“Time spent praying to Mary could be time spent praying to Jesus Himself.” CS Lewis
@MrAndyhdz4 ай бұрын
The great church Father cs lewis 😂
@bernardauberson72184 ай бұрын
C’est un peu simpliste ! Compter son temps de prière, c’est mesquin! De toute façon, Marie est toujours à la droite de Son Fils! Vous ne pouvez jamais passer tout droit à côté de la Vierge sans la saluer : c’est vexer le Christ, Son Fils et passer pour un mufle mal éduqué !
@roses9933 ай бұрын
AMEN!! JESUS>mary!!
@rodney80753 ай бұрын
@@MrAndyhdz In what way do you disagree with the statement though?
@Nil-Hal_Kiggers3 ай бұрын
@@rodney8075 In the way that we do not pray to Mary, or the Saints. We invoke their intercession, the same way you would invoke the intercessory prayer of a family member, or someone you know. Ever heard of prayer requests?
@rosawolfe54442 жыл бұрын
If ever someone was able to articulate so wonderfully well, my deep thoughts, reasoning and firm convictions on this matter, it's got to be you Dr. Gavin. Thankyou for all your hard work and study.
@Jackie.2025 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Pastor Gavin for refuting the lie of “being deep in history is to cease being Protestant.” Thank you, for being a living example, that this statement is simply not true.
@EricAlHarb Жыл бұрын
Read Luke 16 Father Abraham, have mercy on me and send Lazarus, so that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool off my tongue, for I am in agony in this flame. Yup! That’s a prayer to Father Abraham
@Apriluser Жыл бұрын
Being deep in history makes one question some of Protestant worship, not necessarily historic Protestant theology.
@EricAlHarb Жыл бұрын
@@Apriluser there is no Protestant theology. There are many ideas out there that a Protestant can believe, some are Christian and some aren’t.
@thegodofalldragons Жыл бұрын
@@EricAlHarb Why would you model your behavior off a guy who's also dead, burning in hell at the time (so obviously not a good moral example), and had both his pleas flatly rejected by said Saint? The Bible tells us about Saul calling up Samuel's spirit, that doesn't mean it's endorsing that behavior. Also, I might add that the story of the Rich Man and Lazarus is a parable, so the Rich Man and his situation could very well be a fictional invention Jesus came up with for the sake of making a point...
@blastingcows5024 Жыл бұрын
Luke 16 speaks of a dead rich man calling out to Abraham from torment,. He was not praying to Abraham, but rather yelling at him, and he was also dead himself! What a fallacious example of prayer to the dead.
@harmonypizza3 жыл бұрын
"Therefore, since we have a great high priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our confession. For we do not have a high priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but One who has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin. Therefore let us draw near with confidence to the throne of grace, so that we may receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need." [ Hebrews 4:14-16 ;NASB95 ]
@PantocratorFollowerАй бұрын
Is that supposed to refute the practice of intercession? Or are you just stating a random verse that says that we worship God only.
@johnnyg.54992 жыл бұрын
As a life-long, practicing Catholic, a layman with 2 degrees from Catholic Universities in Theology/Religious Studies and a teacher for 31 years, I agree with your critique. I NEVER used the term "praying to Mary/the saints" my whole time in the classroom because of the very reasons you mentioned. I always used "praying WITH the saints" or "asking their intercession." Those excerpts you used show absolutely clearly that God ALONE is the One we PRAY TO. Even when I was in high school (1965 -69) and heard that pious drivel to Mary or some saint I thought "This is all wrong." Currently there are all sorts of "mystics, seers, you-name-it) that claim Mary, or St. Michael are holding back the hand of God from sending His divine wrath down to sinful earth! GIMME A BREAK as the saying goes. Dr. Ortland, you do a favor to Protestants and Catholics of all stripes in explaining why this is absolutely contrary to Scripture AND to Catholic and Protestant theology. Excellent presentation. Thank you.
@nathanmagnuson25892 жыл бұрын
So when you address a Saint directly, you prayers are directed with them instead of to them? This is semantics. You pray to saints as you have no other means of communication to petition with. And Pious drivel? The Theotokos is THE Supreme intercessor and the most holy, spotless, and immaculate Ark of the New Covenant, more spacious than the heavens. You insult God when you belittle His mother.
@BobanOrlovic2 жыл бұрын
That's just your personal preference
@KristiLEvans12 жыл бұрын
If I’d been taught by you, I might’ve converted.
@KristiLEvans12 жыл бұрын
@@BobanOrlovic theotokos was [actually is] a Christological term, pointing to the awesome wonder of God-made-flesh, using a human vessel. Mary would not be insulted by not directing prayers to her. She was a great woman - blessed +among+ women (not above), and would have no part of titles and crowns given to her, which rightly belong to the Son.
@flyswatter64702 жыл бұрын
@@KristiLEvans1 I doubt if any true Christian has ever given the titles and crowns that belong to the son, to Mary. Mary is the mother of God, the ark of the covenant, the mother of the church, Theotokos, queen of heaven and earth because she is the Davidic queen, and our mother by baptism. None of these titles belong to her son. Where, in the bible does it say she is NOT above other women?
@Apriluser Жыл бұрын
As an Anglican, I totally agree with you. It seems that Mary has taken the place of the Holy Spirit in some quarters of the church. And I like the language of “praying with the Saints“. That’s certainly how we see our worship: we are joining the whole company of heaven as we worship together.
@regandonohue3899 Жыл бұрын
I just came out of serving in an intercessory team for a Catholic retreat. Interestingly enough, I was led TO the rosary by the Holy Spirit. I actually understand your concern and I had this feeling as well of, "Why don't I appeal to the Holy Spirit more?" Even as a Catholic I had some reservations towards appealing to Mary because of my studies in trying to understand Protestant objections to Mary, even a couple of weeks ago. But I think we should also consider that the Holy Spirit is in the spirit of the church and us. Mary and the Holy Spirit are not mutually exclusive. They both work TOGETHER! We may not always understand this at times, but the Apostles didn't always understand things either. Who knows, you might find yourself praying the rosary one day. :) God bless!
@eliotchen-b9j Жыл бұрын
@Grey I totally agree with you. You perfectly discribed my thoughts on the issue. I find it truly annoying when some people want to convince us by saying "we do not worship the saints", "prayer isn't worship", "praying to saints is like asking a church brother to pray for you" ... without understanding our point. It is sad that some christians don't see what kind of sin they are doing. If calling Mary "our hope", "the most beautiful", "Queen of Heaven", "giver of grace and forgiveness", orning her icons and statues with luxuries, kissing her images, bowing more than two seconds in front of her images, carrying her images like we carry the pope or organizing parades and celebrations for her are not the same as "worshipping", then I don't know what it is. Christians should focus more on the Bible and the Holy Spirit instead of traditions, pope and saints. I know that christians are humans to. We all can fall into idolatry, so it's why God send us Jesus Christ to die for us and forgive our sin, for sinners like us can trust in Him only to obtain eternal peace. Christ is our only hope and the only King of Heaven. God bless you, and may His Spirit continue to give you wisdom and love.
@Apriluser Жыл бұрын
@@regandonohue3899 If you look at the prayers in the Old Testament, and certainly the prayers in the New Testament, there is no mention of Mary. The Lord’s prayer has no mention of Mary. The book of Revelation, which gives us a glimpse into heaven, does not have the saints praying to Mary or even with Mary. So Scripture would be my first and primary model for Prayer.
@regandonohue3899 Жыл бұрын
@@Apriluser I would say that that depends entirely on the tradition from which you are reading from. The first half of the Hail Mary, as well the Eastern Rejoice O Virgin Theotokos, are both directly from scripture. The Magnificat (My soul proclaims the greatness of the Lord) is also from scripture. The book of Revelation describes "the woman clothed with the sun", who is believed to be Mary.
@regandonohue3899 Жыл бұрын
@Grey I understand what you are meaning because as mentioned, even I as a Catholic had doubts. But I think you are being rather dramatic (e.g. Mary being "more merciful" to sinners than Jesus, treating saintly intercession as delegation instead of asking for prayers), I am not here for this. Respectfully. There are many resources out there that articulate Catholic beliefs more than me. I was just sharing that I had struggled with some of these issues, and yet I was brought into this very discomfort by the Holy Spirit Himself. This has in fact, strengthened the bond between myself and Him, while helping me with my concerns. I'm not worried about all this that you're talking about (which I read! Thanks for sharing) Dominus vobiscum!
@daxmafesi4 ай бұрын
Almost converted to orthodox started researching early church history and found this page thank you for your work
@ReformedInChrist33 ай бұрын
Me too. Now a proud Protestant and no longer converting to orthodoxy
@rolandovelasquez1353 жыл бұрын
Yes! 👍🏼 Thanks again. Yes, in the entire Bible, Old Testament and New, all believers always, without exception, pray directly to God the Father. Always. And, I'd just like to add that, as we know, in God's Word, "the Saints" are we believers and not some special category of Christian as per Roman Catholic practice and teaching. Thanks again Gavin. 👌🏼
@thepalegalilean3 жыл бұрын
Saints turn out a special category of christians. Saints are literally people in heaven. And that is all of God's people. Now while you are called to be a Saint and possibly could be a Saint, It doesn't mean you will be one. Hence that is why we make a distinction between believer and saint. You act as if our distinctions are irreconcilable is concilable to your own position. They're not.
@nathanmagnuson25892 жыл бұрын
Thankfully the Apostolic traditions at large do include these things, of which the Bible is a part
@PaxMundi1182 жыл бұрын
Do you include Maccabees in your entire Bible?
@PaxMundi1182 жыл бұрын
Why do you reject the Coptic Scriptures?
@rolandovelasquez1352 жыл бұрын
@@thepalegalilean in His Word (the Bible) God makes no such distinction. A Saint is simply a believer in Christ Jesus. Period. And the Roman Catholic "saints" are all asleep, according to God's Word ( the Bible). No really. Here it is. Check it out. "But we do not want you to be uninformed, brethren, about those who are asleep, so that you will not grieve as do the rest who have no hope. For if we believe that Jesus died and rose again, even so God will bring with Him those who have fallen asleep in Jesus. For this we say to you by the word of the Lord, that we who are alive and remain until the coming of the Lord, will not precede those who have fallen asleep. For the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. Then we who are alive and remain will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we shall always be with the Lord." 1 Thessalonians 4:13-17 Got it?
@nataliapontirolli81032 ай бұрын
So so good!!! And you are so respectful, clear and biblical. Thank you for this video. Hope it enlightens everyone that’ll watch it 🙏🏻✨
@robertroud327 Жыл бұрын
As a Protestant I agree we cant pray to the Saints, but they are Heros of faith that should be emulated, and held up as an example to live up to.
@saintejeannedarc9460 Жыл бұрын
Hebrews chapter 11, the great faith chapter.
@dailyDorc Жыл бұрын
So every saint canonized by the Catholic Church has confirmed miracles associated w their intercession. Curious to know what you think about that. Is it not possible that it's a sign from God that he approves of the prayer offered by the saint and that it might be His will to allow the communion of saints to be actively involved in lifting each other up and closer to Him? And that he may choose to honor the saints who served Him well in life? Or do you just think every instance is just not actually a miracle or that it's been doctored up somehow?
@sueregan278210 ай бұрын
@@dailyDorcEven Satan can do counterfeit miracles, so as to deceive God’s elect. If the miracle points anywhere but to God, I would question the source.
@dailyDorc10 ай бұрын
@@sueregan2782 all the Saints point to God. And God can choose to honor his Saints by working miracles through them. Acts 5:15-16 Peters shadow heals. Acts 19:20 Paul's handkerchief or apron causes diseases to depart. So when prayers asking for the intercession of a Saint or the relic of a Saint, who spent their whole life pointing people to God, causes a miracle we don't look at that and say oh it's pointing away from God it must be demonic.
@rjdez35894 ай бұрын
@dailyDorc people believe rocks have healed them or the blood of chickens have granted them miraclels ,it doesn't mean they will achieve salvation. People in the OT used to pray to the " queen of heaven " it didn't mean God was with them.As a matter of fact it was abomination to the Lord. Now we have moder day people calling Mary the " queen of heaven".🤔
@justchilling7043 жыл бұрын
I’ll stick to praying to God alone, and respecting the Saints including the ones still living.
@haronsmith89742 жыл бұрын
Theosis, The Church is the body of Christ. It is impossible to say "God Alone" and just ignore the body of Christ. Being in communion with God, means being in communion with every Christian.
@raphaelfeneje4868 ай бұрын
@@haronsmith8974 It's not impossible to say God alone. The Church is the body of Christ, but it's Christ bride and submits to the Head, which is Christ. Nowhere was it taught to pray to anybody aside God. Jesus didn't pray to Moses or Elijah, the Apostles didn't pray to them too.
@haronsmith89748 ай бұрын
@@raphaelfeneje486 if you read Ephesians 4 it literally says we are to become like the head in EVERY way. Also on top of that Jesus even gave parables of Abraham interceding for the rich man in hell. And yes you should look up the actual definition of pray and you’ll see that Jesus did use Elijah and moses for intercession.
@raphaelfeneje4868 ай бұрын
@@haronsmith8974 1. Abraham never interceded for the rich man. In fact it has nothing to do here because they both are dead and there wasn't any form of intercession, rather it was the rich man begging and Lazarus was telling him of his mistakes. You should read your Bible often 2. I don't know how you jumped from we are to become like head to praying to dead saints. That's worse than magic. Are we reading the same Bible?? 3. Praying to dead saints, is already assuming they're omniscient and possess the attributes of God. 4. Nowhere Jesus prayed to Moses and Elijah. Show me the verse. That's the problem with Roman Catholics and Eastern orthodox. They throw away the Bible or read into the text what's not there. 5. I know the meaning of prayer, and nowhere was there a distinction nor prayer offered to dead saints. Now the question is this, seeing that we can approach God in prayer and obtain whatever we want, why do you pray to them?? Why must you??
@haronsmith89748 ай бұрын
@@raphaelfeneje486 1) Yes Abraham interceded for the rich man. Luke 16:19-31 Shows three things that are important to show the intercession of the saints. Luke 16:v24 shows that Jews were okay with asking people in heaven to come to their aid. This is also Jesus giving the example btw because hes the one giving the parable. Luke 16:v25 shows the potential omnipotence of the saints as Abraham KNOWS not only the judgement of the rich man but also all the misdeeds he did during his life. Luke 16:v26 shows that there is a great chasm between them. They're not face to face or in person with each other. That they do not need to physically be next to each other for saint intercession. Maybe you should actually understand the context of scripture before lecturing people about reading it. 2) Jesus is the new Adam as St Paul states it. The Saints are to become like Jesus Christ in every way Ephesians 4(Read the whole chapter) but specifically v15. Also read 1 Corinthians 12 v12-30 Baptism doesn't just make us part of the Body of Christ but also v27 the Body of Christ itself. Its called Theosis, the point of the Church is to make Christians into and a part of Jesus Christ. Youll get this if you read the Church Fathers, and youll come to understand scripture even more. 3) Answered this in 1 4) This is the problem with Sola Scriptura, it assumes your random uneducated person can just pick up scripture and not understand the context behind the obscurity of scripture. I became Catholic because I studied scripture at a graduate level in university. 5) The historic use of the word pray was a request. Have you ever read Shakespear? Look at how people used the word pray until fundamentalists hijacked the word in the modern century.
@costa328 Жыл бұрын
As a former Orthodox, in discussion with Orthodox who use the passages you referred to as why they pray to the saints is timley. I needed some historical context and the Lord guided me to this video, definitely not a coincidence. 🙏
@saintejeannedarc9460 Жыл бұрын
You mention you are former Orthodox. What branch of Christian are you now, and do you still believe in praying to saints? I would be very interested to hear how your beliefs have changed and why they did, as a former insider.
@costa328 Жыл бұрын
@saintejeannedarc9460 Greek Orthodox. When I didn't know any better, I used to follow what I was taught by my parents. Then, when I got saved, I realized that spending a whole year doing nothing but working, reading the Bible, and attending a non-denominational Protestant church that I was misled by the Orthodox Church and their teaching. It's not biblical to pray to saints in heaven. The saints here on earth are to pray for one another. Mary is not the intercessior between man and God. It's Jesus taken straight out of the Bible. The Orthodox Church will always use writing from the "church fathers" to prove their ideology, but it goes against the bible. Everything I follow is from the bible. Can you learn from commentary, yes, but if it's opposite to the bible, it should be set aside since the bible is inspired and the writings of men are not. This does not mean I hate Orthodox people. I'm opposed to the Orthodox Church teaching.
@tigger55100 Жыл бұрын
I am also a member of the Eastern Orthodox Church, but I accepted and surrendered my life to the Lord Jesus Christ and now I am going to be studying Biblical Studies at Moody. I am praying to the Lord for a biblical centered church. I have many issues with the theology of Eastern Orthodox Church since coming to Christ and studying the Bible, taking online courses and Bible studies courses since my acceptance of Jesus in my life. I even heard of Joshua Schooping who left the Eastern Orthodox Church. It is a long journey, but I believe that the Lord is guiding me.
@costa328 Жыл бұрын
@tigger55100 Praise God, know that family members and others will come against you, but stay faithful and only return love for the anger and hatred they show you.
@saintejeannedarc9460 Жыл бұрын
@@tigger55100 I'm always very interested to hear about how this happens. Orthodoxy and Catholicism do not seem like easy branches of Christianity to leave, as they are so comprehensive and ingrained in believers. Do you mind sharing a little about how this came about and what your issues w/ Orthodox theology are? I did see a bit of Joshua Schooping, I think on Gavin's channel.
@tradertrader88382 жыл бұрын
I was born into a pastor's family in 1991, in 2015 I became a part of the Orthodox Church and an active apologist for Orthodoxy in Georgia, because during the study of the history of the Church I thought I had found the "Apostolic Church" with "immutable truths" and now I am starting to return to evangelism again, and one of the reasons What has become an insurmountable dilemma for me is exactly praying with the saints.
@swecalf Жыл бұрын
Praise God, may he lead you to his truth, through the Son, by the Spirit
@mmore242 Жыл бұрын
I’d recommend you understand both point of views before you give in to itching ears. kzbin.infoF5pJTz5EA0k?feature=share
@tradertrader8838 Жыл бұрын
@@mmore242 :))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))))
@Jess-cw6tf Жыл бұрын
Do not be swayed by the wind. I will pray that God reveal the truth to you so you may hold fast to it. kzbin.info/www/bejne/aKalemRohcqEjs0
@benjaminread5287 Жыл бұрын
That's very interesting, stories like these are very rare and I wish more people would talk about them. I think they are helpful to people trying to discern the different denominations, sadly it seems that people converting to Protestantism tend to be less eager to share their story, I do wonder why
@TrentWilaАй бұрын
Superb summation on the issue brother. And I pray that the Lord Jesus leads those back to Him, fully and totally because truthfully, He alone is sufficient to fulfill our every need as our High Priest. There’s is no need He can not fill.
@SCOTTISHSOULFOOD13 жыл бұрын
Thank you. Once more excellent content presented with the right tone. As a Protestant pastor it felt like you were speaking for me.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks James, so glad it was useful to you!
@SCOTTISHSOULFOOD13 жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites made me think of this quote from CS LEWIS C. S. Lewis, “But Hail Marys raise a doctrinal question: whether it is lawful to address devotions to any creature, however holy. My own view would be that a salute to any saint (or angel) cannot in itself be wrong any more than taking off one’s hat to a friend: but that there is always some danger lest such practices start one on the road to a state (sometimes found in Roman Catholics) where the Blessed Virgin Mary is treated really as a deity and even becomes the centre of the religion. I therefore think that such salutes are better avoided. And if the Blessed Virgin is as good as the best mothers I have known, she does not want any of the attention which might have gone to her Son diverted to herself.” Letter to Mary van Deusen June 26, 1952.
@katherinearons69434 ай бұрын
Thank you for your ministry, Gavin. These videos are so helpful.
@metrx330 Жыл бұрын
I have one very simply question to all my Catholic and Orthodox friends. One that usually opens a door to seeing things from a Protestant perspective. "What would Mary think of so many people expending huge amounts of time and energy on prayer and veneration directed at her (or through her) rather than God himself?" It is obvious to all Christians that Mary, who we all believe is blessed most highly of all woman, would want our entire focus on the Trinity.
@1984SheepDog Жыл бұрын
I think she has joy to know that her children love her so much, and the they are relying on her to bring them to her Son that we might all be in heaven together.
@awake3083 Жыл бұрын
Mary would be filled with joy knowing that people honor her, as without her, there would be no Christ. Marian prayers have been a thing for nearly 2 thousand years, it clearly has the co-sign of the Holy Spirit.
@Bartholomaios7 Жыл бұрын
I think you have a pretty unrealistic idea of how much time catholic and orthodox spend praying for the most Holy Theotokos intercession opposed to praying to God. I pray three times a day not including my prayers I say at meals and each prayer time usually has one or two prayers to the most Holy mother for intercession that take less then 5 minutes. The real question you should ask yourself is do you take issue with adding extra prayers for intercession because you don’t believe in intercession or because your lazy and rather do secular things then pray. Most people I find who are against orthodoxy are against it because they want hear a 45 Minute sermon once a week then spend the rest of the week being secular.
@choicemeatrandy6572 Жыл бұрын
@@Bartholomaios7 Do you really believe that Orthodox Christians aren't "secular"?
@Bartholomaios7 Жыл бұрын
@@choicemeatrandy6572 I would say most orthodox Christians fight against secularism. I live my life for Christ, I do my best to avoid the things of this world and the traps the secular world lies. I think it would be wise to note there exists many European nations where orthodox Christianity is the state religion. So yes I think as a whole orthodoxy recognizes and fights secularism better then other denominations. I do not know of any countries where Protestantism is the state religion. In fact the United States was founded by Protestants and by the constitution they wrote created a completely secular government devoid of Christ.
@sueregan278210 ай бұрын
These teachings were what I grew up with in the Catholic church in the mid 20th Century. But after completing a three year Bible study in the early 60’s, I could no longer consider Mary and other saints as my mediators. It is what keeps me from even considering going back to the Roman church, after years of going to God alone, through Jesus.
@TruthHasSpoken8 ай бұрын
In the Book of Kings, - who was the Queen? - what role did she have on behalf of the people? - how did the King greet her? - where did she sit? Keep in mind, Jesus is the King of Kings, and that the Old prefigures a greater fulfillment in the New.
@dallasbrat818 ай бұрын
Sounds like your reaching for a meaning and have scripture imply your truths @@TruthHasSpoken
@TruthHasSpoken8 ай бұрын
@@dallasbrat81 What are the answers? In the Book of Kings, - who was the Queen? - what role did she have on behalf of the people? - how did the King greet her? - where did she sit?
@dallasbrat818 ай бұрын
@@TruthHasSpoken Try and give me a verse and stop ignoring Jesus words in Luke 11:27-28 . This is the time Jesus could have made the case and didn’t instead you like to dance to own conclusion
@TruthHasSpoken8 ай бұрын
@@dallasbrat81 St Bede's commentary on Luke 11 27/28 is an excellent exegesis of the text. _But she was the mother of God, and therefore indeed blessed, in that she was made the temporal minister of the Word becoming incarnate; yet therefore much more blessed that she remained the eternal keeper of the same ever to be beloved Word. But this expression startles the wise men of the Jews, who sought not to hear and keep the word of God, but to deny and blaspheme it._ "Try and give me a verse" Go to 1 Kings 2. Read the entire chapter. Slow down beginning in v13. Keep the questions in front of you: - who was the Queen? - what role did she have on behalf of the people? - how did the King greet her? - where did she sit? The best cure for protestantism is ... education (and not dancing to one's fallible interpretation of the text)
@JHH10277 ай бұрын
I am Catholic and will remain Catholic and really appreciate Gavin Ortlund’s charity in disagreeing with Catholic theology.
@roses9934 ай бұрын
I see many many catholics following Dr. Ortlund. I have hope for you guys. God bless😊
@JHH10274 ай бұрын
@@roses993 The Catholic Church is the fullness of the Christian faith. I pray for the reunification of all Christians. I pray that all will see the truth of the Catholic Church, established by Christ himself. I listen to Gavin because he is charitable and doesn’t speak hatefully against Catholics as so many do.
@roses9933 ай бұрын
@@JHH1027that's your opinion brother. I suggest you watch the video where Dr gavin talks dismantling the one true church argument. It will be helpful to you. 😊😊 God bless
@JHH10273 ай бұрын
@@EchoP7596 I think much of his beliefs are flawed, but it’s probably not his fault.
@alexandremuise8889 Жыл бұрын
Baptized and confirmed in the catholic church. Ultimately couldn't continue trying to ''play both sides'' on this topic and other theological problems fundamental to Roman Catholicism. Being Acadian; I was raised to see Mary with 2 titles; 1. Co-Redemptrix that you can go to if you're not comfortable going to Jesus. 2. Blessed door to heaven. You didn't cross any boundaries; your video is very accurate and respectful. Unfortunately; most catholics who take Marianism seriously will be offended precisely because you are so ''on the nose''. They are convinced that ''well of course we go to Mary because we can't get to get forgiveness without her!"
@budpalerson Жыл бұрын
Glad to see God led you to to the truth brother! It says a lot about one’s faith (or lack thereof) if they’re uncomfortable going to Jesus, our loving Savior and High Priest, in prayer. “It is better to trust in the LORD than to put confidence in man.” Psalm 118:8 KJV
@kalash28742 жыл бұрын
I like your content. I grew up in a small Free Will Baptist Church(protestant). I recieved the Holy Spirit and was Baptised in the name of the Father The Son and the Holy Spirit. I learned about the Covenant of Grace and was taught with the Bible(i can go and read for myself what i learned as a teen). I also believe the Bible is the Highest Authority on earth. But recently got engaged to a catholic woman. I opened my heart to learn unbiasedly. I love history and like concrete evidenced used. God has really blessed us both and i hope i can learn the tradition and theology side of the catholic faith and she can openly learn my side but also at the end of the day every choice and thing we do Honors God Almighty above all
@caleb.lindsay3 жыл бұрын
the way you articulate is my favorite. I know hanging on the words chosen and the manner in which they are chosen is not a popular habit, but for those of us that enjoy that, this is great. you'd definitely be someone I'd love to chat with just so I could listen to the framing and delivery of your perspective on things.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Glad you found the video useful, thanks!
@jotink13 жыл бұрын
I agree with you and very concerning and I speak for myself I could know more about my own Protestant history. It has, just been through channels like this that have awakened me for the need to know why I am Protestant.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
So glad it's been helpful, thanks!
@mclkr91743 жыл бұрын
Protestantism is a total farce and joke. Become Orthodox
@jotink13 жыл бұрын
@@mclkr9174 So a billion Christians who love the Lord and those that have been martyred are part of something that is farce and a joke? Whatever you have been listening to could be that farce and a joke.
@mclkr91743 жыл бұрын
@@jotink1 protestants cannot be martyrs because they dont actually understand anything about christianity. You worship what you do not know
@evans39223 жыл бұрын
@@mclkr9174 well said...
@aarongebreslasie76773 жыл бұрын
You're such a blessing! I watch your videos all the time and l learn new things. Keep what you doing my brother.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Aaron, glad they are of value to you!
@ottovonapps7 ай бұрын
Thank you for the informative videos, brother. Keep up the good work and God bless.
@timp74123 ай бұрын
Excellent explanation. What I would love to hear someone say is that praying to the saints is not just like asking a friend to pray for us. Your friend can share words of encouragement with you, can bring you a meal when you're sick, can come over and hang out with you when you are lonely. Praying to Mary and the saints is very different from asking a friend to pray for us.
@PantocratorFollower2 ай бұрын
You're right, Asking St. Mary to pray for us is way better than asking a fellow on earth.
@timp74122 ай бұрын
@@PantocratorFollower But if I ever mention that praying to the saints isn't commended in the Bible, my Catholic friends respond with, "But it's just like asking a friend to pray for us." - But even you agree that it's not just like that. As far as praying to Mary as being way better, I would invite you to rewatch 3:50-13:30 in the video for some concerns.
@PantocratorFollower2 ай бұрын
@@timp7412 Can you give me a summary of what he says please?
@marcuswilliams74483 жыл бұрын
Hey. I love when a Baptist says "In the Augsburg Confession." And a great, concise presentation and critique of the issue.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
This Baptist loves the Lutherans. Chemnitz has been a great companion over the last 6 months.
@truthisbeautiful74922 жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites Chemnitz is brilliant. Hope you find William Perkins, Francis Turretian, and William Goode as well.
@BornAgainRN Жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites I just found this video on your KZbin channel, which will help for my debate against an eastern orthodox priest at the end of the month. Very interesting to see how this “developed“ over time, which was not developed from the New Testament nor from the first couple hundred years of the church era. It’s interesting that a lot of beliefs that Roman Catholics and eastern orthodox share began around the time of Origen. And ironically, he’s considered a heretic in the Roman Catholic Church. Lol.
@TruthUnites Жыл бұрын
@@BornAgainRN Glad you found it! God bless you in your work!
@BornAgainRN Жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites my debate against an Eastern Orthodox priest on prayer to Mary & the saints got rescheduled for TODAY, February 27th at 8pm EST, on "Standing For Truth." I wanted to let you know that I am planning on using a couple of your arguments you used in this video, which I will be citing you & your channel as a reference. If you don't have a podcast tonight, I hope you get the chance to check it out. Here is the direct link to the KZbin debate: kzbin.info/www/bejne/poLRoGWGit2DeNU
@mesafamily5830 Жыл бұрын
God bless you, Doc Gavin! Somehow I need to get you in front of my RC dad. You have blessed my life much, thank the Lord
@CAMcCoy2 жыл бұрын
a good overview of this issue, and yes, I believe it was irenic in nature, while holding fast to the truth of these accretions. Thanks for doing this Gavin.
@symeon3 жыл бұрын
agree with your point; that often in theory and in practice are very different. very fair and thoughtful critique
@Rashomon69 Жыл бұрын
Doesn’t the Bible say that there is ONE mediator between God and man, and that is Jesus?
@john1-29_aka_LHT-LFA10 ай бұрын
catholics do not really care about the bible...
@derekbates25138 ай бұрын
My friend you are right. John 14:6 King James Version 6 Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me. There's nothing in there about Mary or Saints. Jesus was the only one crucified and sacrificed for our sins. Only he shed that pure blood for our sins and for that I will respectfully as he commanded speak through him to God. Tell the world
@Charlie-gk1uq5 ай бұрын
Indeed! But, respectfully, look at the context of that verse: Paul is instructing Timothy to make intercession for kings and those in authority *because* there is one mediator between God and man, the man Christ Jesus. Now, you can still argue petitioning the saints for their intercession isn’t warranted for some other reason, but not because it’s interfering with the mediation of Christ… the grounding for intercession *is* His mediation!
@cbstanfo83142 ай бұрын
@@Charlie-gk1uq Indeed! but respectfully, the context is Paul giving instructions to Timothy to pray for leaders etc because they're are in need of prayer on this earth, just as Paul and Timothy are. I think you will find , by reading scripture and particularly Pauls teachings, in regards to the huge amount of error , and wrong teachings in the churches , that the holy spirit is the mediator between God and man. Paul even rebuked Peter for his error in regards to being among Gentiles and Jews .Paul says, “The Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know what to pray for as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words.”
@aussierob71772 ай бұрын
It says there is one mediator between Christ and the Father. However there are many ways to Jesus.
@concernedmom-co7wo10 ай бұрын
THANK YOU for explaining this so simply! It validates what I've been trying to tell my family members BUT now I can show them this video!!
@Anna_Marie_Music3 жыл бұрын
Such a great video- you express so many concerns that I've had that I wasn't quite able to articulate. Thank you for your peaceful dialogue in all your videos!
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Anna! So glad it was useful! Yes, I'm committed to peaceful dialogue -- I find it is both more productive as well as more enjoyable.
@thecuriouschristiangal4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this information. As a lifelong protestant, I've been deep diving into the Catholic faith. Learning from faithful minds such as trent Horn, Matt fradd, Bishop barron, Father Mike Schmidts, etc... these Godly men have taught me so much, and I have really been embracing the Catholic teachings. I never even considered Mary as being highly favored even though scripture referred to her as such. My appreciation for the saints and heroes of the faith has grown. However, praying to dead Mary is something I just can not overcome. Your sincere and gentle teachings of rebuttal are going to be my next deep dive. This has been a fascinating time of growth and learning.
@JoeLackey10 ай бұрын
Jesus: "Here's how you pray: Our Father in heaven..." Catholics and Orthodox: "Thanks, but we'll take it from here. Mother, to you I come..."
@TruthHasSpoken8 ай бұрын
"Jesus: "Here's how you pray: Our Father in heaven..."" And in your room with your door shut!! I'm sure you do that.... only.
@tymon19285 ай бұрын
You only pray these words? Or do you pray to Jesus too?
@ubemon3 ай бұрын
💀💀😂😂 that made me chuckle
@angru_archesАй бұрын
We actually do pray to the Father, in the name of the Son...you guys pray, "Mother...".@@TruthHasSpoken
@TruthHasSpokenАй бұрын
@@angru_arches and you only in your room with the door shut?
@MatthewHarris474 ай бұрын
Really appreciate this video.
@markmurthen70683 жыл бұрын
Very helpful in thinking about the historic trajectory. Really excited about the book too!
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Mark!
@lisalmenard38282 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your work. It’s much appreciated.
@DanielApologetics3 жыл бұрын
2 very valid points! Keep it up.
@fletcher39133 жыл бұрын
You make good points and I agree with most. I pray to the Father in Jesus' name. However, while Catholics may make too much of Mary, Protestants seem to make too little of her. I can't ignore that she is the mother of Jesus/God. Nor can I ignore the amazing Marian apparitions at Guadalupe, Fatima and Lourdes. These things lead me to believe she has a special status in Heaven. With that in mind, asking Mary to pray for me doesn't seem heretical.
@mike_AD3 жыл бұрын
i cannot comment on guadalupe or lourdes, but why do you believe the mary of fatima, was indeed actually mary the mother of jesus? how would you distinguish between a demonic apparition posing as a christian saint, or an actual saint?
@MNskins112 жыл бұрын
@@mike_AD a demon wouldn’t call people to Jesus and repentance.
@DamonNomad822 жыл бұрын
@@MNskins11 Oh? There's an incident mentioned in the Book of Acts that seems to imply otherwise: "Now it happened, as we went to prayer, that a certain slave girl possessed with a spirit of divination met us, who brought her masters much profit by fortune-telling. This girl followed Paul and us, and cried out, saying, 'These men are the servants of the Most High God, who proclaim to us the way of salvation.' And this she did for many days. But Paul, greatly annoyed, turned and said to the spirit, 'I command you in the name of Jesus Christ to come out of her.' And he came out that very hour." Acts 16:16-18 NKJV
@jenex56082 жыл бұрын
The argument is weak. Just cause Mary is mother of Jesus rhe divine Son doesn't mean she deserves our attention. All our attention should be focused on God alone. Second Demons can show apparition as well. For one Mary is dead, So seeing apparitions of Mary, Is basically necromancy. The Dead is Dead. I affirm Mary is in heaven of course. But seeing are spirit in a vision is blatant necromancy. Second No where in Scripture do u see any one especially in Acts of seeing visions of a dead person and interacting. Test every Claim with Scripture. I don't deny Visions exists. I affirm they work within the realm of Scripture
@duckymomo79352 жыл бұрын
They’re asking a spiritual being not Mary herself
@jerrypecsoy13762 жыл бұрын
You are a gift to the church Dr Orlund
@gracepilditch9388 Жыл бұрын
Thanks very much Gavin for the historical context. As someone who’s interested in church history, I find very helpful indeed, especially the sources you quote from.
@easybeliever72 жыл бұрын
Appreciate your work Gavin.
@Probably_Dumb3 жыл бұрын
The timing of your video is very appropriate. So soon after Matt and Cameron have been arguing about this. The concerns/problems you point out don't seem like they would be unfamiliar to the Catholic or Orthodox. Sometimes it feels like gaslighting when I hear someone explain prayers to saint as a mere "prayer request" when even the official prayers of the Catholic church seem to be suplicating the saints for what can only be given by God.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Great point. The defenses sometimes make it sound more benign than it really is, it seems.
@matthewbroderick62873 жыл бұрын
James, Again, just as many in the early Church sought the mediation and intercession of mere human beings like Peter and Paul and their prayers and shadow and handkerchiefs, so too even now, for NOT EVEN DEATH CAN SEPARATE US. Especially the Mother of God, she who moved her Son and Lord to perform His public miracle, even though it was not yet His hour, touched by His Mother's compassion for the wedding couple, as the prayers of a righteous person have great power in it's effects. Jesus Christ teaches that when we die, we become like Angels, and Angels present our prayers before the throne of God! Peace always in Jesus Christ our Great and Kind God and Savior, He whose Flesh is true food and Blood true drink
@matthewbroderick62873 жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites Not a great point at all really, for how did Peter know that Ananias and Sapphira had withheld money in Acts 5? God allowed Peter to know! This is why Jesus Christ teaches when we die, we become like Angels and Angels present our prayers before the throne of God, as God allows the Angels to know these prayers! Just as many in the early Church sought the mediation and intercession of mere human beings like Peter and Paul and their prayers and shadow and handkerchiefs, so too even now, for NOT EVEN DEATH CAN SEPARATE US! Especially the Mother of God, she who moved her Son and Lord to perform His public miracle, even though it was not yet His hour, touched by His Mother's compassion for the wedding couple, as the prayers of a righteous person have great power in it's effects! Peace always in Jesus Christ our Great and Kind God and Savior, He whose Flesh is true food and Blood true drink
@AtomicSea3 жыл бұрын
I heard it’s called the Motte and Bailey fallacy. It’s where the arguer conflates two points that share similarities, with one being easy to defend, and the controversial one is smuggled in later.
@Mygoalwogel3 жыл бұрын
@@matthewbroderick6287 *Orthodox Compline prayer to Mary:* _On the terrible day of judgment, deliver me from eternal punishment and make me an heir of your Son's glory_
@cqbarnieify3 жыл бұрын
I needed to hear everything you you so eloquently stated. Thank you!
@capturedbyannamarie Жыл бұрын
Really appreciate this thorough information. All of these things are completely foreign as a Protestant, really good to hear research about it.
@harmonypizza3 жыл бұрын
Another great video! Thank you brother.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks James, glad you enjoyed!
@HopeUnknown10 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this content! I enjoy it! 🙏
@Destroyercon3 жыл бұрын
Very good video and very well timed. Many of my Catholic friends say the exact same thing about the saints that you addressed in this video and it is interesting to see how these church practices have changed, especially since Catholics often try to claim that everything they do has been done for thousands of years and was given by the spirit, forgetting that men can split the church and add things to it that aren't scriptural. As an Anglican, I value tradition as much as the next guy, but if tradition goes against the Bible, then the tradition is wrong.
@sinfulyetsaved3 жыл бұрын
I would say who put the Bible together? It was the apostolic tradition that brought you the Bible you have now. Not the other way around. A alot of it is in the Bible but those books were pulled out by the reformers.. Smh I'm not Roman catholic by the way I am orthodox. There is no winning an argument when you have the mindset scripture doesn't point it out.. The sinners prayer for example is not biblical its not in the Bible yet it is a tradition for some protestant faiths.. These arguments are just silly.
@Draezeth2 жыл бұрын
@@sinfulyetsaved You didn't listen. He said he respects tradition, quite explicitly. And he also clearly states that it's when a tradition is in conflict with the Bible that it must be rejected. You completely bypassed what he said.
@saintejeannedarc94602 жыл бұрын
@@Draezeth It doesn't matter if their traditions are found in the bible or not. They like them, and the argument that they've been entrenched in Christianity for hundreds of years is good enough. So is the new one he said, that I see a lot lately, which amounts to: "we gave you the bible, so shut up about it". It's not a valid argument, but it's supposed to pacify us somehow.
@samueljennings48092 жыл бұрын
@@sinfulyetsaved Wouldn’t that boost his case? Because if it contradicts the Bible, it would also contradict the Apostolic tradition that put it together, which, by the way, we are not to add to, a warning not only echoed in Scripture, but also in the Church Fathers. So if something contradicts the Bible, it contradicts the Apostolic Faith in the Church Fathers that put it together and thus that thing should be shunned and abandoned.
@binklesworthington2 жыл бұрын
@@samueljennings4809 The Bible does not contain all apostolic tradition. According to the canonized scripture the church is the authority. Not canonized scripture. Saint Paul wrote two short letters to the Thessalonians that are in the Bible. Saint Paul also taught in the church of Thessaloníki for an entire year. Do we have the transcripts of that entire year that Saint Paul taught in the Bible? No. But we do have tradition that has unfolded from these teachings in the spirit. Also keep in mind there was no Bible for the first 300 years of Christianity. What was the authority then?
@tjflash602 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the observations.
@KunchangLeeMusic3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Gavin
@Brian65875 ай бұрын
Love love love this response! I recently been looking into the Catholic Church as my Grandma is Catholic. I am Protestant (Baptist) and I had some issues with the prayer of saints and I really like your critique!
@holmavik67562 жыл бұрын
Excellent presentation. My personal view is that if I can ask a fellow sinner, perhaps a priest or a friend, to pray for me then I can also ask Mary for the same kind of support. Yet I could never, ever, use the extreme, almost chocking, words of the medieval prayers that you mention.
@geordiewishart1683 Жыл бұрын
But there is a difference between asking someone who is ALIVE and someone who is DEAD
@jamesbishop3091 Жыл бұрын
@@geordiewishart1683 so Saints are dead, in heaven?
@sarahlaslett3279 Жыл бұрын
You must know this person means those who have died in relation to this life. Yes believers are with God eternally but according to scripture we are forbidden to speak to the those who have passed from this life. Yes indeed we can ask our friends/loved ones to pray this sde of eternity but not once they have passed on.
@sarahlaslett3279 Жыл бұрын
@@jamesbishop3091You must know what the person means. They who have passed through death and although spiritually alive are physically dead. Scripture forbids any communication with those who have passed on.
@BookofAkathists3 жыл бұрын
On a hill far away, stood an old rugged Cross The emblem of suff'ring and shame And I love that old Cross where the dearest and best For a world of lost sinners was slain So I'll cherish the old rugged Cross Till my trophies at last I lay down I will cling to the old rugged Cross And exchange it some day for a crown Oh, that old rugged Cross so despised by the world Has a wondrous attraction for me For the dear Lamb of God, left his Glory above To bear it to dark Calvary So I'll cherish the old rugged Cross Till my trophies at last I lay down I will cling to the old rugged Cross And exchange it some day for a crown In the old rugged Cross, stain'd with blood so divine A wondrous beauty I see For the dear Lamb of God, left his Glory above To pardon and sanctify me So I'll cherish the old rugged Cross Till my trophies at last I lay down I will cling to the old rugged Cross And exchange it some day for a crown To the old rugged Cross, I will ever be true Its shame and reproach gladly bear Then He'll call me some day to my home far away Where his glory forever I'll share So I'll cherish the old rugged Cross Till my trophies at last I lay down I will cling to the old rugged Cross And exchange it some day for a crown.
@michaelhebert53342 жыл бұрын
Amen!
@goyonman96552 жыл бұрын
Amen
@cheerfulturtlegirl Жыл бұрын
I love this hymn.
@lastchance81425 ай бұрын
Glory to Jesus!
@GospelSimplicity3 жыл бұрын
That new branding though👀 Looks great!
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks! New intro and outro in the works also …
@harmonypizza3 жыл бұрын
Yes. I agree.
@garyschwitz3383 Жыл бұрын
Your videos are tremendous. I am former SBC pastor now Cumberland Presbyterian.
@Rashomon69 Жыл бұрын
I don’t buy the whole “ever-virgin and sinless Mary”, either. The Bible says, “For ALL have sinned…”
@kriegjaeger Жыл бұрын
They forgot Jesus at the temple .-.
@_secret_lore Жыл бұрын
@@kriegjaeger jesus never sinned, at the temple, Jesus showed a righteous/ godly anger.
@andrebuxo76735 ай бұрын
Mary was a married woman. What kind of married woman wouldn't sleep with her own husband?
@aussierob71772 ай бұрын
Mary was born without original sin. If the Bible says "ALL have sinned, then that includes Christ as well
@silenthero2795Ай бұрын
@@aussierob7177 The full verse is "for all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God; being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus" (Romans 3:23-24). God is the standard but since Jesus belongs to the Trinity (which means he's also God), he's not included in the "For all have sinned" part. However, Mary doesn't have such supporting verses but the opposite really. She's not God and she actually is in need of a Savior from her own lips. Luke 1:46-47 46 And Mary said: “My soul glorifies the Lord 47 and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior, You don't need a Savior if you didn't sin and yet Mary needed a Savior so that means she did sin in her life.
@kotonifihaki1276 ай бұрын
I think there is a lack of coherent and well thought out concerns from the protestant view on this topic, but you have done a great job. Thanks !
@timmcvicker57753 жыл бұрын
Prayers to Mary, such as those read in this video, are still very much in practice today.
@saintejeannedarc94602 жыл бұрын
The Marian veneration seems more entrenched than ever. She's now born sinless, is a co-redemptrix, and was assumed bodily (as of 1950 this was made official). The one that shocks me most is that the Catholic immaculate conception is not Jesus being born sinless, but apparently Mary also being born sinless. So apparently Mary has most if not all the attributes of Jesus for Catholics. They say she doesn't, but I can't see how she doesn't. Not being raised w/ these Marian beliefs and not being use to just accepting them, they are shocking.
@movingamountain2 жыл бұрын
Can confirm. As a former Catholic, I saw all kinds of stuff like this almost daily. Recently there has been a trend of consecrating oneself to Mary and St. Joseph, sometimes never even mentioning God.
@saintejeannedarc94602 жыл бұрын
@@movingamountain What brought you out of Catholicism? I see so many convinced Catholics in comments and some of them know to argue w/ scripture. There are a lot of protestants who become Catholic and many are pastors now. While I think Catholics are still our brethren, I can understand when the dogmas are all you know. I am confused by bible believers being able to accep the dogmas. Though for some, it does deepen their faith.
@movingamountain2 жыл бұрын
@@saintejeannedarc9460 it has been a long and difficult journey. I wrestled with a lot of things regarding Catholicism for years. Intellectually things wouldn't make sense and my conscience would convict me, but there was a deep fear of leaving the RCC. A few months ago I was at mass one morning and the Scripture reading was the contest between Elijah and the prophets of Baal. This one particular verse struck me, "And Elijah came near to all the people and said, “How long will you go limping between two different opinions? If the Lord is God, follow him; but if Baal, then follow him.” And the people did not answer him a word." (1 Kings 18:21) I had been sitting on the fence for a long time, and it was time to make a decision. I stopped going to mass and never turned back. So, it was a cumulative process that happened over many years and through many doubts. Once I left, I realized how many teachings I actually disagree with, but I think the thing that really pushed me over the edge was prayer to Saints and how excessive it was in practice. Catholic apologists will often say, "We don't pray to Saints. We only ask them to pray for us." That is not at all what happens in practice and many sanctioned prayers go far beyond that, as Gavin addresses in the video. I hope that answers your question! Feel free to ask anything else if you are curious.
@saintejeannedarc94602 жыл бұрын
@@movingamountain The one that gets me the most is the Mary worship. They call it veneration, and many Catholics do leave it there, but so many really do worship and treat her as divine. So it must have been quite recent you hopped off the fence if you stopped going to Mass a few months ago. Do you still miss the reverence of the mass and the belief in true presence of the Eucharist? I guess most of my curiousity would be around RCC belief in the Eucharist and where you are now? Though whatever else you feel moved to share is great. I've always been Christian, but do attend Mass. To cut things short, I really gave Catholic doctrines a fair shake, threw out all I'd heard and got it from Catholic sources. Some entrenched dogmas are worse than what we'd heard. Purgatory, treasury of merit, Marion dogmas, and Jesus as a continuing sacrifice, as well as infant baptism only taking care of original sin, making Jesus' atonement not really enough, since the rest of the effort is ours to be doled out by the church, had me convinced I could not become Catholic. Since I saw pastors converting to it, I thought there must be things I didn't know. I do still see Catholics as brethren. I think their veneration of the Host is lovely, even if I can't believe in transubstantiation. I gave it a strong try, praying that I did not want to miss more of Jesus if this "knowledge" from an ancient form of Christianity had more.
@rebekahayers45875 ай бұрын
Gavin, thank you for your videos! I often feel completely overwhelmed when Catholic friends ask me for opinions on these topics, so thank you for making a concise, logically organized video that provides me with some key context history to make my point instead of just saying "it's not in the Bible" or trying to make an appeal without evidence.
@PantocratorFollower2 ай бұрын
It is in the Bible
@harpgal99503 жыл бұрын
Very thoughtful and concise presentation. I'm protestant with Orthodox leanings. But I cringe at some of the titles that are given to Mary. She is forever blessed and is to be honored. However, I see no scriptural basis for praying to anyone but the Father through Jesus Christ.
@zekedog19903 жыл бұрын
So, I was a Protestant pastor and had been so in a few denominations. My degrees are in both church history and counseling. I leaned Orthodox, and now I am an Orthodox catechumen, God willing, my family and I’ll will be baptized orthodox on Dec 24th. As someone becoming orthodox, there are three major issues I find with his arguments that need to be addressed. The first is “A good guy needs a gun because bad guys have them.” What I mean by this is the argument of, “anything is a weapon in the hands of a mad man.” In this video he takes little to no offense at the language used in these prayers. However, his only defense against them is how people have abused them through medieval history. As an ex-Protestant pastor, I have seen many pastors abuse their people with good things. Abused them for not opening their Bible enough. Abused their desire to volunteer. Abused them for not being more fervent about coming to church. A mad man will take a tool, and use it as a weapon, and I think that is perfectly illustrated here. So, once again, there is no danger in praying to the saints, but there is danger within the prideful inclinations of the heart. As a “soon to be orthodox Christian,” the other issue I see in this video is the lumping of all who have a prayer to the saints. Canonization is very different in Catholicism from orthodoxy. It is so different that Orthodoxy does not recognize Catholic saints who were canonized after the great schism. As such our veneration of saints is wildly different. It may not look that way to outsiders but to insiders it does. For one, in Catholicism, Mary forgives sin, where as in Orthodoxy our example is the wedding feast where The Mother of God asks Jesus to turn water into wine and even though it isn’t his time, he joyfully does so. If God opposes the proud, there’s nothing more humbling than recognizing your so sinful that you need all the help you can get. This doesn’t make God despise you, but makes him want to draw near to you. The Theotokos intercedes, and Christ draws near to us. We even have prayers that mention that it is possible to receive the Theotokos’s mercy and still be found guilty. God desires to show mercy, and Jesus also loves granting his mother’s requests. Finally, as the psalm says, “God is glorified in his saints.” Without the saints there is no means by which to see and experience the glory of the Lord within God’s church. Maybe that’s why so many Protestant churches are lifeless, fractured and fracturing, or given over to sensual self-love trends. Praying to the saints is one of the biggest evidences for Jesus defeating death, because not even death can separate us! These truths, though, cannot be intellectualized and they can’t be emotionally obtained. They only happen as a result of a genuine pursuit of him in his church and then they start making sense. However, they make sense not in the intellect, nor in the heart, but the nous. Otherwise the amount of arguments can be endless. In short, experience these things in the Orthodox Church and then they start to make sense. They seem like foolishness to outsiders, but that’s exactly how God designed is. God has chosen the foolish ones in the world to confound the wise.
@harmonypizza3 жыл бұрын
@@zekedog1990 "However, his only defense against them is how people have abused them through mideaval history." That is simply wrong. You must watch this video again. One of his argument was that this was not an early church practise. Didn't you see that?
@zekedog19903 жыл бұрын
@@harmonypizza yes, but that’s also incorrect because it was also not only an early church practice but also an ancient Jewish practice. The problem is that many modern scholars look to archeologists for their history because of a lack of trust in oral history, tradition, and ancient historical texts and the result is a general guesstimation of of what ancient people believed and did. This is because of the lack of understanding of how honor-based/shame-based cultures work. Oral tradition and ancient writings are extremely reliable because of how much time, care, and money went into preserving them. Changing these things in These cultures could mean your death or being anathema. Many humanist/gnostic intellectuals dismiss these accounts because it came from people. And people are unreliable. However, this is based on an innovative or Democratic worldview. This worldview did not exist in the early church. Now, there were those who disagreed with these things, but, they are disagreement had no staying power proving that it was not of God. However, to be fair, Mary the Mother of God was venerated both when she was alive and also after she had reposed. But, the way in which all orthodox everywhere venerate her did solidify overtime. Heresy would rise up and the defeat of that heresy would give birth to The way in which she was venerated. There have been countless of songs to The Theotokos that have been written in a more modern setting. However, they don’t become a part of church tradition unless they are accepted by all orthodox everywhere. In Protestantism, people have been abused by the fallible infallible pope, passion filled angry arrogant leaders like Martin Luther, countless morally perverse prosperity and celebrity pastors, etc. that it seems wrong to trust the account of ancient church fathers. However, this is where faith comes in. If the Church is the body of Christ then it cannot live and exist with heresy. To believe that you can agree to disagree with different denominations is in itself blasphemy because what a person is saying is that imperfections can reproduce and perpetuate within the body of Christ. People aren’t perfect but the church throughout history should have remained the same from the very beginning. This has been true of only one church, and this is the orthodox church. The services have been shortened since the first service, expressions within orthodox churches can be diverse, there can be cultural differences in the way that the words are song and the art is painted, but there is no innovation. Even the Bible was not an innovation but a preserving of what had always been.
@josueinhan84363 жыл бұрын
@@zekedog1990 All of our experiences, as christians, need to be submitted to Biblical evaluation. And when I evaluate Orthodox doctrines and practices with the Bible I find no room for somethings such as Praying to the saints (even if you distort that passage in Hebrews or Revelation), praying to Mary, the necessity of an iconography (not use them only pedagogycally), the necessity to a bishop to be a single man, hesychaism... and soooo on. You talked about humility. I advise you to look for Joshua Schooping's videos here at the KZbin, and maybe... how about write him an email and see his points?... investigate it a little further, considering he is someone who spent more time than you in Eastern Orthodoxy and know it from within. God bless
@zekedog19903 жыл бұрын
@@josueinhan8436 Thank you for your reply, funny thing is, I was actually a protestant missionary in Romania where it was my sole commission to convert what was referred to me as pagan orthodox Christians away from their paganism. So, this is actually subject I have a lot of familiarity with. And ultimately, what led me to orthodoxy, was the idea that everything had to come from the Bible. The reason being is that there is a massive and huge issue with everything needing to be weighed by the Bible. For one, many different doctors and theologians and professors and lay people will all look at the Bible and come back with different interpretations. The excuse was the Bible can mean different things to different people. However, that is the most dangerous notion. The most dangerous notion that anyone could think of is that the Bible means different things to different people. If we take this approach anybody can look at the Bible and come up with a different idea. It’s why you and I can disagree on the scriptures in the Bible where they talk about the veneration of the Saints. So then I began to ask questions like, “what is the true understanding of the Bible?” And as I begin to ask this question I found that there was no clear or conclusive understanding of it. Theologians, archaeologists, pastors and denominations couldn’t agree on the same thing. Why does Christ give forgiveness of sins to his disciples? Why does the Bible say the only faith is necessary for salvation but that works are also completely necessary to salvation. When did works begin, and faith end for salvation? Why does Paul say it’s necessary to be baptized in order to have remission of sins but the thief on the cross doesn’t need baptism. Why does Christ insist that the elements are the body and blood of Christ but we believe it to mean symbolically? Why are some people raising the bread and others flattening it out for communion? However, the biggest issue with all of this is that we have to weigh everything in the church against the Bible, lays the greatest heresy. For one, we are saying that the created, creates the uncreated. Jesus is uncreated, therefore the body of Christ, the church, is uncreated, but, it comes after the created, the Bible. In Orthodoxy the uncreated came before the created. In Protestantism, the created should form and dictate the uncreated. Limits should limit the unlimited. This is justified by the scripture where it speaks about the word of God, but it completely neglects the fact that the word of God was always looked at as being the logos, not the Bible. The scriptures predates the formation of the Bible. Again the created word of God, the Bible, is used as a measuring stick for the limitless uncreated Savior Jesus Christ and his body the church. So how is one supposed to understand the Bible if the church is uncreated and the Bible is defined and created. Well, simply, the two of them work together. This only works in orthodoxy because it was established before the creation of the Bible. Therefore the Church and the Bible worked hand-in-hand with each other. The church is needed as a key to understand the Bible, and the Bible works as a protection to the church. Protestant churches came out of the Catholic Church which divorced the church Jesus started. This meant that the protestant churches had no choice but to base their church on their understanding of Scripture, but they are based on a flawed understanding of Scripture which is why the Protestant churches have fractured thousands upon thousands upon thousands of times. The fact that so many theologians, archaeologists, pastors, etc. can so vehemently disagree with each other, even in the middle of their own denominations, should be evidence and proof that there understanding of Scripture is inherently flawed. The Bible is not like the Quran, it is not uncreated, it was created through the body of Christ which is the church, therefore it needs the church that Jesus started in order to understand it.
@georgeluke6382 Жыл бұрын
Gavin, I’m continually helped by your work on YT. Good exhortation to Protestants (like myself) to make time to learn our historical concerns in rejecting or positively formulating doctrine. It’s ironic with this specific doctrine that we forget how to articulate our historical relations to the saints in heaven, who lived in union with the Christ by the Spirit, in history.
@TruthUnites Жыл бұрын
glad its helpful to you!
@aperson40573 жыл бұрын
People don't understood how much of an issue this is. In Latin America, many Catholics essentially worship Mary. There is a show from Mexico about miracles of Mary. God is never mentioned in the show. I've heard of some who I have said that they don't believe in Jesus (the main character of evangelicalism in their minds) but only Mary. This is not to blame the Vatican since they can't control everybody, but their practices were basically the gateway to these practices. Finally, in these conversations, people avoid the way that this can also be considered necromancy. I've heard some try to justify this by saying the saints aren't truly dead, but nevertheless, God has a strong prohibition on speaking to the dead which in the minds of ancient Jews, is someone who is physically dead. I just can't see how ancient Jewish believers, both OT and NT, would be ok with this.
@mcgilldi2 жыл бұрын
A Person, the miracle of Our Lady of Guadalupe explains some of the Latin American devotion to Mary. Look it up. This image, not made by human hands, is in the Cathedral in Mexico City.
@mariasoniamoreno3433 Жыл бұрын
Yes, you are right that too many Catholics don't actually know their Catholic doctrine. But the problem is not appealing the saints' intercession but the lack of catechization of the flock. The Church needs to instruct us weak Catholics so we don't fall into erroneous practices or beliefs. However, for serious believers, the Catechism of the Chruch gives us the authoritative answers. Thank you, Lord!!
@katherinebare8212 Жыл бұрын
You absolutely should blame the Vatican. This is a widespread and very serious issue. What's the point of having a single head of the church who can declare doctrine for all if he doesn't use his power to stamp out such heresy and idolatry?
@CountMondego55 Жыл бұрын
Even the Antichrist can perform signs and wonders. The serpent hates the Father, he hates the Son, and he hates himself. So he destroys the father through mockery (portrayal of weak and incompetent father figures in pop culture), he destroys the son through addiction (porn, alcohol and drug addiction), he foments disregard and dishonor of the parents (You shall honor thy father and mother) and he raises up woman in defiance of man. Marian worship and miracles are a deception, and the are evil because they go against the Father. Plain and simple. I might have a splinter in my eye but I have heard the scriptures and have a good eye yet with which to read them.
@BernardoRojasdeLuna5 ай бұрын
Really good video. And well put! Thank you. God bless you.
@anthonywhitney6343 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video, like someone else said quite topical considering the conversations on Capturing Christianity. I would definitely appreciate if at some point you dove deeper into this and spent more time directly addressing points that Catholics make, and the general theological problems with this. Thanks!
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks, will try to address this more fully in the future!
@emilianohermosilla399619 күн бұрын
It’s good to see so many denominations of the church unite on this matter. Catholics, Protestants and Orthodox seems to show in this comment section that it feels weird to say “PRAY TO” instead of “PRAY WITH”, there may a be difference in opinion between us but it seems doctrinal truth is what we seek above all 😉😁
@hotwings803 жыл бұрын
Thank you for talking about these issues. You are so right. People are Protestant out of convenience, not out of conviction.
@arcguardian3 жыл бұрын
Conviction is nothing if it's not from the Holy Spirit. High conviction can easily be another way to praise ur efforts instead of God. Convenience is just a worthless as inconvenience. Believe on/in Christ.
@timmcvicker57753 жыл бұрын
That's a pretty broad brush.
@larrybedouin2921 Жыл бұрын
I am a Christian, not a Catholic of another faith. Thy way, O God, is in thy sanctuary, who is so great a God as our God? {Psalm77:13} ...as Moses was admonished of God when he was about to make the tabernacle: for, See, saith God, that thou make all things according to *the pattern* shewed to thee in the mount. {Hebrews 8:5} The *sanctuary* [tabernacle] was a pattern of types and shadows of the heavenly temple, and Jesus Christ is the substance of those types and shadows. He is the door to the sanctuary; Jesus is the door to the Kingdom of heaven. He is the inner court surrounded by white linen; which is symbolic of being covered Christ prefect righteousness. He is our passover sacrificed for us on burnt alter for sacrifice. He is the laver for washing; symbolic of the rebirth, being born again of the Spirit. He is the table of Showbread; the two stacks of loves of bread are symbolic of the word of God (the bread of life) in two testaments / witnesses, also the twelve tribes of Israel and the twelve Apostles. He is the Lampstand; the oil being symbolic of his Spirit; the Lampstand symbolic of his light unto the world. He is our Altar of incense; making intercession for his saints. He is our Mercy seat covering the Ark of the covenant; Jesus is both our advocate standing for his saints with the Father and He is our judge in judment. Jesus Christ caused the sacrifices and their oblations to cease, (Dan 9:27) by his one perfect sacrifice. In contrast to the time of the Gentiles, wherefore the sanctuary of God is trodden under foot for forty and two months. How so? This church who calls herself the mother church, claims to be *the door* to salvation. And the white linen surrounding the inner court is the righteousness of Mary and the saints of the Roman church. She claims that Christ sacrifice and Atonement for sin was not sufficient, for she instituted seven (works) sacraments. She through infant baptism makes a mockery of the rebirth of the new man. Her Catechism thinks to replace the inspired word of God. Her prayers to dead saints and to Mary, thinks to replace Christ work of intercession at the altar of incense. Hers is a false spirit which thinks to cover the light of truth. This beast and her king think to change times and laws of God. And goeth into perdition.
@tbojai3 жыл бұрын
Thank you Gavin for a lucid and frank view of how many protestants see the issue of prayers to the saints. It’s always helpful for everyone, and in this case I would say particularly Catholics, to understand more about how others view such important issues that Catholics (& Orthodox) believe in. That being said, I think that it is important that we don’t pigeon-hole or caricature all protestants. There are protestants who do pray to the saints, including some Anglicans. Also, it is worth pointing out that while Luther was addressing the doctrines of Mary in his work 'Magnificat', he specifically tells the faithful that they should pray to Mary’. Also, C.S. Lewis, in one of his 'Letters to Malcolm' says that while he does not pray the saints himself, that "There is clearly a theological defence for it...who am I to judge the practices of others?" It can be easy to say that all protestants hold to one specific view, but it’s important to acknowledge that not all protestants are of one mind on this issue.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Hey Taylor, good to see you today. You're certainly right that you can find a few Protestants who believe in praying to the saints. I'm not aware that I've claimed otherwise, so I don't really perceive the relevance of your comment. But I appreciate you engaging the video, and glad you found its broader point to have some use!
@daveranck1 Жыл бұрын
As protestants, we sometimes act in a similar manner when we say "pray for me", but don't really seek God on our own behalf.
@drawingdragon Жыл бұрын
I don't recall ever asking for someone to pray for me by calling that person things like "most venerated above all" and telling them "you alone can placate Christ and grant me forgiveness." Asking for support from a fellow Christian in your own prayers is not the same at all as praying TO a fellow Christian.
@vt20247 Жыл бұрын
Right...do you ask that for from the dead? The scripture clearly encourage us to pray for one another. There is no where in the scripture that mentioned about the living asking the dead to pray for them. Or pray to the dead so they can bring our prays to Jesus!
@Nil-Hal_Kiggers3 ай бұрын
@@vt20247 So you're going to just ignore all the parts about eternal life in Christ Jesus? Eternal life in the Kingdom of Heaven? How are they dead when Jesus promised us eternal life? Are you calling Him a liar, or are you saying He was wrong?
@thinkerj8 күн бұрын
@@Nil-Hal_Kiggers Heard about the resurrection?
@Eva_Hope4 ай бұрын
Praying to Mary was what saved me out of the new age. I didn’t know anything else, all I remembered was learning about Mary in catholic school as a child. I prayed for her help, as if she was a mother figure. I didn’t have a mum to help. Within a few weeks I was praying to Jesus and several weeks later I was attending church & baptised. Even as a Protestant I can’t deny that Mary interceded for me. I don’t think you can judge it until you have actually benefited from the fruits of it
@NiviWord3 ай бұрын
True, I too got to know Jesus only after I was praying to Mary and another saint to keep my unborn baby safe as she was not supposed to be a normal baby as I had some complications. My daughter turned out to be extraordinary contrary to what the doctors told. Gradually, Jesus came into my life who is now everything for me.
@LeRoiBooysen3 жыл бұрын
As a layman listening to and reading through some of the comments here the only question that kept popping into my head was "Who is My mother and who are My brothers?". I find it difficult to get my head around why He would have changed His mind on this after being glorified. This same Christ taught us to pray directly to our Father and left the Holy Spirit as our helper who intercedes for us. James writes about confession, praying for each other and that the prayers of a righteous man avails much. If I combine all of these Scriptures with some of the comments and practises read and listened to here I might just as well start praying to someone who at this moment is alive and well and walking the earth.
@arcguardian3 жыл бұрын
Pray for man pray to God, it's not that complicated.
@MrPeach1 Жыл бұрын
that last paragraph is you getting it. The only difference is the Saints in heaven will hear our requests in a different format than the living saints on earth that we can walk up to and ask for prayers
@alishavogel7926 Жыл бұрын
@@MrPeach1 got proof of that? One of the reasons I struggle with this idea is the extreme assumption making of the ideology. Where are you getting "Saints in heaven will hear our requests in a different format than the living saints on earth" because all the evidence I have seen comes down to wishful thinking. Because of the practical nature of asking for prayers from living people (must be in same room, have written to them, or use of modern technology) there is a vast chasm of doubt I have for the idea that others in heaven that aren't God have "special abilities" that aren't God's abilities, but we don't know what those are or how they work and can only point to out of context scripture, but we know they exist so just do it. It just seems awfully confusing and vague and God isn't the author of confusion, but one of order.
@MrPeach1 Жыл бұрын
@@alishavogel7926 biblically the phrase cloud of witnesses makes me think they are witnesses to our earthly goings on. How that is possible is God's mystery. But a great cloud of witnesses would witness you asking for prayers and since we know they are holy to be alive in heaven it stands to reason that they would love to pray for you.
@alishavogel7926 Жыл бұрын
@@MrPeach1 thanks for responding. However, I would gently push back. All that is inferred from Hebrews 12:1-2 is that there is a great number of witnesses which the verses are in reference to the realization of the promise of faith. Who they are, what they do, and their abilities are not given. While personally, I believe that we will all one day have each others stories and triumphs in heaven known to those who came before us, I do not see in scripture where our lives are broadcast as if it were a film or where there is mutual interaction between those currently living on earth vs those who died saved. But for the reference of Angels, demonic spirits, possible accounts of Jesus (OT), necromancy, and visions, there aren't any other interactions from other entities between our physical world and the spiritual world. So since this is such a big issue if you are in the wrong, I need more than just "It's a mystery of God." You have to be careful of dependence of "mysteries" least the possibility you get sucked into mysticism and occult practices.
@BornAgainRN Жыл бұрын
15:00. Whenever a Roman Catholic or Eastern Orthodox attempt to try to use Revelation 5 & 8 as examples of Angels and other heavenly beings holding bowls of incense which represent the prayers of the saints as evidence for praying to the saints, I give my own example of when I was an altar boy and holding the Sacramentary for the priest. It was not the intention of the writers of it to deliver the contents of it to me and then deliver them to the priest. Instead, I functioned as a human podium which the priest would open the book and read its contests. Likewise, all these heavenly beings are doing is holding the bowls that contain the prayers, and then the prayers themselves ascend to God.
@galantkoh39173 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video. It was very informative. One thing you didn't mention, Dr. Ortlund, but it is possibly outside the scope of what you wanted to say here, is that prayers offered to saints are prayers not requested from local brothers and sisters. I have often considered that along with the Holy Spirit granting different gifts to different members in order that we may build one another up, so too praying for one another and requesting prayer from one another both serve to edify, encourage the growth in love and promote unity. For prayer turns our minds to one another, and requesting prayer develops relationships.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Interesting point, thanks!
@3joez33 жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites Not to mention, not everyone has great friends in Christ to journey through life with. Looking to the saints as spiritual friends, gifts from God who built up the church, has been especially important in my faith especially when good friends are sometimes hard to find. I know your point about venerating saints too, but I consider it important to try to connect in a physical way with these "friends in Christ." I know it may seem crazy to outsiders, but its like if a therapist tells a couple to hold hands more if they're having marital issues. We are human and sometimes venerating saints might actually make sense to foster a real connection with the communion of saints which is very much alive and perhaps more alive.
@Tylerstrodtman Жыл бұрын
I think this is a very fair treatment of this topic, my view on Catholicism, as a protestant has equally softened because of your videos, but has also given me great assurance that I don’t have to be Catholic in order to be a Christian. People like Trent horn can argue very convincing Lee And persuasively for their position, and you helped me a lot to be assured of the truth of the gospel, regardless of tradition. In this issue in particular, the way I look at it is, let’s say you call a friend to ask for a favor, but instead of just asking them on the phone privately for the favor, you ask them to put you on speakerphone, and , request of everyone in the room to remind your friend to fulfill the favor.
@saintejeannedarc9460 Жыл бұрын
Your speaker phone analogy, is that how you see asking departed saints for intercession?
@Tylerstrodtman Жыл бұрын
@@saintejeannedarc9460 Yes
@jgiaq3 жыл бұрын
Great job! I've always wondered if the Greco-Roman practice of ancestor worship influenced this practice in Christendom at all. Many of the items Romans would carry to worship their ancestors very much resemble Saint medallions and the like.
@justchilling7043 жыл бұрын
It almost certainly did, we are all influenced by our culture in way we don’t even notice. The same was true about Greco-Roman early Christians, this is why you see rather bad things believed about women, slavery etc.
@hillaryfamily Жыл бұрын
A very important factor, yes. Perhaps the more relevant background issue is the state, condition and power of the dead. The OT view is that we are dust, and to dust return when we die. When we die, God takes back his breath from our nostrils and we return to dust. We are like the grass of the field that sprouts up for a season, jd then the wind blows on it and it dries out and perishes or is cut down and thrown into the fire. All meet the same fate, all go to the same place. In the collective grave or underworld, the dead are cut off from the living, they do not know what is going on in the world above anymore. They do not know anything, in the land of oblivion. They have no power to help the living. Accordingly, there is no point asking them for help. That is the critical point for prayer. They can neither hear our prayers, nor answer our prayers, not make prayers for us. They are sleeping in the dust and do not wake up to hear our concerns. When we die, we go down to meet them, they greet us with the message, “you have become weak as we, you have become like us!” (Is. 14:10). We are reunited with our dead children, we rest with our fathers… forever. Yet the dead still have some existence and function for the living. They live on hopefully in the children they have raised up before they died. Their descendants give them a good burial and after their flesh has rotted away they collect the bones and put them into the family bone box. If they leave no offspring their line dies out and their name is forgotten. Given enough generations, all men are forgotten by those who come afterwards, as pointed out in the book of Ecclesiastes. Yet to God, their memory is never forgotten. He keeps a record of their deeds, good and evil, in his book. God is the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, to him they are living, not dead. The seed of Abraham survives and he is the father of many nations. Yet this persistence does not make these dead ones conscious or having power to intervene to help the living. For this reason, there is still no praying to Abraham, Isaac or Jacob. Jacob in particular is the seed of Abraham, the elect one, the chosen people. He lives on as Israel, the nation. The resurrection is defined as the “hope of Israel”. But the resurrection of Israel was taking place, and was to take place and be completed in a new form of Israel, the new man, the body of Christ, the church made up of people from every nation, tribe, people and tongue. In the resurrected Israel is the communion of saints. The dead of the past are members of this new living and immortal body along with the living saints. The dead saints give us light, they are fixed in heaven and shine as stars for us. They are not forgotten and they share our elevated heavenly status. The saints, the dead saints, in particular the martyred saints, have a special place in the communion of saints, as honoured examples for us to remember and to copy. All of this makes sense of why there is no point in praying to the dead saints but merit in remembering and respecting them. It is only later with platonic body soul dualism and the theory of the immortality of the soul that it makes sense to pray to the dead saints. In later Christian theory and practice this dualism was introduced, and prayer to the saints became a thing.
@thomaskorah41153 жыл бұрын
I appreciate that Dr. Ortlund didn't strawman the Catholic position. As a Catholic, I myself have struggled with some of these practices / prayers, because they can seem a little excessive. But I've also come to realize that this isn't one of those things where the biblical "evidence" is what changes opinion... it's actually more the mystical evidence that changed my mind more. Which is weird, considering that I'm naturally very skeptical about that kind of stuff normally!
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the comment, and glad it didn't come across as attacking a strawman!
@saintejeannedarc94602 жыл бұрын
That's an enigmatic comment. I can understand how biblical evidence wouldn't sway a Catholic as much, since they seem to place higher importance on tradition. How did mystical evidence sway you more, what kind, and are you still Catholic? I hope I didn't bombard you w/ questions, but your comment intrigued me.
@duckymomo79352 жыл бұрын
its not a strawman, the actual practice is heinous and the doctrine does not match the practice
@melarrow6202 Жыл бұрын
@@saintejeannedarc9460 Mystical evidence ? I’d venture a guess. Possibly it means seeing some response either in events or an interior state after praying for intercession from a Saint. Or it could mean something that has close to zero probability of happening actually comes to pass.
@bassettabq11 ай бұрын
Thank you for your thoughtful discussion on this strongly held catholic practice. If/since I can go DIRECTLY to the throne of God to receive all His benefits, WHY would I appeal to anotber source for anything?? Why would Jesus in Matthew 11 invite us to come to Him in our every difficulty for help, rest, peace???? I'm a sbc protestant but came from a staunch Catholic background. Thank God for his Word!
@toneyh12 ай бұрын
Because we share gods grace and live the Christian life together no man is an island
@ayenewyihune7 ай бұрын
As an Orthodox, this is probably the only area where I feel aligned with protestants.
@mariebo74916 ай бұрын
Is that allowed?? Isn’t this tied to icons? I’ve seen them anathematize anyone who questions these practices in their liturgy. I ask cuz I was considering EO, but I can’t seem to get around the venerations of and praying to Mary and the saints issue. 😰
@Teddy-ke6xh22 күн бұрын
@@ayenewyihune there’s a biblical/patristic/tradition way of explaining it.. not having deep understanding of scripture and then asserting your position is where the heresy lies.. do not give the pentay leverage by this foolishness! Please seek more knowledge before these foolish assertions.
@ayenewyihune22 күн бұрын
@@Teddy-ke6xh I don't think this warrior mindset is useful. Do you think Christ will be pleased because you "defended" Him this way?
@Teddy-ke6xh22 күн бұрын
@@ayenewyihune it is not a “warrior mindset” it’s a rebuke bro, if you cannot see this, and lack the humility in you, you are bound to “displease Christ”-even Christ used such language to attack hypocrites “you blood of vipers”, Elijah the Great Prophet mocked the pagans. Protestantism and leaning towards it can make you fall into various errors I am simply trying to emphasize this danger in my comment with this, &I do it in love. Do not be alarmed by the severity of it, because the severity of language is proportionate to the error! Mary and the Saints are huge in our liturgy and to say you side with the Protestants is a huge betrayal! study first and understand before commenting!
@ayenewyihune22 күн бұрын
@Teddy-ke6xh Thank you for clarifying your intent. I accept your rebuke. But I believe we should be ready to talk with open minds, while being faithful to our church. I don't think it's not because I haven't read or I don't know much, but it's because I still struggle to take all the teachings and practices in the name of "venerating saints". By that, I don't mean the standard teachings of the church about venerating saints in the right way. But I often see this going too far. And this might hinder outsiders from appreciating the spiritual depth of the church. After all it's just my opinion.
@leeenk69323 жыл бұрын
Mark 10:46-52 And they came to Jericho. And as he was leaving Jericho with his disciples and a great crowd, Bartimaeus, a blind beggar, the son of Timaeus, was sitting by the roadside. And when he heard that it was Jesus of Nazareth, he began to cry out and say, “Jesus, Son of David, have mercy on me!” And many rebuked him, telling him to be silent. But he cried out all the more, “Son of David, have mercy on me!” And Jesus stopped and said, “Call him.” And they called the blind man, saying to him, “Take heart. Get up; he is calling you.” And throwing off his cloak, he sprang up and came to Jesus. And Jesus said to him, “What do you want me to do for you?” And the blind man said to him, “Rabbi, let me recover my sight.” And Jesus said to him, “Go your way; your faith has made you well.” And immediately he recovered his sight and followed him on the way. ESV Hebrews 4:14-16 Seeing then that we have a great High Priest who has passed through the heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our confession. For we do not have a High Priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but was in all points tempted as we are, yet without sin. Let us therefore come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need. NKJV Hebrews 10:37-38 For yet a little while, And He who is coming will come and will not tarry. Now the just shall live by faith; But if anyone draws back, My soul has no pleasure in him.”NKJV Hebrews 11:6 But without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him. NKJV In the story of the blind man, people tried to deter him from crying out to Jesus. Don't let people deter you from going directly to Jesus and following him on the way to life, saying that he is too harsh of a judge, and we need a million other mediators and intercessors in order to appease HIm. Instead come with boldness to the throne of grace with humility, and expectation. He can sympathize with us because He partook of human nature and felt what we felt, yet without sin. For without faith it is impossible to please Him, and He has no pleasure in those who shrink back. The just shall live by faith. Jesus accomplished our salvation through His death and resurrection. So those who repent of their sins, and turn from them, and trust and believe in Him will be saved.
@MiguelBenitezJr4 ай бұрын
I greatly appreciate this video. I am a Protestant, but I still do have this lingering question, Why shouldn’t we ask our brothers and sisters in heaven to pray for us? The same way that I might ask you to pray for me, why would it be inappropriate to ask a saint who has passed to pray for me? You raised this question/concern, but I don’t know that it was addressed head on.
@noahfletcher30193 жыл бұрын
Great video Ortlund
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Noah!
@DaveArmstrong19582 жыл бұрын
I have made an in-depth response: "Reply to Gavin Ortlund on Praying to the Saints (Including a Reply Regarding the [Blasphemous?] 'Excesses of Marian Prayers' from the Protestant Point of View)" [5-15-22 on my "Biblical Evidence for Catholicism" blog] Lots of Bible and direct "biblical replies" to the criticisms of Catholic Marian prayers. All feedback welcome and encouraged. If you want to see how a Catholic can defend -- from the Bible -- everything that Gavin critiques in this video, this article is for you.
@tmw55202 жыл бұрын
Hey where can I find your article ? Can you post a link please?
@DaveArmstrong19582 жыл бұрын
@@tmw5520 KZbin doesn't allow links (I tried). Just paste the title into Google and you'll find it. Or go to my blog (by name) and scroll down a bit.
@tmw55202 жыл бұрын
@@DaveArmstrong1958 okay sure thanks for replying
@jasonengwer89233 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video, Gavin! You make a lot of good points. I would add that there's far more evidence against prayers to the saints than what's addressed in the video, including widespread evidence against the practice in the patristic era. The Biblical prohibitions against attempting to contact the dead seem to be addressing attempts to contact the dead in general, not just by certain means. So, trying to contact the dead through prayer would be part of what's prohibited. And the dead in question are the physically dead, not the spiritually dead. Otherwise, Daniel would have been sinning by speaking with spiritually dead government officials, Paul would have been sinning by speaking to spiritually dead individuals in the book of Acts, etc. The fact that saints are spiritually alive in heaven doesn't change the fact that they're physically dead. Furthermore, it's highly unlikely that there was a practice of praying to the dead during the Biblical era, yet it never gets mentioned anywhere, even while prayers to God keep getting mentioned explicitly and frequently. The same can be said of the early patristic era. As you mention in the video, both Celsus and Origen, in Origen's treatise Against Celsus, seem to think the mainstream Christian practice is to pray only to God. Celsus criticizes Christians in general for holding that view. And multiple ante-Nicene fathers wrote entire treatises on prayer without saying anything about praying to the saints. To the contrary, some of their comments on prayer suggest that it should only be directed to God. Many of the ante-Nicene fathers explicitly or implicitly contradict the idea that we can pray to the deceased. Though the practice became popular in later centuries, it was still opposed by some sources even then (e.g., Vigilantius, who was himself a presbyter, and he had the support of multiple bishops). If anybody is interested, I've argued at length for the Protestant view that we should pray only to God, and I've documented widespread support for the Protestant view in the patristic era. Many of the patristic sources are often misrepresented by proponents of prayers to the dead. For example, Hippolytus is often misrepresented by citing his comments directed at Daniel's companions in his commentary on Daniel, as if Hippolytus is praying to Daniel's companions. But that's like citing Psalm 114:6 to argue for praying to mountains. Or citing the words of the hymn "Angels From The Realms Of Glory" to prove that Protestants believe in praying to angels. If you read the entirety of Hippolytus' commentary on Daniel, as I have (Tom Schmidt translated the entire document into English about a decade ago), there's nothing in it that actually supports prayer to the dead. (Email me if you want to know where to find the large majority of the commentary online using an internet archive.) In another portion of the same commentary on Daniel, Hippolytus directs some comments to Nebuchadnezzar. Should we conclude that Hippolytus was praying to Nebuchadnezzar? In section 1.20.2-3 of the commentary, Hippolytus writes concerning some dead unbelievers, "O lawless rulers and leaders who are filled with diabolical activity! Did Moses hand down these things to you?" Should we conclude that Hippolytus was praying to those dead unbelievers or was encouraging other people to do so? If you look at Hippolytus' writings as a whole, it seems that he viewed prayer as something to be offered only to God. I've addressed the misrepresentations of Hippolytus and other patristic sources in a lot of depth, if anybody is interested. Do a search for a May 28, 2015 post at Triablogue titled "The TurretinFan/Albrecht Debate On Intercession Of The Saints". There's a large amount of material linked there, and you can find more in the blog's archives.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the informative comment, Jason!
@jasonengwer89233 жыл бұрын
Something else should be said about the alleged reference to praying to the saints in Hippolytus. There are other passages in Hippolytus' Commentary On Daniel in which he writes as if he's talking to deceased individuals. And there's a pattern of speaking to those people as if they're still alive on earth, doing the things they did during their earthly lives. Daniel is referred to as prophesying (1.12.5). The elders who sinned against Susannah are referred to as exercising religious authority in Israel and defiling the earth, and they're referred to as if they're currently in the process of sinning against Susannah (1.20.2-7). Nebuchadnezzar is referred to as currently carrying out governmental activities, as if he's currently ordering Daniel's companions to be placed in the furnace (2.24.8, 2.27.2). Shortly after, Hippolytus addresses Daniel's companions in the passage that supposedly is about praying to the dead (2.30.1-3). But the setting of that passage probably is earthly, like the other four passages just cited, meaning that Hippolytus is speaking to Daniel's companions in the context of their earthly lives. Why does he tell them to pray for him, then (assuming that's what he means by telling them to remember him)? Presumably because he associates their earthly lives with prayer: "And so then, Azariah, having stood up together with the rest, praised God through a hymn and a prayer in the midst of the furnace." (2.29.1) "For always the three boys were also with him [Daniel] praying." (3.26.1) So, the passage in which Hippolytus addresses Daniel's companions isn't about praying to the dead. It's using a rhetorical device that involves addressing Daniel's companions as if he's one of their contemporaries during their lives on earth, just as he addressed Daniel, Susannah's elders, and Nebuchadnezzar that way. None of these passages, including the one cited by advocates of praying to the dead, is about praying to the dead. Hippolytus' Daniel commentary does say a lot about prayer. But the prayers are directed to God, not deceased individuals.
@matiasgamalieltolmosuarez7902 жыл бұрын
@@jasonengwer8923 wow dude thank u very much. Personally I got convinced that praying to the saints is an innovation in "Caring for the dead" by St Agustin
@merecatholicity2 жыл бұрын
So I guess that Christ conversing with Moses and Elijah on the mount was sinful? Not trying to be nitpicky, but it would seem that if there was a massive divide between the living saints, and the arguably MORE living saints, we would have to call into question the morality of the mount of transfiguration.
@samueljennings48092 жыл бұрын
@@merecatholicity I mean, Jesus is a special case because He is literally God, and I think there is a difference between the Son of God doing that by the Will of the Father, and us as mere humans doing the same thing.
@mc072 жыл бұрын
praying to the saints/Mary is one of the practices I find most disturbing
@candyclews4047 Жыл бұрын
especially when praying to relics. On a visit to Rome once, I was hugely disturbed to find people praying to 'fingers', 'skulls', 'teeth' of saints. It felt very demonic to me.
@derekbates25138 ай бұрын
John 14:6 King James Version 6 Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.
@mc078 ай бұрын
@@derekbates2513 yes
@777Thebear6 ай бұрын
That and idol veneration
@MrAndyhdz4 ай бұрын
Interesting. I find the SBC baptists refusing to affirm the Nicean Creed pretty disturbing myself
@dudeholla2128 ай бұрын
When I was in the EOC, during the homily, the priest explicitly said, "Pray TO our holy mother the queen of heaven". "When we say pray we don't really mean pray". Orthodoxy is one of the most disingenuous denomination.
@huey74373 жыл бұрын
Really enjoy these videos, I always learn something and these topics are always clarified, in charity. I would love to listen to a dialogue with Trent Horn, whom I also always learn something and gleen clarification. Look forward to more!!
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
so glad you enjoy them, thanks for letting me know!
@cryptoknight969 ай бұрын
Well done!
@toddvoss523 жыл бұрын
On your opening comment about modernity’s loss of deep and intimate friendship outside romantic love is something I very much agree with !! Glad to be ecumenical about that !
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Todd! Really appreciate you highlighting that point of common ground.
@willieblanco18592 жыл бұрын
Great video!
@suswik36822 жыл бұрын
So good. Going to read about Origen. Doing a basic distance uni course in Church History. Grew up in Edinburgh in 70s. Catholicism was very taboo. Have strong protestant understanding on scripture in most areas. I have a lot of questions on the Roman/Greek influence in general on Christianity. Thanks for this break down. Must be hard for Catholics to hear it. Humbly I have a lot to read and learn.
@makeda65302 жыл бұрын
I feel like those Marian prayers would be pretty fire reworded to Jesus, Himself.
@chrissyelric71348 ай бұрын
Agree
@Nil-Hal_Kiggers3 ай бұрын
Cool, I guess. I guess you missed the part where we ask for Mary's intercessory prayers, and do not actually think she is omnipotent on the level of Jesus to be able to help us in the way Jesus can.
@yvettesam731 Жыл бұрын
Pastor Gavin ORTLUND. Thank you so much for your sharings and thoughts. I wish to ask to you give HONOUR to the Mother of God. Merci. So many Pastors who believe in Sola Sriptura say nasty things on her and about her. My questions to them. Did you ever speack in the Bible ? No. Mary did. Did you ever give birth to the ONLY SON OF GOD, care of him and brougth him up? NO. Mary did. Where you present when he died on the cross ? NO Mary was on the foot of the cross. She deserves at LEAST HONOUR. So just give HONOUR to this humble Lady. Otherwise you will miss out from her praises "From now on all generations will call me blessed" in Math 1 v 48. Amen ❤
@TruthUnites Жыл бұрын
thank you -- indeed, let Mary be honored for the wonderful woman of God she is. She is I am sure a far better Christian than I.
@NovelistVampireGirl3 жыл бұрын
The Theotokos has an extremely significant role in bringing us Christ. I’ve seen so many Protestants who want to down play and forget the simple fact that what was asked of Mary was no easy task. I’ve even heard it said that she’s so irrelevant that she could have easily been replaced by a bush. So yes, some Protestants are extremely disrespectful especially toward the Theotokos but to all the saints and anyone who honors them. I used to be a Protestant. I was never that bad, at least not outwardly but I just didn’t understand this concept because it wasn’t ever taught. It was only after making the decision to become Orthodox that I was able to connect with those who had gone before us and fully appreciate the incredibly rich spiritual heritage that’s there for anyone willing to discover it.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
I definitely agree that we should honor Mary. She is a model of virtue as well as the Lord's chosen vehicle for the incarnation. God bless.
@mcgilldi2 жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites Catholics call Mary the new Arc of the Covenant and the new Eve, the woman who did the will of God willingly, did not sin, and bore God within her body. I do agree with many of your points about excesses in especially Roman Catholic Mariology, but also think that many Protestants deny her holiness.
@jenex56082 жыл бұрын
There's no such thing as New Eve. New Eve is the Bride of Christ the Church. Which Mary is part of Mary being the New Ark of convenant is also a false analogy. The Ark of The Convenant God's presence through the Holy Spirit dwelt. Paul says our body is the temple of Holy Spirit
@mrob755 ай бұрын
Pastor Gavin….”Behold your mother…”. She truly is not a threat whatsoever; quite the contrary. I’ve never understood the old Protestant dichotomy of our Blessed Mother and the saints vs. Christ our Lord…You can’t parse or separate God and His love for us….And please do not fear prayers of intercession to our Saints. (Keep in a mind that in law, attorneys are needed to plead your case before going directly to the judge….That’s just the way it is.). May our Blessed Mother, all the saints and angles continue to quell your anxieties about faith.
@leeenk69323 жыл бұрын
One of the most beautiful things about the Passion of Christ! Matthew 27:45-52 Now from the sixth hour until the ninth hour there was darkness over all the land. And about the ninth hour Jesus cried out with a loud voice, saying, “Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani?” that is, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” Some of those who stood there, when they heard that, said, “This Man is calling for Elijah!” Immediately one of them ran and took a sponge, filled it with sour wine and put it on a reed, and offered it to Him to drink. The rest said, “Let Him alone; let us see if Elijah will come to save Him.” And Jesus cried out again with a loud voice, and yielded up His spirit. THEN, BEHOLD, THE VEIL OF THE TEMPLE WAS TORN IN TWO FROM TOP TO BOTTOM; and the earth quaked, and the rocks were split, and the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised... NKJV This scene from the crucifixion is something that some might passover without thinking about its significance. After Jesus drew His final breath, it says, " The veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom." This is significant because under the old covenant, the Jewish people relied on the Levitical priesthood to mediate between them and God. In the Jewish Temple the Ark of the Covenant was placed behind a Veil in the Most Holy Place ( or Holy of Holies ) separating the Most Holy place from the Holy place. Only the High Priest once a year was allowed to go behind the veil to offer a yearly sacrifice for his own sins, and for the sins of the people of Israel, because that was where the Presence of God dwelt with the Ark. No one else was allowed to approach the Presence of God due to sin. See Exdous 26:31-35, Leviticus 16:2-3, 11-17. The Veil separated the common person from God, and only a consecrated Priest could go before God. Hebrews 9:6-7 Now when these things had been thus prepared, the priests always went into the first part of the tabernacle, performing the services. BUT INTO THE SECOND PART THE HIGH PRIEST WENT ALONE ONCE A YEAR, not without blood, which he offered for himself and for the people’s sins committed in ignorance...NKJV First part is ( The Holy Place ) second part is ( The Most Holy Place) Only the High Priest alone could enter the second part with animal blood to offer sacrifice for his own sins, and for the sins of Israel. This demonstrated that man could not approach God without the mediation of a priest. The veil itself was rather large and quite thick to which no man could tear it in half himself. What is the point in this post...? After Jesus died, God completely tore the veil in two, demonstrating that God had accepted the perfect and eternal sacrifice of His Son, and now man can freely approach God without the mediation of a priesthood, but instead through Christ, Who is the One Mediator between God and man. See 1 Timothy 2:5. Hebrews 7:25-27 Therefore He is also able to save to the uttermost those who come to God through Him, since He always lives to make intercession for them. For such a High Priest was fitting for us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners, and has become higher than the heavens; who does not need daily, as those high priests, to offer up sacrifices, first for His own sins and then for the people’s, for this He did once for all when He offered up Himself. NKJV Christ who was separate from sinners and sinless, became our High Priest. He is Holy, harmless and undefiled, higher then the heavens, and is able to save to the uttermost those who come to God BY HIM, because He offered Himself up ONCE FOR ALL. Unlike the Levitical Priests who were sinful men, and had to also offer for their own sins, even daily. Hebrews 10:19-22 Therefore, brothers, we have CONFIDENCE TO ENTER THE MOST HOLY PLACE BY THE BLOOD OF JESUS, by a NEW and LIVING way that He has opened for us through the VEIL, that is to say, HIS FLESH, and since we have a High Priest over the house of God, let us draw near with a true heart in FULL ASSURANCE OF FAITH...MEV So the new veil is the flesh of Christ by which we approach God, and we approach God FREELY by Christ into the Most Holy place in FULL ASSURANCE of FAITH. So in a nutshell... Hebrews 4:16, says... "Let us therefore come BOLDLY TO THE THRONE OF GRACE, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need." NKJV ...That is to GOD HIMSELF! Hebrews 10:11-18 And every priest stands ministering daily and offering repeatedly the same sacrifices, which can never take away sins. But this Man, after He had offered ONE SACRIFICE FOR SINS FOREVER, sat down at the right hand of God, from that time waiting till His enemies are made His footstool. FOR BY ONE OFFERING HE HAS PERFECTED FOREVER those who are being sanctified. But the Holy Spirit also witnesses to us; for after He had said before, “This is the covenant that I will make with them after those days, says the Lord: I will put My laws into their hearts, and in their minds I will write them,” then He adds, “Their sins and their lawless deeds I will remember no more.” NOW WHERE THERE IS REMISSION OF THESE, THERE IS NO LONGER AN OFFERING FOR SIN. NKJV Also see 1 Peter 3:18. Christ was offered one time, never to be repeated. He suffered once for sins, He the Just for unjust humanity. Isaiah 45:22 TURN TO ME AND BE SAVED, all the ends of the earth! FOR I AM GOD, and there is no other. ESV Isaiah 43:1,11 But now thus says the Lord, He who created you, O Jacob, He who formed you, O Israel: “Fear not, FOR I HAVE REDEEMED you; I have called you by name, YOU ARE MINE.... I am the Lord, and besides me THERE NO SAVIOR. ESV Amos 5:4 For thus says the Lord to the house of Israel: “SEEK ME AND LIVE...ESV Joel 2:32 And it shall come to pass that everyone who calls on the NAME OF THE LORD SHALL BE SAVED. ESV 1 Timothy 4:10 For to this end we both labor and suffer reproach, because we TRUST IN THE LIVING GOD, who is the SAVIOR of all men, especially of those who BELIEVE. NKJV
@derekbates25138 ай бұрын
John 14:6 King James Version 6 Jesus saith unto him, I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.
@FentonHardyFan2 жыл бұрын
Please DO make a video about something called the doctrine of friendship! I think friendship is incredibly undervalued in both Christian and secular circles. I’ve only ever heard one sermon about friendship, and I’m 29 years old and grew up in the church.
@Mygoalwogel2 жыл бұрын
Ruth Whiteford's doctoral theses is on the topos of friendship in 1-2 Corinthians.
@Veshgard3 жыл бұрын
Gavin, you missed one very important piece of context: The medieval (and ancient) use of extremely deferential language as a matter of course. Simply put, in ancient and medieval times - and even today in Orthodoxy - we sometimes say things that we don't actually mean literally in our prayers, and never did mean literally. "I have no one else to turn to but you", for example, does not literally mean "no one else will listen to me, including God". It actually simply means "I beg you to help me". Or addressing someone by extreme-sounding titles like "mother of mercy, mother of grace, hope of all the forsaken, comforter of all the despairing, etc etc"? That just means "I respect you a lot". It's a cultural thing, at least in the Christian East (but probably also in the medieval Christian West as well). Heaping extreme praise on someone was simply the polite thing to do if you were going to ask them for help. For a secular example, just think of letters that end with "your humble servant", for instance. This was a common phrase including when the person writing was absolutely not a servant of the other in any sense, not even metaphorically. Even today, if you read official letters written by one Orthodox bishop to another, they always call each other things like "the blessed and most pious and God-loving Bishop X", and sign off with phrases like "please consider the appeal of my unworthiness". This is simply how people used to talk, at least when making a formal request.
@Mygoalwogel3 жыл бұрын
Papists do worship Mary. No question about it: "My Queen and my Mother, *I give myself entirely to you;* and to show my devotion to you, I consecrate to you this day my eyes, my ears, my mouth, my heart, *my whole being without reserve.* Wherefore, good Mother, as *I am your own, keep me, guard me, as your property and possession.* Amen."
@Mygoalwogel3 жыл бұрын
*Orthodox Compline prayer to Mary:* _On the terrible day of judgment, deliver me from eternal punishment and make me an heir of your Son's glory_
@HumanDignity10 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this. As Gavin was reading these prayers, I kept thinking I wished I had more context. It's kind of like reading the bible - there are lots of instances where what it means in today's parlance is not what it meant to the ancients.
@HillbillyBlack Жыл бұрын
This was excellent
@frjamesbozeman53753 жыл бұрын
I gave this a listen. Since this was basically a critique of Roman Catholic practice (as interpreted by a Baptist minister, which is problematic, in my opinion, but hey...), we Eastern Orthodox Christians probably don't have a horse in this race as the saying goes. But since I am here... I will say this: one of the biggest problems in these sorts of Protestant critiques is what I would consider to be the misuse of the preposition "to", coupled with a radical misunderstanding of the verb "pray". Anything that we place between ourselves and God is an idol. I say this as an Orthodox priest and one who engages the saints in prayer constantly. Prayer itself is an act of communion and communication. It can also incorporate elements of submission and service, particularly as we offer our prayers to God. The main objections to prayers involving saints (notice: I dropped "to", as I think that this is a misused preposition) seem to be a supposed lack of Biblical evidence of such things (which is odd, coming from Protestants who innovate by nature), coupled with the idea that this sort of act becomes de facto idolatry, or at the very least is a foolish act because saints are not God and cannot hear us. So here is how I typically explain this to catechumens: IF saints can hear our prayers (and I belive they do based on Orthodox tradition and simple reasoning) then it is because a) God enables this, and b) He desires that the whole Church remain united in prayer, having c) conquered death, which "no longer holds men captive". I can't speak for the RC's, but I can assure you that when Eastern Orthodox Christians pray **with** the saints, we are simply honoring God's defeat of death and His desire that we all be one as He is one. We are surrounded by a cloud of witnesses (obviously a reference to Hebrews) and this cloud does not seem to be passive and disengaged. If I ask St James to pray for me, then I trust the Lord to see to it that St James offers his efficacious prayers on my behalf. Few things seem more impoverished, more lonely, more isolated than Protestant forms of prayer: just me and Jesus. Certainly (and don't mistake) Jesus and His fullness are what we Orthodox desire, but we are not so foolish as to throw away one of the greatest gifts that Jesus offers us, which is communion through shared prayer with those very saints whom He has committed to pray on our behalf. I mean, what else are they doing while they wait in Christ's presence?
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for listening and typing out a thoughtful comment! I'm curious, why do you think it's problematic to critique Roman Catholic practice as a Baptist? Do you think that is inherently problematic or was there something in particular about my critique? If the latter, why bring up my being a Baptist? I really struggle to understand your preposition issue (talking WITH the saints rather than TO them). The practice in question is surely talking TO them. You could say it's both, I suppose. But I still don't really see what this is doing for you. Maybe you can clarify why you find that significant. I think the Protestant approach of practicing prayer as it is defined in Scripture is a reasonable one. My main desire is simply to be obedient to God, and I understand God to have revealed what prayer is in Scripture. I don't pray to the saints any more than I pray to angels. It's simply not what God revealed prayer to be. If that is wrong, it's certainly not unreasonably or wildly wrong. So I find your comments unnecessarily dismissive. (I'd also say that if praying to God alone is a "lonely" form of prayer, then all Scriptural prayers are lonely.) Still, thank you for taking the time to share your perspective!
@frjamesbozeman53753 жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites Just to clarify: I hope that my comment regarding being a Baptist didn’t come across as snarky. From the Orthodox perspective of things, I would say that if you are not practicing a given thing (case in point: practice prayer that involves praying with the saints) it seems problematic to feel that you can fully relate to what is happening when someone is doing this. Naturally, we don’t need to enter into sinful acts in order to know that they are wrong, but I would contend that praying “to” the saints is not a sinful act in the least (as you might guess) . It’s not that we don’t have reasons that we can communicate for these practices, but that we begin by doing a given thing, and that understanding tends to follow. That may sound scary, and it would be scary, if these practices were not proven by generations of faithful, pious Christians proving their value and consistency with the teaching of the Apostles (which I guess is a point that you are contesting). I like that you offered that if the Protestant approach to prayer is wrong, it isn’t wildly wrong. I would agree, but I would happily and hopefully challenge anyone who does not avail themselves of the very practical and spiritually tangible cloud of witnesses, asking for their prayers, to simply do it. When our loved ones die in the Lord, are we afraid that if we go to their grave and speak to them expressing our love and our sense of loss, that somehow this is sinful or in some way violates a spiritual principle? For myself, being confident that Christ has trampled down death by death, I cannot see death as something that prevents me from asking the prayers of my departed loved ones, of departed Christian mentors or of the more remote saints of the Church. What I gain is two fold: through the act of this prayer I demonstrate that “death no longer holds men captive”, and I simultaneously glorify God, showing Him my faith that He is able and willing to work in and through His saints. This is a rich, highly-connected form of prayer that takes me from a place of isolation into a sense of that same cloud of witnesses to which I belong. We all pray together. That’s my experience of it, at least. I don’t mean to be dismissive. It’s just that I grew up as an evangelical, and while I have no regrets for that past, it simply doesn’t compare to the richness of what I am experiencing now as an Orthodox Christian and priest . I guess it so good, that I want others to “taste and see”.
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
@@frjamesbozeman5375 thank you for taking the time to explain your thinking more fully! I don’t have time to respond just now as I’m watching the kids, but I’ll reflect upon your remarks!
@frjamesbozeman53753 жыл бұрын
@@TruthUnites Please take your time! I was trying to reply via my iPad, so forgive any odd punctuation or poorly structured sentences. ;)
@ContendingEarnestly3 жыл бұрын
*I gave this a listen. Since this was basically a critique of Roman Catholic practice (as interpreted by a Baptist minister, which is problematic, in my opinion* Why is it problematic? Roman catholics critique other faiths, including we Christians all the time. Do you find that problematic or does it just work one way? If its an honest appraisal it shouldn't be a problem. Either way, its something to be discussed, not dismissed. *I will say this: one of the biggest problems in these sorts of Protestant critiques is what I would consider to be the misuse of the preposition "to", coupled with a radical misunderstanding of the verb "pray".* So it all boils down to linguistics and grammar? If we all get our grammar worked out praying TO dead people is okay? The rcc says this in its ccc CCC 2679 Mary is the perfect Orans (pray-er), a figure of the Church. *When we pray to her,* we are adhering with her to the plan of the Father, who sends his Son to save all men. I think the radical misunderstanding comes from those that can brush aside the mountain of evidence in the bible regarding prayer and insert their own teaching. Its not like the bible is silent on prayer either whom to pray to, who not to pray to and how to pray or what to pray for. Its not complicated. The fact is no one did what both you and roman catholics suggest. *Anything that we place between ourselves and God is an idol. I say this as an Orthodox priest and one who engages the saints in prayer constantly.* You just admitted placing saints between you and God. According to you this is???? Begins with an I *The main objections to prayers involving saints (notice: I dropped "to", as I think that this is a misused preposition)* This topic isn't simply reduced to grammar, much as i think many would like it to be. This is theology and we can't tweek what God has laid out for us by simply adjusting our prepositions. Praying TO saints is precisely what youre doing. You'd like to water down this practice by changing the wording to something less convicting. *seem to be a supposed lack of Biblical evidence of such things* If its only 'supposed' why didn't you offer any scripture? If its only supposed that there is no biblical support, why did you say this; *So here is how I typically explain this to catechumens: IF saints can hear our prayers (and I belive they do based on Orthodox tradition and simple reasoning)* So the bible has support for this teaching or you wouldn't have said 'supposed' (or am i radically misusing this word) but you don't appeal to the bible, you just said you 'typically' explain it based on orthodox tradition and simple reasoning. I'm quite sure if the bible supported your beliefs then your catechumens would be given that very source as proof. Right? *(which is odd, coming from Protestants who innovate by nature)* Gotta get that dig in huh? What exactly has been innovated? I can find my beliefs in scripture. Seems you can't. Whose innovating? *Few things seem more impoverished, more lonely, more isolated than Protestant forms of prayer: just me and Jesus.* Its obvious that like roman catholics the orthodox don't have a real personal relationship with their savior. If you did you'd never have made that comment. Jesus went off by Himself to pray to His Father. We pray to Jesus because we have a deep relationship with Him. He lives to intercede on our behalf. Impoverished? The person going to a multitude of people dead or alive rather than Jesus is impoverished. You're settling for people that can't hear you over the one that desires your prayers more than anyone. *but we are not so foolish as to throw away one of the greatest gifts that Jesus offers us, which is communion through shared prayer with those very saints whom He has committed to pray on our behalf.* Where does Jesus offer us this gift? Chapter and verse please. *I mean, what else are they doing while they wait in Christ's presence?* Another sad statement. Paul came back from the third heaven and said what he saw was unspeakable. Being in the presence of God and you make it sound like people there are bored. Amazing.
@WhatYourPastorDidntTellYou3 жыл бұрын
Love the new logo!!!
@TruthUnites3 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot! I do, too. Got help from a very generous friend.