I
Iraneaus
Guest
True words. Nicely put.
What on earth does this post mean? Lutherans have always believed in the Real Presence. It’s one of their central doctrines. if you don’t know this, you don’t know much about them.Do you doubt that your pastor has the authourity to do this? Or is this something you don’t doubt?
I ask since I am not sure how long your branch has thought this way, and when it started to, and who was the pastor who was the first one that did this thinking it would be okay to do just because he thought so.
I’m confused.
I guess not. Considering I was one. There are so many different ones though.What on earth does this post mean? Lutherans have always believed in the Real Presence. It’s one of their central doctrines. if you don’t know this, you don’t know much about them.
Edwin
Oh and I was going along so nicely agreeing with this thread until the “who broke from who” came up. I guess we will disagree on whether Rome broke from the other 4 patriarchs or the 4 patriarchs broke from Rome.Is this what your pastors teach you?? Of course Jesus started the Catholic Church. Only The Catholic Church has existed since the time of Jesus. Every other Christian Church is an offshoot of The Catholic Church. The Eastern Orthodox Church broke off from unity with The Pope in 1054. The protestant Churches were established during The Reformation, which began in 1517. Only the Catholic Church existed in the tenth century, in the fifth century, and in the first century, faithfully teaching THE DOCTRINES GIVEN BY CHRIST TO THE APOSTLES, omitting nothing. The line of popes can be traced back, IN UNBROKEN SUCCESSION, TO PETER HIMSELF. THIS IS UNEQUALED BY ANY INSTITUTION IN HISTORY. Read (2Tim2:2).
You are being misled. Constantine was a Catholic convert. He built the Church of The Holy Seplechure in Israel.
LOL.Oh and I was going along so nicely agreeing with this thread until the “who broke from who” came up. I guess we will disagree on whether Rome broke from the other 4 patriarchs or the 4 patriarchs broke from Rome.
Well, lots of ex-Catholics don’t seem to have a clue about what the Church actually teaches, do they?I guess not. Considering I was one.
Shouldn’t make a difference, though the ELCA does include groups with more low-church tendencies.There are so many different ones though.
I don’t understand it. What does his local pastor have to do with it? It’s like saying “why does your local priest believe in transubstantiation? After all, Fr. D at Immaculate Conception says that Jesus is only present in the bread and wine as He’s present in the congregation.”For instance, the M.S. claim the Pope is the anti-christ. Or did back in the day I was Protestant. I’m just asking a genuine question here. Why not answer it?
I am a Catholic.Well, lots of ex-Catholics don’t seem to have a clue about what the Church actually teaches, do they?
Shouldn’t make a difference, though the ELCA does include groups with more low-church tendencies.
I don’t understand it. What does his local pastor have to do with it? It’s like saying “why does your local priest believe in transubstantiation? After all, Fr. D at Immaculate Conception says that Jesus is only present in the bread and wine as He’s present in the congregation.”
Edwin
No, of course I didn’t understand it, because you didn’t put it this way.I am a Catholic.
Your post makes no sense.
How can a Protestant of any flavor of the day claim they have a valid Eucharist?
That is my question you are not understanding.
I used to be a Protestant for a reason. Use some critical thinking.No, of course I didn’t understand it, because you didn’t put it this way.
You used to be a Protestant. Did you go around saying “we don’t have a valid Eucharist”? It’s a bizarre question.
How can we not claim to have a valid Eucharist? Otherwise, obviously, we would stop being Protestants!
Edwin
I’m so glad someone else knows what this is like. I have seen so much convoluted Bible interpretation over the matter-- Sometimes people married other people who had been married before and got divorced. Then, after having been married to and divorced from a previously married person, they were still considered to have “been married before” and were thus unmarriageable.Mine too!
Edwin
Probably the Coptic Church, the Ethiopian Church–perhaps even the vestigial remains of the Church in India where St. Thomas preached and possibly also the Church established in Iraq where Jude went. I think they were separate for many years from what became the distinct entity of the Catholic Church of today. I think there are others, too, but I forget the names. I think the early Church was a pretty loose structure in the beginning.Name even one that does this, aside from the Orthodox Churches (which in fact do date back to the Apostles - they have other issues, though).
Why should I assume the burden of proof?I used to be a Protestant for a reason. Use some critical thinking.
Make your claim to have a valid Eucharist.
You claim you have it. Back that claim up.
AMEN!!!:clapping:Jesus was not a Catholic, he was a Jew. So was St. Paul.
Religious sectarianism divides. That is what the Pharisees did, and the Saducees, and any who sought their identity by what group they followed.
Group identity makes us self-righteous and it leads to an ‘Us against Them’ mentality. That is exactly what Jesus spoke AGAINST.
We must stop thinking of ourselves as Catholics, or Americans, or as ‘right’ compared to others ‘wrong.’
God states clearly in Isaiah that ALL will be blessed by him.
And elsewhere, that through Abraham ALL the nations of the earth will be blessed.
If we would stop being just another sect of Christianity and study and read what Jesus ACTUALLY SAID we would realize that he criticized his own religion, not the so-called heretics.
He called his own nation to repentance, not anyone else.
We are to take the beam out of our own eyes, not point smugly at the splinter in someone else’s eye.
We are to love, not judge.
You are right! We are to Love, not judge.Jesus was not a Catholic, he was a Jew. So was St. Paul.
Religious sectarianism divides. That is what the Pharisees did, and the Saducees, and any who sought their identity by what group they followed.
Group identity makes us self-righteous and it leads to an ‘Us against Them’ mentality. That is exactly what Jesus spoke AGAINST.
We must stop thinking of ourselves as Catholics, or Americans, or as ‘right’ compared to others ‘wrong.’
God states clearly in Isaiah that ALL will be blessed by him.
And elsewhere, that through Abraham ALL the nations of the earth will be blessed.
If we would stop being just another sect of Christianity and study and read what Jesus ACTUALLY SAID we would realize that he criticized his own religion, not the so-called heretics.
He called his own nation to repentance, not anyone else.
We are to take the beam out of our own eyes, not point smugly at the splinter in someone else’s eye.
We are to love, not judge.
I’ve read convert stories out the wazoo. I practically had *Rome Sweet Home *memorized at one point.Listen
Every non-Catholic on this site must go to the website GUYDOUD.COM and listen to his story. Even better the website WWW.EWTN.COM/VONDEMAND/AUDIO and pick and choose a story with each convert and their reasons WHY they converted to The Catholic faith. Guy Doud was an Evangelical Protestant for 17 years. He tells how Protestants do not have the fullness of what Christ intended with The Sacraments. He goes on to say how Luther and Calvin DID NOT have the writings of The Early Church Fathers. And how The Catholic Church REALLY IS the True Church started by Christ.
TO BE DEEP IN HISTORY IS TO CEASE TO BE PROTESTANT- John Henry Newman (convert)
How can we not claim to have a valid Eucharist? Otherwise, obviously, we would stop being Protestants!
Hello Damascus.You claim you have it. Back that claim up.
For how long was the bible an oral tradition? How did the bible get written? Who wrote it down? I suggest you take a history lesson. I am sorry to tell you you are missing out on alot as a Christian. You are not fully following Christ if you are outside HIS Church. You have been handed a watered down version of Christianity. If you are satified with that, fine. I would not be, though.Anyway, back to topic, I dont follow Martin Luther I follow Christ and the living breathing love letter He sent us–the bible.![]()
If it helps, I couldn’t relate to that story, either. It seemed very emotional, to me, which would be fine except for the claim that they studied their way into the Church.I’ve read convert stories out the wazoo. I practically had *Rome Sweet Home *memorized at one point.