Posted on 04/28/2015 8:36:56 AM PDT by RnMomof7
Its a question that requires little thought to answer; are you infallible? It ranks right up there with, Are you God? But to Catholic apologists the question is quite serious; thats because they believe that there is a man on earth who, on the subject of faith and morals, is infallible; they call him, holy father. See, it does rank right up there with, Are you God, at least when coming from people who think their leader is equal with God on deciding issues of faith and morals.
According to Catholic apologist, John Martignoni, this question should cause Protestants to suddenly doubt everything they believe, and Catholics should take comfort in knowing they and only they, have an infallible leader here on earth. But how can they know? Is there one Catholic person out there, besides the pope of course, who will confess to being infallible? And if a Catholic is not infallible, how can he or she know their pope is infallible? They cant! So if they cannot infallibly declare their pope to be infallible, then their assertion is nothing more than a fallible opinion. And if they are wrong, which my fallible counter-assertion says they are, then they are being deceived.
The logic that so often accompanies claims of papal infallibility goes something like this: Jesus did not leave His people vulnerable to the doctrinal whims of competing leaders.
The logic used is quite revealing; it indicates very strongly that those who use it have no idea what it means to have the gift of the Holy Spirit, because if they had the gift of the Holy Spirit they would not be looking to Rome for infallible direction. It also reveals that they think everyone else is like them, wanting to follow the whims of their leaders. It also denies the notion that Christ has relationship with man through the gift of the Holy Spirit. Their magisterium reserves that privilege for themselves and people buy into it. Its no different than Mormons following their prophet in Utah.
The pope is the head of the Roman Catholic Church, but the Apostle Paul explicitly said that Christ is the head of His Church and He reconciles all things to Himself. To wit, Catholics will be quick to agree that Christ is the head, but then immediately contradict themselves by saying, but He established the papacy through which He reveals His truths . Based on what? If Christ is the head and we are the body, where does the papacy fit in? I see no evidence of this claim in Scripture or history, so if the evidence is not there the papacy must belong to a different body; one that is not associated with Christ and His church.
In his newsletter on his website where he shares chapter one of his new book, Blue Collar Apologetics, John Martignoni instructs his faithful followers to establish the fact that Protestants are not infallible early on in discussions with them. The purpose of doing this is to attempt to convince the Protestant that he could be wrong about what he believes. The funny thing is Martignoni never tells his readers what to do if the Protestant turns the question back on them; and that is most certainly what is likely to happen.
Does Martignoni really not see this coming, or is he simply at a loss for how to address it? Once a Catholic apologist is faced with admitting their own fallibility, they will immediately be forced to deal with the realization that their claim of papal infallibility is itself a fallible opinion; so they must, therefore, admit that they could be wrong as well. And once they realize the playing field is level, the evidence will do the talking.
A Catholic apologist who is willing to concede that his belief regarding papal infallibility is nothing more than a fallible opinion will likely ask another similar question, What church do you belong to and how old is it? In their minds this is the true gotcha question. They believe, in their fallible opinions of course, that they belong to the church founded by Christ nearly 2000 years ago. But the fact is, and yes it is a fact, there was no Roman Catholic Church 2000 years ago; it took a few hundred years for that to develop. Furthermore, by their own admission, the doctrines they hold equal in authority to the Bible, which they call sacred traditions, did not exist at the time of the apostles; that also is a fact.
There is something, however, that is clearly older than any Protestant or Roman Catholic Church and that is the written books of the Bible. If a person bases his or her faith on these written works then no supposed authority that came later can undermine the power of God working through them. It is unfortunate that when a person comes to Christ in faith through reading the Bible, that there are so-called Christians who come along to cast doubt in their minds. For example, in a tract on the Catholic Answers website called, By What Authority, it is stated, In fact, not one book of the Bible was written for non-believers.
Not according to the Apostle John who explicitly wrote, These are written that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that believing you may have life in His name? He did not say these are written because you believe; he said, these are written that you may believe. Johns gospel is a firsthand written testimony of the ministry of Jesus for the purpose of bringing people to Him, and Catholic apologists are telling us it was never Johns intention for us to become believers by reading it? Amazing; isnt it? The Catholic Answers philosophy seems to be to make up facts rather than face them.
So for the sake of the next John Martignoni disciple who wants to ask me if I am infallible, the answer is no; and incidentally your answer to my identical question is also no. Thus I am not interested in your fallible opinion that your pope is infallible when speaking on faith and morals. Perhaps one of you can go tell Mr. Martignoni that chapter his one is incomplete, and that he might want to consider adding a realistic response to his question rather than a bunch of scenarios where the Protestant is simply dumbfounded. His current scenarios might have been fun for him to write, but they are only going to embarrass his readers when they go out armed with the Martignoni sword.
Count me in when he says "we".
me too
Amen
+1
Glory to God for your encouragement and heart for souls! And see this page of comparative quotes.
Along the line i was speaking of are the massive number of classic devotional ad evangelical hymns/songs written about Christ and the relationship with Him, and other Heavenly things resulting from that.
I am not aware of the comparative genre of other religions, but i am sure both the kind of expression and their number and popularity then Christianity is unique. Blind Fanny Crosby alone penned thousands!
I have said before that if you had only 3 documents to take with you then it should be the Bible, a hymn book and your address and tel. # book.
The question must be asked, where these writers fantasizing such things as "He walks with me and He talks with me along the narrow way?" Who would write such about Muhammad and find millions singing them?
Certainly souls can write about the fantasies they have about a person, but we are talking her about a personal relationship that multitudes identify with, as well as deep Scriptural truths they have found to be real, and of a living hope of the future flowing from what they have realized.
Sunday, the man who was my close friend and brought the Good News to me more than forty years ago, died. He was my Brother in Christ. He had become a Mormon, but he was first a Christian Born Again. I expect I'll see him very soon for the Rapture is nigh at hand, even at the door.
Oh, and thanks for the link. Bookmarked it to my favorites.
Even so faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being alone. Yea, a man may say, Thou hast faith, and I have works: shew me thy faith without thy works, and I will shew thee my faith by my works.Remember we said earlier that faith doesn't come to the party alone. There will always be works resulting from genuine faith. So we're still on the same page up to that point. But look what James says next. He rebukes the man who says he has faith, but whose life does not show it. How? By declaring that faith is manifested through good works! Just as you yourself said earlier. This is truly the evangelical perspective, and I am sorry I am having such a hard time helping you see this.
(James 2:17-18)
Was not Abraham our father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the altar? Seest thou how faith wrought with his works, and by works was faith made perfect? And the scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: and he was called the Friend of God. Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only.Here's the interesting thing about that. What Scripture does both Paul and James use to make their respective cases? This one:
(James 2:21-24)
And Abram said, Behold, to me thou hast given no seed: and, lo, one born in my house is mine heir. And, behold, the word of the LORD came unto him, saying, This shall not be thine heir; but he that shall come forth out of thine own bowels shall be thine heir. And he brought him forth abroad, and said, Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to number them: and he said unto him, So shall thy seed be. And he believed in the LORD; and he counted it to him for righteousness.But look back at James. When did James see this justification taking place? When Abraham acted on his faith in offering Isaac. But when did the accounting of his faith as righteousness take place according to Genesis? Before Isaac was ever born, all the way back to when he believed the promise of God, and had no act to offer at that time. Now bear with me a little more, and look at Paul's use of that incident:
(Genesis 15:3-6)
What shall we say then that Abraham our father, as pertaining to the flesh, hath found? For if Abraham were justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but not before God. For what saith the scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness. Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt. But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness.Now we know that one Holy Spirit inspired the whole of Scripture, so we know there cannot be a true contradiction. James and Paul and Moses must all agree, when rightly understood. Yet it does superficially look as though Paul wishes to exclude works from justification, and James wishes us to see them as related.
(Romans 4:1-5)
This is he, of whom it is written, Behold, I send my messenger before thy face, which shall prepare thy way before thee. For I say unto you, Among those that are born of women there is not a greater prophet than John the Baptist: but he that is least in the kingdom of God is greater than he. And all the people that heard him, and the publicans, justified God, being baptized with the baptism of John.Now, the people hearing John's message are not justifying God in any forensic sense. That would be blasphemy, to say God had to be acquitted of some sin. Rather, it is a more basic sense, agreeing with God that He is right about something, or right to do something, or worthy of praise, etc. In other words, it fits perfectly with James' use of the term in chapter 2, because with James it does indeed have that "diagnostic sense," as you put it, of showing true faith, not causing redemption. And in James it comes in, not at the moment of belief, but later, when some overt action is set forth to demonstrate that true faith. So here justification is NOT forensic, but illustrative. It doesn't vacate the penalty of sin; it vindicates that sinner as one who has true faith.
(Luke 7:27-29)
Thou believest that there is one God; thou doest well: the devils also believe, and tremble.What good does it do to believe there is one God? Even the devils believe that, yet their intellectual assent to the truth cannot save them. They remain devils. But as Paul shows in Romans, Abraham had a living faith, much more than an assent to some list of facts, but a full heart trust in God that was real, and God counted it for righteousness. It was by his faith Abraham was justified. The justification needed no other good work. But good works resulted from it.
(James 2:19)
This has been explained to many people many times. Logic would dictate, that sooner or later, it might sink in. 🇵🇭😀
ALL those song writers, over hundreds of years ... ALL seeing and saying the same thing, yet having never seen ... SAY.
Thanx for today's meditation
A long time ago where was a certain farmer who had a beautiful white horse whom the neighbors marveled at. But one day the horse ran away. His neighbors gathered together upon hearing the news and sympathetically said to the farmer, Thats too bad.
But the farmer simply replied.Lets see,
About a week later the horse returned on his own and brought seven wild stallions with it. The neighbors then exclaimed. Look how many more horses you have now, What a good thing!
But the farmer simply replied.Lets see,
The next day, the farmers son attempted to ride one of the wild horses, but was thrown off and broke his leg. Then the neighbors said, That's too bad
But the farmer simply replied.Lets see,
The next week, war broke out and military officers soon came to town to conscript young men into the service, including the farmer's son. But after they saw the sons broken leg, they rejected him. Then the neighbors gathered round the farmer to tell him how fortunate he was.
But the farmer simply replied.Lets see...
O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out! (Romans 11:33)
This story does not mean such things as the 7 wild horses showing up was not a blessing, and that we are not to rejoice at such, but that God makes everything work for good for those who love Him, especially for our soul. Even though we may not be able to imagine how, yet we can thank God in all things because He is able willing and faithful to makes all things work out for good if and as we surrender and obey Him.
That the Lord will be exalted and glorified and justified in all that He does should be our only ultimate concern, and source of our joy. .
Jesus said to his disciples:
I am the true vine, and my Father is the vine grower.
He takes away every branch in me that does not bear fruit,
[note: the Father can "take away" a branch--i.e. one of us believers--even if that branch is "IN HIM"; this isn't describing an unbeliever. Beliecvers who do not bear fruit will be removed.]
and everyone that does he prunes so that it bears more fruit.
You are already pruned because of the word that I spoke to you.
Remain in me, as I remain in you.
[Why would Jesus urge a believer to REMAIN in Him? To "remain" in Him, they first have to BE in Him, yes? So what does this mean, re: the Protestant idea of "once saved, always saved"? It completely refutes it, apparently... or else Jesus would be absurdly warning His disciples against an impossibility: akin to saying, "Don't you dare create any squar circles, lest you die!" Given the choice between thinking that Jesus has "lost it", and thinking that the "once saved, always saved" proponents are dead wrong, I'll always choose the latter.]
Just as a branch cannot bear fruit on its own unless it remains on the vine, so neither can you unless you remain in me.
[Remaining in Christ is a free choice, and refusing (or neglecting) to remain in Him leads to us failing to bear fruit... which has bad consequences for teh believer who does that.]
I am the vine, you are the branches.
Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much fruit,
because without me you can do nothing.
Anyone who does not remain in me
will be thrown out like a branch and wither;
people will gather them and throw them into a fire
and they will be burned.
[This doesn't sound like Heaven, to me; rather, it sounds like hell and eternal damnation. Those who WERE "in Him", but who do not REMAIN in Him and produce fruit, will be thrown out, gathered, thrown into the fire, and burned. This is serious.]
If you remain in me and my words remain in you,
[Again: note the "IF"? It is no "automatic guarantee"--we have to REMAIN in Him, and we have to let His Word REMAIN in us, on pain of being thrown into the fire. This is Jesus talking, not me!]
ask for whatever you want and it will be done for you.
By this is my Father glorified,
that you bear much fruit and become my disciples.
[A believer need not be a true disciple; one can be a mere "hearer"--and even a believer--of the Word, and deceive Himself, as St. James warns (James 1:22ff). If we are not "doers that act" (James 1:25), we deceive ourselves, and the consequences are grave... as described by Our Lord, above.]
Amen, bro. That right there is the bottom line. :)
Peace,
SR
[FatherofFive]Now, since you didn't clarify why you asked your first "how many churches" question, I was forced to assume that it had something to do with your subsequent statement--i.e. that those Churches were somehow "separate", with "no ties to any of the others". But then you have the following exchange with me:
Christ established His Church. One, not many.
[CynicalBear]
How many "churches" did Jesus have John write to in Revelation?
[FatherofFive]
Great question. There is a Catholic Church in New York. There is a Catholic Church in Boston. There is a Catholic Church in San Diego. And on and on. Many Churches. One Church. All these Churches are one. One Body. One spirit. There is no question on what the meaning of what the meaning of the word 'is' is.
[CynicalBear]
That doesnt work FatherofFive. Each was a separate entity with a separate candlestick. No ties to any of the others. Jesus didnt address one entity and tell that entity to correct its subordinates.
[paladinan]There's where your position crashes to the ground. Not only is this last sentence obviously your mere raw opinion, but it doesn't logically follow from anything you said in the previous sentences (all of which were quite accurate, in and of themselves).
Perhaps you might explain why Jesus referred to "building His Church" in the *singular* (ekklesia), not in the plural (ekklesiai)? Or are you suggesting that only one of the seven local Churches (we call them "dioceses"... or "bishoprics", if you're British) had the promise never to have the gates of Hades prevail against it? [...]
[CynicalBear]
Only those called by God, born from above, and indwelt by the Holy Spirit are part of the ekklesia of Christ. It includes all of those "called out" throughout history. That is the invisible ekklesia as only God knows who they all are.
[By the way: you never explained clearly how you came to these conclusions via "sola Scriptura"; you simply threw a few Bible verses, and left the matter, without explaining how you thought those verses proved your point. Ironically enough, I agree with the definitions you gave, so far as they go... though I agree for what I think are very different REASONS than you might give.]
The local "assemblies" are members of the universal ekklesia and are the visible part of that ekklesia.
[Again: I agree... but this is shaping up to be an interesting problem. More, in a moment.]
Christ is the head of that ekklesia and present with them when meeting with as few as two or three.
[Definitely.]
There is no single earthly organized hierarchical structure such as the Catholic Church would have you believe.
IIRC, we read that Abraham and the entourage (including his son) were heading to the altar mountain and Abraham told the entourage to wait at the foot of the mountain, that ‘THEY’ would return to them when the sacrifice was completed. I have thought of that in regards to what Paul wrote in Romans regarding ‘faithing’ in God’s Promises. Abraham was so sure of God’s Promise in Isaac would Abraham be blessed that even going to sacrifice him on that altar he told the men with them to wait for THEM to return from the event. Brother, that’s walking in FAITH.
I only have a moment; I’ll try to write more when I have more time... but just a quick question:
The word which my translation rendered “lacking”, you render “behind”; but the Greek word is “husterEmata”, which means “deficiency”, even according to Strong’s Protestant etymological analysis. Compare it with the following occurrences of the same word in the NT, and see if “behind” or “deficient” is more accurate:
Luke 21:4
2 Corinthians 8:14, 9:12, 11:9
1 Thessalonians 3:10
1 Corinthians 16:17
Also: redemptive suffering does not expiate sin; rather, it calls down graces by which the person in question can more perfectly cooperate with the expiation of Christ’s redeeming death on the cross.
More later; must dash!
"I am in the course of furnishing the complete fulfilment of what in my case still remains in arrear of fellowship of affliction with Christ" (derived from Col 1:24)In which case it is Paul's view of fellowship with Christ that defines the gap, not any deficiency in what Christ has done, which I'm sure if Paul heard it he would reject with a hearty "God forbid!"
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