Posted on 01/05/2010 9:46:47 PM PST by the_conscience
I just witnessed a couple of Orthodox posters get kicked off a "Catholic Caucus" thread. I thought, despite their differences, they had a mutual understanding that each sect was considered "Catholic". Are not the Orthodox considered Catholic? Why do the Romanists get to monopolize the term "Catholic"?
I consider myself to be Catholic being a part of the universal church of Christ. Why should one sect be able to use a universal concept to identify themselves in a caucus thread while other Christian denominations need to use specific qualifiers to identify themselves in a caucus thread?
Thanks for the warning about Schaff... I’ll have to take him with a grain of salt now.
Indeed. If possible, he was more anti Catholic than Calvin ever was.
Cronos: A flaw in your argument -- Jews DO that and we can't deny that they worship the God of Abraham.
Cvengr: FK is correct on this one. Even the Jewish mechanism of worshiping God requires this. Consider how any priest must cleanse themselves prior to entering the temple to have fellowship with God, to worship Him. First there would be a burnt offering, pointing the object of our faith in the sacrifice being made to God for cleansing, pointing to Christ. ....
Thanks, and your analysis is spot on. I was just reading about the construction of the original Tabernacle and the note in my study Bible said: "... the tabernacle was a provisional symbol, rather than the full reality, of God's dwelling with man. It symbolized the heavenly temple of God:"
This pointed forward to the dwelling of God with man in the person of Jesus Christ (John 1:14 "dwelt among us"). There are tons of examples like this in the OT. Everything pointed to Christ. The God of Abraham is absolutely inseparable from Christ.
Oh that's alright...There's lots of folks who yawn at God's words...
You really need to get out more. The Baltimore Catechism was flawed and NOT the same as the Catechism of the Catholic Church as issued and maintained by the Vatican. It was a dumbed down version that sought to teach to primarily by rote, not understanding. If you are sincere about understanding and communicating the actual Catechism of the Catholic Church quote from here:
Well, I can see by this posted on Arminianism I cannot agree with. though there are some points I do.
Why is it seemingly important, for some, to be identified with them or Calvinism, or for that matter any ism that is or might be????
Exodus 20:8
She was yawning at your post, which did not contain God’s words.
Are you claiming that your posts, which have been recently documented as either largely or surpassingly in error, are God's words?
So what? I have yet to see any tradition which unequivocally gives us permission to use musical instruments in Church.
I didn't say "tradition" to bow and pray to an idol, I said scripture. I don't CARE about tradition in any church.
If He says to not bow and pray to IDOLS, then you don't do it.
Again, back to scripture, where does He state we cannot play an instrument in church along with our hymns.
Not exactly.
Saint means "holy". Certainly for the church to declare (not MAKE, mind you, just declare or acknowledge) a human to be a saint, the qualifications you mention are applicable, more or less.
Angels, however, being of a different order of creation, have different rules. The ones that aren't demons are holy. Therefore they are saints - 'holy ones'.
A little learning is a dangerous thing.
Further, any clue about what we say about the relationship between the Church and the "Israel of God" or "the new Israel?"
Your side doesn't realize that just as there is a kind of organic unity to your view, so also there is to ours. So you take your side's idea of Church and then try to apply that to our side's idea of angelology.
These threads do not permit me the comparisons I would certainly express of the same and similarities of beliefs and rites, that are both expressed and shown, within the catholic church, that once were practiced centuries ago and still are in various places in the world.
It seems to me the catholic church was derailed from the basic tenants of the Christian faith...and adopted “other” practices and incorporated them into their faith, adding more and more to them over these many years until Christ became an afterthought or something to tack onto the latest additions.
In many ways I am grateful for not having been exposed much to catholicism, so that in seeing these posts, references etc. I could draw conclusions based on those who actually practice their faith seriously. But I could not, nor would I recommend the catholic faith based on my observations here, and the references and authors given to support their beliefs. No matter what initials, names or c’s are used.
It's obvious catholics would not refer anyone to non-catholic churches as well. I understand this and will trust God will bring those out who he knows seeks the truth. But I also understand now why there are Christian missionaries who see the catholic church as their mission field.
This is simply what I have determined from this thread and the references used here. Thank you for your posts and all who did so. What an eyeopener it has been... indeed.
That is not the meaning of the imprimatur. For example:
Please know that the presence of an Imprimatur does not mean that a book is an official text of the Church. It doesn't make the book the equivalent of an encyclical, say. It's not the approval of the work by the Pope or a dogmatic Council, and it's not a stamp of infallibility. It doesn't even mean that everything in the book is accurate, only that there is nothing in it that contradicts Catholic dogma.Source.
Documented by a Catholic??? I post God's words in bold type with the chapter and verse noted before the words...If you haven't noticed that yet, now you won't have to wonder...
It helped me to consider that Vincent of Lerins (SP? date? I have no idea!) was not a dope. From the time of Acts and of the Pauline letters there was disagreement. So he can't have meant that there was this sort of simpy-grin, kumbaya unity when he hauled out "semper, ubique, et ab omnibus."
(This is why super-human precision, refinement, and care are necessary to do this stuff well. Or good bourbon ...)
Our take is that IHS sure SEEMS to say, "This - my body," etc. And while Paul surrounds it with good stuff that central identification is never lost. The Didache, Hippolytus, Justin Martyr all seem to accept and to assert the core identification.
Then somebody says, "Ick! No thanks!" (this is how it was 'splained to me in my NOT transubstantiation thinking seminary.) So the distinction between what it IS and what it TASTES (feels, looks, etc.) like is introduced into the conversation.
Then the theologians come in to try to clean up the mess.
I was just talking about this Wed PM after RCIA (Catholic re-education camp) There was a kind of bubble of new thought in the 50's - 70's, new attempts to 'splain it. And I think every time philosophy comes up with a new "likely story" about what we mean when we say "thing" and "is", there will be wrinkles and ripples in Eucharistic Theology.
Fun stuff right now is that a Dominican I very much admire is at a University in Fribourg (sp?) exploring "sacrifice and sacrament" for his doctoral work. It would be so fun if you and he could meet and argue out bloodless sacrifice.
(P.S: thanks for the news about coffee and asthma. I'll just move my coffee maker and all my Tom Clancy books into the BR and never reappear!)
So yeah, I'd say a sheaf offering or a griddle cake offering or whatever is a sacrifice and every one of us, when we offer our selves to God is a sacrifice - always by his grace - both as to the calling and as to the sanctifying.
It's obvious catholics would not refer anyone to non-catholic churches as well. I understand this and will trust God will bring those out who he knows seeks the truth. But I also understand now why there are Christian missionaries who see the catholic church as their mission field.
Then we are doing our job well...Hopefully there are many others who have come thru the veil to the Throne of Grace instead of hoping Mary and some obscure saints would do it for you...
Certainly there is something special about blood. We hear about blood crying out from the ground, but not sap, huh? ;-)
I didn't realize you were talking about sacrifices for forgiveness. I though it was sacrifices and offerings in general. I think the data on Cain and Abel is too vague to draw any conclusion with certainty.
But somewhere in there, the inversion happens and we begin to realize that our side, so to speak, of the comparisons is derivative and vague and that we learn what Fatherhood is from contemplating God, whose REALITY or (sort of) 'intensity of being' overwhelms the provisional and confused notions we form from our experiences.
Skipping a few steps here, and I ask you to remember it's been decades since I really immersed myself in Calvin, my criticism of Calvin would be that maybe he forgets that God will not be comprehended by our images and language. And consequently he is more rigid in his logical unfolding of his system than the nature of God allows.
If I'm following you then I would fully agree that if we assign our starting point to our own experiences, then we will fail miserably in attempting to comprehend God and His communication to us. If we presuppose that the starting point is God, then we are in much better shape.
As for Calvin, in relative terms while I suppose that the term "rigid" can be a fair adjective, I also see him seeking from the God POV. Charles R. Biggs, an OPC pastor, put together A Summary of Calvins Interpretation of Scripture. Here are some excerpts I "hope" are on point :)
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ONE of the reasons I unburden myself of this rant is that I THINK that these notions might help us to be more charitable and patient in dealing with one another's conversation about God.
Agreed, and it's a pretty good rant. :)
That we think it important enough to justify burning all this energy seems to me to suggest that God is definitely yanking each of our chains. That is merciful of Him and I am happy to see it in you and in me.
Amen, may we all grow closer to Him.
I imagine that most of us here approve of that way of trying both fact and law. We think that even though the defendant may lie through his teeth, he ought to be heard and his testimony ought to be examined fairly. We ought not, we think, to start our enquiry assuming that he is lying.
It is remarkable to me that many patriots here on FR see absolutely nothing amiss, when they are invited to make up their mind about what Catholics actually are taught, in taking the bulk of their evidence and of the canons of its interpretation from our adversaries.
Still, as Job would say, "Surely you are the people, and wisdom will die with you." We have been separated for almost 500 years. It is not to be expected that TRULY understanding one another will be an easy thing. And yet, on the basis of our adversaries, you decide we are wrong. None so blind as those who will not at least take a look.
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