It should be obvious that I do not consider it hairsplitting, which
would seem to imply that the contrasts I point out are unimportant.
That said, I am not trying to control this conversation, but at the
same time I am not about to compromise on what I believe to be of key
importance.
That said, let me make it clear to you that I do also respect you, and
accept you as a sincere seeker of the truth of Christ. I believe that
in God's perfect timing for you, you will find it in all its
completeness. I understand that it is more difficult for you because
of the indoctrination you have received. I am not trying to be
condescending here, I am simply stating the truth as I see it, and as
far as I know it.
Maybe we should start again, and lay some groundwork, to see what we
agree on first, rather than beginning with our disagreements.
I have expressed the belief on this group, also expressed in the
popular song by John Lennon, that "All you need is love." Scripture
says, "God is Love." I think this is of key importance, and I hope
you know that I love you as a fellow Christian and respect your walk
with Christ, and I understand that it is your walk with Him, and He is
perfectly capable of showing you the fullness of truth without any
assistance from me.
I think we both agree on certain things, like the doctrine that God is
Love. It seems we both believe in God and in Jesus Christ His only
Son, and in the Holy Catholic Church. We have so far disagreed on the
exact identity of that Church, but not, I think, on the principle that
God's Church does in fact exist in the world today. We both, it
seems, consider ourselves members of that One Church. I don't know
whether you consider me a member of her, or whether, on the other
hand, you consider me an apostate because I am a "papist" or a
"romanist." For my part, I will say that I consider you a sister in
the One Church, though I view your communion with that Church as
imperfect at present.
Obviously, and statedly, I believe that the One Church subsists in the
Roman Catholic Church, a visible Body tracing its lineage with
uninterrupted historical continuity right back to the Apostles and to
Christ. It seems we disagree on this point, and right now I do not
intend to address this point, because there is much groundwork to be
laid before we get so far. One does not move a tree by pushing on its
branches, in order to move a tree one must dig to its roots. So
before we can hope to agree on anything, we need to understand each
other better, and I am willing to extend whatever effort is required
in order to do that.
That said, I want to reiterate that I do not consider these issues
superficial at all, so I object to the charge of hairsplitting. We
both believe that God in fact gave us an Incarnation in Jesus Christ.
You would not, I think, consider it hairsplitting if I were to insist
that the Incarnation is actually Jesus of Nazareth, and not, for
example, Judas Maccabeus. Judas Maccabeus was a Messianic figure in
Jewish history, but not the Messiah and Savior of the world. Judas
Maccabeus was a human creature; Jesus Christ is the Word made Flesh.
Jesus said, "except ye be converted and become as little children, you
shall not enter the Kingdom of Heaven." (Matthew 18:3) A little child
is open and trusting, not suspicious and sophisticated. If to find
the Kingdom of Heaven requires one to be clever, then it would seem
Jesus was inaccurate when He said we must become as little children.
I do not believe Jesus was inaccurate; hence I do not believe that to
find the Kingdom requires us to be clever or suspicious. But some of
the things you have said in the past seem to imply that it does so
require, and if you will, I would like you to examine yourself to see
whether it is so.
The beauty of a discussion group like this one is that neither of us
is going away anywhere, we have plenty of time to discuss these things
rationally, we need not call each other names or start a quarrel or
any kind. I apologize if we got off on the wrong foot. Let us try to
repair that if we can. Perhaps we will not be able to agree, but if
that is the case, I'd like to know that by experience rather than just
assume it.
On Nov 18, 12:59 am, Michele Gennette <
xnun2...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> I'l laddrewss your disappointing hairsplitting later, and NOT on your terms.
>
> xnun
>
> --- On Tue, 11/17/09, Joe <
thelemiccatho...@gmail.com> wrote:
> To unsubscribe from this group, send email to
a-civil-religious-...@googlegroups.com.