G
GKC
Guest
Only if you read the book(s).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?![]()
GKC
Only if you read the book(s).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?![]()
Wait, what?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 think the reference is to AbideWithMe’s ailing mother. I don’t know why GKC said:Wait, what?
Did I miss something?
I certainly hope she’s OK.
Originally Posted by GKC
Maybe GKC can explain.I doubt that PR can see that.

I think she has me blocked.I think the reference is to AbideWithMe’s ailing mother. I don’t know why GKC said:
Maybe GKC can explain.![]()
Thank you.I think she has me blocked.
GKC
I am studying the Borgia right now (a rabbit trail from Savonarola). It might even fit in the thread! Seems like part of the fuss…Only if you read the book(s).
GKC
Tomi this phrase has been sticking in my mid for a couple of days. I started to make assumptions about what you might mean by “demonstably lower level” then realized it might be better to ask.Well…Anytime you have a sole pastor and other leaders at a demonstrably lower level, you have an episcopal model.
Got a book on the Borgias I was looking at last night.I am studying the Borgia right now (a rabbit trail from Savonarola). It might even fit in the thread! Seems like part of the fuss…
. See CCC91-92]“Ye have an unction from the Holy One, and ye know all things”. The “ye” is all the "little children "he mentions all thru out the epistle so it is not to other elders as some try to imply. Here is my quote from another thread that is appropo: "Absolutely but if we go to far with the dichotomizing (individual vs “Body’ Church) we may abrogate the dignity and newness of those middle wall of partitions being torn down and the veil being torn in two. It does say neighbor will *not *need to teach his neighbor, that He, the Almighty, will write the law on the heart of the believer, and (as Augustine says, He, Jesus, the Holy Spirit, will teach us), even illumine every member of the ecclesia, forbearing teachers and prophets and apostles and healers, etc… It is a new dispensation, where He will pour out His spirit upon all flesh , a new covenant.”…So, it is both individual and corporate and am careful not to diminish any member of the ecclesia. It is not just the church in a corporate sense if taken in context. It is “whosoever” is in the Body. John speaks to you and me as individuals as part of the ecclesia. He does not say the Church sets you straight . He does not say the magisterium sets you straight . They could not set straight those that departed from the church and consequently I say it is not the ultimate reason for those staying in it. He says the Holy One sets you straight (again forbearing the giftings and offices we may have as indicated in other scriptures).1Jo 2:20 But you have an anointing from the Holy One, and all of you know the truth.
Tell me, benhur, how do you interpret this?
Was John talking in an absolute sense? What is the anointing?
If that means that Christians (who have an anointing) know all the truth, taken in an absolute sense, as you seem to be implying, that means that MANY Christians are being dishonest in denying some truth or another, since they are in disagreement about many doctrines.
[The Church interprets this passage in a communal, corporate sense, as in the *sensus fidei
Four modelsTomi this phrase has been sticking in my mid for a couple of days. I started to make assumptions about what you might mean by “demonstably lower level” then realized it might be better to ask.
Would these be like pastors in training? Pastors with less expereince?
I am flummoxed. What odds? What race?Got a book on the Borgias I was looking at last night.
GKC
And while we are at it.I am flummoxed. What odds? What race?
Do you think leggings will make a comeback? I think they have never left.
We have not touched on the absence of teaching authority in the Catholic Church in the late medieval era, and the prevalence of multitudinous views that the Magisterium was silent on. People did not know where the teaching authority lay, whether with the monastarys, the universities, or where. Some of this was because of the aftereffects of the time of the pope and anti-pope and the papal concern for earthly power, but another whole effect was the real abandonment of any sort of guidance of the church in terms of teaching.
Comments? I would dearly love to hear your approach to ankle and calf tattoos in coordination with capris-length leggings. Or maybe not. And, of course, their bearing on the Reformation.
Is there a book on that?I am flummoxed. What odds? What race?
Do you think leggings will make a comeback? I think they have never left.
We have not touched on the absence of teaching authority in the Catholic Church in the late medieval era, and the prevalence of multitudinous views that the Magisterium was silent on. People did not know where the teaching authority lay, whether with the monastarys, the universities, or where. Some of this was because of the aftereffects of the time of the pope and anti-pope and the papal concern for earthly power, but another whole effect was the real abandonment of any sort of guidance of the church in terms of teaching.
Comments? I would dearly love to hear your approach to ankle and calf tattoos in coordination with capris-length leggings. Or maybe not. And, of course, their bearing on the Reformation.
We do not think that what is given by God is revoked because people refuse to embrace and use the gift. Corruption does not invalidate the authentic, anymore than Judas’ betrayal of his office can invalidate the reality of the offices of the other Apostles.We have not touched on the absence of teaching authority in the Catholic Church in the late medieval era, and the prevalence of multitudinous views that the Magisterium was silent on.
That’s vastly overstated. The authority conflicts were mostly administrative, not doctrinal, and when there were doctrinal controversies (like John XXII’s view on the Beatific Vision) they were pretty rarefied and were resolved relatively quickly. The major exception was the Immaculate Conception, but it wasn’t as if that couldn’t have been resolved. The papacy did not weigh in on it, and the one Council that did was a schismatic one.We have not touched on the absence of teaching authority in the Catholic Church in the late medieval era, and the prevalence of multitudinous views that the Magisterium was silent on. People did not know where the teaching authority lay, whether with the monastarys, the universities, or where. Some of this was because of the aftereffects of the time of the pope and anti-pope and the papal concern for earthly power, but another whole effect was the real abandonment of any sort of guidance of the church in terms of teaching.
Very good explanation. Still, there is a conceptual distinction which I think is unjustified. It isn’t, in my view, that the classical Protestant view is outright heretical so much as that it’s unnecessarily cumbersome. You have to introduce a lot of “epicycles” in order to avoid antinomian conclusions. This doesn’t automatically make the position false, but it does raise the question of whether all this is really necessary.
- There is no separation between justification and sanctification. Those who are justified become sanctified, those who get sanctified were justified. We use the two terms analytically but experientially there is no separation. It is not “Tuesday you got J, Wednesday morning you begin S”. Justification is the initial step in a process. 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.
It’s not a myth. No one, of course, encourages such behavior, but in some Baptist circles this is the conclusion. It’s a result of tearing perseverance of the saints out of its original Reformed context. If you believe that a person can be born again by an act of the free will (free in a “libertarian” sense), and that such a person’s salvation is then assured, it seems to follow that (however deplorably) a person could then choose to live an ungodly life, die, and go to heaven. In my experience, Baptists (of the “eternal security but not Calvinism” persuasion) waver between something like the Reformed position (believers won’t want to sin) and genuine antinomianism. But some do in fact bite the bullet and say that being born again is no guarantee of a righteous life and that a person who chooses to live an unrighteous life will “lose their reward” but will still go to heaven. One claim I’ve commonly heard in fundamentalist Baptist circles is that a sinful believer will be punished by temporal death (this seems to result from OT passages about death as the consequence of sin).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 think the Reformation CONTINUES to have negative ramifications on Christianity as a whole, and Catholics in particular; therefore making it of significant importance in the 21st Century.I continually see threads here on the Reformation and its issues. It’s like if hubby and I had a fight thirty years ago and he keeps bringing it up, even though he and I both agreed, then, that the issues were settled. Both Catholics and Protestants (uh, western, non-Catholic Christians) have moved along from what happened 500 years ago. Why are people dealing with it as if we are frozen in time and nothing has happened since then?
I find in this presumption and a bizarre twist on ‘once saved, always saved’ only at the corporate level. God took away Israel and Judah because of their sins, and he took away the Levitical priesthood. Jerusalem was destroyed in 70 AD. Why do you think God would spare the papacy?We do not think that what is given by God is revoked because people refuse to embrace and use the gift.
Corruption does not invalidate the authentic, anymore than Judas’ betrayal of his office can invalidate the reality of the offices of the other Apostles.
Agreed. But this knife slices in more than one direction.Truth is not defined by those who depart from it.
Like the effect on fashions in ladies’ hats? Historians have not spent much attention on this aspect, IMHO.but, if you wish, we can certainly delve into any and everything that relates to the Reformational “fuss”.
What I said lines up with what I have read, so I think you may be overstating how vastly I have overstated. I believe you will agree that there were competing authorities, with the University of Paris, for example, being looked to. I will back up to the extent of saying that it was a complex situation, one that may no longer be apprehendable by us. Many (Erasmus, for example) were calling for reformation (although he himself did not cross the Danube, or the Rhine, or whatever). The Greek texts had arrived from the east and there was some consternation in their discovery: is THIS what the Church teaches?That’s vastly overstated. The authority conflicts were mostly administrative, not doctrinal, and when there were doctrinal controversies (like John XXII’s view on the Beatific Vision) they were pretty rarefied and were resolved relatively quickly. The major exception was the Immaculate Conception, but it wasn’t as if that couldn’t have been resolved. The papacy did not weigh in on it, and the one Council that did was a schismatic one.
There was a vast, overwhelming consensus on doctrine, and the authority of the Pope was accepted–the question was precisely how that authority interacted with other authorities. Again, you’re blowing things out of proportion in order to create a false comparison with the doctrinal chaos of Protestantism. And you’re assuming, as you do throughout, that the Catholic position requires absolute, cookie-cutter unanimity. Just because some silly people on the Internet talk this way doesn’t justify you in ignoring the nuanced work on authority that has been produced by good Catholic theologians and by official Church organs such as Vatican II.
Edwin