Oral Tradition, is it infallible?

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This fallibility in all men is why there never has been and never will be 100% agreement on all doctrine and practices of faith by all who profess Christ (at least not on this earth).
And, this is why Christ gave one person the keys to the kingdom of Heaven to safeguard the full deposit of faith and its true meaning, and in the very next statement, firmly prophesied that the gates of hell, i.e. division/schism/heresy, would never prevail over His Church. The Catholic Church is both divine and human, just as Christ Himself is.
 
I’m not sure what you are meaning by this statement. Wouldn’t our own interpretation of the Gospel also be an opinion? Therefore, if every single person, with the exception of the 13 Apostles, can only form opinions of what they believed the Gospel message is, how can we ever know with 100% certainty what is Jesus’ truth?
We can know with 100% the things that matter, the things that are explicitly taught in scripture that are agreed to by Christianity as a whole. The early Creeds summarize those explicit teachings.

Theologians since have asked tough questions and given their opinions on the answers. Catholicism accepted some of the answers and rejected others. Protestants accepted some answers and rejected others. American Evangelicals accepted some answers and rejected others. In the end, the answers to questions about Grace/Free Will, Faith and Works, what is and isn’t sin and so forth are based on opinions. Some of our opinions have more scriptural support than others and are more likely to be true.

However, we all hold to the truth that Jesus is the Son of God, he came to redeem man from sin, and by trusting in Him and living a life of faith in Him, we are reconciled to God and will inherit eternal life.
 
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Do you think the writings of the ECF are infallible?
First we need to define infallible. The basic definition is an adjective meaning incapable of making mistakes or being wrong.

Do you think Jesus wanted us to have infallible knowledge of His plan for salvation?

Because if you do a book can not be infallible. Only the person reading the book can be fallible or infallible.

That being said nope never claimed the ECF’s were infallible. However, they give an insight of how the Early Christians understood the writings that would some day be combined to form the Bible.

Your response has no bearing on my question. I never claimed they were infallible I simple asked…
If we are going to take the ECF, many being the successors of the Apostles, basically the “faithful men” of 2 Timothy 2, with a grain of salt, wouldn’t it make sense to not even give any modern Evangelical of the last 500 years even a moment of our time? In my mind if I am to read the ECF, basically the smartest men of the first 300 years after Christ, with skepticism, why would I ever believe anyone that is even further removed from Christ?
The ECF’s don’t need to be infallible to give an understanding of the Scriptures during the first few centuries. The only thing I am asking is if you are skeptical of their writings why aren’t you skeptical of your interpretation or or your pastors interpretations?

God Bless
 
And, this is why Christ gave one person the keys to the kingdom of Heaven to safeguard the full deposit of faith and its true meaning, and in the very next statement, firmly prophesied that the gates of hell, i.e. division/schism/heresy, would never prevail over His Church. The Catholic Church is both divine and human, just as Christ Himself is.
The problem is that the popes and bishops are fallible as well and subject to the same things as everyone else. And these fallible men only have the ability to teach the Gospel as it was presented by Christ and taught through a supernatural gift by the Apostles. When proclaiming something as binding on the church the church must adhere to the teaching of the Gospel as it was given to the Apostles. Just saying “they taught it because we say they taught it isn’t good enough”. We are warned to not accept a gospel that was not given by the apostles. We are to test all teachings, no matter who they are from, by the teachings of the apostles. If they are not found in those teachings we are to reject them.

The only definitive proof we have of what the apostles taught is in the New Testament. Everything else are just claims. That is why sola scriptura is so important.
 
The problem is that the popes and bishops are fallible as well and subject to the same things as everyone else.
The Pope is not fallible on faith and morals. This charism of infallibility comes from Christ and is ordained by Christ. This is why Christ gave the keys to the Kingdom of Heaven to Saint Peter and his successor, to protect the Church from heresy/schism/error on faith and morals.
 
The only thing I am asking is if you are skeptical of their writings why aren’t you skeptical of your interpretation or or your pastors interpretations?
I am skeptical of my interpretation and my pastors interpretation. I’m aware of my selfishness and sinfulness and how it can skew my belief system. That is why I’m studying and examining the scriptures daily. However, I’m also confident that God’s grace is more powerful than any bad theology I may have. That my faith and trust in Christ and my adoption as a Son of God outweighs mistakes I may make in the flesh concerning theology.
 
The early Creeds summarize those explicit teachings.
The creeds are Oral tradition. The earliest written form of the Creeds dates to the 300’s. Why would you accept them?
Theologians since have asked tough questions and given their opinions on the answers.
On who’s authority? I’m not being unfair here. It’s an honest question. Forget everything you believe to be true and just imagine for one second that Jesus did leave Peter as His Chief Steward here on earth. Jesus tells Him who hears you hears me. (I’m not trying to prove anything here, just trying to get you to imagine that there might be the slightest possibility it might be true). Now imagine someone questions the authority Jesus left in charge. Jesus said who hears you hears me. It would be like not agreeing with Jesus. Can you even fathom the mortality of that sin? It blows my mind to even think about telling Jesus you don’t agree.
In the end, the answers to questions about Grace/Free Will, Faith and Works, what is and isn’t sin and so forth are based on opinions
So Jesus left us in the dark?

Why didn’t He believe any of these were important enough to give us explicit “written” teaching?

If we don’t agree a sin is a sin does that let us off the hook with Jesus? Is He obligated to redeem us from a sin we don’t agree is a sin?

God Bless
 
The Pope is not fallible on faith and morals.
The problem with that is there have been a bunch of unfaithful Popes. How can you be unfaithful (even to the point of murder) and yet still be infallible on faith and morals? That is like trusting the Gambino family to write and uphold the laws on murder and racketeering.
 
However, I’m also confident that God’s grace is more powerful than any bad theology I may have. That my faith and trust in Christ and my adoption as a Son of God outweighs mistakes I may make in the flesh concerning theology.
This is my point. How can you be confident? How do you know your selfishness and sinfulness isn’t just telling you what you want to hear. Maybe deep down you don’t want to have a visible authority in your life, that’s human nature we all despise authority. Maybe deep down you don’t want to believe you have to go to a priest for confession, because like on another thread a Catholic convert said I’m having troubles with confession, because when I was a non-Catholic I said sorry directly to God and never thought about it again. Now that I confessed to a Priest I worry more because I more often notice my sins now and it is troubling when I commit that sin again. Maybe you don’t want to have that greater responsibility.

I’m not trying to be preachy here I’m just pointing out that you faith is the trust you have put in your interpretations.

How can you know 2X + 3 = Y when you freely admit you have to start by making an opinion on what you believe the value of X is.

I believe Jesus not only left us the equation (the Bible) he also left us the answers (the Oral traditions that give us the definitive interpretations)

God Bless
 
Why didn’t He believe any of these were important enough to give us explicit “written” teaching?

If we don’t agree a sin is a sin does that let us off the hook with Jesus? Is He obligated to redeem us from a sin we don’t agree is a sin?
Because Christianity is not about a religious system. It is about a change in our hearts and souls. It isn’t information that we process in our brains that then provides us with a to do list. Is about the Holy Spirit giving us a new heart that produces love, joy, peace, patience, goodness, kindness, gentleness and self-control.

So no, I don’t think those things are as important as knowing Christ and the power of His resurrection. I don’t think Christ did either or else He would have made them more clear.

And the New Testament gives us list after list of sin. Our problem is we as humans either are legalistic and call things sin that the Bible doesn’t call sin or we rationalize that our sin is not sin because of our circumstances or feelings.
 
The problem with that is there have been a bunch of unfaithful Popes. How can you be unfaithful (even to the point of murder) and yet still be infallible on faith and morals? That is like trusting the Gambino family to write and uphold the laws on murder and racketeering.
I love this statement. To me this is the proof that defines Jesus promise in …
Matthew 16:18 And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell[c] shall not prevail against it.

Jesus built the Church and Jesus holds His Church true. Even when the worst of the worst Popes are in charge here on earth the Holy Spirit still has the final say. It blows my mind that these sinful Popes were unable to tear the Church apart from the inside out. To me that is not humanly possible. There can only be one reason the Catholic Church stayed strong through these years of corrupt leadership and Mathew 16:18 is the answer.

God Bless
 
The problem with that is there have been a bunch of unfaithful Popes. How can you be unfaithful (even to the point of murder) and yet still be infallible on faith and morals? That is like trusting the Gambino family to write and uphold the laws on murder and racketeering.
You’re confusing individual morals, or lacktherof, with the charism to accurately define morals. Just because the Pope is sinful, does not negate the charism of infallibility as it pertains to faith and morals. You are mixing moral impeccability with papal infallibility.
 
So no, I don’t think those things are as important as knowing Christ and the power of His resurrection. I don’t think Christ did either or else He would have made them more clear.
But here’s the rub, wouldn’t you agree that your selfish sinful self has no way of knowing if Jesus actually made them clear and it’s your subconscious, that has a hang up with organized religion, refusing to see the clearly because you just prefer doing your own thing.

Personally, I’m kind of a perfectionist. I don’t like wasting my time on something I have know way of knowing if I finished it correctly or not. I believe Jesus wants us to know the truth and not just form our own opinions. Jesus wanted unity and the only way to unity is with the truth, opinions get us know where.

God Bless
 
You’re confusing individual morals, or lacktherof, with the charism to accurately define morals. Just because the Pope is sinful, does not negate the charism of infallibility as it pertains to faith and morals. You are mixing moral impeccability with papal infallibility.
So a murder and a liar has the moral authority to tell others to not kill or lie?
 
So a murder and a liar has the moral authority to tell others to not kill or lie?
Saint Peter denied Our Lord three times. Yet, Our Lord gave him the Keys to the Kingdom to bind and loose matters of faith and morals. That charism does not prevent Saint Peter from sinning, but from promulgating error when defining faith and morals.
 
You seem to point to the Church fathers a lot. They also pointed to scriptures in regards to the real presence, the Pope and even Mary.
When you say “Church fathers” why not begin with the founding Church fathers of the faith? Why skip over to “father” that were actually hundreds of years after the apostolic church?

You know as well as I do that this is where the break-down begins. The founding fathers of the faith gave no consent to Mary in the way you do. They gave no consent or doctrinal instruction about any office of pope or priesthood or presence in the Eucharist. You know this, yet you point to people who do, to make your case.

If you can find these so-called truths in the foundation, we will gladly believe you when you talk about them in the structure itself. I don’t think you are ready to reconcile this glaring inconsistency. You want us to embrace the structure of the CC while ignoring what the foundation actually reveals.

If a reformer spouted off their belief in the Pope’s office, I’m not sure they would be a true reformer. But nonetheless, if they did, the same suspicions would be present in my willingness to listen to them.
 
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When you say “Church fathers” why not begin with the founding Church fathers of the faith?..
I never said I skip over the founding fathers. Do you honestly believe, with all the verses I sight, that I don’t read the Bible?

Back to 2 Timothy 2, which you don’t seem to want to discuss. I believe the Church Fathers, some of which wrote within 20 to 50 years of the the Apostles are the 1st generation faithful men that Timothy was to entrust the true meaning of the gospels. Some of these fathers studied under the Apostles themselves. I believe their writings came from the command to teach others. I mean if the written word is the only thing you are willing to accept don’t you think the Holy Spirit would have known this and the true meaning of 2 Timothy 2 would be for the faithful men to keep writing their understandings of Scripture?

Why wouldn’t we use these faithful men’s writings to help us form our understanding of what the Apostles meant?
You know as well as I do that this is where the break-down begins…
No disagreement on interpretation is what causes your breakdown. I fully see and understand the teachings about Mary, the Pope and the Eucharist in the Bible. The difference between you and me is you read it and say that is man made tradition. When I read it I see the New Testament concealed in the Old and the Old Testament revealed in the New and my mind is blown. Only an all powerful God could have written such and amazing intertwined history. There is no way these connections between the Old and the New could be thought up by man. Not possible. These revelations could have only come from God who planned them from the beginning of time.
You want us to embrace the structure of the CC while ignoring what the foundation actually reveals.
Nope I have nothing to gain here. I am fully aware that I am not the one who can convince you of the truth. My only goal is to convince you of a truth that we can historically prove, that nothing that has ever been or ever will be can exist without authority. This is the only claim I make. When dealing with fallible, selfish, sinful humans, there always has to be an authority. I believe Jesus being smart than all of us combined knew this and showed us His authority, that will be with us to the end of the age in 2 Timothy 2. You have two choices continue to ignore my questions on the meaning of 2 Timothy 2 or pray that the Holy Spirit will tear down that wall that makes you ignore this verse.
If a reformer spouted off their belief in the Pope’s office, I’m not sure they would be a true reformer.
I might be misreading this statement but it sure looks like you reject ecumenism here?

Are you here to have an ecumenical dialogue about verses like 2 Timothy 2 or do you just come to preach to us? 🤔

God Bless
 
So a murder and a liar has the moral authority to tell others to not kill or lie?
Jesus taught it was possible during the old covenant, why wouldn’t we believe He couldn’t make it possible under the New and greater Covenant?
Matthew 23:1-3
23 Then Jesus said to the crowds and to his disciples, 2 “The scribes and the Pharisees sit on Moses’ seat; 3 therefore, do whatever they teach you and follow it; but do not do as they do, for they do not practice what they teach.
God Bless
 
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