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Don't you think it's a little bit strange that people will ask, why don't you pray to Jesus directly as if praying to or through the Saints excludes Jesus from the transaction. Yet we don't have trouble understanding that asking a friend to pray for us doesn't exclude Jesus. Paul wrote to the Christians in the different churches to pray for him in his trials and he offered to pray for them in their trials. Why should we behave differently? Why should we not be asking for the prayers of those who have gone before us and who are now in heaven in the presence of God, able to intercede very directly for us, and knowing very clearly the difficulties that we face? I can't help but think that the reformers in their zeal to jettison everything to do with the Catholic Church jettisoned a great many things that are absolutely important and Central to being a Christian. So I for one will continue to pray for the deceased and to the Saints, asking for their intercession with the Lord our God on my behalf and on behalf of those whom I love. May God have mercy on our souls.I know of no Christian who doesn't. But we also ask others to pray for us. Don't you?
Not strange, just dumb. "Them Catholics don't pray to God, they just pray to them statues of saints. " Simple ignorance.Don't you think it's a little bit strange that people will ask, why don't you pray to Jesus directly as if praying to or through the Saints excludes Jesus from the transaction.
Yeah, and it's weird. They say they believe that the blessed dead are alive in Heaven, but if you talk about asking them to pray for you then those same departed saints are dead-dead. Kinda schizophrenic, innit?Yet we don't have trouble understanding that asking a friend to pray for us doesn't exclude Jesus.
All the Prots do that too, but in their reckoning "that's different".Paul wrote to the Christians in the different churches to pray for him in his trials and he offered to pray for them in their trials. Why should we behave differently?
Agreed.Why should we not be asking for the prayers of those who have gone before us and who are now in heaven in the presence of God, able to intercede very directly for us, and knowing very clearly the difficulties that we face?
Amen.I can't help but think that the reformers in their zeal to jettison everything to do with the Catholic Church jettisoned a great many things that are absolutely important and Central to being a Christian. So I for one will continue to pray for the deceased and to the Saints, asking for their intercession with the Lord our God on my behalf and on behalf of those whom I love. May God have mercy on our souls.
And in Rom 8:34it is Christ who makes INTERCESSION for us .Not strange, just dumb. "Them Catholics don't pray to God, they just pray to them statues of saints. " Simple ignorance.
Yeah, and it's weird. They say they believe that the blessed dead are alive in Heaven, but if you talk about asking them to pray for you then those same departed saints are dead-dead. Kinda schizophrenic, innit?
All the Prots do that too, but in their reckoning "that's different".
Agreed.
Amen.
I can't find the word "exclusively" in the verse you quoted. Perhaps you have a different translation?And in Rom 8:34it is Christ who makes INTERCESSION for us .
dan p
Do you intercede for others?And in Rom 8:34it is Christ who makes INTERCESSION for us .
dan p
Just not possible based on Romans 8:24. Never mind Paul asks for people to pray for him with intercessory prayer.And you never, ever, EVER ask anyone else to pray for for you, right? Right?
Why pray at all then if we do not know the outcome of certain situations that will happen in this life?
We are supposed to make intercession for others and pray for people. It’s all in God’s hands.Not knowing outcome of prayer is a different thing, one that does not preclude praying still, from not knowing anything about what is needing prayer. So it can be asked, why pray at all when not knowing anything about what is needing prayer.
If you really want to, go right ahead.However, if we are certain about the outcome of various things in life, is there any reason to pray about it? For example, if l am certain that tomorrow morning I will eat a bowl of cereal for breakfast, should I pray about it, other than to give thanks?
The New Testament hints at the existence of a realm beyond heaven and hell. Jesus is said to have preached to the spirits in prison who were disobedient during Noah's time (1 Pt 3:19-20; also see 1 Pt 4:6). This could indicate a place after death that is neither heaven nor hell, though its current existence is uncertain. Paul's reference to the Corinthians baptizing on behalf of the dead (1 Cor 15:29) might suggest a similar concept. Additionally, Jesus' statement that blasphemy against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven in this age or the next (Mt 12:32) raises the question of whether some sins may be forgiven post-mortem, implying a place after death other than heaven or hell. [see The Bible on Praying for the Dead : A Catholic Reflection]Out of curiosity is 2 Maccabees the only passage or verse used to support the prayers for the dead. And also the tradition of the early church. Was the tradition also based on this text or were there others? Even if it is Deuterocanonical.
It's a bit anachronistic to speak of the tradition being based on a text or a collection of texts. The tradition of the early church was the complete body of Christian worship not just doctrinal. Practices weren't created from pouring over the texts and re-creating a former pattern of worship, but were the practices handed down from the apostles and from Jesus Himself. Today we're stuck arguing over what practices the text recommends, but the early church had the luxury of a clear heritage for their practices. The doctrinal questions developed from a combination of interpreting the traditional practices in light of the text, not from developing original or recreating practices based on doctrinal readings of the text.Out of curiosity is 2 Maccabees the only passage or verse used to support the prayers for the dead. And also the tradition of the early church. Was the tradition also based on this text or were there others? Even if it is Deuterocanonical.
The New Testament hints at the existence of a realm beyond heaven and hell. Jesus is said to have preached to the spirits in prison who were disobedient during Noah's time (1 Pt 3:19-20; also see 1 Pt 4:6). This could indicate a place after death that is neither heaven nor hell, though its current existence is uncertain. Paul's reference to the Corinthians baptizing on behalf of the dead (1 Cor 15:29) might suggest a similar concept. Additionally, Jesus' statement that blasphemy against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven in this age or the next (Mt 12:32) raises the question of whether some sins may be forgiven post-mortem, implying a place after death other than heaven or hell. [see The Bible on Praying for the Dead : A Catholic Reflection]
There is more, even in the NT. See post #715.Out of curiosity is 2 Maccabees the only passage or verse used to support the prayers for the dead. And also the tradition of the early church. Was the tradition also based on this text or were there others? Even if it is Deuterocanonical.
Hi FerventIt's a bit anachronistic to speak of the tradition being based on a text or a collection of texts. The tradition of the early church was the complete body of Christian worship not just doctrinal. Practices weren't created from pouring over the texts and re-creating a former pattern of worship, but were the practices handed down from the apostles and from Jesus Himself. Today we're stuck arguing over what practices the text recommends, but the early church had the luxury of a clear heritage for their practices. The doctrinal questions developed from a combination of interpreting the traditional practices in light of the text, not from developing original or recreating practices based on doctrinal readings of the text.
When we think of Scripture as a unified body of documents like the Bible, we're being anachronistic. Paul and Jesus' understanding of Scripture wouldn't have been "the OT" because the OT wasn't compiled and canonized until sometime after the fall of the temple in 70 AD, in fact there was a major debate whether Scripture was just the 5 books of Moses or if it included the Prophets(books like Judges, Kings, and such) and the Writings(what we think of as prophetic books and wisdom books)...instead they were a part of an active tradition that included both written and unwritten material. Both of them referenced both Scripture and the wider Pharisaical tradition in their establishment of Christ, but the majority of what they referred to got codified into our Scriptures because they were used in such a manner not the other way around. So while there certainly was a new dynamic that developed, it was embedded within an ongoing tradition and what we now think of distinctly "Jewish" traditions are only thought of as such because our traditions have veered in another direction. It's ahistorical to think of Scripture outside of tradition, because it is within the flow of tradition that Scripture came to be defined not the other way around. The Bible didn't descend from heaven one day fully intact, but was formed as an ongoing conversation within the people of God that stretches back to Adam and the incarnation serves as the central defining moment.Hi Fervent
Thanks, I think we may have a differing views of what early means.
Was Jesus and Paul being anachronistic when they referred to the OT Scriptures?.
They used Scripture to show who Christ is and what He came to do. Scripture (OT and some of Paul's writings at the time) were authorative in the Jewish/Gentile context and the traditions that the church were told to hold on to was reinterpreted to reveal the Christ and all He promised.
A different dynamic had arisen. The Jewish way was to attend synagogue, to offer sacrifices, acknowledge certain feasts, abstain from certain foods, circumcision etc. But as the Spirit revealed Christ and His teaching, traditions changed in light of Him. Paul presented this as the "new" traditions.