Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

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  • Philpwnsyou
    FFR Player
    • Apr 2007
    • 41

    #106
    Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

    God did not create a wicked creature in opposition to himself. Rather, one of the angelic “sons of God” developed a selfish desire to seize for himself the worship rightfully belonging to God. (Job 38:7; James 1:14, 15) This desire led him to embark on a course of rebellion against God. By rebelling, this spirit creature made himself Satan (meaning “resister”) and Devil (meaning “slanderer”).

    God's intelligent creatures are given the option as to whether or not they will serve him, in this case we know what happened.

    Comment

    • devonin
      Very Grave Indeed
      Event Staff
      FFR Simfile Author
      • Apr 2004
      • 10120

      #107
      Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

      Though I will say, Lucifer had a pretty strong point as far as "reasons to be pissed off" goes. But that's a seperate discussion entirely.

      Comment

      • Grandiagod
        FFR Player
        • Jul 2004
        • 6122

        #108
        Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

        Originally posted by Philpwnsyou
        God did not create a wicked creature in opposition to himself. Rather, one of the angelic “sons of God” developed a selfish desire to seize for himself the worship rightfully belonging to God. (Job 38:7; James 1:14, 15) This desire led him to embark on a course of rebellion against God. By rebelling, this spirit creature made himself Satan (meaning “resister”) and Devil (meaning “slanderer”).
        Considering that God is omnipotent he DID create a wicked creature in opposition to himself.

        He knew what would happen, he had the power to stop it or the power to never let it happen. But he decided to create it. Pretty much just to mess with us.
        He who angers you conquers you. ~Elizabeth Kenny

        Comment

        • super kid
          FFR Player
          • Nov 2006
          • 1359

          #109
          Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

          The pope is a weiner for saying that.
          Originally posted by KgZ
          next time instead of trying to talk to the girl acting like a sketchball just whip your dick and stick it in her mouth; dont even say anything

          Comment

          • purebloodtexan
            FFR Player
            • Oct 2006
            • 2845

            #110
            Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

            Originally posted by super kid
            The pope is a weiner for saying that.
            *Sigh* I don't have anything fancy to say, so I'll just keep it simple:

            Type intelligently or GTFO.


            Comment

            • Sir_Thomas
              FFR Veteran
              • Oct 2005
              • 848

              #111
              Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

              By the way. The Pop also said he believes Evolution is cool and it can coexist with the church.

              Comment

              • Philpwnsyou
                FFR Player
                • Apr 2007
                • 41

                #112
                Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                Originally posted by Grandiagod
                Considering that God is omnipotent he DID create a wicked creature in opposition to himself.

                He knew what would happen, he had the power to stop it or the power to never let it happen. But he decided to create it. Pretty much just to mess with us.
                To understand the matter of foreknowledge and foreordination as relating to God, certain factors necessarily must be recognized.

                One factor to be considered is the free moral agency of God’s intelligent creatures. The Scriptures show that God extends to such creatures the privilege and responsibility of free choice, of exercising free moral agency (De 30:19, 20; Jos 24:15), thereby making them accountable for their acts. (Ge 2:16, 17; 3:11-19; Ro 14:10-12; Heb 4:13) They are thus not mere automatons, or robots. Man could not truly have been created in “God’s image” if he were not a free moral agent. (Ge 1:26, 27) Logically, there should be no conflict between God’s foreknowledge (as well as his foreordaining) and the free moral agency of his intelligent creatures

                A second factor that must be considered, one sometimes overlooked, is that of God’s moral standards and qualities, including his justice, honesty, impartiality, love, mercy, and kindness. Any understanding of God’s use of the powers of foreknowledge and foreordination must therefore harmonize with not only some of these factors but with all of them. Clearly, whatever God foreknows must inevitably come to pass, so that God is able to call “things that are not as though they were.”—Ro 4:17.

                The question then arises: Is his exercise of foreknowledge infinite, without limit? Does he foresee and foreknow all future actions of all his creatures, spirit and human? And does he foreordain such actions or even predestinate what shall be the final destiny of all his creatures, even doing so before they have come into existence?

                Or, is God’s exercise of foreknowledge selective and discretionary, so that whatever he chooses to foresee and foreknow, he does, but what he does not choose to foresee or foreknow, he does not? And, instead of preceding their existence, does God’s determination of his creatures’ eternal destiny await his judgment of their course of life and of their proved attitude under test? The answers to these questions must necessarily come from the Scriptures themselves and the information they provide concerning God’s actions and dealings with his creatures, including what has been revealed through his Son, Christ Jesus.—1Co 2:16.

                The view that God’s exercise of his foreknowledge is infinite and that he does foreordain the course and destiny of all individuals is known as predestinarianism. Its advocates reason that God’s divinity and perfection require that he be omniscient (all-knowing), not only respecting the past and present but also regarding the future. According to this concept, for him not to foreknow all matters in their minutest detail would evidence imperfection. Examples such as the case of Isaac’s twin sons, Esau and Jacob, are presented as evidence of God’s foreordaining creatures before their birth (Ro 9:10-13); and texts such as Ephesians 1:4, 5 are cited as evidence that God foreknew and foreordained the future of all his creatures even before the start of creation.

                To be correct, this view would, of course, have to harmonize with all the factors previously mentioned, including the Scriptural presentation of God’s qualities, standards, and purposes, as well as his righteous ways in dealing with his creatures. (Re 15:3, 4) We may properly consider, then, the implications of such a predestinarian view.

                This concept would mean that, prior to creating angels or earthling man, God exercised his powers of foreknowledge and foresaw and foreknew all that would result from such creation, including the rebellion of one of his spirit sons, the subsequent rebellion of the first human pair in Eden (Ge 3:1-6; Joh 8:44), and all the bad consequences of such rebellion down to and beyond this present day. This would necessarily mean that all the wickedness that history has recorded (the crime and immorality, oppression and resultant suffering, lying and hypocrisy, false worship and idolatry) once existed, before creation’s beginning, only in the mind of God, in the form of his foreknowledge of the future in all of its minutest details.

                If the Creator of mankind had indeed exercised his power to foreknow all that history has seen since man’s creation, then the full weight of all the wickedness thereafter resulting was deliberately set in motion by God when he spoke the words: “Let us make man.” (Ge 1:26) These facts bring into question the reasonableness and consistency of the predestinarian concept; particularly so, since the disciple James shows that disorder and other vile things do not originate from God’s heavenly presence but are “earthly, animal, demonic” in source.—Jas 3:14-18.

                Comment

                • devonin
                  Very Grave Indeed
                  Event Staff
                  FFR Simfile Author
                  • Apr 2004
                  • 10120

                  #113
                  Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                  Originally posted by Grandiagod
                  Considering that God is omnipotent he DID create a wicked creature in opposition to himself.

                  He knew what would happen, he had the power to stop it or the power to never let it happen. But he decided to create it. Pretty much just to mess with us.
                  Satan and God are not opposites. Satan and Archangel Michael are opposites, and both under God in terms of power.

                  Comment

                  • omgwtfToph
                    FFR Music Producers
                    FFR Music Producer
                    • Aug 2004
                    • 198

                    #114
                    Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                    Current pope is a douche and is missing the point of christianity if he really called other churches fake.

                    The bible defines "the church" as not a building or organization (i.e. denomination) but people who serve Christ. The Catholic church is IMO too filled with ritualistic fluff and I think that gets in the way a lot. Actually, I think that of pretty much all religion since 95% of "religious" people are just going through the motions, they don't have any real deep contact with God.

                    See, if all "religious" people did what they were supposed to, holy war wouldn't exist. I don't think I need to explain myself on this one, but "holy war" is a stupid misunderstanding between retarded sheep who think that historical "religious" disputes and differences in scripture override the overarching message of love.

                    Pope is missing that point.
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                    Comment

                    • Relambrien
                      FFR Player
                      • Dec 2006
                      • 1644

                      #115
                      Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                      Originally posted by omgwtfToph
                      Current pope is a douche and is missing the point of christianity if he really called other churches fake.

                      The bible defines "the church" as not a building or organization (i.e. denomination) but people who serve Christ. The Catholic church is IMO too filled with ritualistic fluff and I think that gets in the way a lot. Actually, I think that of pretty much all religion since 95% of "religious" people are just going through the motions, they don't have any real deep contact with God.

                      See, if all "religious" people did what they were supposed to, holy war wouldn't exist. I don't think I need to explain myself on this one, but "holy war" is a stupid misunderstanding between retarded sheep who think that historical "religious" disputes and differences in scripture override the overarching message of love.

                      Pope is missing that point.
                      Did you even read the thread?

                      It's been agreed upon that it was not the Pope who called the other churches "defective," but rather something was literally lost in translation and construed as such. Something about how the other churches were "missing an integral part" and therefore "cannot be called Churches in the proper sense," or something like that.

                      I'll go find it for you now.

                      EDIT: Here we are.

                      Originally posted by Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
                      FIFTH QUESTION
                      Why do the texts of the Council and those of the Magisterium since the Council not use the title of “Church” with regard to those Christian Communities born out of the Reformation of the sixteenth century?

                      RESPONSE

                      According to Catholic doctrine, these Communities do not enjoy apostolic succession in the sacrament of Orders, and are, therefore, deprived of a constitutive element of the Church. These ecclesial Communities which, specifically because of the absence of the sacramental priesthood, have not preserved the genuine and integral substance of the Eucharistic Mystery[19] cannot, according to Catholic doctrine, be called “Churches” in the proper sense[20].
                      There you go. Because these churches follow different practices, Catholics cannot call them as such.
                      Last edited by Relambrien; 08-4-2007, 11:01 AM.

                      Comment

                      • GuidoHunter
                        is against custom titles
                        • Oct 2003
                        • 7371

                        #116
                        Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                        Originally posted by omgwtfToph
                        The bible defines "the church" as not a building or organization (i.e. denomination) but people who serve Christ.
                        The Bible defines "the church" as a visible entity, something in which others can see the unity of all brothers under Christ.

                        The invisible umbrella of all those who call themselves Christians does NOT fit that description, especially the part about the visible unity.

                        The Catholic church is IMO too filled with ritualistic fluff and I think that gets in the way a lot.
                        All that "ritualistic fluff" carries deep spiritual meaning and is one of the things I find the most beautiful about the Catholic Church. Absolutely everything we do is meaningful, and understanding the meaning in the smallest things we do in mass and everywhere else really helps people to better understand their faith and connect more with God.

                        --Guido


                        Originally posted by Grandiagod
                        Originally posted by Grandiagod
                        She has an asshole, in other pics you can see a diaper taped to her dead twin's back.
                        Sentences I thought I never would have to type.

                        Comment

                        • jewpinthethird
                          (The Fat's Sabobah)
                          FFR Music Producer
                          • Nov 2002
                          • 11711

                          #117
                          Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                          Aren't there three churches in the Catholic faith? Or something like that? I remember the comparison of all of mankind representing the body, Catholics as the heart, and the divine world as the spirit...a sort of Unity of all people of sorts.

                          Do I fabricate this? Or is it on the right track to being true?

                          Comment

                          • GuidoHunter
                            is against custom titles
                            • Oct 2003
                            • 7371

                            #118
                            Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                            Nope, completely fabricated.

                            Jesus is the head, and the Church is his body, if you're thinking of that reference.

                            --Guido


                            Originally posted by Grandiagod
                            Originally posted by Grandiagod
                            She has an asshole, in other pics you can see a diaper taped to her dead twin's back.
                            Sentences I thought I never would have to type.

                            Comment

                            • jewpinthethird
                              (The Fat's Sabobah)
                              FFR Music Producer
                              • Nov 2002
                              • 11711

                              #119
                              Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                              Originally posted by GuidoHunter
                              Nope, completely fabricated.

                              Jesus is the head, and the Church is his body, if you're thinking of that reference.

                              --Guido

                              http://andy.mikee385.com
                              Maybe. Mine sounds cooler. I'm calling my church Jesus Ninja Commando Team. I am infallible now.

                              Comment

                              • omgwtfToph
                                FFR Music Producers
                                FFR Music Producer
                                • Aug 2004
                                • 198

                                #120
                                Re: Pope said other churches are "defective", is he right?

                                Originally posted by Relambrien
                                Did you even read the thread?
                                nope, too lazy and didn't care enough

                                also: k gotcha
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                                Comment

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