Z
Ziggamafu
Guest
Belief in a fallible collection of infallible books, moreover with no infallible method of interpretation, seems to be a logical impossibility; it seems absurd. The idea of an infallible collection of infallible books, moreover with an infallible method of interpretation seems much more reasonable and much less silly.
It took the Church a long time to write the Scriptures and a very long time to figure out what was and wasn’t divinely inspired. And the councils that did this (beginning in the fourth century, I think) listed the canon as Catholics understand it, which included the books the Protestants would reject a thousand years later…how then could the Bible be the only infallible rule of faith?
It *seems *irrefutable to me in logically assessing Christianity that to believe in the infallibility of the Bible one must necessarily believe that either a) the Church is also infallible or b) the Bible, in its entirety, was revealed by Christ or canonized by the Apostles. To believe anything other than these two options is to fall into logical absurdity, believing in a fallible collection of infallible books. It was for this reason – that an infallible Bible requires an infallible Church – more than any other that I was able to eventually trust that the Catholic Church is the house God built for all Christians. In doing so, I received more from my relationship with Christ than I could have ever dreamed possible.
While I was in the process of becoming Catholic, I presented this “Protestant puzzle” to many non-Catholic friends. Nobody could give me a solid answer. They all either dodged the question or used circular reasoning. It seems to me that our faith in the infallibility of the Bible must rest on our faith in the infallibility of the Church. The infallibility of the Church’s teaching authority rests on faith in Christ - that, according to many historical sources (including the Bible) he conveyed his own authority upon the Apostles, who in turn conveyed their authority onto other men. We even see the first council in Acts 15!
So…seriously…how do Protestants get around this? Do they just never go there? Avoid it like the plague? I simply don’t get it…I would love to at least be given the opportunity to try!

It took the Church a long time to write the Scriptures and a very long time to figure out what was and wasn’t divinely inspired. And the councils that did this (beginning in the fourth century, I think) listed the canon as Catholics understand it, which included the books the Protestants would reject a thousand years later…how then could the Bible be the only infallible rule of faith?
It *seems *irrefutable to me in logically assessing Christianity that to believe in the infallibility of the Bible one must necessarily believe that either a) the Church is also infallible or b) the Bible, in its entirety, was revealed by Christ or canonized by the Apostles. To believe anything other than these two options is to fall into logical absurdity, believing in a fallible collection of infallible books. It was for this reason – that an infallible Bible requires an infallible Church – more than any other that I was able to eventually trust that the Catholic Church is the house God built for all Christians. In doing so, I received more from my relationship with Christ than I could have ever dreamed possible.
While I was in the process of becoming Catholic, I presented this “Protestant puzzle” to many non-Catholic friends. Nobody could give me a solid answer. They all either dodged the question or used circular reasoning. It seems to me that our faith in the infallibility of the Bible must rest on our faith in the infallibility of the Church. The infallibility of the Church’s teaching authority rests on faith in Christ - that, according to many historical sources (including the Bible) he conveyed his own authority upon the Apostles, who in turn conveyed their authority onto other men. We even see the first council in Acts 15!
So…seriously…how do Protestants get around this? Do they just never go there? Avoid it like the plague? I simply don’t get it…I would love to at least be given the opportunity to try!