Quote:
And Catholic councils do not have divine authority. They are fallible and don't determine what is biblically true.
Q: Where is the record of the first ecumenical council found?
A: Acts 15.
Quote:
And Catholic councils do not have divine authority. They are fallible and don't determine what is biblically true.
Fre3dombear said:
There is something powerful and freeing sitting face to face with someone and telling them out loud your worst mistakes (and not worry as well). The acknowledgement drives accountability and out best attempt to go and sin no more
Protestants aren't "children of Zwingli and Calvin", they are believers in church reform whenever the church departs from Scripture, Scripture being the only infallible authority for faith and doctrine. They are children of God's word.Realitybites said:Fre3dombear said:
I also wonder how many here who have Martin Luther to thank for their various denominations have delved deeply into his thoughts on Mary and the Catholic Church. Could they even expound extemporaneously on what his 95 theses even were and how many other things were nailed to the wood that day as was the custom.
I actually have a lot of respect for confessional Lutheranism, having preserved pre-Tridentine worship in the west. But the children of Zwingli and Calvin are a long, long way from the faith once delivered to the saints.
Acts 15 is Scripture. Scripture is infallible.Realitybites said:Quote:
And Catholic councils do not have divine authority. They are fallible and don't determine what is biblically true.
Q: Where is the record of the first ecumenical council found?
A: Acts 15.
"You shall know them by their fruits."Fre3dombear said:
I'm Curious if any Protestants here have really studied scientifically Our Lady of Gaudalupe which defies all science as we understand it (similar to The Shroud).
Someone here (or I may be conflating my message boards) may have alluded to the devil did that. Is that a generally held Protestant belief? So much good came from it, affecting literally millions and an entire continent and beyond. Never knew the devil to do so much good but he plays the long game so maybe he trickin me
It's interesting that you always call it "double-talk" when I present solid logic because it doesn't fit YOUR interpretation.and/or narrative.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:You went from "we don't know what happens to them" to asserting "God does not work in absolutes for salvation". You can't assert something to be true when you don't know. And 1 Timothy 2:4 doesn't support that assertion. This is just more double talk.Coke Bear said:Here, you are exactly in accordance with Catholic teaching. We don't know the status of those people (or anyone else who hasn't heard the gospel. The Catechism states in CCC 847 -BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Regarding the person who's never heard of Jesus - it is and always will be a tough question. Whatever God does, it will be perfectly fair and just. I don't know what happens to them, and neither do you, so you shouldn't presume anything. It seems fair to us for God to judge those who've never had the opportunity to hear the Gospel based on how they've responded to God's revelation via nature, morals, etc.
"Those who, through no fault of their own, do not know the gospel of Christ or his Church, but who nevertheless seek God with a sincere heart, and, moved by grace, try in their actions to do his will as they know it through the dictates of their consciencethose too may achieve eternal salvation."
God does not work in absolutes for salvation. 1 Timothy 2:4, states that God "wants all people to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth."
God is NOT going to ask the impossible of the 14th Century Native Americans to obtain their salvation. Just like Jesus is not going to require the thief on the cross to be baptized. It would have been impossible for him to do so.
Jesus gave us a Church. It is an historic fact that the church that Jesus created was the Catholic Church.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
I JUST told you what determines salvation. In the very paragraph you are responding to. I've been saying what determines salvation throughout this whole thread. I already told you to not consider me a "protestant" or any other label, and just deal with what I'm saying based on its own merits. You are so caught up on what church people belong to, instead of the actual substance of what they believe. In the end, that's all that matters. God doesn't save churches. He saves people.
I know what the Nestorian heresy contains. But you have denied that Mary is the "Theotokos," God-bearer. Sounds pretty heretical to me.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Once again, please understand what the Nestorian heresy is before you accuse others of it. This is three times now you've gotten it wrong, and instead of doing the intellectually honest thing, you've tripled down on it.
The Council of Ephesus IS considered infallible. Both Catholics and Orthodox hold and agree doctrine that ecumenical councils are infallible.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
And Catholic councils do not have divine authority. They are fallible and don't determine what is biblically true. Catholic councils made it a requirement to believe in completely unbiblical and invented beliefs like Mary's sinlessness, bodily assumption, and perpetual virginity upon penalty of being anathematized to hell. They even anathematized the rulings of their own previous councils! If that doesn't reveal to you they do not have divine authority and are fallible then perhaps nothing will.
Nope. The attention that Mary gives ALWAYS points to Jesus. We venerate (showing great respect - per Oxford) her. We don't worship her. You can type that all you want, but it doesn't make it true. Show me an official Catholic Ecumenical Council or Doctrine that literally says that Catholics should "worship Mary as God" or never state that again.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:"You shall know them by their fruits."Fre3dombear said:
I'm Curious if any Protestants here have really studied scientifically Our Lady of Gaudalupe which defies all science as we understand it (similar to The Shroud).
Someone here (or I may be conflating my message boards) may have alluded to the devil did that. Is that a generally held Protestant belief? So much good came from it, affecting literally millions and an entire continent and beyond. Never knew the devil to do so much good but he plays the long game so maybe he trickin me
The fruits of alleged Marian apparitions and miracles is the giving all focus and attention to Mary, leading to her glory, veneration, and worship by millions and millions, thus directing it all away from Jesus. They've succumbed to doctrine and beliefs that are completely unbiblical and a complete distortion of the saving gospel itself. So if this isn't the "doctrine of demons", I don't know what is.
I called it "double talk" because that's what it is. How else do you describe saying that something is required, and also that it's NOT required?Coke Bear said:It's interesting that you always call it "double-talk" when I present solid logic because it doesn't fit YOUR interpretation.and/or narrative.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:You went from "we don't know what happens to them" to asserting "God does not work in absolutes for salvation". You can't assert something to be true when you don't know. And 1 Timothy 2:4 doesn't support that assertion. This is just more double talk.Coke Bear said:Here, you are exactly in accordance with Catholic teaching. We don't know the status of those people (or anyone else who hasn't heard the gospel. The Catechism states in CCC 847 -BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Regarding the person who's never heard of Jesus - it is and always will be a tough question. Whatever God does, it will be perfectly fair and just. I don't know what happens to them, and neither do you, so you shouldn't presume anything. It seems fair to us for God to judge those who've never had the opportunity to hear the Gospel based on how they've responded to God's revelation via nature, morals, etc.
"Those who, through no fault of their own, do not know the gospel of Christ or his Church, but who nevertheless seek God with a sincere heart, and, moved by grace, try in their actions to do his will as they know it through the dictates of their consciencethose too may achieve eternal salvation."
God does not work in absolutes for salvation. 1 Timothy 2:4, states that God "wants all people to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth."
God is NOT going to ask the impossible of the 14th Century Native Americans to obtain their salvation. Just like Jesus is not going to require the thief on the cross to be baptized. It would have been impossible for him to do so.
With respect to the language that I chose, I was trying to meet you with your words.
The Church believes exactly what is stated in the CCC 847. God wants all to be saved. We don't know what's in the heart of every specific 14th century Native American. Only God does.
You stated those who "responded to God's revelation via nature, morals, etc" may obtain salvation even though they never heard of Jesus. The Church makes a similar assertion as stated in CCC 847.
EDIT TO ADD THE FOLLOWING -
Referring to letting preaching to others so that they would also know the truth.
I just heard a great quote from Fr. Mike Schmitz that he got from another priest -
"Jesus loves us just as we are. But he loves us to much to stay as we are."
That's why we proclaim the gospel, even if it puts others "at risk."
"Catholic" just means "universal". It means the total body of believers in Jesus. It most certainly does NOT mean the Roman Catholic Church. The Roman Catholic Church is an apostate Christianity that compromised with pagan god and goddess worship. That is a historical fact. It perpetually distorts the gospel and promotes heresy and idolatry by building itself on the very false concepts of church infallibility and infallible non-Scriptural tradition. One only has to read the constant warnings from the apostle Paul and Jesus in the New Testament about heresies and false gospels entering the church to know that those concepts are completely false.Coke Bear said:Jesus gave us a Church. It is an historic fact that the church that Jesus created was the Catholic Church.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
I JUST told you what determines salvation. In the very paragraph you are responding to. I've been saying what determines salvation throughout this whole thread. I already told you to not consider me a "protestant" or any other label, and just deal with what I'm saying based on its own merits. You are so caught up on what church people belong to, instead of the actual substance of what they believe. In the end, that's all that matters. God doesn't save churches. He saves people.
"Protestant" is the label for those that protest against the Church. You are protesting (strongly against the Church.
If your not with the Catholic Church, then you are a protestant, whether you like the label or not.
Denying that Mary is the "Theotokos" is not the Nestorian heresy. You are just trying to make the false association. You are intellectually dishonest.Coke Bear said:I know what the Nestorian heresy contains. But you have denied that Mary is the "Theotokos," God-bearer. Sounds pretty heretical to me.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Once again, please understand what the Nestorian heresy is before you accuse others of it. This is three times now you've gotten it wrong, and instead of doing the intellectually honest thing, you've tripled down on it.
Just two chapters later in Matthew, Jesus tells that to ALL of the disciples.Coke Bear said:The Council of Ephesus IS considered infallible. Both Catholics and Orthodox hold and agree doctrine that ecumenical councils are infallible.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
And Catholic councils do not have divine authority. They are fallible and don't determine what is biblically true. Catholic councils made it a requirement to believe in completely unbiblical and invented beliefs like Mary's sinlessness, bodily assumption, and perpetual virginity upon penalty of being anathematized to hell. They even anathematized the rulings of their own previous councils! If that doesn't reveal to you they do not have divine authority and are fallible then perhaps nothing will.
Jesus promised Pete, in Matthew 16, that what ever he bound on earth would be bound on heaven and what he loosed on earth, would be loosed in heaven. In Hebrew practice, "binding and loosing" refers to the authority of religious leaders to declare certain actions as forbidden ("bound") or permitted ("loosed") based on their interpretation of Jewish law. Did Jesus give your church that power? Did Jesus start your church? NO. He started the Catholic Church. Bad laypeople, bad priests, bad nuns, bad bishops, and even bad Popes have tried their best to destroy the Church, but they can't. Jesus won't let them. He promised us this in Matthew 16.
How can Roman Catholic councils be infallible, when their councils anathematize their own previous councils?Quote:
The Council of Ephesus IS considered infallible. Both Catholics and Orthodox hold and agree doctrine that ecumenical councils are infallible.
Catholics hold that their own councils are infallible? Pretty convenient.Quote:
The Council of Ephesus IS considered infallible. Both Catholics and Orthodox hold and agree doctrine that ecumenical councils are infallible.
And sadly obvious from History.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Catholics hold that their own councils are infallible? Pretty convenient.Quote:
The Council of Ephesus IS considered infallible. Both Catholics and Orthodox hold and agree doctrine that ecumenical councils are infallible.
Roman Catholicism: "Yes, we pray to her, sings hymns to her, kiss pictures and statues of her, bow to statues of her, constantly think of her, say her name ten times as much as we say God's name, hold hundreds of festivals for her every year, and consider her a glorified being in heaven to whom we make supplications.......Coke Bear said:Nope. The attention that Mary gives ALWAYS points to Jesus. We venerate (showing great respect - per Oxford) her. We don't worship her. You can type that all you want, but it doesn't make it true. Show me an official Catholic Ecumenical Council or Doctrine that literally says that Catholics should "worship Mary as God" or never state that again.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:"You shall know them by their fruits."Fre3dombear said:
I'm Curious if any Protestants here have really studied scientifically Our Lady of Gaudalupe which defies all science as we understand it (similar to The Shroud).
Someone here (or I may be conflating my message boards) may have alluded to the devil did that. Is that a generally held Protestant belief? So much good came from it, affecting literally millions and an entire continent and beyond. Never knew the devil to do so much good but he plays the long game so maybe he trickin me
The fruits of alleged Marian apparitions and miracles is the giving all focus and attention to Mary, leading to her glory, veneration, and worship by millions and millions, thus directing it all away from Jesus. They've succumbed to doctrine and beliefs that are completely unbiblical and a complete distortion of the saving gospel itself. So if this isn't the "doctrine of demons", I don't know what is.
Coke Bear said:Nope. The attention that Mary gives ALWAYS points to Jesus. We venerate (showing great respect - per Oxford) her. We don't worship her. You can type that all you want, but it doesn't make it true. Show me an official Catholic Ecumenical Council or Doctrine that literally says that Catholics should "worship Mary as God" or never state that again.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:"You shall know them by their fruits."Fre3dombear said:
I'm Curious if any Protestants here have really studied scientifically Our Lady of Gaudalupe which defies all science as we understand it (similar to The Shroud).
Someone here (or I may be conflating my message boards) may have alluded to the devil did that. Is that a generally held Protestant belief? So much good came from it, affecting literally millions and an entire continent and beyond. Never knew the devil to do so much good but he plays the long game so maybe he trickin me
The fruits of alleged Marian apparitions and miracles is the giving all focus and attention to Mary, leading to her glory, veneration, and worship by millions and millions, thus directing it all away from Jesus. They've succumbed to doctrine and beliefs that are completely unbiblical and a complete distortion of the saving gospel itself. So if this isn't the "doctrine of demons", I don't know what is.
"Honey, I think of her all the time. I call or text her every day. I go on dates with her. I kiss her. I have sex with her......but never have I ever SAID that I am cheating on you with her. Show me one time when I've ever SAID that. So since I've never SAID such a thing, never say that I'm cheating on you again".Coke Bear said:Nope. The attention that Mary gives ALWAYS points to Jesus. We venerate (showing great respect - per Oxford) her. We don't worship her. You can type that all you want, but it doesn't make it true. Show me an official Catholic Ecumenical Council or Doctrine that literally says that Catholics should "worship Mary as God" or never state that again.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:"You shall know them by their fruits."Fre3dombear said:
I'm Curious if any Protestants here have really studied scientifically Our Lady of Gaudalupe which defies all science as we understand it (similar to The Shroud).
Someone here (or I may be conflating my message boards) may have alluded to the devil did that. Is that a generally held Protestant belief? So much good came from it, affecting literally millions and an entire continent and beyond. Never knew the devil to do so much good but he plays the long game so maybe he trickin me
The fruits of alleged Marian apparitions and miracles is the giving all focus and attention to Mary, leading to her glory, veneration, and worship by millions and millions, thus directing it all away from Jesus. They've succumbed to doctrine and beliefs that are completely unbiblical and a complete distortion of the saving gospel itself. So if this isn't the "doctrine of demons", I don't know what is.
Roman Catholics bow to and kiss statues of Mary, seek mediation through her in order to go to heaven, have prayers that call her "sovereign", "god of this world", "salvation of the universe", and "give all their heart and soul" to her, and have their own psalms that take the original Psalms of the Old Testament and replace God and Jesus with Mary......Fre3dombear said:Coke Bear said:Nope. The attention that Mary gives ALWAYS points to Jesus. We venerate (showing great respect - per Oxford) her. We don't worship her. You can type that all you want, but it doesn't make it true. Show me an official Catholic Ecumenical Council or Doctrine that literally says that Catholics should "worship Mary as God" or never state that again.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:"You shall know them by their fruits."Fre3dombear said:
I'm Curious if any Protestants here have really studied scientifically Our Lady of Gaudalupe which defies all science as we understand it (similar to The Shroud).
Someone here (or I may be conflating my message boards) may have alluded to the devil did that. Is that a generally held Protestant belief? So much good came from it, affecting literally millions and an entire continent and beyond. Never knew the devil to do so much good but he plays the long game so maybe he trickin me
The fruits of alleged Marian apparitions and miracles is the giving all focus and attention to Mary, leading to her glory, veneration, and worship by millions and millions, thus directing it all away from Jesus. They've succumbed to doctrine and beliefs that are completely unbiblical and a complete distortion of the saving gospel itself. So if this isn't the "doctrine of demons", I don't know what is.
I saw a post in your response. I think that person misunderstands what happened south of texas in the years that followed the appearance of our Lady of Guadalupe 500 years ago, what stopped and what started.
Catholicism isn't the #1 represented church in texas because all those Latinos that came here are Marians
I guess the devil failed in what that miracle of an image he created (in some people's minds) as it brought millions and millions to the Catholic faith. That's undisputed history.
Expi fail devil. You suck! (Not that we don't already know that)
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
]Protestants aren't "children of Zwingli and Calvin", they are believers in church reform whenever the church departs from Scripture, Scripture being the only infallible authority for faith and doctrine. They are children of God's word.
Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli did not invent the idea of a faith based on the authority of the original apostles and their testimony, i.e. infallible Scripture. That's how it was in the beginning and how it always should be. Protestantism is a return to the beginning, as well as a repudiation of man-made abuses of Scripture like the Roman Catholic concoction that you can pay money to the Roman Catholic church for "indulgences" to have yourself or departed loved ones avoid "purgatory". If you honestly believe that wasn't a cause for reform, then you really don't have any sense.Realitybites said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
]Protestants aren't "children of Zwingli and Calvin", they are believers in church reform whenever the church departs from Scripture, Scripture being the only infallible authority for faith and doctrine. They are children of God's word.
Protestants didn't exist before 1517 AD. Roman Catholics didn't exist before 1054 AD. Within protestantism, there are three major streams of thought: Luther, Calvin, and Zwingli. These are simple historical facts that have nothing to do with specific Christian doctrine.
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the Roman Catholic concoction that you can pay money to the Roman Catholic church for "indulgences" to have yourself or departed loved ones avoid "purgatory". If you honestly believe that wasn't a cause for reform, then you really don't have any sense.
If you can't "reconstitute" the original faith from Scripture, then you can't do it at all. You certainly can't do it with tradition that you can't trace back to the original apostles at all. Scripture is the only thing the church has in its possession that we know is the divinely inspired word of the original apostles, thus it is the only infallible rule of faith for the church.Realitybites said:Quote:
the Roman Catholic concoction that you can pay money to the Roman Catholic church for "indulgences" to have yourself or departed loved ones avoid "purgatory". If you honestly believe that wasn't a cause for reform, then you really don't have any sense.
Absolutely was a cause for reform. Such things are heresy. But this teaching stems from the idea that the Roman Catholic church holds the keys to a Treasury of Merit, from which partial or plenary indulgences can be granted, applying the merits of Christ and the Saints to the seeker of the indulgence. These were dogmatically confirmed as part of the Roman Catholic faith by the Council of Trent in the mid 1500s AD. It was substantially revised in 1967 AD.
When the Roman Patriarchate went into schism in 1054 AD, it proceeded to go off the rails. Most of what an American recognizes as the Roman Catholic religion today is the product of its the Lateran, Trent, Vatican I, and Vatican II meetings with a scattering of other innovations added between them.
The flip side of that is that you cannot reconstitute the Church of the First Millenium by picking up a Bible any more than you can build a Ferrari in your garage with a Haynes manual. That is why there are tens of thousands of Protestant denominations who disagree with each other.