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What Is The Brown Scapular
Eternal Life Blog ^ | August 29,2014 | Eternal life

Posted on 05/09/2015 7:44:31 AM PDT by RnMomof7

Millions of sincere Catholics wear the brown scapular thinking by doing so it will help them spiritually. They believed the report that Mary made and is backing a salvation promise in connection with the brown scapular hundreds of years ago based on their religious traditions. Over the years wearing the brown scapular has been perpetuated by sincere Catholic leaders, such as the one in this video, but it is in complete futility that it is worn. It is a false hope and a spiritual snare. wearing brown scapularIt is not based on God’s truth and is, therefore, just as deadly for the sincere Catholic as it is for the Hindu who bathes in the Ganges River thinking his sins will be washed away in the water or for the Muslim who kisses the black stone of Kaaba to be forgiven! [The picture to the right is Mel Gibson, the director of the Passion of Christ, wearing a brown scapular as he smokes.]

I too once wore the brown scapular as an Ex Roman Catholic. I know what it is like to be taught something and accept it as truth to find out later it is not only unscriptural, but anti-scriptural. It hurts, but TRUTH is what we must stand on to be safe. It takes humility in such cases to turn.

NOTE: At about 2:23 time-wise into the video, the speaker is quoted below. How could anyone deny that Mary is deified in Catholicism? Surely, this rampant idolatry is grieving to the Lord Jesus Christ and God the Father. This is what Catholicism teaches about the brown scapular:

Brown Scapular Catholic Propaganda

And so, wearing of the brown scapular reminds us, should remind us, of three things. First, that we are children of Mary. Second of all, that we need to work for our Lady. And finally, it should be a garment of humility and penance. First, by the brown scapular we profess ourselves to be children of Mary. The scapular of our Lady is a badge or a uniform so to speak by which we profess to whom we belong and who we serve. Likewise, our Lady in turn by wearing the brown scapular, she recognizes us as her children, as her special children. And because of that, she consequently protects us and watches over us. The brown scapular should also remind us that we need to work for our Lady because the scapular, which means shoulder garment, was originally that, it was a garment worn by religious in order to protect their habit, their religious habit that they wore on a daily basis during those periods of work to keep it from getting dirty, stained, from ripping, etc. and so therefore the scapular is a working garb. And so this should remind us that there’s no room for lazy piety. If we wear the brown scapular and we consider ourselves our Lady’s children, there’s no place for lazy piety but rather we should fill our lives with good works. This brown scapular should remind us the need to faithfully fulfill our daily duties, and to make another adaptation of Scripture, to labor as good soldiers of the Immaculate. Finally, the third place, the brown scapular is also a garment of humility and of penance. So in a spirit of penance, we should accept all the difficulties of our state of life and all the sufferings that our Lady may want to send us. And the scapular will give us the strength to do this. In all of our difficulties, we can always grab onto our brown scapular, remind ourselves of our Lady’s protection, her watchfulness, her presence and especially at the moment of death, when we can call to mind our Lady’s promise of salvation. Our Lady of Mount Carmel, pray for us.

* Not a single word about Jesus was mentioned there.
* The brown scapular is 100% religious mythology and idolatry, as Mary is deified as a type of Savior.
* No Bible light shines from such brown scapular Catholic tradition.



TOPICS: Apologetics; Evangelical Christian; Theology; Worship
KEYWORDS: deception; idolatry; superstition; tradition
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To: Faith Presses On
I keep getting jerked around here.

I am told that the Bible is inerrant and must be obeyed as written.

I point out that there are things that don't work out with a straight literal reading, and say you have to interpret.

Then it is either A. No you don't, that is blasphemy, or B. No there are no problems with literal reading (hundreds of examples are posted on line, starting with the order of creation between Genesis One and Two) or C. The Holy Spirit reveals the truth and resolves apparent conflicts, or my favorite, D. You just have to "Rightly divide God's Word", like that is not interpreting the meaning, like that is somehow substantially different.

When I say that relying on revelation is not literal reading, you say "Many Christians would disagree.", like that somehow makes it literal reading? No, it is avoiding the issue and pretending that it has been refuted. It is a glaring inconsistency.

I point out the potential downside of relying on revelation rather than literal reading, with the example of Jim Jones, who claimed revelation over literal reading. You seem to discount this by pointing out that he didn't adhere to the letter of scripture, as if that absolves the revelatory approach that he did use. It is the opposite.

Then others will chime in with statements like, "I am a Fundamentalist, and I don't know where you get the idea that we use a literal interpretation of scripture". That is kind of the common definition of the term. When I google it, the first thing I get is:

fun·da·men·tal·ism, noun; "a form of a religion, especially Islam or Protestant Christianity, that upholds belief in the strict, literal interpretation of scripture."

I am sick of the circular run-around, and the angry bigoted bashing of Catholics, and don't really want to keep being dragged back into these same loops over and over.

I have long wondered why Jews aren't Republicans, and why they don't see Christians as some of the strongest supporters of Israel (which I believe they are). I have heard from Jewish friends about their discomfort with evangelicals, but I did not understand it until now, I had not felt it myself until this experience, despite knowing many over the years in the military.

I think that faith is one of the main aspects that distinguish Christianity from other major religions. Every major religion has faith, just as all will have some strains of philosophical intellectualism, some fundamentalists, some devoted to social service, some devotional practices, and so on. But in my assessment, Christianity has some particular excellence in the development of faith.

It can do great things, but it can have some negative expressions as well (just as love can have negative expressions in possessiveness or jealousy). I see over zealousness and closed mindedness, when folks seem quick to abandon logic, reversing themselves or resorting to absurd sophistry, and triumphantly conclude that they have logically proven their case. Nothing will be allowed to get in the way of the predetermined conclusion.

It has been interesting to discuss things, but in total I come away turned off that it typically boils down to a sudden shift in argument, waving a "magic wand" like I have the Holy Spirit and you don't, or simply total non-sequiturs (unrelated statements, personal attacks, unrelated attacks on other things like the Catholic Church. or simply re-asserting whatever was challenged without refuting the challenge).

I come away with the expectation that if I attempt to reason with Protestant Fundamentalists online concerning religion, I will encounter unkind, unfair, and ultimately inconsistent argumentation; and that there will be no admission of a lost point, no matter what (which feels pretty creepy).

I had long since come to a similar conclusion about debating fundamentalist muslims, although their ultimate bottom line is so much worse - violence and censorship. One other thing that I have found both muslim and Protestant Fundamentalism to share, is an above average degree of bigoted disrespect for the practices and beliefs of others. I come away with the feeling that this whole thread was basically bigoted Catholic bashing to reinforce a sense of superiority (absolutism, actually).

I really want to back out of this discussion, and feel bad that I may have injured anyone's faith. I got drawn in trying to quell what I saw as inter-Christian hostility, and ended up engaged in it. I don't feel nearly as bad arguing politics. So please pardon me if I don't respond to future questions, and feel free to take parting shots.

And may God bless you all with kindness and wisdom and love all around.

661 posted on 05/12/2015 10:51:06 PM PDT by BeauBo
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To: BeauBo
Bless you.

these threads are alas usually not true discussions but merely a way for them to feel superior to those they disagree with.

I sometimes try to answer but usually get non sequitor or straw man type answers. Now I just report the worst ones, since FR forbids personal attacks and years ago it got so bad that JRob banned all of them.

662 posted on 05/12/2015 10:59:07 PM PDT by LadyDoc (liberals only love politically correct poor people)
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To: LadyDoc
these threads are alas usually not true discussions but merely a way for them to feel superior to those they disagree with. I sometimes try to answer but usually get non sequitor or straw man type answers. Now I just report the worst ones, since FR forbids personal attacks and years ago it got so bad that JRob banned all of them. 

ROTFL when did that ever happen?

663 posted on 05/13/2015 2:03:20 AM PDT by Alex Murphy ("the defacto Leader of the FR Calvinist Protestant Brigades")
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To: Religion Moderator

Oh, you mean that thread that was cast into the outer darkness of the Smokey Back Room? That’s where we should discuss a Religion Forum issue? Ok, yeah, sure. Right. Got it.


664 posted on 05/13/2015 3:35:29 AM PDT by Brian Kopp DPM
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To: mlizzy
..offering my time up to Jesus and Mary instead.

I see...

665 posted on 05/13/2015 5:20:09 AM PDT by Elsie (I was here earlier!)
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To: mlizzy
... disrespecting Christ through the disrespect they show Mary...

I see...

666 posted on 05/13/2015 5:21:05 AM PDT by Elsie (I was here earlier!)
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To: mlizzy
I, too, am backing off from any hope for this forum...

Bye.

667 posted on 05/13/2015 5:21:41 AM PDT by Elsie (I was here earlier!)
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To: Elsie

You made it!


668 posted on 05/13/2015 5:22:28 AM PDT by WVKayaker (On Scale of 1 to 5 Palins, How Likely Is Media Assault on Each GOP Candidate?)
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To: LadyDoc
I sometimes try to answer but usually get non sequitor or straw man type answers.

But them others are really good ones that go right to the core of the problem.

669 posted on 05/13/2015 5:23:40 AM PDT by Elsie (I was here earlier!)
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To: Elsie

670 posted on 05/13/2015 5:26:16 AM PDT by Elsie (I was here earlier!)
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To: BeauBo

A ramblin’ type of semi-opus, but quite nice actually.

Thanks for the well-wishes.

R2z


671 posted on 05/13/2015 5:33:06 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: mlizzy
I, too, am backing off from any hope for this forum [in the sense of time spent on the fruitless threads], offering my time up to Jesus and Mary instead. The "Anti-Catholicism" on this site is much stronger than the Christianity displayed [by NCCs], and when they as a group can start talking about something they've done for the Lord or their families and friends, instead of disrespecting Christ through the disrespect they show Mary, I'll come back on board too. Until then,...

It never was intended to be the Nice For Catholics Forum. It is called the Free Republic Religion Forum. And sooner or later, you can see all kinds of religious opinions right here without having to clean your LCD screen.

Also, there is a large amount of constant Christian unity expressed here by some of the diverse posters.

Thanks for the blessing as we part ways.
672 posted on 05/13/2015 5:45:10 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: WVKayaker

Is that you with your tabby on the motorcycle?


673 posted on 05/13/2015 5:47:26 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: LadyDoc
(T)hese threads are alas usually not true discussions but merely a way for them to feel superior to those they disagree with.

By using the word "them", one can presume you mean Christians who don't agree with your sect of religion.

About the superiority thing, the Word of God trumps the catechism of the Catholic Church and all other sects' catechisms every single time...then, now, and forevermore.

We are told to walk humbly with God by the power of the Spirit and in Christ. Because it is Christ Who is our very reason for our hope and life eternal with Him. I readily admit to you that I do not always do humble very well, but He has His way of handling me when I act just like a proud Roman Catholic.
674 posted on 05/13/2015 5:58:00 AM PDT by Resettozero
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To: Resettozero
No! I saw this guy in Washington, DC when I was waiting for the nighttime July 4th fireworks. Cool dude that can get his cat to do that!

I have a Doberman that munches them for S&G!


675 posted on 05/13/2015 6:06:18 AM PDT by WVKayaker (On Scale of 1 to 5 Palins, How Likely Is Media Assault on Each GOP Candidate?)
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To: Elsie

Speaking of a rare book......

676 posted on 05/13/2015 6:16:58 AM PDT by Utah Binger (To keep order in Orderville everyone pulls his own weight.)
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To: BeauBo
When I google it, the first thing I get is:

fun·da·men·tal·ism, noun; "a form of a religion, especially Islam or Protestant Christianity, that upholds belief in the strict, literal interpretation of scripture."


Yes, that is a very popular view of Christian fundamentalism.  It is also highly misleading.  People once thought all Irish people were alcoholics, too.  Popular misconceptions die hard.   I am sorry you didn't respond to my last post to you.  I believe I understand where you are coming from, and it was my intention to help you see inside our heads a bit, sort of my way of trying to defeat the natural prejudices that lie between our two world views.  Evidently I have failed.  If you respond no further, that is your choice.  But if you are reading this, please consider a few things before closing the door absolutely:

Christian fundamentalism was, at its inception, a healthy reaction to the wholesale rejection of supernaturalism that was going on in Christianity in the wake of Darwin and the Enlightenment.  The focus on literalism was selective. Accepting the Scriptures as true in all facts does not equate to accepting forms of literalism that reject the ordinary use of metaphor or other figurative language.  The problem ran deeper.  The Enlightenment was a door being opened to pseudo-rationally reject all forms of supernaturalism.  The fundamentalists pushed back by arguing from faith that God could and did still interact with the world miraculously.  

For example, when we say Jesus rose from the dead, we really believe that.  It was not figurative because nothing in the ordinary language of the text would lead one to believe the authors were being figurative about that specific thing.  They even had the chance to go all metaphor with the resurrection but chose instead to die for the truth of it rather than recant. 

Likewise with creationism.  We believe God could have created the world in any manner He saw fit, even if human science can only see certain aspects of that world.  Seven days or seven seconds or seven billion years.  None of those are outside the supernatural power of God.  So we elected to believe what God had chosen to reveal to us and use that as the filter on science.  Humanistic empiricism seeks to reverse that process, where whatever we see today, the science fad of the moment, filters God's revelation to us, which we're supposed to take with a grain of salt anyway, because the underlying assumption, per Hume, is that if you can leave out the supernatural to explain anything, you're obligated by Reason to do so.  This is because under the new rules of the Enlightenment, Reason had become God.  That's why they capitalized the "R."  Seriously.

But in all of this, the focus of fundamentalism was not to reject the rich tapestry of layered meaning in the Scriptures, but to reject the Enlightenment's descent into atheism, initially shown by the symptom of systematically rejecting all things supernatural.  This is why we cringe when those with the popular perception of the matter put us in the "strictly literal" category.  That's level of literalism is actually a mental illness.  Truly.  Nobody is an absolute literalist.  It isn't possible without clinical mental defect.  When we hear Jesus say "I am the Door," or "I am the True Vine," we are just like every other normal human being.  We know that's a metaphor.

But the reason we know that is because we have a specific methodology for interpreting texts.  It is the ordinary method ordinary folks use to interpret all texts.  It is called the Historical-Grammatical method.  We simply look at the full historical, cultural, grammatical, semantic context, try to figure out what the original communication meant in its original context, and build our truth system from that. A lot like Constitutional Originalism. Sometimes that produces strictly literal results, such as belief in a literal resurrection.  Sometimes it leads us to find figurative language not intended to be taken literally, such as "I am the Door," "I am the True Vine," "I am the Bread of Life," etc.

So perhaps you see the problem here.  You have used a flimsy, poorly crafted Google definition of a complex and richly textured movement.  What can possibly result from that but disappointment?

There is more that could be said, but I'm going a bit long here.  In any event, it's just true that in these encounters we have a lot of stereotypical images to overcome.  It can be hard.  Grace on all sides, and much patience, would go further, IMHO, than people giving up.  The subject matter is worth the effort.

Peace,

SR





677 posted on 05/13/2015 10:40:40 AM PDT by Springfield Reformer (Winston Churchill: No Peace Till Victory!)
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To: BeauBo
I got drawn in trying to quell what I saw as inter-Christian hostility, and ended up engaged in it.

The book addressed this...

Galatians 6:1
Brothers and sisters, if someone is caught in a sin, you who live by the Spirit should restore that person gently. But watch yourselves, or you also may be tempted...

678 posted on 05/13/2015 2:06:31 PM PDT by Elsie (I was here earlier!)
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To: StormPrepper

If Joseph Smith had started his ministry today....

 

 

 

 

 

679 posted on 05/13/2015 2:28:28 PM PDT by Elsie (I was here earlier!)
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To: mlizzy

Well, I do believe there is a lot of unchristian speech going on at this site. That’s something that troubles me. There is a lot said that shouldn’t be said, especially as it is. In Matthew, I believe, Jesus said people will give an account to the Lord for every word they say, and we would do well here to remind each other of that. But I have to say that many of the unchristian things said are said by Catholics, while you are faulting only Protestants in your reply.

On criticizing the doctrines, practices and conduct of any church, that is not only permitted at this site, but part of its purpose, and the only group I’ve noticed trying to stop criticism of their church and impose censorship is Catholics.

Agreeing to participate here means putting up with reading a lot of things that a person believes are unfair and untrue criticisms of their church, and false and even heretical interpretations of Christianity. People should not be posting here if they don’t accept that. The equality is that we all can post articles for and against certain churches and beliefs, and we all can say why we agree or disagree with anything being said. Anyone can hit that “post article” button and post any article they want to for or against the beliefs and practices of any faith. Why should anyone be given control over what articles other people can post?

And while I have to say that is Protestants as well as Catholics making nasty personal attacks here, I also have to say that from what I’ve seen, it is solely a great many Catholics here who are trying to impose censorship on legitimate criticisms of their church, which they will not recognize as legitimate criticisms. You mentioned fundraising being slow, but if Catholics would get the censorship some want that would lead to the end of this site, as far as I can see, starting with the Religion Forum.

From what you wrote to me, you consider criticism of Catholic doctrine on Mary to be “disrespecting Mary.” But in our view, it is Catholic doctrine that is disrespecting Mary, to act towards her and think of her in many ways that are *exactly* how we act towards God and think of Him because He is God. Catholic doctrine also isolates Mary from other creatures and burdens her with them, when she isn’t God, as well as placing her above her husband Joseph, and if she is the “mother” of believers, then she is also his mother. Consider also this passage from Jesus:

“And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent.” John 17:3

The Bible relentlessly focuses our attention on God alone.

I wish you well, mlizzy.


680 posted on 05/13/2015 7:31:19 PM PDT by Faith Presses On ("After this I beheld, and, lo, a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations...")
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