I recently came across your article on
Scripture and Tradition, and I feel that it makes a number of misrepresentations about what exactly the idea of Sola Scriptura entails.
Good for you, and thanks for posting.
Code:
My chief objections related to the following statement:
“Protestants claim the Bible is the only rule of faith, meaning that it contains all of the material one needs for theology… anything extraneous to the Bible is simply non-authoritative, unnecessary, or wrong”
Sola Scriptura does not claim the Bible to be the only source of doctrinal authority. What is claimed is that the Bible is the only infallible source of doctrinal authority. While both Protestants and Catholics will agree that scripture is an infallible source of doctrine (2 Timothy 3:16-17), the Protestant position is that no other infallible source of doctrine is anywhere established.
However, Protestants do believe that other sources of authority exist outwith scripture, with perhaps the most significant of these being the church. Scripture itself shows that the church may make authoritative interpretations of scripture (Acts 15), and enforce these as a matter of discipline across the local churches (Acts 16:4).
There are many different interpretations of SS, which is not perhaps made as clear in the article as ought to be done. That statement does accurately describe some Protestant positions.
Catholics consider Scripture to be inspired and inerrant, but the quality of fallibility can only be found in persons, not books, however Holy.
Indeed, this is the very basis of the presbyterian church polity of the Reformed branch of Protestantism. An example of the application of such authority would be the almost universal implementation of creeds and confessions across Protestant churches, which are regarded as authoritative, despite not being part of the scripture. Some of these we will share with Catholics (eg the Nicene Creed), while others we will not (eg the Westminster Confession of Faith). So I feel that your article was very misleading when it stated Protestants believe that “anything extraneous to the Bible is simply non-authoritative, unnecessary, or wrong”.
I agree. I think that describes “solo scriptura” much better.
While Protestants and Catholics can agree that the church is invested with a certain authority to speak on doctrinal matters, their disagreement is about whether or not is it infallible in doing so. Protestants would say that the church is a subordinate authority to the scripture. Indeed, it is the scripture that establishes the authority of the church (Acts 15, Acts 16:4, Matthew 18;17-19 etc).
Yes. This is a drastic departure from the Apostolic faith.
Likewise, the scripture shows the church to be subordinate and subject to the scriptures. For example, the Thessalonians were commended for searching out the scriptures to prove the teachings of Paul himself (Acts 17:11) - if the words of the original apostles were subordinate to scripture
Actually no, but that is a common misinterpretation of that verse. On the contrary, what made the Bereans more “noble” than the others was that they first received the Apostolic instruction with eagerness, then turned to the scriptures in the light of what they were taught.
how can the ‘apostles’ of this day and age claim to speak with greater authority?
It is the same authority. Jesus gave authority to His Apostles, and they passed it to their successors, the Bishops. The Church and her authority preceded the Bible, and the New Testament came out of the Church, not the other way around.
This issue aside, one important point to note is that while Protestants do not believe the Bible to be the sole source of all doctrine and discipline, we do believe it to contain all that is necessary for salvation, and that its teachings in this particular matter are sufficiently clear that they are of themselves sufficient to preach salvation. Accordingly, 2 Timothy 3:15 states:
Yes, Catholics also believe in material sufficiency. But this verse has also been misinterpreted by Protestants. Scripture is profitable. In whose hands? Who did Jesus charge with the duty to equip the saints?
11 And his gifts were that some should be apostles, some prophets, some evangelists, some pastors and teachers, 12
to equip the saints for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, 13 until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ; Ephesians 4:11–14
The Scriptures were never meant to be separated from those to whom Jesus gave the gifts and responsibility for equipping the saints.
Protestants believe that the scriptures are indeed sufficient to make us wise unto salvation, independent of any supposed apostolic traditions, or the interpretations of church leaders. However this is only true of matters pertaining to salvation, and not the entirety of Christian life and discipline.
Then you have retained some Catholic teaching, in spite of the effort to reject it.
