Jesus was
I do see where you are going. Impeccability is not the standard. David had many shortcomings, as do we all, but one thing that Scripture makes clear is that David walked close to the Lord and was “a man after God’s own heart.” And is David even analogous to the Papacy? God used David, but that didn’t mean that God spoke infallibly through all the Kings of Israel, even the one’s who worshiped Baal.
Don’t you think a Pope walks close to God? How about Pastors that walk close to God? How about layperson that walk close to God?
Does that mean they can write Scriptures?
However, God appointed some to write Scriptures. And how are we to determine who are those persons? Well the Holy Spirit did guide a group of men. Can we agree on that?
Then, if we are not sure that these writings are infallibly selected as Scripture, How are we to know what is infallibly true about these writings? Did Jesus exist? Did Jesus have 2 natures? Is there such a thing as assurance of salvation? How can you be sure of something that has error and it has not been infallibly declared? Further, under what authority is that declaration coming from?
You see, if you claim assurance of salvation. You are claiming an infallible statement, whether you realize it or not.
When you claim that 2 Tim 3:16 says that ALL SCRIPTURE is breathed out by God…, you are claiming that that verse is infallible, whether you realize it or not.
Further, How can a book validate itself? Does it not need the Holy Spirit’s guidance to an outside agent (men) to do so?
I made no such claim to infallibility. Neither did I make the claim that the Bible is free from error. That claim was already being made when I was born in 1989. I simply receive it and accept it in light of God’s word, “All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness” (2 Tim. 3:16).
I’m not saying you made those specific claims, but you believe in Christ, and you believe the Bible to be inspired by God and I am pretty positive you don’t think there is error in your beliefs. Or do you think you err in your belief of Jesus and that of Scripture?
Further, if you believe the Bible has errors, what are they?
Once again, it’s not a claim I make. It’s not up to me to decide such things.
Agreed! Not to me either.
Is that a bad thing? Perhaps the different churches are right on somethings and wrong on others. We can be witnesses to each other of the full gospel. Some ambiguity will always exist.
All in moderation. We (Catholics) have 23 different rites (Mostly branching out of 4 main rites as I remember). However, when numbers start to go well beyond the 100s then I have to scratch my head and realize there is something just not right here.
And yes, ambiguity has existed since the Apostles themselves! That is precisely why we need an authority to Oversee them.
Off the top of my head, Mary’s Immaculate Conception, but its not that I don’t like what the Pope says in as much as I do not find the principle of papal infallibility persuasive from a biblical, historical, or practical standpoint.
History is in a way against you on this. What do you think the Councils claimed when they defined matters of the Faith? When they declared “anathema” other ambiguities? Infallibility! They left no doubt that what they were proclaiming had any margin of error. In fact, I have not read anything about any ecumenical council retract from anything in matter is the faith.