not sure I’m influenced by the reformation, but my main point was that man-made is open to corruption, God-given aint (so with man-made “trust but verify” shouldn’t be dismissed out of hand).
I’m sorry, I didin’t mean you personally were influenced by the reformation, but generally.
Who is to verify and how? You? Me? And who gave us that authority? Since Christ gave the authority to the Apostles, and so to their successors, to teach, preach and baptize in his name–a promise that is verified by the power of the Holy Spirit, we need not fear that any teaching of the Church is merely man-made.
it seems as though you are saying that having the Bible available for all to read has been detrimental to the Church; that we would be better off letting the Priests/Deacons read and interpret for us. Or am I misunderstanding?
Huh? Yes, you are not only misunderstanding you’re adding things to my words that aren’t there. Please don’t do that. I write what I mean–period.
I wrote nothing about our priests/deacons being the only ones who can/should interpret Scripture for us. I wrote that that is the duty and authority of the Magisterium, which is, as I also wrote, all the bishops of the world in union with the pope. Individual bishops, priests and deacons do not have the authority to interpret Scripture apart from Sacred Tradition, which is also under the authority of the Magisterium.
Anyone may read the Scriptures devotionally, but intrepreting it doctrinally is not for individuals to do all on their own. Scripture actually forbids doing so:
2Pt. 1[20] First of all you must understand this, that no prophecy of scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation,
[21] because no prophecy ever came by the impulse of man, but men moved by the Holy Spirit spoke from God.
Those men were God’s prophets in the OT and the Apostles in the NT.