Amen!Just do the work necessary to help her to never become a "proof-texter." That is no more than a modern day Pharisee. All the verswes of the Bible must fit together for us and spell out the WHOLE story.
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Amen!Just do the work necessary to help her to never become a "proof-texter." That is no more than a modern day Pharisee. All the verswes of the Bible must fit together for us and spell out the WHOLE story.
Thank you for your concern about this.(Amadeus, does size 5 help you? I feel like I am yelling with size 6 type.I never thought about that. Never liked them large print books.)
Non-Catholics can agree on this but *Holy Tradition* frequently trumps Scripture for Catholics.1.) Can we agree that the Scriptures take precedence over our own personal opinions or traditions?
One would hope so, but frequently Scriptures are not provided to back up what is being said.2.) Do we search the Scriptures diligently to support our beliefs?
This could become quite extensive, but the key doctrine is the Doctrine of Christ: And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness: God [Theos] was manifest in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, seen of angels, preached unto the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up into glory. (1 Tim 3:16 KJB).3.) What are the basic doctrines of the Bible that you must hold to in order to be a Christian, according to the Scriptures?
That is a lie and I am quite sure it has been explained to you many times why it is a lie. There are bad traditions we must avoid, but Scripture also gives good traditions that St. Paul tells us to follow. There are two types of traditions in Scripture, focusing on just the bad ones and using that alone as a definition of all tradition is a false man made tradition in itself, and a very poor choice of anti-Catholic weaponry.Non-Catholics can agree on this but *Holy Tradition* frequently trumps Scripture for Catholics.
These truths (taught consistently for 2000 years) have been borrowed from the same historic Church you despise. Your prejudice against Catholicism is irrational.This could become quite extensive, but the key doctrine is the Doctrine of Christ: And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness: God [Theos] was manifest in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, seen of angels, preached unto the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up into glory. (1 Tim 3:16 KJB).
There are quite a few here who cannot believe that Jesus is God. And without that fundamental belief, all else falls apart. In fact, the apostle John tells us that the way to distinguish between the spirit of truth and the spirit of error (also called the spirit of antichrist) is this litmus test -- "Has Jesus Christ come in the flesh?" which translates into "Did God the Word become Man as Jesus of Nazareth?" (John 1:1).
You and I both Amadeus, my eyes are not great, so large print is the way to go with me.Thank you for your concern about this.
It depends on the font you use as well as the size. I use 6 for Times New Roman, but on some other fonts that comes out too big. If you use another font just compare the resulting size with my posts. For very short posts I have little real problem with even small letters but for longer posts with few or no paragraph spaces the difficulty is noticeable. I know how to increase the size of another person posts [Control + or -] but I don't routinely do that unless I really have a strong incentive to read it carefully.
When I respond to a person while I use the 6 with the Times New Roman, I reduce the size of the quotes of the other persons to 5 Time New Roman for a better contrast.
As to the large print books, I love them as you might imagine.
Catholics back up just about EVERYTHING they believe with Scripture. BUT... most Protestants are not willing to accept their interpretations of those Scriptures. However, they are STILL very clearly and (in their views) accurately backed-up.
What do we do with situations like that?
we need to do this and we must do that, hmmThis is why we need to find churches with men who know the Scriptures. Again, I know that there will be minor differences here and there between denominations, however, this is why we must assert the bare-bones doctrines to which all Christians adhere; such as Christ being the one and only way, that the Scriptures are the infallible word of God, ect.
or that we have IDed them correctly either i guess; obviously those deemed that by the world would not be those God deems that, etcAbsolutely! This is why while God does provide apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors and teachers [see Eph 4:11] for our edification, we cannot presume that they are all always where they should be.
so you say, but cannot Quote, wadr.Truth is not relative. There is only one right answer.
When we allI think when we get to Heaven, we will understand scripture TONS better then right now.
hope you come to see that one could reject all three of them just as easily and still be justifiedLove this! I chose all three of them.
How often do we base out theology on just a few verses, without regarding what the rest if the Scriptures. Many a false belief has been based on one verse that is misinterpreted. A philosophy of mine has always been to compare Scriptures with Scriptures. Especially on this forum, I have seen a spike in the amount of "opinions" that are being passed of as equal to Scripture, people who claim inspiration that the Bible clearly states are impossibilities. I would like to have a calm, meaningful discussion on the following questions.
1.) Can we agree that the Scriptures take precedence over our own personal opinions or traditions?
2.) Do we search the Scriptures diligently to support our beliefs?
3.) What are the basic doctrines of the Bible that you must hold to in order to be a Christian, according to the Scriptures?
Seriously, actually READ what I wrote, instead of seeing if you can work up an argument about something. There is not one of those things Catholics present without what they feel is Scriptural verification. And we cannot dispute that obvious fact... We can ONLY dispute their interpretations of the Scriptures they use.So do you consider purgatory, prayer for the departed saints, penance, the exalted place of the priesthood to forgive sins, etc are supported by Scripture?
so you say, but cannot Quote, wadr.
Do your very best then, and set us up a question that can be answered by one of your Absolute Truths, if you will.
if you wish you can give the Answer too, but that is secondary for now; in fact prolly best if you don't, or maybe even put it in a spoiler or something? Might even be fun! Ok well maybe not for you in the moment lol
that would depend upon you i guess
When we all
get to heaven...
(sing it with me :))
hope you come to see that one could reject all three of them just as easily and still be justified
as hard as that might be to get
None of your multiple topic rant has anything to do with your abuse of the term "Holy Tradition". You got caught in a lie so what do you do? Deny, deny, deny every word of my explanation. The Primacy of Peter is just an escape, a rabbit trail. Not understanding is one thing, refusing to understand and re-asserting a lie is something else.I had said: "Non-Catholics can agree on this but *Holy Tradition* frequently trumps Scripture for Catholics."
Epostle's response was "That is a lie and I am quite sure it has been explained to you many times why it is a lie."
Well it is really quite easy to show that that is NOT a lie. Let us take the most glaring example, which is that the apostle Peter was the first bishop of Rome, and indeed that the Papacy is rooted in this idea. According to the New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia entry for Papacy: This term is employed in an ecclesiastical and in an historical signification. In the former of these uses it denotes the ecclesiastical system in which the pope as successor of St. Peter and Vicar of Jesus Christ governs the Catholic Church as its supreme head.
For something this critical surely there would be incontrovertible support in Scripture. But that is not what we find. Instead, we find that Peter was designated as the apostle to the *Circumcision* (the Jews), and there is no mention of him going to Rome, and establishing a church there or being called the bishop of Rome.
For he that wrought effectually in Peter to the apostleship of the circumcision, the same was mighty in me toward the Gentiles (Gal 2:8)
Or as the NET Bible paraphrases this: For he who empowered Peter for his apostleship to the circumcised also empowered me for my apostleship to the Gentiles.
Indeed Peter is not even mentioned in Paul's epistle to the Romans, but we find Peter along with James and the other apostles in Jerusalem giving instructions to Paul, Barnabas, and others in Acts 15 regarding the application of the Law of Moses to Gentiles. And Matthew 16:18 had to be reinterpreted to make Peter (Petros) "the Rock", instead of Christ, who called Himself Petra, the true Rock.
Thus the RCC had to go outside Scripture to come up with the concept of the Papacy, and "Holy Tradition" carved that in stone. So the real issue that Christians have to deal with is this: Why was Peter's never connected with Rome in the Bible if this was so critical for Christianity?
According to History of the Christian Church by Philip Schaff, the Catholic claims about Peter in Rome are not solidly based on fact.
"We conclude then that Peter's presence in Rome before 63 is made extremely doubtful, if not impossible, by the silence of Luke and Paul, when speaking of Rome and writing from Rome, and that His presence after 63 can neither be proved nor disproved from the New Testament, and must be decided by post-biblical testimonies.
It is the uniform tradition of the eastern and western churches that Peter preached the gospel in Rome, and suffered martyrdom there in the Neronian persecution. So say more or less clearly, yet not without admixture of error, Clement of Rome (who mentions the martyrdom, but not the place), at the close of the first century; Ignatius of Antioch (indistinctly), Dionysius of Corinth, Irenaeus of Lyons, Caius of Rome, in the second century; Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Hippolytus, Tertullian, in the third; Lactantius, Eusebius, Jerome, and others, in the fourth.
To these patristic testimonies may be added the apocryphal testimonies of the pseudo-Petrine and pseudo-Clementine fictions, which somehow connect Peter's name with the founding of the churches of Antioch, Alexandria, Corinth, and Rome. However these testimonies from various men and countries may differ in particular circumstances, they can only be accounted for on the supposition of some fact at the bottom; for they were previous to any use or abuse of this, tradition for heretical or for orthodox and hierarchical purposes.
The chief error of the witnesses from Dionysius and Irenaeus onward is that Peter is associated with Paul as "founder" of the church of Rome; but this may be explained from the very probable fact that some of the "strangers from Rome" who witnessed the Pentecostal miracle and heard the sermon of Peter, as also some disciples who were scattered abroad by the persecution after the martyrdom of Stephen, carried the seed of the gospel to Rome, and that these converts of Peter became the real founders of the Jewish-Christian congregation in the metropolis. Thus the indirect agency of Peter was naturally changed into a direct agency by tradition which forgot the names of the pupils in the glorification of the teacher.
The time of Peter's arrival in Rome, and the length of his residence there, cannot possibly be ascertained. The above mentioned silence of the Acts and of Paul's Epistles allows him only a short period of labor there, after 63. The Roman tradition of a twenty or twenty-five years' episcopate of Peter in Rome is unquestionably a colossal chronological mistake. Nor can we fix the year of his martyrdom, except that it must have taken place after July, 64, when the Neronian persecution broke out (according to Tacitus). It is variously assigned to every year between 64 and 69. We shall return to it again below, and in connection with the martyrdom of Paul, with which it is associated in tradition."
So it is with the flesh, but at 74 I feel blessed because I can still do many things I enjoy in spite of necessarily slower pace. I used to love to play tennis. I wish I still could. I could hit the ball I am sure, but I would get out of breath walking slowly across the court. It's OK! Give God the glory!You and I both Amadeus, my eyes are not great, so large print is the way to go with me.
Even so! Of the many pastors I have had over the years, looking back there is only one that I am certain was called by God as a minister and he missed a lot of steps. The ones who never had the calling they took are another thing altogether. I am glad that I don't have to judge them. God has led me on, but the pain and damage done to many who submitted themselves sincerely would a heavy burden if they ever understood that it was theirs to carry.or that we have IDed them correctly either i guess; obviously those deemed that by the world would not be those God deems that, etc
I am 73. I have had a stroke, one knee replaced, lost the tip of one thumb, and they tell me I will be effectively blind in about two years. (My computer is set to a "ZOOM" of 150% for everything.)So it is with the flesh, but at 74 I feel blessed because I can still do many things I enjoy in spite of necessarily slower pace. I used to love to play tennis. I wish I still could. I could hit the ball I am sure, but I would get out of breath walking slowly across the court. It's OK! Give God the glory!
One of the bug-a-boos of being old, and into the Bible since third grade, is coming to the realization that, cleverly manipulated, selected verses (often MANY of them) can be used to make the Bible sound like it is saying almost anything anyone wants it to say. This very thing is what fuels the Westboro Baptist mob.
That is a lie and I am quite sure it has been explained to you many times why it is a lie. There are bad traditions we must avoid, but Scripture also gives good traditions that St. Paul tells us to follow. There are two types of traditions in Scripture, focusing on just the bad ones and using that alone as a definition of all tradition is a false man made tradition in itself, and a very poor choice of anti-Catholic weaponry.
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The first NT book was written over 20 years after Pentecost. It's teachings were preserved by a mode of transmission called Holy Tradition. The main instrument in discerning fake books from inspired books was Holy Tradition, because the Bible as we know it, did not exist and could not be "measured against". There was no complete NT canon for 350 years. If it were not for the Tradition of the episcopate, there would be no Bible. This is where you are forced to re-write history, because history is your enemy.
These truths (taught consistently for 2000 years) have been borrowed from the same historic Church you despise. Your prejudice against Catholicism is irrational.