P
PRmerger
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We have?We have discussed the “conditional” aspect of this, to which John also attests or qualifies somewhat.
Could you please clarify?
Who is excluded from the “all”?
We have?We have discussed the “conditional” aspect of this, to which John also attests or qualifies somewhat.
can’t beat her visual attachments either. Do you have a thank you bow PR ?I agree. She is one of my favorite posters as well.
posts # 711,736, 738, 743 touch upon it a bit, as does John in his epistle.We have?
Could you please clarify?
Who is excluded from the “all”?
You’ll need to be more specific. Which epistle?Not just the magisterium but all "little children " in the Body share this unction, per John’s epistle
Do you not agree that the concept of penal substitution is what lays the groundwork for this separation between justification and sanctification?“raises arched eyebrow.” Oh?
I understand that. In Catholic theology, and in scripture, the two are inseparably entwined. In order to be “finally” justified, we need to be sanctified. We need that holiness “without which it is impossible to see God.”
I have met quite a few. Most non-denoms have never had any. “Bible Church’s” don’t see the episcopal structure either.Let’s see…I may be one of the few who would support the removal of episcopal governance, or at least argue in favor of it. How many members does CAF have?
Yay! I love a good debate.We haven’t argued about this, and it wasn’t on the List.
Let 'er roll.
Of course I agree. I am just making the point that 1500 years of Sacred Tradition regarding the role of the episkopos was thrown out, in order to get rid of the corruption. Men are always in need of reform, but the doctrines are not. I note that the Eastern Church, which has not suffered what we in the West have with the Reformation, still retain the Apostolic structure of the bishopric.Code:Mr. Guanophore, I am surprised at you taking such a bald and non-nuanced position. I find a lack of cause and effect between the stated desire and the stated action: correlation is not causation. They DID want an end to corrupt bishops. They looked at the NT and the early church documents to see what was going on then.
What “organizational problem” was that?Catholic scholars will agree that in the beginning episcopos (overseer) and presbyter (older man) were interchangeable - one term related to function, the other to description. As time went on, the episcopos became more the lead pastor, the Bishop, to use its descendant term, over his fellow elders, until it was marked as a separate office. As the church grew it solved the organizational problem by having bishops over bishops, and patriarchs over the bishops.
I am sure that the effort to return to the earliest, pure model was motivated by a desire to return to purity and eliminate corruption. I fear that much was lost in the process.Code:What Presbyterians have done is a return to the earliest model, wherein the pastor is one of a group of fellow-elders, some of whom are full-time and some are not.
Actually the two methods are not contradictory. All of the ordained come out of parishes where they are encouraged and put forward for the discernment of a vocation. Many parishes support their members during seminary and pastoral training. There are a lot of factors involved in the imposition of Holy Orders “from the outside”, and during the Renaissance and Middle Ages there was a conflation with secular power. Fortunately the CC has forbidden those who are ordained from holding secular office, which prevents the kinds of abuses that precipitated the Reformation.We see the election of elders from among the congregation, not imposition from outside, and we see preaching and teaching and leading as their primary duties, with the sacraments secondary, in line with the Reformed understanding of the Word as primary.
Well, we read it differently.Let me point to Justin Martyr in his Apology, where in the description of a church service there is an entire absence of terms such as priest, sacrifice, transubstationary language; instead we have a ‘president’ of the meeting. It is POSSIBLE he is describing a Catholic Mass, but to my mind some of the elements critical to today’s understanding of what the Mass is are simply missing.
Oh. I guess that is on my List.![]()
Not to interject, but I wouldn’t think so. Strict Arminians also separate the ordo salutis into justification and sanctification, and distinguish between the two. They (historically) have denied penal substitution.Do you not agree that the concept of penal substitution is what lays the groundwork for this separation between justification and sanctification?
Therein lies the rub. Whatever theological differences exist between Catholics and Lutherans (and the Orthodox), they are important but nigh irrelevant compared to ecclesiology. It isn’t justification.Of course I agree. I am just making the point that 1500 years of Sacred Tradition regarding the role of the episkopos was thrown out, in order to get rid of the corruption. Men are always in need of reform, but the doctrines are not. I note that the Eastern Church, which has not suffered what we in the West have with the Reformation, still retain the Apostolic structure of the bishopric.
As an aside, the East would probably argue that the penal substitution theory was just an erroneous outgrowth (by St. Anselm) that was a natural conclusion of the already erroneous satisfaction view held by the Latin church.Do you not agree that the concept of penal substitution is what lays the groundwork for this separation between justification and sanctification?
I have three problems with this.Do you not agree that the concept of penal substitution is what lays the groundwork for this separation between justification and sanctification?
Well…Anytime you have a sole pastor and other leaders at a demonstrably lower level, you have an episcopal model. Many Baptist pastors would be quite startled to discover they are following an episcopal model of church government, something they would indict if they preached on church government.I have met quite a few. Most non-denoms have never had any. “Bible Church’s” don’t see the episcopal structure either.
Going from one small church or a few groups of churches to a huge number of churches. The resolution they employed was a furtherance of the episcopal model, which meant more and more power was concentrated in the hands of a few, who became rivals in many cases.What “organizational problem” was that?
They might have a lot to say that would not be favorable. Bear in mind Protestants consider that St. Peter’s was built with plunder from Germany (indulgences, for one).Yes, we are in agreement that the structure and function did evolve. The small mustard seed that has become the largest tree can hardly be recognized. I wonder what the Apostles would say if they visited the Vatican?![]()
I guess it is all settled then.However, it is clear in reading the early documents that nothing valid was done apart from the Bishop. The bishop, from the beginning, was the successor to the Apostles and the visible sign of unity.
I think we have all lost a lot.I am sure that the effort to return to the earliest, pure model was motivated by a desire to return to purity and eliminate corruption. I fear that much was lost in the process.
A reform I applaud.Actually the two methods are not contradictory. All of the ordained come out of parishes where they are encouraged and put forward for the discernment of a vocation. Many parishes support their members during seminary and pastoral training. There are a lot of factors involved in the imposition of Holy Orders “from the outside”, and during the Renaissance and Middle Ages there was a conflation with secular power. Fortunately the CC has forbidden those who are ordained from holding secular office, which prevents the kinds of abuses that precipitated the Reformation.![]()
Well, we read it differently.![]()
What Catholic distinctive is there in what Justin wrote that is not found among Lutherans or the Reformed? How can you demonstrate it was specifically Catholic? Or was that a time when we could all have happily worshiped together?To us it is the perfect pattern and description of the modern Mass, which evolved out of the Synagogue service.
Actually the assumptions I have made about you are not relevant to the statement, since it was not directed to you. That being said, I am delighted you have chosen to respond.Code:I have three problems with this.
- There is an assumption that I am Reformed therefore I am all atwitter about penal substitution
Would it not be reasonable to state that Jesus has provided us with all that we need to know to get us to heaven? I would advance the argument that the nature and process of salvation is the single most important part of His teaching. Although I can concede that we can’t know everything, I think we can know sufficiently to navigate our course in this life into the next. Otherwise, would not his mission have been a failure?Code:I am not sure we know enough, given the analogical nature of revelation and what we have, that we can really come down to one singular solution. We approach the Atonement kerygmatically primarily, not analytically. A lot happened. We know a lot. We don't know everything.
This is certainly the staunch Calvanistic position.
- There is no separation between justification and sanctification. Those who are justified become sanctified, those who get sanctified were justified.
Perhaps I am choosing poor words to make my point. Could we agree that a person is not sanctified until one is justified?Code:We use the two terms analytically but experientially there is no separation.
By “separation” I mean that justification is a once for all “step” that cannot be repeated, or undone.It is not “Tuesday you got J, Wednesday morning you begin S”. Justification is the initial step in a process.
NOt sure if I am followig this analogy. Perhaps I am impaired as a baker of homemade loaves. To me the end piece is still part of the loaf.A poor analogy is to say that the end piece in a loaf of bread is the end piece, so it is not part of the loaf. The terms mean different things, but we use them for analysis.
Both things are true. It is a myth, and there are those who believe it, teach it, ,pray it, and practice it, I am sorry to say. It is an unfortunate sequalae of the doctrine of the perseverance of the saints. That particular part of the TULIP has bitten us in the hinder regions.Code:I don't know if it is myth that there are those running around who say that if you say the sinner's prayer you get a ticket to heaven and you can party like the devil until you drop dead.
I am relieved to hear that this particular aspect of the Apostolic faith, at least, has been preserved.Everywhere I have been they would rebuke you soundly for that. Presbyterian sermons have a reputation for beseeching the sinner to turn from his wicked ways, not comfort the saved in their assurance.
No wedge intended, just an observation that Calvin’s view placed justification as a single event, where the Apostolic faith holds differently.
- I see your statement as a non sequitor. No, I don’t agree, because I do not see a separation. There is no crack to drive a wedge in.
And not just the plunder of Germany, ,but of all of Europe. But I was not speaking of buildings, or even of corruption among the medieval clerics, but rather, of the episkopal structure that has evolved.They might have a lot to say that would not be favorable. Bear in mind Protestants consider that St. Peter’s was built with plunder from Germany (indulgences, for one).
Yes. For those who have retained the Apostolic faith, it is a matter of holding fast to what we received, not just with regard to the role of the Bishop, but the whole deposit of faith. Although we can develop, we cannot undo, disregard, or alter that which was committed to the Church by the Apostles.Code:I guess it is all settled then.
I think that Lutherans would see the same Masst that we do, because theirs derives from the Latin Rite which reflects what Justin describes.What Catholic distinctive is there in what Justin wrote that is not found among Lutherans or the Reformed? How can you demonstrate it was specifically Catholic? Or was that a time when we could all have happily worshiped together?
1John 2:20You’ll need to be more specific. Which epistle?
1Jo 2:20 But you have an anointing from the Holy One, and all of you know the truth.Not just the magisterium but all "little children " in the Body share this unction, per John’s epistle Again if it is only magisterium that has this unction then your roots to our organic church is important. But as I state per John the unction goes deeper to every member of the Body and you are back to who is the “us”, including which church is fully resting on the unction. That is an entire new thread, just how is and is not the CC or any Church of today organically like the first church.
I doubt that PR can see that.Thanks for your work, GKC. That’s all helpful information.
PRmerger–please see GKC’s two posts.
I saw Steven Spielberg in April of this year has signed on to produce a movie on Edgardo Mortara based on Kretzer’s book. If that movie does materialize, it may behoove Catholics to be familiar enough with the story to do some Catholic “apologetics” to the friends and acquaintances who may ask about it.
I myself apologize for dropping out of this thread. I know I owe several replies to PRmerger from way back, Guanophore, and FathersKnowBest; I’m sorry for being an absentee discussion partner. I have some elderly-mom-still-living-alone responsibilities that came up; she is such a lovely person that I’ve been too heavy-hearted and preoccupied to focus my attention on the internet.
But, this has been an interesting thread, as far as I’ve read it.
Thank you for all your diligent research. I feel like I just got out of a graduate seminar. Do I have to give a book report next week?Part the first:
Back 10 days ago, the subject of the Edgardo Mortara case dropped into the thread. In it, the question was raised as to what was the presumed authority (in the source book, by Kertzer) under which the abduction of Edgardo was performed. What dogma, magisterial document, doctrine, whatever required the child to be removed (there are other points of contention that might also be raised, but I’m not gonna). Since the answer required buying a book, I offered to see what might be found. I like books.
Thank you. She is such a sweet person that it’s heartbreaking to see her lose strength and health. I know many people face these things sooner or later.I doubt that PR can see that.
And I am intimately, thoroughly, personally acquainted with elderly mom issues. No more, for over 7 years, but the loss is still there. May God give you strength.
GKC