I am not sure what you mean. No evidence can say if St. Paul actually talked to Jesus, right?
So unless you want to terminate the circles by something naturally acceptable to practical reason, you do still have a circle, no?
Sure, but it is acceptable to practical reason. Set aside the question of whether the Scripture is inspired for a moment. Let’s just say his writings, as well as the writings of Luke are uninspired… they’re just historical records.
We also know that outside of the NT witness itself, Paul was a learned rabbinical teacher, who, apparently, at the drop of a hat goes from being a persecutor of the Christian faith to being the preeminent Christian apostle to the entire Gentile world, and professes to his experiences up to and including the point of beheading. I would ask you, what is more reasonable to the practical senses, that Paul’s testimony is true or that a wealthy, well respected Jewish leader, having been instructed by the foremost rabbi in Palestine, who spent his formative years hunting down and murdering Christians, to a state of constant near poverty, association with a persecuted minority (in fact, a minority he himself persecuted), imprisoned by Rome, flogged in synagogues, threatened to death by the Jewish community, and eventually is willing to die…for something
he would have objectively known never happened (his encounter with Christ). Added to this fact, the apostles at the time of Paul’s conversion also authenticate his message as being the same doctrine that they themselves were instructed in personally by Christ and welcome him into apostolic fellowship (as does the entire Christian church).
Which all leads to the veracity of his testimony, which insures the veracity of his writings…and so on and so forth.
The Church can make the pronouncement. It does not matter for a Catholic if the reasons given end up being great because the teaching itself is considered to be protected from error.
Now just to demonstrate something here, here the Catholic assents to an authority, the Church. The most natural question to ask (now that we have become somewhat familiar with the problem of circularity) is whether this position by Catholics is not circular.
To answer this question, you must understand the Catholic position. The Catholic position argues that Christ’s death and resurrection gives us reason to accept his authority over the transcendent/supernatural. In other words, if I had reasons (historical) to say the resurrection is true, then it is intuitive to me to give assent to Christ’s authority (note, I still wouldn’t know specifics about Christ as to even whether he is the son of God).
Okay.
At this point in time, I recognize that Christ was a rabbi. Thus, I decide to turn to his students, the Apostles. This is as intuitive today as it was back in the day. Today we turn to Phd students of Professors who have pioneered a field for an example. In this same way, we accept their students, the Apostolic Successors.
Okay. The latter part being dependent on how you define apostolic succession.
The faithful then assent to the specific hierarchy and the limitations and scope of their authority as taught by them. This too is not foreign since this is exactly what doctors or engineers do. They have a scope in which they have declared their expertise.
So for the Catholic, the circle is terminated at Christ’s death and resurrection where the link is provided by the naturally recognized truth of acknowledging the authority of a student from a great teacher.
This would be true of any Christian.
In this way, all I am asking if you have a way to terminate your circle? Also keep in mind that more complicated and more elaborate your solution, the more unlikely that it was what the first Christians thought.
It gets no more complicated. How would you address the inherent circularity of the Catholic position, though? Especially as regards the canon. I know you haven’t argued this point, but here is what I usually see:
Premise: The Church is infallible
Major: The Church has infallibly defined that Scripture is God’s word, thus, we know it is.
Minor: The Church has infallibly interpreted the word of God to say the church is infallible.
Conclusion: The Church is infallible.
The only way, IMO, in the above scenario to break the circle, is to know that revelation is God’s word apart from church infallibility.