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“I never said you stole the money” – An Excellent Explanation of How Easy it is to Misinterpret the Bible
Patrick Madrid is a friend of over 30 years and is one of the brightest Catholic apologists on the planet.
This is his excellent article about how easy it is to misinterpret the Bible. A compelling critique of “sola Scriptura” or “Bible alone”. It is fast-paced, fun and easy to read. Very instructive too.
A tidbit to entice you to read the whole article:
I have found that this same habit often shows up when people read the Bible. A sincere believer sometimes “sees” in Scripture a doctrine the Bible does not actually teach. Two well-known examples are the Protestant principles of sola scriptura, meaning “by Scripture alone,” and sola fide, meaning justification by faith alone. Neither doctrine appears in the Bible, and both are explicitly denied by it.
There is another kind of misunderstanding that is just as common. Sometimes the words are not random at all, but their meaning is unclear because of ambiguity. Consider this familiar sentence:
“Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like bananas.”
If it is possible to misread a sentence that short and simple, it should not surprise us that people misread complex historical texts.
The Bible is no exception.
Some readers impose ideas onto Scripture that are not actually present, a practice known as eisegesis. Others ignore passages that do not fit their own theories or preferences.
I learned this lesson in a particularly vivid way years ago, after finishing a parish apologetics seminar.
Two men, both Calvinists, approached me and asked if I would give them a chance to show me how wrong my understanding of the Bible was.
The whole article is here: https://open.substack.com/pub/patrickmadrid/p/i-never-said-you-stole-money
Are Saints Only in Heaven? NO! You are called a Saint in Scripture!
My article “Saints or saints: Is There a Difference?” was published by Crisis Magazine HERE.
But below is the full text. You may be surprised how Scripture refers to saints — never to those in heaven, but those of us on earth!
For audio, click here: https://trinitymedia.ai/player/share/b365cf723c96819037066778dac7e4197ada
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Ask any average Catholic, “What is a saint?” and you will likely receive a puzzled look. The facial expression predicts their responding question, “What? You don’t know what a saint is? Everyone knows that? A saint is someone who is in Heaven!”
And they would be correct, but only half-accurate, since, biblically speaking, there is a whole category of saints we usually don’t consider.
In the Catholic world, the designation “saint” is part of our everyday language. We refer to St. Peter and St. Paul, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, or St. John Paul II. Our churches take the names of saints, and as Catholics, we adopt a favorite saint’s name at our confirmation. My confirmation saint is St. Athanasius. We pray to them and appeal to patron saints for everything imaginable. Who has not appealed to St. Anthony to find a lost item or to St. Jude or St. Rita for an impossible cause?
The ancient churches of the East and West have carried on this practice from the beginning. However, more recent Christian traditions following Martin Luther have rejected the canonization and intercession of the saints. For example, Luther wrote, “This misery has been helped by the shameful abomination which people call the canonization of the saints.”1 Virtually all Protestant groups followed his condemnation and rejection.
Catholics have a long-standing and well-developed theology concerning faithful believers who have departed this world with no unconfessed mortal sins and in friendship with God. Heaven is full of those who were faithful to Christ until the end. They expected to hear, “Well done, good and faithful servant…Enter into the joy of your master” (Matthew 25:23).
In Heaven, there is no sin, and those in Heaven are holy; they are saints. In fact, addressing Christians, Hebrews 12:14 reminds us that without holiness we will not see the Lord. Those in Heaven are “holy ones,” the same word in Greek for “saint.”
Catholic theology explains the Church’s canonization of saints—the solemn declaration that a certain believer is known to be in Heaven. The Catechism defines canonization as
The solemn declaration by the Pope that a deceased member of the faithful may be proposed as a model and intercessor to the Christian faithful and venerated as a saint on the basis of the fact that the person lived a life of heroic virtue or remained faithful to God through martyrdom. (p. 869)
My wife and I took pilgrimage groups to Rome for the canonizations of Pope John Paul II and Mother Teresa. Everyone knew they were both saintly and led sanctified lives. However, on the day of their canonizations, something changed. One day, it was improper to call them a “Saint,” and the next day, it was not only proper but expected to refer to them as Saints.
The New Testament was originally written in Greek. In Greek, the word for “saint” is hagios (ἅγιος), which literally means “holy” or “holy one.” A saint is therefore a “holy one.” This then begs the question, what does holy mean? Though the word is nuanced, it can be distilled down to two basic meanings.
The first definition is sinless and pure, morally or ceremonially. In this case, holy means without sin, devoid of anything offensive to God. With this definition, Jesus was holy—completely without sin. “For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin” (Hebrews 4:15). Those who are now in Heaven see God as He is (the “beatific vision”). They are now free from sin. There is no sin or evil in Heaven (Revelation 21:27).
The second definition of holy relates to the sacred rather than profane. To be holy in this sense is to be consecrated to God—being set apart from the profane and common in dedication to God’s sacred service. God’s holy people are not sinless, but they are the people who belong to God. For example, the Holy Ark of the Covenant was unable to sin, but it was “holy” because it was dedicated to the sacred service of the Temple.
I was confronted once by a young man who said we Catholics were wrong to call our pope “Holy Father” because he was a sinner like everyone else. I explained to him that “holy” can mean two things. The pope is not holy in the sense of being sinless. Popes know that, and they themselves go to confession regularly. It is said that Pope John Paul II availed himself of the Sacrament of Reconciliation every week. The Holy Father was not sinless, but he was holy in the sense of being called and consecrated by God for a sacred duty.
With this background, I now reach the main point of this article. As Catholics, we almost exclusively define “saint” as a canonized believer known to be in Heaven. In the Catechism, the word “saint” is used 122 times, and the vast majority correctly refer to the Saints in Heaven. But this is not the emphasis of hagios in Sacred Scripture.
In the New Testament, the word holy (hagios) is used 61 times. It does not refer exclusively to a saint in glory or to canonized saints. In each instance, it is plural, as in “saints,” and refers to those of us on earth whom God has called to a life of sanctity in His Church. Paul uses the word “saint” 40 times. In each case, it refers to living Christians, members of the Church.2 It seems that in a few instances in Revelation, it may refer to believers in Heaven and on earth united as in the communion of saints.
In Paul’s theology, “saint” refers to members of the Church who are still on earth. They are sanctified because they are “in Christ” and belong solely to God, not because of any inherent personal holiness. All members of the Church are referred to as saints, without qualification or distinguished by exceptional piety or moral achievement. This often surprises Catholics accustomed to thinking of saints as only those in Heaven.
Here are only three examples:
Acts 9:32: “Now as Peter went here and there among them all, he came down also to the saints who lived at Lydda.”
Philippians 4:22: “All the saints greet you, especially those of Caesar’s household.”
Colossians 1:2: “To the saints and faithful brothers in Christ at Colossae: Grace to you and peace from God our Father.”
The Catechism recognizes this when saying, “The Church, then, is ‘the holy People of God,’ and her members are called ‘saints’” (823). And again, “Contribute to the needs of the saints, practice hospitality” (1971).
It is important to distinguish between the canonized saints in Heaven and those of us called saints on earth. For those in Heaven, I use a capital S, as in “Saints.” And for those of us striving to achieve that lofty goal, I use a small s, as in “saint.” So, there are Saints, and there are saints.
Again, I refer to the Catechism, which says, “The Church is called the communion of saints, of the holy ones,” and in doing so, it is referring to “The unity in Christ of all the redeemed, those on earth and those who have died” (pp. 898, 871).
Yes, the Saints (with a capital S) are those in glory that we honor and venerate. They have reached their final reward and are before the throne of God in Heaven. But we on earth are also saints (with a small s) because we are called by God and members of Christ’s Church, set apart for God. It is good to make this distinction, and it reminds us of our lofty call and position as saints in the family of God as we strive to finish our earthly course and join the Saints in glory.
How Many Churches Did Jesus Intend?
“I am praying not only for these disciples but also for all who will ever believe in me because of their testimony. My prayer for all of them is that they will be one, just as you and I are one, Father… so they will be in us, and the world will believe you sent me” (John 17:20-21, NLT Bible)
On the night before He died, Jesus earnestly prayed to His Father to keep all His future believers one and united. It is a must if the whole world is to believe in Him.
That is why Jesus established only one church in 30 AD with Peter as first Pope. Jesus said, “You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the powers of death shall not prevail against it. I will give you the keys of the kingdom of heaven, and whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.” (Matthew 16-18-19)
Division causes confusion and weakness as proven by Paul to his advantage in the First Reading. He successfully sowed confusion between the Pharisee and Sadducee sects of Judaism over their division on the theology of life after death, thus he evaded their joint wrath for teaching about Jesus Christ.
With this in mind, in 50 AD (long before the Church complied the New Testament in 400 AD), Paul emphasized to his converts the importance of the continuity of tradition to keep the Church united. “So then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter.” (2 Thessalonians. 2:15)
Even as the last Gospel (the Gospel of John) was being written between 90-110 AD, the Church was already called Catholic, meaning universal or worldwide. In 107 AD, Bishop Ignatius of Antioch wrote to the Christians in Smyrna (modern-day Izmir, Turkey), “Wherever Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church.” (Wikipedia Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_(term))
It is very poignant that it was in Antioch where Ignatius was Bishop, where the believers of Christ was first called Christians (Acts 11:26).
Elsewhere, we find these written confirmations in secular encyclopedias:
“St. Peter, of Bethsaida in Galilee, From Christ he received the name of Cepha, an Aramaic name which means rock .Prince of the Apostles, w
as the first pope of the Roman Catholic Church. He lived first in Antioch and then in Rome for 25 years. In 64 or 67 AD, he was martyred. St. Linus became the second pope.” (National Almanac, ©1996)
“ROMAN CATHOLICISM The largest of the Christian denominations is the Roman Catholic church. As an institution it has existed since the 1st century AD… the Roman church owes its existence to the life of Jesus Christ in the 1st century AD” (Comptons Encyclopedia, ©1995)
“Roman Catholic authority rests upon a mandate that is traced to the action of Jesus Christ himself, when he invested Peter and, through Peter, his successors with the power of the keys in the church. Christ is the invisible head of his church, and by his authority the pope is the visible head.” (Encyclopedia Britannica, ©1999)
“Roman Catholicism Christian church characterized by its uniform, highly developed doctrinal and organizational structure that traces its history to the Apostles of Jesus Christ in the 1st century AD.” (Encyclopedia Britannica, ©1999)
We Catholics are proud that our Church is the true one – AND RIGHTLY SO! And we love to hear the proof of it. But do we show the same love for her teachings? If she is the right one, do we stand with her against contraception, abortion, divorce and same-sex ‘marriage’? Do we follow her advice in choosing the morality of leaders who will run our country and help build the Kingdom of Jesus Christ?
Pentecost was when the Holy Spirit descended from the Father and the Son upon Mary and the Apostles, thus giving life to the Church. As our birthday gift to our Mother Church, let us give her and her Bridegroom Jesus Christ the gift of our obedience and unity.
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