BobRyan said:
Where is the "protect them from error" prediction? Given Paul's statement "men from among your own selves" WILL come and WILL introduce error - I think this question needs to be answered.
Bob, anybody with common sense can look at the Protestant Church today and see the many, many competing fractions; it’s basically a market place. There’s no one voice that can speak collectively. If I group a Methodist, Baptist, Church of Christ and a SDA in a room and ask them to explain to me what baptism is in relation to salvation, none can give me an answer. I will walk away frustrated.
Christ promised that His Church would be infallible and that the gates of Hell will not prevail against it. Now you and others may claim that Christ’s words where hollow and error propagated right off the bat, but if I were you I’d tread carefully in believing that the Holy Spirit failed His mission.
Infallibility means freedom from teaching error; it means that, through God's protection and guidance, the Apostles and their successors must, in their official teaching, set forth the very teaching of Christ without addition, diminution (or lessening), change, or corruption. Christ emphatically, solemnly, and repeatedly guaranteed that His Church would never fall into error-that the living authority He established to teach mankind would be gifted with freedom from error in its official teaching, so that His Church would live on through the ages unchanged and unchangeable, uncorrupted and incorruptible, unconquered and unconquerable. Thus the oldest church, which is admittedly the Catholic Church (which, at any rate, is admitted to have been in existence centuries before Protestantism), must be the true Church for the simple reason that the Church Christ founded could not change. Let us go to the Gospels and see how plainly and emphatically Christ promised that the Church He founded would never err.
He that heareth you, declared Christ to the Apostles,
heareth Me (Luke 10:16). Could this be said if it were possible for them to teach error Bob? No, for in that case those who heard the Apostles would be listening not to Christ and His message of truth, but to erring men teaching false doctrines.
In addressing Simon, whose name He changed to Peter (which means rock), Jesus also made a solemn promise regarding the Church:
I say to thee that thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it (Matt. 16:18). These words express a clear guarantee that the Church will never be allowed by its Divine Founder to teach error; that Christ will ever watch over and guide it, so that the powers of darkness and error may never prevail against or overcome it.
John's Gospel chapter 14 16-26, also contains a plain guarantee that the Church of Christ would never fall into error, for it would be blessed with the abiding presence of the Spirit of Truth. Christ made it quite clear that the Spirit of Truth would remain with the teaching body (the Apostles and their successors) not merely for a few centuries, so that the Church would afterwards fall a prey to false doctrines and remain in that state for hundreds of years until Martin Luther should appear to enlighten it, but right on till the end of time-for ever. Here are the words of Christ:
I will ask the Father, and He will give you another Comforter, the Spirit of Truth, that He may abide with you for ever. The Comforter, the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in My name, will teach you all things, and bring all things to your mind, whatsoever I shall have said to you.
From the fact that those who refuse to believe the teaching of Christ's Apostles and their successors are threatened with everlasting punishment, therefore we must infer that such teaching could never be wrong, for how could God, Who is infinitely just, condemn anyone refusing to believe a false doctrine? Our Savior imposes on men the same duty of assent to the teaching of the Church as to His own:
Go ye into the whole world and preach the Gospel to every creature, Christ said to the Apostles-words which obviously referred also to their successors, for the Apostles, whose span of life was comparatively short and whose power of travel was necessarily limited, could not personally complete this mission.
He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall be condemned. (Mark 16:16).
Before ascending to heaven, Jesus gave His final commission to the Apostles, which commission manifestly refers also to their lawful successors, for the Apostles could not personally teach all nations and, besides, Christ speaks of His assistance till the end of the world. Christ commanded His Apostles to go forth and teach all nations all the doctrines He had entrusted or made known to them, and at the same time He gave an emphatic assurance or guarantee that, in this ministry of teaching, He would be in their midst, assisting them and guiding them, not merely for a few centuries, but even until the end of the world.
Could there be a clearer promise that the Church would be always preserved from error in its teaching-that it would always enjoy infallibility? Study Christ's words as recorded by St. Matthew:
Jesus coming spoke to them, saying: ‘All power is given to Me in heaven and on earth. Going, therefore, teach ye all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost, teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you; and lo! I am with you all days, even unto the end of the world’(28:20).
Sounds pretty cut and dry to me or is there something Ellen G. White knows that the Apostles and Early Church failed to understand?
-