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Offline Nishant

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« Reply #120 on: June 28, 2013, 11:05:23 AM »
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  • Now I know you don't even read posts before you reply. Go back and read the post, I answered the questions you asked.

    Offline Stubborn

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    « Reply #121 on: June 28, 2013, 12:51:59 PM »
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  • Quote from: Nishant
    Now I know you don't even read posts before you reply. Go back and read the post, I answered the questions you asked.


    I am sorry, I stand corrected.
    You did say that "I attended an SSPX chapel" - to which I ask, WHY?

    Whoever waters down or denies the dogma makes Catholicity hardly more than a nicety, as if membership in the Church were like the first-class compartment on a commercial airliner, in which the majority of others will arrive at the same destination, really none the worse for their second-class transport.



    You did not answer the question because you did not quote from the catechism which came directly from Trent:

    You said: I also answered that question you keep repeating about Trent's catechism earlier, go back and see, with the words, "Exactly, for adults, the danger present for infants if they die is not there, because it is certain that desire will avail for adults in that case, which therefore no man may ever lawfully call into question, without being offensive to the Church" to which you didn't answer. If that teaching of the Catechism of Trent is false, the martyrs and catechumens who have gone to their death believing it, have been lost for all eternity because of the Church, which is heretical to assert, and which destroys the Church.


    FYI, you did not post the catechism from Trent because here is the section, CORRECTLY copied - so try again and Please post it's teachings on a BOD or how a BOD is salvic or how the unforeseen accident + BOD = salvation (Note: if you read what is written, you will be faced with the fact that they teach something completely contrary to a BOD)



    On adults, however, the Church has not been accustomed to confer the Sacrament of Baptism at once, but has ordained that it be deferred for a certain time. The delay is not attended with the same danger as in the case of infants, which we have already mentioned; should any unforeseen accident make it impossible for adults to be washed in the salutary waters, their intention and determination to receive Baptism and their repentance for past sins, will avail them to grace and righteousness.

    Nay, this delay seems to be attended with some advantages. And first, since the Church must take particular care that none approach this Sacrament through hypocrisy and dissimulation, the intentions of such as seek Baptism, are better examined and ascertained. Hence it is that we read in the decrees of ancient Councils that Jєωιѕн converts to the Catholic faith, before admission to Baptism, should spend some months in the ranks of the catechumens.
    Furthermore, the candidate for Baptism is thus better instructed in the doctrine of the faith which he is to profess, and in the practices of the Christian life. Finally, when Baptism is administered to adults with solemn ceremonies on the appointed days of Easter and Pentecost only greater religious reverence is shown to the Sacrament.


    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse


    Offline Isaac Jogues

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    « Reply #122 on: June 28, 2013, 10:02:47 PM »
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  • Quote
    St. Gregory nαzιanz, 381 AD: “Of those who fail to be baptized some are utterly animal and bestial, according to whether they are foolish or wicked.  This, I think, they must add to their other sins, that they have no reverence for this gift, but regard it as any other gift, to be accepted if given them, or neglected if not given them.  Others know and honor the gift; but they delay, some out of carelessness, some because of insatiable desire.  Still others are not able to receive it, perhaps because of infancy, or some perfectly involuntary circuмstance which prevents them from receiving the gift, even if they desire it…

         “If you were able to judge a man who intends to commit murder, solely by his intention and without any act of murder, then you could likewise reckon as baptized one who desired Baptism, without having received Baptism.  But, since you cannot do the former, how can you do the latter?  I cannot see it.  If you prefer, we will put it like this: if in your opinion desire has equal power with actual Baptism, then make the same judgment in regard to glory.  You will then be satisfied to long for glory, as if that longing itself were glory.  Do you suffer any damage by not attaining the actual glory, as long as you have a desire for it?”


    I guess Nishant disagrees with St. Gregory. And

    Quote


    St. John Chrysostom, The Consolation of Death: “And plainly must we grieve for our own catechumens, should they, either through their own unbelief or through their own neglect, depart this life without the saving grace of baptism.”


    I guess Nishant doesn't agree that all the saints and martyrs who endured some of the most horrid tortures and death was necessary. When they did all they could to Baptize people before the people died because the saints believed these people would go to hell. I guess all their sufferings were in vain.
    Ecclesiasticus 5:8-9 "8 Delay not to be converted to the Lord, and defer it not from day to day.
    9 For his wrath shall come on a sudden, and in the time of vengeance he will destroy thee."

    Offline SJB

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    « Reply #123 on: June 29, 2013, 07:22:07 AM »
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  • Quote from: Stubborn
    Quote from: SJB
    Quote
    All it takes in one Pope to make a solemn pronouncement, after that we have no choice, we are bound to believe what has been pronounced - without exception. There is no 3 baptisms no matter how many catechisms say there is.

    Of course it has never occurred to you that if nobody else has noticed this ... then maybe you really haven't noticed it either.


    All the souls in heaven noticed it - that much is guaranteed.
    All the Catholics before Cushing noticed it - since it was, after all, the only teaching of the Church that is easily traced from the time of the Apostles  that 100%  all saints and theologians and fathers and doctors of the Church taught that there was only one baptism - read Eph 4:5 - this makes the teaching of one baptism universally common and constant - and defined infallibly.

    No, you have shown NO EVIDENCE that anybody ever noticed or commented on this "grave error." You can't seem to grasp the enormity of your lonely opinion.


     
    Quote
    Quote from: SJB
    Quote
    You preach a strange "rule of faith" when any one of any faith can slide into heaven via the road of good intentions.

    Without true supernatural faith nobody is saved. Your comment about "sliding into heaven" is strange and reminds me of the parable of the workers in the vineyard.


    The workers in the vineyard labored, all preformed the same labor under the same owner - your attempt at using the parable for justification of rewarding infidels, who explicitly reject to labor at all, the same reward as Catholics is futile.

    They didn't perform the same labor. Some labored all day; some just a small fraction of a day.
    It would be comparatively easy for us to be holy if only we could always see the character of our neighbours either in soft shade or with the kindly deceits of moonlight upon them. Of course, we are not to grow blind to evil

    Offline Stubborn

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    « Reply #124 on: June 29, 2013, 09:45:31 AM »
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  • Quote from: SJB

    No, you have shown NO EVIDENCE that anybody ever noticed or commented on this "grave error." You can't seem to grasp the enormity of your lonely opinion.


    Why is it that you think the dogma, worded the way it was worded, was declared anyway - because the popes and councils had nothing better to do that day?

    Trent said:"As it is written...[John 3:5]"
    Trent did not say: Interpret what is written....[John 3:5]
    Trent did not say: "Disregard what is written or ignore the words of Our Lord for He knew not what He said...[John 3:5]"

    Trent did not say a lot of things that they deemed unnecessary to say, so when Trent said "As it is written...[John 3:5] , that is what they meant. John 3:5 is to be understood "as it is written" - no implicit or hidden meaning - and no exceptions. "As it is written" means to read what is written, literally.
    Why this is impossible for BODers to accept is beyond me.

    Why do you not accept as reasonable fact, that the Pontiffs who pronounced these decrees were perfectly literate and fully cognizant of what they were saying?
    And that if there were any need to soften or qualify their meanings, why do you not believe that they were quite capable of doing so?
    Why do you think that they were not regarded as heretics or fanatics at the time of their pronouncements, and have never been labelled such by the Church, even to this very day?


     
    Quote from: SJB

    They didn't perform the same labor. Some labored all day; some just a small fraction of a day.


    The jist is, they *all* labored. They *all* performed the same job for the same owner.

    You try to use *that* to justify salvation for infidels, who have no owner and explicitly refuse to do any labor at all, with Catholics who must persevere in their labor for God.

    If the parable was told as you want to make it out in order to fit your ideas, then the guy standing on the corner all day would be paid the same pay as those who labored in the vineyard all day.

    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse


    Offline Nishant

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    « Reply #125 on: June 30, 2013, 09:02:01 AM »
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  • Stubborn, in the impossible chance that you do not know, I will remind you that the SSPX teaches and has always taught baptism of desire and publicly reproved Feeneyism as an error and a misunderstanding, at best. So your question to me on that point is meaningless. You should ask yourself why +ABL and almost all traditional priests today reject your opinion as false. Since you won't submit to Magisterial authority from the past, you might at least submit to moral authorities such as traditional priests and Bishops in the present, perhaps? But you probably won't do that either.

    I already answered your questions, but you don't read properly when you answer, you see only what you want to see and ignore the rest.

    I. Trent's Catechism - yes, I quoted it in the first response, I'm not going to quote it every time, we both know what it says - reasons in this way when it explains why there is no danger in adult catechumens being baptized after some delay.

    1. For infants, the danger of them dying and being lost is present
    2. For adults, this same danger is not present at all
    3. This is because desire will avail them to grace in that situation

    So you are wrong on that as well, the context clearly shows it is speaking of adults whom death overtakes unforeseen to them. In this line of reasoning too, Trent follows almost verbatim here the reasoning and the answer of the Angelic Doctor on this point.

    II. Just like God is Triune, baptism too is in a sense triune. This is how the Apostle writes, which also refers to the threefold means of baptism.
    Quote from: 1 John 5:7
    "And there are three that give testimony on earth: the spirit, and the water, and the blood: and these three are one."
    The Angelic Doctor also teaches the same thing, the baptism of blood, water and spirit as a threefold means of one baptism.

    Even if you completely reject all this, as you undoubtedly will, at least you should have the very minimal intellectual honesty to concede that this doctrine predates Cushing by millenia. Will you? Probably not.

    Please answer what I ask you first before you attempt to answer what I ask Isaac, in case you haven't noticed, the both of you do not exactly agree entirely, so I ask different questions to you both.

    As for Isaac, I asked you a question you didn't answer on penance.

    III. Do you admit in that case the res sacramenti, the sacramental effect can be obtained by desire perfected by contrition, before the reception of the actual sacrament?

    That it can is the plain teaching of Trent, because a desire for the sacrament is included in such an act of perfect contrition.

    Quote from: Council of Trent
    "it happens sometimes that this contrition is perfect through charity and reconciles man to God before this sacrament is actually received, this reconciliation, nevertheless, is not to be ascribed to the contrition itself without a desire of the sacrament, which desire is included in it"


    A near moral certitude that our sins have been forgiven, which Stubborn mentioned earlier, is one outcome of receiving the actual sacrament, but that is not, strictly speaking, the exact reason we must confess our sins even if we are truly perfectly contrite, as seen in the excerpt above.

    We'll go from there, because it's exactly analogous with catechumens and baptism, and Trent utilises the same word and principle of desire in reference to the sacramental effect of baptism.

    IV. Do you agree that perfect contrition will not avail for one who by contempt or neglect of the sacrament, intends to put off the confession of his sins? Well, the like thing applies to baptism and it is catechumens who do that whom the Fathers are reproving, just like a priest would rebuke penitents who, however much he professes to be contrite, when the sacrament became available, would delay or neglect to receive it.

    Beside this, since individual Fathers can be mistaken, the point is moot - the Pope and the Church quite clearly settled the issue, and not in your favor. Do you believe Pope Innocent III, the same pope who declared there was no salvation outside the Church, was mistaken in the authoritative response he gave regarding baptism of desire, that I cited earlier?

    Offline Stubborn

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    « Reply #126 on: June 30, 2013, 09:24:19 AM »
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  • Quote from: Nishant
    Stubborn, in the impossible chance that you do not know, I will remind you that the SSPX teaches and has always taught baptism of desire and publicly reproved Feeneyism as an error and a misunderstanding, at best. So your question to me on that point is meaningless. You should ask yourself why +ABL and almost all traditional priests today reject your opinion as false. Since you won't submit to Magisterial authority from the past, you might at least submit to moral authorities such as traditional priests and Bishops in the present, perhaps? But you probably won't do that either.


    Why they - or any Catholic for that matter - bother with being persecuted and worrying about the salvation of souls etc. if there is another way to get to heaven would make a good topic for another thread.
     



    Quote from: Nishant

    I already answered your questions, but you don't read properly when you answer, you see only what you want to see and ignore the rest.

    I. Trent's Catechism - yes, I quoted it in the first response, I'm not going to quote it every time, we both know what it says - reasons in this way when it explains why there is no danger in adult catechumens being baptized after some delay.


    No you did not answer using the Catechism that came from Trent. You quoted from one of the catechisms that were revised to include the three baptisms which are non existent in Trent's original catechism. I supplied you with the link for the catechism Trent actually approved, but you did not use it - please answer why you did not use that link?


    Quote from: Nishant

    3. This is because desire will avail them to grace in that situation


    I asked you very specifically to read what was written and to show where the catechism taught that BOD is salvic.............

    1) What does the word "avail" mean?
    2) Since when is "grace" and "salvation" the same thing?
    3) Where is it said the accident caused any adult's "death"?


    No need to proceed further until you reply using the catechism from Trent as your reference.

    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

    Offline Nishant

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    « Reply #127 on: June 30, 2013, 09:53:33 AM »
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  • One thing - I meant to quote 1 Jn 5:7-8 but in fact only quoted the latter verse.

    You just prove again and again that you don't read posts. See page 20, post #4 by me beginning "No, there is no way around" and ending "being offensive to the Church" where the Catechism from Trent is quoted and I gave my first answer.

    You jump to 3 without reading 1 and 2. Do you know what a syllogism is? Each premise in that line of reasoning depends on and follows from the one antecedent to it.

    You asked, "Where is it said the accident caused any adult's "death" - the comparison with infants and the danger present there establishes it beyond a doubt, since the Catechism affirms the same danger - death - present for infants is not present for adults.

    Also, as is typical, you didn't answer or even attempt to answer Pope St. Pius V's pronouncements which touch the subject, despite grave and obstinate Feeneyite denial, since the Pope taught that perfect charity in catechumens does secure the remission of sins, and condemned the opposite error.


    Offline Stubborn

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    « Reply #128 on: June 30, 2013, 10:27:16 AM »
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  • Quote from: Nishant
    One thing - I meant to quote 1 Jn 5:7-8 but in fact only quoted the latter verse.

    You just prove again and again that you don't read posts. See page 20, post #4 by me beginning "No, there is no way around" and ending "being offensive to the Church" where the Catechism from Trent is quoted and I gave my first answer.

    You jump to 3 without reading 1 and 2. Do you know what a syllogism is? Each premise in that line of reasoning depends on and follows from the one antecedent to it.

    You asked, "Where is it said the accident caused any adult's "death" - the comparison with infants and the danger present there establishes it beyond a doubt, since the Catechism affirms the same danger - death - present for infants is not present for adults.

    Also, as is typical, you didn't answer or even attempt to answer Pope St. Pius V's pronouncements which touch the subject, despite grave and obstinate Feeneyite denial, since the Pope taught that perfect charity in catechumens does secure the remission of sins, and condemned the opposite error.


    A syllogism is futile when, as the Catechism certainly is, explicit teaching is used.

    You add exceptions to what is written.

    Trent's catechism does not speak of accidental death rewarding salvation to one who desires baptism - that is your own interpretation because you read what is not written.

    AGAIN.......
    I asked you very specifically to read what was written and to show where the catechism taught that BOD is salvic.............

    1) What does the word "avail" mean?
    2) Since when is "grace" and "salvation" the same thing?
    3) Where is it said the accident caused any adult's "death"?

    To avoid doing that from now on, please read what is written without presuming they forgot to add stuff.

    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

    Offline Stubborn

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    « Reply #129 on: June 30, 2013, 10:30:14 AM »
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  • I asked you very specifically to read what was written and to show where the catechism taught that BOD is salvic.............

    1) What does the word "avail" mean?
    2) Since when is "grace" and "salvation" the same thing?
    3) Where is it said the accident caused any adult's "death"?
    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

    Offline Nishant

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    « Reply #130 on: June 30, 2013, 10:59:04 AM »
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  • Quote
    1) What does the word "avail" mean?


    You really are grasping at straws, aren't you?

    a•vail (əˈveɪl)

    v.t.
    1. to be of use, advantage, or value to; profit: All our efforts availed us little.
    v.i.
    2. to be of use; have force or efficacy; serve; help: Nothing you do will avail.
    3. to be of value or profit.
    n.
    4. effective use in the achievement of a goal or objective; advantage; use: His help was of no avail.
    5. avails, Archaic. profits or proceeds.

    Quote
    2) Since when is "grace" and "salvation" the same thing?


    Since it is a dogmatic truth that all who die in the state of grace are saved.
     
    Quote
    3) Where is it said the accident caused any adult's "death"?


    When it is clearly said that "The delay is not attended with the same danger as in the case of infants which we have already mentioned". What is the danger "which we have already mentioned" - death.

    Quote
    "The faithful are earnestly to be exhorted to take care that their children be brought to the church, as soon as it can be done with safety, to receive solemn Baptism. Since infant children have no other means of salvation except Baptism, we may easily understand how grievously those persons sin who permit them to remain without the grace of the Sacrament longer than necessity may require, particularly at an age so tender as to be exposed to numberless dangers of death."


    Offline Stubborn

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    « Reply #131 on: June 30, 2013, 05:04:36 PM »
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  • Now I know you do not read what has been written for our instruction - rather, you take what has been taught for our instruction and change it to suit your own theory.

    Quote from: Nishant
    Quote
    1) What does the word "avail" mean?


    You really are grasping at straws, aren't you?

    a•vail (əˈveɪl)

    v.t.
    1. to be of use, advantage, or value to; profit: All our efforts availed us little.
    v.i.
    2. to be of use; have force or efficacy; serve; help: Nothing you do will avail.
    3. to be of value or profit.
    n.
    4. effective use in the achievement of a goal or objective; advantage; use: His help was of no avail.
    5. avails, Archaic. profits or proceeds.


    Ok, so now you should understand that "their intention and determination to receive Baptism and their repentance for past sins, will avail them to grace and righteousness............" does not say, imply or otherwise mean that their desire *gives* them grace *and* righteousness - and it certainly does not say that desire rewards them salvation.

    If you cannot agree, then read what is written until you understand what it is they are teaching. This is a catechism, written to be understood literally so as to learn from it - it is not written so whoever chooses too can add new meanings to that which is written.

     





    Quote from: Nishant

    Quote
    2) Since when is "grace" and "salvation" the same thing?


    Since it is a dogmatic truth that all who die in the state of grace are saved.


    The catechism does not say that the desire to be baptized *gives* grace - that is YOU and ONLY you who are saying that. Can't you see that??

    The catechism states "their intention and determination to receive Baptism and their repentance for past sins, will avail them to grace and righteousness"

    "Avail them to grace and righteousness" = put them in the proper disposition to receive the Sacrament.
    This is the same disposition all adults need to have before they are baptized - it in no way shape or form says: "their desire will give them grace and this grace is sufficient for their salvation" - only YOU are saying it says that - but that is NOT what it says - read it until you read what is written and understand what  they wrote without adding your own provizos.






    Quote from: Nishant

    Quote
    3) Where is it said the accident caused any adult's "death"?


    When it is clearly said that "The delay is not attended with the same danger as in the case of infants which we have already mentioned". What is the danger "which we have already mentioned" - death.




    On adults, however, the Church has not been accustomed to confer the Sacrament of Baptism at once, but has ordained that it be deferred for a certain time. The delay is not attended with the same danger as in the case of infants, which we have already mentioned;....

    With infants the Church is concerned because there is always the danger of premature death - but the catechism is telling you that this danger of death is not ordinarily any concern for adults, which is why they are not baptized at once - that's why it states that the danger is not the same danger - in fact, the following paragraph states that the delay for adults is advantageous.

    It continues on.....Nay, this delay seems to be attended with some advantages. And first, since the Church must take particular care that none approach this Sacrament through hypocrisy and dissimulation, the intentions of such as seek Baptism, are better examined and ascertained. Hence it is that we read in the decrees of ancient Councils that Jєωιѕн converts to the Catholic faith, before admission to Baptism, should spend some months in the ranks of the catechumens.
    Furthermore, the candidate for Baptism is thus better instructed in the doctrine of the faith which he is to profess, and in the practices of the Christian life. Finally, when Baptism is administered to adults with solemn ceremonies on the appointed days of Easter and Pentecost only greater religious reverence is shown to the Sacrament.




    The catechism THEN goes on about the "unforeseen emergency" - NOTE that it STILL does not state the desire will reward salvation, but it does explicitly state the sacrament must still be administered:

    In Case Of Necessity Adults May Be: Baptised At Once

    Sometimes, however, when there exists a just and necessary cause, as in the case of imminent danger of death, Baptism is not to be deferred, particularly if the person to be baptised is well instructed in the mysteries of faith. This we find to have been done by Philip, and by the Prince of the Apostles, when without any delay, the one baptised the eunuch of Queen Candace; the other, Cornelius, as soon as they expressed a wish to embrace the faith.[/i]

    This is why I keep telling you that you need to read what is written, if you will do this, you will not be guilty of changing what the catechism is teaching.

    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

    Offline Nishant

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    « Reply #132 on: June 30, 2013, 11:20:05 PM »
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  • Heh. You've descended into semantics and hermeneutics now have you?

    Quote
    "does not say, imply or otherwise mean that their desire *gives* them grace *and* righteousness"


    If the Catechism had said, "gives" them grace, you would have wrested that even more awkwardly than you are doing now.

    Are you a Protestant? Do you believe in "imputed righteousness"? Surely not.

    Avail them to grace and righteousness is the correct way to say it - anyone who knows anything about the Catholic doctrine on justification knows that it is teaching that they attain to the infused justice or righteousness that comes with sanctifying grace.

    Quote
    but the catechism is telling you that this danger of death is not ordinarily any concern for adults, which is why they are not baptized at once - that's why it states that the danger is not the same danger


    No, firstly if there were no extraordinary means of baptism and the Church delayed the baptism of adult catechumens to their damnation, the discipline of the Church would be harmful to souls, which is impious to maintain.

    Secondly, the danger spoken off in the case of infants is departing this life in without the state of grace "since infant children have no other means of salvation than baptism" - but this danger - departing this life in sin and without sanctifying grace - is not present for adults when an accident unforeseen to them "deprives them of baptism".

    Here' a thought experiment to see what it is clearly the catechism is teaching and how it would be understood by those for whom it was meant - why don't we teach hundreds of faithful for hundreds of years in from this catechism and see how they understand it?

    Oh, wait, that was already done, and the results are already in. Every Catholic learned and simple alike, layman and clergy alike, faithful and priests alike, long before Vatican II was dreamt of knew baptism of blood and baptism of desire were Catholic doctrines and had been taught so in their catechism.

    So you will have to come up with a better excuse for ignoring this fact - and also for ignoring the point of Pope St. Pius V's direct condemnation of your error when he that charity in catechumens does secure the remission of sins.

    Offline Stubborn

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    « Reply #133 on: July 01, 2013, 04:12:41 AM »
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  • Quote from: Nishant
    Heh. You've descended into semantics and hermeneutics now have you?

    Quote
    "does not say, imply or otherwise mean that their desire *gives* them grace *and* righteousness"


    If the Catechism had said, "gives" them grace, you would have wrested that even more awkwardly than you are doing now.

    Are you a Protestant? Do you believe in "imputed righteousness"? Surely not.

    Avail them to grace and righteousness is the correct way to say it - anyone who knows anything about the Catholic doctrine on justification knows that it is teaching that they attain to the infused justice or righteousness that comes with sanctifying grace.



    Yes, it is the correct way to say it. That is why they said  "will avail" and not "gives".

    Again, read what is written, without adding your own provisos.


    Quote from: Nishant

    Quote
    but the catechism is telling you that this danger of death is not ordinarily any concern for adults, which is why they are not baptized at once - that's why it states that the danger is not the same danger


    No, firstly if there were no extraordinary means of baptism and the Church delayed the baptism of adult catechumens to their damnation, the discipline of the Church would be harmful to souls, which is impious to maintain.


    You are wrong. I posted the catechism's teaching: Nay, this delay seems to be attended with some advantages. BODers cannot accept this teaching, even though it teaches it explicitly, because it destroys the whole "salvation via accident" theory.

    Quote from: Nishant

    Secondly, the danger spoken off in the case of infants is departing this life in without the state of grace "since infant children have no other means of salvation than baptism" - but this danger - departing this life in sin and without sanctifying grace - is not present for adults when an accident unforeseen to them "deprives them of baptism".


    This is another one of your provizos. You are not reading what is written. The catechism says NOTHING about depriving any adult baptism - only YOU do that. Does not the catechism state that for adults, that baptism is not to be deferred?
    If infants, in all their innocence have no other means for salvation, how is it that you are able to make such a leap to falsely claim that the catechism teaches that adults do?

    You are making the catechism to teach something it does not teach........"In Case Of Necessity Adults May Be: Baptised At Once.... as in the case of imminent danger of death, Baptism is not to be deferred"

    You somehow make: "Baptism is not to be deferred" into "the desire for baptism gives salvation".

    Why do you do that? is spreading error your agenda?


    Quote from: Nishant


    Here' a thought experiment to see what it is clearly the catechism is teaching and how it would be understood by those for whom it was meant - why don't we teach hundreds of faithful for hundreds of years in from this catechism and see how they understand it?

    Oh, wait, that was already done, and the results are already in. Every Catholic learned and simple alike, layman and clergy alike, faithful and priests alike, long before Vatican II was dreamt of knew baptism of blood and baptism of desire were Catholic doctrines and had been taught so in their catechism.

    So you will have to come up with a better excuse for ignoring this fact - and also for ignoring the point of Pope St. Pius V's direct condemnation of your error when he that charity in catechumens does secure the remission of sins.


     :facepalm:

    I asked you specifically to read what was written, but you have proven that you are 100% incapable of doing that.



    "But Peter and the apostles answering, said: We ought to obey God, rather than men." - Acts 5:29

    The Highest Principle in the Church: "We are first of all under obedience to God, and only then under obedience to man" - Fr. Hesse

    Offline poche

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    « Reply #134 on: July 01, 2013, 05:22:23 AM »
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  • There used to be a rule that when a baby was born he was to be brought to the church to be baptized within the week. And just to make sure, as soon as the pastor learned that a baby had been born, hw was to go to the home of the newborn and remind the parents of this obligation.