Does CS Lewis have ‘infallibility?’
His analogy fails when one recognizes that without the saving faith (it also being a gift from God), there are no works; just self serving vanity.
Religion Forum threads labeled Ecumenical
Ecumenical threads are closed to antagonism.
To antagonize is to incur or to provoke hostility in others.
Unlike the caucus threads, the article and reply posts of an ecumenical thread may discuss more than one belief, but antagonism is not tolerable.
More leeway is granted to what is acceptable in the text of the article than to the reply posts. For example, the term gross error in an article will not prevent an ecumenical discussion, but a poster should not use that term in his reply because it is antagonistic. As another example, the article might be a passage from the Bible which would be antagonistic to Jews. The passage should be considered historical information and a legitimate subject for an ecumenical discussion. The reply posts however must not be antagonistic.
Contrasting of beliefs or even criticisms can be made without provoking hostilities. But when in doubt, only post what you are for and not what you are against. Or ask questions.
Ecumenical threads will be moderated on a where theres smoke, theres fire basis. When hostility has broken out on an ecumenical thread, Ill be looking for the source.
Therefore anti posters must not try to finesse the guidelines by asking loaded questions, using inflammatory taglines, gratuitous quote mining or trying to slip in an anti or ex article under the color of the ecumenical tag.
I hope you are not implying that catholics are without faith and therefore have only empty works...I assure you this is not the truth. Faith allows the fruit borne of good works.
Satan rejoices when Christians bicker over semantics. ...makes it easier for the deceived who do not know Christ to point out their hypocrisies. To be Chrisiitan is to attempt to walk the path of Jesus in how we relate to our fellow man. “For what you do unto the least of my people you do unto me.” To those much is given much is expected.