L
LtTony
Guest
This constant haggling about trivial exact wording is getting under my skin lately. I agree that many of the Protestant quotes and even some but not all of the founding father quotes are coming very close to crossing the line of both the Bible (which is a subset of tradition) and tradition. I suspect that a good portion of the latter and probably even of the former is due to difficulties in translation and ‘cherry picking’ only the lines that seem to agree with a given position.
This is muddied by the fact that the Catholic teaching isn’t truly given. In this position, as in most dogma, the Church’s position is reflected by scriptures:
“For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous.”
“so also Christ died once for all time as a sacrifice to take away the sins of many people.”
(I will leave it as an exercise for the reader to chase down where in the Bible these are. They are from two different translations, but that is ok.)
Therefore the Catholic’s position is that ‘Christ died to save us from our sins.’ To go further is to leave the safety of the Bible and tradition into the realm of speculation. We are free to speculate how Jesus freed us from our sins and we may find some strength from it, but we still have to be careful to recognize it for speculation and we do need to take care that it does not stray into heresy.
(snip)
The only things we can be certain of about the Cross is that ‘Jesus died to save us from our sins’ and that ‘he did so once and for all’. The exact mechanism for that salvation (whether or not he bore our sins directly) is pure speculation and should not be taught as absolute truth. That speculation can be comforting and is generally not a problem unless it either 1) takes the main focus away from the two known facts about this salvation or 2) crosses over the line to heresy in some other way.
With regard to 2) a few of those quotes come close to heresy and depending on the translation, context, etc. may cross it. The one that comes most readily to me is the idea that the Father forsook the Son, literally. The Father and the Son are one; it is not possible for the Father to forsake the Son or to be separated from Him. The heresy here is Arianism and/or its many children.
On the other hand, I just cannot see how this argument can be productive. It seems to me to be ‘straining out gnats’ when the real problem is ‘swallowing camels’. It should be sufficient for us Catholics to say: “Jesus died once and for all to save us from our sins.” Arguing about the details is pointless.
I enjoyed the thoughts expressed in these posts, thank you. Another subject for me to research and contemplate.I get what your saying. I’m curious to see where this debate will go, and it interests me, however at the end of the thread the only thing I’m going to put inside my heart is what you just said there.
I believe my heart is like the Temple with an outer court yard. I’ll take what you just said ‘Christ died to save us from our sins.’ into the Temple, and I’ll leave the finer details of this thread in the outer courtyard.
Each have their place and remain surrounded by walls of inclusion, but I want the inner temple sacred and free from all error. For that reason I only take the necessary and pure things into that place. When the earthquakes come, the outer courtyard may lie in ruins but the temple and it’s treasure will remain untouched.
I will only put diamonds in the temple, so only when theology beats itself into a perfect diamond will I take it into the Temple. Until then it will remain in outer purgatory, going through several gates to reach the Temple.