If they're a Biblical dictionary, they're defining what it's assumed those words mean in the Bible, not what the words mean
And your proof of that is based on your understanding of the words "Biblical dictionary", as opposed to being based on the book's own description?
Incorrect. You are the one making a claim; that god would let us know if he updated anything. So provide evidence that he did any such thing for the new testament
The first time this was brought up, I said: "Assuming the premises, God would let us know if he had updated anything."
The proof is contained in the premises.
So if all it takes for a thing to be the ultimate example of morality is to fit those premises why is it solely the new testament and not the quran
I never said it applies solely to the New Testament.
Rrrright, so they're saying "the Bible lets us do this is we carry a cross!" and you're trying to say thats not justification?
Not only is that not a justification, that's not even an understandable English sentence.
Did you mean "if we" instead of "is we"?
If so, you're fabricating a quote from whole cloth. It's a lie. The pope never said that, so no it's still not a justification.
I mean its right there in the speech dude. He makes a parallel between salt of the earth and salting the earth
Quote the section where he does that. It's much more likely that you simply misunderstood what the pope was saying.
You can't ask for a type of evidence then deny that type of evidence counts when I provide it, thats just denial
You didn't provide evidence that the bible was used to justify the crusades. You provided a speech that referenced bible verses.
Referencing the bible is not necessarily using it to justify something.
I can find them if you want
Do it.
, you were arguing about the new testament predating the church as part of your claim humans didn't write it. To which I pointed out the earliest known date of the church and the date the canonical new testament came into being. If you're going to argue about the timeline of events, bringing up dates is not a fallacy, but factual evidence
Okay, if you want to pretend that you were bringing up dates to disprove that the NT predates the church, as opposed to bringing up the dates in order to prove that the church wrote the NT, I'll pretend that too.
Here's a link from an "Associate Professor of New Testament" who says "...the church did not arbitrarily decide which books should be in the New Testament; early Christians simply acknowledged the books that were apostolic and orthodox", and "During this period of the "apostolic fathers," there is evidence that Paul's letters were already circulating as a collection and were regularly being referred to by Christians authoritatively, as were other writings of the apostles. Separately, the four Gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) were probably already circulating together at this time.
And your claim that the Catholic Church, as an organization, was around in 110 a.d is a bad claim. That's
the earliest recorded usage of the phrase "catholic church". That doesn't mean that there was an organization who went around calling themselves "The Catholic Church". You'd need to understand what words themselves mean.
Catholic means, literally "universally accepted". So he was saying "this universally accepted church". The word "church" was already in use by everyone else who followed the new Christian religion. There's a real blurry line between "early Catholics" and "other Christians".
According to Catholics, Catholics have existed ever since Jesus said Matthew 16:18 to Peter, but that's not really convincing unless you're Catholic. If you believe Catholics, Catholicism even predates the death of Jesus.
I'm sure the Catholics or Catholic-educated waiting to pounce on any sort of inaccuracy can provide better information.
Personally, I'd go with their legalization in 313.
They're the ones we're arguing about, yes
The Nicene Creed wrote rules into the bible?
Remember, we're talking about biblical rules, not whether or not one religion decided to pick and choose. If a religion says "we want to do this and not that", that's their problem, not the bible's problem.
If someone sets their dog on you and doesn't do anything about it mauling you, is that a moral act, yes or no?
1) My definition of morality is different than yours, so I don't see how my answer will help your argument.
2) It depends on the circumstances. Am I breaking into someone's house at night? Am I murdering somebody? Is the person even capable of doing something about the dog? Can I fight off the dog myself? I can't give a "yes or no" answer to such a vague question.
You claim the Bible allows divorce in the context of adultery. The word used does not mean adultery, but fornication which cannot mean adultery as it between people unmarried to anyone. Thus your claim is wrong
If you're married, and your spouse commits fornication (has sex with someone they aren't married to), then they've cheated on you, yes?
And if the doctrine you are following is declared heretical that makes you a...?
Who says that they continued to follow the doctrine after it was declared heretical?
From Wikipedia: " The heretic who is aware that his belief is at odds with Catholic teaching and yet continues to cling to his belief pertinaciously is a formal heretic. "
But House, how could any of that happened if the Bible were so easy to understand?
You're still working backwards. You're presuming that these papal bulls (and the ones they replace) were ever based on understanding the bible, as opposed to just things the Pope made up for other reasons, and as usual, you provide no evidence of that claim.
Your evidence should be in here. That's the bull in question that was later deemed heretical (or at least part of it was). Quote the section or sections that are based on the bible.