StThomasMore
Christian Democrat
The Magisterium of the Roman Catholic church is NOT infallible and neither were the ecumenical councils.
then neither would the NT canon then
And your opinion holds how much authority?
The Church is the interpreter of scripture because the Church is led by the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is what makes the Church infallible, since it has the divine guarantee from Christ, who promised the gates of hell would not prevail and would be with till the end of time.
That doesn't mean the Church is impeccable. When people see the word infallible regarding the Church, they misleadingly think impeccable and that Popes somehow never make mistakes or errors.
The ecumenical councils are the work of the Holy Spirit.
the "denominations" of the Catholic Church are simply the differing Rites and Liturgical traditions. Byzantium, Maronite, Oriental, Syriac, Alexandrian, etc. They are all in communion with the See of Rome. The Catholic Church holds a large amount of liturgical traditions that certain cultures and areas prefer over the Latin Rite. The Church grants them this autonomy. But they all agree doctrinally as the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church, governed by the Rock of Peter.According to the Barrett study there are 781 EO denominations and 242 Catholic denominations.![]()
Is that why the Church had already over 20 different translations of the bible during the time of Luther? English copies and reading of scripture go way farther back than what you suggested. The first English copy of scripture for the laity dates back to the 8th century. If you studied some non-biased sources you will find that it wasn't the translations, but rather the anti-catholic commentaries and prefaces they littered their books with. And the reason why many people did not have bibles was not because the Church tried to keep it away from them, but because no one could afford a bible, which was worth 3 years wages, and many people could not even read.No Church gave us the Bible...Rome did everything in its power to keep the Scriptures out of the hands of the common people and tried to prevent it from being translated into other languages besides Latin .... the translators of the Bible were burned at the stake
Catholics never outlawed the reading of the bible. They outlawed certain editions of the bible that were translated incorrectly by reformers. Versions where the word "Only" was added to the word Faith in Rom 3:28. That one word changes the whole entire meaning of the doctrine of the bible. We are not supposed to add to the word of God. The church is the bibles guardian and the guardian of all truth because the Catholic church is the Pillar and foundation of all truth(1 Tim 3:15). The Catholic church is the biggest promoter of scripture and always has been. We wrote it(at least the new testament), copied it, passed it on, and canonized it in 382 At the council of Rome under Pope Damasus I. If it was not for the Catholic Church and her popes and traditions the world would never of even known what the bible was. Protestants only know the bible because of us. Martin Luther admitted that. St Augustine also did in the 4th century. fundamentalist always spread rumors about us keeping the scriptures away from people. Bugt htose are just lies.
In fact St. Thomas More himself stated that the Church had already translated the bible into English even before Wycliff. He states:
"The whole Bible long before Wycliff’s day was by virtuous and well-learned men translated into the English tongue, and by good and godly people with devotion and soberness well and reverently read.” - - Dialogues III"
Before the printing press, Catholic monks had been copying Scriptures by hand from the earliest manuscripts down through the centuries We must remember that if they had not preserved God’s word neither Catholics or Protestants would have the Scriptures today. Not only is it said that the Catholic Church did not have Scriptures available in the common languages, the Church is also accused of keeping the Bible away from the people, even going so far as chaining Bibles in the Church! Remember that before printing had been invented the Bible was hand-copied and therefore copies were both rare and expensive. Chaining the Bible to the Church would keep it from being taken away and therefore making it more available to those who were able to read. One can compare this with telephone books that are chained up at public telephone booths today – not to keep people from using them but keeping them available for all.
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