You were once a Lutheran. Do you see this as substantially different from the Lutheran approach? That being, we rely on the Church for hermeunetics?
For clarity, I’ll include what I believe to be the pertinent quote from my earlier post, “The Roman Catholic Church says that the Bible is materially sufficient but not formally sufficient. Materially sufficient means that everything the Christian needs to believe is found in Scripture. Formally sufficient means that in order to understand the Bible, the Roman Catholic Church has to interpret it.”
And actually, no, I don’t see this as substantially different from what just about every Protestant church believes. In his book Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy, Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick critiques the concept of
sola scriptura in several ways, but among them is that “Protestants tend to interpret according to traditions, anyway. There is a certain consistency among most Presbyterians, Lutherans, and so on, because they are following their own teachers in the faith.”
I don’t think many Protestants within any particular denomination would agree with that. My experience is that they all believe they are the ones who have it right, who are accurately drawing the doctrines they adhere to from the scriptures. In defending/explaining the idea of
sola scriptura, Luther’s words at the Diet of Worms are often quoted, “Unless I am convinced by Scripture and plain reason - I do not accept the authority of the popes and councils, for they have contradicted each other - my conscience is captive to the Word of God. I cannot and I will not recant anything for to go against conscience is neither right nor safe. God help me. Amen.” But I think it is without question that on the many questions that separate Protestants (e.g., did Christ die only for the elect, or for everone; are the sacraments something God is doing to and for us, or are they a statement of what we believe about God; can a person lose his salvation, or is he, once saved, eternally secure), most people hold the positions they do based on the particular tradition they come from, not from just reading the Bible.
I think I’ve reached my current state of eclecticism, or perhaps better stated as confusion and uncertainty, with respect to various doctrinal positions because I’ve never stayed long in any one Protestant tradition. As a child, our family attended a Baptist church, then a Presbyterian church, then a different kind of Baptist church, and then no church. In my later teens I joined the Mormon church, but also helped my grandmother get to her Methodist church (and attended both Methodist and Lutheran colleges), then left the Mormon church due to acceptance of the doctrines of grace and spent a decade at a Reformed Baptist church. Finally unable to cope with the idea that Christ died only for the elect (or, to put it more selfishly, how could I know that Christ died for me), I found a home in an AFLC Lutheran church; when that congregation split due to internal conflict (over property issues), I ended up in a conservative, 1928 BCP Anglican church (though lately, I’ve spent more time driving my dad to his Baptist church).
In all this, I have developed a fondness, admiration, and respect for teachers, past and present, from many different Protestant traditions. When one group says you can baptize infants and another group says you can’t, I know it’s not because one group is stupid or is twisting the scriptures to suit their own ends–both are trying to honor God and follow His Word faithfully in both teaching and practice. With regard to Catholicism, my younger brother ended up joining that church, and I know the time, study, and soul-searching he put into that decision. I didn’t spend time trying to talk him out of it, but started buying his birthday and Christmas presents at the local Catholic bookstore, and picked up several things for me to read as well. The Catholic Church is not for me, but that doesn’t mean I have to equate it with the Whore of Babylon.
Since you have ruled out the CC in terms of a correct interpretation or understanding of doctrinal truth, then perhaps you could point me in the general direction of the person or church leadership that can be trusted with the correct interpretation and understanding; please be specific? Again, no sarcasm; just open and amiable dialogue!
I’m afraid I don’t have one for you. As indicated in my ramblings above, and from the quote I gave from the Smith Dictionary in an earlier post, my position is that “we must not expect to see the Church of Christ existing in its perfection on the earth. It is not to be found thus perfect, either in the collected fragments of Christendom or still less in any one of those fragments.” For me, it is enough when a church deals honestly with scripture, and I respect varying interpretations when those are demonstrated to be founded on respect for God’s word and systematic study of the scriptures, which I see in the dogmatics from several different traditions. Not a satisfying answer, but that’s where I’m at right now.