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Radio Replies Second Volume - The Idealization of Protestantism
Celledoor.com ^ | 1940 | Fathers Rumble & Carty

Posted on 05/08/2010 9:30:27 PM PDT by GonzoII

The Idealization of Protestantism



246. Protestants claim to belong to the Apostolic Church.

The claim cannot be sustained. That Church alone can be truly Apostolic which reaches back to the Apostles by the historical, spiritual, and social bond of uninterrupted succession. Jesus chose and commissioned the Apostles, and they formed the authoritative body in the Church. And in the same Church today there must still be an authoritative body derived from them. This derivation must be historically and socially evident in a visible Church. The whole chain depends on the first link, for that links the Church to Christ.

247. The Reformation was to restore the Apostolic Church.

So it is said. But Protestants do not claim an Apostolic character for their Churches in the right sense of the word. As a rule, they seek to attach themselves to Christ directly, without any intermediary society possessing historical continuity. They rather claim to have a religion "like" that of the Apostles, than one given them "by" the Apostles and their lawful successors. The true Christian and Catholic doctrine is that the Eternal Son of God became man in the Incarnation, thus commencing a life at once divine and human. And this life of Christ continues its activity by the Church, which is a kind of permanent social incarnation. As there is one continuous life of humanity by heredity, so the life of the Church is continuous by succession and tradition.

248. We cling to the traditions of the Apostles.

You mean that you have the same doctrines as the Apostles. That is not really true. But even were it true, it would not be enough. To profess someone's doctrine on the grounds of one's own approval of them does not mean social continuity with him. The Church is a society, and its life is collective and organized under one authority. Protestantism has no central authority, and no priesthood properly so-called. It has not an apostolicity such as the true Christian Church requires.

249. The Reformed Church has always acknowledged the Roman Catholic Church as an important branch of the Church Catholic; but that Christian judgment is not reciprocated.

Do all the Protestant Churches constitute the one "Reformed Church"? If so, would Methodists or Presbyterians admit that they are one with Judge Rutherford's Witnesses of Jehovah? After all, Judge Rutherford has as much, or as little right to set up his new Protestant sect as John Knox had to set up Presbyterianism. And it is not true, of course, that the Protestant Churches have always acknowledged the Roman Church as an important branch of the Church Catholic. The first Reformers rejected the Catholic Church as antichrist, and spoke of it with the utmost horror. Preaching in Edinburgh, in 1565, John Knox, the founder of Presbyterianism, declared that the Church is limited to those who profess the Lord Jesus, and have rejected papistry." The Catholic Church must be forgiven for refusing to admit relationship with Protestant Churches which originated with men who denounced her, and left her, and never returned to her. Is it reasonable to suppose that the new Churches set up by the Reformers are really in union with the Church they left? History and logic leave no room for the modern claim of Protestants to belong also to the Catholic Church.

250. Whom do members of Protestant Churches acknowledge as head of their Church on earth?

They have various systems of government. In some, as the Congregationalists, the members of each congregation are a law to themselves. In others, as the Presbyterians, authority is vested by the members in elected office-bearers, different assemblies prevailing in various localities. In these cases there is no universal bond of unity in the strict sense of the word. In Churches which have bishops, as the Catholic, Orthodox Greek, and Episcopal or Anglican, power is vested in those bishops. In the Greek Church the power is ultimately traced back to one or other of almost a dozen different Patriarchs. There is no such thing as one united Greek Church. In the Anglican Church the final authority is traced back to the Crown of England. In the Catholic Church all authority on earth centers in one supreme bishop independent of any national rulers — the Bishop of Rome. Thus we have a genuine ecclesiastical unity side by side with the required universality of one and the same Church throughout the world.

251. Do the Anglican, Presbyterian, and Methodist Churches exist in such foreign countries as Germany, Russia, France, Spain, Norway, etc.?

They may have what may be termed "agencies" in some of those countries to cater for English-speaking tourists of the different denominations. But, insofar as any nationals of these countries profess Protestantism, they usually profess a type of Protestantism peculiar to themselves. Where the Catholic Church unites men of different nationalities in one and the same Christian doctrine, Protestantism permits variations in doctrine to suit the national differences of outlook amongst men.

252. You habitually speak of your own Church as the Catholic Church. What right have you to drop the prefix "Roman"?

Either ours is the Catholic Church, or there is no Catholic Church. The expression "Roman Catholic," though frequently used, is really meaningless. Grammatically it involves a contradiction in terms. For the word Catholic means universal or "not limited." To use the word "Roman" as a qualifying adjective of limitation or restriction is like speaking of the "limited unlimited." Again, geographically, the Catholic Church is that Church which exists in all the different countries of the world for members of those different countries. And our Church is alone truly Catholic in that sense of the word. The Church subject to the Bishop of Rome exists in every country precisely for the people of each different country. No other Church is universal in this sense of the word.

253. I cannot accept your verdict of Protestantism. You seem quite blind to all the positive good it has accomplished.

I am not blind to the good to be found in Protestantism side by side with its errors. But I am concerned with the Reformation movement as such; and I say that it was not justified.

254. When the Romish Church rose to power she abandoned the teachings of the Gospel until the people were fed up with the deal given by Rome.

The Catholic Church never abandoned the teachings of the Gospel. The laxity of many of her members in practice was made one of the excuses for the Protestant Reformation. But the Protestant defection from the Church was a great mistake.

255. The people gladly accepted the teaching in which the Apostles gloried.

You would find it very difficult to set out clearly the teachings of the Protestant Reformers which you believe to harmonize with those of the Apostles. For the Reformers themselves were anything but agreed as to what should be believed. They fought against each other's teachings bitterly, indulging in violent mutual recriminations.

256. Protestantism is a witness to the great truths that have stood the test of time.

It used to witness to some of them. But unfortunately it is allowing most of them nowadays to be denied without protest, and even by its official teachers and ministers.

257. Protestants believe the Bible to be the standard of Christian truth, and the very Word of God.

Many of their leading exponents dispute that today. But even amongst those who still accept the Bible, there is little agreement as to what the Bible means. The Catholic Church defends the Bible as the very Word of God, and is alone capable of giving the authentic interpretation of the sense intended by God.

258. The Bible gives spiritual freedom such as all Protestants enjoy.

The Bible nowhere gives freedom to believe as one pleases, or to worship as one pleases. It demands our submission to the truth that we may be free from error, and obedience to the Church that we may be free from false forms of religion.

259. The Reformation limited the power of priests, and liberated the people from an autocratic hierarchy.

It abolished the priestly office, limiting the ministry to the preaching of the Word of God and the administration of some of the Sacraments.

260. It meant a purifying of the ministerial office to an extent that makes it difficult to realise now the evils to which it was subject.

It is true that there were many evils amongst the clergy at the time of the Reformation. I will go so far as to say that, had the Catholic clergy of the time been all they should have been, the disaster would not have occurred. At the same time, if many were not true to their obligations, many also were strictly faithful, and some were saints fit for canonization. Nor did any really holy priest dream of leaving the Church. I deny, of course, that the ministry was purified by abandoning the priesthood, abolishing its obligations, and adopting definitely lower standards. However, as I have admitted, if the Reformation did not itself purify the ministry, it did occasion a vast movement of reform strictly so-called within the Catholic Church; and the Council of Trent made the most stringent legislation for the better formation of future candidates for the priesthood, and the elimination of abuses. While the Reformation, then, did not purify the ministerial office, it did challenge the Catholic Church to do so.

261. Protestant Churches are founded on personal trust, and freedom as to how and where we shall meet our Lord in prayer.

The Catholic Church does not exclude personal trust in our Lord. She insists upon it. And Catholics are perfectly free to seek union with Him in prayer whenever they wish. But the Catholic Church rightly forbids Catholics to seek union with the assemblies of others who profess doctrines other than hers. Whatever charity we have for the persons of others, we cannot extend approval to their erroneous teachings and forms of religious worship. You may be my friend; but your religion is not my religion; and you should not expect me to behave as if it were.

262. Protestantism at least has meant liberty.

It liberated people from the Catholic Church. But that was a liberation from the restraints of the truth revealed by Christ, and from His moral laws. In his excellent book on "Luther and His Work," Mr. Joseph Clayton, F.R.H.S. writes, "Whither has Luther led his followers? Into what promised land, after the years of wandering outside the Catholic unity, are now brought the Protestants who date their emancipation from Martin Luther? Four centuries of journeying since Luther started the exodus, and yet the promised land of the Lutheran evangel, so often emergent, fades from sight even as the mirage vanishes in the desert. It is the wasteland of doubt that Protestants have reached — a wasteland littered with abandoned hopes and discarded creeds."

263. The Reformation meant the restoration of public prayer to its right place as the duty and privilege of every servant of God, and not the monopoly of a select class of monks and nuns called ironically the Religious.

Such a sneer at those who consecrated their lives to God in the Religious Orders is unworthy of a Christian. Meantime, while the suppression of the monasteries meant the suppression of the worship offered to God within them in the name of the whole Church, what have people made of the duty and privilege of public prayer? Protestant clergymen complain regularly of lost congregations, empty Churches, and the neglect of public worship. That scarcely sounds like the restoration of public prayer to its proper place as the right and duty of all the faithful. On the other hand, Catholic Churches are filled to overflowing.

264. The Reformation meant a purifying of family life.

In what way? The Catholic Church certainly cannot be blamed for the growth of loose ideas of marriage, easy divorce, the widespread plague of contraceptive birth control, and other acknowledged evils tending to break down family life.

265. How can you escape the evident success of Protestantism?

I deny that its success is evident, at least from the genuinely Christian point of view. Genuine Christianity leads to supernatural rather than to merely natural ideals. Christ said that His kingdom was not of this world, and definitely bade us "love not the world." A spiritual and unworldly outlook is therefore the outstanding characteristic of the Catholic religion. I do not say that it is the outlook of all individual Catholics. But insofar as he has not a spiritual and unworldly outlook, a Catholic has drifted from Catholic ideals. On the other hand, Protestantism does not, of its very nature, lead to a spiritual and unworldly outlook. If some good Protestants are truly spiritual, it is in spite of their religion, not because of it. The contrast is evident in the fact that Catholicism will propose as one of her heroes a St. Francis of Assisi who utterly rejected worldly goods, sought poverty and holiness of life, and ended up as a canonized Saint. But the heroes of the Protestant tradition grow from penniless boys into millionaires, or travel from log cabin to White House.

Encoding copyright 2009 by Frederick Manligas Nacino. Some rights reserved.
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0
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TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History
KEYWORDS: catholicism; christianity; protestantbash; protestantism; radiorepliesvoltwo; religion; theology
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To: sabe@q.com

What about that whole having sex outside the marriage deal? Whats it cost to have the Church overlook that detail?


201 posted on 05/09/2010 1:40:24 PM PDT by driftdiver (I could eat it raw, but why do that when I have a fire.)
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To: driftdiver

isn’t that adultry? Not that I believe that any sin is worse than any other but doesn’t that particular sin rank pretty high up in the Catholic Church?


202 posted on 05/09/2010 1:40:34 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: sabe@q.com

“isn’t that adultry?”

Seems like it would be to me. But then I’m not the pope or a priest so who am I to determine whether its adultery or not.


203 posted on 05/09/2010 1:42:12 PM PDT by driftdiver (I could eat it raw, but why do that when I have a fire.)
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To: driftdiver

I’m not a Catholic so I don’t know if adultry disqualifies one from receiving communion.


204 posted on 05/09/2010 1:42:50 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: Natural Law
History does have some undeniable truths

Yes, it does, but it is important to address those truths equitably. They are easily bent one way or the other, especially by those in power. While I do speak of the Roman church in particular, it isn't in order to offend Roman Catholics exactly - The same could be said of any powerful governmental structure.

Unified Catholic Christendom, before the 16th century, had not been plagued by the tragic religious wars [...]

You are kidding, right? I suppose you had forgotten to close with a /sarc tag, European crusades/inquisitions and all...

which in turn led to the "Enlightenment," in which men rejected the hypocrisy of inter-Christian warfare and decided to become indifferent to religion rather than letting it guide their lives.

That is not perfectly true - IMHO, two documents were lifted up at that same (relative) time in history:
One being the American Declaration of Independence, and the other being the French Declaration of the Rights of Man...

One of those was inclusive of, and based upon, the Judeo-Christian Ethic, and was thereby established in God. The other was not, and espouses the beliefs which were in your statement... And I'll bet you know the difference. (That was framed as a compliment, btw)

What was rejected was a synchronous partnership between an all-encompassing and horribly corrupt church, and the feudal kings which abetted it. And rightly so.

205 posted on 05/09/2010 1:44:23 PM PDT by roamer_1 (Globalism is just Socialism in a business suit)
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To: driftdiver; Judith Anne

I was accused of the sin of lying by poster judith anne up earlier in the thread because I said I wasn’t anti-Catholic.

Maybe Judith Anne can answer your question.


206 posted on 05/09/2010 1:44:24 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: Natural Law

“The Catholic Church, on the other hand, is not anti-Protestant.”

Is that why they call Queen Mary of Tudor “bloody Mary.”


207 posted on 05/09/2010 1:51:28 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: sabe@q.com; Religion Moderator
"Natural Law has already responded to me that the Bible isn’t 100% about God or something like that."

The rules prohibit making fellow freepers the subject of individual posts. It is also double plus ungood to lie about it.

So if you are going to quote me, quote me accurately. I did not say that any of the bible is incorrect *even that part about bearing false witness). I said that the bible does not contain 100% of the Word of God.

208 posted on 05/09/2010 1:52:54 PM PDT by Natural Law
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To: sabe@q.com
"Is that why they call Queen Mary of Tudor “bloody Mary.”"

Are you completely unable to differentiate between acts performed by sinners in the name of the Church and the deeds of the Church or do the rules applied by Luther and Calvin to Scripture extend to your interpretation of history as well?

209 posted on 05/09/2010 1:55:17 PM PDT by Natural Law
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To: Natural Law; Religion Moderator

“The Bible, as wonderful as it is, does not contain 100% of the revealed Word.”

How else am I supposed to take that quote?


210 posted on 05/09/2010 1:58:30 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: Natural Law

Queen Mary of Tudor believed she was faithfully as Queen executing the deaths of non Catholics and she also believed the Catholic Church was over her as Queen of England.


211 posted on 05/09/2010 2:01:54 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: sabe@q.com
"How else am I supposed to take that quote?"

Exactly as written. It does not in anyway imply that the bible contains anything nonfactual. The catechism teaches:

105 - God is the author of Sacred Scripture. "The divinely revealed realities, which are contained and presented in the text of Sacred Scripture, have been written down under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit."

"For Holy Mother Church, relying on the faith of the apostolic age, accepts as sacred and canonical the books of the Old and the New Testaments, whole and entire, with all their parts, on the grounds that, written under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, they have God as their author, and have been handed on as such to the Church herself."

106 - God inspired the human authors of the sacred books. "To compose the sacred books, God chose certain men who, all the while he employed them in this task, made full use of their own faculties and powers so that, though he acted in them and by them, it was as true authors that they consigned to writing whatever he wanted written, and no more."

120 - It was by the apostolic Tradition that the Church discerned which writings are to be included in the list of the sacred books. This complete list is called the canon of Scripture. It includes 46 books for the Old Testament (45 if we count Jeremiah and Lamentations as one) and 27 for the New. 107 The inspired books teach the truth. "Since therefore all that the inspired authors or sacred writers affirm should be regarded as affirmed by the Holy Spirit, we must acknowledge that the books of Scripture firmly, faithfully, and without error teach that truth which God, for the sake of our salvation, wished to see confided to the Sacred Scriptures." 108 - Still, the Christian faith is not a "religion of the book." Christianity is the religion of the "Word" of God, a word which is "not a written and mute word, but the Word is incarnate and living". If the Scriptures are not to remain a dead letter, Christ, the eternal Word of the living God, must, through the Holy Spirit, "open [our] minds to understand the Scriptures."

212 posted on 05/09/2010 2:12:02 PM PDT by Natural Law
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To: sabe@q.com
"Queen Mary of Tudor believed...."

That doesn't pass the "so what" test.

213 posted on 05/09/2010 2:13:41 PM PDT by Natural Law
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To: Natural Law

http://www.abarim-publications.com/Bible_Commentary/God_Breathed.html

I know its not from the gospels, but it from the NT.


214 posted on 05/09/2010 2:15:35 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: Natural Law

google; yahoo; bing are your friends


215 posted on 05/09/2010 2:17:10 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: GonzoII
"The Catholic Church defends the Bible as the very Word of God, and is alone capable of giving the authentic interpretation of the sense intended by God."

The article says Catholics are gnostics.

216 posted on 05/09/2010 2:26:37 PM PDT by spunkets
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To: sabe@q.com
"I know its not from the gospels, but it from the NT."

I have not said that any part of Scripture is false, I have only said that the bible does not contain 100% of the revealed Word.

217 posted on 05/09/2010 2:28:56 PM PDT by Natural Law
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To: sabe@q.com
"google; yahoo; bing are your friends"

And http://www.vatican.va/archive/catechism/ccc_toc.htm is your friend when attempting to comment on what Catholics do or don't believe and profess.

218 posted on 05/09/2010 2:31:17 PM PDT by Natural Law
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To: Natural Law

I was talking about Queen Mary of Tudor. Please try to keep up.


219 posted on 05/09/2010 2:35:03 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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To: spunkets

Where does it say that? Is all this thread all for naught?


220 posted on 05/09/2010 2:35:49 PM PDT by marajade (Yes, I'm a SW freak!)
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