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Featured The Mark is coming

Discussion in 'Other Christian Denominations' started by Cathode, Dec 18, 2022.

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  1. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    Funny how you call returning to the biblical truth a heretical idea. The Catholic church was corrupt from the top down but you will defend it I am sure.
    1] Turning from a false teaching [Catholic] to follow the truth [Bible] does not make one a heretic, rather, for those that died, it makes them martyrs.
    2] Saying it was the state not the church that killed them is the same as Calvin claiming he did not kill those that disagreed with him. In both cases it is just a smoke screen that you hope will hide the ugly truth.

    The fact that you would try to justify even one death at the hands of the church is disturbing. Do you think that all those that are outside of your Catholic church are heretic's?
     
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  2. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    If Martin Luther was inspired by The Holy Spirit, why aren’t all Protestants Lutheran? Why aren’t you Lutheran?
    If every “ bible alone “ guy picked up the bible and came to the same understanding, interpretation and same doctrines as Luther, then a powerful case could be made, that it’s God’s doing.
    They weren’t returning to biblical truth, they were scattering in human opinion of scripture, traditions of rebellious men. Chaos followed.
    Under Catholicism Scripture had only one Apostolic meaning, handed down from the Apostles, the Tradition of The Holy Spirit.
    Under Protestantism Scripture could mean anything and it continues dividing, nullifying the word of God by its many incoherent doctrines and interpretations of Scripture. Men looking at that conflicted mess of doctrines, have given up on finding the Truth.
    Look at all the traditions of men founded in Protestantism, look at all the conflicting doctrines derived from the same Scripture. Is that the “ Return to Biblical truth “, or is it substituting the Truth for human opinion.

    Protestantism reduced Scripture from a Divine document to a legal document that was subject to each man’s opinion and reasoning.
    They don’t discern the Word by the Spirit. Apostolic Tradition.

    It was Spanish State that was simply enforcing its laws to protect the peace, Sovereign states do the same today. Heresy was far deadlier in non pluralist countries of the past.

    No. A heretic is a very particular thing. Basically it pertains to the generation of the rebellion, not subsequent generations as such.

    Secondly, a heretic or heresy can only be declared by an Infallibility guided Church, guided in all truth as scripture states.
    Protestantism rejected the idea of Infallibility, so no one in Protestantism can condemn you as a heretic or declare a heresy, so don’t worry. They only have the weight of human opinion anyway, so they will most likely ultimately tell you that you should join another denomination, even if it teaches conflicting doctrines from their understanding of scripture.
    So there is no Pope or ultimate arbiter of Truth in Protestantism, just each man’s opinion of scripture, it’s not the Truth, but people settle for it.

    Different for us though, our Bishops have Apostolic power and authority, and the Apostolic Tradition has a weight of its own. A 2000 year old understanding of Scripture handed down from the Apostles, guarded by The Holy Spirit.
    Catholics have never been allowed to privately interpret scripture and come up with new novel doctrines from those interpretations, we would end up like Protestantism scattered in human opinion and human traditions of men, the Truth would be the first casualty in that mess.
     
    #42 Cathode, Jan 10, 2023
    Last edited: Jan 10, 2023
  3. DaveXR650

    DaveXR650 Well-Known Member

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    For heaven sakes you guys just buried a Pope who quit over doctrinal differences and a lot of the church officials couldn't even agree on how to bury him. Don't give me that baloney. You guys do have enough central control and unity though to ensure that error introduced, instead of being fought over and corrected gets permanently imbedded and compounded like making a copy of a copy where eventually it is totally unreadable. There is exactly nothing handed down today that really came from the Apostles to the Catholic church. I don't know why a Baptist forum would give a platform for this kind of stuff. Is there a Catholic forum that reciprocates?
     
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  4. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    If you go into other denominations section, you very likely hear what other denominations believe.
    And very likely hear other perspectives that are different from your own.

    I don’t generally go to any other part the forum and express my understanding of things. I do use the hobby sport section however.

    Many Catholic forums are very welcoming as far as I have seen, there can be many sections in them for non catholic members.

    I’ve been a moderator on Protestant sites, I’m big on hearing every other perspective out there, it’s when I’ve learned the most.

    I’ve picked up some real nuggets, simply by going outside the box.
     
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  5. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    You need to check your theological base, it is not the Apostles. You have fallen for the idea that your leader sits in Peter's chair, just one of the many errors of your theology. Augustine is called a Saint of your church and yet he brought many pagan ideas into your church. Spend some time in research and stop believing all the bishops tell you.

    Just look at some of the silly ideas that your popes have brought into your church, Infallibility of the pope, Mary worship, perpetual virginity of Mary, transubstantiation, purgatory, that one can be absolved of sin but some man [priest] to name but a few. Now you say that your church is the only one that has a true understanding of scripture so perhaps you can show us where we can find support in the bible for the above mentioned errors?
     
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  6. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    First off It was the Catholic Church that determined the Canon of Scripture itself, that’s what the Catholic Church does, it canonises things.

    Pope Damasus declared the first Canon of the Bible, after the work of the Church councils was completed.

    So the idea of establishing the Canon of Scripture itself came from the Catholic Church.

    “ Without the Catholic Church, we would have no Bible “ Professor Peter Flint, Protestant translator of the Dead sea scrolls.

    The Bible itself is an enduring Tradition of the Catholic Church, even Protestant bibles, every book in them was determined by the Catholic Church and Her Councils.

    “ As The Father sent me, so I now send you. “. The Apostles were sent out with the same authority Christ was given by The Father to forgive sin.
    “ whose sins you forgive, are forgiven them” and “ whose sins you retain, are retained “.

    “All mortal sins are to be submitted to the keys of the Church and all can be forgiven; but recourse to these keys is the only, the necessary, and the certain way to forgiveness. Unless those who are guilty of grievous sin have recourse to the power of the keys, they cannot hope for eternal salvation. Open your lips, them, and confess your sins to the priest. Confession alone is the true gate to Heaven.” Augustine, Christian Combat (A.D. 397).

    And as for Infallibility

    “ He who listens to you, listens to me “

    What the Apostles handed down in Apostolic Tradition was the True understanding of Scriptures and the Scriptures themselves.

    The Scriptures weren’t handed down so that people could interpret what they liked from it, as in Protestantism. Human deductions are not the Spiritual discernment of the spiritual document.
     
  7. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    So what your saying is that since it was the catholic church that determined the cannon they get to read into it what they want. Using Augustine as a support for your view is questionable, he was a catholic so what would you expect him to say?

    I note you did not address this "Just look at some of the silly ideas that your popes have brought into your church, Infallibility of the pope, Mary worship, perpetual virginity of Mary, transubstantiation, purgatory, that one can be absolved of sin but some man [priest] to name but a few. Now you say that your church is the only one that has a true understanding of scripture so perhaps you can show us where we can find support in the bible for the above mentioned errors?"

    Your theology is faulty due to the fact that the foundation it is built, a misunderstanding of scripture, is faulty.
     
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  8. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    No. They can only hold on to the Apostolic understanding of Scripture handed down to them in Apostolic Tradition. The Pope can define interpretation in line with Apostolic Tradition not against it.

    The true interpretation of Scripture is handed down as a deposit of Faith, it’s not something people independently deduce for themselves. Hence all the division in bible alone Protestantism, each coming away with his own understanding, not the ancient understanding of scripture.

    Sure. But why do I believe as he believed 1600 years ago. Apostolic Tradition The Tradition of The Holy Spirit.
    He would point you to the same scripture I pointed out to you, for the power of forgiving sin.
    His understanding of scripture like mine, is not our own, but Apostolic Tradition.

    I could go back in time 1600 years and have complete theological unity with Augustine. Mass, the Eucharist, Confession, papal Infallibility, belief in purgatory, our understanding of Mary, everything.

    Can you go back in time and have complete theological unity with the founder of Bible alone doctrine Martin Luther ? No, he would condemn you.
    In 500 years you have been isolated from his understanding of scripture, other traditions of men broke away with there own human spin on scripture.

    The Bible did not come from Protestantism, it came from the Catholic Apostolic Church. If we all trust the Catholic Church to determine the Canon of Scripture Itself, we can also trust the Catholic Church to tell what it means.

    Why trust self declared churches that came along 1500 years or more later, that had nothing to do with the Bible or it’s determination, especially since they can not agree among themselves what the Bible means.
     
  9. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    Your error is that you are trusting in some man [Augustine or Pope] to tell you what the bible says. You say you go back 1600 years whereas I go back to the bible, approx 2000 years.

    I trust the canon of the bible but do not trust the many changes and additions that the RCC has made to the bible. As for your Popes. How did you put it "The Pope can define interpretation in line with Apostolic Tradition not against it." You admit that your ideas of the Mass, the Eucharist, Confession, papal Infallibility, belief in purgatory, the understanding of Mary, everything came from Augustine or what you would call Apostolic Tradition and not the bible. So what it comes down to is you are trusting in some man not the bible and therein lays the error of your RCC.

    You seem to think that it was the RC church that determined which books should be included in the bible we have but what you overlook is that God is the author and He gets to decide that.


    Many people wonder who decided which books should be placed in the Bible.

    The simple answer is that God decided which books should be in the canon. He was the final determiner. J. 1. Packer writes:

    The church no more gave us the New Testament canon than Sir Isaac Newton gave us the force of gravity. God gave us gravity, by his work of creation, and similarly he gave us the New Testament canon, by inspiring the individual books that make it up (J. 1. Packer, God Speaks To Man, p. 81).​

    Canonizing and Collecting
    A distinction needs to be made between canonizing and collecting. No man or council can pronounce a work canonical or scriptural, yet man was responsible for collecting and preserving such works. F. F. Bruce writes:

    One thing must be emphatically stated. The New Testament books did not become authoritative for the Church because they were formally included in a canonical list; on the contrary, the Church included them in her canon because she already regarded them as divinely inspired, recognizing their innate worth and generally apostolic authority, direct or indirect. The first ecclesiastical councils to classify the canonical books were both held in North Africa-at Hippo Regius in 393 and at Carthage in 397-but what these councils did was not to impose something new upon the Christian communities but to codify what was already the general practice of these communities (F. F. Bruce, The New Testament Documents: Are They Reliable?, Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1960, p. 27).​

    Hence the books we have as Scripture were inspired by God and recognized such by man.
     
    #49 Silverhair, Jan 11, 2023
    Last edited: Jan 11, 2023
  10. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    That’s right. The Catholic Church just examined its own Tradition from the time of the Apostles, the scriptures it continuously already used in liturgy.

    So really the Bible was an organic outgrowth of Catholic Tradition by preserving the scriptures in its own liturgy from the time of the Apostles.

    Catholics are the only pre Bible Christians, but the Catholic Church carried the Sacred Scriptures in Her liturgical womb until the Canon was definitively birthed to the world. A compendium of it’s own liturgy and Tradition.

    The Bible is extremely Catholic in origin.

    Check it out.

    ““For the blessed apostle Paul himself, following the rule of his predecessor John, writes only by name to seven Churches in the following order–to the Corinthians afirst…there is a second to the Corinthians and to the Thessalonians, yet one Church is recognized as being spread over the entire world…Howbeit to Philemon one, to Titus one, and to Timothy two were put in writing…to be in honour however with the Catholic Church for the ordering of ecclesiastical discipline…one to the Laodicenes, another to the Alexandrians, both forged in Paul’s name to suit the heresy of Marcion, and several others, which cannot be received into the Catholic Church; for it is not fitting that gall be mixed with honey. The Epistle of Jude no doubt, and the couple bearing the name of John, are accepted by the Catholic Church…But of Arsinous, called also Valentinus, or of Militiades we receive nothing at all.” The fragment of Muratori (A.D. 177).

    So the Catholic Church Councils work was to examine the Chain of custody of Scriptures continuously used in its own Tradition and Liturgy back to the Apostles.

    That’s why professor Peter Flint was so adamant saying

    “ Without the Catholic Church, we would have no Bible “

    The dude was a brilliant Protestant scholar himself, and he accepted the Catholic origin of the Bible.
    God decided to do it that way, what’s the point arguing with it.

    The Scriptures were Catholic Liturgy, before they became the Bible.
     
  11. AustinC

    AustinC Well-Known Member

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    @Cathode
    Wait, what!? You stated:
    "So really the Bible was an organic outgrowth of Catholic Tradition by preserving the scriptures in its own liturgy from the time of the Apostles."

    The Bible says this:
    *2 Timothy 3:16-17*
    All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.

    The Bible is not Catholic tradition and interpretation via the Roman Church just as the Old Covenant was not the Jewish tradition and interpretation via the Rabbinic commentaries. It is the Jewish traditions and interpretation of Messiah that made it impossible for the scribes, Pharisees and Sadducees to believe that Jesus is the Promised One, the Messiah. It is the Roman Catholic traditions and interpretations of salvation that make it impossible for one to be saved by means of the sacraments. The Roman Catholic Church lost its way and no longer trusts the Bible, but instead it leans wholly upon its tradition as the means of salvation. It's tradition is not what the Bible teaches, just as the Jewish rabbinical traditions were not what the Old Covenant teaches.
     
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  12. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    You will find that there are all 73 books in the first Bible determined by the Catholic Church. That remained the same Bible for over 1000 years before Protestants removed books from their bibles.

    Luther wanted to remove James as well calling it an epistle of straw, blaspheming the Word. This after throwing out 7 books out of his bible.

    The Catholic Church didn’t make any changes to Her Book since the 4th century when it declared the first Bible. Trent just reaffirmed the same Bible. We still have the same original 73 book bible today.

    So Catholic Bible 73 books 1600 years old

    Protestant Bible 66 books 500 years old.

    Who made changes again?
     
  13. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    I find it interesting that you would resort to Gnostic's to support your view.


    Valentinus (also spelled Valentinius; c. AD 100 – c. 180) was the best known and, for a time, most successful early Christian Gnostic theologian.[1] He founded his school in Rome. According to Tertullian, Valentinus was a candidate for bishop but started his own group when another was chosen.[2]

    Valentinus produced a variety of writings, but only fragments survive, largely those quoted in rebuttal arguments in the works of his opponents, not enough to reconstruct his system except in broad outline.[1] His doctrine is known only in the developed and modified form given to it by his disciples, the Valentinians.[1][3] He taught that there were three kinds of people, the spiritual, psychical, and material; and that only those of a spiritual nature received the gnosis (knowledge) that allowed them to return to the divine Pleroma, while those of a psychic nature (ordinary Christians) would attain a lesser or uncertain form of salvation, and that those of a material nature were doomed to perish.[1][4][5]

    Valentinus had a large following, the Valentinians.[1][3] It later divided into an Eastern and a Western, or Italian, branch.[1] The Marcosians belonged to the Western branch.[1]

    1. Cross, F. L.; Livingstone, E. A., eds. (2005). "Valentinus". The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church (3rd, Revised ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 1687–1688. ISBN 978-0-19-280290-3.
    2. Adversus Valentinianos 4.
    3. Dunn, James D. G. (2016). ""The Apostle of the Heretics": Paul, Valentinus, and Marcion". In Porter, Stanley E.; Yoon, David (eds.). Paul and Gnosis. Pauline Studies. Vol. 9. Leiden and Boston: Brill Publishers. pp. 105–118. doi:10.1163/9789004316690_008. ISBN 978-90-04-31668-3. LCCN 2016009435. S2CID 171394481.
    4. The Tripartite Tractate, §14
    5. Irenaeus, Adversus Haeresies i. 6

    Valentinianism was one of the major Gnostic Christian movements. Founded by Valentinus in the 2nd century AD, its influence spread widely, not just within Rome but also from Northwest Africa to Egypt through to Asia Minor and Syria in the East.[1] Later in the movement's history it broke into an Eastern and a Western school. Disciples of Valentinus continued to be active into the 4th century AD, after the Roman Emperor Theodosius I issued the Edict of Thessalonica (380 AD), which declared Nicene Christianity as the State church of the Roman Empire.[2]

    The doctrine, practices and beliefs of Valentinus and the Gnostic movement that bore his name were condemned as heretical by proto-orthodox Christian leaders and scholars. Prominent Church Fathers such as Irenaeus of Lyons and Hippolytus of Rome wrote against Gnosticism.
     
  14. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    I didn’t.

    The document outlines some of what the Catholic Church received as scripture, and what it rejected, long before it declared the first Canon of Scripture.
    I’m agreeing with you that the scriptures were in use in the Church before it declared the Canon. That was your point, wasn’t it ?

    The real point being that the preservation of the scriptures and the establishment of the Canon of Scripture, was an entirely Catholic affair by the Grace of God.

    Protestants didn’t exist in those times, only Catholics.

    God did not drop a King James Version from the sky in the 1600s, Catholics established the Canon more than a thousand before Protestants walked the Earth.
    Catholics preserved all the scriptures, just ask the scholars, it’s historical fact.
     
  15. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    The question is not why were they removed but rather why would the RCC add those books.

    The word apocrypha literally means “hidden away.” These writings are hidden for good reason. They are deemed theologically suspicious and even heretical by many. Jewish and Protestant circles flat out reject these writings as authoritative for the faith and practice of the church.

    Jesus and the New Testament authors never directly quote the Apocrypha. Neither do they introduce it with labels that would suggest inspiration, such as “as it is written” or “as the Scripture says.”

    Even though the Septuagint existed in New Testament times and was available to the New Testament writers (the Book of Hebrews quotes from the Septuagint), Jesus and the New Testament authors never directly quote the Apocrypha nor does the New Testament refer to any apocryphal books as part of Scripture.

    Even the Roman Catholic Church did not officially recognize the Apocrypha as belonging in the Bible until the Council of Trent in A.D. 1546. This was Catholicism’s response to the Reformation
     
  16. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    So your saying God did it all alone, with no human agency, but especially not Catholic human agency ?
     
  17. Silverhair

    Silverhair Well-Known Member

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    Even a cursory reading of the New Testament will reveal that the Catholic Church does not have its origin in the teachings of Jesus or His apostles. In the New Testament, there is no mention of the papacy, worship/adoration of Mary (or the immaculate conception of Mary, the perpetual virginity of Mary, the assumption of Mary, or Mary as co-redemptrix and mediatrix), petitioning saints in heaven for their prayers, apostolic succession, the ordinances of the church functioning as sacraments, infant baptism, confession of sin to a priest, purgatory, indulgences, or the equal authority of church tradition and Scripture. So, if the origin of the Catholic Church is not in the teachings of Jesus and His apostles, as recorded in the New Testament, what is the true origin of the Catholic Church?

    For the first 280 years of Christian history, Christianity was banned by the Roman Empire, and Christians were terribly persecuted. This changed after the “conversion” of the Roman Emperor Constantine. Constantine provided religious toleration with the Edict of Milan in AD 313, effectively lifting the ban on Christianity. Later, in AD 325, Constantine called the Council of Nicea in an attempt to unify Christianity. Constantine envisioned Christianity as a religion that could unite the Roman Empire, which at that time was beginning to fragment and divide. While this may have seemed to be a positive development for the Christian church, the results were anything but positive. Just as Constantine refused to fully embrace the Christian faith but continued many of his pagan beliefs and practices, so the Christian church that Constantine and his successors promoted progressively became a mixture of true Christianity and Roman paganism.

    Following are a few examples:

    Most Roman Catholic beliefs and practices regarding Mary are completely absent from the Bible. Where did those beliefs come from? The Roman Catholic view of Mary has far more in common with the Isis mother-goddess religion of Egypt than it does with anything taught in the New Testament. Interestingly, the first hints of Catholic Mariology occur in the writings of Origen, who lived in Alexandria, Egypt, which happened to be the focal point of Isis worship.

    The Lord’s Supper being a consumption of the literal body and blood of Jesus is not taught in the Bible. The idea that bread and wine are miraculously transformed into the literal body and blood of Jesus (transubstantiation) is not biblical. However, several ancient pagan religions, including Mithraism, which was very popular in the Roman Empire, had some form of “theophagy” (the eating of one’s god) as a ritualistic practice.

    Roman Catholicism has “saints” one can pray to in order to gain a particular blessing. For example, Saint Gianna Beretta Molla is the patron saint of fertility. Francis of Assisi is the patron saint of animals. There are multiple patron saints of healing and comfort. Nowhere is even a hint of this taught in Scripture. Just as the Roman pantheon of gods had a god of love, a god of peace, a god of war, a god of strength, a god of wisdom, etc., so the Catholic Church has a saint who is “in charge” over each of these and many other categories. Many Roman cities had a god specific to the city, and the Catholic Church provided “patron saints” for cities as well.

    The idea that the Roman bishop is the vicar of Christ, the supreme leader of the Christian Church, is utterly foreign to the Word of God. The supremacy of the Roman bishop (the papacy) was created with the support of the Roman emperors. While most other bishops (and Christians) resisted the idea of the Roman bishop being supreme, the Roman bishop eventually rose to supremacy, again, due to the power and influence of the Roman emperors. After the western half of the Roman Empire collapsed, the popes took on the title that had previously belonged to the Roman emperors—Pontifex Maximus.

    Many more examples could be given. These four should suffice in demonstrating the origin of the Catholic Church. Of course, the Roman Catholic Church denies the pagan origin of its beliefs and practices. The Catholic Church disguises its pagan beliefs under layers of complicated theology and church tradition. Recognizing that many of its beliefs and practices are utterly foreign to Scripture, the Catholic Church is forced to deny the authority and sufficiency of Scripture.

    The origin of the Catholic Church is the tragic compromise of Christianity with the pagan religions that surrounded it. Instead of proclaiming the gospel and converting the pagans, the Catholic Church “Christianized” the pagan religions and “paganized” Christianity. By blurring the differences and erasing the distinctions, the Catholic Church made itself attractive to the idolatrous people of the Roman Empire. One result was the Catholic Church becoming the supreme religion in the Roman world for centuries. However, another result was the most dominant form of Christianity apostatizing from the true gospel of Jesus Christ and the true proclamation of God’s Word.

    What is the origin of the Roman Catholic Church? | GotQuestions.org
     
  18. 37818

    37818 Well-Known Member

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    No. Holy Scriptures were Holy Scriptures when they were written. And the original recipients knew the human writers. ". . . For the prophecy came not in old time by the will of man: but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Spirit. . . ."
     
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  19. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    I told you that the Catholic Church selected only books that were in continuous use in its liturgy going back to the Apostolic times.
    That was the only selection criteria.

    The Jews flat out rejected the entire New Testament, the Catholic Church wasn’t about to take advice from them. Protestants didn’t exist to consult them till more than a thousand years later.

    Jesus was in the Temple at the Dedication solemnity, all Jews celebrated this solemnity. Something you can only find the purpose of in Maccabean books.
    Protestants today still don’t know what the Dedication of the Temple was about, they rejected the books that would tell them.

    Luthers main reason to reject the deuterocanonical books was because they supported Catholic doctrine. The same reason he rejected James appendicising it along with Hebrews, Jude and Revelation. Only later on were they added back by other Protestants.
    Luther was founding a new religion, so of cause he was going to change the ancient bible to fit his new doctrines.
    James was troublesome because it opposed the new doctrine of “ faith alone “. Hebrews referenced 2 Maccabees, Maccabees supported purgatory.

    Not so bro, the councils at Hippo (393), Carthage (397, 419), II Nicea (787), Florence (1442), and Trent (1546) all held to the same Canon of scripture, all 73 books mate.
     
    #59 Cathode, Jan 11, 2023
    Last edited: Jan 11, 2023
  20. Cathode

    Cathode Well-Known Member

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    What a history you paint, and not one Protestant witnessed any of it.

    This is just revisionist prejudicial assertions dude.
     
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