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adamhovey1988
Guest
Wait a minute…maybe I am missing something, but why would someone who doesn’t accept the authority of the Pope, care about which books may or may not be canonical, as according to the Pope.?
I didn’t think the Pope got it wrong.How can a Pope get this wrong? Pope Gregory the Great while quoting from 1 Maccabees tells us that 1 Maccabees is, "…not Canonical.
To be fair, there were others who held this opinion of the 7 books…that while ‘inspired’ they were not necessarily of the same stature as the other 39. Referred to as having lesser authority. Even when the early Jews accepted them as canonical, it likely was not all Jews of that era.Wait a minute…maybe I am missing something, but why would someone who doesn’t accept the authority of the Pope, care about which books may or may not be canonical, as according to the Pope.?
Sr_Brando. You asked . . . .
I didn’t think the Pope got it wrong.
I just thought the sense he was using this was it was a Deuterocanonical book vrs. a Protocanonical book.
1st Maccabees was not “canonical” in a Protocanonical sense.
1st Maccabees is canonical in a Deuterocanonical sense.
There are Protocanonical a Deuterocanonical New Testament books too.
God bless.
Cathoholic
BINGO!Wait a minute…maybe I am missing something, but why would someone who doesn’t accept the authority of the Pope, care about which books may or may not be canonical, as according to the Pope.?
That’s because I didn’t catch that side of the statement. I’ll reply when I can…BINGO!
That is the point I was trying to make with Jerome. If he won’t accept the other writings of Jerome or the fact that he admitted his error and did end up including the 7 books in his Latin translation, why does he accept that one statement of Jerome’s as authoritative???
If you noticed he skipped right over those facts.
There is a serious historical flaw in your argument. It has to deal with the ordinary gloss, can’t spell out the actual Latin name off the top of my head…To be fair, there were others who held this opinion of the 7 books…that while ‘inspired’ they were not necessarily of the same stature as the other 39. Referred to as having lesser authority. Even when the early Jews accepted them as canonical, it likely was not all Jews of that era.
That was Luther’s argument. That there were these personal opinions about them over the years.
But they were part of the Vulgate for over 1,000 years prior to Luther with no major disputes about inspiration post Jerome(who’s own opinion changed over time)
Fill me in - tell me why you think I’m in errorThere is a serious historical flaw in your argument. It has to deal with the ordinary gloss, can’t spell out the actual Latin name off the top of my head…
Ummm…no. I am quoting the inerrant Word of God.Are you quoting an infallible source who has interpreted this passage for you?
Go to the following article for the whole argument I’ve read:To be fair, there were others who held this opinion of the 7 books…that while ‘inspired’ they were not necessarily of the same stature as the other 39. Referred to as having lesser authority. Even when the early Jews accepted them as canonical, it likely was not all Jews of that era.
That was Luther’s argument. That there were these personal opinions about them over the years.
But they were part of the Vulgate for over 1,000 years prior to Luther with no major disputes about inspiration post Jerome(who’s own opinion changed over time)
I don’t have to accept him/them as authoritative as the CC does to understand the flow of history.Wait a minute…maybe I am missing something, but why would someone who doesn’t accept the authority of the Pope, care about which books may or may not be canonical, as according to the Pope.?
I deny that the church is “the pillar and foundation of truth.”Ummm…no. I am quoting the inerrant Word of God.
Do you deny that the Scriptures state that the Church is the pillar and foundation of truth?
Yipes!I deny that the church is the pillar and foundation of truth.
I edited my post.Yipes!
Let me disabuse you of some mistaken ideas, Brando.Your not quoting the the Catholic church’s official interpretation of this passage?
Would you put the sake of your salvation on that statement? I mean, the Bible says the Church is the pillar and foundation of truth. In the (American) south some folks like to say (seriously, you used to see it on bumper stickers), “The Bible says it, I believe it, that settles it”.I deny that the church is “the pillar and foundation of truth.”
I accept that the church is "the pillar and buttress of the truth."1 Tim 3:15
And, if I’m not mistaken about what you’ve previously stated, your interpretation is not to be accepted based on your own standard. Your not quoting the the Catholic church’s official interpretation of this passage. Shouldn’t you be doing that to be consistent? I mean, what’s the point of having an infallible interpreter if you never quote from that source?
Umm, how does that work? You question me all the time about an authoritative interpretation and then. when the argument is reserved you don’t have an authoritative interpretation? Isn’t that a double standard?Let me disabuse you of some mistaken ideas, Brando.
The CC does not have an official interpretation of this passage.
The CC simply is the the lens through which we read the Bible.
That is, the Bible is a Catholic book, produced by Catholics, for Catholics.
Those of our brothers and sisters in Christ who have departed from the One Faith are certainly welcome to read it, and to be nourished by its words, but when you don’t read it with the lens of the Faith which gave you this Book, you will end up with tens of thousands of differing, sometimes even contrary!, interpretations.
That’s just what the devil ordered.
That’s because your position is inconsistent, Brando.Umm, how does that work? You question me all the time about an authoritative interpretation and then. when the argument is reserved you don’t have an authoritative interpretation? Isn’t that a double standard?
The bible says, “pillar and **buttress **” not foundation. That’s what I’m denying. And, I would stake my salvation on the church being the, “pillar and **buttress **” which is holding up “the truth.”Would you put the sake of your salvation on that statement? I mean, the Bible says the Church is the pillar and foundation of truth. In the (American) south some folks like to say (seriously, you used to see it on bumper stickers), “The Bible says it, I believe it, that settles it”.
Pillar and bulwark or Pillar and buttress = THE SAME THING, Brando.I edited my post.