No, the Catholic Church can not claim an unbroken line. We can go into this in more detail later, but briefly, there was no central Church authority in Rome until about 140 A.D. There were dispersed groups of elders and bishops, and no single leader. As I mentioned before, the book of Revelation also indicates there were dispersed group of churches, each with their own leader, but no "Pope".Coke Bear said:You are making a claim with NO proof. The Church can demonstrate an unbroken line of 267 popes with dates starting with the 1st Pope Peter.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Christianity had from its beginning depended solely on first hand witness testimonies of Jesus' disciples and apostles, in the form of the 4 Gospels, and Paul's letters to Churches. Catholicism was breaking away from this by adding their tradition and papal claims of infallibility. "Sola Scriptura" was merely the belief in returning Christian belief and practice back to relying on scripture only, the way it was from the beginning. This is NOT an "ad hoc" argument.
Sola Scriptura is completely unbiblcal.I've provided several biblical verses for these. You choose to not accept them. Your anti-Catholic bias is strong here.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
An "ad hoc" argument/explanation is one that is developed, usually without any real evidence at all, to explain away certain inconsistencies. A clear example is seen in the Catholic dogma of the sinlessness of Mary. Her sinlessness is contradicted by Mary calling the Lord her "Savior". So what the Catholic Church had to do, was create the belief that Mary was "saved" from sin before conception, in order to solve that problem. But there is absolutely no indication from scripture or any historical reference that this was even an idea among the first Christians. Another example is Mary's perpetual virginity. Catholics believe that if Mary birthed Jesus through the normal process, i.e. through the birth canal, then Mary could not have been perpetually a virgin. So they create the belief, again without any evidence, that Jesus sort of miraculously "beamed" out of Mary's womb.
I give you this, you have been trained well in this regard. I also appreciate the fact that you have not resulted to ad hominin attacks on the faith and keep the discussion, for the most part, about scripture.
If you'd like, I will send you a book (at my cost) called The Early Church Was the Catholic Church, by Joe Heschmeyer. If you want it and will read it, PM me. If not, no worries. I am happy to send it to someone else. You make not agree with the book, but you will at least understand our historical basis for the Catholic Church.
I can not accept your arguments from scripture regarding the sinlessness of Mary and her perpetual virginity, because they are not scriptural. The perfect passive participle of the verb "graced" does not mean Mary was sinless. This is a logical leap that has no basis. Her being the fulfillment of a typology of the ark of the Covenant is just an eisegesis that has no other scriptural confirmation. That is, unless you are relying on your reach about the tense of a verb. But that would be like begging the question, i.e. arguing in a circle.
I am not "well trained" in being anti-Catholic. I am just a Christian who cares about the truth of the Gospel and about Jesus. I'm also not being anti-Catholic in the sense that I am not against Catholic believers. I consider Catholics fellow believers in Jesus, but who are in grievous error, who are being misled by the authorities they trust, to the point that the gospel they're believing in isn't the true gospel anymore, and thus they are at risk of not being saved. However, I am anti-Catholicism, in that I am against the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church. If I didn't care about Catholics, I wouldn't be spending all this time. If I don't tell you the truth, then THAT is being anti-Catholic.