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Still waiting for an answer

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by Astralis:
Sov. Grace,

Nice, but you'll have a hard time finding an intelligent Protestant to believe in your myths.

You should find more persuasive arguments to attack Catholics rather than from Jack Chick comic books.
Actually Astralis most standard Protestant commentaries describe the whore of Revelation 17 as the Roman Catholic Church, as well as some Catholic commentaries. It is very common. Why don't you go and look at the commentaries that can be found on line. What Sovereign Grace said is not that far off from what many many Protestants believe.
DHK
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by Astralis:
DHK,

I said, "intelligent Protestants."
Like I said you ought to read some of the online commentaries. There is no need to infer that some of the greatest scholars that we have had are fools. That is what you are making of yourself. There is no excuse to sit content in blissful ignorance.
DHK
 

CatholicConvert

New Member
Astralis --

Honestly, why bother any more? You can find boobs like sov grace a dime a dozen everywhere on the planet. Not only does he not know Church history, not believe the promises of Christ, not have any idea of proper interpretation of the Bible, nor any idea of the covenant of God, but he DOESN'T WANT TO!!

I'm seriously considering ending my little daliance on forum boards. It is a waste of time, except for the rare few people like Adam and Briguy, Aussie Theo Student and a couple of others, most of what we spend out time doing is knocking our heads against a wall.

Yer a better man that I be, Gunga Din, if'n ya want to keep playing this game.

Brother Ed
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Brother Ed,
Let me point out an inconsistency here. You rely heavily on the writings of the early Church Fathers. We do not, although we respect them, and even occasionally use them. The Bible remains our final authority. We also use other resources like commentaries written close to the time of the reformation, and the following two centuries especially. There were many great scholars during those years. We don't go continuously mocking the church fathers, but do point out that we do not agree with everything they believe, because the Bible is our final authority. There is still respect there.
There is no just cause to call great men of God fools, or to infer the same. I am not referring to Sovereign Grace, I am referring to those who agree with him, as I have already pointed out the Protestant reformers and those who protestant who wrote commentaries, saying much the same that Sovereign Grace was trying to say. I find a great deal of hypocrisy in your previous post, and lack of charity and respect in both yours and Australis.
You want respect from us, but won't give the same in return.
DHK
 

Astralis

New Member
DHK,

Is this what you mean by charity?

We know that it is not the correct interpretation because the gates of Hell have prevailed, and it has allowed all sorts of Hellish doctrines into its organization, not even worthy enough to be called a church.
We know that it is not, because it persecuted those who did have the correct interpretation of the Word of God and called them heretics.
We know that it is not, because it hated the Word of God with such a great intensity that it gathered every copy of the Word of God it could find and burned it (during Tyndale's time).
We know that it is not, because it has paganized Christianity, and Christianized paganism.
We know that it is not, because contrary to popular Catholic belief, the Catholic Church (like the condemned Pharisees) have taken away the "keys" from their people, so that they also are condemned.
We know that it is not, because they do not preach the truth of the gospel as the Apostles preached it (remember there was no "Mass" in the New Testament).

No, the Catholic Church does not have the correct interpretation. It never did.
BTW, these are your charitable quotes.

You think that what we have to say isn't charitable because you don't like to hear someone disagree with you. I have been very friendly in light of all the attacks, such as saying I belong to a faith that isn't worthy of being called a Church.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by Astralis:

You think that what we have to say isn't charitable because you don't like to hear someone disagree with you. I have been very friendly in light of all the attacks, such as saying I belong to a faith that isn't worthy of being called a Church.
What I posted are facts. Did the Catholic Church burn Tyndale at the stake or not? Is this a fact of history or not? Was this there way of dealing with those that disagreed with them or not? These are the facts of history, as ugly as they are.

I suggest you go back and read the rules of this board before you enter into to it. If you can't take the heat get out. But if your only rebuttal is to come back and call Protestant scholars unintelligent fools, then I pity you. Please use your intelligence. What I said is truth. If the truth hurts so be it. Maybe you ought to repent and get ought of an apostate religion.
DHK
 

Dualhunter

New Member
Originally posted by Astralis:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />
Maybe you ought to repent and get ought of an apostate religion.
Thanks for your charity! You're very friendly.

Agape!
Astralis
</font>[/QUOTE]I see, the Catholic church was just trying to be charitable when they forcibly invited Tyndale to their bonfire. It was especially charitable of them to use Tyndale as fuel for the bonfire too.
 
L

LaRae

Guest
Dual,

In your haste to paint the Catholic Church as some monster you overlook the protestant atrocities that have taken place thru out the centuries....atrocities prepetuated on Catholics and non-Catholics.

As I told PS104, this type of dialogue is pointless and only further divides people.

LaRae
 

Dualhunter

New Member
Originally posted by LaRae:
Dual,

In your haste to paint the Catholic Church as some monster you overlook the protestant atrocities that have taken place thru out the centuries....atrocities prepetuated on Catholics and non-Catholics.

As I told PS104, this type of dialogue is pointless and only further divides people.

LaRae
The term "protestant" refers to a extremely broad group of people. Just being a "protestant" won't save anybody. Many Protestants in history committed the same sort of attrocities that the Catholics committed, if is doubtful that those committing these attrocities on both sides had any real knowledge of the Truth. The difference is that the Catholics today will try to claim that the the Catholics commiting the attrocities were Christians and thus new the Truth.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by LaRae:

In your haste to paint the Catholic Church as some monster you overlook the protestant atrocities that have taken place thru out the centuries....atrocities prepetuated on Catholics and non-Catholics.
This thread is now 8 pages long. Back on the first page, on the first post the question was asked:

CAN YOU NAME ONE ORAL, EXTRABIBLICAL TRADITION, DEMONSTRABLY TRACED TO THE APOSTOLIC AGE, WHICH IS NECESSARY FOR THE FAITH AND PRACTICE OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.

No Catholic has come forward and given an adequate answer to this question. What Australis and Daniel have done is mindlessly put forth the Catholic statement that the gates of Hell cannot prevail against the Church (meaning Catholic of course), and yet offer no evidence or proof to back up this baseless claim, when in fact history is replete with examples of where the gates of Hell have prevailed against the Catholic organization. The fact is the verse was twisted out of context in the first place and never meant to apply to the Catholic "Church." When shown their error, they have replied more with insults than with Scripture. The facts, both of the Bible and of Scripture speak for themselves. The doctrine of the Catholic Church cannot be found in the Bible. And the atrocities of the Catholic Church nullify it from being Christ's church.

As for Protestants' atrocities, that begs the question. First, many Baptists, like myself do not consider themselves Protestants. We existed before the reformation, were not in the Catholic Church, as the reformers who protested against it and tried to reform it from within.
Secondly, some of the Protestant leaders of the Reformation era such as Luther and Calvin were some of the greatest persecutors of Baptists also. There was no love loss between them and the Baptists. The issue became one of separation of church and state. When Calvin set up his own church state, he persecuted those who did not agree with him. Just as the Catholic Church did under the terrible reign of Bloody Mary.
Baptists were advocates of soul liberty, the freedom to believe what you believed was right. The Catholic Church tried to force by the sword others to believe their heretical doctrine. This is not charity is it?
DHK
 

Astralis

New Member
CAN YOU NAME ONE ORAL, EXTRABIBLICAL TRADITION, DEMONSTRABLY TRACED TO THE APOSTOLIC AGE, WHICH IS NECESSARY FOR THE FAITH AND PRACTICE OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.

No Catholic has come forward and given an adequate answer to this question.
Assumption of Mary. We discussed this. Read the thread again, you must have missed it.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by Astralis:
</font><blockquote>quote:</font><hr />
CAN YOU NAME ONE ORAL, EXTRABIBLICAL TRADITION, DEMONSTRABLY TRACED TO THE APOSTOLIC AGE, WHICH IS NECESSARY FOR THE FAITH AND PRACTICE OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.

No Catholic has come forward and given an adequate answer to this question.
Assumption of Mary. We discussed this. Read the thread again, you must have missed it.</font>[/QUOTE]Are you serious?
The "assumption of Mary" was not declared a dogma of the Catholic church until 1950 when Pope Pius XII declared it to be so.
If this doctrine is so necessary for faith and practice of the church, why was it not even proclaimed a dogma of the Catholic Church until 1950?
DHK
 

Astralis

New Member
DHK,

Yes, your response is usually the first response from Protestants. But upon closer inspection on how the Church works, you will notice that we also defined the Trinity, and also defined canon in the Third Century once and for all. Are we to say these beliefs didn't exist before then? Of course not.

The following is from a post of mine earlier in this thread that addresses your concern in more detail:
The earliest known written reference to the Assumption can be found in the Greek text De Obitu S. Dominae, which dates to the fourth or fifth century but has been attributed to St. John himself. In the East, it is mentioned in the sermons of St. Andrew of Crete, St. John Damascene, St. Modestus of Jerusalem and others.

In 451 AD, at the Council of Chalcedon, the Emperor Marcian and Pulcheria desired to own the body of Mary, the Mother of God. St. John of Damascus tells us that St. Juvenal, Bishop of Jerusalem, told them that, "Mary died in the presence of all the Apostles, but that her tomb, when opened, upon the request of St. Thomas, was found empty; wherefrom the Apostles concluded that the body was taken up to heaven." The Catholic Church does not, however, claim to derive this doctrine from any of these early writers, but from Apostolic Tradition itself, which these early sources merely point to.

The Assumption of Mary has also been celebrated since early times with a Feast day. We do not know exactly where or when this celebration first occurred, but according to the life of St. Theodosius (d. 529) it was celebrated in Palestine before the year 500, probably in August. It has been celebrated at other times of the year in various places, however, such as in Egypt and Arabia, where it was observed in January. By 700 it was one of the principle feasts in Rome, and was a Holy Day of Obligation. As we do not know exactly where or when Mary died, we cannot mark the exact anniversary of her death, but we can still remember her Assumption with this celebration.

Many will argue that nowhere in the Bible can mention be found of Mary's Assumption. In Genesis, Enoch is said to have been assumed, and the same goes for Elijah in 2 Kings. So if Mary was truly assumed, then wouldn't this event have warranted mention in the Bible? On the face of it, this argument seems to hold weight. There are no express Scriptural proofs that show the validity of this doctrine. As Catholics, though, we need not rely solely on the Bible as our rule of faith. For us, it is enough that the living, infallible, teaching Church has told us that it is true, and it must be so. This requires an examination of the Protestant doctrine of sola scriptura (Scripture Alone), and will be dealt with later. For now it is important to point out that nowhere in the Bible does it exclude the possibility of the Assumption. In fact, in Matthew 27 it describes a scene where "graves were opened, and many bodies rose out of them, bodies of holy men gone to their rest: who, after his rising again, left their graves and went into the holy city. . ." This scene certainly seems to imply that such a thing as the Assumption is possible.

If one were to look to the Scripture for references to Mary's Assumption, the best place to look is the Book of Revelation, chapter 12. "And a great portent appeared in heaven, a woman clothed with the sun, with the moon under her feet, and on her head a crown of twelve stars; she was with child and she cried out in her pangs of birth, in anguish for delivery. And another portent appeared in heaven; behold, a great red dragon, with seven heads and ten horns, and seven diadems upon his heads. His tail swept down a third of the stars of heaven, and cast them to the earth. And the dragon stood before the woman who was about to bear a child, that he might devour her child when she brought it forth; she brought forth a male child, one who is to rule all the nations with a rod of iron, but her child was caught up to God and to his throne, . . ." This reading, of course, requires the reader to look for a deeper meaning than that normally given by commentators. The woman, to them, refers to some collective entity, such as the Church. However, since the dragon is always identified with Satan, and the child always Christ, and these are both singular entities, it makes sense that the woman should be identified first as a singular entity, and secondarily as a collective entity. The singular entity is, of course, Mary. John's vision of Mary in heaven with her son, Jesus, only makes sense if she had been Assumed into heaven, as Pope John Paul II as well as Pius X have stated. And this is, of course, what the Apostles believed happened, according to what the Bishop of Jerusalem said at the Council of Chalcedon, as we read above.

In fact, the absence of a body, or any remains at all, attributed to Mary speaks volumes. The Biblical silence on her assumption is neither an affirmation or a rejection of the fact--it is simply silence. But the silence of anyone claiming to have, or have seen, her earthy remains is worth noting. From the very beginning of the Church, Catholics have had a special veneration for the saints. The bones of the martyrs killed in the Coliseum were gathered up and preserved almost immediately, according to the biographies of those first Christian victims. Cities would vie for the claim to fame of being the final resting place of a famous saint. For some of the more famous saints, the bones were even divided up so that more than one town could claim them. These relics were preserved and venerated and were objects of great devotion. Surely a saint such as Mary, the most well known of all, who had such a special honor among all the saints, would be preserved and venerated more than any other. Yet no city anywhere has ever claimed her remains. We know she lived for a while in Ephesus with John and may have died there. There is also a good case that she may have died at Jerusalem and her temporary tomb is said to be there. Yet neither of these cities claims or ever has claimed to have her corporeal remains. Nowhere are her bones venerated. No one claims to have them. Why not? Because there were no remains to venerate and the people of the time knew it.

Mary's Assumption cannot be explained without also considering the doctrine of her Immaculate Conception. I cannot give that doctrine a full treatment here, but it states that Mary was conceived immaculately, without the stain of original sin. That from her conception she was set aside, chosen by God, to be the New Eve, the one to bear Christ to the World. Death and decay are the punishments for original sin, and since Mary was free from this stain, she was free of its consequences. So why did she die? If she died, it was because she was united with Christ. It was her desire to do the will of God, and just as Christ chose to die for our sins so that we may be redeemed, she chose to suffer and die an earthly death to be united with her son. Just as we all will one day be reunited with our physical bodies in our eternal home, Mary's body was taken into Heaven along with her soul. God would not allow her body, the body of His servant, free of sin, to corrupt. Her assumption gives us a glimpse of what the final destination of all of us may be.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
CAN YOU NAME ONE ORAL, EXTRABIBLICAL TRADITION, DEMONSTRABLY TRACED TO THE APOSTOLIC AGE, WHICH IS NECESSARY FOR THE FAITH AND PRACTICE OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.

The question is still avoided. Both the immaculate conception and the assumption of Mary are not necessary for the faith and practice of the Church of Jesus Christ. Both are man made doctrines unsupported by the Bible. Your rationalization of Scriptures is simply that: rationalization--taking Scripture out of context or applying Scripture improperly. You have failed to demonstrate from Scripture how these doctrines are necessary to the faith and practice of the church. You cannot even trace them to the Apostolic age through viable historical resources. You must rely on unreliable tradition.
DHK
 

Astralis

New Member
I rely on Tradition, you may believe it's unreliable, but scripture tells us to hold onto Tradition (notice the big "t"). If the Catholic Church is the church Jesus founded as it claims it is, and if Jesus promised the gates of hell shall not prevail against it, and promised the Peter that whatever he binds on earth in bound in heaven, then Catholics must accept Tradition as authoritative and also accept the Church's interpretation of it.

You disagree with this which is fine. But, you cannot say you're 100 percent correct in your private interpretation of scripture unless you're infallible.
 

DHK

<b>Moderator</b>
Originally posted by Astralis:
I rely on Tradition, you may believe it's unreliable, but scripture tells us to hold onto Tradition (notice the big "t"). If the Catholic Church is the church Jesus founded as it claims it is, and if Jesus promised the gates of hell shall not prevail against it, and promised the Peter that whatever he binds on earth in bound in heaven, then Catholics must accept Tradition as authoritative and also accept the Church's interpretation of it.

You disagree with this which is fine. But, you cannot say you're 100 percent correct in your private interpretation of scripture unless you're infallible.
Let's just say my interpretation of the Scripture is far closer to the truth than the Catholic Church's private interpretation. I, BTW, don't claim to have a private interpretation, unlike the Catholic Church, so that is either a misunderstanding, ignorance, or deliberate slander. You can choose which one, and then inform me.

You say you rely on tradition according to Scripture. Scripture condemns the teachings of man and tradition in the sense that you believe and teach. In the verses usually used by Catholics to support tradition, the word "tradition," simply means truth. The tradition that Paul taught was the truth of Scripture, the truth of the gospel, the truth that God directly revealed to Him by special revelation. Christianity was new. There was no "tradition" that was formed or built up when Paul wrote his epistles. It takes time for tradition to be formed. Your idea of tradition is totally foreign to the New Testament and cannot be supported by the New Testament, except in the verses where Christ condemns it.
DHK
 
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