P
pablope
Guest
Which covers England?There hasn’t been a Queen of England since Queen Anne, and the 1707 Act of Union. The sovereign is today the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Which covers England?There hasn’t been a Queen of England since Queen Anne, and the 1707 Act of Union. The sovereign is today the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
You need to brush up on your Revolutionary War history. The King, in either his civil or ecclesiastical personality, was persona non grata. The Episcopal Church bent over backwards to make the point that no civil magistrate had any authority in its internal affairs.And while we’re on the subject, is the titular head of your Church the same as the titular head of the Anglican Church: the reigning King or the Queen of England?
Yep. England hasn’t been a sovereign state (i.e. a kingdom) since 1707.Which covers England?
I’d say that Hus was! Certainly more so than the Emperor and Council that betrayed and condemned him.Contarini
But Wycliffe and Hus were “morally, spiritually, and theologically trustworthy?”
- The increasing suspicion among late medieval radical reformers (most notably Wycliffe and Hus) that the institutional Church was no longer morally, spiritually, and theologically trustworthy.
![]()
My personal opinion is that Protestants had no choice but to hold the Bible as their highest authority because they were left with no other authority.
That’s the danger.Now there’s a great point! It’s either that or every man is a pope!![]()
Since 1558 the title has been “Supreme Governor,” not “head.” (Catholics pretty consistently exaggerate the role of Henry VIII in the formation of Anglicanism, when in fact most of the formularies of current Anglicanism were shaped decisively under Edward and Elizabeth.)Contarini
Sorry, I got you mixed up with somebody else who is Lutheran. But the same questions I’ve just asked you would apply to an Episcopalian as well.
And while we’re on the subject, is the titular head of your Church the same as the titular head of the Anglican Church: the reigning King or the Queen of England?
Maybe**Contarini
That last sentence succinctly summarizes the problem I have with your posts and those of a lot of other folks on this forum. You are strengthening Protestants in their error, because they imagine that Catholics accept the truth of the Faith based on very weak arguments.**
What you are saying here does not make any sense. According to Aquinas, the arguments of Scripture should convince the faithful even when they cannot convince the adversaries of the faithful. Do you regard yourself as an adversary of the faithful?
The second quote you cite does not refer to the infallibility of Christ’s Church
No, but it refers to the nature of faith.What has that got to do with infallibility of the teachings of our faith? We believe, we assent, we know the Holy Spirit guides us infallibly in the teachings of the Church or else all is lost. We might as well doubt or disbelieve all the teachings on the ground that we cannot make out of them a demonstrable science.
Indeed. That’s not my point. I’m not criticizing infallibility–only the way you are using and interpreting the concept.
To believe that something is correct is not to say that it was infallibly determined. Infallibility does not just mean the absence of error, but the absence of the possibility of error (see the Catholic Encyclopedia’s article on “infallibility”).Correct me if I mistake your argument. Do you believe that Lutheran teachings might be false? If you do, then why are you arguing for something that is doubtfully true? If you do not believe they are in error, then you must believe they are infallibly true. How do you know they are infallibly true when you deny that the Catholic Church infallibly teaches God’s truth? Why is the Lutheran truth infallible because it comes from Luther, whereas the Catholic truth is false because it claims to come from the Holy Spirit?.
That being said, the tenacity with which confessional Protestants defend the teachings of their respective communions does seem odd given their denial of ecclesial infallibility. This doesn’t apply to us Anglicans. What Anglicans regard as binding is expressed in the “Lambeth Quadrilateral”: the Apostles’ and Nicene Creeds, the authority of the Scriptures, the two sacraments of baptism and Eucharist, and the historic succession of bishops. All of these things are shared with Catholics and Orthodox, of course. Everything else is more or less open to debate.
Furthermore, as I said in my previous post, I have now unequivocally expressed to the local priest my desire to be received into the Catholic Church, so I’m in a transitional state with regard to Anglicanism.
Edwin
Scripture and the confessions, along with the tradition of the Church, do not provide for women in the priesthood.Yeah…how will the Scripture and Confessions say they are in error?
Edwin I pray your transition is quick, painless and fulfilling in every way. Catholicism will be much more complete with the likes of you as it is clear you have much to offer.Furthermore, as I said in my previous post, I have now unequivocally expressed to the local priest my desire to be received into the Catholic Church, so I’m in a transitional state with regard to Anglicanism.
Well, it’s already been about eighteen years since I started seriously considering conversion to Catholicism. It’s been very long, and very painful. Pray that I will not waver this time (every time up to now, I’ve “blinked,” including last fall when the priest emailed me to say that I was confusing the other members of the RCIA class and should meet with him personally–I kind of got the impression that he found me a nuisance and wasn’t very enthusiastic, and I was having a very rough semester and was getting cold feet anyway, so I just put the whole thing on hold until last week).Edwin I pray your transition is quick, painless and fulfilling in every way. Catholicism will be much more complete with the likes of you as it is clear you have much to offer.
God Bless!!!
Wow! 18 years…stubborn old coot!Well, it’s already been about eighteen years since I started seriously considering conversion to Catholicism. It’s been very long, and very painful. Pray that I will not waver this time (every time up to now, I’ve “blinked,” including last fall when the priest emailed me to say that I was confusing the other members of the RCIA class and should meet with him personally–I kind of got the impression that he found me a nuisance and wasn’t very enthusiastic, and I was having a very rough semester and was getting cold feet anyway, so I just put the whole thing on hold until last week).
Edwin
I don’t think it was negative in the sense of thinking I was a bad person, at all, more in the sense of not really wanting to be bothered with my rather cerebral approach to things.Wow! 18 years…stubborn old coot!
I suppose his comment could have been from the negative but please don’t assume so. I can only guess an intelligent, well read, person like you would bring up much in discussion that would confuse or fluster the average joe. Meeting with him personally might even speed up your RCIA process.
Peace!!!
No, they don’t, unless, again, you are defining “infallibility” just as “being right,” which is not the CE’s definition or the definition I’ve seen in any Church document.Contarini
All I wish to say is that I think most Protestants repudiate the Catholic doctrine of infallibility, yet they claim it for themselves. They have to.:
And the Catholic Encyclopedia, and John Henry Newman, are also unnecessarily argumentative?**Contarini
Infallibility means that you can’t be wrong, not just that you aren’t wrong.**
Here perhaps you are being unnecesarily argumentative.
Some might. Some might also say that it was stupid of me to be as vulnerable as I was on a forum full of argumentative people such as yourself.If it’s that you can’t stand hearing people say something without disagreeing or correcting them, I can see why you are continually imploding on several levels. I’ve had the problem myself at various points in my career, and some in this forum might say I still have it.
And where do you find me denying any teaching of the Church?The worst kind of convert is the one who comes home half-hearted and determined to set the Catholic Church straight on a few things. I recommend the attitude of Aquinas on his deathbed. Submit! **The Church is infallible. That means with respect to basic teachings it cannot be wrong and is not wrong. **
Perhaps,but I would never say scripture as whole does not point to the “surety of His salvation” for it does. That you can throw it away, if you really had it, is another question.“Once saved, always saved” or eternal security?
No. The Bible does not support this. It is possible for someone to lose his or her salvation.
I am not a “fiver” Calvinist, yet name me anything you can do in this regard and it seems God is a step ahead of you making it possible for you to do so. I think you get to the pearly gates and before entering it says, “You have chosen wisely” (Choose ye this day whom ye will serve). On the other side as you pass through the sign reads, "Chosen,predestined since before the foundations of the earth).If you are going to go on using the phrase “His” salvation, answer me this question:
In your view, is an unbeliever saved?
If not, then kindly stop pretending that your view of salvation is all about Jesus and not anything we do. If it were just “His salvation,” it would apply to atheists, Hindus, etc., just as much as to Christians. If it only applies to people who hold particular beliefs and/or go through a particular kind of conversion experience, then it’s “our” salvation also and you need to use language that honestly reflects that fact.
Indeed, Scripture as a whole does not support the new-fangled idea that our salvation is assured by a single moment of conversion.
Edwin
Full-blown (or at least four-point) Calvinism is the only doctrine that makes any sense of eternal security, in my opinion.I am not a “fiver” Calvinist, yet name me anything you can do in this regard and it seems God is a step ahead of you making it possible for you to do so. I think you get to the pearly gates and before entering it says, “You have chosen wisely” (Choose ye this day whom ye will serve). On the other side as you pass through the sign reads, "Chosen,predestined since before the foundations of the earth).
OK Edwin,thanks. I am thinking of a circles and where does my part of the deal begin and end and where does His and which comes first in that circle ? Is “five points” saying there are a series of “works” as opposed one or none ?Full-blown (or at least four-point) Calvinism is the only doctrine that makes any sense of eternal security, in my opinion.
I agree with your last sentence.
All I’m saying is that you want to position eternal security as being all about what God does. But it isn’t. Especially in its non-Calvinist (or not fully Calvinist) form, it makes a single human choice determinative of one’s eternal destiny. Non-Calvinist eternal security is the worst form of works righteousness–it’s salvation by one simple work.
Edwin
It’s not really “five points” per se (the fifth point is limited atonement). It’s more the doctrine of election–in the Calvinist understanding, perseverance is guaranteed by election. I didn’t know if you were a Calvinist, and I’m still not sure from what you are saying, but if you are then I think your language makes more sense… With my challenge about unbelievers I was trying to argue that if you think faith is necessary for salvation, then you are saying that given something on our part (true faith at some point) salvation is guaranteed.OK Edwin,thanks. I am thinking of a circles and where does my part of the deal begin and end and where does His and which comes first in that circle ? Is “five points” saying there are a series of “works” as opposed one or none ?