C
CopticChristian
Guest
This is from the Postings Of Radical.
What sayest thou?I would suggest that sola scriptura is an answer to a rather modern question. That question could be worded as: “Where, at this time, is the full message from God (with regards to salvation) to be found in a form free from any error?” The answer to that question would not always have been the same. The answer in 30 AD is different from the answer in 60 AD and both of those answers could be different from the answer in 1520 AD (or in 2008 AD, for that matter).
The aspect of “full message” calls into consideration the question of whether scripture is materially and/or formally sufficient.
The “free from any error” aspect together with the “sola” aspect of the answer calls into question whether tradition contains any error.
The “at this time” aspect recognizes that what has provided by God has changed over time. In 30 AD the answer to the question would have been “in Jesus’s teaching”. In 60 AD the answer to the question would have been “in the inspired teachings, both oral and recorded, of the apsotles and the Jewish scriptures”. The fact that the correct answer in 30 or 60 AD is not “sola scriptura” does not mean that the correct answer could not be sola scriptura in 1520 AD as things changed in the interim.