You’re missing the point of the relevancy of Paul’s veracity as it relates to this. I certainly don’t rely solely on his claim. It is, however, evidence. Again, you or I might die for our faith, but it would stand to reason that we wouldn’t if we objectively knew it never happened.
How do you know Paul died for the claim that HE SAW CHRIST AND WAS GIVEN AUTHORITY as opposed to just the claim of the Resurrection or just seeing Christ? I honestly don’t know how the fact that someone is willing to die for something gives them authority to teach about that something.
Practical reasoning does not determine dogma. Revelation does.
?? You cannot know what is revelation unless you can arrive at it through some reason. Then you have to assent by faith but you must first verify what you assent to is actual revelation. Your insistence and the use of the word Revelation is confusing in this sense.
We assent to Apostles and Apostolic Successors NOT because it is dogma at first. We just assent because it is the only thing you CAN DO if you want to learn about Christ.
Christ nor the apostles ever say this. I could reason my way into believing this but without revelaton confirming this, I would rather stick with Christ’s reasoning.
??? What do you think Apostles did when they replaced Judas? Does that Apostle have the same authority? So revelation as far as I can see indicates this happening many times. But you are looking at this from the view that you already know something.
As I said before, unless you first accepted the Church, you don’t have the Bible of anything else. All you have is “Christ rose from the dead”.
It is intuitive that if Christ sends his apostles with a particular charism and this charism is never said to apply to anyone after them, then I have no reason, much less a de fide one, to think it applies to anyone after them. It’s not a question of whether it is reasonable or not.
First, how is it intuitive that Christ gave any special charism to them to begin with? And what is a charism if you haven’t already read the Bible?
As far as practical reason goes, if you are trying to say that the authority of students certified by a teacher is a foreign model to you, I think you are really grasping at straws now. You will have to be super careful next time you visit a doctor or cross a bridge built by engineers because who knows if these are actually… doctors or engineers
It’s not a question of application. It’s a question of logical priority. God must choose to reveal Himself before my reason can process the information. Without revelation, I am relying solely on fallen reason, which could very well tell me that the fruit gives me wisdom and is desirable to look at.
Ok first, please stop undermining reason. If reason is that fallen, there is really no point in God even revealing himself. You know why? Because no one will figure out what he is revealing or whether he even has to reveal himself.
So anyway, no one is debating that God has to reveal himself first. BUT, you have to identify revelation from some logical means. You can’t just jump to conclusions that book X is divine revelation. That is absurd, right? In short what I am saying is that fallen as reason maybe, it would make the least sense to go and just accept things and ideas without reason.
At least the idea of accepting Apostles and their successors make logical sense. The idea of just accepting the Bible as the word of God makes zero sense.
We’re both Christians Eufronosia. We both accept Scripture. I’m not going to pretend that you’re agnostic every time Scripture is cited. Assenting to the church to tell me that Jude is the word of God is circular. What tells me that I must assent to the church? If you say the word of God, then I must already have a way to know that the word of God tells me to assent to the church. Which means I don’t need the church to tell me what the word of God is.
I thought I answered this a few times now. But let me explain again.
You assent to the church because it consists of the Apostolic successors. You assent to the Apostolic successors because of the natural and practical understanding that every man and woman has of the authority of a teacher being passed down to the student he certifies. In this case, the first teacher was Christ. Did you notice how I didn’t refer back to any “Word of God” claims?
I assent to the hierarchy in my church because Scripture tells me to. Which means the hierarchy is not the only interpreter of Scripture.
Now that is a good example of circular reasoning. In fact, the entire Protestantism is based on a circular reasoning i.e.
- Scripture is the word of God. It is the word of God because it says so in the text.
- Scripture is the Word of God. Scripture says my Church down the road is the Church. The Church says Scripture is the word of God.
All of the above is circular unlike the Catholic claim which grounds everything back in Christ and his authority.
Does your church infallibly interpret it’s interpretation, or does it rely on you to interpret it fallibly?
Now you are just stating buzz lines. As I said before, no Catholic or agnostic needs to have any idea of infallibility before moving on from the authority of Christ (proven from his death and Resurrection) to the Church.