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How do non-Catholics explain Eucharistic miracles, such as bleeding, and Marian...

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Rhamiel

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I am slightly confused, are you saying that the pool of Bethsaida was demonic?
 
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Rick Otto

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Oh, I see, so there is no more content in the three posts you have made than what you were whining about what was contained in mine and MoreCoffee's posts. I understand now.
You understand trolling like an expert.
 
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Tzaousios

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You understand trolling like an expert.

I am glad that I was able to understand your methodology, Rick.

Are there any other assumptions you would like to get off your chest now that you have taken the space?
 
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sunlover1

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Excellent work.
Thanks for sharing some food for thought.
I schedule my life around God and His Word.
(Try to rather)
 
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Standing Up

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The Protovangelion of James always struck me as being a Jewish, not a pagan, story, echoing the stories found in the Old Testament, and not necessarily any more mythical than the other Gospel accounts.

You mean Mt, Mk, Lk, Jn? or are you comparing PoJ to other pseudo works?


Well, it's hard for something to resemble something when we really don't know. IOW, you're assuming, begging the question, that Mary's life did resemble pagan stories. From what we know from scripture and tradition, it didn't.

There's pagan ideas and there's the truth about Mary. They really do not resemble each other at all.

Pagan..................... Truth
priestess ..................not a priestess
ever-virgin.............. normal birth (virginity over)
raised in temple.............. no idea her childhood (probably just normal)
left at 1st blood .............not an issue
her child born of stardust..... Christ born of flesh
 
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Root of Jesse

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You're right, friend. It's one thing to deny yourself a drink or a candy or a meal. It's another thing to beat yourself every 45 seconds. I don't get it either, and it's not something I condone or would do myself. But it is discipline, such as athletes put themselves through, is it not? I mean, I sacrifice every day walking up the street, about an eight story climb to the level of the church I attend, and I do it on purpose, and it hurt at first. In fact, I still have tendonitis. And sometimes I fight through it to get to the church. But athletes sometimes break bones while playing their sport, and work through it.

You're right, think of it as spiritual training. But do so only if you feel called, and you have someone to direct you in the practice.
 
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Root of Jesse

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There is plenty of evidence. But lots of people don't accept it. Like I said a while back, when it comes to miracles, for those who believe, nothing will dissuade them. For those who don't, no proof is sufficient.
 
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Root of Jesse

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Just so you know, the Catholic Church always approaches a reported miracle or apparition with a great degree of skepticism. And in fact, the apparition at Lourdes, Bernadette was subjected to secular threatening and menacing, apparently long hours of questioning under duress; as well as shunning and ridicule by the townspeople, and the local hierarchy. Denied the Eucharist for lying publicly. And yet, the facts manifested themselves in such a way that the Church came to believe it. Same with Guadalupe, and Fatima, and most of the ones that have been approved. I don't think you'll find church-approved apparitions in toast.

In fact, the way most miracles are investigated, the same way most saints are investigated prior to canonization, is very rigorous, and some take ages.
 
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MrLuther

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There is plenty of evidence. But lots of people don't accept it.

Well, if you think that "Hey, this completely irrelevant pseudopigraphical work written a MINIMUM of 100 years after the last of the Apostles died says something....that must make it true!", is evidence, then sure.

However, that's the worst possible definition of evidence I've ever heard :S
 
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FireDragon76

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In fact, the way most miracles are investigated, the same way most saints are investigated prior to canonization, is very rigorous, and some take ages.

It seems to me in the last two centuries, the Vatican has been largely uncomfortable with new miraculous claims. I'm reading through a book on Pio of Pietrelcina, and his life was full of the Church's hierarchy restricting and persecuting him for his devotees miraculous claims.
 
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sunlover1

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You're right, friend. It's one thing to deny yourself a drink or a candy or a meal. It's another thing to beat yourself every 45 seconds. I don't get it either, and it's not something I condone or would do myself.
Glad to hear that.

Do you believe that they are missing the mark when they do
so? I can't see how, for instance, WWW could NOT be missing
the mark...

You're right, think of it as spiritual training. But do so only if you feel called, and you have someone to direct you in the practice.
I just haven't seen such a thing in Scripture, so I don't know
why I'd be tempted to do so. I would worry that could attract
"cutting" and such.

Yes, what RCC's call proof may not be considered so for others who
are not in your church.
 
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Rhamiel

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yeah, this has been going on longer then 200 years
the big fear is that a cult of personality will build up
and then it turn out the person was fake or demonic
and common people would get their faith hurt

Joseph of Cupertino - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St.Joseph of Cupertino (1603-1663) would levitate while celebrating Mass
he was often confined to his quarters or moved to different communities by Church officials
 
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FireDragon76

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I don't think all Protestants on this forum are aware there is a distinction between things like the Roman Magisterium and the Vatican, private devotions and folk catholicism. One can't look at apparitions or miracles that are popular among Catholic laity and declare them "official" Catholicism when most of them are not matters that can bind ones conscience. Not everything about Roman Catholicism is top down- a great deal of what Protestant label as "official" is driven by the laity and Catholicism contains a great deal of pluralism, local expression, and private opinions in that area.
 
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christianmomof3

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I think that most non-Catholics do not know the difference. Since the RCC welcomes/allows/encompasses and does not deny the validity of so much of what many people see as total nonsense - like people flocking to see an image of Jesus or Mary on an underpass/chocolate dripping/piece of toast/apple core etc... then most people think that is enorsed by and a part of the Catholic religion. I have never seen any statements by the RCC denying or decrying that sort of thing.
 
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Rhamiel

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Odd that so much of this thread is being devoted to the Protoevangelium of James

that book is not considered cannon by any Church

it was a popular book among early Christians, but it is not counted as being authoritative as Scripture, no one even thinks it was really written by James
 
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