Dear awalt:
You are being somewhat impatient. I did not think it would make sense to try to reply to all of your points in a single response. Please give me some time.
Your impression is correct. I do not accept the “teaching document,” “Gift of Scripture,” as a helpful statement of Catholic teachings in these matters. At the very least the document gives the wrong overall impression and has to be read very circumspectly to avoid falling into error.
For example, consider your quote: “We should not expect total accuracy from the Bible in other, secular matters. We should not expect to find in Scripture full scientific accuracy or complete historical precision.” It is possible to understand this as warning the reader against expecting the detail and evidence to which modern readers have grown accustomed. For example, in a modern historical text, one would expect documentary citation and an account of the chain of evidence. However, the genealogies of Matthew and Luke do not give any such “documentation” to substantiate the reported facts. This would be expected in secular or historical writing now, and is not properly to be expected of the Scripture. In this sense, the first sentence of the quoted text must be read with an emphasis on “total” and the second sentence must read “scientific accuracy” and “historical precision” as references to academic standards for texts intended to persuade modern readers of given facts.
Though the quoted text can be interpreted in this fashion by a wary reader, it seems unlikely that a casual reader would be lead to a proper understanding of the Church’s teachings in this matter, and therefore it seems that the authors of the document – who are un-named in the version that I reviewed – do not, in fact, believe in the inerrancy of Scripture in all its parts.
There are also other difficulties with this document. There is an interesting, though somewhat aggressive, critique of this document available. See,
A Critical Review of the Document ‘The Gift of Scripture’. This document does have some examples of writings by Pope John Paul II that are at odds with the claims made in the “teaching document.”
This brings up a general sticking place in our exploration of this question. You seem to limit the material you will consider to the last few (20? 40?) years, and to exclude documents before that time. Your recent post even suggests that an encyclical which is invoked by the Second Vatican council and included as a reference in the text of Dei Verbum is not thereby “republished” and “re-endorsed” by the authority of the Council, but rather remains “too old” for your standards. By this logic, the Second Vatican Council’s inclusion of Providentissimus Deus, and its affirmation that,
This Sacred Council . . . proposes again the decrees of the Second Council of Nicea, the Council of Florence and the Council of Trent. (Lumen Gentium, art 51.),
and again,
The dogmatic principles which were laid down by the Council of Trent remaining intact . . .” (Sacrosanctum Concilium, art 55.),
along with other such invocations and references, have no effect or meaning.
Further your posts so far suggest that you are willing to over-rule “older” magisterial teachings in favor of non-magisterial writings which are of more recent publication. Even the implied private approval of a Cardinal, group of Bishops, or of a recent Pope is accepted as superceding the formal encyclicals of Popes and published statements and canons of Ecumenical Councils, even though the more recent statements are neither definitive nor stated as teachings of the Church.
This procedure seems to me to be unjustified. In deed, since the Second Vatican Council closed over 40 years ago, this logic may reject even the teachings of that council.
Please consider who would be rejected by this mode of proceeding: besides Mr. Dennis Barton and me, it rejects all members of the Church, Doctors, Saints, Popes, and other pastors from Adam until 1967, it also rejects all current members of the Church Militant who understand these “earlier” teachings to be integral to the Faith.
This view narrows the Church of Christ to a recent invention, un-tethered from the Apostolic Tradition. It is a tragic disintegration, and there is no need for it.
Spiritus Sapientiae nobiscum.
John Hiner