Thank you, same to you all. You can probably see I’m not really a compromiser on what I see as essential truths of the Gospel, far from it. But that does not mean we can’t be civil in our discussions
Thanks for the clarification. However I don’t see this as being all that in accord with what we can examine in history; I find it hard to put down the entire of the book I posted a link to earlier in these boxes… If anyone is interested in seeing a Protestant view on canon development, I can’t recommend it highly enough.
Hippo and Carthage and Damasus however don’t settle the matter, after these events there are still differing lists being produced:
aomin.org/aoblog/index.php?itemid=3465
Hippo and Carthage are not ecumenical, as such their voices did not settle things, and neither did Damaus, which I see as evidence against him being recognised universally as having authority over all churches. There was no set canon for the Catholic Church until Trent… For example, Dr White has a video here detailing the numerous figures prior to the Reformation who also excluded the Apocrapha, including such giants of course as Jerome, and Cardinal Catejan:
m.youtube.com/watch?v=IKGZfrZiYVU
So the bible is tradition in written form, I would not take issue with this. I would say though that being the case that it is tradition in written form, the inspired word of God, we’re are to test things to it… Again, see the book on how long the development takes, I argue for a late first century date…
Indeed Chalcedon provided a faithful witness to sacred scripture… Again; not a lack of tradition, but that it’s subservient to scripture.
Is your view not also informed by who you have learned from; the church? This also assumes the early church is identical to Rome today, big claim, which I guess is the whole point of out thread
Yes, the truth, which is recorded for us in scripture. The appeal to Protestant disunity works just as well against churches who espouse a more ‘church alone’ position as opposed to a ‘scripture alone’ position… catholic, orthodox, JW, Mormon… Unless one can actually demonstrate the claims are true in history and scripture, all it will succeed in doing is getting a few Protestants to think “I need an infallible guide, I must now then use my private interpretation to pick the right one out from the bunch.” With respect, it doesn’t quite work.
I am acquainted with Cardinal Newmans famous essay, but I see it more as an abandonment of the traditional catholic position as seen prior to him… Things can develop, but the development of tradition must be tested to scripture… “So for the sake of your tradition you have made void the word of God.” Matt 14:6. I think this passage is clear on scripture being that to which any tradition must be held.
Regards
Lincs.