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itsjustdave1988
Guest
I believe you may be mistaking “biblical inerrancy” with “doctrinal infallibility.”Every adult ed class I have attended has taught inerrancy only in faith and morals
Magisterial sources of Catholic doctrine have never taught that the truth of Sacred Scripture is limited solely to matters of faith and morals. Fr. Raymond Brown even admits this view of Biblical inerrancy is condemned by Catholicism. The doctrine on doctrinal infallibility pertains to doctrines on faith and morals.
In dogmatic theology, what constitutes a matter of faith? Is salvation history a matter of faith? Yes. Questions of sacred history regarding “**facts narrated in [Scritpure] that touch upon the fundamentals of the Christian religion” **(St. Pius X, PBC decree, *AAS *1 (1909) 567-69) are inseparably related to dogma. That’s why such things as Mary’s immaculate conception and Christ’s real incarnation, passion, death and resurrection are dogmatically taught as actual historical facts of sacred history.
The revelation of God happened in time, within history, in real events, deeds, and words of the prophets, and of Jesus Christ, and of the apostles. The response of man is also something that happens in time, within history, in real events. Scriptures give us an inspired and inerrant account of this sacred history, with the intended purpose or authorial intent to teach what our response to this historic revelation ought to be for the sake of our salvation. What is inerrant pertains to the affirmations, the authorial intent of the sacred writers, what they intend to assert about sacred history and the response of man desired by God: God’s historic revelation, man’s historic response. Man’s historic response presented in history is one of faithfullness, and one of faithlessness. The sacred authors are obviously teaching that faithfulness is salvific, and faithlessness is not.
This sacred history is presented without error, but is tailored to the audience in an inspired way by the sacred author for a purpose other than simply “rememberence” or giving history for history’s sake. While the intent of Scripture is not profane history, math, or science, it is the intent to teach sacred history, the true history of salvation, which consists in God’s progressive revelation to man, and man’s historical response to that revelation. The author presents this true sacred history, yet often consolidated, synthesized, re-ordered, and in various literary genres for the purposes of preaching so as to make us Christians, not to make us historians or mathematicians.
As I’ve asserted before, just because an author reorders, synthesizes, gives a different context of actual events, or recounts true historical events in a poem, the events that he recounts are still historic, which is precisely what Paul VI is affirming in his PBC Instruction on the HISTORICITY OF THE GOSPELS Sancta Mater Ecclesia.