Inkaneer: Thank you for posting a response to my post. I would like to comment on your response.
First off I believe truly that 2 Thess 2:15 is scripture and I accept it fully. God doesn’t change, his essential nature and character etc doesn’t change, agreed. Does God’s Word change? Perhaps you can clarify that question I am not sure what you are asking. Are you talking about the method God uses to pass on his directions, commands to his people? At different times God used different methods of passing on his divine instruction, commands to his people…God has used written and oral transmission. God for instance giving divine instructions through the prophets whom then gave them to the people, that is oral transmission. At other times God used written communication to his people…
What I meant when I asked the question, “Does God’s Word change?” is that do we have to keep interpreting God’s word to fit the times or is God’s word, like God Himself, immutable [unchanging]. In other words, is truth an absolute or is it relative? I think every one will agree that God’s word like He Himself is unchanging so Scripture, the written word of God means the same today as it did when first penned almost 2,000 years ago. The meaning of the written word has not changed. So Paul’s exhortation to the Thessalonians to hold onto the Oral Tradition is as valid today in the 21st century as when he wrote it in the 1st century. That is not good for sola scriptura.
Just_Me_Andrew;7038741:
You asked if we are holding onto what God has given orally today, interesting that your own church has stated no new revelation is being given today. The canon they say is closed…yet oral revelation is still being given? Interesting that in the early Church prophets were around e.g. Agabus (Acts 11:27-28). That is oral transmission of God’s prophetic word, and yet we don’t see the Catholic church proclaiming they have prophets giving oral revelation. As you read the book of Acts and onward through the NT the prophetic gift seems to have died down…yet the Catholic church claims oral revelation through the Pope and the Magesterium, very interesting.
There has been no new public revelation since the death of the last Apostle somewhere around 100 AD. There is private revelation. However, one is not obligated to believe in private revelations. The Catholic Church does not claim “oral revelation” through the pope or the Magisterium. In fact the term “oral revelation” is one I am not familiar with. I have heard of public and private revelations. That is why you don’t see anyone with the mantle of prophet today in the Catholic Church. What you do see is the church clarifying doctrine by formal definition. Usually this is done in response to some erroneous teaching such as Arianism or Nestorianism but that is not always the case. In 1968 Pope Paul VI wrote an encyclical called *Humanae Vitae * [Human Life] in which He extolled the perils of abortion and contraception calling them grave sins. This was long before the infamous *Roe vs Wade * court case in the U.S. and it raised quite a ruckus amongst Catholics and protestants alike. His teaching on abortion was not new as the church has always called abortion murder. It was condemning artificial contraception that was seen as new because prior to ‘the pill’ there was no way to prevent conception. But
Humanae Vitae said that artificially preventing life was no different than aborting it in that both were grave [mortal] sins. What you are seeing therefore, is not any new “revelation”. Rather, the Church was given, by Christ, a teaching obligation. In Mt 28:19-20 we see this conferred onto the Apostles. That obligation was never abrogated and is still in effect today. What the Church is doing in this teaching role is applying those immutable truths to the times today. It does this often in the face of secular and even religious opposition by protestants as was the case forty years ago when it labled artificial contraception a sin. Today protestants in the pro-life movement no longer oppose the teaching and
Humanae Vitae is seen as a landmark in the pro life movement.