Roman Catholicism
Definition
Roman Catholic theology is the doctrinal system and individual dogmas developed and defended by the Roman Catholic Church. The system is grounded on two axioms—the nature-grace interdependence and the Christ-Church interconnection—from which flow the various Catholic beliefs.
Summary
This essay focuses on Roman Catholic theology in relationship to Protestant theology. The foundations of the Catholic system are the nature-grace interdependence and the Christ-Church interconnection. The foundations of the Protestant system are the Reformation principles encapsulated in five solas: Scripture alone, Christ alone, grace alone, faith alone, God’s glory alone. Still, the two traditions embrace many commonalities. At the same time, because the two systems have different foundations, they clash with many theological divergences.
Articles
Can the Roman Catholic Church Survive Two Popes?
If this situation remains unresolved, it will be the end of Roman Catholicism as it stands.
What Does ‘This Rock’ Refer to in Matthew 16:18?
Just because he’s not the first pope doesn’t mean Protestants should demote Peter in this passage.
The FAQs: The Pennsylvania Report on Child Sexual Abuse by Catholic Clergy
What you should know about the Catholic clergy abuse scandal in Pennsylvania.
9 Things You Should Know About Notre Dame Cathedral
More than 400 French firefighters are attempting to save Notre Dame cathedral from a devastating fire. Here are nine things you should know about the iconic religious landmark.
Who First Showed Juan Sánchez the Beauty of Jesus?
It took a team effort to show me Christ in all his beauty. And I’ve never been the same.
A Vibrant Theological Painting
‘The Kingdom’ is not for those who need theological foundations, but for those whose theology has become drab and stale.