lori4dogs said:
Then you got this guy, John MacArthur, making false statements about purgatory. He is either lying or doesn't know what he is talking about. I want to believe the later.
Honestly, I trust John McArthur a thousand times over you.
Could you please give us examples of these "false statements", along with citations?
The Catholic Church teaches we are saved by grace.
So do the Mormons. The problem is, just like the Mormons, Catholics claim that we are saved by grace but
redefine grace.
When a Catholic talks about salvation by grace, he may truly believe he is saved by grace, but the Catholic idea of grace is imparted and kept by works and rituals.
The Catholic Church has always taught that we are saved by grace.
Then could you please explain why the Council of Trent pronounced anyone who believes in salvation by grace alone as "anathema"?
lori4dogs said:
He makes the usual dribble...
Actually, it's drivel, not "dribble". Perhaps you heard that from a "Morman".
Are you really suggesting that Catholics don't build statues to dead saints and bow down and pray to them? Next time you're in New Jersey, you might want to take a ride down Rt40 and watch all of the Catholics bowing down at a shrine to "Padre Pio". And then, when you're leaving New Jersey, you can stop off at that giant, hideous looking statue to Mary in New Castle, De, and watch the Catholics bowing there.
inventing purgatory for the purpose of making money
Yep. Purgatory was invented so that the Catholic Church could sell indulgences.
(not to mention he says 'it is a second chance to get into heaven) re-sacrificing Christ at every mass, etc.
Actually, I've already cited Catholic sources for you that admit that Christ is "re-sacrificed" at every mass.
I'm glad you don't agree with his 'by definition, Catholics aren't Christians' and that salvation is on an individual basis, person by person.
But how is a person saved if they're relying on a false Gospel for their salvation?
The statistics among protestants is much more telling.
Steep decline in membership, embracing same-sex marriages, promoting abortion, denying Christ divinity, denying the resurrection, denying the virgin birth, promoting universalism, referring to the Atonement as 'divine child abuse', and the lists goes on and on.
Actually, anyone who denies Christ's divinity, denies the resurrection, denies the virgin birth isn't a Christian. So we can eliminate those people.
Second, the problem with your claim is that Christianity doesn't embrace these things institutionally. Catholicism
does, by definition, embrace Catholic heresies.
The third difference is that you fail to take into account (a) that these beliefs are only a very small minority and that (b) the vast majority of Christians actually speak out
against these things.
You want to talk about decline and heretical teachings. Take a good look at protestantism in America.
Have you ever heard of a logical fallacy called tu quoque?