Me too Alexis. . . I was wondering if I was the only one. . ..Alexis OCA said:Really? It kind of grosses me out!![]()
Peace
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Me too Alexis. . . I was wondering if I was the only one. . ..Alexis OCA said:Really? It kind of grosses me out!![]()
lambslove said:Sweetie, the name is lamb's love not lamb's glove.![]()
And I don't know anything about a list of indulgences, but I do have the little rosary booklet I picked up at the Miami County (ohio) fair from the roman catholic booth and it says the same exact thing about having rosaries blessed and getting indulgences. If you can tell me what a list of indulgences is, maybe I can look it up for you. But are you saying that catholic.com and newadvent.com are misquoting doctrine? They are websites officially run and sanctioned by the catholic church.
I never said anything that would suggest that there is any shame in being child-like .. we are all to become as little children. That was not what I was referring to at all . . .As for the comment about it being presented for a child, there's no shame in being child-like, is there? Didn't Christ say we have to have a child-like faith in order to gain the kingdom of heaven?![]()
Terri said:Thanks for all of the info guys.
I didn't know the beads had indulgences associated with them!![]()
I thought that the indulgence stuff had been done away with.
Iollain said:I see this 'other pope dude' is mad because 'there is no salvation outside the RCC' and John Paul II said there is, i think is was him anyways.
http://www.truecatholic.org/pope/encyc-ecclesia.htm
Yes, bsically this is right.Gold Dragon said:It was the selling of indulgences that Luther objected to and that has been done away with. Indulgences themselves are still around, but no longer sold.
thereselittleflower said:Yes, bsically this is right.
What was actually discontinued was the practice of granting indulgences for "alms" because of the potential for abuse, not just the abuse itself.
Peace
GreenEyedLady said:Actually, Some indulgences are still sold today. A missionary in our church lives in Canada. He told our church that his friend, who is unsaved and is a Catholic, paid $5000 to a priest so he could get to heaven and live the life he wanted. The priest accepted the money and gave him a certificate of pardon. Then our missionary showed his friend in the bible where our debt was PAID IN FULL. I cannot remember if the man accepted the true gospel but it floored me that this practice still goes on today. Don't be so sure to think that this does not still happen.
GEL
GreenEyedLady said:First of all, a bible believing, soul winning, french candian missionary who was saved by the blood of Jesus told our church this. He was catholic his whole life until someone showed him the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ and he was saved at the moment of accepting Christ. Not only does this man have bible knowledge, but he also has alot of RCC knowledge. So, YES, is he totally crediable. There are alot of things that go on outside of our country in other countries that we know nothing about. What may be the norm in some areas may not be the norm in others. Yes, this was a normal Roman Catholic Priest no wacko.
All I can say, is that it has been practiced in this decade whether or not the church knows it.
No, I am not kidding.
GEL
thereselittleflower said:GEL
. I am afraid this person he talked to was 'had' - he paid $5000 for nothing!
Peace
GreenEyedLady said:Actually, Some indulgences are still sold today. A missionary in our church lives in Canada. He told our church that his friend, who is unsaved and is a Catholic, paid $5000 to a priest so he could get to heaven and live the life he wanted. The priest accepted the money and gave him a certificate of pardon. Then our missionary showed his friend in the bible where our debt was PAID IN FULL. I cannot remember if the man accepted the true gospel but it floored me that this practice still goes on today. Don't be so sure to think that this does not still happen.
GEL
Thanks Dave!daveleau said:Mesue:
Two references on the subject: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antipope
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01582a.htm
mesue said:The Orthodox catholic
The Roman Catholic
or
The Greek Catholic?
I merely asked if the Orthodox Catholics had a Pope.
I was Roman Catholic. I understand Roman Catholicism, but none of the other Catholic denominations. If I weren't Baptist I may have considered Orthodox.
Roman Catholics do have a Pope, I don't know if the Orthodox Catholics do or not. I hope this is clearer.
Gold Dragon said:I don't believe the Orthodox refer to themselves as Orthodox Catholics, but I could be wrong.
One of the major reasons for the East-West Schism was because the Eastern church because of a disagreement about the phrase "first among equals" description that the Bishop of Rome held in relation to the bishops of the other Sees of that time. The Patriarch/Bishop of Constantinople was seen as the "first among equals" in the eastern church after the schism. The other "equals" include the traditional Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem as well as the more modern Russian, Greek, Georgian, Romanian, etc.
mesue said:But, do they have a pope?
Thanks for the infoGold Dragon said:It depends on what you mean by pope. Any priest can rightly be called pope which means father.
But if you are talking about having a spiritual/political leader equivalent to Benedict XVI, then no. The Patriarch of Constantinople is considered the first among equals, but does not hold authority over the other Sees in the OEC.
The governance structure used by the OEC is called an autocephaly.
Gold Dragon said:It depends on what you mean by pope. Any priest can rightly be called pope which means father.
I don't believe the Orthodox refer to themselves as Orthodox Catholics, but I could be wrong.
Carrye said:I wouldn't equate the terms though GD, because in English they mean different things, and actually meant different things initally. Pope comes from the Latin 'papa' or the Greek 'pappas'. It was originally used to refer to a bishop, which the Pope is - bp of Rome. It is now used within the Church as an exclusive title of the Bishop of Rome.
While we (general English usage) think of a "papa" as being a father, that isn't the way it's used within the Catholic Church. The Latin that we would use to refer to a priest would be "pater" not "papa".
I should say too, that I wanted to start calling my priest "papa" (common English usage), as a way of distinguishing him from all of my priest-professors in school. He instructed me not to do so for exactly the reason I stated above.
I hope that helps. I always appreciate your honest, moderate presentation of facts, GD.