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Miguel_Sastre
Guest
That’s a non-sequitur, Paul, if there ever was one. Let’s substitute “sola Roma” for “sola scriptura,” and see if your reasoning holds: “The problem is that you can’t find it from Scripture, Tradition and/or the Magisterium–otherwise there would be no doctrinal disputes within Christianity.”I agree with you that there is a real truth out there to be grasped. The problem is that you can’t find it from Scripture alone - otherwise there would be no doctrinal disputes within Christianity.
Refutation: If this were true, Paul, then there would be no doctrinal disputes in Christianity, which I suspect for you means “Catholicism.” But even within Catholicism there is now, and always has been doctrinal disputes. Even by adding two more infallibilities (i.e., Tradition and the Magisterium), you have not eliminated dispute. In fact, you’ve complicated matters precisely by adding two more infallibilities. Here are just some of the problems that ensue:
- In addition to defending an inerrant Bible, you also have to defend the inerrancy of Tradition and the inerrancy of the popes and councils. That’s a tall order, especially when the three doctrines that the pope had defined (including his own infallibility!) either contradict scripture or lack a sufficient basis in it in order to bind the conscience of the believer.
- Papal infallibility has actually lead to more, not less dissent within your communion simply because many have come to the conclusion that unless the pope uses his charism of infallibility, everything undefined is up for grabs. Thus there has been an unprecedented tendency toward dissent and disobedience since the 1870 definition.
- The face-saving need to add a development of doctrine theory to supplement “sola Roma,” since clearly many dogmas that long had been presumed to have been directly taught by Jesus and the apostles are now–in light of a modern historical consciousness–now known not to have been taught by them.
- The necessity to authorize both historical anachronism and eisegesis in order to read back present dogmas into an age when such beliefs were non existent and then argue that such beliefs were always “implicit” or “latent” or “there in germ form” all along.
Especially when you begin with “sola Roma” as your presupposition and then approach the text in search for confirmation of your beliefs. If you torture a text long enough, Paul, it can be made to say anything.And the liability to faulty understanding of scripture can not be overstated.
Your mistake is believing first that Rome cannot error, and then making the evidence try to agree with your prior assumption.Your mmistake here is that you don’t recognize taht there is nothing that The Catholic Church teaches that is in opposition to scripture. It elaborates on scripture, but it does not contradict it.
Rather than do that, Paul, which would be the subject for another thread for every doctrine I could mention (i.e., infant baptism, baptismal regeneration, the sinlessness of Mary,infallibility, the theory that tradition is on par with scripture, etc), I’ll just highlight your qualification: “in essence.” Compare that to the WCF which said that doctrine must be based on either what is clearly stated in scripture or what must be derived from it by “good and necessary consequence.”Name a Catholic dogma that can’t be traced back in its essence to the Apostles?
Granted that all parties admit that there is nothing in Luke 1:28 that explicitly says Mary was conceived without sin, is there anything there that would obligate us to conclude this by good and necessary consequence? Not at all. In fact, there is no reason whatsoever to think Luke was asserting an implicit doctrine of Mary’s sinlessness in the Angel’s greeting and every reason to suppose that “sola Roma” is at work here. In other words, begin with the defined belief as defined by Rome, then reason backwards to the conclusion that it must be contained in scripture, at least “in essence.” Well, Paul, what belief could NOT be grounded in scripture using this methodology? Rome’s approach has no controls here because Rome, not scripture or tradition, is the standard by which beliefs are determined. That’s because you believe first in sola Roma and only in scripture and tradition insofar as they agree with Rome. Intellectual honesty calls for you to admit at least this much, Paul.
Because I can trace my baptismal beliefs back to the New Testament. But you can’t and neither could they. Did you know that the earliest known reference to infant baptism is found in Tertullian and in it he questions the practice? The historical trail dries up there. Anything prior to Tertullian is based on inference and conjecture. But there simply is no evidence for anything but believers baptism prior to that. And yet you call me the heretic. That’s laughable since the best evidence is on my side, not yours. If you doubt me, then prove your position. Demonstrate for us from the historical record, which includes the scriptures themselves, that infants were baptized in the apostolic age. I already know you can’t do it. But if you think otherwise, by all means, prove me wrong.Okay, so you are more heretical than Luther or Calvin. How does this make you more credible?