Wait a minute… you come close to claiming that Christ is the Word Made Flesh.
Are you sure you want to do that? Are you claiming Christ is an actual person who existed in time and space? Be careful. Before you can say “we find in the New Testament canon”, you must first find the person, Christ. And if you find the person Christ, you must find a community of believers -
before the NT is recorded-. Are you sure you mean what you say above?
And what this “community of believers” based their faith on were the
OLD Testament Scripture, which separated them from the apostate Jewish leaders who
added to these Scriptures, as well as contradicted them. That’s why the apostates Jews didn’t recognized their Savior. Had they went strictly by OT Scripture, they would have realized Jesus was a fulfillment of it, as well as the promised Savior that the OT prophets wrote about. That’s why we as Christians need to rely on Scripture, so we know “Who” the “real” Jesus, unlike Mormons who call themselves “Christian” but base their “faith” on the book of Mormon which teaches a different “Jesus,” just as the gnostic & pseudoepigraphical writings do.
Scripture contradicts itself so much it’s not even worth debating.
Really??? Scripture contradicts
itself? I don’t think there’s a single Catholic, let alone Protestant, would agree with this. I’m surpised no one has corrected you on this.
You quote a lot of material here. What you should do is go talk to someone who does scripture as a life’s vocation, and talk to them about the myriad family trees of scripture interpretations that have developed over the centuries.
Different Scripture
interpretations is different than there being
contradictions in Scripture. The latter - there are none.
The absence of contradiction and other transmission difficulties does not prove inspiration,
Contradictions disqualify a particular writing as being God-breathed. The fact that NONE of the books of the Bible contradict each other, nor contain errors - of any kind - in them, as well as most of them containing fulfilled prophecy, supported & called “Scripture” by other authors (like Peter’s with Paul’s, & Paul’s with Luke’s, & Luke’s with Isaiah, etc), as well as the other godly attributes previously mention prove their Inspiration. You don’t find these qualities in ANY other pieces of “religious” writing.
Scripture is a messy endeavor undertaken by sinful humans inspired by God, but it’s still inspired.
So, how can Scripture be Inspired (
God-breathed), yet contain contradictions in it? That’s like saying God contradicts Himself.
Those who wrote the Gospel were contradictions themselves. they wanted to be committed followers of the Person, but were awful persons in many ways, some of them unfaithful to the end. Yet Christ not only accepted death in the shadow of their unfaithfulness, he rose and still, gave to these persons his Tradition. He trusted common sinners with the words of eternal life. No tape recorders, no video, no pens and paper at Pentecost. If God wanted the book to be our faith, he sure did his best to fail us.
The writers of Scripture being sinful doesn’t mean the Scripture they wrote errant or have contradictions in them. God using sinful men who are capable of being in error, yet these same men made NONE in “any” of the books of the Bible, prove that they were aided by the Holy Spirit (2 Timothy 3:16; 2 Peter 1:20-21). I think you’re still confusing the inerrancy of Scripture, with the errancy of those who wrote Scripture. The writers themselves were not anything special. God used these “ordinary men” to do His will.
Your faith is inverted. Christ should be at the top of the pile. From Christ the person comes the community, a living Tradition, then the book.
Jesus is the “top of the pile.” Relying on God-breathed Scripture to discern between the “real” Jesus vs. the false “Jesus” mentioned in extra-biblical literature doesn’t somehow “diminish” Him. Tradition is only useful provided that that tradition doesn’t contradict Scripture, which Jesus Himself attests to (Matthew 15:1-9).
You’ll find this unsatisfying, but we believe Mary is Ever-Virgin because the community that Christ breathed on says it is so.
The “community” that Christ “breathed on” was His disciples like Peter, John, & Matthew who later wrote Inspired Scripture, and later the Holy Spirit descending on the early Church at Pentecost, like James & Jude who also wrote Inspired Scripture. So, if this “community” that Jesus “breathed on” believed that Mary was an “ever-virgin,” please provide a
single quote from anyone from this “community” in Inspired Scripture, that they “believed” she was. Surely “somewhere” in the NT, at least
ONE of them mentioned something as significant & specific as this.