M
Michael16
Guest
This has been an interesting and fruitful discussion, Ianman87. Thank you.
To address the Tradition question:
Catholic teaching is a synthesis of Tradition and Scripture. A mutual cross reference. Think of the confluence as two mutually supporting pillars. And it’s not as fluid as you perceive it to be.
Now Tradition came before Scripture and is composed of the oral and written teaching of the Church; securely based on the Apostles and the Deposit of Faith. One way to look at Tradition is as commentary and teaching based on the Apostles and the Deposit. Plus, it’s the living practice of the Faith as you see in the lives of the saints and Popes that contributed to it.
A lot like the traditions built up by the Protestant founders: Interpretations, commentary and teaching along the lines set by the founders.
Looking at it like this: The Protestant founders built up and passed down a tradition based on the authority that they claimed for themselves.
In essence: Protestants have their own tradition and Scripture structure in which they interpret and teach.
You addressed the Gnostic heresy; cool. The Gnostics taught that the God of the OT was an evil demiurge that sought to imprison souls and that Jesus preached the message of the NT God that was the Creator of the OT God. They were handily dealt with by, I want to say; the 2nd or 3rd centuries.
The major heresy around the time of the codification of Scripture was the Arians. They taught that Jesus wasn’t God; only a human that was adopted by God at His Baptism.
I’m not sure if the Arians was the reason behind the codification of Scripture. That was a separate Council from the Council that addressed the Arian heresy.
In the battles with heresies, you see the Church taking the forefront in confronting them and not the body of the faithful as a whole.
Christ established the Church with Saint Peter as the head with the authority to exercise it, to shepherd us in our Faith. “ Feed My sheep. “ Is what He said. Without the visible Church and it’s authority; we’re lost and listless in a sea of contending interpretations and outright heresies.
In my understanding of Protestants is that they didn’t really return to the Deposit of Faith. If they returned to the Deposit, they wouldn’t be saying things that contradict what the Apostles actually taught.
To address the Tradition question:
Catholic teaching is a synthesis of Tradition and Scripture. A mutual cross reference. Think of the confluence as two mutually supporting pillars. And it’s not as fluid as you perceive it to be.
Now Tradition came before Scripture and is composed of the oral and written teaching of the Church; securely based on the Apostles and the Deposit of Faith. One way to look at Tradition is as commentary and teaching based on the Apostles and the Deposit. Plus, it’s the living practice of the Faith as you see in the lives of the saints and Popes that contributed to it.
A lot like the traditions built up by the Protestant founders: Interpretations, commentary and teaching along the lines set by the founders.
Looking at it like this: The Protestant founders built up and passed down a tradition based on the authority that they claimed for themselves.
In essence: Protestants have their own tradition and Scripture structure in which they interpret and teach.
You addressed the Gnostic heresy; cool. The Gnostics taught that the God of the OT was an evil demiurge that sought to imprison souls and that Jesus preached the message of the NT God that was the Creator of the OT God. They were handily dealt with by, I want to say; the 2nd or 3rd centuries.
The major heresy around the time of the codification of Scripture was the Arians. They taught that Jesus wasn’t God; only a human that was adopted by God at His Baptism.
I’m not sure if the Arians was the reason behind the codification of Scripture. That was a separate Council from the Council that addressed the Arian heresy.
In the battles with heresies, you see the Church taking the forefront in confronting them and not the body of the faithful as a whole.
Christ established the Church with Saint Peter as the head with the authority to exercise it, to shepherd us in our Faith. “ Feed My sheep. “ Is what He said. Without the visible Church and it’s authority; we’re lost and listless in a sea of contending interpretations and outright heresies.
In my understanding of Protestants is that they didn’t really return to the Deposit of Faith. If they returned to the Deposit, they wouldn’t be saying things that contradict what the Apostles actually taught.
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