Iām just trying to understand things from your perspective! So, Lutherans can trust the Lutheran writers of the Lutheran Confessions to which you and Josiah must defer, and Lutherans/Catholics can trust the writers of the Nicene Creed to which both Lutherans/Catholics must defer, and all Christians can trust the writers of the holy bible to which all Christians must defer. It is each respective document(s) as opposed to the writers that are relevant, but not infallible, with the exception of the bible? If the Lutheran Confessions, written by men can be trusted, then surely these men could have been trusted in their day - correct?
Do you agree with what you just wrote?
Yup! However, I believe that all authority was given to Christ and Christ then conferred His authority on His church leaders in His stead, commissioning them to go to the ends of the earth, in His name, building up and governing His Church, and we are to obey our leaders and defer to their authority just as the the early Christians did when Paul said:
*āObey your leaders and defer to their authority. They keep watch over you as men who must give an account. Obey them so that their work will be a joy, not a burden, for that would be of no advantage to you.ā
*
If we are to defer to the bible only as our one and only authority, then I guess Paul didnāt get the memo.

I believe that Jesus endowed His church leaders (regardless of the century) - via the power of the holy spirit of course, with the discernment of Gods will and that they are incapable of error in expounding doctrine on faith or morals only. If I didnāt, I would have to consider the possibility that the 4th century Trinitarian dogma could actually be fallible, or that the 4th century doctrine of the hypostatic union (the two natures of Jesus, which was adopted as orthodox doctrine at the Council of Chalcedon ) - could very well be a fallible teaching as well. After all, many rejected this doctrine after it was defined by the CC. I would also have to consider the possibility that the Council of Ephesus, which decreed in 431 that Mary is Theotokos (which was met with opposition) - because her son Jesus is one person who is both God and man, divine and human, could also have been fallible in its pronouncement. If the infallibility of these early ecumenical councils are called into question, then so are the preceding doctrines defined therein. The question is: how did all these fallible CC leaders (who came together at certain times in history) - define these doctrines as infallibly accurate teachings of truth? Perhaps the holy spirit had something to do with it!
The Jews once asked Jesus:
āAnd when he entered the temple, the chief priests and the elders of the people came up to him as he was teaching, and said, āBy what authority are you doing these things, and who gave you this authority?āā (Matt. 21:23)
This was indeed a legitimate question, and one that any sincere Christian ought to ask of anyone who claims to be a a shepherd of Godās flock, appointed by Jesus Christ Himself, and, as Josiah as basically stated: Scripture tells us that this position is never self-appointed. That is, no man can merely take it upon himself, of his own initiative, to start shepherding Godās flock:
āAnd one does not take the honor upon himself, but he is called by God, just as Aaron was.ā (Heb. 5:4)
It goes without saying that the one (Jesus) - who confers the authority must be superior in authority to the one being commissioned, since no one can confer that which he does not possess himself, and the same applied to the Apostles who conferred their authority, and were of course superior in authority to the ones they commissioned, such as Titus and Timothy, who were told to do the same. Surely this biblical paradigm was to continued until Jesusā return? This scriptural pattern can be ascertained by observing the mission of Jesus Christ. It is a pattern of divine succession via the power of the holy spirit:
God the Father (the superior authority) sends Jesus Christ: āā¦these very works which I am doing, bear me witness that the Father has sent me.ā John 5:36
Jesus, in turn, sends the Apostles: āā¦As the Father has sent me, even so I send you.ā John 20:21
Jesus sends His Apostles: āas the Father has sent me,ā that is, in the same manner, with the same authority: āall authority.ā
āAll authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.ā (Matt. 28:18)
The Apostles then, did not take their office and authority upon themselves, but were appointed by a superior authority, Jesus Christ. The bible attest to the unique authoritative status of the Apostles in several ways. The Apostles possessed the gospel message precisely because it was āentrustedā to them, and not taken by them on their own initiative. The bible clearly establishes how the gospel message and the necessary authority that accompanies its preaching was passed on from God to Jesus Christ, then to the Apostles. The question I had to ask myself as a former Lutheran, was this: after the demise of the original 12 Apostles, how was this gospel and apostolic authority to be passed on?
continuedā¦