BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Just as I said - complete, non sequitur eisegetic nonsense.
No, unfortunately, it is your inability to understand typology. That's what happens when you make up your own religion and don't learn from the Church.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
There is nothing that says the woman in Revelation is Mary. It is highly symbolic imagery, not a real person. And even if it were, clearly she is feeling pain at childbirth which means she had sin, which goes against your belief in her sinlessness. So you're defeating your own beliefs. And also, even if that were Mary, there is nothing there that suggests she was "assumed" bodily into heaven eiher, only that she is IN heaven, like all believers are.
Every Catholic should agree that the imagery in Revelation is polyvalent. Having said that several Church Fathers, such as Epiphanius, Andrew of Caesarea, Augustine, and Irenaeus see Mary as the woman in Revelation. This belief was long before the so-called reformers rebelled from Christ's Church.
Please check your Bible again in Gen 3:16
"I will
greatly multiply your pain in childbirth; in pain you will bring forth children,"
It never said that the pain wasn't there before. Also, one could argue that any woman after the fall would have pains in birth.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
There is nothing that says the ark is Mary. And EVEN if your distorted mind says that it is, still, nothing there suggests she was assumed bodily into heaven, but only that she is IN heaven.
Luke goes to great lengths in his first chapter to identify Mary as the new Ark. I know that I and others have covered this many times before. The correlation between Luke and Samuel are nearly word for word.
Well, Rev clearly shows her BODY in the heavens. Also, we have NO relics of Mary. The Church has relics of ALL of the apostles and Mary Magdalene, but none for Mary, the most holy human person ever.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
The serpent was not something they bowed and prayed to, as if it were a "window" to God. It was a prefigurement of Jesus. Now that Jesus has come, there is no instruction or reference whatsoever in all of the New Testament for Christians to do this. There is not a single instance of Jesus' church using pictures and images of himself or departed believers as part of prayer and worship. And in fact, it was the unanimous consensus among the early church fathers that icon veneration was forbidden.
First your quote is an
ALL OUT LIE. I apologize for being so blunt. Many of your post state falsehoods and they are placed in BOLD. They need to be called out and refuted. Very few mentioned Icon Veneration. Those that did oppose it was because a variety of reason such as keeping Christianity away from paganism, keeping the focus on the intellectual (not the sensory), some with an outright refusal.
I fully understand why this practice existed as the Church was battling paganism and always many had come from a Jewish background. But as time progressed, people realized that they is nothing in the bible that says you can't make images. God commanded the Hebrews to make the bronze serpent, cherubim, and all the decorations in the Temple. He forbade the worshipping of them AS a god.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
And how many times are you going to repeat your failed argument about "scripture must prove scripture" in order for sola scriptura to be correct? Can you really not understand the logical flaw in that? Or that sola scriptura doesn't exist before scripture does? I'm literally talking to a wall.
Sola Scriptura didn't exist until the 16th century. Your only "success" in trying to find a Church father that believed in was using St Augustine out of context and I demonstrated that your claim was pulling one passage
OUT OF CONTEXT (again) and that he did not believe in such a thing.
The Hebrews did NOT believe in SS. They believed in Written Torah and the Oral Torah, which includes interpretations and teaching that have been passed down through generations.
The Hebrews had a three-fold priest structure and so does the Church today.
The Hebrews prayed for the dead (2 Mac) and so does the Church today.
The Jews have a Red Lamp (Ner Talmid) in their synagogue symbolizing God's perpetual presence and the Catholic Church as a red candle called the Sanctuary Lamp which signifies the Real Presence of Jesus Christ in the tabernacle.
The Tabernacle in Catholic Churches is similar to the original Ark of the Covenant and later the Temple is being where God's glory resided.
And most importantly, the Catholic Church celebrates the Eucharist at EVERY mass EVERYDAY of the year (except Good Friday), just as Jesus TOLD us to do as the fulfillment of the Last Supper, which was the Passover meal that the Jews celebrated every year for the previous 1300 years.
Catholicism (aka the OG Christianity) a
fulfillment of Judaism. Christ came to fulfill the law, not abolish it. Today's evangelicals have completely
abolished what God created so that they can worship how
THEY want and not what
God wants. This is just like Aaron's sons, Nadab and Abihu, who offered "unauthorized fire" which he had not commanded them to do. They paid the price for their disobedience.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Like I've already said, someone HAS told us what scripture is - Jesus. We believe him through faith. Jesus only gave his stamp of approval on the Tanakh and the words of the apostles. There is no "authority" that decides what the apostles wrote. The knowledge of what they wrote was known first hand by the first century Christians, which they passed down through testimony. The "authorities" were only essential in their preservation of that testimony. And it's obvious that this process was NOT infallible, as even Roman Catholic history reveals, given that the Council of Trent contradicted it's own previous councils, and even anathematized their rulings on the canon. None of you seem to want to deal with this fact. It's pretty obvious why.
You AGAIN are stretching Luke 24:44-45. He doesn't use Tanakh. He says the "Law, Prophets, and the Psalms." He does say the Writings. Even if that is included, the NT was written for at least 20 years after his death. He was NOT talking about it. He was stating that HE is the fulfillment of those scriptures. It is not a proof text for what the scriptures are.
Mark wasn't an apostle, and we don't know who wrote Hebrews. Someone had to decide whether they were canon. That someone was the Catholic Church. Not some nebulous body of believers.
Please cite the anathema that "anathematized their rulings on the canon." The only canon that I can locate that even come close to what you are claiming is the following:
If anyone does not receive as sacred and canonical the books as they have been read in the Catholic Church and contained in the Latin Vulgate edition, and knowingly condemn the aforesaid traditions, let him be anathema.
That doesn't sound like it says the old Canons are anathematized. I really don't understand your weak point.
To the original point, sola scriptura is false because:
- Bible does NOT teach it
- The Church (guided by the Holy Spirit discerned and declared the canon of Scripture
- Sacred Tradition passed down through apostolic succession, provides the context and correct interpretation of scripture
- Sola Scriptura arose only during the protestant "reformation"
- Without an authoritative interpretive body, SS leads to various interpretations resulting in doctrinal confusion
So I ask you, is the Bible the foundation of Truth?