Talk to Jesus about it. He instituted it.Oldbear83 said:
Popes were and are a bad idea.
I wish that the Catholic Church was free from corrupt people like all the Protestant churches are. (smh)Oldbear83 said:
Power corrupts
Talk to Jesus about it. He instituted it.Oldbear83 said:
Popes were and are a bad idea.
I wish that the Catholic Church was free from corrupt people like all the Protestant churches are. (smh)Oldbear83 said:
Power corrupts
Absolutely not.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
So do you concede, then, that the earliest known lists of Old Testament canon in church history did NOT contain the Apocrypha (save Wisdom, which is debatable) thus showing that your claim that the church always included the Apocrypha is wrong?
You stated that he subtracted them. He didn't. He included them even though he has his doubts about them.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Which part is the misrepresentation?
Not if those Jews rejected Jesus as the messiah.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Jerome lived in Bethlehem during the time he was translating the Vulgate. He lived in a monastery there. He knew the Hebrew language. His unique position allowed him to ascertain that the Church there did not consider the Apocrypha as canon. If he could not find any Hebrew copies of the Apocrypha, wouldn't that support the point that the Jews did not consider it canon Scripture?
It was not a "majority of the major theologians" that rejected them, but it was a few that did. They, like Jerome, listened to the Church during the Councils that declared them as canon.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- If the Church always included them, then why did Jerome's influence continue, to where the majority of major theologians during his time and thereafter continue to hold to his position, that the Apocrypha was not canon? Why did the major reference work during the middle ages, the Glossa Ordinaria, teach that it wasn't canon? And the point remains, which you still haven't addressed, that the Council of Laodicea recognized a different canon than was recognized in later councils, one that did NOT include the Apocrypha...."always included them"?
Never said the Protestants were perfect. But claiming your pointy-hate leader is "infallible", well that's a special sin all its own, and special to the RC church.Coke Bear said:Talk to Jesus about it. He instituted it.Oldbear83 said:
Popes were and are a bad idea.I wish that the Catholic Church was free from corrupt people like all the Protestant churches are. (smh)Oldbear83 said:
Power corrupts
Who complied the bible and when?BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Right - GOD gave the world the Bible.
1) The Dead Sea Scrolls include copies of deuterocanonical books like Sirach, Tobit, and Baruch.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
What is your evidence that many Jews of Jesus' time considered the deuterocanon as canon?
What is your evidence that the deuterocanon was considered part of the Writings?
pointy-hate leader - What's' up with the derogatory comment like this?Oldbear83 said:Never said the Protestants were perfect. But claiming your pointy-hate leader is "infallible", well that's a special sin all its own, and special to the RC church.Coke Bear said:Talk to Jesus about it. He instituted it.Oldbear83 said:
Popes were and are a bad idea.I wish that the Catholic Church was free from corrupt people like all the Protestant churches are. (smh)Oldbear83 said:
Power corrupts
Melito wasn't making a list of Old Testament canon himself.Coke Bear said:Absolutely not.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
So do you concede, then, that the earliest known lists of Old Testament canon in church history did NOT contain the Apocrypha (save Wisdom, which is debatable) thus showing that your claim that the church always included the Apocrypha is wrong?
It was a list from ONE person. Just like Melito's canon was the writing of one person, NOT the Church.
The Church affirmed the canon in several Councils - meaning the bishops gathered and agreed (guided by the Holy Spirit) as to what books to include in the full canon. Not just a few Church fathers and their opinions.
I fully agree with you that Jerome's position is not a subtraction - the Apocrypha was never Jewish canon. He didn't subtract anything, because the Apocrypha was never there to begin with.Coke Bear said:You stated that he subtracted them. He didn't. He included them even though he has his doubts about them.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Which part is the misrepresentation?Not if those Jews rejected Jesus as the messiah.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Jerome lived in Bethlehem during the time he was translating the Vulgate. He lived in a monastery there. He knew the Hebrew language. His unique position allowed him to ascertain that the Church there did not consider the Apocrypha as canon. If he could not find any Hebrew copies of the Apocrypha, wouldn't that support the point that the Jews did not consider it canon Scripture?It was not a "majority of the major theologians" that rejected them, but it was a few that did. They, like Jerome, listened to the Church during the Councils that declared them as canon.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- If the Church always included them, then why did Jerome's influence continue, to where the majority of major theologians during his time and thereafter continue to hold to his position, that the Apocrypha was not canon? Why did the major reference work during the middle ages, the Glossa Ordinaria, teach that it wasn't canon? And the point remains, which you still haven't addressed, that the Council of Laodicea recognized a different canon than was recognized in later councils, one that did NOT include the Apocrypha...."always included them"?
1) You're using the same fallacious logic that RealityBites tried? Come on, man. Explain how the mere presence of those books among the Dead Sea Scrolls automatically means they were considered canon.Coke Bear said:Who complied the bible and when?BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Right - GOD gave the world the Bible.1) The Dead Sea Scrolls include copies of deuterocanonical books like Sirach, Tobit, and Baruch.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
What is your evidence that many Jews of Jesus' time considered the deuterocanon as canon?
What is your evidence that the deuterocanon was considered part of the Writings?
2) The prologue to Sirach references "the law and the prophets and the others that followed them" and "the law itself, the prophecies, and the rest of the books," indicating that the Hebrew canon was not closed and that these books were included.
3) OT Scholars, like Otto Kaiser , state that the deuterocanonical books "presuppose the validity of the Law and the Prophets and also utilize the Ketubim, or 'Writings' collection, which was, at the time, still in the process of formation and not yet closed.
The Church does NOT claim this. Once again, this is one of MANY false assumptions the Protestants have about the Church.Oldbear83 said:
Sorry, there is no reason to trust any living human as speaking for God.
Serious question, do you have access to his private writings or are you projecting your view onto this assumption? St Jerome was a stubborn jerk (God rest his soul) that alienated most of his closest friends and lived in near seclusion. I doubt he was worried about that. Unless you can provide statements from his private writings, your theory is pure conjecture.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
I get that your argument is that Jerome ultimately acquiesced to the judgement of Rome, but he did so because he didn't want to be at odds with church authority (who'd want to be branded a heretic and have to face their wrath?)
It was not VASTLY held throughout Church history. There were some that did think that they were canonical. There were many that did. The Church felt the same.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
But there is no evidence that he ever changed his actual belief. Nevertheless, it's plainly obvious that his view was vastly shared throughout Church history, even before the Reformation.
The Essenes thought them as part of the canon as demonstrated in the finding of them in the caves. These were the in the Septuagint. The Septuagint contains all 46 books of the OT.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
1) You're using the same fallacious logic that RealityBites tried? Come on, man. Explain how the mere presence of those books among the Dead Sea Scrolls automatically means they were considered canon.
Coke Bear said:The Church does NOT claim this. Once again, this is one of MANY false assumptions the Protestants have about the Church.Oldbear83 said:
Sorry, there is no reason to trust any living human as speaking for God.
The Pope is preserved from error when he solemnly proclaims a doctrine of faith or morals.
That is it. No more - no less.
Jerome included the apocryphal books in his Vulgate translation, but he clearly considered them separate from the rest of Scripture as being non-canonical. Does my alleged conjecture about his reasons for doing so make ANY difference about that fact?Coke Bear said:Serious question, do you have access to his private writings or are you projecting your view onto this assumption? St Jerome was a stubborn jerk (God rest his soul) that alienated most of his closest friends and lived in near seclusion. I doubt he was worried about that. Unless you can provide statements from his private writings, your theory is pure conjecture.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
I get that your argument is that Jerome ultimately acquiesced to the judgement of Rome, but he did so because he didn't want to be at odds with church authority (who'd want to be branded a heretic and have to face their wrath?)It was not VASTLY held throughout Church history. There were some that did think that they were canonical. There were many that did. The Church felt the same.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
But there is no evidence that he ever changed his actual belief. Nevertheless, it's plainly obvious that his view was vastly shared throughout Church history, even before the Reformation.
The Church believed that the deuterocanon was canon prior to Jerome else he wouldn't have had an issue. He included them as they were there before.
You still haven't answered where the canon came from. Who put the bible together?
HOW does their presence among the Dead Sea Scrolls necessarily indicate they were canon? You're merely repeating your assertion, you're not providing the reasoning. I'll save you time - you're making a logical fallacy.Coke Bear said:The Essenes thought them as part of the canon as demonstrated in the finding of them in the caves. These were the in the Septuagint. The Septuagint contains all 46 books of the OT.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
1) You're using the same fallacious logic that RealityBites tried? Come on, man. Explain how the mere presence of those books among the Dead Sea Scrolls automatically means they were considered canon.
He did NOT allow the blessings of same-sex marriages. The Church CANNON bless sin.Realitybites said:
It is correct to say that in the Roman Catholic church papal infallibility only extends to ex-cathedra statements.
Francis has promoted heresy (the blessing of gay marriages, his latest advocacy of perennialism when talking to schoolchildren). It will be interesting to see what happens to Roman Catholicism when he, or a successor of his, does make an ex-cathedra statement legitimizing such things.
Russell Moore will probably get around to defending the culinary choices of illegals from Haiti first though.
I'll be quite frank, I don't know what you mean by this. Forgive my ignorance.Oldbear83 said:Coke Bear said:The Church does NOT claim this. Once again, this is one of MANY false assumptions the Protestants have about the Church.Oldbear83 said:
Sorry, there is no reason to trust any living human as speaking for God.
The Pope is preserved from error when he solemnly proclaims a doctrine of faith or morals.
That is it. No more - no less.
A couple of your recent editions indicate otherwise.
Yes, actually. He obeyed the Church and deferred to her wisdom. You said that it was done out of fear. The 73-book canon was not dogma at that point. He was allowed to have his opinion. He wisely chose to follow the Church.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Jerome included the apocryphal books in his Vulgate translation, but he clearly considered them separate from the rest of Scripture as being non-canonical. Does my alleged conjecture about his reasons for doing so make ANY difference about that fact?
You've sited a few individuals that didn't believe that they were canon, even thought the Church has always included them. If is was not VASTLY held, the multiple Councils would have never approved the true canon.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
"It was not VASTLY held throughout Church history" - the historical evidence I had just given you strongly suggests otherwise. Either way, does it really make ANY difference to the point whether you agree it was "vast" or not? Would "strong majority" really make a difference to your position?
That quote, from a Protestant website, from William Webster, known for his anti-Catholic writings. Forgive me when I don't believe his "the vast majority of theologians, bishops and cardinals throughout the Middle Ages followed Jerome."BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
The writer of the article I provided came to the same conclusion: "While there were some who followed Augustine and the Councils of Hippo and Carthage in accepting the Apocryphal books, the vast majority of theologians, bishops and cardinals throughout the Middle Ages followed Jerome." What is your historical evidence to the counter?
Let's start simple. How about the NT?BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
If there was any question I did not answer, I apologize. I intend to answer any and all questions you want answered. There is just so much material to go through, and it was easy to overlook. I need some clarification about your question, though - which canon? Which bible?
What exactly does that mean. If he proclaims a doctrine of faith, you believe he cannot be wrong? This is a great error. Morals also. We are ALL accountable directly to God for what we believe and a Pope is not perfect. He can misinterpret Scripture and I assure you that he does. I would dare say that all Popes have disagreements in those areas you named, which proves that they are not error free. Someone is wrong. When we all stand before God, WE are accountable directly to God for what we believe and we should never trust the opinion of any man over what we know to be true from Scripture. That's how we need to face God, by what His Word says.Coke Bear said:The Church does NOT claim this. Once again, this is one of MANY false assumptions the Protestants have about the Church.Oldbear83 said:
Sorry, there is no reason to trust any living human as speaking for God.
The Pope is preserved from error when he solemnly proclaims a doctrine of faith or morals.
That is it. No more - no less.
He is only infallible when teaching "Ex Cathedra" - from the Chair. It protects him from preaching heresy. For instance, he could never proclaim doctrine like a 4th person of the Trinity or that Jesus sinned.xfrodobagginsx said:What exactly does that mean. If he proclaims a doctrine of faith, you believe he cannot be wrong? This is a great error. Morals also. We are ALL accountable directly to God for what we believe and a Pope is not perfect. He can misinterpret Scripture and I assure you that he does. I would dare say that all Popes have disagreements in those areas you named, which proves that they are not error free. Someone is wrong. When we all stand before God, WE are accountable directly to God for what we believe and we should never trust the opinion of any man over what we know to be true from Scripture. That's how we need to face God, by what His Word says.Coke Bear said:The Church does NOT claim this. Once again, this is one of MANY false assumptions the Protestants have about the Church.Oldbear83 said:
Sorry, there is no reason to trust any living human as speaking for God.
The Pope is preserved from error when he solemnly proclaims a doctrine of faith or morals.
That is it. No more - no less.
Coke Bear, I don't think you see the obvious problem with that claim, that a Pope is 'preserved from error' when he speaks AS pope.Coke Bear said:He is only infallible when teaching "Ex Cathedra" - from the Chair. It protects him from preaching heresy. For instance, he could never proclaim doctrine like a 4th person of the Trinity or that Jesus sinned.xfrodobagginsx said:What exactly does that mean. If he proclaims a doctrine of faith, you believe he cannot be wrong? This is a great error. Morals also. We are ALL accountable directly to God for what we believe and a Pope is not perfect. He can misinterpret Scripture and I assure you that he does. I would dare say that all Popes have disagreements in those areas you named, which proves that they are not error free. Someone is wrong. When we all stand before God, WE are accountable directly to God for what we believe and we should never trust the opinion of any man over what we know to be true from Scripture. That's how we need to face God, by what His Word says.Coke Bear said:The Church does NOT claim this. Once again, this is one of MANY false assumptions the Protestants have about the Church.Oldbear83 said:
Sorry, there is no reason to trust any living human as speaking for God.
The Pope is preserved from error when he solemnly proclaims a doctrine of faith or morals.
That is it. No more - no less.
- Jerome only obeyed the Church to include the Apocrypha in his translation, NOT to include them in canon. My "conjecture" about his reasons why he deferred to the Church to include them does NOTHING to change the fact that he never thought them to be canon, and as we see clearly from church history thereafter all the way to the Reformation, his view was, yes, vastly shared. I'm giving historical facts. You are only giving opinion.Coke Bear said:Yes, actually. He obeyed the Church and deferred to her wisdom. You said that it was done out of fear. The 73-book canon was not dogma at that point. He was allowed to have his opinion. He wisely chose to follow the Church.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Jerome included the apocryphal books in his Vulgate translation, but he clearly considered them separate from the rest of Scripture as being non-canonical. Does my alleged conjecture about his reasons for doing so make ANY difference about that fact?
You've sited a few individuals that didn't believe that they were canon, even thought the Church has always included them. If is was not VASTLY held, the multiple Councils would have never approved the true canon.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
"It was not VASTLY held throughout Church history" - the historical evidence I had just given you strongly suggests otherwise. Either way, does it really make ANY difference to the point whether you agree it was "vast" or not? Would "strong majority" really make a difference to your position?
That quote, from a Protestant website, from William Webster, known for his anti-Catholic writings. Forgive me when I don't believe his "the vast majority of theologians, bishops and cardinals throughout the Middle Ages followed Jerome."BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
The writer of the article I provided came to the same conclusion: "While there were some who followed Augustine and the Councils of Hippo and Carthage in accepting the Apocryphal books, the vast majority of theologians, bishops and cardinals throughout the Middle Ages followed Jerome." What is your historical evidence to the counter?
After doing some research I did learn that that "Melito was writing a book called The Extracts. The Extracts were a collection of defenses of the Christian faith against Jewish attacks trying to find common ground with Jewish believers to defend the Christian faith. So in order to find that common ground, Melito says that he went East and came to the place where these things were preached and done."
Why? Protestant scholar, Lee McDonald reaches the conclusion that Jews of his time did not have a uniform canon.
Glossa Ordinaria I could find no reference to this being a bible or a canon list. It appears to be a book on canon law.
Biblia Complutensia This was a polygot book (speaking in many languages). It had all three Greek, Hebrew, and the full Septuagint.
Latin bibles - Sanctes Pagnini This was another translation from the Hebrew. It doesn't surprise me that it didn't contain the Deuterocanon if it was a Hebrew translation.
Latin bibles - Johannes Petrius, 1527 I couldn't find anything on this with the exception of some excerpts that were written in German. I didn't see anything with this in Latin or it being a full bible. Having said that, color me surprised that a German translation, post-Protestant rebellion, didn't contain the Deuterocanon.
Summarizing these points, William Webster is NOT exactly an unbiased source concerning the Deuterocanon.Let's start simple. How about the NT?BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
If there was any question I did not answer, I apologize. I intend to answer any and all questions you want answered. There is just so much material to go through, and it was easy to overlook. I need some clarification about your question, though - which canon? Which bible?
The current Pope is easily the worst in my lifetime.Coke Bear said:Talk to Jesus about it. He instituted it.Oldbear83 said:
Popes were and are a bad idea.I wish that the Catholic Church was free from corrupt people like all the Protestant churches are. (smh)Oldbear83 said:
Power corrupts
i agree. He is very Liberal and anti Biblical.KaiBear said:The current Pope is easily the worst in my lifetime.Coke Bear said:Talk to Jesus about it. He instituted it.Oldbear83 said:
Popes were and are a bad idea.I wish that the Catholic Church was free from corrupt people like all the Protestant churches are. (smh)Oldbear83 said:
Power corrupts
Coke Bear said:He is only infallible when teaching "Ex Cathedra" - from the Chair. It protects him from preaching heresy. For instance, he could never proclaim doctrine like a 4th person of the Trinity or that Jesus sinned.xfrodobagginsx said:What exactly does that mean. If he proclaims a doctrine of faith, you believe he cannot be wrong? This is a great error. Morals also. We are ALL accountable directly to God for what we believe and a Pope is not perfect. He can misinterpret Scripture and I assure you that he does. I would dare say that all Popes have disagreements in those areas you named, which proves that they are not error free. Someone is wrong. When we all stand before God, WE are accountable directly to God for what we believe and we should never trust the opinion of any man over what we know to be true from Scripture. That's how we need to face God, by what His Word says.Coke Bear said:The Church does NOT claim this. Once again, this is one of MANY false assumptions the Protestants have about the Church.Oldbear83 said:
Sorry, there is no reason to trust any living human as speaking for God.
The Pope is preserved from error when he solemnly proclaims a doctrine of faith or morals.
That is it. No more - no less.
xfrodobagginsx said:
Where does the Bible, Jesus or the Apostles this claim about that position?
Well there you go. It's all fake and should not be believed. The Bible is the infallible Word of God.Realitybites said:xfrodobagginsx said:
Where does the Bible, Jesus or the Apostles this claim about that position?
They do not ever make such a claim. The church fathers do not make such a claim. The mutual excommunications that terminated the relationship of the Latin church with the rest of Christendom and launched what we know today as the Roman Catholic Church in 1054 AD testify against it.
The doctrine of papal infallibility was adopted at the First Vatican Council of 1869-1870 in the document Pastor Aeternus.
FIFY.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- Jerome only obeyed the Church to include the Apocrypha in his translation, NOT to include them in HIS canon. My "conjecture" about his reasons why he deferred to the Church to include them does NOTHING to change the fact that he never thought them to be canon, and as we see clearly from church history thereafter all the way to the Reformation, his view was, yes, vastly shared. I'm giving historical facts. You are only giving opinion.
You have unwittingly my my case in your point. Councils are only called when the Church needs to refute heresy of clarify a particular doctrine. When Luther moved the deuterocanon and tried to remove NT books and amend Ephesians, the Church called the Council of Trent, (Probably later than it should have been called) to officially dogmatize the true canon and properly correct and end some abused that were happening in the Church at that time.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- Multiple councils approved different canons. You need to learn church history. Your catholic bible was never formally dogmatized until Trent in the 1500's. As I've clearly shown from church history, there was never agreement regarding the Apocrypha by the Church until then. In fact, as I've shown, the canon from Trent was actually the minority view amongst all major scholars and theologians during the Middles Ages.
I'll have to do more research as to why he stated that other than it's factual. The Sadducess, Pharisees, and Essenes (and others) had different canons.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- Cite Lee McDonald's reasoning for why he believed the Jews didn't have a uniform canon. Does he explain it?
Please allow me more time to do more research on this. As far as I've found, my Google sources show the Biblia Complutensia containing the entire Septuagint. I can find no reference stating that it did not consider the deuterocanon as canon.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- The Glossa Ordinaria was not a canon list, it was THE standard text on biblical commentaries used to train all theologians of the time. If the Apocrypha was always part of the Bible as you've claimed, then why did the major reference work of the time say that it wasn't?
- yes, the Biblia Complutensia included the full Septuagint..... and explicitly said that the major books of the Apocrypha found in the Septuagint WERE NOT CANON. Focus, man, focus.
- the Latin bibles cited that the Apocrypha were not canon. If you're going to blame this on the fact that they were Hebrew translations, then go ahead and disown your own official Latin bible of the Roman Catholic Church - the Vulgate. Because it's a Hebrew translation too.
The whole "vast majority" phrase. This is completely false and full of his anti-Cathlolic spin. It it were true, then the Council would have never affirmed them or they would have outright denied them.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- what historical facts did William Webster get wrong?
Who complied the 27 books and when? How do we know that these are the correct books?BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
- who gave us the NT? As I said earlier, it was God who gave it to us. His people, His church, recognized it as his word and received it.
I am doing a poor job explaining papal infallibility. The Pope is NOT impeccable in all his speaking. No human person is that. Papal infallibility, though through the Holy Spirit protects him from teaching error.Oldbear83 said:
Coke Bear, I don't think you see the obvious problem with that claim, that a Pope is 'preserved from error' when he speaks AS pope.
You either ARE or ARE NOT perfect in your statements and claims. Going back to the Old Testament, for example, there was no qualifier about whether a professed prophet was 'speaking in his office' when making a prophecy. He was either right or wrong, and the standard was complete accuracy.
The Pope must not be held to a lesser standard.
If someone claims to speak for Christ, there is no 'off' switch when he/she is just a normal person with imperfect knowledge, that sitting in a certain place or in a certain role somehow makes them perfect..
Please explain to me which Pope has taught false doctrine.Oldbear83 said:
Tremendous harm has been done by both Protestant Ministers and Catholic Popes who taught false doctrines.
Once again, it was formally dogmatized in 1870, but it can be traced back to Saint Irenaeus of Lyons, in his work "Against Heresies" between 175-185 AD, Saint Cyprian of Carthage, in *The Unity of the Catholic Church" in the 3rd Century, and Saint Augustine of Hippo in the 4th Century.Realitybites said:xfrodobagginsx said:
Where does the Bible, Jesus or the Apostles this claim about that position?
They do not ever make such a claim. The church fathers do not make such a claim. The mutual excommunications that terminated the relationship of the Latin church with the rest of Christendom and launched what we know today as the Roman Catholic Church in 1054 AD testify against it.
The doctrine of papal infallibility was adopted at the First Vatican Council of 1869-1870 in the document Pastor Aeternus.