R
Roman_Catholic_1
Guest
Very well written.In 1 Corinthians Paul is addressing the importance of the virtue of personal humility. First he gives a string of Old Testament quotes which warn against boasting:
1Cor 1:19 refers to Isaiah 29:14
1Cor 1:31 refers to Jeremiah 9:24
1Cor 3:19 - 20 refers to Job 5:13 and Psalm 94:11 (which some Bibles number as Psalm 93)
In light of this, what does Paul mean when later, in 1Cor 4:6, he says not to “go beyond what is written”?
That’s because…
- Objectively speaking, the natural presumption of the reader is he means that for the sake of the virtue of humility, the Corinthians should stay in line with the teachings he quoted from Isaiah, Jeremiah, Job and Psalms. This is the context of the letter. The letter was not crafted because the Corinthians were formulating doctrines beyond authentic Christian teachings.
- There is nothing to indicate that Paul’s references to “what is written” equals Sola Scriptura. The concept of Sola Scriptura goes way beyond what is actually supported in the text.
- If Paul was an adherent of Sola Scriptura, why didn’t he clearly write it? Why didn’t he simply teach it? If he spent just one minute to outline Sola Scriptura in just one of his letters then everyone would be an adherent of Sola Scriptura. Consider what you said in the above quote: “When I do look to scripture for confirmation, I find it. You may not.” But if Paul explicitly taught Sola Scriptura then everyone would find it when they looked for it, because it would be there for all to see. After all, when we look for the Beatitudes we find them, don’t we? You claim that Paul was an adherent of Sola Scriptura, but seeing as it was never explicitly stated in the Old Testament, why wouldn’t he clearly teach it in his own writings, especially if he is worried about violations against it? The obvious answer to such questions is that Paul never explicitly taught Sola Scriptura because he did not believe it.
- If you want to use 1Cor 4:6 as a basis for Sola Scriptura, then you also must not “go beyond what is written”, and previously in this letter Paul says that “what is written” is Isaiah 29:14; Jeremiah 9:24; Job 5:13 and Psalm 94:11. Your Bible, therefore, would only contain these passages, because the addition of anymore passages would be going “beyond what is written.” Of course, the irony is that this would also mean throwing out 1Corinthians. Even if this notion of Scripture is defined in a broader context, your Bible could certainly not include anything written after 1Corinthians, because Paul refers to what is written, and makes no reference to what shall be written.
**1) ** The Catholic eisogetical explanation of Luke 1:28 (“Hail, full of grace” / “Hail, favored one”) is backed up by Sacred Tradition. Sola Scriptura is not.
2) The Doctrine of the Immaculate Conception does not have to be derived explicitly from Scripture in order to be true. Moreover, the Doctrine of the Immaculate Conception does not contain an inherent contradiction. Now, compare this with Sola Scriptura. Sola Scriptura is not found explicitly in Scripture, but it demands that, for the sake of validity, all Christians doctrines have to be. As I have stated before, it fails its own test. Therein lies the contradiction. And your claim that Sola Scriptura “is a principle not a doctrine” is just mincing words. Whatever you want to call it, it is still not in Scripture and therefore violates its own standard.
God bless
