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Mother Mary??

Discussion in 'Free-For-All Archives' started by David.Mathews, Mar 14, 2004.

  1. DHK

    DHK <b>Moderator</b>

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    I've already checked it. Cotton answered this well. The word "catholic" simply means "universal." The Roman Catholic Church, as such had its beginnings in the fourth century under Constantine when it became a state church.

    And you point is...

    If Moses was inspired by God to write the first five books of the Bible, then it wasn't oral tradition was it? It is the Word of God, written by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. There is no Oral Tradition here, only the inspired Word of God. It is God's revelation to mankind. If you claim this to be Oral Tradition, then you are denying it to be the Word of God.

    Were these events talked about? Sure they were talked about. There are over 1,000 references to the Old Testament in the New Testament. Jesus referred to the creation, to Adam and Eve, to the flood, and to other events such as Jonah and the whale. To deny their historicity is call Jesus a liar. Jesus referred to them as the Books of Moses. Jesus considered them as Scripture, and not tradition. Whose word is more authoritative: yours or Jesus? I know whose word I will go with!
    It seems to me that you don't study your Bible enough. The Bible does give us answers to these questions, if you motivated enough to study it.
    Check Genesis 5:4
    The events are recorded in the Bible, and enough information about them that God wants us to know are given. We don't need frivilous speculation on the rest.

    The Assumption is taken as a doctrine of the Catholic Church. Any doctrine must have its foundation in the Word of God or it is heresy. There is no Biblical basis for the Assumption. It is a heretical doctrine.
    DHK
     
  2. Living4Him

    Living4Him New Member

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    Gen. 5:4 "And the days of Adam after he had begotten Seth were eight hundred years: and he begat sons and daughters:" What does this have to do with the question that I asked. If we go with your answer then, Cain's wife had to be Eve or perhaps his sister.
    Also DKH, I have 30+ years of Bible memory and study. I once was one of the top Bible Quiz team members in highschool.

    I never said that my word is authoritative. It appears that you are still missing the point. Before the complete Bible was put together, the early Christians had to rely on oral tradition. We know that the NT is made up of letters that were sent to the different churches. Therefore, the early Christians had to rely on oral tradition.

    God is the same yesterday, today, and tomorrow.

    It's foolish to say that because it's not recorded in the Bible doesn't mean it didn't happen.
    I guess you didn't really read Cotton's answer
    He did not say anything remotely to what you are saying that the Church had its beginnings under Constantine.
     
  3. DHK

    DHK <b>Moderator</b>

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    If you have 30 plus yers of studying the Bible is it so hard for you to comprehend that Cain married one of his sisters. Adam lived to be 930 years. Do you know how many children he could have had in that time. The verse says that after he had begotten Seth (which wasn't his first son, and no mention of how many daughters were born before this time), he lived 800 more years. He was 130 years old when Seth was born. All the children of Adam are not mentioned. Only some of them. People living to the age of 900 plus can beget a lot of children. He married his sister. Civilization had to start somewhere. Does this bother you? Does it bother you that Abraham married Sarah, his half-sister.
    Incest, as we know it today, was not condemned until 2,000 years later when God gave Moses the Law on Mt. Sinai. Does this answer your question.
    Before the Bible was complete the early Christians had the Old Testament, and as you say they had some of the epistles. Even with just the Old Testament they had the Scriptures. What do you think happened at Berea:

    Acts 17:11 These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.

    They searched the Scripturess to verify the gospel message that Paul was preaching was true. What Scriptures. The Old Testament Scriptures of course. What was the result:

    Acts 17:12 Therefore many of them believed; also of honourable women which were Greeks, and of men, not a few.

    This is not Oral Tradition. This is the Word of God. Paul did not preach Oral Tradition. He preached the Word of God that he received from the Lord.

    1 Corinthians 15:3 For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures;

    The writer of the Book of Hebrews says:
    Hebrews 2:3-4 How shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation; which at the first began to be spoken by the Lord, and was confirmed unto us by them that heard him;
    4 God also bearing them witness, both with signs and wonders, and with divers miracles, and gifts of the Holy Ghost, according to his own will?

    The epistles were written by the Apostles who had seen and heard the Lord, and were eyewitnesses of Him. This is not Oral Traditon.

    1 John 1:1 That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen with our eyes, which we have looked upon, and our hands have handled, of the Word of life;

    As each epistle was written it came into the hands of the early believers and was recognized as Scripture. Peter recognized the writings of Paul as Scripture (2Peter 3:15). Peter also recognizes the writings of the other apostles as having as much weight and authority as the prophets of the Old Testament.
    2 Peter 3:2 That ye may be mindful of the words which were spoken before by the holy prophets, and of the commandment of us the apostles of the Lord and Saviour:
    Actually he did. "Christianity" did not become a state church until Constantine legalized it, and made it a state church, thus forming the Catholic Church. What he did is paganize Christianity, and Christianize pagans. That is what the Catholic Church is today. They still have their pagan idols that Constantine introduced. They still commit idolatry. They still pray to the dead. They still have many of the pagan concepts that Constantine introduced into Christianity when he made it a state church. That is when and where the Roman Catholic Church began.
    DHK
     
  4. Living4Him

    Living4Him New Member

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    DKH,
    I want to make sure that I am not taking your words out of context....
    Are you saying that there wasn't a Church until Constantine made one?
     
  5. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

    #1. Actually, I use the KJV for some things such as my belief of the worlds age.

    #2. No, the deuterocanonical books are not the only ones that contain "Catholic" beliefs. But without them it is difficult to debate ideas that either make you Catholic or Protestant. The other stuff is merely a matter of disagreeing on interpretation.
     
  6. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

    I thought my post covered the topinc quite well, but I'm sorry you didn't. You also seem to be willingly overlooking the distinct difference of the Assumption of Christ and of Mary. Christ assumed into heaven under His own power, Mary did not. She was assumed through divine intervention much in the same way as Elijah. Therefore, Mary did not assume into heaven on the same level that Christ did.

    Adopted children still call the female authority figure of there childhood their mother even though she did not physically give birth to them. You cannot deny that much. Christ was, in a way, an "adopted" child as He was not hers by procreation. To say Mother of God does not mean that she was better or more holy than God, just that she was the female authority figure in Jesus' life as a little boy.
     
  7. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

    Right, but the opinion is of a person who was alive during that time period, therefore, very knowledgable on what was going on and what had happened.

    Quoting a person who lived in 100 AD is supporting a belief. It's like quoting the Bible as support or quoting Newton as support. Is it so hard to imagine that my belief may just happen to COINCIDE with that of someone else who is now dead? Yours does, too. And 900,000,000 Catholics believe the same thing, too. I'm not supporting the position of a dead person, but supporting my own position with the words of a dead person who was alive during the time period all of this happened.

    To seem to think that "inspiration" is given to people in only dreams such as Daniel's or something. I think inspiration can be that way, but it only seems logical that God would also use inspiration in that Moses already knew about it from Oral Tradition and that God convicted him to write it down.

    I encourage you to show me idolatry.
     
  8. DHK

    DHK <b>Moderator</b>

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    There was no such thing as a "state church" until the time of Constantine. The word "church" in the Bible is "ekklesia" in the Greek, which simply means congregation or assembly. Paul went on three missionary journeys and established over 100 churches; not denominations, but churches. Jesus wrote to seven churches in the Book of Revelation. It is evident that Jesus planned to have many churches, not just one. The one that he spoke of in Matthew 16 would be a model of all others. It would be built upon the solid rock of Christ Himself, which every Bible believing church is.

    1 Corinthians 3:11 For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ.
    DHK
     
  9. DHK

    DHK <b>Moderator</b>

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    I don't offer opinion. That is what you just gave. I give you the facts contained in the Word of God.

    Hebrews 1:1-2 God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets,
    2 Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds;

    Hebrews 1:1 says that God spoke in the Old Testament at different times, in various ways by the prophets, not through Oral Tradition.

    Verse 2 declares that in these days He speaks to us through His Son, Jesus Christ--who is revealed to us through His Word.
    The fifteen stations of the cross, that you bow down in front of and pray before is idolatry. The Bible specifically says in the Ten Commandments that you shall not make any graven image, and shall not bow down before them. This is idolatry. The Catholic Church has images or icons all throughout their churches which they kneel before, and which they pray before. That is idolatry. Any Bible dictionary will define worship as a bowing down before God. You are bowing down before an idol.
    DHK
     
  10. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

    If you read the Nicene Creed it should be pretty evident that the RCC is founded on Christ.

    I guess by that standard your church would have to take down the cross that is undoubtably in the sanctuary. And a lot of Protestant churches that I have attended have altar calls....where they kneel at the altar. Guess that has to go, too.

    And no one is bowing before anyone but God. The Stations of the Cross, etc. are visuals to help one focus their hearts and minds on God. There is nothing unbiblical about that.

    "2 Thessalonians 2:15 - So then, brothers, stand firm and hold to the teachings* we passed on to you, whether by word of mouth or by letter.

    *Or traditions"

    This being taken from a Protestant Bible, one might wonder why Paul told them to hold on to oral teachings (tradition) if they were not important or true to Christ.
     
  11. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

    Also, another Protestant source...

    Thus the early Church historian J. N. D. Kelly, a Protestant, writes, "[W]here in practice was [the] apostolic testimony or tradition to be found? . . . The most obvious answer was that the apostles had committed it orally to the Church, where it had been handed down from generation to generation. . . . Unlike the alleged secret tradition of the Gnostics, it was entirely public and open, having been entrusted by the apostles to their successors, and by these in turn to those who followed them, and was visible in the Church for all who cared to look for it" (Early Christian Doctrines, 37)
     
  12. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

  13. Living4Him

    Living4Him New Member

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    Peace of Christ to you DKH.

    What do you say to this? Formation of Catholic Church

    The word "catholic" means universal. Jesus created one universal church for all of mankind. The Catholic Church was established by Jesus with his words spoken in Matthew 16. Jesus asked his disciples "Who do people say that the Son of Man is?" The disciples then offered various answers - "Some say John the Baptist, others Elijah, still others Jeremiah or one of the prophets." But the question that Jesus then asked was crucial: "But who do you say that I am?"

    The answer provided by Simon Peter set in motion the formation of the Catholic Church by Jesus. "You are the Messiah, the Son of the living God." With this answer, Jesus established the Catholic Church with Simon Peter designated the first Pope.

    "Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah. For flesh and blood has not revealed this to you, but my heavenly Father. And so I say to you, you are Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church, and the gates of the netherworld shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys to the kingdom of heaven. Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven."

    OR From Constantine: Founder of the Catholic Church?

    As for all those “pagan practices” Constantine supposedly introduced...



    The Sign of the Cross was found in the ruins of Pompeii in a house chapel. Pompeii was destroyed in AD 79, LONG time before Constantine, nearly 300 years in fact. Also: At the beginning of the 20th Century, a graveyard of Jewish-Christians was found on the Mount of Olives by archeologist P. Bagatti, dating from the First Century after Christ. FIRST Century, that would be from around AD 33 – AD 100, when the Apostles and those who knew Jesus were still alive. On the ossuaries of the departed were found typical Jewish names of the time and (ready for a shock?) many were marked with the Sign of the Cross, or the Chi Rho (monogram of Christ in Greek), and with the Greek monogram IXB (which means, “Jesus Christ Helper”). And here’s the BIG shock: ossuaries were found in a First Century family crypt with the names “Maryam”, “Martha”, and “Eleazar” written on them and signed with the cross. Oh, by the way, those names translate to Mary, Martha, and Lazarus.

    But folks not only used the Sign of the Cross marked on things (such as ossuaries and graves), they also made the Sign on their bodies. Tertullian, an early Christian theologian born around AD 160, tells us that, as Christians, “before all we do, we make the Sign of the Cross upon our foreheads.” And he tells us it is a custom coming from the Apostles’ own day (which, for him, was only 50 years before!).
     
  14. BobRyan

    BobRyan Well-Known Member

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    I thought my post covered the topinc quite well, but I'm sorry you didn't. You also seem to be willingly overlooking the distinct difference of the Assumption of Christ and of Mary. Christ assumed into heaven under His own power, Mary did not. She was assumed through divine intervention much in the same way as Elijah. Therefore, Mary did not assume into heaven on the same level that Christ did.
    </font>[/QUOTE]You are not following the point. The RCC does not HAVE the witness reports for Mary's assumption that the Bible gives for Christs. They have to use "something else".

    They use "an argument" and that argument is NOT "well what if we like to think of Mary as assumed into heaven - after all Moses was".

    RATHER they argue "Mary was sinless like Christ THEREFORE She had to be assumed into heaven" and they use the argument of Acts 2 that is applied to Christ - as the "reason" that Mary ought to have been assumed.

    See?

    Catholic Digest – Fr Ken Ryan Answers:
    Fr Ryan: Yes, at least partly. The Grace of a happy death should be among the intentions of all who recite the Fourth Glorious Mystery because the "Mystery", or the subject of meditation, is the belief that the Blessed Mother, after her death, was taken up body and soul into Heaven without experiencing the natural corruption of the dead body. A "happy death" is one which the expectation of the resurrection is present: an "unhappy death" would be one in which there is expectation only of relief from pain or escape from sorrow. The Blessed Mother must have known that her entry into heaven was imminent and that expectation was certain to bring the happiness we Pray for when we Pray the Fourth Glorious Mystery.

    But there is, of course, far more to the Assumption than hope and Prayer for a happy death. Mary was Free from sin (immaculate conception), including Original Sin and so escaped one of the penalties for that sin: Corruption of the dead body. Death itself, also a penalty for Original Sin, was accepted by her so that she would be like her divine Son. The Assumption of Mary is an echo of the Resurrection of Christ.

    It is a kind of Divine Pledge to humankind that bodily entry to Heaven is possible for one who is only a human being, not only for the God-human, Christ. It is Conceivable only with the Resurrection of Christ as a background, not as an isolated honor given by the Church to it's greatest saint, Mary.

    The Assumption was not declared an article of the Catholic Faith until 1950, ALTHOUGH it was celebrated as a feast as early as the 7th century. It is not, in so many words, found in the bible, BUT is founded on inescapable logic, if one first accepts the truths of the Scriptures, for instance, it was absolutely necessary that the Mother of God should be without Sin, which came along with being a member of the human race, If she was without original Sin, she was free from the penalties of Sin, in the case of Original Sin from death and corruption of the body. The whole purpose of every human life should be to become "Like Christ". Mary became more "Like Christ" by her Assumption. The quotation from the book of Revelation shows, as applied, the glory of Mary, but is not part of the basis of the doctrine of the Assumption.&gt;&gt;

    </font>[/QUOTE]In Christ,

    Bob
     
  15. BobRyan

    BobRyan Well-Known Member

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    Clearly the 1950 doctrine is argued FROM The basis of the heresy that Mary was like Christ - born sinless and living a sinless life.

    In Christ,

    Bob
     
  16. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

    It's funny how you keep missing the good points. Just another point to make that her assumption was not at all like Christ's. She was dead. Interesting to also note this as a difference between hers and Moses' and Elijah's, too.

    1950. well, as I see it, up until then it was not required by the Church, but in order for the Church to make it an article it must have been a pretty big and talked-about thing. And I can't argue Oral Tradition because you'll just act as usual, again. They didn't invent it in 1950. Which, might I add, is somewhere around 27 years before the Baptist church.
     
  17. DHK

    DHK <b>Moderator</b>

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    Why? Does the Nicene Creed have any more credence than Fortran IV? Neither one will prove that RCC is founded on Christ. The RCC is not a Christian Church, never has been a Christian, and never will be. A Christian church is one that preaches the gospel; the RCC does not.
    A Christian church believes that Christ died for their sins; the RCC does not--thus the belief in purgatory.

    And I guess we don't have to. You presume upon yourself too much. We don't have any crosses in our church, and would never have them. None of our people would ever wear a cross as a piece of jewelry. 50 years ago you would never find a cross on a Protestant church--a steeple maybe, but not a cross. A cross is a Catholic symbol; not a Christian symbol. If Christianity has a symbol it is the empty tomb, not the cross. We serve a risen Saviour; not a dead Christ!!

    Concerning kneeling, did it not ever occur to you that kneeling is a posture that we take when praying to God. "Kneeling in prayer to God" The difference is that we don't kneel in front of a statue, an idol like Mary, etc. Unlike the RCC, we do not commit idolatry.

    That is exactly what idolatry is. The visualization of the god that is behind the idol. When a Hindu bows down before one of its many gods, he is not worshipping the actual piece of wood or metal, but rather the "god" or demon that it represents--its visualization as you say. You do the same thing with Mary. It is pure idolatry.

    Catholics like to force a different meaning of tradition into this word than that which the context would have it mean.
    A Catholic encyclopedia tells us that tradition is oral or written teaching that is handed down from generation to generation throughout the centuries.
    (That's the concise version). But the important thing to note that it is teaching that is handed down from generations throughout the centuries. Now tell me? How many centuries had passed from the death of Christ til the time that Paul wrote that statement to Timothy. Christ died 29 A.D. 2Thessalonians was written no later than 53 A.D. How much tradition, in the classic definition of the word--the way that Catholics define it--took place in the 24 years between the death of Christ and the time of the writing of that epistle. Your argument holds no water. The word "tradition" simply refers to the teaching--teaching from the Word of God--that Paul had given Timothy. There was no tradition in the sense that you define it. What kind of tradition can accrue in 24 years?? :rolleyes:
    DHK
     
  18. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

    Temper, temper.....

    The anger, resentment, and outright lies in this post are astonishing!

    First, the Nicene Creed...

    We believe in one God,
    the Father, the Almighty,
    maker of heaven and earth,
    of all that is, seen and unseen.
    We believe in one Lord, Jesus Christ,
    the only Son of God,
    eternally begotten of the Father,
    God from God, light from light,
    true God from true God,
    begotten, not made,
    of one Being with the Father;
    through him all things were made.
    For us and for our salvation
    he came down from heaven,
    was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary
    and became truly human.
    For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate;
    he suffered death and was buried.
    On the third day he rose again
    in accordance with the Scriptures;
    he ascended into heaven
    and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
    He will come again in glory to judge the living and the dead,
    and his kingdom will have no end.

    We believe in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the giver of life,
    who proceeds from the Father [and the Son],
    who with the Father and the Son is worshiped and glorified,
    who has spoken through the prophets.
    We believe in one holy catholic and apostolic Church.
    We acknowledge one baptism for the forgiveness of sins.
    We look for the resurrection of the dead,
    and the life of the world to come. Amen.

    Now, for the "unofficial" Ind. Bap. beliefs (also referred to as a Statement of Faith).....

    1. We believe in the verbal inspiration and authority of the scriptures. The King James Version of the Bible is the only version used at Independent Baptist Church and it's ministries. We believe that the Bible reveals God, the fall of man, the way of salvation, and God's plan and purpose for the ages to come.

    2. We believe that there is one God, eternally existent in three Persons:
    Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.

    3. We believe in the Deity and Virgin Birth of our Lord Jesus Christ, in His sinless life, in His miracles, in His vicarious and atoning death through His shed blood, in His bodily resurrection, and in His ascension to the right hand of the Father.

    4. We believe in the visible, personal and premillennial return of Jesus Christ.

    5. We believe that salvation is "by grace" plus or minus nothing. The conditions for salvation are repentance and faith in Jesus Christ.

    6. We believe that man is sinful and, thereby, separated from God. He is justified by faith alone and accounted righteous before God only through the merit of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.

    7. We believe in the resurrection of both the saved and the lost: the saved unto the resurrection of life; and the lost unto the resurrection of the damnation.

    8. We believe in the eternal security of the believer in Christ.

    9. We believe in the local church with its ordinances of baptism by immersion and the Lord's Supper.

    Excluding the minor differences of eternal security and "faith alone" they seem pretty much the same. To state that the Nicene Creed doesn't offer support for the RCC being founded on Christ also nullifies your own "Statement of Faith". So, we're back to Square 1 on that.

    I am also very sorry that you are so uninformed as to think that the RCC doesn't preach the Gospel. It does, and therefore is a Christian Church. Actually, the FIRST Christian Church. I urge you to show me any other Christian denomination that precedes the dates of the Catholic Church. I do have an exhaustive list here, so be careful.

    And the outright, bald-faced lies that you spread are insulting to not just me, but everyone on here.

    You state, "A Christian church believes that Christ died for their sins; the RCC does not--thus the belief in purgatory."

    Please RE-READ VERY CAREFULLY the Nicene Creed. And I quote -

    For us and for our salvation
    he came down from heaven,
    was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary
    and became truly human.
    For our sake he was crucified under Pontius Pilate;
    he suffered death and was buried.
    On the third day he rose again
    in accordance with the Scriptures

    Hmmm....sounds like we DO believe Christ died for our sins after all!!! Purgatory has nothing to do with our "salvation" in the sense that God has saved us from the eternal damnation of Hell.

    Actually, I used to live near a Baptist church. They had a cross on their building. OUTSIDE!!! And I have seen several other Baptist churches, including Independent, that have crosses and the like on their buildings and signs. To say that the cross is a Catholic symbol is correct - the Catholic Church was the FIRST Christian church. If you want to put up an empty tomb, by all means, feel free. But the cross is not a symbol of a dead Christ, as you have so eloquently put it, but a reminder of what He has done for us because He loves us so much. The Catholics had it's present version of the cross way, way before any Protestant came along and decided to change it. And before you make the arguement that we still have Him on the cross let me just tell you that you are wrong. It is, once again, a reminder of what He has done for us.

    Kneeling is simply a sign of respect. Your arguement about this is so narrow-minded I can't even begin to reply to you. You wouldn't listen anyhow.

    Idolatry is not the "visualization" of anything. It is worshipping someething or someone that is not God. No Catholic does this. How many times do I have to say that??? And I NEVER said visualization, you did. And if someone is worshipping Buddha then, yeah, that's idolatry; NO ONE IS WORSHIPPING MARY.

    If the tradition is the same as was in those 20 or 30 years, then why is time a factor at all?! To say that the earth is round one day after Columbus proved so is the same as saying it's round today. An apple falling on Newton's head so many years ago is the same as it would be today if he were still alive, or falling on anyone else's head at any time. IF THE TEACHING IS THE SAME, TIME IS NOT AN ISSUE. And if Paul found things important enough to share with Timothy as orally back then, why should they not be important still today.

    Slowly, I am coming to the realization that your IBC affiliation is very comfortable for you, and the "easiest" road to heaven in your mind. Nothing is ever going to change that for you because you couldn't even fathom being uncomfortable. It's very easy to just say, "I'm right! You're wrong! You shall burn in hell as a heretic! I am going ot heaven because this is how I see the Bible!", and not show proof. I hate to burst your bubble, but that's not how it truly is.

    [ March 25, 2004, 02:26 AM: Message edited by: frozencell ]
     
  19. DHK

    DHK <b>Moderator</b>

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    It is not what the Nicene Creed says necessarily; it is what it doesn't say. 93% of Americans say they believe in God; that doesn't make them all Christians does it?
    BTW, when I made that post it was not made out of anger. I was stating my convictions. I will state this again: I do not believe that a person being both knowledgeable about the gospel and their Catholic doctrine, can be a Catholic and a true Christian (born again) at the same time. It is impossible. It is like trying to be a Muslim and a Christian at the same time. It can't be done. You have to choose one or the other. You can't be both.
    The difference of "faith alone" is one of the most important differences there is. Unless you come to that realization in salvation you cannot be saved. A man is not saved by works (Eph.2:8,9). He is saved by faith alone. Until you accept that truth you cannot and will not be a Christian, for your salvation will be resting on works which God says are as filthy rags (Isa.64:6), and he does not accept them. Salvation is by faith alone. That is what a Christian believes. Every religion of the world, Cathoicism included, bases their relgion on works. Biblical Christianity alone bases their faith on a personal relationship with Christ which comes by faith alone in the sacrifice of Christ.

    I am not uninformed. I was in the Catholic Church for 20 years and never heard the gospel message once. The RCC does not preach the gospel. It preaches another gospel--as Paul says a gospel by which one is accursed. It is a gospel of works; not of grace and faith. It is a gospel born out of the heresy of baptismal regeneration--not taught in the Bible.

    No lies--just the truth. Because I don't speak the gospel according to frozencell or according to the RCC you are angry. But as I explained before, I have one standard, and one standard only--the Word of God. Defend yourself with the Bible, and the Bible only. I have had an outstanding challenge to my relatives here and to those in our community: "Show to me from the Bible that the Catholic religion is the true religion, and I will become a Catholic; but if I can show you from the Bible what I believe is true, then you change your faith." I have never had anyone accept my challenge.

    Like I said, it is not what the Nicene Creed says; it is what it does not say that is important.
    If Catholics truly believed that Christ died for their sins, then they would not believe in purgatory where they go and must pay the penalty of the same sin themselves. Christ already suffered for our sins. So what is the purpose of purgatory? It is redundant, if not downright cruel. What a cruel God the Catholics believe in. What an insult to spit in the face of Christ. Christ pays the penalty for your sin with His own blood, and you insult Him by saying:
    "Nope Christ, that's not good enough for me; I have to do my own suffering, I have to purge myself of my own sins in my own purgatory. Your blood just isn't sufficient for me. When you said "It is finished" (John 19:30), Lord, you lied. And that's why we have purgatory Lord, because you lied to us."
    You don't believe that Christ died for your sins, because you believe that you have to be baptized for you to be saved. The blood of Christ isn't sufficient to atone for your sins. You think that you need to wash those sins away with the magical waters of baptism!! Such superstion! This is not Christianity; it is more like Hinduism. Add in all the Hindu-like statues that you worship and it is very similar to Hinduism, not Christianity. The blood of Christ isn't good enough for the Catholic; he must trust in the waters of baptism as well, even though the Bible says that the blood of Christ washes away all our sin.

    Yes I will agree that most evangelical and even Baptist churches now put up crosses. But note what I said. Protestant churches of about 50 years ago never did. Things gradually change over time. Jesus said: When I come shall I find faith on the earth?

    And we both agree that the cross is a Catholic symbol. But the Catholic church is not a Christian church, because (as explained already) it does not preach a Christian gospel. It wasn't the first "church." The church at Jerusalem was the first church, of which James was the pastor. It was far more Baptistic in nature than Catholic. From the Bible alone, we can show you Baptist doctrine that the early churches (in the Bible) practiced. But you can't do the same with the Catholic church. Your definition of "church" isn't even found in the Bible. There is no "Catholic Church" in the Bible, nor even the very concept of one. It is a man-made concept, as is most of your doctrines.

    Is it simply a sign of respect? Look closely at a small part of a definition of "worship" taken from the International Standard Bible Encyclopedia:
    As you can see, the eastern form of kneeling, or (prostrating oneself) is very much a part of worship. It is even part of the very definition of the word. When one worshipped, the bowed down or kneeled in front of, or prostrated themselves, depending on the culture. In our culture we kneel; in the Muslim culture they prostrate themselves to the ground. You kneel before Mary; you pray to Mary; you commit idolatry. Don't fool yourself--you can't fool God, and you can't fool others.
    "I never said visualization, you did." Alright, let's take a look at what you did say:
    ERROR #1. "No one is bowing before anyone but God." This is a lie, an untruth. You bow down before the stations of the cross. You bow down before an image of Christ (the crucifix). You bow down before images of Mary. You say the rosary. You pray directly to Mary by saying the "Hail Mary." Kneeling before Mary, praying to Mary, is the ultimate form of both idolatry and necromancy--praying to the dead.

    ERROR #2. "The stations of the cross are visuals."
    Yes, they are. Every statue, every icon is a visual, a visualization of what you are praying to. If you were just praying to God, you wouldn't need a "visual."
    John 4:24--God is spirit, they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth.

    If therefore, you are worshipping God in spirit and in truth you would never need a visual. But you are not worshipping God; you are worshipping idols--idols of Mary, Joseph, various saints, and even an idol of Christ. Idolatry is wrong. You need to study the Ten Commandments.

    That Thomas went to India as a missionary is a tradition--probably true.
    That Peter was in Rome in 45 A.D. (according to the link that Living4Him gave) is someone's tradition, but it is definitely false.
    Tradition is knowledge passed on throughout centuries--may be true or not.

    What Paul taught Timothy was knowledge from the Word of God. It was truth. It was not tradition in the sense that you are defining it. It was the tradition or truth of the Word of God. There was no tradition within 24 years to be passed on. Your logic at this point is ridiculous. Even the Catholic definition of tradition requires generations throughout centuries of time to develop. So why are you trying to invent your own definition??

    Here you are wrong again. I couldn't be any happier. I have a relationship with Jesus Christ. I don't have religion; I have a relationship. That is the difference. I fear that you are making the accusations that you do (or just did) because you don't and you realize that the things I say about the Catholic Church are true. Remeber that I was there for a long time. I know what it was like.
    My proof is in the Bible. "Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved."
    The Catholic doctrines, one by one, can be refuted by the Bible, and have been.
    What kind of proof are you looking for? And proof for what? I pray that your eyes will be opened to the errors of Catholicism that lead so many astray from Christ.
    DHK
     
  20. frozencell

    frozencell Guest

    You seem to willingly overlook the most simple and basic things that I have said. I am not stupid enough to believe in any religion that says you "work" your way to salvation. Catholics do not work their salvation. If we did, we would have to cut out half of the Bible that we read everyday.

    And I was not previously aware that you knew the matters of the heart as they pertain to me, but now that I know that I shall listen to everything you say blindly.

    Actually, you have yet to explain how the Catholic Church doesn't preach a Christian Gospel.

    No concept? Did not Christ Himself appoint overseers of the church? In fact, I remember Him giving them even the powers to cast out demons and heal the sick.

    And I don't remember reading about the Baptist church in the Bible, either. Please refer to the $64,000 question thread for that.

    There you go again. If you won't "allow" me to use any Catholic-based literature and accept it on reasonable level, then you can't go and use Protestant sources on me.

    But, alas, I shall oblige your biased attitude. From this same book...

    IDOLATRY - ...and ultimately in the New Testament idolatry came to mean, not only the giving to any creature or human creation the honor or devotion which belonged to God alone, but the giving to any human desire a precedence over God's will (1Co 10:14; Ga 5:20; Col 3:5; 1Pe 4:3).

    No good Catholic gives the honor and devotion that is deserving of God alone, which is worship. Again --- CATHOLICS DO NOT WORSHIP ANYONE BUT GOD! And also, said good Catholics don't put any human desire or precedent over God.

    ADORATION -- 2. Material Objects: But when material things produce a reverential attitude, not to themselves, but to the Deity whose presence they symbolize, then they are regarded as legitimate aids to devotion.

    Which is the case in the Catholic Church.

    Example: The reverential attitude toward Mary is not because of what she was as a human, but who she was in Christ working through her, therefore symbolizing the presence of God and all His Glory. End result? A legitimate aid to devotion.

    In reference to your word "proskuneo" (from the same book) - Some ambiguity, however, belongs to the Greek word proskunein, for while it is the usual word for "worshipping" God (eg. Joh 4:24), in some contexts it means no more than paying homage to a person of superior rank by kneeling or prostration, just as the unmerciful servant is said to have `fallen down and worshipped' his master the king (Mt 18:26)...

    So, now that I have effectively used your own source to debunk your post maybe you will listen to what I have to say a little more. Please don't try to use technicalities, as they can sometimes backfire.

    Please see above for adoration.

    I'm sure you have "traditions" at your house, such as in Christmas-time, etc. that have developed over a lot less than 24 years. Tradition is passing down elemants of culture so that they are not forgotten by later generations. The Catholic Church uses "tradition" over centuries only to include the entire time the Catholic Church has been around since the beliefs and traditions haven't changed since the beginning.

    At no point did I say you had religion.

    And since you seem to think that you being affiliated with Catholicism foor 20 years is something to be heralded as supreme knowledge, might I add that I was affiliated with Protestantism for 22.
     
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