Why is there not a single Protestant Understanding of the Bible?

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If Solo Scriptura is truly accurate in that not only is the Bible clear but that we could clearly understand it,then by test everyone with faith and effort should come to the same conclusions or at least a huge majority. Yet all the time I hear protestants say “that’s not what’s in the bible” when in discussion with Catholics even though no other protestant group may agree with them on their actual understanding. So why are there so many interpretations?
 
If Solo Scriptura is truly accurate in that not only is the Bible clear but that we could clearly understand it,then by test everyone with faith and effort should come to the same conclusions or at least a huge majority. Yet all the time I hear protestants say “that’s not what’s in the bible” when in discussion with Catholics even though no other protestant group may agree with them on their actual understanding. So why are there so many interpretations?
The understanding of “Church” and “church” is different between Catholics, high-church protestants (Anglicans, Episcopals, Lutherans etc.) , and fundamental protestants (Presbyterians, Baptists, Pentecostals, etc). High-church protestants tend to view the Church more in terms of the eastern Orthodox understanding. Fundamental protestants tend to view the Church as all believers who have “been saved”. Fundamentalists believe that doctrines not immediately pertaining to salvation (believing that Christ is your personal Lord and savior) are up to personal interpretation because they do not necessarily interfere with one’s salvation.
 
They severed themselves from the True Faith led by the Magisterium.

They all have bits and pieces of the Truth, but not all of it. Thus, without direction of the Holy Spirit, that He gives to the Church, they can interpret the Bible to mean whatever it is that they want it to mean.

Think of it in terms of gossip. The first story is told to some people who get the whole truth. It’s overheard by others that only get pieces of it, and passed on and on until it has very little resemblance to the original statement.

If you read the book that has tradition in it and don’t understand it WITH the original tradition, then you will use whatever tradition you want to make it fit what you want it to mean.

All protestants use some sort of a tradition. They just don’t like to acknowledge it.
 
You know, I thought about this many times before as I’ve read many posts with similar thoughts.

If you think about it, even Catholic understanding is based on our Holy Tradition, and then even the Church doesn’t have set ways of understanding the Bible except as far as it doesn’t go against Tradition.

We are blessed to have that Tradition to guide us, but we’re free to take all kinds of “understandings” away with us. There are many protestant interpretations that are very much in line with ours, and then, yes, there are many who are all over the place… which is why I say we are blessed.

Edited to add… I realized I just pulled a St Teresa of Avila here… but I understand what I want to express and hope that you all will see through the “mud” of my thoughts! Eek! … or it could be the glass of wine I’m enjoying 😉
 
They all have bits and pieces of the Truth, but not all of it. Thus, without direction of the Holy Spirit, that He gives to the Church, they can interpret the Bible to mean whatever it is that they want it to mean.
Out of curiosity, how many verses of the Bible has the Roman Catholic Church claimed to interpret?
 
Out of curiosity, how many verses of the Bible has the Roman Catholic Church claimed to interpret?
This is what I wanted to say 😃 The CHURCH has only interpreted a very very few verses.

But we must remember that Holy Tradition came before the Church, and the Church knows how to interpret the book that it authored. By this I mean to say that She has always taught us how the books are to read and understood, although we are free to take away personal thoughts as long as it is in line with what the Apostles and Disciples understood it all.

Ack… More mud! Sorry :o
 
I was a protestant for 30 years, I have a little insight. As my priest pointed out, during my instruction to the CC, at its basis, protestantism is in protest. This is the “you can’t tell me what to think” attitude. “We can vote for a president, why not on doctrine?”. We have a real problem with authority, maybe its left over from the 60’s, I don’t know. In America, we have dozens of churches at our disposal, maybe more. When we get the feeling our independence is threatened, we can make a change (of churches).

People always want their own way, see Genesis 3. We want to be like God, or be our own God. Therefore, rather than submit to the Church’s interpretation, many choose their own way. We have become so used to having things on our terms, that we have forgotten how to submit. I do not doubt the fact that the Holy Spirit works in non-Catholic churches and non-Catholic hearts, I have been there and seen and felt it. If the Holy Spirit was truly guiding everyone outside of the CC, there would be uniformity. Not necessarily uniform styles, but uniform doctrine. There are some who claim to be led by the Holy Spirit, that are working toward very liberal ideas, many of these ideas contradict scripture and Tradition.

I think many people, outside the CC, are well meaning and good hearted people. They are lacking the fullness of truth. They have been raised outside of the fullness of truth for generations, thus are unwilling to change. It is really sad, I hate to see this divide in Christendom.

To return to the OP, when you base your belief system on protest, it becomes an easy way to justify division. Once you reject the Authority give to the CC, everyone has an opinion and they all weigh the same. Somehow, by throwing away 1500 years, they think they can re-invent the first century church in 2012.

As we approach the feast of the conversion of St. Paul, let us pray for unity and conversions! St. Paul pray for us!
 
This is what I wanted to say 😃 The CHURCH has only interpreted a very very few verses.

But we must remember that Holy Tradition came before the Church, and the Church knows how to interpret the book that it authored. By this I mean to say that She has always taught us how the books are to read and understood, although we are free to take away personal thoughts as long as it is in line with what the Apostles and Disciples understood it all.

Ack… More mud! Sorry :o
Fair enough, Loboto. However, I fail to see the difference between following the particular traditions of the Roman Catholic Church as a guide to understanding Scripture, and a Lutheran or Baptist who understands Scripture within the confines of their own tradition. Both allow for a personal understanding of the text of Scripture within the tenets of the stated beliefs of the tradition. Granted, the Roman Catholic Church claims that its tradition is the word of God and was handed on by the apostles. So you, as a Roman Catholic, believe those claims and believe that the Magisterium has been protected from having false traditions. But that is a presuppositional claim. That is, it is assumed.
 
To return to the OP, when you base your belief system on protest, it becomes an easy way to justify division. Once you reject the Authority give to the CC, everyone has an opinion and they all weigh the same. Somehow, by throwing away 1500 years, they think they can re-invent the first century church in 2012.
Do you honestly think that we base our faith on protesting something? I assure you, I believe what I believe without any reference to what the Roman Catholic Church teaches or doesn’t teach.
 
Do you honestly think that we base our faith on protesting something? I assure you, I believe what I believe without any reference to what the Roman Catholic Church teaches or doesn’t teach.
But don’t you still have a presuppositional claim that the bible is true?

Even if you accept that God delivered the bible through the Church, wouldn’t you also have the presupposition in believing they can’t infallibly interpret the book that they discerned?

Or somehow went astray sometime in History?

You can’t separate yourself from the Catholic Church, no matter how hard you try, you will always be indebted to Her.
 
But don’t you still have a presuppositional claim that the bible is true?
No.
Even if you accept that God delivered the bible through the Church, wouldn’t you also have the presupposition in believing they can’t infallibly the book that they discerned?
I do accept that the Church (by that being the prophets and apostles) were the agents by which the Holy Spirit inspired Scripture. I don’t have any evidence either from Scripture, or from history, that the subsequent generations of church leadership received any charism of infallible interpretation.
You can’t separate yourself from the Catholic Church, no matter how hard you try, you will always be indebted to Her.
I don’t deny indebtedness. That isn’t what I meant by my statement. What I meant was, I don’t believe as I do simply because I’m protesting Roman Catholicism.
 
In my experience growing up a a Protestant (church of Christ) they did not “search the scriptures daily to see if it is true”. What they did was to examine the faith and practices of the Catholic church and do the exact opposite.

They were extremely anti=Catholic and it was often said “we can’t do that, it’s what the Catholics do”.

They also, like Mormons claimed the church was totally “apostate”.

I left that sect as soon as I moved out of the parents house!
 
This may be out of this thread subject, but I remember in the Nativity movie, in the last credits the Magnificat was done as a voice over, and (being a Protestant production) they conveniently skipped “…holy is His name” and “henceforth all generations will call me blessed”. And any line that refers to Israel. 😦

I will not go into other problems of that movie though.

So that’s the trouble with the Protestant understanding, they skip words to suit their opinion. 🤷

MJ
 
Fair enough, Loboto. However, I fail to see the difference between following the particular traditions of the Roman Catholic Church as a guide to understanding Scripture, and a Lutheran or Baptist who understands Scripture within the confines of their own tradition. Both allow for a personal understanding of the text of Scripture within the tenets of the stated beliefs of the tradition. Granted, the Roman Catholic Church claims that its tradition is the word of God and was handed on by the apostles. So you, as a Roman Catholic, believe those claims and believe that the Magisterium has been protected from having false traditions. But that is a presuppositional claim. That is, it is assumed.
The Claims of Apostolic are well founded and you can see it’s biblical support in St. Paul’s letters to Timothy and Titus.

How do we have the bible we have, without an Apostolic succession?

How do you know the bible is true, without pointing to the bible?

Presuppositional Apologetics will only be able to go so far without leading to the Church!

The disciples of Greg Bahnsen could see the missing link!

calledtocommunion.com/2010/08/episode-14-from-presuppositional-pca-to-rome/
 
The Claims of Apostolic are well founded and you can see it’s biblical support in St. Paul’s letters to Timothy and Titus.

How do we have the bible we have, without an Apostolic succession?
Because the Bible doesn’t require it. It requires the Apostles to have been given revelation which was written down. The Israelites did not have an infallible magisterium with divine succession, and yet they received the Scriptures.
How do you know the bible is true, without pointing to the bible?
By pointing to the empty tomb, which verifies Jesus’ claim to deity, which verifies that the Scriptures are the word of God, because He said they were. I can approach the Scriptures as a normal written work of literature that is generally reliable as history. If He rose, then they are something more.
 
Because the Bible doesn’t require it. It requires the Apostles to have been given revelation which was written down. The Israelites did not have an infallible magisterium with divine succession, and yet they received the Scriptures.

By pointing to the empty tomb, which verifies Jesus’ claim to deity, which verifies that the Scriptures are the word of God, because He said they were. I can approach the Scriptures as a normal written work of literature that is generally reliable as history. If He rose, then they are something more.
Israel’s Levitical Priesthood was entrusted to keep the word of God

Was that God ordained priesthood somehow not a divine succession?

They also had a High Priest (the Nasi) that would sort out any contention amongst the Levites and he was also the head of the Sanhedrin.

Being that you hold to a high view of God’s sovereignty, ***how can you be infallibly sure that the Nasi (High priest) in union with the Levites (priest) when entering into a Great Sanhedrin (The highest Judicial and Ecclesiastical council) Did not make binding Infallible proclamations on matters of faith and morals? ***

I agree that If Jesus rose, then the Scriptures are something more, but, which scriptures? How can you infallibly know the ones you hold were infallibly discerned?
 
Lutherans believe in letting Scripture interpret Scripture. We have have in the LC-MS The Lutheran Study Bible with Lutheran Study Notes and the LC-MS is coming out this fall with the Apocrypha with Lutheran Study Notes. I believe the reason why they didn’t combine the Bible is that it would make to unwieldy with all the notes.
 
Israel’s Levitical Priesthood was entrusted to keep the word of God

Was that God ordained priesthood somehow not a divine succession?

They also had a High Priest (the Nasi) that would sort out any contention amongst the Levites and he was also the head of the Sanhedrin.

Being that you hold to a high view of God’s sovereignty, ***how can you be infallibly sure that the Nasi (High priest) in union with the Levites (priest) when entering into a Great Sanhedrin (The highest Judicial and Ecclesiastical council) Did not make binding Infallible proclamations on matters of faith and morals? ***
Because there is no scriptural reason to. Would you seriously argue that the Sanhedrin were infallible in their understanding of Scripture? That is, its interpretation? I would hope you don’t think the Gospels bear this out. Because they sure as heck missed the mark on the question of the Son of God!

If the Jewish authorities did not have to be infallible in interpreting Scripture, neither does the Church. This is not to say that the church doesn’t interpret Scripture. Of course it does, as the church is the only entity gifted with the Holy Spirit. But again, there is no charism of infallibility conferred upon the church anywhere in the New Testament. And while the Apostles did appoint elders, there is no evidence that the unique gifts of the apostolic office were passed on to them.
I agree that If Jesus rose, then the Scriptures are something more, but, which scriptures? How can you infallibly know the ones you hold were infallibly discerned?
Why must I infallibly know them in order to trust that they are accurately called the word of God? To demand an infallible certainty is to set up a Cartesian reality where we can only act upon and/or believe upon those things we know infallibly. There is only one Person in the universe who is possessed of infallible knowledge, and that is God Himself. If you want to set up a litmus test of infallible knowledge for certainty, then I would be forced to ask how you infallibly know that the Magisterium is infallible? After all, you have made the decision to believe that the Magisterium is infallible. Why should I trust your fallible decision?

You will never be able to escape yourself and your own fallible decisions. Your certainty will always be fallible because you are fallible.
 
Because there is no scriptural reason to. Would you seriously argue that the Sanhedrin were infallible in their understanding of Scripture? That is, its interpretation? I would hope you don’t think the Gospels bear this out. Because they sure as heck missed the mark on the question of the Son of God!
No, That is not what i was trying to say. What I was getting at was, God had set up this modus operandi to compile scriptures over the ages, there were many apocryphal writings in Judaism as well.
If the Jewish authorities did not have to be infallible in interpreting Scripture, neither does the Church. This is not to say that the church doesn’t interpret Scripture. Of course it does, as the church is the only entity gifted with the Holy Spirit. But again, there is no charism of infallibility conferred upon the church anywhere in the New Testament. And while the Apostles did appoint elders, there is no evidence that the unique gifts of the apostolic office were passed on to them.
I’m not saying the Jewish authorities were infallible, I’m trying to make the point that we each accept things that are handed down and cannot Infallibly know anything, but we can see a mosaic, and in that we can recognize infallibility. With the information we have in this present reality, in light of the Word of God we have received is it not plausible that an Infallible, Omniscient, God would complete the past ordained governing body infallibly?

The Catholic Church is the completion and fulfillment of the Nasi (High priest) in union with the Levites (priest) when entering into a Great Sanhedrin (The highest Judicial and Ecclesiastical council) through the merits of Jesus Christ 👍

That was the inference I was trying to make!
Why must I infallibly know them in order to trust that they are accurately called the word of God? To demand an infallible certainty is to set up a Cartesian reality where we can only act upon and/or believe upon those things we know infallibly. There is only one Person in the universe who is possessed of infallible knowledge, and that is God Himself. If you want to set up a litmus test of infallible knowledge for certainty, then I would be forced to ask how you infallibly know that the Magisterium is infallible? After all, you have made the decision to believe that the Magisterium is infallible. Why should I trust your fallible decision?
I don’t believe one must be infallible to recognize infallibility, at least in regards to scripture. I think they are an infallible collection of books. I also think that if you have an infallible collection of books, it would logically lead to having them infallibly compiled by an infallible source, the Holy Spirit, delivering them through an infallible council, the Catholic Church. Otherwise if they are only a fallible collection of infallible books then why should I believe the books are infallible if the modus operandi of there discerning was fallible?
You will never be able to escape yourself and your own fallible decisions. Your certainty will always be fallible because you are fallible.
I can recognize that I am fallible, but can one recognize infallibility? If you say that God is infallible, would you say His word is too? That was my whole point. I may not be infallible but I believe it can be recognized without being infallible?
 
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