Just wanted to jump in here;
When the Moses Seat speaks correctly about Writ, and just Writ, she is to be followed.
Are you suggesting that there was some authority to appeal to beyond the the Chair of Moses, especially if Moses ruled against you in your personal understanding of “Writ”?
I’m afraid that when Moses spoke specifically from his position of authority, “that was it”. I’ve even read a few protestant commentaries that described his seat as “infallible”, even though we’d agree that if they had their “anti-Cathiolic” brains switched on, there’s
no way they would have used that word.
Moreover, in the time of Moses, there was very little, if any “Writ” as the only biblical events to have happened up to his life are contained almost exclusively in the book of Genesis. The proto-Jewish faith was still taught, largely, in the oral traditions of the Patriarchal priesthood.
Augustine testifies that nothing is surpassing to Writ, for it is easily read and accessible to all men.
Augustine also wrote “The two councils sent their decrees to the Apostolic See (Rome) and the decrees quickly came back. The cause is finished; would that the error were as quickly finished”.
Commonly given as: “Rome has spoken, the case is closed”.
Augustine understood that there was no written text more important in Christianity than the bible. He also understood that a divine text requires a divinely appointed teacher.
it can not be denied that some eras believed it would be dangerous to read without proper guidance, and therefore better not to read privately ,as in ones home.
Imagine that! A living Church that didn’t want to encourage the idea that your personal interpretation of a text was somehow authoritative apart from that living Church that predates the text by God’s own decree.
The authority and responsibility for teaching was given to the Apostles and their heirs. Not you and me. Just because I have a different view of 1 Peter does not, in any way, make it a potentially correct view.
The Word went out at the beginning , and yet God had to destroy what was done with it with a flood. Then the Word began afresh with Noah, yet Babel followed all too closely.
“The Word” in any sort of written form simply didn’t exist in this point in history. The priesthood did. It always has. But not the written “Word”.
So because some , if not many , abuse the Word, are ignorant of it in spirit and truth, you must still disseminate and let the chips fall as they may. Wide is the destruction gate and narrow the righteous path, but one should avoid the temptation to institutionally or artificially make "narrow’’.
As charitably as I can, these sound like the very accusations made against the JWs by the majority of remaining Christendom, not just Catholics.
it is also clear that reformation had it’s root in folks who were properly trained in catholic theology , and well before the printing press, and mass distribution of bibles.
I would argue about how “clear” or complete that training was.
The most fundamental problem with the approach to Christianity that consists of “A man and his bible - the church will arise from that” is that it assumes the existence of several things that didn’t exist for the overwhelming majority of Christian history.
- A man needed to be wealthy enough to afford a bible.
Books were items for the ultra wealthy prior to the advent of the printing press. After that, they were newly affordable by the very wealthy. It’s really been in the last 200 years or so where the working-class could reasonably afford one.
From a perspective of access, the JW (and wider protestant) approach to Christianity has only been workable for commoners for about 4% of the last 6000 years.
From the perspective of the much older apostolic churches (like the CC and EO), their approach has been workable for 100% of the last 6000 years.
- A man needed to be literate enough to read the bible.
For the overwhelming majority of western history, the common man knew enough writing to sign his name and recognize the signage that he frequently encountered during his geographically limited life. As late as 1820AD, only 12% or so of Americans were literate enough to functionally read and write - much less divine ancient texts!
“A man and his bible” couldn’t work because he simply couldn’t read it.
There are several other problems like “God’s primary medium of teaching is through the written word” or “The bible is greater than the Church that produced it”, but the first two are sufficient for now.
$0.02