WHEN,WHERE and by WHOSE authority declared:
the early church leaders* taught the principle ***that **Scripture stood as the single authoritative standard **for accepting or rejecting any doctrine
Sources please…I am really want to see where you are gathering such information?
What authority would you accept, to make the declaration I gave, above? If I cite Cyril, for example, who in his lectures to new believers instructed them,
“This seal have thou ever on thy mind; which now by way of summary has been touched on in its heads, and if the Lord grant, shall hereafter be set forth according to our power, with Scripture proofs. For concerning the divine and sacred Mysteries of the Faith, we ought not to deliver even the most casual remark without the Holy Scriptures: nor be drawn aside by mere probabilities and the artifices of argument. Do not then believe me because I tell thee these things, unless thou receive from the Holy Scriptures the proof of what is set forth: for this salvation, which is of our faith, is not by ingenious reasonings, but by proof from the Holy Scriptures.”
This excerpt appears in *A Library of the Fathers of the Holy Catholic Church *(Oxford: Parker, 1845), “The Catechetical Lectures of S. Cyril” Lecture 4.17. How would you paraphrase the last two lines, say the same thing in other words?
Or, as J. N. D. Kelly reports *Early Christian Doctrines *(San Francisco: Harper & Row, 1978), pp. 42, 46,]
“The clearest token of the prestige enjoyed by Scripture is the fact that almost the entire theological effort of the Fathers, whether their aims were polemical or constructive, was expended upon what amounted to the exposition of the Bible. Further, it was everywhere taken for granted that, for any doctrine to win acceptance, it had first to establish its Scriptural basis”.
I doubt your sincerity, Nicea, because as you will recall, I tried this once … gave you a significant list of quoted writings, the content of which you obviously didn’t like. Your response was to accuse me of taking each one “out of context”, and eventually to insist that I stop!
I have no idea how I can provide excerpts from statements made by Cyril, and Gregory of Nyssa, and Irenaeus, and Tertullian, without exposing myself all over again to that same accusation. I can, as above, give you the names and the authors of the history books in which these works have been compiled, Catholic writers who, based on their analysis, come to the same conclusions I do … but if you don’t like what they say, you have shown repeatedly that you will use any means at your disposal to dismiss them out of hand … or, as you said of yourself, “I will not believe”. So, apart from your personal amusement, what purpose do I have in continuing to play your silly games?