It was somewhat tongue-in-cheek, but if you are requiring non-
Catholics (those not part of YOUR group of Christians) to stop taking communion, i.e. not be allowed to be part of the
catholic (universal) church, then you aren't being very universal in your Roman Catholicism.
idk. Could be what happened to King Saul is not what the New Testament is talking about, and what is happening to us, under the New Covenant.
Maybe so. But you had made a statement that the anointing of the Holy Spirit caused an ontological change, like becoming a sheep instead of a goat, or passing from death to life, even if "probationary" or "reversible". Someone that passes from death to life, then back to death, and then back to life, perhaps, doesn't seem to have really passed from death to life. This is one reason I feel like our definitions of "death" and "life" are insufficient, or perhaps insincere, if they don't address the real death and life state, but some "spiritual" death and life state.
Could very well be. Good point about Paul.
That's fine with me.
OK.
OK.
Synonymous with attributes. Near-synonymous with properties. Predicates. Descriptions. It's keeping consistent with substance, substance and accidents being the language or Aristotelian categories.
Ok, but I hadn't encountered such usage before. In today's language, "accident" is rarely ever associated with "properties".
I meant that whatever happens in the Resurrection of the dead at the end of time or whenever that is, that it's going to be completely unique.
Is it? Jesus Christ rose from the dead in a way that we expect to experience, so it isn't "completely" unique. And there are two other resurrections talked about in Revelation 20 (before and after the millenium) and by Jesus in John's gospel (unto life and unto condemnation). Daniel talked about this dichotomy of resurrection results, too, but it's unclear if his both happen at the same time.
Definitely not.
OK.
Yes but to use your word, the extinguishing of the fear of death is a byproduct of faith in Christ and the Gospel, what I was getting at was that it appeared you were making the end of the fear of death the point of Christian faith,
I am willing to agree with this idea.
and you were leaving open the door to achieving a lack of death outside of believing in Him, by not stating that you don't believe that any other path toward not fearing death is illegitimate ultimately. (I think that's a triple negative. I'm sorry.) You left open the door to attaining a lack of the fear of death through whatever means, just so long as you don't fear death anymore.
Well, you were the one who brought up that idea, and I don't think other means of attaining a lack of fear of death should be trusted--because they aren't trustworthy. None of them have shown actual success in defeating death. Jesus's has.
New Covenant liturgy, basically.
It's liturgy. The part it plays is that it's a part of your life as a Christian. It's not salvific, that's faith, but it is strictly speaking and officially and formally obligatory, but that's not the same as salvific. It's like not committing adultery, again, not salvific, but still a part of a Christian's life is to abstain from adultery.
I think I agree with you here, although "obligatory" has negative connotations. I prefer to focus on a perfection in acknowledging Him as Lord, such that we desire to do anything He wants. Thus, it might be obligatory, but it is not done because it is obligatory.
Sure, by design.
Ineffective at what?
For salvation. But there's more to being a Christian, and it has always been this way, with plenty of proof in the New Testament.
idk what you mean by rites of salvation. If you mean that the work itself saves you, then neither does Catholicism believe this. Catholicism believes the Bible, that salvation is through faith alone, in Christ alone.
Some might call them "means of grace"--the things that you do, or that are done to you that "help" you to be saved. I'm not comfortable with the idea, because it seems to put the saving power of Christ's death, into which we are baptized, on a par with liturgy, as you call it. Perhaps one is having faith that the act of baptism is what saves, rather than the expression of the complete immersion in the Spirit's power and mission. I'm not sure I'm being very clear here.