jlay wrote:Bippy,
First of all, I would ask, are you claiming Ignatius' words as God breathed?
Second, i can read the same quote..,,,
“They abstain from the Eucharist and from prayer, because they confess not the Eucharist to be the flesh of our Savior Jesus Christ which suffered four our sins, and which the Father, of His goodness, raised up again. Those, therefore, who speak against this gift of God, incur death in the midst of their disputes” (The Epistle of Ignatius to the Symrnaeans Ch. VII).
,,,and come to a different conclusion. Notice that they obstain from prayer as well. Why, because they didn't believe in the bodily resurrection of christ. Most important in the context is to ask what did Ignatius literally intend to communicate. The context is clear that he wished to address Gnostics who denied the physical truths of these things. Prooftexting Ignatius is no better than prooftexting scripture. Your presumptions are that Ignatius is arguing for transubstantiation. And thus, you handle the text in that way. You start with a conclusion and then look for prooftexts to back it up. This is also how much error has crept into scriptural interpretation.
Ignatius says in chapter 5,
“some ignorantly deny Him, or rather have been denied by Him, being advocates of death rather than of the truth. These persons neither have the prophets persuaded, nor the law of Moses, nor the Gospel even to this day, nor the sufferings we have individually endured. For they think also the same thing regarding us. For what does anyone profit me, if he commends me, but blasphemes my Lord, not confessing that He was [truly] possessed of a body? But he who does not acknowledge this, has in fact altogether denied Him, being enveloped in death. I have not, however, thought good to write the names of such persons, inasmuch as they are unbelievers. Yea, far be it from me to make any mention of them, until they repent and return to [a true belief in] Christ’s passion, which is our resurrection
Of course if you wanna interprete things personally you can deny almost anything in the bible ad make it sound to your own personal beliefs. Don't Mormons and jehovas witnesses have their own interpretations also.
This is a strawman as is much of your post. I don't discount all tradition, not at all. Although I also do not inadvertently weaken, or even at times appear to attack scripture by elevating tradition, which is always the way the argument comes across to me. There is always a proper way to interpret, and that is not tied to instituions but of sound reason and logic. Certainly, the institution can and did empoy those methods. Likely more often than not. But let's not forget that it is your personal personal belief to follow the RCC interpetation. And the facts remain, that the matter and terms or transubstantiation didn't actually come into effect until hundreds and hundreds of years later.
The power to bind and loose wasnt given to every Tom and Harry , Jesus gave that authority to Peter and the apostles, and contrary to what Protestants believe, Jesus commissioned the apostles to preach the good news, not wrote a book.the bible even says that if all that Jesus had done were to be written down we won't have enough books to hold them
Yes he did. But you, like every other RCC is conflating that to something it is not. If you look at the succession of events, you will notice that God later appointed Paul as apostle. Why? Did he just forget something? No.
Of all the quotes it's interesting that you site James 4:5. Where does the spirit dwell? In Vatican city? No. It dwells in each individual believer. It is nothing but religion that says we cannot trust who we are in Christ, but must return to structure and religous hierarchy. That system was already in effect. Did it stand? No.
Actually this does not compute Paul because of many factors . Did any church have the authority to decide on the canon of scripture? Only the Catholic Church decided on the canon of the bible.
Last I checked, the Israelites had a pretty big role in it. You know, the ones who were in apostasy and had the Kingdom taken from them.
Jlay are u claiming Calvin's word as Gods word. No one was claiming ignatius words as Gods words, but you must understand that the bible isn't self interpreting . Ignatius was a student of John the apostle. He taught the early church what was taught to him by John the apostle. What did Jesus say to the apostles? He said whoever hears you hears me. Again jlay I ask you, whose interpretation are you going to go by, the earliest Christianswho were in the position to know exactly what the apostles taught or the reformers who were 1400 years separated from them them. History is on the side of the earliest Christians. When someone taught as doctrine anything contrary to sacred scripture and sacred Tradition (tradition with a capital T) every single time it was pronounced as heresy by the early Christian Church.
Heed the written word and the sacred oral tradition.
The bible never says listen to scripture only.
That was invented 1500 years later.
From the earliest times we saw a church hierarchy from the earliest Christians.
Clement of Rome taught against personal interpretation in the late 1st century as I posted from his writings and for this he wrote that the ordained future church leaders (the bishops, presbyters and deacons to make sure that sacred scripture and sacred tradition are consistent with what the apostles taught them.
Ignatius in 110
Justin martyr
Origen and so on and so on.
They all stressed the importance of following church teachings, the bishops, the magisterium.
If someone didnt what happened throughout early Christian church history?
They were renounced as heretics.
The Arians, the docetists who taught that Jesus's humanity can be separated from his divinity, and this is why I have to disagree with Rick when he claims we should call Mary the mother of Jesus the man and not Jesus the God.
You cannot separate the 2 and the earliest Christians were firm in This belief and that is why the doctrine of the theotokos (Mary the mother of God) was developed at the same time as te doctrine of the trinity.
You can disagree on it if you want but your going against the majority of the early Christians . The Catholic Church gave us the doctrine of the trinity and also the theotokos .
You can't name even one early apostolic father or early church father that believed in private interpretation of scripture.
They would be pulling their hair out if you had come out in the first 3 centuries and tod them that you had the right to interpret scripture the way you personally see fit to.
They would have taken a good look around and saw the thousands of different denominations if they had been alive today and they would have been delirious at what they saw.
We are one in Christ,and this is exactly what the apostles passed on to the apostolic fathers.
Christ said and The gates of hades shall not prevail over this church.
When I was heavily leaning towards becoming an evangelical, I did so because I saw a love and zeal for Christ that I really loved and admired which didn't see in the cradle catholics that I hung out with, and that respect at and admiration will never go away. Catholics need to learn how to fellowship the way evangelicals have and still do.
We are one in the body of Christ.
Brothers and sisters in Christ