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IHeartAquinas
Guest
In my ongoing dialogue with two Sola Scriptura non-denominational coworkers, we ended up in a (more than usual) heated debate that came down to hammering out the issue of Apostolic Tradition. We were originally going over a commentary I had written and then they had written notes (mostly “This isn’t biblical!” and “Wrong!” etc.), and the conversation kept coming back to Sola Scriptura vs. Tradition.
Finally, I uttered what I thought was going to end the dialogue altogether and was terrified that I had suddenly become polemical in my approach–something I never want to have happen. What I said was this:
“Look, we don’t have the writings of the first century. If Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John DID write their own gospels with their own hand, all we have are copies. Yes, these copies would have been meticulously copied to prevent error because of how important they were. But even the English translations, as good as they are, are difficult to understand at times because the Greek, Hebrew, Aramaic, and Latin used carry certain cultural connotations in their meaning that unless you actually live in that culture and understand the language in that particular way, you will not fundamentally understand what is being said. I am a student of Russian, and I understand far more culturally than I could ever explain properly to someone without any background in Russian, but I can at least offer some information. In this way, we rely on the Church Fathers because they did understand and speak these languages, and if they didn’t, they had access to people who did. Nobody today speaks these languages the way they were spoken at the time (ie, lived their lives speaking them). Sola Scriptura will always be flawed because of this, and therefore, hermeneutics is ultimately an invalid way of reading scripture.”
The response I received?
That they had never thought of it that way and could think of no way to refute that observation. I immediately jumped in trying to explain I wasn’t meaning to be polemic, but they were given reason to pause, and for the first time, I think, they had something they couldn’t refute with scripture alone. I find it strangely appropriate because I had just written (with help from the CAF members!
) A purely sola scriptura defense of utilizing the Church Fathers, which they also took home with them.
Though this is an exciting moment of evangelization, I am mostly concerned with bringing that argument to CAF because it’s a purely logical argument against Sola Scriptura that cannot be refuted utilizing Sola Scriptura. In fact, from a logic standpoint, it can’t be refuted at all. Not saying it’s the ace-in-the-hole against Sola Scriptura, but I think it’s an argument that we as Catholics need to be aware of simply because of the profound impact it had. My friends have my copy of my catechism and pages upon pages of Catholic theology and defense thereof, and it’s this one observation that I think had the greatest impact on them.
Finally, I uttered what I thought was going to end the dialogue altogether and was terrified that I had suddenly become polemical in my approach–something I never want to have happen. What I said was this:
“Look, we don’t have the writings of the first century. If Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John DID write their own gospels with their own hand, all we have are copies. Yes, these copies would have been meticulously copied to prevent error because of how important they were. But even the English translations, as good as they are, are difficult to understand at times because the Greek, Hebrew, Aramaic, and Latin used carry certain cultural connotations in their meaning that unless you actually live in that culture and understand the language in that particular way, you will not fundamentally understand what is being said. I am a student of Russian, and I understand far more culturally than I could ever explain properly to someone without any background in Russian, but I can at least offer some information. In this way, we rely on the Church Fathers because they did understand and speak these languages, and if they didn’t, they had access to people who did. Nobody today speaks these languages the way they were spoken at the time (ie, lived their lives speaking them). Sola Scriptura will always be flawed because of this, and therefore, hermeneutics is ultimately an invalid way of reading scripture.”
The response I received?
That they had never thought of it that way and could think of no way to refute that observation. I immediately jumped in trying to explain I wasn’t meaning to be polemic, but they were given reason to pause, and for the first time, I think, they had something they couldn’t refute with scripture alone. I find it strangely appropriate because I had just written (with help from the CAF members!

Though this is an exciting moment of evangelization, I am mostly concerned with bringing that argument to CAF because it’s a purely logical argument against Sola Scriptura that cannot be refuted utilizing Sola Scriptura. In fact, from a logic standpoint, it can’t be refuted at all. Not saying it’s the ace-in-the-hole against Sola Scriptura, but I think it’s an argument that we as Catholics need to be aware of simply because of the profound impact it had. My friends have my copy of my catechism and pages upon pages of Catholic theology and defense thereof, and it’s this one observation that I think had the greatest impact on them.