B
benhur
Guest
SS does not use SS .The church uses SS.My specific’s lay with SS. How can a *SS use SS *to defeat any historical or new heresy without an infallible authority to do so?
One does not defeat heresy. One can only uphold the truth, and pray souls to hear His voice on the matter thru you. And pray you do not get infected after having delivered others. He has already defeated all heresies. If we walk in Him we are safe.
That is right. Saints and councils, and really tradition, are off topic for SS folk. Not their forte…?You introduced Catholic Saints and Catholic Councils. I respectfully declined to respond to a off topic subject, that has no relation to my question.
Does Paul say the church is *infallible *, or that she will be presented, in that day, spotless ?From what I understand SS to be saying here. SS does negate the power of God. When SS rejects that God can make His Church infallible and as Paul states the Church being without any stain, Immaculate without spot or wrinkle.
Otherwise I agree. SS is definitely to displace the other notion that the church is infallible and an equal source to theopneustos.
SS would deny that power, as the other (CC) would deny the unique power of Writ that comes from specifically being, distinctly being superlatively normative
Well I have not posted anything being "invisible’’(save Diety and His Wind though we see the affect) SS is a quite visible foundation of apostles and their writ. SS is to be used then by all the visible authorities. After all it is her Writ to be custodian of. Tradition then is how the church acts as a rule of faith, by that same said Apoostolic/Writ foundation. It is not an equal, infallible revelation, for nothing new can be laid that which was already laid by apostles/Writ.According to your post’s. SS possesses an invisible authority,
Just as the OT developed tradition around their prophets/Writ, with the Mishna and the Talmud. But like our discussion today, the latter became as binding, authoritative as theopnestos Writ, but with much debate and not by all. Writ troubled not the Lord, but the other stuff (fallible traditions) sure did.
Well one must look at the authority structure say in Lutheranism, or Anglicanism, or even look at any one congregation/ church body. For the most part, one must teach from Writ but as understood in or by their respective tradition, small t. I would add that their small t tradition is to go back to the first church.I am seeking answers to how a SS practices that authority from SS.
Blessings