orthodox and the RCC was the fact that the Orthodox does not accept the primacy of the pope or papal primacy at all. That is still the biggest difference between the two churches. **
**To place tradition over Scripture is simply not supported by Scripture and the fact that the church a few hundred years ago decided the pope was infallible, that was a bad blow. At least the Orthodox are much more like the early church but they also have brought in some false dogmas and doctrines.
**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.
The New Testament came from oral tradition alright but once it was written down(in the first century also), it no longer was oral tradition that was used but the written word of God.
Read your quote a little more carefully; it states that the New Testament was already "acknowledged" as canonical by the church.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