Ah ... this is the fault of men, not doctrine.I ask how many people have been killed as a result of doctrines being enforced as the only true way to consider faith in God?
Ah ... this is the fault of men, not doctrine.I ask how many people have been killed as a result of doctrines being enforced as the only true way to consider faith in God?
I would argue that the above text warns against the Bahi'a teaching:1 Thessalonians 5:21-28 "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good. Abstain from all appearance of evil. And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ..."
So it can be considered that some doctrines have led to more evil than good.
But you have no clergy, no Liturgy, no Sacraments – it is an empty church, a hollow shell.That is my chosen Church, it is founded on Christ (The Annointed One).
Do you? I see no metaphysical reason to assume that.I see all Faiths have a spring, summer, autumn and winter ...
But you eviscerate the Catholic Church. Christ was hung on a cross, you would have Him drawn and quartered.Just so you know. As a Baha'i I have embraced that the Catholic Church is the legitimate representative of Jesus the Christ.
Self would be our greatest enemy.Still I ask, as a Catholic invited to embrace Baha'i values ... which doctrines need I 'let go' – and please be specific, either name them, or simply say all of them.
Regards.
Thomas
There is a quandary all faiths have and will face. All Messengers have faced those that have done this.Don't be led astray by those who would change doctrine to suit themselves
I personally see ample evidence in Biblical Scriptures to support the comment. Many passages could be offered.Do you? I see no metaphysical reason to assume that.
Got to differentiate. The Quran just states that Jesus is neither God nor a physical son of God, but a very particular human Messenger and Messiah), and that Monastism has never been prescribed. But yes, the Quran calls for correction on those points. Jesus also pointed out that there are Jewish traditions that have never been decreed. Equally, there are traditions and ideologies in Islam that have never been decreed or supported. A person who points out that it is so is not wrong.However according to you, and also to Islam, Christianity started to become corrupted almost from the start -- with doctrines of Trinity and monasticism, the Eucharist and so on.
Although he comes from (Shia) Islam, I don't have the impression that he had a profound knowledge of it, either.In spite of all the soothing words, there's no doubt that below the surface the Baha'i faith is set against Christianity as it stands -- and particularly against the Catholic Church.
Of course anyone is entitled to believe whatever they choose. The problem is trying to use Christian scripture to justify those beliefs -- especially by those whose actual knowledge of those scriptures is extremely thin, acquired second-hand, and restricted to out-of-context quote mining -- aimed at others who don't know the scriptures beyond a surface association, in an attempt to hoodwink them and convert them.
Yes.Where a person reserves the right to proselytize, another has the right to counter falsehood, to prevent others being hoodwinked?
Jesus didn't teach to have a clergy (Don't say "father" to any human but God alone; he didn't mean the natural father but just the "patres" and the popes (papa). He founded two sacraments, the baptism and the communion. But he didn't teach to baptise infants and to have the Roman Catholic doctrine being associated to the Eucharist.But you have no clergy, no Liturgy, no Sacraments – it is an empty church, a hollow shell.
There is simply no correspondence between what you claim and the words of Christ.
Matthew 15:18 "This people honoureth me with their lips: but their heart is far from me. And in vain do they worship me (alongside many others), teaching doctrines and commandments of men (which require dismissal of doctrines founded on the words of Christ).
That's not an answer ...Self would be our greatest enemy.
That in itself is no guarantor of authenticity.There is a quandary all faiths have and will face. All Messengers have faced those that have done this.
Jesus grew up in liturgical world administered by the clergy of the day, and never sought to dismantle it – rather he challenged institutional hypocrisy.Jesus didn't teach to have a clergy ...
"But be not you called Rabbi (Gk: rabbi from the Hebrew, meaning 'elder' or 'master' ). For one is your master (Gk: kathēgētēs 'guide, master, teacher'); and all you are brethren. And call none your father (Gk: pater) upon earth; for one is your father (pater), who is in heaven. Neither be ye called masters (kathēgētēs); for one is your master 9kathēgētēs), Christ." (Matthew 23:8-10).Jesus didn't teach to have a clergy (Don't say "father" ...
minister means serve.Jesus grew up in liturgical world administered by the clergy of the day, and never sought to dismantle it – rather he challenged institutional hypocrisy.
In founding His church (cf Matthew 16:18) clearly established a need to minister to the community. The New Testament authorises presbyters, deacons and, arguably, bishops.
Supposing it is authentic, it's not meant to create an earthly institution for forgiveness.When Jesus appeared to the Disciples after His Resurrection, He says "Peace be to you. As the Father hath sent me, I also send you. When he had said this, he breathed on them; and he said to them: Receive ye the Holy Ghost." (John 20:21-22) and furthermore says "Whose sins you shall forgive, they are forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are retained." (v23).
Minister reconciliation - help people to forgive and to repent.St Paul in 2 Corinthians 5:18–23 that the same God “who through Christ reconciled us to himself” is also the one who “gave us the ministry of reconciliation”.
We already discussed that pointBaptism is not disputed.
Regarding the Eucharist – The Catholic Church sees in the command “Do this in remembrance of me” evidence that Jesus instituted the apostles as a ministerial priesthood. Offering sacrifice is a duty that belongs to priests (cf Leviticus 9:7, 14:12; Hebrews 8:3). Furthermore, they are priestly actions because He was offering bread and wine as Melchizedek did (cf. Genesis 14:17–20) and Hebrews makes it abundantly clear that Jesus is a priest in the line of Melchizedek.
So if it could be shown that Jesus is commanding the apostles to offer the Last Supper as a sacrifice when he says “Do this in remembrance of me,” then the Catholic Church’s position would be justified.
In the language of the New Testament, Jesus' command 'Do this' in the Greek is the verb poieo, which can be translated as 'offer' – in the sense of offering a sacrifice. (Cf Exodus 29:36-41 in the Septuagint poieo is used five times in reference to Moses offering sacrifice as part of the ritual for ordaining Aaron and his sons as priests.
This conclusion is further supported by the use of the word “remembrance,” (Gk: anamnesis. Anamnesis has sacrificial meaning in both the Old and New Testaments: Numbers 10:10 the sacrificial offerings “serve you for remembrance (anamnesis) before your God.” Anamnesis is also used in Hebrews 10:3 in reference to the Old Testament sacrifices that serve as a “reminder” year after year.
His speech is directed to his disciples."But be not you called Rabbi (Gk: rabbi from the Hebrew, meaning 'elder' or 'master' ). For one is your master (Gk: kathēgētēs 'guide, master, teacher'); and all you are brethren. And call none your father (Gk: pater) upon earth; for one is your father (pater), who is in heaven. Neither be ye called masters (kathēgētēs); for one is your master 9kathēgētēs), Christ." (Matthew 23:8-10).
The context here was Jesus criticising the Pharisees for placing burdens upon the community which they neither shouldered themselves not offered assistance.
"Mister" is a remains of feudalism, which is not really a Christian thing.Taken literally, this text forbids the use of the clerical title of 'Father' for the clergy (a fundamentalist could argue against the use of the term father for a biological parent). Without going to such extremes, it is possible to argue that the spirit of the text precludes the use of 'mister' (master), 'reverend' or, indeed, 'imam' (for example) in the Islamic world.
But is he right in this? Maybe he felt to old to call himself brother (which he also did occasionally).Yet 'father' is used for people other than God, and in 1 Corinthians 4:14-15 "I write not these things to shame you, but as my beloved sons I warn you. For though ye have ten thousand instructors in Christ, yet have ye not many fathers (pater) : for in Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the gospel." Paul explicitly calls himself a 'father' in relation to a congregation.
In the Latin world, the term 'father' as a form of address for priests is recent. I think in the Early Church, it was applied only to bishops. Of course we study the 'Church Fathers' (patristics), although the Aramaic 'abba' is used as a term of address in the Desert Fathers. The term for priest was 'presbyter', meaning 'elder'.
The term 'father' has its origins in the monastic world. The head of a monastery was an 'abbot', the father of the community. Abbots were almost always ordained priests, and people referred to the monastics in general as 'the fathers'.
By the 18th century in Europe only the priests under monastic vows were called 'father'. With the abolition of the Catholic hierarchy by the Reformers, Catholic priest missionaries were all monastics – it was about this time that 'father' came to be applied to all Catholic priests.
For us, it is.Supposing it is authentic, it's not meant to create an earthly institution for forgiveness.
Much the same. Genuine contrition is a pre-requisite of the validity of reconciliation.For us, there are three who need to forgive the trespasser