ABostonCatholic:
There is nothing moot about the point I made. There are places in Pauls writing (1 Cor. 5:8, Col. 4:16) where it seems POSSIBLE that there are other writings of Pauls that have been lost. If it is POSSIBLE that there were lost writings, then it is POSSIBLE that such writings be found.
Unless, or until what you speak of comes to pass, the speculation is an academic exercise that is moot.
ABostonCatholic:
My question was, if this POSSIBILITY should become ACTUAL, would you immediately accept it as scripture, since you interpreted Peter to mean that ALL of Paul’s writings are inspired (including any possible lost epistles).
It took almost 1600 years for the first infallible definition of the canon, if your speculation came to pass, and I doubt that it will, it would probably take another 1600 years to determine the authenticity of the find; I will certainly be at rest with the Lord by then.
ABostonCatholic:
What do you not understand about the canonization process?
My statement that what the writers of scripture wrote
is orthodoxy was in response to two statements made by you:
BTW-Peter’s assumption is that SOME letters of Paul are inspired, not that ALL of them are, and certainly we don’t know WHICH ones are. The Church would decide that much later on.
Keep in mind, too, that one of the tests for a book to be in the canon was theological orthodoxy, which necessarily implies that there be a standard outside of scripture itself.
Catholics maintain that the NT church
is the Catholic Church. That being the Catholic position, Peter was speaking to the Catholic church in that epistle, and He was doing so as
the Pope; therefore, Peter was not
assuming that
some of Paul’s letters were inspired; rather, Peter was declaring,
as the Pope, that
all of Paul’s letters are scripture. As a Catholic, you should know that.
Now you may argue that He wasn’t speaking
ex cathedra; however, he was speaking inspired scripture which is
far better than speaking
ex cathedra.
Do you better understand my statement concerning orthodoxy now?
The canonization process has nothing to do with Peter’s statements in 2 Pet 3, but with the fact that Pope Peter declared that the NT writers knew that they were writing scripture; therefore, the NT church knew that it had NT scripture; how else would they know to preserve it?