V
Verita
Guest
First a little background:
In April I made a decision to permanently leave my protestant faith and join the Catholic Church. With my husband, a cradle Catholic, I entered a period of intense study of the Bible, the Catechism and the Early Church Fathers. Everything I read and learned only confirmed and strengthened my decision. Since coming here I have continued to learn in a more practical setting. However, there are still some things I am unclear on and sometimes things people say only serve to increased the confusion. (We’re only human, after all, and not infallible.) I’d like to put down some of my thoughts on the subjects that I’m still uncertain of and hopefully the wise people here can help me understand the Catholic Faith better.
What does it mean that Scripture is inspired by God? Both Catholics and Protestants believe it.
As a protestant (non-denominational) I was taught nothing really specific about it. But I always had the impression, from years of sermons and Sunday school lessons, that it was God himself writing the books of the Bible through its human authors. Perhaps as if God were whispering the words in their ears. Whatever His direct role in the actual composition of the words, we believed that God had intentionally caused the books of the Bible to be written to serve future Christians as a complete guide and source of all Christian truth. It was the “Word of God”, the book he left behind specifically for us to use.
I am still unclear about what the Church teaches about the inspiration of the Bible. I know that the Church considers the Bible to be only part of the “Word of God” and that the Bible is inerrant. (My husband has pointed out to me in the past that the word infallible isn’t accurate for describing the Bible since the Bible is not an acting agent.) But what does the Church consider to be God’s role in the authorship of the Bible? How much is God and how much is the human author? Did God plan the Bible to be written, or was it our human nature that made it necessary?
My own recent thoughts on the subject are as follows:

In April I made a decision to permanently leave my protestant faith and join the Catholic Church. With my husband, a cradle Catholic, I entered a period of intense study of the Bible, the Catechism and the Early Church Fathers. Everything I read and learned only confirmed and strengthened my decision. Since coming here I have continued to learn in a more practical setting. However, there are still some things I am unclear on and sometimes things people say only serve to increased the confusion. (We’re only human, after all, and not infallible.) I’d like to put down some of my thoughts on the subjects that I’m still uncertain of and hopefully the wise people here can help me understand the Catholic Faith better.
What does it mean that Scripture is inspired by God? Both Catholics and Protestants believe it.
As a protestant (non-denominational) I was taught nothing really specific about it. But I always had the impression, from years of sermons and Sunday school lessons, that it was God himself writing the books of the Bible through its human authors. Perhaps as if God were whispering the words in their ears. Whatever His direct role in the actual composition of the words, we believed that God had intentionally caused the books of the Bible to be written to serve future Christians as a complete guide and source of all Christian truth. It was the “Word of God”, the book he left behind specifically for us to use.
I am still unclear about what the Church teaches about the inspiration of the Bible. I know that the Church considers the Bible to be only part of the “Word of God” and that the Bible is inerrant. (My husband has pointed out to me in the past that the word infallible isn’t accurate for describing the Bible since the Bible is not an acting agent.) But what does the Church consider to be God’s role in the authorship of the Bible? How much is God and how much is the human author? Did God plan the Bible to be written, or was it our human nature that made it necessary?
My own recent thoughts on the subject are as follows:
- Jesus no where writes his teachings down, no where speaks of writings to be a source of our faith. What He did do was choose 12 men and ordained them for the role of preaching the gospel and establishing His Church. He does speak of the Church He will build and even talks about the Church’s ultimate authority in matters of dispute.
- Jesus, as the Word of God, is Divine Revelation. The revelation He brought as the incarnation was entrusted to the Apostles who he ordained (breathed on) as His successors.
- The Apostles were promised the Holy Spirit for their guide who would lead them into all truth. Therefore, the Apostles were infallible. They themselves were divinely inspired when preaching the gospel and forming the Church.
- The Bible then is inerrant and divinely inspired not because God was writing it through the authors, but because the authors themselves were passing along a message of Divine Revelation and were themselves inspired and infallible. It was the message and the men, not the letters and books.
- The writings of these inspired men then become part of Sacred Tradition, part of the teachings handed on to us by the men God chose. They are merely in another form, written record instead of spoken instruction, and not superior to the oral teachings of the Apostles in any way. They are a tool and a resource for all Christians who are so many centuries removed from the original revelation.