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itsjustdave1988
Guest
Ummmmm… no. If you read what I wrote, that’s what I meant.So the catechism is not “all of it” but it contains “all of it”?
It seems you’ve proven my point that written communication can be easily misunderstood. The Catechism is a summary of teaching.
Let me give you an example, I studied quantum physics in my bachelor’s studies. But ya know, I didnt’ just buy a book on quantum physics and read it. That would have made me a poor physicist indeed. That would likely have led to wildly variant and erroneous understandings of what the author of the book meant to convey. Quantum physics is pretty complex (like theology), and can easily be misunderstood. So, it seems wise to have oral teachings from a doctor of physics accompany the book in order that I might better learn physics. In fact, even after I learn from the doctor and the book, I am not really a physicists, as it takes some practice and continued study in the actual field of physics, applying what I’ve learned before I really seem to know the significance of what it was I studied in a class. It takes practice (just like Christianity) and constant consultation with doctors more learned than I before such study becomes more concrete in my life.
So, which doctor should I trust? What if the doctor I take the class from is like Marcion, denying what other doctors have taught before him, distorting the true sense of what I ought to know about the subject matter? Some professing to be doctors may even omit some important chapters from the text book he gives you (eeek!).
So it seems it matters which doctors you learn from. What was Luther’s credentials to teach? He was just a Catholic monk, no? He had superior to which Scripture said he ought to have obeyed (Heb 13:17). Yet Luther discarded Hebrews, so perhaps Heb 13:17 meant nothing to him.
What about Calvin? Did he, like the apostolical men of the early church have real and full ordination, the laying of hands, tracable from the source of our faith, Jesus Christ? What about Arius? He was ordained, so could he be trusted without reservation? Or should one verify that they are teaching in accord with the doctors, the apostolical men that came before them, in unity with entire community of these ordained men? Or, are they going off on a tangent, denying long held teachings in favor of something rather novel which was nowhere taught by the doctors, the apostolical men that came before them? Is the epistle of James an epistle of straw? How about the Theodotian recension of the Book of Daniel. Jerome accepted it. So did Origen. Why is this self-proclaimed doctor omitting chapters of the accepted text when the doctors of the early church, those closest to fountain of truth considered these chapters wholly orthodox?