Does one have to be baptized Catholic to be saved? If so, I am excluded from heaven despite faith in the person and work of Christ:dizzy:
do I have to understand your posts to be saved?
Does one have to be baptized Catholic to be saved? If so, I am excluded from heaven despite faith in the person and work of Christ:dizzy:
do I have to understand your posts to be saved?
Does one have to be baptized Catholic to be saved? If so, I am excluded from heaven despite faith in the person and work of Christ:dizzy:
Jesus is calling you big time. Remain in awe and love of Him and all will be well.
Great question. I am still awed and amazed at the extent of Apostolic Authority Jesus has given His Church. He lets them do and say and run things with such a freehand.
And not to strike them at being fools, for He knows we are all fools! He knew what was in man; no one had to tell Him.
It is only when the church seems to be about to scorch herself does He gently lean down and rescue her. My yoke is easy and My burden light. Gentle, gentle loving guidance.
My answer at the present moment: Jesus is in no rush. We are racing around like crazy, but not God. Gently, slowly, guiding with a tender light touch. Amazing!
You didn't directly answer my question, but I believe you are in agreement with me that just because these people had Jesus with them - they were not infallible whether in action or doctrine. yes?
If so, then you can see where I'm coming from. It is not a matter of the RCC having Jesus or not - it is a matter of it being run by men who are imperfect. As such, their doctrines and practices are fallible.
LOL well he maybe calling me to do something,
The dogmas are infallible. If they are not, then Jesus lied when He said The Holy Spirit will lead you into all truth.
He was about to shed His Blood when He gave them all the amazing promises of John 15-17 Not likely He was not focused! He cannot decieve us, nor can even desire such an evil. No, He leads into all the truth.
My point is: He does not lead with a heavy hand. All the centuries of debate and discussion and so on, before the final declarations. Whew.
And as to doctrine and practice, these are the best way to acheive the will of God in this life, for even tho maybe not perfect they are from Jesus' Will. And the will of God is to love Him and our neighbor as He loved us. Doctrine goes on in discussion for a very long time without an infallible decree. Such as Justification: it has not been defined to the nth degree. When the discussion gets heated, maybe there will be one. Such as the Council of Trent: infallible. The catechism: infallible.
Infallible does not even mean perfect, in the sense that no more can be known about the subject declared. Only in heaven will knowledge be perfected.
You might ask why Jesus lets sinners sit in the Chair of Peter. Ever wonder about that?
That was my thinking.
I do not enter into denominational debates, but I've been reading through various posts about the official, unofficial, the unofficial non-official church.
Side bar: As to RCC, I had a very close friend in Denver who a Catholic priest who I respected and loved as a brother in Christ. We haqd several lively conversations over noon time coffee and sandwiches, it was the late C. B. "Woody" Woodrich, I called him Pastor Woody and he didn't mind, I still miss the noon time fellowship we had.
Then I thought about this . . . Though the Presbyterian Church is dated in the 1700's, this diagram shows the changes they have gone through.
If you believed it was required for salvation, and you did not do it, then yes. That equals a rejection of Christ at it's core. A Hebrews 6 type warning comes in to play here: it is a denial of the sacrifice, the one true path: The Way- The Truth- The Life- His Body.
We have His authority and presence to preach the gospel. This does not guarantee doctrinal purity or perfection of practice. The early church was led by the Spirit, but had divisions, doctrinal disputes, immorality, etc.
Apostolic Succession is a Catholic myth, not a biblical truth.
http://www.gotquestions.org/apostolic-succession.html
http://www.bible.ca/cath-apostolic-succession.htm
The changing, extra/contrabiblical doctrines of the RCC and the corruption in her midst should make you think twice.
The Word of God is the final authority, not imperfect churches, especially ones influenced by paganism, false tradition, fallible men, manmade organizations that go beyond Scripture.
I am not anti-Catholic and believe it is possible (but not automatic) for a Catholic to be a Christian.
It is not a matter of whether I believe something or not, but whether it is true, biblical, salvific. Faith in Christ is biblical. Catholic sacramentalism is not salvific nor biblical.
So, spit it out. Either I can or cannot be saved without/with Catholic sacraments.
Heb. 6 is about Jewish Christians who revert back to Judaism (apostasy). It has nothing to do with a Protestant evangelical rejecting Catholic error.
The Spirit does lead into all truth, but it begs the question to think that Catholicism is this truth. Any group can use the same logic without it being true.
Well, I would say No to that. The faith "once for all delivered to the saints" is still unfolding in understanding of it. Going deeper, but not a wholly new train of thought. Each rung of the ladder stands on the rungs below, each in ascending order.Who says that the HS is done leading?
The breaking of bread and feeding the 4,000 and the 5,000 show a definite heirarchy. Jesus was teaching Apostolic church governance those days and others I am sure. He fed the Apostles always first: not globally. Globally leads to divisions. Unity is fostered by visible Church Authority.Did he promise a global leading unto truth for the church? Or was it a promise for individuals who independently seek the truth?
Well, they are guaranteed against error. That is, they are maybe imperfectly expressed, yet they are not erroneous. In other words, they lead us in the correct direction in which to go deeper. It is not a chaotic free-for-all. Basics can be known wth clarity and precision.Well, I agree with the first part of this. But anything done or decided on by men is prone to error, and so I cannot blindly agree that the councils or the catechism are infallible. They maybe right on various points, maybe all - but I won't accept them simply under the guise that they are infallible.
We actually agree here. Rather than imperfect, I should have said: incomplete.I disagree - if a doctrine is infallible it is perfect. That's not to say that we can't go deeper, or that a fuller understanding won't be revealed to us - but a fuller understanding will only add onto an infallible doctrine.
I don't believe in the Chair of Peter, so no. Even if I did - Peter was a sinner, so there isn't any problem with sinners taking his seat.
I see sacramentality in His every fibre. From Old Testament Priesthood and holiness to Jesus fulfilling the ability to become sons of God in flesh and blood, not in name (spiritualized) only.It is not a matter of whether I believe something or not, but whether it is true, biblical, salvific. Faith in Christ is biblical. Catholic sacramentalism is not salvific nor biblical.
What did Jesus say? Unless you eat My flesh and drink My blood you have no life in you.So, what is it to have "life" according to Jesus?So, spit it out. Either I can or cannot be saved without/with Catholic sacraments.
Heb. 6 is about Jewish Christians who revert back to Judaism (apostasy). It has nothing to do with a Protestant evangelical rejecting Catholic error.
The Spirit does lead into all truth, but it begs the question to think that Catholicism is this truth. Any group can use the same logic without it being true.
Yes - but it is not the RCC - which came along some 300 years later.
Sacramentalism is an affirmation of the Incarnation and emphasizes the immanent nature of the Godhead. When you dismiss that you are left with a rather remote and purely transcendent Creator. And that brings along a whole set of issues, such as factionalism.