Is the Catholic view of theological authority more defensible than the Protestant?

I apologize for the inconvenience, but I re-wrote my post before you replied. But I'll respond to this as well:

And why must the truth be relayed to you by a human being, who is just as corruptible as yourself?

Because God wills that fallible human beings come to know the truth.

How is the Pope any more biologically equipped to speak with God than anyone else?

Why God wills for human beings to be the instrument of His divine plan, I cannot say. But that appears to be the case.

Indeed, many teachings say it is possible to receive messages from God in your sleep, your thoughts, your dreams, etc. They are just as infallible as the Popes, of course, but if there are multiple religions, there's a higher chance of success than if there was only one.

Come again? I'm unable to discern the meaning or relevance of this paragraph. Could you possibly elaborate?

I think anything you get while meditating or praying would be just as valid as what the Pope apparently gets.

The Pope doesn't get divine revelations, if that's what you apparently think. Papal infallibility refers to the fact that he cannot make a proclamation from the chair of St. Peter that is morally or theologically incorrect.

If all human beings are spiritually equal(as we are due to our free will; we can choose to live in sin or virtue, to believe or to not), than we are all just as capable of receiving messages from God. The Pope is a monarch and theocrat left over from a time long since past.

I agree with the first sentence. I don't see how the second sentence follows thereof.

Furthermore, don't Church doctrines change all the time, like a Supreme Court ruling?

No. Practices change, not dogma.

No, that is not true at all. The Constitution is purposely vague so as to allow it to be modified and interpreted to meet its needs; it is why there is an Amendment process. It is why there is a Supreme Court to review it. It is why there is so much controversy over what each single phrase means.

No. You misunderstand. I don't deny that it was left somewhat vague, but the purpose of that was not to allow each person to come to his personal interpretation of its meaning, but rather to allow the steady evolution of the American government. Perhaps you should listen to what James Madison, its primary author, said:

"Do not separate text from historical background. If you do, you will have perverted and subverted the Constitution, which can only end in a distorted, bastardized form of illegitimate government."

If the Constitution had a single meaning, then we'd have no Supreme Court. The Supreme Court's job is to interpret the Constitution and its relation to the laws. Therefore, there is no "singular meaning", apart from what the Court says it means.

That's not true at all. The Supreme Court's job is to provide a single meaning for the Constitution based on historical and jurisprudential context, not make up new ones.

Because if it's not historical, it is by definition, fantasy, as it never happened.

I don't think fantasy is the proper term to use for it; but nevertheless, how do you equate "fantasy" to "fabrication?"

Edit: Also. Your likely partisanship is showing. You wrote "confuscations" - one letter off from confiscations.

I realized that was the wrong word and changed it to obfuscations before you replied.

Furthermore, if by "poor education", you're referring to the left; some bad news for you. Liberals are more educated than conservatives on average. I'm not saying conservatives are dumb, just saying that liberals are more educated as a whole.

I have no intention of dragging a political context into this debate. I am an originalist when it comes to Constitution interpretation, but some liberals are as well, and some conservatives are not.
 
Come again? I'm unable to discern the meaning or relevance of this paragraph. Could you possibly elaborate?

If there are 1000 religious beliefs, it is more likely the right one will be among them than if there was only one(i.e. one dictated by a human being).

The Pope doesn't get divine revelations, if that's what you apparently think.

I had always operated on that idea; my mistake.

Papal infallibility refers to the fact that he cannot make a proclamation from the chair of St. Peter that is morally or theologically incorrect.

The point still stands that any person's interpretation could be just as valid as his; the idea the Pope is better than anyone else in this regard is based on faith. Then again, all the religious beliefs are, so I suppose it doesn't matter.

I agree with the first sentence. I don't see how the second sentence follows thereof.

I'm just being hostile towards monarchy and authority. :p

No. You misunderstand. I don't deny that it was left somewhat vague, but the purpose of that was not to allow each person to come to his personal interpretation of its meaning, but rather to allow the steady evolution of the American government.

Exactly. Which Congress, the President, and the Court have done over their centuries of existence, sometimes repealing their old policies as well. The American government has evolved, justifying much of itself on the Constitution's vague passages. Just as the right can use the 10th Amendment to handicap the feds, the left can use the welfare clause and necessary and proper clause to justify their social programs.

Perhaps you should listen to what James Madison, its primary author, said:

"Do not separate text from historical background. If you do, you will have perverted and subverted the Constitution, which can only end in a distorted, bastardized form of illegitimate government."

I don't think it's been separated at all; the Constitution was built on our experiences with the British and based on the view of other states as well. Never mind this makes it somewhat outdated as all those nations have become enormously different(all sorts of freedoms, most monarchies are gone, etc.).

We still keep true to the Bill of Rights for most intents and purposes, but the interpretation has caused great debate; for example, which clauses take precedent over others?

That's not true at all. The Supreme Court's job is to provide a single meaning for the Constitution based on historical and jurisprudential context, not make up new ones.

But the Court once said that segregation was okay. If we must base things on historical context, should that still be allowed, rather than being overturned by a later court? The SCOTUS's job is to interpret the Constitution based on the current context, not the past. We may stick true to our ideals of limited government and all the assorted freedoms, but the way we practice these ideals can change. Like you said of the Church, the doctrine is still there, but how it's practiced shifts all the time.

I don't think fantasy is the proper term to use for it; but nevertheless, how do you equate "fantasy" to "fabrication?"

Both fantasy and fabrication are not based entirely in fact, and are pulled from our imagination to an extent. For example, perhaps the writers of the Bible, like some fable writers(I don't mean to compare the Bible to fable, though), wanted to tell a moral, but make it interesting to the reader, and so built stories to tell it.

I don't know the Bible word for word like some, but if I had to think of an example, perhaps the story of creation is just a way to show God's awe-inspiring power, rather than it literally happening(i.e. if he wanted to, God could very easily do the things described, but it doesn't mean that he did). While based in truth(God's power), the story itself could still be a fabrication meant to relay that truth.

I am an originalist when it comes to Constitution interpretation, but some liberals are as well, and some conservatives are not.

Likewise, I just get a bit jumpy whenever I think there's potential partisanship. My apologies.
 
If there are 1000 religious beliefs, it is more likely the right one will be among them than if there was only one(i.e. one dictated by a human being).

... I still have no idea what you're talking about.

The point still stands that any person's interpretation could be just as valid as his; the idea the Pope is better than anyone else in this regard is based on faith. Then again, all the religious beliefs are, so I suppose it doesn't matter.

Your assumption seems to be, "if Catholicism is wrong, then it's likely that the Pope's interpretation doesn't matter." A bit self-defeating, yeah?

Exactly. Which Congress, the President, and the Court have done over their centuries of existence, sometimes repealing their old policies as well. The American government has evolved, justifying much of itself on the Constitution's vague passages. Just as the right can use the 10th Amendment to handicap the feds, the left can use the welfare clause and necessary and proper clause to justify their social programs.

The notion that the Constitution without necessary amendments evolves is patently ridiculous, and makes it entirely useless. Whenever somebody wants to do something that's unconstitutional, he simply has to declare that the Constitution has evolved. Problem solved. How does the Constitution protect people from overbearing government if the government gets to dictate what it means? Originalism not only makes the most sense, it's a political imperative.

Note that when the Supreme Court gives rulings that contradicts previous rulings, the justification is (well, should be) that the previous ruling was incorrect; not that the meaning of the Constitution has changed.

I don't think it's been separated at all; the Constitution was built on our experiences with the British and based on the view of other states as well. Never mind this makes it somewhat outdated as all those nations have become enormously different(all sorts of freedoms, most monarchies are gone, etc.).

If it's evolving, how exactly is it NOT removed from historical context? That's a linguistic contradiction. Either it means what it means when it was written, or it means whatever the government wants it to mean.

We still keep true to the Bill of Rights for most intents and purposes, but the interpretation has caused great debate; for example, which clauses take precedent over others?

The fact that it has one meaning doesn't mean it's not vague. It's alright to debate over its meaning; but the debate shouldn't be, "what do I want the Constitution to mean?," rather than, "what does the Constitution mean?"

But the Court once said that segregation was okay.

No. The Court said that segregation was legal according to the Constitution, which it obviously was, given that it was the intent of the Founding Fathers to make it so, prior to the passing of the Fourteenth Amendment.

The SCOTUS's job is to interpret the Constitution based on the current context, not the past.

Once again, this leads to political paradoxes. Suppose some Supreme Court were to interpret "Indians" to refer to the people of the country of India, thus implying that the U.S. has some sovereignty over them. Living Constitutionalists have to admit that such a thing could happen if an imperialist president appointed likewise justices. Hence the danger of allowing anything but the original context of the Constitution to dominate its interpretation.

We may stick true to our ideals of limited government and all the assorted freedoms, but the way we practice these ideals can change. Like you said of the Church, the doctrine is still there, but how it's practiced shifts all the time.

You're not referring to changing practices, you're referring to changing doctrines when you think the meaning of the Constitution can simply change by the times.

Both fantasy and fabrication are not based entirely in fact, and are pulled from our imagination to an extent. For example, perhaps the writers of the Bible, like some fable writers(I don't mean to compare the Bible to fable, though), wanted to tell a moral, but make it interesting to the reader, and so built stories to tell it.

The purpose of fantasy is pleasure. The purpose of fabrication is to deceive. So I don't think using the two univocally does justice to moral parables.

I don't know the Bible word for word like some, but if I had to think of an example, perhaps the story of creation is just a way to show God's awe-inspiring power, rather than it literally happening(i.e. if he wanted to, God could very easily do the things described, but it doesn't mean that he did). While based in truth(God's power), the story itself could still be a fabrication meant to relay that truth.

No objection to this paragraph, except the use of the word "fabrication," as per the above.
 
Excuse me for responding to these posts out of order. I'm doing them ascendingly by the amount of time required.



The passage you quoted demonstrates that Christ is the paschal sacrifice for our sins. It does not say that there is no clergy in the Church. Otherwise, why did Christ give the power of absolution His apostles (John 20:22-23), or the power of curing the sick (James 5:14-15)? Why does St. Paul repeatedly mention bishops and priests (Acts 20:17,28)?

Even if you want to quibble about the meaning of the passage, I ask, from whose authority do you give your interpretation? Your own, which the Bible itself specifically tells you not to do (2 Peter 3:16), or from the authority of the Church (Matthew 16:18-19 / Isaiah 22:22, 1 Timothy 3:15) compounded with apostolic tradition (2 Thessalonians 2:15)?
The first passage talks about how we have direct passage to God, since wee can go directly to the Great High Priest, being Jesus. The High Priest was basically God's representative for the people. They would have to go through him to get to God, but not any more.
 
Let's see.

Prevailing political ideology: The people are the ultimate masters of their own destiny, and all authority is controlled by them, not the other way around.

Catholicism: The clergy and Pope know God better than the common person.
Protestantism: The people are intelligent enough to understand their own god-danged religious book, and should read it for themselves and come to their own conclusions.

Sorry, Protestantism seems more in line with the democratic ideas than Catholicism. Catholicism empowers the one; Protestantism empowers the many.



Like the Constitution, it can be interpreted however one wishes. For instance, some Christians consider the earlier stories to be fabrications meant to relay a general idea(think like a fable and its moral), others take them literally.
uh more like
Catholicism: Jesus and the Apostles knew God best
Protestantism: People living 1500-2000 years after the Bible was written by the Apostles reading a mangled copy of the Bible with parts gouged out and gone through 3+ translations know God as well if not better than Jesus and the Apostles

if the Protestant version of it is the truth then Jesus was a snake oil salesman and Christianity is absolutely worthless

as LightSpectra mentions below if the founders claim that there is only one interpretation and they tell the people this interpretation than by default all other interpretations are a perversion of the meaning

And why must the truth be relayed to you by a human being, who is just as corruptible as yourself?

How is the Pope any more biologically equipped to speak with God than anyone else?

Indeed, many teachings say it is possible to receive messages from God in your sleep, your thoughts, your dreams, etc. They are just as infallible as the Popes, of course, but if there are multiple religions, there's a higher chance of success than if there was only one.

I think anything you get while meditating or praying would be just as valid as what the Pope apparently gets. If all human beings are spiritually equal(as we are due to our free will; we can choose to live in sin or virtue, to believe or to not), than we are all just as capable of receiving messages from God. The Pope is a monarch and theocrat left over from a time long since past. Furthermore, don't Church doctrines change all the time, like a Supreme Court ruling? If so, then God must change his mind, and if God is all-knowing and infallible himself, then changing his mind must mean something is wrong.



No, that is not true at all. The Constitution is purposely vague so as to allow it to be modified and interpreted to meet its needs; it is why there is an Amendment process. It is why there is a Supreme Court to review it. It is why there is so much controversy over what each single phrase means.

If the Constitution had a single meaning, then we'd have no Supreme Court. The Supreme Court's job is to interpret the Constitution and its relation to the laws. Therefore, there is no "singular meaning", apart from what the Court says it means.

Anyway, this is about Protestantism vs. Catholicism, not the Constitution. I merely used the Constitution as an analogy of how interpretation works.

Edit: Also. Your likely partisanship is showing. You wrote "confuscations" - one letter off from confiscations. Furthermore, if by "poor education", you're referring to the left; some bad news for you. Liberals are more educated than conservatives on average. I'm not saying conservatives are dumb, just saying that liberals are more educated as a whole.



Because if it's not historical, it is by definition, fantasy, as it never happened.
When did anyone claim "the Pope any more biologically equipped to speak with God"
Divine revelations through dreams? In the New Testament???
Your assumption of multiple religions multiple chances is only valid if they all got an equal chance
If God gave you knowledge of everything in an utterly unknown and incomprehensible language then it is functionally worthless
Dogma of the Catholic Church doesn't change, if it did then that would suggest God is fickle and capricious which is entirely at odds with God as revealed by Jesus
The first passage talks about how we have direct passage to God, since wee can go directly to the Great High Priest, being Jesus. The High Priest was basically God's representative for the people. They would have to go through him to get to God, but not any more.
You do realize that using a very small portion of a very specific message to a very specific audience without any context leaves it devoid of meaning/value right?
 
I am not going to read all those quote infested discussions.

Anyway, does the catholic church not recognize the Bible as the infallible Word of God? If yes, then why not base everything on it (like protestants), instead of using all those dogmas? If not, why are there still biblical influences in their teachings?

I know that the Catholics have a Dogma, but what is it based on? On human interpretations of the Bible? On age-old practices? Where is God in this picture? Why not make it simple and base it on one book only?
 
Oh Plotinus, what did you do moving this discussion to OT, we can't possibly reach the standards of the history forum here!

I know, no-one's asked who'd win in a battle between the Romans and the medievals, or even mentioned Zheng He.

But the premise isn't, "interpret the Bible as you please because we don't know who is right." The premise is, "interpret the Bible as you please because everybody is right." Remember, the person that started this discussion was Traitorfish, who originally said, "If an individual truly and sincerely believes that a given form of Christian is imperfect, on what grounds do you oblige him to live, as he sees it, in a state of heresy?" My response was that his personal opinion is irrelevant, because only one interpretation of the Bible can be true. Hence, personal interpretation of the Bible is folly.

All right, I see what you're getting at. I still think this doesn't follow, though.

Remember that Protestants do not - as far as I can tell - think that interpretation of the Bible is simply a matter of people sitting and reading it and coming up with whatever they want. (And I'm taking "Protestants" here to mean biblicists who think the Bible is infallible.) They believe that the Bible must be read with the aid of the Holy Spirit, and that just as God guided the human authors of the Bible to write infallible truth, so too he guides the faithful reader to discern that infallible truth. So it's not a matter of leaving it up to the individual's fallible powers of understanding. One might say that where the Catholic Church holds that there are many interpretations of the Bible, but only one that is trustworthy and true, the Protestants hold exactly the same thing. What they disagree about is the medium by which God shows believers the correct interpretation. For Catholics it's the Catholic Church, while for Protestants it's the action of the Holy Spirit upon the individual reader. And of course the Holy Spirit isn't going to give people variant interpretations any more than the Catholic Church is.

There's surely some discussion at cross-purposes here too. You say that the Catholic interpretation of the Bible is correct, and given that, there's no sense in interpreting it in any other way. That's fine for anyone who accepts the premise that the Catholic interpretation is correct. But if people think that the Catholic interpretation is incorrect then what's their motivation for believing it anyway? Is that even possible? Certainly only one interpretation of the Bible can be the correct one, but if someone investigates the matter and it seems to her that the Catholic one is deeply flawed and (say) the Southern Baptist interpretation is the correct one, what's she supposed to do?

This comes back to what I said before. For Catholics, it seems they take it as a basic premise that what the Catholic Church teaches is true, and not only this, that its teaching is incontrovertibly true. It's barely even conceivable that it's not true. From this position, everyone either accepts the truth or deliberately rejects it in favour of error. But of course non-Catholics don't accept this position from the start. They are not deliberately rejecting what is evidently true - they aren't convinced that it's true in the first place or that it has any more legitimacy than any of the other claims to truth that are out there. And until both sides recognise what the other's starting point is, they'll never even really understand each other's arguments, let alone come to any agreement.

The matter of interpreting the Bible is a bit more complex than I've let on during this discussion; so I will attempt to elaborate here. Yes, Protestant theologians throughout history have grieved themselves to an absurd degree in attempting to reconcile all their beliefs with that of the Bible. But, obviously, they can't all be right. Which is where the matter of an infallible interpreter comes in. People can quibble about the meaning or relation between different passages until the sun collapses, so it's right that we turn to external reason. Obviously God would not be the author of these confusions, because it's philosophically demonstrable that God loves His creation* and would want us to find the truth. So He must have given some means of interpreting scripture, which would be an infallible Church, which cannot have been corrupted by the flow of history. That's as simple as I can boil it down to without beginning my doctoral thesis in this thread.

Fair enough, but I think any kind of argument like this, based on what we think God would do, is going to be shaky at best. I'll grant that God loves his creation, since I think that something like this must be pretty much part of the definition of God (although I don't think Aquinas' proof of it is so great, but let's not get into this). But I don't see how one could be certain that the fact that God loves his creation means that he would provide us with an infallible means of knowing the truth. Furthermore, even if we did know that God has provided us with an infallible means of knowing the truth, I certainly don't see how we could know that this means must be a church. It could easily be something else - e.g. the indwelling of the Holy Spirit to enable us to read the Bible correctly, as outlined above.

After all, this kind of argument really proves too much. If we could demonstrate with reasonable certainty that God would wish to keep us from error by providing us with a church that issues authoritative and reliable teaching, then it would seem that the same argument should demonstrate that God would wish to keep that church from schism and heresy. Yet we find that the church has fragmented throughout history. Of course you'll say that the Catholic Church has remained steadfast and all that's happened is that heretics and schismatics have chosen to go their own way. But why would God allow that? If the church is such an important part of his plan, why would he allow something like the Reformation to occur, and millions of people in the centuries that follow to be brought up with the wrong interpretation of the Bible?

You might say that that's free will, and these people chose to break with the church against God's wishes. But then that same argument can be turned against the Catholic Church itself. Presumably the ministers of that church have always had free will too. How do we know that they haven't been misusing it too, just like the Protestants?

In short, the argument from God's intentions is either too weak or too strong. Any argument of this kind that seeks to establish that God would set up the Catholic Church for his purposes could just as easily be used to establish that he would allow the Reformation and similar events. Conversely, any attempt to explain things like the Reformation as occurring through human sinful misuse of freedom also undermines the original argument, because it establishes that God doesn't have control over any of this stuff.

Yes, there is the matter of liberal Christians that reject Biblical infallibility. I do have responses to give to them, but once again, this isn't relevant to the debate at hand, since the premise is that the New Testament is reliable. The question is that of interpretation of infallible scripture; not whether it is wise to consider scripture to be infallible.

But I don't want to just ignore this question. On whether the New Testament is reliable, there's a few sources I can bring to your attention:

Combating Biblical Skepticism by Frederick W. Marks

"Can We Trust the Gospels?: Investigating the Reliability of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John" by Mark D. Roberts

"The New Testament Documents: Are They Reliable?" by F.F. Bruce

"Jesus Under Fire: Modern Scholarship Reinvents the Historical Jesus" by Michael J. Wilkins

I don't want to get into this as it is not really relevant to our discussion here. However, I will say that I'm a little surprised that you should cite F.F. Bruce, especially in the context of this discussion! I've had a look at the Marks article and I'm afraid I'm not very impressed by what he says. Some of it is odd. For example, he claims that Tatian wrote a defence of biblical inerrancy. Well, I don't even know that text that is supposed to be referring to - I know of only two books by Tatian, neither of which matches that description. He also seems to think that denying that the apostle Matthew wrote the Gospel of Matthew is an attack on biblical authority, despite the fact that the Gospel as it appears in the Bible is anonymous. The marshalling of second-century witnesses to the authorship of the Gospels seems impressive, but there are serious problems with these witnesses when you look at them in detail, primarily the fact that the way they describe the writing of the Gospels does not conform to what we can tell from looking at the Gospels themselves. E.P. Sanders and Margaret Davies analysed these problems very carefully in Studying the synoptic Gospels, which is now a fairly old book but still very useful. For example, Papias states that Matthew's Gospel was written in Hebrew, but every indication is that it is an original Greek text. So either Papias wasn't very reliable or he was talking about a different text altogether, in which case he's not a useful witness for what we call Matthew's Gospel. Again, Marks argues against the nigh-universally accepted conclusion of New Testament scholars that Mark's Gospel was written before Matthew's. But I don't think that this stands up to the evidence in the slightest. Overall I just don't see anything remotely convincing in this article. It's really a collection of assertions that biblical scholars are wrong rather than good evidence that they are.

I must add that in my limited experience this is typical of the site Catholic Answers. I have been dreadfully disappointed and often angered by that site. The articles and answers it hosts seem to me very often woefully lacking in both intellectual rigour and pastoral care to the people who post on it. It seems to reflect not what I have always thought of as mainstream, reasonable Catholicism, but something rather different. The fact that the Marks article is explicitly arguing against the views of Catholic bishops, and in favour of something more conservative and less engaged with secular scholarship than the mainstream Catholic Church, reflects this. Again, though, this isn't very relevant to what we're talking about there.

Before I begin to respond to this objection, let me first admit that you're probably more knowledgeable than me in this particular era. That being said, I've read a lot of secondary material that conforms to the positions I've stated here, and so I'll give my best effort to defend myself. Please just keep in mind that if I have to admit I'm wrong at some point, it's not necessarily because my position is erroneous, but because my expertise is for the proceeding millennium of theology.

Of course, and I'm no expert on this either - my interest in patristics is theological/philosophical, not ecclesiastical.

People don't obey their bishops today, either. But the fact that he's arguing that bishops are to be obeyed indicates that they have a position of authority.

Does it, though? Couldn't it equally mean that he wants them to have authority? At the very least, it indicates that at least some people thought they didn't have authority in some way or for some reason.

As I said, we must be wary of assuming the existence of (what we would recognise as) an episcopal system at all. We mustn't assume that each of these churches even had "a" bishop in the first place - not even one who was struggling to assert his authority. Some may have been governed by a group, with no clear leader (see below on this). Some may have been split into factions, each with its own leader - perhaps all striving to be recognised as the overall leader, or perhaps not. Some may not have had institutional leadership at all, but been governed by itinerant prophets who moved from church to church. Now when Ignatius talks about "the" bishop, perhaps that's because he assumes that these churches have "a" bishop - maybe because that's the situation in his own church and he assumes that they're the same as his. Or perhaps he's well aware of the different situations in the different churches, and he's trying to drag them into line with the situation that he thinks is the correct one. That is, he's trying to impose his view of how churches should be run on them all. Or perhaps he favours particular individuals in these churches not because he is committed to a certain model of church leadership, but because he is committed to certain doctrines or liturgical practices, and he is basically endorsing the leader in each church who most closely matches his views on these matters. In this case, all the stuff about the necessity of obeying the bishop as God's representative is there because Ignatius wants the people to obey the person who has the right understanding of the Christian faith.

All of these are perfectly possible explanations for why Ignatius says what he does about the episcopate. This is why we can't take Ignatius' views as evidence that the ideal he describes was actually in practice.

That there were rival claimants to the episcopate doesn't surprise me. But there were a great deal of early Church Fathers that strongly indicated that bishops had a special ordination based on apostolic succession. For instance:

"And do ye also reverence your bishop as Christ Himself, according as the blessed apostles have enjoined you. He that is within the altar is pure, wherefore also he is obedient to the bishop and presbyters: but he that is without is one that does anything apart from the bishop, the presbyters, and the deacons. Such a person is defiled in his conscience, and is worse than an infidel. For what is the bishop but one who beyond all others possesses all power and authority, so far as it is possible for a man to possess it, who according to his ability has been made an imitator of the Christ Of God? And what is the presbytery but a sacred assembly, the counselors and assessors of the bishop? And what are the deacons but imitators of the angelic powers, fulfilling a pure and blameless ministry unto him, as the holy Stephen did to the blessed James, Timothy and Linus to Paul, Anencletus and Clement to Peter? He, therefore, that will not yield obedience to such, must needs be one utterly without God, an impious man who despises Christ, and depreciates His appointments." Ignatius of Antioch, Epistle to the Trallians, 7 (c. A.D. 110).

Source

Certainly, but again, the fact that Ignatius feels compelled to go on about this at such length is itself evidence that it was, at the very least, not a unanimous view at the time. And perhaps it was only a minority one. Which leads us to:

That's extremely debatable.

This is the nub of the matter. I don't think it's enormously debatable that there was variety in how churches were governed in this period. What may be debatable is how great that variety was. What we do find is that different sources from this period speak of different kinds of leadership. I'll summarise what they seem to indicate.

Paul (50s). Testifies to a sort of charismatic ministry where different people are called to perform different functions in the church according to their abilities (1 Cor. 12). There are people in charge (1 Thess. 5:12-13). But there seems to be no-one in charge of the Eucharist, where he tells people to behave in an orderly way but makes no mention of anyone in charge (1 Corinthians 11). He mentions titles of church leaders only once: bishops and deacons (Philippians 1:1). No indication of what these titles mean or who these people were.

Revelation (probably 90s). Speaks of prophets, male and female (1:10; 2:20-23). Also apostles (2:20). These are probably itinerant, going from church to church and exercising their ministry there, since they are described as being judged and found wanting by certain churches.

Didache (uncertain date, probably late first century). Says a great deal about prophets and apostles. Both groups are itinerant. Prophets can stay for a while in an individual church, but apostles may stay for no more than two days before moving on. Unclear what apostles do, but prophets speak "in the Spirit". Bishops and deacons are also mentioned. They are apparently not itinerant, and they are apparently subordinate to the prophets and apostles and assist them, but it is unclear in what way.

1 Peter (uncertain date, probably late first century). The church is ruled by presbyters (5:1-5).

Pastoral epistles (probably late first century). Bishops and deacons mentioned frequently. A single bishop in each church, assisted by a number of deacons. Clear rules for selecting them. Also mentions of presbyters. Unclear who these are or how they relate to bishops and deacons. Sometimes the presbyters are said to rule the church (1 Tim. 5:17-19), but at other times they are identified with bishops (Tit. 1:5-9).

1 Clement (90s). The church is ruled by presbyters, in the plural. Bishops and deacons also mentioned on occasion, apparently taking "bishop" and "presbyter" to be synonymous.

So some texts, such as Paul's, seem to suggest a situation with almost no formal leadership. Some, such as Revelation, suggest one with a shifting, charismatic ministry of prophets and apostles. Others, such as 1 Peter, suggest a localised ministry of presbyters. Others, such as 1 Clement, also suggest one where the church is ruled by presbyters, but mention bishops and deacons as well in a rather off-hand way. Others, such as the pastorals, are the reverse: they emphasise the bishops and deacons, and are unclear about the presbyters. Others still suggest situations of transitions, so in the Didache we find apostles and prophets in charge but bishops and deacons also present.

Of course a biblicist Protestant would reject the distinction between Paul and the pastorals, so that would simplify things somewhat. However, even if we merge those two groups and suppose that they testify to a single situation of charismatic leadership and bishops/deacons, we still have a wide range of different situations.

Now all of this is clearly very confusing. One possible explanation is that after the initial period suggested by Paul's letters, in which church ministry was basically charismatic, three different systems appeared in different churches. In some, the ministry continued to be charismatic, and it revolved around these prophets and apostles who travelled from church to church. This system is associated especially with the churches of Asia Minor. Other churches developed a presbyterian system, in which the church was governed by a sort of college of presbyters. Presumably these were originally the oldest and wisest among the church, since "presbyter" just means "old man". It is not clear at what point, if at all, this became an official title rather than a description. And other churches still developed the episcopal system, with a single leader - the bishop - and his helpers - the deacons. Again, it's not clear at which point these names developed from descriptions (they just mean "overseer") into official titles. And some churches mixed these different systems, in different ways.

Again, this is just a possible interpretation. On this interpretation, when Ignatius of Antioch - writing in the early years of the second century - tells people to obey their bishop, he's assuming a system like the third one mentioned above. And as I suggested before, perhaps he is deliberately trying to champion that system as opposed to the others.

But it is important to recognise that even after this time, things took a while to settle into the familiar episcopal system. Remember that the Montanists, who were widespread and popular in Asia Minor, seem to have operated a system not unlike that reflected in Revelation and the Didache. They also had apostles and prophets who moved from church to church. Again, in some churches in the second century, administration seems to have been done by people without formal titles. Irenaeus of Lyon may be an example. He apparently ran the church there, but there is no evidence that he held the title of "bishop" or occupied any official post. Finally and most striking, there is the case of Noetus, who got into trouble in Rome for his views about the relation between the Father and the Son. According to Hippolytus, he was brought before the presbyters and his views were examined; they were found wanting, and he was expelled from the church. So it seems that this church was still being run on the presbyterian model, not the episcopal one. And this was Rome at the end of the second century! It is only after this date that we hear of a bishop of Rome actually doing anything at all (as opposed to merely appearing in a list of names) - namely Callistus, who shocked other leading Christians with his relatively liberal attitude to morality, and who may have been locked in some kind of power struggle with Hippolytus. The fact that this power struggle is rather obscure and we don't even know whether Hippolytus regarded himself as bishop of Rome, bishop of somewhere else such as Ostia, or even a bishop at all is again consistent with the view that the organisational structure of the church was still rather fluid even at this time.

Excuse me if I misunderstand your point, but I don't see how this refutes the Catholic belief in apostolic succession. It seems like most of these problems can be explained; for instance, perhaps the lack of a bishop in X area is a result of the fact that it wasn't populated enough to require its own bishop, or because there was a lack of clergy and one bishop had to manage his diocese from a very long ways away.

Certainly it can all be explained. If it couldn't, the Catholic position would be untenable. But all of this does weaken the argument for that position. That is, all of the evidence I've just outlined is consistent with the claim that in all these places there was, in fact, a single bishop in charge. Perhaps those sources that speak of prophets and apostles are describing other groups of leaders who existed alongside the bishop and had a different sort of role; and perhaps they just happen not to mention the bishop. And so on for the others. Perhaps Irenaeus was bishop of Lyon, and this fact just wasn't mentioned in contemporary texts; perhaps the presbyters dealt with Noetus because the bishop was away. Of course all of this is possible. But the problem is that even if this is true, it's hardly supported by the evidence. On the face of it, the evidence points away from the episcopal system existing in the way that the Catholic position suggests. You certainly can't say, as you did, that there is "as much [historical proof] as you can possibly ask for in historical evidence pertaining to the antiquity era" for this. And this is why I think the Catholic argument is very weak at this point. You just don't have the evidence of a clear succession of authoritative and reliable successors to the apostles that you need to argue for your position.

I don't see why the episocal system has to be perfectly in place in every Christianized area in order for the apostolic succession to be considered legitimate. It could've gone horribly awry in some places, even, but so long as the core succession was still valid, it could've been rectified.

Yes, but I don't think you can show even that core succession.

Don't these two possibilities indicate my point, if anything?

I wouldn't have said so. All they indicate, if they are the correct interpretation, is that Ignatius thought that an episcopal system where the bishop has very great authority is the correct one. It doesn't indicate that such a system was in widespread use or indeed existed outside Ignatius' own head.

This is a good objection. I'm going to ask somebody more educated than me about this. My immediate response, however, is that almost all of the early heresies, obviously were heresies because they were unreasonable and contradicted the Judaic premises of Christianity. For instance, apostolic tradition isn't necessary in order to refute Gnosticism. Their belief that matter is evil is immediately contradictory of Genesis 1. And, the notion that Jesus was somehow a dissenter against Jewish theology contradicts basically everything we know against about Him. So the fact that Ignatius and Clement and others survived and went on to preserve the Catholic Church, seems somewhat obvious to me, because only their beliefs were internally consistent.

I don't quite follow what you're arguing here - if you can explain what you mean I'd be grateful.

Of course there were heresies (I'm using this term in the Catholic sense of course) which weren't necessarily unreasonable or anti-Jewish. Ebionism is the obvious example, although we don't know much about it. Montanism is another example; indeed as far as we know the Montanists didn't teach any heretical doctrines at all, but were regarded as heretics (rather than merely schismatics - to the extent that a distinction between these existed at all at the time) because they accepted prophecies as genuine which other people didn't. And the spate of heresies at the end of the second century and start of the third don't seem obviously anti-Jewish or irrational, such as Sabellianism, the views of Hermogenes, and so on.

It's tempting to argue this, but that would be inconsistent with my other arguments. St. Augustine said, "For my part, I should not believe the gospel except as moved by the authority of the Catholic Church." So no.

OK then! I'll be interested to see what you do say.

uh more like
Catholicism: Jesus and the Apostles knew God best
Protestantism: People living 1500-2000 years after the Bible was written by the Apostles reading a mangled copy of the Bible with parts gouged out and gone through 3+ translations know God as well if not better than Jesus and the Apostles

That's a great strawman, but it's not very conducive to mutual understanding. As I said at the start of this apparently endless post, that's not the Protestant position. Protestants would agree that Jesus and the apostles knew God best. They would say that the apostles wrote what they knew in the New Testament, under the guidance of God. That is where revelation and truth are to be found. After that point, no-one has a monopoly on interpreting it, and no-one is better at interpreting it than anyone else just because they have a pointy hat or indeed a degree in biblical studies. This is because the Holy Spirit is given to all believers and guides them as they read it.

Now this may or may not be true. (Of course I don't think it's true.) But I don't see how it's any dafter than the Catholic position. As I said before, both groups believe that the authoritative interpretation of the Bible comes from God, not from merely human understanding. They differ only on the question of what means, or what medium, God uses to provide that interpretation. Now there may be good reasons for thinking (from a Christian point of view) that one or the other model is the correct one, but you cannot just assume that one's obviously reasonable and mock the other as absurd.

if the Protestant version of it is the truth then Jesus was a snake oil salesman and Christianity is absolutely worthless

as LightSpectra mentions below if the founders claim that there is only one interpretation and they tell the people this interpretation than by default all other interpretations are a perversion of the meaning

Yes, you're still assuming that Protestants ignore "the founders", namely Jesus and the apostles. As I said, Protestants think that what they said is completely authoritative. What they deny is the claim that what their successors said is authoritative. The Catholic view is that Jesus and the apostles said some stuff, and after this the church retains the rights to it (as it were) and has the authority to explain what they meant. The Protestant view is that Jesus and the apostles speak for themselves, they left us the record of what they said, and that if we need any help in understanding it, God will give it to us.

Divine revelations through dreams? In the New Testament???

Matthew 1:20-24
Matthew 2:12
Matthew 2:13
Matthew 2:19-20
Acts 2:17
Acts 10:10-16
Acts 16:9

Not that it has much relevance to this discussion, but perhaps you ought to read the Bible more carefully before attacking other people for their knowledge of it!
 
The first passage talks about how we have direct passage to God, since wee can go directly to the Great High Priest, being Jesus. The High Priest was basically God's representative for the people. They would have to go through him to get to God, but not any more.

Why did you entirely ignore everything I said, and simply repeat your previous post?

Anyway, does the catholic church not recognize the Bible as the infallible Word of God? If yes, then why not base everything on it (like protestants), instead of using all those dogmas? If not, why are there still biblical influences in their teachings?

The Bible itself says to follow sacred tradition (2 Thessalonians 2:15) and apostolic authority (Acts 1:15-26). While everything in scripture is infallible, it does not contain the fullness of truth; for instance, the word "Trinity" is nowhere to be found in it, though the doctrine is obviously able to be derived from scripture.

I know that the Catholics have a Dogma, but what is it based on? On human interpretations of the Bible?

Yes, by the people who knew the people who wrote the Bible, as per what the Bible actually says ((Matthew 16:18-19 / Isaiah 22:22).

On age-old practices? Where is God in this picture? Why not make it simple and base it on one book only?

Because the Bible specifically tells you not to do that (2 Peter 3:16), and to follow the Church, which is the pillar of the living truth (1 Timothy 3:15). Sola scriptura is a self-defeating position.
 
Before we start, isn't it kind of paradoxical that you are trying to prove reasons not to tightly follow the Bible by quoting bible texts...:crazyeye:
The Bible itself says to follow sacred tradition (2 Thessalonians 2:15) and apostolic authority (Acts 1:15-26). While everything in scripture is infallible, it does not contain the fullness of truth; for instance, the word "Trinity" is nowhere to be found in it, though the doctrine is obviously able to be derived from scripture.
Thank you for forcing me to look up all the bible texts. Am I supposed to know it by heart or something...
Anyway, 2 thess. 2:15 says that you should stick to what the Word says... contrary to your point.
15 So then, brothers, stand firm, and hold the traditions which you were taught by us, whether by word, or by letter.
The text from Acts just says how one apostle was added to the 11...?

Because the Bible specifically tells you not to do that (2 Peter 3:16), and to follow the Church, which is the pillar of the living truth (1 Timothy 3:15). Sola scriptura is a self-defeating position.
2 Petrus 3:16 says that there are things in the Bible that are difficult to understand and easy to be twisted by "ignorant and unsettled". That doesn't mean you shouldn't base your life on the Bible.
Also:
"but if I wait long, that you may know how men ought to behave themselves in the house of God, which is the assembly of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth. "
How can you deduce from this that you should follow what one specific church says?
 
Spoiler :
I know, no-one's asked who'd win in a battle between the Romans and the medievals, or even mentioned Zheng He.



All right, I see what you're getting at. I still think this doesn't follow, though.

Remember that Protestants do not - as far as I can tell - think that interpretation of the Bible is simply a matter of people sitting and reading it and coming up with whatever they want. (And I'm taking "Protestants" here to mean biblicists who think the Bible is infallible.) They believe that the Bible must be read with the aid of the Holy Spirit, and that just as God guided the human authors of the Bible to write infallible truth, so too he guides the faithful reader to discern that infallible truth. So it's not a matter of leaving it up to the individual's fallible powers of understanding. One might say that where the Catholic Church holds that there are many interpretations of the Bible, but only one that is trustworthy and true, the Protestants hold exactly the same thing. What they disagree about is the medium by which God shows believers the correct interpretation. For Catholics it's the Catholic Church, while for Protestants it's the action of the Holy Spirit upon the individual reader. And of course the Holy Spirit isn't going to give people variant interpretations any more than the Catholic Church is.

There's surely some discussion at cross-purposes here too. You say that the Catholic interpretation of the Bible is correct, and given that, there's no sense in interpreting it in any other way. That's fine for anyone who accepts the premise that the Catholic interpretation is correct. But if people think that the Catholic interpretation is incorrect then what's their motivation for believing it anyway? Is that even possible? Certainly only one interpretation of the Bible can be the correct one, but if someone investigates the matter and it seems to her that the Catholic one is deeply flawed and (say) the Southern Baptist interpretation is the correct one, what's she supposed to do?

This comes back to what I said before. For Catholics, it seems they take it as a basic premise that what the Catholic Church teaches is true, and not only this, that its teaching is incontrovertibly true. It's barely even conceivable that it's not true. From this position, everyone either accepts the truth or deliberately rejects it in favour of error. But of course non-Catholics don't accept this position from the start. They are not deliberately rejecting what is evidently true - they aren't convinced that it's true in the first place or that it has any more legitimacy than any of the other claims to truth that are out there. And until both sides recognise what the other's starting point is, they'll never even really understand each other's arguments, let alone come to any agreement.



Fair enough, but I think any kind of argument like this, based on what we think God would do, is going to be shaky at best. I'll grant that God loves his creation, since I think that something like this must be pretty much part of the definition of God (although I don't think Aquinas' proof of it is so great, but let's not get into this). But I don't see how one could be certain that the fact that God loves his creation means that he would provide us with an infallible means of knowing the truth. Furthermore, even if we did know that God has provided us with an infallible means of knowing the truth, I certainly don't see how we could know that this means must be a church. It could easily be something else - e.g. the indwelling of the Holy Spirit to enable us to read the Bible correctly, as outlined above.

After all, this kind of argument really proves too much. If we could demonstrate with reasonable certainty that God would wish to keep us from error by providing us with a church that issues authoritative and reliable teaching, then it would seem that the same argument should demonstrate that God would wish to keep that church from schism and heresy. Yet we find that the church has fragmented throughout history. Of course you'll say that the Catholic Church has remained steadfast and all that's happened is that heretics and schismatics have chosen to go their own way. But why would God allow that? If the church is such an important part of his plan, why would he allow something like the Reformation to occur, and millions of people in the centuries that follow to be brought up with the wrong interpretation of the Bible?

You might say that that's free will, and these people chose to break with the church against God's wishes. But then that same argument can be turned against the Catholic Church itself. Presumably the ministers of that church have always had free will too. How do we know that they haven't been misusing it too, just like the Protestants?

In short, the argument from God's intentions is either too weak or too strong. Any argument of this kind that seeks to establish that God would set up the Catholic Church for his purposes could just as easily be used to establish that he would allow the Reformation and similar events. Conversely, any attempt to explain things like the Reformation as occurring through human sinful misuse of freedom also undermines the original argument, because it establishes that God doesn't have control over any of this stuff.



I don't want to get into this as it is not really relevant to our discussion here. However, I will say that I'm a little surprised that you should cite F.F. Bruce, especially in the context of this discussion! I've had a look at the Marks article and I'm afraid I'm not very impressed by what he says. Some of it is odd. For example, he claims that Tatian wrote a defence of biblical inerrancy. Well, I don't even know that text that is supposed to be referring to - I know of only two books by Tatian, neither of which matches that description. He also seems to think that denying that the apostle Matthew wrote the Gospel of Matthew is an attack on biblical authority, despite the fact that the Gospel as it appears in the Bible is anonymous. The marshalling of second-century witnesses to the authorship of the Gospels seems impressive, but there are serious problems with these witnesses when you look at them in detail, primarily the fact that the way they describe the writing of the Gospels does not conform to what we can tell from looking at the Gospels themselves. E.P. Sanders and Margaret Davies analysed these problems very carefully in Studying the synoptic Gospels, which is now a fairly old book but still very useful. For example, Papias states that Matthew's Gospel was written in Hebrew, but every indication is that it is an original Greek text. So either Papias wasn't very reliable or he was talking about a different text altogether, in which case he's not a useful witness for what we call Matthew's Gospel. Again, Marks argues against the nigh-universally accepted conclusion of New Testament scholars that Mark's Gospel was written before Matthew's. But I don't think that this stands up to the evidence in the slightest. Overall I just don't see anything remotely convincing in this article. It's really a collection of assertions that biblical scholars are wrong rather than good evidence that they are.

I must add that in my limited experience this is typical of the site Catholic Answers. I have been dreadfully disappointed and often angered by that site. The articles and answers it hosts seem to me very often woefully lacking in both intellectual rigour and pastoral care to the people who post on it. It seems to reflect not what I have always thought of as mainstream, reasonable Catholicism, but something rather different. The fact that the Marks article is explicitly arguing against the views of Catholic bishops, and in favour of something more conservative and less engaged with secular scholarship than the mainstream Catholic Church, reflects this. Again, though, this isn't very relevant to what we're talking about there.



Of course, and I'm no expert on this either - my interest in patristics is theological/philosophical, not ecclesiastical.



Does it, though? Couldn't it equally mean that he wants them to have authority? At the very least, it indicates that at least some people thought they didn't have authority in some way or for some reason.

As I said, we must be wary of assuming the existence of (what we would recognise as) an episcopal system at all. We mustn't assume that each of these churches even had "a" bishop in the first place - not even one who was struggling to assert his authority. Some may have been governed by a group, with no clear leader (see below on this). Some may have been split into factions, each with its own leader - perhaps all striving to be recognised as the overall leader, or perhaps not. Some may not have had institutional leadership at all, but been governed by itinerant prophets who moved from church to church. Now when Ignatius talks about "the" bishop, perhaps that's because he assumes that these churches have "a" bishop - maybe because that's the situation in his own church and he assumes that they're the same as his. Or perhaps he's well aware of the different situations in the different churches, and he's trying to drag them into line with the situation that he thinks is the correct one. That is, he's trying to impose his view of how churches should be run on them all. Or perhaps he favours particular individuals in these churches not because he is committed to a certain model of church leadership, but because he is committed to certain doctrines or liturgical practices, and he is basically endorsing the leader in each church who most closely matches his views on these matters. In this case, all the stuff about the necessity of obeying the bishop as God's representative is there because Ignatius wants the people to obey the person who has the right understanding of the Christian faith.

All of these are perfectly possible explanations for why Ignatius says what he does about the episcopate. This is why we can't take Ignatius' views as evidence that the ideal he describes was actually in practice.



Certainly, but again, the fact that Ignatius feels compelled to go on about this at such length is itself evidence that it was, at the very least, not a unanimous view at the time. And perhaps it was only a minority one. Which leads us to:



This is the nub of the matter. I don't think it's enormously debatable that there was variety in how churches were governed in this period. What may be debatable is how great that variety was. What we do find is that different sources from this period speak of different kinds of leadership. I'll summarise what they seem to indicate.

Paul (50s). Testifies to a sort of charismatic ministry where different people are called to perform different functions in the church according to their abilities (1 Cor. 12). There are people in charge (1 Thess. 5:12-13). But there seems to be no-one in charge of the Eucharist, where he tells people to behave in an orderly way but makes no mention of anyone in charge (1 Corinthians 11). He mentions titles of church leaders only once: bishops and deacons (Philippians 1:1). No indication of what these titles mean or who these people were.

Revelation (probably 90s). Speaks of prophets, male and female (1:10; 2:20-23). Also apostles (2:20). These are probably itinerant, going from church to church and exercising their ministry there, since they are described as being judged and found wanting by certain churches.

Didache (uncertain date, probably late first century). Says a great deal about prophets and apostles. Both groups are itinerant. Prophets can stay for a while in an individual church, but apostles may stay for no more than two days before moving on. Unclear what apostles do, but prophets speak "in the Spirit". Bishops and deacons are also mentioned. They are apparently not itinerant, and they are apparently subordinate to the prophets and apostles and assist them, but it is unclear in what way.

1 Peter (uncertain date, probably late first century). The church is ruled by presbyters (5:1-5).

Pastoral epistles (probably late first century). Bishops and deacons mentioned frequently. A single bishop in each church, assisted by a number of deacons. Clear rules for selecting them. Also mentions of presbyters. Unclear who these are or how they relate to bishops and deacons. Sometimes the presbyters are said to rule the church (1 Tim. 5:17-19), but at other times they are identified with bishops (Tit. 1:5-9).

1 Clement (90s). The church is ruled by presbyters, in the plural. Bishops and deacons also mentioned on occasion, apparently taking "bishop" and "presbyter" to be synonymous.

So some texts, such as Paul's, seem to suggest a situation with almost no formal leadership. Some, such as Revelation, suggest one with a shifting, charismatic ministry of prophets and apostles. Others, such as 1 Peter, suggest a localised ministry of presbyters. Others, such as 1 Clement, also suggest one where the church is ruled by presbyters, but mention bishops and deacons as well in a rather off-hand way. Others, such as the pastorals, are the reverse: they emphasise the bishops and deacons, and are unclear about the presbyters. Others still suggest situations of transitions, so in the Didache we find apostles and prophets in charge but bishops and deacons also present.

Of course a biblicist Protestant would reject the distinction between Paul and the pastorals, so that would simplify things somewhat. However, even if we merge those two groups and suppose that they testify to a single situation of charismatic leadership and bishops/deacons, we still have a wide range of different situations.

Now all of this is clearly very confusing. One possible explanation is that after the initial period suggested by Paul's letters, in which church ministry was basically charismatic, three different systems appeared in different churches. In some, the ministry continued to be charismatic, and it revolved around these prophets and apostles who travelled from church to church. This system is associated especially with the churches of Asia Minor. Other churches developed a presbyterian system, in which the church was governed by a sort of college of presbyters. Presumably these were originally the oldest and wisest among the church, since "presbyter" just means "old man". It is not clear at what point, if at all, this became an official title rather than a description. And other churches still developed the episcopal system, with a single leader - the bishop - and his helpers - the deacons. Again, it's not clear at which point these names developed from descriptions (they just mean "overseer") into official titles. And some churches mixed these different systems, in different ways.

Again, this is just a possible interpretation. On this interpretation, when Ignatius of Antioch - writing in the early years of the second century - tells people to obey their bishop, he's assuming a system like the third one mentioned above. And as I suggested before, perhaps he is deliberately trying to champion that system as opposed to the others.

But it is important to recognise that even after this time, things took a while to settle into the familiar episcopal system. Remember that the Montanists, who were widespread and popular in Asia Minor, seem to have operated a system not unlike that reflected in Revelation and the Didache. They also had apostles and prophets who moved from church to church. Again, in some churches in the second century, administration seems to have been done by people without formal titles. Irenaeus of Lyon may be an example. He apparently ran the church there, but there is no evidence that he held the title of "bishop" or occupied any official post. Finally and most striking, there is the case of Noetus, who got into trouble in Rome for his views about the relation between the Father and the Son. According to Hippolytus, he was brought before the presbyters and his views were examined; they were found wanting, and he was expelled from the church. So it seems that this church was still being run on the presbyterian model, not the episcopal one. And this was Rome at the end of the second century! It is only after this date that we hear of a bishop of Rome actually doing anything at all (as opposed to merely appearing in a list of names) - namely Callistus, who shocked other leading Christians with his relatively liberal attitude to morality, and who may have been locked in some kind of power struggle with Hippolytus. The fact that this power struggle is rather obscure and we don't even know whether Hippolytus regarded himself as bishop of Rome, bishop of somewhere else such as Ostia, or even a bishop at all is again consistent with the view that the organisational structure of the church was still rather fluid even at this time.



Certainly it can all be explained. If it couldn't, the Catholic position would be untenable. But all of this does weaken the argument for that position. That is, all of the evidence I've just outlined is consistent with the claim that in all these places there was, in fact, a single bishop in charge. Perhaps those sources that speak of prophets and apostles are describing other groups of leaders who existed alongside the bishop and had a different sort of role; and perhaps they just happen not to mention the bishop. And so on for the others. Perhaps Irenaeus was bishop of Lyon, and this fact just wasn't mentioned in contemporary texts; perhaps the presbyters dealt with Noetus because the bishop was away. Of course all of this is possible. But the problem is that even if this is true, it's hardly supported by the evidence. On the face of it, the evidence points away from the episcopal system existing in the way that the Catholic position suggests. You certainly can't say, as you did, that there is "as much [historical proof] as you can possibly ask for in historical evidence pertaining to the antiquity era" for this. And this is why I think the Catholic argument is very weak at this point. You just don't have the evidence of a clear succession of authoritative and reliable successors to the apostles that you need to argue for your position.



Yes, but I don't think you can show even that core succession.



I wouldn't have said so. All they indicate, if they are the correct interpretation, is that Ignatius thought that an episcopal system where the bishop has very great authority is the correct one. It doesn't indicate that such a system was in widespread use or indeed existed outside Ignatius' own head.



I don't quite follow what you're arguing here - if you can explain what you mean I'd be grateful.

Of course there were heresies (I'm using this term in the Catholic sense of course) which weren't necessarily unreasonable or anti-Jewish. Ebionism is the obvious example, although we don't know much about it. Montanism is another example; indeed as far as we know the Montanists didn't teach any heretical doctrines at all, but were regarded as heretics (rather than merely schismatics - to the extent that a distinction between these existed at all at the time) because they accepted prophecies as genuine which other people didn't. And the spate of heresies at the end of the second century and start of the third don't seem obviously anti-Jewish or irrational, such as Sabellianism, the views of Hermogenes, and so on.



OK then! I'll be interested to see what you do say.



That's a great strawman, but it's not very conducive to mutual understanding. As I said at the start of this apparently endless post, that's not the Protestant position. Protestants would agree that Jesus and the apostles knew God best. They would say that the apostles wrote what they knew in the New Testament, under the guidance of God. That is where revelation and truth are to be found. After that point, no-one has a monopoly on interpreting it, and no-one is better at interpreting it than anyone else just because they have a pointy hat or indeed a degree in biblical studies. This is because the Holy Spirit is given to all believers and guides them as they read it.

Now this may or may not be true. (Of course I don't think it's true.) But I don't see how it's any dafter than the Catholic position. As I said before, both groups believe that the authoritative interpretation of the Bible comes from God, not from merely human understanding. They differ only on the question of what means, or what medium, God uses to provide that interpretation. Now there may be good reasons for thinking (from a Christian point of view) that one or the other model is the correct one, but you cannot just assume that one's obviously reasonable and mock the other as absurd.



Yes, you're still assuming that Protestants ignore "the founders", namely Jesus and the apostles. As I said, Protestants think that what they said is completely authoritative. What they deny is the claim that what their successors said is authoritative. The Catholic view is that Jesus and the apostles said some stuff, and after this the church retains the rights to it (as it were) and has the authority to explain what they meant. The Protestant view is that Jesus and the apostles speak for themselves, they left us the record of what they said, and that if we need any help in understanding it, God will give it to us.



Matthew 1:20-24
Matthew 2:12
Matthew 2:13
Matthew 2:19-20
Acts 2:17
Acts 10:10-16
Acts 16:9

Not that it has much relevance to this discussion, but perhaps you ought to read the Bible more carefully before attacking other people for their knowledge of it!

1) But wasn't one Magi Chinese? :p

2) Most Protestants have a butchered Bible, how can one discern the correct interpretation with only part of the facts
3) Strawman? Well it is partially hyperbole, but when trying to talk with Protestants about Transubstantiation they claim things like it's unChristian and the Catholic Church is reading the Bible wrong when the basic concept minus the name is in there, John 6:53-56 for example
4) You Bible quotes actually prove my point because they refer to Joseph, Mary and the Apostles
 
@Mathilda, basing theological authority solely on the Bible only gives 1/3 of the truth,
Based on Catholic doctrine, I presume, since this is the first time I've heard of it.
you said aspects in the plural, please elaborate on the others (indulgences is typically the only one trotted out, like whipping a dead horse)
Other problems in Catholic history?
Well, overall for the most of its history the Catholic church appears to have been more of a political organisation than a religious one. You know, Ecumenical council gathering to excommunicate political opponents, using Donation of Constantine, inquisitions.
Not to mention the more personal failings of the "God's representative on earth"-persons.
Nevertheless, Magisterial infallibility (that is, from ecumenical councils) has been invoked on a great number of issues, which is what I was primarily referring to.
I don't supposed you'd know where I could find a handy list of these?
I mean the ones that have official standing.

Au contraire; John Henry Newman said, "To be deep in history is to cease to be Protestant."
I'm sorry, really I am, but I don't understand at all. To me it seems this Catholic bishop you are quoting is saying exactly what I said.

I've already established that personal interpretation of the Bible will lead to numerous logical paradoxes,
Isn't the only difference not that the Catholics only accept a small group of theologians (people, well men in their case) to decide what the interpretation is, and protestants allow / encourage everyone to search for it?
and the notion that tradition is to play no part in Christianity is contradicted by 2 Thessalonians 2:15.
20 years since I've read that book, so I'm not going to start a quote war with you :)
 
I snipped the Constitutional talk to make this discussion more on-topic. That debate would go on forever, and it was mostly meant as a quick comparison to show how all texts are open to interpretation.

... I still have no idea what you're talking about.

Logic states that if you have 1000 ideas to approach a problem, there's a higher chance of solving it than say, if you only had 1.

Your assumption seems to be, "if Catholicism is wrong, then it's likely that the Pope's interpretation doesn't matter." A bit self-defeating, yeah?

No, my assumption is that if the Pope is any better-equipped to hear God's truths than others, then this idea that he is better is based on faith alone. Just as it's hard to prove God, it's hard to prove that others are better than their fellow humans at being able to communicate with him.

Now if all humans can communicate with God, why can't they get the truth as well?

Now you might say that makes no sense, as there can't be more than one truth. Perhaps, but have you though that, in his omnibenevolence, God is not the belief-centric being many depict him as, and that he has made many paths for people to reach him, rather than just one?

The purpose of fantasy is pleasure. The purpose of fabrication is to deceive. So I don't think using the two univocally does justice to moral parables.

No objection to this paragraph, except the use of the word "fabrication," as per the above.

Well, I don't know what the proper term would be. "Artistic rendering" then?

uh more like
Catholicism: Jesus and the Apostles knew God best
Protestantism: People living 1500-2000 years after the Bible was written by the Apostles reading a mangled copy of the Bible with parts gouged out and gone through 3+ translations know God as well if not better than Jesus and the Apostles

How about: even after 1500-2000 years, human beings are still just as capable of interacting with God as the Apostles were? Were those in the Roman era better than modern people? Technology says otherwise.

if the Protestant version of it is the truth then Jesus was a snake oil salesman and Christianity is absolutely worthless

I fail to see how that follows. Perhaps the Protestants just have their own special connection to God, which, as a Catholic, you do not agree with?

When did anyone claim "the Pope any more biologically equipped to speak with God"

It's implied. If the Pope is the only one capable of speaking with God and hearing all the divine truths from him, and no one else is, then he must be speshul. Of course, if nobody is agreeing with this sentiment, it matters not.

Divine revelations through dreams? In the New Testament???

Plotinus already looked through the scripture for me on this one; he's better equipped to debate you all on the actual religious texts. I mostly have to debate based on my logical understanding from what I know.

Your assumption of multiple religions multiple chances is only valid if they all got an equal chance

Which they do. The equal chance of all being believed. They may be believed by different people, but they are still believed. Logic says that if you have a problem, 1000 possible solutions is better than one, because one of those 1000 is bound to be correct; if that one solution doesn't work, what then?

And that basically also relays the general theme of religion. Thousands of possible solutions to how to reach God, but in most's mind, only one of them will get you into Heaven rather than Hell.

Dogma of the Catholic Church doesn't change, if it did then that would suggest God is fickle and capricious which is entirely at odds with God as revealed by Jesus

It was said that practices change but not Church dogma. If this is true, why didn't God, in his omniscience, reveal the proper practices from the beginning? Has it ever been considered the Pope is just as human as everyone else, prone to all the prejudices and misinterpretations? And accordingly, "God"'s view of practices changes with each new Pope?

I am not going to read all those quote infested discussions.

You're going to have fun then. ;)

---

Now on to your next post...

First, civ_king, could you please actually break up text? Quoting a whole post instead of the relevant part you're debating is annoying, frustrating, and also makes the forum harder to understand.

2) Most Protestants have a butchered Bible, how can one discern the correct interpretation with only part of the facts

How is it butchered? The fact it's been revised by the individuals? And I imagine many Catholics have a butchered bible as well; you know, the trend away from Latin and towards vernacular literature.

You may be referring to how the various kings changed it, but I'd say their claim to being divinely-appointed would be just as valid as the Popes.

3) Strawman? Well it is partially hyperbole, but when trying to talk with Protestants about Transubstantiation they claim things like it's unChristian and the Catholic Church is reading the Bible wrong when the basic concept minus the name is in there, John 6:53-56 for example

Sounds like you have an axe to grind against Protestants almost.

Concept, that's the key word. Not having read the Bible, I imagine the concept is that of a "universal church", or "universal body of believers." Why does the Catholic Church have to be the universal church; why can't be any other ancient Christian Church? Why can't the universal church refer to all Christians, rather than any subset?

Of course you could just be talking transubstantiation, but I don't know. Perhaps they just have a different interpretation of the same passage?

4) You Bible quotes actually prove my point because they refer to Joseph, Mary and the Apostles

He was simply stating that revelation in that manner is possible, from what I gathered.

It also shows that you need not be a member of the hierarchy to receive them. Apart from faith, what says that only the Pope can get God's truth? Why are his statements any more valid than what anybody else who has read the Bible says?
 
The Bible was written by a bunch of different humans each with their own political agendas and motivations. It contradicts itself in multiple places and can basically be interpreted in whatever way you want it. And if you talk to different people, you will basically see that they cherry pick whatever verses happen to conform to their beliefs. There is no one "right" way to interpret the Bible. Just like there is no one "right" way to interpret any piece of text.
 
Before we start, isn't it kind of paradoxical that you are trying to prove reasons not to tightly follow the Bible by quoting bible texts...:crazyeye:

That's not my thesis. My thesis is that "Sola scriptura" is a self-defeating and logically paradoxical view to hold, since the Bible itself tells you not to follow the Bible alone.

Anyway, 2 thess. 2:15 says that you should stick to what the Word says... contrary to your point.

Perhaps you should finish reading the sentence.

"15 So then, brothers, stand firm, and hold the traditions which you were taught by us, whether by word, or by letter."

Why would St. Paul be telling anybody to follow tradition if all they need is scripture?

The text from Acts just says how one apostle was added to the 11...?

It proves the doctrine of apostolic succession.

2 Petrus 3:16 says that there are things in the Bible that are difficult to understand and easy to be twisted by "ignorant and unsettled". That doesn't mean you shouldn't base your life on the Bible.

Excuse me. I was citing the wrong verse.

"First of all you must understand this, that no prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation, because no prophecy ever came by the impulse of man, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God" (2 Peter 1:20-21).

No prophecy, that is, understanding of scripture is a matter of one's own interpretation.

Also:
"but if I wait long, that you may know how men ought to behave themselves in the house of God, which is the assembly of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth. "
How can you deduce from this that you should follow what one specific church says?

It shows that the Church established in AD 33 is the "pillar of the living truth." It can't have been corrupted, because Christ promised the "Gates of Hell [would] not prevail against it" in Matthew 16:18-19. Since the Catholic Church is the only candidate for this, St. Paul must be referring to the Catholic Church.

It cannot be some sort of "universal church" or association of believers. Protestants believe different things, all drawing their conclusions from the Bible. How can this be a "pillar of truth" if they're all wildly contradictory? The Holy Spirit cannot have been the author of this confusion. The verse must be referring to a visible hierarchy, which is confirmed by St. Paul's mention of bishops and elders.

Other problems in Catholic history?
Well, overall for the most of its history the Catholic church appears to have been more of a political organisation than a religious one. You know, Ecumenical council gathering to excommunicate political opponents, using Donation of Constantine, inquisitions.
Not to mention the more personal failings of the "God's representative on earth"-persons.

Catholics are sinners. Guilty as charged. Judas and St. Peter both betrayed Christ, however, and that didn't seem to challenge the infallibility of the Church. Pay attention to what Christ says about the Pharisees in Matthew 23:3: "The scribes and the Pharisees have sitten on the chair of Moses. All things therefore whatsoever they shall say to you, observe and do: but according to their works do not. For they say, and do not." In other words, because they sit in the chair of Moses, God has preserved for them the truth of the faith, even if they don't live it themselves.

I don't supposed you'd know where I could find a handy list of these?
I mean the ones that have official standing.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church, which can be read online, summarizes them for the layperson without in-depth training in theology. If you want to go deeper than that, you have to study each council individually.

I'm sorry, really I am, but I don't understand at all. To me it seems this Catholic bishop you are quoting is saying exactly what I said.

That knowledge of history causes you to not be a Protestant?

Isn't the only difference not that the Catholics only accept a small group of theologians (people, well men in their case) to decide what the interpretation is, and protestants allow / encourage everyone to search for it?

Yes. The small group of theologians in question have apostolic authority which was passed down from the era of Christ, thus protecting them from false teachings. Anybody can read the Bible and draw wrong conclusions, hence why there must be a single infallible Church.
 
Logic states that if you have 1000 ideas to approach a problem, there's a higher chance of solving it than say, if you only had 1.

It also means you have a 99.9% chance of being wrong.

No, my assumption is that if the Pope is any better-equipped to hear God's truths than others, then this idea that he is better is based on faith alone. Just as it's hard to prove God, it's hard to prove that others are better than their fellow humans at being able to communicate with him.

The Pope is not better equipped to hear God's truths. He was specially designated to be the temporal shepherd of the flock.

Now if all humans can communicate with God, why can't they get the truth as well?

They can.

Now you might say that makes no sense, as there can't be more than one truth. Perhaps, but have you though that, in his omnibenevolence, God is not the belief-centric being many depict him as, and that he has made many paths for people to reach him, rather than just one?

As every religion says contradictory things about each other, and God would certainly not be the author of lies, it's a simple deduction than only one religion can be true, if any.

I fail to see how that follows. Perhaps the Protestants just have their own special connection to God, which, as a Catholic, you do not agree with?

Then their connection is to a being that offers contradictory truths, which is an impossibility.

And that basically also relays the general theme of religion. Thousands of possible solutions to how to reach God, but in most's mind, only one of them will get you into Heaven rather than Hell.

The goal of religion should not be an eternal reward. The goal of religion should be to become a virtuous person. Given that all religions have contradictory ethical approaches, this is again a strong reason to not be a pluralist.

It was said that practices change but not Church dogma. If this is true, why didn't God, in his omniscience, reveal the proper practices from the beginning?

He has, and the proper practices have changed throughout time.

Has it ever been considered the Pope is just as human as everyone else, prone to all the prejudices and misinterpretations?

Apparently, you think all Catholics are mindless drones that have never ever ever considered other religious beliefs, and you're the sole freethinker in a world of sheep. Please believe me that this isn't the case.

How is it butchered? The fact it's been revised by the individuals? And I imagine many Catholics have a butchered bible as well; you know, the trend away from Latin and towards vernacular literature.

I don't see how that butchers it. But the point is that Protestants removed books of the Bible from the canon that they couldn't reconcile with their beliefs, such as 1 & 2 Maccabees.

You may be referring to how the various kings changed it, but I'd say their claim to being divinely-appointed would be just as valid as the Popes.

Citation needed on that kings have altered the Bible.

Concept, that's the key word. Not having read the Bible, I imagine the concept is that of a "universal church", or "universal body of believers." Why does the Catholic Church have to be the universal church; why can't be any other ancient Christian Church? Why can't the universal church refer to all Christians, rather than any subset?

I've covered this so many times that I'm starting to get drowsy talking about it. The Catholic Church, by historical evidence, is the only one that's existed since AD 33. Since by the Bible and other contemporary writings, we know Christ established an infallible Church, they must be the same thing. 1 Timothy 3:15 can't refer to some loose "universal church" because all Protestants believe in wildly contradictory things, and God wouldn't be the author of such confusions; the Church must be visible.

The Bible was written by a bunch of different humans each with their own political agendas and motivations. It contradicts itself in multiple places and can basically be interpreted in whatever way you want it. And if you talk to different people, you will basically see that they cherry pick whatever verses happen to conform to their beliefs. There is no one "right" way to interpret the Bible. Just like there is no one "right" way to interpret any piece of text.

I'm starting to regret that this thread was moved to Off-Topic, because now people without the faintest clue of what they're talking about, whose sole education consists in reading two-paragraph blurbs on about.atheist.com or other such amateur website, wants to give their input. Please at least read the rest of the thread before you do so.
 
The way Christians misunderstand each other in what seems a quite wilful way, one wonders whether the ecumenical movement has been a total waste of time...

Before we start, isn't it kind of paradoxical that you are trying to prove reasons not to tightly follow the Bible by quoting bible texts...:crazyeye:

If I may step in on the Catholic side for a change, perhaps a bit more mutual understanding is required here. The Catholic posters are not arguing that Christians should not "tightly follow the Bible". On the contrary, they think the Bible should be followed just as "tightly" as any Protestant does. Their point is simply that one cannot understand the Bible without the guidance of the church. There's nothing paradoxical about finding quotations in the Bible which support this position.

Anyway, 2 thess. 2:15 says that you should stick to what the Word says... contrary to your point.

I think you should look at it more carefully. Paul isn't talking about sticking to "the Word". (In fact "the Word", meaning the Bible, is not a biblical expression.) He's telling his readers to stick to what he, Paul, has told them, both through speaking and through writing. He's not talking about the Bible at all.

The point is that in this text, Paul instructs his listeners to obey him, including his personal instructions as well as his writings. The Catholic argument is that this indicates that leaders of the church (such as Paul) have personal authority and that this is something in addition to the authority of the written text of the Bible (since Paul specifically mentions not just his writings, but his speeches).

Now I don't personally think that this is a very strong argument, but it's fairly clear if you pay attention to the text.

2 Petrus 3:16 says that there are things in the Bible that are difficult to understand and easy to be twisted by "ignorant and unsettled". That doesn't mean you shouldn't base your life on the Bible.

No - but it does mean that people can read the Bible and misinterpret it. In which case, if you're sitting there reading your Bible by yourself and trying to understand it by yourself, how can you be sure that you're understanding it properly? What if you're one of these ignorant people mentioned in 2 Peter? The Catholic argument is not that you shouldn't base your life on the Bible. The Catholic argument is that this text indicates that people can misunderstand the Bible, so you need to be sure that when you read it you are understanding it correctly, and the only way to be sure of that is to follow the teaching of the church, which is the authoritative interpreter of the Bible.

1) But wasn't one Magi Chinese? :p

Ah, he crops up everywhere...

2) Most Protestants have a butchered Bible, how can one discern the correct interpretation with only part of the facts

You may call it "butchered", but on what authority? That of the Catholic Church? Isn't that a circular argument? After all, a member of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church could just as reasonably accuse Catholics of having a "butchered" Bible, since there are books that that church accepts but which Catholics don't.

I take it you're referring to the fact that Protestants reject the deutero-canonical books, relegating them to the Apocrypha, whereas Catholic Bibles integrate them into the main text. The problem here is that the Catholic Church has traditionally regarded these books as deutero-canonical to some extent, even though it keeps them as part of the Bible; the church fathers were a bit dubious about them and almost never quote them. Furthermore, there's almost nothing in them of theological importance, with the possible exception of a text which may authorise praying for the dead.

3) Strawman? Well it is partially hyperbole, but when trying to talk with Protestants about Transubstantiation they claim things like it's unChristian and the Catholic Church is reading the Bible wrong when the basic concept minus the name is in there, John 6:53-56 for example

So you're saying it's all right for you to use strawmen because your opponents do? Is that really a sensible debating technique - let alone a loving and Christ-minded one?

As for the transubstantiation issue, that is a side issue, but the John passage does not teach transubstantiation (although what it teaches is certainly compatible with the doctrine of transubstantiation). It's also compatible with rival doctrines such as consubstantiation or merely the Real Presence. And even that is on the assumption that the text is about the Eucharist; it could equally well be interpreted in a spiritual way as being about the believer's union with Christ, as Paul describes in Romans 6 (in very different language). Certainly that is how many Protestants have interpreted it. You may disagree with that interpretation but don't assume that they're being dishonest in making it. You need more intellectual empathy than that.

4) You Bible quotes actually prove my point because they refer to Joseph, Mary and the Apostles

Erm, well, if your point was that Joseph, Mary, and the apostles feature in the New Testament, then yes, but I don't think anyone was disputing that. I listed those quotations because you laughed at someone for mentioning divine revelation via dreams. I was just pointing out that the New Testament speaks of such things quite often (although certainly not as often as the Old Testament). Matthew's infancy narrative is absolutely crammed with them. And this is the very first thing in the New Testament!

[EDIT] Cross-posted some of this with LightSpectra. Sorry!
 
Don't worry about it. I'm actually kind of amazed that your posts are about as eloquent as they were when these debates began. I'm really starting to drone out here and I'm providing one-sentence answers to questions that deserve more time.
 
I think you should look at it more carefully. Paul isn't talking about sticking to "the Word". (In fact "the Word", meaning the Bible, is not a biblical expression.) He's telling his readers to stick to what he, Paul, has told them, both through speaking and through writing. He's not talking about the Bible at all.
I think I misunderstood 'by word or by letter' as both meaning the same thing, but 'word' means the things he said (I read letter as in a letter of the alphabet; the Dutch translation gave more clarity).

15 So then, brothers, stand firm, and hold the traditions which you were taught by us, whether by word, or by letter.
The letters of Paul are now part of the Bible. He also tells them to follow the things he said, but these have been lost. How can we, as modern Christians, possibly follow that? I think that we should just live to the letters he wrote as much as we can, and hope he repeated most of his words in the letters.

The point is that in this text, Paul instructs his listeners to obey him, including his personal instructions as well as his writings. The Catholic argument is that this indicates that leaders of the church (such as Paul) have personal authority and that this is something in addition to the authority of the written text of the Bible (since Paul specifically mentions not just his writings, but his speeches).

Now I don't personally think that this is a very strong argument, but it's fairly clear if you pay attention to the text.
Fact remains that spoken text is not saved, unless it's written down. I am pretty sure that Paul has written down most or at least the most important parts of it in the letters.
 
The letters of Paul are now part of the Bible.

Yes, and his traditions are not.

He also tells them to follow the things he said, but these have been lost. How can we, as modern Christians, possibly follow that?

They're only lost by Protestants that reject sacred tradition.
 
Spoiler Mathilda :
Based on Catholic doctrine, I presume, since this is the first time I've heard of it.

Other problems in Catholic history?
Well, overall for the most of its history the Catholic church appears to have been more of a political organisation than a religious one. You know, Ecumenical council gathering to excommunicate political opponents, using Donation of Constantine, inquisitions.
Not to mention the more personal failings of the "God's representative on earth"-persons.
*snip*
I'm referring to Scripture Tradition and the Magisterium
excommunication of political opponents? surely there would be religious antagonization of the Church too
I didn't know about the "Donation of Constantine," I learned something new
Inquisitions have taken a lot of undeserved bad reputation, as LightSpectra pointed out previously
The clergy is still composed of humans

Spoiler Taniciusfox :
*snip*
1) How about: even after 1500-2000 years, human beings are still just as capable of interacting with God as the Apostles were? Were those in the Roman era better than modern people? Technology says otherwise.
My problem is when people claim the Bible says things in utter opposition to the Apostles, I doubt people these days know Jesus as good as the Apostles

I don't remember Roman society prizing greed and the ability to exploit people and claiming it is Christian to do so. Spiritually Romans may have been better off than we are today, though this is hard to tell because few people have talked with Cicero recently.
2) I fail to see how that follows. Perhaps the Protestants just have their own special connection to God, which, as a Catholic, you do not agree with?
"Jesus Christ! I got a wine stain on my white dress, please God, make it come out *uses bleach* *stain comes out*. I love you God thank you for removing the wine stain"

where does the Bible say everyone basically has a hotline to God or Jesus?
3) It's implied. If the Pope is the only one capable of speaking with God and hearing all the divine truths from him, and no one else is, then he must be speshul. Of course, if nobody is agreeing with this sentiment, it matters not.
I'm sure a fair number of saints have communed with God, besides the Popes purpose is shepherd not oracle
4) Plotinus already looked through the scripture for me on this one; he's better equipped to debate you all on the actual religious texts. I mostly have to debate based on my logical understanding from what I know.
pst reading the Bible may help you understand it
5) Which they do. The equal chance of all being believed. They may be believed by different people, but they are still believed. Logic says that if you have a problem, 1000 possible solutions is better than one, because one of those 1000 is bound to be correct; if that one solution doesn't work, what then?
Logic doesn't consist of an RNG :lol:
6) And that basically also relays the general theme of religion. Thousands of possible solutions to how to reach God, but in most's mind, only one of them will get you into Heaven rather than Hell.
Nope, that's not what the Church teaches :p
7) It was said that practices change but not Church dogma. If this is true, why didn't God, in his omniscience, reveal the proper practices from the beginning? Has it ever been considered the Pope is just as human as everyone else, prone to all the prejudices and misinterpretations? And accordingly, "God"'s view of practices changes with each new Pope?
practice revisions are few and far between, closer to each new millennia than each new Pope
---

8) Now on to your next post...

First, civ_king, could you please actually break up text? Quoting a whole post instead of the relevant part you're debating is annoying, frustrating, and also makes the forum harder to understand.
Is this better?
9) How is it butchered? The fact it's been revised by the individuals? And I imagine many Catholics have a butchered bible as well; you know, the trend away from Latin and towards vernacular literature.

You may be referring to how the various kings changed it, but I'd say their claim to being divinely-appointed would be just as valid as the Popes.

Sounds like you have an axe to grind against Protestants almost.
Butchered as in there are seven books missing. The Bible is far better in Latin (for example God is referred to as He because there is no pronoun to refer to something without gender), but having it in vernacular does not inherently make it butchered
10) Concept, that's the key word. Not having read the Bible, I imagine the concept is that of a "universal church", or "universal body of believers." Why does the Catholic Church have to be the universal church; why can't be any other ancient Christian Church? Why can't the universal church refer to all Christians, rather than any subset?
as LightSpectra put it:
I've covered this so many times that I'm starting to get drowsy talking about it. The Catholic Church, by historical evidence, is the only one that's existed since AD 33. Since by the Bible and other contemporary writings, we know Christ established an infallible Church, they must be the same thing. 1 Timothy 3:15 can't refer to some loose "universal church" because all Protestants believe in wildly contradictory things, and God wouldn't be the author of such confusions; the Church must be visible.
11) Of course you could just be talking transubstantiation, but I don't know. Perhaps they just have a different interpretation of the same passage?
I was trying to give a specific example because it is hard to try to refute something that is vague
12) He was simply stating that revelation in that manner is possible, from what I gathered.

It also shows that you need not be a member of the hierarchy to receive them. Apart from faith, what says that only the Pope can get God's truth? Why are his statements any more valid than what anybody else who has read the Bible says?
You claimed that anyone could receive dreams from God, Plotinus provided specific examples of very special people

Spoiler Plotinus :
*snip*
Ah, he crops up everywhere...
:D
You may call it "butchered", but on what authority? That of the Catholic Church? Isn't that a circular argument? After all, a member of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church could just as reasonably accuse Catholics of having a "butchered" Bible, since there are books that that church accepts but which Catholics don't.

I take it you're referring to the fact that Protestants reject the deutero-canonical books, relegating them to the Apocrypha, whereas Catholic Bibles integrate them into the main text. The problem here is that the Catholic Church has traditionally regarded these books as deutero-canonical to some extent, even though it keeps them as part of the Bible; the church fathers were a bit dubious about them and almost never quote them. Furthermore, there's almost nothing in them of theological importance, with the possible exception of a text which may authorise praying for the dead.
The Catholic Church has never been subordinate to another Church, the Ethiopians can't say the same, also the Protestants removed the books much after the original compilation
So you're saying it's all right for you to use strawmen because your opponents do? Is that really a sensible debating technique - let alone a loving and Christ-minded one?

As for the transubstantiation issue, that is a side issue, but the John passage does not teach transubstantiation (although what it teaches is certainly compatible with the doctrine of transubstantiation). It's also compatible with rival doctrines such as consubstantiation or merely the Real Presence. And even that is on the assumption that the text is about the Eucharist; it could equally well be interpreted in a spiritual way as being about the believer's union with Christ, as Paul describes in Romans 6 (in very different language). Certainly that is how many Protestants have interpreted it. You may disagree with that interpretation but don't assume that they're being dishonest in making it. You need more intellectual empathy than that.
I was using example I have observed from my life,
I wasn't making a strawman instead I rejected his reality and substituted my own

Corinthians 11:23-29. especially verse 27: "Therefore whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord in an unworthy maner shall be guilty of the body and the blood of the Lord."

Erm, well, if your point was that Joseph, Mary, and the apostles feature in the New Testament, then yes, but I don't think anyone was disputing that. I listed those quotations because you laughed at someone for mentioning divine revelation via dreams. I was just pointing out that the New Testament speaks of such things quite often (although certainly not as often as the Old Testament). Matthew's infancy narrative is absolutely crammed with them. And this is the very first thing in the New Testament!

[EDIT] Cross-posted some of this with LightSpectra. Sorry!
I was confused not by his claims of messages from God through dreams, but rather by ANYONE can receive them,

you don't try conversing with a Scotch in Swahili, but rather with someone who understands what in blazes you are saying


In the interest of easier viewing they are in spoilers
 
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