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Secret Service Agents Seize Ray Comfort Gospel Tracts ("1 million dollar bill")
WorldViewWeekend.com ^ | 06/02/2006 | Brannon Howse

Posted on 06/03/2006 6:54:04 AM PDT by TheBattman

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To: P-Marlowe
The Catholic Church does have a sortid history, with many unscriptural practices and traditions.

"Sortid" history? That's not a term we have in the Catholic Church.

One question - why did the "Church" fight so strongly against having a Bible in languages other than Latin? Was it because they really believed that the "unwashed masses" couldn't understand, or was it to protect their power?

Mass was celebrated in Latin - a language chosen as a common language for the Universal (Catholic) Church. This was not an attempt to keep power - no matter what the Chick tracts tell you. The idea was that a Catholic could travel the world and hear the same Mass no matter where he or she was. This is a wonderful thing -- and something I wish we'd not gone away from after Vatican II.

81 posted on 06/04/2006 11:29:01 AM PDT by AlaninSA ("Beware the fury of a patient man." - John Dryden)
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To: AlaninSA

>>One question - why did the "Church" fight so strongly against having a Bible in languages other than Latin?<<

People forget that the bible had already been translated into a lot of languages without any problems. Even St. Bede made an English translation of the Bible around the year 700.

Later translations were not well received mainly because they were rotten translations. That's why they were destroyed. We still have that problem (rotten translations) to this day.

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15367a.htm


82 posted on 06/04/2006 11:44:51 AM PDT by Nihil Obstat
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To: Nihil Obstat

Great point -- people get so wrapped in the hype of the snake handler fundies/Jack Chick apostles that they lose sight of actual history.


83 posted on 06/04/2006 11:47:30 AM PDT by AlaninSA ("Beware the fury of a patient man." - John Dryden)
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To: TheBattman

"it does contain a significant basis in truth"

What truth do you think it contains? It is an absolute joke! It has nothing to do with being Catholic and everything to do with being a tin foil hat wearer.

"The Catholic Church does have a sortid history, with many unscriptural practices and traditions."

What unscriptural practices and traditions do we have? I'm guessing you have the wrong idea about Catholicism and believe what these silly tracts say.

"One question - why did the "Church" fight so strongly against having a Bible in languages other than Latin? Was it because they really believed that the "unwashed masses" couldn't understand, or was it to protect their power?"

I think you meant to phrase that, "I'm so thankful for the Church that fought so strongly against incorrect translations of scripture that could change the Word of God. Even today we have that same battle. We sure wouldn't want anything incorrectly added or important texts taken away." There, that's better.


"Notice how things got really interesting when the Bible was made available for people other than the clergy... For that matter, how about clergy who actually opened up thier mind and took off the blinders placed by the church - who realized that not all the Church was teaching was truth - many paid with their lives."

It's comments like this that make me think of Democratic Underground. It seems so "conspiracy theory". If you want to give me specific examples of all this hogwash you are throwing out there maybe we can discuss it.

"Also note that the "Church History" the Church (Catholic) doesn't exactly line up with actual historical fact."

Again, if you want to give me something concrete I'd be more than happy to debate. I don't know what you are talking about here. I notice you use the term "power" often. Being Pope has nothing to do with being powerful. It's generally not a job many men want or compete for. Our current Pope wanted to retire and do some gardening. He is God's servant. Again, it's not about power.

Here is an excerpt I found on answer.com trying to refute the "death cookie" tract. Hope this sheds a little light for you.

This tract deals very irreverently with the Sacrament of the Eucharist that was instituted by Christ Himself.

The basic justification for the Sacrament is found throughout the Bible.

In the old testament, we have the account of the Passover where the spotless male lamb was sacrificed. In order for the Angel of Death to passover the house of the Israelites, the blood of the lamb had to be put on the doorpost and the flesh of the lamb had to be consumed. Only through this command of God would the family be spared!

In the New Testament starting at John 6:22 and running through John 6:71, we see that Jesus says, not just once but four times, that we must eat His flesh and drink His blood in order to have everlasting life. This is so difficult to accept that many walk away. But the apostles stay, even though they probably do not understand what Jesus is saying.

Finally at the last supper, Jesus gives the apostles the means to fulfill the command He gave in Chapter 6 of John's Gospel. He celebrates the last supper where He gives us His Body and Blood.

So in the New Testament, we have the sacrifice of the sinless male lamb of God to allow us to passover into Heaven. The parallel with the Old Testament is unmistakable. The flesh of the lamb must be consumed to be saved!

You may wish to walk away from this teaching like those in John's Gospel, but if you are going to walk away, be sure of what you walking away from!


84 posted on 06/04/2006 1:20:51 PM PDT by samiam1972 (Live simply so that others may simply live!)
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To: PetroniusMaximus

I interpret scripture to the best of my ability. However, the Baptist preacher down the street may quote the same passage but give it a completely different meaning. How do we know who is correct? God gave us his church to guide us..a teaching authority. I don't have the same problem. I have a final answer.


85 posted on 06/04/2006 2:48:14 PM PDT by samiam1972 (Live simply so that others may simply live!)
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To: samiam1972

Nice posts...

I've yet to find an anti-Catholic hellfire and brimstone preacher able to refute factual statements like yours.

I've also never found them able to answer simple questions like these:

Are Baptist Teachings about Baptism Biblical?

Are Baptist Teachings about Communion Biblical?

Are Baptist Teachings about Scripture Biblical?

Are Baptist Teachings about Salvation Biblical?

Are Baptist Teachings about the Church Biblical?

Are Baptist Teachings about Mary Biblical?

What Are some other Common Baptist Errors?


86 posted on 06/04/2006 3:08:55 PM PDT by AlaninSA ("Beware the fury of a patient man." - John Dryden)
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To: SW6906
Just the other day at a Taco Bell, my bill came to $6.53. I gave the person $22.00 and they just stared at me. They actually keyed it into the register to see what the change would be before the light came on as to why I did that..........

$22.05 would have sent him or her over the edge. :-)

87 posted on 06/04/2006 3:16:18 PM PDT by Thinkin' Gal (As it was in the days of NO...)
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To: the-ironically-named-proverbs2
The tracts are used by Ray Comfort and his co-host Kirk Cameron and have been promoted on their national television program.

Reports were that the Secret Service was going to pay a visit to Comfort’s national offices in Bellflower, California and confiscate their entire stock. Apparently someone in North Carolina took one of the $1 million dollar tract to a bank and tried to deposit it into their account.

And...

When it comes to producing counterfeit money, there must be intent to defraud. This wasn't produced with the intent to buy anything, or to get change . . . it was produced as a gospel tract. That's its sole intent.

Take a look over here.

88 posted on 06/04/2006 3:18:54 PM PDT by Thinkin' Gal (As it was in the days of NO...)
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To: AlaninSA

Thanks! I'd like to see those answered, too!


89 posted on 06/04/2006 3:31:42 PM PDT by samiam1972 (Live simply so that others may simply live!)
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To: AlaninSA

Who are you quoting?


90 posted on 06/04/2006 4:09:59 PM PDT by P-Marlowe (((172 * 3.141592653589793238462) / 180) * 10 = 30.0196631)
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To: TheBattman
OK - so I have a few of their $1 million bill gospel tracts and have used them from time to time.

And how much did you put into the bank. ;O)

91 posted on 06/04/2006 5:14:11 PM PDT by HarleyD ("Then He opened their minds to understand the Scriptures" Luke 24:45)
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To: samiam1972; AlaninSA
"I interpret scripture to the best of my ability..."

The Church Fathers believed what Paul said in Eph 3:3-5*, that the scripture could be understood by merely reading it. They indicated that the scriptures themselves were clear, so clear, they even criticized the heretics for getting it wrong. If those outside the church and common pew dwellers are unable to understand the Bible themselves as the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches teach, then why did the apostolic fathers expect the heretics to understand the Bible with their own human skills? (Tertullian, The Flesh of Christ, ch 20), (Athanasius, On the Incarnation of the Word, 56), (Hilary of Poitiers, On the Trinity, Book 1, 35), (Hilary of Poitiers, On the Trinity, Book 7, 16) http://www.bible.ca/catholic-questions.htm

* "As I briefly mentioned earlier in this letter, God himself revealed his secret plan to me. 4As you read what I have written, you will understand what I know about this plan regarding Christ. 5God did not reveal it to previous generations, but now he has revealed it by the Holy Spirit to his holy apostles and prophets." - Ephesians 3:3-5
92 posted on 06/04/2006 7:09:28 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: AlaninSA; samiam1972
Are Baptist Teachings about Baptism Biblical?

Yes. Can you prove they are not - using the Scriptures?


Are Baptist Teachings about Communion Biblical?

Yes. Can you prove they are not - using the Scriptures?


Are Baptist Teachings about Scripture Biblical?

Yes. Can you prove they are not - using the Scriptures?


Are Baptist Teachings about Salvation Biblical?

Yes. Can you prove they are not - using the Scriptures?
 

Are Baptist Teachings about the Church Biblical?

Yes. Can you prove they are not - using the Scriptures?


Are Baptist Teachings about Mary Biblical?

Yes. Can you prove they are not - using the Scriptures?
93 posted on 06/04/2006 7:16:03 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: PetroniusMaximus

Wow. You're good. Not quite what I was hoping for.


94 posted on 06/04/2006 7:24:52 PM PDT by samiam1972 (Live simply so that others may simply live!)
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To: PetroniusMaximus

I'll start with Scripture, but I can continue if you wish.




According to Baptists, Scripture is "the supreme standard by which all human conduct, creeds, and religious opinions should be tried" (e.g., the Southern Baptist "Faith and Message," June 14, 2000). The General Association of Regular Baptists concurs that "We believe in the authority and sufficiency of the Holy Bible" (GARBC Articles of Faith), and then goes on to effuse that:


"The Bible is the final authority in all matters of belief and practice because the Bible is inspired by God and bears the absolute authority of God Himself. Whatever the Bible affirms, Baptists accept as true. No human opinion or decree of any church group can override the Bible. Even creeds and confessions of faith, which attempt to articulate the theology of Scripture, do not carry Scripture's inherent authority" (GARBC "Baptist Distinctives").


The Bible is indeed the inspired and infallible word of God. But the Bible neither makes the claim that Holy Scripture is sufficient nor that it is the supreme standard in deciding religious matters.


Indeed, when we speak of the Bible, we speak of a canonical collection of Scriptures that are accepted as both: 1.) inspired, and 2.) authoritative. However, nowhere in the Bible do we find a definition of the canon of the Bible, hence our canonical Bible cannot be said to have any Biblical authority in and of itself. In point of fact, the canon of the Bible was an ecclesiastical judgment, arrived at over several centuries of Christian life and reflection, and finalized by a series of Councils in the late fourth century. The very process of the canonization of Scripture subordinates the Bible to the authority of the Holy Spirit operating through the ministry of the living Church!


The faithful Baptist, then, would do well to consider the following topics:

2 Timothy 3:16:


"All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness."


This splendid passage proves the plenary inspiration of Holy Scripture beyond any shadow of a doubt, but it argues against the Baptist doctrines of the sufficiency and supreme authority of Scripture.


Firstly, Paul specifically writes that Scripture is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, and for instruction. These are each ecclesiastical functions of the various ministers of the Church, and hence Paul deliberately states that Scripture is a pastoral tool in the hands of the leadership of the Church. But while Paul writes that Scripture is useful for doctrine, he does not say that Scripture is the necessary and sufficient font of all doctrine. Such is simply not in the text at hand.


Moreover, it should not escape our notice that Paul is referring to the Old Testament, since the New Testament was not yet written, compiled and canonized. Does this mean, by the logic of internal sufficiency, that we should REJECT the New Testament as inspired and profitable for doctrine, reproof, correction and instruction?


Does this passage in any way establish which books are to be part of the canon of the New Testament? Does this passage in any way establish its own standing as Holy Scripture?


Finally, it is worth noting that Paul was writing to Timothy, who was Greek; he was writing in Greek, and cites the Greek translation of the Old Testament (the Septuagint). Hence, when he says "all Scripture," he is implicitly pointing to the Septuagint translation and canon of the Bible. Thus, Paul means that "ALL Scripture" must certainly include the deuterocanonical books of the Greek canon of the Old Testament (e.g., Wisdom, Sirach, Tobut, Maccabees, etc.). Does this mean that Baptists should put these books back into their Bibles?


2 Peter 1:19-21:


"And so we have the prophetic word confirmed, which you do well to heed … knowing first, that no prophecy of Scripture is of any private interpretation, for prophecy never came by the will of man, but holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Spirit."


Again, this passage proves the divine inspiration of Scripture, but says nothing to the matters of sufficiency or supreme authority. Indeed, since Scripture, being the voice of God through the Holy Spirit, is not of any private interpretation, then the interpretation of Scripture is surely a task of the "bishops which the Holy Spirit has appointed to shepherd the Church of God which He purchased with His own blood" (Acts 20:28). Indeed, does not Paul inform Timothy that Scripture is a profitable tool for the formulation of doctrine?


We must take 2 Peter 1:19-21 in the context of the entire first chapter of Peter's Second Epistle. Peter reminds his audience that he has for many years proclaimed to them, by means of his preaching and witness, the power and coming of the Lord Jesus Christ (1:16); he tells us that he has seen confirmation of the words of the prophets (1:19; which indeed he did in the Transfiguration and in the Empty Tomb). He tells us that he is about to suffer martyrdom (1:14), but that he will leave a "means to recall these things to mind" (1:12, 15).


Hence we must take note that Peter never wrote a Gospel, and that 2 Peter is his last canonical Epistle. What then did he leave behind "to remind you always of these things"? Peter left behind the teaching office of the Church to call these things to mind. Indeed, it is Peter who tells us so firmly to "be submissive to the presbyters" (1 Pe 5:5)!


An indication of the full scope and import of this teaching office that Peter and the Apostles established is to be gleaned from the telling fact that two of the four Gospels were written by Christians who had no first hand knowledge of the Life of Christ, but rather drew on the traditions and teachings of the Church for their information.


It is thus that 2 Pe 1:19-21 takes its meaning: if the interpretation of prophecy (i.e., Scripture) is not of a private nature, then it is of an ecclesial nature. The Scriptures have great authority, but the individual Christian, often a "newbie" or inexperienced soul ('neoteros', 1 Pe. 5:5) in his walk with the Lord, has no real business taking the interpretation of Scripture upon himself. Indeed, Peter reminds us quite explicitly that many have fallen into error in misreading Paul's epistles (2 Pe 3:16).


2 Corinthians 1:13:


"We do not write you anything you cannot read or understand."


Peter clarifies this, saying: "In all [Paul's] letters there are of course some passages which are hard to understand, and these are the ones that uneducated and unbalanced people distort, in the same way that they distort the rest of Scripture--to their own destruction" (2 Peter 3:11).


Also, Peter reminds us that "we must recognise that the interpretation of Scriptural prophecy is never a matter for the individual" (2 Peter 1:20). This is to say, according to Peter, Scripture is subordinate to ecclesiastical authority in matters of teaching and doctrine. This statement, of course, is in complete harmony with Paul's comment on the profitability of Scripture in 2 Timothy 3:16.


John 16:13:


"When He, the Spirit of Truth has come, He will guide you into all truth."


This is not an unconditional promise that every believer will be able to infallibly interpret Scripture, thereby according Scripture full sufficiency and supremacy in matters of discerning doctrine and religious questions. Indeed, Paul reminds us that not every one of us is gifted by the Holy Spirit with the word of wisdom or the word of truth (1 Cor. 12:8). The mistaken and un-Biblical notion to the contrary is precisely why there exists today such a bewildering multitude of competing Protestant churches and sects!


The Spirit does guide us into truth, of course. But we must stand humbly before God like the Ethiopian Eunuch, who realized that he could not understand the Scriptures by himself, and asked the guidance and instruction of a Spirit-filled Bishop of the Church (Acts 8:26-39)! That is the Scriptural way to interpret Scripture!

One of the greatest dividers between Catholics and such fundamentalists as Baptists is the manner in which we construct the relationship between the Bible and authority within the Church. The Catholic Church has, for its part , acknowledged this state of affairs (UR, 21), which is so awkwardly apparent to those believers, Catholic and Baptist alike, who seek only to share the Good News of Jesus Christ with those around them.


So, what can we say about the practical import of our doctrinal differences on the matter of the Bible and authority? In rationalizing their split from the Catholic Church some 500 years ago, the reformers and their congregational progeny have raised the compelling battle-cry of "sola scriptura"! The Catholic Church has responded by underscoring the importance of apostolic traditions within Divine Revelation, and by emphasizing the teaching office of the episcopacy (e.g., LG, 25). The Church thus views the deep reverence that Baptists have for the written Word of God as something approaching a cult of the Book (UR, 21).


The Problem of Biblical Authority for Average Believers


For the practical purposes of nearly all lay people, Catholic and Baptist alike, this contention over the nature of the authority of the Bible invariably translates into a matter of human authority.


How can this be so? Let us take for example the "Baptist Distinctives" of the General Association of Regular Baptist Churches, which teaches that "the Bible is the final authority in all matters of belief and practice … whatever the Bible affirms, Baptists accept as true." In principle, this is a wonderful idea. In practice, it is impossible to attain and thus, to the degree that the gap between ideal and reality is denied, even potentially deceitful. Between what the Bible "affirms" on any given topic and in any given passage, and what a body of believers corporately accepts as true, there must intervene an authoritative hermeneutic process. Even were one to insist that everything that the Bible says may be taken literally and at face value, the need for an external and authoritative interpreter remains. This may illustrated quite readily.


As you are aware, the Bible contains many texts that simply do not agree with each other on major points. Let us not bring up such complicated and contended issues as salvation and the work of redemption, but rather focus our attention on just one or two simple examples that shall suffice to make the point.


John, for example, tells us that Jesus was crucified on the afternoon before the Passover meal (13:1, 29; 18:28; 19:14, 31), while Mark (14:12-16) and hence the other synoptics tell us that He ate the Passover meal with his disciples (i.e., the Last Supper) and was crucified on the following day. On which day was Jesus really crucified?


Similarly, John writes that Jesus personally bestowed the Holy Spirit upon the disciples in the evening on the day of His Resurrection, that first glorious Easter Sunday (20:19-23). Luke, however, tells us quite specifically that the Holy Spirit descended upon those same disciples on the feast of Pentecost, some fifty days later and after the Ascension (Acts 2:1-4). When did the Holy Spirit descend upon the disciples?


There are of course many, many more such examples of what one might call discrepancies in the Bible; this cannot be denied by anyone who has devoted any appreciable time to studying Sacred Scripture. But does this mean that the Bible is not true? Does this mean that our precious Christian faith is based on a fraud? Of course not!


But these discrepancies, once they come to the attention of the individual believer, do in fact demand a convincing, authoritative explanation. This is to say, then, that the Bible is not, and cannot be, truly self sufficient, at least for the practical purposes of each and every believer, on even such important and seemingly straight-forward topics as the historical facts of the Passion and the Descent of the Holy Spirit.


Surely God must have willed this apparent insufficiency of the Bible for a reason of His own? Are these discrepancies perhaps a sign for us, the Church, living in the last age? Indeed, exploring Biblical discrepancies has led many students of the Bible to a deeper, often anagogical understanding of the mystery of God's love for humankind. Moreover, the apparent insufficiency of the Bible must be seen as a reminder that it is not a book, not even such a holy book as the Bible, that is at the head of the Body of Christ, but rather Christ Himself, both in glory in heaven and in the mysteries by which He continues to manifest Himself and His loving presence among us. Truly He is with us, even until the end of the age (Mat. 28:20); for the Word of God lives and abides for ever (1 Pet. 1:23). We too, as the Body of Christ Who is the Word, are a living Church for the Holy Spirit operates among us, in part in the reading of the Holy Scriptures, and in part in the doctrines and traditions handed down through the ages.


The Bible and the Mediating Authority of the Church


Most fundamentalists, of course, recognize the need for a somewhat more sophisticated hermeneutic than "whatever the Bible affirms, I accept as true." An interpretative, didactic agency must exist to mediate the passage of truth from the Bible to the believer. Some fundamentalists hence claim that the Holy Spirit guides each and every believer in understanding and interpreting the Bible, pointing to such texts as John 16:13 for Scriptural support. Indeed, many of the more vituperative Catholic-baiters, such as Dave Hunt (1994, 338), raise this belief as a largely rhetorical device by which to assail the fact that Catholics readily acknowledge the teaching authority of the Church!


Sadly, this pneumatic theory of interpretative authority, when applied without distinction to all believers, is simply un-Biblical. Paul confirms that the Holy Spirit mediates the word of wisdom, and the word of truth, to Christians (1 Cor. 12:8). But Paul also and quite specifically admonishes that not all of us are given those specific spiritual gifts; rather, God Himself has appointed pastors and teachers in the Church (Eph. 4:11; 1 Cor. 12:28-29). Holy Scripture, of course, is the greatest tool that these duly appointed and ordained pastors and teachers have in formulating doctrine, reproving wayward brothers, correcting errors and instructing the faithful in righteousness (2 Tim. 3:16). But it is just not the place of each and every Christian to claim for himself the right to interpret Scripture (2 Pet. 1:19-21), for in point of fact much of Scripture is simply too hard to understand and can lead to errors and distortions when the uneducated or unbalanced attempt to be their own Bible teachers (2 Pet. 3:11).


What does this mean for us, the average believers in the pews? We ask, with St. Paul, are all of us teachers (1 Cor. 12:29)? Of course not. Nearly all of us must rely to a greater or lesser extent on our teachers, exegetes and interpreters to mediate the full meaning of the Bible to us. Even from the beginnings of our individual walks with Christ, just as the Thessalonians, we must be taught the Good News and established in the faith by those approved of God (1 Thess. 2:4; 3:2). And this relationship with our teachers of Scripture continues in our life in the Church. Paul urged Timothy, and hence all bishops and teachers, to proclaim the word with longsuffering and teaching, for many "shall turn away their ear" from sound doctrine and follow after the fables of false teachers (2 Tim. 4:2-4). The message is clear: in order to persist in sound doctrine and the truth of Jesus Christ, the average believer is exhorted to listen to the teaching of his duly ordained pastors and teachers.


Let us be quite clear on the import of this Biblical teaching: for the average Christian layperson, the authority of the Bible can only emerge in a meaningful way from the very teaching and doctrinal authority of the Church.


Catholics and Holy Scripture


So what, exactly, is the Catholic position on authority and the Bible? To begin, recall that the Catholic Church believes that the books of the Bible are the inspired word of God, which "firmly, faithfully and without error, teach that truth which God, for the sake of our salvation, wished to see confided to the sacred scriptures" (DV, 11). But the ways of God are not always readily comprehended by mere mortals (e.g., Job 38-30:2; Is. 55:8-9; 1 Cor. 13:12); thus Catholics acknowledge that the Holy Spirit is the necessary interpreter of Scripture (DV, 12). Today, the Catholic Church exhorts each and every believer to frequently and prayerfully read the Bible. Indeed, the Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation cites St. Jerome to this end, reminding us that "ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ" (DV, 25). Thus, the latest Catechism includes excellent and time-proven guidelines for the Spirit-filled reading of the Bible (32-24).


This is not, however, an invitation to hermeneutic libertinism and profligacy. The Catholic Church specifically and unabashedly claims the responsibility of ultimate judgment in the matter of interpreting the Bible especially on points of doctrine, faith and morals (DV, 12). Such a position is not only necessary, it is wholly salubrious. Since the Jesuits in particular once mastered the art of casuistry, we Catholics, of all people, are all too aware that in the hands of an able rhetor the Bible can be made to say just about anything on any topic. In nearly any debate over even the most substantial of matters, both sides, pro and con, can cite the Bible at will to marshal support for their own views. Indeed, we have watched main-line Protestantism descend into a morass of liberalism even while citing the Bible for support in such innovations as divorce and remarriage, abortion, women pastors and homosexuality. We have also watched the fundamentalist branches of Protestantism undergo a thousand-and-one splits and schisms over the impact of discordant interpretations of Scripture on church doctrine.


Thus, in matters of Scriptural interpretation and doctrine, Catholics stand ready to listen to their bishops and teachers; such is, after all, the only correct Scriptural position. Of course, Catholic theologians and lay people often debate the meaning of certain nuances in the Scriptures just as freely and just as often as fundamentalist theologians and lay people. However, at an institutional level, Catholics have chosen to stress the unity of the Church in the Holy Spirit over the individual liberty of hermeneutic application. We believe what we are taught by those who have been ordained and empowered by the Holy Spirit to interpret the Scriptures, and to use Scripture in matters of doctrine, reproof, correction and instruction (2 Tim. 3:16). We turn our ears to the words and teachings of our God-appointed pastors, so that we may avoid the tempting lures of the false teachers who have gone forth into the world in this last age (2 Tim. 4:2-4).


Those who love God's Holy Scriptures are invited to join the Catholic Church in proclaiming and preserving the written word of God until the end of the age.


Sources Cited:


DV = Dei verbum. Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation, 18 Nov. 1965.

Hunt, Dave. A Woman Rides the Beast: The Roman Catholic Church and the Last Days. Eugene, 1994.

LG = Lumen gentium. Dogmatic Constitution on the Church, 21 Nov. 1964.

UR = Unitatis redintegratio. Decree on Ecumenism, 21 Nov. 1964.


95 posted on 06/04/2006 8:34:36 PM PDT by AlaninSA ("Beware the fury of a patient man." - John Dryden)
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To: samiam1972

"However, the Baptist preacher down the street may quote the same passage but give it a completely different meaning. How do we know who is correct?"
___________________________________

I think that's why we bring our Bibles to Church. We hold our pastors accountable. We don't blindly follow. We use the GOD-BREATHED SCRIPTURES to verify what is being taught is not wrong. The HOLY SPIRIT that has sealed us guides us in the process of understanding SCRIPTURE.

Loyalty to an institution is not FAITH.


96 posted on 06/04/2006 8:37:56 PM PDT by wmfights (Lead, Follow, or Get Out Of The WAY!)
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To: AlaninSA

"I'll start with Scripture, but I can continue if you wish...."

Listen, I'm looking forward to this conversation, but let's try an not post tomes at each other. There is no way I can coherently reply to an article such as you have posted - it's simply too long. For clarity sake, would you mind summarizing the point(s) you are trying to make with this article and then we can address them.

Congrats! You did pick the salient point. Any discussion we would have will eventually come back to the issue of authority.


97 posted on 06/04/2006 10:22:51 PM PDT by PetroniusMaximus
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To: monkapotamus; AlaninSA; samiam1972

And many false prophets shall rise, and shall seduce many.

Thought you'd get a kick out of da banana!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ray_Comfort

Born ethnically half-Jewish (via his mother), Comfort was raised with next to no religious experience; in his words: "I went through life without any Christian instruction at all. I think I went to church about three times in about twenty years. I hated it. I found it an insult to my intellect.

He became a Christian on April 25, 1972, "... at 4:00 A.M. in the morning," at the age of twenty-two[2] after looking at a banana and noticing how easily it fit into his mouth. He then began using his banana (named "The Atheist's Worst Nightmare") as a preaching tool, teaching thousands.


98 posted on 06/04/2006 10:39:38 PM PDT by CaptObe
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To: AlaninSA
The guy's a nut, a bigot and, as I said, a low-cal version of Jack Chick. Anything like this that can be done to Islamic Jihad, the KKK or the Chick-like nuts...I'll cheer for that.

If you call Ray Comfort a "low-cal" version of Jack Chick, that tells me that you haven't listened to or studied either of them in depth. If our Bishops put forth their homilies with a tenth of the truth and conviction that Ray Comfort delivers his messages, Catholicism wouldn't have found itself in the mess that it finds itself in today. Instead we oftentimes are treated to the senile ramblings of liberal gay rights sympathizers. Comfort's message "Hell's Best Kept Secret" is one of the single best Christian messages I've ever heard anyone give.

(oh, and I'm Catholic...but not cut from the same cloth as the current leadership I'm afraid).
99 posted on 06/04/2006 11:04:09 PM PDT by Old_Mil (http://www.constitutionparty.org - Forging a Rebirth of Freedom.)
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To: TheBattman
CWN was told by Living Waters’ customer service manager that their website was being slammed with orders after they sent out the e-mail alert.

Sounds like the marketing ploy worked. Now is there a legitimate source reporting the Secret Service 'raid'?

100 posted on 06/04/2006 11:29:44 PM PDT by PAR35
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