Wow!
Remember Pedrito's previous warnings in various places to be on the look out for underhanded techniques?
And that the use of those techniques actually proves the very opposite of what those techniques are promoting or defending?
Well, a noteworthy example has been presented in this thread.
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The technique used here is to repeatedly ignore telling evidence that has been presented, and pretend that no destructive evidence of any note has been presented. This stonewalling technique is not only diversionary, but also intimidatory – it is designed to demoralise the person bringing that evidence to light.
It is commonly used by large companies when malpractices they have been indulging in, are unveiled.
In this thread, the technique is being used to defend a psychologically and organisationally important later addition to the Nicene Creed. The addition must be defended to the hilt, otherwise many churches will have to admit they have been teaching heresy. And that situation cannot be permitted.
The tchnique is evidenced by the repeated asking of questions like: "where is the heresy?".
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Once again, whenever a technique such as this is observed, a reader (or hearer) knows beyond doubt that the perpetrator is defending a personally important belief against evidence that they find irrefutable.
Readers who have been contributors and visitors to this forum for some time, may remember seeing this mechanism (which Pedrito believes can only be described as underhanded and disrespectful of the God of Truth), being used before.
God, being the all-knowing God, would not have inspired the development of, or inclusion of, any creedal clause that is heretical in any human language.
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The Filioque Clause shows itself to be heretical.
As pointed out by the employer of that technique: 'In English the clause says "who proceedeth from the Father and the Son"’ – i.e. two stated direct sources, the very condition that the 1995 Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity (PCPCU) stated made the Greek version heretical.
He then directly followed that heretical statement with another instance of a “where is the heresy?” statement.
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In closing, perhaps we should thank the Poster of Posts #61 and #66 (and other Posts) for demonstrating so clearly for us that he actually finds the evidence (showing that the Filioque clause is most definitely heretical), to be so conclusive.