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Comparing the Catholic Catechism to the Word of God:


by James G. Battell, - October 1, 2006

It has long been my belief that the Church of Rome reluctantly gives the Bible mere lip service, and if the truth be told, they in reality are quite able to function and exist without the word of God.

This brief article will demonstrate how Rome understands the Holy Scripture and what is expected of her laity if and when they ever wish to delve into God's only infallible message and witness to mankind.

For the most part, I will be quoting from an official Roman Catholic source, which was used for seminarians studying in the UK for the priesthood, in the 1960s. I believe this source to be a trustworthy, accurate and faithful publication.

Rome on the Bible

"The Church, then, affirms that all Scripture is the word of God, but at the same time it maintains that there is an unwritten word of God OVER and ABOVE Scripture" (1, pg. 78.)

First of all, the following 4 points, need to be made:

1. Whenever official Catholic publications use the word Christian, they actually mean Catholic.

2. Whenever they use the word Church, they mean Catholic Church.

3. Whenever they speak about the Bible, they mean the Apocrypha also.

4. Whenever they speak of the unwritten word, they mean oral tradition also.

Now this first statement is nothing new for Rome to affirm, for they have always held to this, especially more so after the successful Reformation of the 15th century. However the Bible is never silent when it comes to vain men and their religions, not only seeking to reach God their own private way (Gen. 11:1-9; John 10:1.), but also states categorically, how God will one day put His word not only above His name (Ps. 138:2), but through the name of Jesus, who is the WORD of God, will forceEVERY knee to bow and EVERY tongue to confess, that He is the Lord to the glory of God the Father (Phil. 2:10, 11.)

...."It is the duty of a Christian to receive the one [oral tradition] and other [written word] with equal veneration and respect" (1, pg. 78.)

Such a declaration as this may all sound good and fair to the average naive Catholic and ignorant Protestant, but what happens when the two clash and contradict one another? And how can a Catholic treat both with equal respect, when one is superior to the other?

Sadly this duel authority is also found in Mormonism (Book of Mormon and Bible), Judaism (Talmud and Tenach) and Jehovah's Witness (Kingdom Hall and their corrupt Bible translation, NWT.)

"For twenty years after our Lord's ascension, not a single book of the New Testament was written, and all that time no Christian could appeal, as many Protestants do now, to the Bible and the Bible only; for the simple reason that the New Testament did not exist" (1, pg. 78.)

Some conservative scholars have dated the Book of Matthew to 37AD (4, pg. 993), James to 44AD (2, pg. 1924) and 1 Corinthians to 55AD (2, pg. 1726) so the above statement isn't universally accurate, to say the least.

Interestingly they next cite Irenaeus, who oddly took the dangerous and hypothetical position that:

"The apostles had left no Scripture at all. In this case, he says, we should still be able to follow the order of tradition, which the Apostles handed down to those into whose hands they committed the churches" (1, pg. 78.)

May I say such a view as this could have terrible repercussions, for the simple purpose that if one took the words of men to be the word of God, who could ever know for sure, whether what one was told was absolute or not. One would be forever in bondage to such men and such a precarious position as this, would cause much anxiety and concern.

As the late Len Ravenhill once put it so brilliantly, when dealing with sacred Scripture:

"Either the Bible is absolute or its is obsolete."

That is our view entirely

"A popular Protestant theory makes it the right and the duty of each individual to interpret the Bible for himself and to follow his own religion accordingly; the Catholic, on the contrary, maintains that it belongs to the Church, and to the Church alone, to determine the true sense of the Scripture, and that we cannot interpret contrary to the Church's decision, or to the unanimous consent of the fathers, without making shipwreck of the faith" (1, pg. 78)

There is much in this paragraph that needs to be highlighted and then corrected.

Firstly, the Scripture itself always commends everyday people who take the initiative to read it, whether to check to see if it lines up with apostolic teachings (Acts 17:11); to help the child of God understand God's word (2 Tim. 2:15); to fully equip the saint to be perfectly able to walk and live the Christian life (2 Tim. 3:16) and finally to allow a universal blessing to all who read and believe it (Rev. 1:3.)

Secondly, the diversity within the many strands of Protestantism, only goes to enrich the universal method of worshipping God; such groups therefore are not ones "own religions" but just different emphasises and interpretations of divers theological positions. To make this erroneous statement about one's "own religions" is either wilful ignorance or intentional smearing.

And thirdly, one needs to read this section very carefully again, for what has just been said is this: You, Mr. or Mrs Catholic, are not allowed to have your own view as to what the Bible teachers. You're opinion must line up totally with "the unanimous consent of the fathers."


Articles:
Catholics and the Bible 1
Catholics and the Bible 2
RCC compared to Bible 1
RCC compared to Bible 2
RCC compared to Bible 3
Heresies refuted by Bible
The Mass and the Bible
Thy Word IS Truth
Baptism and the Bible
Purgatory and the Bible
Bible Interpretation
Vicar of Christ and the Bible
Confirmation and the Bible
Images & relics and the Bible
Canon of the Bible EXPLAINED!
Word of God not to be Changed!
Sola Scriptura 1
Sola Scriptura 2
Sola Scriptura 3
Biblical Salvation
Bible is the ONLY Authority!
Statue Worship
Bible Only!
It is Written!
Interpreting Scripture
Purgatory
RCC versus the Bible
RCC compared to Scripture
The Mass compared to Bible
Apocrypha books
Baptism
The Eternal Word
Is the Bible Sufficient?
Confessing sins to priest
List of unbiblical doctrines
Rome the Bible Societies
Bible Christianity VS RC (V)
A trustworthy Authority
Can Bishops accurately interpret?
The Vatican's interpretation
Bible Gospel versus RC Gospel
Catholics reject Words of Christ
Trading religion for Christ
No longer I that lives
RCC False religion
Biblical Gospel versus RC gospel
Come out of her, My people
Apostolic or Apostate?
Catholics and Sin
RC compared to Bible
Catholic doctrine in the Bible
Bible defends itself
Who gave us the Bible?
Church can forgive sins
Chart comparing RCC to Bible
Interpretation by church only
Christ or Catholicism?
RCC doctrine and the Bible
Catholicism and Bible 1
Catholicism and Bible 2
Church "fathers" on Scripture
Catholicism versus Bible
Commentary on Rev (1)
Commentary on Rev (2)
Catholicism versus the Bible
Does Bible forbid an Interpretation?
Catholics and the Bible
Apocrypha is NOT Scripture
RCC and the Bible

Videos:

"It is not necessary for all Christians to read the Bible" (1 pg. 79.)

This subject has long been a bone of contention between Catholics and Protestants, because the latter have long believed that such a medieval view does indeed do much damage to the average Catholic, for ignorance of Scripture, according to infallible Pope Benedict XV, is "ignorance of Christ" (Hos. 4:6.)

"Clement XI condemned the proposition that the reading of Scripture is for all" (1, pg. 79.)

To think that the blood of Biblical Prophets and Apostles was partly shed for the word of God and its message to the world, such a statement as this therefore, is deeply offensive and insulting to Scripture and their memory.

Jude the Apostle would also say how one, "should earnestly contend for the faith which was ONCE delivered unto the saints" (Jude 4.)

"....The Councils of Toulouse (1229) and Tarragona (1234) forbade the laity to read the vernacular translations of the Bible. Pius IV required the bishops to refuse lay persons leave to read even Catholics versions of Scripture, unless their confessors or parish priests judged that such reading was likely to prove beneficial" (1, pg. 79.)

The Scriptures, according to Paul the Apostle, had the power to make one wise unto Salvation (2 Tim. 3:15.)

"The Popes have warned Catholics against Protestant Bible Societies, which distribute versions (mostly corrupt versions) of the Bible with the avowed purpose of perverting simple Catholics" (1, pg. 79.)

Their statement "simple Catholics" is a most honest one, for most Catholics are indeed simple to the meat of the word of God; unfortunately for them, that is how their Church likes it.

"Leo XIII granted indulgences to those who devoutly read the Scriptures (1898)" (1, pg. 79.)

It does appear, does it not, that on the one hand Rome has to bribe her faithful to read the Bible, yet on the other hand, Catholics are only allowed to do this (with permission from their superiors) and then only providing they don't believe the Bible, or use it to correct their church with it!

Quick Facts

Catholics discovered reading the Authorised Bible, without permission of their "masters," were nearly always excommunicated (The Index, Canons after Art 10; Council of Trent, Paris edition, 1832.)

Infallible Pope Clement VIII ordered all Catholic Bibles to be burnt, even thoughInfallible Pope Sixtus V had officially sanctioned their existence (Catholic Encyclopaedia, Vol. II, pgs. 411, 412.)

In 1548, one lady in Leeuward was unfortunately discovered by the Catholic Gestapo to have a copy of a Latin Testament; she was put on the rack, tortured and then beheaded. Why? Because she had no right to read this book, without "permission" (Thomas Armitage, A History of the Baptists, pg. 412.)

The next account is a most sad one, when a Christian individual is treated with religious bullying and bigotry:

"One Baptist sentenced to death escape over a frozen lake (a certain Dirk Willemzoon.) One of the papist soldiers chasing him feel through the ice and began to scream for help. His two buddies deserted him, but Dirk came back and helped him out. Once out, the soldiers buddies showed up; they arrested Dirk and took him back into prison, and he was burned at the stake the next day" (3, pgs. 519, 20.)

Conclusion

The following facts only go to degrade the Catholic church even further into a hostile and Bible rejecting institution.

It was once said that when the AV translators came together to translate the Bible into the Kings English, the one thing that each of them knew firsthand, was the fact that they had lived long enough to remember the terrible purges that Rome had ordered in Britain, therefore this new and masterful text would forever separate the Whore of Rome from the true Body of Christ.

Sources

1 A Catholic Dictionary Containing Some Accounts Of The Doctrine, Discipline, Rites, Ceremonies, Councils, And Religious Orders Of The Catholic Church - St, John's Seminary, Wonersh, 1961

2. The Macarthur Study Bible, 1997

3. The History of New Testament Church, Dr. Peter S. Ruckman, Vol. 1

4. Scofield Reference Bible, 1909

 
Popery opposed to the Bible:

Taken out of the book entitled Popery, 1854 
Nothing can be more decided that the opposition of the Church of Rome to the free use and circulation of God’s Word. She is opposed to the Bible, simply because the Bible is opposed to her. Christ said. “Search the Scriptures,” (John v. 39) but Rome places her members under such restrictions as to the use of the Word of God, as amounts to an absolute prohibition. We shall now give our various authorities, and establish our assertion by indisputable evidence.I. The Council of Toulouse, A.D. 1229, passed the following decree: 
“We prohibit also the permit-ting of the laity to have the books of the Old or New Testament, unless any one should wish, from a feeling of devotion, to have a psalter or breviary for divine service, or the hours of the blessed Mary. But we strictly forbid them to have the above-mentioned books in the vulgar tongue.” -- 
Labbey and Cassort’s Councils, part I., tom. ii. Paris, 1671. 
This decree was passed in the time of the Waldenses, and strictly carried out.II. Quesnel, a pious and eminent Roman Catholic, in the beginning of the 18th century, published a work which proved very distasteful to the Church of Rome. Accordingly, Clement XI, issued a bull, commonly entitled the bull Unigenitus, in which he condemned certain propositions contained in the above work. See Chap. IX, on the canon law. Amongst the propositions condemned were the following: 
“It is useful and necessary, at all times, in all places, and for persons of every class, to study and to know the spirit, piety, and sacred mysteries of the Scriptures. 
The reading of the Holy Scriptures is for all men.” 
These propositions, so scriptural and truthful, with others of a similar kind, the bull condemns as -- 
“Seditious, impious, blasphemous, suspected of heresy, and savouring of heresy itself; favouring, 
moreover, heretics and heresies, and also schisms; as erroneous, nearly allied to heresy, often condemned, and finally, even heretical.” 
The bull Unigenitus is of the highest authority. Roman-ists unblushingly admit it to be in full force even in the British kingdom. Dr. Murray, Romish Archbishop of Dublin, gave evidence before the Committee of the House of Commons, in 1828, as follows: 
“Is the bull Unigenitus received in Ireland? It Is.” See Report, P. 647.III. Saint Alphonsus Liguori, the high authority of whose works we have already pointed out in Chapter II., says, “The Scriptures and books of controversies may not be permitted in the vulgar tongue, as also they cannot be read without permission.” 
The Saint refers with approval to the 4th rule of the Index, to which we shall call attention.IV. The second article with approval of Pope Pius’s Creed amounts to a prohibition of Scripture: 
“I also admit the sacred Scriptures, according to the same sense which the holy Mother, the Church, has held, and does hold, — to whom it belongs to judge of the true sense and intrepretation of the Holy Scriptures; nor will I ever take and interpret them otherwise than according to the unanimous consent of the Fathers.” 
Here the Romanist promises to understand Scripture only according to the sense of the Church, and the unanimous consent of the Fathers. But the Church has never given an au-thorized sense or commentary of Scripture; and the unanimous consent of the Fathers is a non entity, these ancient writers being divided on almost every point. Therefore, the conclusion irresistibly follows, that the Scriptures are not to be understood at all.V. The fourth rule of the Index of the Council of Trent, distinctly prohibits the use of the Scripture to the member of the Church of Rome, unless he can obtain the license or permission of his superior. The rule is as follows: 
“Inasmuch as it is manifest, from experience, that if the Holy Bible, translated into the vulgar tongue, be indiscrimi-nately allowed to every one, the temerity of men will cause more evil than good to arise from it; it is, on this point, referred to the judgment of the bishops, or inquisitors, who may, by the advice of the priest or confessor, permit the reading of the Bible translated into the vulgar tongue by Catholic authors, to those persons whose faith and piety, they apprehend, will be augmented, and not injured by it; and this permission they must have in writing. But if any one shall have the presumption to read or possess it without such written permission, he shall receive absolution until he have first delivered up such Bible to the ordinary. Booksellers, however, who shall sell, or otherwise dispose of Bibles in the vulgar tongue, to any persons not having such permission, shall forfeit the value of the books, to be applied by the bishop to some pious use, and be subjected to such other penalties as the bishop shall judge proper, according to the quality 
of the offense. But regulars shall neither read nor purchase such Bibles without a special license from their superiors.” — See Canons and Decrees of Council of Trent. Paris, 1832.Here several points are observable. 
1. It is taken for granted that the indiscriminate reading of Holy Scripture will “do more harm, than 
good”! 
What! The reading of the inspired volume do harm! Yes; such is the deliberate teaching of the Church of Rome. 
2. The bishop or inquisitor, not the parish priest, may give license to certain parties to read the Bible. 
3. These parties are those who, it is ascertained, will derive no harm therefrom; that is to say, who are so thoroughly imbued with Romish sentiment and feeling, that nothing can shake their adherence to Popery. 
4. The licence must be given in writing. 
5. The person who possesses a Bible without such written license, must deliver up the Bible to the Church authorities. 
6. If he does not give up the Bible, he cannot receive absolution. 
7. Booksellers who sell Bibles in the vulgar tongue to persons not possessing the license, must lose the value of the books, and be subject to other penalties, according to the pleasure of the inquisitor. 
8. Even the clergy are not to read or buy such Bibles without the permission of the prelates. 
Such then are the principles and discipline of the Church of Rome, in reference to the Bible and its use. 
This 4th rule is binding even at the present day. Dens says, 
“According to Styaert, the law has been received, and hitherto observed, (with some variation, according to the character of the countries,) in by far the greatest part of the Catholic world; only where they lived amongst heretics, a greater indulgence was allowed.” — p. 103, vol. II. Dublin, 1832.The Bible is sometimes possessed by Romanists in England, and Protestant countries; nay, it is even studiously paraded in the Roman Catholic bookshops, but Dens explains the reason, “Where they (Catholics) lived among heretics, a greater indulgence was allowed.” The object is evident; even to lead Protestants to suppose that the Church of Rome is not the foe of the Bible. 
We cannot do better than quote a passage from Venn’s excellent letters to Waterworth, in which he shews that the 4th rule of the Index if referred to in the most recent bulls of the Pope as of the highest authority. 
“(1.) Pius VII., in a letter to Ignatius, Archbishop of Quesn, Primate of Poland, dated June 29, 1816, alarmed at the progress of the Bible Society in that country, thus writes: 
“‘We have been truly shocked at this most crafty device, by which the very foundation of religion are undermined.’...‘We again and again exhort you, that whatever you can achieve by power, provide for by counsel, of effect by authority, you will daily execute by the utmost earnestness.’ And then he repeats the rules of the Index, Nos. 2, 3, and 4, and the Decree of Benedict XIV.“The same Pope, in his letter to the Archbishop of Mohilow, dated September 3, 1816, reproves him for having sanc-tioned the Bible Society and adds, ‘You ought carefully to have kept in view what our predecessors have already prescribed, — viz. that if the Holy Bible, in the vulgar tongue, were permitted everywhere, without discrimination, more injury than benefit would thence arise.’ He afterwards proceeds to quote the bull Unigenitus,as expressing the opinion of the Church; and in another passage of his letter, he reproves the Archbishop for quoting the first part only of Pius VI.’s celebrated letter to Martini, which is prefixed to the stereotype edition of the Rheimish New Testament, published at Belfast, 1839, (which is so often appealed to by English Romanists as a proof that their Church is favourable to the free circulation and reading of the Scriptures,) and says, ‘That most wise Pontiff, for this very reason, commends a version of the Holy Scriptures made by that prelate, because he had abundantly enriched it by expositions drawn from traditions, accurately and religiously observing the rules prescribed by the sacred congregation of the Index.’“In the year 1820, Pius VII. approved of the decrees of the sacred congregation of the Index, which condemned and proscribed two editions of the New Testament translated into Italian by Martini. 
“These editions appear to have been exact reprints from the original work of Martini, but without any notes. The original work, consisting of 23 quarto volumes, needed no proscription. (Martini’s edition of the Bible needs no proscription, because it consists of 23 quarto volumes, and therefore cannot be purchased by the masses.) 
“(2.) Leo XII., in his encyclical letter, dated May 3, 1824, says, and I adopt the translation by the Roman Catholic bishops in Ireland. 
“‘Our predecessors published many ordinances; and, in his later days, Pius VII., of blessed memory, sent “two briefs,” (from which I have just quoted.). . . .“‘Reprove, beseech, be instant in season and out of season in all patience and doctrine, that the faithful entrusted to you, (adhering strictly to the rules of our congregation of the Index,) be persuaded, that if the sacred Scriptures be everywhere indiscriminately published, more evil than advantage will arise thence, on account of the rashness of men. . . . “‘The power of temporal princes will, we trust, in the Lord, come to your assistance,’ 
“in the year 1825, Leo XII. issued a mandate, dated March 26, and published in the last Index, in which all patriarch, archbishops, bishops, &c., are charged to remember those things which are set forth in the rules of the Index, and in the ‘observance’ and ‘addition respecting the fourth rule. 
“(3.) Pius VIII., in his encyclical letter, dated May 24, 1829, writes to the same effect as Leo XII. had done in the year 1824. 
“(4.) Neither has his successor, Pope Gregory XVI., been less earnest in this matter than his predecessors. “A decree was passed by the scared congregation of the Index, dated January 7, 1836, to which a notice is subjoined, and in that notice it is said, ‘Those regulations are especially to be insisted on (omnino insistendum) which were set forth in the fourth rule of the Index.’ 
“In the Index of prohibited books, published at Rome in 1841, not only does the 4th rule appear without any intimation of is even having been suspended; but the notice enjoining the strict observance of it is placed among the prefatory and recognized documents.“The encyclical letter, dated the 25th of May last, (1845,) and addressed to all patriarchs, primates, archbishops, bishops, is chiefly directed against the Bible Society, and not only are the tranlations of that Society condemned, but the principle itself, of free circulation and reading of the Scriptures, is likewise condemned, and the observance of the 4th rule of the Index enjoined. The following are extracts from it. 
After mentioning the efforts made at the time of the Reformation to promote its doctrines, he says, 
‘Therefore, in those rules which were drawn up by the Fathers, chosen by the council of Trent, and 
approved by Pius IV, and prefixed to the Index of prohibited books, it is read, established by general sanction, that Bibles in the vulgar tongue should not be permitted to any but those whom the reading of them should be judged profitable, to the increase of faith and piety.’ (Here a reference is made to the 3rd and 4th rules of the Index. ‘To this same rule, which was afterwards made more stringent by a new caution, on account of the persevering fraud of the heretics, the declaration was at length added, by the authority of Benedict XIV., That the reading of versions in the vulgar tongue, which have been approved of by the Apostolic See, or published with notes taken out of the holy Fathers of the Church, or learned and Catholic men, should be held henceforth permitted,’ ( i.e. permitted to those having a license; not to all, as is proved by the context.) The pope then goes on to attack the Jansenists and Quesnelists, who held the Protestant doctrine respecting the reading of the Bible, and observes, that their audacity is rebuked in the solemn judgment passed against their doctrines, with the applause of the whole Catholic world, by two Popes, —viz. Clement XI., in the bull ‘Unigenitus,’ and Pius VI., in his constitution ‘Auctorem Fidei,’ — that very Pius VI. who wrote to Martini on his translating the Bible and who is so often ignorantly quoted as a friend to the free circulation and reading of the Holy Scriptures’” p. 10, letters — Hereford, 1845. 
Thus the Church of Rome, by her highest authorities, prohibits the circulation of the Bible in the vulgar tongue. 
It is true, that English Roman Catholics deny this; but their very denial of it only proves either that they are kept in ignorance of the laws of the Church, or that they are willfully deceived. We believe that the former alternative is the case, at least in most instances.The Church of Rome, in her rulers, is the deceiver; she prohibits the Bible, and yet denies the existence of that prohibition; and thus adds hypocrisy to her other sins. 
How can Britons, who are characterized for honesty and love of the Bible, countenance such a system of fraud and hostility to God’s Word as this? And yet the nation actu-ally sanctions the exclusion of the Bible from its own, (the national,) schools in Ireland, and the education of the youth of that enlightend country in ignorance of the Bible. Need we wonder that insulted Providence permits Ireland to be England’s difficulty, and that evils overwhelm the sister isle. The remedy is to give to its people that blessed book, which the Lord has given for all, to be a lamp unto our feet, and a light unto our path, Psalm cxix. 105. 
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