Code:
No. Neither was he blowing hot air when he warned leaders what He would do to them, or when Israel went into exile, etc.
At least we are in agreeement on that point. However, the New Covenant was established differently, and He did not give authority to the Church in a conditional way. Individuals can fall away from the faith, but the Church cannot fall, because He is her Head.
Those who fall from grace pay a terrible and eternal price, but the office that they occupy remains. “Until the end of the Age” means the Church age. Those structures that were put in place by Christ will remain until there is no longer a need for the pilgrim Chuch on earth, because she has been taken up to heaven.
The popes forced men to choose between God and themselve in demanding obedience in the face of their most heinous acts. They set up a system where they were unanswerable to anyone on earth, and acted it out in defiance of God and man. As you yourself said, they lost sight. The apostolic deposit is one of truth, which they abandoned. They forfeited the deposit, did they not?
They forfeited the deposit for themselves. We are not able to judge anyone’s soul, but we can certainly judge them by their fruits, and it does not appear that many of them were in a position to be united with the imperishable inheritance kept undefiled for them in heaven.
But their lack of adherance to the deposit of faith does not invalidate that deposit any more that Judas forfeiting his calling invalidated his office. The deposit of faith was made to the Church, and it is held infallibly in the Church by the Holy Spirit. This was Christ"s promise, and He has kept it.
Is God not free to judge them? Were they free to do good or evil, and they rejected the holy, or rather turned it to their own sordid ends? Yet you maintain they have carte blanche to commit utmost evil until the end of time and not possibly lost their authority.
I think it is quite clear that they lost their credibility to rule authoritatively. Because they did not walk the walk, a huge rebellion occured which has fractured the Church (and is still doing so).
What was not lost was the gifts and call of God, which are irevocable. Their refusal to participate in His plan does not invalidate the plan. Jesus created an authorative structure for His Church. Those who rebel against it cannot make that which is immutable go away.
What is wrong with this picture?
That you are unable to separate the fallible people from the infallible Church.
He did not say how or when, or through whom.
I guess we read the New Testament very differently.
But I do understand why you cannot accept what is written from the point of view of those who wrote it. If one acknowledged that Jesus was clear about the how, when, and through whom, one could not, in good conscience, remain separated from what He put into place.
Not a fiction. Not rebellion. Being forced between God and man, we chose God. What did the Catholics choose?
There are two problems with this. One is that it is no longer a choice between “God and man”, since we have had a century of holy popes, so the conditions that existed cannot validly be used to continue the sin of separation.
Second, one of the unfortunate sequalae of the Reformation is that the nature of the Church was redefined, and the Apostolic understanding of it was lost to our separated brethren. Faithful Catholics always choose the Church founded by Christ, because despite however many Judases have come and gone, we know that there is no salvation outside of her, His most holy bride.
Code:
You keep saying that, but that does not make it so. The reference to Israel in Romans is to the Jews, not to the Catholic Church.
The reference is about the gifts and the call of God. Besides, in saying this principle only applies to “the Jews” then you are invalidtating your own argument. You are trying to compare the CC to faithless Jewish leaders whose authority was removed from them for corruption and disobedience, and yet you affirm that the promises that God made to the Jews as a people are still valid?
Either you believe Jesus meant what He said, or you don’t. It appears that you do not.
Matt 28:18-20
“
All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, to the close of the age.”
Whenever we see “therefore” in Scripture it is important to look and see what it is there for. In this case, it references the authority in which Jesus is sending the Apostles. He gives them authority to adminster sacraments and to teach. He promises to be with them
until the end of the age.
You are free to reject the Apostolic faith, commited once for all to the Church.
Luke 10:16
16 “He who hears you hears me, and he who rejects you rejects me, and he who rejects me rejects him who sent me.”
Jesus’ Word, and the authority of the Father, are not changed by the actions of those who throw away the duties to which they were appointed.