Sola scriptura challenge

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Hi, Revert TSIEG,

That was a well invested two cents! 🙂
I have read through almost all the pages on this thread. My question is why has no one brought up the point that prior to Luther’s reformation, there was not “Christian” church, only the Catholic Church. The church in question did not exist. So does that mean that the Catholic Church was wrong for over 1500, and all those who followed it went to hell or were simply wrong?

I am a true believer of apostolic succession… therefore I am believer in out Pope. I am not going to lie and say that I feel all warm and fuzzy about all the CC practices and believes, but I must follow them, no matter how I feel. The Holy Spirit has soften my heart about abortion. I will continue to pray for my understanding of why we, the CC do certain things… all while loving what I have already became aware of!

Just my 2c

Revert TSIEG
God bless
 
It would seem that S Hahn has jumped from a frying pan into a fire…I wonder if he knows it. Here is the way that I see it:
For both Protestants and Catholics it is:
a) I have faith that God revealed his message to us.
b) I have faith that scripture is a reliable record of that message.
c) I have faith that God used fallible men to first write down that message and then to preserve and recognize it .

The Catholic adds:
d) I have faith that all sacred tradition is also a reliable part of that message.
e) I have faith that God used fallible men to first orally voice that message and then to preserve and recognize it.

Hahn seems to think that it is logically inconsistent to believe God used fallible men as stated in (c) but not as stated in (e). In reality, for most Protestants and Catholics there is no logic involved. They simply take as a matter of faith what their parents or what the guy at the front of the church tells them…it is not thought through. Wrt those people, one can’t say one view is logically superior to the other as both are merely positions of faith.

For those who have examined the matter, Hahn’s accusation of logical inconsistency would apply if the Protestant accepted (b) and (c) based on evidence X and criteria Y and then rejected (d) and (e) when the exact same evidence X and criteria Y exist for (d) and (e). But such is hardly the case. The ECFs identifed a certain set of writings as scripture to the exclusion all else. The ECFs did not identify a certain set of teachings as sacred tradition to the exclusion of all else (what they did identify as the core rule of faith can be entirely found in scripture). Next, we have manuscript after manuscript for scripture so that we can study the degree of error in the copying procedure and note where variations occur and then do are best to determine what was originally written. We do not have the same evidence to use to determine the degree of error in the transmission of sacred tradition. We have quotes from most books of the NT in the first extra-scriptural writings (known as the Apostolic Fathers{AFs}) so that we know these works existed before the time of the AFs and again from the manuscripts we know the tendency to make additions or alterations to the text. In contrast, the AFs do not make reference to anything about Mary (for example) apart from what is contained in Scripture (her virginity, that is) and so we don’t know that those traditions (of Marian doctrine) existed at the time of the AFs and we can’t study the tendency for additions using the same approach. Wrt scripture, we do not have to accept much of anything that the ECFs did after the first few centuries whereas wrt all sacred tradition we still have an obligation to accept developments at this time. Those distinctions are just for starters…and so I would suggest that one can recognize (c) and reject ( e) w/o needing to be logically inconsistent.
Further, as indicated (a)-(e) are all matters of faith and so when talking to someone outside the conservative Christian family we must admit that we possess these items of faith. The situation changes somewhat when we are having an in-house discussion. The Catholic admits (a)-(c) and so the Protestant can work off of that admission…Therefore, between you and me, it shouldn’t be a matter of me proving (a)-(c), but you proving (d) and (e). If you want to say that I must accept (d) and (e) b/c I have accepted (a)-(c), then it sounds to me that you would be in the same position as a trial lawyer telling the judge that b/c he accepted the one statement from the witness, he must then accept everything the witness said.
God also used the evilness of Egypt to deliver us a great Patriarch in Moses. Moses was active in the ways of Egypt. But the Lord led him away!
 
When a Christian has questions concerning his faith, he turns to the Bible, the inspired Word of God, and seeks answers. Guided by the indwelling Holy Spirit – the same Holy Spirit Rome claims guides the membership of her Magisterium and protects her from doctrinal error – the diligent believer will discover God’s truth. The Scriptures reveal those things necessary for salvation and are the sole infallible rule of faith.

How much more difficult for the Roman Catholic faithful, who must seek guidance and answers from a multitude of sources grouped under three general headings:

“[The object of faith]. Further, by divine and Catholic faith, all those things must be believed which are contained in the written word of God and in tradition, and those which are proposed by the Church, either in a solemn pronouncement or in her ordinary and universal teaching power, to be believed as divinely revealed.” (Pius IX, Dei Filius, Chap. 3, 1st Vatican Council, Session III, April 24, 1870 [Denzinger 1792])

All things necessary for salvation are revealed in the Holy Scriptures. No need to spend a lifetime searching for elusive and poorly elaborated dogmas, doctrines, practices and disciplines written in ancient languages and hidden away in dark corners of forgotten libraries. Open the Bible and read the Word of God. The truth is there and truth will set you free.
Problem for you is that every single Bible only Believer claims that Divine authority of Holy Spirit Guided Interpretation That is absolute & correct. even when it is diametrically opposed to your Buddy’s revealed Knowledge. Then with NO Authority, no Church, no Tradition to guide you what can you do but argue that “I am Right and You are wrong” because the Holy Spirit told me so! trouble is He, the Holy Spirit told Us & everyone else a different version some closer to yours some closer to mine & some closer to that other fella.

Without a Final Authority ALL Holy Spirit Claims of Biblical teaching, guidance or revelation are subjective to personal / individual applications & understanding and thus that TRUTH is in Flux and Changes depending upon the person or interpretation, Hence is is not Truth in a Biblical sense.
 
Radical,

At this point, a lot of Protestants would probably expect me to come back with a stereotypical/caricature Catholic statement like “Well all these concerns and logical difficulties you’re having would completely go away if you just learn to accept what the Pope tells you to accept”. But I’d like to think that you’ve gotten to know us better than to expect that. 🙂
It would seem that S Hahn has jumped from a frying pan into a fire…I wonder if he knows it.
Two things:

First, I think it’s from a fire into a frying pan in this case: Protestant have no claim to an “infallible list of infallible documents”, not even w.r.t the Bible. On the other hand, Catholics can at least claim that the list of book of the Bible is infallible – even though we don’t claim to have an exhaustive list of all infallible documents that have ever been written. (For example, we disagree among ourselves about how many ex cathedra statements there have been.)

Having said that, let me tell you what I consider to be one of the weaknesses of “Rome Sweet Home”: there are some places where I believe Hahn should have added a footnote to the tune of
*That was my thinking at the time, but in the process of becoming and living as a Catholic my thinking has changed to …

(If you’d like another such example, besides the one where already discussing, see page 61 where he explains his reasons for not becoming Orthodox.) To be more specific, it seems clear to me that the thought process Hahn describes in pp 75-76 is still a very Protestant one (which hopefully he has abandoned since his conversion). In Catholic and Orthodox thinking, there’s nothing intrisically wrong with a fallible list of infallible documents – even though we (Catholics and Orthodox) sometimes find it difficult to relate to Christians who believe something so central as the list of books of the Bible has not been infallibly declared.

That’s about all I have time for right now, but I’d like to ask …
The Catholic admits (a)-(c) and so the Protestant can work off of that admission…Therefore, between you and me, it shouldn’t be a matter of me proving (a)-(c), but you proving (d) and (e). If you want to say that I must accept (d) and (e) b/c I have accepted (a)-(c), then it sounds to me that you would be in the same position as a trial lawyer telling the judge that b/c he accepted the one statement from the witness, he must then accept everything the witness said.
… are you sure that’s an analogy you want to run with? :ehh:
 
First, I think it’s from a fire into a frying pan in this case: Protestant have no claim to an “infallible list of infallible documents”, not even w.r.t the Bible…
I would say that we have a claim to an infallible list of infallible documents, but that it is a purely faith based claim…faith in (a)-(c)… I said frying pan to fire b/c a Catholic has two “pillars” to support with faith (a)-(c) and (d)-(e) whereas the Protestant only has the one.
On the other hand, Catholics can at least claim that the list of book of the Bible is infallible …
again based purely on your faith in your Church…you can’t prove its infallibility
… are you sure that’s an analogy you want to run with? :ehh:
absolutely…history, like a civil trial, is about determining what most likely happened (balance of probabilities and all that) and the historical evidence is like the witness on the stand.
 
As I said, the challenge is perfectly in keeping with the Statement of Faiths of several evangelical churches I have belonged to in my travels. Apparently Nottoosmart and Guyonthestreet belong to Protestant churches that define it a bit differently. This poses them with a bit of a problem. If they concede that there are different definitions of sola scriptura out there, this quickly degenerates into an epistemological quagmire and provides an object lesson on why so many factions of Protestantism have drifted toward postmodern relativism (which would be a good topic for another thread). So they pretend that there is only one definition (hoping you don’t ask who decides it and on what authority 😉 ) and those who define it differently “don’t understand” the doctrine correctly.

In my obsrvation the “you don’t understand doctrine X correctly” is a common Protestant debate tactic and is usually offered without any attempt to formally define the “correct” understanding of doctrine X or provide a rational basis for it. It’s an easy way to dismiss anything you can’t refute. It’s a lot harder to lay your own theology on the line and let it stand up to scrutiny.
Your challenge is in itself a straw man argument. I’m sorry but maybe you did not study Protestant theology well. You come from an incorect definition of Sola Scriptura. It flows from the doctrine of the sufficiency of Scripture but it doesn’t mean that human traditions mean nothing. They have weight. The teachings and interpretations of our church leaders have bearing, however, they are NOT INFALLIBLE as the Roman Church sees it. That is the difference of Sola Scriptura. Solo Scriptura was never generally held by Protestants, although there are some misguided souls who confuse the two. Stop forcing your ill-informed question on the adherents of Sola Scriptura because you shall not get the answers you want. To get the right answers, you must first ask the right questions. 😉
 
Further, as indicated (a)-(e) are all matters of faith and so when talking to someone outside the conservative Christian family we must admit that we possess these items of faith. The situation changes somewhat when we are having an in-house discussion. The Catholic admits (a)-(c) and so the Protestant can work off of that admission…Therefore, between you and me, it shouldn’t be a matter of me proving (a)-(c), but you proving (d) and (e). If you want to say that I must accept (d) and (e) b/c I have accepted (a)-(c), then it sounds to me that you would be in the same position as a trial lawyer telling the judge that b/c he accepted the one statement from the witness, he must then accept everything the witness said.
You’ll excuse me for being a little slow on the uptake. I see now that you and I agree on more than I previously thought, specifically that it was the Roman Catholic Church – not the Eastern Orthodox Church, or the Anglican view of the Church (branch-theorectical), etc. – which gave us the Bible.

Would you also be willing to take that a step further and say that the Eastern Orthodox Church broke away from the Catholic Church (not the other way around, as they claim)?
 
You’ll excuse me for being a little slow on the uptake. I see now that you and I agree on more than I previously thought, specifically that it was the Roman Catholic Church – not the Eastern Orthodox Church, or the Anglican view of the Church (branch-theorectical), etc. – which gave us the Bible.
Sorry, I must have been sloppy as I do not believe that it was the RCC that gave us the Bible…The “witness” I refer to is the historical record left to us by the ECFs,…It is in those records that we find the earliest lists of books to be placed in the NT canon, it is in those records that we find quotes from the letters etc. that became the NT, it is in those records that we find reference to and see the development of what has been labelled sacred tradition. As indicated here, I do not believe that a monarchical system was in place at the start and I do not believe that Peter was the first bishop of Rome and I do not believe that Petrine supremacy was established by Christ…all were post-apostolic developments. Therefore, I do not equate the current CC with the catholic church of the first centuries. The ECFs are not the property of the CC or of the EOC (for that matter) such that either can legitimately say “these are our boys”.
Would you also be willing to take that a step further and say that the Eastern Orthodox Church broke away from the Catholic Church (not the other way around, as they claim)?
If anything, I’d side with the Orthodox on this issue…IMHO Rome is guilty of adding to the rule of faith all that stuff about the primacy of the Pope etc and so it would be Rome that is guilty of trying to bend the rule of faith still further away from the truth.
 
Hi, Radical,

This is not a matter of belief, but, rather, one of simply history. Part of that history was the establishment of Constantinople as the seat of the Imperial Roman Empire in 330AD Here is a link just so we get the time frame correct: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantinople Now - the Catholic Church traces its origin from Jesus Christ founding the Church on Peter. We read about Saul persecuting the followers of The Way and nothing really beyond that as far as scripture.

Here is something you should read to make sure we get the name correct:

As mentioned in the Acts of the Apostles, it is true that the followers of Christ early became known as “Christians” (cf. Acts 11:26). The name Christian, however, was never commonly applied to the Church herself. In the New Testament itself, the Church is simply called “the Church.” There was only one. In that early time there were not yet any break-away bodies substantial enough to be rival claimants of the name and from which the Church might ever have to distinguish herself.

Very early in post-apostolic times, however. the Church did acquire a proper name–and precisely in order to distinguish herself from rival bodies which by then were already beginning to form. The name that the Church acquired when it became necessary for her to have a proper name was the name by which she has been known ever since-the Catholic Church.

The name appears in Christian literature for the first time around the end of the first century. By the time it was written down, it had certainly already been in use, for the indications are that everybody understood exactly what was meant by the name when it was written.

Around the year A.D. 107, a bishop, St. Ignatius of Antioch in the Near East, was arrested, brought to Rome by armed guards and eventually martyred there in the arena. In a farewell letter which this early bishop and martyr wrote to his fellow Christians in Smyrna (today Izmir in modern Turkey), he made the first written mention in history of “the Catholic Church.” He wrote, “Where the bishop is present, there is the Catholic Church” (To the Smyrnaeans 8:2). Thus, the second century of Christianity had scarcely begun when the name of the Catholic Church was already in use.

Thereafter, mention of the name became more and more frequent in the written record. It appears in the oldest written account we possess outside the New Testament of the martyrdom of a Christian for his faith, the “Martyrdom of St. Polycarp,” bishop of the same Church of Smyrna to which St. Ignatius of Antioch had written. St. Polycarp was martyred around 155, and the account of his sufferings dates back to that time. The narrator informs us that in his final prayers before giving up his life for Christ, St. Polycarp “remembered all who had met with him at any time, both small and great, both those with and those without renown, and the whole Catholic Church throughout the world.” Here is the link: ewtn.com/faith/teachings/churb3.htm

While I am delighted that you acknowledge the contribution made by the ECF - they were united to the Bishop of Rome. So, here we start off, in 107AD by calling the group the Catholic Church, picked up by others and carried forward to this day.
Sorry, I must have been sloppy as I do not believe that it was the RCC that gave us the Bible…The “witness” I refer to is the historical record left to us by the ECFs,…It is in those records that we find the earliest lists of books to be placed in the NT canon, it is in those records that we find quotes from the letters etc. that became the NT, it is in those records that we find reference to and see the development of what has been labelled sacred tradition. As indicated here, I do not believe that a monarchical system was in place at the start and I do not believe that Peter was the first bishop of Rome and I do not believe that Petrine supremacy was established by Christ…all were post-apostolic developments. Therefore, I do not equate the current CC with the catholic church of the first centuries. The ECFs are not the property of the CC or of the EOC (for that matter) such that either can legitimately say “these are our boys”.

If anything, I’d side with the Orthodox on this issue…IMHO Rome is guilty of adding to the rule of faith all that stuff about the primacy of the Pope etc and so it would be Rome that is guilty of trying to bend the rule of faith still further away from the truth.
The issue to “…side with the Orthodox…” is truly a red herring. The ECF were all members of the Catholic Church united under the Bishop of Rome.

And, that really is the way it was for the ECF.

God bless
 
Hi Tom,
Hi, Radical,

Time out … all of the writers of the NT were officially declared as saints. You are making a division without a distinction. Are you saying they are not saints?
no, I am saying that they aren’t any more Catholic than they are Pentecostal or Baptist
The Holy Spirit inspired each writer so that God’s message was ever present. As you well know, there was no Bible as we think of it today prior to 400AD when the Catholic Church (yes, that is the name!) established the Canon.
yes, same name…but then as I have already pointed out, the “Mormon Jesus” has the same name as the “orthodox Jesus”. Also, I think your date is too late… the synods/councils of the late 4th century codified existing opinion.
Some of the writings examined were pious, some were deceitful frauds and others were inspired.
Yes, so what should be made of the work’s authority (as viewed by the ECFs) when the epistles of Ignatius (with their emphasis on the importance of the
Bishop) are categorized and placed on a level beneath that of scripture?
It is simply folly to think can be right about one and in error about the other.
Well the Arians got some things (most things actually) right, but were wrong on one important matter…seems that the folly might be yours
…if there is error - then the entire document is subject to error - and that means none of it can be from God - because God is Perfect.
well then you best throw out your Bible b/c there will be some errors in it…at a minimum some copying errors would have occured
Candidly, the only ‘legitimate reason’ I can think of is to…
perhaps more study would enable you to think outside the box you are presently sitting in?
One honestly needs to keep a clear eye on history.
agreed.
Catholics trace their origin from Jesus Christ founding His Church (and that would be the Catholic Church) on Peter and there is an unbroken line from Peter to Benedict XVI.
and wrt (with respect to) this sort of claim is where that clear, unbiased and informed eye on history really comes in handy…What proportion of modern Catholics historians would endorse this claim of yours?
The CC always believed one has to be Baptized, that the ordained priests have the delegated power of God to forgive sin and that, in accordance with Christ’s commands, common bread and wine is consecrated by ordained priests to become, through the Power of God, the Body, Blood, Human Soul and Divinity of Jesus Christ. These same truths were passed on from the Apostles to the Early Chruch Fathers and from them to their successors … and, you guessed it … right to us today where we Catholics still believe these Truths. Where do you stand?
elsewhere than the CC…if you are really curious you could search my posts…I don’t participate in that many threads and have discussed, Augustine’s view of the Real Presence, Tertullian’s view of the RP, John 6 and a RP in considerable detail.

God Bless.
 
Hi, Radical,

We do have some significant issues here. So, let’s get started.
Hi Tom, no, I am saying that they aren’t any more Catholic than they are Pentecostal or Baptist Actually, the term Catholic came from Ignatius of Antioch in about 107AD. There is a direct connection between the Apostle John who I believe taught Ignatius and many of the Early Church Fathers. At this time, there were the Jews, the Roman and Greek pagans - and the Catholics.

yes, same name…but then as I have already pointed out, the “Mormon Jesus” has the same name as the “orthodox Jesus”. Also, I think your date is too late… the synods/councils of the late 4th century codified existing opinion. Now, you know that makes no sense. Why use it? “Mormon Jesus” just does not follow. I was lazy and did not look it up … but, you are right - the Councils acted on the Canon before 400AD - which is what I tried to cover in my more expansive. date 😃 .

Yes, so what should be made of the work’s authority (as viewed by the ECFs) when the epistles of Ignatius (with their emphasis on the importance of the
Bishop) are categorized and placed on a level beneath that of scripture? This is not to say that certain works were without merit - this is what I meant by pius writings. All I am saying is that under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, those works were not considered inspired. Hey! You guys already have an edited and abridged version of the Bible - if taking material out is not without fault - then surely adding material must be viewed in the same vein. Seriously, if you think so highly of Ignatius’ work - just put it in. No? Hmmmm why not? 😉

Well the Arians got some things (most things actually) right, but were wrong on one important matter…seems that the folly might be yours As I recall, the Arians said Christ was not God and they disputed the Trinity. I guess I missed it… just what is it that they ‘got right’? You know, my old late aunt had a cow once … 😃 … and this cow would give a gallon of milk in the morning and a gallon in the evening. Pretty good production for a cow. As much as my aunt wanted to brag about her cow … it did have this one bad habit… just before the bucket was filled, the cow would kick it over! So, going back to the house … there really wasn’t much milk to talk about. Your Arians got me to thinking of my aunt’s cow… :rolleyes:

well then you best throw out your Bible b/c there will be some errors in it…at a minimum some copying errors would have occured What inspiration means is that God got his message across - across centuries, across honest errors, across dishonest efforts to distort His Work. And, since your Bible has its roots in ours - think twice before throwing it out - after all - it is all you have.

perhaps more study would enable you to think outside the box you are presently sitting in? While more study is always best - this ‘box’ you refer to is like the Ark, floating ontop of storm tossed seas of ignorance, error and heresy.

agreed.

and wrt (with respect to) [THANK YOU - THANK YOU VERY MUCH!] this sort of claim is where that clear, unbiased and informed eye on history really comes in handy…What proportion of modern Catholics historians would endorse this claim of yours? I really have no idea. Do you?

elsewhere than the CC…if you are really curious you could search my posts…I don’t participate in that many threads and have discussed, Augustine’s view of the Real Presence, Tertullian’s view of the RP, John 6 and a RP in considerable detail. Not to be unkind, but I am doing good to say grace over what I have in front of me - without going after other material. So, I tell you what … send me the link as a PM and I will be happy to look at it.

God Bless.
And, God Bless you, too.
 
Sorry, I must have been sloppy as I do not believe that it was the RCC that gave us the Bible…The “witness” I refer to is the historical record left to us by the ECFs,…It is in those records that we find the earliest lists of books to be placed in the NT canon, it is in those records that we find quotes from the letters etc. that became the NT, it is in those records that we find reference to and see the development of what has been labelled sacred tradition.
Ah, alright I think I understand your analogy now … just because you accept some things that the ECFs say, that doesn’t mean you have to accept everything that they say. And in fact I agree with that, so far as it goes. (I don’t claim that every ECF was right about everything.)
 
Ah, alright I think I understand your analogy now … just because you accept some things that the ECFs say, that doesn’t mean you have to accept everything that they say. And in fact I agree with that, so far as it goes. (I don’t claim that every ECF was right about everything.)
yep that’s it…and to do so isn’t logically inconsistent if the reasons/evidence for and against accepting the reliability of the canon of scripture are different than the reasons/evidence for and against accepting the reliability of the rest of sacred tradition
 
again based purely on your faith in your Church…you can’t prove its infallibility
Yes, I suppose that’s true – in the same sense that I cannot prove Christianity to be true in the first place.
 
Hahn seems to think that it is logically inconsistent to believe God used fallible men as stated in (c) but not as stated in (e).
I would say rather the he believed that Protestantism could not work without an infallible list of infallible books (i.e. the canon of the Bible).

If we agree with this premise, then the natural way to try and get out of this difficulty would be to say (as you did in one of your posts) that you do believe that you have an infallible list of books of the bible. But, it seems to me, this still leaves a problem, namely that Protestantism wouldn’t have worked during the first couple of centuries of Christianity, since they clearly didn’t have a canon of Scripture back then. (Plus I don’t see how the claim to an infallible list of books of the bible can avoid contradicting “Sola Scriptura”.)
 
Hi, PeterJ,

I think we need to be specific in this matter - there is no such thing as the Roman Catholic Church. The proper name is the Catholic Church, CC if you will, but not RCC. 🙂

The idea that there is some type of break from Christ-to-Peter-then-Apostles-then-ECF. Saul goes out to persecute members of The Way and later this group is known as the Christians and in about 107AD, Ignatius of Antioch uses the term catholic church. At this time, to the best of my knowledge, there were only three religious groups: Jews, the various Greek and Roman pagans and the catholic church. Nobody else was involved in religion.
You’ll excuse me for being a little slow on the uptake. I see now that you and I agree on more than I previously thought, specifically that it was the Roman Catholic Church – not the Eastern Orthodox Church, or the Anglican view of the Church (branch-theorectical), etc. – which gave us the Bible.

Would you also be willing to take that a step further and say that the Eastern Orthodox Church broke away from the Catholic Church (not the other way around, as they claim)?
The reason this is important is that if the wrong name is used - you will never find the proper reference. This same reality exists even the phone book.

God bless
 
In reality, for most Protestants and Catholics there is no logic involved. They simply take as a matter of faith what their parents or what the guy at the front of the church tells them…it is not thought through. Wrt those people, one can’t say one view is logically superior to the other as both are merely positions of faith.
True, although I don’t believe that has a lot of bearing on this discussion. Consider: pretty much any issue that you or I could bring up, the other could respond to by saying, Well the majority of Catholics and Protestants never think that one through.
For those who have examined the matter, Hahn’s accusation of logical inconsistency would apply if the Protestant accepted (b) and (c) based on evidence X and criteria Y and then rejected (d) and (e) when the exact same evidence X and criteria Y exist for (d) and (e). But such is hardly the case. The ECFs identifed a certain set of writings as scripture to the exclusion all else.
I’m sorry but that’s simply false – those ECFs who lived in the first, second, and third centuries simply did not have the list of 27 books of the New Testament that we list today. (I’ll be very much surprized if you can name even one ECF before the 4th century who proposed that exact list of 27 books.) The only “certain set of writings” that could be said to have been identifed by the ECFs (before the 4th century) “as scripture to the exclusion all else” would be the Old Testament – which I’m sure you do not regard as the whole Bible. (And even on the OT, the ECFs were far from unanimous on what was included.)
The ECFs did not identify a certain set of teachings as sacred tradition to the exclusion of all else (what they did identify as the core rule of faith can be entirely found in scripture).
Certainly. I’m not claiming that the ECFs proposed/defined some list or “canon” of Sacred Tradition.
 
Yes, I suppose that’s true – in the same sense that I cannot prove Christianity to be true in the first place.
agreed…they are both matters of faith…though I think that we would both like to think that there is evidence that make our respective matters of faith reasonable, if still unproven
 
I would say rather the he believed that Protestantism could not work without an infallible list of infallible books (i.e. the canon of the Bible).
you are right, I did not describe the logical inconsistency that he thought existed…I’ll use the excuse that was too foreign a concept for me to grasp on the first go around…Hahn states that the Protestant position is that “we have a fallible list of infallible documents”. I, however, have never met a Protestant that holds to that position. Every P I know thinks that God went to the bother of inspiring certain authors and then also went to the bother of ensuring their preservation and selection.
If we agree with this premise, then the natural way to try and get out of this difficulty would be to say (as you did in one of your posts) that you do believe that you have an infallible list of books of the bible. But, it seems to me, this still leaves a problem, namely that Protestantism wouldn’t have worked during the first couple of centuries of Christianity, since they clearly didn’t have a canon of Scripture back then. (Plus I don’t see how the claim to an infallible list of books of the bible can avoid contradicting “Sola Scriptura”.)
I have been trying to explain this difficulty from the start of my involvment on this thread…here it is again. The concept of sola scriptura is not meant to apply for all periods of time…it is a relatively modern solution to a modern problem. Picture the year 1517. Something is terribly wrong with the Church in the west…certain people within its heirarchy are purporting to trade in grace as if it was a common commodity such as oil, or pork bellies. (This should be common ground). Luther perceives other error as well. At this point the concept of SS is introduced to address the perceived error.
The conversation would go like this: PeterJ, we both agree that error existed in the Church in 1517 (though you would say it was not part of its official teaching and was largely remedied during the Counter-reformation). We both agree that God inspired the authors of scripture and acted to ensure the preservation of the books of the NT and the OT and acted to ensure their selection to the canon. PeterJ, you say that sacred traditon is also inspired and that the Magisterium of the RCC can not err in its official teaching. Unfortunately, this is where we part company. From my assessment of your tradition and Magisterium I must conclude that there is error in both, and so I am left with SS. In the conversation between you and I (or between Luther and the RCCof 1517) the reliability of Scripture need not be proven…it is a “GIVEN”. The analysis leading to SS must be understood in that context. The analysis is then: Given that the Bible we possess is the inspired word of God:

a) is it materially sufficient?
b) is it formally sufficient? and
c) is anything else equally inspired such that it is also w/o error?

The answers, yes, yes and no result in SS.
 
True, although I don’t believe that has a lot of bearing on this discussion. Consider: pretty much any issue that you or I could bring up, the other could respond to by saying, Well the majority of Catholics and Protestants never think that one through.
agreed
I’m sorry but that’s simply false – those ECFs who lived in the first, second, and third centuries simply did not have the list of 27 books of the New Testament that we list today. (I’ll be very much surprized if you can name even one ECF before the 4th century who proposed that exact list of 27 books.)
Sorry, did you think that I said “that the ** very first** ECFs immediately identifed a certain set of writings as scripture to the exclusion all else”?. If so, you would be correct in identifying that as a false claim, but it ain’t what I said. The ECFs did eventually put aside their limited differences and arrive at a canon of scripture. In contrast, as you say:
I’m not claiming that the ECFs proposed/defined some list or “canon” of Sacred Tradition.
Why do you suppose that was the case? Why did the ECFs think it necessary to define a canon of scripture, but not a canon of sacred tradition?
 
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