The false teachers will be judged more harshly for a reason.
As for us now, you have no excuse.
Did you know that as late as 1950 the illiteracy rate in the world was about 50%? That is an awful lot of people who may not be able to read a Bible. How are they to live as Christians if they want to?
When I was growing up, I had an older father who was taught that you do not read the Bible without a priest or nun to explain it to you.
That could be a bad thing. Or it could be a good thing. 2 Peter 3:16 warns about people using Scripture and twisting it to their own destruction because they have not been trained in how to read the Scriptures.
We see in the Bible that the Ethiopian eunuch had a similar problem:
"So Philip ran to him, and heard him reading the prophet Isaiah, and said, “Do you understand what you are reading?” And he said, “How can I, unless someone guides me?” And he asked Philip to come up and sit with him." (Acts 8:30-31)
Just imagine how, when I at the age of about 11 would take the family Bible to my room to read. The look of horror on my mom's face and not wanting my dad to find out.
That is sad depending on the intent. But really says nothing about what the Church teaches. That may have been a local idea and not part of the universal Church especially with the confusion that came after Vatican II.
It even said in the Catholic Bible to not read without a priest or nun.
I've never in my life seen that....because it is not there. Was it there in the past somewhere in the world of Catholicism? Perhaps.
If the intent was to help with understanding, like the Ethiopian eunuch needed (who happened to be wealthy and reading the Scriptures in the original language)..that would be a good intent.
Many do not have any excuse.
Agreed. To whom much has been given...much will be expected.
The Catholic church is not supposed to change.
Says who? Please explain.
That is about individual people.
No it isn't. It is about the growth of the Church from a small, little mustard seed type into a tree/bush that can be homes for birds of the air. Jesus says "the Kingdom of Heaven" is like the mustard seed. That references His Church...not individual people. He is explaining how His Church will grow.
Don't you read what I post? I already explained with scripture that the letters and books that they shared were and are the scriptures.
Of course I read what you post. You said they had a New Testament in the first century. The simple fact is that they didn't and that is not a Catholic idea, Protestants acknowledge that as well.
They had some letters and books at certain times during the 1st century (you have shown that) but they didn't have a New Testament as we know it. The books and letters were written over many decades (at least 30 years) and there were many others that people were reading too.
Officially? hahahaha
Many think the Catholics determined what books were to be included in the Bible, because they over the centuries publicly listed the books that they used. There were canons put together and used by people even before the Catholics. Different people gave personal statements about the books, but they were only commenting on the books and letters that the first Christians used from the beginning. They had only acknowledged those books early Christian communities already accepted as scripture.
What do you mean..."used from the beginning"? What was used in 43 A.D., for example? 10 years after Christ's death.
I am afraid you are quite mistaken. The canon of the New Testament entailed quite a little debate before decided upon.
The Catholic denominations started to introduce heresies in approximately 310 A.D. The Roman Catholic Church, which taught things contrary to the Bible, began with the prayers for the dead and the sign of the Cross. The Catholics continued to bring in many false teachings.
Official canonization of the New Testament scriptures came about because of heresies Gnostics and other sects spread. The first Christians accepted as scripture New Testament teachings by letter and books right from the beginning.
What year was "right from the beginning?"
The New Testament teachings were by letter and books right from the beginning. In 1 Timothy 5:18 Paul joins a New Testament scripture (Luke 10:7) to an Old Testament scripture (Deuteronomy 25:4) and calls them both scripture. In addition, we can see in 2 Peter 3:15-16 Peter recognizes what Paul writes as scripture.
Agreed. But many of the books of Scripture weren't even written yet so you cannot claim that they had a New Testament right from the beginning unless you mean like 70 A.D. or something beyond that.
Again, the believers from the beginning used these books and letters from the start. That is what determined these books as scripture.
Define "the beginning" please. What year?
And why didn't they include other books that were used from "the beginning" as well? Like the Didache (the Teaching of the Twelve Apostles), the letters of Clement, and others.
And yes, that is what helped to determine those books as scripture...but that final determination didn't really happen until about 382 at the Council of Rome.
The Catholics teach that the priest is a tool to turn the bread and wine into the real blood and flesh of Jesus.
That would be an interesting topic if we decide to do that.
You do not break bread as the people in the New Testament do.
Do you? Please explain how you do. Thanks.
Peace.