What are the main differences between Bible Christians and Catholics?

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Yes, that is true. The question is how does one become “IN CHRIST” such that one can become new?
Well; just for interest’s sake, and to compare the Catholic & Protestant views of “Bible Christianity,” lets explore this question a bit. How does one become “In Christ?” Are some “more” in Christ, than others?
 
Well; just for interest’s sake, and to compare the Catholic & Protestant views of “Bible Christianity,” lets explore this question a bit. How does one become “In Christ?” Are some “more” in Christ, than others?
Yes, I would say some are more in Christ than others.

As a matter of fact, if to be a New man one must be in Christ, then until we are in heaven then we are only in partial states of being in Christ because we cannot say that we are completely new.

Except of course right after baptism.
 
Well; just for interest’s sake, and to compare the Catholic & Protestant views of “Bible Christianity,” lets explore this question a bit. How does one become “In Christ?” Are some “more” in Christ, than others?
How does one become "In Christ?"
First of all by coming to believe in Christ, Repenting, and being baptized.
After this initial coming to Christ then, in order to more fully enter “into Christ” one must grow in faith, trust, and action.

Are some “more” in Christ, than others?
Certainly. Just as there is a difference between belief and faith, mind and heart, types and nature and degrees of spiritual gifts and levels of trust - Jesus told the diciples that some “demons” can only be expelled by prayer and fasting, He also said that faith the size of a mustard seed, could move mountains. He did not say they did not have faith, but only that they had “little faith” (Oh ye of little faith).

I think all of us have read the lives of great people of God and said - I’d love to have that kind of faith. We’ve probably all known others personally who have impressed us by their selfless holiness. I would find it easy to say that my own godfather is more “in Christ” than I am…WHY? Because he has spent his entirel life conforming himself to the image of Christ…

Peace
James
 
In short “Bible Christians” use the bible as there sole source of faith - still many adhere to a particular denomination which has it’s own statement of faith.
Are you sure we look to the Bible as the sole source of faith? or do we see the Bible as the final source of authority on faith?
 
You’ve just pulled a cooterhein.
I’m pretty sure we aren’t allowed to do this anymore. It was fun, but I’m afraid I can no longer reciprocate.
You are assuming that I have never heard these kinds of things from them. How do you know that for a fact?
No, that’s not what I was assuming.
First a clarification.
The quote that I included in my response were not mine but someone elses. My aim was to get you to explain how you think it works instead of just saying that’s not how it works. I am beginning to think that you do not even really know how it works because you have not answered that question.
Protestantism has historically been guided by the historical-grammatical method of interpretation. Of course I know how it works.
Now to your assumption that I do not know this As a matter of fact I do. I have one friend who I have started debating with a few years ago and he is one proof of the above statement. Incidentally, this is what led me to CAF.
Most Catholics are not well-catechized, and a solid 70% of American Catholics will consistently answer surveys by saying it is possible to be a Catholic in good standing while using contraception on a regular basis. Nevertheless, that does not change the fact that Church teaching indicates the opposite.

In the same way, most Protestants are better-schooled in the basic teachings of Protestantism, but I don’t doubt that 70% of them are unable to articulate the Protestant method of interpretation very well. That doesn’t mean no such method exists, though. Such a method does exist, and it’s called the historical-grammatical method. I will tell you about it.
When I was in high school I had a friend who was “born again” and she had the same silly notions.
You have some silly notions, too, but I recognize them for what they are and I don’t demean all Catholics because of you. For example, I don’t assume that all Catholics believe there is nothing wrong with calling Calvinism “idiotic” and defend it by saying “I’m just calling a spade a spade.” Nor do I assume that your church leadership looks on this kind of dialogue favorably.
And here at CAF, the protestants of different variants that I have encountered in this forum prove those statements true.
Would you mind making a poll that has something to do with this? How would you phrase the question, and what kinds of options would you have as answers? You should get some (name removed by moderator)ut from different Protestants in order to make sure nearly all of them can choose an option that describes them, then we can see what they have to say for themselves.
But the biggest proof would be the testimonies of “Bible Christian” converts who say the same thing all the time. Things like – “before I became Catholic there were Bible verses that were too hard so I ignored them” or one that was quite damning “all these years we’ve been lied to”.
Trust me, you’ll hear the same kinds of things from Catholic converts, too. With them, though, it usually has to do with being exposed to certain passages that they’d never seen before in their entire lives. Then they wonder why their Catholic parish would keep these things hidden.
Now , as a general comment on your post: You have written a reply of decent length and yet not one little bit of a hint of an answer to my question.
This is true. I asked you to affirm something, though. It was a bit of a prerequisite for an actual answer. I have to make sure you’re actually listening to me and that I’m not just wasting my time.
It would be good if you could actually address the questions and reply accordingly.
Sure, I can do that. Pretty easily, actually, since I know what I’m looking for.
So again: If that was not really how it works and that is not how it really happened then please give us two answers:
I will give you a helpful link, but before I commit to spending any more time on this, I need you to respond to this little thing:

[SIGN]As an example, if I tell you X is not how it works and Y is not what happens, it’s possible for you to think “X is how it works and Y is what happens.” Please tell me I can rule out that possibility.[/SIGN]
How does it really work?
How does it really happen?
It’s called the historical-grammatical method, and this link gives you most of the major information about it.
pediaview.com/openpedia/Historical-grammatical_method
Any further questions or comments on the historical-grammatical method should be prefaced by something indicating that I can rule out the aforementioned possibility that I brought up. And if you want to discuss the possibility of the poll that I mentioned earlier, that would be fine, too.
 
doctrine wise, work from majors to minor doctrine, thanks
“Bible Christians” tend to be “anti-creedal”, they will not acknowledge the historic creeds of the Church claiming: “The Bible is our creed”, which becomes very subjective.
To claim “sola scriptura” presents problems because each person interprets that phrase, and the Bible, differently. There simply is no authority.
Without any authority, many “Bible Christians” fall into the heresies of the past. For example, many fundamentalists have begun to deny the doctrine of original sin, a heresy the Church dealt with centuries ago. Once you deny the doctrine of original sin, other doctrines follow like dominoes, the Virgin birth, the impeccability and (eventually) the Deity of Christ. Many take a modalistic view of the Trinity, another ancient heresy. Some deny the need for repentance in regard to salvation. Without any doctrinal authority, “fundamentalism” become very “non-fundamentalist”.
Many “Bible Christian” churches have a “doctrinal statement”.
The problem comes from the “doctrines” within it that were never part of Historic Christianity.
 
It’s not true that the Bible does not say "the Bible alone. Catholics have almost gloated over this apologetics approach, thinking it to be quite secure, and succesfully tripping up many Protestants.

Trying to prove that the Bible doesn’t say a certain, exact wording, does not prove that that something is not in scripture. It could still be in scripture; in slightly different words, yet still meaning the same thing. The Bible is clear that we are not to add anything to it, and this means “Bible alone” for the Christian.

**Pro 30:6 ** Add thou not unto his words, lest he reprove thee, and thou be found a liar.

Rev 22:18 For I testify unto every man that heareth the words of the prophecy of this book, If any man shall add unto these things, God shall add unto him the plagues that are written in this book:

Deu 4:2 Ye shall not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish ought from it, that ye may keep the commandments of the LORD your God which I command you.

Now I know that Roman Catholic teachings do say that “Tradition” supposedly establishes scripture; yet the Bible warns about “tradition” of the very wrong kind.

Mat 15:3 But he answered and said unto them, Why do ye also transgress the commandment of God by your tradition?

Protestants teach, on the other hand, that Catholics have added the Apocrypha, while enduring Catholic counter-claims that we “removed” the Apocrypha from the Bible.

“Bible Christians” are just that. They base their teachings on the Bible alone.
I had originally asked this question of Protestant101, but was not answered. Can any protestant answer it?

These verses are very true. Now for the sake of clarification, which came first, the original Catholic Bible or the version edited by man, the KJV? So which Bible is the one that has been changed, added to, removed from? Which one do you use? The Original or the edited version?
 
What are the main differences between Bible Christians and Catholics?

Well, just in my own personal opinion, I feel that Bible Christians gather together to increase faith through fellowship and preaching… The prayers involved all seem to revolve around the idea that faith alone should be the most stressed factor in worship. To increase faith seems to be the purpose of bible christians.

Catholics also believe in faith, but treat it equally to works… Catholics are more obligated to sacrifice themselves through suffering as a way of worship. Our prayers are a sacrifice, fasting is a sacrifice, confession is a sacrifice, self flagellation is a form of sacrifice, and communion is a sacrifice.

Catholics even call the Mass “The Sacraficial Mass”… So if sacrifice is considered to be one in the same as works, then Catholics ultimately worship God through faith and works where Bible Christians worship God through faith alone.
 
Yes, I would say some are more in Christ than others.

As a matter of fact, if to be a New man one must be in Christ, then until we are in heaven then we are only in partial states of being in Christ because we cannot say that we are completely new.

Except of course right after baptism.
2Co 5:17 Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.
 
I had originally asked this question of Protestant101, but was not answered. Can any protestant answer it?

These verses are very true. Now for the sake of clarification, which came first, the original Catholic Bible or the version edited by man, the KJV? So which Bible is the one that has been changed, added to, removed from? Which one do you use? The Original or the edited version?
The “original” Bible wasn’t “Catholic.” You have asked the wrong question
 
The “original” Bible wasn’t “Catholic.” You have asked the wrong question
This is odd… if the first canon of the Scriptures did not come from the Catholic Church, where exactly did it come from? :yukonjoe:
 
Well that depends on what you define as the “original bible”.

If you mean the jewish scriptures, the Torah and Tanakh then clearly they were not canonised by the catholic church rather they were acknowledged by judaism to begin with.

However if you mean the entire canon of the bible including the new testament than history attests to the fact that the books in the bible were canonised by the authority of the Catholic Church, they didn;t just spontaneously descend from the heavens complete and entire. Indeed there were countless gnostic and otherwise erroneous and false gospels that never made it into scripture because they were rejected by the Church with many containing totally abject heresy. From memory there is one that states Jesus was actually a woman for example.

Now it is indisputable that the church did indeed canonise the contents of the bible in an official capacity. It is up to you Protestant101 to show us definitively that the christian bible was not canonised and compiled in its entirety by the authority of the Church and that it was either pre-existent or emerged in some other manner before the canon was declared and defined officially by the Church. Simply saying something is not so without a shred of evidence to proove your point doesn;t make your argument correct so it would be good if you explained to us your point of view and your argument to the contrary of the Catholic position.
 
2Co 5:17 Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.
But that still does not answer the question of how does any man become in Christ?

Are you saying that if even one man is in Christ, the rest (as signified by “all things”) become new?
 
Protestantism has historically been guided by the historical-grammatical method of interpretation. Of course I know how it works.
And that was all you had to say to answer the question. You could have written that at the start.

Still, that answers only the second part about “having mere opinion, ignoring these biblical statemenents on sacred tradition.”It does not address the first claim that “they conveniently ignore scripture which doesn’t agree with them”; which I have explained I have personally experienced and read in conversion stories.
Most Catholics are not well-catechized, and a solid 70% of American Catholics will consistently answer surveys by saying it is possible to be a Catholic in good standing while using contraception on a regular basis. Nevertheless, that does not change the fact that Church teaching indicates the opposite.
In the same way, most Protestants are better-schooled in the basic teachings of Protestantism, but I don’t doubt that 70% of them are unable to articulate the Protestant method of interpretation very well. That doesn’t mean no such method exists, though. Such a method does exist, and it’s called the historical-grammatical method. I will tell you about it.
That may be true but the people I cited are not your run of the mill non-denominational Christian. These are learned people, even pastors and theologians.
You have some silly notions, too, but I recognize them for what they are and I don’t demean all Catholics because of you. For example, I don’t assume that all Catholics believe there is nothing wrong with calling Calvinism “idiotic” and defend it by saying “I’m just calling a spade a spade.” Nor do I assume that your church leadership looks on this kind of dialogue favorably.
And I don’t demean Calvinists because of a particular Calvinist. I demean (if one may call it that) Calvinistic belief which is not quite the same.

Calling something ‘idiotic” if it is “idiotic” is not a silly notion. If a something is idiotic and a dangerous belief then it must be exposed for what it is so people will not be misled.

If I were to say that Atheism is a stupid faith (and it is a faith though atheists would disagree), I doubt you would say that it is silly of me to say so.

But of course the burden of proof rests of me to prove that it is indeed idiotic. I can’t just claim it so and expect everyone to believe it to be so.

In the case of Calvinistic Predestination, I think I did prove that it was indeed idiotic. Which is why you came up with the following challenge, remember?
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cooterhein:
What if I demonstrate that there are no well-respected Catholic apologists of the formerly Calvinist variety who give an ounce of credence to the “monstrous Calvinist god” argument? You’d have to wait a few days, but I can do it with one phone call. You up for it? I can do this on January 6th.
I am still waiting for your reply you know. It’s way past January 6.
Would you mind making a poll that has something to do with this? How would you phrase the question, and what kinds of options would you have as answers? You should get some (name removed by moderator)ut from different Protestants in order to make sure nearly all of them can choose an option that describes them, then we can see what they have to say for themselves.
But it is not about polls. You said that I don’t really know for a fact that protestants ignore verses that do not agree with them. So to prove to you that I do know that for a fact, I mentioned that I have encountered some Protestants here at CAF who do that. Not all mind you, but there are some.
Trust me, you’ll hear the same kinds of things from Catholic converts, too. With them, though, it usually has to do with being exposed to certain passages that they’d never seen before in their entire lives. Then they wonder why their Catholic parish would keep these things hidden.
Which is total hogwash. No Catholic Parish has ever kept anything in the Bible hidden. It is true that in general Catholics are rather lazy about reading the Bible and when it does get proclaimed to them at Mass quite a lot just don’t pay attention. Which of course is their fault and to some extent due to some misguided priest who failed to proclaim the fullness of truth. I know a few of them.
This is true. I asked you to affirm something, though. It was a bit of a prerequisite for an actual answer. I have to make sure you’re actually listening to me and that I’m not just wasting my time.
Cooterhein, if I reply to you, you will know I am listening as I have this habit of breaking down a post and replying in detail. I may misunderstand what you say but have no doubt that I have read what you have written. You should know that by now from our previous verbal fencing.
 
I will give you a helpful link, but before I commit to spending any more time on this, I need you to respond to this little thing:

As an example, if I tell you X is not how it works and Y is not what happens, it’s possible for you to think “X is how it works and Y is what happens.” Please tell me I can rule out that possibility.
No, I cannot rule out that possibility since you are not the fountain of all truth.

If you propose X and Y, I read it, ponder it, see if it is logical and consistent with whatever evidence I have available to me and if they are so then the most I can say is yes I agree with you to the extent of how you phrased your reply.

Another thing that you must remember is that you are a Calvinist of some sort and not all Protestants agree with you so you cannot even say that you speak for all protestants although you might represent a reasonable portion.
It’s called the historical-grammatical method, and this link gives you most of the major information about it.
pediaview.com/openpedia/Histo…matical_method
Any further questions or comments on the historical-grammatical method should be prefaced by something indicating that I can rule out the aforementioned possibility that I brought up.
If you had said that right at the beginning instead of saying ‘No that’s not how it works “ then we could have avoided this inordinate amount of typing that is not good for my sore joints.
And if you want to discuss the possibility of the poll that I mentioned earlier, that would be fine, too.
The poll is not necessary since I do not need to know how many evade passages that do not suit them. It is sufficient that I know they do, from personal experience, conversion stories and debates here at CAF.
 
And I don’t demean Calvinists because of a particular Calvinist. I demean (if one may call it that) Calvinistic belief which is not quite the same.
Hang on now! If you check; you will see quite a number of discussions here from the past where I tried to say I am not personally attacking Catholics; only certain beliefs. I have been told over and over that if I attack the belief; I attack the people. Why wouldn’t the same rule apply here?

In reference to 2 Cor 5:17, it is not something I was saying. It’s something that the Bible says. I offered absolutely no interpretation or explanation; I just quoted a verse that is related to the question you asked about being “in Christ.”

Out of curiosity benedictus2, I would be interested to see if you had any other Bible verses that would be linked to this subject of being “in Christ.” How would you explain it from the Bible?

To me; someone can be “in Christ” no matter what denomination they are in. And I believe that is the direction that you are headed with that - how that one cannot be truly “in Christ” unless they are Roman Catholic…
 
Hang on now! If you check; you will see quite a number of discussions here from the past where I tried to say I am not personally attacking Catholics; only certain beliefs. I have been told over and over that if I attack the belief; I attack the people. Why wouldn’t the same rule apply here?

In reference to 2 Cor 5:17, it is not something I was saying. It’s something that the Bible says. I offered absolutely no interpretation or explanation; I just quoted a verse that is related to the question you asked about being “in Christ.”

Out of curiosity benedictus2, I would be interested to see if you had any other Bible verses that would be linked to this subject of being “in Christ.” How would you explain it from the Bible?

To me; someone can be “in Christ” no matter what denomination they are in. And I believe that is the direction that you are headed with that - how that one cannot be truly “in Christ” unless they are Roman Catholic…
that would be my assessment. you will eventually BE Catholic my friend. that is if we all reach heaven. or do you believe that Christ is a polygamist, and he is coming back for more than just One Bride? you are only responsible for what you know. i also have a problem with Adventism being labled a denomination. after much study, and debates on this forum, i personally have come to the conclusion that Adventism has anther Jesus they follow. not the Jesus of the bible. they claim that Michael the Arch Angel is Jesus. this is not the Jesus the Church has proclaimed for 2000 years. this is not the Jesus any protestant denomination has claimed. imntbho i do not at this time believe that as a whole, Adventist Are in Christ. im sure despite the teachings of their movement,there are some who still hold to true Christolgy as taught by traditional Christianity. but the organiztion as a whole does not. this would be a major cause of concern dont you agree? peace
 
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