BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
We don't need special authority to be able to read those passages and see that none of them contain anything explicit about saints in heaven being able to hear, read, or know our prayers in our minds. It's just honest and basic reading and comprehension. It's scriptural to do this - the Bereans analyzed Scripture for themselves this way.
It is shocking how much your mind is like someone in a cult - how you'll so easily abandon the evidence of your own eyes and mind when you read Scripture because someone in power above you told you that you don't have the capacity to do it for yourself, so you need them to interpret it for you, and you believe them wholly when they tell you something is there when it really isn't. This is exactly what those cult leaders do to brainwash their followers into really lurid things like sex, for example.
Maybe we can get you to see this for yourself, I don't know, but we should try - let's go through those verses, one by one, and you tell me how the "infallible" interpretation managed to get out of those verses that saints can hear, read, or know our prayers and that we should pray to them. Let's examine them like the Bereans with logic and reason.
Revelation 8:3-4
Another angel, who had a golden censer, came and stood at the altar. He was given much incense to offer, with the prayers of all God's people, on the golden altar in front of the throne. The smoke of the incense, together with the prayers of God's people, went up before God from the angel's hand.
Do you really believe that the angels NOT know what they are doing? Do you believe that God can't share in his the ability to hear prayers? Are we not called to "share in his kingdom and glory"? 1 Thessalonians 2:12
Does 1 John 3:2 not tell us, "Beloved, we are God's children now; it does not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he appears we shall be like him"
Revelation 5:8 -
"And when he had taken the scroll, the four living creatures and the twenty-four elders fell down before the Lamb, each holding a harp, and with golden bowls full of incense, which are the prayers of the saints."
Who are the 24 elders? These elders are often interpreted as representing the twelve tribes of Israel and the twelve apostles, symbolizing the fullness of God's people, both Old and New Covenant.
It plainly states that the bowls of incense are the prayers of the saints (those of us on earth.)
Please tell me what you think that means.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Prayer is an act of worship. Even you don't believe that's what you're doing, it is what you're actually doing. Just like all what you do for Mary. Telling you the truth isn't "arrogance" and "ignorance". But it being an act of worship is only part of the problem here. You are engaging in a practice extrapolated from bad eisegesis which has no tie to original apostolic tradition (aka Scripture), and which even has pagan roots. Given all these, and the fact that the practice isn't even a salvivic issue, it would seem a lot more sensible and prudent to just abandon it.
As mentioned in Revelation, the saints and angels are aware of our prayers.
Also Shepard of Hermas affirms that angels can hear our prayers:
'But those who are weak and slothful in prayer, hesitate to ask anything from the Lord; but the Lord is full of compassion, and gives without fail to all who ask him. But you, [Hermas,] having been strengthened by the holy angel [you saw], and having obtained from him such intercession, and not being slothful, why do not you ask of the Lord understanding, and receive it from him?'" (The Shepherd 3:5:4 [A.D. 80]).
Clement of Alexandra:
"In this way is he [the true Christian] always pure for prayer. He also prays in the society of angels, as being already of angelic rank, and he is never out of their holy keeping; and though he pray alone, he has the choir of the saints standing with him [in prayer]" (Miscellanies 7:12 [A.D. 208]).
I can also cite Origen - 230 AD, Cyprian of Carthage - 253 AD, Methodius - 305 AD, several others before the Council of Nicaea happened in 325 AD. The same council that denounced the Arian heresy and affirmed the divinity of Jesus and the original canon of scripture.
Why would the council not condemn the asking for intercession if it was so bad. Why has the Church performed this since the beginning, but there's NEVER been condemnation at ANY council?
Please find a historical source that proves your point.