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Why would anyone become Catholic?
https://www.indiegogo.com ^ | October 2, 2014 | Indiegogo

Posted on 10/08/2014 11:39:09 AM PDT by NKP_Vet

Why would intelligent, successful people give up their careers, alienate their friends, and cause havoc in their families...to become Catholic? Indeed, why would anyone become Catholic?

As an evangelist and author who recently threw my own life into some turmoil by deciding to enter the Catholic Church, I've faced this question a lot lately. That is one reason I decided to make this documentary; it's part of my attempt to try to explain to those closest to me why I would do such a crazy thing.

Convinced isn't just about me, though. The film is built around interviews with some of the most articulate and compelling Catholic converts in our culture today, including Scott Hahn, Francis Beckwith, Taylor Marshall, Holly Ordway, Abby Johnson, Jeff Cavins, Devin Rose, Matthew Leonard, Mark Regnerus, Jason Stellman, John Bergsma, Christian Smith, Kevin Vost, David Currie, Richard Cole, and Kenneth Howell. It also contains special appearances by experts in the field of conversion such as Patrick Madrid and Donald Asci.

Ultimately, this is a story about finding truth, beauty, and fulfillment in an unexpected place, and then sacrificing to grab on to it. I think it will entertain and inspire you, and perhaps even give you a fresh perspective on an old faith.

(Excerpt) Read more at indiegogo.com ...


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Charismatic Christian; Evangelical Christian; General Discusssion; Mainline Protestant; Other Christian; Religion & Culture; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; willconvertforfood
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To: CynicalBear
"Dear St. Anthony, we are all pilgrims. We came from God and we are going to Him. He who created us will welcome us at journey's end. The Lord Jesus is preparing a place for all His brothers and sisters. St. Anthony, Guide of Pilgrims, direct my steps in the straight path. Protect me until I am safely home in heaven. Help me in all my needs and difficulties. (Name them.) [http://catholic.org/prayers/prayer.php?s=41] Tell me again how Catholics ONLY ask them to be pray FOR them."

=============================================================

You are mistaking a prayer shortcut (with obvious implicit direction to God through the saint for fulfillment) with some kind of stand-alone action by a saint.

As a very rough and very imperfect illustration, when Donald Trump asks his butler to bring him a case of "Courvoisier", he doesn't think the butler is going to go make it in his basement or something, and he also doesn't specifically tell him to go the liquor store and buy it either -- that is implied in his request, and just goes without saying.    He just makes the simple request to the butler, and the butler will go to the source he has to in order to get that request successfully fulfilled for Trump.

Your mischaracterizations of those fervent prayer requests you keep searching around for, grossly distort the whole picture of what is actually happening.    The saints in heaven who hear these requests are intelligent, and understand perfectly what the person praying is actually requesting, and that it is God who actually fulfills all prayer requests.

------------------------------------------------------------

"Yes, I do mean to tell you that. We are told to go boldly before the throne. To think that somehow God is incapable of hearing our prayers as well as those in heaven is doubting His omnipresence and omniscience."

=============================================================

Once again, you are grossly misstating what I said.    I'm not talking about God's ability to hear our prayers.    I'm talking about our own ability to formulate and express prayers, when we are tired, distracted, agitated, hungry, confused, etc., all maladies not suffered by the saints in heaven.

Now God does not need ANY prayers.    God already knows every single need, and every single prayer request that will ever be made by anyone, including all people on earth, and all the saints in heaven.    However, we do know that God wants (for our sakes) all of us to pray for one another, as He plainly tells us in His Sacred Written Word.

Do you not believe God when He says that?

God also wants us to love Him, and to love one another, and prayers for others is a wonderful way to extend our love to them (and that love principle still holds true for the saints in heaven).

1,601 posted on 10/14/2014 8:33:10 PM PDT by Heart-Rest ("Our hearts are restless, Lord, until they rest in Thee." - St. Augustine)
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To: Rides_A_Red_Horse
"Another poster cited The Necessary Seven Sacraments. So, the “good thief” was obviously a sinner. Was his faith in Christ and Jesus' sacrifice sufficient to get him straight into Heaven or did he need a some “therapeutic” Purgatory torture?"

=============================================================

(For questions about someone else's posts, please direct your questions to them.)

The Seven Sacraments are gifts of God for providing avenues of His Grace for believers.    One can wisely accept those gifts from our loving God, or foolishly reject them.

God can save people in many different ways (and God always takes into account how much a person actually knows in His perfect judgment).    God saved Abraham, a guy who never heard of Jesus Christ.    Do you think it is easier and better for us to know something about Jesus Christ, or to not know something about Jesus Christ like Abraham?

(I would say it is much better to know about Jesus Christ, and it is also much better to make full use of God's beautiful gifts of the Seven Holy Sacraments too, but all people are free to choose for themselves.)

For a good explanation of the Seven Sacraments, and their biblical basis, check out these links:

   "THE SACRAMENTS OF CHRISTIAN INITIATION"

   "THE SACRAMENTS OF HEALING"

   "THE SACRAMENTS AT THE SERVICE OF COMMUNION"

1,602 posted on 10/14/2014 8:38:01 PM PDT by Heart-Rest ("Our hearts are restless, Lord, until they rest in Thee." - St. Augustine)
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To: Heart-Rest

Nope, I pray “real” prayers from my heart. Prayers of thanksfulness, , for help, healing, etc. I can not remember the last time The Lord’s Prayer was said. It is an example of how to pray. I do not know of any church which says the prayer at every service. I read that it should never be sung but I do not understand that reasoning but can not remember if I ever heard it sung. Does not mean it hasn’t been, though.


1,603 posted on 10/14/2014 8:45:52 PM PDT by MamaB
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To: MamaB
"Nope, I pray “real” prayers from my heart. Prayers of thanksfulness, , for help, healing, etc. I can not remember the last time The Lord’s Prayer was said. It is an example of how to pray. I do not know of any church which says the prayer at every service. I read that it should never be sung but I do not understand that reasoning but can not remember if I ever heard it sung. Does not mean it hasn’t been, though."

=============================================================

Here's a web site with a recording of the "Brewster Baptist Church" saying "The Lord's Prayer" :

   "Opening Prayer and Lord’s Prayer 11-13" - (Brewster Baptist Church)

(You can listen to the congregation there reciting the Lord's Prayer on the recording on that web page, right after after her opening prayer.)

By the way, these are "real" prayers, and Catholics also pray all kinds of "informal" prayers too.    Every single prayer type that protestants use, Catholics use also, and in addition to that, Catholics can pray formal prayers, like "The Lord's Prayer", the "Rosary", the "Psalms", etc., and many other forms too (like "Lectio Divina", using scripture for meditative and contemplative prayer).

1,604 posted on 10/14/2014 9:24:15 PM PDT by Heart-Rest ("Our hearts are restless, Lord, until they rest in Thee." - St. Augustine)
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To: Heart-Rest
Oh, no, I never said they did it "equally"!

No distinction is made.  Peter doesn't actually receive the power of loosing and binding until the other disciples receive it.  That happens over in Matthew 18:18.  But back in Matthew 16:19,  Jesus says He will give Peter the keys, then defines those keys in terms of the loosing and binding.  However, it isn't until Matthew 18 that this power is actually given, and it is not given to just Peter, but all the disciples. There is simply no warrant for seeing the loosing and binding as unequally distributed.  Jesus didn't say, "and Peter here's a little more for you." Didn't happen.

That's a little like saying that the protestant pastor and his congregants are all exactly the same in a protestant church service.


I never said they were the same.  The Holy Spirit distributes gifts as He sees fit.  Some teach, some evangelize, some serve congregational needs, etc.  But as between the apostles, no distinction was made with respect to the binding and loosing. Deny it if you wish. Anyone can read it in Matthew 18:18.

And Jesus definitely singled out Peter as the rock He would build His Church on.

We'll address that in a moment ...

Just because there is great disagreement about that teaching, that does not invalidate it.   

It's not just that there's a disagreement about it.  It's that the entire edifice of the Petrine supremacy rests on a passage which even such learned men as Augustine did not see Peter, but Peter's confession of Christ, as the Rock foundation of the ecclesia. Yet no one who accepts Scripture denies that Jesus is the Son of God, or that He died and rose again for our sins, and so many other basic, essential doctrines.  Indeed, there are for all doctrines essential to the faith a multitude of unambiguous Scriptural witnesses.  Yet here, in this one place, where rests the entire superstructure of Roman claims to a supervening authority, there is profound uncertainty whether the Roman interpretation is anything but a self-serving miscue. You are free to believe whatever you like, no matter how thin the evidence. I can commit my life to Jesus as the crucified and risen Lord of glory, because the Scriptures teach that without room for doubt.  But it is not reasonable to commit oneself to the self-professed authority of one particular early schism on such frightfully fragile evidence.

Regarding Judas ...

No it is not moot.    It helps to teach us that none of the other individual apostles were promised that same kind of individual infallibility like Peter was by our Lord.

Yes it is moot. Times a million. That'll save us both some wasted posts. :)  But seriously, it's moot because Jesus did give that power of binding and loosing to all twelve without distinction.  I have provided textual evidence of this and you have not refuted it.  If you wish to infer infallibility of office from that, you must logically extend it to all twelve.  If you cannot bring yourself to extend it to all twelve, due to Judas, then you must withdraw the claim of infallibility from all twelve. In which case we might expect Judas to lapse catastrophically and permanently, Peter to lapse catastrophically but NOT permanently, John to be faithful throughout, etc., because none of them were encumbered with infallibility as a matter of office; only as a matter of providence.  

Consider a comparison between Caiaphas and Judas and Balaam. We know that Caiaphas was given to prophesy concerning the substitutionary death of Jesus here:
John 11:49-52  And one of them, named Caiaphas, being the high priest that same year, said unto them, Ye know nothing at all,  (50)  Nor consider that it is expedient for us, that one man should die for the people, and that the whole nation perish not.  (51)  And this spake he not of himself: but being high priest that year, he prophesied that Jesus should die for that nation;  (52)  And not for that nation only, but that also he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad.
Yet he was not gifted with official infallibility that could be invoked on demand.  This was a direct function of divine sovereignty.  God wanted that prophecy on the books from the mouth of the high priest, and that's what happened.  Similarly, Balaam was no part of the people of God at all. And he would have cursed the children of Israel if he could have.  But God intervened and compelled him to give his blessing instead.  And this was more intrusive than with Caiaphas. It was clear even to Balaam that he was being pushed to do what he did.

So then why not for Judas the same sort of providence?  Like Balaam, like Caiaphas, profoundly opposed to God and God's good plan, but put in a position where God was perfectly able to ensure that whatever he said during the tenure of his discipleship with Jesus would be exactly as God intended.   This is providence, though, and not a gift to be exercised at the option of the one so gifted. Thus there is no need for an official capacity to invoke infallibility. Only a need to rely on God to work through His apostles just as He promised He would. And thus the gift of binding and loosing could be given to all twelve disciples without partiality to any one above another, as is exactly what is recorded in Matthew 18:18.

SR: The Greek term is ecclesia, which has a range of usage that can be examined in the Old Testament through the Greek lens of the Septuagint.

HR: No, Jesus was talking about building His one NEW Church, not reshuffling an old one.


It looks as though you missed my point. I am using the Septuagint to show how ecclesia is used to speak of a kind of person, and a kind of assembly, which is not defined by visible metrics per se, but by spiritual qualities.  Does Jesus' mean to build His ecclesia out of dead stones, or living?
1 Peter 2:5  Ye also, as lively stones, are built up a spiritual house, an holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God by Jesus Christ.
And if we ourselves as living stones make a spiritual house, we need a foundation.  And who does Peter say that foundation is? Peter? Or ...
1 Peter 2:6  Wherefore also it is contained in the scripture, Behold, I lay in Sion a chief corner stone, elect, precious: and he that believeth on him shall not be confounded.
Hmmm. Not Peter, but Jesus. And this according to Peter.  Has he forgotten he, Peter, was the Rock? Or maybe he never thought that for a second.

His promise that the gates of hell would not prevail against us requires that there be an infallible earthly authority to (among other things) make judgment on new heresies that began to arise after all the apostles were dead.

This is pure surmise on your part. We have three infallible authorities keeping company with us during our sojourn on this earth:

1. We have the Scriptures, which Paul says are sufficient to lead us to Christ, and sufficient as a means of becoming equipped for every good work, which Paul specifically mentions includes dealing with questions of doctrine.

2. We have the Holy Spirit, who is given to every believer without distinction, albeit with different gifts, as God wills, but all working together as the several members of the body of Christ.

3. And we have Jesus, who promised, promised He would be with us until the end of the age.  

Each of these resources is infallible, free of error, but not merely error-free, but they are the power of God made available to every believer.  As stated above, there simply is no need to add to that by creating a human office for Chief Dogma Generator.  We have our Bibles, we have our Holy Spirit, and we have Jesus.  I realize that seems not enough to some, but it's enough for us. We'll muddle through somehow. :)

If you don't believe Jesus was guaranteeing that infallible guidance for His Church and the authority of the successors of the apostles, you would have to believe/accept that the Holy Spirit teaches mutually exclusive contradictory things, such as the ability to lose one's salvation (the Methodist view, for instance) vs. the view held by Calvinists and other "persistence" or "once saved, always saved" based denominations.    The Holy Spirit does NOT teach mutually exclusive contradictory things, in opposition to the "Truth".

This is not a Scriptural argument. It is a consequentialist argument.  Something bad will happen if we don't do X.  But did God say to do X? Well, no, but it's obvious, because if we don't do X, the bad thing will happen.

Remember Uzzah? Also a consequentialist. David is bring the ark of the covenant back to it's rightful place, but the cart is shaken and it looks like the ark will fall and possibly be damaged.  What does Uzzah do? He tries to help God by defying the command of God, which was not to touch the ark. It was a fatal mistake.  Our job is not to worry about what might happen to the ark. God can take care of Himself.  Our job is to obey the instructions He has given us. He has given no instruction that there be an infallible earthly office. He has promised to be with us, to guide us with His word, faithfully taught by those so gifted, and to enlighten our understanding by His Holy Spirit.  Sometimes it's hard to trust God.  He will sort out all the superficial discrepancies. He knows His own sheep, and they will hear his voice, and follow only Him. Jesus said that. Do you believe it? I do. I can't solve all the discrepancies.  But I can trust Him.. So that's what I've got to do. Even when it's scary.

(HR's) ARTICLE QUOTE:  "He intended it to be absolutely universal and imposed upon all men a solemn obligation actually to belong to it, unless inculpable ignorance should excuse them;"

YOUR (SR's) RESPONSE:  "This is false on its face. The ecclesia are the sheep of God. If God intended everyone to be His sheep, we would have to become universalists, and abandon any concept of perdition.

HR: You are missing his point.    It has absolutely NOTHING to do with the "universalists", who say that everyone is going to be saved, but just refers to there being only ONE universal Church that Jesus Christ founded, not thousands of them, and not every person will be saved.    His statement is 100% true.


No, the "it" in his statement is referencing back to the visible church, the motley mix of wheats and tares. But as he makes no beneficial distinction between visible church and invisible ecclesia, it does lead one to think God intends everyone to be in it.  If you are saying here that his "all men" does not really mean "all men," that is a possible way to avoid an inference of universalism.  But the premise of "absolutely universal" membership in one visible human institution is not taught anywhere in Scripture, because the ecclesia Jesus promised to build is a spiritual house, and not everyone has a place in it. 

As for your discussion of Peter and "the rock", I don't buy all those ridiculous contortions they go through to try to preserve the myth of Jesus calling Peter a little pebble.    Quite frankly, that's a crock.   I believe the Gospel writer (when translating the word from the Aramaic) didn't want to call Peter by an effeminate name in Greek (like some kind of girly-man or cross-dresser or something).    He wanted to use the masculine name, not a lady-man name.

You apparently didn't pick up on some things I said last time. I don't disagree that the big rock/little rock distinction is not as important as some would make it.  However, the center of the argument isn't there.  The RC hypothesis that the two terms are different solely due to gender alignment is false.  According to recent scholarship, Petros was already serviceable as a proper name, meaning it was NOT Petra being adjusted to masculine to avoid a feminine effect.  The name in it's own right already conformed to the masculine pattern.  

Furthermore, the fact that it shares a root with Petra does not demonstrate they are the same word. Many distinguishable words share common roots.  If I said, "You are Rocky, and on this Rock I will build an indestructible spiritual family," are you thinking those are both referring to the same thing? No, of course not.  And rock size has nothing to do with it.  It runs deeper than that. There's the simple fact that Petros could have been used in both places, and with much grater clarity: "You are Rocky, and on you, Rocky, I will build an indestructible spiritual family." That would have kept the second person form of address in tact.  

But instead, Jesus introduces the demonstrative pronoun "this" (ταύτῃ), jarring the listener out of the address to Peter, and signaling a new referent.  Or if Jesus had wanted He could have called Peter Petra, because contrary to what you may have heard, some masculine Greek names do have the feminine ending. Example you say? Sure. Zorba the Greek.  Feminine ending on a masculine name. Go figure.  So if the alleged underlying Aramaic was really Kepha/Kepha, that could be rendered with equally symmetry into the Greek without fussing about gender endings.

Bottom line? Those two Greek words bolded below are two different words, not the same word adjusted for gender setting:
Matthew 16:18 Κἀγὼ δέ σοι λέγω, ὅτι σὺ εἶ Πέτρος, καὶ ἐπὶ ταύτῃ τῇ πέτρᾳ οἰκοδομήσω μου τὴν ἐκκλησίαν, καὶ πύλαι ᾍδου οὐ κατισχύσουσιν αὐτῆς.
And all the more significant a difference when you've got Peter himself identifying Jesus as the principle stone in the foundation of the ecclesia that Jesus is building, and Paul concurring on the identity of Petra, the Rock:
1 Corinthians 10:1-4  Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea;  (2)  And were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea;  (3)  And did all eat the same spiritual meat;  (4)  And did all drink the same spiritual drink: for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them: and that Rock was Christ.
In the mouth of two or three witnesses, a thing is confirmed ...

Peace,

SR




1,605 posted on 10/15/2014 12:10:13 AM PDT by Springfield Reformer (Winston Churchill: No Peace Till Victory!)
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To: Rides_A_Red_Horse

Prots love to bear false witness don’t they?


1,606 posted on 10/15/2014 2:13:49 AM PDT by verga (You anger Catholics by telling them a lie, you anger protestants by telling them the truth.)
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To: Rides_A_Red_Horse
That which calls itself “Catholic” is nothing even close to the Church described in the epistles.

You are wrong.

1,607 posted on 10/15/2014 2:15:25 AM PDT by verga (You anger Catholics by telling them a lie, you anger protestants by telling them the truth.)
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To: Springfield Reformer; Heart-Rest
And thus my your opponent's argument fails.

A position was taken.

You (S. R.) offered well reasoned rebuttal.

The rebuttal was challenged.

...Large portions there raised, soundly defeated in your following rebuttal.

The peanut gallery wonders...(and I speak for peanut galleries);

Perhaps the winged beast that was being ridden (and shot down pierced full of arrows thru vitals) was but a spectre of the Tolkienish/Celtic combo sort rather than the heavy-metal version with 30mm and 20mm cannons.


1,608 posted on 10/15/2014 2:26:27 AM PDT by BlueDragon (...but who will now scour the Shire? it's gone to pot while we off doing all this fighting)
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To: CynicalBear
No wonder Catholics don’t much like the written word. It always comes back to bite them.

And it's their OWN words!!!

They CANNOT deny them; so they merely IGNORE them.

1,609 posted on 10/15/2014 4:11:01 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: terycarl
when you answer a question with a question, it means that you don't know the answer to either.

Remember this...


1,610 posted on 10/15/2014 4:14:40 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: terycarl
let's see now, mother of Jesus is in the bible.....Jesus is God....therefore mother of God IS in the bible...

You have illustrated my point:

Catholicism ADDS things in it's PRACTICES that are NOT in the bible.

And it's members keep repeating the mantras they are taught.

1,611 posted on 10/15/2014 4:18:20 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Elsie
They CANNOT deny them; so they merely IGNORE them.

You are wrong.

1,612 posted on 10/15/2014 4:22:27 AM PDT by verga (You anger Catholics by telling them a lie, you anger protestants by telling them the truth.)
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To: terycarl
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bad_Popes stuck on that, aren't you???

Yes; I am.


9‎/‎5‎/‎2014‎ ‎10‎:‎21‎:‎04‎ ‎PM · 64 of 67
terycarl to BwanaNdege
I am a Catholic priest."
 
so was Luther...
 

The Priesthood of All Believers?

‎8‎/‎13‎/‎2014‎ ‎10‎:‎28‎:‎35‎ ‎PM · 8 of 106
terycarl to PastorBooks
As I said, wrong for 2000 years and counting.

WOW, it's a good thing that Luther came along 1,600 years later to set Catholics straight....just in the nick of time...WHEW!! It's a good thing that he knew more about Christian beliefs and teachings than did 16 centuries of church leaders....pathetic


Protestants: It's time to come back

‎7‎/‎14‎/‎2014‎ ‎10‎:‎37‎:‎30‎ ‎PM · 327 of 647
terycarl to Iscool
...Luther tried to get them to come back to this side but they refused...

yeah...that's it, use Luther as your example.....good grief


Explaining the Heresy of Catholicism (John MacArthur)

5‎/‎26‎/‎2014‎ ‎9‎:‎58‎:‎42‎ ‎PM · 180 of 233
terycarl to OneVike

Maybe if more Catholics did read the Bible as you incorrectly believe, they would stop worshiping the ground the Pope walks on.

Catholics WROTE the bible that you describe....even the parts that Luther took out...we know what's in it and carried it to you through the ages, copying it BY HAND for a couple of thousand years.....withyout Catholics, you would have no idea of who Christ was nor the story of His life, nor His teachings.....there was no one else around to write it all down....the Catholic church did and you have them to thank...


Explaining the Heresy of Catholicism (John MacArthur)

5‎/‎26‎/‎2014‎ ‎9‎:‎33‎:‎11‎ ‎PM · 161 of 233
terycarl to spacejunkie2001

If only the Catholics would watch. They are one group that does NOT want to know the truth of God’s Word.

they are the one group who brought you the word of God through the ages....without the Catholic church you would have no idea of who Jesus was....none. There were no protestants for 1,600 or so years AFTER Christ. The Catholics brought you both the old and new testaments in one easy to read book...the bible...they changed nothing and unlike Luther, removed nothing....say "Thanks Catholics" !!!

 

 

 


1,613 posted on 10/15/2014 4:28:27 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: verga
Scripture says that Jesus turned the bread and wine into His Body and Blood.

Why don't protestants believe that?

Because it's a lie created by the Catholic Church.

1,614 posted on 10/15/2014 4:29:35 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: terycarl
you misinterpret, at best, what the Catholic church is....it is the instrument, established by Christ Himself, to be His physical presence on Earth.

Yes, your chosen religion teaches this; but it is not found to be true.

1,615 posted on 10/15/2014 4:31:57 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: verga

Not FRACTALY wrong?


1,616 posted on 10/15/2014 4:32:51 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: terycarl
where???? besides, the Catholic church teaches that she was concieved without sin,

Yes, this IS what your church teaches.

But ypour choice of the word besides indicates to me, at least, that you don't care WHAT the bible might say; you'll go with what your chosen religion teaches.




1,617 posted on 10/15/2014 4:35:11 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: terycarl
She may have had some pretty bad thoughts toward those who were beating and crucifying her Son.

Speculation...

1,618 posted on 10/15/2014 4:35:54 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: terycarl
they do follow Him alone, and by the way, say thanks to rhe Catholics for providing you with that quote from John....without the Catholic church, you would never have read that quote nor would anyone else have.

Have you changed your mind now?

Thanks; Catholics!!!


Now OBEY it!

1,619 posted on 10/15/2014 4:37:28 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Resettozero
Teacher! Teacher! Terycarl is mindreading again!.

Not quite.

If he'd typed...

She may have had some pretty bad thoughts toward those who were beating and crucifying her Son.

...then the claim could probably be made with accuracy.

1,620 posted on 10/15/2014 4:39:14 AM PDT by Elsie ( Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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