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ddarko
Guest
I think by definition of Sola Scriptura, all of the above in your list is automatically denied, no? If Scripture is the sole authority, then it also means that Church and Tradition has no equal authority.[SIGN]Sola Scriptura (bible alone) is the principle that the Holy Scriptures are the only source that carries the weight of infallible authority in the Church’s faith and practice. Everything a person finds as part of his essential Christian beliefs (including Salvation) can be sufficiently derived from the Scriptures
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With all that said, I want to see if anyone could prove the following:
- Sola Scriptura denies Church Authority
- Sola Scriptura forbides Church Discipline
- Sola Scriptura denies scriptural tradition
- Sola Scriptura deines the word of God speaking at one point or another.
I would however would like to add the additional scriptural passages that suggest (by implication) that the Word of God is sufficient enough to be the sole source the Church can go to for faith and practice.
Tell me what you think.
- Proverbs 30:5
- Hebrews 4:12
- Matthew 4:4
- 2 Timothy 3:16
- Deuteronomy 8:3
- Jos. 8:8 (Note: Joshua’s obedience/actions were done so according to whatever God said, i.e. his word. By implication, it shows that we are to follow whatever source is his Word.)
- Acts 13:44
Parker
I think you are spot on that the word of God is sufficient for salvation. But, what you fail to realize is that word of God has to be interpreted properly. For that, you need Tradition and Church.
Otherwise you will have multiple possible interpretations of the same passage. A good example from real life is the fact that every protestant denomination has it’s own spin on part of the Bible that disagrees with the rest.
So this is why in the Bible it-self, there is a mention of the importance of Tradition and Church Authority.
Ironically, now you will mention that you have an alternate way to reconcile those scripture passages in such a way that it safe guards Sola Scriptura. My answer to you is, while you probably can, there is no way to know whose right. Logical consistency does not automatically mean that something is true. So how do you know whose right?
Therefore, to know the true interpretation of any passage, one needs to first accept Tradition, Scripture and Church authority.
So Church, Tradition and Scripture, all have equal authority. If one falls, the entire Christian faith becomes a best guessed interpretation.
God Bless