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As for Protestants i already know they're kiked to the boot but i'd like to know whats the general consesus on what is the most based sect of Christianity, as i am not highly informed on this matter, thanks.
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Erase99 on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
Catholics believe in:

*Universal jurisdiction of the bishop of Rome

*Dual procession of the Holy Spirit

*Immaculate conception of Saint Mary

*Purgatory

Eastern Orthodox don't accept any of these. Regarding your question, "what is the most based sect?" The answer is: anything other than Protestantism. Christianity is a spiritual, not political movement, even though it can intersect with politics. It goals and the working of the religion are ultimately spiritual. The question you should ask is "should I follow the Roman Catholics or Eastern Orthodox", since Protestantism is obviously wrong. I don't want to turn this website or thread into RC vs EO, which would become endless acts of sniping and fruitless arguing. I'll say this: God rewards those who diligently seek Him.
Gottmituns_ on scored.co
1 month ago 2 points (+0 / -0 / +2Score on mirror ) 2 children
Good summary, but if you actually ask most RC or EO what they believe they can't answer you. That's because these churches are defined by a common tradition and culture rather than theology. "Protestantism", which you ought to understand if you're going to critique, is an act of drawing boundaries by theology. It's nearly a useless term now but it initially referred to three different branches of disagreement with rome: anabaptist, calvinist, and Lutheran. Notice Anglican is not included. When most people say protestant what they really mean is "American spiritualism", or nondenominational/heretical franchise "churches" with no real theology.
ColloidalUranium on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 ) 1 child
What is considered real theology?
Gottmituns_ on scored.co
1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
Real theology as in an inquiry into the divine. The foundation for that in a Christian context is a confession of belief, which is used as a starting point. A shared confession means more theologians working from the same premise. What I see in American spiritualism are disjointed and obscure confessions, if a church has one at all. That means that they have trouble importing any traditional theology and difficulty clarifying what they actually believe.
deleted 1 month ago 0 points (+0 / -0 )
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