It's true both because the Church says so and because Jesus said that what the Church teaches is what he teaches. But I am happy to concede that people who reject the Catholic Church for whatever reasons will see the matter differently. By the way the people at Berea were Jews not Christians and their example was superior to the reaction in Thessalonica but it was not good. They checked up on Paul's claims about Jesus by consulting their Jewish scriptures (probably the Septuagint translation of the old testament into Greek but possibly a Hebrew/Aramaic text was also available for those who could read those languages) because they didn't trust his words at face value. That was better than the direct opposition that the Jews in Thessalonica offered but it is not what Christians are called to do. Doubting an apostle's testimony to Jesus Christ is not a great start to Christian faith but it is not nearly as bad as rejecting it. So back to what the Church says being what Jesus says. Have a look at this passage. You can accept it or reject it as you please. I choose to accept it.
Luke 10:16 'Whoever listens to you listens to me, and whoever rejects you rejects me, and whoever rejects me rejects the one who sent me.'
Please provide scripture to prove this.
"It's true both because the Church says so and because Jesus said that what the Church teaches is what he teaches."
Where do we find Jesus ever referring to the church at Rome?
Why does Luke give commendation to the Bereans for expecting a person to prove their point in God's word?
You are projecting your bias into the text to force your interpretation.
What is the context around Luke 10? I can tell you this. It wasn't the church at Rome because there was no church at Rome when Jesus walked the earth.
MoreCoffee, you are engaged in very typical RC eisegesis where a person projects whatever they want on any text, even though the context goes against the interpretation. Please study what it means to exegete a passage.
Observe
Question
Interpret
Apply
Context, Context, Context