Originally Posted by foolishmortal
…as to make it public revelation and nothing can be added or subtracted from it. Why was it not a mere infallible handbook? It didn’t even have all Jesus ever said. It didn’t cover cloning specifically. That was for the Magesterium to interpret. We did fine before the Bible fighting off heresies with oral Tradition. Even the Bible talks about oral Tradition. Why didn’t we make a catechism or Magesterial teaching public revelation that CAN be added to it (though nothing subtracted or Christ would have been a liar in promising us the Church that he did) since it is closer to Oral Tradition since it holds all we believe and it could never be fundamentally wrong as protected by the Holy Spirit? This way, no Protestants could have used it against us since they could not hijack it–I don’t think (I mean some traditionalists think otherwise, it seems, regarding those present at Vatican 2).
These are some interesting and tough questions.
Actually, I think it is the Muslims who would take exactly your point of view. To them, everyone in the Bible is Muslim. It is the early Christian Church and the rabbinic Judaism which is apostate, as I understand it.
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I merely asked why we (the Church) didn't just have the Bible be infallible and not be also public revelation? We would still have the words of Jesus.
After all, we defeated hersies without it for a while and probably could have done it longer with or without the Bible…How bad could we have screwed up if we just ran on that knowledge and the authority to declare other truths if the Holy Spirit would not allow the Church to err in those matters?
The Protestants did hijack the Bible and make it out as if it came from God by magic and only they made use of it. I’m suprised they haven’t added the Gospel of Thomas by now as liberal as many denominations have become–well, that might decrease church attendance. They don’t realize that books were subtracted from their Bibles by Luther; many think the opposite was done by our Church not realizing Catholics wrote them and compiled them.
They can’t hijack the Magesterium or other Tradition. The Bible isn’t the full compedium of all Jesus wanted us to know but Protrestants use only what’s there to say, “Well, Jesus didn’t say anything about this or that” (as more liberal ones more likely say) or “Paul hijacked the Church”–which is strange if what EWTN says is true about their holding more tight to the words of St. Paul (unless they refer to the moral teachings more fundamentalist sects adhere to). Did we give the Protestants the idea of the Bible being sufficient by making it public revelation–so that it would seem to be the basics?