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#1
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Re: Catholic v. Christian
[ QUOTE ]
It all starts with being born again. Catholics and many Christian denominations differ from true Christians in how this is accomplished. Catholics believe priest-baptized infants are born again. This is false. Any religion that baptizes infants and declares them born again is false. [/ QUOTE ] Why don't you google for "Didache", also known as the Teaching of the Twelve Apostles, which was written in the 100s but only rediscovered in the mid 1800s. It is a primer for early christian converts to be baptized and gives the best synopsis of christian moral teachings I have ever seen. But check toward the end of it where it discusses forms of baptism. The very early christians did not believe and practice like you, whose doctrine can only be traced to the 1500s. |
#2
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Re: Catholic v. Christian
[ QUOTE ]
The very early christians did not believe and practice like you, whose doctrine can only be traced to the 1500s. [/ QUOTE ] You know what I believe and practice from 2 paragraphs on a message board? [ QUOTE ] Why don't you google for "Didache", also known as the Teaching of the Twelve Apostles.... [/ QUOTE ] Thank you, but I will pass. I have gone past the 'what I believe' drudgery (where so many just stop and stay and fiddle around) and gone on to enjoy the wonders of the 'Whom I believe' life. In things spiritual, he who has the experience is never at the mercy of he who has an argument. |
#3
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Re: Catholic v. Christian
Yes from your two paragraphs I could easily deduce that you are a fundamentalist christian. And regarding the last comment in your reply, ignorance for you is obviously bliss and avoids any pesky questioning not of faith in Christ, but in the particular brand of christianity you believe in. It sure is nice isn't to feel so smug about johnny-come-lately denominational views when the majority of Christians living now or that have ever lived in the past 2000 years have been members of the Catholic Church.
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#4
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Re: Catholic v. Christian
[ QUOTE ]
Yes from your two paragraphs I could easily deduce that you are a fundamentalist christian. [/ QUOTE ] Well sir, then you deduced wrongly. [ QUOTE ] And regarding the last comment in your reply, ignorance for you is obviously bliss and avoids any pesky questioning not of faith in Christ, but in the particular brand of christianity you believe in. [/ QUOTE ] Religionists believe in differing doctrines, particular brands of christianity. My faith is in a Person. And He is who is worthy of being followed, not the doctrines of men. I was a baptized in a Catholic church, but I wasn't born again until I was an adult. That is my experience. At one point the Holy Spirit was outside of me. And when I was born again He is in me. That is my experience. And that experience lines up with scripture. Any argument pointing to a Didache or this that or the other is futile to the man who has experienced what God says man will experience when you become his child. |
#5
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Re: Catholic v. Christian
And a logical extension of your feelings and beliefs is that we catholics who have experienced only infant baptism cannot have that same feeling and belief of having the indwelling of the Holy Spirit or of being a child of God without that adult baptism you had. You are very wrong on this.
And your refusal to examine doctrinal claims because of your present feelings and beliefs is just following the admonitions of less well educated preachers in your own denomination because they know that the beliefs of that denomination not only cannot stand the light of the experience and beliefs of the Body of Christ through time, but also not even the Bible properly interpreted by an authentic interpreter. And how very lucky you were to stumble onto the correct protestant denomination out of so many denominations with differing beliefs. Congratulations. |
#6
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Re: Catholic v. Christian
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In things spiritual, he who has the experience is never at the mercy of he who has an argument. [/ QUOTE ] He said, as he argued about spirituality. |
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