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What Is The Brown Scapular
Eternal Life Blog ^ | August 29,2014 | Eternal life

Posted on 05/09/2015 7:44:31 AM PDT by RnMomof7

Millions of sincere Catholics wear the brown scapular thinking by doing so it will help them spiritually. They believed the report that Mary made and is backing a salvation promise in connection with the brown scapular hundreds of years ago based on their religious traditions. Over the years wearing the brown scapular has been perpetuated by sincere Catholic leaders, such as the one in this video, but it is in complete futility that it is worn. It is a false hope and a spiritual snare. wearing brown scapularIt is not based on God’s truth and is, therefore, just as deadly for the sincere Catholic as it is for the Hindu who bathes in the Ganges River thinking his sins will be washed away in the water or for the Muslim who kisses the black stone of Kaaba to be forgiven! [The picture to the right is Mel Gibson, the director of the Passion of Christ, wearing a brown scapular as he smokes.]

I too once wore the brown scapular as an Ex Roman Catholic. I know what it is like to be taught something and accept it as truth to find out later it is not only unscriptural, but anti-scriptural. It hurts, but TRUTH is what we must stand on to be safe. It takes humility in such cases to turn.

NOTE: At about 2:23 time-wise into the video, the speaker is quoted below. How could anyone deny that Mary is deified in Catholicism? Surely, this rampant idolatry is grieving to the Lord Jesus Christ and God the Father. This is what Catholicism teaches about the brown scapular:

Brown Scapular Catholic Propaganda

And so, wearing of the brown scapular reminds us, should remind us, of three things. First, that we are children of Mary. Second of all, that we need to work for our Lady. And finally, it should be a garment of humility and penance. First, by the brown scapular we profess ourselves to be children of Mary. The scapular of our Lady is a badge or a uniform so to speak by which we profess to whom we belong and who we serve. Likewise, our Lady in turn by wearing the brown scapular, she recognizes us as her children, as her special children. And because of that, she consequently protects us and watches over us. The brown scapular should also remind us that we need to work for our Lady because the scapular, which means shoulder garment, was originally that, it was a garment worn by religious in order to protect their habit, their religious habit that they wore on a daily basis during those periods of work to keep it from getting dirty, stained, from ripping, etc. and so therefore the scapular is a working garb. And so this should remind us that there’s no room for lazy piety. If we wear the brown scapular and we consider ourselves our Lady’s children, there’s no place for lazy piety but rather we should fill our lives with good works. This brown scapular should remind us the need to faithfully fulfill our daily duties, and to make another adaptation of Scripture, to labor as good soldiers of the Immaculate. Finally, the third place, the brown scapular is also a garment of humility and of penance. So in a spirit of penance, we should accept all the difficulties of our state of life and all the sufferings that our Lady may want to send us. And the scapular will give us the strength to do this. In all of our difficulties, we can always grab onto our brown scapular, remind ourselves of our Lady’s protection, her watchfulness, her presence and especially at the moment of death, when we can call to mind our Lady’s promise of salvation. Our Lady of Mount Carmel, pray for us.

* Not a single word about Jesus was mentioned there.
* The brown scapular is 100% religious mythology and idolatry, as Mary is deified as a type of Savior.
* No Bible light shines from such brown scapular Catholic tradition.



TOPICS: Apologetics; Evangelical Christian; Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: deception; idolatry; superstition; tradition
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To: Elsie
I've heard that Catholics make the best Mormons.

And JW's ...(Most that show up at my door were former RC)

441 posted on 05/11/2015 6:29:04 AM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: RnMomof7

My BIL is a former Catholic turned JW.


442 posted on 05/11/2015 6:39:05 AM PDT by bonfire
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To: BeauBo; ealgeone; metmom; Springfield Reformer
To be rigidly certain of an interpretation of something written thousands of years ago in a very different context, and translated through several different languages in many different contexts; strikes me as a poor risk in practice. Fundamentalism, by definition.

That is quite a broad statement, and which applies to Rome and her "interpretation" of Scripture, history and tradition also, and more so, since her rigid certainty of such rests upon the novel and unScriptural premise of ensured perpetual magisterial infallibility.

For Rome has presumed to infallibly declare she is and will be perpetually infallible whenever she speaks in accordance with her infallibly defined (scope and subject-based) formula, which renders her declaration that she is infallible, to be infallible, as well as all else she accordingly declares.

If millions of people practice using a small brown scapula to try to improve their behavior, that is a great thing.

It is not simply wearing a brown scapula, but what it represents and the teaching behind it.

If millions of people practice using a small Hindu bindi to try to improve their behavior, that is not a great thing, because the deception it represents is ultimately detrimental.

I see that your response resulted in a further exchange by you, which i would like to respond to.

that scripture is divinely protected from alteration, and that every word is literally true. It is an act of faith, in defiance of easily demonstrable facts. It can lead to extreme conclusions, when logic and judgement are suspended, or deemed to be overridden by divine authority.

Which, unless you are referring to the original autographs as per standard evangelical definition, would seem to place you at odds with your brethren who hold to historical RC teaching (not the Rome is always consistent with herself)

The traditional understanding of the doctrine of biblical inerrancy is perhaps most powerfully and clearly expressed by St. Augustine in one of his letters to St. Jerome:

For I confess to your Charity that I have learned to yield this respect and honour only to the canonical books of Scripture: of these alone do I most firmly believe that the authors were completely free from error. And if in these writings I am perplexed by anything which appears to me opposed to truth, I do not hesitate to suppose that either the MS. is faulty or the translator has not caught the meaning of what was said, or I myself have failed to understand it . . . I believe, my brother, that this is your own opinion as well as mine.1

In his great encyclical on biblical studies, Providentissimus Deus (1893), Pope Leo XIII cites these words of Augustine and adds that Augustine's insight was by no means singular, but it represented the consensus of the tradition: ". . . emphatically were all the Fathers and Doctors agreed that the divine writings, as left by the hagiographers, are free from all error . . ."2 Leo XIII re-asserted this teaching with fervor. Leo also stated in no uncertain terms the traditional teaching that the inerrancy of the Bible may not be restricted to matters of faith and morals, but rather is plenary in scope:

But it is absolutely wrong and forbidden, either to narrow inspiration to certain parts only of Holy Scripture, or to admit that the sacred writer has erred. For the system of those who, in order to rid themselves of these difficulties, do not hesitate to concede that divine inspiration regards the things of faith and morals, and nothing beyond, because (as they wrongly think) in a question of the truth or falsehood of a passage, we should consider not so much what God has said as the reason and purpose which He had in mind in saying it — this system cannot be tolerated.3

In addition, Leo draws attention to the weight of this teaching:

And so far is it from being possible that any error can coexist with inspiration, that inspiration not only is essentially incompatible with error, but excludes and rejects it as absolutely and necessarily as it is impossible that God Himself, the supreme Truth, can utter that which is not true. This is the ancient and unchanging faith of the Church, solemnly defined in the Councils of Florence and of Trent, and finally confirmed and more expressly formulated by the Council of the Vatican.4 - https://www.catholicculture.org/culture/library/view.cfm?recnum=8441

There are conflicts in scripture

Estimated to be about one half of one percent of actual ones which do not have reasonable explanations, if that many, in contrast to Islamic and skeptic claims, and none of which would alter any necessary doctrine.

Christian Apologist Norman Geisler states: "There is widespread misunderstanding among critics about 'errors' in the biblical manuscripts. Some have estimated there are about 200,000 of them. First of all, these are not 'errors' but variant readings, the VAST MAJORITY of which are strictly grammatical. Second, these readings are spread throughout the more than 5300 manuscripts, so that a variant spelling of one letter in one verse in 2000 manuscripts is counted as 2000 'errors.' Textual scholars Westcott and Hort estimated that only ONE IN SIXTY of these variants have significance. This would leave a text 98.33 percent pure. Philip Schaff calculated that, of the 150,000 variants known in his day, only 400 changed the meaning of the passage, ONLY FIFTY were of real significance, and NOT EVEN ONE affected 'an article of faith or a precept of duty which is not abundantly sustained by other and undoubted passages, or by the whole tenor of Scripture teaching' (Schaff, 177)

"Most other ancient books are not so well authenticated. New Testament scholar Bruce Metzger estimated that the Mahabharata of Hinduism is copied with only about 90 percent accuracy and Homer's Illiad with about 95 percent. By comparison, HE ESTIMATED THE NEW TESTAMENT IS ABOUT 99.5 PERCENT…" (Norman L. Geisler, Baker Encyclopedia of Christian Apologetics, pp. 532-533; bold and capital emphasis ours)

There are varied versions

Indeed, as there are varied church versions, neither of negates the preservation of the word of God or His church, which can be seen manifest amidst the tares.

There are non-literal allegorical statements in scripture, like the parables told by Jesus.

Indeed, as Fund. affirm, despite the Cath. strawman of them. But the latter have taught liberal revisionism for decades, teaching in their own Bible commentary that OT historical accounts were fables or folk tales, though the NT (the integrity of which they also impugn) references them as literal.

There are timelines (like the flood) which don’t hold up to archeological evidence.

Thus the Lord and Peter referenced a fable, while the conclusions of archeological evidence - and sometimes the evidence itself - has often been shown to be disputable and subject to change. It also did not find warrant for the existence of Bethlehem in times past, among other Scriptural facts.

Councils of people selected what was to be included and excluded.

Rather, both men and writings of God were discerned and progressively established as being of God by the people, before conciliar decisions which basically can only officially ratify the best consent, but not as possessing ensured perpetual magisterial infallibility. And which establishment was essentially due to their unique and endurng Divine qualities and attestations.

Meanings and usage change over time. If I were to note in my journal in 1970 that someone was cool, by 2570 a reader might think it miraculous that their body temperature was abnormally low.

This is true, which is why Caths engage in etymological fallacy in defending giving presbuteros/episkopos the formal title of hiereus (priest from "preost," and which was due to imposed functional equivalence), which the NT never does for its ordained pastors, as hiereus uniquely only is used for Jewish or pagan sacerdotal priests.

Which was recently dealt with here by God's grace.

You (anyone) must interpret words to comprehend their meaning. If you insist that you absolutely understand the scripture correctly, you are claiming to know God’s mind - quite a bit of hubris in that.

Which - unless one is claiming 100% correct understanding - means that God commands us to believe and obey what we cannot be sure of, or that a perpetual infallible magisterium is essential for this, that being the historical magisterium, to dissent from which is disallowed (which effectively nukes the NT church).

What if that bit about scripture is to be read, rather than interpreted, was added by a doctrinaire cleric hundreds of years after Christ, who was in tiff arguing with someone over meaning, and wanted to shut down debate?

Which is basically what RCs have claimed here, that Rome does not interpret Scripture but declares what it means. However, all communication is to be interpreted, meaning understood. And which, as in everyday speech, does require taking into account genre, and immediate and larger contexts, and linguistical meanings, as evangelical scholars recognize.

It is a circular argument to say that you must accept the absolute authority of a document, based on the document itself.

Indeed. Souls came to recognized men and writings of God as being so in the light of evidence. And is was upon Scriptural substantiation in word and in power the the Lord and His church established their Truth claims, as Scripture, as written, became the standard the assured word of God and the standard for obedience and testing Truth claims, as is abundantly evidenced .

However, a faithful RC is not to ascertain the veracity of RC teaching by examination of evidences (for that reason). For to do so would be to doubt the claims of Rome to be the assuredly infallible magisterium by which a RC obtains assurance of Truth.

You deny that there are conflicts within scripture. Try Google. Do you know why Matthew, Mark and Luke are called the synoptic gospels? Because John is so different.

Google is also useful for providing sources which testify to the remarkable preservation of Scripture, refuting typical Islamic/skeptic claims, which it seems you have swallowed some of. .

(You may also wanted to prayerfully use Google's own Apologetics search of approx 135 Christian apologetics websites and blogs. Or my own here ).

Which would include the idea that John being different represents a real conflict with the synoptics, which instead all 4 gospels are complimentary, not contradictory.

The passion narratives dealt with here are helpful (and with a nice chart) as well as here . Also useful .

If parables are not allegories (despite the generally accepted definitions of theses words), do you believe that Jesus was actually concerned with raising grain, grapes, fishing and sheep herding, rather than making (allegorical, non-literal) teaching points about human behavior?

I am not sure where you get the idea that being a Fund. means that you take all of Scripture as literal genre, rather than literally being the word of God, even when stating the conclusion of the natural man (some of Ecclesiastes) or in using similes, figurative language, or allegory, etc. It is Caths who impose literal language which makes Christ into requiring consumption of human flesh via priests in order to obtain spiritual life.

Parables use allegory, using known physical realities which correspond to unseen spiritual realities, and which never use real names. Which is why Lk. 16:19-31 is not a parable, as if it were and annihilationists are correct, then for the first and only time then the Lord was using science fiction, that of souls being physically dead but sentient, to correspond to a spiritual reality (of Gentiles being saved and the Jews damned).

People absorbed by such dogmatic interpretation are likely to get sidetracked into quibbling over doctrinal differences of interpretation and generate schisms within the Christian community, rather than focusing on bringing everyone together and improving their holiness and happiness.

Then see to thine own house as a RC, while the ambiguous non-dogmatic non-literal approach to Scripture which you seem to advocate is what is contradictory with Scripture, and is also judgmental and divisive, while its unity is in error, and defies solidity.

And if you insist on literal fundamentalism, isn’t there all of the Old Testament genocide, slavery, rape and torture to reinstate?

No, as this ignores the differences btwn basic universal moral laws and culturally applied laws based on them, and restrictions, and those which allowed something, vs commanded it, and covenantal distinctions.

You sem to have spent too much time reading atheists versus refutation. If you want more, then get back to me on each issue, and by Go';s grace i may respond to it. And once you are born again, then you will realize how true and powerful the word of God is.

The point is the spirit of the law, not the letter of the law, when it comes to spiritual realm - a very central message of Jesus to the legalistic and ritualistic religious leaders of his days on Earth.

Out of context, for while keeping the letter of the entire law as the standard of holiness and means of salvation is opposed to seeking to keep the spirit or intent of it after being justified by faith in the One who perfectly fulfilled the entire Law, yet keeping the spirit usually means keeping the Lord letter of the moral Law. Which Christ certainty upheld, as does the rest of the NT.

But the liberal hermeneutic allows for rejecting the condemnation of such things as literal adultery.

The fundamentalist muslims of ISIS and al Quaeda are derisively called takfiri by other muslims. Takfiri means “those who declare others to be heretics”. Anyone who varies from their reading of scripture (and the rules they use to interpret it) they attack as heretics

Again, you are certainly at odds which your RC brethren here, or blatantly duplicitous, as it is Rome which has historically specialized in defining and punishing "heretics" even by the use of the sword of men (if not unique to her), while Scripture condemns her as being so, as it teaches there is such a thing as being heretical.

Thus the modern fund. evangelical movement arose to combat liberal revisionist denials of such things as the integrity of Scripture, the virgin birth, the deity of Christ, etc., which also means contending against Cath. inventions not in Scripture and contrary to it.

kind of like another apparently fundamentalist poster accused me of blasphemy, for using the word “interpret” in reference to understanding scripture.

Well, you do have fringe elements here that are usually shunned by the majority once known.

Is your view the New Testament completely supersedes the Old Testament, and that it is therefore not scripture?

Again, where are you getting these ideas? Do you really think rejecting genocide, slavery, rape and torture bcz they are not taught in the NT means rejecting the Old Testament as Scripture???

the politically correct term “manservant” might have been used instead of slave

In fact, Hebrew slaves were basically indentured servants, usually by selling themselves, which even non-Israelis could own for 6 years, and who were to be offered freedom with generous severance pay. This was an alternative to declaring bankruptcy, or prison, or poverty.

Both there are many references to how slaves are to be distinctly legally treated in the Old Testament.

Indeed, and the taking of which was not commanded, but as in the OT, God regulated an existing institution which was a deeply rooted integral part of the ANE economy, and which God made morally tolerable, unlike the image we have from the antebellum South. Slavery was not a monolithic institution, and under Biblical regulation an escaped slave was not to be returned, and was to be set free even because his master knocked a tooth out, which in principle could be used for similar injuries obtaining the same. And as circumscribed, they were partakers of the salvific covenant, and would have much rest on the 7th day and year. And unlike so many without, they had ensured provisions of bed and board. And most slaves became so due to their family selling them or they themselves. Non-Israelis being perpetual property was a means of keeping enemies in subjection. This was a tough world.

In the NT, in a world in which slave revolts did not go well, equal pay was required for slaves, and threatnings forbidden, and obtaining freedom was advocated. And an escaped converted slaves was to be received back as a brother, not a slave, but as Paul himself. Meanwhile, the first organic church had no slaves, and the outworking of the Christian ethos of brotherly love worked toward dispensing of slavery as a hitherto tolerated appendage when it became culturally able to do so. . However, the Romanization of the church and other political factors hindered this on a large scale. And evangelicals were at the forefront of the modern abolition movement.

See more on this complex issue here and here .

There is plenty of scripture on genocide, rape, torture and such; far too much to list - literally thousands of morally questionable references.

In which distinction must be made btwn the record of such, versus Divine command. And the latter case was rare, and limited to certain tribes in a certain place, unlike Islam, whose Qur'an lack the historical context and theological teaching to make such distinctions. And the manifest supernatural attestation that God was leading the Hebrews, which preceded the covenant the Hebrews choose to enter into, and the commands to exterminate the Canaanites and Amaklekites, while the Flood was not by the hands of man.

And in so doing the Lord saved the innocent from becoming like their fathers and incurring the same eternal damnation, taking them to Heaven, while finally - after long-suffering generations of them - preventing a terminally immoral destructive people from replicating themselves further, and infecting the nation whom God raised up to show the world who the one true God was, to be benefit of all. And cannot the Giver of life take it, and make it work out for the good of those who love God, and thus good?

But atheists complain that God does not deal with Islamic type extremism (and rationalize away the culpability of what atheism did and does under Communism, etc.) and then complain when He decisively does. And presume moral supremacy and omniscience in judging God as being a murderer, as if the Giver of life is immoral for taking life, and as if He does not make it work out not only justly but mercifully. Eternity will reveal why and how God justly allowed the Holocaust and the positive effects it had.

You just have to have your own moral compass, guided by the principles of Christian teaching, rather than by literal adherence to every word. That is the liberal moral relativism that prohomosexual apologists engage in (dealt with here and here by God's grace), and which negates Scripture as providing any coherent transcendent moral absolutes, esp as regard sexual aspects.

Is the Old Testament no longer scripture in your view? It explicitly prescribes rules concerning slavery practices. Jesus did not specifically address slavery in the New Testament, except to use cases of slavery to make other points, as I cited previously.

Which is just what prohomosexual apologists invoke in trying to negate the Scriptural injunctions against homosexual relations. See here .

Rape has many prescriptions: If a man is caught in the act of raping a young woman who is not engaged, he must pay fifty pieces of silver to her father. Then he must marry the young woman Deuteronomy 22:28.

Indeed (unless she was betrothed, in which he was a dead man). And unlike others, he can never put her away. And thus rape is not sanctioned, but penalized, and rather than leaving the violated women as a widow, or devaluing virginity, care for here was mandated for the rest of her life. And even you think neglect of wives was allowed, then you ignore that even a second wife (concubines were wives) taken out of those who were slaves was to be set free if the husband did not get her equal care (including children) as wife #1. And we can see from Gn. 34 and other places the accountability souls could be expected to face in taking wives.

If you want to a literal fundamental reading of scripture, then either you do away with the old testament, or you carry over a bunch of war crimes, tortures, stoning, slavery and so on. A lot of it reads like the Quran.

If you ignore the critical distinctions such as the unmistakable supernatural attestation that it was God who was leading them, not just some dreams in the night. The Qur'an is much a corruption of what it takes from Scripture, thus similarities are to be expected.

So it boils down to these choices: 1. Reject Old Testament outright. 2. Accept the Old Testament prescriptions as scripture - therefore they should be reinstated. 3. Make moral judgements about what to accept and how to interpret conflicts - therefore reject fundamentalism.

Wrong, as this is simply a false dilemma, for the Old Testament prescriptions being as scripture does not translate into all that is written as being in the same class of laws, so that laws such as forbid eating shellfish are literally universal enjoined for all time in all places for all places, as are basic moral laws on human behavior. Which obfuscation again what pro sodomitic apologists use in attempting to invalidate the injunctions against sodomy. See here .

The OT clearly reveals God would provide a new covenant, which is distinctly "not according" to the Sinaitic one, and the NT clearly states such differences, Col. 2:16,17; Heb. 4:3; 9:10; 10:1-22; Gal. 4:10).

And how the kingdom of God into which all believers are placed is not of this world, (JN. 18:36) thus its means of warfare are not, (2Co. 10:3,4; Eph. 6:12) though the state is sanctioned to use the sword of men, (Rm. 13:1-7; 1Pr. 2:14) can carry out Biblical penalties against moral sins.

And which historical Christian fundamentalism manifests it understands, and thus do not fly planes into airplanes like an Islamic fundy find sanction to do, if following post Medenic Muhammad.

Unable to refute a single point on substance. Resorting to personal attack. I accept your surrender.

I would say that "If you don't understand the OT and the NT and how they operate, I will not be able to make it clear to you," since your postings indicate willful ignorance and indoctrination by liberals and atheists, means you marginalized yourself as unfit for meaningful dialog on this pro-God anti liberal site. Sad to see you seem to believe the latter.


443 posted on 05/11/2015 6:46:28 AM PDT by daniel1212 (Come to the Lord Jesus as a contrite damned+destitute sinner, trust Him to save you, then live 4 Him)
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To: BeauBo; daniel1212

Requires saving faith in only Lord Jesus Christ to lead one to the true wisdom of God, evidenced by the living Word of God and enlightened daily by the Holy Spirit. God testifying to God.

Other manners of human education are all vanity and fruitless, but you both probably know that already.


444 posted on 05/11/2015 7:02:54 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: Resettozero
Correcting your misquote of 1 Timothy 5:14...(ESV) So I would have younger widows marry, bear children, manage their households, and give the adversary no occasion for slander.

Thanks for the tip. I'd call what I did misediting: what I posted at "1 Timothy" otherwise duplicates of what lies two entries below in 1 Thessalonians 5:14. I apologize for any misleading. 1 Timothy 5:14 is not what I intended, although coincidentally (or providentially?) the end there has a slight connection to other texts.

Instead, substitute this text and mentally move it to a place with the other "evidently not opposed" entries:

[1 Timothy 6:11] But thou, O man of God, flee these things; and follow after righteousness, godliness, faith, love, patience, meekness.
[These qualities are evidently not opposed to one another.]

That reminds me: take note that both 1 Timothy (5:20) and Titus (1:13) also contain commands to rebuke (Titus 1:13 actually has "rebuke them sharply"]. Unless contradictions appear in the same book, though, these rebukes are probably not what the world has in mind when it rebukes. Standing for righteousness, godliness, and faith does not expel love, patience, and meekness; standing for love, patience, and meekness does not expel righteousness, godliness, and faith.

And I was just reminded further of Jude 9, which I didn't have in mind earlier because it wasn't so directly relevant. It contains an interesting example:

[Jude 8] Likewise also these filthy dreamers defile the flesh, despise dominion, and speak evil of dignities.
[9] Yet Michael the archangel, when contending with the devil he disputed about the body of Moses, durst not bring against him a railing accusation, but said, The Lord rebuke thee.
[10] But these speak evil of those things which they know not: but what they know naturally, as brute beasts, in those things they corrupt themselves.

445 posted on 05/11/2015 7:07:28 AM PDT by Lonely Bull ("When he is being rude or mean it drives people _away_ from his confession and _towards_ yours.")
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To: Lonely Bull

All of these Scriptures clearly are worthy of being honored by heeding them and performing them as one is led by the Holy Spirit of God.

What is not clear is what you are intending to accomplish by posting these particular pieces of Scripture on this forum. as opposed to ANYTHING from the Holy Bible.


446 posted on 05/11/2015 7:12:50 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: Resettozero; Elsie
What is not clear is what you are intending to accomplish by posting these particular pieces of Scripture on this forum. as opposed to ANYTHING from the Holy Bible.

I was responding to a post by Elsie (post #437) that quotes yet other texts.

The general theme of this subthread concerns how to post in the Religion Forum. A running theme in other threads (as well as this one) is that we readers are exhorted to go to the Bible for truth and guidance. Accordingly, over time I reviewed the New Testament letters concerning speech and related matters.

The quotation from Matthew 23 is not the Bible's only guidance on speech or writing. This quotation, in conjunction with other things in the Bible, would establish that using "you hypocrites" isn't absolutely sinful, but other scriptural evidence makes me wonder just how often Christians are called to follow this particular example.

(Even if you readers don't believe that calling others "you fool" may put you in spiritual danger--see Matthew 5:22--calling people "fools" may lead to other problems. I don't advise readers to try it very often, whether on this forum or in real life.)

In looking up 1 Corinthians 11:1 just now, I found yet another text that I missed earlier:

[1 Corinthians 10:31] Whether therefore ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God.
[32] Give none offence, neither to the Jews, nor to the Gentiles, nor to the church of God:
[33] Even as I please all men in all things, not seeking mine own profit, but the profit of many, that they may be saved.
[11:1] Be ye followers of me, even as I also am of Christ.

(At least a few newer translations place these verses together in one paragraph. I am aware that these chapter-and-verse and paragraph divisions, while useful for some purposes, are not part of the original text--and no large mainstream group, I think, considers these divisions inspired.)

I also have apparently different ideas about the quotations from Mark and Galatians. Though extensive discussion of these ideas may be a bit off-topic, the gist is that Mark 7 may contain more of a "test" than an insult, and Galatians 5:12 strikes me as something rhetorically interesting in its context, something more than an actual "wish" (and more than even what I'll call a rhetorical wish) that certain people mutilate themselves.

447 posted on 05/11/2015 8:44:38 AM PDT by Lonely Bull ("When he is being rude or mean it drives people _away_ from his confession and _towards_ yours.")
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To: Lonely Bull
The general theme of this subthread concerns how to post in the Religion Forum.

Okay. Thanks for replying.

(Virtually every thread on this forum eventually becomes many subthreads leading down various rabbit and other varmint trails.)
448 posted on 05/11/2015 8:50:26 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: BeauBo; Faith Presses On

If the Bible is not inerrant, then it is not Truth.


449 posted on 05/11/2015 9:04:20 AM PDT by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith...)
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To: CynicalBear
"It’s interesting that scripture is totally silent on Mary or her life after Pentecost yet the Catholics have elevated her to goddess status. "

So what? Why does it bother you? You aren't a Catholic.

450 posted on 05/11/2015 9:24:33 AM PDT by ex-snook (To conquer use Jesus, not bombs.)
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To: RnMomof7

> I’ve heard that Catholics make the best Mormons. And JW’s ...(Most that show up at my door were former RC)

I’ve noticed this myself, why is this do you suppose?


451 posted on 05/11/2015 10:29:36 AM PDT by sasportas
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To: BeauBo; daniel1212; Faith Presses On; metmom
This is a useful definition of inerrancy:
"The inerrancy of Scripture means that Scripture in the original manuscripts does not affirm anything that is contrary to fact" (Wayne Grudem, Systematic Theology, page 90).

Quoted from this very helpful article: http://www.fivesolas.com/inerrancy.htm
As the above article makes clear, fumbling around with an imprecise definition for inerrancy is sure to lead to trouble.  

For example, when I started reading Scripture as a young man, I was confronted with many of the things to which you now appeal as evidence of factual error.  But unwilling to accept a superficial verdict, I dug beneath the surface and found and continue to find rational solutions for these passages I presumed (in my youthful hubris) to be problematic, largely because I was guilty of imposing my own flimsy definition of "inerrant" on God's word.  After many years now, and seeing many of those objections as they are raised by atheist and Islamic partisans, I have yet to find one that is unresolvable, either by simply increasing my knowledge of the circumstances or language, or by identifying issues with genre, style, culture, etc., that make it clear the Scriptures were affirming true facts after all, despite my initial misunderstanding.

And that gets down to one of the main issues.  What are my assumptions going in?  If I accept that God by definition is capable of reaching His people with His message, then I am going to be looking for a message that is divine in quality and nature.  I expect God to tell me the truth.  No, I do not expect that I, in my fallen and limited humanity, will by purely naturalistic means be able to understand everything He is saying to me.  But God's arm is not so short it cannot save.  If He wants me to get the memo, I will get the memo.  I might not respond to it the way I should, but I will know what He wanted me to know.  If God could not accomplish that tiny, easy, little task, it would impugn His power as God.  God, to be God, must be able to speak to us.  

As for the litany of supposed problematic issues, virtually everything you recited has relatively easy solutions.  For one thing, raising the Old Covenant as though we are being inconsistent if we don't reactivate it is rather like saying that  because America started with 13 colonies, we aren't true Americans if we don't get back to the original 13 colonies.  There is universal, unchanging truth, but it is contained in a history of movement and change. Progression through time and events do not change universal truth; they illustrate it.

For example, the OT/NT relationship is best understood as the systematic unfolding of God's eternal plan of redemption in time.  Every step of the process was essential to get to the next step, but no individual step so far represents the end state of the process.  So we have God making a covenant with Abraham, which we learn from Paul comes to fruition in the appearance of the Messiah for all people, not just Israel.  Yet God's dealings with Israel, and His specific covenant with them, are essential to fulfill God's promise to Abraham.  And then, when Messiah does finally come, we learn from Him and His apostles what the New Covenant will look like, though it has been predicted in the Old, and in fact that prophesy used to validate the New.  

So you see, viewed as a self-consistent but sequential system, we would be in violation of the revelation to resurrect the Old Covenant where it has been explicitly set aside by the Maker of the Covenants. What you appear to be suggesting, by contrast, is more like a multi-stage construction contract, where we finished the foundation, and now new rates and rules apply, by agreement, and you seem to want us to violate the contract by going back under rules and rates that no longer apply to where we really are in the project.  You are in fact advocating that unless we breach the contract, we aren't really keeping the contract.  Do you see how this might strike us as irrational?

As for the argument for a kind of universalism based on uncertainty, which is how I read your core argument, I don't think your premise is valid.  Based on what you have written, you appear to be arguing that superstition is OK as long as it leads to people trying to be good, but that any attempt to come up with a sound definition of what is good is "heretic hunting."  The underlying premise in that mess is that God has not objectively revealed truth to us that we can use to know how to relate to him, so it's OK to just make it up as we go along.  In which case we are no better off than the secular postmodernists who disavow any notion of being able to know universal truth, other than the single premise that there is no universal truth to be known.  And if you have in fact accepted that fatally circular epistemology, I can see why that premise of uncertainty about God's message would make sense to you.  

But we do not accept that God's truth cannot be known, because we do not accept the reductionist view of God it takes to get there:
For as the rain cometh down, and the snow from heaven, and returneth not thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it bring forth and bud, that it may give seed to the sower, and bread to the eater: So shall my word be that goeth forth out of my mouth: it shall not return unto me void, but it shall accomplish that which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it.
(Isaiah 55:10-11)
Peace,

SR
452 posted on 05/11/2015 10:35:12 AM PDT by Springfield Reformer (Winston Churchill: No Peace Till Victory!)
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To: ex-snook; CynicalBear
CB : "It’s interesting that scripture is totally silent on Mary or her life after Pentecost yet the Catholics have elevated her to goddess status."

ex : So what? Why does it bother you? You aren't a Catholic.

Not a bother. It's interesting to many non-Catholic Christians who are rightfully posting here the same as you are.

For one specific, what CynicalBear posted pinpoints one key major difference (of many) between what Christians believe definitely (The Word of God) and the customs and rituals and peculiar practices of some of the many branches and types of Catholicism, including those who exalt Mary much much higher than what God has said or done.
453 posted on 05/11/2015 10:42:57 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: Springfield Reformer
"The inerrancy of Scripture means that Scripture in the original manuscripts does not affirm anything that is contrary to fact" (Wayne Grudem, Systematic Theology, page 90).

That's very functional and agrees with my own definition which has been published nowhere I know of. Thank you. R2z
454 posted on 05/11/2015 10:47:59 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: sasportas
> I’ve heard that Catholics make the best Mormons. And JW’s ...(Most that show up at my door were former RC)
I’ve noticed this myself, why is this do you suppose?

Biblical illiteracy

455 posted on 05/11/2015 11:20:44 AM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: daniel1212

Thank you


456 posted on 05/11/2015 11:28:09 AM PDT by RnMomof7
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To: ex-snook; CynicalBear
So what? Why does it bother you? You aren't a Catholic.

It may bother CB, as it does me, because when we see folks practicing idolatry, we're concerned for their souls.

That's not a bad thing...

Hoss

457 posted on 05/11/2015 11:51:16 AM PDT by HossB86 (Christ, and Him alone.)
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To: metmom
If the Bible is not inerrant, then it is not Truth.

This is untrue. The Bible is not God. The Bible is a collection of writings, most of which were written by prophets of God.

It is not the complete collection of all the writings of the prophets.

The Bible is not perfect because man put the words to paper and translated it, and man is not perfect.

There is truth in the Bible, but there is some errors also. Claiming the Bible to be inerrant does not win you points with God.
458 posted on 05/11/2015 12:11:45 PM PDT by StormPrepper
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To: sasportas; RnMomof7

> I’ve heard that Catholics make the best Mormons. And JW’s ...(Most that show up at my door were former RC)>

**I’ve noticed this myself, why is this do you suppose?**

Gnosticism?


459 posted on 05/11/2015 12:25:29 PM PDT by Gamecock (Why do bad things happen to good people? That only happened once, and He volunteered. R.C. Sproul)
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To: daniel1212

Wow. Right up front, I’d like to say that I appreciate your thoughtful response, and the time that you took to prepare it. Also, that I feel sincerity and concern in your thinking which I admire, and which I believe reflect a Christian spirit.

We don’t have full agreement, and sometimes I believe that some of your points are unfair or descend a bit into ill will. But I fall prey to to the same shortcomings, so it is not difficult for me to forgive these, in light of what seems to me to be your basic goodness of character and intent.

Whenever we deal with people, we can’t realistically expect perfection, and that goes for Church leaders, Popes and such as well. I would offer that Pope Leo may personally have had a stronger tendency toward authoritarianism, or a more decisively judgmental habit of mind than average.

The current Catholic Church catechism on the inerrancy of scripture is artfully vague. That is probably the best that anyone can do, if you are motivated by the goals of helping the most people, but still protecting against an “anything goes” descent into chaos, and maintain an ongoing organizational authority to avoid schism and in-fighting. I don’t find it unusual that the Catholic Church has not been consistent concerning the inerrancy of scripture - we are talking about billions of people over many centuries.

By the same token, Protestant denominations have not been consistent. Positions have changed, schisms have occurred, and individuals have expressed varied opinions.

Some Catholics have adopted a concept of absolute inerrancy, as have some Protestants, some Muslims, some Jews, etc.

It can help many people, by giving them a firm feeling of certainty, which strengthens their resolve and commitment. It has a powerful effect in keeping an organization together over time, which itself has great value.

But there are major downsides to adopting such a doctrine. Disintegration of the Christian community, even to the point of civil war, has occurred. Bigotry and condemnation of essentially good things that don’t conform to a particular rigid interpretation can get carried to hurtful and destructive extremes.

In some cases, your arguments supported non-literal interpretation of scripture, that reason and morality may temper explicit text, that there are some things that are to be applied always while others are not, or that translation is very good (but imperfect), and so on. In other instances, you didn’t refute a point itself, but instead criticized some historical Catholic doctrine or statement for doing the same thing. In other instances, you seem to simply re-assert inerrancy.

I think that is a natural outcome of struggling to reconcile all the great mass of scripture against a consistent doctrine and moral standard. In my view, we are all ultimately in that same difficult position, and would be wise to be kind to each other, as our knowledge and comprehension improves over time.

Again, I appreciate you taking the time to explain things. Although I do not agree with everything that you said, I did find some of it informative and helpful. So I offer a prayer for your health and happiness, and for God’s grace to increase your wisdom and kindness further.


460 posted on 05/11/2015 12:31:49 PM PDT by BeauBo
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