J
joe370
Guest
I didn’t ask for a exposition on the various ways the word infallible or fallible can be used. We all know how it is being used. In your opinion, do non-Catholic ministers claim to teach erroneously or inaccurately when spreading the good news to their flock?
Please note that the words “fallible” and “infallible” can each mean two different things depending on the context. For example, if you’re answering a question like “Did the Holy Spirit inspire these words and protect them from error?”, the answer could be “yes” in the sense that the Holy Spirit did protect someone from error. Or the answer could be “no” in the sense that the Holy Spirit did not protect someone from error.
The other sense in which these words are used is in response to a question like “Is this thing certainly right/true?” Again, the answer could be “yes, it’s infallible” in the sense that it’s certainly true or it could be “no, it’s fallible” in the sense that it’s not certainly true.
There’s certainly some overlap between these two usages (and I am certain of this even though God didn’t tell me that…see how this works?), but most of the time there’s not. Most things (even most things within a religious context) are fallible in the first sort of context, and that’s just a given. From this group, though, a good number of them are infallible in the sense that we have certitude as to their accuracy and truth while others do not.
If you must insist on conflating the different ways in which the word is used…well, just don’t. I know you’re smarter than that.