BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Coke Bear said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
The Roman Catholic Church promotes the belief that Mary has divine authoritty. I've literally shown you example after example. You guys have completely shut your minds to any clear, objective evidence that goes against what you're told to believe. It's quite astonishing to behold.
No you have not. You presented a book written (before our country was founded) in another language in a completely different culture, which you have taken out of completely out of context.
St. Alphonsus consistently reiterates throughout his writings that while Mary is to be highly venerated due to her unique role in salvation history, worship is reserved for God alone.
Please cite ONE paragraph from the Catechism of the Catechism Church (link included to help you search) that states that Mary has "divine authority."
As a side note, please define "divine authority."
It doesn't have to come from the Catechisms in order for the Roman Catholic Church to be teaching it. You are so dishonest. As well as in denial of what Ligouri's book is all about.
A rational, honest person can read that book, hear statements made by popes and bishops, read the messages of apparitions that are fully condoned by the RCC, and conclude that yes, the RCC teaches the divine authority of Mary. I've given example after example of all this. You simply aren't honest enough and too brainwashed to see it.
In fairness, you've also given "examples" of the fact that Church Doctors don't teach Church doctrine and that sola scriptura was practiced before Scripture was canonized. So I think some skepticism is warranted here.
The plain fact is that the Church Doctors didn't, and Christians were never without God-breathed Scripture. Scripture didn't need to be "canonized" in order to be Scripture.
Augustine and Athanasius would partially disagree. Scripture could only be fully recognized and proclaimed once it was canonized.
This may sound odd, but you know what I would recommend reading if you haven't? John Henry Newman. Hear me out. His Essay is the definitive work on the development of Christian doctrine. Of course you won't agree with all of it, but it would clarify the issues if you were to read it with an open mind.
I really think you need to stop speaking for the church fathers. You don't really know what they would have believed, especially in light of your slanted viewpoint towards whatever the Church tells you to think. So there's reason for skepticism there.
For Christians, Scripture was the Old Testament before there were the writings of the apostles. While the apostles were living and before their testimony was written down, their oral teaching had the authority of Jesus behind it as if it were Scripture. Augustine and Athanasius could not have disagreed that by the end of the 1st century, the majority of the New Testament was already recognized by the body of Christ as Scripture. For Athanasius, the early church did have the full Old Testament - and he did not consider the deuterocanonical books as canon Scripture. Yet he was canonized as a saint and made a Doctor of the Church. So why would it be so hard to believe the same could happen with Augustine?
Because there was no significant debate, if any, until centuries after Augustine's time. He would have been expressing an obviously heterodox view if your interpretation were correct.
"obviously heterodox view" - an assertion without any basis in historical fact whatsoever.
Regardless, the point remains that if Athanasius was canonized and Doctored, there's no reason that Augustine's views, heterodox or not, would have prevented him from the same, as CokeBear claimed. Besides, as we've clearly witnessed, RC's only accept their church's version of history anyway, so who's gonna know if any of them actually held contrary views? Anyone arguing this is just "taking them out of context", right?
Early Christians weren't taught to believe in the Incarnation, the Resurrection, and the Book of James. The scriptural canon was established later, through painstaking factual investigation as much as anything else. Unlike the Real Presence, it was not an article of faith handed down from the very origins of the Church.
Early Christians weren't taught to believe in the Resurrection, the central tenet of Christianity?
Now we're really skeptical of your take.
They were taught the essential tenets but not given a pre-packaged canon.
With regard to the Old Testament, they were. And according to Athanasius, the deuterocanonical books did not belong, a belief that the RCC later anathematized a person to Hell for - and then soon after he was declared a Doctor of the Church.
No. Again, the Christian world was far from consensus.
"Anathematized to hell" is not a concept that exists in Catholicism.