I understand your lack of desire to respond to insults and condescending behavior. There’s unfortunately a lot of it on this board.
However, I will add that even though I’m more inclined to agree with you (though I am not baptist) how you know that the bible you have is scripture is relevant to the discussion. The reason it is relevant is because they’re trying to get you to say “I know it’s scripture because of the confirmed canon centuries ago at the church council” and then they will say “You accept the canon based on tradition and therefore you inadvertently confirm a necessity for there to be truth outside of the biblical text.”
I agree, for example, that the word, being complete, doesn’t need sacred tradition to flesh it out (so to speak) but I won’t personally deny that it is a matter of tradition which preserves the text. I just don’t necessarily agree that the reason we have a bible is because of a council two hundred years after the writings were finished. But that’s my own project that I’m trying to research myself.
My point is that it’s a relevant discussion I think.
Hello,
If I may join in on this discussion.
As I asked Jon, there is the issue in stating that “Bible is the word of God” without another equal authority.
To explain, even if tradition had preserved until 392 AD, the Bible as the collection of books and letters as you know today, it still does not explain why it is the “word of God”. When we say something is the “Word of God”, it goes beyond the idea of it simply being written by the first Apostles. The best example would be Gospel of St. Luke. St. Luke was not an original Apostle.
So the idea that the councils merely upheld the belief that St. Luke for an example is the WORD of God doesn’t add up, yes?
This means, that another authority had to declare that it is the word of God. Now in history, the only person that has clearly proven the AUTHORITY regarding the transcendent/supernatural is Christ. The claim that the Bible is the WORD of God is also a claim that is transcendent/supernatural. We cannot verify it by some test.
Now this authority that presented the Bible as the word of God, must therefore be linked to Christ in someway as well as been an authority that was accepted by the faithful as late as Council of Hippo.
This is authority is that of Apostles and Apostolic Successors. Note here that Apostles did not have authority in and of themselves. They had the authority by virtue of the fact that they were Christ’s Apostles. The natural reasoning that leads you to the Apostles from Christ is that they were the students of the Rabbi Jesus. Then you assent completely to what they teach regarding Christ.
In the same way, you assent to the Apostolic Successors because they too have that same authority since they were the students of the Apostles (in the natural reason sense) and because they were instituted as successors (in the faith sense).
So when Council of Hippo pronounced that a certain set of books were inspired, the faithful didn’t have to debate. The Apostolic Successors had told them so.
In this way, Scripture, Sacred Tradition and the Authority of the Church are all on the same plane. This is when you have two contradictory interpretations of a passage, you always side with the Church. The Church is what people always turned to for learning about Christ. It wasn’t the Bible. The Bible didn’t exist till 392 AD and it certainly wasn’t clear to the faithful that the Bible was inspired (i.e. Word of God) prior to that.