I do know the Church cannot teach any old thing that comes into her head.
They havenāt. The basis is Divine revelation. We donāt know the reasons behind the Trinity, yet it is a dogma nonetheless, simply by virtue of it being Divine revelation. We donāt know why the Epistle to the Hebrew, for example, was included in Scripture. Yet, the canon of Scripture is a Divinely revealed dogma. We donāt know why the Son is āeternally begotten of the Fatherā but even if it were never explicitly taught before, the Church has the Divine authority to discern what is and is not dogma. Faith in the dogmas of Catholicism has the following reason: āHe who hears you, hears me. He who rejects you rejects me.ā
The ordinary universal magisterium affirms that inerrancy of Sacred Scripture is* de fide* dogma, a Divinely revealed doctrine. But what about the opposite view?
Can you provide the patristic evidence, councilar support, and or magisterial texts for your thesis? The early Church was quick to pounce on any novel doctrines that popped up out of the blue. Even the date of Easter was met with much dispute in the early Church. So, if someone were to suddenly say, out of the blue, that the Sacred Scriptures are without any error, one would expect that if this was such a novel teaching that there would be much argument against such a view. Yet, we see no such thing in the early Church. No saint, doctor, or pope has ever held the view that the Sacred Scriptures are not inerrant. None. Yet, there are many fathers, councils, and popes over many centuries who have agreed that the Sacred Scriptures are authored by the Holy Spirit, and as such, are without all error. They havenāt posed this view as speculative, but as certain.
So, looking solely at the patristic, councilar and other magisterial evidence, your thesis is in no way Catholic. St. Vincent de Lerinās rule of faith is that Catholic faith is that which has the characteristics of: 1) antiquity, 2) universality, and 3) consent.
Antiquity means that it is not new, that thereās evidence from the past that the early Church believed this teaching either implicitly or explicitly. Universality means that it is not merely a regional teaching, but can be found in various places in the universal Church. Consent means that in antiquity, the fathers taught similarly, and if there was some dissent among them (e.g. apokatastasis), nearly all the fathers agreed. Often, when something is met with such dissent, councilar decisions provide evidence of consent.
Of the two of us, Iām the only one who has provided patristic, councilar, and magisterial evidence that the rule of St. Vincent has been met. Your only rebuttal is that all these saints, ecumenical councils, and popes may have been wrong, or merely giving their speculative opinion with the intent that Catholics may legitimately hold the contrary view and be a āgood Catholic.ā Yet, you have not shown any evidence to support your thesis. Which other early fathers of our Church were quick to disagree with these? Your argument is based upon the mere possibility of error, without any support whatsoever that the early Church ever disagreed with the doctrine. It is clear to me that comparatively, there was more disputes about the Divinity of Jesus Christ in Church history than whether Sacred Scripture is or is not inerrant.
Catholicism is based upon the rule of faith which relies upon revelation and principles of dogmatic theology. If you would attempt the same, that would be more compelling that simply telling us over and over again that Church, century after century, despite being guided by the Holy Spirit, is wrong.
These are levels of dogmatic certainty as I understand them are:
- De fide (either by the repeated teaching of the universal ordinary magisterium or definitive through the solemn magisterium). This is the highest level of dogmatic certainty, considered infallible.
- Sententia Certa (certain teaching). Lacking a solemn definition and it is not clear that such a teaching has been repeatedly held by the universal ordinary magisterium. These teachings over time can be understood more clearly as de fide when it becomes a repeated assertion by the universal ordinary magisterium. The manner or words used by the magisterium when promulgating sententia certa is what makes it clear that such a teaching is ācertainā to Catholics, and no longer a matter of free opinion.
continuedā¦