Grace_Seeker:
It is for this reason, because we Protestants accept as true (as an apriori assumption, not because the Bible says so) that the scriptures are indeed a measuring standard or a rule.
Admitting this to be the case is at least logically consistent.
I do think, however, you need to limit your statement as applying to “some” Protestants.
Since you admit that you can’t prove this assumption from Scripture alone. That’s really the only part of you post that’s relevant to this particular thread.
And because we accept them as a meausring standard we us them that way as well. We compare every other teaching against them to see if that teaching measures up. Does the teaching conform to the standard and rules of faith and practive taught in the scriptures or is it a new teaching?
And this is the inconsistent next step that always gets taken.
Though not “circular” in logic, your position does require you to have a double standard.
You expect everything except for your assumed standard of belief to conform to a standard of being confirmed by individual biblical interpretation.
Where we differ with Catholics is on the Catholic Church’s teaching that “the [Catholic] Church alone possesses the means to understand and interpret Scripture infallibly.” Why? Because we don’t see that statement supported in the canon. It does NOT “measure up.” It is simply the opinion of the Catholic Church, not the actual teaching of the measuring standard that we use for faith and practice.
Catholics of course read the same scripture (well mostly the same scriptures) and come to exactly the opposite conclusion.
Indeed, when Catholics ask Protestants to point to a time that the Catholic Church has ever taught something that was an error, this teaching itself is the first and foremost of those errors which we would cite as evidence of the fallibility of the teaching magesterium of the Catholic Church in its role of teaching the faith. This is not to say that they have always been wrong. Indeed, I accept most of the teachings of the Catholic Church as right on. But they are fallible, in the sense that they do have the potential to err.
And the Catholic Church is certainly not uniquely alone in being qualified to interpret and apply the faith to daily life and practice in ways that are also correct.
The validity [or lack of validity] of this assertion has nothing to do with the subject at hand.
Discerning when it is one and when the other, that is the work of the Holy Spirit which is not the unique property of the Catholic Church, but available to all who are in Christ.
Except that the simple fact that you and most Catholics have diametrically opposed views on what we each believe scripture says invalidates this assertion.
Either you need to maintain that every time you disagree with someone (Catholic or fellow Protestant) on their interpretation of scripture that one of you has the “Holy Spirit” and the other does not, or that the Holy Spirit has led Christians to diametrically opposed “truths.’
But again this is a subject for another thread.
(Texts supporting that view being previously edited out of this discussion as not relevant. Showing in my view the bias of this forum against open and honest discussion,)
Well actually all you have to do if you want to have an “open and honest discussion” on whether or not scripture supports taking the position that the Holy Spirit will lead individual Christians to discern the truth of scripture is to start a thread on and then stick to that subject.
I can start one for you if you’d like.
Chuck