I understand what you mean, but I think you are still missing the point. If there are 335 known manuscripts of Mark, and they are not all exactly the same, but differ in several respects, then are they all divinely inspired? Of course not. The original may well hve been, but we don’t have that. We instead have copies. At a certain point in time the Church choice one version or another, but that was essentially back in the 300 CE, and we have many many more manuscripts that have been found since then. If you want to claim that when the Church essentially chose the canon, the copies that it used were the definitive “inspired” ones, then so be it, but many would argue that that doesn’t hold up very well when earlier copies are found albeit at a later date in time. Most experts work off a theory, not always correct, but a working theory none the less that older copies are closer to the original than later ones.
So when some biblical experts conclude that based upon examination of all the available manuscripts, and the point in time when a suspected phrase was written, that some segment or particular verse was a later addition, not part of the original document, they are in effect saying that this part is not divinely inspired, but was man-made. There are instances when Matthew and Luke both changed certain remarks of Mark because to them, given their view of Jesus, his words created theological problems. The entire synoptic problem leads to the conclusion that each writer worked existing material to his own personal needs as an evangelist. Now i suppose you can argue that they are all divinely inspired in their respective interpretations, but just as likely they are more editorial comment by the evangelist to make his point.
I agree the Gospels have different origins; I still don’t understand even if an earlier writer contradicts a writer of Canon, the Canon is declared inspired, so yes I propose to argue just that.
It seems you are putting scholarship ahead of Christ’s declaration to Peter. If Jesus left us without an authoratative source and as is plainly evident from history that the Holy Spirit does not settle theological disputes, we have NO basis other than concupiscent scholarship. If that’s the case I cannot refute homosexual activists who “scholar up” reasons why homosexual behaviour is lawful. Under what rubric is their interpretation to be less valid than mine? We are lost to our fallen natures without a shepherd, if scholarship has given the lie to Jesus’ promise.
If you overturn one authoritative pebble you overturn the whole mountain. This is the nature of Just Authority: That it is founded in Truth.
But I don’t think there is an issue. For example, a writer St. John perhaps was there on the scene. He wrote a gospel. Does that mean everything he wrote is divinely inspired? No, that would be silly. The prayerful Church under the guidance of the Spirit chose what was Holy Scripture. The basis for this choice is not scholarship or even historical accuracy, but the Spirit Himself.
This does not invalidate scholarship, but does put scholarship in proper context when contemplating Scripture, divinely inspired. Seriously, if the Church declared Dr. Seuss’ Cat in the Hat as a divinely inspired book, I would submit and try to find out why. For 2000 years and countless intellectual heresies, the Church has taught a constant Gospel with all manner of concupiscent pressures and perhaps diabolical pressures. Yet for that whole time against arianism, protestantism, the islamic heresy, the Church has upheld the Gospel and the cross.
Wow, just wow. I just cannot not believe in the Church. For two millenia She has consistently held up the gospel. It is too hard a thing this Good News. I must carry a cross and deny myself to be true to myself? The more I empty myself, the more I receive? God is Bread that I must eat, literally? God died–and for me personally and now wants to adopt me? Yet this startling message has been faithfully upheld. History bears out the truth of Christ’s promise to Peter. And the gospel and the saints are too consistent, too continually correct in their spirituality in surprising ways.
Without the promise of Christ, I do not see how such a counter intuitive message could have maintained such deep coherency as evidenced by the doctors of the Church. When churches fall from the Church, how quickly do they bend and wilt under the pressures of the age? These are signs of authority and lack thereof.
Thanks for dialoguing with me.