An "ecclesia" is a word with a meaning. Merriam-Webster defines it accurately...
Never mind Merriam-Webster, you previously said that Ecclesia meant a "called out body".
Christ died to establish an actual Ecclesia. That is a called out body formed with the purpose to govern.
I agreed with you - I said that Christ's followers are called out from the world.
We are not to show our separateness by shutting ourselves away, but by our behaviour, morals and priorities. Holy, means set apart.
Christ's followers belong to him, not to the world. He created us, saved us, has called us and given us his Spirit. ALL who are Christ's followers are part of his called out people. ALL who belong to him, serve him and have him living in their lives through his Spirit.
Not sure why you keep likening it to a book club.
Jesus founded the Church, not Peter. Peter was merely appointed to be the earthly authority to act in Christ's absence.
By all means believe that if you want to - as long as you acknowledge that the church is built on Christ, not Peter.
Christ founded it, is the foundation and corner stone, died for it and sends the Spirit to empower it. The church is the bride of Christ, not the bride of Peter.
Which testifies that God can use anyone, does it not??? Also, note... this was before Pentecost and Peter's full infilling with the Spirit.
Of course God can use anyone.
That this was before Pentecost doesn't matter, because Catholics on these forums have said that the Catholic church started in Matt 16:18.
Peter was not perfect, even after Pentecost - whereas Christ is. That's why He will always be the firm, unmoveable foundation stone.
Yes, James was appointed Bishop over Jerusalem, not the entire Church. Paul was a missionary evangelist who appointed elders over the churches. However, only Peter was given the keys to the kingdom of Heaven.
Whatever that phrase means, it does not mean that Peter, alone, decided who should and who should not be in the Kingdom.
The Kingdom of God is anywhere that God is acknowledged, and allowed to rule, as king. Entry into the Kingdom is through re-birth, being born again, John 3:3. The Holy Spirit leads people to Jesus and brings them to new birth and new life in Christ - not Peter.
The Holy Spirit convicts people of sin and leads them to Jesus so they will be forgiven.
Peter did not, himself, decide that Gentiles should hear the Gospel and become believers, the Holy Spirit revealed it to him by a vision. After which he said that "God has NO favourites", Acts of the Apostles 10:34.
Nowhere does Jesus give such authority to any other Apostle.
I don't know what you believe that means, but ALL Apostles had authority in the early church - not just Peter.
As I said, if there was a debate, they sent for the Apostles, Acts 15.
The Apostles performed signs and wonders among the people, Acts of the Apostles 5:12.
It was the Apostles who chose deacons, Acts 6.
When Saul was converted, Barnabas took him to meet the Apostles, Acts of the Apostles 9:27.
This book is called acts of the Apostles, not Acts of Peter.
I could go on and on and on... It is a historical fact that the vast majority of Christian theologians have observed the authority of St. Peter and his successors.
Maybe.
But whatever authority he had is/was not greater than the authority given to all believers.
All believers are to preach the Good News, make disciples and baptise, Matthew 28:19-20.
All believers are part of the body of Christ, 1 Corinthians 12:27.
All believers are to confess their sins to one another, James 5:16.
Peter himself says that believers are a royal priesthood; God's own possession, 1 Peter 2:9.
He says that believers are living stones, with Jesus as the foundation, 1 Peter 2;:4-5.
Nowhere does he say "and I am head of the church", or "only I can give you permission to enter the kingdom", or "I, alone, have the authority to forgive" - quite simply, because it wasn't true.
All those verses are firmly believed in and embraced by the Catholic Church,
I'm sure they are.
They are firmly embraced by all believers.
All who are IN Christ are his children. All who belong to Christ have eternal life.
Again, you're not reading the Bible. The Bible firmly records Christ giving Peter the Keys of the Kingdom of Heaven,
Yes.
And you're not listening to what I am saying. Nowhere does the NT, or Peter, say that Peter is head of the church. Someone wants to believe; let's ask Peter if he will allow it. Someone wants to be filled with the Spirit; only Peter can pray that this will happen. Paul/Philip/John/Barnabas etc want to go to a certain place to preach the Good News; they need Peter to give them permission.
I'm saying that Christ gave the "keys to the kingdom" to ALL the Apostles, not just Peter - as they ALL preached and taught about the Kingdom and how to be born again.
Read the NT; that's what happened.
Even in Acts 15 we see the Church gathered to resolve the issue of circumcision regarding new Gentile converts. The meeting was in heavy debate until Peter speaks and brings it to order. Upon St. Peter speaking, they all become silent and listen to the testimonies of Paul and Barnabas,
Yes - and it was James who concluded that a letter should be written to the Gentiles, and what it should say.
When Peter was rescued from prison he said "tell this to the believers, and to James."
Actually... the Bible does teach that Mary is Queen of Heaven. This deserves a post all of its own to break down biblically. I'll follow up with it. You might disagree... but you'll never be able to say this teaching isn't found in Scripture.
Yes, I will; because it isn't.
Oh I don't doubt that there are verses which have been interpreted to show that Mary is "queen of heaven", but nowhere is it taught.
Jesus never referred to his mother as "queen of heaven".
In the upper room before Pentecost, Mary was there, praying with the others. No one said "let's ask the queen of heaven when the Spirit is going to come", or "let's ask the queen of heaven to lead this prayer meeting".
Paul teaches that the Holy Spirit intercedes for us - not the queen of heaven.
Peter himself, the apparent head of the church, never mentions the queen of heaven. Neither does John, into whose care Mary was given at the cross - although I've no doubt you are going to tell me of a reference in Revelation which "proves" this doctrine.
That's buffet bar Christianity. Take what you like and leave what you don't. True and historic Christianity is far far more robust and authoritative than that.
Yes, it's the Gospel, which is accepted by ALL born again believers.
Beliefs about Mary, Peter, baptism, speaking in tongues etc etc are not the Gospel.
In another thread, I asked a Catholic what there is in the Gospel that they believe that we don't.
I never got an answer. I suspect that might be because he didn't want to admit that Protestants believe in the same God, the same Christ, the same Spirit, the same Gospel as Catholics do. That would mean he would have to concede that we are saved, born again and children of God, just as Catholics are. Which would also mean that Protestants did not only have "part of the truth", as he had previously stated.
Martyrdom is an entirely different subject.
Sorry, but you've either misunderstood, or are ignoring, my point.
If believers were asked - at gun point - whether they were Christians and confessed Christ as Lord, there would be no time, and it would be irrelevant, to say, "yes - but only we are the true church built on Peter/that group over there don't have the whole truth/those people never tithed" etc etc.
The minute we said "yes", we'd be dead - Catholics and Protestants would both have died confessing Christ, and him alone. In Revelation, martyrs are those who died for Christ; refusing to worship the beast and accept its mark. Jesus said that we are blessed when we are persecuted, killed and hated for HIM - not for Peter, Mary, church attendance, baptism or anything else.
Deny that Peter is head of the church - it doesn't matter, or affect your salvation.
Deny that Jesus is Lord, Saviour, giver of eternal life and so on - and there IS no salvation.
Some are saved in spite of their broken relationship to the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church.
All believers belong to THE Holy, Catholic and Apostolic church
Holy, because we are set apart from the world, are in Christ and belong to Christ.
Catholic because this means "universal"
Apostolic because it is built on the teachings of the Apostles - including Paul - who taught the words and teachings of Christ. It is not built on A human being, but on Christ.
And yes, people can be saved even without belonging to a church - which shows that it is Christ who saves and admits people to the Kingdom; not any human being.