C
Cowboy_Pete
Guest
Of course.Who is the King of kings and the Lord of lords? It is He Who instituted Baptism, and commanded that it be accomplished. The Church, being the mystical Body of Christ, simply carries out His commands. Revelation 17:14, 19:16
As a Catholic, I find this very difficult to reconcile with the counsel of Peter, who was speaking to those who believed after Jesus accompished His atonement. If their sins were gone, there would be neither the need for baptism, nor the remission of any sins.
Acts 2:38
King James Version (KJV)
Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Their sins aren’t gone. Everyone of the age of accountability sins, falls short of what God wants for us. We simply believe that our sins are our own sins, and that no one is imputed a sinful condition just because of Adam’s transgression.
Jesus gave Peter the keys - what Peter then opened, no one shut. What he shut, no one opened. Reference this to Isaiah 22:22. He then gave Peter and the eleven power over sin, in the binding and loosing authority. This is the source of the Sacrament of Reconciliation (confession). Saint Paul wrote of this authority to forgive sin in the person of Christ in 2 Corinthians 2:10.
Ah. But the Eucharist, do you believe that must be done by someone in authority, i.e. by a Catholic Priest? Or could a Hindu dispense the Eucharist?Baptisms are not authorized by the Catholic Church - they are recognized. God is the authority involved, but He uses humans to accomplish His will.
Edited to add – I see you answered that – thank you!
Do you see the communion ceremonies of various protestant sects valid as well?
Great. I think I understand now. So you do have something analogous to our authority concept and the laying down of hands, except you apply it only to communion, not to baptism. Are there other sacraments where only the Catholic and Orthodox churches can carry out?No. Jesus Christ appointed twelve Apostles and sent them forth with unprecedented authority. They passed that authority on to succeeding generations, via the laying on of hands (Book of Acts). Only Catholic and Orthodox Churches have valid Holy Orders (the ordained Preisthood). The Apostolic power to consecrate bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ was lost in the reformers’ separation from the Church.