P
Per_Crucem
Guest
Yes, and they also claim infallibility.Does the Eastern church reject Hebrews as now? The East was involved with the canon.
Yes, and they also claim infallibility.Does the Eastern church reject Hebrews as now? The East was involved with the canon.
So the Orthodox churches have 26 books in their NT canon?Yes, and they also claim infallibility.
According to you (below) God gave you the Bible.The western or eastern Church?
Did God hand you your Bible, or did the Catholic Church?I’m satisfied with God being infallible.
That is exactly the position you take when you decide for yourself what is true and what is not according to your own preferences while ignoring the authority given to the Church by the very words of Christ himself.Hmm…checking for when I labeled myself arbiter of truth. Nope. Missed it.![]()
Nope. But they infallibly say that your church is fallible. So which one is actually infallible?So the Orthodox churches have 26 books in their NT canon?
LOL! I love how non-Catholic always have the habit of mentioning the East. The topic is SS,not what the East accepts or rejects.Nope. But they infallibly say that your church is fallible. So which one is actually infallible?
I always find it a little odd when a person who belongs neither to the Western nor the Eastern Church defends their own position by pitting the West against the East. The simple fact is that Luther accepted the canon of the Latin Church and so do you and that canon was given to us by the Catholic Church. It did not drop out of heaven with a little note from God telling us that it was his word. He guided human beings to both write and discern the word of God.Nope. But they infallibly say that your church is fallible. So which one is actually infallible?
I look at the evidence of Scripture and history, pray and come to a conclusion. Just like you.That is exactly the position you take when you decide for yourself what is true and what is not according to your own preferences while ignoring the authority given to the Church by the very words of Christ himself.
Yes. Because if you raise the specter of infallibility, I am going to ask you to infallibly determine which infallible magisterium is actually infallible. Your claim is no more or less credible than theirs, after all. Every argument for it you can make, they can make. You posit the impossibility of an infallible church ever being wrong on dogma or failing, yet clearly that happened in the schism. I think both are, to varying degrees. I, however, am not claiming infallibility for either of them.I always find it a little odd when a person who belongs neither to the Western nor the Eastern Church defends their own position by pitting the West against the East.
Scripture tells us to take it to the Church. Why is doing so not sola scriptura, Joe?Judged and normed, when doctrinal disunity arises, by the teaching office of he Lutheran Church? The LC is definitely not a SS proponent, in the strictest sense i.e. like us you defer to church teaching office and they use one two and three? My good friend JonNC says the same thing. The LC is a lot like the CC.![]()
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Yes, we’re discussing SS in comparison to sola ecclesia. If the Catholic argumentation is to bring up disagreements over Scripture, other denominations, etc. in order to counter SS, how is it not fair to bring up multiple church bodies that hold to sola ecclesia?LOL! I love how non-Catholic always have the habit of mentioning the East. The topic is SS,not what the East accepts or rejects.
Absolutely, they do.Your statement is too general. The East claimes the RCC is fallible? How strange since they also were part of many doctrines being ratified throughout the centuries.
The EO have a magisterium?Yes. Because if you raise the specter of infallibility, I am going to ask you to infallibly determine which infallible magisterium is actually infallible.
I don’t believe they make such a claim.Your claim is no more or less credible than theirs, after all.
Please provide a citation.Every argument for it you can make, they can make.
Because scripture is pointing to an authority outside of itself. That makes it not the sole authority. Simple, no?Scripture tells us to take it to the Church. Why is doing so not sola scriptura, Joe?
Jon
Of course it does. Sola scriptura depends on the Church. From a Lutheran perspective, it is a practice of the Church. All SS does is set scripture as the final norm for doctrine. So, in that sense, scripture is “sola”, alone, the final norm. No other norm is equal to it, and instead other norms are normed by it. And in the Lutheran practice, it is the Church, not individuals, that set doctrine.Because scripture is pointing to an authority outside of itself. That makes it not the sole authority. Simple, no?
One of these days, Jon, they will acknowledge that they are not arguing with Baptists or non-denominational fundamentalists.Of course it does. Sola scriptura depends on the Church. From a Lutheran perspective, it is a practice of the Church. All SS does is set scripture as the final norm for doctrine. So, in that sense, scripture is “sola”, alone, the final norm. No other norm is equal to it, and instead other norms are normed by it. And in the Lutheran practice, it is the Church, not individuals, that set doctrine.
Jon
Nope. You just said it was a practice of the Church.Of course it does. Sola scriptura depends on the Church. From a Lutheran perspective, it is a practice of the Church. All SS does is set scripture as the final norm for doctrine.
So, you are saying the Church is not commanded with a teaching authority?Nope. You just said it was a practice of the Church.
You will not find that practice commanded in scripture.
Therefore, the Church is the final norm, unless you can find scripture saying that it is the final norm.
I know, but the problem is all they ever hear is the solo scriptura scenario. Its on TV, on YouTube, and frankly, we Lutherans are by and large a rather laid-back bunch. We’re just not as vocal. So, I think their position is understandable.One of these days, Jon, they will acknowledge that they are not arguing with Baptists or non-denominational fundamentalists.
Jon,Of course it does. Sola scriptura depends on the Church. From a Lutheran perspective, it is a practice of the Church. All SS does is set scripture as the final norm for doctrine. So, in that sense, scripture is “sola”, alone, the final norm. No other norm is equal to it, and instead other norms are normed by it. And in the Lutheran practice, it is the Church, not individuals, that set doctrine.
Jon
At least when they say sola - it’s actually solaOne of these days, Jon, they will acknowledge that they are not arguing with Baptists or non-denominational fundamentalists.
LOLAt least when they say sola - it’s actually sola![]()