S
Safia
Guest
Looks like I forgot to mention here, too – eep – I always try to cite. I pulled from John Salza.
Hi, Mrjinx,
All of this to show that the Apostles taught according to Scripture?
The only real snag in this argument you are putting forward is that the first word of New Testament scripture had not yet been written by 47AD (wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_the_earliest_book_written_in_the_New_Testament) So, the only thing that could be reviewed by these early Catholic converts and Jews was the Old Testament.
SS is not proven by any of the text you provided. The real issue is that not everything is written down in Scripture. And, as I have previously told you, John tells us this twice - just in case we were not paying attention the first time!
But here is one you may want to look at carefully - it is from this Sunday’s Gospel (4th Sunday in Ordinary Time according to the Latin Rite). Mark 1:21-28. Now, what I found interesting is that Jesus is just starting off His Public Ministry - and He goes to Capernaum and stays there one week BEFORE going to local synagogue to preach and expel a demon. So, what do you think He did during the week He stayed there … where did He say? Did He pray? do any miracles? teach the Apostles? Say and do nothing for a week? Nothing is said - but, He had to do something to keep the interest of His Apostles.
Ultimately, finding a justification for everything through Scripture is going to lead to failure and frustration because Scripture only has part of the answer. Besides, there is this problem with personal interpretation of Scripture - and how we have 30,000+ Protestant groups today. None of them can agree on the fundamentals! The proof is right there in the yellow pages of your phone book under ‘Church, Protestant’.
God bless
But this is still incorrect. Eating with Gentiles and eating animals that were considered unclean both contradict the OT scripture.Hi tqualey,
you would note that I said that their teaching, tradition, practice were done in accordance with scripture not against. I have place in bracket Old Testament . I am keenly aware of the new testament not being written at that time.![]()
Hi tqualey,
you would note that I said that their teaching, tradition, practice were done in accordance with scripture not against. I have place in bracket Old Testament . I am keenly aware of the new testament not being written at that time.![]()
But this is still incorrect. Eating with Gentiles and eating animals that were considered unclean both contradict the OT scripture.
Thanks. Sorry I was so quick to respondHi, Newsy,
Great post!
God bless
Where did you find your definition of sola scriptura?
That’s fine. Lutherans, for example, are perfectly willing to accept that the early creeds, and councils, and even our own confessions, while not at the level of scripture, are important to the instruction of the faith. Your first two sentences state the Lutheran position; that scripture is the final norm, to which all teachers and teachings, and doctrines are held accountable.
Yes. the Church. From Augsburg:* Of Ecclesiastical Order they teach that no one should publicly teach in the Church or administer the Sacraments unless he be regularly called. *
JonNc
You totaly miss the point.
That’s not the intent of sola scriptura.
And how does does this dispute sola scriptura?
And how does this relate to sola scriptura?
Sola scriptura doesn’t say this.
I was never taught this either.
No. Sola scriptura is apractice of hermeunetics of the Church, and no more “subjective” than the scripture/Tradition/Magisterium hermeunetc model. It is still subject to human beings interpreting.
Irrelevent to the intent of sola scriptura.
Jon
But this is still incorrect. Eating with Gentiles and eating animals that were considered unclean both contradict the OT scripture.
Are stating the Jews were allowed to eat uncean food and with Gentiles under the OT?Newsy,
I think you are fast to answer without considering that the apostle were quoting from the old testament.
Messiah’s death on the cross was to bring to an end the old covenant and his blood remember ratified the new covenant. all this is clear from the old testament, from which the apostles taught, and PROPHETS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT prophesied that the gentiles will be a part of his people.
Maybe you would want me to take the time to highlight the so many scriptures. scripture (new testament) never said Peter or Paul or the Gentiles they were associating with were eating unclean animals ,you are making an assumption - which is not based on the context.
You said "you would note that I said that their teaching, tradition, practice were done in accordance with scripture not against. I have place in bracket Old Testament ". So I was pointing out the error in your statement. I understand what you are saying in the post I have quoted, but that is not what you said in the earlier post. You were trying to say that the Apostles never contradicted Scripture, the OT, I am just showing you that is a false statement. If it was understood that the OT was completed, that all animals were now clean, why is Peter’s vision recorded in Acts? If this was common knowledge, then it would not need to be recorded. As for eating with Gentiles, that is why the early Christians were shocked at first reaction, if this was understood then why were they shocked? Where does it say that these thing changed before the Apostles changed them? I believe they were acting in accordance with God’s will, but they were working against what Jews were taught.Newsy,
I think you are fast to answer without considering that the apostle were quoting from the old testament.
Messiah’s death on the cross was to bring to an end the old covenant and his blood remember ratified the new covenant. all this is clear from the old testament, from which the apostles taught, and PROPHETS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT prophesied that the gentiles will be a part of his people.
Maybe you would want me to take the time to highlight the so many scriptures. scripture (new testament) never said Peter or Paul or the Gentiles they were associating with were eating unclean animals ,you are making an assumption - which is not based on the context.
Newsy,
I think you are fast to answer without considering that the apostle were quoting from the old testament.
Messiah’s death on the cross was to bring to an end the old covenant and his blood remember ratified the new covenant. all this is clear from the old testament, from which the apostles taught, and PROPHETS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT prophesied that the gentiles will be a part of his people.
Maybe you would want me to take the time to highlight the so many scriptures. scripture (new testament) never said Peter or Paul or the Gentiles they were associating with were eating unclean animals ,you are making an assumption - which is not based on the context.
Hello… mrjinx…
I think we’ve been disconnected.![]()
How is it that you declare ALL Protestants to subscribe to Sola Scriptura? Pretty sure you need a lesson in religious history. Not all Protestants are the same, not by a long shot.I’d like to know how/where Protestants justify sola scriptura – the position that all things necessary for salvation and concerning faith and life are taught in the Bible clearly enough for the ordinary believer to find it there and understand it – within the “proof” I’ve outlined below (drawn from Robert A. Sungenis). I’m genuinely curious. It’s self-evident to me, especially for someone who returned to the Catholic faith only after deep agnosticism and in-depth research.
Problems of Coherence
Sola scriptura is incoherent because it it is (1) unbiblical, and (2) logically inconsistent.
(1) It is unbiblical.
– (a) The Bible nowhere teaches or assumes sola scriptura.
We can agree that Jesus, Paul, and others claim that Scripture has divine authority, and Jesus appeals to its authority. But nowhere does Jesus assume that what is written is the only source of continuing divine authority, and nowhere is it stated that “God’s will throughout history has been to commit wholly to writing all revelation and instruction that He intended as an ongoing authority for His people and their salvation.” All of the texts typically referenced (i.e., 2 Tim 3:16, Acts 17:10-12, etc.) “simply do not say this nor can they be made to imply this, without assuming in advance what is proper to one’s exegetical conclusions.”
– (b) The Bible assumes a larger context of delegated authority.
“God is never seen conferring authority on Scripture in an historical and social vacuum. Scripture is always found, rather, within a community in which God has conferred authority upon lawfully ordained human leaders. These leaders are always either (1) appointed by God Himself, and publicly confirmed in their appointment by a miraculous ministry, or (2) appointed in legitimate and lawful succession by authorities having their ultimate origin in the first category … Jesus and the apostles are seen demanding obedience not only to the written Word of God, but to the living decisions of the Church (Mt 18:12-20; cf. Acts 15, 16:4).”
– (c) The Bible assumes extrabiblical traditions.
"… the position of sola scriptura is self-defeating, because it rests on a presupposition that cannot be proved from Scripture (let alone from history) – namely, that the whole content of God’s revealed will for the ongoing instruction of His Church was committed “wholly to writing,” so that no unwritten residue of divinely inspired instruction survived from the oral teachings of Jesus and His apostles that remained binding on God’s people after the New Testament (NT) was written … But where does Scripture say this? How could one claim to know this? …
"First, if all bindingly authoritative oral instruction ceased with the death of the last apostle and if the early churches did not have copies of all the New Testament books until well after that time, who spoke for the Lord Jesus and the apostles in the interim?
"Second, how can only plausibly imagine the transition from the partially oral framework of authoritative instruction (OT + teachings of Jesus and apostles) to a wholly written framework (OT + NT) required by this hypothesis?
“The writings of the early Church are filled with extrabiblical sayings of Jesus, practices of the Christian community, liturgical and Eucharistic formulas, and so forth, which presuppose the divine origin and authority of these things.”
– (d) The Bible assumes the liturgical context of the worshipping community.
“The Bible is by design a text intended to be publicly read and heard. We lose something when all we do is read it on our own. This privatized and bookish view is anachronistic and contrary to both the primary intended use of the Biblical texts and to the historical milieu of Scripture itself.”
(2) It is logically inconsistent.
– (a) It is self-referentially inconsistent.
"First … ‘it is self-contradictory, for it says we should believe only Scripture, but Scripture never says this! If we believe only what Scripture teaches, we will not believe sola scriptura …’
"Second, it assumes that the ‘essential’ teachings of Scripture are sufficiently clear to be understood by anyone, but is not itself sufficiently clear to be considered a scriptural teaching by all.
"Third, it claims that the Bible is the ultimate authority, but in fact subordinates the Bible to the extrabiblical (traditions of) interpretation of this or that individual, or group, about what the Bible says. This means, practically speaking, that sola scriptura leads to hermeneutical subjectivism.
“Fourth, sola scriptura is self-referentially inconsistent because the Bible contains no inspired index of its own contents and cannot even be identified as a divine revelation except on extrabiblical grounds of tradition.”
– (b) It violates the principle of sufficient reason.
“… it violates the principles of causality: that an effect cannot be greater than its cause. The Church (the apostles) wrote Scripture; and the successors of the apostles, i.e., the bishops of the Church, decided on the cannon, the list of books to be declared scriptural and infallible. If Scripture is infallible, then its cause, the Church, must also be infallible.”
How is it that you declare ALL Protestants to subscribe to Sola Scriptura? Pretty sure you need a lesson in religious history. Not all Protestants are the same, not by a long shot.
Looks like I forgot to mention here, too – eep – I always try to cite. I pulled from John Salza.[/QUOT
Are you suggesting the “oral tradition of the Apostles” were teachings that were (1) different (2) in direct opposition (3) in conflict with written scripture ?
Because I disagree: I see no conflict with Sola Scripture and the preaching of the Word of God.
Now I don’t see a problem with preaching and teaching against the scriptures , I agree that all that Jesus said could not be contain in books however based on his own words and lifestyle, I hasten to add that all that he said and did was done according to scripture.
May be another view of Sola Scripture - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sola_scriptura
You know fishing is not a bad thing however I have learned from Jesus silence has its value and now I am ready to continue.Hi, Newsy,
Maybe he went fishing (for better references and answers…)
God bless
Whose intention? Luther & Co voluntarily left the Catholic Church through apostasy. The truth is they willfully cut themselves off from the Church founded by Christ. They initiated and enacted a revolt - Luther may have started out to reform some genuine practice abuses , but apparently was drawn in by the power he thought he control. His actions in the Peasants War of 1524 shows that he was willing to do whatever was necessary to stay in power. %between%
tqualey,
I think it is unfair to say Martin Luther left the church volunarily. He was exommunicated and most do not even know why specificallly. Do you really think he would have been excommunicated today?
I dont think any of that disqualifies the common sense of SS. It simply means that scripture alone is sufficient to understand the Gospel Message and how to find salvation.SS is all about interpretation - it has nothing to do with whatever may be written. With 30,000+ examples of groups that actively believe in SS - take any verse, or passage or chapter or book in Scripture - and it can be interpreted to mean anything the interpreter wants it to mean. All Protestant doctrines seem to spring from Scripture - yet, there are 30,000+ because none of them agree with one another. This is a major issue and one that deserves to be addressed clearly. It appears to me that you are confusing things./
After all scripture is the Word of God and not any doctrines taught by any church. It is the words of Jesus and the apostles. Why is that not sufficient?
Rob
Basically, they stand on 2 Tim 3:16, and a few other verses that they cherry-pick out of context for their use to suit their own personal beliefs… But I mustn’t generalize; after all, in Protestantism there are as many popes as there are noses, and they could all teach something different if they wanted to, so long as they find it/base it on/think it’s implied in the Bible.
But if not:Isn’t that good enough?![]()
From my understanding, if scripture and Tradition never conflict, then there is no issue. Some reject Catholic Tradition, big “T”, and refer to scripture. If they are in disagreement with the Church, then they are naturally reading scripture with a pretext. The Canon of the Bible was given to the Catholic Church by the Holy Spirit through Ecumenical Councils. If the Catholic Church was in conflict with scripture, then why would they include the troublesome passage?