illuminator,
Welcome! I hope you enjoy your time here, and please feel free to ask any questions you would like (as long as respectfully asked, and asked with the intent of having a two way dialog).
illuminator:
In today’s climate of relativism where anyone can do anything they want because “it feels right” or it’s morally right to them - it is important to have some standard of belief.
There are very few people on this site who would disagree with you.
The question comes down to whether it is the Bible alone or the Bible with Tradition.
This actually doesn’t follow from the previous statement, but I’ll agree with it for now. Further, I would state that with the Bible Alone you run a heightened risk of Relativism than with the Bible and Tradition, which is a more objective source for values.
Isa 8:20 “To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them.”
Amen!
Please show me where exactly this is taken out of context.
As CM stated, it means what it says, and we believe it - however, it can by no stretch of the imagination be turned into a statement that, “Thou shalt use the Bible Alone as your sole authority.” That would be out of context.
In the rebuff that I was handed, a reference to me not knowing the beliefs of the Catholic Church was also made.
I think it’s because your post implied that the Catholic Church does not speak according to the Holy word of God - in fact, there is no more Biblical a church than the Catholic Church; the reason is that the Bible is a Catholic book, written by Catholics and for Catholics. If you disagree with this statement, I would question how you came to know which books should be in the New Testament (the “canon of Scripture”) to begin with - as there is no “divinely inspired table of contents,” there are only two options remaining:
(1) I feel a “burning in my bosom” when I read each epistle, so I
know that each book is inspired. This is Calvin’s (and the Mormons’) position. (Hannah,
Notes, 3.7)
(2) The Catholic Church sat down one day in the 4th Century and determined what the canon of the New Testament would be. This is Martil Luther’s position, and why he felt free to attack James, Revelation, Hebrews, Jude, and 2 Peter - this is also why he felt free to kick seven books out of the Old Testament canon.
Since we are talking about the bible and its authority, Sunday is the day that is venerated by Roman Catholics as the sabbath of the 10 Commandments (I think we can all agree on this). My question is: why? Is it based on Biblical evidence or Tradition or both?
Both.
Link.
It would probably do best to create a new thread for each topic you want to discuss (rambling threads tend to get shut down), and the Apologetics forum is better suited to discussions of doctrine/dogma. That said, I hope your questions have been answerer (although for some reason I doubt that will be the case).
God Bless, and again, welcome!
RyanL