The UFO Deception Explosion of December 2023—Tucker Carlson, Joe Rogan, David Grusch, & Much More
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Council of Nicaea. 325 AD.
That was for the Catholic Church, The true church existed before and still exists today apart from the Catholic Church. If the catholic church would be the only church and the true church then there would be any scripture whatsoever authorizing such an organization but I read 0 entries in the New (or old) testament regarding the pope and it would be impossible to have the catholic church without the pope.
The Catholic Church is the True Church.
This is what all early Christians believed and continued to believe for over a thousand years.
It's also just evident that a doctrinal authority is needed. If nobody agrees on doctrine, nobody is worshiping God, but their own interpretations of the Bible and thus of God.
Acts 2:38. No cathedrals, no infant baptisms, popes, nuns, monks. Just Christians.
The pope is and always will be a flawed man who pretends to be God. If he is so ordained then how in the world did Galileo get put on house arrest for saying our solar system is Heliocentric?
Where is your counterargument?
It gets really tiring posing a very specific argument and just receiving a "verse battle" in response, or whatever other manner of completely unrelated response.
Why should I respond to your argument when you categorically ignore mine?
You mean the council where Emporer Constantine opened up by making himself subordinate to the bishops?
Let's straighten this out.
The councils didn't decide on a whim what books should be in the canon. Instead, they more or less recognized and affirmed what was already widely accepted and used by Christian communities.
Think of it like this: The councils weren't picking books out of thin air. They looked at what most Christians across various regions were already considering authoritative and divinely inspired. It's more like a ratification process than a selection process.
So, the councils didn't play a "Let's choose random books" game. They were more like, "Hey, these books are already being read and respected by the majority of Christians. Let's make it official."
There were probably thousands of writings, they included what fit the Roman Narrative.
Indeed, there were numerous writings circulating at the time. The councils, rather than trying to fit a "Roman Narrative," aimed to discern the writings widely accepted and used across diverse Christian communities. It was more about finding a common ground among believers than pushing a specific agenda.
The process was complex, but the idea was to ensure unity in the essential teachings of the faith. So, while there were many writings, the councils focused on those that resonated most broadly among Christians.
There are a lot of disputed beliefs among the various Church organizations. I was surprised when I looked into different Churches stance on Abortion, Gay whatever, even women as Pastors and Priests.
I'm pro-life, and I don't have a problem with priests having wives. They had wives until Pope Gregory made it so that priests were supposed to be above and beyond the populous. Then Gays and Child molesters gravitated to the Priesthood so mom would quit pestering them for grandchildren.