and because Tradition has been thus errantly defined by the magisterium–that scripture is the only access we have to God’s word today.
This formulation still does not account for the tradition that we are commanded by Apostles to obey and maintain mentioned in Scripture. If the CC has “errantly defined” it, then what is the correct definition? SS’s say “it is all in the Scripture”, yet, Scripture says the opposite of itself.
Code:
Sola scriptura--as historically understood by Protestants--is not the denial that God's word has existed orally at one time. But the oral proclamation of his word that God wished to preserve for posterity always culminates in scripture.
And yet, Scripture does not support this concept whatsoever. It also requires a belief that Jesus did not, could not, or would not keep His promises to the Church.
Isa 55:11
11 so shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth;
it shall not return to me empty,
but it shall accomplish that which I purpose,
and prosper in the thing for which I sent it.
Such a belief would require that the purpose for which Jesus deposited His Word in the Church had come to an end at some point.
Sola scriptura, then, is sort of the default position that emerges when the other two legs of the stool have collapsed. If the Church has erred, and if erroneous traditions have been defined as dogma, then scripture is all that remains. 3-2 = 1. Its really that simple.
Yes, I think you hit this nail right on the head Miguel. This doctrine was developed because those who made it up had already concluded the same about the other two legs. Jesus failed in his promise to guide the Church into all truth, so men had to find a default position that would make up for His lack of faithfulness.
Code:
I believe a number of the church fathers (especially Cyril of Jerusalem) and scholastics held to the view that scripture had the highest normative authority.
I doubt you can substantiate this, but I will certainly concede that the fathers nad doctors of the Church have** all** considered the Scriptures to be of high normative authority. None of them used them apart from the Sacred Tradition that created them, but certainly venerated the Scriptures a Source of God’s Word - as Jerome said, ignorance of Scripture is ignorance of Christ.
Many of these, however, would have also believed that the Church and Tradition were all part of the rule of faith simply because they had presumed that the Church’s teaching was an accurate expression of the truths of scripture–not because they thought of the bishops or the pope or something called “Tradition,” as being on par with scripture. But that’s a topic for another thread.
The two are not separated, Miguel.
Not only that, they did not have to “presume” because they had both available to them, and it was perfectly clear to them that Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture complement one another, and never contradict.
Code:
If we attempt to prove sola scriptura by assuming sola scirptura, we beg the question. Principles can't prove themselves. Since sola sciptura is a principle--that is a starting point--then it is the beginning point from which doctrines are derived.
This is a very good point, also one which makes the principle self refuting.
Doctrines are not to be gleaned from the pages of a book, however Holy, but are handed down from Jesus through the Apostles. They are preserved infallibly in the Church by the HS because this is how God intended it to work.
Assume, for a moment, that your counter-example were true. If God had designated a biblical prophet to say, “sola scriptura is true”…or words to that effect, what would that prove?
In fact, this is exactly what we see! We see Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, etc speaking as if they believe they are prophets of God. You are right, it proves only that anyone can appoint themselves a prophet and declare what one believes is the Word of God.
One would only know to take the prophet’s word for it because one already knew that one is supposed to listen to the words of the prophets that are recorded in scripture. Such a hypothetical verse would provide us with no new information since we would have already had the notion in place that scripture–as Gods word–is our highest authority.
None of the verses of Scripture provide Catholics with any “new information”, since the faith was whole and entire before a word of it was ever written down. Further, that fullness of Truth did not somehow vanish from the Church where He instilled it after some of it was written down.
It basically boils down to how God intended His authority to function on earth until the end of the Church Age. Catholics believe He founded a Church, and appointed authority in and over it. Sola Scripturists believe, as you have cited here, that the authority appointed by Christ is defunct. He was unable to uphold them, so they fell.
