goout:
Jesus is a person not a book.
No one who properly uses the principle of sola scriptura would deny this. In fact, it is a straw man.
It is not a straw man at all. We continually see in many places what amounts to a denial of the Incarnate Christ, as if Christ is a figure in the bible, but did not walk the earth in human flesh, in human history, touch people, breathe on people, speak to people, give people work to do, ie form a Church.
This kind of “literary only” Christ is rife here and all through protestantism. And that is not Christ. Christ is above all incarnate, fully the Son of God, and fully human.
Jesus formed a community, he didn’t write a book.
This comes close to denying God’s authorship of scripture. I assume you do not mean it that way.
It does not. It observes the truth that scripture is the word of God in human words, written by the community it lives in.
Do you believe God floated the bible to earth already written, or was a community formed first, which wrote the bible?
The community he formed wrote the book. The community he formed has authority, not the book.
The bible comes out of Tradition.
Again, this seems to marginalize scripture, which I don’t believe to be a Catholic position.
That said, it is self evident that scripture and Tradition should not disagree. And, scripture confirms that the Church has been given the authority to teach. Sola scriptura does not oppose that confirmation.
The bible comes out of Tradition.
Scripture and Tradition are a unified whole with the living Church. If you don’t have one, you don’t have the whole.
Please explain how that marginalizes scripture, when in fact it merely observes how scripture came about.
Again:
Where was the bible when Jesus walked the earth in human flesh?
You never answer this question.