The Sola Scriptura Contradiction

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The difference in Catholicism would be the Church is ordained by God with the task to bind and loose.
Again though you keep misinterpreting what binding and loosing refers to. In the context provided in Matthew 16 and 18 where the subject of binding and loosing is mentioned, this is referring to the forgiveness of sins, not the declaration of doctrine. The Church does not have the authority to contradict what was revealed to it. Don’t conflate the two issues.
 
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and the faithful transmission of the record of Christ’s work.
The transmission of the oral word that conflicts with the written word (which provides us the norm by which we are to judge the oral proclamation of the word) is unfaithful and fallible.
This is why I’m not a Protestant. On the one hand, you are suggesting that fallible men were able to provide a faithful transmission of God’s Word.
On the other hand, you are suggesting that the Church must be in error in principle because the proclamation is not the written transmission.
What really grinds my gears is how you have come to the conclusion that you yourself can judge such a thing since you are also fallible. It is mind-boggling.

Let me share my perspective. By God’s will, fallible men were able to provide an infallible text. By God’s will, fallible men are able to provide infallible doctrine. It’s that simple. So easy. No logical conundrums. What am I left to do? Obey and serve in faith through faith. Hope in Gods mercy. Love FULL STOP.
 
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Again though you keep misinterpreting what binding and loosing refers to.
By what infallible method have you determined that I have misinterpreted the text?
By your bias fallible interpretation you have determined me to be in error. I fail to be bound.
 
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I don’t know any Protestant who proposes an adversarial position between Church and scripture.
I must know more Protestants than you.
the actual position of protestants is far more nuanced than that.
Yes, the “nuance” is that the Church is to be “submissive” to the Scripture, even though you are begging the question… Whose Scripture interpretation? If the Church has the authority to teach, and Her interpretation is infallible (a doctrine of the Church) then there is no adversarial tension between the Church and Scripture EXCEPT to “personal judgement” Protestants, who would take issue with the Church’s interpretation, and therefore put it in an adversarial position. There is no “nuance” there is the elephant in the room of personal judgement/interpretation.
The transmission of the oral word that conflicts with the written word (which provides us the norm by which we are to judge the oral proclamation of the word) is unfaithful and fallible.
This is a Protestant teaching which is borne out of the adversarial position that they have created themselves.

To Catholics there is NO “conflict” between the written word and the oral proclamation, any more than the Early Christians would have found a “conflict” between St. Paul’s teachings and the Scripture they already had. St Paul TAUGHT the early Christian converts HOW the Scripture was to be understood. None of them (except for the Judaizers) would have dreamed of arguing the supremacy of the “law” over the Gospel.

The VERY EXISTENCE of Protestantism HINGES on the adversarial position of the Scripture and the Church. Without that, there would be NO Protestantism.
 
The VERY EXISTENCE of Protestantism HINGES on the adversarial position of the Scripture and what men of the Church did. Without that, there would be NO Protestantism.
See my edits in bold above pursuant to the following:

“Even in the beginnings of this one and only Church of God there arose certain rifts, which the Apostle strongly condemned. But in subsequent centuries much more serious dissensions made their appearance and quite large communities came to be separated from full communion with the Catholic Church - for which, often enough, men of both sides were to blame.”

I would argue that it’s what we do that creates “positions” - not what’s written in Scripture.

(I greatly appreciate the great candor and humility of the Catholic Church in what is said here and in the rest of Unitatis Redintegratio. There are many of my Protestant brethren who could learn a thing or 2 about humility and ecumenism from my Catholic brothers and sisters.)
 
Let me share my perspective. By God’s will, fallible men were able to provide an infallible text. By God’s will, fallible men are able to provide infallible doctrine.
That is where you err. You keep ascribing God’s revelation to man. God’s revelation is God’s revelation. I agree that men were the tool for recording it, but again, the revelation is God’s.
On the other hand, you are suggesting that the Church must be in error in principle because the proclamation is not the written transmission.
No, I say the Church is in error when it proclaims something that is contradictory to the written word.
What really grinds my gears is how you have come to the conclusion that you yourself can judge such a thing since you are also fallible. It is mind-boggling.
You believe that men can judge such a thing as well. That is exactly what the magisterium of the Church does.
 
My gears are still grinding lol.

No I believe that infallible doctrine is from God who utilizes the fallible men. God chooses his mechanism.

You’re asserting that you know somehow that the only mechanism God chooses is Sacred Scripture. I’d love to know how in the world you know that.

Ultimately your answer is you know that because Scripture says so… but by what infallible method have you interpreted Scripture to make such a claim?

And the circle goes on and on and on…
 
Define Church so we’re not talking past each other.
That’s an appropriate challenge. I’m not so sure I can define Church because it’s definition depends on the context. I’m happy to clarify my position for you however.

When I say the Church is ordained by God, in one sense I am specifically referring to the ministerial offices (i.e. the office of an apostle, bishop, cardinal, pope, etc.) AND by Church I am referring to the sum total of these ordained offices WHICH by network includes every member of the entire body.

What is important to our conversation and what my argument is referencing is the ordained office. God established teaching offices, when he established His Church and by connection He established the fallible men who occupy those offices.
 
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For most Protestants, the Church is the body of all believers. The context your using would mean Magisterium for some of us arm-chair theologian folks.

So this is where the tricky part comes in.
Though all believers are the Church, some Protestants recognize that others have the gift of teaching and etc. but others don’t. Others would include everyone regardless of educational background to discuss and come to a conclusion on some matter.

The Holy Spirit that dwells in all Christians also guided those who wrote Scripture. There’s a mutual reinforcement for a lack of a better words.
 
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I would suggest that you are running into the problem of Sola Scriptura. Which interpretation should you accept. If you’ve accepted one, by what method have you removed all bias from your selection?

My method is to completely remove myself from the decision process and simply listen to the Church when it definitively interprets Scripture.

I would say that with the doctrine of Sola Scriptura you unwittingly do the same, while denying that you actually do.
 
I would also suggest a thorough review and diverse think tank on Acts Chapter 15 would help reinforce that the teaching offices (those given the gift of teaching) does indeed have the final say on the interpretation of Scripture.
 
My method is to completely remove myself from the decision process and simply listen to the Church when it definitively interprets Scripture.
So you are saying that “Church” means “your definition” of Church because the Catholic Church defined it as such? And then the Catholic Church (something I stress a lot that it doesn’t help to assume this was “the Church created by Christ” as most Protestants don’t buy that )also equals the definition of “Church” to itself?
 
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So you are saying that “Church” means “your definition” of Church because the Catholic Church defined it as such? And then the Catholic Church (something I stress a lot that it doesn’t help to assume this was “the Church created by Christ” as most Protestants don’t buy that )also equals the definition of “Church” to itself?
I am saying by faith Church means my definition. In contrast by Scripture Alone a Protestant defines Church. That definition is moot without establishing the authenticity of the doctrine. The doctrine itself is a massive logical circle and is therefore void as soon as you realize it. Do I know my definition of Church is right? No! By faith my definition of Church is accurate.

Does a Protestant know his definition of Church is accurate? He would tell you YES! By Scripture he knows the correct definition of Church. This statement reveals a lot about the difference in our position. If he doesn’t say yes then by what authority or what measure does he reject the Catholic Church?
 
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Well I can honestly say I didn’t expect that answer.

So I am one of your “other Protestant” friends in this case. I take faith very seriously and in all honesty grin many many times when I read some things here that posters take as fact. Many things I agree with but take by faith and HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA how someone can take this as fact!

So I agree with your first part. Absolutely. But what I want to ask is why “if I say no” I should not reject the Catholic Church?
 
Sola Scriptura is clearly defined as Scripture being the only infallible rule of faith.
Let’s define Sola Scriptura as Protestants have defined it historically:

Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion, article 6 (Anglican, 1563)
  • Holy Scripture containeth all things necessary to salvation: so that whatsoever is not read therein, nor may be proved thereby, is not to be required of any man, that it should be believed an article of the Faith, or be thought requisite or necessary to salvation.
Westminster Confession of Faith, chapter 1 (Presbyterian, 1646)
  • The whole counsel of God concerning all things necessary for his own glory, man’s salvation, faith and life, is either expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from Scripture: unto which nothing at any time is to be added, whether by new revelations of the Spirit, or traditions of men. Nevertheless, we acknowledge the inward illumination of the Spirit of God to be necessary for the saving understanding of such things as are revealed in the Word:and that there are some circumstances concerning the worship of God, and government of the Church, common to human actions and societies, which are to be ordered by the light of nature, and Christian prudence, according to the general rules of the Word, which are always to be observed.
Confession of Faith (United Methodist, 1962)
  • We believe the Holy Bible, Old and New Testaments, reveals the Word of God so far as it is necessary for our salvation. It is to be received through the Holy Spirit as the true rule and guide for faith and practice. Whatever is not revealed in or established by the Holy Scriptures is not to be made an article of faith nor is it to be taught as essential to salvation.
Baptist Faith and Message (Southern Baptist, 2000)
  • The Holy Bible was written by men divinely inspired and is God’s revelation of Himself to man. It is a perfect treasure of divine instruction. It has God for its author, salvation for its end, and truth, without any mixture of error, for its matter. Therefore, all Scripture is totally true and trustworthy. It reveals the principles by which God judges us, and therefore is, and will remain to the end of the world, the true center of Christian union, and the supreme standard by which all human conduct, creeds, and religious opinions should be tried. All Scripture is a testimony to Christ, who is Himself the focus of divine revelation.
 
@ltwin

Welcome to the conversation. Glad to have you and I’m ready for a solid debate. I’m working on a response to another question on this thread but I look forward to answering your challenges. Might be a bit before I dig in but I won’t forget. God Bless!
 
Doesn’t the infallibility of the Holy Spirit dwelling in Christians logically contradict the position that Scripture alone is infallible.
No. Scripture was written by men who were divinely inspired by the Holy Spirit. Scripture’s authority derives from its author, who is God (working through human writers). When Protestants say that Scripture alone is infallible, we are not claiming that God is fallible. That would make no sense. How can a fallible God inspire and reveal an infallible Scripture. Protestants mean that Scripture is the only infallible source of doctrine. Traditions can be fallible. Councils, church writers, theologians, etc. can err. Only Scripture, in the Protestant view, can be trusted to be an infallible source of doctrinal truth–which all other sources of doctrine should be measured and tested against.
 
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So I agree with your first part. Absolutely. But what I want to ask is why “if I say no” I should not reject the Catholic Church?
This was actually a great question it made me stop and ponder. Much appreciation!
This is my response:
If you say that you do not know the definition of Church then:
You can not know that the Catholic Church does not have the ordained offices I have mentioned which are protected by God. By which fallible men are the mechanism by which God infallibly declares doctrine.
So a formal rejection of the Catholic Church is not yet in order.
You are faced with a dilemma. Do you continue to try to obtain a definition of Church via the principles of Sola Scriptura? By what method will you come to know the definition infallibly via Sola Scriptura? The problem is there all over again. You put yourself back into the equation and you know you can not infallibly trust yourself.
And the cycle of the logical circle goes on and on and on… but without an infallible definition of Church which can not be obtained without men your kind of stuck wondering what is so formal about your rejection in the first place.
Suppose you could reject it out of spite though or just to be silly. But could you confirm that your rejection is absolute? Nah.
 
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