G
Gabriel_of_12
Guest
Well hold on there, to respond to this, and I am anxious to, but I am not clear of your understanding of the difference that may exist between a teaching compared to a doctrine.that is in your and the RCC’s opinion. the protestants would argue with you on that one.
**Yes it is debatable, but the Catholic church’s stance is,If you dont submit to the authority invested in Peter (Pope) by Jesus himself. Then you break away from valid holy orders, valid sacraments instituted by Jesus Christ, not to mention the succession back to the apostles. Now I know this can open up a lot of debate here, so I will agree with you, protestant can argue the break away from the Catholic church. **
actually, the people that followed the leaders relied upon the leaders’ interpretations not their own so they didn’t really believe in sola scriptura. they believed in prima scriptura… that all teachings are subject to scripture but that we don’t only teach scripture.
**Now this is a first, I can agree in your statement this would make a world of difference between Protestants and Catholics, but to many still follow the newly only scripture, only faith save you doctrine. I have to admit, I never heard a protestant say they dont jjust hold to sacred scripture. Unless I am misunderstanding you, and I got overexcited to what seems to me a new doctrine, coming to the Catholic understanding. **
i would argue that in practice, most catholic apologists (especially the protestant converts) hold to prima scriptura because they say repeatedly and try to show how all of the teachings of the magisterium are found in scripture. hence they are putting the magisterium’s teachings under scripture.
This is the first I have heard of Prima scriptura being taught by protestants. Would this fall in the lines of Sacred Tradition?