A
Ani_Ibi
Guest
Do you think it’s in the invisible Church?As Kaycee clearly doesn’t rely on any aspect of tradition for faith, the Confession must be a lost book of the Bible.
Do you think it’s in the invisible Church?As Kaycee clearly doesn’t rely on any aspect of tradition for faith, the Confession must be a lost book of the Bible.
It seems to stem from envy.Luther admitted that he added the word Alone. How is that admirable?
Particularly when the Reformers have their own 30 000 traditions and magisteria. Woddupwidat? Double standard? It’s OK for a Reformer to have his own private tradition and magisteria adjustable to time and place, but it’s not OK for a Catholic to have a 2000 year-old Tradition and Magisterium which has never changed and ain’t about to?
:whacky:![]()
THAT would explain it!Do you think it’s in the invisible Church?
Why were the creeds necessary?Kaycee, did you ever confirm for us where we can find the Book of Westminster? Our bibles don’t seem to have it, and since the Westminster Confession clearly cannot be required of the faith by your definition unless it is whole and entire in the Bible, surely you can point us to a Bible pre-17th century with this book in it.
Why was the Westminster Confession necessary, anyway?
Firmilian wrote the following against the Roman bishop Stephen, who seems to have claimed something like papal authority:[You are quite correct, as I know of no false “apostolic tradition”–please enlighten me…
DJim
Originally Posted by DJim
You are quite correct, as I know of no false “apostolic tradition”–please enlighten me…
Irenaeus once reported,DJim
CyprianOriginally Posted by DJim
You are quite correct, as I know of no false “apostolic tradition”–please enlighten me…
I just looked that up. He is discussing 2 things. 1) additional Sees in Rome that would schism the Church and 2) difference in cultures which he does not rebukeCyprian
“1But that they who are at Rome do not observe those things in all cases which are handed down from the beginning, and vainly pretend the authority of the apostles;2 any one may know also from the fact, that concerning the celebration of Easter, and concerning many other sacraments of divine matters, he may see that there are some diversities among them, and that all things are not observed among them alike, which are observed at Jerusalem, just as in very many other provinces also many things are varied because of the difference of the places and names”(Cyprian, Epistle 74, 6)
CyprianOriginally Posted by DJim
You are quite correct, as I know of no false “apostolic tradition”–please enlighten me…
Exactly…he seems to have changed his tune when Pope St. Stephen denounced such rebaptism. Before that, he states:Cyprian was fighting with Pope St. Stephen, because he believed that if one broke a vow or fell away from the Church they needed re-baptized…
Ahhh, OK, Some things hard to understand.My comment comes from Peter–who clearly states that “hard to understand” Pauline passages and the “rest of Scripture” are distorted by the ignorant and unstable to their own ruin. I did not want to go beyond Scripture by claiming a “majority” of its passages are easy to understand when Peter makes no such claim…![]()
The authors known as the Apostolic Fathers wrote chiefly between AD 90 and 160, and in their works we find evidence for their acquaintance with most of the books of the New Testament. In three works whose date is probably round about AD100-the ‘Epistle of Barnabas’, written perhaps in Alexandria; the Didache, or ‘Teaching of the Twelve Apostles’, produced somewhere in Syria or Palestine; and the letter sent to the Corinthian church by Clement, bishop of Rome, about AD 96-- find fairly certain quotations from the common tradition of the Synoptic Gospels, from Acts, Romans, 1 Corinthians, Ephesians, Titus, Hebrews, 1 Peter, and possible quotations from other books of the New Testament. In the letters written by Ignatius, bishop of .Antioch, as he journeyed to his martyrdom in Rome in AD 115, there are reasonably identifiable quotations from Matthew, John, Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, 1 and Timothy, Titus, and possible allusions to Mark, Luke, Acts, Colossians, 2 Thessalonians, Philemon, Hebrews, and 1 Peter. His younger contemporary, Polycarp, in a letter to the Philippians (c. 120) quotes from the common tradition of the Synoptic Gospels, from Acts, Romans, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, 2 Thessalonians, 1 and 2 Timothy, Hebrews, I Peter, and I John. And so we might go on through the writers of the second century, amassing increasing evidence of their familiarity with and recognition of the authority of the New Testament writings. So far as the Apostolic Fathers are concerned, the evidence is collected and weighed in a work called The New Testament in the Apostolic Fathers, recording the findings of a committee of the Oxford Society of Historical Theology in 1905.After the ink on what dried–the originals? How long did it take the “churches in practice” to get hold of an actual copy of a letter to Corinth? Ephesus? Timothy??? Give me some time frame–something specific.
It’s a bit disingenuous to say a council “rubber stamped” the Canon–but since you say so–please tell me — who officially “stamped” the Canon before the council got hold of it? Why was it that people happily were accepting 1 Peter but not the Letter of Barnabas (which is a very good letter)???
The only books about which there was any substantial doubt after the middle of the second century were some of those which come at the end of our New Testament. Origen (185-254) mentions the four Gospels, the Acts, the thirteen Paulines, I Peter, 1 John and Revelation as acknowledged by all; he says that Hebrews, 2 Peter, 2 and 3 John, James and Jude, with the ‘Epistle of Barnabas’, the Shepherd of Hermas, the Didache, and the ‘Gospel according to the Hebrews’, were disputed by some. Eusebius (c. 265-340) mentions as generally acknowledged all the books of our New Testament except James, Jude, Peter, 2 and 3 John, which were disputed by some, but recognised by the majority.’ Athanasius in 367 lays down the twenty seven books of our New Testament as alone canonical; shortly afterwards Jerome and Augustine followed his example in the West. The process farther east took a little longer; it was not until c. 508 that 2 Peter, 2 and 3 John, Jude and Revelation were included in a version of the Syriac Bible in addition to the other twenty two books.The late-second-century “Muratorian Fragment” says some Churches were reading from the Apocalypses of John and of Peter. Who decided the Apocalypse of Peter should get the axe?
Are definitions previously put forward, purposely being ignored?Even those who claim to follow sola scriptura do not do so.
Every ecclesiastical community requires tradition, and every ecclesiastical community follows an authority within that tradition.
To deny the obvious in favor of sloganeering is to display a profound disrespect for truth.
I see many ministers, especially televangelists make all kinds of wild claims about the Bible and the church with a series of “scriptural proofs.” Each one a divine revelation to them for the community.…
What then is sola scriptura?
…
Or you could make life easier and write it down.So what if John did tell you a Tradition? And then you forgot it? It would be lost to you, right?
So what if you were to entrust what John told you to a very reliable friend and then you forgot it? Your reliable friend would remind you, right?
Or I could get a literate person to read to me.Well, the Church is the reliable friend. The Holy Spirit has made the Church the Reliable Friend, not just for rich literate and influential, but for the whole world.
Let’s look at another scenario:
What if folks wrote down the Gospels, thinking kaycee would surely be able to read this. kaycee would be happy, right? Because kaycee can read.
But what if kaycee never learned how to read and lived in a neighbourhood where no one knew how to read. What then?
Lucky for kaycee that he/she still has his reliable friend – the Church.
Not following your logic here. What does reading the scripture to the iliterate infer here.See, Jesus had all the basis covered. Even for the poor, the illiterate, the folks who have no leisure time to read or hear the reading of others, the geographically isolated.
Jesus wasn’t just thinking of those who had enough money to go to school and learn how to read, and those who had enough money to afford the leisure time to pore over the Bible or to hire someone else to pore over the Bible for them.
He was thinking of the poor. He was thinking of the little people.
Did you know, kaycee, that for all those centuries before Luther, over 90% of the Church was illiterate?
Even those who could read, only small numbers were fluent in Latin, which was the lingua franca of those ages.
Did you know that Bibles were chained to pulpits to prevent theft because they were so costly? Who could afford handwritten Bibles except the monumentally wealthy?
Silly me, I thought the Reformation occured partly because Tetzel was soaking the “little people” selling indulgences to build St. Peter’s Basilica.But, oh no, the wealthy literate leisure class came up with Sola Scriptura which effectively excluded the poor from the Gospels except what was forced down their throats by Luther and his friends.
Weren’t the wars of religion instigated by the papacy and RC monarchs bent on stamping out the Protestant movement? Think you need to read up on Julius II, Bloody Mary, Catherine de Medici, and Philip II—to name a few. And what about the Fourth Crusade? And the Inquisition.Did you know that folks were forcibly converted to Protestantism during the Reformation – on pain of death?
Obviously. I suggest you try reading history from a less impartial source.Do the math, kaycee. The tree is known by its fruit.
Stop watching TBN and the wolves and hucksters. Should I define Catholics by Tetzel, the Popes of the pornocracy or today’s wayward priests?I see many ministers, especially televangelists make all kinds of wild claims about the Bible and the church with a series of “scriptural proofs.” Each one a divine revelation to them for the community.
The Epistle of Ignatius to the SmyrnaeansCyprian
“But that they who are at Rome do not observe those things in all cases which are handed down from the beginning, and vainly pretend the authority of the apostles; any one may know also from the fact, that concerning the celebration of Easter, and concerning many other sacraments of divine matters, he may see that there are some diversities among them, and that all things are not observed among them alike, which are observed at Jerusalem, just as in very many other provinces also many things are varied because of the difference of the places and names”(Cyprian, Epistle 74, 6)
“How carefully has Stephen fulfilled these salutary commands and warnings of the apostle, keeping in the first place lowliness of mind and meekness! For what is more lowly or meek than to have disagreed with so many bishops throughout the whole world, breaking peace with each one of them in various kinds of discord: at one time with the eastern churches, as we are sure you know; at another time with yon who are in the south” (Cyprian, Epistle 74, 5, 256 AD, of Pope Stephen’s false teaching on baptism)
Can you hear the sound of me pulling out my hair in grave disappointment, Kaycee?The Bible claims to be the sole and sufficient rule of faith for the Christian Church.
To fight heresy from those who twisted Scripture to their own destruction. The early heretics would have destroyed your best arguments from Scripture kaycee. I mean no offense - just an observation from what I have observed of your debating skills. They were not dumb. The visible, authoritative Church was required to clearly set out the Truth that Christ was not only an actual person, but that He was fully God and fully Man.Why were the creeds necessary?
lol! That’s hilarious! I wish I had been thereSomething kind of funny happened to me this weekend. I was in a Calvinist Reformed conference in Kansas City, feeling sort of like the Amazing Rome-Sympathizer sideshow in the local carnival, when the conversation turned to criteria for valid interpretation of the Bible. After a while, without thinking much about it, I said, “Well, all this just proves we should thank God for the Magisterium.” About half of those present stopped talking entirely; the other half had to have the comment explained. After that, they watched me like I was going to bite the head off a chicken or something.