It has the advantage of being skewed by facts rather than fiction.
I could say the same.
I thnk you already addressed this in many previous posts. You do not recognize the authority appointed by Christ, do not accept that the gifts and the call of God are present in the apostolic succession, and accept a truncated definition of the Church.
Getting your exercise by jumping to conclusions?
You presume without proof that the bishops are that authority. You have given rhetoric and little else to back this up.
You presume on my understanding of the apostolic succession. To me it is the passing on of truth, not of laying on of hands from unbeliever to unbeliever. Those who pass on truth given by God are the ones in apostolic succession. Some are in your Communion, some are not.
More than once I have said respectful things concerning your leadership. I have said God can use them. On the other hand, He once spoke through a donkey. PR would argue then that donkeys are infallible, I guess.
I do not accept ‘a truncated definition of the church’. I am not sure either that I know what you mean by that or that you do, as you have not bothered to define it.
Rejection of the Apostolic elements of the faith such as these leaves one with very little left except the principle of Sola Scriptura, which inevitably makes everyone their own authority.
Groundless silliness.
We shall know them by their fruits. The medieval Popes lost the confidence of the flock by abusing their authority.
Yes, we know them by their fruit. Thank you for setting those statements side by side.
You have proposed that God removed it from them, presumably to give it to the Reformers.
I suggested we discuss whether God
would ever remove papal authority (and I passed over the two logical precedents of whether there was ever such a thing and whether it extended into the 1400s)
All of the Reformers founded ecclesial communities that have continued to splinter and divide.
Amazing how you ignore the splits in the Catholic church, some larger and of greater duration, whether the OO, EO, the PNCC, Old Catholics, etc., which makes quite a list.
We are now further away from unity that we were at the time of the Reformation as a result.
If the pope was who you claim, then he was responsible for the split. If he was not, then Protestants were. I am not convinced Catholics have fully accepted the blame for their role or for the persecution of Protestants.
In answer to the thread topic question, that is precisely why there is “all the fuss”.
No, there is more to it than that. But I thank you for narrowing things.
