Huh? Why are Feeneyites like the KKK? I mean, I think their denial of the efficacy of baptism of desire and baptism of blood are incorrect and contrary to the teaching of the Church since Augustine and the immemorial practices of the Church (such as that catechumens who die prior to baptism are counted the same as those who have been baptized and accorded a Catholic funeral and burial). Feeneyism is a hypercorrection against the false ecumenism that Fr. Feeney was rightly worried about. But how in the world did you go from that to the KKK?
Fr. Feeney, among his various beliefs, was also an extreme racist and anti-Semite. One might easily conclude that he was the Catholic form of the KKK (although, of course, the KKK itself was virulently anti-Catholic). The KKK was also composed of primarily Southerners who were, historically Democratic. The Democratic party of that time was racist in the South, but tempered by northern anti-racist tendencies. Thus, I do not see the larger number of errors of doctrine with those who deny the physical death of Mary as with the number of errors promulgated by Fr. Feeney. Nor do I see these individual fomenting division in the Catholic Church, but I may be quite incorrect about this as I only have a limited view as to what is actually happening inside the Catholic Church.
Most KKK members have traditionally been Democrats, so is that the comparison? I'm lost.
So then the original topic of this thread, that Mary died prior to her resurrection and translation into Heaven, is no surprise to anyone -- it is, by far, the prevailing belief.
Agreed.
It is not necessary to prove each and every one of the Church's teachings to have been written about by an Apostle. It is enough to prove that the apparent Catholic Church is the true Catholic Church and then to adhere to what She teaches as the Word of God.
Well said. First comes faith in the Catholic Church, then follows faith in everything it teaches. The difficulty frequently comes with matters such as this which have been open to varying views and no clearly dogmatic interpretation has been provided; rather, statements are provided which permit opposing opinions to be reasonably deduced. We have the Dogma of the Assumption which, theoretically, ought to have settled this question, but instead has been left open to two very divergent views.
Catholic dogma is not based on private revelations. Private revelations -- even if they do not conflict with the faith an appear to be pious or even have miraculous approbation -- are, by their very nature, private and not intended for the Church as a whole. We adhere to the teachings of the Apostles, which are vetted by Scripture and reason. The various stories of the Dormition, although they give us context and fill out what we know (like the Acts of Peter and Paul), are not the final basis for our belief or the dogmatic definition.
Am I correct in understanding the the final basis for your belief is a dogmatic statement from the Pope?
Why are written accounts so necessary? One thread insisted that a teaching had to be included in some writing prior to AD 70 -- 37 years after Pentecost. Some scholars don't even say that all the books of the New Testament were written by then. There are no actual copies of any of the writings which actually date back that far, it's a textual thing, there aren't copies even of the Gospels that date back before AD 200 (and these were only discovered in the 20th c., prior to that, no one had any that they could date back before the 4th or 5th c.). So it's not as though we have everything that has ever been written and we can just flip through a library and see when things start being written about. We have scattered and fragmentary evidence.
We do have, however, a body of literature which the Church (not just one segment of the Church) agreed under the guidance of God, the Holy Spirit, is the infallible and inerrant Word of God. This body of literature, e.g. the Bible (specifically the New Testament canon) was distinguished from a multitude of contemporaneous literature and elevated to a position where it is to be taken as a thoroughly accurate and reliable record. This body provides a (some would say the) lodestone against which all other information is judged. Thus, when a Mormon insists that the Trinity is not true, one can easily reject their teaching by showing the truth of the Trinity from the Bible (and yes, I know the argument that "Trinity" is not in the Bible).
One of St. Augustine's arguments for the existence of Original Sin is that the Church baptizes infants. Now, nowhere that I know of, is there evidence of any sort of arguments on the question of baptizing infants, whenever it is written about, it is just something that is done. Epiphanius, as discussed earlier, says that there are varied accounts and he may be right but we certainly know what was the prevailing account.
One can easily develop an argument for the existence of Original Sin without resorting to infant baptism to justify the argument. One need look no further than Psalm 51:5 to find that taught in the Bible.
If we were talking about any secular, non-miraculous event, would there be any doubt that these records were true? Of course not, we have multiple variations on the story that exist, which are not the basis for but rather the
evidence of this event being part of the teachings of the Apostles.
If, for example, I were to write a lengthy tome explaining how North America was blasted by an enormous meteor in 1676 would there be any doubt that my record was true? Of course there would be - on several levels. First, there are no records from that year or until the time I wrote my book that such an event occurred. Second, there is no physical evidence that survives of such an occurrence. Third, it contradicts all other evidence. However, if I were to get the leader of my religion to state that it was, indeed, true and is a matter of utmost certainty so that one's salvation depends upon it, it would become an entirely different matter.
This is not at all unlike poor Copernicus and the flat earth theory. However, I will not go there, for your sake.
The Bible was not written as a manifesto for a religion, it is wrong to look at it that way. It was Authored by God, yes, but that doesn't make it definitive -- it doesn't mean that the Apostles never taught things that they didn't also write about. St. Paul even says so explicitly:
True.
St. John ends his Gospel by saying:
Also true.
St. Luke, who was not an Apostle, opens his by saying:
I don't get your connection here.
There was a body of teaching which existed
outside and
apart from the New Testament. We can deduce some of the teachings of the Church based on what is written about in the New Testament, and indeed these words are Divinely inspired, but it is still to the teachings given to the
Church which are the real substance of the faith. I said in another thread that we do not build our Church on what the New Testament says, but rather the New Testament was based on our Church. It is wrong to look at the New Testament as a blueprint for building a man-made church, but rather it is written about the faith of the Church founded by Christ on the Apostles, the Church which still exists today.
Thank you for the clear distinction. Herein lies the significant difference. You have faith in your Church apart from all else. Thus, your Church is the self-defining source of Truth for you. So, if your Church determines that something is true that contradicts previously held truths, it has absolute freedom to reject those truths as, at best, errors, or, at worst, outright falsehoods. The only absolute is the fact that the Church is Truth Incarnate.
For myself, Truth Incarnate is the Word of God, Jesus Christ. There is every reason that He is given the title, Word of God, linking Him ineffably to the revealed and written Word of God, the Bible. I note that He is not called the Church of God but is called the Head of His body, the Church. The Church is subordinate to its Head and its Head is the revelation of God to mankind, Apart from the written Word of God we would know nothing concerning Jesus Christ other than, perhaps oral fables and myths, some of which might be true and many, if not most or all, might be quite false.
The vast majority of the Christian world accepts that Mary was died, raised from the dead and taken, body and soul, into Heaven. This is what the Church teaches and there has been no corruption in Her teachings -- this we must accept by faith, based on the evidence presented to us. It is part of an integrated system -- you cannot take one teaching away without the rest falling apart.