Albion
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- Dec 8, 2004
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Hey...The issue--at least from me--is not "What is the Catholic Church's theory about the sacraments?"Chi Rho posted a link above with a ton evidence and logic to support the CC's beliefs about the sacraments.
It's "What acts are properly to be considered sacraments and which rites or ceremonies fail the test of being sacraments?".
No way? Let me offer you my copy of the Holy Bible.OK maybe I took the logic too far, but one person's interpretation carries no more authority than another's interpretation, leaving one with no way to determine who is correct.

Mr. X says his interpretation is valid and Mr. Y's isn't. Mr. Y says his interpetaion is valid Mr. X's isn't. Mrs. Z disagrees with both of them and goes and starts her own church. How can one determine what the truth really is, digging through thousands of unauthoritative interpretations?
Bible scholarship is no more unthinkable or impossible to do than studying the works of Thomas Aquinas or Karl Marx in order to properly understand them.
No, but you can't name me any other system which completely avoids the possibility of misunderstanding on the part of some reader, somewhere. You're suggesting that I go with your system instead, but it presents the very same uncertainties as you are attributing to God's word in scripture.But Sola Scriptura provides no way to know which interpretations are valid.
The anti-Sola Scriptura argument is bogus because it holds Scripture up to a standard that not only is impossible--every reader coming up with the same understanding or interpretation, under all circumstances, regardless of education, I.Q. or anything else that affects the issue--but AT THE SAME TIME you simply substitute "Just believe what my church tells you."
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