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https://christianforums.net/threads/become-a-vessel-of-honor-part-2.112306/
vic said:How have these books influenced your Doctrines?
Honestly, I should be more familar with them than I am. I only know a bit about Macabees, since they are part of my End Times history.
If Paul's writings were not in the Bible Catholic teaching would be the same. I would suspect that Protestant teaching would be quite different. Just a speculation.
I'll check that out in my Literal translations. I'm not getting that from reading the two passages about Onesimus in the KJB.It would be more difficult to see in scripture, though there is evidence in one of Pauls writings where he speaks of Onesimus's family and it is implied that Onesimus is dead.
vic said:We' re looking to learn and not be subjected to opinions about whose doctrine is in err.
vic said:How have these books influenced your Doctrines?
Gary said:vic said:How have these books influenced your Doctrines?
Substantially. The Council of Trent affords these books full canonical status and pronounces an anathema (excommunication) on any who reject them. The Council stated: “If anyone, however, should not accept the said books as sacred and canonical, entire with all their parts . . . and if both knowingly and deliberately he should condemn the aforesaid tradition let him be anathema.â€Â
So I guess all born-again, Bible-believing Christians and all other non-Roman Catholics are anathema according to the Roman Catholics!
Doctrinally, the Apocrypha supports prayers for the dead (which also entails a belief in purgatory). For instance, 2 Maccabees 12:46 reads: “Thus he made atonement for the dead that they might be freed from this sin.â€Â
By the way, the Greek church has not always accepted the Apocrypha, nor is its present position unequivocal. At the synods of Constantinople (a.d. 1638), Jaffa (1642), and Jerusalem (1672) these books were declared canonical. But even as late as 1839 their Larger Catechism expressly omitted the Apocrypha on the grounds that its books did not exist in the Hebrew Bible. This is still their position.
Source for some of this:
Geisler, N. L., & MacKenzie, R. E. (1995). Roman Catholics and Evangelicals : Agreements and differences (Page 164).
Doctrinally, the Apocrypha supports prayers for the dead (which also entails a belief in purgatory). For instance, 2 Maccabees 12:46 reads: “Thus he made atonement for the dead that they might be freed from this sin.â€Â
vic said:How have these books influenced your Doctrines?
Gary said:Substantially. The Council of Trent affords these books full canonical status and pronounces an anathema (excommunication) on any who reject them. The Council stated: “If anyone, however, should not accept the said books as sacred and canonical, entire with all their parts . . . and if both knowingly and deliberately he should condemn the aforesaid tradition let him be anathema.â€Â
So I guess all born-again, Bible-believing Christians and all other non-Roman Catholics are anathema according to the Roman Catholics!
Doctrinally, the Apocrypha supports prayers for the dead (which also entails a belief in purgatory). For instance, 2 Maccabees 12:46 reads: “Thus he made atonement for the dead that they might be freed from this sin.â€Â
By the way, the Greek church has not always accepted the Apocrypha, nor is its present position unequivocal. At the synods of Constantinople (a.d. 1638), Jaffa (1642), and Jerusalem (1672) these books were declared canonical. But even as late as 1839 their Larger Catechism expressly omitted the Apocrypha on the grounds that its books did not exist in the Hebrew Bible. This is still their position.
Source for some of this:
Geisler, N. L., & MacKenzie, R. E. (1995). Roman Catholics and Evangelicals : Agreements and differences (Page 164).
stray bullet said:The Council of Trent didn't give them canonical status- they had the status since the early centuries. That's why the Orthodox (11th Century) and Coptics (5th Century) use them. It wasn't until the 16th Century that protestant removed them from the bible... perhaps because of the prayers for the dead?
Don't try and twist the facts by saying when they were 'declared'... something is 'declared' when it becomes a controversy... which is did after the reformation.
Norman Geisler said:At the Roman Catholic Council of Trent (a.d. 1546) the infallible proclamation was made accepting the Apocrypha as part of the inspired Word of God. Unfortunately, the proclamation came a millennium and a half after the books were written and in an obvious polemic against Protestantism. Furthermore, the official infallible addition of books that support prayers for the dead is highly suspect, coming as it did only a few years after Luther protested against this very doctrine. It has all the appearance of an attempt to provide ecclesiastical support for Roman Catholic doctrines that lack biblical support.