K4G (I trust you don’t my my shorthand…),
I like that you have enumerated your questions. That always makes thing so much easier!
Knight4God:
1)I do not see the need to being with.
Ok. Let’s start with the beginning, i.e., Christ’s mission on earth. He came for what purpose? To save us from our sins. Great, that’s one reason. Why else? To make sure we can know about it. If we don’t know about it, it can’t help us. If God wanted to save us from our sins without us knowing, He could have just willed it rather than suffer on earth. Ok, so we have to know about it. But how? By writing a book? Did Jesus write a book? Nope. As far as we know, Christ never set pen to paper. He did, however, start a Church. Matt 16:17-19. Furthermore, He commissioned this Church to make disciples of all nations. This Church (with the help of the Holy Spirit) recorded some of its stories on paper. These stories were collected nearly 400 years later into what the Catholic Church officially pronounced as the cannon of Scripture. Were these the only stories on paper from this time period? Nope. There were tons. Like the
Didache, for starters (if you have never read it, please do - it’s not long). Some thought Hebrews shouldn’t be in the cannon, some thought the
Shepherd of Hermas should be. So how did they know which ones should be in and which ones shouldn’t? At this point you have to rely on the authority of the Catholic Church. The Church decided, and all of Christianity has believed this list ever since. Luther said:
Martin Luther:
We are obliged to yield many things to the Papists - that with them is the word of God, which we received from them; otherwise we should have known nothing at all about it.
So you have to rely on the authority of the Catholic Church in order to believe that the Scriptures are authoritative - if you would deny this authority of the Church, you must also reject the canon of scripture. After all, what guarantee is there that the Church was right?
- I don’t see the conclusive evidence for claims of any infallible interpreter
How conclusive do you need? If you need God to explain it to you personally, you probably won’t get there. If you’re willing to accept the preponderance of the evidence of history and Scripture, that’s easy enough…
- I then don’t see who this would have to be applied to Rome and not some other Church and
Only a few Churches can make the claim of being the Church founded by Christ through the Apostles. Basically, it comes down to the Catholic Church and the Orthodox. Both can trace Apostolic Succession back to Christ. Any others are simply “churches” started by men, and for them your question definitely stands.
- Therefore, why I stated my interpretation on scripture counts, because if I am wrong in my interpretation because the scriptures are difficult to understand, I should be able to be shown in the text why am wrong and not merely told Rome has said differently.
Ask, and the Church will answer. Pick a doctrine, any doctrine, and start a thread on the topic. We will explain anything you want to know, but understand that history (which is a science) must be used to support some of the arguments; like the argument as to why we should believe the Bible. It’s not enough that the Bible claims inspiration - so do the writings of Mary Baker Eddy, the Qur’an, the Hindu Vedas…I could write something and
claim it’s inspired, but that’s no proof. So how do you prove inspiration? Try
this.
God Bless,
RyanL