Is the Infant of Prague idolatrous?

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • October 11, 2013 • Anti Catholicism; Apologetics

 

Mr. Alan “Rhol­o­gy” Mar­i­cle admits that he was bored. Liv­ing in Okla­homa, which will have that effect on a per­son, he “had some time to kill” and could think of noth­ing bet­ter to do than search about for some new Catholic out­rage. Catholi­cism is less plen­teous in Mr. Rho’s stamp­ing ground than it is in Rome, and so he has to look hard across the land­scape for it, pos­si­bly with binoc­u­lars. In this frame of mind, he made a pil­grim­age to Prague, Okla­homa, and the Nation­al Shrine of the Infant Jesus.

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Killing Jesus: Could Christ have spoken from the cross?

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • October 6, 2013 • Apologetics; Blind Guides & False Prophets; Book Review; Exegesis; Media Personalities

 

The best that can be said is that “slow suf­fo­ca­tion” is a debat­ed and unset­tled ques­tion even among med­ical experts. So why is Mr. O’Reilly cer­tain enough on this point that he can deny Christ’s very words from the Cross? Does he have this rev­e­la­tion from the Holy Ghost? And why would the Holy Ghost inspire Mr. O’Reilly to con­tra­dict St. Luke? Did the Holy Ghost mis­lead Luke? Did Luke mis­hear the Holy Ghost? Has the Church been mis­tak­en about the infal­li­bil­i­ty of Luke’s gospel for 2000 years? Should Mar­tin Luther have tak­en that book out of the canon too?

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James White Agonistes; or, How I played the apologist easier than a pipe.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • May 22, 2013 • Apologetics

 

The Divid­ing Line of May 21, 2013 is all the evi­dence I need  that Dr.* James White is so pre­dis­posed to see lack of intel­li­gence, seri­ous­ness, cred­i­bil­i­ty (fill in your noun of choice) in Catholic apol­o­gists, that he will let him­self be played on like a pipe. No need for Catholic apol­o­gists who engage the good Dr.* White to wait for him to invent straw men. You can hand him one of your own mak­ing: He will grab it, tear it to shreds, stomp upon it, and cack­le in tri­umph. Mean­while, you can pro­ceed with your seri­ous apolo­getic, and he won’t both­er to touch it.

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A counterblast to Dr.* James White and his blithe denial of 48,509 Protestant sects.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • May 17, 2013 • Apologetics

 

Accept­ing as giv­en the fig­ure of ca. 33,000 for 2001, I have searched, for some time now, for a sci­en­tif­i­cal­ly accu­rate for­mu­la for deter­min­ing the exact num­ber of Protes­tant sects on any giv­en day in his­to­ry from 1517 for­ward. The Encyclopedia—any ency­clo­pe­dia — can only give esti­mates; but what the Catholic apol­o­gist should desire is pre­ci­sion. That way, when con­front­ed by a rabid Protes­tant, he can be deal­ing in sci­en­tif­ic fact, not dis­putable con­jec­ture. I gave the begin­nings of such a mod­el in my pre­vi­ous arti­cle. How do my esti­mates fare in com­par­i­son to oth­ers?

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Ephesians chapter four: Only one Church.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • May 14, 2013 • Apologetics

 

Reformed Chris­tians have a very high doc­trine of the Gospel, but not a very high doc­trine of the Church. The rea­son that is trou­bling is because Paul claims no less an exclu­siv­i­ty for the Church than he does for the Gospel. I am used to hear­ing Protes­tant apol­o­gists take a page out of Pla­to and say things like, “There is an invis­i­ble Church which is man­i­fest in local bod­ies.” But St. Paul doesn’t use the plur­al, he uses the sin­gu­lar: body. I nev­er hear Protes­tants say things like, “There is an invis­i­ble Gospel which is man­i­fest in local books.”

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Leonardo di Chirico has fun with semantics.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 25, 2013 • Anti Catholicism; Apologetics

 

In a cat­e­go­ry of dis­cov­ery that might be called “found blogs,” I ran across this gem on a site called Ref­or­ma­tion 21, cour­tesy of the ever-help­ful assis­tance of the polem­i­cal rogue John Bugay. The title of the arti­cle, by Leonar­do De Chiri­co, is “Vat­i­can Files No. 19”; and based on both its con­tents and the allu­sion (as I pre­sume) to that bizarre TV show from the 1990s, I am rather afraid that to peer into Vat­i­can Files 1 – 18 might take me deep­er into the realm of sci­ence fic­tion than I want to go, the polem­i­cal rogue’s rec­om­men­da­tion of it as “blunt and hon­est” notwith­stand­ing.

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Why Jason Stellman has Protestantism nailed.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 25, 2013 • Apologetics

 

Here­in is the Protes­tant par­a­digm: They are very good at scrip­tur­al exe­ge­sis (albeit with­in their own hereti­cal frame­work), and they are very good at ana­lyt­i­cal homilet­ics. But they have lit­tle sense, in their the­o­log­i­cal ori­en­ta­tion, of won­der or mir­a­cle or the super­nat­ur­al. To the super­nat­ur­al, such as they accept it, they bring mere cold rea­son and emp­ty white rooms. They do not know what Ger­ard Man­ley Hop­kins meant when he wrote, “The world is charged with the grandeur of God.” And that is why they — and espe­cial­ly the Calvin­ists in their midst — are mad.

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Regarding the first Protestant critique of Pope Francis’s words on finding Jesus in the Church.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 24, 2013 • Apologetics

 

It did not take long. Nor did I sus­pect it might. Yes­ter­day I pre­dict­ed that it would not only be dis­senters with­in the Church, but also dis­senters out­side the Church, who would be stirred to ver­bal hand-wring­ing over this homi­ly by Pope Fran­cis. The key sen­tence in the homi­ly — the source of said hand-wring­ing — is this one: “[I]t is not pos­si­ble to find Jesus out­side the Church.” And lo! but a few hours after I made my pre­dic­tion came this post from the famil­iar and pro­lif­ic Tur­ret­inFan — known on this blog as Mr. X. He has four main points of cri­tique for us to sort through.

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Pope Francis: Extra ecclesiam nulla Iesu.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 23, 2013 • Apologetics

 

All the nuance aside, the key thing for those out­side the Church to under­stand is this: You are liv­ing a life that is less than what Christ intend­ed. Christ intend­ed for grace to be poured out through the sacra­ments; you don’t have them. Christ intend­ed for us to encounter Him — body, blood, soul, and divin­i­ty — in the Eucharist; you haven’t received it. Christ intend­ed for us to be led into “all truth” — those were his words: all truth—within the Church. But you are being led, and you admit it, by fal­li­ble teach­ers. Talk about Christ until you’re blue in the face, you don’t know him.

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Mr. X riddles us more on papal infallibility.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 21, 2013 • Apologetics; papacy; Papal Infallibility

 

I am wor­ried about Tur­ret­inFan. Nor­mal­ly, he is one of the abler crit­ics of the Catholic Church. His ear­li­er cri­tiques of two of my arti­cles on sola scrip­tura, though wrong­head­ed, were at least cogent. They at least made argu­ments that were seri­ous and schol­ar­ly and worth address­ing. But I am afraid some incon­sis­ten­cy has crept in to the works, start­ing with this arti­cle of his on Pope John XX, and now just yes­ter­day with this very strange addi­tion to his lat­est exam­i­na­tion of papal suc­ces­sion and infal­li­bil­i­ty. I frankly know not what to make of it. Is Mr. X mere­ly tired?

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A clarification on the salvation of infants who die without baptism.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 20, 2013 • Apologetics; Sacraments

 

God made the sacra­ments for man, not man for the sacra­ments. They are the ordi­nary means of sal­va­tion, and no one should believe that the sacra­ment of bap­tism can be put off because God is mer­ci­ful. But some peo­ple — still­born infants, or infants who die by abor­tion — sim­ply have no oppor­tu­ni­ty, through no fault of their own, to receive them. God is not going to send infants to some hypo­thet­i­cal Lim­bo because of a tech­ni­cal­i­ty. God insti­tut­ed the sacra­ments, but the sacra­ments do not bind his hands. And that is hard­ly “warped Catholi­cism.”

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Mr. X plays riddle me this, riddle me that.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 20, 2013 • Apologetics; papacy; Papal Infallibility

 

Rather than do the right and brave thing and address my rebut­tals to every last one of his six objec­tions to the unbro­ken suc­ces­sion of popes, Tur­ret­inFan decides to plow on as if noth­ing had hap­pened and invent a sev­enth. “Well, okay,” he says. “And what about John XX?” Now, this kind of thing, when you get right down to it, is no more than an attempt to turn anti-Catholic claims into a game of Rid­dle Me This. Can you throw your oppo­nent for a loop? Well, what about this pope? Well, what about that pope? So it goes with the Undaunt­ed Mr. X of Calvin­ism.

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The papacy, necessity, and unbroken succession: A reply to Mr. X.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 13, 2013 • Apologetics; papacy

 

We should not, by false the­o­ry and syl­lo­gism, think that God would insti­tute only those offices in the Church that are “nec­es­sary” in our own sight. Such an idea makes Christ pow­er­less before Neces­si­ty the same way Zeus is pow­er­less before Fate. I doubt Mr. X believes that Neces­si­ty is a high­er order of divin­i­ty than Christ. But that is the log­i­cal con­se­quence — is it not? — when you judge some office in the Church upon the stan­dard of its “neces­si­ty,” rather than the only prop­er stan­dard: name­ly, did Christ intend this?

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TurretinFan & the necessity argument against the papacy.

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 11, 2013 • Apologetics; papacy

 

Every now and then, an anti-Catholic apol­o­gist — he need not be Protes­tant; he could be an athe­ist, or a Hin­du, or an agnos­tic endocri­nol­o­gist — will try to dis­cred­it the papa­cy, or the priest­hood, or tra­di­tion, or Mary gar­dens, or some oth­er ele­ment of the Church, by wav­ing his hand and say­ing, “We don’t need it.” Thus the false god of Neces­si­ty is invoked against what very God of very God wants us to have as a pure and unmer­it­ed gift. Tur­ret­inFan (known on this blog as Mr. X) is the lat­est to make this odd claim about the papa­cy. I’m hap­py to put him to rights.

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Is Mr. John Bugay’s rejection of infallibility infallible?

BY: Henry Matthew Alt • April 9, 2013 • Apologetics; Papal Infallibility

 

John Bugay, the polem­i­cal rogue, has not met the dis­si­dent Catholic priest who hasn’t warmed the very tell-tale cock­leshells of his red and beat­ing heart. In his phan­tas­ti­cal efforts to dis­cred­it the Church he reject­ed of old, he turns to the cred­i­ble pens of those who also have reject­ed her. If these dis­si­dent priests con­tin­ue, some­how, to claim they’re still Catholic, all the bet­ter as far as Mr. Bugay is con­cerned. In the lat­est episode of this long, twi­light strug­gle, Mr. Bugay unearths a 1981 book by August Bern­hard Hasler. The title of the book is How the Pope Became Infal­li­ble.

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