Showing posts with label Protestantism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Protestantism. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Notes: Wednesday, June 15-Tuesday, June 21, 2011 (part 2 of 2)

6.2 A blog comment on sola Scriptura: "[T]he phrase “Sola Scriptura” ... is not found in the Bible"

The comment of 17.6.11 / 1am in the combox here:

http://www.billmuehlenberg.com/2011/06/15/politics-religion-and-the-dalai-lama/

Labels: Protestantism, Scripture, theology

7. "[A] growing number of parents are having more than two children" ("[d]espite the nation's fertility rate falling slightly")?

http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/bigger-families-are-growing-on-us/story-fn6e0s1g-1226077320962

I would like to copy and paste that whole short article here, but I think that that would involve a copyright infringement; the one part of that article which I will highlight is this one:
Although the vast majority of Australian parents still have two children, Bureau of Statistics [A.B.S.] figures showed 29.3 per cent of women who gave birth in 2009 were having their third or subsequent child, with most mothers aged between 35 and 44.
[my square-bracketed interpolation]
I looked at the A.B.S. website but did not see anything under the "Media Releases" heading which might have occasioned that article, and I don't have time to conduct a thorough search of that website (though I would appreciate it if anyone could point out where, if at all, the relevant figures can be found there).

Labels: Australian fertility rate, demography

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of St. Aloysius Gonzaga, Confessor, A.D. 2011

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Mr. Henderson on (against) the Catholic doctrine on Indulgences

http://acroamaticus.blogspot.com/2010/11/quality-of-mercy-is-not-strained.html

I don't have time to weave my thoughts into a proper essay-style rebuttal, so I'll just offer the following thoughts in bullet points, which (points) might be disorganised, so please excuse any incoherence in them:
  • The overall problem with Mr. Henderson's critique is the complete failure to address the distinction between objective redemption (the historical work wrought by Christ) and subjective redemption (how that redeeming work is applied to Christians down through the ages/how Christians participate in that redeeming work). So Mr. Henderson, late in his piece, says that

    The Indulgence, which is gained by performing the prescribed pious work - it may be saying the Creed or the Lord’s Prayer or a Hail Mary - remits (i.e. cancels) the temporal punishment. Here the sufficiency of Christ’s satisfaction for sins is clearly brought into question, as the temporal punishment due for sin is remitted by a satisfaction made by the believer himself, or in the case of the “poor souls in purgatory” by someone still living on their behalf.

    Well, no, the gaining of an Indulgence does not impugn the sufficiency of Christ's satisfaction for sin, for several reasons:

    1. The Indulgence is dispensed from the Treasury of Merit, which is the sum of the merits of Christ and His living members, but even if no-one after Christ merited anything, the superabundant merits of Christ would still be quite sufficient. (Mr. Henderson appears confused here in another way too, because earlier he had identified (correctly) the "prescribed pious work" of the Indulgence-gainer as a condition for the remission of temporal punishment, but now he speaks of it (incorrectly, in the context of Indulgences) as a cause of that remission. One of Christ's living members can indeed merit satisfaction for his sins and the sins of others, but then that would not, of course, be an Indulgence.)

    2. The question of whether the redemption wrought by Christ (objective redemption) was and is sufficient to satisfy for all sin is one thing, but the question of how that redemption is applied to any given Christian, and what should happen to that Christian if he or she falls back into sin after it is first applied, is another.

    In the same paragraph, Mr. Henderson goes on to ask

    What else is this [the Catholic doctrine on merit], I ask, but rank synergism, salvation by faith plus human works? How does it not undermine the doctrineof the vicarious satisfaction of Christ for the sins of the world and the sufficiency of the atonement made by Christ by teaching that there is still some satisfaction which must be made by the repentant sinner himself or by others - who have the "correct disposition" - on his behalf?

    There is more confusion on Mr. Henderson's part here, because in fact after Baptism there is no more satisfaction to be made for previous sins--that only becomes necessary if the baptised should lapse back into sin after his Baptism. So the question again is not one of whether Christ's satisfaction is sufficient, but of how that satisfaction is applied.

    Mr. Henderson's failure to distinguish objective from subjective redemption is at its most striking here:

    Then consider our Lord’s words “It is finished.” What was finished? The work he came to accomplish, making atonement to God for the sins of mankind.

    In other words, objective redemption was finished. But subjective redemption is another question altogether, and Mr. Henderson hence fails to refute the Catholic doctrinal claims on the matter. In his next paragraph, he goes on to write

    But what does this mean, the lay reader may ask? It means that the death of our Lord on the Cross not only removed the guilt of our sin, but also turned away the divine anger from repentant and believing sinners. God no longer punishes his children for their sins, for that punishment has been borne completely by Christ. God demonstrates his righteousness to us precisely by setting forth Christ as the atoning sacrifice for our sins, to paraphrase Paul in Romans 3 ...

    Here again we have the problem of objective vs. subjective redemption brought to the fore. It is as though for Mr. Henderson there is no distinction between the two. But that surely cannot be the case, for he is a Lutheran, and Lutherans at least administer Baptism, implicitly acknowledging that objective redemption needs to be applied subjectively.
  • Mr. Henderson writes that

    On the basis of these statements [by the Council of Trent and Paul VI.], we are entitled to draw the conclusion that for Rome the guilt of sin and its temporal punishment are two distinct things; guilt is atoned for by Christ’s death on the Cross, but temporal punishment must be expiated (suffered or paid for) by the repentant sinner, either in this life or the next.

    More confusion here, on two levels:

    1. Once again, Mr. Henderson fails to grasp that in Catholic doctrine, eternal and temporal punishment are both remitted in full when the Redemption is first applied to a soul by Baptism; no punishment whatsoever remains due after someone is baptised.

    2. Here, and throughout his piece (such as when he quotes St. Anselm asking "What else does it mean to remit sins than not to punish them?"), Mr. Henderson implicitly rejects a distinction between eternal and temporal punishment. Yet according to no less an authority than another Lutheran Pastor and S.C.E. commenter, namely William Weedon,

    the Lutheran Symbols distinguish between temporal and eternal punishments and we acknowledge that God’s remission of eternal punishments does not always eliminate temporal ones. The thief on the cross died a forgiven sinner and was welcomed to Christ kingdom; but the forgiveness didn’t get him out of his cross.
    [http://scecclesia.wordpress.com/2009/03/19/lots-happening-trying-to-keep-up-with-the-discussions/]

    (That quotation is all the more apposite here for its reference to the Good Thief, a reference which Mr. Henderson also makes.)
  • Mr. Henderson asks

    Now, what strange love is this, that [sic] forgives, but still punishes? Strange indeed!

    Here the maxims 'beggars can't be choosers' and 'don't look a gift horse in the mouth' come to mind; if we have been given the gift of new life, and with it the remission of all the punishment we owe, in Baptism, then we can hardly complain if the Giver of this gift requires that some satisfaction be made for sins commited after receiving it. Whereas acts of justice involve giving to someone what is his own, acts of charity/love involve giving to someone what is one's own, and hence an act of charity can be as great or as small as one pleases. Thus there is nothing 'strange' about a love which pays all of someone else's debt at one point in time, but which requires that, if and when future debts are incurred, the debtor pay some share of the newly-acquired debt.

    Furthermore, The Catechism of The Council of Trent explains thus how the Catholic doctrine on post-Baptismal satisfaction involves no contradiction of Divine mercy/charity/love:

    It is also in keeping with the divine mercy not to remit our sins without any satisfaction, lest, taking occasion hence, and imagining our sins less grievous than they are, we should become injurious, as it were, and contumelious to the Holy Ghost, and should fall into greater enormities, treasuring up to ourselves wrath against the day of wrath. These satisfactory penances have, no doubt, great influence in recalling from and, as it were, bridling against sin, and in rendering the sinner more vigilant and cautious for the future.
    [http://www.catecheticsonline.com/Trent2.php
    See also Trent, Session XIII, Ch. 8, from which the foregoing was originally drawn and which contains a wealth of relevant Scriptural references. And the whole of the Roman Catechism's section "Advantages of Satisfaction" is worth reading.]

  • Mr. Henderson concludes with the following (a little 'epilogue' follows the conclusion, though):

    We cannot, and need not, add to the sacrifice of Christ through our own penal sufferings. To assert that we can is to deny the completeness and sufficiency of Christ’s atonement and deny the Word of God.

    We "cannot ... add to the sacrifice of Christ through our own penal sufferings". So the sufferings of a living member of the Body of Christ are worthless? We "need not ... add to the sacrifice of Christ through our own penal sufferings". So there is, then, no deterrent against falling back into sin after one's Baptism? "To assert that we can is to deny the completeness and sufficiency of Christ’s atonement and deny the Word of God." No, it isn't, since God is perfectly free to apply the fruits of the Redemption as He sees fit.
  • I conclude with the following: Mr. Henderson asks

    Need I remind the reader of how this system [of "rank synergism"] contradicts scripture? There is a catena of passages one could cite, but suffice it to point to the chief passages and let the reader examine each passage for himself in context and follow through by using the cross-references in his own Bible: Isaiah 43:25, John 3:36, 5: 24, Romans 3,5:9, Romans 8, 2 Corinthians 5:21, Colossians 2:13, Hebrews 1:3; 1 John 2:1-2, 5:10-13, Revelation 1:5.

    That's a perfectly Protestant approach to take--"to point to the chief passages and let the reader examine each passage for himself in context and follow through by using the cross-references in his own Bible" (and here he is in complete accord with Mr. Weedon--"[t]he Lutheran approach is to invite anyone and everyone to read for themselves the Sacred Scriptures and to compare our teaching with them" (source)--but is it the right one? Mr. Henderson has said in the past that "we [Lutherans] hold that everything necessary for salvation and for the faith and life of the church has been set down by the Apostles in the NT", which we can broaden, given Mr. Henderson's Old Testament references here, to say "... by the Apostles and Prophets in the NT and OT." Where, then, is it set down in the Old and/or New Testaments that 'everything necessary for salvation and for the faith and life of the church has been set down by the Apostles and Prophets in the NT and OT'?
Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of the Dedication of the Basilica of Our Saviour, and (the feast) of St. Theodore, Martyr, A.D. 2010

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Notes: Tuesday-Thursday, October 26-28, 2010 (Part 2 of 2)

6. Local government conference rejects motion to endorse the Declaration of Montreal

An item in the Diary section of yesterday's Herald:

TOUCHY-FEELY STUFF

What flies like a swift in the inner-city of Sydney can sometimes drop like a dead turkey in the outer suburbs. At the local government conference in Albury yesterday, Leichhardt Council asked delegates to condemn the federal government's refugee policies, a move derided by a Wollondilly councillor, Benn Banasik, who argued that refugees were not one of the ''three R's of local government'': rubbish, rates and roads. Malikeh Michaels from Auburn Council, demurred. She had seen the devastating effects of detention centres on recently arrived refugees and so supported Leichhardt. But the motion was lost, as was another, from the City of Sydney, endorsing the Declaration of Montreal, which recognises the human rights of gay, lesbian and transgender people. Banasik also criticised this, claiming discrimination did not exist at his council."
[http://www.smh.com.au/national/the-diary/sartor-sangas-off-the-menu-20101026-172f0.html?skin=text-only]

I hadn't heard of the "Declaration of Montreal". I'll have to check it out. (I was amused to see that the next Diary item's heading was "STARS ALIGN FOR SODS". Not over Albury, it would seem!)

7. Wise comment on how error advances

I was interested to read the following by the Lutheran "Harry" in a comment at Mr. Schütz's blog:

... Charles Porterfield Krauth said that Error creeps into the Church in three stages. First, it tell Truth that it will not make waves, jut leave it be. Second, Error tells Truth, that their position should have equal rights. Then Error tells Truth that Truth is causing disorder in the Church. ...
[http://scecclesia.wordpress.com/2010/10/27/our-st-mary-more-likely-to-pray-for-vocations-than-to-challenge-for-women-priests/#comment-17826]

Replace "Church" with 'Society' and you've got what could be a description of the philosophy and advancement of Liberalism (the inevitable consequence of Protestantism).

8. Vatican Information Service daily e-mail bulletin item, with an incongruous headline, on the death sentence handed down for Tariq Aziz:

In today's edition of the bulletin:

HOLY SEE CONDEMNS DEATH PENALTY AGAINST TARIQ AZIZ

VATICAN CITY, 27 OCT 2010 (VIS) - Holy See Press Office Director Fr. Federico Lombardi S.J. released the following declaration yesterday afternoon:

"The Catholic Church's position on the death penalty is well known. It is hoped, therefore, that the sentence against Tariq Aziz will not be implemented, precisely in order to favour reconciliation and the reconstruction of peace and justice in Iraq after the great sufferings the country has experienced. As concerns the possibility of a humanitarian intervention, the Holy See is not accustomed to operate publicly but through the diplomatic channels at its disposal".
OP/ VIS 20101027 (110)

I don't see how that headline fits the content of the body of that item. The latter is a legitimate, if debatable, prudential judgment; hardly a 'condemnation'. Perhaps part of the 'condemnation' went unreported?

9. Mr. Coyne's 'historical Jesus'

... Again though, when I use the descriptor "Jesus" I'm not alone speaking or thinking of the individual who I do believe roamed around Ancient Galilee and was executed in Jerusalem around 2,000 years ago give or take a few decades. The "figure" that is important to me is BOTH the historical figure — and the record left of his sayings and parables — but also the interpretation put on those by others. That process of placing a patina on Jesus I strongly suspect had begun before the first Gospels were written. They are theological stories rather than some "historical, factual record of the individual man named Jesus".
[http://www.catholica.com.au/forum/index.php?id=58901]

10. Blog comments by me

Three, all of them more or less the same:

10.1

Cardinal Pole said...

Dr. Bugg's article capped off four days of letters published on the topic of Catholic womenpriests, with the last two days' worth responding to this one from the second day:

"I think many Catholics saw the irony of the Mary MacKillop celebrations in a church in which women are still excluded from full participation. As I said at Mass last Sunday: "Today we celebrate a woman's canonisation; hopefully it won't be too long before we celebrate a woman's ordination."

"
Father John CrothersSt Declan's Church, Penshurst
[
http://www.smh.com.au/national/letters/settlement-of-djs-case-doesnt-ease-the-tension-20101019-16sfb.html?skin=text-only
See
this blog post and comment by me in order to see all the letters collated.]

I wonder how Fr. Crothers's Local Ordinary has dealt or will deal with this scandal?

October 28, 2010 3:52 AM

Your comment has been saved and will be visible after blog owner approval.
[http://australiaincognita.blogspot.com/2010/10/women-priests-and-st-mary-of-cross-sigh.html]

10.2

Cardinal Pole said...

Dr. Bugg's article capped off four days of letters published in the Herald on the topic of Catholic womenpriests, with the last two days' worth responding to this one from the second day:

"I think many Catholics saw the irony of the Mary MacKillop celebrations in a church in which women are still excluded from full participation. As I said at Mass last Sunday: "Today we celebrate a woman's canonisation; hopefully it won't be too long before we celebrate a woman's ordination."

"
Father John CrothersSt Declan's Church, Penshurst"
[
http://www.smh.com.au/national/letters/settlement-of-djs-case-doesnt-ease-the-tension-20101019-16sfb.html?skin=text-only
See
this blog post and comment by me in order to see all the letters collated.]

(Something new to add to your "
Fr Crothers" label, my dear Cloistered ones?) I wonder how Fr. Crothers's Local Ordinary has dealt or will deal with this scandal?

October 28, 2010 4:13 AM

Your comment has been saved and will be visible after blog owner approval.
[http://coo-eesfromthecloister.blogspot.com/2010/10/laura-bugg-er-awf.html]

10.3

Dr. Bugg's article capped off four days of letters published in the Herald on the topic of Catholic womenpriests, with the last two days' worth responding to this one from the second day:

"I think many Catholics saw the irony of the Mary MacKillop celebrations in a church in which women are still excluded from full participation. As I said at Mass last Sunday: "Today we celebrate a woman's canonisation; hopefully it won't be too long before we celebrate a woman's ordination."

"
Father John CrothersSt Declan's Church, Penshurst"
[
http://www.smh.com.au/national/letters/settlement-of-djs-case-doesnt-ease-the-tension-20101019-16sfb.html?skin=text-only
See
this blog post and comment by me in order to see all the letters collated.]

I wonder how Fr. Crothers's Local Ordinary has dealt or will deal with this scandal?

(Before submitting this comment it occured to me that I had better do a Google search in order to see whether His Eminence is already dealing with this, and lo and behold, I found that Coo-ees has a whole blog label devoted to Fr. Crothers! Here's the U.R.L.:

http://coo-eesfromthecloister.blogspot.com/search/label/Fr%20Crothers)
Your comment is awaiting moderation.
[http://scecclesia.wordpress.com/2010/10/27/our-st-mary-more-likely-to-pray-for-vocations-than-to-challenge-for-women-priests/#comment-17853]

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of Sts. Simon and Jude, Apostles, A.D. 2010

Friday, August 27, 2010

Notes: Thursday-Friday, August 26-27, 2010

""New and Improved" Novus Ordo Mass Retains Most Grievous Abuse"

http://mauricepinay.blogspot.com/2010/08/new-and-improved-novus-ordo-mass.html

On the authority of the Bible, and 'arriving at one's own response' thereto

A Herald letter which hints (presumably unwittingly) at why private interpretation of the Bible (Protestantism's first principle) will end up meaning as many Christianities as there are Christians:

No wonder church's future is at stake

[...]

Anyone who still wonders why the church is in decline need only read the Reverend Kevin Murray's letter (August 25). Requiring men (women are not ordained into the Presbyterian church as ministers) to sign a statement saying they recognise the authority of the Bible, but not allowing them to arrive at their own responses to this authority, says it all. I respect and revere the Bible, but I worship the God of the Bible, not the Bible itself.

Pam Connor Mollymook Beach
[http://www.smh.com.au/national/letters/yet-another-victim-in-a-war-without-reason-20100825-13s36.html?skin=text-only]

On numbering more than one Senate ballot sheet box above the line

The second sentence of the second paragraph mentions how it would work (not that I have formed an opinion one way or another on the merits of such a proposal, though):

Law of unintended consequences

[...]

I agree with the thrust of Alex Stitt's letter (August 26) about the inability or unwillingness of folk to number to 84 on the Senate ballot paper. It is quite a daunting task, and can easily lead to errors, thus resulting in an informal vote. But the "above-the-line" system is inherently undemocratic as it allows political parties to control preference flows.

So why can't we number all the boxes above the line? That way the voter controls the preference flow and the parties control only the order of their candidates.

Bill Young Greenwich

[http://www.smh.com.au/national/letters/whatever-independents-do-will-upset-someone-20100826-13u35.html?skin=text-only]

Another interesting voting-system proposal

One which I had not considered before reading this, the first letter in the "short & sharp" column in the Sydney Daily Telegraph's "your say" section last Wednesday, p. 33 (and, again, with which I don't necessarily agree, but find interesting):

IT SEEMS to me that a far better system than people not knowing where their preferences are going would be if each voter was allowed to mark two Xs for the Upper House and two Xs for the Lower House. Whoever gets the most Xs wins. Even if that person is your second choice, if they have the most Xs then clearly they are supported by most of the community in that area.
Chris Roberts Engadine

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of St. Joseph Calasanctius, Confessor, A.D. 2010

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Notes: Wednesday, August 25, 2010

Another Herald letter proposing preferential voting with discounting of the value of distributed votes:

Half measures

While we have a preferential voting system that values the second preference vote the same as a primary vote, we will rarely get a result that reflects the true will of the people. Preferences should be transferred at a lesser value - say half that of a first preference. This would reduce the horse-trading in preferences among parties and give us a more accurate assessment of what voters want.

Rob Hurdwell Bowral
[http://www.smh.com.au/national/letters/consensus-works-for-all-but-especially-tamworth-20100824-13q8l.html?skin=text-only]

"Toleration, Ascendancy, Democracy"--article on the history of religious toleration in the British Isles

http://angelqueen.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=33328

Long but interesting article. It begins thus:

Tolerance, according to the apostle of English Liberalism, John Stuart Mill, was the outcome of the failure of intolerance. The different factions of English Protestantism had a go at suppressing each other, including a civil war, and failed. They were therefore left with no option but to tolerate each other.

So religious pluralism appears as the unavoidable consequence of Protestantism--once public judgement (i.e. judgement by the Magisterium) has been replaced with private judgement, religious unity will inevitably break down, making toleration of any and all sects the only tenable policy.

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of St. Louis IX., King, Confessor, A.D. 2010

Friday, July 2, 2010

Notes: Friday, July 2, 2010

Mr. Croome and Mr. Raj on so-called gay marriage

http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/australia-lags-shamefully-on-gay-marriage-20100701-zqia.html?skin=text-only
http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/new-pm-same-old-stance-on-gay-marriage/

Both these opinion pieces are rubbish, but both are worth highlighting, Mr. Raj's because it provides a useful summary of the standard (fallacious) arguments for 'gay marriage', and Mr. Croome's because it's good for a laugh: He begins by considering some reasons why The Hon. Julia Gillard M.P. might have a 'personal view', as has been reported, against gay marriage, one of which is the following astounding non sequitur:

She has no children, so it can't be because she believes there's an obligatory link between procreation and the right to marry.

Did it not occur to Mr. Croome that the link between marriage and procreation might be precisely why Ms Gillard has neither married nor procreated? Whether it's a matter of not wanting to marry because there would be an obligation to have children, or not wanting to have children because it would entail an obligation to marry, either way, there's clearly no reason inherent in the condition of childlessness to think that the childless reject an obligatory link between marriage and children. Quite the contrary, in fact--a desire not to marry might be precisely why they haven't had children.

And I was interested to learn the following:

["[M]arriage equality advocates"] have asked the Icelandic Prime Minister, Johanna Sigurdardottir, who married her same-sex partner a few days ago, to explain to Gillard why marriage equality is so important to same-sex couples and their families, and to a just society.

The Icelandic leader would also do well to ask Gillard if the Australian government will officially recognise her wife, should the couple visit Australia, and, if so, why that recognition can't be extended to the hundreds of Australian same-sex couples who are also legally married overseas.

Ha! What a sight that would be! Mr. Croome goes on to ponder why Ms Gillard might be personally opposed to gay marriage:

Perhaps she believes the overreaching claims of Pentecostal pastors about the influence of their mega-churches in key marginal seats. Perhaps she owes something to those right-wing Catholic MPs who are, in turn, under the unhealthy influence of Rome. Perhaps she simply wants to convince voters that she is a leader of conviction, even when she knows those convictions are wrong.

Perhaps Mr. Croome's intellect is under the unhealthy influence of Sodom, because it seems not to have occured to him that marriage, in any sense of the word, is the uniting of two complementary parts into a whole, that in marriage, in the sense of matrimony, the complementarity is primarily sexual (not merely semi- or quasi-sexual), and that, since two persons of the same sex have no sexual complementarity, then just as an opposite-sex couple in which at least one member is relatively or absolutely impotent cannot have matrimony, neither can a same-sex couple have matrimony. Could it be that Ms Gillard is, her atheism notwithstanding, clear-minded enough to recognise this, and hence she is opposed to so-called gay marriage?

Link to an on-line transcription of the 1859 Haydock Bible commentary:

http://haydock1859.tripod.com/index.html
(Discovered here: http://angelqueen.org/forum/viewtopic.php?p=367400#367400)

A couple of observations regarding the recent Roman Curial appointments

From LifeSiteNews via AQ:

In his seventh year as a Cardinal and at age 66, Cardinal Ouellet still has at least 9 more years to be in a prominent role of service to the Church (official retirement age is 75). His appointment as Prefect of the Congregation for Bishops comes at an especially opportune time given that nine of the 19 Latin Rite bishops in his home province of Quebec are set to retire in the next two years. And within that number are four of the five most powerful posts or 'metropolitan sees' as they are known.

Quebec's bishops, with the current exception of Cardinal Ouellet and perhaps one or two others, are known to be the principal force behind the spread of damaging liberalism throughout the Church in Canada - a situation many hope will change with the appointment of Cardinal Ouellet to head the Pope's 'bishop selection committee.'

[http://angelqueen.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=32324]

From Dr. Brown at Fr. Zuhlsdorf's blog:

If the cardinal cannot appoint orthodox staff to his own seminary, I have no idea how he is going to appoint orthodox bishops to the universal Church.
Comment by Deimater

He won’t because it will not be his job. Bishops are nominated by the pope. Of course, the Prefect does have power, and there was a difference between the Congregation run by Gantin. On the other hand, the nominations are the result of a complex process involving the Prefect, the Sec (who seems to be a Re clone), the members, the nunzio, and certain powerful members of a nation’s episcopacy.

IMHO, of equal importance is that another Sodano ally is out of power. When BXVI became pope, Sodano was Sec of State, Sandri the Sostituto, and Re was at Bishops. That made it possible to frustrate whatever BXVI wanted to do.

Comment by robtbrown — 1 July 2010 @
8:19 am
[bold type in the original,
http://wdtprs.com/blog/2010/06/important-appointments-made-by-pope-benedict/#comment-212584]

Mr. Obeid refutes some of the standard Fundamentalist objections to Catholic beliefs and practices

http://davidobeid.blogspot.com/2010/07/reply-to-onesimus.html

H.H. The Pope appoints The Lord Bishop of Basel as President of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity

From today's Vatican Information Service daily e-mail bulletin:

OTHER PONTIFICAL ACTS

VATICAN CITY, 1 JUL 2010 (VIS) - The Holy Father appointed Bishop Kurt Koch of Basel, Switzerland, as president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity, he succeeds Cardinal Walter Kasper whose resignation from the same office the Holy Father accepted, upon having reached the age limit.
NA/ VIS 20100701 (60)

A couple of blog comments by me:

At "For the Sake of Science", by Mr. Michael Hawkins: I just couldn't resist making this comment:

Cardinal Pole, on July 1, 2010 at 2:08 pm Said:

“No new data is gained from logic.”

No new data are gained from grammar, either.
[http://forthesakeofscience.wordpress.com/2010/07/01/thought-of-the-day-126/#comment-5889]

which I published after my introductory comment:

Cardinal Pole, on July 1, 2010 at 2:07 pm Said:

Hello Mr. Hawkins, I came across your blog while looking for a transcript of the comment by Ms Gillard which you’ve quoted here.

I’m trying to work out why you support same-sex marriage. (Naturally I checked your “gay marriage” and “Same-sex marriage” labels first, but they contained links to posts from other blogs; I also skim-read your blog’s first page, to no avail.) Could you explain why, or direct me to a post where you do so? I can understand how, as an atheist/anti-theist, you would see no moral reason to oppose it (no higher being than man => no such thing as true and proper moral obligation, no natural law, &c.), but there would still be the logical reasons (following from the definition of marriage, in its most general sense, as the uniting of two complementary parts into a whole, with marriage in the particular sense of matrimony involving sexual complementarity) .

(I’ll be back on Monday night, Australian time.)

[http://forthesakeofscience.wordpress.com/2010/06/30/gillard-is-against-gay-marriage/#comment-5888]

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of the Visitation of The Blessed Virgin Mary, A.D. 2010

Friday, May 21, 2010

Notes: Friday, May 21, 2010

A nice response to yesterday's Herald letter on stealing

Brand of faith

With all due respect to Donald Howard, if I wanted an unbiased analysis of Catholic theology, Moore College is the last place I would go (Letters, May 20).

Stephen Magee Epping
[http://www.smh.com.au/national/letters/little-people-suffer-when-twiggy-acts-like-a-log-20100520-vnv5.html?skin=text-only]

Upcoming Compass episode on the Australian experience of Vatican II and its aftermath

From Yesterday's CathNews:

This episode of Compass explores the Catholic Church in Australia during one of the most dynamic periods in its recent history, the Second Vatican Council (1962-65). Vatican II challenged elements of Catholicism unquestioned since the 16th century. Pope John XXIII wanted to bring the church 'up to date' in a dynamic and fast changing world.

Almost 50 years later this film explores how Vatican II changed Catholic practice, identity and faith through the personal stories of eminent and ordinary Australians.

It also examines how the reforms of the Second Vatican Council are faring today in a time of rising conservatism in the church.

Challenge, Change, Faith: Catholic Australia and the Second Vatican Council - Compass, 10.05pm ABC- TV1, May 23

[http://www.cathnews.com/article.aspx?aeid=21404]

Russian Orthodox prelate on relations between the Catholic Church and the Russian Orthodox Church

http://www.angelqueen.org/forum/viewtopic.php?p=361642&sid=416531fe6b2dd8306e12130cbc1910ac


Archbishop Hilarion [Alfeyev of Volokolamsk, chairman of the Department of External Affairs of the Moscow Patriarchate] went on to note that in both the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church "the awareness has grown of not being in competition, but of being allies." The rivalries of the past, he added, "must stay there, in the past."

He noted that cultural changes, particularly the "de-Christianization of our countries," is calling for "greater collaboration."

Other cultural changes call increasingly for an open dialogue between Catholics and Orthodox, the prelate said: "Today there are many mixed marriages. We often find an Orthodox person next to a Catholic."

[...] Archbishop Hilarion affirmed that for many Orthodox, "the election of Benedict XVI was received positively," especially because of "his position on moral questions."

"There is a commitment [among the Orthodox] to observe and promote traditional values," he said.

In regard to the theological dialogue between Orthodox and Catholics, the archbishop projected that it will last for many years.

"Each stage of the dialogue ends with a text where Catholics and Orthodox say something together," he explained. "What is important is that these texts are received not only by theologians but also by the faithful."

From another report on the same web-page:

"I think the atmospere of dialogue has improved and without a doubt relations improve along with the theological dialogue. But I think the theological dialogue still has a long way to go," [Metropolitian Hilarion of Volokolamsk, president of the Moscow Patriarchate's office for external relations] said.

[... Regarding the prospects for a meeting between the respective heads of the Catholic Church and the Russian Orthodox Church:] "An encounter between a pope and a patriarch should be a historic event, not just because it is the first meeting between the head of the Roman Catholic Church and the Russian Orthodox Church but especially because such a meeting must be sign of the intention to move our relations forward, which is why is must be prepared for well," he said.

"I hope there could be an encounter not between just any pope of Rome and patriarch of Moscow, but between Patriarch Kirill and Pope Benedict XVI," Metropolitan Hilarion said.

Pressed on the question, he said, "By mentioning these two concrete people, I tried to indicate somewhat a desired deadline."

He told reporters that most of the Russian Orthodox clergy and faithful have a very favorable opinion of Pope Benedict and particularly appreciate his efforts to promote traditional moral values and to strengthen the Christian culture of Europe.

Blog comments from me:

At Mr. Schütz's blog:

Cardinal Pole
May 21, 2010 at 4:07 am

Thanks, Peregrinus. (Also, you might be interested to read the comment I’m about to post at the bottom of the main thread, on the origin of the symbol.)
[http://scecclesia.wordpress.com/2010/05/18/a-man-of-devastating-sanity-professor-claudio-veliz-on-cardinal-george-pell/#comment-14837]

Cardinal Pole
May 21, 2010 at 4:16 am

I wonder how the convention of prelates using the plus sign originated? I seem to recall reading somewhere some time ago that Bishops used to write ‘sinner’ before their respective names when signing something, and this evolved into the plus sign, which, as Peregrinus rightly noted, represents a cross. But if, as I think, it is for Ordinaries only, not just anyone consecrated Bishop, perhaps it’s meant to signify the heavy burden–the cross–of exercising Ordinary jurisdiction? The care of a single soul, let alone the souls of thousands, is a weighty enough responsibility, and they say that Hell is paved with the skulls of Bishops.

[http://scecclesia.wordpress.com/2010/05/18/a-man-of-devastating-sanity-professor-claudio-veliz-on-cardinal-george-pell/#comment-14838]

Cardinal Pole
May 21, 2010 at 4:37 am

“what is the Catholic view on the priesthood of believers,given that St Paul clearly talks about it?”

For what it’s worth (I’m no expert either!):

Any priesthood is the power to offer sacrifice. As a living member of the Body of Christ, the Christian has the power–and is required–to offer up spiritual sacrifices ‘on the altar of his heart’, as they say. By offering up good works, performed from a motive of Faith while in the state of grace, the Christian merits increase of grace and glory and makes satisfaction for his sins and the sins of others. This is the priesthood of all believers.

The ministerial priesthood, on the other hand, is the power to offer the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, which (Sacrifice) is a true, propitiatory sacrifice, one and the same as that offered on Mt. Calvary, differing only in the manner of offering (unbloody rather than bloody), by which the Sacrifice of Calvary is renewed and represented and its fruits received.
[http://scecclesia.wordpress.com/2010/05/19/rare-but-allowable-former-baptist-pastor-becomes-catholic-priest/#comment-14839]

Cardinal Pole
May 21, 2010 at 4:58 am
Is that “masters and magistrates” as in civic officers, or as in ecclesiastical officers (‘pastors and doctors’)? (From the contrast to following “individual intuition and authority” I expect the latter, but I might be mistaken.)
[http://scecclesia.wordpress.com/2010/05/19/on-heretics/#comment-14840]
Two blog comments by others which I wish to save for future reference:

From Mr. Schütz's blog:

Schütz
May 20, 2010 at 2:22 pm

The difference between Calvinists/Lutherans and the Anabaptists is often described (and well) as the difference between a “magisterial” reformation and a “radical” reformation. “Magisterial” in this sense means that they followed the authority of the “masters and magistrates”, rather than individual intuition and authority.

Mark Henderson
May 20, 2010 at 10:10 pm

Yes, quite a valid and helpful distinction, David. Lutherans and Reformed also gained official toleration from the Holy Roman Empire, which the Anabaptists didn’t ever do, to my knowledge. By the way, I note that the Anabaptist presence in Australia has been growing over the last two decades; they now have their own association with a website (I mean true Anabaptist groups like the Mennonites, not just run-of-the-mill Baptists).

[http://scecclesia.wordpress.com/2010/05/19/on-heretics/#comments]

Reginaldvs Cantvar
21.V.2010

Wednesday, May 19, 2010

Mr. Henderson on sola Scriptura

The Lutheran pastor Mark Henderson had the following to say in a recent comment at his blog:

M.A. Henderson said...
The new covenant is indeed greater than the old, but that doesn't justify a "let's not read the Old Testament then" mentality - although that has indeed been a popular view in the modern church,a nd it doesn't srprise me that the Mennonites would advocate this, Matthias.

Lutherans have often taught that the OT contains the promises and the NT the fulfilment, which helps to keep the unity of the two testaments in view.

Let's not forget that for the first Christians the OT was their complete Bible, and yet their faith was by no means inadequate; but of course, they had the oral preaching of the Apostles. This is the germ of truth in the RC theory of oral tradition which they have since distorted - they hold that some aspects of tradition, e.g. the Marian dogmas, are Apostolic despite the fact that scripture knows nothing of them, we hold that everything necessary for salvation and for the faith and life of the church has been set down by the Apostles in the NT.
Tuesday, 04 May, 2010

[http://acroamaticus.blogspot.com/2010/05/aquinas-on-primacy-of-scripture-ii.html]

I quote the whole comment because, unlike some bloggers, I abhor the very thought of taking someone out of context, but it's the last part in which I'm interested here:

we hold that everything necessary for salvation and for the faith and life of the church has been set down by the Apostles in the NT

So we have the proposition:

everything necessary for salvation and for the faith and life of the church has been set down by the Apostles in the NT

Evidently that proposition would itself be "necessary for salvation and for the faith and life of the church". So ... whereabouts is that "set down by the Apostles in the NT"? Mr. Henderson? Anyone?

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of St. Peter Celestine, Pope, Confessor, and of St. Pudentiana, Virgin, A.D. 2010

Friday, April 23, 2010

Banned from, and defamed by, "Glosses from an Old Manse"

Here are some comments which I submitted to 'Pastor Mark' Henderson's blog a couple of hours ago, but which he has refused to publish (as of now, which I know because he has let through other comments since their submission). I'm kicking myself for not saving the comments which induced my banning, but I'll be much more careful dealing with "Pr Henderson" in future and will make sure to publish them here too.
***

"You've been hoisted on your own petard, Reginald."

No, I haven't. As I said in the comment, that quotation was something

"with which no Catholic will disagree"

So in trying to appear clever, you've made a fool of yourself. Your quotation from Dei Verbum is a statement of Catholic doctrine, and one with which Protestants (so-called 'orthodox Protestants', though perhaps not 'liberal Protestants') will agree. Protestants and Catholics will disagree, of course, as to my statement of the doctrine of sola Scriptura, a statement which you have yet to prove.
Your comment has been saved and will be visible after blog owner approval.
[http://acroamaticus.blogspot.com/2010/04/juxtaposition.html]

***

Sir (as I said in one of my deleted comments I said "Let me know" whether you insist on me calling you "Pr Henderson", but you have still not said so),

Could you please e-mail me a copy of those comments of mine which you declined to publish? I'm kicking myself for not saving them in Notepad or elsewhere before submitting them for publication. (I don't expect you to publish this comment, of course, but I would like to post those comments of mine at my own blog, and those willing to engage in open discussion may discuss them at my blog. Interesting how the most fervent defenders of 'freedom of speech' are always the quickest to violate it.)

As for the question of the status of Magisterial pronouncements: In addition to the usual two criteria for a prounouncement to be considered Magisterial (namely, (1.) that they are issued by the Pope or (and) Bishops(s) in his (their) teaching capacity, and (2.) that they are on a matter of Faith or morals), the two criteria which set ex-Cathedra-level pronouncements apart from non-ex-Cathedra-level ones are (3.) definitiveness and (4.) imperativeness.

3.=> that the statement is pronounced finally, irreformably, definitively (a common form is "We, by Our Apostolic Authority, hereby define, declare and pronounce ...", though the Magisterium is not restricted to this or that form; so long as the definitiveness is conveyed, then that is enough).
4.=> that the pronouncement is issued as irrevocably binding on the faithful. Again, no particular form is necessary.

Look at the wording with which, say, the direct object of Munificentissimus Deus is pronounced, and compare that to the wording with which Catechisms and Vatican II's pastoral essays are pronounced, for comparison.

So if contradictions in teachings of the Ordinary Magisterium, not the Extraordinary Magisterium, are all you have, then you're knocking down a straw man.

(As for your particular question regarding salvation, see this blog post by a lay, but reliable, theologian.)
Your comment has been saved and will be visible after blog owner approval.
[http://acroamaticus.blogspot.com/2010/04/juxtaposition-infallible.html]

***

"[I] refuse to address [you] by the title [you] request"

No. You're over-reacting. I asked "let me know" if you insisted on that. As I said, in Australia, the accepted short form for "The Rev. John Smith" would be "Mr. Smith".

"[I] apparently harbour a desire to see [you] burned at the stake"

I indicated no such thing, and harbour no such desire. Please publish my original comment so that your readers can see whether this comment of yours is defamatory or not.

"If [I] have any sense of honour"

If you have any sense of honour then you'll publish those comments of mine.

"which is completely beside the point"

No, I asked for final pronouncements, and you have given me none. You're using apples against oranges.

"[Vatican II was] an authoritative utterance of a body -an Ecumenical Council in the Roman view -which claims infallibility aqccording to thei rown doctrine."

Compare and contrast:

The Pope can speak ex Cathedra, in which case the prouncement is irreformable, but pronouncements at a lower level--even if they come from the Pope--are not irreformable of themselves.

A Council can speak ex Cathedra, in which case the prouncement is irreformable, but pronouncements at a lower level--even if they come from a Council--are not irreformable of themselves.

Why do you grasp the first but not the second?
Your comment has been saved and will be visible after blog owner approval.
[http://acroamaticus.blogspot.com/2010/04/vatican-i-on-canon-of-scripture.html]

***
This episode has brought back memories of Mr. Henderson's philosophical cousin, MgS. For a little trip down memory lane, visit my blog post "On the funny way that liberals show how much they value 'freedom of speech'".

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of St. George, Martyr, A.D. 2010

Response to "Rick"'s comment

The comment to which I refer is available here, and though I've submitted my response for publication, I doubt whether it will indeed be published.

***

What I'm asking for are phrases like 'by Scripture alone', 'Scripture only', 'nothing but Scripture'. If we let X be a set containing the books in the Canon, and Y being (supernatural) truths necessary for salvation, then you need words which amount to

X and only X contains Y
All Y is in X

You'll probably object that I'm making up my own criteria. But we have other examples of such language; for instance, Our Lord says 'No-one comes to the Father but by Me' (the bi-conditional 'X and only X is Y'). He doesn't just say 'People come to the Father by me' (the conditional 'X is Y'), which would leave open the possibility that people can come to the Father by other ways too. What Christ says there is 'people come to the Father by Me alone, 'people come to the Father only by Me', 'no-one comes to the Father but by Me'. So 'by Christ alone' is in Scripture, but where is 'by Scripture alone'?

So, on to your proof-texts:

25 Now to him that is able to establish you, according to my gospel and the preaching of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery which was kept secret from eternity; 26 (which now is made manifest by the scriptures of the prophets, according to the precept of the eternal God, for the obedience of faith) known among all nations: 27
[Romans 16:25-26,
http://newadvent.org/bible/rom016.htm]

"[B]y the Scriptures alone", though?

30 Many other signs also did Jesus in the sight of his disciples, which are not written in this book. 31 But these are written, that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God: and that believing, you may have life in his name.
[John 20:30-31,
http://newadvent.org/bible/joh020.htm]

From which Rick infers that

"Therefore, the Book of John is sufficient for salvation."

!!! So the rest of the New Testament isn't even necessary?! I'm not going to bother refuting that!

27 And he said: Then, father, I beseech you that you would send him to my father's house, for I have five brethren, 28 that he may testify unto them, lest they also come into this place of torments. 29 And Abraham said to him: They have Moses and the prophets. Let them hear them. 30 But he said: No, father Abraham: but if one went to them from the dead, they will do penance. 31 And he said to him: If they hear not Moses and the prophets, neither will they believe, if one rise again from the dead.
[Luke 16:27-31,
http://newadvent.org/bible/luk016.htm]

Irrelevant; it doesn't say that everything which God revealed after the Old Testament is contained in the New Testament.

19 And we have the more firm prophetical word: whereunto you do well to attend, as to a light that shines in a dark place, until the day dawn and the day star arise in your hearts. 20
[2 Peter 1:19,
http://newadvent.org/bible/2pe001.htm]

Also irrelevant; the preceding verses speak of the New Testament, and the "prophetical word" therefore refers to the Old Testament. (Here are the preceding verses, together with the one already adduced:

17 For he received from God the Father honour and glory, this voice coming down to him from the excellent glory: This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased. Hear him. 18 And this voice, we heard brought from heaven, when we were with him in the holy mount. 19 And we have the more firm prophetical word: whereunto you do well to attend, as to a light that shines in a dark place, until the day dawn and the day star arise in your hearts. 20
[2 Peter 1:17-19,
ibid.]

Your comment has been saved and will be visible after blog owner approval.

***

Reginaldvs Cantvar,
Feast of St. George, Martyr, A.D. 2010

Friday, January 1, 2010

Dialogue against Protestant errors

A reader e-mailed me some remarks made by an anti-Catholic polemicist. I e-mailed that reader a couple of messages refuting, in dialogue form, the polemicist’s errors. Here are those messages (the polemicist’s remarks are in quotation marks, with mine following underneath; there are also two Scriptural and Patristic citations in quotation marks as well; in the original messages the polemicist’s name was written, but in order to conceal his identity in case he does not wish it to be advertised here I use the pseudonym ‘Mr. N’ in its place):
Message 1:

***

“I believed in God most definitely from that moment on, but over the next 9 months or so discovered things about the church that I could not square with the Bible.”

In other words, ‘which [he] could not square with his interpretation of the Bible’.

“I notice you did not address the concept of priests”

There’s no need to; Mr. N needs to prove sola Scriptura and private judgment before we move on debating any other point of doctrine.

“The temple curtain tore. Do you know what that actually meant?”

Yes, it means that the Old Law had been abolished; see St. Leo the Great’s Sermon LXVIII, section 3:

“so evident a transition [i.e. by the Passion of Our Lord] was being effected from the Law to the Gospel, from the synagogue to the Church, from many sacrifices to the One Victim , that, when the Lord gave up the ghost, that mystic veil which hung before and shut out the inner part of the Temple and its holy recess was by sudden force torn from top to bottom , for the reason that Truth was displacing figures, and forerunners were needless in the presence of Him they announced.”
[http://newadvent.org/fathers/360368.htm]

“The era of priests and sacrifices was over forever. God did the work, because only HE could do it properly.”

But if only God could offer sacrifice properly, then is God likewise the only One capable of, say, baptising properly? Of course not; God uses other people as instruments in conferring Baptism, and He also uses other people as instruments in offering anew the Most August Sacrifice in Persona Christi.

“Still having priests implies Jesus did an imperfect work.”

No it doesn’t; it implies that Our Lord willed that the fruits of His perfect work—the Redemption—be applied to the passing generations by a visible, ritual sacrifice, as the nature of man requires.

“but a priest is only a 'priest' because he is involved in sacrificial atoning works decreed by God”

Of course. But what Mr. N fails to understand is that Our Lord is capable of using other people as instruments through whom to offer anew the perfect sacrificial atoning work of Our Lord on the Holy Cross, albeit by a different manner of offering (unbloodly rather than bloody).

“And you're STILL avoiding using the bible as the authority”

Okay, so let’s take the Bible as our authority. Mr. N needs to prove from it that all of God’s Revelation to the Apostles is contained therein. He will be unable to do so (and I’d be happy to refute whatever proof-texts he supplies to the contrary), so he needs to prove why private judgment is better ‘mechanism’, so to speak, for Christians to attain the correct interpretation of the Bible and to stay unified in that correct interpretation than authoritative interpretation is. He will also be unable to do so, as is clear from consideration of the following theses:

Thesis 1: It is not feasible for the ordinary individual to come to the correct understanding of the truths contained in the Deposit of Faith by his personal interpretation of the Bible.
Proof: Even supposing that it were possible for people to interpret the Bible correctly without the aid of an earthly authority, people would still need extensive and intensive training and education in the relevant scholarly disciplines—at least to university level—in order to do so. But most people do have the time, opportunity, resources or aptitude necessary to acquire the requisite learning.

One remedy for this situation might be for the more learned believers to assist the less learned believers to come to know the truth. But those more learned believers would need to speak with authority (indeed, with God’s authority), otherwise the less learned believers could never have the certainty of Faith as to what is true and false doctrine. This brings us to the following corollary to Thesis 1:
Corollary: If Our Lord wanted His followers to know the True Faith and stay united in it then He would have established an institutional authority capable of ruling irreformably and infallibly on doctrinal questions.

Thesis 2: Even if we were all extraordinary individuals, highly intelligent, fluent in Classical Hebrew, Classical Greek and Latin, and with university-level training in all the scholarly disciplines involved in interpreting the Bible, we would not be able to come to agreement as to which doctrines are contained in the Deposit of Faith and which are errors.
Proof: One need only look at how many learned men disagree as to the correct interpretation of the Bible. (How many tens of thousands of Protestant sects are there as of December 31, 2009?)
Corollary: As for Thesis 1.

Now what I’ve written so far just deals with the difficulty of interpreting the Bible once one knows what the Canon of the Bible is. But the other problem with sola Scriptura is knowing what Scripture is in the first place; Mr. N has an infallible book (with which I agree, of course—the Bible is infallible, but the private interpretation of it by any old layman is not) but no infallible contents page, so to speak. Sola Scriptura is, for these reasons and, no doubt, many others, completely untenable.

“'Unwritten word of God' is just an obfuscation. Now, I know that there are infinite mysteries within the knowledge of God still unknown to us””

Mr. N appears not to understand what Catholics mean by what he calls the ‘unwritten Word of God’. What we mean is that the Apostles and Evangelists did not transmit to posterity all that which Our Lord and the Holy Ghost revealed to them by writing; they transmitted some of it by writing (that’s the New Testament) and some of it orally, which subsequent generations wrote down. (And, lacking a proof from Mr. N of sola Scriptura or a disproof of the assertion that the Church and the earthly Vicar of her Head speak with that Head’s authority, there is no reason to suppose otherwise.) So we are talking about what was revealed but not written down by the Apostles and Evangelists (or their respective amanuenses) themselves, but Mr. N seems to talk about what was not revealed at all, talking about how he “know[s] that there are infinite mysteries within the knowledge of God still unknown to us”.

“The Word of God MUST trump the church in such situations, otherwise it will all unravel for Christendom very quickly.”

This statement is almost laughable; it was precisely when private judgment and sola Scripura most boldly reared their ugly heads—i.e. the time of the Protestant Revolt—that Christendom began to unravel, and quickly. (And continues to do so—Protestant sects multiply every year.)

“You can't claim something has more value and/or authority than the thing that first gives it value and/or authority.”

We don’t; we merely claim that the Church speaks with God’s authority, the same authority with which the Bible was given us by those who received God’s dictation.

“And do you really believe that "having a laugh" is not allowed?!? Or drinking alcohol? That's just silly”

Yet some Protestants believe that the Bible forbids us to partake of alcohol, do they not?

“Do you believe that the Protestant churches are part of the Church of Jesus Christ?”

No, I do not and they are not. They neither have nor even claim tacit consent from the Roman Pontiff in their establishment, and neither have nor claim Apostolic succession from churches which were established with the at-least-tacit consent of the Roman Pontiff.

***

Message 2:

***

“Actually, more accurately, 'that which could not be reconciled with that which God has directly revealed in his Word.'”

We are going around in circles here; I can take Mr. N’s latest formulation and state it more precisely as ‘'that which could not be reconciled with *his interpretation of* that which God has directly revealed in his Word.'’ One way or another an interpretation is needed; is it to come from a fallible interpreter or an infallible one? Mr. N’s answer is: A fallible one—himself.

“The difference is very big. There are many matters in the Word that are not open to debate - ie. Jesus being the Son of God”

To take Mr. N’s first example: The generation of Our Lord. We know that Jesus Christ is the natural Son of God—true God from true God, in the words of the Nicene Creed. But the Protestant cannot simply say that the matter is “not open to debate”, because some people, some of them very erudite—see my lengthy discussion with Vynette at Mr. Schütz’s blog recently—advance Scriptural arguments to say that He is only the Son of God ‘morally’, and that we can all be sons and daughters of God in the very same respect as Our Lord was and is. Catholics can rest assured that Our Lord is the natural Son of God because it was settled finally by the authority of the Council of Nicæa, but the Protestant only has his own fallible judgment by which to settle the matter.

“Wrong. As I have pointed out repeatedly that is backward thinking. The onus is on YOU first to prove the authority of the church by showing in scripture where it adheres to God's teaching and responding appropriately (ie. citing other Scripture) when it is accused of diverting from God's teachings.”

Mr. N is hopelessly confused here; he seems unable to perceive that he is question-begging—making an as-yet-unproven (and, in fact, impossible to prove) assumption, namely, that all that which was revealed is contained in Scripture. What I am saying to Mr. N is this: I agree that the Bible is infallible. Now show me in the Bible where it says that only the Bible is infallible, and that all truths necessary for salvation are contained therein. (Further on he provides one proof-text, and I’ll deal with that shortly.)

“This is God's way of giving us a level of accountability, otherwise there is no reliable way to "correct, rebuke & encourage"”

And yet the Catholic Church has shown herself quite capable of ‘correcting, rebuking and encouraging’, far better than any Protestant sect.

“God has established scripture as his yardstick - you shouldn't be questioning it.”

Yes, Scripture is God’s yardstick—now please show me where Scripture states that it is His *only* yardstick. (More on this shortly.)

“Hmmm, I would say it is logical to argue that if forerunners were not needed any more then neither are 'backrunners', so to speak.”

The key part in my quotation from St. Leo the Great was when he spoke of the transition “from many sacrifices to the One Victim”. A sacrifice has a priest and a victim; if one sacrifice has the same priest and the same victim as another sacrifice then the two are substantially the same. Now in the Sacrifice on Mt. Calvary, the Priest was Our Lord and so was the Victim. Likewise in the Sacrifice of the Mass, the Priest is Our Lord, since the ministerial priest is only His instrument, and the Victim is also Our Lord—‘This is My Body, This is My Blood’. The two Sacrifices are, therefore, really one and the same.

“Why try to emulate that which God has already perfectly done for us?”

It isn’t an emulation, it’s one and the same thing.

“That is a worthless human-reasoned comparison, extrapolation and obfuscation.”

Am I to infer that Mr. N’s own reasonings are somehow non-human-reasoned?

“Baptism is entirely different from the sacrifice that brings our salvation.”

Really? *Entirely* different? Baptism applies the fruits of the Redemption to the baptised, does it not? And Holy Communion also applies the fruits of the Redemption.

“The Word, especially in Hebrews, makes it clear that the work is done [1.]. And so many other things point this way too. ie - Jesus saying "it is finished". Jesus offering the bread and wine as "remembrance" [2.] (note - NOT as a "ritual sacrifice" [3.] or as a 'sharing' of his work or any other twisting).”
[my square-bracketed interpolations]

1. The Mass is one and the same work as on Mt. Calvary.2. Our Lord gave the command to ‘do [it] in memory of [Him]’ after he had pronounced the words of institution. And remembrance and sacrifice are not mutually exclusive.3. Yet the Last Supper was ritualistic and the double consecration—a Sacramental separation of Body and Blood—implies a sacrifice.

“The Catholic teaching here is an insult to the perfection of Jesus.”

Where does the Church teach that the Mass somehow adds to the perfection of Jesus in the atonement?

“Even Jesus didn't expect formal 'consent' to act within God's will for the extension of His Kingdom on earth, just adherence to the truth of God's teachings.”

An adherence which history demonstrates is rather difficult to maintain without an authority to preserve unity and truth.

“Note especially how I have just pointed consistently to God's Word”

To his interpretations thereof, he means.

“and you consistently only use it where convenient, often diverting to fallible human reasoning as if it was authoritative”

Mr. N is the one taking his fallible human reasonings about the meaning of the Bible as if it were authoritative, not me.

“you just basically tell others to shut up because you have decided they are wrong and in danger of hellfire, even as they expressly acknowledge and uphold the blood sacrifice of Jesus for our salvation from sin and his defeat of death evidenced by his physical resurrection.”

Is Mr. N an advocate of the heresy of ‘mere Christianity’, as though people can just agree on the principle points of Christian doctrine and agree to disagree on supposedly ‘less important’ points? So for instance, here Mr. N seems to imply that belief in Our Lord’s Sacrifice and His Resurrection are somehow sufficient for salvation (please correct me if I am wrong).

“I think we will just have to decide to leave it here.”

Fair enough, but I would appreciate if I you could respond to at least one more comment, where, shortly, I deal with 2 Tim. 3:16.

“btw, I think you meant 'don't', not 'do' - as in "have the time" - in your first Thesis”

Correct—sorry about that.

“LOL! As if Catholics were all in agreement! C'mon, that is starry-eyed idealism at best, willful distortion at worst. The Catholic church is just as much subject to human failings as any other organization. You would have me believe it is perfect.”

Now right from where Mr. N says “As if Catholics were all in agreement!” it is clear that he has failed to understand what I am talking when I speak of the necessity of an authority for keeping a body of believers united in the Faith. When the Pope or a Council defines a doctrine which the faithful are irrevocably bound to hold as certainly true (or false), the Catholic knows that, obviously, he must agree with this doctrinal definition if he wishes to remain a Catholic. He is free to disagree with it, of course, but he thereby cuts himself off from the Church. A ‘Catholic’ who rejects an authoritative teaching of the Church is no Catholic at all. So the fact that, lamentably, many nominal ‘Catholics’ disagree with many authoritative teachings is not an argument against authoritative teaching, because abusus non tollit usum—abuse does not detract from use. Far from doctrinal disagreement being an argument against authority, it is, in fact, an eloquent argument against private judgment, because it is precisely by preferring private judgments to authoritative public ones that dissenting ‘Catholics’ fall away from unity in the Faith. Catholics who properly ‘use’ the Church’s authority—by assenting to her authoritative judgments in matters of Faith and morals—remain united in the Faith, whereas those who abuse it—by abandoning it in favour of private judgment—fall away. But the proper ‘use’ of private judgment—taking oneself as an authority in matters of Scriptural interpretation—inevitably leads to chaos, as Protestant history shows.

“The game the way the Catholics play it is open to abuse since they can just play the 'we know best' routine and dismiss scriptural proofs out of hand.”

Catholics are more than happy to refute—not dismiss out of hand—Protestant proof texts (the scholarly discipline of Polemical Theology, with luminaries such as St. Robert Bellarmine, flourished in the wake of the Protestant Revolt). The fact is, though, that the Church *does* know best; Mr. N’s alternative is that every Joe Protestant knows best.

“One more thing - you say I believe the Bible is ALL of God's revelation. That's kind-of right, but it needs a bit of defining. Certainly I believe it is 'all' in as much as it is 'enough'. Enough for our salvation, correction and guidance. (2 Tim 3:16) So it is 'all' we NEED and it is 'all' or sufficient for what God has decreed for our fallen lives to have here on earth.”

By invoking 2 Tim. 3:16, the standard Protestant proof-text for sola Scriptura, Mr. N shows that he suffers from the great Protestant fallacy of equating the conditional relation (‘if … then …’) with the bi-conditional relation (‘if and only if’), in other words, equating necessity with sufficiency. Let’s look at 2 Tim 3:16 (plus 17 for completeness):

“All scripture, inspired of God, is profitable to teach, to reprove, to correct, to instruct in justice: That the man of God may be perfect, furnished to every good work.”
[http://newadvent.org/bible/2ti003.htm]

That’s the Douay-Rheims translation, but whatever translation one uses, the gist of these two verses is that there is a conditional (‘if X then Y’) relation between Scripture (X) and three things (together composing Y): profitability to teach, reprove, correct and instruct in justice (Y1), perfection (Y2) and being furnished to every good work (Y3). That’s a conditional relation—*not* a bi-conditional one; St. Paul does not teach that if *and only if* one has X (Scripture) then one has Y (as given earlier); if he had meant to do so he would have written something like “All scripture, and nothing else …”, or “All scripture, and only scripture …” or perhaps, one might have expected, “Scripture alone” (since ‘sola Scriptura’ means ‘by Scripture alone’). In fact, he says no such thing, and nor do any of the inspired writers. We need Scripture for Y1, Y2 and Y3 (among other things)—after all, as St. Jerome said, ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ—but that same Scripture does not teach that we need Scripture *alone*.

“So your 'solution' is to institutionalize those fallible interpretations and claim them as the only true ones?”

More question-begging (when you speak of institutionalising fallible interpretations)—the Catholic argument is that the Magisterium is a Divinely-constituted and therefore infallible institution.

“It is clear which model works better.”

Number of Catholic Churches: One. Number of Protestant sects: In the tens of thousands.

“Until we die and are made perfect, individual interpretation is the best we can have.”

In other words, the omnipotent and omniscient Lord foresaw how fissiparous a means for Scriptural interpretation is private judgment and yet gave it to us as the only means for understanding revelation, despite Him having the power to do otherwise. Or in other words, God made inadequate provision for the preaching of the Gospel.

“Do you understand the difference? Yes, I may indeed as an individual get interpretations of Scripture (that which is open to interpretation) wrong.”

It is *all* open to interpretation—how many more flavours of Protestantism need to be concocted before you see that? I suspect that the different permutations of Scriptural (mis)interpretations will never be exhausted.

“The problem with your statement is that you believe that YOUR idea of ONE church here on earth is how God views it.”

Yet St. Paul teaches (I cannot think of chapter and verse, though) that the Church is the pillar and ground of truth. A pillar is one; if it is smashed into pieces then the whole edifice collapses. You seem not to think that God desires us to be completely unified in the Faith, or at least that He doesn’t value such unity very highly.

“But God decided that what He gave us was enough. For that reason alone I must reject your concept. That doesn't mean there might not be anything very useful in non-biblical sources, I just need to be aware of the one reliable measuring stick God has given me.”

I ask again: Please prove that Scripture teaches that it *alone* contains the truths necessary for salvation.

“And the onus is on you to prove that the "early Vicar" has the authority you claim.”

I would like to do so, but there is no point in trying to do so until you prove sola Scripture, because as long as you hold to sola Scriptura you could never accept the de iure rights of the Roman Pontiff.

“In heaven, I suspect none of that will matter.”

I had thought that you were a so-called ‘orthodox Protestant’, one who believes, among other things, that God revealed certain truths and that one must believe these at least implicitly and deny none of them explicitly but apparently you are a non-dogmatic, liberal Protestant, seeming to think that people can get into Heaven with scant regard for whether they have right belief or not.

“I actually agree with that, but I simply maintain that a church only has authority in as much as it endeavours to adhere to God's Word, since that came first.”

No, you maintain more than that, since I agree that a body which does not adhere to God’s Word has no authority, it’s just that I believe that God’s Word is not contained entirely between the covers of the Bible. So, more fully, you maintain ‘that a church only has authority inasmuch as it endeavours to adhere to God’s *written* Word and that written Word alone.’

“SOME do. Some non-Christians don't drink either. So what? End of discussion really. Given that John the Baptist expressly did not drink, yet Jesus expressly did and even changed water into wine, what is your point? And don't you see how trivial and worthless your arguments are likely to be when you begin to talk about the personalities of individuals? If you were on solid ground argumentatively with Scripture, you would never consider it necessary.”

My point is that sin is displeasing to God, and I want to live in such a way as not to displease God. So if I have someone telling me convincingly that drinking is displeasing to God then I would want to abstain from liquor. I don’t regard arguments about the sinfulness or non-sinfulness of drinking—or of any activity, for that matter—as ‘trivial and worthless’. Some Protestants—Baptists and, if I recall correctly, Seventh-Day Adventists, among others—say that it is sinful to drink, and I’m sure that they think that they have “solid ground argumentatively with Scripture” for thinking so. Most Protestants disagree. But whom is one to believe, the teetotalers or the drinkers? How much easier it would be if God had instituted an earthly authority to provide final resolutions to such disputes over matters of Faith and morals …
***

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Circumcision of Our Lord, A.D. 2010

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Two recent comments from me: one at thepunch.com.au on same-sex parenting and gaymarriage, and one at AQ on private judgment

http://www.thepunch.com.au/articles/in-defence-of-gay-marriages-and-ending-bad-straight-ones/
http://angelqueen.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=26865

If you've got time during the day today then you might want to join in the discussion at the thepunch.com.au link above here; if my comment is published there then it might attract some criticism from the liberals who dominate the discussion in these matters, but since I won't be back on-line till after midnight, tomorrow morning, any comments there in defence of the truth about marriage and family would be appreciated.

Reginaldvs Cantvar
Feast of Our Lady of Mt. Carmel, A.D. 2009