L
lak611
Guest
I think in many cases it depends a lot on how well we learn our faith. I read the Bible all the time, and I have never had an instance where my interpretation conflicted with official Catholic teaching. I just read the Bible, but so far I have never had to consult books on Catholic dogma in order to make sure I had the right interpretation. For example, when I read John 6, I understand that Jesus is talking about the Eucharist as really being His Body and Blood, not something symbolic. I can refer to the Catechism, the Early Church Fathers, or other official Catholic documents for apologetics purposes, but I understand just from reading the Scriptures what they mean.I take it from this that you believe the Bible is the living breathing Word of God.
So I just have to ask: how can a printed document, no matter how inspired, live and breathe? That’s something only a creature can do, and the Bible is not a creature.
See, the Bible cannot stand up and say, “Hey! You misinterpreted me!” A living, breathing person, however, can tell you you’ve misinterpreted what is written.
That’s why we need human beings endowed with authority from God to tell us when we’ve misinterpreted scripture. We need them to tell us when, even if we’ve convinced ourselves we’re guided by the Holy Spirit, that our interpretation is not a correct one. That is why scripture alone is not enough. That is why we need a Magisterium.