Posted on 05/05/2011 9:38:04 AM PDT by Alex Murphy
VATICAN CITY (CNS) While Catholics believe the Bible is inspired by the Holy Spirit and that it is true, one cannot take individual biblical quotes or passages and say each one is literally true, Pope Benedict XVI said.
It is possible to perceive the sacred Scriptures as the word of God only by looking at the Bible as a whole, a totality in which the individual elements enlighten each other and open the way to understanding, the Pope wrote in a message to the Pontifical Biblical Commission.
It is not possible to apply the criterion of inspiration or of absolute truth in a mechanical way, extrapolating a single phrase or expression, the Pope wrote in the message released May 5 at the Vatican.
The commission of biblical scholars, an advisory body to the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, met at the Vatican May 2-6 to continue discussions about Inspiration and Truth in the Bible.
In his message, the Pope said clearer explanations about the Catholic position on the divine inspiration and truth of the Bible were important because some people seem to treat the Scriptures simply as literature, while others believe that each line was dictated by the Holy Spirit and is literally true.
Neither position is Catholic, the Pope said.
(Excerpt) Read more at ncregister.com ...
It's time to highjack it into...
How to Read the Bible as a MORMON!
#3. We believe that through the Atonement of Christ, all mankind may be saved, by obedience to the laws and ordinances of the Gospel.
and...
#8. We believe the Bible to be the word of God as far as it is translated correctly; we also believe the Book of Mormon to be the word of God.
Good enough for me. I may disagree with you guys, but I don't doubt that you are Christian and my brothers/sisters in Christ.
I hope you feel the same way
I'm sure we do!
I am convinced that the fellow in the pew in front of me does not 'believe' like I do; but he's still my Brother; for he DOES 'believe' in the same CHRIST as me.
That said, the CHRIST of the MORMONs is NOT the same 'christ' even as they protest it is.
Matthew 24:24
For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall shew great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very elect.
Mark 13:22
For false Christs and false prophets shall rise, and shall shew signs and wonders, to seduce, if it were possible, even the elect.
Purty much so, I'd say.
The differences that I see between Catholics and Protestants is that we Protestants feel that we can in NO way, 'help JESUS out' with our Salvation, and it looks to us as that is what Catholicism is doing.
We ‘gentile’ non-mormons feel that we can in NO way, ‘help JESUS out’ with our Salvation, and it looks to us as that is what MORMONism teachs; BIG time!
If one believes in a FALSE christ;
then the reward is a FALSE salvation.
How is Jesus literally the Water of life (John 4:14) -- and how would a "literal" rendering of this from a RC perspective be distinct from a Protestant one?
I never said it was.
And I guess your emphasis on RC "literalness" of interpreting certain Scripture passings suddenly becomes "less literal" in interpreting passages like Matt. 23:9?
I have not emphasized literalness by anybody, and have never suggested that any one group is more literal than another. Such a thing has nothing to do with anything. Are you even reading these posts? And, RC is a brand of cola, and so is entirely unrelated to the discussion.
And I suppose your emphasis on RC "literalness" of interpretation might be a bit "less" literal than the singularity of Hebrews 1?
See above. I have never argued about Catholic literalness, and Royal Crown Cola is not germane.
and confess that even after you followed up, I still don't get the point you were trying to make here.
Yes, that is abundantly clear. Let me help you out. It is very simple. I have made two points. Only two.
You have ignored these issues in order to post false accusations that I have "condemned" others. You have debated things I never said, and focused entirely on your assumptions about Catholics rather than what has been posted. I have never argued that Catholics are more literal, but yet you have decided now that this is what is in play. Its laughable. How can somebody who imagines words like "spiritualize," , "symbolize" and "real" in simple English sentences where they never appear, and then sees condemnation where it isn't even remotely hinted at, claim to have any ability to interpret particular verses of scripture as you are trying to do? You simply lack credibility in this.
The differences that I see between Catholics and Protestants is that we Protestants feel that we can in NO way, 'help JESUS out' with our Salvation, and it looks to us as that is what Catholicism is doing.
I think the real key in this is "and it looks to us." Believe me when I tell you that almost without fail what I run into around here is argumentation not about what Catholics believe, but what people think Catholics believe. No, actually it is what they know Catholics believe. You really cannot disabuse people of these many incorrect assumptions they have about the Church. You can be absolutely crystal clear about something and just directly point out what is true, and people will manage to see past that and argue just what they have been from the start. If I say I like blue they will reply that it is wrong for me to like red. And yet they would interpret scripture.
What do you call post #162, then?
Cothrige, #162: ...the initial editing on the posting of the article was, I think, perhaps intentionally deceptive. But, when people want to believe something badly enough they will grab anything they can and twist whatever comes along to their own ends.
How do you know this? How are you able to glean the intentional inward motives of strangers you don't know? Doesn't Scripture say that only God knows the inward heart -- that man looks @ only what's going on on the outside? (1 Samuel 16:7)
Here you condemned Alex Murphy for being "intentionally deceptive" -- and then you act all offended when somebody points out that this spirit of condemnation is found on your keyboard breath...and then you proceed to repeatedly accuse me for pointing out this breath on you -- that I'm being "false."
Tell us, Cothrige, how are you able to discover inward motivations of strangers? Perhaps you'd like to apologize to Alex Murphy now?
To quote what do you told SkyPilot in #246: "You simply cannot have it both ways, and suggesting otherwise is just making egregious assumptions based on personal bias and prejudice."
So if SkyPilot can't have it "both ways" -- why are you able to have it both ways? If you accuse SkyPilot of "making egregious assumptions based on personal bias and prejudice" what egregious assumptions about Alex Murphy did you make in post #162? Were they based upon "personal bias" toward Alex Murphy based upon previous posts by Alex Murphy? Or what?
Certainly to claim you know the inward motivations of a poster is a rather large assumption, is it not? And to claim they are intentionally being deceptive is egregious, is it not?
Either you are simply a very slippery fellow, or you weren't following what you said in post #272 -- and why I introduced the word "real" in post #279 (my response).
Here's what you said in 272 -- you were covering All of John 6: Cothrige, #272 If a pope comes out tomorrow and says that John 6 doesn't really reflect a teaching on the Eucharist no Catholic would accept it. It would be one man's opinion, and a bad one.
In case you want to look at John 6:55, the word "real" is there (twice). It's not imagined as you now claim. [So not only did I bring a verse from John 6 into play after you mentioned John 6, I was also introducing this Biblical word as a contrast to how Catholics like to emphasize John 6 as the "literal" body and blood of Christ...the word "literal" isn't ever mentioned in John 6...the word "real" is...]
I have not emphasized literalness by anybody, and have never suggested that any one group is more literal than another. .. I have never argued about Catholic literalness...I have never argued that Catholics are more literal, but yet you have decided now that this is what is in play. (your post #310)
Cothrige, post #102: ...don't think inspiration was in question, but rather LITERAL truth. (1)
It seems to me that it is entirely possible for certain discrete statements in the Bible to not be "literally true" (2)
and yet for the Bible to still be inspired and true...Personally, I consider the entire Bible inspired, but I don't know if that inspiration means that every number in every instance is identical exactly to the LITERAL truth. (3)
I can tell you that it would be strange indeed if reality always happened in neat rounded numbers. That doesn't reflect MY EXPERIENCE of LITERAL truth. (4)
Not emphasized "literalness" by anybody? (Yeah, right...you're entirely too slippery)
Oh, and you didn't stop there in deciding that the subject of "literalness" was "in play" for thee, but not for me:
Cothrige, #273: Every reasonable Christian knows that one has to consider any single statement from Scripture within the whole context in order to know whether it is meant to be taken as LITERALLY true on its own, (5)
or rather as contributing to a point being made through a greater segment of text. For instance, is it "LITERALLY true" when Christ said "This is my body" over bread? (6)
We say yes, given the context of the entire Scriptures and their witness to the Eucharistic faith of the Church. We also say yes given the historic witness of the Church throughout history. However, and very ironically, most of the people shouting that Catholics deny the Bible in believing that not every sentence of the Bible must be "LITERALLY true," (7)
would say this single sentence is actually not LITERALLY true. (8)
What the Holy Father is talking about here is actually what 99% of Christians do every time they read the Bible. Some want to make things controversial, but nothing said here actually is.
Nice to know that after you mentioned "literal" and its similar words eight times in two posts that you...
...(1) now claim you "have not emphasized liternalness"
...and (2) accuse me of suddenly "decided now that this is what is in play."
Perhaps if you had simply recalled what you typed in two posts, the subject of "literalness" wouldn't have popped up to surprise you & bite you in the nose.
You then added Its laughable.
The above really is.
What do you call post #162, then?
A dodge on your part? Otherwise, your claim would have to be that, in post #162, I 'condemn Protestants for not reading John 6 as "real."' That was, after all, what you said. Not that I condemned Alex Murphy for editing the initial post, but for a particular attitude about John 6. And, even if I had accused Alex Murphy of something, or even condemned him, would that mean that I 'condemn[ed] Protestants for not reading John 6 as "real"'? Hardly. You can't demonstrate either claim.
One very juicy irony in this is that this entire post only supports my statements regarding your persistent refusal to address the actual content of the comments and article, which was the reason for my usage of your accusation as an example in the first place. You grab onto imagined intents or actions, imply novel meanings not inherent in the text, or simply assume wildly about what a person simply must believe, and then argue all of those things. You are tilting at windmills in your own mind. Please do try to actually read the posts and then consider well whether you can contribute something useful before commenting.
Not imagined. YOU are the one who used the word "intentionally" to describe Alex Murphy's edits of this article as "deceptive." How do you know his intents?
A dodge on your part?
So you dodge my questions, eh? Why won't you answer them?
Here, I'll repeat them:
Cothrige, #162: ...the initial editing on the posting of the article was, I think, perhaps intentionally deceptive. But, when people want to believe something badly enough they will grab anything they can and twist whatever comes along to their own ends.
How do you know this? How are you able to glean the intentional inward motives of strangers you don't know? Doesn't Scripture say that only God knows the inward heart -- that man looks @ only what's going on on the outside? (1 Samuel 16:7)
Here you condemned Alex Murphy for being "intentionally deceptive" -- and then you act all offended when somebody points out that this spirit of condemnation is found on your keyboard breath...and then you proceed to repeatedly accuse me for pointing out this breath on you -- that I'm being "false."
Tell us, Cothrige, how are you able to discover inward motivations of strangers? Perhaps you'd like to apologize to Alex Murphy now?
Not that I condemned Alex Murphy for editing the initial post, but for a particular attitude about John 6. And, even if I had accused Alex Murphy of something, or even condemned him...
Can't make up your mind if you condemned Alex Murphy, eh? Or what you condemned him for, eh? (Let us know when one side of your brain communicates with the other & comes to a decision)
Yup; I took a bit of thought as how I was going to type that.
We are, I think, very much like the blind men inspecting the elephant.
NOBODY wants to talk about Acts 15!
Nice to know that after you mentioned "literal" and its similar words eight times in two posts that you... ...(1) now claim you "have not emphasized liternalness" ...and (2) accuse me of suddenly "decided now that this is what is in play."
Look at point 1. You quote me as having claimed that I "have not emphasized literalness." Full stop. Close quote. Is that an honest quote? Did I say this, with the implications you have given it throughout that I have argued against discussions regarding literalness? Let us look at the actual full quote, and its context:
YOU:And I guess your emphasis on RC "literalness" of interpreting certain Scripture passings suddenly becomes "less literal" in interpreting passages like Matt. 23:9?ME:I have not emphasized literalness by anybody, and have never suggested that any one group is more literal than another.
I have not emphasized the literalness "by anybody, and have never suggested that any one group is more literal than another." And what was I replying to? Your statement that I emphasized so-called "RC literalness." My comment never suggested that literalness was not the issue, but rather that arguments about which church is more or less literal, and the relative value of those opinions, were never in my comments. I never brought such things up but you argued against my imagined view of it anyway. You imply, and then twist the implication, and now even quote segments of sentences to try to prove what isn't so. I don't trust your purpose or intent, and can see nothing constructive in continuing with you.
Have a nice day.
Yup; I took a bit of thought as how I was going to type that.
I appreciate the time too, and I think your comment was a commendable and useful one. We see one another and what we do, and are forced to consider the actions from within our own context. A very difficult thing. But, if we are open to considering that our perspective may not be the other person's, then we can at least be reasonable with one another and be reminded that, regardless of the differences, we all say together "Jesus is Lord."
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