The Protestant "Creed Problem"

Ойын-сауық

In this episode, Trent comments on the Southern Baptist "Nicene Creed Debate" and shows how it reveals a fatal flaw in Sola Scriptura.
To support this channel: / counseloftrent
Be sure to keep up with our socials!
/ counseloftrent
/ counseloftrent
/ counseloftrentpodcast
Timestamps:
00:00 Southern Baptist Church and the Nicene Creed
00:20 The Protestant “Creed Problem”
00:39 The Protestant Definition of Sola Scriptura
01:50 Solo Scriptura vs Sola Scriptura
03:25 The use of Sola Scriptura and Heretical views
05:09 Ecumenical Councils and Sola Scriptura
06:21 Baptismal Regeneration

Пікірлер: 2 600

  • @TheCounselofTrent
    @TheCounselofTrent7 күн бұрын

    For an in-depth examination of this topic, be sure to check out my colleague Joe Heschmeyer's video, "One, Holy, BAPTIST, and Apostolic Church??" kzread.info/dash/bejne/d4CDvMR8nKW3Y6w.html

  • @andrewmcdougall7158

    @andrewmcdougall7158

    7 күн бұрын

    Great video! Definitely adds to this topic.

  • @BensWorkshop

    @BensWorkshop

    7 күн бұрын

    @@andrewmcdougall7158 I've watched it to. Joe is so good and reasonably penning people in.

  • @xinosaj

    @xinosaj

    7 күн бұрын

    Most Baptists just call themselves Christians. No Protestant bats an eye at "catholic" in the creed. I wouldn't assume it means the RCC any more than the PNCC or Old Catholics, just because some groups put Catholic in their name with a capital C. BTW, you guys have changed the creed in the past, introducing errors in regard to the procession of the Holy Spirit. The Orthodox are certainly right about the Filoque. So don't lecture us on a creed you feel free to change (at least every thousand years or so).

  • @JoeThePresbapterian

    @JoeThePresbapterian

    6 күн бұрын

    Interesting title. I can see how the rebuttal would be titled "One, Holy, PAPIST, and Apostolic Church."

  • @BensWorkshop

    @BensWorkshop

    6 күн бұрын

    @@xinosaj So you do not believe that Jesus the Son of God is equal in divinity to The Father?

  • @SaraBaxter-bf4rt
    @SaraBaxter-bf4rt18 сағат бұрын

    *Larry Burkett's book on "Giving and Tithing" drew me closer to God and helped my spirituality. 2020 was a year I literally lived it. I cashed in my life savings and gave it all away. My total giving amounted to 40,000 dollars. Everyone thought I was delusional. Today, 1 receive 85,000 dollars every two months. I have a property in Calabasas, CA, and travel a lot. God has promoted me more than once and opened doors for me to live beyond my dreams. God kept to his promises to and for me*

  • @HarrisWay-kc7li

    @HarrisWay-kc7li

    18 сағат бұрын

    There's wonder working power in following Kingdom principles on giving and tithing. Hallelujah!

  • @FelixRothbart

    @FelixRothbart

    18 сағат бұрын

    But then, how do you get all that in that period of time? What is it you do please, mind sharing?

  • @PaulDerekLiddell

    @PaulDerekLiddell

    18 сағат бұрын

    It is the digital market. That's been the secret to this wealth transfer. A lot of folks in the US and abroad are getting so much from it, God has been good to my household Thank you Jesus

  • @PaulDerekLiddell

    @PaulDerekLiddell

    18 сағат бұрын

    Big thanks to Ms. Chisty Fiore❤️✨💯May God bless Christy Fiore services,she have changed thousands of lives globally

  • @EmmaKristiana

    @EmmaKristiana

    18 сағат бұрын

    How can I start this digital market, any guidelines and how can I reach out to her?

  • @DouglasTheDon
    @DouglasTheDon7 күн бұрын

    Even Martin Luther would consider most modern protestants radically heretical

  • @elKarlo

    @elKarlo

    7 күн бұрын

    Not going to lie. Many are getting there. I’ve talked to some that don’t believe Mary is Theotokos. Or if she is, it doesn’t mean anything at all, as it’s just about Jesus. Or some that are close to being non Trinitarian I’ve talked to some that reject all the creeds and councils. Basically Christianity is what they want it to be. Which is scary as we can bend things to suit us so easily.

  • @eve3363

    @eve3363

    7 күн бұрын

    So are you now saying that Martin Luther is the leader of the Christian faith? What's wrong with yall? There is only one leader of the Christian faith. It isn't the Pope, Martin Luther, Joseph Smith, Mohamed, none of them! The only leader is God's Son Jesus Christ who is alive in Heaven with his father. Oh, I forgot. Jesus and God are supposedly the same entity. No wonder most self proclaimed Christians are absolutely confused: following man and not the God sent to save man!

  • @nicolasramirez3944

    @nicolasramirez3944

    7 күн бұрын

    @@eve3363no they’re not saying that. They’re saying that Protestants are so far from the true faith that even the guy who started it would agree.

  • @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    7 күн бұрын

    @@elKarlo Getting where exactly?

  • @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    7 күн бұрын

    @@nicolasramirez3944 THE Faith was once for all delivered...and didnt need to be "developed" over many many centuries.100% sufficient then and now

  • @maddiemeadowsplace9990
    @maddiemeadowsplace99907 күн бұрын

    If you know the scriptures, you will recognize the Nicene Creed as being totally faithful to scripture.

  • @drjanitor3747

    @drjanitor3747

    3 күн бұрын

    Yet most so called Catholics deny the Nicene creed by denying the one baptism.

  • @VizziMoto

    @VizziMoto

    3 күн бұрын

    @@drjanitor3747who does this? The one Baptism is what unites Catholics. In fact many Catholics believe Protestants to be fallen away Catholics if they were baptized in The Name of The Father, and of The Son, and of The Holy Ghost.

  • @suzannakoizumi8605

    @suzannakoizumi8605

    2 күн бұрын

    ​@@drjanitor3747Where did you get that idea???

  • @saldol9862

    @saldol9862

    Күн бұрын

    @@VizziMoto Yeah most Prot baptisms are usually valid, as long as it is done as “I baptize you in the name of the Father, Son, and the Holy Ghost” or whatever equivalent in another language. The only group I know of that has invalid baptisms while using nominally the same formula is the LDS church due to an incompatible understanding of God.

  • @joshuareeves5103
    @joshuareeves51037 күн бұрын

    As a Baptist, you have given me lots to think about in regard to this. Thanks.

  • @randombanana3771

    @randombanana3771

    7 күн бұрын

    Gavin Ortlund’s Truth Unites channel just made a video about how Baptists should affirm the Nicene Creed. Worth checking out!

  • @uverpro3598

    @uverpro3598

    7 күн бұрын

    I was raised Missionary Baptist. I like the foundations of truth and passion for God, but it left me with longing for theological questions and traditions. I found that of my own accord, in Roman Catholicism. Good luck on your journey, Brother in Christ.

  • @universalflamethrower6342

    @universalflamethrower6342

    7 күн бұрын

    You know what I did when it came to choose a Church, I prayed to God and I also asked The Mother of God since it was between Orthodoxy and Catholicism for me, yet I still think Orthodoxy is valid, Catholicism just fits me better.

  • @PatrickSteil

    @PatrickSteil

    7 күн бұрын

    Just seek HIS Truth! :)

  • @FleurPillager

    @FleurPillager

    7 күн бұрын

    @@randombanana3771 I know! It's like they are trying to merge all of the religions under some false unity flag while ignoring the gospels. It's terrible

  • @thetombier13
    @thetombier137 күн бұрын

    Speaking as a Protestant, I can tell you what we believe about Creeds: creeds and confessions do not share the same authority as the Bible, but they are helpful summaries of the Bible’s teachings, and therefore should be used to help us understand the broader teaching of the Scriptures. However, as the Bible alone was divinely inspired in the autographs, creeds and confessions must necessarily submit themselves to the authority of the Bible. When creeds, confessions, councils, or pastors speak, if they are out of step with the scriptures then they are in error.

  • @joshj3787

    @joshj3787

    6 күн бұрын

    Who determines when they are out of step with Scripture? For instance, the Nicene Creed, as Trent dove into, claims regenerational Baptism. Who gets to decide what Scripture teaches so that we know whether the creed is accurate or out of step?

  • @Jiko-ryu

    @Jiko-ryu

    6 күн бұрын

    Then it would be better if, speaking as a Protestant, one would point out where exactly in the Nicene Creed is out of step with the Scriptures and is in error. The SBC, in their decision not to accept the Nicene Creed, was more honest than other Protestants in pointing out their disagreement with two articles of the Nicene Creed. Magisterial Protestants, though claiming to be sola Scriptura, are really 𝘱𝘳𝘪𝘮𝘢 𝘚𝘤𝘳𝘪𝘱𝘵𝘶𝘳𝘢 with their own magisteriums.

  • @FleurPillager

    @FleurPillager

    6 күн бұрын

    @@joshj3787 Read it yourself and decide for yourself. If your church is saying things contrary to the gospels then you need a different church.

  • @Mr.BaSir20

    @Mr.BaSir20

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@FleurPillager 2 Peter 1:20-21 [20]Understand this first: that every prophecy of Scripture does not result from one's own interpretation. [21]For prophecy was not conveyed by human will at any time. Instead, holy men were speaking about God while inspired by the Holy Spirit.

  • @gregm6894

    @gregm6894

    4 күн бұрын

    @@Mr.BaSir20 This is an inappropriate, inapplicable Scripture quote if I've ever seen one. These verses have to do with the inspired writing of "prophecy of Scripture", not the Holy Spirit's guidance and counsel in understanding Scripture. Jesus called Him the 'Counselor' for a reason. John 16:14 - "He will glorify me because it is from me that he will receive what he will make known to you."

  • @henrytucker7189
    @henrytucker71897 күн бұрын

    I saw Gavin Ortlund’s defense of the Nicene Creed. The problem, of course, is that when individuals can define the words of the creed however they want, it ceases to be a “guardrail for orthodoxy.”

  • @jadehaze7939

    @jadehaze7939

    7 күн бұрын

    Every sentence has room for interpretation. What Jesus teaches is to follow the spirit of the law. There's nothing controversial in the Nicene Creed to any true Christian.

  • @ZTAudio

    @ZTAudio

    7 күн бұрын

    the Catholic Church is a study in “(re)defining words for themselves.”

  • @A-ARonYeager

    @A-ARonYeager

    7 күн бұрын

    How so ​@@ZTAudio

  • @codywork-us7wu

    @codywork-us7wu

    7 күн бұрын

    @@jadehaze7939 "One Baptism for the forgiveness of sins" Thats SUPER controversial for Baptists and Evangelicals.

  • @StringofPearls55

    @StringofPearls55

    7 күн бұрын

    That's my take too.

  • @noel_112
    @noel_1127 күн бұрын

    They were probably scared of the "...Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church..." and "One baptism for the forgiveness of sins" parts.

  • @thenewhope123

    @thenewhope123

    7 күн бұрын

    Catholic and Apostolic shouldn't be a problem for them. Baptism for the remission of sins tho...

  • @ianquyck9834

    @ianquyck9834

    7 күн бұрын

    I can’t speak for all Protestants, but I’m Lutheran and we believe in the “Holy catholic and apostolic church” without any fear. When we say “catholic” we use the lower case c and it means universal.

  • @namapalsu2364

    @namapalsu2364

    7 күн бұрын

    The second one.

  • @thenewhope123

    @thenewhope123

    7 күн бұрын

    @@ianquyck9834 yeah we are catholic evangelicals! This is a historic name for our church actually

  • @bobinindiana

    @bobinindiana

    7 күн бұрын

    As a non-expert on the doctrine of baptism by immersion of a believer who has reached the age of reason, I believe you are correct about the phrase about baptism in the creed. Viewing baptism as an ordinance means that one is baptized as Jesus was because Jesus commanded it. The act symbolizes one’s death, burial, and resurrection in the Lord Jesus Christ.

  • @thenateclineshow
    @thenateclineshow7 күн бұрын

    CAN YOU TAKE ME HIIGHE..... oh, wrong Creed..

  • @MrDarthtelos

    @MrDarthtelos

    7 күн бұрын

    Joe made that joke too.

  • @jayantbenjamin4307

    @jayantbenjamin4307

    7 күн бұрын

    😂

  • @MrAndyhdz

    @MrAndyhdz

    7 күн бұрын

    I heard Creed songs have been outlawed by the SBC

  • @56Tyskie

    @56Tyskie

    7 күн бұрын

    😂😂

  • @jonathanjakubowski8537

    @jonathanjakubowski8537

    7 күн бұрын

    Just found out that Creed is on a reunion tour this summer just btw 👍

  • @johnandava
    @johnandava7 күн бұрын

    Sacred Heart of Jesus, have mercy on us.

  • @briantrafford4871
    @briantrafford48717 күн бұрын

    I didn't know some of the oldest Protestant denominations didn't confess the Nicene and Apostles' Creeds. As a Lutheran convert to Catholicism I thought we all did.

  • @G-ew9hv

    @G-ew9hv

    6 күн бұрын

    Do you recite the Nicene creed? Yes or no. If yes - why?

  • @LittkeTM

    @LittkeTM

    6 күн бұрын

    Because Protestants use confessions of faith and "Belief in the Trinity" is a pretty common feature, thus making a direct citation of The Nicene Creed redundant. Protestants are still mostly Nicene, including the (not actually Protestant, but a form of Anabaptist) Baptists.

  • @G-ew9hv

    @G-ew9hv

    6 күн бұрын

    @@LittkeTM the Nicene creed is deceptive to the lost

  • @briantrafford4871

    @briantrafford4871

    6 күн бұрын

    @@G-ew9hv How is it deceptive?

  • @G-ew9hv

    @G-ew9hv

    6 күн бұрын

    @@briantrafford4871 it does not say that Christ died for our sins. Subtle deception the lost never notice. It gives the power to the church and water!

  • @elnathan2930
    @elnathan29307 күн бұрын

    I dont understand the problem here. Trent says Southern Baptist theology contradicts the Nicene creed, Baptists then proceed to reject the creed because it contradicts their theology. So where is the creed problem? Trent also set up a false dichotomy here, the very fact that Baptists even discussed weather to hold to the creed (an extra-biblical authority) and decided not because they thought it contradicted scripture is the essence of "Sola Scriptura". If it was "Solo Scriptura" they wouldn't even have had this discussion in the first place they would have just said its not in scripture so its not an authority "no need to even look at it" Here are the options of Church authority without Trent's false dichotomy: Solo Scriptura: Bible is the only authority (no need to hold to anything else) Sola Scriptura: Bible is the only infallible authority hence other authorities can be held, but only if they don't contradict the denomination's view of scripture Sola Ecclesia: claims many infallible authorities however one of them interprets the other authorities so functionally there is only one ultimate authority since Catholics hold to 3 authorities: Magisterium, Scripture and Tradition, but the Magisterium interprets what is tradition and what's not tradition and interprets what scripture means. Functionally the Magisterium is the infallible authority that the other 2 "infallible" authorities are measured hence it is the only infallible authority since the other 2 depend on it. There is a reason Catholics claim Protestants can't interpret the bible without the Magisterium Catholic view: Magisterium, Scripture and Tradition are equal (somehow). Because either they all interpret each other(which isnt true, because scripture doesn't interpret the Magisterium, if the Pope made an infallible statement how would scripture interpret it?) or they dont all interpret each other(which isnt true) because then protestants dont need the Magisterium to interpret scripture.

  • @stephengalanis

    @stephengalanis

    4 күн бұрын

    Correct, Catholicism is functionally sola ecclesia and has one authority not three. It would help if Catholics grew more comfortable being intellectually honest about their ecclesiology. Scripture and Tradition have no ability to challenge or correct the Magisterium, they are already a product of the Magisterium, according to Catholics.

  • @edunn7531
    @edunn75317 күн бұрын

    Trent & Gavin Ortlund keep posting back to back and I'm all here for it.

  • @jwatson181

    @jwatson181

    7 күн бұрын

    It is a bit embarrassing for Trent. He just doesn't understand the issues.

  • @caleb.lindsay

    @caleb.lindsay

    7 күн бұрын

    @@jwatson181 i completely agree at least in this context. Trent is thoughtful and one of the more charitable apologists, but it's a very odd thing and anyone not inside can see it here. Trent assumes that what the RCC declares is true but pretends he's arguing in/from a different direction. it's presuppositional apologetics which just only goes so far. this video is so off base. the Creeds were created from Scripture, we know this, and any Creed is only worth anything insofar as it corresponds to the Word of God. it would be something like this: All Word of God could become a binding creed, but not all Creeds can be the Word of God. a Creed is binding only insofar as it's true and accurate relative to the Deuteronomy style tests.

  • @gumbyshrimp2606

    @gumbyshrimp2606

    7 күн бұрын

    @@caleb.lindsaybaptism saves

  • @caleb.lindsay

    @caleb.lindsay

    7 күн бұрын

    @@gumbyshrimp2606 I agree.

  • @Real_LiamOBryan

    @Real_LiamOBryan

    7 күн бұрын

    @@gumbyshrimp2606 Jesus' blood saves. The question is: in what way, or sense, do these things save.

  • @timrichardson4018
    @timrichardson40187 күн бұрын

    As a former protestant, what strikes me is that faith in the infallibility of scripture is not fundamentally different than faith in the infallibility of councils and the pope's official teachings. In all of these cases, we are dealing with human mediated communication of God's word. Therefore, the same potential concerns for human error exist in all three. But we trust what Christ said that the Holy Spirit will lead his Church into all truth and it will not fail. If you divorce the authority of scripture from the Church, then you are left with nothing but private interpretation of scripture, which clearly leads to disagreement and disunity, clear evidence it isn't from Christ who desires his people to be one. And even from a scriptural point of view, Christ clearly established a church which carries his authority (he who hears you hears me, he said). What else can that possibly mean if we can't trust the judgments and teachings of the Church to be guided by Christ and guaranteed to be true?

  • @julywestt5277

    @julywestt5277

    7 күн бұрын

    Awesome!!! Amen. Love to see people putting into practical use, their God given intellect and reason. Once the barrier of pride is smashed, it all makes sense. Thank you for your thoughtful comment. God bless.

  • @silenthero2795

    @silenthero2795

    7 күн бұрын

    Are you really equating the Scripture to any council and the Pope? Therein lies the problem because you think they have the same authority when the later is actually dependent on the former.

  • @mrjeffjob

    @mrjeffjob

    7 күн бұрын

    @@silenthero2795you have it backwards. When I was as a Baptist a Presbyterian pointed out that Bible Alone CANNOT be true for one inarguable reason. The Bible has no list of books that belong in it! Wait. What? You’re right I thought. It had never occurred to me that we got our 66 book Bible from???…. Protestant Tradition! It was just handed on to us as true from our forefathers. So how is that any different than Catholics and their Traditions that we so vociferously condemned? It isn’t different in the least. So here we don’t have to rely on squabbling opinions of this matter. Nor do we have to play Bible verse ping pong. It’s simple inescapable logic Everything that’s infallible is in the Bible. The list of books isn’t in the Bible. We know absolutely that the second statement is true. Therefore the first is not. There was no escape from this simple revolutionary insight so I put away my pride and followed Jesus. Right into His Catholic Church.

  • @FleurPillager

    @FleurPillager

    7 күн бұрын

    Christ also said a lot about false prophets and people claiming to be Christian who are not. Paul too.

  • @julywestt5277

    @julywestt5277

    7 күн бұрын

    @@silenthero2795 quite the opposite.

  • @housecry
    @housecry7 күн бұрын

    Note to the editor: "Collapses" at 2:37 "Infallible" at 2:56

  • @lanetrain

    @lanetrain

    7 күн бұрын

    "Inerrant" at 1:30

  • @mattbernacki9282

    @mattbernacki9282

    6 күн бұрын

    @@lanetrain i think that was the original clips subtitles in that case

  • @mr.fahrenheit8185

    @mr.fahrenheit8185

    6 күн бұрын

    Editor is fallible 😂

  • @horusgodson

    @horusgodson

    6 күн бұрын

    Also 0:50 Mark *Scriptura. A lot of typos in this video.

  • @pineapplerindm

    @pineapplerindm

    4 күн бұрын

    9:03 the "unto" persists for a few seconds

  • @Pedro-bk1ic
    @Pedro-bk1ic7 күн бұрын

    It is reasonable to believe both the creeds and the Bible, because the classical creeds are a great summarization of biblical truth. This is why Protestants feel little tension between the creeds and sola scriptura. Protestants generally do not believe the creeds based on the credentials or authority of the councils that promulgated them, but because of their success in expressing core biblical truth succinctly.

  • @Cklert

    @Cklert

    7 күн бұрын

    I think this begs the question though. How would one know that the Creed expressed the correct biblical truth? Keep in mind that the Arians themselves could quote Scripture to support their view and in fact, its that very reason, that the Creed was formed. Scripture was not enough.

  • @Pedro-bk1ic

    @Pedro-bk1ic

    7 күн бұрын

    @@Cklert I think you ask a good question. In terms of Arianism, truth is they don't have very good explanations of some verses that clearly demonstrate the divinity of Christ. Biblical debates have winners and losers, and it is important that the winners win because they are right, and not just because they proclaim that they are in charge. In this case, I respect the Church fathers because they were right in how they read the scriptures and how they expressed them in the creeds, rather than respecting the creeds because they were written by the church fathers.

  • @matthewoburke7202

    @matthewoburke7202

    6 күн бұрын

    @@Pedro-bk1ic See no, this goes right back around to the same fundamental issue. The Fathers taught and believed things universally that you yourself and most protestants reject, so Protestants are having to reinterpret what the creeds and councils defined in order to maintain their interpretation of the scriptures rather than allowing themselves to be corrected. If you have to reinterpret what they say to fit with what you think about the bible itself, then they really don't have any real authority to you at all, because if they did, you would allow yourself to be corrected on what the scriptures mean.

  • @Pedro-bk1ic

    @Pedro-bk1ic

    6 күн бұрын

    @@matthewoburke7202 Exactly. I appreciate your thoughtful reply. Protestants generally accept teaching based on its merit, not based on the hierarchical authority of the teacher. The obvious exception to this is the apostles. This means that Protestants are free to accept some things the fathers said, and reject others, based on the merit of the teaching as compared with Scripture. I don't have to believe something that Origen said simply because he said it, but I do accept much of what he said, because he understood the bible well. The value of this Protestant stance is highlighted by fellows such as Origen, who were so important for our understanding of core doctrines, but who also had a few somewhat heretical views. Protestants can easily filter out the good from the bad using scripture. It's true that this is a different attitude toward the creeds than generally seen amongst Catholics, but the idea that Protestants must accept either the creeds or sola scriptura, but never both, is what we call a false dilemma. As to your other point, about what I personally believe, I accept the classical creeds, the Nicene and Apostles creeds to name two specifically, so I don't know on what basis you are claiming I don't believe them. The early reformers like Luther and Calvin accepted the creeds, and so do most non-progressive evangelicals today.

  • @matthewoburke7202

    @matthewoburke7202

    6 күн бұрын

    @@Pedro-bk1ic Now, while I agree that Church fathers were fallible men, and prone to mistakes, what they universally believed is a different matter entirely. If the universal Church believed a certain way, then that should inform our opinions, since the holy spirit is leading the Church into all truth. With that being said, the problem still stands, because you are basically free to pick and choose which teachings you agree with which most falls in line with YOUR interpretation of the scriptures, making YOU the final determining factor of what constitutes orthodox belief. That's the problem with Protestantism, it ultimately results in pretty much everyone not being able to come to an agreement on major issues, and a disunified Christendom. It doesn't work. This is why Jesus instituted hierarchal authorities (Ephesians 4:11-14).

  • @pete3397
    @pete33977 күн бұрын

    The Creeds are summaries of Scripture; there is nothing about them that denies the truth of Sola Scriptura, unless you are laboring under a false misconception of what Sola Scriptura means.

  • @bradleyperry1735

    @bradleyperry1735

    7 күн бұрын

    This is false. That’s not what the Creeds are.

  • @Cklert

    @Cklert

    7 күн бұрын

    I think the bigger question is, why do Protestants choose to believe the Creed correct? Keep in mind that the Arians could also back up their stance with Scripture. That's the entire reason why the Creed was formulated. So what exactly confirms to Protestants that the Creed is correct?

  • @pete3397

    @pete3397

    7 күн бұрын

    @@bradleyperry1735 If the Creeds are not summaries of the truths provided in Scripture, then what are they? Poems?

  • @romeostojka123

    @romeostojka123

    7 күн бұрын

    @@bradleyperry1735my guy the nicene creed comes from interpretation of athanasius of his understanding of scripture which literary council accepted at Nicea. Which if you read his book against arius. His literary quoting scripture to support eternal generation💀

  • @pete3397

    @pete3397

    7 күн бұрын

    Is there something in the Creeds that does not comport with Scripture or that cannot be argued from Scripture? No. Therefore the Creeds are derived from and support the truths written in Scripture. Remember, Athanasius used Scripture to argue against the Arians and their modern successors (Jehovah's Witnesses) have to distort and mistranslate John 1 in order to provide an "argument" from Scripture.

  • @decinate
    @decinate7 күн бұрын

    Thanks for all you guys do at Catholic Answers. It helps strengthen my faith and knowledge of it. Please never stop!

  • @andrew33bird
    @andrew33bird7 күн бұрын

    Protestant here: A lot of this boils down to a misunderstanding of the role creeds/confessions/catechisms etc play in the church. G.I. Williamson in his study guide on the Heidelberg Catechism gave a helpful analogy. He talked about the benefit of studying a map first instead of starting with a study of the surface of the earth. In this case, creeds and confessions serve as that map because they teach and summarize the basics so that we can then study the thing they summarize - the scriptures. But the map is only helpful to the extent that it is accurately conveying the actual geography. If there is a error, then the map must be the one that changes. So creeds are extremely helpful, but only to the point that they accurately convey scriptural teachings. But just like a map, creeds, confessions, catechisms, etc are always reformable under scripture.

  • @renomtv

    @renomtv

    7 күн бұрын

    this flexibility in teachings such that there will be no "final word" (because one holds on to the possibility of reforming it down the line) is what lead to a relativism in society

  • @andrew33bird

    @andrew33bird

    7 күн бұрын

    @@renomtv In many ways you are right. But did God give the gospel to reform society, or did he give his gospel to reform his elect? "Not all Israel is Israel" "As many as are being led by the Spirit of God are sons of God" Many people can take scripture and come up with all sorts of crazy ideas. But are they led by the Holy Spirit or are they false teachers? Are they governed by the Lordship of Christ in everything, seeking to deny themselves and submit to Christ with all their heart? In the end there is a final word. Jesus Christ will come again and make all things right. Until then he left his church (his chosen elect) the scriptures and the Holy Spirit.

  • @FleurPillager

    @FleurPillager

    7 күн бұрын

    I'm confused by all of the comments on church doctrine and the absence of comments about what is said in the gospels.

  • @joshj3787

    @joshj3787

    6 күн бұрын

    But who decides whether a creed, or a contemporary book on theology for that matter, "accurately convey[s] scriptural teachings."

  • @MikePasqqsaPekiM

    @MikePasqqsaPekiM

    5 күн бұрын

    To stick with this concept, Baptists have been wandering for years because they found the missing map and threw it away because they prefer to keep wandering 🤷‍♂️ I agree not all creeds are equal or helpful, but for Baptists to disagree on the Nicene Creed shows they don’t agree where they are, or where they’re going, and demonstrates the splintering of Protestantism. I hope this is a wakeup call for many Baptists.

  • @fighterofthenightman1057
    @fighterofthenightman10577 күн бұрын

    But the actual Sola Scriptura that the Reformers referenced isn’t what the SBC and other low church contemporary “Protestant” churches use. Sola Scriptura means the Bible alone is the ultimate infallible authority which creeds, church tradition, church leaders, etc. cannot contradict. It doesn’t mean it’s the only authority, and it never has meant that. There’s no contradiction for Lutherans, Anglicans, Presbyterians, Methodists, etc.

  • @tafazziReadChannelDescription

    @tafazziReadChannelDescription

    7 күн бұрын

    1 an authority can not be a book, authority is a property of people or of organizations, it's about being able and in the right to settle disputes. even then, nobody says that anything can contradict God's Word, especially because it's inerrant. And we don't, in fact, contradict the inerrant Scriptures.

  • @ghostapostle7225

    @ghostapostle7225

    7 күн бұрын

    If the Bible alone is the infallible authority, then the other authorities are ultimately meaningless, they're only truth as much as Scripture recognize them as such, wich exactly Trent's point (it falls down to solo scriptura).

  • @renaldoawes2210

    @renaldoawes2210

    7 күн бұрын

    @@tafazziReadChannelDescription This is easily disproven. Catholics put their infallibility in a singular man, or rather a "role." Over thousands of years now we've seen Popes be fallible. They're constantly wrong on scripture, constantly changing the rules, constantly succumbing to imperial or human authorities and changing laws to give them credibility. They've used the name of Christianity as a political weapon... and you come here and claim the Bible can't be the ultimate authority but the Pope can? That's the most ridiculous non-historical Christian take I've ever heard.

  • @westdc

    @westdc

    7 күн бұрын

    @@ghostapostle7225 And vice versa. If the Church contains the ability to infallibly create dogma, it can render the scripture meaningless. Hopefully Protestants, RCC, and Orthodox recognize that God's people and the Church has always been fallible. Pharisees, Apostles, and the Church have made mistakes and taught mistakes. The Pharisees, by appearing righteous but often times being hypocrites. Paul rebuking Peter, apostles arguing over who is the greatest among them. The RCC and Orthodox anathemitizing each other as if the One True Church was either in the East or West only. However, we can still be assured that God will protect the Church and "gates of hell shall not prevail against it". Despite all the errors of the Pharisees and the Church, Christianity is still strong after 2000+ years and protected by the Spirit.

  • @RayBooM_

    @RayBooM_

    7 күн бұрын

    @@westdc The Holy Spirit guides the Orthodox Church

  • @lillockey04
    @lillockey047 күн бұрын

    I'm not surprised by the Baptists on this front. They don't come out of the Reformation, and part of their whole gig is that they summarily reject the Roman Catholic church (since they're a derivative of the Anabaptists). Although I'm protestant, being a Presbyterian, I recognize the importance of the church fathers and the creeds (looking at you, Apostles Creed). One of the reasons I find myself unable to accept the councils as infallible is the Council of Hieria vs. the Second Council of Nicaea. Furthermore, the anathemas pronounced in the Second Council of Nicaea completely exclude me. "Anathema to those who do not salute the holy and venerable images." (yikes, guess I'm anathema) "Anathema to those who knowingly communicate with those who revile and dishonour the venerable images." (no more protestent friends, I guess) "Anathema to those who say that the making of images is a diabolical invention and not a tradition of our holy Fathers." (it wasn't - it's an acretion at best) "If anyone shall not confess the Holy Ever-Virgin Mary, truly and properly the Mother of God, to be higher than every creature whether visible or invisible, and does not with sincere faith seek her intercessions as of one having confidence in her access to our God, since she bore him, let him be anathema." (marian dogmas and veneration - guess I'm anathema again) "If anyone denies the profit of the invocation of Saints, let him be anathema." (prove the profit of this with scripture and I'll recant) "If anyone does not accept this our Holy and Ecumenical Seventh Synod, let him be anathema from the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, and from the seven holy Ecumenical Synods!" (whoops, guess I'm out - SUPER anathema ... along with every other protestant ever) If these councils are considered infallible, why was there such a shift in tone with Vatican II? Anathema is a strong statement of rejection, excommunication, and complete disassociation. Christian unity is the tone of Vatican II. Why the tonal shift? I can't buy into the infallibility of the councils when they don't align with one another. Important, sure. But infallible? I think not. I think the reformers had the right of it.

  • @claybahl5107

    @claybahl5107

    7 күн бұрын

    Hi @lillockey04, a Catholic here. Glad we can agree that the Church Fathers and Apostle's Creed are legit haha I'd like to respond to some of your points, but can you say more about your objection regarding the Council of Hieria vs. the Second Council of Nicaea? In other words, why does this make you reject the infallibility of the councils?

  • @lillockey04

    @lillockey04

    7 күн бұрын

    @@claybahl5107 Absolutely. I'm glad we've found a middle ground worthy of meeting at. When I consider Hieria vs Nicaea II, I put it forth as the most blatant example of councils disagreeing with each other. I've seen good arguments for the acceptance and rejection of either council. There are other councils, too, which disagree with each other (such as Nicaea II and Vatican II, which is why I mentioned it). My point isn't that these councils are useless; that they hold no authority for those who accept them. The point of the protestant view is that we then look to the fathers who came before and to scripture to verify their rightness. If they come back as right, it's our place to own them. If not, it's not, wouldn't the proper position to be to count it as an acretion? That's what I see when I look into iconoclasm vs iconophilia. I understand that, as a RC, you likely wouldn't stand with me, a presby. But I genuinely hope you're at least able to understand why I question as I do. I appreciate your charitable response and genuine curiosity.

  • @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    6 күн бұрын

    Strong comment.

  • @IG88AAA

    @IG88AAA

    5 күн бұрын

    @@lillockey04What is your specific objection in regards to Hieria vs Nicaea II? If Hieria was not a legitimate council, what is the objection?

  • @Cklert

    @Cklert

    4 күн бұрын

    "If these councils are considered infallible, why was there such a shift in tone with Vatican II?" The most common misconception I see from Protestants with regards to any form of infallibility, is that they simply misconstrue the scope in which it applies. Infallibility is a rare occurrence within our faith, and is only used as a last line of defense. The Councils in of themselves are not infallible. Only when binding formal teaching into faith and morals. The reason why the Ecumenical Councils are authoritative and often lead to dogma, is because representatives of the entire Magisterium are gathered at one spot to discuss issues. The canons declaring Anathema are disciplinary, used to direct the Church in light of binding new dogma. The anathemas are against the Iconoclasts, and even though you may not revere icons. You do not even remotely come close to what the Church at the time was dealing with. The Iconoclasts were a radical and violent movement that seeped into the government. They would often go out of their way to destroy icons and use violence against anyone who even remotely came across as venerating icons. You may not venerate icons, sure. But you also don't violently vandalize our icons or physically attack us. Disciplinary statement are subject to change as different circumstances arise. Even within the First and Second Ecumenical Councils you had revisions and addendums to previous disciplinary or doctrinal matters.

  • @lewkbauer
    @lewkbauer7 күн бұрын

    Enjoying the new branding and editing. Nice work and hats off to the editor!

  • @kevinmccarty6759

    @kevinmccarty6759

    7 күн бұрын

    Except for misspelling “infallible” as “infalable” on the overlay

  • @KjoNiels

    @KjoNiels

    4 күн бұрын

    Yeah may want to edit it. Unless it was intentional as a joke? Though I always argue the doctrine of Trent Horn Infallibility!

  • @jess96154
    @jess961547 күн бұрын

    Thanks Trent! This was one of the best and most concise treatments of this issue that I've run across.

  • @joseilarraza6533
    @joseilarraza65336 күн бұрын

    It’s so hypocritical for a Roman Catholic apologist to say “Christian’s can radically redefine what a council meant.” When THAT IS EXACTLY WHAT HAPPEN IN 2nd Vatican council on the relation of scripture and tradition and priesthood. Yves congar points to the fact that the council of Trent define the relationship in tradition and scripture one way but the Holy Spirit meant it another way. Contemporaries of Congar pointed this out.

  • @petifogger2340
    @petifogger23407 күн бұрын

    I’m loving the new content format! The videos are structured great and the videos are edited very well. Keep it up!

  • @josephgudge6685
    @josephgudge66857 күн бұрын

    I was reading Galatians today. I don’t know how after reading this text anyone could deny the importance of one baptism as a Christian-regardless of tradition. For it unites us under the headship of Christ. We become clothed in Christ. It wipes away the physical and cultural differences between us in terms of being heirs of the promise to Abraham. It declares, alongside the Holy Spirit and our Lord’s blood that we are God’s children.

  • @chrisfrenette1978
    @chrisfrenette19787 күн бұрын

    I don’t know how to pinpoint it but Trent looks like Hayden Christenson on the thumbnail😅

  • @thetorinado2697

    @thetorinado2697

    6 күн бұрын

    I was thinking that 🤣

  • @Antonio_Serdar

    @Antonio_Serdar

    6 күн бұрын

    Michael Keaton

  • @nightingale350

    @nightingale350

    6 күн бұрын

    Jeremy Renner from Avengers

  • @nathantang9964
    @nathantang99647 күн бұрын

    As a Catholic, I don’t think you did such a good job here Trent. Their argument is saying the Bible is the only infallible rule of faith, and all that means is that certain doctrines laid down in creeds and the early church can be wrong and can be overturned (in something like the SBC) as long as it coincides with scripture. This doesn’t mean that some creed held by the SBC doesn’t have any binding power on who is a Christian. It has authority as of now and as agreed upon by the church but it is not infallibly authoritative. What they would say is that arianism is bad because the council said so, but we cannot be 100% sure that they were correct just because it came from a council. They would say that we can only be 100% sure if arianism goes against scripture (how they determine that idk, but that’s why I’m Catholic haha) If they are being consistent, they should be open about disagreeing with early church doctrine and not seeing that as a bad thing.

  • @TAYZER_

    @TAYZER_

    7 күн бұрын

    I think you have got it there

  • @caleb.lindsay

    @caleb.lindsay

    6 күн бұрын

    yes, this argument is truly not good. i don't know why it is, but whenever Protestants or Catholics or Orthodox debating internally (to me meaning "amongst ourselves), we just seem to be incapable of getting it right. maybe there's something to that? maybe in violating the spirit of unity, God forces us to miss the mark? i'm gonna pray on this. the reason so many Protestants haunt these channels (and likely in the opposite manner for Protestant channels) is because as lay Christians, we desire unity above all else. I really think there is a profound blessing in being the lowly in Christ. we can hunger for and see things that get obscured at the higher levels of authority.

  • @str.77

    @str.77

    5 күн бұрын

    Of course there have always been cooler heads in Protestantism that saw the problems with appealing to Scripture alone but the prevailing current in Protestantism has always been that Scripture alone matters. Sure, some Protestanets will at times refer to other sources of information, including creeds or councils, but within the Protestant framework, any credal statement can just be overruled by someone invoking Scripture. As long as the appeal to Scripture is half-way coherent (but not necessarily correct) it will outdo that credal statement. Distinguishing between "Sola Scriptura " and "Solo Scriptura" is a distinction without a difference. How they can determine something is wrong? Well, there's the other infallible authority in Protestantism, they "I".

  • @CF19078

    @CF19078

    5 күн бұрын

    Yeah, I think from listening to the video, you might be right but I think from what he’s getting at is to have authority is to submit to it even in disagreement. The creeds and the councils have no real authority in the lives of the SBC neither does the fathers of the church , it still goes back to scripture alone . It’s like if the Supreme Court interpreted the constitution even if wrong the states must obey . To change they must fight accordingly within the structure set up by the founding fathers through the election of new members. Protestant have no real visible body on earth but the one that they elect based on what fits with their interpretation of the bible. At any point they can change, they may look at history but picking and choosing the words that fit to how they interpret the bible which will break down to solo scripture .This concept of changing the definition of solo/sola scriptura because they look at history for statements of faith is irrelevant. The word infallible just mean incapable of making mistakes or being wrong. And catholics agree on that but when Catholics look at the councils to find what was said , we also look to was is be binding to church trusting that the Holy Spirit will not infallible bind heresy .They question is authority and no creed has it , if baptism regeneration statements by the early fathers can be dismissed by nitpicking on baptism of blood by martyrs during persecution, what power and authority do the creeds have. There are no rule of faith besides solo scripture because the creed are just statements that we agree upon , agreement and submission to it is an flip of coin based on what each generation comes to translate from the bible.

  • @xinosaj

    @xinosaj

    5 күн бұрын

    Catholics don't think the creeds are infallible - that's why you change them. You added stuff after Chalcedon (and I'm being generous by saying "you," since the Orthodox would insist it's they who are the church of that era). Then you added the Filoque a thousand years ago, which split the church irrevocably and even led to wars and massacres. You justify the Chalcedonian changes by appealing to scripture - rightly. In recent years, you've more or less admitted the Filoque is problematic, but that you can understand it in a Biblical way (although this really requires you to accept that the creed is poorly written in the RCC's version). One reason why evangelicals can't accept the creed as fully authoritative is because we would have to hash out what we think about the Filoque and which version we want to use. That would mean entering into a millennium-long war between Rome and Constantinople - it's not our fight and it wouldn't benefit dialog or missions in any way.

  • @dravendfr
    @dravendfr6 күн бұрын

    Oh, as a practicing Southern Baptist this made my jaw drop and I covered my mouth discovering that the Nicene Creed which I admire so much is not acknowledged and doctrinal to the SBC. This is a very big problem for me.

  • @jimcasey1975

    @jimcasey1975

    6 күн бұрын

    Reformed Presbyterians,Orthodox Presbyterian Church (OPC) and the Presbyterian Church of America (PCA) might be worth looking at. They do practice infant baptism. They are both historically faithful Protestant Reformed churches.

  • @Vaughndaleoulaw

    @Vaughndaleoulaw

    6 күн бұрын

    @@jimcasey1975They all deny baptismal regeneration, which is what the Creed pretty clearly teaches. He should look at Lutherans or Anglicans if you want to remain Protestant and affirm the Creed.

  • @Jiko-ryu

    @Jiko-ryu

    6 күн бұрын

    I would like to know, what is it in the Nicene Creed that you admire so much? I would imagine that it is because of the Nice Creed's strong Trinitarianism, and I think that was the reason why it got endorsed. However, although those who endorsed the Nicene Creed to the Southern Baptist Convention believed that Baptist theology is in agreement with the Nicene Creed, the SNC was being consistent in not adopting the Nicene Creed for two main reasons. First, Baptists as a whole do not believe in one universal Church but in several, distinct, independent, autonomous local "churches", thus denying the article "I believe in one, holy, catholic [i.e., universal] and apostolic Church", for the very Council of Nicea denied the Baptist doctrine of local church autonomy, as the first ecumenical council has far more authority than a "convention" does, members of the SBC are not required to adhere to the SBC statement of faith, and churches and state conventions belonging to the global body are not required to use it as their statement of faith or doctrine, unlike during the Councils of Nicea and Constantinople which pronounced anathema to those who would disregard the Creed. But most importantly, Baptists deny that the purpose of baptism is to forgive sins, and could only adopt the Nicene Creed by twisting the meaning of the article, "I acknowledge one Baptism 𝙛𝙤𝙧 the remission of sins", into "I acknowledge one Baptism '𝒃𝒆𝒄𝒂𝒖𝒔𝒆 𝒐𝒇' the remission of sins", ignoring the fact that both before and after the Council of Nicea the doctrine of baptismal regeneration was widely acknowledged except by the Pelagians, and so to reject the doctrine of baptismal regeneration is semi-Pelagian at best, which is why St. Augustine argued for baptismal regeneration to oppose Pelagianism, the idea that one can repent and turn to God without the need of grace. At the same time, those who endorsed the Nicene Creed to the SBC when asked about the article on baptism replied, “Coming under the article on the Holy Spirit, this refers to baptism in the Spirit or regeneration, which occurs with faith. Water baptism is the outward confession of that prior inward reality”, thus denying that the baptism of water and the baptism of Spirit is one baptism, calling them two distinct baptisms, and thus they do not really acknowledge “one baptism” but two. And the SBC, by not only not adopting the Nicene Creed, but also showing a willingness to twist the historical and grammatical meaning of the article, "I acknowledge one Baptism for the remission of sins", has divorced itself from historic, Scriptural Christianity. And so, 𝐍𝐎, 𝐁𝐀𝐏𝐓𝐈𝐒𝐓𝐒 𝐂𝐀𝐍𝐍𝐎𝐓 𝐇𝐎𝐍𝐄𝐒𝐓𝐋𝐘 𝐀𝐅𝐅𝐈𝐑𝐌 𝐓𝐇𝐄 𝐍𝐈𝐂𝐄𝐍𝐄 𝐂𝐑𝐄𝐄𝐃, no matter how "admirable" it may seem. Trent Horn is correct here: either be consistent with sola Scriptura or admit that what is actually believed is 𝘱𝘳𝘪𝘮𝘢 𝘚𝘤𝘳𝘪𝘱𝘵𝘶𝘳𝘢.

  • @manny-9261
    @manny-92617 күн бұрын

    My heart breaks for those separated from the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.

  • @matts-7566

    @matts-7566

    7 күн бұрын

    nice vid ❤ waiting on your 'sacrament of reconciliation' vid that you promised week ago ❤

  • @bcalvert321

    @bcalvert321

    7 күн бұрын

    The word catholic means universal. The words used were all in small caps. It is not one Catholic Church but the universal Church of Jesus. He is the Head, anyone who makes Jesus Lord and Savior belongs in His church. They do not have to belong to the Catholic church.

  • @heroevulgar

    @heroevulgar

    7 күн бұрын

    @@bcalvert321 it is the only one that provides the real sacraments by priest with apostolic succession through the laying of hand for 200 centuries. Not other denomination can claim that.

  • @RayBooM_

    @RayBooM_

    7 күн бұрын

    @@bcalvert321 well to witness Christs full joy and full faith, we have to go to the church he established and not other churches created by men

  • @FleurPillager

    @FleurPillager

    7 күн бұрын

    The Catholic Church persecuted people who wanted to read the Bible and ask questions about what it means. 💀

  • @vtaylor21
    @vtaylor217 күн бұрын

    It’s not about what rule of faith is infallible. It ultimately depends on interpretation. If your interpretation of scripture doesn't fit a creed, you ignore the creed. If the early Christians’ belief is different from your interpretation of scripture, you will think the early Christians didn't follow the Bible.

  • @ghostapostle7225

    @ghostapostle7225

    7 күн бұрын

    Wich is the point many of the people here saying "but we believe in other authorities" are not grasping.

  • @timothyvenable3336

    @timothyvenable3336

    7 күн бұрын

    But as some point, you must consider that your interpretation is incorrect. That’s the problem with many Protestants, is that they don’t always seek the true understanding of scripture and only want to interpret it how they want. Which is not what sola scriptura means

  • @tonyl3762

    @tonyl3762

    7 күн бұрын

    What about all the early Church citations of Scripture? Most powerful question you can ask a Protestant: who are you (your teachers) to reject the biblical interpretations of those taught, discipled, approved, and ordained by the biblical authors, by the Apostles, esp Peter and John? (Clement of Rome, Ignatius of Antioch, Polycarp)

  • @ghostapostle7225

    @ghostapostle7225

    7 күн бұрын

    @@tonyl3762 They'll respond: "who are they compared to Scripture?" and then say "but this is not solo scriptura".

  • @tonyl3762

    @tonyl3762

    7 күн бұрын

    ​@@ghostapostle7225Sure, but I'd say that's the wrong question. The right question is what I asked above: who are you (your teachers) compared to the early Church fathers?? Merely claiming Scripture for yourself and your beliefs is merely a rhetorical tactic; it doesn't actually demonstrate who has the true and proper interpretation of Scripture.

  • @SufferingWell-dtwakr
    @SufferingWell-dtwakr7 күн бұрын

    As a Protestant, I believed strongly in Sola Scriptura. One day, though, it occurred to me that Sola Scriptura isn't possible. If it were, then we wouldn't have over 40,000 denominations. It's Scripture plus interpretation. So the question is "Whose interpretation?" With that question out there, I realized that the interpretation that made the most sense was the one based on the early church fathers who must have had a good idea of what the apostles thought, as well as the Church that Jesus ordained to have authority over these things. Didn't take too long for me to become Catholic.

  • @secondratefilms635

    @secondratefilms635

    7 күн бұрын

    That’s your interpretation

  • @joe5959

    @joe5959

    7 күн бұрын

    ​@@secondratefilms635no, its the only rational interpretation

  • @RayBooM_

    @RayBooM_

    7 күн бұрын

    @@secondratefilms635 what you said is also on interpretation

  • @jey4339

    @jey4339

    7 күн бұрын

    Scripture and its interpretation aren't the same. Scripture can be infallible, with the interpretations not being so. Your logic is self defeating. There were christian fathers who held to views that you now consider as heretical, so clearly they must not "have had a good idea of what the apostles thought,". Also "as well as the Church that Jesus ordained to have authority over these things" this is ahistorical.

  • @SDRBass

    @SDRBass

    7 күн бұрын

    “Whose interpretation?” The interpretation that accurately reflects the original intent of the original author. This is the part opponents of Sola Scriptura completely gloss over.

  • @MrAndyhdz
    @MrAndyhdz7 күн бұрын

    It's a Baptist problem not a Protestant one. Us Presbyterians love our creeds!

  • @Real_LiamOBryan

    @Real_LiamOBryan

    7 күн бұрын

    Same here, with us Anglicans. I suspect that this applies to Lutherans and traditional Methodists as well. Basically, this seems to be the case with denominations that hold closely to Magisterial Reformation tradition.

  • @thegoatofyoutube1787
    @thegoatofyoutube17877 күн бұрын

    One SBC member said that the concern was that “one baptism for the forgiveness of sins” is often “misunderstood” to mean baptismal regeneration by the church fathers. He added that the creed is fine but only if “properly interpreted”. Protestants are hilarious 😂.

  • @Jiko-ryu

    @Jiko-ryu

    6 күн бұрын

    The moment they said that, the SBC started to sound more like a cult like the Seventh-Day Adventists with their reinterpretation of the Scriptures.

  • @jobo8143
    @jobo814311 сағат бұрын

    I went to a Lutheran baptism for my niece. I was shocked when the Nicene Creed was said but WORDS HAD BEEN CHANGED.

  • @pantherbane78
    @pantherbane787 күн бұрын

    What gets you up, the stairs or the guardrails? The stairs. The guardrails help you stay on the stairs. Yes, you can choose not to hold on to the rails and go up just fine, or you can fall and break your neck. Those who have come before us say, "We added rails, mind them, they will help you ascend." But the later Romans and Greeks say the rails make you go up just like the stairs (the rails *are* stairs), or you can't go up without holding on to the rails...which I reject. As a Protestant, I appreciate the rails and they have been proven to be sturdy and helpful over thousands of years. I mind them. I study them. I love them. I receive the wisdom of my ancient brothers. But, I know the rails are not the stairs. I know that I don't "need" them to ascend. But when one of my Protestant brothers ignorantly wants to take them down, I will do what Protestants do best and protest.

  • @joseilarraza6533
    @joseilarraza65336 күн бұрын

    Regarding Arian Hersey. It is heretical because of the scriptures(which the orthodox fathers pointed out) and the council of Nicaea is witness to that.

  • @pbalwaysinformed
    @pbalwaysinformed7 күн бұрын

    I do not agree. The Nicean creed is a summary of the most important points you need to hold onto as Christian, which are all deduced FROM scripture. It helps you to not read the whole Bible in order to understand that most important points, because many people cannot / couldnot read. Still, it is all FROM scripture. Therefore, no contradiction.

  • @Jinnyfir

    @Jinnyfir

    4 күн бұрын

    Thank you

  • @nyxego5378
    @nyxego53786 күн бұрын

    Hi Trent, I was basically looking for this topic yesterday and you just uploaded it 😮 thank you

  • @dominicwallington9568
    @dominicwallington95687 күн бұрын

    I love the new style and production quality behind these videos. So happy to have donated to help

  • @ProjectMysticApostolate
    @ProjectMysticApostolate7 күн бұрын

    Thank you Trent. This video was amazing.

  • @junkim5853
    @junkim58537 күн бұрын

    Trent should do a better job representing the protestant view of scripture. I am not a Baptist but I can't see how his argument works in regards to how sola Scriptura actually becomes solo scriptura. What protestants mean historically about the scripture being the only infallible rule of faith is that this particular rule of faith is ontologically different compared to other rules of faith because scripture is God-breath. Scripture being God-breathe is obviously taught in Trent's church and pretty much all churches that claim apostolic succession. A creed can interpret scripture correctly that doesn't mean this interpretation was God-breathed at all. If the creeds have the same ontology as the Bible isn't the Catholic Church logically inconsistent since they do not include this creed in their canon? You can bring Gavin Ortlund and how he struggled to condemn William Lane Craig as a heretic but that issue doesn't necessarily have to be a problem for Protestantism itself. I have no problem calling William Lane Craig a heretic because magisterial protestant tradition has deep historical roots in dyotheletism. The reformers were trying to reform the Church not revolutionize it at all. Is Trent really going to say it's utterly impossible to get dyotheletism including the doctrine of the trinity without a priest or a bishop interpreting scripture for them? If that's the case Trent can say dyotheletism and trinity are not biblical and is only in the Church's teachings. But this kind of view is an utter innovation. Athanasius, Augustine, Jerome, and so much for Church Fathers would never ever advocate this view at all. Trent clearly has to result in innovation to try to protect his Church's infallibility, there is no situation for him logically to have his cake and eat it too.

  • @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    6 күн бұрын

    Roman Catholics have no interest in actually engaging with Protestantism. They merely echo strawmam arguments. I've largely stopped engaging with Roman Catholics online because of how they misrepresent Protestantism. Even when many are corrected they refuse believe you. Alas, Rome doesn't seem to promote theological understanding in its laity.

  • @kisstune

    @kisstune

    5 күн бұрын

    It is how it plays out in practice. A protestant will ask us "Where is that in the bible?" We respond with bible verses and early Church writings that back our interpretation of Scripture. The responses we get is the early Church writings don't count or they don't care about that they just want bible verses. What then follows are claims that we Catholics are misinterpreting scripture. Then it devlovles into bible verses being thrown back and forth with accusations from both sides of twisting scripture by using it out of context or misinterpreting Scripture. Rinse and repeat and it gets old real fast. So we not conclude that Sola Scriptura is really Solo Scriptura.

  • @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    5 күн бұрын

    @@kisstune At this point it's useless to talk with Roman Catholics on this issue. You'all (seemingly) refuse to engage with Protestantism and our tradition. If you don't believe what Protestants tell you about their theology then we're wasting each other's time. I guess it makes sense since theology is reserved for the clergy in Romanism.

  • @junkim5853

    @junkim5853

    5 күн бұрын

    @@kisstune Show me if any magesterial protestants do that. I see the Catholics do the exact same thing a protestant do when a Protestant offers a verse from scripture and many quotations from the Church Fathers. Does that show Catholicism is false? Come on now, your arguments are just weak. Why aren't you actually addressing my arguments? Trent clearly did not portray sola scriptura in its best light. What he did is like a lame protestant apologist appealing to a laymen claiming that they worship Mary as a Goddess to suggest that Catholicism is false. He misportrayed our understanding of infallibility in the discussion of Sola Scriptura. We are saying scripture is God breathe so it's different in its ontology, so far we can never find anything in Church history that indicates that ecumenical councils or any commentary from the Church Father is God breathed. The bishops from ecumenical councils never claimed that the creeds drafted were God breathed nor any Church Fathers claimed that their writings were God breathed either. Clement of Rome never declared infallible authority or his writings were God-breathed in his letter to the Corinthians. This fact just completely skips a Catholic when they read Clement's epistle to the Corinthians or read any writing from Church history. If you see a Catholic that denies that the Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ should that bother you? Does that disprove Catholicism or show how Catholicism is not properly being applied in its practice? If a Catholic disrespectfully do not allow protestant to appeal to protestantism and the historic understanding of sola scriptura we as Protestants should not allow a Catholic to appeal to their magesterium and say Catholicism fails in its practice. I don't care if William Lane Craig rejects dyotheletism, it's biblical and deeply rooted in Christian tradition if a Christian studies Church history. I don't care if Gavin Ortlund struggles to condemn William Lane Craig as a heretic, that's his problem no reformers would have any problem condemning William Lane Craig period. If any reformers were here today they see William Lane Craig as nothing but a heretic and innovator who is trying too hard to undo the reformation altogether. Many Church Fathers would agree too end of story.

  • @Jdrummer3

    @Jdrummer3

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@junkim5853What are your issues with Catholicism then, ultimately? Does it come down to claims of papal infallibility? We know that Scripture teaches us that the gates of Hell will not prevail against the Church, and we believe that the Church is then protected by the Holy Spirit from error doctrinally.

  • @leonhewitt4744
    @leonhewitt47446 күн бұрын

    Trent, the quality of your videos has really ramped up. I love the graphics and the added bits and pieces. Really well done team! As always, quality content, keep it up.

  • @andyfisher2403
    @andyfisher24037 күн бұрын

    I appreciate your content very much. I miss the longer episodes though.

  • @Nomorehero07
    @Nomorehero077 күн бұрын

    I have heard of William Lane Craig but I did not expect him to not only deny an ecumenical council but to hear him affirming heresy. Now I'm really certain that Sola Scriptura has to be a mistake.

  • @timothyvenable3336

    @timothyvenable3336

    7 күн бұрын

    I’m not familiar with the ecumaenical council or what Craig teaches on it, but I don’t think that makes sola scriptura a mistake. It’s possible for Craig to be wrong, and he’s just misunderstanding. Sola scriptura can be true even if one Protestant believes in free will and another determinism

  • @batglide5484

    @batglide5484

    7 күн бұрын

    @@timothyvenable3336Sola Scriptura cannot be true because it is silly. Let me demonstrate. Premise 1: Sola Scriptura is true Premise 2: Scripture does not teach sola Scriptura. If premise 1 is true, then we have from premise 2, a rule of faith not found in scripture that _must_ be higher than scripture. Since we do not find sola Scriptura taught anywhere in scripture, the rule itself must be a tradition, external to scripture, which is of higher authority than scripture. The Protestant position is inherently silly.

  • @timothyvenable3336

    @timothyvenable3336

    7 күн бұрын

    @@batglide5484 I believe that is a misunderstanding on what sola scriptura is. I think you’re implying that *only* what is found in scripture is our standard. Sola scriptura teaches that the Bible is the only *infallible* ruling, not that we cannot use any other standard or logic. Also, the Bible doesn’t teach sola scriptura, but it is implied. All men are fallible, so while some teachers are wonderful and brilliant, not everything they say is true. So how do we know if it is true? We must align it with scripture. Scripture is what we use to align all other teachings. I think even Catholics agree to that

  • @caleb.lindsay

    @caleb.lindsay

    7 күн бұрын

    @@batglide5484 to be fair: all you did is equivocate what sola scriptura is and then knock down the straw-man. i can't force you to take this seriously, but it should genuinely bother you when you make such ridiculous arguments that are so vacuous. i used to do similar things like this with the RCC out of ignorance, and i would gladly ask you to forgive me for them. (misunderstanding adoration vs honor, saying things like "RCC believes you're saved through works", etc.) in the spirit of charity, study more so you can do better OR at least try to infuse your language with more humility.

  • @jey4339

    @jey4339

    7 күн бұрын

    @@batglide5484 Premise 1: The earth revolves around the sun Premise 2: The church did not teach this Ergo, the church is not the final rule of faith. Do you see how dumb this is? Something doesn't have to be taught explicitly to be derived from said source. Protestants hold to sola scriptura simply because of the infallibility of the bible. On the other hand, there is no reason to think the catholic church is infallible, other the mental gymantics of re-writing history and make claims about a lineage from peter.

  • @thistagworked
    @thistagworked7 күн бұрын

    Sola scriptura totally wreaked my world. Anything other than the Bible being the sole authority never entered my mind because it seemed like common sense, if not the Bible then the only other option is fallible man. Made sense at the time but as time went on I started doubting if sola scriptura is even practical, it just doesn't work when every individual is interpreting themselves. What's weird is I think I was doubting sola scriptura before I even heard of the concept. I remember telling my evangelist grandpa long before I researched anything Catholic "I'm not convinced the Bible was written in this instruction manual type of way that clearly lays out clear steps to follow."

  • @joshj3787

    @joshj3787

    6 күн бұрын

    I spent a lot of time in Evangelicalism between my Catholic youth and Catholic adulthood, and it's funny because I neither questioned Sola Scriptura nor really bought into it. I guess I just never really considered it until I started coming back to the Catholic faith and realized how critical an authoritative interpreter is when it comes to teaching theology and morality. I Like your "instruction manual" point. I've come to say something similar when I'm talking to a Protestant. I make the point that the Bible wasn't put together to be an encyclopedia of our faith. This does two things (hopefully): first, it drives the point home that the books of the Bible and the canon were all written/determined by human beings (and didn't just magically appear), and second that of course there are things those humans believed about our faith that didn't appear in those writings. Why? Because those letters weren't written as encyclopedias (or instruction manuals) and the canonists weren't trying to piecemeal our faith together by ensuring every theological point was addressed at least once in the writings they deemed worthy of Scripture.

  • @user-tr9fx8il2o
    @user-tr9fx8il2o12 сағат бұрын

    Hi Trent. I see the fruits of your labor. Loving the heightened production quality. Great stuff. Thanks.

  • @DanyTV79
    @DanyTV797 күн бұрын

    Excelent explanation and video.

  • @fletcherallen3478
    @fletcherallen34787 күн бұрын

    I think it is a false dichotomy to say that sola scriptura means that a Protestant cannot believe what a creed, confession or Church Father says in addition to the Bible. If the Bible is the only infallible authority it does not mean that we don’t believe in any other authority, and it doesn’t not mean that other authority’s cannot speak truth.

  • @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    6 күн бұрын

    Many Roman Catholics aren't capable of this type of nuance. It doesn't compute in their brains. It is what it is; the papal church doesn't want the laity thinking too hard about such things.

  • @NorthCountry84

    @NorthCountry84

    6 күн бұрын

    Isn’t that the distinction made between Sola and Solo Scriptura at the beginning?

  • @kisstune

    @kisstune

    6 күн бұрын

    He is just pointing out how this plays out in practice. We point to scripture and early Church writings then get some response of not care what early Church writings said or those don't count/matter demanding bible only citation (solo scriptura) or we're the ones misinterpreting the bible passages we quote.

  • @mariebo7491
    @mariebo74916 күн бұрын

    Am I understanding correctly? Are regeneration and forgiveness of sins the same thing?

  • @ClosedDoor35

    @ClosedDoor35

    6 күн бұрын

    I think regeneration is the washing away of Original Sin. So what he's saying is that the whole ritual of baptism, rather than one's mere acceptance of Christ, is what wipes away Original Sin.

  • @wickd6878

    @wickd6878

    Күн бұрын

    Forgiveness of sins is akin to being pardoned for committed crimes. Regeneration could be broadly compared to no longer desiring to commit that crime, IF the change was made by an external being. Regeneration begins after forgiveness, and thankfully, Jesus offers both!

  • @caxe-oj4bt
    @caxe-oj4bt7 күн бұрын

    If I had a nickel for every bad papist argument I heard in this video i could afford an indulgence.

  • @JR0G
    @JR0G7 күн бұрын

    Thank God that he chose me according to His will, now I can truly rest in him and not worry about works trying to make me right. That’s the Gospel 🙌🏽

  • @vedinthorn
    @vedinthorn7 күн бұрын

    If you think protestants can't have creeds, you don't understand either creeds or Protestants very well. Creeds are affirmations and denials, not authorizations.

  • @ReapingTheHarvest

    @ReapingTheHarvest

    7 күн бұрын

    Did he say or imply that "protestants can't have creeds"?

  • @TPizzle96

    @TPizzle96

    7 күн бұрын

    The Council of Nicea declares itself binding which is against Sola Scriptura, which states that only the Bible can bind a man's conscience.

  • @joelbecker5389
    @joelbecker53897 күн бұрын

    It's odd that W. L. Craig says he sees nothing in Scripture to say that Jesus had two wills when immediately before that he based his view of one will on a philosophical commitment to the will being a property of the person, not the nature. Also, when Jesus prayed for the Father to take the cup from him, yet not his will but the Father's will be done, Craig's view would make the divine Son's will contrary to that of the Father. Christ having two wills makes better sense of that passage: though the divine Person is one in will with the Father, his human nature (which is not essential to his being) could at times have other, though subservient desires. (Please correct me if I have mischaracterized dyothelitism here.)

  • @bobinindiana

    @bobinindiana

    7 күн бұрын

    Craig is brilliant but drifting into liberal Christianity. He does not seem to believe Scripture is inerrant.

  • @nethrelm

    @nethrelm

    7 күн бұрын

    That's exactly the passage that immediately came to my mind as well. If Christ only has one will, the Divine Will, then this passage demonstrates disunity in the Divine Will (and thus disunity in the Trinity), which is contradictory to the Trinity itself. There can, by definition, be no disunity within the Tri-Unity of God.

  • @dylanschweitzer18
    @dylanschweitzer186 күн бұрын

    Great work on the new studio and brand update, it looks awesome!

  • @TheCounselofTrent

    @TheCounselofTrent

    6 күн бұрын

    Thanks so much, Dylan! -Vanessa

  • @hexahexametermeter

    @hexahexametermeter

    5 күн бұрын

    @@TheCounselofTrent Just like all the corporations. Jesus didn't need branding. Think about that....

  • @goldenreel
    @goldenreel7 күн бұрын

    You can have creeds as a Protestant. They just don’t level on par with scripture but they are useful guidelines for churches to have so there’s an open understanding of what that churches positions are and you know they will preach within those guidelines.

  • @georgepierson4920

    @georgepierson4920

    7 күн бұрын

    Protestants reject anything that challenges their claim that the Bible, and not God, is the ultimate authority.

  • @hexahexametermeter
    @hexahexametermeter6 күн бұрын

    I'm not an Arian or follow the Nicene Creed because the Nicene Creed is infallible. I follow the Nicene Creed because it is CORRECT. There are so many non-sequiturs in here. Seems like they are just hoping you dont notice and take the papal bait.

  • @cronmaker2

    @cronmaker2

    6 күн бұрын

    You mean you follow it (or maybe just parts of it, Nicaea taught other doctrines various Protestants dispute besides just baptismal regeneration) because it conforms to your current provisional interpretation of Scripture. Thus, solo scriptura.

  • @hexahexametermeter

    @hexahexametermeter

    5 күн бұрын

    @@cronmaker2 Or maybe YOU just follow parts of it. How do you know your current understanding of the creed is correct? Sorry, but being in union with the same-sex-blessings Pope doesn-t fix that. You actually have to study and understand what the creeds mean yourself to gain that benefit. Dont need your heretic pope for that.

  • @cronmaker2

    @cronmaker2

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@hexahexametermeterthe church and tradition confirm understanding. There's no need for an infinite regress, iterative clarity and terminus can be reached - it's pretty clear Rome and the East affirm baptismal regeneration, the apostolic ministry and episcopate held at Nicaea - Protestants have criticized those dogmas for 500 years. So not the same boat as the solo scripturist.

  • @rdowdy
    @rdowdy7 күн бұрын

    Sacred Scripture is the ultimate source of truth. Teachings that are in accord with it, like baptismal regeneration (Jn 3:5, Mk 16:16, Acts 2:38, etc.) should be accepted, and anything contrary to it (including some of the Catholic Church's other teachings) rejected as heresy. From that perspective, I think the Nicene Creed is a beautiful summary of who God is and the Gospel message.

  • @wickd6878

    @wickd6878

    Күн бұрын

    "Jesus answered, Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." -John 3:5 KJV This does not teach water baptism regeneration. Jesus did not say born 'again.' "Born of water" refers to the human birth, or better understood, at conception.

  • @Fingolfin456
    @Fingolfin4565 күн бұрын

    I'm a fan of Trent's work, but I do think this is lacking a bit. There is an obvious whole in his argument. His argument (2:23): "if Protestants affirm the Bible and creeds, then either it is not sola scriptura or when its put into practice is collapses into solo scriptura; implied premise neither of these consequences are good (more or less)--meaning if you affirm only the Bible then you can't affirm the creeds and if you affirm the creeds then you can't affirm only the Bible. Therefore, Protestants can't affirm both the Bible and creeds." The whole in the argument comes from his ambiguous use of the word "affirm". Protestants claim that creeds are authoritative only if they affirm doctrines directly in Scripture; so they can affirm parts of the creed but not necessarily all of the creed. For example, scripture says nothing about the wills of Christ. In fact, I think Craig might be anachronistic in his denial of the two wills of Christ. The "wills of Christ" was a philosophical idea born from platonic philosophy. It did not mean "will" the way we use the term today--that is, our personal desires and wants. The way the church, and the mid to late Platonists used the term was that the will is a function of the nature. It was more of a set of natural powers and abilities (e.g. oak trees have the power to make acorns) that all participants of that nature share. All oaks trees share the same nature, so they share the same will--i.e. making acorns. Or, all people have the same will, although we have different desires and wants. So, the early church thought that if Christ has two natures, then he must have two wills. Craig is interpreting "wills" in the modern sense given that Craig affirms the two natures of Christ (hence the anachronism). This example is meant to show that the creeds and councils contain more than just concise descriptions of doctrines found in scripture. They contain some philosophical unpacking. The Protestants will take only that which is directly from scripture as authoritative, taking or leaving the philosophical underpinnings. Therefore, part of the creeds are authoritative and other parts are not. The whole in Trent's argument is that there is a third option: affirm the Bible and parts of the creeds.

  • @audreymarsh5090
    @audreymarsh50907 күн бұрын

    Another great video, and a wonderful follow-up to Joe Heschmeyer’s video from 2 weeks ago on this topic. PS: loving the sleek, professional new look of the channel!!

  • @melissastone434
    @melissastone4347 күн бұрын

    *Hallelujah!!!! The daily jesus devotional has been a huge part of my transformation, God is good 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻was owning a loan of $47,000 to the bank for my son's brain surgery (David), Now I'm no longer in debt after I invested $12,000 and got my payout of m $270,500 every months,God bless Christy Fiore🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸..*

  • @melissastone434

    @melissastone434

    7 күн бұрын

    Thanks to my co-worker (Carson ) who suggested Ms Christy Fiore

  • @RachelGulden684

    @RachelGulden684

    7 күн бұрын

    She's a licensed broker here in the states🇺🇸 and finance advisor.

  • @RachelGulden684

    @RachelGulden684

    7 күн бұрын

    After I raised up to 525k trading with her I bought a new House and a car here in the states🇺🇸🇺🇸 also paid for my son's surgery….Glory to God, shalom.

  • @AdamGeorge-eg8et

    @AdamGeorge-eg8et

    7 күн бұрын

    Can I also do it??? My life is facing lots of challenges lately

  • @EricPeter462

    @EricPeter462

    7 күн бұрын

    I've always wanted to be involved for a long time but the volatility in the price has been very confusing to me. Although I have watched a lot of KZread videos about it but I still find it hard to understand

  • @JW_______
    @JW_______7 күн бұрын

    Of course you can have both. What you mean is that you can't have the both sola scriptura and the Nicene Creed as infallible bar to entry to claim to be a Christian. The value of the creed is that it is correct, not that it's infallible.

  • @kvzacomics

    @kvzacomics

    6 күн бұрын

    My thoughts exactly.

  • @Cklert

    @Cklert

    4 күн бұрын

    I feel like this is having your cake and eating it too. How do you know the Creed is correct? What makes it correct?

  • @JW_______

    @JW_______

    4 күн бұрын

    @Cklert The queston of "why is something true" is a nonsensical question when you think about it, because the answer will necessarily be redundant. The creed is true because every truth claim contained in it is true. It describes ontological reality, things that happened in history, and things that exist now. The question of how we know something is true is a different question from why it is true. How we know something is true is an epistemological question, whereas whether or not something is true is an empirical or an ontological question, depending on what it is we're talking about. The Church didn't make the creed true by putting it to paper and agreeing to it at Nicea. The truth claims found in the creed were already true before the church formally adopted it at the ecumenical council, and they would have continued to be true even if the Church failed to recognize them.

  • @Grizzly_Bear2018
    @Grizzly_Bear20187 күн бұрын

    Excellent segment

  • @jrhemmerich
    @jrhemmerich6 күн бұрын

    At 8:05 nether the quote from JND Kelly nor Furgusen says that the the early church taught baptismal regeneration. That baptism “conveys” the meaning of the remission of sins does not mean that one is not regenerate or had received the Holy Spirit prior to baptism-as Cornelius in Acts clearly already had.

  • @VickersJon
    @VickersJon7 күн бұрын

    Did Gavin and Trent plan to put out these videos at exactly the same time?

  • @mew_the_pinkmin7621
    @mew_the_pinkmin76217 күн бұрын

    Excellent analysis, I also notice that though some protestants claim to have other rules of faith, none of them can withstand or corral his own personal interpretation of Scripture, no matter how novel or crazy those may be.

  • @vladimirtarabay2416

    @vladimirtarabay2416

    7 күн бұрын

    Are you saying Catholics lie about what they truly believe, whereas Protestants tell the truth? Strange flex.

  • @harrygarris6921

    @harrygarris6921

    7 күн бұрын

    Yep the right to private judgement was core to the reformation. Although they can pay respect and honor to creeds and confessions none of them are ultimately binding on the conscience. The clear implication of the right to private judgement is the right to schism.

  • @kyrptonite1825

    @kyrptonite1825

    7 күн бұрын

    A foolish right at that. Basing everything on private interpretation is not a good idea.

  • @vladimirtarabay2416

    @vladimirtarabay2416

    7 күн бұрын

    @@kyrptonite1825 which is exactly what everyone already does, or they lie and say they agree with something they know to be false. The idea that personal reasoning(as opposed to impersonal reasoning?)is bad is ultimately going to rest on your personal reasoning and is thus self-refuting.

  • @spacecoastz4026

    @spacecoastz4026

    7 күн бұрын

    @@kyrptonite1825 Even though the entire purpose of the letters and epistles of Paul and Peter and John were to be read to the people for them to understand? Think about that.

  • @N8R_Quizzie
    @N8R_Quizzie5 күн бұрын

    I'm kinda okay with Solo scriptura for now because I don't want to hold myself to a standard of something I'm unfamiliar with yet. I haven't read any of the creeds, counsels, or church fathers, so I wouldn't know what I'm signing up for. The Arianism argument is interesting because even though I do agree that Arianism is wrong, I would say that's because Athanasius had scriptural reasons, not just in the fact that Athanasius said it was wrong.

  • @glennshrom5801
    @glennshrom58017 күн бұрын

    Good information and sources, Trent, regarding the views on baptism from the beginning centuries of the church era!! I was not aware of that. Thank you!

  • @rosarylover
    @rosarylover7 күн бұрын

    Our Lady of Guadalupe, pray for us.

  • @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    7 күн бұрын

    I used to live near Guadalupe. Mary wasnt there

  • @essafats5728

    @essafats5728

    7 күн бұрын

    @@TimSpangler-rd6vs well welcome our fav Christian Infidel, i.e. Protty

  • @canibezeroun1988

    @canibezeroun1988

    7 күн бұрын

    I try to pray the prayer every morning.

  • @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    7 күн бұрын

    @@essafats5728 Infidel? Did you really just say that?

  • @essafats5728

    @essafats5728

    7 күн бұрын

    @@TimSpangler-rd6vs Yes, I typed out INFIDEL; did not verbally say it.

  • @islam-exe.
    @islam-exe.7 күн бұрын

    People who are reading this comment, I ask you to pray that I can Find Jesus in my life and stop doubting his existence

  • @FleurPillager

    @FleurPillager

    7 күн бұрын

    Read the gospels

  • @wickd6878

    @wickd6878

    Күн бұрын

    Certainly, friend! I do pray that you may find Jesus in fullness, and trust in Him with all of your being, just as He made you. "37 On the last day of the feast, the great day, Jesus stood up and cried out, "If anyone thirsts, let him come to me and drink. 38 Whoever believes in me, as the Scripture has said, 'Out of his heart will flow rivers of living water.'" 39 Now this he said about the Spirit, whom those who believed in him were to receive, for as yet the Spirit had not been given, because Jesus was not yet glorified." (John 7:37-39, ESV) I might also share with you, I do not believe this channel is completely biblical, but I am here to help understand Roman Catholic arguments, which I believe to be false. Red Pen Logic is an excellent source for finding some help in understanding God's Word. There are many short videos, which are easy to understand, and given with much grace!

  • @islam-exe.

    @islam-exe.

    Күн бұрын

    @@wickd6878 Thank you, I am also not a Catholic . I only watched this channel because it has videos against atheism .

  • @wickd6878

    @wickd6878

    Күн бұрын

    @@islam-exe. I wish you well in this, and hope you find the answers for the right time, according to God's generous grace!

  • @NuLeif
    @NuLeif7 күн бұрын

    This. Was. Excellent! Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

  • @steven9red
    @steven9red7 күн бұрын

    Okay, Trent, you gotta spell out some of these things for us anathema Baptists: what does Jesus' will or wills have to do with salvation? Because strictly speaking essential doctrine means if you believe this, you don't have the prerequisite understanding to be a Christian.

  • @ManInTheTimes
    @ManInTheTimes7 күн бұрын

    Southern Baptist here - still young in my faith after 15 years and learning much from your podcasts Trent! I might be wrong in saying this and maybe a protestant brother will correct me, but again I think Trent doesn't put forward the fully fleshed out view of Sola Scriptura - at least how it's acted out in the protestant churches I've been around. The Catholic view seems to be that protestants don't have a framework through which we view scripture, therefore any interpretation is valid which leads to heretical teaching. The authority of the Catholic Church, evident in all it's doctrines, dogmas, and traditions, is supposed to act as a guardrail for these things. The problem is, just like Catholics, Protestants DO have a mechanism through which we interpret scripture - the inner witness and guiding of the Holy Spirit! I actually think Protestants have a lot more in common with our Catholic brethren than we might think. The reason I'm not Catholic is I don't think Catholics recognize that sometimes the Church veers off the rails (or has the ability to), whereas most Protestants I know are very comfortable using the words "I don't know." I once heard Trent say on another podcast, I think with Allie Stuckey, that the Church may have been in need of reform during the time of Martin Luther, but certainly wasn't meant to be split into the factions we now inhabit. I actually agree with this wholeheartedly! The problem is that if I walked into a Catholic church tomorrow and denied the position of Mary as immaculately conceived and totally sinless, I would be barred from taking holy communion (assuming I went through confirmation in a single day lol)! Thanks be to God that we have the grape juice and crackers at my local church! I consider even these the scraps dropped by my Master and Lord Jesus Christ from His table, though no other priest blessed them. The reason we see the Nicean Creed being considered at the SBC is that God's CHURCH yearns desperately to be reunited. It breaks our hearts that because of doctrinal differences we can't be together as the bride of Christ. Even Catholics believe God won't abandon Baptists because we misunderstood some inessential doctrine. We are as much a part of the body of Christ as any person who has, as the Apostle Paul says, confessed with their lips that Jesus is Lord and believed in their heart that God raised Him from the dead. I don't think I misinterpreted that one. Much love brothers and sisters,

  • @ReapingTheHarvest

    @ReapingTheHarvest

    7 күн бұрын

    The Holy Spirit is who guides the Church you are right about that. The Holy Spirit can guide anyone and everyone. The problem is that there are countless thousands of denominations all claiming to be guided by the Holy Spirit in their interpretations and doctrines, but yet they all disagree on interpretations and doctrines. Either none are right all the time or only one is right all the time. Jesus only established 1 church. While other denominations are right here and there, they will also err sometimes. Only the Catholic Church is infallible in matters of faith and morals when making definitive teachings. You also imply that the Catholic Church doesn't admit that sometimes we just don't know things. This isn't true. There are many mysteries and we will never know everything, the Church acknowledges this. That doesn't mean the Church "veers off the rails" as you say. Not knowing something doesn't mean you have veered off the rails. What we can be sure of is that all Catholic doctrines are without err and we can trust them fully, just as we can trust Scripture. This doesn't mean that everything there is to be known is laid out in Scripture or in doctrines.

  • @ManInTheTimes

    @ManInTheTimes

    7 күн бұрын

    @@ReapingTheHarvest Thanks for the reply - I agree that there are many denominations claiming to be guided by the Holy Spirit, but the primary difference between the protestant view and the catholic view in this area is as you stated - that Catholics believe they are the Church (capital C). Protestants believe the Church (Capital C) extends beyond the boundaries of the Vatican because we reject the infallibility of the Church. That's also why I imply that Catholics typically don't say "I don't know." Also, I'm sure I'm misunderstanding you but are you saying the Catholic church is infallible, or that the pope is infallible when he speaks ex cathedra? Are these two separate doctrines? Surely you don't mean the rank and file catholic churchgoer is infallible in any respect, whether in theology or daily living. I assume you are talking about the corporate body of believers?

  • @DPK5201

    @DPK5201

    7 күн бұрын

    @@ReapingTheHarvestbut I just listened to a sedavacantist call Trent a heretic, and Francis the anti-Pope It’s a ruse to portray the RC church as the preserver of unity.

  • @markushill8639

    @markushill8639

    7 күн бұрын

    ​@@DPK5201The distinction here would be that we acknowledge that individuals can possess false beliefs and be disunified, but in doing so, one rails against the centralized authority of the Church and Sacred Tradition (which includes Sacred Scripture) in doing so.

  • @FleurPillager

    @FleurPillager

    7 күн бұрын

    We're supposed to be united in Christ not in false church doctrine which is rampant in both the Catholic Church and many Protestant denominations as well.

  • @rsissel1
    @rsissel17 күн бұрын

    SBC... Welcome to the 4th century

  • @mrjeffjob

    @mrjeffjob

    7 күн бұрын

    That’s good when the fourth century teaching is the same as the first all the way through to the twenty first. Because Truth doesn’t change. Only Protestantism does.

  • @ninjason57

    @ninjason57

    6 күн бұрын

    @@mrjeffjob If you truly don't think all churches, Protestant, Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox, change then you're living in a delusion

  • @MaranglikPeterTo-Rot
    @MaranglikPeterTo-Rot7 күн бұрын

    Trent Horn @ Council Of Trent is yet my favourite Catholic Apologist. Others including: Jimmy Akin, Michael @Reason with Theology, Bryan Mercier @ Catholic Truth, I Miss Christendom, Matt @ Pints with Aquinas, Voice of Reason etc. God bless you, all the amazing souls behind this KZread Channel and your good ministry.

  • @PaladinJackal
    @PaladinJackal7 күн бұрын

    Interesting insights as always Trent.

  • @ChrisTheFreedomEnjoyer
    @ChrisTheFreedomEnjoyer7 күн бұрын

    As a Southern Baptist, the convention voting against adding the Nicene Creed to the Baptist Faith and Message was incredibly embarrassing.

  • @gunsgalore7571

    @gunsgalore7571

    7 күн бұрын

    I'm just curious, do you say this because you believe in baptismal regeneration? Or do you say it because even though you reject baptismal regeneration, you believe that the Nicene Creed can accommodate a non-baptismal regeneration view?

  • @ChrisTheFreedomEnjoyer

    @ChrisTheFreedomEnjoyer

    7 күн бұрын

    @@gunsgalore7571 The latter. I reject baptismal regeneration, and I believe that it is possible to reject baptismal regeneration and still affirm the Nicene Creed while being intellectually consistent.

  • @kevinjypiter6445

    @kevinjypiter6445

    7 күн бұрын

    ​@@ChrisTheFreedomEnjoyer You cannot be intellectually consistent if you claim to affirm the Nicene Creed and be Baptist. "One baptism for the remission of sins" literally means "one baptism for the remission of sins". It isn't "say the sinners prayer for the remission of sins". I have more respect for the consistency of those within SBC to reject the Nicene Creed, because they honestly are being intellectually consistent (while being misguided). But I do admire your want to conform to be like the early christians, but you first must admit the early christians believed in something entirely different from you

  • @tammywilliams-ankcorn9533

    @tammywilliams-ankcorn9533

    7 күн бұрын

    I was raised that the baptism of The Holy Spirit does remiss sins and since water isn’t mentioned in the Nicene creed, we were able to say it. That’s how a Baptist understands it, I guess.

  • @Postmillhighlights

    @Postmillhighlights

    7 күн бұрын

    @@kevinjypiter6445I’m no baptist, but I know baptists can affirm the Nicene creed. The phrase your quoting from the creed is basically Acts 2:38, right? You know Baptists believe Acts 2:38?

  • @felipeneves9571
    @felipeneves95717 күн бұрын

    Sola Scriptura is the great horseman of relativism.

  • @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    7 күн бұрын

    Believing the Bible isnt evil

  • @ultimateoriginalgod

    @ultimateoriginalgod

    7 күн бұрын

    Tommy the Strawman appears

  • @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    @TimSpangler-rd6vs

    7 күн бұрын

    @@ultimateoriginalgod Not sure who Tommy is...but even he knows that believing the Bible isnt evil

  • @felipeneves9571

    @felipeneves9571

    7 күн бұрын

    @@TimSpangler-rd6vs Sola Scriptura isn't just believing in the Bible. Lying is a sin against a commandment of God.

  • @jwilsonhandmadeknives2760

    @jwilsonhandmadeknives2760

    7 күн бұрын

    Sola Scriptura is the ever moving goalpost. It is self-defeating. But every time the legs get kicked out from under it the definition gets restated with a different nuance, repeat, repeat, repeat.

  • @dynamic9016
    @dynamic90167 күн бұрын

    Really appreciate this video.

  • @ZachFish-
    @ZachFish-6 күн бұрын

    The first half is probably fairly easy to refute, I’m interested in hearing a rebuttal video to this, so keep me updated if there is one my good fellows.

  • @CrushingSerpents
    @CrushingSerpents7 күн бұрын

    The consistent tag-team between Trent and Joe is always encouraging!

  • @simon330
    @simon3306 күн бұрын

    Choosing to become Catholic is a personal one and thus requires one’s personal interpretation to be that the Catholic magisterium is correct. Personal interpretation is unavoidable, even for Catholics.

  • @cronmaker2

    @cronmaker2

    6 күн бұрын

    Sure we're all humans using reason, but that right to ultimate private judgment and interpretive authority no longer remains after submission to Rome's authority claims. It does under Protestantism, nothing changes pre and post submission as no churchs judgment can bind the conscience. As an analogy, a NT era Jew has to judge Christ/Apostles claims and credibility as divinely authorized guides. After submission, they were no longer permitted to question each and every teaching based on their private judgment of the OT. If they did, they never actually submitted to Christ/Apostles authority claims in the first place.

  • @hexahexametermeter

    @hexahexametermeter

    5 күн бұрын

    @@cronmaker2 COOL. JOIN ROME...BECOME A ROBOT "just following orders"

  • @cronmaker2

    @cronmaker2

    5 күн бұрын

    ​@@hexahexametermeterso you recognize a difference between private judgment in Rome vs Protestantism. No need for Rome to be the Borg, it just sets irreformable boundaries within which debate and progress can occur. Were NT era believers submitting to Christ/Apostles infallible interpretive authority robots? Nope.

  • @diestrom.5880
    @diestrom.58803 күн бұрын

    Creeds are agreed upon interpretations of "men" from the Scriptures. If as believers they can interpret from the Scriptures,why others can't? Sure there are people who have spiritual gifts of wisdom, but who decides, is it the people or the Holy Spirit? When the Magisterium decides what is the right interpretation, do they all have the same one time interpretation or they choose the majority? When Christ said, the Holy Spirit will guide you into all truth, does it speak only on the Apostles alone and the bishops of the Churches and not on an individual level?

  • @EveryHappening
    @EveryHappening6 күн бұрын

    I’m not really understanding the argument here. I’m not sure why giving authority to creeds and councils necessarily equivocates these authorities to be co-equal in authority to scripture (which is essentially what Catholics must argue). To argue for Sola Scriptura means that the infallible word of God is the foundation upon which every creed or council is predicated upon. This was Martin Luther’s point! This very point. There is one authority and where there are creeds and councils which align with scripture, they have authority because the antecedent to this authority is derived from something fundamentally true and inerrant. If this were not the case, then why have there been changes made to the various credal statements of the Catholic Church? And which of those creeds could be argued as having equal authority to scripture? In other words, when were these false statements co-equal to the authority of scripture and the councils which formulated them and when was this authority lost? The second we begin speaking about creeds and councils without scripture, we run into serious issues of authority and the values in the creeds and councils are ostensibly lost. Creeds and councils may well be necessary authorities within the church but they by no means have sufficient authority since they are derived by men from…. Scripture. The sufficient authority is scripture and it is for this reason we argue for Sola Scripture. Trent, this video misses the mark by such a vast distance. It’s as if you refused to take the time to really understand the Protestant position are so steeped in Catholic Dogma that you can’t help but make such a gross equivocation. But in either case, I found this to be a very, very poor argument and I struggle to understand what good it could have done even if it was well argued. Other than a pro-Catholic video protesting the Protestants… which is ironic really.

  • @avarmadillo
    @avarmadillo7 күн бұрын

    Baptists ironically deny the Sacramental power of the act of baptism? What a joke.

  • @bobinindiana

    @bobinindiana

    7 күн бұрын

    True, Southern Baptists have no sacraments. By the way, this was just a very minor motion at the Annual Meeting here in Indianapolis this year. It may have gotten 6 minutes bevore it was overwhelmingly voted down. There were other more serious issues.

  • @renaldoawes2210

    @renaldoawes2210

    7 күн бұрын

    Because Baptists believe in baptism of the Holy Spirit and the Waters of Life, not your local pool with cat piss in it. You dolt. Baptists understand spiritual baptism better than Catholics do. Catholics insist that holy water is a thing and all this other disproven nonsense. Like you legit believe you are eating Christ and drinking his blood, when you in fact are not. You also believe your Pope is infallible, when that has been disproven historically about 100 times now. Cultists gonna cult.

  • @Murph_gaming

    @Murph_gaming

    7 күн бұрын

    @@bobinindiana They don't call them sacraments but ordinances.

  • @silenthero2795

    @silenthero2795

    7 күн бұрын

    Because baptism itself doesn't do anything but just a public display of one's faith? The Pharisees were baptized too and they crucified Christ.

  • @FleurPillager

    @FleurPillager

    7 күн бұрын

    I think that Baptists deny baptism to babies because they are not developed enough to make that decision.

  • @ryandelaune139
    @ryandelaune1397 күн бұрын

    To steal a phrase I heard used by Jordan Cooper, the Creeds and the Confessions are NORMED by Scripture. Therefore, their authority is derived from the basis of their beliefs being biblical. So no, Trent, we don’t treat them as equal authorities to Scripture, but they are authoritative all the same because their declarations are sourced from the ultimate authority of Scripture and proven to be valid by history

  • @ghostapostle7225

    @ghostapostle7225

    7 күн бұрын

    So, their authority is only meaningful because the Bible said it so. How this is not solo scriptura ultimately?

  • @ryandelaune139

    @ryandelaune139

    7 күн бұрын

    @@ghostapostle7225 I’d be interested to hear what you think “Solo Scriptura” is. Because from what I’ve heard from different Catholics, “Solo Scriptura” is more the dudes saying “me and muh bible” and not the historic Protestant Sola Scriptura. Ultimately, yes, our faith and practice in its totality should find its ultimate authority in the Scriptures and doctrines derived out of it, by “good and necessary consequence” to quote the Westminster Confession. If that principle means that I practice Solo Scriptura in your mind, having both my personal interpretation guarded by the creeds and confessions of history, which derive their own source of authority from scripture, then sure. But I don’t see a problem with that.

  • @Mariaa_Hernandezz
    @Mariaa_Hernandezz7 күн бұрын

    Such great insight❤️🙏

  • @TheCounselofTrent

    @TheCounselofTrent

    7 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much! -Vanessa

  • @filiusvivam4315
    @filiusvivam43157 күн бұрын

    Thank you Trent. Great video.

  • @MarvinGunkle
    @MarvinGunkle7 күн бұрын

    Id love to see you debate The Other Paul on this one, i think there are a couple errors in your arguments that Id like to see a rebuttal on/dialogue on. The part i like least about debates are when they end, so if you do decide to discuss this topic with him i think as long as possible would be the most fruitful. Love your content though even as someone you would consider protestant.

  • @JenniferLynn-kk7tk
    @JenniferLynn-kk7tk6 күн бұрын

    Hallelujah!!! I’m blessed and favored with $60,000 every week! Now I can afford anything and support the work of God and the church. For Your glory, LORD! HALLELUJAH!

  • @MatthewDaniel-gm3gc

    @MatthewDaniel-gm3gc

    6 күн бұрын

    Oh really? Tell me more! Always interested in hearing stories of successes.

  • @JenniferLynn-kk7tk

    @JenniferLynn-kk7tk

    6 күн бұрын

    This is what Ana Graciela Blackwelder does, she has changed my life.

  • @JenniferLynn-kk7tk

    @JenniferLynn-kk7tk

    6 күн бұрын

    After raising up to 60k trading with her, I bought a new house and car here in the US and also paid for my son’s (Oscar) surgery. Glory to God.shalom.

  • @GreenwoodWhitsett

    @GreenwoodWhitsett

    6 күн бұрын

    Wow, that’s inspiring. How can I contact Ana Graciela Blackwelder?

  • @JenniferLynn-kk7tk

    @JenniferLynn-kk7tk

    6 күн бұрын

    connect with her through

  • @karsonbruce7451
    @karsonbruce74516 күн бұрын

    You did it, Trent. You made it. Your video editing and aesthetic are now up to par and visually stunning to look at. Your video editing now equally compliments your intelligence and the truth you desire to convey. Give whoever you hired a high five and take them out to lunch. Cheers.

  • @EveraldoCruz-kh3bj
    @EveraldoCruz-kh3bj7 күн бұрын

    Great video ❤

  • @adamh.2345
    @adamh.23455 күн бұрын

    The production quality of your videos has gone up so much in the last few months! keep up the great work!

  • @davidfettig8885
    @davidfettig88856 күн бұрын

    Trent I would not lump all Protestants into Baptist. Anglican and Lutheran are very very far from them. Once again Trent you do an awesome job!

  • @hexahexametermeter

    @hexahexametermeter

    6 күн бұрын

    Reformed and Presbyterian as well.

  • @lukasmakarios4998
    @lukasmakarios49984 күн бұрын

    Actually, you can have both. The Nicene Creed was developed to explain questions not explicitly answered in the Bible, BUT the debate centered around whether the offered answers were in agreement with the texts of the New Testament, and the Hebrew Scriptures. Thus, the Bible was considered to be the final authority, which would determine whether one answer or another was valid. The NT was considered at the time to be the authoritative compendium of the Apostolic deposit, since the Council was convened 200 years after the last person who knew any Apostles had died. Therefore, the Nicene Creed is a reflection of the Scriptures, and does not stand alone or in contra-distinction from them.

  • @SimplyReformed
    @SimplyReformedКүн бұрын

    You cannot have two ultimate authorities. Traditional Protestants affirm the creeds as subordinate to Scripture. Thus, for example, we believe in the Trinity, and firm the great ancient creeds, however, when we defend the Trinity we do so through Scripture. We do not say "thus saith Nicene." We do say, "thus saith the written Word of God", which the Nicene create helps us to understand.

  • @gabesternberg555
    @gabesternberg5557 күн бұрын

    Can you have creeds and sola scriptura? Yes. Because we (Lutherans) have had both since the beginning. The scriptures are the source of creeds. They aren't infallible, but simply contain no errors because every word is a direct quote from the scriptures.

  • @bradleyperry1735

    @bradleyperry1735

    7 күн бұрын

    No.

  • @emilyslavin7100

    @emilyslavin7100

    7 күн бұрын

    Every word is in fact not a direct quote from the Scriptures. That's exactly why the Nicene creed was so controversial initially.

  • @jayt9608

    @jayt9608

    7 күн бұрын

    Every word in the creed might be in Scripture, but it is also in a dictionary. The creed does not become a mere grammary because every word is in the dictionary. Worse, this fails in the face of Scripture itself, for the words that Satan uses to tempt Christ are found throughout Scripture, with even direct quotations. His words are no more infallible than the creed because he misapplied them. A creedal misapplication of a text would render the document fallible, though the Scripture is not.

  • @joshj3787

    @joshj3787

    6 күн бұрын

    No, every word is an interpretive explanation of our faith, of which the data are found in Scripture but often not the explicit facts. The fact that you (Lutherans) have, from the beginning, claimed to be Sola Scripturists while simultaneously reciting the creeds to define the faith, just shows how unavoidably contradictory Sola Scriptura is. It's not eventually contradictory, but immediately and always contradictory.

  • @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    @jahnvantuttlesma8215

    6 күн бұрын

    All historic Protestants affirmed the creeds. Modern fundamentalism/evangelicalism is so cringe (not to dismiss their positives contributions to American Christianity. They do have some major issues).

  • @davidhunt3151
    @davidhunt31517 күн бұрын

    Great video, but "colapses" typo at 2:34

  • @ThinkTwice2222
    @ThinkTwice22227 күн бұрын

    Why would any man's interpretation have more authority over another if we are all created equal?

  • @steven9red
    @steven9red7 күн бұрын

    6:50 technically we believe in those words, but the meaning is different. As we believe 2 "baptisms" exist: the spiritual baptism where the Holy Spirit is pored out on us (this is a synonym for "salvation") and the physical dunking which is a representation of being consumed by Jesus' death and resurrection.

Келесі