C
Cat_Herder
Guest
In the United States of America, the federal government and 49 of the states have something called “common law.” There is no official position on what the common law is. Judges decide what the common law is when individual cases are brought before them. Catholic Tradition is the same. Someone posits that X verse means this, someone else says it means that, and a council is convoked to decide the issue. Or a bishop issues a decree to close the issue.Who cares?
Well, you should.
…
This is one of the many elephants in the room for the Roman Catholic Communion. The fact that there is no official position on ‘Tradition’.
For some reason you think there is something wrong with that, or that it can’t possibly work in practice. Nevertheless, it still does. If you want to keep sending money to Alpha & Omega Ministries instead of to the Catholic Church, know that 100% of your money will go to promoting unintelligent arguments like this one, and that said arguments will be directed against the Catholic Church, where that money would have been used to feed the hungry, tend to the sick, help immigrants and refugees, run orphanages and schools, and generally fulfill the Beatitudes.
Now ANSWER THE QUESTION please.
Who cares?
Whether or not all Catholic dogma is at least implied in the Bible or not (it is) is a different question than whether the Bible is self-interpreting (formal sufficiency).
If it were really possible to obtain the true religion from the Bible alone then:
(1) Protestantism would be united. It isn’t. And no amount of quote-warring is going to do that.
(2) There would have been no Reformation anyway, because the whole premise of the Reformation was that the “biblical” religion had been lost. If I had a dollar for each time I’ve given the 1 Tim 2:3-4 explanation over and against this then I would be very rich.