Catholicism vs Protestantism

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Dan_473

Senior Member
Mar 11, 2014
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Turn to a Bible’s table of contents and you’ll see that each of the books was written by either a prophet or apostle (Ephesians 2:20), or by someone with a direct relationship to one.
I think this would be a good example of tradition.

starting at the first book in the New testament, who wrote the book we call Matthew?
the Bible doesn't say.
the traditional author is Matthew the apostle.
 
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Bede

Guest
My brother bede, if it about something in the Bible like heaven or hell, we believe before we see it.
We talking about, is apostle Paul able te hear and talk to us like abraham talk to the rich man?
All we need to do is talk to him and as loving apostle, he will talk back to us if he can.
I love my son, if he call me I answer, I talk back to him. Why apostle Paul never talk to me? Is He ever talk to you?
We believe that the apostle Paul can hear our requests.
The story of Abraham and the rich man and the other scripture I gave shows that.

That does not mean he will answer us or talk back to us. I don't know if he would if we asked.
That is up to God. But all we do is ask for his intercession.
That is why we pray to Saints in heaven, not to have a chat.
 
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Bede

Guest
How the church examined? What kind of evidence the church have?
I don't know all the details but the Church examines all the evidence from witnesses, cross examining them, and also any physical evidence.

One day, the church sale forgiveness certificate, I am not hear it still on sale now, it may because the church know it was a mistake.
The Church has never sold indulgences (what you call forgiveness certificate).
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
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The Holy Spirit, working in and through the apostles, their companions, as well as Christians in apostolic churches, decided what the canon of Scripture would be.

We know from the New Testament that for Jesus of Nazareth, His apostles, and all Palestinian Jews, the canon of the Old Testament was already established. It consisted on just 24 books in the Hebrew Bible, and not one of the apocryphal books was included.

We also know from the 2nd epistle of Peter, that MORE THAN HALF of the New Testament was regarded by God and the apostles as canonical (the epistles of Paul). So by the 2nd century AD, the canon of Scripture was complete and already established, as seen in the Syriac translation of the Bible (the Peshitta).
 
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Bede

Guest
The Holy Spirit, working in and through the apostles, their companions, as well as Christians in apostolic churches, decided what the canon of Scripture would be.

We know from the New Testament that for Jesus of Nazareth, His apostles, and all Palestinian Jews, the canon of the Old Testament was already established. It consisted on just 24 books in the Hebrew Bible, and not one of the apocryphal books was included.

We also know from the 2nd epistle of Peter, that MORE THAN HALF of the New Testament was regarded by God and the apostles as canonical (the epistles of Paul). So by the 2nd century AD, the canon of Scripture was complete and already established, as seen in the Syriac translation of the Bible (the Peshitta).
That the Canon of the OT was only 24 books is highly disputable but I'm not going to get into that argument now.

You can only use 2Peter to establish that Paul's letters were canonical after 2Peter has been accepted as canonical and that was in the late 4th century.

There were many disputes about what was accepted and what was not.
My question was when and by whom?. By that I mean definitively not just some books.
 

Dan_473

Senior Member
Mar 11, 2014
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The canon of Scripture was decided centuries ago.
well, and again I don't mean this to sound snarky in any way,

if their decision was not recorded in the scriptures,
then their decision would be part of tradition, it seems to me.
 

Dan_473

Senior Member
Mar 11, 2014
9,054
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So by the 2nd century AD, the canon of Scripture was complete and already established, as seen in the Syriac translation of the Bible (the Peshitta).
my impression was that the peshitta had a different canon then the common 27 books of the New testament.

if the peshitta is a translation, then the people who decided what books to translate, following those people would be following a kind of tradition, imo.
 

Jackson123

Senior Member
Feb 6, 2014
11,769
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We believe that the apostle Paul can hear our requests.
The story of Abraham and the rich man and the other scripture I gave shows that.

That does not mean he will answer us or talk back to us. I don't know if he would if we asked.
That is up to God. But all we do is ask for his intercession.
That is why we pray to Saints in heaven, not to have a chat.
The sample about abraham talk back to the rich man, if you basing on that sample, apostle Paul must talk back to us when we talk to him.
 

Jackson123

Senior Member
Feb 6, 2014
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I don't know all the details but the Church examines all the evidence from witnesses, cross examining them, and also any physical evidence.
The church is human and has lie reputation
The Church has never sold indulgences (what you call forgiveness certificate).
Why Martin Luther protest the church?
 

Jackson123

Senior Member
Feb 6, 2014
11,769
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my impression was that the peshitta had a different canon then the common 27 books of the New testament.

if the peshitta is a translation, then the people who decided what books to translate, following those people would be following a kind of tradition, imo.
In my opinion, there are 2 tradition we are talking about here,
1 Christian tradition like pray to God is ok
2. Pagan tradition like pray to queen of heaven is satanic
 
Jun 5, 2020
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We believe that the apostle Paul can hear our requests.
The story of Abraham and the rich man and the other scripture I gave shows that.

That does not mean he will answer us or talk back to us. I don't know if he would if we asked.
That is up to God. But all we do is ask for his intercession.
That is why we pray to Saints in heaven, not to have a chat.
Where does it say anything about praying to anyone besides God? God alone is worthy of prayer.
 
Jun 5, 2020
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I don't know all the details but the Church examines all the evidence from witnesses, cross examining them, and also any physical evidence.



The Church has never sold indulgences (what you call forgiveness certificate).
One particularly well-known Catholic method of exploitation in the Middle Ages was the practice of selling indulgences, a monetary payment of penalty which, supposedly, absolved one of past sins and/or released one from purgatory after death. Not only were indulgences Biblically wrong they were morally wrong: stealing money from poor people to give them false hope of something they could not deliver on. Pope Pius V abolished the sale of indulgences in 1567.

In his theses, Martin Luther condemned the excesses and corruption of the Roman Catholic Church, especially the papal practice of asking payment—called “indulgences”—for the forgiveness of sins.
 
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Bede

Guest
my impression was that the peshitta had a different canon then the common 27 books of the New testament.

.
Yes. According to the Encyclopedias Brittanica "The earliest extant versions of the New Testament Peshitta date to the 5th century ad and exclude The Second Letter of Peter, The Second Letter of John, the Third Letter of John, The Letter of Jude, and The Revelation to John, which were not canonical in the Syrian church."
 
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Bede

Guest
The sample about abraham talk back to the rich man, if you basing on that sample, apostle Paul must talk back to us when we talk to him.
There is no must. Paul is not obliged to answer anything.
 
B

Bede

Guest
In my opinion, there are 2 tradition we are talking about here,
1 Christian tradition like pray to God is ok
2. Pagan tradition like pray to queen of heaven is satanic
Praying to the true Queen of Heaven is not wrong.
You don't not pray to God because pagans pray to false gods.
 
B

Bede

Guest
One particularly well-known Catholic method of exploitation in the Middle Ages was the practice of selling indulgences, a monetary payment of penalty which, supposedly, absolved one of past sins and/or released one from purgatory after death. Not only were indulgences Biblically wrong they were morally wrong: stealing money from poor people to give them false hope of something they could not deliver on. Pope Pius V abolished the sale of indulgences in 1567.

In his theses, Martin Luther condemned the excesses and corruption of the Roman Catholic Church, especially the papal practice of asking payment—called “indulgences”—for the forgiveness of sins.
The Church did not sell indulgences. That was a Protestant lie which is still perpetuated.
 
Aug 14, 2019
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Search the scriptures and you will find that every water baptism throughout the entire bible is done in the name of the Lord Jesus.
The various baptisms in the Gospels although in Christ they becme one, they are distinct in how they immerse the receiver into the life of the one offering a baptism. Baptism in the Lord Jesus washed by means of the spoken Word. John's baptism with water prepared the receiver to have ears to hear Jesus and so be able to receive baptism in the Lord Jesus which is received in the form of words. Then the Baptism Jesus Himself received from the Father is incorporated into the one baptism of our faith by which we are plunged into the death and resurrection of Our Lord.
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
26,074
13,771
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my impression was that the peshitta had a different canon then the common 27 books of the New testament.
The earlier versions did not have the 27 books, but the later versions did.

Syriac New Testament
Of the New Testament, attempts at translation must have been made very early, and among the ancient versions of New Testament Scripture the Syriac in all likelihood is the earliest. It was at Antioch, the capital of Syria, that the disciples of Christ were first called Christians, and it seemed natural that the first translation of the Christian Scriptures should have been made there. Some research, however, goes to show that Edessa, the literary capital, could have been the place.

If we could accept the somewhat obscure statement of Eusebius[4] that Hegesippus "made some quotations from the Gospel according to the Hebrews and from the Syriac Gospel," we should have a reference to a Syriac New Testament as early as 160-80 AD, the time of that Hebrew Christian writer. One thing is certain, that the earliest New Testament of the Syriac church lacked not only the Antilegomena – 2 Peter, 2 and 3 John, Jude, and the Apocalypse – but the whole of the Catholic Epistles. These were at a later date translated and received into the Syriac Canon of the New Testament, but the quotations of the early Syrian Fathers take no notice of these New Testament books.

From the 5th century, however, the Peshitta containing both Old Testament and New Testament has been used in its present form only as the national version of the Syriac Scriptures. The translation of the New Testament is careful, faithful and literal, and the simplicity, directness and transparency of the style are admired by all Syriac scholars and have earned for it the title of "Queen of the versions." [1]
http://textus-receptus.com/wiki/Peshitta#Syriac_Old_Testament

if the peshitta is a translation, then the people who decided what books to translate, following those people would be following a kind of tradition, imo.
The *tradition* (if you can even call it that) was of the apostolic churches. Not all the churches may have had all the books at the same time, so that should be taken into account. But the books of the New Testament were being circulated among all the churches of that time.