Nathan F wrote:Just to clear a couple things up:
The Trinity is not more than one God. It is one God, in three different, uhm, how to explain, incarnations, so to speak. The Father being God, the Son, Jesus, being God on earth, and, the Holy Spirit (or Ghost) being how God works through people. Essentially three different parts of one God, not three different Gods.
Not what I was taught. They are supposedly all God, but there is only one God, yet each of them is distinctly God, which is a contradiction. Yet another one of those "mysteries" that we all have to accept on faith.
Now that that is cleared up, it is things like this that make me disagree with the Catholic church (not Catholics in general, but the leadership). The Church considers the Pope to be infallible. There is something about that that just strikes me as wrong. No one is perfect, other than Jesus Christ, the Bible itself states that. Heck, that is what is central to Christianity.
The Church only considers the Pope to be infallible under certain conditions:
1. When he speaks ex cathedra (i.e. from his official position).
2. When he declares something that is already generally agreed upon.
3. When he speaks about a matter of the faith.
Those conditions must all be satisfied before the Pope is considered to have made an infallible statement. Of course, the Pope has perverted the last condition to make himself infallible with respect to moral issues, as well, and he's ignored the second condition a few times (such as when he declared that women would never be priests).