P
pablope
Guest
Authority in what sense? The Scripture is over the Church?Only God confers authority. Neither the Bible nor the Church possess any authority not conferred by God. The Church *recognises *the authority of Scripture.
Authority in what sense? The Scripture is over the Church?Only God confers authority. Neither the Bible nor the Church possess any authority not conferred by God. The Church *recognises *the authority of Scripture.
In some senses yes, in some senses no. The Church has authority to recognise books as canonical, to have them read as part of liturgy, to interpret and teach them. She does not have authority to change them or to contradict them in matters of faith.Authority in what sense? The Scripture is over the Church?
So what are we going to do about John 6 then? Catholics believe heaven and earth become one at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb most Protestants believe it’s just a mere symbol. Are Catholics contradicting scripture or are Protestants and why is the Holy Spirit leading people to believe two different things?In some senses yes, in some senses no. The Church has authority to recognise books as canonical, to have them read as part of liturgy, to interpret and teach them. She does not have authority to change them or to contradict them in matters of faith.
Well…it is the Church that selected these variouis writings…and I am sure you believe this…change them in what way that the Church does not have authority to do?In some senses yes, in some senses no. The Church has authority to recognise books as canonical, to have them read as part of liturgy, to interpret and teach them. She does not have authority to change them or to contradict them in matters of faith.
They cannot mean scripture is over the Church it’s not logically possible.Authority in what sense? The Scripture is over the Church?
Most Protestants do not believe that the eucharist is a mere symbol. Even the likes of Calvin affirm a real, if spiritual presence.So what are we going to do about John 6 then? Catholics believe heaven and earth become one at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb most Protestants believe it’s just a mere symbol. Are Catholics contradicting scripture or are Protestants and why is the Holy Spirit leading people to believe two different things?
What authority do Protestants have to remove Old Testament books, Catholics and Protestants have different Bibles! Again, why would God create this confusion if it was coming from the Holy Spirit?In some senses yes, in some senses no. The Church has authority to recognise books as canonical, to have them read as part of liturgy, to interpret and teach them. She does not have authority to change them or to contradict them in matters of faith.
Depends what you mean byThey cannot mean scripture is over the Church it’s not logically possible.
I’ve responded to this elsewhere, but, in brief:What authority do Protestants have to remove Old Testament books, Catholics and Protestants have different Bibles! Again, why would God create this confusion if it was coming from the Holy Spirit?
You obviously don’t have Fundamentalists and Baptists in your neck of the woods, I can’t tell you how many times I get accused of believing in cannibalism . Luther and Calvin also defended the perpetual virginity of Mary and the Immaculate conception, Catholics now get accused of Worshiping Mary and a get told Mary was just a vessel and a sinner like everyone else, why did they change their view on Mary?Most Protestants do not believe that the eucharist is a mere symbol. Even the likes of Calvin affirm a real, if spiritual presence.
If the Holy Spirit is the author of dissention when it comes to the exegesis of Scripture, then He must also be the same when it comes to divisions in the Church! Alternatively, instead of saying that either Church or Spirit are somehow lacking in full authority due to the action of the Spirit, we could acknowledge that man is sinful and fallible, and therefore prone to reject either/both.
I’d suggest that the fundamentalists and Baptists in your neck of the woods have strayed from traditional Protestantism! You’ll find, I imagine, that the orthodox Lutherans and Anglicans on here will have theologies broadly similar to your own, and are friendly to Roman Catholics. Our disagreements with Rome are, in the grand scheme of things, minor.You obviously don’t have Fundamentalists and Baptists in your neck of the woods, I can’t tell you how many times I get accused of believing in cannibalism . Luther and Calvin also defended the perpetual virginity of Mary and the Immaculate conception, Catholics now get accused of Worshiping Mary and a get told Mary was just a vessel and a sinner like everyone else, why did they change their view on Mary?
Early Judaism?? The Jewish cannon was changed in 90 AD Jesus had been dead and ascended to heaven sixty years earlier, Peter and Paul had been dead for almost 30, I will never accept that it was the cannon Jesus used. No one calling themselves a Christian for 1500 years accepted this either.I’ve responded to this elsewhere, but, in brief:
(1) Protestants do acknowledge the Apocrypha/Deuterocanon insofar as it has a place in the lectionary, and is useful for teaching faith and morals.
(2) Following St. Jerome, and the principle of consensus in the early Church and early Judaism, we tend to use only those 39 books acknowledged as divinely inspired by the Jews and early Christians alike when establishing doctrine. We err on the side of caution with regard to texts whose canonicity and authority were up for debate in the first few centuries of Christianity and Rabbinic Judaism.
I would suggest that (1), following the principle lex orandi lex credendi, is probably more the more significant for the life and theology of the Church of England, of which I am a member.
There was no Jewish canon. Yavneh/Jamnia was a school, not a council. We don’t know for sure which books Jesus would have read as Scripture, but I agree that the early Church on the whole seems to have used the LXX. I don’t deny that at all. I simply say that when we’re making doctrine, it makes sense to be safe and use the canon recognised by all as uncontroversial.Early Judaism?? The Jewish cannon was changed in 90 AD Jesus had been dead and ascended to heaven sixty years earlier, Peter and Paul had been dead for almost 30, I will never accept that it was the cannon Jesus used. No one calling themselves a Christian for 1500 years accepted this either.
The best answer I can give (having never been Protestant) regarding the tradition of Sola Scriptura, would be that it is the only solid, tangible guide that could govern/teach Christians if they were to reject The Church (the CATHOLIC/UNIVERSAL Church).What is the origin of the Sola Scriptura doctrine of the Protestants?
Who firstly and most famously argued this doctrine, and what was the main rationale for it?
What is the main answer Catholics can give to this doctrine?
Thank you?
Martin Luther:I’d suggest that the fundamentalists and Baptists in your neck of the woods have strayed from traditional Protestantism! You’ll find, I imagine, that the orthodox Lutherans and Anglicans on here will have theologies broadly similar to your own, and are friendly to Roman Catholics. Our disagreements with Rome are, in the grand scheme of things, minor.
I’m not aware of Luther and Calvin defending the Immaculate Conception, but I’m willing to be proven wrong on that one! Just reading the sheer amount that Luther and Calvin wrote is difficult enough!
Why do you assume we cannot know which books Jesus used the Apostles would have used the same ones and we know their disciples like Polycarp would have used the same scriptures as the Apostles who taught them. The Church was already in Rome in 90AD, the new Exodus had already taken place. They wouldn’t have used anything coming out of Palestine. There was a reason why the Church had to leave Jerusalem. I also find it more controversial that 500 years ago Christians decided not to accept some of these books as the Word of God when no Christian on earth had ever done this.There was no Jewish canon. Yavneh/Jamnia was a school, not a council. We don’t know for sure which books Jesus would have read as Scripture, but I agree that the early Church on the whole seems to have used the LXX. I don’t deny that at all. I simply say that when we’re making doctrine, it makes sense to be safe and use the canon recognised by all as uncontroversial.
I don’t see how this is a response to what Novocastrian said.So what are we going to do about John 6 then? Catholics believe heaven and earth become one at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb most Protestants believe it’s just a mere symbol. Are Catholics contradicting scripture or are Protestants and why is the Holy Spirit leading people to believe two different things?
Sure it is. Scripture is the Word of God (as is Sacred Tradition). The Church recognizes and submits to the authority of the Word. It’s all in Dei VerbumThey cannot mean scripture is over the Church it’s not logically possible.
Yes, he does, for the students. The Church confers no intrinsic authority on the books of Scripture. The Church recognizes the fact that these books are inspired by God and thus possess authority from God, and the Church tells us this. The Church has authority over her members, not over Scripture.Your analogy doesn’t work. The authority of the Church was used to endorse and validate the authority of the Scriptures in the 4th Century. Until then there was no authentic and authoritative endorsement of the books valid for the New Testament. In your analogy, the professor only suggests reading a greater authority than himself. He does not actually confer authority on the other scholar.
That’s a remarkably silly argument, and I continue to marvel at its popularity. All the books existed, and all the books were regarded as divinely inspired by some (probably most) Christians long before the fourth century. The question of the limits of the NT was not fully settled until the fourth century. But that’s quite different from the NT not existing.The New Testament as we know it did not even exist before the 4th Century.
The process of the Church “conferring authority” was not as clear-cut as you’re making it sound. People did not sit around until the fourth century saying “we don’t know what books are in the NT–who is going to tell us?” Christians spoke of various books as divinely inspired, and there were lists of canonical books which differed slightly from each other. Through this messy process, the Church was discerning which books were canonical. This discernment was, to all intents and purposes, complete by the end of the fourth century. At that point Christians knew more certainly than they had before which books were and were not in the NT canon.How then did any Christian know what books were valid or not valid until the Church conferred authority on the final Testament?