patricius79
Called to Jesus Through Mary
Of course you agree with THAT. You're the one who made the statement.
But do you also agree with me that there is likewise nobody in the early church who was roughly Roman Catholic as we know the beliefs and practices of the RCC nowadays?
I can't really respond to inventions like this, my friend. You've tried repeatedly to say that reformed Christians--or I myself--are following some mythical Protestant "oral traditions" when that's totally a figment of your imagination or some misguided debating point you've invented. You think that if you come up with some term like "oral traditions" and attribute Protestant belief to them rather than to Scripture, it will put us in some kind of bind. It does nothing of the sort, since it's not true. It gains you nothing to keep saying it.
"Center of Ecumenical agreement" is a million miles away from what you alleged. He certainly did not agree that there was any universal acceptance of Papal Supremacy or Infallibility or some of the Marian doctrines you believe.
You mentioned it. You were wrong. It's a non-starter of a debating point, no matter how many times you say it. I have to inform you that I will not any longer even respond to the fifteenth or sixteenth mention from you of claims that have long since been answered by me.
That said, do you believe Scripture to be the word of God or not? If the answer is "yes," all the rest of this banter about who did what, etc. is beside the point. We have it. Do you trust it or not? Why would we instead choose to believe some manmade suggestion of such a doctrine as the immaculate conception? Seriously, why? Because it seems devout or uplifting, whether or not it's actually true?
Since nobody in the the early Church was roughly Protestant, as you say, then how can one make a plausible case against the beautiful doctrine about our Blessed Mother, Mary, the Mother of God, the Immaculate Conception? Obviously your argument requires Catholics to provide an explicit text on the Immaculate Conception. But there is no such explicit text for the definition of the Trinity or the N.T. Canon, both of which were defined by the early Catholic Church in communion with the Successors of St. Rock. I don't find any of the specifically Protestant ideas/oral traditions/arguments against the Marian doctrines in the Bible. Likewise, you've acknowledged that the doctrine of Sola Scriptura is not a divine truth. And of course the Bible says to hold fast to both the written and the oral traditions 2 Thessalonians 2:15. So how do Protestants hold fast to the oral traditions when their oral traditions only came in about the 1500s?
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