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guanophore
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The same thing happens with scripture.On my own I wouldn’t mind, but in a forum like this? We’d get nowhere. I’ve seen it happen before: One side quotes a church father that allegedly supports his view, and then the other side fires back a contradictory quote and/or claims that the particular church father is being taken out of context, etc. So saying merely that I “don’t want to refer to the fathers” is oversimplifying, misrepresentative, and ignoring this explanation of mine, which I have already given in another post.
You are right that we might get “nowhere”, but that is not because of ambiguity in the FAthers, but because the Fathers were Catholic! It is impossible to set aside their clearly Catholic theology. Well, I guess I can’t say that either, because the Reformers did do this to create new theologies, and a new gospel to suit their own perceptions. It is amazing how much of Augustine Calvanists can ignore so they can pick and choose to support the errant doctrines like SS that emanate from the Reformation.
Besides, you should shy away from such a challenge here because you are surrounded by a vibrant flock of well catechized Catholics who know their Scripture, and their Fathers.
SS was invented precisely for the purpose of mitigating agains the Tradition and the Church (authority). But I do agree with you, many in our day have abandoned the Reformers’ notions of SS and replaced it with their own ideas, just as the Reformers abandoned the Apostolic view of Scripture and replaced it with their own ideas.Well, first of all, SS does not speak against STC, at least not in one sense. SS does not militate against tradition or the church. Anyone who uses SS to justify abandonment of church and tradition either doesn’t understand it or is distorting it.
A preposterous idea, since Scripture, not being a person, cannot be fallible or infallible. Scripture does not have a will, discernment, and ability to take responsibilitly for actions. These are qualities of persons, not writings, however Holy. In attempting to push the authority Christ gave to persons away from the persons, it was forced into Holy Scripture, where it does not belong. What has resulted is exactly what you have demonstrated here. Everyone reads and interprets according to their own perceptions, and believes that their conclusions come from “infallible Scripture”. The result is the complete fragmentation of the Body.SS says that tradition and the church are not infallible, and that the only infallible rule is Scripture, which means that both the Church and tradition are subject to Scripture. So it does acknowledge all three (STC), but not the T and C in the way that the RCC defines them.
This is also a fallacy, and a misunderstanding of what this verse actually says. It does not say what you are trying to make it say. On the contrary, it says the opposite!I prefer to go straight to the source: Scripture itself. Regarding the sufficiency of Scripture, 2 Tim. 3:16-17 makes this all too clear. Since Scripture makes the man of God complete and thoroughly equipped for every good work, nothing else is needed in terms of revelation. That is clearly the concept of sufficiency. If something else were needed, then the phrase thoroughly equipped for every good work is not true.
It appears that you still need some more bible study!Nowhere that I know of did Christ or the apostles speak of either tradition or the church as having authority equal to the word of God, such that new revelation, in addition to Scripture and considered to be infallible, could proceed from them.
What do you think the Church did for 30 years before there was no NT?
What SS did they use at the Council of Jerusalem?!
He did, and what was the basis of the test? It was the Apostolic teaching! What did not come from the Apostles was not authentic. There was no NT at the time!The idea that one should submit unconditionally to church teaching, without testing it in any way, is actually contrary to Scripture. As I’ve pointed out elsewhere, Paul expected his Galatian audience to test any preaching that purported to be the gospel and reject it, even if it came from him or an angel.
Exactly, and that Gospel is what has been infallibly preserved in the Church. It is not extracted from the pages of Scripture 1500 years after the fact, in contradiction to what Jesus already revealed to the Apostles.The gospel itself, then, was expected to be the rule by which other preaching was to be tested. Paul was not speaking hyperbolically here. He wasn’t exaggerating. He took the gospel very, very seriously. This was the man who wrote elsewhere, Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel. He indicated in another place that the gospel was entrusted to him by God, and he valued the stewardship of the gospel that had been given him to such a degree that he even wrote that his reward was simply preaching the gospel free of charge.
What made the Bereans more noble is that they received the Apostolic preaching with eagerness. This is exactly what most modern Protestants reject. Instead of opening themselves to what Jesus gave to the Church, instead they reject it out of hand, and turn their back to the Apostolic preaching, attempting to extract their faith from the pages of Scripture. This is not “noble”.In addition, the Bereans were commended for testing what the apostles taught using Scripture. If it was wrong for them to do this, then the text would not refer to this act as noble.