If the manner of interpreting Scripture is ulimately subject to the Church [which it is] which is the same Church which exercises the divinely conferred commision and ministry of watching over and interpreting the Word of God. how in the world does Scripture which are words on paper become Authoritive over the Church?
Because, with all due respect, you’re confusing the relationship between the Church and its members with the relationship between Church and Scripture. Ironically, this is the same basic confusion that Protestants have historically made, so clearly Protestants shouldn’t be blamed too harshly
The fact that the Church has authority over
me with regard to how *I *interpret Scripture does not affect the Church’s relationship to Scripture. Why would you bring this in as if it were relevant? The Church has authority over me because the Church listens to the Word of God. It isn’t that the Church has authority over me whether it agrees with Scripture or not (which is the Protestant caricature of the Catholic position) but that the Church has authority over me
because it is guided by the Spirit in listening to the Word of God (of which Scripture is the written form, not the only form).
I’m talking about doctrine, of course. The Church has disciplinary authority even if that authority is exercised in ways that clearly do not come from God. But that’s because the Church’s discipline, even if badly carried out, rests on doctrinal principles derived from the Word of God.
Thus, by the light of the Spirit of truth, these successors can in their preaching preserve this word of God faithfully, explain it, and make it more widely known. Consequently it is not from sacred Scripture alone that the Church draws her certainty about everything which has been revealed. Therefore both sacred Tradition and sacred Scripture are to be accepted and venerated with the same devotion and reverence…Dei Verbum
Indeed.
Again, I think you’ve ironically accepted a Protestant way of framing this issue, in which “tradition” goes along with “Church” and stands over against “Scripture.” Or more precisely, you assume that this is what I’m defending. But it’s not. I’m defending the position of Dei Verbum, in which “Tradition” (note the large “T”) goes along with “Scripture” as the Word of God to which the Church is obedient.
The whole idea that “tradition” is interchangeable with “Church” in these discussions is an artifact of Reformation-era polemic.
We’re not arguing about the relationship between Scripture and Tradition, but between Scripture (which is the written, but not the only, form of the Word of God) and the Church. Two completely different things.
If it leads you away from the Apostolic Church then you are simply wrong.
Agreed.
I never heard not one say, “You don’t have to attend our congregation”
Well, I have.
Not that that’s relevant here.
The fact that people are following along with scripture hop-skipping around
I’m not sure if you refer to the preacher hop-skipping through Scripture or the congregation engaging in bodily movement. I think both of these are excellent practices (the former is called “intertextuality” and is the way all the Fathers interpret Scripture), but I agree that they need to take place within the context of Tradition and not as a replacement for it
Another version of what USE TO BE a Apostolic Church with a new twist of understanding Scripture which of course the Apostles and their students “misunderstood” the correct meaning of. Thank God John Calvin came along to correct us.
The point where I agree with Calvin is that you can’t simply define the Church as the body guided by the Spirit without saying that this guidance takes place through the Word.
However, Calvin went wrong when he assumed that he, as an early-modern Biblical scholar (actually mostly self-taught in theology, but that’s not really the point here), was the judge of whether or not the Church was actually listening to the Word, so that he could characterize any doctrinal disagreement between himself and the Catholic hierarchy or traditional Catholic theology as the latter not listening to the Word. (I heard an excellent paper last year which argued–to the consternation of some folks present–that Calvin effectively saw himself as “above Scripture”–this was clearly hyperbolic language, but if it’s fair to say that Catholics think the Church is above Scripture then it’s just as fair to say that Calvin saw himself that way, because in practice he acted as if his teachings were the authoritative interpretation of Scripture.)
Who ever said anything contray for the first 12-centuries? In fact its very much the opposite.
Actually I find the theologians of the first 12 centuries pretty consistently exalting Scripture over the Church. But not in the Protestant sense of making the Church just a fallible community that needs to be “reformed” by heroic theologians who get the Bible right where the traditional Church has gotten it wrong.
Which gets back to my point the Horse and Cart are in reverse! Jesus turned Bread and Wine into himself “FIRST” before the Cross, this happened before anyone even wrote a word.
No, before anyone wrote a word of the *New *Testament.
The Bible denies that it is sufficient as the complete rule of faith. Paul states it (2 Tim. 2:2). He instructs to “stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter” (2 Thess. 2:15).
This argument works against some of the sillier, fundamentalist forms of Protestantism. But it does not refute the classical doctrine of Sola Scriptura. That doctrine does not say that the Word of God can only exist in a written form. It says that Scripture is
now the only infallible form in which the Word of God comes to us. Protestants have always recognized that the NT was oral tradition before it was written Scripture. 2 Thessalonians, in particular, is arguably one of the earlier books in the NT (if one takes the traditional view that it is written by Paul and is a relatively close sequel to 1 Thessalonians). So according to defenders of Sola Scriptura, when Paul wrote those words the NT canon had not been completed, and obviously people had access to verifiable, oral apostolic preaching. The Protestant argument is that once the canon had been completed, and once the apostles themselves had died, our only certain access to apostolic Tradition is Scripture.
It is a mistake to limit “Christ’s word” to the written word only or to suggest that all his teachings were reduced to writing. The Bible nowhere supports either notion.
Nor do classical Protestants argue for either notion. The Reformers in fact taught that preaching is a form of the Word of God–just not infallible. And of course not all Jesus’ teachings were reduced to writing–the question is whether we now
have any of Jesus’ teachings that weren’t reduced to writing.
The only possible example of a specific such teaching I can think of is a clearly millenialist teaching found in Irenaeus, citing Papias. I think it would be fairly hard for Catholics to accept this as a genuine teaching of Jesus.
Of course one can argue in a general way that doctrines such as the Real presence or the sacrificial priesthood were taught more clearly by Jesus in oral form than in anything we have in writing.
Note that the above paragraphs are an argument against what I find to be simplistic Catholic arguments and do not indicate that I agree with Sola Scriptura. I don’t. But these arguments don’t get to the real issues.
The facts are clear historically, the Bible is subject to the teaching authority
Sigh. . . . you come back to this slogan even though nothing you have said comes anywhere near to establishing it, and even though your own Church has authoritatively stated the exact opposite.
How is the Bible “subject” to the Church’s teaching authority? Could the Church have decided that one of the books of the canonical NT wasn’t really canonical? That would mean either that
a) an inspired book could be non-canonical; or that
b) inspiration is somehow caused (not just recognized) by the Church.
Neither of these make sense.
Could the Church teach something contrary to the genuine teaching of the Bible? Me genoito, as St. Paul would say.
Again, you seem to me to be defending a Protestant caricature of Catholicism as if it were the real thing. This is disastrous. I know better, because I’ve read a good bit of Catholic theology. But talk that way to the average Protestant, and they’ll walk away from the Church, with considerable excuse.
The first Christians “devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching” (Acts 2:42) long before there was a New Testament. From the very beginning, the fullness of Christian teaching was found in the Church as the living embodiment of Christ, not in a book. The teaching Church, with its oral, apostolic tradition, was authoritative and is authoritive.
But oral, apostolic tradition isn’t a product of the Church either. It’s the Word of God, to which, again, the Church obediently listens.
I want to repeat, again, that we’re talking about doctrinal authority. I would entirely agree that it wouldn’t be appropriate to say that Scripture is greater or better or more divine than the Church. The fellowship of the Church, the worship of the Church, the holy witness of the Church (in the person of the saints)–we’re not talking about those things. We’re talking about the teaching authority of the Church. This teaching authority, by its own admission (in Dei Verbum) is subject to Scripture and indeed to the Word of God in all its forms, not the other way round.
Edwin