Allow me to clear it up for you.But you don't seem to know what you are and are not.
I've been wanting to read more about that.Exactly. The history of the early church is amazing to read,
To Catholicism? Maybe I shouldn't then. :noid:and has powered many a conversion.
Yeah, not a fan of infant baptism. :think:Seeing the early church in liturgical action in the Mass, baptizing, confessing, ordaining, one can see there was an authoritative hierarchy, there was a sacramental and liturgical life. And there was infant baptism "...baptize first the children..." (Hippolytus: The Apostolic Tradition, A.D. 215)
Yep. I'd venture that going from Catholicism to Protestantism is easier than going the other way. But who knows.I'm a cradle Catholic, so I have to admit that I never had to ponder that the way a convert would. In all things, however, His grace is sufficient for us.
This is your example of a Catholic doctrine that supposedly "contradicts the Scriptures"? It seems that you're confusing your preferred interpretation of the Scriptures with "the Scriptures" themselves. Big difference there."Holy Mary, Mother of God: Pray for us sinners. Now and at the hour of our death. Amen."
If you don't have a genuine answer, just say so. :doh:Jesus said that we'd recognize Christians by their love for the brethren. I don't see that love in catholics. I see hatred.
Or not. :yawn:But: they are.
So then, you can't establish that your opinions about the Bible's meaning are right, and that therefore the opinions of others are wrong. Thanks for the admission.I don't have to, The Bible does that just fine.
Good. Then everyone can go ahead and ignore your biblical interpretations and theological opinions. Very good.Nope. They should follow Christ, as I've said all along.
I've been wanting to read more about that.
Yep - could be dangerous. Not for the faint of heart.To Catholicism? Maybe I shouldn't then. :noid:
Possibly because you look at baptism as a believer's baptism, instead of a baptism of regeneration?Yeah, not a fan of infant baptism.
An interesting book, though it contains the typical biases and flaws of any "Christian" history written by a non-Christian.
Allow me to clear it up for you.
I believe on the Lord Jesus Christ as my Savior and as God's Word in the flesh. I believe in His death, burial, and resurrection, and that through His death, burial, and resurrection, my sin was judged and my sins are forgiven. And I believe that He will return again.
Right: Because the Roman Catholic Church and Organization traces Her roots directly back to the Root - the Lord Jesus Christ - asking what She got right is like asking what the Lord Jesus Christ - Her King - got right.
He got Her right.
Let me know if this isn't clear.
Catholics got lots of things wrong. The worst was probably when they let Constantine join them to Rome. After they became a religious and political institution they made it a state religion. The problem with a state run religion is heretics could then be punished through civil law.
From Wikipedia...
On this date, Theodosius I decreed that only the followers of Trinitarian Christianity were entitled to be referred to as Catholic Christians, while all others were to be considered to be heretics, which was considered illegal.[14] In 385, this new legal situation resulted, in the first case of many to come, in the capital punishment of a heretic, namely Priscillian, condemned to death, with several of his followers, by a civil tribunal for the crime of magic.[15] In the centuries of state-sponsored Christianity that followed, pagans and "heretical" Christians were routinely persecuted by the Empire and the many kingdoms and countries that later occupied the place of the Empire,[16] but some Germanic tribes remained Arian well into the Middle Ages[17] (see also Christendom).
If you ever let these people get power again get ready for a religious legal system run by political power which will kill you if you disagree with their doctrines. If we see state run religion be ready for forced worship on pains of death. Down with the bloody big head!
^United Nations comes to mind. The Catholic hierarchy was based on the Roman government hierarchy. Doesn't the Roman Catholic church in England run the Government there?
United Nations comes to mind. The Catholic hierarchy was based on the Roman government hierarchy. Doesn't the Roman Catholic church in England run the Government there?
I have that in one of my books.
Possibly.Possibly because you look at baptism as a believer's baptism, instead of a baptism of regeneration?
What is the baptism of regeneration for?
For the removal of sins, both Original and actual as well as the bestowing of sanctifying grace and the gifts of the Holy Spirit to the soul.
Evo
I have that in one of my books.
Possibly.
What is the baptism of regeneration for?
^United Nations comes to mind. The Catholic hierarchy was based on the Roman government hierarchy. Doesn't the Roman Catholic church in England run the Government there?