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Prodigal_Son1
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It wasn’t necessarily on this thread and I don’t believe I said that it was.On this thread? I must have missed that.
It wasn’t necessarily on this thread and I don’t believe I said that it was.On this thread? I must have missed that.
Silly Dispensationalist Anabaptists.Forgive my denseness, but what is SDA?
I’ve had to repeat many acronyms and tried to figure them out on the boards but I can’t seem to understand this one![]()
So you were making a LITERAL distinction between what could be heard and what cannot at the specific time the original autographs were made?Speaking can be heard by all. Inspiration is between God and the author.
Okay, then where? I want to read it.It wasn’t necessarily on this thread and I don’t believe I said that it was.
One thread is closed. I think it was the ‘Sabbath’ thread.Okay, then where? I want to read it.
Well, of course! No faithful Catholic will easily be pursuaded that there are benefits in apostasy.Of course you can make a case for that Guan. It seems I have to spend half my time on CAF doing exactly that!
Unfortunately it is the Catholics to whom I have to make the case!
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You seem to be saying that the benefit of being a lapsed Catholic is that one reserves the privilege to worship God on ones own terms, instead of His. The benefit of being a lapsed Catholic is that one can use their own conscience to replace what God has revealed to the Church.Code:Lots of benefits. One gets to worship the Lord in the manner they may prefer. While following his or her informed conscience after much prayer and study and contemplation of his or her understanding of where the Holy Spirit is leading.
Do you honestly believe that there are some people that God has not called to repentance?But for an answer perhaps more to the liking of some, there is also always the chance the HS might call someone to repentence as prescribed by the CC and there is of course always Anointing of the Sick.
That is just it, Matt. When one abandons the chuch founded by Christ, to that extent such a one is no longer “in faith” or “in Christ”.But in any case always in faith with the knowledge of and hope in God’s infinite mercy for us all. Peace and God bless always.
seven day adventist. i thinkForgive my denseness, but what is SDA?
I’ve had to repeat many acronyms and tried to figure them out on the boards but I can’t seem to understand this one![]()
Yes, I agree. I think that the Catholic Church, because she has been given the gift of infallibility and the fullness of Truth does bear a greater responsiblity.Yes, of course we are all sinners, and I for one don’t expect the clergy to be without sin. The problem is, the Church claims for itself an extraordinary degree of authority, which it asserts comes directly from God. Doesn’t that come with an corresponding expectation of extraordinary goodness? When the same hierarchy which failed to protect innocents against this abuse commands that I not eat meat on certain days, under pain of eternal damnation - and wraps itself in the “unerring guidance of the Holy Spirit” - well, sorry, I’m callin’ BS!
This demonstrates your ignorance of the Catholic faith. What you have cited is not a doctrine, but a discipline.Sir, you are bearing false witness against me - not very charitable! I said that a specific doctrine was BS:
You might be able to stand by it if it were. As it is, you are just standing there by your strawman.I don’t mind being quoted at all - I stand by what I said regarding that particular doctrine.
Basically you are saying that you are unable to trust God. That He is not able to work through fallible persons to preserve His eternal truth. You are saying that your ideas are of better quality than those persons appointed by God.I have more faith in my own (God-given) fallible judgment than I do in the judgment of a hierarchy which proved itself incapable of carrying out so basic a Christian duty as protecting innocents.
The notion that a man in such an office has any authority from God to bind me to do anything is patently absurd.
Guan, we were taking about how Baptism incorporates one into the Church and no sin can erase this as the catechism teaches so a person may be considered Catholic. Not about apostacy.Well, of course! No faithful Catholic will easily be pursuaded that there are benefits in apostasy.
Do you honestly believe that there are some people that God has not called to repentance?
Do you think the teaching of the Apostles on repentance is different from the Reformed notions of it?
That is just it, Matt. When one abandons the chuch founded by Christ, to that extent such a one is no longer “in faith” or “in Christ”.
No man is infallible. I have the luxury of saying to Pastor but hold on a miniute dosen’t the Bible say this? Which in fact I never had to do, because he doesn’t preach anything but the Gospel of Jesus Christ.Then you consider anything preached by this ‘man’ to be infallible?
It is not a denomination. It is the Church all Christian Churches have roots to, as they all came through that one holy Catholic and Apostolic Church.
You keep saying different Churchs- there is and always has been one church/“one body” with different “parts”Would you care to show us different Churches in the beginning, with slight to great differences in doctrines?
How was scriptures privately interpretated by those in 35AD? Can you give examples? How about 40AD?
I do not question 1st or even 2nd hand Oral Tradition- I have mentioned that before. All Christians have access to the early writings of the Church Fathers, statements of faith, we know from the discussions in the New Testament.Scriptures themselves give great examples of things learned ONLY through the oral tradition.
Exodus 18Christ taught the People to listen to those who sat upon the chair of Moses. How did the people know what Christ was speaking about? The chair of Moses in not mentioned anywhere else in scriptures?
Luke wrote a Gospel, recording the words of Christ. Acts 20:35 tells us of something Christ said. Luke was not an eyewitness to Christ’s life. Luke writes about things spoken before Christ’s birth, the conversation between the Angel and Mary, Elizabeth and Mary, the child Jesus and Mary.
St. Paul also wrote about Jannes and Mambres, the two magicians for Pharoah. Remember, Moses’ staff, turned into a snake, ate their staffs turned into snakes. Jannes and Mambres are not written about anywhere in scriptures. The only way St. Paul could have known their names, was through oral tradition.
2Ti 3:8 Now as Jannes and Mambres resisted Moses, so these also resist the truth, men corrupted in mind, reprobate concerning the faith.
St. Paul also wrote about the rock that followed the Israelites, during the Exodus led by Moses. The rock that followed them, is not written about anywhere else in scriptures.
1Co 10:4 And all drank the same spiritual drink: (And they drank of the spiritual rock that followed them: and the rock was Christ.)
We don’t know that it was strictly an Oral Tradition or if we have just not discovered the writing.Whether one wants to admit it or not, a lot of OUR faith is based on oral tradition…
Actually I came across a cool article that is saying research is coming in that shows that the Gospels were actually written the year Jesus was Crucified and rose.Christ died, was buried, resurrected and ascended in heaven around approximately 33AD. Christians were persecuted with the penaly of death. There wasn’t a new Testament for some years, with some books written the latter part of the century, Revelations is estimated to have been written around 90 to 107AD, yet the Church not only grew, it flourished…on oral tradition.
GOD can, but HE has given us choices, a free will to distort. We have seen how corruption comes into the world - man. There were cults forming very early in Church history.Do you think God has no power over man to be able to protect His truth through the oral tradition of the Church, He Himself built?
I have never argued that a 1st or even 2nd hand account is a bad thing as far as Oral Tradition goes..If you apply reason you have got to conclude that Oral Tradition gave way to Written Tradition/Scripture - there were no printing presses until about the 1200 (I must check that - I think it was even a couple of centuries after that - can’t recall) There came a time when those inspires holy men had to write the inspired Word.
Yes that is why I was so suprised that they continued to go to the Church after they had gone to the higher ups to have them removed.I had an experience at a Parish where the priest was a fantastic preacher and had a lot of innovative ideas but both my husband and I found him too casual and relaxed - the Holy Spirit became a “she” and I sent him a couple of emails before we changed Parishes - you know Schaick nowadays people are better informed in all spheres - for example doctors can’t just give us an injection and a couple of pills and send us on our way. We read up on conditions on the internet and have informative articles in the media. We demand an explanation. If I had a really weird priest I would go to the bishop and if I got no joy I would go to the Cardinal.
No, he was a very moral man and was effectively preaching the Gospel. He went through a couple of Christmas Eve and Christmas Day services having multiple mini heart attacks. The night between Christmas Eve and Christmas Day he spent sleeping upright against a wall, ended up going into the hospital after Christmas Day and passed away within a day or 2. He had given himself to the preaching of GOD for life..Well the old man should have been put in his place. In the Catholic Church we go to Mass not for the preaching (although that is a good thing) we go for the Eucharist mainly.
We also know He was a ‘light’, a ‘door’ and a ‘cornerstone’, among other things. This does not take away from the fact that He renamed Simon Bar-Jona to ‘rock’, Cephas in Aramaic and Petros in Greek, both translated to Peter in English. To leave this out, has appearances of only using certain passages to fit a theology.Not sure about your point of the rock- we all know that Jesus is the ROCK!
Yet, all historic studies until this ‘cool’ article have shown otherwise. Even those who had disputes place the writings at a later date than the death and resurrection. This has an appearance of fitting history to a theology.Actually I came across a cool article that is saying research is coming in that shows that the Gospels were actually written the year Jesus was Crucified and rose.
A good example of ‘evidence’ that hasn’t changed anything. I’m sure you noticed that article was two years old?On a slightly different topic have you read about this?
nytimes.com/2008/07/06/world/middleeast/06stone.html
GOD can, but HE has given us choices, a free will to distort. We have seen how corruption comes into the world - man. There were cults forming very early in Church history.[/qutoe]
We know Christ chose and appointed ‘men’ over His Church. We also know He taught the people to observe and do whatsover those who sat in the seat of authority told them to do. We also know Paul wrote to ‘obey your prelates’.
Your comment almost seems like a ‘veiled’ attempt at accusing the early Church, that has survived to present day of being a cult. It’s sad that anyone would think such a thing about such a Church, especially in light of that Church preserving scriptures for us to have in our hands today. How can anyone distrust that Church, that had every opportunity to make changes in scriptures, through the mulitple copying and translations, and place all trust in the scriptures over the Church? People will say, because God can protect His written word. But, those same people doubt God’s ability to protect His ‘oral’ tradition, which was the only tradition used by Jesus, or protect His Church, which was built by Jesus. There seems to be no logic in that thinking, at least in my honest opinion.
schaick;6484307:
I disagree, in that I cannot see the ‘written’ being the unity of all when we consider the multiple interpretations, many denominations with many doctrines/teachings, all claiming guidance of the one Holy Spirit. There was one faith, one Church, of the same mind and judgment, all of the same accord, in the beginning. There was no such thing as ‘multiple’ applications of the one truth. Multiple applications does not represent the scriptural teachings of the same mind and judgment or being of the same accord.BUT HE did safe guard the Oral Tradition by having man write it down. The only way to absolutely protect the Oral tradition was to write it down. Statements of faith were written.
The above quote would confirm one faith, of the same mind and judgment, all of the same accord, as written by Paul.I believe that is why things were written down right away- codices of the Gospel circulating back and forth between church very early on- even in Paul’s time.
You too.Have a BLESSED EASTER!
No, you are saying that. I am unable to trust men.Basically you are saying that you are unable to trust God. That He is not able to work through fallible persons to preserve His eternal truth.
I do not believe they were appointed by God. They were selected by men.You are saying that your ideas are of better quality than those persons appointed by God.
It certainly does. But given a choice between listening to men who claim to speak for God, and doing my best to hear the Holy Spirit directly, I’ll trust my own "ears"every time!If you cannot trust God to preserve His Truth through fallible men, then why does that principle not apply to yourself?
(1) I do not believe they were appointed by God, and (2) I’m not a sheepWhy are you more righteous to have authority over you than the shepherds God appointed?
And our Lord calls Himself the Good Shepherd.
- I do not believe they were appointed by God, and (2) I’m not a sheep
Good point. Then for the Lord Himself, I’m a sheep! But for mere men, sorry - I’m a man.And our Lord calls Himself the Good Shepherd.
Ironically, it was what I saw on this forum which led to my falling away.I’m sad to see that you are fallen away, that is your decision. But why are you HERE?