I do not have a clear date when the church had all of the four gospels and the rest of the books. Some people like to point to certain lists but that is just evidence that one person gave them value and the lists differed. That is irrelevent of course though.
All of which means absolutely nothing, unless Jesus said, “Write down and compile the Bible, and then once everything is in writing, you can start to ignore the Tradition that I am giving you now in my teachings, in favour of the written word that you have written down and compiled.”
Do you have evidence that Jesus ever said this, or anything resembling this?
Christ and his disciples and then Paul never deviated from his message but from the very beginning, as Paul talks about in his letter to the Corinthians and John’s vision of the churches, they were departing from the true teachings.
This message is the Tradition, which has been handed down from Jesus Himself, through the Apostles, down through the Church, to the Catholic Pope and Bishops of our present day. The Bible is part of that Tradition, but it is only a part - it is not the whole thing.
You have heard of reading the Bible in context, I’m sure - and I’m sure you understand that you have to read whole passages of the Bible; not just bits and pieces of it, and that you have to compare your understanding to the whole message of the Bible itself - this is part of what it means to read the Bible in context, but a greater part of reading the Bible in context is to read it within the context of the Tradition that produced it - the Tradition of Jesus Christ and His Apostles.
Belief in the Bible takes faith,What is the alternative?
To believe both the Bible and the Tradition out of which it came - the men who produced the Bible were guided by the Holy Spirit. Did the Holy Spirit suddenly depart from them in absolutely every
other aspect of their teaching? (In which case, what evidence do we have that they were ever guided by the Holy Spirit at all - either with regard to putting the Bible together, or in any other thing?)
Either they were being guided by the Holy Spirit, in which case we can trust them in
all things, including the Bible.
Or they were not being guided by the Holy Spirit, in which case,
nothing they did is reliable, not even the Bible.
No. I am saying if they had never departed from the true teachings of Christ there would have been no difference.
They never did. You have been deceived into thinking that certain things (perhaps the motherhood and virginity of Mary?) are false, but no - these things are also true - the fact that they are only obliquely referred to in the Bible does not mean that they were not always part of the Tradition that was handed down to us from Jesus and the Apostles.
That [seven of Ignatius’ letters are genuine] is the opinion of the same scholars who reject the Virgin Birth, the resurrection of Jesus, and a real hell for those who do not accept him.
I seriously doubt that -
most of the people who quote from St. Ignatius believe even more literally than you do in the virginity of Mary, in the Resurrection, and in the existence of Hell.
Ignatius had heretical views about church government but he does not resemble present day Catholicism too much.
You are aware that he died in 107 AD, right? About ten years after the death of the Apostle John. Are you trying to say that it took
less than ten years for “heretical” Catholic-style Church government to take root?
