G
Gaelic_Bard
Guest
All very true, Steve. There’s nothing here in substance that I would disagree with (tradition being the only determinative factor in the authenticity of Hebrews notwithstanding). We both agree that the teaching of the apostles was handed on to the church in both written and verbal forms.Very true.
So in order for Hebrews to be accepted as apostolic, there was a determination made by someone as to its authenticity. But this judgment had to be based upon the contents of the writing and without consideration to its human authorship since it is unknown. It follows, then, that there already existed, prior to the writing, the deposit of faith against which the book of Hebrews was measured. This is Sacred Tradition in action. The Church had to have already possessed the Truth present in Sacred Scripture in order to make a judgment as to the inspired nature of any particular writing it includes.
Yes. A judgment was made by the Church that it was not one of the inspired writings, along with many others. In the same way the Church discerned which writings were inspired, all based upon the deposit of faith handed down orally by the Apostles. Sacred Tradition came first and already possessed the fulness of truth. It was the truth present Sacred Tradition that set the bar for any writing that was to be considered inspired.
It is that same Church that teaches the real presence in the Eucharist, who administers the sacraments, who celebrates Mass, rather than having a “service”. All these wierd Catholic things that you do not find spelled out specifically in the Bible come from Tradition and they are as apostolically valid as the writings chosen by this Church to make up the New Testament. You can’t have one without the other. If the Scriptures are valid, then so is Sacred Tradition.
Where we ultimately disagree is whether the content of tradition contains doctrine outside of what is recorded in Scripture and whether said tradition can be demonstrated to be apostolic in origin.
Which takes it back 50 posts ago and why I wanted to avoid a discussion on something we already agree on anyway