I’d consider it a guide or roadmap for Christians given by God.Why was the law given? What is its purpose?
I’d consider it a guide or roadmap for Christians given by God.Why was the law given? What is its purpose?
You are right: it is guide - to bring us to Christ. After that, we are not under that guide:I’d consider it a guide or roadmap for Christians given by God.
Rom 3:20 Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight: for by the law is the knowledge of sin.I’d consider it [the law] a guide or roadmap for Christians given by God.
Y'all need to get some new lines. That "you don't understand" crap is for the birds.Then you know little to nothing about Catholic doctrine…..or Calvinism.
I edit this post to add…or the Reformation.
I agree!Neither
They teach a work based, idolatry laden type of gospel, but NOT the GOSPEL of JESUS CHRIST.My experience with Catholics is they teach the same. How do they not preach the gospel? They aren’t teaching from the Koran.
Joe obviously you just don’t understand this issue.Y'all need to get some new lines. That "you don't understand" crap is for the birds.![]()
@Ransom - The baptism thing is confusing to me. I’ve always been taught that it’s a public expression of faith, and baptism alone will not save a person. The Catholic Church seems to indicate baptism is not a good work, but when it comes to salvation, it seems a slippery slope as to whether it’s required or not. I’ve read a person not baptized but desiring baptism is acceptable, as is martyrdom.
Assurance of salvation, the reasoning for following the law, confession to man, clerical celibacy, etc., are all items that I’d be uncomfortable with at this point in time.
Yes, I’d think it’s obligatory to keep the Ten Commandments regardless of Catholic or Protestant.
Excellent article from a trustworthy source.![]()
Are Catholics saved? | GotQuestions.org
Are Catholics saved? Do Catholics go to heaven? If a person adheres to Roman Catholic beliefs and practices, is he/she saved?www.gotquestions.org
Nope. Catholicism is a corruption of the Faith. Always has been. Claims that Peter was the first Pope don't hold any truth. If you read how Peter, Paul, James and Jude confronted false teachings in each of their epistles, you'll see there is no way they would have been Catholic. I don't know how the faithful remnant resisted Catholic dogma but I believe if God can tell Elijah that He had preserved for Himself 7,000 in Israel who had not bowed the knee to baal, I believe He was perfectly capable of preserving a faithful remnant who stood up to the Catholic Church during the time that history tells us Catholicism was the only "Christian" church.Don’t we all agree that our ancestry is Catholic?
Are you suggesting that the garden variety of Protestant denominations did not come from the Catholic Church? Martin Luther was excommunicated and began Lutheranism in the 1500s. The other denominations spun off from there.Nope. Catholicism is a corruption of the Faith. Always has been. Claims that Peter was the first Pope don't hold any truth. If you read how Peter, Paul, James and Jude confronted false teachings in each of their epistles, you'll see there is no way they would have been Catholic. I don't know how the faithful remnant resisted Catholic dogma but I believe if God can tell Elijah that He had preserved for Himself 7,000 in Israel who had not bowed the knee to baal, I believe He was perfectly capable of preserving a faithful remnant who stood up to the Catholic Church during the time that history tells us Catholicism was the only "Christian" church.
I am suggesting that there has always been a remnant. The faithful did not cease to exist after the Catholic Church came into being then came back into play with the Protestant Reformation.Are you suggesting that the garden variety of Protestant denominations did not come from the Catholic Church? Martin Luther was excommunicated and began Lutheranism in the 1500s. The other denominations spun off from there.
Yes, I forgot about the Eastern Orthodox Church, and it is pre-Luther. But I still read it split from the Catholic Church in the Great Schism of 1054.I am suggesting that there has always been a remnant. The faithful did not cease to exist after the Catholic Church came into being then came back into play with the Protestant Reformation.
I also understand the context is interpreted differently by the Catholics.
But I do think about the fact that Martin Luther, who initiated the Protestant Reformation, and prior to his Ninety-Five Theses, was in fact a Catholic priest. Don’t we all agree that our ancestry is Catholic?
I'm not talking about denominations of any kind. The faithful remnant have been around through the centuries. Some may have gravitated to the groups that split from the RCC but the splinter groups don't necessarily account for all of the remnant believers. Again, I don't know how the remnant faithful stood up to Catholic dogma but they've been around since the first false teachings.Yes, I forgot about the Eastern Orthodox Church, and it is pre-Luther. But I still read it split from the Catholic Church in the Great Schism of 1054.