The problems with the here at CAF arguments against sola scriptura are indeed legion and to some extent are strawmen. Even the article that you cite, which argues that many Protestant groups have misunderstood sola scriptura–and I think that is absolutely the case–still never tries to explain what
sola scriptura actually is, unless I just missed it. And so the article itself further contributes to this problem. Here are what I think the major problems are:
- First off, there is a general tendency at CAF to broad-brush Protestantism, which is a highly, highly, diverse religious phenomenon. Any time you see the statement, “Protestants believe X…” the author is by definition, probably mistaken and spreading false notions. This immediately erodes credibility. There are really very few things that can be said of all Protestants other than the fact that they are not Catholics
And some (say, Anglo-Catholics) will debate even that.
- Usually when Catholic posters here say “Protestants” they actually mean “evangelicals” which is probably the place where one can perhaps begin to generalize. It would be more honest and helpful if people could at least make that distinction.
- As the article says, more or less, evangelicals have distorted the idea of “sola scriptura” to mean that all doctrine or even to some radical extent, everything worth knowing, is in and comes from the Bible. That much is correct in the article; there have been distortions. So, the distorters of sola scriptura claim the slogan, usually attaching it to Martin Luther help bolster their claim, but claim none of its actual substance. With this distortion, comes a vague rejection of “tradition” although that’s never really defined either. Everyone, even evangelicals, have an interpretive tradition. You can’t function in life without traditions.
- The next typical move is that Catholic apologists attack what they have (mis)learned about sola scriptura from evangelicals or ex-evangelical converts, who never actually understood it to begin with. This is all radically reduced to Catholic (Bible + Tradition) versus Protestant (Bible only). And so the errors and inaccurate generalizations compound exponentially from this point forward.
- Sola scriptura, as originally understood, was not a doctrine (a favorite Catholic strawman here at CAF) but in reality a way of judging church practices and human action. The reformers asked themselves: “is this a practice we should continue doing or not?” In answering that question, Scripture is definitely the highest authority, but NOT the only authority.
It’s best to use an illustration. During the Reformation, Anabaptist groups were challenging the practice of infant Baptism. In answering their critique, Luther observed that while there are no explicit instances of infant baptism in the Bible (i.e., Luther AGAINST a Bible-alone approach), that the practice is beneficial for salvation, and that importantly, it is NOT PROHIBITED in the Bible, and that IMPORTANTLY, it is part of the long-standing Tradition of the church. So, it its original context, sola scriptura means that practices and interpretations of the Bible that go against the Bible AND reason, cannot stand (no matter who is advocating them–including the Pope or Councils), but otherwise, church tradition helps inform us. This is really very, very different that the modern “Bible alone” stance generally advocated by evangelicals–which I’m sure has its various nuances as well.
Of course you don’t have to agree with Luther’s approach, and it’s very subjective, imo, but it’s important to understand what you’re challenging and not distort or generalize about what you are challenging.
In summary it would be helpful for all if Catholic apologists could take the time to understand the issue and then if they want to challenge it, by all means. Perhaps getting Catholics to distinguish between “Sola Scriptura” (the classical view of the reformers) and “Bible alone” (the more or less usual view of contemporary evangelicals) would be helpful–but I don’t know what the solution is to this mish-mash.