The sacred writings weren’t compiled until the Council of Hippo in 430 so you’d better hope that one of the original Apostles lived that long, or else you have a bunch of garden variety pastors rather than an infallible authority telling you what is in the Bible.
So because it wasn’t compiled until the Latin Vulgate translation, that equates to the fact that no one considered them Scripture? The Bible didn’t get its authority from being placed in a one volume collection. It received its authority the moment it was written and the churches received them as such.
[BIBLEDRB]Romans 2:05-20[/BIBLEDRB]
You are quite right to point out that Paul writes in this chapter that obedience to the law will result in justification.
Complete and perfect obedience to the law. And how does Paul end his discussion about the law in Romans?
What then? Are we Jews any better off? No, not at all. For we have already charged that all, both Jews and Greeks, are under sin, as it is written:
“None is righteous, no, not one;
no one understands;
no one seeks for God.
All have turned aside; together they have become worthless;
no one does good,
not even one.”
“Their throat is an open grave;
they use their tongues to deceive.”
“The venom of asps is under their lips.”
“Their mouth is full of curses and bitterness.”
“Their feet are swift to shed blood;
in their paths are ruin and misery,
and the way of peace they have not known.”
“There is no fear of God before their eyes.”
Now we know that whatever the law says it speaks to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be stopped, and the whole world may be held accountable to God. For by works of the law no human being will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of sin.
So, therefore, all of the law requirements Paul points out in chapter 2? No one has done it.
Problem is you have other people reading the same Scriptures and coming to different conclusions, even about salvation:
That may be true. It is, however, equatable to only one group of individuals coming to a conclusion about salvation that is false. Or, more accurately, two supposedly infallible institutions that come to different conclusions about salvation that are false.
The Catholic Church says this means what it says. The Baptists say it doesn’t, and that anyone who is baptized as an infant isn’t properly baptized and will not be saved. Since you are with the Baptists on this, and no one taught the Baptist position before the Reformation, you are betting your salvation on one thing: whether or not God allowed the Catholic Church to go into apostasy, which, as I have already demonstrated
I am not with the Baptists on that question. Nor do I believe that the Roman Catholic Church fell into apostasy. Error, yes. Apostasy, no.