Posted on 12/29/2018 6:57:14 AM PST by SeekAndFind
MANILA, Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte mocked the Christian doctrine of the Holy Trinity, calling it silly on Saturday, December 29.
In a speech in Kidapawan City, Cotabato, the President attacked the doctrine of God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit as he once again went into a tirade against priests and the Catholic Church.
"Youre already praying at one God, then youre going to pray at these cursed saints. Theres only one God. Theres only one God, period. You cannot divide God into 3, thats silly, said the President.
Before attacking the Holy Trinity doctrine, Duterte said Jesus Christ is unimpressive because he had allowed himself to be nailed on the cross.
"Your God was nailed on the cross. How unimpressive. Im God and you will crucify me? Id tell them, Lightning, finish all of them. Burn all the non-believers.'"
The passion, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ is among the central doctrines of Christian faith, with Christians believing that Jesus sacrificed himself to save the world from sin.
The President likewise belittled the belief in saints, whom he previously called as fools and drunkards.
"Saint Catalina, Saint Anne, Saint Thomas, Saint Sebastian, Saint Rodrigo, theyre nothing I dont know them. Look, those documents were written if at all 3,000 years ago. Why would they care about our lives now?"
"Who wrote about them? Whos Saint Thomas? We dont know who they are. That might even be a name for a cow or camel then"
The President under whose term a string of priests have been murdered had previously stirred controversy for calling God stupid."
On December 6, Duterte even joked that bishops should be killed for supposedly doing nothing but criticizing his administration, which is waging a bloody war against drugs that has killed thousands.
Cut me some slack bro. No one at Dallas is sympathetic to your plan of salvation. I am not sympathetic to your plan of salvation either. To me, its a non plan. I do, however, completely understand 1st Corinthians 2:14. I am of the opinion, that its possible you do not. Have a nice eternity bro. I plan to. Do you?
What in the world are you talking about, Luircin?!? You are 100% wrong! There was not one drop of "anger", or "bile", or any "accusations" or "condescension" intended in my reply in post #142, which was actually my response to another poster's post. (I just copied my reply to that poster to you and another poster too, because I knew those links I provided there would help to answer your questions to me in your posts as well.)
In that post #142 to that other poster, I listed a series of scriptural passages, and some related statements about those Bible texts. To summarize, basically those texts show that Jesus often used "hyperbole" when he spoke, in order to make a point more powerfully and effectively, such as when he told them to pluck their eyes out, and throw them away, if their eyes offended them (Matthew 5:29), or the other time where he told them that unless they hated their father, mother, wife, children, brothers, sisters, and even their own life, they could not be his disciple (Luke 14:26). Jesus clearly did not mean those statements in a literal sense, but was just using hyperbole to drive his point home, and that is also what he was doing when he said to call no man father.
That can be ascertained just by reading the various Epistles and Gospels in the New Testament, where, on many occasions, the authors, directly inspired by God, called some man "father" on many occasions, which would have clearly violated that directive from Jesus, if he had really meant in it in a "literal" sense. (In that post #142, I provided the clear example of the Apostle Paul in Romans 4:11, under divine inspiration, calling a man named Abraham the "father" of all believers. If Jesus directive in Mattew 23:9 had been meant in a literal sense, Paul would have clearly been violating that directive of Jesus under the direct guidance of God, which, obviously wasn't happening, because Jesus didn't mean that in a literal sense, or God would not have inspired Paul to break that command.)
I told that other poster that when their is a contradiction between a man's interpretation of a statement from Jesus, and God's view of what was really meant by that statement made by Jesus, the man is always wrong, and God is always right.
(God would never have directed Paul to do something that was wrong.)
Many of the Gospels and Epistles in the New Testament (which were all written long after Jesus spoke those words about calling someone "father), contain similar references, calling some man "father", so there is obviously nothing wrong with doing that, or God would never have inspired all of those Bible writers to do that wrongful action.
In that post, I took the time to research and set up convenient links to a large number of sources, which would help to answer your questions and the others questions, then I wished everyone a Happy New Year, and God's blessings upon them. When I first read your post accusing me of "anger", and "bile", and "accusations" and "condescension", my first thought was that you must have been hitting the sauce just a little bit early on New Year's Eve, since there was not one smidgeon of "anger", or "bile", or "accusations", or "condescension" in that post #142! :-)
Please go ahead and check out those links in that post #142, and I'm sure you will at least see a clearer picture of our side that question.
placemarker
.
None of that is even close to the “trinity” nonsense.
The “Paraclete” that He would send to His apostles was his own spirit.
Nothing in scripture teaches any “trinity.”
That is pure pagan hogwash.
All those 'sacraments' that Rome has invented.
Did Jesus say...
Woman; where are your accusers??
Go and sin no more.
HMMMmmm
1 John 5:7 KJV
For there are three that bear record in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost: and these three are one.
There is a 'trace' of BINITY to be found there:
So is:
Call no man father.
You will feel a twinge of... something... the next time you address 'Father' John Doe; your local priest.
A lot of things about God are so silly only a child can understand them.
Then Jesus spoke to the multitudes and to his disciples,
2 Saying: The scribes and the Pharisees have sitten on the chair of Moses.
3 All things therefore whatsoever they shall say to you, observe and do: but according to their works do ye not; for they say, and do not.
Have you a LIST of them?? (Also; I don't see any "This is my command..." like you've earlier inferred MUST be needed.)
x
Me too, Mark. It’s telling that he doesn’t plan anything for the East Coast. Not enough people to make it worthwhile. Only 8 million people here in NYC but how many would go to hear Tsarfati?
You probably believe this pious religious book, too, don't you?
Over the centuries, there have been lots of books and other writings of questionable veracity, filled with bias on both sides (Anti-Catholic, and Anti-Protestant), and, in that light, it is best to take any books filled with quotes and accounts from long-dead figures with a grain of salt. Many of the writers of books and online materials probably have even less credibility than today's mainstream media, and their fictitious published accounts of Trump and of Trump supporters.
But, for arguments sake, let's pretend for a moment that all of your quotes from these long-dead figures are genuine and accurate.
So what?
Right from the beginning, the Bible records that some prominent Church leaders have expressed or promoted erroneous ideas, but those teachings were never officially (magisterially) accepted or implemented by any form of the Church Magisterium, as guided by the Holy Spirit. (Read, for example, Galatians 2, where St. Paul says he had to straighten out St. Peter himself, right to his face, regarding the issue of forcing new converts to live like Jews, so the Holy Spirit can and does at times even cause popes to be overridden, before they are able to implement something magisterially in the Church.) St. Peter's views were expanded and "refined" over time, as the Church's teachings developed more fully over time, and were settled by the Church Magisterium under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and that refining of individual views can probably be said to be true about all Church leaders (and Church members) over the centuries.
Does that mean you throw out the whole Church, just because some number of its early Church leaders did not have a full and complete or correct understanding yet of some particular issue, and which the Holy Spirit caused to be overridden and rectified in the Church's actual official magisterial teachings, which came out of the Church leaders' prayerful discussions? Of course not! Or, do you throw out the Bible, just because some of the early Church teachings mentioned in it, later turned out to need to be further developed, or refined, or corrected, or because some Epistles in the Bible are attributed to St. Peter, who was at some point corrected by St. Paul (who was also in very deep error for a while, and was strongly corrected himself - see Acts 9 - regarding his own strikingly erroneous views before that)? Of course not!
The Church leaders of the time, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, magisterially hammered out a new formal Church doctrine (concerning an issue Jesus had never instructed them on), which declared the new official Church teaching that new converts did not have to become like Jews, and get circumcised, and so forth. They nipped that right in the bud. (This official doctrinal decision was all done magisterially by the Church leaders, based on prayer-guided tradition, without any consultation or interpretation of the New Testament writings, as most (if not all) of the New Testament "books" weren't even written yet.)
This is another great illustration of the fallacy of following your own personal interpretation of the Scriptures. Both the Apostle Peter and the Apostle Paul knew the Jewish Scriptures well, and both men also knew a great deal about the teachings of Jesus, and they both came to opposite personal conclusions about the "Judaizer" issue. But, they didn't just rely on their own personal interpretations of those things, and they didn't split up into two churches, or just agree to disagree about it. Instead, those Apostles and the Church leaders sought and received the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and were directed on which way to go, which was to establish a brand new doctrine for the One Church, which did not require gentiles to adopt Jewish practices, and that became the official Church doctrine from that time forward.
Other humans in various Church leadership roles over the centuries have also said or done things that are later determined by the Magisterium to be inadequate, just like those early Judaizers (like Peter and James), but that is why the Holy Spirit is necessary, to guide the Church and her magisterial doctrinal decisions, and keep her on course, as Jesus promised. Those "erroneous teachings" of various individual Church leaders do not end up becoming official, magisterial teaching of the Church over time, thanks to the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
What you always have to look at is not the expressed opinions of various individuals within the Church, but the actual teachings of the Church, as hammered out over the centuries by the Magisterium, directly guided by the Holy Spirit (as Jesus promised), which are conveniently available these days in the Catechism of the Catholic Church. You may still want to attack those Church teachings, but you won't have to force yourself to continue to post so many long, rambling lists of questionable quotes, attributed somewhere, to some long dead individuals, who can no longer be questioned about those "quotes", or about their true beliefs.
There have been prominent Church leaders right from the very beginning (and recorded in the Bible), who have made misstatements concerning Church doctrines, or non-magisterially proposed some erroneous teachings, as mentioned in Galatians 2. The opinions of those individual Church leaders in biblical times (like the Judaizers) were listened to, and considered, then officially abandoned by the Magisterium leaders of the Church, under the guidance of God, and the same kind of assessments and decisions have continued to be resolved in that same way ever since those early biblical examples. So, you can save yourself a lot of time (and save your misemployed fingers) from a lot of useless and senseless typing of all those protracted, wearisome, and thoroughly irrelevant lists! :-)
(You're welcome, brother!)
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.