Craig, I have two questions for you. If you’ve already answered these in other posts, feel free to just give me the post numbers and I’ll read them.
- What inconsistencies have you seen in infallible Catholic teaching?
- What scriptures do you base your belief of Sola Scriptura on?
In addition to this, I’d like to just caution you, from my own personal experience, about the risks of relying too much on your own inward peace and spiritual experiences, with regard to your conviction in Sola Scriptura. I feel a similar peace – not only peace,
great joy – in my conversion to Catholicism, and I feel from the Spirit great animosity toward the subjectivism inherent in the Sola Scriptura approach.
Those have been my personal experiences with the Spirit.
That is a serious problem with the Scripture + Spirit + Me approach- you get people with all kinds of contradictory experiences, interpretations and views.
When I was Protestant, I once had a threefold spiritual experience I thought was from God, in which I was told that all Eucharists are the same. As I became Catholic, I found that that relativistic view is utterly false. I have found that not only according to infallible Catholic teaching, but also in all my spiritual experiences. A couple nights ago, I had a dream from my Lord in which I fled from a church that had the Protestant Eucharist and
ran to a church that had in it the Catholic Eucharist. There were lights shining at that church, in the dream, breaking through the dark of the night. Then I had additional spiritual experiences that morning from Jesus and Mary confirming the dream was from my Lord, and that its meanings were true.
I’ve just got to warn you about relying too much on spiritual experiences. They can lead in opposite directions sincere, devout Christians who both follow what they honestly believe the Bible’s meaning to be. That’s why there has to be an infallible standard against which spiritual experiences can be compared.
You would say that that is the Scripture. However, humans interpret the Scripture. They often interpret it incorrectly. Therefore we have the Spirit to guide us, you might say . . . but that’s where the Protestant argument becomes circular. Spirit interprets Scripture, because we can’t trust our human reasoning . . . but we can’t put our faith in spiritual experiences because they can lead incorrectly, so we compare them against the Scripture . . . but we can trust our interpretation of Scripture, so we rely on the spiritual experiences . . . Basically it comes out to: If our spiritual experiences and our interpretation of Scripture agree, we’ll believe it. BUT we know that spiritual experiences can have errors and our interpretations of Scripture have errors, so that whole structure of authority becomes fallible for us, in practical terms. Which doesn’t mean it has errors- it’s just that we can’t trust our conclusions about it, so its lack of errors doesn’t help us.
UNLESS God inspired His councils to be always completely correct

. In which case, through them, we CAN know what the Scripture means without grotesque error shattering us into thousands of different denominations.