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LaRae
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Furthermore Catholics are not required to even believe in any apparitions....and not all apparitions are even approved by the Church to start with.
LaRae
LaRae
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Just a couple of notes...Originally posted by DHK:
The Catholic Church has an open revelation. People down throughout the ages have been receiving divine messages through apparitions. These revelations become a part of the greater "revelation" of God, just as the "traditions" of the church, the papal and church council decrees, have also become a part of the "greater revelation" that the Catholic Church has. They have an open revelation. We do not. We have a closed revelation, the Word of God--the Bible. There is no revelation outside of that. It is therefore our final authority.
Here's a link to a sourced document (don't know how official the sources are though): What About Marian Apparitions?Originally posted by The Briguy:
C and GS, I read some of the revelation given to Maureen ? at the site DHK listed. What officially does the Catholic church do with those things. Actually, What did they say about that actual revelation. The two things I read were messages directly from Jesus and from Mary (Blessed Mother as she was referred to). I want to be honest here. If the words of Jesus are accepted as the real words of Jesus then that would be the actual word of God and would have authority in the church right? It would have to be if it is really is Jesus talking. Do you see where I am going with that logic. Doctrine could potentially change with each accepted revelation then. Actually, with the esteem given Mary the words she says would have some authority as well (I would think anyway) Let me know what you think of my logic here. I am being serious and I hope I am not sounding like I am trying to be tricky. Looking forward to a response.
I'm not sure I see the problem here. It would be one thing if Church approved apparitions were required belief. They aren't though and this is simply another reason why. I don't think this could be considered a doctrine either. The official Church teaching is that Catholics don't have to believe anything revealed through a private revelation that isn't official Church teaching. The statement in question is simply supporting evidence as to why the Church takes this stance. Does that help?Originally posted by The Briguy:
One paragragh at the site was disturbing. It says:
"It is also noteworthy that even in the case of an authentic private revelation, it often happens that some error in the receiving or the transmitting of the revelation may occur because of the ever present human nature of the visionary. Several authentic private revelations that have received official Church approval have also had some secondary elements of human error, even when the visionary has been a canonized saint.3"
This sounds like something that is in the doctrine to try to cover any inconsistencies. It seems a little to convienent to me. Safegaurds like that are usually in place when there are problems already going on. Hope that made sense. Please comment on the section of the writing I copied.
Your argument is with God not with me.Originally posted by GraceSaves:
Who are you to say that Jesus doesn't appear in visions to people? Either way, this has nothing to do with "further revelation," as the Catholic Church does not make doctrine out of someone's vision or apparition.
You're being mean and making lies. We've already proven they're lies.
Originally posted by chz:
Whether or not they are required to believe in them is an entirely different matter. The fact remains that the message received is a "revelation." If it is a revelation, and it is from God, then why would I not want to believe in it? I want to believe the very words of God. That is what this discussion centers around: authority. Revelation is authoritative. If a person has a revelation, that person is saying that he or she has received the very words of God. If you choose not to believe, according to your own faith, you are choosing not to believe the very words of God. Right?I'm not sure I see the problem here. It would be one thing if Church approved apparitions were required belief. They aren't though and this is simply another reason why. I don't think this could be considered a doctrine either. The official Church teaching is that Catholics don't have to believe anything revealed through a private revelation that isn't official Church teaching. The statement in question is simply supporting evidence as to why the Church takes this stance. Does that help?
DHK
Originally posted by chz:
This is a flip-flop in your position. You now agree that the Bible is the final authority. That is sola scriptura, the one doctrine that the Catholics so hate, and claim that the reformers invented (which is not true).3) There is little question about whether or not God's Word is everyone's final authority. I'm not sure why you keep suggesting that Catholics don't believe this. The issue is a) "What is God's Word?" and b) "Who has the authority to interpret it?" A good place to start for these questions concerning Catholics would be here: THE TRANSMISSION OF DIVINE REVELATION
The issue is "What is God's Word?" That may be an issue with you, but it never has been an issue for us. It is the 66 books of the Bible, the written revelation of God. This has always been the accepted position from the time of the Apostles onward, except for the Catholic Church.
"Who has the authority to interpret it?" Again, not an issue for us, but it is for you. Every believer has the authority to study the Bible and come to his own decisions. Jesus Himself commanded us to "Search the Scriptures." Paul said, "Study to show yourselves approved unto God." Jesus again said, "Ye do err not knowing the Scriptures." It is our responsibility to study, know, and interpret the Scriptures according to the enlightenment that the Holy Spirit gives each individual. The magesterium does not take the place of the Holy Spirt. That is just not in the Bible. 1Pet.2:5,9 teach that we are priests before God, each and every believer. I do not need a priest to interpret the Bible for me. I am a priest before God. He gives me the Holy Spirit and grants me understanding in the Word.
I looked at your website, The Transmission of Divine Revelation, and basically it says the same thing that I have been saying all along. That is, that you (the Catholics) accept the Bible as a major source of revelation, and second, you accept sacred tradition as another source of revelation. You also accept apparitions, but it doesn't get into that very much. You have an open system of revelation, even if you just consider the first two sources of revelation. Tradition is still on-going. Magesterial decrees, papal bulls, vatican councils, etc., are always on-going. You have an open revelation. All of these things are included in your source of authority, your revelation.
Whereas the Bible is our only source of revelation, the final authority in all matters of faith and practice. It is all-sufficient for us in all things pertaining to doctrine and faith. We need no other authority; no other revelation.
DHK
Originally posted by chz:
"Who has the authority to interpret Scripture?"Perhaps you can answer some questions for me(optional of course). For you, who has the authority to interpret scripture? Who determines which passages of Scripture are to be taken literally and which are figurative? Who determines what passages that seem to contradict beliefs such as "faith alone" really mean?
If your answer is "God" or "the Holy Spirit":
a) How do we know who is telling the truth when two sincere "Bible Believers" claim the Holy Spirit interprets a passage in two different ways?
b) Do you participate in a group Bible Study? If you do, why would you need study the Bible with a group when you are receiving the Holy Spirit as guidance?
c) Since many of the interpretations you receive from the Holy Spirit are not explicit in the Bible (perhaps this is a bad assumption?), do you think you are receiving revelation from a source outside of the Bible?
? every born-again believer has the authority to interpret Scripture. (1Cor.2:12)
"Who determines which passages of Scripture are to be taken literally and which are to be taken figuratively"
? In one word: context. To give further explanation, it is good for every believer to know some principles of hermeneutics. Here are some basic principles that I learned from John Mcarthur:
1. The Literal Principle
Take the Bible literally, unless the context dictates otherwise.
2. The Historical Principle
Study the historical and cultural setting of the time that it was written. Know who it was written to, why it was written, who wrote it, something about the people of that time, etc.
3. The Grammatical Principle
Break the verses or the passage down grammatically. Most major thoughts center around the verbs. Understand meanings of words and their relationship to the rest of the sentence. Know your grammar. Learn to diagram sentences.
4. The Application Principle
The Bible is a timeless book. It is applicable for every age. How does the passage apply for us today?
NOTE: I did not go and copy this from a website. This is what I remember, and what I have learned.
Basically, with good study habits, the Bible interprets itself.
"Who determines what passages that seem to contradict beliefs such as "faith alone" really mean?"
? See the above. With careful study, I am not afraid to tackle any Scripture in the Bible. "All Scripture is given by inspiration and is profitable." That means the hard passages too. The Bible does not contradict itself. Everything has a solution.
Two sincere Bible-believers may come to different conclusions on some things. If those "things" are apart from the fundamentals of the faith, then we have the soul liberty to agree to disagree, and still maintain fellowship one with another. There are certain issues that will divide. Very obviously doctrine divides. Christ said: I come to bring a sword. The message that He preached was not all love. In fact He preached more on Hell than He did on Heaven. Doctrine divides. You come to your own conclusions through very careful Bible study. "Be fully persuaded in your own mind." "Be a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth."
"Do you participate in a group Bible Study? If you do, why would you need study the Bible with a group when you are receiving the Holy Spirit as guidance?"
? First, if all participating are believers, then all receive the Holy Spirit to guide them. Second, God has ordained that we have teachers to guide and instruct us. I do not condone the type of Bible Study where there is no leader (teacher), everyone shares their opinion, and the end result is pooled ignorance. "God has set some in the church... "teachers." The Holy Spirit illumines the believer's heart that he may understand the mysteries of the Bible, that he would not otherwise understand. That is the teaching of 1Cor.2:12. The Holy Spirit was not given to give us new revelation, but to help us in understanding the revelation that we have already.
"c) Since many of the interpretations you receive from the Holy Spirit are not explicit in the Bible (perhaps this is a bad assumption?), do you think you are receiving revelation from a source outside of the Bible?"
? We do not receive any revelation outside of the Bible. We can use outside resources such as historical references, and such. But our final authority is always God's Word. Often it may be an outside source that helps determine the meaning: a dictionary, encyclopedia, etc. But it still God's Word that is authoritative. The only revelation we have is in the Bible--God's Word. Our duty is to find out the proper meaning and sense of the passage of Scripture before us. That is not the duty laid upon any body of people such as a magesterium; it is the duty of every Christian.
DHK
I am new in this particular forum. Obviously, many of the arguments between people here are based on an understandings from past arguments.Originally posted by Gloria1:
Good point. The reality of the Immaculate Conception always existed but did not become manifest into the human mind until then. It just shows that the Church is the unfolding of Gods plan here on earth.![]()
Actually, the authority you grant, whether in whole or in part, to the catechism we grant to the Bible alone.Originally posted by chz:
2) The Catholic Church goes through painstaking effort to provide to the world a Catechism. It complies its doctrines and backs them up with reasoning from scripture or other documents based upon scripture. No other Church has dared to create such a work and expose it to the world for scrutiny. I would suggest that you back up any assertions about what you think Catholics believe with solid references from the Catechism taken in context.
Biblicists, which includes many but not all self-proclaimed Baptists, believe that the Bible is a self-authenticating book. It declares its own authority. We trust scripture to interpret/explain scripture. The believer is to be guided by the Holy Spirit as they are conformed to the image of Christ through the study and application of God's Word."Who has the authority to interpret it?"
I answered above. How do you answer?For you, who has the authority to interpret scripture?
I could not improve on DHK's answer.Who determines which passages of Scripture are to be taken literally and which are figurative?
Context will resolve most of these problems as well as viewing the passage in light of other scripture. I am very skeptical of any "doctrine" that is built on less than two or three distinct passages of scripture. A single passage can be easily misinterpretted.Who determines what passages that seem to contradict beliefs such as "faith alone" really mean?
The one who can build the strongest biblical case.
a) How do we know who is telling the truth when two sincere "Bible Believers" claim the Holy Spirit interprets a passage in two different ways?
Two things: First, discussions between believers are used by God to edify individual believers. Second, it is a classic misunderstanding of the ministry of the Holy Spirit in the age of grace to expect some sort of Divine revelation each time something is not easily understood. There are some Bible mysteries that we may not understand in this life. The Holy Spirit does move us and guide our decisions but never in contradiction to biblical truth.b) Do you participate in a group Bible Study? If you do, why would you need study the Bible with a group when you are receiving the Holy Spirit as guidance?
No. That is the error of many religions but not biblicists. The pentecostals/charasmatics definitely believe this. In my view, several Catholic doctrines fit in this catagory.c) Since many of the interpretations you receive from the Holy Spirit are not explicit in the Bible (perhaps this is a bad assumption?), do you think you are receiving revelation from a source outside of the Bible?
This is your faith but it has very little to do with fact. Your doctrine says that you must pay for your own sins. The Bible says that we are incapable of any good apart from the indwelling Holy Spirit. The only way we can receive the Holy Spirit is by personally accepting Christ as Saviour. We are wholly incapable of paying for any of our sins. Christ's substitionary sacrifice on the cross was completely sufficient to take away the "sins of the world."Originally posted by Pauline:
Scott,
There can never be a disagreement between Scripture, Sacred Tradition and papal decree. It's as simple as that. Scripture and Sacred Tradition make up one deposit of Faith.
As Bible believers, it is just as scandalous to us when a religion confers a divine characteristic to someone without biblical proof and without them claiming it for themselves.It is scandalous to us Catholics when Protestants seem to lower the dignity of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. You ask: How is this done? By teaching that Mary sinned, that she was not kept the pure Ark by God Himself. And further, by teaching that after she had borne the Second Person of the Triune God, she had sexual relations with a man and bore other children.
Oops. Got to go. UNP
Pauline.