J
JPrejean
Guest
I thought that I had, in that I gave a particular example of what I meant in Athanasius’s argument. I apologize if that wasn’t clear. But more generally, the problem is that I can’t be more specific about terms like “Tradition” and “the life and the practice of the Church.” They are, by their very nature, open-ended. You can’t point to a list and say “X, Y, and Z are tradition, while A, B, and C are not.” I can only explain how the principle works in a particular context and in response to a particular argument, which I thought that I had done. I presume that you intended to assert that Athanasius held the Arian error to be refutable per sola scriptura, and my point was that Athanasius cannot be made to demonstrate that conclusion for any reasonably specific definition of sola scriptura (whether Mathison’s “Tradition 1” or otherwise).If you weren’t satisfied with the specificity of my terms, why would you then use vague terms yourself? You could have asked for me to define what I wrote in a more concrete manner.
Again, I thought that I had demonstrated them, rather than simply stating them as obvious. Is there a particular part of my argument that is unclear? My point is that Athanasius’s argument from Scripture is made in a manner that would not demonstrate a belief in sola scriptura and would likely contradict it outright. Perhaps this illustration from Athanasius’s argument would be clearer. Athanasius used evidence such as:Would you mind demonstrating these two points? The conclusions might be obvious to you, but such a position is not useful in discussion with someone holding to another view.
Now what textual warrant or exegetical principle does Athanasius have for presuming that the 89th and 144th Psalms are Messianic? And why is he arguing from these so-called non-Scriptural sources, Baruch and Susanna, if his goal is to show that Scripture alone (per the Protestant interpretation) is sufficient?Susanna said, ‘O Everlasting God[3];’ and Baruch wrote,
‘I will cry unto the Everlasting in my days,’ and shortly after, 'My hope is in the Everlasting, that He will save you, and joy is come unto me from the Holy One[4]
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and David too in the eighty-ninth Psalm, ‘And the brightness of the Lord be upon us,’ and, ‘In Thy Light shall we see Light[6],’ who has so little sense as to doubt of the eternity of the Son[7]?
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And the words addressed to the Son in the hundred and forty-fourth Psalm,
These anomalies are simply inconsistent with the hypothesis that Athanasius was endorsing sola scriptura.
I do, and my purpose generally is to steer people to the wheat (trained and reputable patristics scholars) and away from the chaff (Bill Webster, George Salmon, et al.). If you want a brief introduction to what an actual survey of a Father’s writings looks like, see Joe Gallegos on St. Athanasius: cin.org/users/jgallegos/athans.htm. At the bottom of the following dialogue from Dave Armstrong, you get to see the opinions of heavyweights in ecclesial history (Newman, Kelly, Schaff, Pelikan) on sola scriptura among the Church Fathers generally, and with respect to Athanasius in particular: ic.net/~erasmus/RAZ319.HTM. By all means, go out and read these authors.you would rather point me toward scholarship that you think sufficiently discusses this issue, I would be happy to research this from sources you recommend rather than attempt to touch upon a subject that you may believe is too complicated to be approached on a discussion board.