C
commenter
Guest
Is Scripture really unchanged, unevolved in the eyes of people? The interpretation of it has changed and varied drastically, even by those who deny any role for Tradition and/or Magisterium. From one generation to the next there are drastic changes in how verses are interpreted, or which verses are deemed applicable to given questions. Changes in translation may reflect partly new scholarship, sometimes also reflect (or obey) the changing cultural or politically correct parameters.Quickly, the defined role of scripture may have changed, evolved partly due not to scriptures, but the defined role of the church, or even councils (by the church) and in particular as being the final arbiter of truth, including scriptural truth and that infallibly. The question then came how to dialogue with an infallible church/council in a perceived error but with **the only unchanged, unevolved source left , scripture ? **Yet this was done in “church”, magisterial and as much as possible, council fashion (“confessions” etc). You may say and perhaps partly right, that reformers really used same model, just that they attached no inerrancy except to scriptures themselves.
One might say that leads to further division with such a "checked’ central authority, but even with your model there was division (C and O).
I guess I am saying the roles,models have not been static
The newer canons - for instance, in “A New New Testament”, or the “Uncommon Lectionary” , add new gospels, epistles, etc onto the familiar 27, which will bring a whole new set of changed “insights” to “Scripture”, as the newly “canonized” books are used in study and worship, not separate but intermingled with the familiar 27. I don’t think the heads of the TEC or ELCA, for instance, have endorsed these additions, but the president of the UCC was on the committee to bring about expanding the canon; other mainline denomination leaders too (but most denominations are not on board).
