When did the universal Church first mentioned in 110AD stop being universal?

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epostle1

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Born_Again said:
What do you mean "not found in protestant bibles"? All of those verses are. Clarify, please.
I didn't say all of therm, just Hebrews 11:32-37, which is a reference to 2 Maccabees 7, from a book that Martin Luther threw out. It's not in your OT Bible. I should have been more clear.

Matthew 2:23, 1 Cor.10:4 are Traditions the Apostles kept, because they are not found in the OT in anybody's Bible.

Eph.5:14 Therefore it is said... It does not say "therefore it is written". It's oral tradition.

Acts 20:35 is quoting Jesus, but it is not found in the Gospels. It is a Tradition the Apostles kept.

Scripture, Tradition and the Magisterium all work together in harmony, one is not over the other.

76 In keeping with the Lord's command, the Gospel was handed on in two ways:
- orally "by the apostles who handed on, by the spoken word of their preaching, by the example they gave, by the institutions they established, what they themselves had received - whether from the lips of Christ, from his way of life and his works, or whether they had learned it at the prompting of the Holy Spirit";33

- in writing "by those apostles and other men associated with the apostles who, under the inspiration of the same Holy Spirit, committed the message of salvation to writing".34
. . . continued in apostolic succession
77 "In order that the full and living Gospel might always be preserved in the Church the apostles left bishops as their successors. They gave them their own position of teaching authority."35 Indeed, "the apostolic preaching, which is expressed in a special way in the inspired books, was to be preserved in a continuous line of succession until the end of time."36
CCC

Apostolic Tradition, properly understood, has nothing to do with customs or rubrics.
THEY ARE NOT MAN MADE.

apostolic tradition



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REDEEMER IN THE WOMB


 

tom55

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Wormwood said:
Tom,
Thank you for your response. You have a great many assumptions in your response. First, you are coming from the perspective that all these various groups are splinters from the Catholic Church whereas the Orthodox would likely see it quite to the contrary. So, you kinda have homer glasses on here I am afraid. Also, I agree with you that we are to be of one mind and unified. I certainly am not making a plea for division and discord. However, I think if you take any time reading the NT you will see that "unity" and "one mind" language has little to do with church polity and allegiance to specific leaders and much more to do with brotherly love and people of LOCAL congregations getting along with one another. No where do we see Paul writing about the church in Corinth having "one mind" by submitting to the religious authorities in Jerusalem or Rome. Such a view is nonsense! In fact, Paul, even though he was an Apostle, does not use this position as a means to demand submission of those under his care (even though he could have). Rather, he appeals to their local autonomy and encourages them by the mercy of Christ, and not through a domineering tone of authority based on human political systems. In fact, I think Jesus spoke pretty clearly that this was not the way Church would be set up. I mean, if we are going to argue for a supreme Church leader and heirarchy based on the writings of the NT, we should argue that the bishop of Jerusalem was the leader of the church, not the bishop of Rome. I mean, I don't read anywhere where it says Irenaeus was an infallible, inspired writer of Scripture in his utterings about Rome's authority. In fact, (as you likely know) there was a great deal of debate about which bishop was to be supreme between Jerusalem and Rome. It wasn't a foregone conclusion as you imply.

In any event, Paul is pretty clear in Galatians and elsewhere that our guidance and authority does not come from human heirarchies, but from obedience to the message of the Gospel. I mean, Paul's pretty clear that his authority came from Jesus, not from Peter and he did not consult man or need man's permission to preach the Gospel. He passes this same instruction along to people like Timothy and Titus. Their basis for leadership and appointing elders had nothing to do with papal permission, but was directly related to local church autonomy and the character and spiritual maturity of those in that local congregation. It could not be any more clear in 1 and 2nd Timothy and Titus.

Again, I think you put entirely too much hope in human structures and authorities. I agree there is "one" holy, catholic and apostolic church. My faith is not based in doctrines founded outside the teaching of the Apostles! However, in my ecclesiology, a person belongs to that one church by faith and not by a human stamp of approval. Of course, that was the big rub between Luther and the Pope. Luther saw a great many wicked behaviors taking place in the church that needed reform whereas the Pope and church authorities saw this critique by Luther as an undermining of their authority and position. I mean, if we allow priests to critique and question the legitimacy of church functions...and the Scriptures and faith have greater weight than the see of Christ, then the Pope's power is nullfied. The problem is, it shouldn't be about who has the right to be the "true" church. It should be about who is "faithful." That is what Christ desires. Do you really think those priests who bought their positions by simony were legitimate spiritual authorities in the Church simply because they had a Pope's seal of approval and the proper gown!? Just look at the book of Revelation. A church belongs to Jesus not because of the robes they wear or a Pope's decree. They belong to Jesus because they love him and are faithful to the truth. That is the whole point of Revelation! Jesus is encouraging those who are outcast and being killed that if they remain faithful, they will be pillars in the house of his God...regardless of what men think, say or do. Meanwhile, some churches that look successful and are praised are dead and will be spit out of his mouth. Men look at robes and human approval, but Jesus looks at the heart and those who abide by the truth. I think we should do the same and not be so quick to label millions of believers as agents of Satan because they do not bow to the same elder you do.
[SIZE=9pt]You say that you agree that we Christians are to be of one mind and unified and that you are not making a plea for division and discord but then you say reading the NT you will see that "unity" and "one mind" language has little to do with church polity and allegiance to specific leaders.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=9pt]How can you AGREE that we are to be of one mind and unified (which I agree is what scripture says) but then say that scripture does not say we are to have unity and one mind in church polity and allegiance to a specific leader (which is opposite of what scripture says)? How are we to be of one mind and unified if we don’t have allegiance to specific leaders? If we have many leaders (your local congregations making their own doctrines theory) are we then NOT speaking with one mind and NOT unified? Was Jesus the leader of The Church when he was alive? Did not the Apostles take over that leadership when they were alive after he died? Didn’t Jesus say to the Apostles in the Great Commission to teach us to[/SIZE][SIZE=9pt] obey everything I have commanded you? He didn't say teach everything I commanded you and set up local congregations and then let those local congregations decide what to teach that works best for them and their locality. [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]Did Jesus not organize the Apostles and set up fundamental principles or establish precedent with them? At the Council of Jerusalem did the Apostles not organize a society on a large scale and set up fundamental principles or establish precedent for all other Christians to follow? Did that organization and the process they set up to establish fundamental principles end AFTER the Apostles died? [/SIZE]

[SIZE=9pt]Polity defined[/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]: a form or process of civil government or constitution OR an organized society[/SIZE]

[SIZE=9pt]Constitution defined[/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]: a body of fundamental principles or established precedents according to which a state or other organization is acknowledged to be governed.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=9pt]Organized[/SIZE][SIZE=9pt] defined: arranged in a systematic way, especially on a large scale[/SIZE]

[SIZE=9pt]I agree with you that “Their basis for leadership and appointing elders had nothing to do with papal permission, but was directly related to local church autonomy and the character and spiritual maturity of those in that local congregation”. Neither I nor the RCC denies that. What you are conveniently leaving out is that according to scripture AND history the Apostles appointed elders, based on their character and spiritual maturity, and those elders appointed others and then those elders appointed others etc. etc. for 2,000 years. When those that were NOT appointed by thru Apostolic Succession started their own church and were NOT teaching[/SIZE][SIZE=9pt] what The Church approved they were called heretics (Irenaeus against Heresies 3:3:1, A.D. 189). And since you don’t like what Irenaeus says since he destroys your theory you should read what ALL the Apostolic and ECF’s say about apostolic succession all the way from Clement in 80AD to [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]Augustine in 397 AD.[/SIZE] [SIZE=9pt]Scripture CLEARLY sets up a hierarchical system that is governed by men and binding decisions are made upon ALL Christians by those men (Church leaders). Historically The Church has continued that hierarchy. Based on scripture and history you are completely and utterly wrong.[/SIZE]

[SIZE=9pt]How can ‘LOCAL congregations get along with one other’ if they are disagreeing with each other on the interpretation of Scripture? They can’t and won’t!! That was the reason they held the Council at Jerusalem because the “local churches” were disagreeing with each other. They held the council to bring UNITY to The Church so [/SIZE][SIZE=9pt]that they may all agree, and that there be no divisions amongst them but that they would be united in the same mind and the same judgment (1 Galatians 1:10, John 17:20-23). Your ‘local congregation’ theory is not scriptural and causes disunity. Your statement “No where do we see Paul writing about the church in Corinth having "one mind" by submitting to the religious authorities in Jerusalem or Rome[/SIZE]” is narrow minded. The Council at Jerusalem CLEARLY established a binding doctrine/belief upon ALL Christians and ALL Christians had to submit to the religious authorities in Jerusalem. Your ‘no one church has authority over the other Churches’ theory is utterly destroyed by scripture AND history.
 

heretoeternity

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Read Revelation 17 and 18 and see what God thinks of the Roman religious system, which includes Roman church and the protestant churches (daughters of the harlot) who are still following the Roman system...
 

epostle1

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Wormwood, on 29 Nov 2016 - 7:18 PM, said:
Quote
Tom,

Thank you for your response. You have a great many assumptions in your response. First, you are coming from the perspective that all these various groups are splinters from the Catholic Church whereas the Orthodox would likely see it quite to the contrary. So, you kinda have homer glasses on here I am afraid. Also, I agree with you that we are to be of one mind and unified. I certainly am not making a plea for division and discord. However, I think if you take any time reading the NT you will see that "unity" and "one mind" language has little to do with church polity and allegiance to specific leaders and much more to do with brotherly love and people of LOCAL congregations getting along with one another.

"Brotherly love and people of LOCAL congregations getting along with one another" wasn't enough to stop the Arian and Nestorian heresies, and every "bible alone" heretic down through the centuries..

Independent Evangelical churches follow the Baptist Successionist idea that the early church was de-centralized. They like to imagine that the early Christians met in their homes for Bible study and prayer, and that in this pure form they existed independently of any central authority. It is easy to imagine that long ago in the ancient world transportation and communication was rare and difficult and that no form of centralized church authority could have existed even if it was desirable.

The most straightforward reading of the Acts of the Apostles shows this to be untrue, and a further reading of early church documents shows this to be no more than a back-projected invention. In the Acts of the Apostles what we find is a church that is immediately centralized in Jerusalem. When Peter has his disturbing vision in which God directs him to admit the Gentiles to the Church, he references back at once to the apostolic leadership in Jerusalem.(Acts 11:2)

The mission of the infant church was directed from Jerusalem, with Barnabas and Agabus being sent to Antioch (Acts 11:22,27) The Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15) was convened to decide on the Gentile decision and a letter of instruction was sent to the new churches in Antioch, Syria and Cilicia. (Acts 15:23) We see Philip, John Mark, Barnabas and Paul traveling to and from Jerusalem and providing a teaching and disciplinary link from the new churches back to the centralized church in Jerusalem.

After the martyrdom of James the leadership shifts to Peter and Paul. The authority is not centered on Jerusalem, but through their epistles to the various churches, we see a centralized authority that is vested in Peter and Paul as apostles. This central authority was very soon focused on Rome, so that St Ignatius, a bishop of the church in Antioch would write to the Romans in the year 108 affirming that their church was the one that had the “superior place in love among the churches.’”

Historian Eamon Duffy suggests that the earliest leadership in the Roman church may have been more conciliar than monarchical because in his letter to the Corinthians, Clement of Rome doesn’t write as the Bishop of Rome, but even if this is so Duffy confirms that the early church believed Clement was the fourth Bishop of Rome and read Clement’s letter as support for centralized Roman authority. He also concedes that by the time of Irenaeus in the mid second century the centralizing role of the Bishop of Rome was already well established. From then on, citation after citation from the apostolic Fathers can be compiled to show that the whole church from Gaul to North Africa and from Syria to Spain affirm the primacy of the Bishop of Rome as the successor of Peter and Paul.
The acceptance of this centralized authority was a sign of belonging to the one true church so that St Jerome could write to Pope Damasus in the mid 300s,
“I think it is my duty to consult the chair of Peter, and to turn to a church whose faith has been praised by Paul… My words are spoken to the successor of the fisherman, to the disciple of the cross. As I follow no leader save Christ, so I communicate with none but your blessedness, that is with the chair of Peter. For this, I know, is the rock on which the church is built!”


No where do we see Paul writing about the church in Corinth having "one mind" by submitting to the religious authorities in Jerusalem or Rome. Such a view is nonsense! In fact, Paul, even though he was an Apostle, does not use this position as a means to demand submission of those under his care (even though he could have).

Being submissive to apostolic authority is obedience, which is a virtue. Dominating dictatorship is a gross misrepresentation of authority.
Rather, he appeals to their local autonomy and encourages them by the mercy of Christ, and not through a domineering tone of authority based on human political systems.

The Church is not a mere political human system. She is an extension of the Incarnation united by the Eucharist. Denial of this truth is a form of Gnosticism, which is a man made Protestant tradition.


I think Jesus spoke pretty clearly that this was not the way Church would be set up. I mean, if we are going to argue for a supreme Church leader and heirarchy based on the writings of the NT, we should argue that the bishop of Jerusalem was the leader of the church, not the bishop of Rome.
see above



I mean, I don't read anywhere where it says Irenaeus was an infallible, inspired writer of Scripture in his utterings about Rome's authority. In fact, (as you likely know) there was a great deal of debate about which bishop was to be supreme between Jerusalem and Rome. It wasn't a foregone conclusion as you imply.
No one Church Father is infallible. Only Jesus is infallible who gives this gift to His Church that prevents her from teaching error.

Irenaeus
"But since it would be too long to enumerate in such a volume as this the succession of all the churches, we shall confound all those who, in whatever manner, whether through self-satisfaction or vainglory, or through blindness and wicked opinion, assemble other than where it is proper, by pointing out here the successions of the bishops of the greatest and most ancient church known to all, founded and organized at Rome by the two most glorious apostles, Peter and Paul, that church which has the tradition and the faith which comes down to us after having been announced to men by the apostles. With that church, because of its superior origin, all the churches must agree, that is, all the faithful in the whole world, and it is in her that the faithful everywhere have maintained the apostolic tradition" (Against Heresies 3:3:2 [A.D. 189]).
In any event, Paul is pretty clear in Galatians and elsewhere that our guidance and authority does not come from human heirarchies, but from obedience to the message of the Gospel. I mean, Paul's pretty clear that his authority came from Jesus, not from Peter and he did not consult man or need man's permission to preach the Gospel. He passes this same instruction along to people like Timothy and Titus. Their basis for leadership and appointing elders had nothing to do with papal permission, but was directly related to local church autonomy and the character and spiritual maturity of those in that local congregation. It could not be any more clear in 1 and 2nd Timothy and Titus.

Paul was always submissive to the Church.
It is incorrect to regard St. Paul as some kind of spiritual “lone ranger,” on his own with no particular ecclesiastical allegiance, since he was commissioned by Jesus Himself as an Apostle.
- In his very conversion experience, Jesus informed Paul that he would be told what to do (Acts 9:6; cf. 9:17). (who told him to do what??? Did Jesus appear a second time???)
- He went to see St. Peter in Jerusalem for fifteen days in order to be confirmed in his calling (Galatians 1:18), and
- fourteen years later was commissioned by Peter, James, and John (Galatians 2:1-2,9).
- He was also sent out by the Church at Antioch (Acts 13:1-4), which was in contact with the Church at Jerusalem (Acts 11:19-27).
- Later on, Paul reported back to Antioch (Acts 14:26-28).
- Acts 15:2 states: “. . . Paul and Barnabas and some of the others were appointed to go up to Jerusalem to the apostles and the elders about this question.”
- The next verse refers to Paul and Barnabas “being sent on their way by the church.” Paul did what he was told to do by the Jerusalem Council (where he played no huge role),
- and Paul and Barnabas were sent off, or commissioned by the council (15:22-27), and shared its binding teachings in their missionary journeys: “. . . delivered to them for observance the decisions which had been reached by the apostles and elders who were at Jerusalem” (Acts 16:4).
The Jerusalem Council certainly regarded its teachings as infallible, and guided by the Holy Spirit Himself. The records we have of it don’t even record much discussion about biblical prooftexts, and the main issue was circumcision (where there is a lot of Scripture to draw from). Paul accepted its authority and proclaimed its teachings (Acts 16:4).

The attempt to pretend that St. Paul was somehow on his own, disconnected to the institutional Church, has always failed, as unbiblical. Protestant frown upon institutions, but we Catholics rather like the Church that Jesus Christ set up, initially led by St. Peter.
Furthermore, Paul appears to be passing on his office to Timothy (1 Tim 6:20; 2 Tim 1:6, 13-14; 2 Tim 4:1-6), and tells him to pass his office along, in turn (2 Tim 2:1-2) which would be another indication of apostolic succession in the Bible. You can acknowledge Paul passing his office to Timothy instructing him to teach others and so on yet deny apostolic succession? (another man made Protestant tradition) It's a contradiction.
Again, I think you put entirely too much hope in human structures and authorities. I agree there is "one" holy, catholic and apostolic church. My faith is not based in doctrines founded outside the teaching of the Apostles!

There are no Catholic doctrines found outside the teaching of the Apostles. They are direct, indirect, or a development of the original truths with the essence never changing.


However, in my ecclesiology, a person belongs to that one church by faith and not by a human stamp of approval.
What human stamp of approval are you talking about???


Several evangelical scholars have noted that the problem with Protestant ecclesiology is that there is no Protestant ecclesiology. In many denominations—and especially in non-denominational churches—there is no hierarchy of churches responsible to a central head, no accountability beyond the local congregation, no fellowship beyond the local assembly, no missional emphasis that gains support from hundreds of congregations, and no superiors to whom a local pastor must submit for doctrinal or ethical fidelity.
Daniel B. Wallace Executive Director of CSNTM & Senior Professor of NT Studies at Dallas Theological Seminary


Of course, that was the big rub between Luther and the Pope. Luther saw a great many wicked behaviors taking place in the church that needed reform whereas the Pope and church authorities saw this critique by Luther as an undermining of their authority and position.

That's a whole different topic.

I mean, if we allow priests to critique and question the legitimacy of church functions...and the Scriptures and faith have greater weight than the see of Christ, then the Pope's power is nullfied. The "pope's power" is not over the Scriptures, that is a man made Protestant tradition
The problem is, it shouldn't be about who has the right to be the "true" church. It should be about who is "faithful." That is what Christ desires. Do you really think those priests who bought their positions by simony were legitimate spiritual authorities in the Church simply because they had a Pope's seal of approval and the proper gown!? Just look at the book of Revelation. A church belongs to Jesus not because of the robes they wear or a Pope's decree. They belong to Jesus because they love him and are faithful to the truth. That is the whole point of Revelation! Jesus is encouraging those who are outcast and being killed that if they remain faithful, they will be pillars in the house of his God...regardless of what men think, say or do. Meanwhile, some churches that look successful and are praised are dead and will be spit out of his mouth. Men look at robes and human approval, but Jesus looks at the heart and those who abide by the truth. I think we should do the same and not be so quick to label millions of believers as agents of Satan because they do not bow to the same elder you do.
The first 40 popes were killed by pagan Romans but anti-Catholics never include them as martyrs for the faith. The Catholic Church recognizes non-Catholic churches as Christian, sources of grace and salvation. Look what we get in return.


Only a Dave Hunt reader would bring up this nonsense about vestments. It is appropriate for Catholic clerics to wear 'gowns", if for no other reason because they have been liturgical practice of the true religion since ancient Israel.

God commanded that scarlet yarn and wool be used in liturgical ceremonies (Lev. 14:4, 6, 49–52; Num. 19:6), and that God commanded that the priests’ vestments be made with purple and scarlet yarn (Ex. 28:4–8, 15, 33, 39:1–8, 24, 29).
Of course, you would never misrepresent Judaism the way you do Catholicism.
 
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Wormwood

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Tom,

I don't have time to respond to everything. Allow me to just make a few quotes from scripture and briefly comment.

2 I entreat Euodia and I entreat Syntyche to agree in the Lord. 3 Yes, I ask you also, true companion, help these women, who have labored side by side with me in the gospel together with Clement and the rest of my fellow workers, whose names are in the book of life.

First, let me comment here. The "division" here had nothing to do with church polity. Their "one mind" that Paul desires for the Philippians has nothing to do with determining who the proper bishop is and blindly following whatever that person says. No, this unity had to do with these people to work together and give grace to one another so that the church would not be divided. Pretty much every reference to unity in the NT epistles are similar examples. You're falsely inserting a paradigm that was very far from the Apostle Paul's mind in order to validate your ecclesiology.

10 I appeal to you, brothers, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree, and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be united in the same mind and the same judgment. 11 For it has been reported to me by Chloe’s people that there is quarreling among you, my brothers. 12 What I mean is that each one of you says, “I follow Paul,” or “I follow Apollos,” or “I follow Cephas,” or “I follow Christ.” 13 Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or were you baptized in the name of Paul? 14 I thank God that I baptized none of you except Crispus and Gaius, 15 so that no one may say that you were baptized in my name.

Here, Paul is calling for unity among the Corinthians. How does Paul handle it? Does he say, "Well of course you should follow me! I am a legitimate Apostle! We can end all the debates if you just take whatever I say and chisel it into gold tablets in the Corinthian church." Or, "You should consult Peter. We all follow Peter because he is the voice of Christ on earth for us all." No, far from it. Paul does the OPPOSITE of what you argue. Rather than pointing to himself as the chief bishop who alone has the authority and who's word should end all debate, rather he calls them to see all these various teachers and preachers valuable workers. Paul is not arguing for no disagreement at all by establishing one person as the sole source of authoritative speech (as we will see shortly in Romans), but that in the midst of doctrinal division, calling these believers to remember the humility and love of Christ and see different teachers as all valuable workers and not antithetical to one another because they may not agree in all areas. You'd be wise to take the same approach rather than condemning everyone who doesn't bend the knee to your Pope.

As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed.
10 For am I now seeking the approval of man, or of God? Or am I trying to please man? If I were still trying to please man, I would not be a servant of Christ.

Here we see Paul's real focus: The heart of the Gospel. Paul does not say, "If Peter preaches anything, you must believe him because he is the see of Christ and we must accept all he says as infallible truth from God. That is how we will stay unified and effective as a church." No, Paul says the Gospel he preached is the truth authority and unifying message and it doesn't matter what any man says, or angel for that matter. If the Gospel is not the focus, and its original message is not being obeyed and proclaimed, then it is a false Gospel and should be rejected....and the preacher of that false Gospel should be condemned...(be it a bishop, Pope, or even a heavenly angel!). In fact, Paul actually opposed Peter (the see of Christ in your ecclesiology), because he was acting inconsistently with the Gospel. But, if I were to hold to your theology, Paul was out of line. How dare he oppose the Pope!? No one has the right to twist the Gospel, and it is always right to oppose any authority that misuses authority or misrepresents the truth of Jesus Christ

One person esteems one day as better than another, while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind. 6 The one who observes the day, observes it in honor of the Lord. The one who eats, eats in honor of the Lord, since he gives thanks to God, while the one who abstains, abstains in honor of the Lord and gives thanks to God.

One more example. Here is a perfect example of what I am talking about. Why doesn't Paul just settle it all and say what is right and what is wrong from his authoritative seat as an Apostle? Why not say, "Yes eat the meat." Or "No, its sinful." Because the issue, first of all, is about faith. Secondly the issue is about loving each other in differences. The way we solve our divisions is not by electing some Pope to be God for us and settle all our differences. No, the solution is, although both people are "fully convinced" in their own minds, they should strive to honor God and give space for others to also honor God on debatable matters. Your solution to everything seems to be, "WE need to appoint a man to be God for us and settle our differences." Paul never approached debates and disunity that way. He didn't use his authority to squelch arguments by choosing a side (so long as what was being fought over wasn't a false Gospel). No, he called believers to love each other in their differences and to respect each other's faith in Christ on debatable matters.
 

epostle1

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Wormwood said:
Tom,

I don't have time to respond to everything. Allow me to just make a few quotes from scripture and briefly comment.

2 I entreat Euodia and I entreat Syntyche to agree in the Lord. 3 Yes, I ask you also, true companion, help these women, who have labored side by side with me in the gospel together with Clement and the rest of my fellow workers, whose names are in the book of life.
This Clement became the 4th pope.



First, let me comment here. The "division" here had nothing to do with church polity. Their "one mind" that Paul desires for the Philippians has nothing to do with determining who the proper bishop is and blindly following whatever that person says. No, this unity had to do with these people to work together and give grace to one another so that the church would not be divided. Pretty much every reference to unity in the NT epistles are similar examples. You're falsely inserting a paradigm that was very far from the Apostle Paul's mind in order to validate your ecclesiology.
Bishops were ordained and appointed to various churches. There was no question as to who they were. "blindly following whatever that person says" is a distortion of Hebrews 13:17 "Obey your leaders and submit to their authority. They keep watch over you as men who must give an account. Obey them so that their work will be a joy, not a burden, for that would be of no advantage to you."
There is no advantage in disobedience. The meaning of the Greek word “pistis” and “pisteo” (faith) includes “obedience.” The sad thing is, you think that when bishops and popes teach, Christ is absent.
10 I appeal to you, brothers, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree, and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be united in the same mind and the same judgment. 11 For it has been reported to me by Chloe’s people that there is quarreling among you, my brothers. 12 What I mean is that each one of you says, “I follow Paul,” or “I follow Apollos,” or “I follow Cephas,” or “I follow Christ.” 13 Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or were you baptized in the name of Paul? 14 I thank God that I baptized none of you except Crispus and Gaius, 15 so that no one may say that you were baptized in my name.
Paul is not saying that Peter is not above Paul in authority any more than he is saying that Christ is not above both of them. What Paul is saying is that if you accept any one, Christ , Peter, Paul, or Apollos, then you must accept all of the others. A person cannot rationalize a rejection of any one of them. It's interesting to note here that Paul uses the Aramaic Cephas to a Greek speaking community, as he does in 7 other places. The Aramaic Cephas has no constructive pronouns, no petra/petros. Jesus calls Peter the Aramaic "Cephas" in John 1:42, which flattens the petra/petros argument.
Here, Paul is calling for unity among the Corinthians. How does Paul handle it? Does he say, "Well of course you should follow me! I am a legitimate Apostle! We can end all the debates if you just take whatever I say and chisel it into gold tablets in the Corinthian church." Or, "You should consult Peter. We all follow Peter because he is the voice of Christ on earth for us all." No, far from it. Paul does the OPPOSITE of what you argue. Rather than pointing to himself as the chief bishop who alone has the authority and who's word should end all debate, rather he calls them to see all these various teachers and preachers valuable workers. Paul is not arguing for no disagreement at all by establishing one person as the sole source of authoritative speech (as we will see shortly in Romans), but that in the midst of doctrinal division, calling these believers to remember the humility and love of Christ and see different teachers as all valuable workers and not antithetical to one another because they may not agree in all areas. You'd be wise to take the same approach rather than condemning everyone who doesn't bend the knee to your Pope.

As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed.
10 For am I now seeking the approval of man, or of God? Or am I trying to please man? If I were still trying to please man, I would not be a servant of Christ.

Here we see Paul's real focus: The heart of the Gospel. Paul does not say, "If Peter preaches anything, you must believe him because he is the see of Christ and we must accept all he says as infallible truth from God. That is how we will stay unified and effective as a church." No, Paul says the Gospel he preached is the truth authority and unifying message and it doesn't matter what any man says, or angel for that matter. If the Gospel is not the focus, and its original message is not being obeyed and proclaimed, then it is a false Gospel and should be rejected....and the preacher of that false Gospel should be condemned...(be it a bishop, Pope, or even a heavenly angel!). In fact, Paul actually opposed Peter (the see of Christ in your ecclesiology), because he was acting inconsistently with the Gospel. But, if I were to hold to your theology, Paul was out of line. How dare he oppose the Pope!? No one has the right to twist the Gospel, and it is always right to oppose any authority that misuses authority or misrepresents the truth of Jesus Christ
What does the Pope have to do with this discussion???
You’re trying to set the Bible against the Church, which is typical Protestant methodology, and ultra-unbiblical. The Bible never does that. I’ve already given the example of the Jerusalem Council, which plainly shows the infallibility of the Church.

The Bible repeatedly teaches that the Church is indefectible; therefore, the hypothetical of rejecting the (one true, historic) Church, as supposedly going against the Bible, is impossible according to the Bible. It is not a situation that would ever come up, because of God’s promised protection.

What the Bible says is to reject those who cause divisions, which is the very essence of the onset of Protestantism: schism, sectarianism, and division. It is Protestantism that departed from the historic Church, which is indefectible and infallible (see also 1 Tim 3:15).

Within 65 years of the Protestant revolt, there were 200 interpretations of "this is my body". If that is not severe division, I don't know what is.

And is any church and any teacher to be rejected who strays from God’s words, as Paul commands?
Sure; this is why we reject any form of Protestantism, because all fail the test of allegiance to God’s Word in Holy Scripture, and the historical pedigree that the fathers always taught was necessary. Every heretic in the history of the world thumbed their nose at the institutional Church and went by Scripture alone. It is the heretical worldview to do so, precisely because they know they can’t prove that their views were passed down through history in an unbroken succession.

Therefore, heresies and Protestantism either had to play games with history in order to pretend that it fits with their views, or ignore it altogether.

I gave several passages showing that Paul was under Church authority, in various ways. Of course, all authority ultimately comes from God. It is the pitting of the ultimate source against the secondary, human source (the Church) which is the problem in your approach and that of Protestantism in general. You guys don’t like human, institutional authority and don’t have enough faith to believe that God can and does preserve it, so you try to undermine it by fallacious arguments, as presently.

No doubt you aren’t even aware that you are doing it. To do this is automatic in Protestantism; it’s like breathing. It’s like the fish that doesn’t know it’s in water. It all comes from the rejection of the infallibility of the Church (which is one thing that sola Scriptura always entails).



Wormwood said:
One person esteems one day as better than another, while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind. 6 The one who observes the day, observes it in honor of the Lord. The one who eats, eats in honor of the Lord, since he gives thanks to God, while the one who abstains, abstains in honor of the Lord and gives thanks to God.

One more example. Here is a perfect example of what I am talking about. Why doesn't Paul just settle it all and say what is right and what is wrong from his authoritative seat as an Apostle? Why not say, "Yes eat the meat." Or "No, its sinful." Because the issue, first of all, is about faith. Secondly the issue is about loving each other in differences. The way we solve our divisions is not by electing some Pope to be God for us and settle all our differences. No, the solution is, although both people are "fully convinced" in their own minds, they should strive to honor God and give space for others to also honor God on debatable matters. Your solution to everything seems to be, "WE need to appoint a man to be God for us and settle our differences." Paul never approached debates and disunity that way. He didn't use his authority to squelch arguments by choosing a side (so long as what was being fought over wasn't a false Gospel). No, he called believers to love each other in their differences and to respect each other's faith in Christ on debatable matters.
In Galatians 1-2 Paul is referring to his initial conversion. But even then God made sure there was someone else around, to urge him to get baptized (Ananias: Acts 22:12-16). He received the revelation initially and then sought to have it confirmed by Church authority (Gal 2:1-2); then his authority was accepted or verified by James, Peter, and John (Gal 2:9). So we see that the Bible doesn’t pit the divine call directly from God, against Church authority, as you do. You do it because it is Protestant man-made tradition to do so; period, and because the Protestant has to always undermine the authority of the Church in order to bolster his own anti-system, that was set up against the historic Church in the first place.

We believe in faith that the Church is infallible and indefectible, based on many biblical indications. It is theoretically possible (speaking in terms of philosophy or epistemology) that the Church could stray and have to be rejected, but the Bible rules that out. We believe in faith that it has not and will not.
Protestants don’t have enough faith to believe that God could preserve an infallible Church, even though they can muster up even more faith than that, which is required to believe in an infallible Bible written by a bunch of sinners and hypocrites.

We simply have more faith than you guys do. It’s a supernatural gift. We believe that the authoritative Church is also a key part of God’s plan to save the souls of men. We follow the model of the Jerusalem Council, whereas you guys reject that or ignore it, because it doesn’t fit in with the man-made tradition of Protestantism and a supposedly non-infallible Church.
 
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Wormwood

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"This Clement became the 4th pope."

Yes, according to Jerome who lived approximately 400 years afterwards (which, just for reference, is about twice as long as the United States of America has been in existence). The documents that argue for the bishop of Rome's supremacy are hundreds of years after these church leaders lived. Of course, Clement was an impactful church leader and an influential bishop/pastor. But the efforts to crown him as some kind of crown wearing super-bishop that oversaw the Church across the Roman empire is nothing but historical revisionism to validate efforts to form heirarchies in the church long, long, after these people existed. The fact is, the early church had no such intentions and were more focused on serving one another and surviving persecution than arguing about which church bishop was more important than another bishop. I think they would consider such debates both nonsensical and foreign to the ways of Jesus Christ.

In any event, this only shows that you're so focused on your ecclesiology that you cant even read the passage without inserting your paradigms on a passage that has nothing to do with papal authority.

Yes, I agree that bishops/pastors/elders are ordained and appointed. I also agree that Christ works through appointed leaders and that we should submit to them. My point is that nowhere in Scripture do we read that only Peter or the one sitting in Peter's seat (Scripture speaks of no such thing), can appoint such leaders. No, actually we see in the NT that leaders were appointed locally based on their faith and character, not by some papal edict. Again, I agree we should submit to church leaders, however, if they are misrepresenting the Gospel (such as what was happing in the RCC during the days of Luther) then the Gospel supersedes the teaching of any man! Luther was right to reject the abuses of the RCC leadership in his day because simony, indulgences and the gazing on icons for grace were a means of preying on the poor and a twisting of the message of Christ. We are to obey our local church leaders, but if they disobey the Gospel, we are called to remain faithful to God, first and foremost.

The Pope is central to this discussion because this position highlights the differences in our ecclesiology. I also believe in the Church. I also believe that God works in and through the Church and that we should obey our church leaders. I also believe that there is one holy, catholic (universal) Church and Christ is the head of that Church. I also believe the Church is the hope of the world.

The differences between us, kepha31, is how we define this thing we call "Church." You define Church as a structure implemented by men who determine doctrine and by which God's grace flows through certain individuals who have successors throughout the ages. The Pope represents the top of this heirarchy and the ultimate source of God's authority and voice on earth (the see of Christ). He is the one who holds the keys of the Kingdom and the one who is the leader of a physical institution that is the conduit of Gods grace in Christ for humanity. Thus, Scripture, for you, is a product of this infallible human product and is simply another means of grace which is ultimately subject to the ultimate authority of this institution (the Church/Pope determines the meaning of Scripture).

My ecclesiology is far different. I define Church as a spiritual entity that is determined by faith, through which God's grace flows to people throughout the ages. The foundation of this Church is the teaching of the Apostles/Scriptures. All men are subject to this teaching and the message of the Gospel/Scriptures is the ultimate authority for all men. They are infallible and authoritative and are inspired in such a way as to be clearly understood. Scriptural authority does not need a higher human authority to determine their meaning. If that is the case, inspiration is meaningless. They are inspired to be both authoritative and comprehendable. Moreover, like the parable of the wheat and tares, the Kingdom of God (Church) is not a physical entity that consists of a business-model superstructure. Rather it is a kingdom of faith in which those who believe and obey the Word and those who do not are not always clearly distinguishable by men, but are by God. That is why many will be surprised on Judgment Day when Christ proclaims to those who felt they were in because of some status or position, "Depart from me, evildoer, I never knew you." It is also why Jesus warns some churches in Revelation and praises others. Its not because they weren't following the properly appointed bishop/Pope, but because they were not living lives of faith. In other words, the Word of a God/Scripture determines the validity of a local church (I.e. Are they faithfully obeying the message of Christ?).

In my ecclesiology, what matters is whether or not we truely live and believe the truth as men like Peter and Paul taught it and is not a matter of whether or not your communion or baptism was blessed by the person with the right credentials. I mean, how many times do we see the ones with the proper credentials being the ones most antithetical and opposed to the true working of God among His people? I think the OT makes this abundantly clear. The Church exits by and is created and furthered through faith. Where the people believe and obey the truth of Gospel of Jesus Christ, there the Church exists and people are saved (cf. 1 Thess. 2:13-16). There is no need for an official person to appoint official bishops...Paul encourages these new believers to appoint THEIR OWN elders and trusted the Holy Spirit would empower these men of faith to lead. Anyway, I hope that clears my perspective up for you a bit to aid in future dialogue.
 
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tom55

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Wormwood said:
Tom,

I don't have time to respond to everything. Allow me to just make a few quotes from scripture and briefly comment.

2 I entreat Euodia and I entreat Syntyche to agree in the Lord. 3 Yes, I ask you also, true companion, help these women, who have labored side by side with me in the gospel together with Clement and the rest of my fellow workers, whose names are in the book of life.

First, let me comment here. The "division" here had nothing to do with church polity. Their "one mind" that Paul desires for the Philippians has nothing to do with determining who the proper bishop is and blindly following whatever that person says. No, this unity had to do with these people to work together and give grace to one another so that the church would not be divided. Pretty much every reference to unity in the NT epistles are similar examples. You're falsely inserting a paradigm that was very far from the Apostle Paul's mind in order to validate your ecclesiology.

10 I appeal to you, brothers, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you agree, and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be united in the same mind and the same judgment. 11 For it has been reported to me by Chloe’s people that there is quarreling among you, my brothers. 12 What I mean is that each one of you says, “I follow Paul,” or “I follow Apollos,” or “I follow Cephas,” or “I follow Christ.” 13 Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or were you baptized in the name of Paul? 14 I thank God that I baptized none of you except Crispus and Gaius, 15 so that no one may say that you were baptized in my name.

Here, Paul is calling for unity among the Corinthians. How does Paul handle it? Does he say, "Well of course you should follow me! I am a legitimate Apostle! We can end all the debates if you just take whatever I say and chisel it into gold tablets in the Corinthian church." Or, "You should consult Peter. We all follow Peter because he is the voice of Christ on earth for us all." No, far from it. Paul does the OPPOSITE of what you argue. Rather than pointing to himself as the chief bishop who alone has the authority and who's word should end all debate, rather he calls them to see all these various teachers and preachers valuable workers. Paul is not arguing for no disagreement at all by establishing one person as the sole source of authoritative speech (as we will see shortly in Romans), but that in the midst of doctrinal division, calling these believers to remember the humility and love of Christ and see different teachers as all valuable workers and not antithetical to one another because they may not agree in all areas. You'd be wise to take the same approach rather than condemning everyone who doesn't bend the knee to your Pope.

As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone is preaching to you a gospel contrary to the one you received, let him be accursed.
10 For am I now seeking the approval of man, or of God? Or am I trying to please man? If I were still trying to please man, I would not be a servant of Christ.

Here we see Paul's real focus: The heart of the Gospel. Paul does not say, "If Peter preaches anything, you must believe him because he is the see of Christ and we must accept all he says as infallible truth from God. That is how we will stay unified and effective as a church." No, Paul says the Gospel he preached is the truth authority and unifying message and it doesn't matter what any man says, or angel for that matter. If the Gospel is not the focus, and its original message is not being obeyed and proclaimed, then it is a false Gospel and should be rejected....and the preacher of that false Gospel should be condemned...(be it a bishop, Pope, or even a heavenly angel!). In fact, Paul actually opposed Peter (the see of Christ in your ecclesiology), because he was acting inconsistently with the Gospel. But, if I were to hold to your theology, Paul was out of line. How dare he oppose the Pope!? No one has the right to twist the Gospel, and it is always right to oppose any authority that misuses authority or misrepresents the truth of Jesus Christ

One person esteems one day as better than another, while another esteems all days alike. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind. 6 The one who observes the day, observes it in honor of the Lord. The one who eats, eats in honor of the Lord, since he gives thanks to God, while the one who abstains, abstains in honor of the Lord and gives thanks to God.

One more example. Here is a perfect example of what I am talking about. Why doesn't Paul just settle it all and say what is right and what is wrong from his authoritative seat as an Apostle? Why not say, "Yes eat the meat." Or "No, its sinful." Because the issue, first of all, is about faith. Secondly the issue is about loving each other in differences. The way we solve our divisions is not by electing some Pope to be God for us and settle all our differences. No, the solution is, although both people are "fully convinced" in their own minds, they should strive to honor God and give space for others to also honor God on debatable matters. Your solution to everything seems to be, "WE need to appoint a man to be God for us and settle our differences." Paul never approached debates and disunity that way. He didn't use his authority to squelch arguments by choosing a side (so long as what was being fought over wasn't a false Gospel). No, he called believers to love each other in their differences and to respect each other's faith in Christ on debatable matters.
Paul and Barnabas appointed elders for them in each church and, with prayer and fasting, committed them to the Lord, in whom they had put their trust. Paul sent Timothy out to command certain people not to teach false doctrines any longer and what you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses entrust to faithful men, who will be able to teach others also.

This means that elders were appointed to each church by the Apostles. These elders were trusted to teach the sound doctrines that they were taught by the Apostles. These elders were to then "teach others also". This is called Apostolic Succession.

When did this Apostolic Succession end?



They were also given the authority to discipline unruly elders: But those elders who are sinning you are to reprove before everyone, so that the others may take warning. Peter speaks to the elders of The Church: To the elders among you, I appeal as a fellow elder and a witness of Christ's sufferings who also will share in the glory to be revealed. The Apostles also said that they heard that some persons have gone out from us and troubled you with words, unsettling your minds, although we gave them no instructions. In other words some were teaching doctrines that were not approved by the Apostles. The Apostles had the authority to call out those that taught false doctrines and that authority was passed to the elders of The Church who were considered FELLOW ELDERS. According to the NT, the writings of the Apostolic Fathers and the ECF's these ELDERS (successors) have authority not to merely preach but to command and render authoritative judgment.

When did that authority end?

You act as if you have the authority to interpret Scripture correctly. Who gave you that authority?

I destroyed your LOCAL CONGREGATION theory and your response above has nothing to do with anything I previously said about your theory. If you can just answer the two questions in blue I would be a happy camper. :)

You are pitting Paul against Peter and The Church. I don't understand your theory/argument. Kepha did a good job of rebutting your theory. Thank you KEPHA!
 

tom55

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Wormwood said:
"This Clement became the 4th pope."

Yes, according to Jerome who lived approximately 400 years afterwards (which, just for reference, is about twice as long as the United States of America has been in existence). The documents that argue for the bishop of Rome's supremacy are hundreds of years after these church leaders lived. Of course, Clement was an impactful church leader and an influential bishop/pastor. But the efforts to crown him as some kind of crown wearing super-bishop that oversaw the Church across the Roman empire is nothing but historical revisionism to validate efforts to form heirarchies in the church long, long, after these people existed. The fact is, the early church had no such intentions and were more focused on serving one another and surviving persecution than arguing about which church bishop was more important than another bishop. I think they would consider such debates both nonsensical and foreign to the ways of Jesus Christ.
Are you calling Jerome a liar?

Maybe you should read what the Apostolic and EC Fathers have written about the matter, just like Jerome did, and you will come to the same conclusion as Jerome did.

Your statement, "The fact is, the early church had no such intentions and were more focused on serving one another and surviving persecution than arguing about which church bishop was more important than another bishop" is completely and utterly not historically true.

Have you even read what Clement of Rome wrote? Have you read his letter to the Corinthians? You should. It will show your above statement as being completely and utterly false.
 

tom55

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Wormwood said:
Yes, I agree that bishops/pastors/elders are ordained and appointed. I also agree that Christ works through appointed leaders and that we should submit to them. My point is that nowhere in Scripture do we read that only Peter or the one sitting in Peter's seat (Scripture speaks of no such thing), can appoint such leaders. No, actually we see in the NT that leaders were appointed locally based on their faith and character, not by some papal edict. Again, I agree we should submit to church leaders, however, if they are misrepresenting the Gospel (such as what was happing in the RCC during the days of Luther) then the Gospel super ching of any man! Luther was right to reject the abuses of the RCC leadership in his day because simony, indulgences and the gazing on icons for grace were a means of preying on the poor and a twisting of the message of Christ. We are to obey our local church leaders, but if they disobey the Gospel, we are called to remain faithful to God, first and foremost.
"We are to obey our local church leaders, but if they disobey the Gospel, we are called to remain faithful to God, first and foremost."

Which local church? The Baptist Church? Methodist? Mormons? Jewish Church leaders? Lutheran? Catholic? Which local church leaders are you speaking of?

Which one do I go to in fulfillment of Matthew 18:15-18? Which Church has the binding authority scripture speaks of? Who determines if they have disobeyed the Gospel?
 

tom55

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Wormwood said:
In my ecclesiology, what matters is whether or not we truely live and believe the truth as men like Peter and Paul taught it and is not a matter of whether or not your communion or baptism was blessed by the person with the right credentials. I mean, how many times do we see the ones with the proper credentials being the ones most antithetical and opposed to the true working of God among His people? I think the OT makes this abundantly clear. The Church exits by and is created and furthered through faith. Where the people believe and obey the truth of Gospel of Jesus Christ, there the Church exists and people are saved (cf. 1 Thess. 2:13-16). There is no need for an official person to appoint official bishops...Paul encourages these new believers to appoint THEIR OWN elders and trusted the Holy Spirit would empower these men of faith to lead. Anyway, I hope that clears my perspective up for you a bit to aid in future dialogue.
Paul and Barnabas appointed elders for them in each church and, with prayer and fasting, committed them to the Lord, in whom they had put their trust. Paul sent Timothy out to command certain people not to teach false doctrines any longer and what you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses entrust to faithful men, who will be able to teach others also.

This means that elders were appointed to each church by the Apostles. These elders were trusted to teach the sound doctrines that they were taught by the Apostles. These elders were to then "teach others also". This is called Apostolic Succession.

When did this Apostolic Succession end?


They were also given the authority to discipline unruly elders: But those elders who are sinning you are to reprove before everyone, so that the others may take warning. Peter speaks to the elders of The Church: To the elders among you, I appeal as a fellow elder and a witness of Christ's sufferings who also will share in the glory to be revealed. The Apostles also said that they heard that some persons have gone out from us and troubled you with words, unsettling your minds, although we gave them no instructions. In other words some were teaching doctrines that were not approved by the Apostles. The Apostles had the authority to call out those that taught false doctrines and that authority was passed to the elders of The Church who were considered FELLOW ELDERS. According to the NT, the writings of the Apostolic Fathers and the ECF's these ELDERS (successors) have authority not to merely preach but to command and render authoritative judgment.

When did that authority end?
 

epostle1

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Wormwood said:
"This Clement became the 4th pope."

Yes, according to Jerome who lived approximately 400 years afterwards (which, just for reference, is about twice as long as the United States of America has been in existence). The documents that argue for the bishop of Rome's supremacy are hundreds of years after these church leaders lived. Of course, Clement was an impactful church leader and an influential bishop/pastor. But the efforts to crown him as some kind of crown wearing super-bishop that oversaw the Church across the Roman empire is nothing but historical revisionism to validate efforts to form heirarchies in the church long, long, after these people existed. The fact is, the early church had no such intentions and were more focused on serving one another and surviving persecution than arguing about which church bishop was more important than another bishop. I think they would consider such debates both nonsensical and foreign to the ways of Jesus Christ.
"And thus preaching through countries and cities, they appointed the first-fruits [of their labours], having first proved them by the Spirit, to be bishops and deacons of those who should afterwards believe. Nor was this any new thing, since indeed many ages before it was written concerning bishops and deacons. For thus saith the Scripture a certain place, 'I will appoint their bishops s in righteousness, and their deacons in faith.'... Our apostles also knew, through our Lord Jesus Christ, and there would be strife on account of the office of the episcopate. For this reason, therefore, inasmuch as they had obtained a perfect fore-knowledge of this, they appointed those [ministers] already mentioned, and afterwards gave instructions, that when these should fall asleep, other approved men should succeed them in their ministry...For our sin will not be small, if we eject from the episcopate those who have blamelessly and holily fulfilled its duties."
Pope Clement, Epistle to Corinthians, 42, 44 (A.D. 98).

And what is the presbytery but a sacred assembly, the counselors and assessors of the bishop? And what are the deacons but imitators of the angelic powers, fulfilling a pure and blameless ministry unto him, as the holy Stephen did to the blessed James, Timothy and Linus to Paul, Anencletus and Clement to Peter? He, therefore, that will not yield obedience to such, must needs be one utterly without God, an impious man who despises Christ, and depreciates His appointments." Ignatius of Antioch, Epistle to the Trallians, 7 (c. A.D. 110).

"...And when I had come to Rome I remained a there until Anicetus, whose deacon was Eleutherus. And Anicetus was succeeded by Soter, and he by Eleutherus. In every succession, and in every city that is held which is preached by the law and the prophets and the Lord.'"
Hegesippus, Memoirs, fragment in Eusebius Ecclesiatical History, 4:22 (A.D. 180).

Your history is grossly flawed.

In any event, this only shows that you're so focused on your ecclesiology that you cant even read the passage without inserting your paradigms on a passage that has nothing to do with papal authority.
Which passage? Paul was subject to the Church, which you seem to be avoiding. He checked with Peter, James and John, later termed the Magisterium, to verify his gospel. Why you think this has nothing to do with papal authority is outside of reason.

Yes, I agree that bishops/pastors/elders are ordained and appointed. I also agree that Christ works through appointed leaders and that we should submit to them. My point is that nowhere in Scripture do we read that only Peter or the one sitting in Peter's seat (Scripture speaks of no such thing), can appoint such leaders. No, actually we see in the NT that leaders were appointed locally based on their faith and character, not by some papal edict. Again, I agree we should submit to church leaders, however, if they are misrepresenting the Gospel (such as what was happing in the RCC during the days of Luther) then the Gospel supersedes the teaching of any man! Luther was right to reject the abuses of the RCC leadership in his day because simony, indulgences and the gazing on icons for grace were a means of preying on the poor and a twisting of the message of Christ. We are to obey our local church leaders, but if they disobey the Gospel, we are called to remain faithful to God, first and foremost.
The Protestant revolt is a red herring to the discussion. Let's save it for a rainy day.
The Pope is central to this discussion because this position highlights the differences in our ecclesiology. I also believe in the Church. I also believe that God works in and through the Church and that we should obey our church leaders. I also believe that there is one holy, catholic (universal) Church and Christ is the head of that Church. I also believe the Church is the hope of the world.
The differences between us, kepha31, is how we define this thing we call "Church." You define Church as a structure implemented by men who determine doctrine and by which God's grace flows through certain individuals who have successors throughout the ages

No, that is definitely not my definition. Eph. 5:32- Paul calls the Church a "mystery." This means that the significance of the Church as the kingdom of God in our midst cannot be understood by reason alone. Understanding the Church also requires faith. "Church" does not mean a building of believers. That is not a mystery. Non-Catholics often view church as mere community, but not the supernatural mystery of Christ physically present among us.
The Pope represents the top of this heirarchy and the ultimate source of God's authority and voice on earth (the see of Christ). He is the one who holds the keys of the Kingdom and the one who is the leader of a physical institution that is the conduit of Gods grace in Christ for humanity. Thus, Scripture, for you, is a product of this infallible human product and is simply another means of grace which is ultimately subject to the ultimate authority of this institution (the Church/Pope determines the meaning of Scripture).

Your main problem is your view of the Church as purely a human institution. If she were, she would never have survived 2000 of constant resistance from the world. Do you think there are 1.1 billion Catholic because our leaders are all holy and smart? I don't.
My ecclesiology is far different. I define Church as a spiritual entity that is determined by faith, through which God's grace flows to people throughout the ages. The foundation of this Church is the teaching of the Apostles/Scriptures. All men are subject to this teaching and the message of the Gospel/Scriptures is the ultimate authority for all men.
"Gospel/Scriptures is the ultimate authority for all men" is not in Scripture. It is a theory invented by Martin Luther, who was mentally ill, because he was angry with the Pope.
They are infallible and authoritative and are inspired in such a way as to be clearly understood. Scriptural authority does not need a higher human authority to determine their meaning. If that is the case, inspiration is meaningless. They are inspired to be both authoritative and comprehendable. Moreover, like the parable of the wheat and tares, the Kingdom of God (Church) is not a physical entity that consists of a business-model superstructure. Rather it is a kingdom of faith in which those who believe and obey the Word and those who do not are not always clearly distinguishable by men, but are by God. That is why many will be surprised on Judgment Day when Christ proclaims to those who felt they were in because of some status or position, "Depart from me, evildoer, I never knew you." It is also why Jesus warns some churches in Revelation and praises others. Its not because they weren't following the properly appointed bishop/Pope, but because they were not living lives of faith. In other words, the Word of a God/Scripture determines the validity of a local church (I.e. Are they faithfully obeying the message of Christ?).In my ecclesiology, what matters is whether or not we truely live and believe the truth as men like Peter and Paul taught it and is not a matter of whether or not your communion or baptism was blessed by the person with the right credentials. I mean, how many times do we see the ones with the proper credentials being the ones most antithetical and opposed to the true working of God among His people? I think the OT makes this abundantly clear. The Church exits by and is created and furthered through faith. Where the people believe and obey the truth of Gospel of Jesus Christ, there the Church exists and people are saved (cf. 1 Thess. 2:13-16). There is no need for an official person to appoint official bishops...Paul encourages these new believers to appoint THEIR OWN elders and trusted the Holy Spirit would empower these men of faith to lead. Anyway, I hope that clears my perspective up for you a bit to aid in future dialogue.
OK, so you don't have bishops, contrary to 1 Tim. 3:1-2. Therefore your ecclesiology is divorced from the early Church.

Inspiration of Scripture is not contested, we venerate the Scriptures as we would venerate Our Lord's body. But Scripture is not always clear as you think, otherwise Protestantism would not be divided into 5 major camps on baptism, not to mention the thousands of denominations with contradicting interpretations.

The Pope doesn't interpret scripture by himself, that is an anti-Catholic myth. The Church only interprets Scripture when they are violated. The Pope uses theologians, scripture scholars and is in union with all the bishops of the world.
Contrary to the opinions of anti-Catholics, we can all interpret Scripture, or there wouldn't be apologists. But we have authoritative guidelines that don't result in the chaos that sola scriptura has inflicted on Protestantism.




quote-i-believe-in-god-not-in-a-catholic-god-there-is-no-catholic-god-there-is-god-and-i-believe-in-pope-francis-388028.jpg
 
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epostle1

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The basic assumptions the typical Evangelical has about the papacy are part of the wallpaper in the Evangelical world. Being brought up in an independent Bible Church, I was taught that our little fellowship of Christians meeting to study the Bible, pray and sing gospel songs was like the ‘early Christians’ meeting in their house churches. I had a mental picture of ‘Catholic Pope’ which I had pieced together from a whole range of biased sources.

When I heard the word ‘pope’ I pictured a corpulent Italian with the juicy name “Borgia” who drank a lot of wine, was supposed to be celibate, but who not only had mistresses, but sons who he called ‘nephews’. This ‘pope’ had big banquets in one of his many palaces, was very rich, rode out to war when he felt like it and liked to tell Michelangelo how to paint. That this ‘pope’ was a later invention of the corrupt Catholic Church was simply part of the whole colorful story.

But of course, the idea that the florid Renaissance pope is typical of all popes is not a Catholic invention, but a Protestant one. Protestantism has been compelled to rewrite all history according to it’s own necessities. As French historian Augustin Thierry has written, “To live, Protestantism found itself forced to build up a history of its own.”

Jesus certainly did not plan for the inflated and corrupt popes of the popular imagination. He intended to found a church, but the church was not democratic in structure. It was established with clear individual leadership. In Matthew 16.18-19 Jesus says to Simon Peter, “You are Peter, and on this Rock I will build my church, and the gates of Hell will not overcome it.” So, Jesus established his church not on a congregational model, but on the model of personal leadership.

Was this a monarchical papacy? In a way it was. In Matthew 16 Jesus goes on to say to Peter, “I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven; whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven.” This is a direct reference back to Isaiah 22.22, where the prophet recognizes Eliakim as the steward of the royal House of David. The steward was the Prime Minister of the Kingdom. The keys of the kingdom were the sign of his personal authority delegated by the king himself.
Jesus never intended a monarchical papacy in the corrupt sense of the Pope being an absolute worldly monarch, but the church leadership Jesus intended was ‘monarchical’ in the sense that it was based on his authority as King of Kings.

Did Jesus plan the monarchical papacy? He did not plan for the sometimes corrupt, venal and worldly papacy that it has sometimes become down through history, but Jesus did plan for one man to be his royal delegate on earth. He did plan for one man to lead the others (Lk.22.32) He did plan for one man to take up the spiritual and temporal leadership of his church. This is shown not only through the famous passage from Matthew 16, but also in the final chapter of John’s gospel where Jesus the Good Shepherd hands his pastoral role over to Peter.
Authority of the First Popes
 
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epostle1

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The reference to Isaiah 22 shows that the structure of Jesus’ kingdom was modeled on King David’s dynastic court. In Luke 1.32-33 Jesus’ birth is announced in royal terms. He will inherit the throne of his father David. He will rule over the house of Jacob and his kingdom shall never end. Like Eliakim, to whom Jesus refers, Peter is to be the appointed authority in this court, and as such his role is that of steward and ruler in the absence of the High King, the scion of the House of David. That Peter assumes this pre-eminent role of leadership in the early church is attested to throughout the New Testament from his first place in the list of the apostles, to his dynamic preaching on the day of Pentecost, his decision making at the Council of Jerusalem and the deference shown to him by St Paul and the other apostles.

If Jesus did not give this pre-eminent role of leadership to Peter, then Jesus is not the King of Kings either.
 
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Wormwood

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"Are you calling Jerome a liar?"

Tom, give me a break. Im saying that 400 years is a long time between the time of Jerome and Clement, especially without media as we have it today. Not to mention Jerome was not an inerrant writer of Scripture. Should I quote early church writers who argued that the Jerusalem bishop should be preeminent? My point is, these records start long after, and just like the mistreatment of Scripture taking place here that takes a Scripture that has absolutely no mention of papacy, you two are using it as rationale for RCC heirarchies. You must be joking.

Why don't you quote your records and Clement's letter if you have some sort of proof to share. I have taken plenty of church history courses and have read Clement's letter. I stand by my statements. I have a feeling that your "proof" will be more of the same where you take a general comment (such as the previous comment we discussed about not performing rites without the bishops and extrapolate that into proof for the RCC heirarchy).

Even one of your own scholars, Klaus Schatz, concedes that it is wrong to read Ignatius of Antioch and the First letter of Clement's statements about the church in Rome "presiding in love" as a ecclesiastical statement arguing for this bishops primacy.

"Your main problem is your view of the Church as purely a human institution. If she were, she would never have survived 2000 of constant resistance from the world. Do you think there are 1.1 billion Catholic because our leaders are all holy and smart? I don't."

What kind of logic is that kepha?? By that rationale, Buddhism and Islam must not be "purely a human institution" since they have been around nearly as long or longer! I'm not saying the early church was not a true church or used by God. Im just saying I think the development of the structure of its hierarchy was man's doing, not Gods. It doesn't mean God didn't use it. Just like in the time of Kings, God moved among the structures they established. But I think it's a great error to confuse the people of God with the ranks and models they set up. The two are not the same.

In any event, I don't think this is going to amount to much, your mind is pretty much made up and you will see every quote and thought as validation for what you already believe. I am simply sharing why I don't hold to the views of you two, but that doesn't mean I do not believe you are Christ-loving believers. For me, the development of the papal heirarchy is not much different than the development of the doctrine of venerating Mary. This view developed over a few hundred years and was based out of the phrase that was declared Mary to be the "mother of God." The focus of the phrase originally was to defend Christ's divinity against Arianism and other heresies. However, the phrase soon began to be used to highlight Mary as the mother of God and led to her verneration. The point is, many of these quotes you see can be understood many ways. Mary, the mother of God, could be a phrase that emphasizes Mary's significance as the mother of God, or it could be understood as a phrase that emphasizes the birth of Jesus as the incarnation of God, himself. I think the focus is on the latter. Likewise, you might see a quote about Rome's primacy in love and see that as a plea for Roman supremacy as a church and therefore the supremacy of their bishop. I, however, do not think this is the heart of what is being said.

In sum, I don't think this is going anywhere. If you want to convince me, you are going to have to use Scripture. We both agree it is authoritative and divine. I, however, do not believe that men such as Tertullian, Jerome, Luther, Wesley or any other person in Church history has that same authority in my life. No where in Scripture does Paul speak of leadership needing to recieve their authority to lead from Peter or someone he had appointed to grant that authority. On the contrary, the ONLY teachings we see on starting churches and appointing elders and bishops focus only on faith in the Gospel and godly character. Unless you can show me in Scripture, I don't think we are going much further.

I hope the two of you have a blessed day.
 
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epostle1

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Wormwood said:
Tom, give me a break. Im saying that 400 years is a long time between the time of Jerome and Clement, especially without media as we have it today. Not to mention Jerome was not an inerrant writer of Scripture. Should I quote early church writers who argued that the Jerusalem bishop should be preeminent? My point is, these records start long after, and just like the mistreatment of Scripture taking place here that takes a Scripture that has absolutely no mention of papacy, you two are using it as rationale for RCC heirarchies. You must be joking.

Why don't you quote your records and Clement's letter if you have some sort of proof to share. I have taken plenty of church history courses and have read Clement's letter. I stand by my statements. I have a feeling that your "proof" will be more of the same where you take a general comment (such as the previous comment we discussed about not performing rites without the bishops and extrapolate that into proof for the RCC heirarchy).
A quote from Clement has already been posted. Papal primacy and apostolic succession is not proven by ECF alone, but they are the best historical records available. I previously posted about the shift of centrality from Jerusalem to Rome. It's both/and, not either or. Unless you wish to deny that Peter and Paul went to Rome where they were martyred. (not at the same time). I shouldn't need a CF quote to prove that.

It took 4 centuries for the Bible to develop; it's unrealistic to expect the papacy to be in full bloom in the 1st century. No, it's just stupid.

​It was MAN that compiled all the books of the Bible. Catholic bishops. Without a hierarchy, there would be no Bible. God uses human beings and appoints their leadership. I don't know why that disturbs you.
Even one of your own scholars, Klaus Schatz, concedes that it is wrong to read Ignatius of Antioch and the First letter of Clement's statements about the church in Rome "presiding in love" as a ecclesiastical statement arguing for this bishops primacy.
Higher critics can disprove most of the Bible with historicity methods, we call them Modernists. Modernism is the synthesis of all heresies and was condemned in 1907. Klaus Schatz is a respected scholar. Some like him, I don't. Cherry picking a few paragraphs from a book is as bad as one verse theology. Klaus is not saying there was never a pope, he is saying it took longer to develop than what we think. The essence of the papacy was always there.

"For what is the bishop but one who beyond all others possesses all power and authority, so far as it is possible for a man to possess it, who according to his ability has been made an imitator of the Christ off God? And what is the presbytery but a sacred assembly, the counselors and assessors of the bishop? And what are the deacons but imitators of the angelic powers, fulfilling a pure and blameless ministry unto him, as…Anencletus and Clement to Peter?"
Ignatius, To the Trallians, 7 (A.D. 110).

"Hegesippus in the five books of Memoirs which have come down to us has left a most complete record of his own views. In them he states that on a journey to Rome he met a great many bishops, and that he received the same doctrine from all. It is fitting to hear what he says after making some remarks about the epistle of Clement to the Corinthians. His words are as follows: 'And the church of Corinth continued in the true faith until Primus was bishop in Corinth. I conversed with them on my way to Rome, and abode with the Corinthians many days, during which we were mutually refreshed in the true doctrine. And when I had come to Rome I remained a there until Anicetus, whose deacon was Eleutherus. And Anicetus was succeeded by Soter, and he by Eleutherus. In every succession, and in every city that is held which is preached by the law and the prophets and the Lord.'"
Hegesippus, Memoirs, fragment in Eusebius Ecclesiatical History, 4:22 (A.D. 180).

What kind of logic is that kepha?? By that rationale, Buddhism and Islam must not be "purely a human institution" since they have been around nearly as long or longer! I'm not saying the early church was not a true church or used by God. Im just saying I think the development of the structure of its hierarchy was man's doing, not Gods. It doesn't mean God didn't use it. Just like in the time of Kings, God moved among the structures they established. But I think it's a great error to confuse the people of God with the ranks and models they set up. The two are not the same.
Age of a religion has nothing to do with divine origins. If the hierarchy of the Church is man made without the superintendence of the Holy Spirit, then you are saying Jesus lied when He made His promises.

In any event, I don't think this is going to amount to much, your mind is pretty much made up and you will see every quote and thought as validation for what you already believe. I am simply sharing why I don't hold to the views of you two, but that doesn't mean I do not believe you are Christ-loving believers. For me, the development of the papal heirarchy is not much different than the development of the doctrine of venerating Mary.
I suppose the Bible didn't develop either.
This view developed over a few hundred years and was based out of the phrase that was declared Mary to be the "mother of God." The focus of the phrase originally was to defend Christ's divinity against Arianism and other heresies. However, the phrase soon began to be used to highlight Mary as the mother of God and led to her verneration.
No, it was the Council of Ephesus defending the Incarnation from the heretic Nestorius. The relationship between Jesus and His mother had to be defined. If Jesus is God, then Mary is His mother. Mary is the mother of God. It's a no brainer.
The point is, many of these quotes you see can be understood many ways. Mary, the mother of God, could be a phrase that emphasizes Mary's significance as the mother of God, or it could be understood as a phrase that emphasizes the birth of Jesus as the incarnation of God, himself. I think the focus is on the latter. Likewise, you might see a quote about Rome's primacy in love and see that as a plea for Roman supremacy as a church and therefore the supremacy of their bishop. I, however, do not think this is the heart of what is being said.
The development of Marian teachings went along side of the development of the Trinity. The declarations of the Councils of Nicae, Ephesus, and Chalcedon developed the Trinity that all Christians accept, but when comes to Mary, objectors dream up all kinds of nonsense . Except intervention, all the early reformers accepted all Catholic terachings on Mary in varying degrees. I wonder if the doctrine of the Trinity could come about if there was no hierarchy.

The Trinity can be proven from Scripture alone, but that was not enough to prevent every heretic and his dog from coming up with something weird. Every heretic in the patristic period went by "scripture alone", they had no Tradition to prove their ideas came from the Apostles.

In sum, I don't think this is going anywhere. If you want to convince me, you are going to have to use Scripture. We both agree it is authoritative and divine. I, however, do not believe that men such as Tertullian, Jerome, Luther, Wesley or any other person in Church history has that same authority in my life. No where in Scripture does Paul speak of leadership needing to recieve their authority to lead from Peter or someone he had appointed to grant that authority. On the contrary, the ONLY teachings we see on starting churches and appointing elders and bishops focus only on faith in the Gospel and godly character. Unless you can show me in Scripture, I don't think we are going much further.

I hope the two of you have a blessed day.


Scripture on the next post.
 
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epostle1

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OFFICE OF THE POPE IN THE BIBLE
Isa. 22: 19 I will thrust you from your office, and you will be pulled down from your station

Shebna is described as having an "office" and a "station." An office, in order for it to be an office, has successors. In order for an earthly kingdom to last, a succession of representatives is required.
This was the case in the Old Covenant kingdom, and it is the case in the New Covenant kingdom which fulfills the Old Covenant. Jesus our King is in heaven, but He has appointed a chief steward over His household with a plan for a succession of representatives.

Isa.22:20 In that day I will call my servant Eli'akim the son of Hilki'ah,


Isa. 22:20 - in the old Davidic kingdom, Eliakim succeeds Shebna as the chief steward of the household of God. The kingdom employs a mechanism of dynastic succession. King David was dead for centuries, but his kingdom is preserved through a succession of representatives.

Isa.22:21 and I will clothe him with your robe, and will bind your girdle on him, and will commit your authority to his hand; and he shall be a father to the inhabitants of Jerusalem and to the house of Judah.

Isa. 22:21 - Eliakim is called “father” or “papa” of God's people. The word Pope used by Catholics to describe the chief steward of the earthly kingdom simply means papa or father in Italian. This is why Catholics call the leader of the Church "Pope." The Pope is the father of God's people, the chief steward of the earthly kingdom and Christ's representative on earth.

Isa.22:22 And I will place on his shoulder the key of the house of David; he shall open, and none shall shut; and he shall shut, and none shall open.

Isa. 22:22 - we see that the keys of the kingdom pass from Shebna to Eliakim. Thus, the keys are used not only as a symbol of authority, but also to facilitate succession. The keys of Christ's kingdom have passed from Peter to Linus all the way to our current Pope with an unbroken lineage for almost 2,000 years.

23: And I will fasten him like a peg in a sure place, and he will become a throne of honor to his father's house.

Rev. 1:18; 3:7; 9:1; 20:1 - Jesus' "keys" undeniably represent authority. By using the word "keys," Jesus gives Peter authority on earth over the new Davidic kingdom, and this was not seriously questioned by anyone until the Protestant reformation 1,500 years later after Peter’s investiture.

Revelation 3:7 "And to the angel of the church in Philadelphia write: `The words of the holy one, the true one, who has the key of David, who opens and no one shall shut, who shuts and no one opens.

Matthew 16:19 I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven."

Matt. 16:19 - whatever Peter binds or looses on earth is bound or loosed in heaven / when the Prime Minister to the King opens, no one shuts. This "binding and loosing" authority allows the keeper of the keys to establish "halakah," or rules of conduct for the members of the kingdom he serves.

Jer. 33:17 For thus saith the Lord: There shall not be cut off from David a man to sit upon the throne of the house of Israel.

Jeremiah prophesies that David shall never lack a man to sit on the throne of the earthly House of Israel. Either this is a false prophecy, or David has a successor of representatives throughout history.

Dan. 2:44 But in the days of those kingdoms the God of heaven will set up a kingdom that shall never be destroyed, and his kingdom shall not be delivered up to another people, and it shall break in pieces, and shall consume all these kingdoms, and itself shall stand for ever.

Daniel prophesies an earthly kingdom that will never be destroyed. Either this is a false prophecy, or the earthly kingdom requires succession.
 
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heretoeternity

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Daniel 7, and 2nd Thessalonians 2.4, and Revelation 17 form the connection of the end time religious figure who will rule the religious systems on planet earth...with the likes of Osteen, Copeland etc running to Rome at the pope's beckoning, it seems like the "universal church" with it's false and blasphemous teachings will indeed be universal, and continue to change God's times and laws at Daniel 7 says...however God will deal with it as described in Revelation 17 and 18.
 
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