T
Traverse
Guest
I’m going to try and make this simple because I think we’re just getting caught up in responses to individual points and missing the forest for the trees.
You guys keep quoting “hold fast to the traditions… either by word of mouth or letter” over and over again. I never said I disputed the verse so repeating it isn’t really helping anything. The dispute is whether or not we still get the word of God through word of mouth, not whether or not we should hold to it if we do.
Furthermore, I’ve shown scriptural evidence for how the bible does claim that the spiritual gifts will be temporary until the bible is completed. You deny the interpretation of that scripture, which is your prerogative, but don’t continually ask me for the evidence I would submit to you because I’ve already done it. Just because you disagree doesn’t mean I’ve been withholding bible verses or can’t find any. I’ve found them! We just have a disagreement on interpretation and that’s fine. It’s a little weird when you guys just dismiss what I’ve said and then basically say “see you can’t find anything” and I’m standing here with an arrow pointed at things I’ve found.
As for the assertion that the bible doesn’t contain everything necessary for salvation… I don’t see how it doesn’t. It contains the commandments for repentance and baptism. It contains the institution of communion and the requirement that the saints assemble together. It tells us to “be holy as I am holy.” It tells us to love one another, to avoid false doctrine and stick to the faith that has been handed down to us.
What else is there?
Sacred Tradition, in my experience, has been used to convey the catholic church’s hierarchy, not illustrate additional requirements for salvation.
Someone asked me by what authority I meet on wednesday evenings for bible study. By the example of the apostles, in fact. We take communion on the first day of the week because (at least in the bible) we only have an example of that in scripture, but we DO know that the early church met frequently besides. So us picking another day to gather together to study the bible is perfectly within the authority of scripture.
A big point of confusion has been that because I use the bible as the final authority for doctrine that I deny the authority of the church. I do not in any way do this. The Lord has given authority to the church as the pillar and the foundation of truth. This does not necessarily follow, however, that the church has additional things to say that aren’t in scripture but rather can exercise authority based on scripture.
I know I’m missing a few questions here and there by not responding directly to quotes, but right now I’m trying to point out a few things so that we can go from there. You misunderstand me when you say I deny the authority of the church or that I say the Holy Spirit no longer helps the church just because I put forward a thought that the HS helps us in OTHER ways.
I will comment directly on this quote though from PR merger…
The actual assembling of the books and what IS scripture and what isn’t? That I do not take as common sense and that is why I’m here on this forum, to discern the validity of my collection of scripture and the catholic collection of scripture. But which version is THE scripture doesn’t really enter into the concept of sola scriptura. Personally, I’ve seen catholics behave like they believe sola scriptura while simultaneously claiming they don’t. I’ve never seen a sacred tradition explained as valid except in light of scripture.
You guys keep quoting “hold fast to the traditions… either by word of mouth or letter” over and over again. I never said I disputed the verse so repeating it isn’t really helping anything. The dispute is whether or not we still get the word of God through word of mouth, not whether or not we should hold to it if we do.
Furthermore, I’ve shown scriptural evidence for how the bible does claim that the spiritual gifts will be temporary until the bible is completed. You deny the interpretation of that scripture, which is your prerogative, but don’t continually ask me for the evidence I would submit to you because I’ve already done it. Just because you disagree doesn’t mean I’ve been withholding bible verses or can’t find any. I’ve found them! We just have a disagreement on interpretation and that’s fine. It’s a little weird when you guys just dismiss what I’ve said and then basically say “see you can’t find anything” and I’m standing here with an arrow pointed at things I’ve found.
As for the assertion that the bible doesn’t contain everything necessary for salvation… I don’t see how it doesn’t. It contains the commandments for repentance and baptism. It contains the institution of communion and the requirement that the saints assemble together. It tells us to “be holy as I am holy.” It tells us to love one another, to avoid false doctrine and stick to the faith that has been handed down to us.
What else is there?
Sacred Tradition, in my experience, has been used to convey the catholic church’s hierarchy, not illustrate additional requirements for salvation.
Someone asked me by what authority I meet on wednesday evenings for bible study. By the example of the apostles, in fact. We take communion on the first day of the week because (at least in the bible) we only have an example of that in scripture, but we DO know that the early church met frequently besides. So us picking another day to gather together to study the bible is perfectly within the authority of scripture.
A big point of confusion has been that because I use the bible as the final authority for doctrine that I deny the authority of the church. I do not in any way do this. The Lord has given authority to the church as the pillar and the foundation of truth. This does not necessarily follow, however, that the church has additional things to say that aren’t in scripture but rather can exercise authority based on scripture.
I know I’m missing a few questions here and there by not responding directly to quotes, but right now I’m trying to point out a few things so that we can go from there. You misunderstand me when you say I deny the authority of the church or that I say the Holy Spirit no longer helps the church just because I put forward a thought that the HS helps us in OTHER ways.
I will comment directly on this quote though from PR merger…
Tradition tells us this:
Code:The canon of Scripture The canon of Scripture is closed Revelation ended with the death of the last apostle The canon of Scripture is inerrant
I do believe these truths, but based more on common sense than the authority of sacred tradition. The canon is closed because of course it is. It’s been a long time! Revelation ended with the last apostle because of course it did… we don’t have revelation today for me to be aware of. The canon of scripture is inerrant because of course it is, it is the word of God.None of the above is proclaimed in the Bible, but you believe each of those truths, yes?
The actual assembling of the books and what IS scripture and what isn’t? That I do not take as common sense and that is why I’m here on this forum, to discern the validity of my collection of scripture and the catholic collection of scripture. But which version is THE scripture doesn’t really enter into the concept of sola scriptura. Personally, I’ve seen catholics behave like they believe sola scriptura while simultaneously claiming they don’t. I’ve never seen a sacred tradition explained as valid except in light of scripture.