Not only are Catholics Christians, but we are the original Christians.
I didn't know Moses was a Roman Catholic. I actually don't think he was.
Not only are Catholics Christians, but we are the original Christians.
I didn't know Moses was a Roman Catholic. I actually don't think he was.
Not only are Catholics Christians, but we are the original Christians.
I didn't know Moses was a Roman Catholic. I actually don't think he was.
The OP is referring to the "Catholic Church." Nothing was said about the "RCC."The RCC can't be the church Jesus Christ personally and historically founded.
How exactly do you imagine that Peter being married would in any way negate the Catholic Church as Christ's one historic Church...?One of the reasons being that Peter was married...
Not even close (see this)....and the RCC to begin with, deny their priests the God-given gift to marry.
can you help us make sense of this?
The "RCC" is not the subject of the OP. The OP's subject is specifically the Catholic Church.The document known as the Edict of Milan (Edictum Mediolanense) was the beginning of the RCC...
Neither do I, nor does my previous statement suggest any such thing. (Again, the subject of the OP is not "Roman" Catholicism, but specifically the Catholic Church.)I didn't know Moses was a Roman Catholic. I actually don't think he was.
Neither do I, nor does my previous statement suggest any such thing. (Again, the subject of the OP is not "Roman" Catholicism, but specifically the Catholic Church.)
Of course they did. The Greek term "ecclesia" ("church,""assembly," or "congregation") is used several times in the New Testament to describe Christ's one historic Church.The point is that Christian assemblies did not begin in NT times.
Not properly speaking. It could be imagined that he was a sort of "retroactive 'Christian'," but the testimony of Scripture is that Moses (and other pre-Christian saints) lived under the the Old Covenant, not under the New Covenant initiated by Jesus Christ.Moses was indeed a Christian...
While the historical and theological roots of Christianity are Jewish, the New Covenant Church is not itself Jewish. The Church had entirely separated from the Synogogue by the late 1st century....and the "Catholic" Church is a replica of Judaism.
While the historical and theological roots of Christianity are Jewish, the New Covenant Church is not itself Jewish.
Not properly speaking. It could be imagined that he was a sort of "retroactive 'Christian'," but the testimony of Scripture is that Moses (and other pre-Christian saints) lived under the the Old Covenant, not under the New Covenant initiated by Jesus Christ.
That's very interesting, but in no way alters my statements in Post #50 above.Located at the southern end of the Vatican Museums and just north of St. Peter's Basilica, the Sistine Chapel is of no great architectural interest. It is a barn-like simple rectangle, 40.93 meters long by 13.41 meters wide - the exact dimensions of the Temple of Solomon as given in the Old Testament. The New Testament fulfillment of Old Testament "types" is a common theme in Christian theology and church art, but in the Sistine Chapel there is another layer of meaning. Pope Sixtus IV wished the entire cycle to illustrate the legitimacy of his papal authority, running from Moses, via Christ, to Peter.
That's very interesting, but in no way alters my statements in Post #50 above.
Yes, the People of God encompasses both the Old and New Covenants. But that does not mean that an Old Covenant Jew (Moses) is a New Covenant "Christian." :nono:You said, "Of course they did. The Greek term "ecclesia" ("church,""assembly," or "congregation") is used several times in the New Testament to describe Christ's one historic Church." Pope Sixtus IV said his authority came from Moses through Christ.
But that does not mean that an Old Covenant Jew (Moses) is a New Covenant "Christian."
Moses was a member of the Old Covenant Church (Jewish), not of the New Covenant Church (Christian) founded by Jesus Christ.By Christian you seem to be saying Moses was not a Catholic.
Moses was a member of the Old Covenant Church (Jewish), not of the New Covenant Church (Christian) founded by Jesus Christ.
Who said anything about a "Roman" Church?Jesus is a Jew. Why would he found a Roman church? Is it because the Romans subjugated his nation?