A
Ahimsa
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If Jesus points you to your own authority, then would you follow Jesus?And if Jesus points you to your own authority, then so be it?
If Jesus points you to your own authority, then would you follow Jesus?And if Jesus points you to your own authority, then so be it?
That’s the wrong question to ask. Reality is, Jesus does NOT point me to my authority. In reality, Jesus has pointed me to the authority of the Catholic Church.If Jesus points you to your own authority, then would you follow Jesus?
In the same context you have given here, who has final authority in the Catholic Church?I would like to pose this question for our Protestant brothers and sisters. I am not posing this question for debate reasons (though I won’t refrain from discussing with the posters), but I am posing this question to get an understanding of where you’re coming from.
Who has the final authority (on earth) with regards to the interpretation of the Bible? If two Protestants disagree on an interpretation of a Scripture passage such as “Take, eat, this is my Body…” who would have the final authority to say who is right? Who has the final authority to tell us what the essentials are, let alone give us the correct understanding of the essentials?
Please feel free to give Scripture passages/Patristics/Councils to back up your claim.
God bless.
The Pope and the Ecumenical Councils held by Bishops. In other words, the successors of the Apostles. That is the practice/belief of the Early Church. “Private interpretation” that goes against what the Church teaches is a practice that is frowned upon by the Early Church. They considered those types of people heretics.In the same context you have given here, who has final authority in the Catholic Church?
I think that Protestants would agree that there is tremendous value in Christians getting together to discuss difficult issues and coming to a consensus. Again, we would say that this is good, right and biblical. The question is whether or not that consensus is equally authoritative with the Bible. Many Protestant denominations have confessions that they adhere to, and affirm as accurately reflecting what the Bible teaches. They usually state that those confession are in submission to the Bible. This is true when you have teachers / preachers, also. How do you know if they are teaching the truth? You act like the Bereans:Where does this passage teach that we are to come up with the truth by studying the Bible on our own? You’ve basically read your beliefs into the passage rather than letting the passage shape your belief.
What happened in the book of Acts when there was a dispute among the Christians? Did they all say “figure it out yourselves and do your best! Good luck!”? Or did they gather in a council together (Acts 15) as a Church, proclaimed the truth that the Spirit of Truth taught them? I suppose if your theory is correct, then we would find each Apostle continuing with whatever teaching he believes to be the right one. We don’t find this in Scripture. Not only that, but we would expect the laymen who are not Apostles to be told to “do your best and figure it out on your own! The Spirit of Truth is with you!” But do we find this at all? On the contrary, we find the Church coming together to hold a council to proclaim what is true.
Grace and peace.
Please compare the canon of Scripture (which came down to us from Tradition and proclaimed in Councils) with the Bible. Where does the Bible teach what the canon of Scripture is?I think that Protestants would agree that there is tremendous value in Christians getting together to discuss difficult issues and coming to a consensus. Again, we would say that this is good, right and biblical. The question is whether or not that consensus is equally authoritative with the Bible. Many Protestant denominations have confessions that they adhere to, and affirm as accurately reflecting what the Bible teaches. They usually state that those confession are in submission to the Bible. This is true when you have teachers / preachers, also. How do you know if they are teaching the truth? You act like the Bereans:
Acts 17:10-11 The brothers immediately sent Paul and Silas away by night to Berea, and when they arrived they went into the Jewish synagogue. 11 Now these Jews were more noble than those in Thessalonica; they received the word with all eagerness, examining the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so.
They examined the Scriptures to confirm the teaching. What would have happened had the teaching contradicted the Scriptures? They would have rejected the teaching. I do know that Catholics have a well thought out faith, so I’m sure there will be many responses to my use of this passage. I’m just trying to answer your question from a Protestant perspective. This would be an example in the Bible where they didn’t just take an Apostles word for it, but appealed to Scripture themselves to verify (and it was called noble).
In summary, we believe that there is tremendous value in councils, but believe that they can err, and the only way too determine the veracity is by comparing the teaching to Scripture. Hermeneutics is a crucial issue, and one in which many Protestants woefully err.
Where can I find the canon of Scripture in the Bible?Many Protestant denominations have confessions that they adhere to, and affirm as accurately reflecting what the Bible teaches. They usually state that those confession are in submission to the Bible.
Many Protestants would say that if Jesus points you to the authority of the Catholic Church, then you should follow what Jesus tells you.That’s the wrong question to ask. Reality is, Jesus does NOT point me to my authority. In reality, Jesus has pointed me to the authority of the Catholic Church.
And yet anyone who has spent any time on CAF can see that discovering what the consensus of the Catholic Church is on many issues can be rather difficult.The Pope and the Ecumenical Councils held by Bishops. In other words, the successors of the Apostles. That is the practice/belief of the Early Church. “Private interpretation” that goes against what the Church teaches is a practice that is frowned upon by the Early Church. They considered those types of people heretics.
Please take a look at my original question:And yet anyone who has spent any time on CAF can see that discovering what the consensus of the Catholic Church is on many issues can be rather difficult.
Just look at a question like the theology of the Eastern Catholics and the Latin Catholics, or some of the Traditionalist Catholics. Not as simple as it seems to discover the final word on many teachings.
My answer is that if we want to find the final authority we need to look at the consensus of faith in the Church. A difficult task in a Church where visible unity is compromised.
Notice I was careful to use “essentials”.Who has the final authority (on earth) with regards to the interpretation of the Bible? If two Protestants disagree on an interpretation of a Scripture passage such as “Take, eat, this is my Body…” who would have the final authority to say who is right? Who has the final authority to tell us what the essentials are, let alone give us the correct understanding of the essentials?
It depends…some Protestants recognize a final authority and some do not. I believe that JonNC (Lutheran) is a Protestant/evangelical Catholic poster here who recognizes a final authority. I do not. As such, if the disagreement is between Jon and myself, there is no final authority that either of us could appeal to, as we do not share a recognition wrt such an authority. Both he and I will, however, appeal to the scriptures (as we recognize the same scriptures) and history (as we both view history as a valid discipline) to make our respective cases ( and mine, of course, is the vastly superior caseI would like to pose this question for our Protestant brothers and sisters. I am not posing this question for debate reasons (though I won’t refrain from discussing with the posters), but I am posing this question to get an understanding of where you’re coming from.
Who has the final authority (on earth) with regards to the interpretation of the Bible? If two Protestants disagree on an interpretation of a Scripture passage such as “Take, eat, this is my Body…” who would have the final authority to say who is right?
again, it is as described above.Who has the final authority to tell us what the essentials are, let alone give us the correct understanding of the essentials?
That’s where the issue lies. Disagreements on something as essential as authority. This practice has never been the way God “ran” things in the past. Exodus 18 is a great example of a need for authority and how God “ran” things.It depends…some Protestants recognize a final authority and some do not.
Jon is the most “Roman Catholic” Protestant I have ever encountered.I believe that JonNC (Lutheran) is a Protestant/evangelical Catholic poster here who recognizes a final authority.
Wouldn’t you say that for you, the final authority would be you? Your interpretation of Scripture and history would be the final authority, no?I do not.
[15]"If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother.As such, if the disagreement is between Jon and myself, there is no final authority that either of us could appeal to, as we do not share a recognition wrt such an authority.
Appealing to Scriptures and history really boils down to interpretation. If you are interpreting it to your liking, then you are the final authority, right?Both he and I will, however, appeal to the scriptures (as we recognize the same scriptures) and history (as we both view history as a valid discipline) to make our respective cases ( and mine, of course, is the vastly superior case)
Do you really believe that this is the way God intended for us Christians to be? To adhere to private interpretations? Even humans recognize that there is a need for authority. Authority is everywhere because it is necessary in keeping order.again, it is as described above.
=lyrikal;8450088]I would like to pose this question for our Protestant brothers and sisters. I am not posing this question for debate reasons (though I won’t refrain from discussing with the posters), but I am posing this question to get an understanding of where you’re coming from.
Hi lyrikal,Who has the final authority (on earth) with regards to the interpretation of the Bible? If two Protestants disagree on an interpretation of a Scripture passage such as “Take, eat, this is my Body…” who would have the final authority to say who is right? Who has the final authority to tell us what the essentials are, let alone give us the correct understanding of the essentials?
The Bible says take it to the Church. That’s what the 7 great ecumenical councils were all about.Please feel free to give Scripture passages/Patristics/Councils to back up your claim.
Thank you, Jon. Hopefully, Radical will understand your position better. You hold the 7 great councils as binding and authoritative, no?Hi lyrikal,
For a Lutheran, it is the Church, and the basis is the Lutheran Confessions. Historically, it was (and ought to be again) the councils unified Bishops, which we do not have currently, and therefore cannot have a truly ecumenical council.
As for the Eucharist, there is no debate for Lutherans. We believe it is the real and substantial body and blood of Christ. To deny this is not to be Lutheran.
The Bible says take it to the Church. That’s what the 7 great ecumenical councils were all about.
Jon
I thought Itwin was spot on.Thank you for your answer. In my opinion, your answer has been the most honest answer of all so far.
God also had burnt offerings from Adam through to Jesus. Things can change. Also, please keep in mind that it was God’s will that his children not have a king to rule over them. They demanded and God relented by appointing Saul. That amounted to a rejection of God as their king. At the time I suppose that the children of Israel could say exactly what you have said here: authority is needed and you gave us Moses as a leader before.Disagreements on something as essential as authority. This practice has never been the way God “ran” things in the past. Exodus 18 is a great example of a need for authority and how God “ran” things.
true thatJon is the most “Roman Catholic” Protestant I have ever encountered.
well, from that perspective, isn’t “you” the final authority for everyone? Didn’t YOU, by either YOUR blind faith or YOUR personal interpretation of Scripture and history determine that, for YOU, YOU would follow the official teaching of the CC? My determination is a continuing process. Your determination, unless you revisit it, is a past accomplishment.Wouldn’t you say that for you, the final authority would be you? Your interpretation of Scripture and history would be the final authority, no?
and? Do you not understand that Protestants (of all stripes) put this passage into practice quite a bit?Matt 18:15-18
At that council some apostles (but not all) were in attendance. Apostles had an authority not possessed by others and so a council with apostles in attendance would have authority not possessed by other councils (w/o apostles)I would also refer you to Acts 15. There was a dispute but they didn’t figure it out on their own; rather, the Church held a council.
for myself, yes…as are you regarding yourself…Appealing to Scriptures and history really boils down to interpretation. If you are interpreting it to your liking, then you are the final authority, right?
you are missing my point…in a discussion with Jon, we both can only appeal to authorities that the other also recognizes…I listed the things Jon and I share.Also, I highly doubt that Jon refers to history… as merely a valid discipline. I think he regards them as authoritative and binding on Christians.
are you aware that until the beginning of the third century, no Christian text uses the term priest (hiereus/sacerdos) directly to designate a particular individual or group of ministers within the Church? The “priests” who conducted sacrifices in the early Church were only found at the temple in Jerusalem.Now you mentioned history as a “valid discipline”. Are you aware that historical Christianity (Patristics) saw a hierarchy of Bishops, Priests, Deacons, and Laymen?
yah, “that all the way back to the apostles” thing is debatable at best. I recommend that you read Sullivan’s From Apostles to Bishops. Sullivan is a Catholic historian who believes in Apostolic Succession, but feels forced to admit that it is a thing that rests on faith and not the evidence of the NT or the first ECFs.Also, they only recognized valid teachings, valid sacraments (with the exception of Baptism), valid Bishops, valid Church with those who have Apostolic Succession who can trace their Bishopric all the way to the Apostles.
and so do you…I highly doubt you recognize any of these. That is why I say that you are the final authority. You determine which traditions/councils you like and throw the ones you don’t like away.
The CC isn’t anyone’s final authority, really. Your decision to submit to it is the final authorityThe Bible isn’t anyone’s final authority, really. The interpretation of it is the final authority.
we understand the error to be tragically obvious.We recognize the Patristics/Tradition/Councils as a guide to helping us understand the Bible and what God is trying to communicate to us. We understand Tradition to be the oral Word of God and we understand the Councils to be guided by the Holy Spirit so Ecumenical Councils cannot err.
God intended for us to be part of a community of believers led by the Holy Spirit.Do you really believe that this is the way God intended for us Christians to be? To adhere to private interpretations?
How does this differ from the OT where the Israelites thought it was necessary for them to have a king?Even humans recognize that there is a need for authority. Authority is everywhere because it is necessary in keeping order.
yep…if I understood you correctly, you read a previous thread where Pneuma07 and I discussed things…here is another thread with him where we discussed Church governanceCan you provide Scripture, Tradition, and/or Councils that back up the claims that you’re making?
Ginger if a catholic does not believe in all the teachings of the Catholic Church then he/she is not a Catholic at all… if a catholic protests against anything that the Church Teaches then he/she is really a “protestant” in the Catholic Church.The Holy Spirit is our guide on Earth.
John 16:13 Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, [that] shall he speak: and he will shew you things to come.
Now before you ask why do some Protestants believe different things, I would suggest it is for the same reason some Catholics don’t believe everything the RC teaches.
Thank you, Radical, for your response.I thought Itwin was spot on.
God also had burnt offerings from Adam through to Jesus. Things can change. Also, please keep in mind that it was God’s will that his children not have a king to rule over them. They demanded and God relented by appointing Saul. That amounted to a rejection of God as their king. At the time I suppose that the children of Israel could say exactly what you have said here: authority is needed and you gave us Moses as a leader before.
true that
well, from that perspective, isn’t “you” the final authority for everyone? Didn’t YOU, by either YOUR blind faith or YOUR personal interpretation of Scripture and history determine that, for YOU, YOU would follow the official teaching of the CC? My determination is a continuing process. Your determination, unless you revisit it, is a past accomplishment.
and? Do you not understand that Protestants (of all stripes) put this passage into practice quite a bit?
At that council some apostles (but not all) were in attendance. Apostles had an authority not possessed by others and so a council with apostles in attendance would have authority not possessed by other councils (w/o apostles)
At that council, Paul and Barnabas and a few believers attended from one church and they reported to the congregation, the elders and the apostles of the other church. Only two Churches were involved. The whole congregation of one of the two churches was involved…if Acts 15 is the template, then it hasn’t been followed very well…Where were the apostles and the congregations at the subsequent councils. You should know that someone claiming to be a successor of an apostle hardly serves as a replacement for an apostle (IMHO). BTW, did Acts 15 establish a precedent for ruling on only matters of behavior…church discipline?.. or do you believe that it dealt with a matter of doctrine? Also, is there any thing in Acts 15 to suggest that the practice was imbedded in stone and could not be revisited?
for myself, yes…as are you regarding yourself…
you are missing my point…in a discussion with Jon, we both can only appeal to authorities that the other also recognizes…I listed the things Jon and I share. are you aware that until the beginning of the third century, no Christian text uses the term priest (hiereus/sacerdos) directly to designate a particular individual or group of ministers within the Church? The “priests” who conducted sacrifices in the early Church were only found at the temple in Jerusalem.
yah, “that all the way back to the apostles” thing is debatable at best. I recommend that you read Sullivan’s From Apostles to Bishops. Sullivan is a Catholic historian who believes in Apostolic Succession, but feels forced to admit that it is a thing that rests on faith and not the evidence of the NT or the first ECFs.
and so do you…
The CC isn’t anyone’s final authority, really. Your decision to submit to it is the final authority
we understand the error to be tragically obvious.
God intended for us to be part of a community of believers led by the Holy Spirit.
How does this differ from the OT where the Israelites thought it was necessary for them to have a king?
yep…if I understood you correctly, you read a previous thread where Pneuma07 and I discussed things…here is another thread with him where we discussed Church governance
God bless you
I think that you need to consider that Jesus was saying this to his apostles at the time, and was referring to pentecost. The way I understand it he is ensuring that his Church will always be guided by the Holy Spirit (which it is). Go with the Church, which is guided by the Holy Spirit, and you can’t go wrong. That doesn’t mean that the Holy Spirit doesn’t also speak to us individually. But when you decide “I’m just going to listen to the spirit and not the Church” and deliberately start teaching things that go against the Church, claiming to be led by the Holy Spirit, you can be sure that doesn’t come from the Holy Spirit but from your own pride. The Spirit does not create disunity, but only unity.The Holy Spirit is our guide on Earth.
John 16:13 Howbeit when he, the Spirit of truth, is come, he will guide you into all truth: for he shall not speak of himself; but whatsoever he shall hear, [that] shall he speak: and he will shew you things to come.
Now before you ask why do some Protestants believe different things, I would suggest it is for the same reason some Catholics don’t believe everything the RC teaches.
that thread isn’t precisely on topic, but it does touch on a number of relevant passages, doctrines etc.Thank you, Radical, for your response.
To be fair, I will refrain from responding to this post until I have read your exchange with Pneuma07 in it’s entirety. I am only on page 3 but I’m not sure when I’ll be able to finish.![]()
good, very good. Thanks…though it signals that winter is about here.By the way, how was your Canadian Thanksgiving?
accepted, but I didn’t think an apology was necessary…I would love to be able to have coffee with you on a regular basis…I doubt that the conversation would ever be dull (though you should know that I am way too old and set in my ways to be able to “get” rap…my daughters have given up trying). Anyway, your tone is not bad at all (considering that I am often telling you that your cherished beliefs are unfortunate, misguided and flat out wrong… dealing with someone that views things very differently from oneself is frustrating at times, fun at times, educational at times…and might just be a good experience for someone possibly headed to the priesthood).Lastly, I want to apologize to you sincerely for having a harsh tone with you at times. I’m wiling to bet that we would get along well if we sat down and had a cup of tea/coffee together. Anyway, please accept my apology.
Sounds very much like Satan: God isn’t my and our (fallen angels) final authority it is your decision to submit to him. Amazing how much pride runs amongst humans much like the fallen angels and the father of pride: Satan.The CC isn’t anyone’s final authority, really. Your decision to submit to it is the final authority