exoflare:
The more I think about it, the more it puzzles me. Just what is the Protestant explanation of how the Bible first got put together? I’ve heard a few generic answers, but most of them don’t really explain anything at all. Examples:
- “The Catholic Church did not make the Bible, it was the Holy Spirit.”
(This is just a bad answer on so many levels it should be obvious… no explanation of just how the “Holy Spirit” carries this out…)
It’s a fact, even so
- it’s a far better answer than the usual self-congratulatory garbage that burbles on about the Church, and not about the Spirit of God. The Church would be nothing, but for God - the Spirit of God is not an optional accessory
.
If the usual smug answer were correct, that praises what men do, and utterly ignores Almighty God, the Church would simply be some wretched human organisation - ignore God, and the Church is nothing but a freakish monstrosity. So God
has to be named as the True Source of the canon - otherwise we end up with quite worthless attempts at apologetics about the canon, which glorify the Church and steal from God by not glorifying Him. Which is completely perverse.
Not every one has a taste for theology - it’s not as though we knew all the ins & outs of how the books were canonised; most of the process is entirely beyond discovery. ##
- “The apostles wrote down everything they wanted people to know.”
(Not all of the books of the NT were even written by the apostles, for one thing)
- “When you read the Bible, it’s obvious that it’s inspired by God.”
(subjective/emotional reasoning, no specific way given to differentiate inspired from “non-inspired” books)
It’s a very good answer - if people* insist* on misrepresenting it, then of course it looks stupid. Again, the decisive part played by the ministry of the Holy Spirit has been ignored.
If anyone here used to be (or is?) a Protestant, I’d be curious to know how this is all generally explained from that point of view in a consistent way. Thanks.
The question never bothered this ex-Protestant - it only seems as though it should do so, if one ignores alternatives to the answers given by Catholics.
The point is really one of logic - the questions one asks oneself, depend on what prompts the questions: IOW, if you don’t doubt that the Bible can be accounted for by ideas about it found within your own form of Christian discipleship, you don’t agonise about how other Christians might answer the questions you don’t ask

That’s why a lot of people don’t worry about where the Bible came from -
they may not know, but their fellow Anglicans, Lutherans, Mennonites, Baptists, Presbyterians, Congregationalists, [insert name] - or such of them who know about these things, and study such questions in detail - will know. So one’s own ignorance is not a fatal weakness; any more than the ignorance of a Catholic about this or that will undermine his discipleship fatally. Someone, somewhere, will know - so one’s own limitations aren’t a problem.
Besides, Christianity is about following Christ - not about possessing inexhaustible knowledge of Church history or the Bible. It is Christ Who matters - not one’s own limitations. Faith in Christ saves - not knowledge of the origins of the Bible. ##