Who is My Brother?

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Eden, you would make an excellent attorney. I pick up your question as being similar to the Classical "When did you stop beating your wife? There just is no good way to answer it. When it comes to killing each other because of differences in belief, we all are guilty. To say that a partricular protestant sect was not because of not having centralized authority is at best disingenous(sp?). Any sect that had the power to condemn and execute depended on some authority whether it was a Pope, a Bishop, a local Minister, the Local Prince, or a monarch like Queen Elisabeth I. Your average everyday believer just can’t get away with it. With a single proof text and a good mind you have them on the run. Wish you were one of us.
 
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JimG:
You had referred to “1000 years” of torturing “separated brethern.” Since there were no “seperated brethren,” i.e. protestants, until the start of the reformation in the 1500’s, it seems to me that some historical perspective is in order.
Well, I should explain that. It is true that, officially, there were no Protestants until the Reformation but there were others I would say shared our beliefs, such as Wycliffe and perhaps the Waldenses, etc. At any rate, I doubt that Wycliffe would be seen as anything but separated brethren, also. Like many of the Reformers, he was a man faithful to GOD, although not perhaps to the Roman Catholic church.

But, I am sincerely sorry to learn that this was the ground of your objection. I thought you might have had the answer for me. Let me explain…

Let us, for the sake of the argument, agree. I don’t want to defend mere trifles. Let us say that the church was actively involved and sanctioning the slaughter of separated brethren for only a few hundred years. What now? Does this change the charge? Isn’t this a little like quibbling over how many people Hitler ordered to the concentration camps? Was it 2 million or 5 million? Perhaps the numbers are conflated? Perhaps they are not? What does all this matter in terms of the question of his guilt?

The same is surely the result when we speak of the question of Rome’s claim to be Christ’s church. I think I disagree with your facts but that is something of a side issue. The real matter is that the Roman Catholic church sanctioned the execution, even the torture, of those of the house of GOD, separated brethren, whom she should have loved, and according to I John, it would seem that Rome cannot be the Church of Christ which lays down HER life for the brethren, loves and feeds and cares for them. As Paul said, the eye of the Body cannot say to a hand, “I have no need of you.”

Does the true Body cut off any of its legitimate members (especially those even she later identifies as having been members)?
 
Are all protestants this ignorant of history?

It would explain much.
 
Calvin sought to persecute heretics (particularly Roman Catholics) so as to keep Protestant believers in the lands divided by the Reformation faithful to his new teachings. He viciously persecuted the Spaniard, Michael Servetus, having him burnt alive on October 27, 1553. As early as 1545, Calvin had written, “If he [Servetus] comes to Geneva, I will never allow him to depart alive.” He kept his promise.

Melancthon, one of the more mild reformers and the editor for Luther’s many works and teachings, would write to Bullinger, “I am astonished that some persons denounce the severity that was so justly used in that case.”

**Theodore of Beza **wrote: “What crime can be greater or more heinous than heresy, which sets at nought the word of God and all ecclesiastic discipline? Christian magistrates, do your duty to God [speaking in Calvin’s Geneva of 1554], who has put the sword into your hands for the honor of His majesty; strike valiantly these monsters in the guise of men.” He went on to characterize those who demanded freedom of conscience “worse than the tyranny of the pope. It is better to have a tyrant, no matter how cruel he may be, than to let everyone do as he pleases.”

Martin Luther also fanned the flames of intolerance, “Whoever teaches otherwise than I teach, condemns God, and must remain a child of hell.”

**King Henry VIII **of England, who took upon himself the role of grand royal inquisitor, took the lives of some 72,000 Catholics, many who were cruelly tortured.

Queen Elizabeth, proved herself the former’s daughter by putting to death more people in one year than the Inquisition had done in 331 years!

IT’S EASY TO POINT FINGERS.
HATE THE SIN, NOT THE SINNER.
 
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rwoehmke:
Eden, you would make an excellent attorney. I pick up your question as being similar to the Classical "When did you stop beating your wife? There just is no good way to answer it. When it comes to killing each other because of differences in belief, we all are guilty. To say that a partricular protestant sect was not because of not having centralized authority is at best disingenuous. Any sect that had the power to condemn and execute depended on some authority whether it was a Pope, a Bishop, a local Minister, the Local Prince, or a monarch like Queen Elisabeth I. Your average everyday believer just can’t get away with it. With a single proof text and a good mind you have them on the run. Wish you were one of us.
Applause.

Well said.
 
You do indeed show some ignorance of history…St Francis of Assisi actually went to the Moslems to preach Christ to them and was given safe passage by them but he was certainly laying down his life and St Maximillian Kolbe laid down his life for another in the concentration camp of Auschwitz. Mother Teresa certainly laid down her life… Selective history runs deep up and down your remarks.

If, as seem possible, you are intent on indicting the Catholic Church for past sins, then this is hardly the mark of someone who is primarily interested in truth. All humans fall short and have need of the glory of God. It happens every day and today is no different. This does not negate the truth, but shows that even those who do their best to attain it fail from time to time.

You are seperated brethren, since history plainly shows that with few exceptions, most modern n-C religions are offshoots of the Catholic Church in the 1500s and most far more recently are offshoots (schisms if you will) of each other.

If you want welcome then that is fine and I welcome you in the name of the Lord, but you have certainly couched your approach in terms that make it questionable as to your purpose.

In the words of Our Lord: (John 8:7) …He that is without sin among you, let him first cast a stone at her.
 
Eden of Mind:
Does the true Body cut off any of its legitimate members (especially those even she later identifies as having been members)?
She does when that member turns his back on Her.

Catholics call it excommunication (self or formally imposed).

The Church will go the lengths to protect, embrace and nurture any who come to Her and wish to pattern their life to the Truth of God. But those unfortunate souls who reject the Church- will not receive that same protection.
 
Ah, rwoehmke, using your analogy, which of us is being the more slippery: the proesecution or the attorney for the defense? You have accused me of using "the Classical When did you stop beating your wife? question and that there is no good way to answer it. I think you have mistaken the nature of my question for what is known as the logical fallacy of a “complex question,” which involves more than one question hidden within the overt inquiry. I am not doing this or, if you prefer, I certainly do not think that I am.

Nevertheless, there is a very easy way to resolve a complex question. You simply deny the implicit and faulty assumption first. For instance, let’s take your example. “When did you stop beating your wife?” You would simply respond, “I never have beaten my wife.” Problem solved. Now, if I am wrong and I’ve asked something that could be classified as this type of logical fallacy, then where is my faulty implicit notion?
When it comes to killing each other because of differences in belief, we all are guilty.
Please, be patient and fair with me and allow me to explain myself. To use an example, the Roman Catholic church could never be accused of having done wrong or of being corrupt in itself because some renegade priest or monk or Pope or cardinal did or said something particularly corrupt. We don’t feel, for instance, particularly tainted by the actions of King David (when he committed adultery and murdered). Why not? Because we’ve never personally advocated his practice, nor does the Bible advocate it.

If I were here pointing to the foul life of some false Roman Catholic, you would be able to make just the sort of straightforward defense you are making. The very fact that such immoral people are false in their actions is precisely what keeps the Church free of that association. But these are not at all the grounds I’m arguing. I am suggesting that these men who burned the people of GOD were not false Roman Catholics but were very good Roman Catholics, acting with a nod of approval from Rome itself. In other words, I am concerned with any church wherein a person who participates in the torture and death of a Christian brother is seen as a member in good standing who is carrying out that church’s policy.

Should we not be concerned about such a church? Should we not deny such a church?

I assume you think that, on some level, the Roman Catholic church is guilty because you have admitted as much… about all of this being indefensible and we’re all guilty of the same (which is actually a fallacy, called the tu qoque or “You do it, too” fallacy), etc. But, after all, the attempt at aiming the accusation back at Protestants of all stripes simply doesn’t work for one very important reason. If it did, I would be right there with you asking whether certain Protestant churches could be rightly deemed Christ’s church (something I’ve done with the Anglican churches and their present corruption and liberalism). I’m willing to be fair because I serve Christ first.

But, your argument continues to suffer from the lack of any precise target. You want to point to Luther or Calvin or to the insufferable wrongs perpetuated in England, which I agree falls under the same rightful censure. None of this, however, even remotely affects a number of remaining churches which have not been involved in those practices.

No matter how strange it may seem to you, personally, there is a possiblity (no matter how slight) that Rome may not be the Church established by Christ. And, if it is legitimate and reasonable to expect that the Church established by Christ will not itself sanction the murder and torture of those in the household of GOD, among the brethren of Christ, then it would follow (so far) that Rome cannot be THAT Church.

There is only one question for us, then. Is it legitimate and reasonable to assume that the Church established by Christ will not itself sanction the murder and torture of those in the household of GOD, among the brethren of Christ? If the verse I provided (which is only one of many, as I think we all know) is nothing more than a “prooftext,” then we should now repudiate the conclusion immediately above and, instead, teach that the Church established by Christ can and, indeed, rightly has sanctioned and practiced the murder and torture of her own. But, if you do agree to that and continue to say that I am using some “prooftext” about how the people of GOD will act, then I would like to see how many Roman Catholics will join you in this.

I certainly do want to remain and hear what everyone has to say on this. All are welcome and, again, I don’t think I’ve heard the last word… but I would appreciate it if concerns which are so deep for me were not simply pushed aside as though they were simple word games I’m playing.
 
Mickey, thank you for adding what you could… but, in “loving the sinner,” am I also called to love the church which sanctioned his sin?
 
Eden of Mind said:
Mickey, thank you for adding what you could… but, in “loving the sinner,” am I also called to love the church which sanctioned his sin?

Thank you for reading my meager contributions.

Doctrine does not sin–people do.

The circular reasoning that you continue to set forth in an attempt to prove that individuals who have sanctioned various actions during certain times in history, constitute the condemnation of the entire Catholic Church, is not very impressive. Good effort though. 😃
 
ChurchMilitant, good points all… many of which are in need of response. If you will, please be patient enough to listen out of concern that, just perhpas, there is a good response to what you’ve said.

I am not trying to be unfair in my representation of the Roman Catholic church. Nor am I ignorant of history along the lines that you’ve chosen to take. Nothing that I have said concerning Rome itself has anything whatsoever to do with St. Francis or any of the other countless beautiful examples of piety and service to Christ in the history of the church.

Time and again, I am told that the more wretched examples in Roman Catholic history do not really betray her because these people were not acting with her sanction. This is a fair defense to make and very true. If a man acts on his own, his immorality cannot reflect back upon Rome itself. But what do we do when a man is immoral (even by Rome’s standards) and yet he was NOT acting on his own but with the full measure of Rome’s acquiescence in his evil?

I can, personally, forgive all of the men who burned my brothers and their wives and children, who tortured and took the lives of gentle men and women of GOD whose sole offense was to carry about a Bible written in a language which Roman Catholics now agree is fine. Their deaths were not justified but I can forgive and forgive and forgive…

But, as I said to Mickey, when I love the sinner and forgive him, am I then called to forgive the church that sanctioned his activity? If you say, yes, I am called to forgive the institution, am I then required to accept that chruch’s claims to authenticity as THE church of Christ?

The Scriptures offer a resounding no. Do you have anything to offer which would reconcile your wish to say, on one hand, that these actions of the Roman church (not the people) were wrong, and on the other hand, that the Roman church is nevertheless all that Scripture says of Christ’s Church?

Does the Bride of Christ have the blood of her own sons spattered on her wedding garment?

Could she ever? Is it true that Rome is that Bride if Rome is bloody in just this sense? Is my question about a church (again, not a set of persons) really so unreasonable?

The answers I have received consistently implicitly admit to the wrongdoing and continue to demand forgiveness. But this really misses the whole point. Forgiveness is here. I do not refuse to give it. That has nothing, however, to do with the true nature of the Roman church itself.

If Rome itself errs and goes astray, can it be the true Church?
 
Eden,

I see that you posed this same question in the ask an apologist forum when you first joined. Please share with us why you are asking it in this thread when you have already received the answer to your question. What exactly is the intent here?
 
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Shiann:
She does when that member turns his back on Her.

Catholics call it excommunication (self or formally imposed).

The Church will go the lengths to protect, embrace and nurture any who come to Her and wish to pattern their life to the Truth of God. But those unfortunate souls who reject the Church- will not receive that same protection.
Thank you, Shiann. That’s a solid point to be considered. There’s only one problem. I do not disagree that the Church of Christ has the right to discipline. Indeed, she has the command to do so. She must even excommunicate some. However, given the Scripture I cited (and many others), can the Church of our LORD kill its own members or have them tortured and killed?

Excommunication is obviously not the concern. I am asking whether the true church can sanction the live burning of the brethren (with their families, including children), whether separated brethren or not?

If she can, then there are two things I don’t understand. Why is Rome now admitting this as a fault? And, secondly, if it is a good thing that was done, why is it not still in affect as Rome’s teaching on the proper recourse for these “separated brethren”?
 
Eden of Mind:
I can, personally, forgive all of the men who burned my brothers and their wives and children, who tortured and took the lives of gentle men and women of GOD whose sole offense was to carry about a Bible written in a language which Roman Catholics now agree is fine. Their deaths were not justified but I can forgive and forgive and forgive…
God bless you brother!
And I as well, will go on record to forgive all those of protestant ancestry who murdered, burned and tortured all my brothers and their wives and children.
 
Eden of Mind:
If I were here pointing to the foul life of some false Roman Catholic, you would be able to make just the sort of straightforward defense you are making. The very fact that such immoral people are false in their actions is precisely what keeps the Church free of that association. But these are not at all the grounds I’m arguing. I am suggesting that these men who burned the people of GOD were not false Roman Catholics but were very good Roman Catholics, acting with a nod of approval from Rome itself. In other words, I am concerned with any church wherein a person who participates in the torture and death of a Christian brother is seen as a member in good standing who is carrying out that church’s policy.
Any nod of approval did not come from God, Jesus or the Holy Spirit- but a man who was acting outside the Church.

And the Catholics here have agreed that this would not be a reflection of a “member in good standing”.
Should we not be concerned about such a church? Should we not deny such a church?

I assume you think that, on some level, the Roman Catholic church is guilty because you have admitted as much… about all of this being indefensible and we’re all guilty of the same (which is actually a fallacy, called the tu qoque or “You do it, too” fallacy), etc. But, after all, the attempt at aiming the accusation back at Protestants of all stripes simply doesn’t work for one very important reason. If it did, I would be right there with you asking whether certain Protestant churches could be rightly deemed Christ’s church (something I’ve done with the Anglican churches and their present corruption and liberalism). I’m willing to be fair because I serve Christ first.
So you basically condem any organized religions based on the fact that you believe they cannot perfectly carry out the wishes of God. The Holy Spirit is not able to protect the Doctrine of Faith- even from imperfect Church leaders?

Your first question was “who is my brother”. Religiously speaking it is any person who has not rejected the Truth of Christ.

All others are not your brother by their own choice.
No matter how strange it may seem to you, personally, there is a possiblity (no matter how slight) that Rome may not be the Church established by Christ. And, if it is legitimate and reasonable to expect that the Church established by Christ will not itself sanction the murder and torture of those in the household of GOD, among the brethren of Christ, then it would follow (so far) that Rome cannot be THAT Church.
But the Church did not justify the killing of brethren- and any killing done, was certainly not done ex-cathedra (infallibly).
There is only one question for us, then. Is it legitimate and reasonable to assume that the Church established by Christ will not itself sanction the murder and torture of those in the household of GOD, among the brethren of Christ?
That is true. The Church protects her members, and now even seperated brethren.
If the verse I provided (which is only one of many, as I think we all know) is nothing more than a “prooftext,” then we should now repudiate the conclusion immediately above and, instead, teach that the Church established by Christ can and, indeed, rightly has sanctioned and practiced the murder and torture of her own. But, if you do agree to that and continue to say that I am using some “prooftext” about how the people of GOD will act, then I would like to see how many Roman Catholics will join you in this.
Again, the Church never murdered and killed “her own”. Anyone who falls under this umbrella- was killed because of their willfull seperation from God. At the time, that was not only a Church sanctioned capital punishment- but often a government sanctioned capital punishment- along with treason.
 
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Mickey:
Thank you for reading my meager contributions.

Doctrine does not sin–people do.

The circular reasoning that you continue to set forth in an attempt to prove that individuals who have sanctioned various actions during certain times in history, constitute the condemnation of the entire Catholic Church, is not very impressive. Good effort though. 😃
Thank you so much for returning, Mickey and choosing to continue on with me. Where have I erred? In selecting a few individuals and using them to reflect poorly on their church? Is that what I have been on about?

Hasn’t my chief concern been that it was not merely a few individuals who did horrid things but a church that demanded it, sanctioned it, taught it and promulgated it for centuries? Does Christ’s Church (not individuals) as a whole sanction and teach and promulgate evil for centuries? Is that Rome’s teaching on the nature of the Church? I have learned that it is the opposite. Is that not true?

I am not concerned with individuals. I am concerned with the consistent activity of Chris’s Church and whether the activity of the church of Rome reflects that. At this point, it betrays it. What does that mean?

Thank you for your efforts and patience with me.
 
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stadre:
Eden,

I see that you posed this same question in the ask an apologist forum when you first joined. Please share with us why you are asking it in this thread when you have already received the answer to your question. What exactly is the intent here?
Why am I asking it again, here? Did you read the response I was given? Well, if you did, then I will simply say that I did not personally think that the good Fr. Serpa understood my question. I was sorry for this because I really did want him, personally, to answer it. I even showed it to a Roman Catholic I know and she was a bit disappointed with the response, even though she thinks there’s a hint of an answer in it and she tried her own. It was similar to some of the answers I’ve received here and, with each and every one I have been careful to respect them all by not merely denying what I’ve been graciously given but responding with solid reasons, each time, to those who troubled themselves to bother with me

That is why I took my question to these forums. It wasn’t answered and, not expecting that Fr. Serpa’s response was the only one Roman Catholics could provide, I wanted to hear what others might have to say.
 
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Mickey:
God bless you brother!
And I as well, will go on record to forgive all those of protestant ancestry who murdered, burned and tortured all my brothers and their wives and children.
Will you also go on record to say that the actions of the churches which endorsed the burning of Roman Catholics does not, of itself, preclude them from being the true Church of Christ? If you do, I cannot join you. Any church that would burn Roman Catholics is not the true Church of Christ, as described by the Apostle John.
 
Eden of Mind:
I am not concerned with individuals. I am concerned with the consistent activity of Chris’s Church and whether the activity of the church of Rome reflects that. At this point, it betrays it.
As a convert, I love reading about the Church, whether it be her history, her teachings, her saints, etc…there is no other church besides the Catholic Church that could be Christ’s Church. Of this I am sure of.

Do you have an alternative opinion?
 
Eden of Mind:
I am not concerned with individuals. I am concerned with the consistent activity of Christ’s Church and whether the activity of the church of Rome reflects that. At this point, it betrays it. What does that mean?
You have forgiven all those who you feel have wounded you and your ancestors. That is the important thing.

"Judge not, and you will not be judged; condemn not, and you will not be condemned; forgive, and you will be forgiven; **Luke **6:37

No one is asking you to accept Catholicism or join the Catholic Church. And it is doubtful that you will sour anyone against the Church with your inquiries. It is likely that you will only receive an answer that is satisfactory to you, when it is your time to meet our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.

Blessings to you on your journey!
 
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