JamesG said:
francisdesales said:
““I am not sure if that is a compliment or not, but so far, I have not even brought the "heavy hammer of Catholic apologetics" to bear on this subject.â€â€
I merely pointed out that you are generalizing all Protestants together. That is not a logical way to proceed. Protestants are diverse by nature and each individual must be dealt with on an individual basis. You may be dealing with this person individually, but you made a blanket statement that made it appear that Protestant diversity does not exist. Such a mistake will only result in some very bad misinterpretations and inappropriate responses.
Thank you for pointing this out. However, so far my argument has been purely on an historical level that is distant from Catholic particulars. I have not brought up anything on the authority of the Church and her power to bind and loosen - until now, that is... :nag We can put those big guns away for now and just focus on the issues without making this a Protestant v Catholic issue.
JamesG said:
A fact is not complimentary. It is merely a fact. You have ability and dignity. Neither should be wasted.
I thought you were providing an opinion.
JamesG said:
I doubt that you will find many Protestants who have researched the history of the Biblical canon to the extent that you have. Especially on a forum such as this. How much can you expect from them? They see no reason to do such research since they already have an alternative understanding of the canon than that it was historically developed and determined to be valid by humans. They believe that God did it and that is all that they need to know. And any arguments that they might present for that perspective appear reasonable to them, no matter how unreasonable their arguments appear to you.
Probably so. There is nothing wrong with understanding the historical aspects of how the Canon was formed, rather than relying on circular arguments and irrational lines of thinking. My contention was against Paul's article, which I skimmed and found glaring problems. I brought them up, and others reading this thread find it interesting. Perhaps because I am not attacking Protestantism per sec, and in today's day and age, it is not "heretical" for a Protestant to think that maybe Luther et al got it wrong and that some of those writings were there for a reason and this realization does not force one to convert to Catholicism.
JamesG said:
Protestants believe in the Bible alone and that it comes from God alone. How do you think that you are going to convince a Protestant any different no matter how much ammunition you think that you have to the contrary?
The convincing is not away from sola scriptura, in this thread, but on the contents of what IS "sola". For example, if a Protestant was informed that 2 Macc is part of their heritage and BELONGS in the Holy Scriptures, removed by some naughty and misinformed men, then they might be more amendable to the argument of "purgatory", since the idea is most strongly argued for in 2 Macc. Not that it is ONLY found there, but one is hard-pressed to deny an existence of such a "place" after death.
JamesG said:
Better Catholic apologists than you, no offense intended, have been arguing against the Protestant perspective for half a millennium with no result whatsoever. And vice versa.
what is your point, James? That because Thomas Aquinas was a better teacher than I, I am wasting my time in the 21st century on this forum???
JamesG said:
Catholics and Protestants still believe what they believe. Discussion has been and continues to be futile.
Now, you are generalizing. You think that because Catholics IN GENERAL disagree with Protestants IN GENERAL on particular topics, that NO Protestants will ever come closer in agreement on any subject. That is poor thinking and totally disregards the process the Church has made on reconciling through the ecumenical movement. Catholics and Lutherans, for example, have come to a greater agreement on faith and works in the salvation formula.
And not only at that level, James, but at the personal level. I get PM from people who are not Catholic and appreciate my input. They tell me I am helping them to solidify their own understandings of either a common dogma, like Trinity, or one we disagree on, the Eucharist. Misunderstandings are a large part of our separation, James, and my goal here is to clear this away as much as possible. If people can appreciate that Catholics are Christian, their attitude outside of this forum changes. Thus, this is NOT futile!!! I am doing the work of Jesus in helping to bring Christians together or better understand their faith. That is not futile, James.
JamesG said:
Your research applies to you and anyone who asks you a reason for the faith that is within you. Those who argue against you are not those who have asked. Some people argue simply to argue. The rest ignore you. There are a lot of people on this forum. What percentage has responded to you?
This logic is not very good logic, either. Unless everyone responds to me, NO ONE is interested. James, have you read the posts of this thread? There are at least THREE Protestants, besides yourself, who say they are interested and find the conversation interesting. I am not trying to convert them, I am providing information to better understand our common history. It is not necessary that my posts go out to the entire Protestant world. In addition, there are a number of lurkers who do not respond, but are indeed reading these posts. It is hard to figure that number, but it is safe to say that the number is more than those who DO respond.
JamesG said:
The Protestant perspective is as much a bias as is the Catholic perspective.
Not on this subject, it's not... The majority of my comments do not bring this up.
JamesG said:
It is not my intention to stop conversing altogether. And at least you are still responding. Though I fail to understand why. Since you think that I am not a believer, you must think that I am still an Atheist.
Why are you making such silly comments? By pointing out the biblical notion of authority does not make you an atheist, what a tremendous leap of illogic...
JamesG said:
But as a Catholic you can’t agree with any of that either. Nor do I wish you to. Revisit? I don’t think so.
More generalizations. You gave up too soon without explaining your point from the Bible's perspective. Basically, you asked me to condone your way of thinking with precious little Bible support, just your personal philosophy. And because I disagree with you IN PART, I am branded a "Catholic apologist" who slavishly follows Catholic thinking and would never think of you even as another Christian, oh, no, just an atheist... Thus, with you, it is either all or nothing. It's no wonder, since you think that any sort of ecumenical activity is a waste of time...
JamesG said:
I don’t remember that you agreed with anything that I had to say, except, of course, where it agreed with your Catholicism.
And I can make the same argument for you, James. You claim to respect other people's thoughts and ideas, but do you really? When they disagree with yours, a person is branded a "person of religion" who has little hope of finding Christ, as opposed to your "enlightened status" as a "true thinker". You need to consistently apply your criticisms to yourself.
JamesG said:
You are much more dogmatically inclined than you realize.
Perhaps, but ironically, so are you. Look how I am treated by you because I do not subscribe to your theories... I am not even worthy of prayers...
JamesG said:
And dogmatism is not conducive to open minded reasoning.
You are confusing "open minded reasoning" to your theological stance, James. Thus, to YOU, James point of view = open minded reasoning. Those who do not agree with James are hearby dubbed "close minded" and are relegated to the dustbin of "religion", oh, I can barely type that word!
Yes, it is sarcasm. When I see such overt hypocrisy, that's usually my reaction, forgive me. But maybe the sarcasm will help you to see that religious hypocrisy is a very difficult thing to self-accuse.
JamesG said:
I perceive you left that long ago, probably when you decided that the Roman Catholic Church is the true authority for knowing reality.
What a self-serving statement... Do I need to further comment on it?
JamesG said:
And I continue to be interested in knowing from whence you came to that conclusion and how you came to that conclusion.
Is there a point in me relating that to you now? It is unlikely to happen, now. So you can continue to tell me how I have left reason as I entered the world of dogmatism???
I hope you feel better about yourself, James.
JamesG said:
The reason that I have no use for this community that you speak of is because it has been divided since prior to 325AD, and it understands everything by human interpretation.
As do you.
JamesG said:
I don’t have the time to do that kind of research. And I don’t have the resources that you speak of. I am not trying to be persnickety or unreasonable when I say that since you made the claim that these later writers quoted the Deuterocanonicals, you must back it up with the real quotes. To just claim that these writers quote the Deuterocanonicals is merely hearsay and your own opinion.
I have provided some quotes as an example. You are being unreasonable if you think I am supposed to cite every single passage. I am not about to post thousands of words
just for you, a person who thinks that such conversations are pointless and futile anyways. It's your responsibility to do the research and prove my assertions wrong, if you judge my intentions as "opinions".. If you can't or won't, that's you just being argumentative and persnickety.