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- Jul 13, 2015
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I ask her to and the holy, Catholic, and Apostolic church tells me that she hears and prays for us.@MoreCoffee, here is where I disagree strongly with the Roman Catholics. You say, "She does pray for us and thus is an intercessor." How do you know that she does?
The above is protestant speculation. What makes you think that the saints in heaven are limited to one "place" in heaven and that they cannot "hear" our prayers and that Blessed Mary cannot intercede for us with God?She is human, and thus her soul is limited to one place in heaven, since she certainly isn't God, who is everywhere. She, therefore, can't hear everyone's prayers and as a result, can't relay them to God the Father.
I am certain that the Holy Tradition of the intercession of the saints was not established by a pope or even by several popes over time. You appear to be pulling these claims out of your hat.The crux of the disagreement I have is that the RCC has added a tradition established by the Popes apart from the Bible that they consider to be authoritative. The Bible should be the only basis for the Christian faith.
Catholic teaching on the intercession of the saints arises from early Christian belief that the righteous in heaven continue to pray for the Church, grounded in New Testament images of heavenly intercession, shaped by second‑century veneration of martyrs, articulated clearly by third‑century writers like Origen and Cyprian, normalised as explicit invocation by the fourth century through Fathers such as Basil, Gregory Nazianzen, Augustine and Jerome, embedded in the developing doctrine of the communion of saints, and finally defined dogmatically at the Council of Trent, which affirmed that the saints in glory intercede for the faithful and may be invoked as part of the Church’s living communion.