Your contributions were great. Not only did you give an answer as to why Protestants don't do tradition, but you became an excellent example for some of the people I talked to here about this protestant mentality of "It's Catholic, not in the Bible" being the roots of cults.
This is what I am talking about on how certain Protestants don't realize their rejection of tradition (under the false claim that it is only catholic) has made denominations that eventually became more distant from Christianity.
Lets look at what just happened here
First, there is picking and choosing of translations and verses, while ignoring other gospels and numerous other translations. This is what the INC, JW's, Mormons, Unitarian Churches do. The INC uses the Lamsa translation with Acts 20:28, which they claim is a prophecy of their church because in the Lamsa it says "church of Christ (which is the name of the church translated to english)", never mind that every other translation has it as "church of God". Same thing was just done here in regards to Matt 6.
Next, the whole "everyone before us is wrong and we are the ones who got it right". Apparently, all christians during the early centuries are wrong for "not following scripture" because of doing repetitive prayers such as the Rosary.
So now, I would like you all to carefully look at how the similarities of these protestant objections to tradition are with these unitarian cults, it is through the protestants you can see how these cults eventually got their train of thought.
This is same "it's catholic. not in the bible" is the same argument that the Unitarian cults make in regards to Jesus' divinity.
Last thing I'll say in this is that the Catholic Church has changed over the centuries dramatically.
It's not about "those who came before us didn't get it right but I did" at all, it's about, at some point the Catholic Church was different than the modern version, a lot of things, like the Rosary were introduced over 1000 years after the Apostles, thousands of years of extra baggage added on to what the apostles taught, and some of it is outright not good.
When Rome made Christianity the official state religion of the Empire, worldly influence started creeping into it. To be absolutely fair it happens to other denominations too as I'm sure you've noticed all the recent rashes of protestant denominations accepting female pastors (an unbiblical position), LGBT+ affirming, babbling in "tongues" etc. But the 4th century, a LOT of stuff started creeping into the Church now that it was legal and the state religion. One of the first things to creep in was allegorization of scripture which fed Amillennialism, to a point where the previous belief the Church had in Chiliasm to be CONDEMNED. Imagine that. the teachings of the apostles and their most direct disciples CONDEMNED after a few hundred years?
and that's where my angle is. It's not about me, it's about returning to scripture, about returning to Apostolic doctrines, rather than Augustinian doctrines. Augustine was a Greek Stoic Philosopher, he converted but he brought a lot of baggage and was very influential, the Church simply wasn't the same after the School of Alexandria had its way with it.
But as for your accusations, I'm Trinitarian, and I can find the Trinity as far back as Genesis 1, that is a biblical concept in scripture, so I adhere to it. Christ's divinity is established in scripture, and I can even find scripture in the old testament projecting that Messiah is indeed God. Jesus even inserted Himself AS the Lord God in some prophetic passages about the Day of the Lord, referring to Himself as the Lord God who will blow the trumpet in Zechariah 9:14-16 in Matthew 24:29-31
I can believe in these Orthodox doctrines about Christ purely through scripture, and can even find the Old Testament affirming them
That's my basis, scripture. So you don't need to worry about me establishing some cult like the Jehovah's Witnesses, I'm just an Independent Fundamental Baptist who holds scripture as the ultimate authority we have on Earth.
But i do want to close out that it's not specifically an anti-Catholic aim that I have, though it may seem like it, again, there are a LOT of Protestant Denominations falling away as well, and to be absolutely fair, the Southern Baptist Convention might be next in this process.
What I am is pro-scripture, pro-apostolic doctrines, and I see a lot of stuff after the first couple centuries of the Church, as baggage.