The Banned said:
1. Faiths will always poke at each other because each one believes (or at least should believe) they have the one true faith. When one believes that, it's going to naturally cause some degree of friction. Take the Eucharist. If the baptists are wrong, they are roundly rejecting the institution Christ left us. If they're right, then Catholics are idolators. Makes sense that they may poke back and forth
2. Eh. The majority of the church was in favor of or leaning towards the Arian heresy until the Church shot it down. There have always been mistaken believers, either due to poor formation or bad preachers.
Great point. If you look at the commentary surrounding St. Spyridon and the Arian controversy during the first counsel time you'll read things about how they
couldn't come up with concise, neat and satisfying defense against Arianism that would shut it down.
It took two things to really put an end to Arianism: a miracle and time.
St. Spyridon's miracle of the clay shard during the debate basically ended a deadlocked debate. And then it took a long long time to see Arianism to go away. And that is the view of the church. If you're wrong, a way to tell if its wrong is that it will eventually fall away because God will not allow the church to disappear or be defeated by lies.
Sapper, that is why I personally think the philosophy underpinnings is ultimately silly. The church didn't start because of thinkers. It started because of Jesus and his miracles. Miracles and prophecy showed the way of the church. OT and NT. The church is founded and advanced by those who showed great devotion to God, not philosophical minutae.
If you struggle with miracles, you're going to lean on philosophy to explain a God that doesn't interact with you. If you have miracles, who cares about how Christianity compares to pagan secular beliefs about God and how they think God arranged the world.
Divine Liturgy is at 10 this Sunday. Everyone's welcome.