Sep 14, 2008 19:33
Is it true that the catholic church charged money to have people raised from purgatory?
'Upon this rock I build my church'
What connection does the Catholic church claim, between itself, and Peter?
purgatory,
pope,
catholicism
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Comments 152
The Catholic Church's claim to separation from the Eastern Orthodox is that St. Cephas/Peter was the first Bishop of Rome, martyred there under Nero Augustus when he persecuted the Christians after the Great Fire. That meant that the See of Rome was an apostolic See, the only one in the West. Traditional Catholicism sees Peter as the temporal founder of Church authority under the Papacy, and Jesus ultimately as its head.
Any other questions?
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For a nice primer I'd recommend here: http://www.catholic.com/library/Primer_on_Indulgences.asp
and here: http://www.catholic.com/library/Myths_About_Indulgences.asp
and for the Catholic POV on Peter and the Papacy, I'd recommend starting here:http://www.catholic.com/library/church_papacy.asp
Hope these help.
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And that is all.
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One argument anti-Catholics often use to attack purgatory is the idea that the Catholic Church makes money from promulgating the doctrine. Without purgatory, the claim asserts, the Church would go broke. Any number of anti-Catholic books claim the Church owes the majority of its wealth to this doctrine. But the numbers just don’t add up ( ... )
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I'd no opinion on purgatory:
I've been watching "Luther;"
and a large part of the film has to do with the Catholic Church using sensationalistic tactics to compel the people to pay money to get their loved ones out of purgatory.
I thought I'd ask if that's true
I also should have asked how far back it goes.
It seems damning to the Catholic church in general.
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That's bad. This is nothing.
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where is it written that this honor is some kind of [holy monarchy], that can be passed on at will?
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There are many sources that site giving honor to the Church of Rome and honor to the Bishop of Rome way before 900AD (some as early as 2nd century), so I'm not sure what you are getting at here.
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Since you're watching "Luther," if you'd like to follow it up with a good book, Richard Marius has an excellent one called Martin Luther: The Christian Between God and Death. It gives great biography as well as some insight into the condition of the Church at the time.
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you're the first Catholic, I think, in this post, that hasn't denied it happened.
I'll check the book out; thanks.
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