Question about Sola Scriptura in actual practice

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Oh…so you believe and agree that doctrine develops then?

And going back to Athanasius…did he use the authority of Scripture or the authority of the Church in telling Arius he is wrong?
Both, but apparently Arius and his followers didn’t care about either. As he kept up his teaching and Arianism survived until finally suppressed by various means, including military, in the 7th century.

I believe doctrine develops but must be true to the Gospel that was taught by the Christ and the Apostles. Anything that goes against or beyond what the Apostles taught is another Gospel and should be rejected.
 
So the Church that wrote the NT and assembled the Bible is subject to it, rather than the other way around?

-ok-

So which canon? Catholic Orthodox Ethiopian or the KJV? Or another? (there are others)

And who sits in the chair of interpretation? What parts are literal? figurative? parable? all 3???

Does 1 Peter 3:21 affirm or deny the requirement of baptism in the process of salvation? I’ve heard it cited by both the “pro” and “anti” camps. How do we know the incorrect camp is incorrect?

Which “church” is “the most” right? How can we tell?
 
So the Church that wrote the NT and assembled the Bible is subject to it, rather than the other way around?

-ok-

So which canon? Catholic Orthodox Ethiopian or the KJV? Or another? (there are others)

And who sits in the chair of interpretation? What parts are literal? figurative? parable? all 3???

Does 1 Peter 3:21 affirm or deny the requirement of baptism in the process of salvation? I’ve heard it cited by both the “pro” and “anti” camps. How do we know the incorrect camp is incorrect?

Which “church” is “the most” right? How can we tell?
Not sure any of that has been agreed upon for a thousand years.
 
Why would I try to exclude anyone from salvation?
I didn’t say you did. Perhaps I should have separated my last sentence from my rhetorical comment about some Catholics

The sparse few I was referring to was small groups that believe the "Great Apostasy ". Most western non-Catholics do not.

Sorry for the confusion

Jon
 
Not sure any of that has been agreed upon for a thousand years.
True.

It would appear to the outside observer that there has been some schism in Christendom since at least the 5th century with a small increase in the 11th-14th. Then the number of divisions began to explode in the 16th.

I wonder what occurred in the 16th century and what novel doctrines emerged to promote the exponential acceleration of intra-faith conflict.

:hmmm:

“…and you shall know them by their fruit.”
 
The sparse few I was referring to was small groups that believe the "Great Apostasy ". Most western non-Catholics do not.
If by “western non-Catholics” you mean “non-Catholic Christians in the west”, the majority of that group by both membership and denomination count is roughly evangelical in nature. The classic “mainline” protestant groups have been in decline for longer than I’ve been alive (and I’m not young). It turns out that when you become that liberal, you likely just stop attending church (nothwithstanding a few conservative splits still trying to hold on). Poisoned by their own “progress”. 🤷

Most evangelicals affirm the Great Apostasy in some form. But like everything else protestant, it’s like herding cats to get them to form any sort of consensus on the particulars of it.
 
True.

It would appear to the outside observer that there has been some schism in Christendom since at least the 5th century with a small increase in the 11th-14th. Then the number of divisions began to explode in the 16th.

I wonder what occurred in the 16th century and what novel doctrines emerged to promote the exponential acceleration of intra-faith conflict.

:hmmm:

“…and you shall know them by their fruit.”
Not sure how this has anything to do with the question of the thread. Just st remember that every single break in the western Church includes Rome. Baptists, for instance, as as much divided from Catholics as the are from Anglicans.

This disagreement on the canon is more than just appearance.
 
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