Protestants hate modern moral relativism.
But their entire system taught the West that inherited authority can be rejected whenever the individual believes he has “the truth.”
Secular liberalism did not invent private judgment.
It inherited it and removed the Bible.
@JohnPalumb66174 So you're a nestorian heretic. After the incarnation you can't separate the human and divine nature. Jesus incarnated through Mary, making her the mother of God
Stop making female counterparts to male leads. It doesn't work. Nobody, not even the women you think you're pandering to, want masculine women.
Let men be men and women be women.
@ThyPaddyDaddy It's more fun to debate RCs IMO because we have more presuppositions than align. Debating Protestants is such a pain because they have so many presups that aren't connected to historic Christianity.
@Arromenth1@FastChase@valorthodoxia In a nominal sense sure but not in a real sense. If you truly believed in Christ you'd join yourself to his body and partake in the Eucharist.
@Arromenth1@FastChase@valorthodoxia 1.) we see intercessory prayers inscribed in the catacombs in the antenicean era.
2.) that's just an assertion. The Psalms were sung in temple worship, asking the angles to bless the Lord.
3. People didn't pray to Mary in the Bible because she was still alive.
@Arromenth1@FastChase@valorthodoxia So according to you the Church started by Christ and his Apostles can completely abandon the faith within 300 years but that doesn't count as hades overcoming the Church? Ok.
@Arromenth1@FastChase@valorthodoxia It's an entailment of "the gates of hades will not overcome it" are you really trying to argue if the Church abandoned the apostolic teachings that wouldn't be the gates of hades overcoming the Church?
@Arromenth1@FastChase@valorthodoxia 1. That's still a practice evangelicals deny despite it being biblical
2. Psalm 103:20 -21 directly asks the heavenly hosts and angels to bless God. You're refuted
3. You're moving the goalposts from veneration to prayer, but we see prayer to Mary very early on in Christendom