That is intellectual honest and a fair correction exactly because my wording made it look like the letters written produced the tradition.
For a catechetical teaching, I should not have offered that inference.
That is intellectual honest and a fair correction exactly because my wording made it look like the letters written produced the tradition.
For a catechetical teaching, I should not have offered that inference.
Hey, that's what conversation is for: spurring each other on toward greater fidelity to Truth
This is exactly the type of difference that makes ecumenism difficult.
The book "History of heresies and their refutations", by Saint Alphonse-Marie de Ligório, is the best source anyone could aim for.
I came for an honest investigative conversation.
The pal has been using ChatGPT because he can't defend his unhinged practices by himself.
Go read "History of heresies and their refutations", by Saint Alphonse-Marie de Ligório.
Now I take my leave.
Haha! Tell me about it! Ecumenism is supposed to be the members of the One Church coming together, not many churches. It's a sad reality that Christians are not all united in one cohesive body, but we instead chose to segregate ourselves into opinionated groups.