Posted on 11/10/2014 5:38:48 PM PST by Coleus
Mon. Nov. 10 at 8:00 PM ET Tue. Nov. 11 at 1:00 AM ET Fri. Nov. 14 at 1:00 PM ET DALE AHLQUIST
Dale Ahlquist, President of the American Chesterton Society and former Baptist, joins Marcus to talk about his journey home to the Catholic Church.
Hispanics make up at least 32% of Catholics, and 47% of Catholics btwn 18-29 in the US.
Also of note, not counting blacks would eliminate 6% of evangelicals (15% of blacks), and 5% of Catholics.
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Wow, you must not know many Protestant Christians then, Springfield Reformer. There are tons of those KJV Bibles with study guides in them out there, and many protestants use them.
For anyone who wants to really know the truth about this (and avoid deception), just do a couple quick searches for yourself.
First, Google king james version bible with study guide and look at some of the tons of results that come back from that search, and exactly what they point to.
Then go to Amazon and do the same.
Some quick examples of KJV Bibles with study guides built in are these:
Will have to finish tomorrow:) but the below stat is accurate in that look at the “red and blue” map over the past 3 election cycles. The map tells the story:
>>Protestants with a strong religious identity continue to increase as Catholics with a strong religious identity continue to decline, according to a March study by the Pew Research Center. The proportion of Catholics reporting strong religious affiliation declined by almost twenty percentage points over the last few decades, from 46 percent of Catholics in 1974 to 27 percent in 2012. Protestants reporting strong religious affiliation increased more than ten percentage points during the same period, from 43 percent to 54 percent.<<
I hope you know the NABRE now comes in a Bible study format.
Look at a paper copy before buying it. The electronic version I have seems to have just footnotes and not much commentary.
Now the Orthodox Study Bible is good. Their footnotes point out the differences of the LXX.
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A print version of this NABRE is good:
"New Catholic Answer Bible: New American Bible Revised Edition (NABRE)"
and I'd also recommend this New Testament Study Bible:
"Ignatius Catholic Study Bible: New Testament"
(I like the Orthodox Study Bible too. Their "Early Church Fathers" references add depth, and the many prayer icons they include in their Study Bible provide a glimpse into their deep contemplative prayer life too. They use the NKJV for their New Testament.)
lol! Well, in my six decades I’ve known plenty of Protestant Christians, mostly Baptist. But I still don’t know any, not one, who specifically uses any kind of KJV study guide. Thompson chain reference counts, maybe, but it’s not actual commentary. Someone gave my son one of those. Just an index in the center column pointing to related verses. I gave up on Bibles with study guides after quitting Scofield’s dispensationalism. I guess there’s still an active market for them. Just no one I know uses them. They would, like me, consider them intrusions, unwanted interlopers on the pages of Scripture.
Bottom line, when I want to know what God says, I go to my Bible. When I want to know what other godly teachers have thought about a given passage, I go look for a good commentary. Or better still, break out the Hebrew or Greek, with morphology tags, along with some good lexicons. But there is no substitute for regular, reflective, reverent reading of the pure words of God in Scripture. All the explanatory notes or catechisms or confessions or language aids in the world won’t do any good if God isn’t right there along side you helping you understand His own words.
Peace,
SR
Then we should be like Mexico; which is HEAVILY Catholic.
Rev 19:9 Blessed are those who are invited to the marriage supper of the Lamb.
Sure doesn't sound like any FEAST I've ever been invited to!
Like mother - like Son...
Mom...
...how come you and Joseph never got it on after I was born?
Who came BECAUSE of THESE infamous Catholics...
Pope Stephen VI (896897), who had his predecessor Pope Formosus exhumed, tried, de-fingered, briefly reburied, and thrown in the Tiber.[1]
Pope John XII (955964), who gave land to a mistress, murdered several people, and was killed by a man who caught him in bed with his wife.
Pope Benedict IX (10321044, 1045, 10471048), who "sold" the Papacy
Pope Boniface VIII (12941303), who is lampooned in Dante's Divine Comedy
Pope Urban VI (13781389), who complained that he did not hear enough screaming when Cardinals who had conspired against him were tortured.[2]
Pope Alexander VI (14921503), a Borgia, who was guilty of nepotism and whose unattended corpse swelled until it could barely fit in a coffin.[3]
Pope Leo X (15131521), a spendthrift member of the Medici family who once spent 1/7 of his predecessors' reserves on a single ceremony[4]
Pope Clement VII (15231534), also a Medici, whose power-politicking with France, Spain, and Germany got Rome sacked.
When dealing with an autocracy, any such thing is possible.
And while the US Catholic church is growing as a result of illegal immigration (Hardly something to brag about), that by default means the Catholic church in those countries is shrinking.
It’s a version of sheep stealing. The churches aren’t really growing, just constantly trading members.
New people coming in? Awesome!
Other people leaving? Well, they weren’t really part of our church anyway.
And just whose fault is that?
Seems the RCC isn't doing such a great job of catechizing its members and is remiss in dealing with that.
You're complaining to the wrong people about how Catholics are behaving.
Should not the bishops provide a list of Catholic universities true to Catholic doctrine?
Oh, come on now.
Are you actually suggesting accountability?
Be real.
John 1:12 But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God,
Greek word for *receive*
http://biblehub.com/greek/2983.htm
Strong's Concordance
lambanó: to take, receive
Original Word: λαμβάνω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: lambanó
Phonetic Spelling: (lam-ban'-o)
Short Definition: I receive, take
Definition: (a) I receive, get, (b) I take, lay hold of.
HELPS Word-studies
2983 lambánō (from the primitive root, lab-, meaning "actively lay hold of to take or receive," see NAS dictionary)
properly, to lay hold by aggressively (actively) accepting what is available (offered).
2983 /lambánō ("accept with initiative") emphasizes the volition (assertiveness) of the receiver.
Revelation 20:17 And when the thousand years are expired, Satan shall be loosed out of his prison,
I'm sure you meant Revelation 19:7-8 but even then the Greek words used do NOT mean what you try to imply. The "righteous deeds of the saints" does NOT mean their deeds as the English could be understood. It means "a sentence of acquittal". It is God's forgiveness that clothed in white.
Once again the corrupted Catholic interpretation of scripture causes error.
“Then we should be like Mexico; which is HEAVILY Catholic.”
Actually the Catholic Church was technically illegal in Mexico for decades. As the Wall Street Journal noted:
In 1979, for example, when Pope John Paul II made his first pilgrimage to Mexico, priests were still legally banned from wearing clerical collars in public, owning property, or voting. Incredibly, government officials claimed that the Pope violated Mexican law by wearing his habit. (But in a gesture that exemplifies the complex relationship between the Mexican church and state, then-President Jose Lopez Portillo himself offered to pay the 50 pesos fine.) http://online.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748703740704575095704065365166
The persecution in Mexico was so severe that in 1935 there were 17 states in Mexico that did not have a single licensed priest legally allowed to minister to the people.
There are millions of Mexicans who call themselves “Catholics” because that’s what their parents and grandparents said, but they are not even baptized and have never been catechized. I’m not kidding. I know this because I seen it on this side of the border with Mexican immigrants (legal and not) who are adults and have never been baptized.
“And just whose fault is that?”
Theirs.
“Seems the RCC isn’t doing such a great job of catechizing its members and is remiss in dealing with that.”
Many bishops, priests and lay people are not doing as well as they should. It is not the Church, just some of the workers.
“You’re complaining to the wrong people about how Catholics are behaving.”
I’m not complaining and I’m not complaining to the wrong people.
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