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SjMelnychuk
Guest
I believe this thread is specifically talking about whether or not the Bible is all we need or Sola Scriptura. Did the Apostles and Early Church Fathers ONLY go by the letters the Apostles had written?I don’t think the first reformers believed they were outside thy body of Christian faith. It is not like the church had been born the day before and they went another way, or said anything that had not been said before, implicitly or explicitly (just as CC claims). There were 1500 years of “History”. Just look at the challenges the church had not even after 100 years, as evidenced by Revelations.
The answer is NO
2 Thessalonians 2:15
So then, brothers, stand firm and hold to the traditions that you were taught by us, either by our spoken word or by our letter.
What people don’t understand is that the Church had ALWAYS held up SACRED TRADITION along with SACRED SCRIPTURE but as others have pointed out “to be Scriptural is Tradition,” So, what is tradition? Tradition is the oral teachings of the Church. The Church NEVER upheld Tradition as the only sole rule of faith and neither did the Church ever teach that the bible is the sole rule faith but together both Tradition and Scripture BOTH being lifted up along with Magisterial Authority. Is the Bible all we need? Obviously not if the common people didn’t have Sacred Scripture easily accessible and obviously not if Sola Scriptura leaves room for heresy and fallible interpretation of Sacred Scripture.
Actually, letters were written but Sacred Scripture wasn’t formally cannonized until quite a few hundred years after Jesus established the Church leaving Oral Teaching (TRADITION) for the majority of the Churches history to be the norm.The first church had the OT and apostolic teaching, which was quickly put to writing…
And to have Tradition is Scriptural !To be scriptural is the tradition of the body of faith, and of the Pillar.
Which is why it’s probably a good idea to research the writings of the Early Church Fathers because then you have a good idea of what the Church was teaching when Jesus first established the Church… What was the Church Jesus established? If we research the writings of the Early Church Fathers we see that what the Early Church Fathers were teaching was consistent with what the Apostles were teaching. Careful and further study of the Catechism of the Catholic Church you’ll see that what the Catholic Church teaches today is what the Early Church Fathers were teaching and it’s all congruent with what the Apostles were teaching. One could easily go by their own fallible interpretation but we cannot go wrong with historical teachings.some can just as easily say some trust in their own fallible interpretation of what is tradition or which tradition, which church.
If this teaching is new then there has to be evidence of such a claim because if it’s new then it would be considered a heresy so you better believe that this would have been addressed in the Early Church. There would be a pattern of it developing unless that teaching really did exist at the start of the Early Church.Infallibilty as CC teaches today is "new"and not found in early church
As evidenced by humanity we don’t always have faith in God let alone faith in the Church that Jesus established. We’re accountable to what has been revealed to us. Humanity has always had the free-will to receive the grace to have faith and believe but it is our choice therefore God asked if He will find faith on the earth upon His return. He wasn’t questioning God’s power, ability etc in his Omnipotence to safe-guard and preserve the Church that God through Jesus Christ established. He was calling into question our faith not God’s omnipotence or the working of the Holy Spirit to guarantee the deposit of faith.The OT is evidence that God is faithful in His own way, and sometimes not like how we think, even as a corporate body, the status quo, the establishment think. Why else would He ask if He will find faith upon His return if His institution is so infallible?
Matthew 16:18
And I tell you, you are Peter, and on this rock I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.
If the Gates of hell will not prevail, even if a remnant of believers remain, the fact is, it’s not questioning that within the context of God’s omnipotence to preserve the Church He established from error but rather, OUR OWN faith. So lets be clear as to what Jesus called into question here.
