H
HopkinsReb
Guest
Ah, so basically they were directed by God to write the books, but God took a hands-off approach to their contents?
.In regard to Traditions, didn’t Jesus show us in Mark 7:1-13 how to test traditions, whether they are from God or man?
MARK 7:3 3 (For the Pharisees, and all the Jews, do not eat unless they wash their hands, observing the tradition (Greek = paradosin) of the elders;
Why?2nd THESSALONIANS 2:15 15 So then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the traditions (Greek = paradoseis) which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter.
This is a clever misrepresentation of what Protestants believe. Protestants believe that God revealed himself throughout history in many ways. In ancient times he revealed himself through his word as spoken through the prophets and recorded in the scriptures. Then in the fulfillment of time he revealed himself through the Word Incarnate in his son Jesus Christ. He continued to reveal himself through the Holy Spirit, inspiring the apostles and their followers to faithfully record God’s Word so that it might be handed down generation to generation. We believe that the Church is the congregation of saints in which the Gospel is rightly taught and the Sacraments are rightly administered. So in that sense, the Word came first, and the Church (through the Holy Spirit working through the Word) was built around it. What norms the teaching and proclamation of that word are the Holy Scriptures because they represent the faithful passing down of that Word revealed by God. When we say Sola Scriptura, this means that the teaching of the Church regarding God’s Word is normed by what has been handed down through the scriptures, and that teachings that contradict those scriptures are not normative because they are not faithful to God’s Word. I hope this clarifies.Most Protestants think that we were given a Bible and should build a church around it, rather than that we were given a church and then that church built a Bible around itself.
Lots of Protestants don’t even believe in Sacraments, and lots don’t believe in Sola Scriptura, so we’re both painting with a broad brush here.HopkinsReb:![]()
This is a clever misrepresentation of what Protestants believe. Protestants believe that God revealed himself throughout history in many ways. In ancient times he revealed himself through his word as spoken through the prophets and recorded in the scriptures. Then in the fulfillment of time he revealed himself through the Word Incarnate in his son Jesus Christ. He continued to reveal himself through the Holy Spirit, inspiring the apostles and their followers to faithfully record God’s Word so that it might be handed down generation to generation. We believe that the Church is the congregation of saints in which the Gospel is rightly taught and the Sacraments are rightly administered. So in that sense, the Word came first, and the Church (through the Holy Spirit working through the Word) was built around it. What norms the teaching and proclamation of that word are the Holy Scriptures because they represent the faithful passing down of that Word revealed by God. When we say Sola Scriptura, this means that the teaching of the Church regarding God’s Word is normed by what has been handed down through the scriptures, and that teachings that contradict those scriptures are not normative because they are not faithful to God’s Word. I hope this clarifies.Most Protestants think that we were given a Bible and should build a church around it, rather than that we were given a church and then that church built a Bible around itself.
I agree that the Word and the Bible are not necessarily synonymous. It is also irrelevant. As stated in my initial response, the scripture represent the God-breathed record of God’s revelation and were given to us for the purpose of providing an enduring and faithful transmission of the testimony about that Word. So if your alternate source of doctrinal authority contradicts or violates that testimony, then it is objectively demonstrable that you aren’t being faithful. Keep in mind that the original use of Sola Scriptura was a refutation of doctrines that were contradictory to Sacred Scripture. Also, I would point out that the “restricted” definition is a false definition of what Sola Scriptura means. If someone is using it in a way which is contrary to what the doctrine means, they aren’t representing it correctly, so your apologetic in opposition to this definition is attacking a straw man. The issue here is that Roman Catholic apologist almost always misrepresent what Sola Scriptura means (usually in ignorance, but often quite purposefully).But yes, the Catholics agree that the Word came first and the Church was built around it (and established by the Word made flesh). But the Word and the Bible are not synonymous. The Church predates the Bible.
The problem with this Hodos, is that I know too mamy Bible Christians with a much more narrow definition than this.When we say Sola Scriptura, this means that the teaching of the Church regarding God’s Word is normed by what has been handed down through the scriptures, and that teachings that contradict those scriptures are not normative because they are not faithful to God’s Word.