The point, Servant, is that you were questioning the validity of Luke’s Gospel by asking:
My point is that the Church declared Luke’s writings as the word of God. The decision was not based upon some human measure of credibility which is definitely implied in your statement, but rather on the guidance of the Holy Spirit, just as were Peter’s writings even though he denied the Lord three times. I am certainly not questioning that Peter had the protection of the Holy Spirit. I am only pointing out that this is the case regardless of how fit one may seem in human terms, therefore your statement is baseless as to “we must use reason at some point”.
You have little to no understanding of what is meant by Sacred Tradition. The deposit of faith was whole and entire before anything was put to writing. The Church did not depend upon Paul’s epistles for its Tradition. They accepted them and canonized them because they comported with the truth already held.
No, he did not. It is only your biased interpretation that contradicts because you do not understand. Do you really think that all the bishops involved in canonizing the New Testament just missed that fact that they included contradicting texts as the word of God? Do you think that you are more qualified than they to make this determination?
The dates given for Luke’s Gospel are between 59 - 100 AD.
I am not about to get into the nuances of the Gospel of Luke because it makes no difference to this conversation. He is attributed to the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles.
Steve