Absolutely you are. You must rely on the authority of the CC to tell you what is inspired and what is not.
Are you not also relying on the infallibility of the Church…?
Gaelic Bard:Oh. So, did you come up with your own canon of scripture?
Sigh.Nope.
Indeed. It’s silly to think that they do not rely on the the Christ-given authority of the Church to canonize the books of the Bible, when they wouldn’t be able to hold nor read one without such.As usual, this is getting silly.
No, I don’t. I rely on the authority of the Holy Spirit, who inspired them, is their author, and as such gave them to the church. Again, your argument is circular. You have two presuppositions with which I don’t agree, because they are based on logical fallacies. Can you answer any of the questions I posed earlier?Absolutely you are. You must rely on the authority of the CC to tell you what is inspired and what is not.
Unless you want to tell us that you examined all of the ancient texts and devised a list of criteria for determining what was* theopneustos* and what was not…
Exactly.No, I don’t. I rely on the authority of the Holy Spirit, who inspired them, is their author, and as such gave them to the church.
No…I am relying on the infallibility of God the Spirit. You do realize that your own church body agrees with this, right? The Roman magesterium has already stated that it receives the canon not because of its own authority but because God gave them. But I am not going to go in pedantic circles with you. Can you answer any of the questions that I posed earlier?Exactly.
So you are relying on the Church (which was assisted by the Holy Spirit) to discern for you what was theopneustos and what was not.
2 conclusions:
You believe in the infallibility of the Church.
You believe in Sacred Tradition.
Sure. But that’s like saying, in response to the question, “Where do babies come from?”No…I am relying on the infallibility of God the Spirit.
Absolutely she does.You do realize that your own church body agrees with this, right?
Indeed.The Roman magesterium has already stated that it receives the canon not because of its own authority but because God gave them.
Yes, this is the typical response when there is no rebuttal.But I am not going to go in pedantic circles with you.
I will address them shortly.Can you answer any of the questions that I posed earlier?
Okay…can you show how/demonstrate how the HS gave the canon to the Church? Did a piece of paper drop from heaven? Through a revelation to someone?No, I don’t. I rely on the authority of the Holy Spirit, who inspired them, is their author, and as such gave them to the church. Again, your argument is circular. You have two presuppositions with which I don’t agree, because they are based on logical fallacies. Can you answer any of the questions I posed earlier?
This is a Protestant paradigm and the CC does not take verses and give “infallible interpretations.”
- What is the infallible interpretation of Matt 16:18?
Answers to 2-4: Because we interpret the Scriptures through the lens of Tradition, which gave us these Scriptures.
- How do you know it’s infallible?
- How can I know infallibly that the way you know it’s infallible is infallible?
- How do YOU know infallibly that what the infallible interpreter says is infallible?
You don’t have to trust what I say. You have already trusted what the Catholic Church says, at least when it comes to defining what’s inspired and what’s not.
- Since you’re not infallible how can I trust what you say?
You can’t.
- Since I’m not infallible, how can I interpret infallibly what the infallible interpreter said?
You can, and do. Each and every time you proclaim something that is consonant with the teachings of the Apostles, given once for all, as revealed in the Catholic Church, you have infallibly interpreted Jesus’ revelation.
- If I am somehow able to interpret the words of the infallible interpreter correctly, why is it that I can’t do so with the words of Jesus?
By giving your full acknowledgement of this Church’s authority…rather than just the partial one you give when you quote from, say, Philemon.
- If I can do neither, how am I ever going to reap the advantages of the infallible interpreter?
Well, you can ex out the Sedevacantists and the latter groups, for they have divorced themselves from the faith of the Apostles.
- How do I infallibly know which competing infallible interpreter is the actual infallible one - Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Sedevacantists, Pope Michaelists, Old Catholics, PNCC?
See above.
- How do I infallibly determine which of the above groups is the possesor of infallible apostolic tradition?
I tend to agree that not everything in the Bible should be taken literally, and certainly not out of context. I also think parts of the Old Testament are likely not historically true…but who knows!Not everything in the Bible is true. The O.T states that the earth was the center of the universe. Thats not true. But as a human, we tend to think of Heaven above us and hell below us. So from that point of view, the earth is at the center. Im not trying to say the writers of the O.T didnt know what they were talking about but if a non believer reads the Bible, they will find it and use it to dicredit our beliefs.![]()
Very interesting! Thanks for sharing!I don’t believe in Biblical inerrancy, either, and I haven’t believed in it for about 15 years. I’m an Evangelical Christian, and I used to believe it was inerrant, but I became unable to reconcile the contradictions without doing major mental gymnastics. I had/have no pet sin that I wanted to excuse, and no moral reason to stop believing in Biblically inerrancy; indeed, for years I tried very, very hard to continue to seek out apologetic efforts to reconcile the contradictions.
Borrowing Indifferently’s words, I don’t believe it’s vital, either, to believe in Biblical inerrancy in order to be a faithful Christian. If some one does believe in it, good for them. I won’t try to dissuade them. My reason for posting is not to argue for Biblical errors, but just to say I’ve been on both sides of the issues and became a more faithful, less doubt-plagued Christian, by ceasing to demand Biblical inerrancy from God.
I’m still Evangelical, and I’ve talked this over with my pastors. They’re fine with it.
The Catholic view on scripture is, at least modern Catholic thought, more open to looking at the Bible in a non-literal way than conservative Protestants are. So I agree with your assessment.My understanding is that the infallibility of the scriptures is in relation to the truth it teaches. From the CCC
107 The inspired books teach the truth. “Since therefore all that the inspired authors or sacred writers affirm should be regarded as affirmed by the Holy Spirit, we must acknowledge that the books of Scripture firmly, faithfully, and without error teach that truth which God, for the sake of our salvation, wished to see confided to the Sacred Scriptures.”
The Bible teaches the truth of our Salvation, God’s work in the world. It has never been intended as a science book. It isn’t a cookbook that contains a recipe on “how to make a religion”. The Johannine comma does not change the truth of our Salvation.
First of all, excellent point about Paul as an apostle.Understandable. However, you would then have to make the argument that Jesus selected Paul to his apostle to the Gentiles, instructed him for three years, conferred the power to work miracles - and yet failed to bless his apostolate with the same authority to priclaim divine revelation. I dont think thats a tenable position.
Paul is using hyperbole here. Be that as it may, if you’re stating that Paul could teach error, then you undermine your own position as well since it would indicate the apostokic witbess could be erroneous; which by extension woukd mean the magesterium can teach error.
The quote so often used from Timothy is referencing the Old Testament. The New Testament was not yet founded.Adherents of biblical Christianity believe the Bible is inerrant because God , who cannot lie (Num 23:19, Heb 6:18) has declared it to be so (2 Tim 3:16).
Again, I don’t believe in Papal infallibility or in Church infallibility…which, being a Catholic, has created a lot of problems for myself, especially on these forums.I did address it. But to be sure I am not discounting the witness of the church to the reliability of the canon. However, that your epistemic gives you no advantage over the Protestant position is demonstrated by the fact that if you are relying solely on the infallibility of the church to know that the Bible is inspired, you have to first determine that the church is infallible; which you can only determine by referring to inspired Scripture; which still doesnt tell you WHICH church that claims to be the truly infallible possesor of sacred apostolic tradition is the right one.
In fairness, even Catholics must submit that even the Jews didn’t have a clear canon of their own Old Testament works.What does “biblical Christianity” say about these books (regarded as canonical by early Christians):
1 & 2 Maccabees
Sirach
Wisdom
Baruch
Tobit; and
Judith
??
Because their Catholic forefathers and ancestors told y’all of them so.I realize this only applies to conservative Protestants. Why do they believe the Bible is inerrant, especially the things not attributed to Jesus, such as Paul’s letters? I realize the Church does because of tradition and Church infallibility.