@Alex337 is not Christian, nor is he concerned or interested in what Christians believe.
So you don’t care what the word of the Bible is?
Not really. @Alex337 has stated that he does not consider the authors to be inspired or inerrant, and the product is human.
So you do worry about translations?
What benefit would “worry” have? There is one translation that is accurate to what the Apostles believed and taught.
Of course they are fallible, because they are translated too.
This is an anti-Catholic position. Of course we would not adopt it.
And if the Tradition of Doctrine is based on a mistranslation you’d still swallow it? Because it’s the Magisterium, right?
No, and NO.
Catholic doctrine is not based on any translation of Scripture. It comes from Jesus, and was passed to the Church through the Apostles. The Catholic faith was whole and entire before a word of the New Testament was ever written.
What is written in the original texts we believe to be a product of the Holy Spirit. Human beings, inspired by God, wrote what God wanted to reveal to humankind.
The duty of the Magesterium is to preserve the One Faith handed down to us from the Apostles.
Also, you accused me earlier of believing texts were fallible which I do, so why didn’t you try this semantics on then?
Christians believe that the Scriptures are inspired and inerrant.
This is a strawman. This is not a Catholic position.
You have zero use for Scripture when you discredit it’s inerrancy.
@Alex337 must discredit Scripture in order to follow a faith practice that disregards the contents.