I think the Pope is panicking right now(smells like it)...
(media.greatawakening.win)
PANICO in Vaticano!
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So now comes the scatter gun approach? Just throw out all of the things that you (falsely) believe about the Church? You have not answered a single one of my Bible-based questions/statements. Just 'move on to a new topic' when confronted by Bible citations.
Your (new) questions betray a lack of understanding of first-century Hebrew, as well as church history (both before and after the Reformation).
I've learned (by talking to liberals) that this conversation is useless. You're going to just throw as much on the wall as possible -- without answering anything that is pending. Never an answer from you, just more accusations.
I'm done here. You've read and interpreted the Bible as you see fit. I, on the other hand, have read, interpreted, and can understand both sides of this argument.
It isn't me who has a 'lifetime of belief' to 'overcome'. I only came to faith several years ago. When I did, I spent years searching the entire Bible for what is true (not just the verses that I like).
God bless.
Just ask yourself these questions: "Am I pleasing God by confessing to a priest, instead of to Him?" "Am I pleasing God when I pray and invoke Mary, instead of Jesus?", "Am I pleasing God in believing that the bread and wine are magically turned into flesh and blood of Jesus, when it clearly is not?"
Sorry if I didn't address specific questions you had, but you didn't address what I stated either, so I guess we're even :) I became a Christian more than 30 years ago. I grew up going to an Episcopal church (Catholic-light :) ), but there really isn't a personal salvation experience associated with that church; you go through confirmation classes and then are "confirmed" as a Christian. It is clear that baptism is intended for believers to experience, not infants, yet the Catholic church still does infant baptisms in the false believe it results in salvation, correct? If you have accepted Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, and repented of your sins, and accept this gift of free salvation, without any works required, and if you confess your sins to God, not to some Priest, then you will be welcomed into Heaven some day. I hope to see you there, but please, stop grieving the Holy Spirit by praying to Mary.
A) A primary purpose of infant baptism is that it results in having the infant being 'sealed' (marked) by the Holy Spirit. The infant (obviously) has no ability to discern what is going on, so the faith is 'borrowed' from the godparents (who are then called upon to help raise the child in the faith). Frankly, I can't see any downside with any of that. The practice started in the first century, when infant mortality was a much bigger problem, and while there was a singular, universal church. Therefore, it is completely impossible to claim it is a 'Catholic invention'. The separate sacrament of Confirmation is what happens when a child is old enough to think for themselves (attains the 'age of reason') and therefore makes a profession of faith. Both practices were in place during the first century AD.
B) No Catholic 'grieves the Holy Spirit' by (properly) praying to Mary. A Catholic prays to Mary to ask her to intercede for them with her Son, and not with any expectation that she can perform whatever 'miracle' we might be asking for. She is not God. If you read the Old Testament, you can see how the kings held their mothers in high regard, with the 'Queen Mother' being someone who regularly interceded 'for the common man'. The king, having (sometimes) hundreds of wives, would not be swayed by the appeal of a wife, but did keep a special place (and royal chair) available for their mother. The term is Gebirah. A king would not refuse a request made by their mother on behalf of a subject (see 1 Kings 2:20).
So, lets say I was 'going in for surgery'... I would (obviously) pray directly to God, but I might also ask a family member, or friend, or neighbor to pray for me. (With no expectation that my family member, or friend, or neighbor could affect the outcome... I'm asking them to pray to God on my behalf.) This is called 'intercessory prayer'. Mary is no different. I pray directly to God, but I might also ask for her to intercede on my behalf. And 1 Kings 2:20 indicates that she 'has the king's ear' a bit more than my next-door neighbor.
C) Works are required. But not to 'earn your way into heaven'. Works are an essential part of faith itself. Consider this analogy... A father raises a child, and over the course of several years, the father imparts many 'words of wisdom' about 'how to live the best life possible' (how to be kind, loving, successful, responsible, etc). At some point, the child grows up and moves out. The question of 'whether the child believes the father' is determined by whether the child lives that way when they are on their own. If they do live that way, the child believes the father. If they do not live that way, then the father did not convince them of the best way to live (because they are living a different way). The child, therefore, does not have faith in what the father said.
Salvation is a free gift from God. We cannot earn it. But look at John 3:16. He who believes in the Son shall have eternal life. Alternatively, he who has been persuaded by the Son shall have eternal life. Been persuaded 'of what'? Of many things, including things like the Sermon on the Mount, where the Son describes the best way for us to live. But do we believe him? That can only be answered by how we live.
If you think that 'what we do' is not important, I'd guide you toward John 3:36. Just a few verses after John 3:16, the Bible makes perfectly clear that "he who believes shall have eternal life, and he who does not obey the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God shall remain upon him." Works are an integral part of what it means to believe, what it means to 'have been persuaded'. John 3:36 (and other passages such as James 3:20-26) are very clear.
How in the world can you ignore Jesus' own warning in Matthew 25:41-46? How can you possibly say works are not integral to belief? Only those who believe the Son are saved.
If you don't agree, that's between you and God. I wish you well. Personally, I have been persuaded (by the Son) of the best way to live, and I do my (imperfect) best to live it out. I see no downside to it. It is exactly what I have been told to do by God.
I don't know if any Christian believes "works" aren't important, but far too many believe "works" are required to be saved, and the reason so many "Christian" cults, like the Jehovah's Witnesses have sprung up. Paul saw that happening early in the Church ("Church" being the fellowship of believers, not some organized institution) and devoted much of his letters to that topic. The Treasury Dept. employees who investigate counterfeit money don't learn what counterfeit money looks like; they study REAL U.S. currency (they don't bother with coins for the most part), so much, that if they come across counterfeit bills, they INSTANTLY recognize them as forgeries. I believe my continuous reading through the Bible during the past 30 years has allowed me to recognize counterfeit Christian theology. I'm afraid that based on this, I consider the Catholic Church to be a cult. Yes, there are saved Christians who are Catholic, but Satan loves to hinder the salvation of humans, so if he can't stop all people from aligning with Jesus in the spiritual battle happening on Earth, he is more than happy to hinder their salvation through false theology and "church tradition". Finally, to address your responses, A) Yes, I understand the origin of infant baptism, and you pretty much answered my concern; it was started by the early church as a response to the plague, in the false belief that the infants would go to Heaven if they were baptized and died before the "age of accountability". But that believe relied on them thinking that baptism was required for the infants to be saved. All humans are saved if they die before reaching the age of accountability, but baptism does not save them later in life. B) There is no scriptural justification for praying to Mary! This is yet another Catholic doctrine with no scriptural support. To rely on the writings of Popes as equal to scripture is really, for lack of a better term, blasphemous. And C) you are partially correct on "works", but the doubts of salvation placed on the minds of Catholics in that regard is totally against the concept of "works".
Do you really think God wanted man to rely on such an organized church (Catholic Church) with all its rules and traditions, after Jesus came to the Earth to condemn the organized church of the time (Judaism)? (and by condemning, I'm referring to the multitude of rules and traditions that the Jewish leaders had established over the centuries, that made it virtually impossible for the people to reach full atonement)
I urge you to read through a Bible, independent of what the Catholic Church says, and let the Holy Spirit work in you to come to the truth. I wish you well. We will all know the ultimate truth regarding what God intended for man some day.