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How do we know this.
He certainly does. Of course the smoke of satan has entered the sanctuary ... just look at the homosexual/paedophile sex scandals, money scandals, weak bishops, etc. Wherever great good is found, there great evil brings special focus to cause injury. The enemy hates Christ's church with passionate intensity and will work with anyone to harm or destroy it.Arthur, what do you make of a statement made by a former Vatican insider that the devil roams within the Vatican?
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul and Peter certainly were not catholic bishops. The first known use of the term catholic was long after.1) Bishops of the Catholic Church wrote the New Testament and years later decided what books to incorporate into the Bible. They did this by the authority given to them and to no others, by Christ himself.
I am glad this is actually not true. The RCC is basically trying to hijack the Bible, I wasn't aware of the extent of this until now.2) The Bible is not the ultimate authority of faith. The Church is. More specifically, it is the apostolic authority received from Christ himself and handed on down to their successors that alone can decide these matters definitively. Christ established a living authority to teach his truth and bring his sanctification to all people down through the ages, until He comes again in glory.
I said Matt 16 is quoted in one of your links as the basis for papal infallibility, not the "catholic claim".No, the basis of the Catholic claim is not in Mt 16. The basis is the authority and mission given directly by Christ to his Apostles in particular and to his disciples in general. It is a living authority, handed down over the generations from the Apostles to their successors, the bishops. The validity and authority rests in Christ himself, the Head of the Church. Mt 16 was only written years maybe decades after the Church had been established. It is the Church that validates Matthews gospel as authentic, not the other way round. Looking to a book as an authority simply begs the question. By what authority? And how do you know?
With your massive essays on relatively basic stuff, you are doing the wriggling.But let's go with your point for a moment: There's simply no way of wriggling out of the plain and clear meaning of Mt 16, where Christ changes the name of Simon and gives him the name Rock, and says that he (Peter) is the rock on which He will build his church, and then gives him the power to bind and loose in His name. These words are addressed to Simon alone.
Elsewhere Jesus says "who receives you receives me, and who rejects you rejects me, and the one who sent me". We also read of the Great Commission, where Christ shares his own mission with his Apostles: "As the Father has sent me, even so I send you" (Jn 20:21). But wait, there's more. He also gives them authority to make binding decisions. "Truly, I say to you, whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven" (Mt 18:18). And he gives that final binding power to Simon renamed to Rock (Peter).
That authority extends to the forgiveness of sins, again something normally reserved only to God: "Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained’" (Jn 20:21–23).
This power was understood as coming from God: "All this is from God, who through Christ reconciled us to himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation" (2 Cor. 5:18). Indeed, confirms Paul, "So we are ambassadors for Christ" (2 Cor. 5:20).
What many religious people in Christ's day could not accept was that a mere man could forgive sins. Yet Christ shares that divine power with mere portals, creatures, weaklings. How do you account for this?
As to your attempt at playing the word "vicar". No cigar. Vicar has several related meanings. It is absurd to suggest that a single Catholic of more than a billion believes for one millisecond that the pope is a substitute Christ. Just ask any one. If you can find one sincere Catholic who believes what you say we believe, I'll eat my hat and give you my car. But there is a sense in which every Christian is called to be another Christ.
Ah yes, that's the way we do it. Kids and dilettantes go sit in the corner, you don't know what you're talking about.What you cannot do and remain credible is use dictionaries and definitions to argue like a dilettante.
If somebody tells me now they are an anarchist, I would find it astonishing if they really are convinced that it won't ultimately end in chaos and mayhem if there was no government.Let me give you an uncontroversial example: take the meaning of the word "anarchy". Any dictionary will include several meanings, spanning a whole range of things, from chaos and mayhem to the simple state of no government. Its precise meaning depends on how and where the word is used. What some people do (and what you are doing with the word vicar) is to take one meaning and then in a different context impute that meaning to a different context. If someone were to say "I am an anarchist", does it necessarily follow from dictionary definitions that they believe in promoting chaos and mayhem? Of course not! For them, "anarchy" could well mean a very specific thing, from the Gk "an=no/none/not, "arche"="government/sovereign/ruler" and you would do them an injustice to impute chaos/mayhem to them. This is what you do with vicar.
As well as the pope and mary.By far the most central and important doctrines and dogmas in the Catholic Church have to do with the utter and transcendent majesty of God
I can think of no better way to explain an atheist or unbeliever what faith actually is.Because the "biblical definition" that you take is in fact part of a long letter that addresses people who already believe. It is of very little use to unbelievers and says only slightly more than nothing about the content of faith.
If one truly and sincerely believes in God and the sacrifice that Christ made, and love Him with all your heart, your life will change accordingly. No it really will.That's a set-up question. Of course there's nothing before God. By definition, else He wouldn't be God. But to suggest that you only have to believe and then you're saved is seriously wrong. It is utterly counter to the gospel of Jesus Christ. It is utterly counter to the Sacred Scriptures. The only place "faith" and "alone" appear together in the New Testament is when St James says that we are NOT saved by faith alone. Why is this do you think?
Man, the dissertations that flow when people start arguing about whose unprovable and improbable assumptions are better...![]()
Well at least it's actually edifying and has a basis in reality, unlike some other fantastical speculations and conjectures which are passed off as science.
Are there any Cardinals in South Africa that can run for pope?
It seems that with his resignation announced, the Pope, whose given name is Joseph Ratzinger, has a meeting with the Italian President, Giorgio Napolitano on February 23 to beg for immunity against prosecution for allegations of child sex crimes. Apparently, this hastily arranged meeting, and likely the resignation as well, are the result of a supposed note received by the Vatican from an undisclosed European government that stated that there are plans to issue a warrant for the Pope’s arrest. This letter was allegedly received on February 4, and Ratzinger resigned a week later.
Wonder what scandal lies behind this story.