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Duane1966
Guest
And yet a fair number of answers for most of us is not good enough. Who cares that the Bible is clear enough where people agree, it is where it is unclear where we need a magisterium. And yet whether Christian marriage is dissoluble is maybe more important than the question of homosexuality, as many more people are affected by the taint of divorce. Funny thing about what they say about not giving the Church a definitive answer on divorce. Of all the early Church fathers, I believe only one said Christian marriage was dissoluble. Every other Church father said it was clear from Scripture, that marriage was indissoluble. Yet these authors say the Bible is unclear on this issue. Funny, the Catholic Church says it is clear.This has floated around the internet for a few years now and has been linked from various PRO-Catholic sites in order to improve the level of apologetics
Unsound Sticks, or, Arguments Catholics Shouldn’t Use
freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2243954/posts
#4, #8, and #17 seem to apply to your points
- Do not exaggerate the inadequacy of Sola Scriptura, as if it were not possible to understand the Bible at all without the Magisterium.** In reality, if one, without help from any external authority, gives the Bible a diligent, sincere, and attentive reading, it will be possible to achieve the right answer to a fair number of questions.** Sola Scriptura is inadequate because it cannot give the Church definitive answers to every question which she needs answered in order to function as the Church. For example, it cannot give the Church a definitive answer regarding whether Christian marriage is dissoluble. On the other hand, the Bible is clear enough that the text alone suffices to tell the Church that homosexuality is evil, among other things. If one fails to recognize this then it will be impossible to come to terms with the patristic witness to the clarity of Scripture
And they are wrong again. From Radio Replies:
- Do not cite 2 Peter 1:20-21 against the Protestant principle of private interpretation of Scripture. St. Peter explains, in the preceding verses, that the Apostles did not invent their claims about the glory of the Lord Jesus Christ, but saw it first hand when He revealed it to them in the Transfiguration. He then exhorts his readers to heed the “prophetic word.” He continues, “No prophecy of Scripture is a matter of one’s own interpretation, because no prophecy ever came by the impulse of man, but men borne by the Holy Spirit spoke from God.”** In context, the “interpretation” which St. Peter refers to is on the part of the prophet, not the reader.** That is, St. Peter’s point is that no prophet made up his own prophecies. The prophets spoke what they received from God to speak, just as the Apostles spoke what they received from God to speak on Mount Tabor. Hence, their words rest on divine and not human authority.
- Peter says that “no prophecy of Scripture is made by private interpretation,” but he adds, “for the holy men of God spoke, inspired by the Holy Ghost.” 2 Pet. I., 20-21. You leave out those last words which show that he refers to the prophets, not to ordinary readers.
A simple internet search also brought up many Protestants who reject the interpretation in the article you linked to.The last words you quote do not qualify the preceding verse as you think. There is no doubt whatever that St. Peter warns against private interpretation in verse 20, giving the reason in verse 21. The sense is as follows: “Do not presume to think you may privately interpret Scripture for yourself. If Scripture were merely the result of natural human thought, it would be different. But it is not the result of merely human thought. The holy writers were inspired by God-and it is the Spirit of God, not your own reasoning, which can dictate the true sense.” That Spirit of God operates through the Catholic Church, the appointed and authentic religious guide of men. In the same Epistle, III., 16, St. Peter obviously shows that he was opposed to private interpretation when he says that there are many things in Scripture hard to be understood, and which the unlearned and unstable wrest to their own destruction.
You must not have read any of my posts clear. I have never asked this question. I have seen good arguments by Protestants. The arguments were poor, in my opinion, in the article you linked to.
- Never ask, if a Protestant believes his salvation is eternally secure, what motivation he has to do good and avoid evil. The answer is obvious (and embarrassing to the Catholic who asked the question): the love of God. The love of God is sufficient motivation to pursue holiness with all vigor, absent any considerations of self interest. The most that a Catholic can argue in this respect is that Catholic theology, which furnishes men with both the baser motive of self interest and the loftier motive of the love of God, is superior in the practical order. For, in many cases, the baser motive will effectually turn a man from evil to good whereas the loftier motive, even though it should have, did not.