You don't. When you run out of things to say all do so post links or reference a post or, as you did with AMR's post, attempt to make think people you are just to great to be bothered with actually dealing with the points raised by others. If you want others to actually take you seriously, then spend some serious time to reply to what people actually say in your own words. If you are not willing to do that, then you will continue to be mocked.
As soon as a Roman Catholic argues from Scripture he denies the need for an infallible magisterium. Once he points to Rome apart from Scripture, he shows himself to be a blind follower of something in the face of Scripture.
Per
here:
“The Catholic commentator is bound to adhere to the interpretation of texts which the Church has defined either expressly or implicitly. The number of these texts is small, so that the commentator can easily avoid any transgression of this principle.”
How small you may ask? I am glad you asked.
“The number of texts infallibly interpreted by the Church is small…It has been estimated indeed that the total of such texts is
under twenty, though there are of course many other indirectly determined”
[Source: Dom Bernard Orchard, M.A., ed.,
A Catholic Commentary on Holy Scripture (London: Thomas Nelson, 1953), p.59]
Better we provide the interpretations to the Romanist in hopes Rome will take them into account and repent:
"...the Church by no means prevents or restrains the pursuit of Biblical science, but rather protects it from error, and largely assists its real progress. A wide field is still left open to the private student, in which his hermeneutical skill may display itself with signal effect and to the advantage of the Church. On the one hand, in those passages of Holy Scripture which have not as yet received a certain and definitive interpretation,
such labors may, in the benignant providence of God, prepare for and bring to maturity the judgment of the Church; on the other, in passages already defined, the private student may do work equally valuable, either by setting them forth more clearly to the flock and more skillfully to scholars, or by defending them more powerfully from hostile attack"
[Src: PROVIDENTISSIMUS DEUS, On The Study Of Holy Scripture (Encylical Of Pope Leo XIII, November 18, 1893].
But the Romanist dare not tread into these turbulent waters. Rome does not deny the intelligibility and perspicuity of Scripture, rather it affirms Scripture is only intelligible and lucid to the magisterium. Crucible is just being a consistent Roman Catholic by not appealing to Scripture to justify Romanism. Rather he points to Rome's authority to defend Rome's claims. Romanists like Crucible understand that their authority is Rome, hence Scripture is useless since any interpretation of any passage of Scripture he may appeal to must await Rome's adjudication for the Romanist to actually
know what Scripture is saying. Crucible wisely knows that anytime he presumes to present some interpretation of Scripture, the knowledgeable Protestant need only remind him that he cannot possibly really
know what he is talking about if he is a consistent Roman Catholic.
Given Rome's slow march towards infallibly interpreting Scripture—most studies say around
seven verses have been so done by the magisterium—folks like Crucible spend their lives in a sort of Scriptural limbo, never quite able to state with conviction "thus sayeth the Lord". When pointed to this or that in Scripture, the Romanist must first "check in" with what, if anything, Rome has to say on the topic. This is smart thinking by Rome, for it prevents the laity from ever really digging too deep and perhaps begin to question exactly what he has been fed by Rome.
AMR