No, we don’t even do that in everyday life. We don’t read a history book and then run our interpretation of every sentence in that book by a historian to see if we’ve grasped it right. We don’t do that with every single point we read in the church fathers or in Scripture.
Ok maybe I was a little too vague. If you wanted to read a history book, you certainly don’t need to make sure you understood what it is saying. It will also be VERY MUCH EASIER for you to understand because it deals with things you always encounter in real life.
But STILL, if you had to then go and teach the subject to others, no one will allow you to do that before making sure that you did indeed understand things correctly. There will be an exam and people will check whether your interpretation and reasoning around the facts you read make sense and follow proper historical analysis.
Now this becomes even more important in fields that do not deal with things that we encounter in real life, whether it be a abstract subject like Theoretical physics or Transcendent claims (Religion). So the need for testing to see if you understood it properly is greater.
Did that clarify?
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I’ve pointed this out to you in another thread: I don’t think your approach is correct because it overlooks the work of the Holy Spirit in the heart of the individual who believes. Faith does involve reason, but it does not all hang on reason, as you seem to think.
The problem with your counterargument is that it is not grounded in reason. It requires me to assent to the existence of a Holy Spirit before even knowing which religion is true. So your objection as far as a person who wants to know the truth and is looking for it is concerned, is invalid. It only has any merits to someone who has already found the truth. But that itself in your case is under test in this very discussion.
I disagree: Christ said that if one’s will is to do God’s will, he will know whether the teaching comes from God. There again is that spiritual component which you consistently seem to overlook. And I CAN use that text to make this objection because it is written in human language, which involves the use of natural reason.
Well this would be great and profound work of Theology if we knew it were true. But as it stands, all we have is your interpretation of what Christ says and empirical evidence that this certainly does not seem to be the case.
People who are honestly seeking without reason, join everything from Islam, Protestantism, Jehovah’s Witness to any other religion you can think of.
So empirical evidence suggest your interpretation is wrong and neither of us have reason to think you have authority. So it is not really of any value.
As to the fact whether you can make that claim with certainty, you cannot do so because it speaks of a Transcendent truth.
Yes you can. You can consult what the entire corpus of Scripture has to say about salvation by faith. And it’s possible to come up with a correct interpretation of those texts.
Aah yes. This is a very common misunderstanding that some have regarding logic. You are of the position that if one were to hold that “One is saved by faith alone”, one can construct a very logically consistent framework that takes in to account entire Scripture. Yes?
The problem is, even if that were true, it does not show that your view is true. It is a classic fallacy to think that is does. All it says is that you have one in possibly infinite possible distinct interpretations that one can arrive about Scripture as a whole and as to what it is saying.
Perhaps if you understand this, it might help you better understand the predicament of Protestantism.
No, but this analogy breaks down all too fast. The grasping of truths in the kingdom of God does not happen in that way. God reveals truths to babes that He hides from the wise. One does not need to consult an expert for everything he reads in Scripture. The Holy Spirit accompanies the preaching of the Word to bring about understanding in those whom He instructs. Jesus told the Jews of His day that they could not understand what He said because His word had no place in them. This has so much more to do with the supernatural than you are making out.
Again, the issue here is that you are afraid to decouple your Theology with actual reasoning we are discussing to adopt that theology in the first place. So this is why you are failing to break free. You are already approaching this with the mindset that you must be right. So anything that suggest otherwise is obviously going to seem wrong.
In this case, you interpreted some Scripture passages and made the above theological pronouncements on why one does not need to consult an expert. But you forget all too easily that it was, first and foremost, your own interpretation of Scripture.
One has to avoid such logical errors if one wants to arrive at the truth, yes?