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There are many doctrines that I accept which have implicit claims in Scripture. Infant baptism is one example.
There are many doctrines that I accept which have implicit claims in Scripture. Infant baptism is one example.
That is more than fair. :yup:By tracing our teachings to the teachings of Christ and His apostles. I do not need to name individual bishops, but rather, what they believed, taught, and confessed.
Ok. Only in that teachings includes both the oral Sacred Tradition as well as the written Sacred Scripture.Teachings - writings. Six of one, half dozen of the other![]()
Ok. Then we are agreed on:I was responding here to a comment you made about revelation.
Augsburg, the CC was proclaiming the Gospel, even those truths which are proclaimed in the book of Revelation, before Revelation was ever committed to paper (or papyrus as the case may be).I donât see how this could be the case, seeing as how revelation was only partly completed. I agree that the vast majority of Christian teaching was made known before the NT was written, but parts of it werenât. An example would be the book of Revelation, which wasnât written until the 90s, yet it contains very important aspects of Christian dogma.
My comment was in response to your tangential, âThus, how could additional revelation add anything essential to the Christian message?âEven if the catholic faith was whole and entire before the NT was written, I donât see how that is an argument for the infallibility of the Magisterium.
If by inspiration, you mean that the church (the entire church) was led to recognize the inspired writings as canonical, then yes.That this canon was discerned, under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, by Catholic bishopsâon this are we agreed?
And this was done without the guidance of âScriptureâ, for that, again, would be begging the question. âLetâs use Scripture to discern what is Scriptureâ.If by inspiration, you mean that the church (the entire church) was led to recognize the inspired writings as canonical, then yes.
Yes, they were preaching the Gospel; but what do you mean by the truths of Revelation being proclaimed before Revelation was written?Augsburg, the CC was proclaiming the Gospel, even those truths which are proclaimed in the book of Revelation, before Revelation was ever committed to paper (or papyrus as the case may be).
An infallible conference being passed on through the Apostles to some successors, while this might be nice and I have nothing against it, I simply have no reason, outside of a pragmatic desire for unity, to believe such occurred. The Scriptures presented concerning the authority of the apostles concerns them alone. There is nothing, from what I can see, said either explicitly or implicitly concerning the passing on of some infallible authority through apostolic succession.Now as to the concept of the infallibility of others besides the apostles, what evidence do you have for this? Why does this charism end? And how do you know?
I am not sure if I would say the oral teaching of the apostles was used. I would have no problem saying that âtraditionâ was used. Of course, that doesnât mean the tradition was separate from the teachings delivered in Holy Writ, per se. There were many historical factors that were used to determine which writings were authentic and which were not.And this was done without the guidance of âScriptureâ, for that, again, would be begging the question. âLetâs use Scripture to discern what is Scriptureâ.
What was used, was the oral teaching of the apostles, yes? The* kerygma.* That which converged with the oral tradition was then discerned to be *theopneustos. * That which diverged was then rejected. Yes?
Not sure what you mean by âthe entire churchâ. Do you mean to include the average Christian peasant in, say, Carthage? He was inspired to discern the canon of Scripture?If by inspiration, you mean that the church (the entire church) was led to recognize the inspired writings as canonical, then yes.
To the best of my knowledge, the Council of Nicea did not address the canon. Of the early councils that you mentioned, none of them were under the supposed doctrine of ecumenical infallibility. So none of them, even by Roman Catholic standards, produced an infallible list of Scripture. The first, as far as I know, that would have qualified would have been the Council of Trent. Was Christendom unsure of the canon up until the 1500s?Not sure what you mean by âthe entire churchâ. Do you mean to include the average Christian peasant in, say, Carthage? He was inspired to discern the canon of Scripture?
At these councils, in which bishops and a pope sat, they discerned the over 400 Christian texts and, under the inspiration of the HS, came to a decision.
This was ratified Rome, at Hippo, Carthage, Nicea, Florence, and Trent.
So on multiple occasions the ChurchâCatholic Church which had bishops and popes presidingâused the guidance of the Holy Spirit to inerrantly proclaim that which was *theopneustos. *.
We are agreed on this, Augsburg? There is no error in the decisions made, on numerous occasions, by Catholic bishops regarding the canon of Scripture?
You are creating a false dichotomy between infallible pronouncements and uncertainty.To the best of my knowledge, the Council of Nicea did not address the canon. Of the early councils that you mentioned, none of them were under the supposed doctrine of ecumenical infallibility. So none of them, even by Roman Catholic standards, produced an infallible list of Scripture. The first, as far as I know, that would have qualified would have been the Council of Trent.** Was Christendom unsure of the canon up until the 1500s?**
That is true; but it isnât I who makes the claim that in order for us to know which books are Scripture, an infallible decision must be made by a church council.You are creating a false dichotomy between infallible pronouncements and uncertainty.
What was solemnly pronounced, declared and defined a certain point of time is not an indication that it only came to be believed at that point.
A teaching need not be proclaimed *ex cathedra *for it to be considered an infallible teaching. Pronouncements by the ordinary and universal magisterium can be infallibleâthe canon of Scripture was such, until, of course, the Council of Trent.To the best of my knowledge, the Council of Nicea did not address the canon. Of the early councils that you mentioned, none of them were under the supposed doctrine of ecumenical infallibility. So none of them, even by Roman Catholic standards, produced an infallible list of Scripture. The first, as far as I know, that would have qualified would have been the Council of Trent. Was Christendom unsure of the canon up until the 1500s?
The Infallibility of the Catholic Church Proved from ScriptureWhile the Scriptures contain many opportunities to teach this type of apostolic succession, either through example in the book of Acts or through explicit instruction in the Pastoral epistles, there is no such teaching. The Scriptures just donât teach that the Apostles conferred their authority on anyone else. All attempts to find the doctrine of infallible apostolic succession in Scripture, in my opinion, must be labeled as eisegetical theology (reading your theology into the text, rather than deriving oneâs theology from the text).
Fair enough. But you have no Scripture to back you up.From my perspective (and I think I speak with some common sense here),
So, was it a fallible decision, regarding the correct inclusion of books in the sacred canon, and the correct exclusion of books from sacred canon, made by the Catholic church:That is true; but it isnât I who makes the claim that in order for us to know which books are Scripture, an infallible decision must be made by a church council.
That is not what I have been professing, Augsburg.That is true; but it isnât I who makes the claim that in order for us to know which books are Scripture, an infallible decision must be made by a church council.
Then this is very Catholic of you to say, Augsburg!I am not sure if I would say the oral teaching of the apostles was used. I would have no problem saying that âtraditionâ was used. Of course, that doesnât mean the tradition was separate from the teachings delivered in Holy Writ, per se.
Ok. But that which diverged from the kerygma was rejected.There were many historical factors that were used to determine which writings were authentic and which were not.
I donât know. One of us is wrong, eh?Why does the Eastern canon differ from the Western, etc?
Not only that, it was tradition that assigned the gospels and most of the epistles, to certain authors of the bible. To embrace scripture is to unwittingly embrace tradition.That is not what I have been professing, Augsburg.
What I have said is
-you do not believe in Scripture Alone if you accept the canon of Scripture, for that cannot be found in Scripture. You needed the Church to discern this. Something *besides *Scripture.
-this Church used Sacred Tradition to discern those books which were theopneustos.
Thus, anyone who quotes from Scripture believes in Sacred Tradition and rejects Sola Scriptura. And if they believe that the Church did not err in this proclamation, then they believe the Church has been given the charism of infallibility.
Indeed.Not only that, it was tradition that assigned the gospels and most of the epistles, to certain authors of the bible. To embrace scripture is to unwittingly embrace tradition.