This thread has become repetitively boring.
Let's see if we can liven it up a bit.
Why don't we determine which organisations can be trusted to be truthful, and their representations therefore trusted?
MoreCoffee in Post #289 stated:
The priests, deacons, bishops and all others who rightly administer baptism within the Catholic Church will not knowingly re-baptise any person who has already received baptism in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
http://www.christianitytoday.com/gl...greement-signed-by-catholic-and-reformed.html
An agreement was signed in the USA on 29 January 2013, by representatives of the Christian Reformed Church in North America, Presbyterian Church (USA), Reformed Church in America, Roman Catholic Church and United Church of Christ., to commonly recognise each other's baptisms. The report noted that the agreement pertained within the USA only, and that such agreements were unusual outside the USA.
Prior to the agreement, those Protestant churches had recognised Roman Catholic baptism, but not the other way around.
Now, if we look at the Catholic Answers web page
http://www.catholic.com/quickquesti...-baptism-if-protestantism-has-no-valid-priest, we find information similar to that offered by MoreCoffee.
If the Catholic Answers statements are true, then there would have been no need at all for any recognition agreement.
In fact, the web site
https://www.catholic.org.au/acbc-me...handbook-1/1389-recognition-of-baptism-1/file actually lists the non-Catholic churches which have their baptisms formally recognised by the Catholic Church in Australia, and for most, the actual year in which that recognition was given.
An interesting list follows.
The second Vatican Council (1962 – international) formally recognised baptism in the Eastern (Orthodox) churches by declaring that they “still possess true sacraments”.
1969 (Australian Catholic Bishops) – Anglican Church baptism recognised.
1973 (Australian Catholic Bishops) – Presbyterian Church baptism recognised.
1973 (Australian Catholic Bishops) – Methodist Church baptism recognised.
1976 (Australian Catholic Bishops) – Lutheran Church baptism recognised. Joint statement in 1977.
1979 (Australian Catholic Bishops) – Uniting Church baptism recognised.
1980 (Australian Catholic Bishops) – Congregational Church baptism recognised.
Later agreements followed in 2004 and 2007. (Lack of space precludes their expansion here. Interested parties can look at the web page and then search for others to obtain more detail.)
And these particular recognitions etc. are confined to Australia. Other countries have differing standards.
If the statement from MoreCoffe (which I understand was honestly based on official Catholic sources), and the companion statements in the web pages above are true, why was there any need for formal recognition and signed agreements? The two concepts are mutually exclusive.
And if anyone wishes to claim they are not mutually exclusive, the obvious question would be: then why did it take the Catholic Church so long (how many hundreds of years?) to extend formal recognition? And why bother now?
In truth, no matter how much might be the referring back to historical figures like Augustine, the further question remains: did the Roman Catholic Church actually recognise baptism carried out before, during and after the Reformation period by say, Lutheran and Anglican churches and other churches whose members were being tortured and slaughtered for their faith?
I think not.
Thus once again we see grand inconsistency within the representations made by the Roman Catholic Church. And we see individual portions of that inconsistent whole, promulgated by its adherents, either innocently or otherwise, to suit individual situations.
And therefore I suspect we can strike the Roman Catholic Church off the list of churches that claim trustworthiness.
For consistency, maybe I should strike some others off too.