Z
zaffiroborant
Guest
They may have been a heretical Christian group with incorrect understanding of the Trinity but they did not create their own church. They saw themselves as, and were members of the Catholic church and intended with the baptisms they performed to do what The Catholic church believes about baptism. Arians were individual Catholics who although they were wrong in belief still saw themselves as members of and aligned with the church. Churches are a different animal altogether, a church has it’s own teachings, and this is where alignment with Catholic understanding is important. If a church has an understanding 180 out from the Catholic understanding it’s ministers can not possibly be doing what the Catholic church intends in regards to baptism.Actually, I am ignoring nothing, as I clearly quoted various views on the issue of belief in the Trinity as well as the Arians, in this post. One person says the Catholic Church does not recognizes baptisms performed by groups that do not believe in the Trinity as expressed by traditional Christianity. Another says that Latter-day Saints are less non-Trinitarian than Arians, and that Arians were heretics, without ever mentioning the significance of either assertion to baptism (despite polite requests to do so or point out the specific post where it was already done). Another says the the issue of the Trinity is a red herring, because of the example of the Arians. Another says that the Arians mentioned by the Councils were most likely semi-Arians that had a sufficient enough Christology that could be interpreted as orthodox (whatever that means). And then we have another that cites an article that claims that holding to the Trinity is important in this matter (again interesting in light of Arians who didn’t hold to that doctrine),** yet he also says that a heretical Christian group that doesn’t hold to the Trinity can still validly baptize**. And of course we have the Orthodox poster that the reasoning has nothing to do with the Trinity, citing examples from one of the ancient Councils.
That is why I keep discussing the issue, because of the above. I am not ignoring anything, nor am I refusing to do anything. The fact is that there is a diversity of views expressed on this issue, as evidenced by the posts in this very thread.
When an individual performs a baptism all that is needed is the intent to do what the Catholic church does, his beliefs and understanding are immaterial. When a person performs a baptism as an authority from a given church the belief and understanding of that church goes directly to intent and that is where the problem lies. LDS are baptizing with the intent of the their church and so it becomes necessary to look to the understanding of the church because there you see what is intended by the minister of baptism. IMO this is where “is it close enough to the proper understanding of the Trinity” comes into play.
Just to add to your confusion