Thank you for the invite.
Giving me a link to address is not fair, unless I invited you, which I did.
Two considerations: T
he Magisterium and a
Catholic apologetic website
The Magisterium is basically: The pillars of infallible truth in the RC are 1) Scriptures 2) Tradition and writings 3) Ex Cathedra proclamation and the leadership and 4) the Sacraments.
The Apologetic website attempts to establish those pillars with 'ten reasons.'
I'll address them one by one for you. Understand that I speak as a personal interpreter, not for the Catholic Church, and while your link does seem to speak for the Catholic Church, I'm not sure that a bishop has given his stamp of approval, the imprimatur. If it is "Nihil Obstat," all it means is that there is nothing in it against Catholic teaching.
"1. The Bible is a Catholic book"
This just means that before AD 1054, there was only One Church, visibly or otherwise. It's an historical fact. There weren't denominations then, only particular churches or dioceses, all of whom were in communion with the Roman diocese. IOW this doesn't argue for Catholicism. It is a sneaky way to say that that One Church then is today the Catholic Church, and the author should have made that argument instead of begging the question by saying that the Bible is Catholic. Besides, the Catholic Bible is 73 books instead of the Protestant's 66, so their point is moot right out of the gate.
"2. The Bible refutes the “Bible alone” principle
"...The Bible teaches that not the Bible or the Protestant interpreters of the 16th century and of the present, but “the Church is the pillar and the bulwark of the truth” (1 Tim 3:15)..."
This should have been the beginning and end of the argument, because in this passage Scripture alone says Church alone. The rest of this explanation distracts from the only true point.
"It also warns against “twisted” interpretations of Scriptures (2 Pt 3:16). While the Church has one teaching, there are now 43,000 evangelical groups with 2.3 added daily. Their views on the Trinity, on gays, etc. contradict each other. Since truth (e.g. Jesus is God) cannot be falsehood at the same time, real falsehoods are sadly being taught among these groups."
More an argument against division in the Church than anything, and it's special pleading and begging the question again that the Catholic Church should be seen as the true Church. The author needs to spell that out instead of gloss over their implication.
"3. Jesus built his Church on a man he named Rock"
Protestants do need a better answer than they have for this point for Catholicism. The Lord did call Simon "Rock," and He did say He'd build His Church upon that rock, Peter. (Yes, also upon Peter's confession, but the Catholic Church admits that anyway, it's a non-starter.) Somehow, if we take the LORD Jesus Christ at His Word, the Church is built upon Peter in some way, and not just upon Peter's confession alone, but upon Peter himself, because that's what the Lord said that He'd do. This point is solid and no Protestant has given a good reason to believe against Catholicism while satisfactorily explaining how the Church is built upon the fisherman from Galilee Peter. The Catholic Church is the only ecclesial community that even tries to make a compelling case, and it's because the Catholic Church owns the only compelling case, since she is based upon Peter's seat as the supreme pastor of the Church.
"4. Jesus and the Church are one"
Even Catholic teaching says that the Church consists of all those baptized people who believe in the Lord Jesus, regardless of whether they're Catholic, so again, a poor point.
"5. The Bible says we are saved “not by faith alone”"
I disagree (with the one sticking point that I cannot see how a true, cold-blooded murderer can be a Christian). I also believe that the Catholic Church teaches that we are saved by faith alone.
Just as a point of reference, do you believe in such a person as a true Christian who is also a true cold-blooded murderer? Paul
was a murderer, before believing in the Lord, and in His resurrection from the dead on the third day according to the Scripture.
"6. The Bible and the early Christians believe in purgatory"
Who cares? Purgatory is no big deal. You believe the Bible, you believe 2nd Corinthians 5:10, "For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may receive the things done in the body, according to what he has done, whether good or bad." Note Paul says "we," even the Apostles are not free from the consequences and penalties that we've all earned and continue to earn for ourselves "while we seek to be justified by Christ, we ourselves also are found sinners" (Ga2:17). The Bible says that we will reap what we sow, and purgatory is what that is.
Purgatory is reserved for the redeemed. No resurrection-denier can enter purgatory. It's no big deal, and I'm looking forward to it. There's also indication in Church teaching that we can begin the purification process now in this life here on earth, and that it's even possible to complete it entirely before departing.
"7. The Bible and the early Christians believe in the Catholic sacraments"
Another weak point since to argue with a Protestant, you must argue from Scripture and not from history, though their statement is true. It doesn't prove that the Church was right.
"8. The Catholic Church is salt and light"
This argument could be made for all Christendom, a poor point.
"9. The Catholic Church is catholic"
An argument from popularity, another fallacy. And besides, as I mentioned above, the Catholic Church has sustained the status of non-Catholic baptized people who believe in the Lord's resurrection as true Christians, and in fact as Catholics themselves, however imperfectly united they may be. As such, the Catholic Church teaches that all Christians everywhere are all part of the One Church, whether they are Catholic or not. So the total size of the Church is not "1.2 billion" or whatever figure they gave, but actually double that, according to Catholic teaching on the matter of what constitutes valid membership (however imperfectly united) in the One Church.
"10. Jesus and the Bible glorify his mother"
The author really needed to, if they were going to bring up Mary, justify why a Christian should pray to her. Most Christians value her faith as a model, but it takes a greater understanding of Catholicism to see how praying to her makes sense. So another weak point.
I'd said this in the other thread: The basic difference is that Catholics believe all of their pillars are infallible and self-authenticating whereas in Protestant churches, anywhere fallen man is part of the equation, there is need for checks and balances. Because of that, the RC's pillars are all challenged by 1 the Bible 2) Body members, including pastors and teachers, 3) Church doctrines and creeds and 4) the Holy Spirit's work and guidance and His Sovereignty over our lives.
We do not question the veracity or accuracy of the scriptures, but question one-another's interpretations.
All I'm doing is challenging your interpretations. I accept what you accept.
We do not question the veracity of the Holy Spirit or God' Sovereignty, but rather one's subjectivity and feelings involved in interpreting His interaction. Brothers/pastors, and creeds we hold up to scrutiny but with a good bit of reliance with proven track-records such plays in the background.
With other meanings but with much the same words, I could say the same. I don't question the veracity of the Holy Spirit or God's Sovereignty at all, and find their full treatment in the teachings of the Catholic Church. I hold up to scrutiny everything the Church teaches, and I have been won over, and see in her teachings that which renders the Scripture fully understood, accessible and complete. There is no part of Scripture that is a mystery, or is off-limits, in the Catholic faith. The Church and the Scripture go together, they are a matched set, a pair, the one constantly enforces and refers to the other, and this has always been, from her beginning (which was AD 33, more than a decade before a single New Testament book was penned). The Scripture and the Church complement each other.
The seat for both Catholics and Protestants, we'd claim, is the Lord Jesus Christ.
Yes, and I'd argue that in the Eucharist, Catholics encounter Him in an entirely unique way, although I think that because of Holy Orders still being validly celebrated by the Orthodox churches, that the Orthodox too truly eat His body and drink His blood during communion.
Importance? We function differently out of the gates and it is important to grasp both what we hold in common, yet how we use those in our lives differently.
There were no fewer than 14 martyrdoms of Apostles and Church bishops in the first century. Martyr means witness. What were they witnesses of, and witnesses to? The resurrection of the Lord from the dead on the third day according to the Scripture. No fewer than 14 people died horribly, just for saying that He rose from the dead. This is what got them killed, was the resurrection, and their witness to it.
Yes. I've read a bit of the Catechism and would agree with that percentage range.
For my part, if people were really as devoted to knowing what they believe from Scripture, it would be 100%.