Hi Wanna,
Apparently I have not explained my reasoning well enough, so I will give you a more complete explanation.
First of all, it was you who used the term ‘gambling’ to describe the way that I have made my decision. To me its more like placing a bet that the sun is going to come up again tomorrow. It is THAT obvious.
I believe that Christ wants us to know his teachings accurately. Being True God, He therefore must have designed a means by which we can know FOR SURE what those teachings are. In other words, he could not possibly have designed a means for us to know His Absolute Truth which would result in massive confusion about his Teachings.
Sola Scriptura has resulted in that massive confusion and so, it cannot possibly be a teaching of Christ, or the Apostles, or Scripture. As we have seen, even Protestant scholars admit that Sola Scriptura was not part of Christian teaching in the early Church, and that Sola Scriptura was a 16th century development.
Sola Scriptura, by its results, has proven itself to be something that Christ could NOT have sanctioned or designed.
For me, that eliminates ANY of the Sola Scriptura communities as being bearers of the FULL Truth. And yet, that does not automatically mean that the Catholic Church is what it says it is. So, what is next? Eastern Orthodoxy, which has FAR fewer individual competing Churches, is, on the surface at least, a possibility as being what Christ intended. However, even though their disunity is practically nothing compared to the Sola Scriptura communities, it still reveals or indicates that it is NOT something that Christ would have designed for us ALL to have Unity. This leads directly to the Roman Catholic Church, but while the failure of the Reformation communities and the Orthodox to maintain Unity proves them to be false, it still does not prove that the Catholic Church is what it claims to be.
In order to determine if the Roman Catholic Church is what it claims to be, it is necessary to compare its teachings to Scripture and also to logic and reason, and then, finally to the teachings of the Early Fathers. What I discovered, is that the teachings of the Catholic Church match up FAR better with Scripture than that of the Reformation communities. Logic and reason also favors a Church which actually HAS been able to hold an internal Unity of belief, and in fact, actually HAS a mechanism by which that unity of doctrine can and WILL be maintained. Lastly, in spite of the proof texting of many, the Early Fathers exhibit Catholic beliefs and not Protestant teaching.
So many people who come from the Reformation communities look at Catholic arguments about Scripture, reason and Church history and automatically dismiss them without a fair hearing, because, they are convinced that it is THEIR particular communion which ‘does it best’. That being the case, it seems that possibly the place to start is whether that particular communion, or Protestantism, really is True.
With all that being said, the only way that the Reformation communities can claim that their beliefs are ‘more Scriptural’ than the teachings of the Church is by the use of their Personal Interpretation, which has already been proven to NOT be a teaching of Christ.
So, rather than having ‘gambled’, which was a term that you applied to my decision process, I see it more as following a set of undeniable certainties. What I would consider to be a ‘gamble’ would be to stay in a communion which is known to be based on a false means of understanding Scripture and establishing doctrine.
If you think that this line of reasoning is faulty, then please explain specifically and exactly why and then we can discuss those specifics.
God Bless You Wanna, Topper