Dear kelman,
Cordial greetings and a very warm welcome to the world of CAF.
Thanks, I appreciate the welcome.
There is indeed nothing prideful about the devout study of Sacred Scripture, but private interpretation only results in doctrinal chaos.
Churches which profess and actually practice sola Scriptura(unfortunately not as many as one would hope for) are considerably united in their theology.
If proof is required of this then one only needs to look the fragmented condition of Protestantism to observe the unhappy result of the uncertanties of private judgment.
I"m not going to pretend that the private judgment of Protestants is infallible, however, when exercised in a humble faithful manner it always leads to an adequate(albeit not perfect) knowledge of the essential truths.
Catholics quite rightly regard the multiplication of demoninations as a tragedy and a scandal in terms of our mission to the world and could never view them as part of the economy of God, supposedly ensuring that issues neglected by the mainstream are championed.
Otoh, surely you can understand that we feel the same with regard to the RCC?.. that much of what it presents to the world is not a part of God’s economy.
Protestant brethren fail to appreciate that the word of Scripture emerged from the Church and is the word spoken in the Church and by the Church for the Church.
I fully appreciate that God gave His Word to the universal church, after all, the Apostles and their contemporaries were the first Christians. Interestingly, we have Eusebius’ account in Ecclesiastical History 3.24.7 that it was John the Revelator who canonized the four Gospels – he
“welcomed” and
“received” the three previous Gospels and
“testified to their truth”.
Further, the Church is, as it were, the Divinely given check against the intrusion of erroneous and novel teaching in faith and morals.
We don’t find God telling us that the church - any church - is infallible and cannot teach error. We need only look to the NT and history to see this is true.
It is surely inconceivable that our gracious God should have left His Church without a visible guide and authoritative voice. This is not merely a matter of biased Catholic opinion or taste, but a self-evident truth which emerges from the character of God.
I suggest that this is, in fact, a “biased Catholic opinion” because we do not have God informing us of a universal jurisdictional authority.
The notion of the perspicuity of Scripture, so extolled by the Protestants, simply cannot be sustained, especially in view of the multitude of denominations.
As I mentioned above, churches who not only profess but actually practice sola Scriptura are considerably in agreement.
Another clear problem that arises is what does one do when the bible does not present clear teaching on some issue of crucial importance? This is pivitol today since so many important moral questions are products of the modern age. The bible simply does not address things like* in vitro* fertilisation, human cloning, atomic warfare or even global warming. Thus when there are disagreements and when Sacred Scripture does not speak clearly, who decides?
The RCC is not the only church to speak about some of these issues and how Scripture might be applied to them. Still, God has given us our own consciences and we’re not to allow others to bind them where Scripture does not speak.
Finally a word about that II Timothy passage, which is the classic proof text for the sola scriptura theory. It is indeed a splendid text and Catholics would agree on the inspiration/usefulness of Sacred Scripture. However, the passage does not declare that Scripture is the only authority, nor does it inform us as to what is the foundational authority for our knowledge of the truth.
God has been clear to define only His written Word as inspired. He says this of nothing else. If something other than Scripture was inspired, one would think God would have mentioned that fact, however, He did not.
The N.T. actually points to the Church as that universal authority. Protestants assert that the bible alone is sufficient and is the final authority and court of appeal, however St. Paul states in the Ephesian epistle that “through the Church the manifold wisdom of God will be made known” (3: 10),
We assert that the Bible alone is sufficient because God say it is – the Bible is sufficient to bring men to faith, to salvation, to “perfect” them. When read in its context we see Paul is speaking about the Gospel – that he was made a minister of it(verse 7). Paul is saying that all men, both Jew and Gentile are now brought together in one “fellowship” – one church(verse 9) where can be observed the magnificence of God’s salvation through the Lord Jesus which was of great interest to the angels(verse 10).
and in I Tim. 3:15 he says it is the Church which is “the pillar and foundation of the truth”, not the bible. Thus St. Paul would certainly entrust us to God and Scripture, but would equally maintain that Scripture must be correctly interpreted by the Church, given that it and not the bible is “the pillar and foundation of truth”.
We find no suggestion in the Bible that a church can infallibly interpret Scripture. Of what is the church a pillar to?..what is the church to uphold?..the Bible which is the Truth …sadly not all churches do.