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I can assure you short of the return of Messiah you WILL undergo a physical death
Such as?
--Prayers to Mary, saints and angels began in AD 600
--Veneration of relics, AD 1786
--Canonization of dead people as saints, 995
--Mandatory mass attendance, 1000
--The rosary beads prayer, 1090 (invented by Peter the Hermit--I need to look up who he was)
--Indulgences, 1190
--Confession to priests, instituted by Pope Innocent III in 1215
--The "Seven Sacraments," 1439
And most of all...
--Tradition declared equally authoritative with Scripture, 1545 by the Council of Trent.
To draw an analogy, I'd like to ask if you believe you're likely to get a fair and accurate history of the modern State of Israel if you consult only Palestinian sources. If your goal is to understand Catholic doctrines, why do you believe it makes no sense to study Catholic sources?It so happens I've recently listened to an excellent audio by Norman Geisler on this subject. It's a classroom setting and he's teaching some seminary students. From it I got a timetable of doctrines/traditions:
--Veneration of relics, AD 1786
If this practice is in error, it sure didn't take long for the error to creep in."We took up the bones, which are more valuable than precious stones and finer than refined gold, and laid them in a suitable place, where the Lord will permit us to gather ourselves together as we are able, in gladness and joy, and celebrate the birthday of his martyrdom."
- The Smyrnean Church on the Martyrdom of St. Polycarp, AD 156
What exactly is the problem with that? "So-and-so led a very faithful, spirit-filled life and we honor that person." It's a recognition of someone's faith and points to them as a role model.--Canonization of dead people as saints, 995
The commandment is to keep the Lord's Day. It is important to set aside time for Mass.--Mandatory mass attendance, 1000
Employment is another consideration. I used to have to work on Sundays. Because I was a rookie Catholic, it never occurred to me to ask for dispensation in exchange for attending Daily Mass on my day off... which my pastor said he would have granted had I asked for it. So my bad there. Still, I forced myself to attend Mass on either Saturday or Sunday as I thought I was supposed to and I don't regret doing that... even though it was a real slog attending Mass after a full day of work.Catechism said:A day of grace and rest from work
2184 Just as God "rested on the seventh day from all his work which he had done,"121 human life has a rhythm of work and rest. The institution of the Lord's Day helps everyone enjoy adequate rest and leisure to cultivate their familial, cultural, social, and religious lives.122
2185 On Sundays and other holy days of obligation, the faithful are to refrain from engaging in work or activities that hinder the worship owed to God, the joy proper to the Lord's Day, the performance of the works of mercy, and the appropriate relaxation of mind and body.123 Family needs or important social service can legitimately excuse from the obligation of Sunday rest. The faithful should see to it that legitimate excuses do not lead to habits prejudicial to religion, family life, and health.
2186 Those Christians who have leisure should be mindful of their brethren who have the same needs and the same rights, yet cannot rest from work because of poverty and misery. Sunday is traditionally consecrated by Christian piety to good works and humble service of the sick, the infirm, and the elderly. Christians will also sanctify Sunday by devoting time and care to their families and relatives, often difficult to do on other days of the week. Sunday is a time for reflection, silence, cultivation of the mind, and meditation which furthers the growth of the Christian interior life.
Not sure I see the significance of this, tbh. Also, I didn't know it went back that far. I'd never claim to be an expert on the Rosary but I thought it was a 13th century thing.--The rosary beads prayer, 1090
What specifically is your objection?--Indulgences, 1190
Actually it was done by Our Lord Himself in the Gospel of St. John 20.--Confession to priests, instituted by Pope Innocent III in 1215
That is one place that view was codified. That may have been a reiteration of an earlier councils statement. I honestly am not sure about that. Either way, that had been their practice for centuries.--Tradition declared equally authoritative with Scripture, 1545 by the Council of Trent.
Our Lord affirmed the concept of the Seat of Moses in the Gospel of St. Matthew 23 and counseled His followers to obey the Pharisees' commands and authority. The reason that's a bit of a challenge for those who hold to Sola Scriptura is because the concept of the Seat of Moses comes from non-scriptural tradition. If Our Lord believed in Sola Scriptura, surely He would've made a point of saying His disciples were free to ignore the Pharisees. And yet He didn't do that.About that last one--it's strange to me that they would do so in light of Matthew 15 and Mark 7, where Christ reprimands the Pharisees for this very thing, adding traditions.
The Council of Trent was a reaction to Protestantism point blank. Yes, they discussed Sola Scriptura but frankly everybody agrees Protestantism was founded upon more than that. Indulgences, for example, were also discussed by the council.But I've read that Trent was called in response to the Reformation and all its emphasis on "Bible only." That would explain it (as well as all of Trent's anathemas!).
See above, re: Sacred Tradition.Christ reprimanded the Pharisees for adding traditions, and for putting them before Scripture. He also stuck to Scripture himself. I see this and think, "Then that's what I need to do."
To be fair, look at it from a Catholic's point of view. "It took over 2,000 years but now that I'm here, the scriptures are FINALLY being understood properly!"And such men try to convince me that I need them, and can't make it without them. That they alone can correctly interpret the Holy Bible. That the book is so difficult to understand that I can never read it right on my own.
That same question is what I'd ask a Protestant, actually. The Catholic Church has been studying, translating and debating the meaning of Sacred Scripture for 2,000 years. It happens to this very day. Frankly, though with respect. they have more credibility with me than Pastor Bob from Second Non-Denominational Assembly who graduated from "Bible college" extemporizing every Sunday morning.Well if we can never read it right, then how is it that they always read it right?
It's not understandable only to a select few. Rather, it's a select few who are given teaching authority within the Church. The Church leaders are, at certain times and under certain conditions, supernaturally protected from error. I, as a layman, am not. I have no such guarantee as I am not (and do not want to be) part of the Church hierarchy.I think we're agreed that our Creator wants everyone to be saved and to dwell forever with him. This being the case, why would God make his word so cryptic and contradictory that only a select elite few can correctly interpret it for everyone? How convenient for those select few!
This, to me, suggests a bit of confusion on your part. Having spiritual authority over another person is hardly the same as serving as mediator between God and that person the way Our Lord does. No Catholic who understands what he's talking about would say otherwise.We may never meet. But I'll tell you this. No one has the right to act as gatekeeper between you and your Creator. No human can claim any self-appointed spiritual "authority" over you, telling you what you can and can't do, what rites you must perform, what rules you have to keep. The sole mediator between God and man is Christ (1 Timothy 1:25).
Unfortunately, though with respect, I see it as a mangling of St. Luke's words. St. Luke calls the Bereans "more noble-minded". But more noble-minded than whom? That would be the jews whom St. Paul met in Thessalonica earlier in Acts. These were the ones who stirred up a crowd and ran him out of town.The Bereans in Acts 17:10-12 were ordinary people like ourselves. They had no special authority to interpret the Scriptures. But they are commended because they didn't take Paul's word, they searched the book for themselves to see if what he was telling them, was really so.
I hope you see this as an encouragement.
In any event, I won't answer everything since that would take forever.
Matthew 23 said:Then Jesus spoke to the multitudes and to His disciples, 2 saying: “The scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses’ seat. 3 Therefore whatever they tell you to observe,[a] that observe and do, but do not do according to their works; for they say, and do not do.
Acts 17 said:Now when they had passed through Amphipolis and Apollonia, they came to Thessalonica, where there was a synagogue of the Jews. 2 Then Paul, as his custom was, went in to them, and for three Sabbaths reasoned with them from the Scriptures, 3 explaining and demonstrating that the Christ had to suffer and rise again from the dead, and saying, “This Jesus whom I preach to you is the Christ.” 4 And some of them were persuaded; and a great multitude of the devout Greeks, and not a few of the leading women, joined Paul and Silas. 5 But the Jews who were not persuaded, becoming envious, took some of the evil men from the marketplace, and gathering a mob, set all the city in an uproar and attacked the house of Jason, and sought to bring them out to the people.
I'd like to know, where did this presupposition come from that different sects/groups/denominations happen because of differing interpretations of God's book?
In my experience, fringe groups start when people get certain ideas and then try to shoehorn them into Scripture. The Church of Christ's ban on all musical instruments is a perfect example of this. What verse did they misinterpret to get this idea? No, rather they got the idea first--from where, I'd like to know--and tried to wrench Colossians 3:16 out of shape in order to support it. A verse which makes not a mention of said instruments.
Speaking of Colossians, Paul says this in chapter 2 of that book:
Let no one cheat you of your reward, taking delight in false humility and worship of angels, intruding into those things which he has not seen, vainly puffed up by his fleshly mind...
This reminds me of things like the Jehovah's Witnesses claiming that only a select 144,000 are going (all right, have gone) to heaven. They cite Revelation 7 as proof. It doesn't mention it--and how, reading it, would a person ever get that idea?
Catholics arguing against SS seem to be pushing the idea that the Bible is like a Rorschach test, that if ten people read it for themselves, they'll come away with ten different interpretations. That hasn't been my experience reading it over the years. Peter mentions some of Paul's letters that are hard to understand, and the book of Revelation is a fireworks display of symbolism; but those are the exceptions, not the rule. The main things are the plain things, and the plain things are the main things.
We've all gone back & forth about Catholicism for quite a while. Time to expand the picture.
What happens when "Sola Scriptura" is abandoned!
(Just a few examples off the top of my head)
--Lucifer is someone's brother. That someone is Christ. (Mormons)
--God started out as a man and worked his way up to Godhood, and we can do the same. (How's that for infallibility?) (Mormons)
--No musical instruments. Period. (Church of Christ)
--God basically hates everything and everyone. (Westboro Baptist Church)
--Christ didn't die on the cross, didn't atone for our sins, and his second coming is actually the advent of Christian Science. (Christian Science, or the "Mary Eddy Bakers" as one Catholic speaker called them)
--It seems you need to pronounce God's name right to be saved. (Assemblies of Yahweh)
--We're saved by faith plus witnessing. (Too many Protestants I've known)
I've also associated with people who believed:
--If you read a horoscope, watch the wrong kind of movie, read science fiction--the list goes on and on--it gives demons a "legal spiritual right" to enter you. Whether or not you act like you're possessed, they're there. I can see myself going crazy with paranoia, wondering if some demon's inside my head. The only way to get rid of it is to figure out what you did wrong and "renounce" it. Best go through an exorcism, too.
Now on the positive side: I read once about George Müller, a 19th-century pastor who built and maintained orphanages for decades without ever asking for donations, except from God. (The whole point, he said, was in proving God still intervenes in our lives and still hears prayer.)
He recommended reading and meditating on the Scriptures daily because that will keep us grounded in the faith, and keeps us from coming up with our own doctrines. Good advice that I strive to follow every day.
HUH???? What attitude? Everyone experience a physical death scripture is clear on that... how on earth you decided to project is beyond meWatch your attitude.
And these resources are free on the internet in multiple places.IMO one also needs to have some basic understanding of Greek and Hebrew or at least a really good lexicon and concordance because there is clearly some bias in the translations