Apart from your argument begging the question, I would like to add that the basis of Sola Scriptura comes from indirect implications. Hence, your objection is invalid.
You have yet to show those “indirect implications” (which, by the way, I can show a lot of things by indirect implication from scripture but I bet you won’t believe them). Please walk us through your “indirect implications” very carefully - because I certainly do not see them in the verses you spewed in your first post.
Oh - and please don’t just send me to look up the verses. If you’re going to argue SS from “indirect implication”, you had better walk me through your thought process. Because what is evident to you by “indirect implication” is certainly not to me.
You’ve made the claim - so the burden is on you to prove it - using the rules you’ve set before us.
And - you really didn’t address the argument that proving SS (or for that matter the infalliability of scripture through scripture) is circular reasoning. You just said it wasn’t a good argument. But if I wrote a book that said “this book contains the Word of God, it is inspired and contains everything you need to know to get to heaven”, that would not guarantee that the book was, in fact, what it claimed to be. Case in point: the Koran claims divine inspiration (actually more than we do since the Koran claims to have been transcribed directly while pretty much all Christians agree that God used people to write down his message, but that it comes in a historical/literary context). The Book of Mormon also claims divine inspiration. And most books in the bible do not. So simply claiming divine inspiration does not divine inspiration make.
Oh, so pharisees had a legit basis to carry the traditions which Christ condemned, right?
Actually, Jesus said they absolutely had the authority (the legit basis) to teach:
Matthew 23:1-4
Then said Jesus to the crowds and to his disciples, "The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses’ seat; so practice and observe whatever they tell you, but not what they do; for they preach, but do not practice. They bind heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on men’s shoulders; but they themselves will not move them with their finger.
(emphasis mine)
Jesus nailed the Pharisees for being hypocrites (for not practicing what the preached), not for preaching in the first place. Not only that, but he actually told his disciples to
do what the Pharisees taught. That’s
very clear authority confirmed by Christ.
And what standards does the Magisterium use to determine Scripture?
[SIGN]THE SCRIPTURES![/SIGN]
Hmmm… Does it? Did the Magisterium look to a place in the
written word of God to determine what books did and did not belong? If it did, please show us proof. I’d like the chapter and verse of the Bible that it’s in, followed by the appropriate passage from the appropriate church council declaring the canon of scripture.
Again - you’ve made the claim - it’s on you to prove it.
What kind of disputes the essentials or not?
Actually, there are plenty of disputes between Sola Scriptura adherents on “essentials.” I know because I grew up in an SS house as a Methodist and went to a Reformed College (CRC to be exact). Both my church and my college were SS adherents. And yet we had
fundamental disagreements on the scope of Christ’s salvific sacrifice, the role of free will in our lives, the nature of grace, etc. I’ve had knock-down dragout fights on these as an SS adherent with other SS adherent - with both of us pointing to massive amounts of scripture to back up our claims. I had similar fights with the Once Saved Always Saved folks.
Why did I fight? Because it was
important. It is utterly and completely important to know whether we have any free will or not. It’s utterly and completely important to know whether we’re just predestined to heaven or hell with no choice in the matter. It
really matters. The whole of salvation hinges on it. Your salvation and mine. That’s why my dear friend and I argued. We were honestly concerned for the other.
So yes- there are
lots of disputes on
“essentials” even among SS adherents.
So far, you’ve raised objections and they all are irrelevant to the doctrine.
Actually, you have yet to make a clear case for SS. And since you set forward the positive claim of SS, it’s on you to prove it, not on us to disprove it.