Topic author: albanach
Replied on: 08/23/2002 04:35:55
Message:
Allen, you are right. Taken together, these accusations are ridiculous and most people can see this. However, they look so absurd largely because they are all lumped together here. Very few Fundamentalist Protestants actually come across this strong. However, many I have met do hold one or more of these assumptions, so a critical examination of them is valuable. Most can be refuted by sheer logic, with not need for recourse to Scriptural passages or Council documents, etc.
quote:
We know that the Catholic Church 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.
This entire argument rests on the assumption that the person is able to tell what are "hellish" (by which I assume they mean false) doctrines. This is the same as saying, "I think the Catholic Church is false because I think she is wrong." This is an argument entirely lacking in logic. Critical thinking would require us to assume at first that the Catholic Church could either be right or wrong and to then come to our conclusion. This argument begins with a conclusion, and through a logical fallacy uses the conclusion to prove itself!
Take the word "Catholic" out of the above and insert the name of your favourite Protestant denomination and you get the same thing.
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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.
This is a good one. It illustrates a trend I notice among ulta anti-Catholic Protestants who want to sympathetically identify with anyone who has ever stood outside the Catholic Church. They identify with any and all past heretical groups with absolutely no regard to what those groups actually taught and believed -- very often contradicting each other and contradicting modern Protestantism.
But this argument carries no more weight that the first, because like the first, it relies upon the person's own ability to determine the true and false interpretation of the Word of God.
And as Theophilus pointed out, Catholics do not have a monopoly on persecuting heretics. Within the first generation of Protestantism, it had split into no fewer than four major sects, who persecuted each other just as feircely as they did Catholics. And take a look at Catholic treatment in England under Queen Elizabeth and King James.
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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).
This can be disproven with good history. Tyndale's Bible was false and corrupt, and if people wanted to burn it (individual people, not the "Church") then that's their right. But the Church definitely did not burn every Bible it could find. This is the same period that the Catholic Church produced its most famous English translation of the Scriptures, the Douay-Rheims version. And what of all those translations in other languages that the Church was mass-producing with the new printing technology?
And, like Theophilus has already pointed out, if it were not for the devout efforts of the Catholic Church for the 1500 years prior to printing, we would know nothing of the Bible today. Martin Luther himself admitted to that. A good read of Henry Graham's _Where We Got the Bible_ would put an end to this argument.
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We know that it is not, because it has paganized Christianity, and Christianized paganism.
Of course, this would mean that Protestant Churches are in trouble, too, now wouldn't it? Some of the big "myths" about pagan influences on Christianity include the celebration of Christmas and Easter. I can't think of a Protestant sect that doesn't celebrate these.
By the way, take a look at my article on the supposed "pagan origins" of Easter, to see how weak this argument really is.
http://albanach.org/apologetics/easter.html
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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.
I don't really understand this, especially in light of all the discussion we have been having on keys in Matthew and Isaiah. When were all "the people" given keys? According to Matthew 16:19, they were given to Peter alone, not even to the other disciples.
I noticed this same error on Jerry Falwell's page, and treated it in my response to him, which you can read at:
http://albanach.org/apologetics/falwell.html
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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).
Like the first two arguments, this one presupposes the person's own ability to discern the truth. We are asked to beleive that Joe Schmo Bible-thumper knows the Apostolic truth better than the Apostolic Church, the Catholic Church, and are given no reason to accept his judgement other than his own self-assurance.
Regarding "no Mass in the New Testament." I'd encourage him to read both _The Lamb's Supper_ by Scott Hahn and _The Mass of the Early Christians_ by Mike Aquilina and Joseph C. Linck.
The Lamb's Supper:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0385496591/albanach
The Mass of the Early Christians:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0879739428/albanach
Pax Christi,
Matt