C
Contarini
Guest
In the now closed thread, E.E.N.S. asked what I meant by this:
Edwin
The Council of Trent can be read as denying the supremacy of Scripture, and many Catholic apologists of the sixteenth century appeared to be heading in that direction. One encounters this sort of argument even today. That is what I was talking about. Of course Catholics believe in the inspiration of Scripture. But whether Catholics can speak of the supremacy and uniqueness of Scripture as a record of apostolic Tradition in the same way the Fathers did–that’s a tougher question. It appears that they can, and that’s a very good thing. But some Catholic apologists certainly don’t.We don’t reject everything else. Therefore, your question makes no sense. We regard the Bible as the supreme authority precisely because this is how the Church has historically regarded it. Insofar as late medieval and early modern Catholics departed from this Tradition, they were wrong.
Edwin