You do not know what you are saying. If you believe that Christ is God, you dare not say that a Church declared by Him to be indefectible ever failed; if you do not believe that Christ is God; it is little use your quoting Him at all.
Radio Replies Volume 1 by Rev. Dr. Leslie Rumble MSC and Rev. Charles Mortimer Carty
🙏 PayPal Donation Appreciated
Related Posts:
- Biblical Reasons Why Catholics Make Use of Images
- Should not Priests have the power to heal as well as to forgive sin?
- Will you prove the reliability of the Gospels according to the five requirements outlined by yourself to a previous inquirer?
- Good Works - The Catholic Church has the Answer
- If God did not give me sufficient intelligence to be able to believe, surely no blame attaches to me?
- Protestant Reformation - The Catholic Church has the Answer
- Did not the Pope grant divorces to Louis XII. and Henry IV. of France, and very nearly to Henry VIII. of England, being prevented in this case by fear of Charles V.?
- The Essence of Christ's Message: "Fear Not, Little Flock"
- Difficult Bible Verses for Protestants
- The Apostles, Creed, the Athanasian, and the Nicene do not mention transubstantiation. There is no record of such a doctrine until 1564 when Pius IV. put it into his creed. Are we to believe…
- Holy Communion - The Catholic Church has the Answer
- Sacraments - The Catholic Church has the Answer
- Our Lord and Redeemer - Primer Catechism
- It is a source of revenue which no Priest dare fail to utilize. The selling of Masses must be most profitable.
- Man has not got a soul—he is a soul Genesis II., 7, says that man became a living soul
- Inquisitions - The Catholic Church has the Answer
- Did not the Jews think that they were asked to eat the very body of Christ? Yet He refuted them by saying that His body would ascend to Heaven and that the flesh profits nothing. Jn. VI., 63-64.
- What becomes of God when you think of the misery and starvation in the world?
- Did not Pope Gregory VII originate it in the 11th century?
- The Role of Saints in the Catholic Church