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FaithfulAndTrue
Guest
Yes! I agree with you! This is why the divide should not be whether or not we are subject to scripture [God], but on the specific interpretations of that scripture. Because the Catholic Church would not teach something that is against what it interprets as contradictory to scripture. And that is the application of sola scriptura.Sure, He can speak authoritatively, but is that authority understood? What good is authority in a sea of ignorance? No one is saying God is not authoritative. But authority is meaningless unless that which is decreed authoritatively is correctly interpreted and understood. So we can go on and on all day about how God is the final authority - no problem at all there. And we can even say He speaks authoritatively through the written Word. Sure. But you can’t stop there. You have to acknowledge the need for correct understanding, and more to the point, a universal understanding. I might begin to agree with you if it happened to also be that those who held to SS all held the same understanding of that which is contained inside it. But that is not the case is it? In fact, the disunity of Christianity is caused by this mistaken belief in unaccompanied authority of the written Word. It can only speak authoritatively if there is no debate about that which it says, and even then, universal agreement does not define objective truth. Thus, it can only speak both authoritatively AND inerrantly if it is interpreted by those entrusted and empowered by Christ Himself to do so, and utilized by those who submit to this authority and do not stray from the framework of the deposit of faith in their reading of it.
Again, I’m not saying that it should be subject to them ALONE, but rather it should be subject to them where they are authoritative.No. It cannot decide on something that scripture is against because the Church IS the Tradition within which Sacred Scripture came to be a treasure of Christianity, and that Church is protected by the Holy Spirit from inerrantly interpreting the written word and from passing down oral tradition regarding matters of faith and morals. Again, the Church is NOT subject to the Scriptures ALONE.