Theologian and pastor Gergely Nagy highlighted that Rita of Perintfalvi, who apostrophizes herself as a Catholic theologian, goes completely against everything that Jesus Christ ever revealed.

Referring to one of Perintfalvi's interviews, the pastor highlights three ideas, the fallacy of which even a non-Christian can quickly realize in the light of perhaps the most quoted passages of the Gospel.

"He who says of himself: 'I am that,' is certainly not the true master. It's good to be around a real master, because with him I can be who I am without being ashamed," Gergely Nagy quotes Perintfalvi in ​​his Facebook post, and then points out: "from a strictly theological professional point of view, we must say that the theologian's statements on the framework of Christian theology they don't stand their ground if they stay inside - and you don't even have to be a Christian to see that."

Gergely Nagy/youtube

Gergely Nagy/youtube

The theologian-pastor then highlights six passages from the Gospels in which Jesus speaks about himself.

Nagy highlights: "Based on Jesus' self-definition, his own words lead us to the conclusion that the Jesus of the Gospels is not the master who, according to Rita Perintfalvi, we should call a true master, since he demands exclusivity."

"According to Perintfalvi, it's good to be around the real master, because next to him, I can be who I am without shame," continues the pastor. In contrast, the Jesus of the Gospels "calls all his disciples to deny themselves, repent of their sins and follow him".

Perintfalvi raises two pivotal points: self-denial and repentance from sin.

Gergely Nagy recalls: "Perintfalvi regrets the fact that sin is a frequent topic of sermons, and he himself previously operated a group where it was specifically forbidden to say this about anything and anyone. On the other hand, the Jesus of the Gospel constantly calls for repentance and forsaking sins."

"However, the two visions are not professionally compatible, as they contain logical contradictions that make it impossible for someone to simultaneously accept Perintfalvi's thoughts and what the gospels return as the words of Jesus," concludes Gergely Nagy in his post.

Source: vasarnap.hu

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