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Where Is That Taught in the Bible?
cna ^

Posted on 07/11/2010 10:58:32 AM PDT by NYer

So then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught by us, either by word of mouth or by letter. 2 Thessalonians 2:15

According to most Evangelicals, a Christian needs only to believe those teachings found in Scripture (a.k.a. the Bible). For these Christians, there is no need for Apostolic Tradition or an authoritative teaching Church. For them the Bible is sufficient for learning about the faith and living a Christian life. In order to be consistent, they claim that this "By Scripture Alone" (sola Scriptura) teaching is found in Scripture, especially St. Paul's Letters.

The passage most frequently used to support the Scripture-Alone belief is 2 Timothy 3:16-17. St. Paul writes:

All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect (complete, adequate, competent), equipped for every good work. [2 Tim. 3:16-17, RSV]

According to those that hold this belief, Scripture is sufficient since it is "profitable for teaching" and makes a Christian "perfect, equipped for every good work." On closer examination though, it becomes apparent that these verses still do not prove this teaching.

Verse 16 states a fundamental Christian doctrine. Scripture is "inspired by God" and "profitable for teaching" the faith. The Catholic Church teaches this doctrine (CCC 101-108). But this verse does not demonstrate the sufficiency of Scripture in teaching the faith. As an example, vitamins are profitable, even necessary, for good health but not sufficient. If someone ate only vitamins, he would starve to death. Likewise, Sacred Scripture is very important in learning about the Christian faith, but it does not exclude Sacred Tradition or a teaching Church as other sources concerning the faith.

St. Paul in verse 17 states that Scripture can make a Christian "perfect, equipped for every good work." In this verse he is once again stressing the importance of Sacred Scripture. In similar fashion, the proverb, "practice makes perfect," stresses the importance of practice but does not imply that practice alone is sufficient in mastering a skill. Practice is very important, but it presumes a basic know-how. In sports, practice presupposes basic knowledge of the game rules, aptitude and good health. Elsewhere in Scripture, "steadfastness" is said to make a Christian "perfect and complete, lacking in nothing." [James 1:4] Even though the language (both English and Greek) in this verse is stronger, no one claims that steadfastness alone is enough for Christian growth. Faith, prayer and God's grace are also needed. Likewise in verse 17, St. Paul presumes God's grace, Timothy's faith and Sacred Tradition (2 Tim. 3:14-15).

Verses 16-17 must be read in context. Only two verses earlier, St. Paul also writes:

But as for you, continue in what you have learned and have firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it... [2 Tim. 3:14]

Here St. Paul suggests Tradition. Notice that Paul did not write, "knowing from which Scripture passage you learned it" but instead he writes, "knowing from whom you learned it." He is implying with the "whom" himself and the other Apostles. Earlier in the same letter, St. Paul actually defines and commands Apostolic Tradition - "what you have heard from me before many witnesses entrust to faithful men who will be able to teach others also." [2 Tim. 2:2] Also if St. Paul were truly teaching the sufficiency of Scripture, verse 15 would have been a golden opportunity to list the Books of Scripture, or at least give the "official" Table of Content for the Old Testament. Instead Paul relies on Timothy's childhood tradition:

...and how from childhood you have been acquainted with the Sacred Writings (a.k.a. Scripture) which are able to instruct you for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus. [2 Tim. 3:15, RSV]

Even though profitable in instructing for salvation (but not sufficient), St. Paul still does not list which Books. He also does not suggest personal taste or opinion as Timothy's guide. Instead Paul relies on Timothy's childhood tradition to define the contents of Scripture. Verses 14-15 show that verses 16-17 presuppose Tradition.

Verse 15 brings up the problem of canonicity, i.e. which Books belong in Scripture? Through the centuries the Books of Scripture were written independently along with other religious books. There were smaller collections of Books, e.g. The Books of Moses (Torah), that were used in Synagogues. The largest collection was the Greek Septuagint which the New Testament writers most often cited. St. Paul in verse 15 probably referred to the Septuagint as Scripture. Only after the Councils of Carthage and Hippo in the 4th century A.D. were all of the Books of Scripture (both Old and New Testaments) compiled together under one cover to form "the Bible." Already in Jesus' time, the question of which Books are Scripture, was hotly debated. As an example, Esther and the Song of Solomon were not accepted by all as Scripture during Jesus' day. The source of the problem is that no where in the Sacred Writings are the Books completely and clearly listed. Sacred Scripture does not define its contents. St. Paul could have eliminated the problem of canonicity by listing the Books of Scripture (at least the Old Testament) in his Letters, but did not. Instead the Church had to discern with the aid of Sacred Tradition (CCC 120). Canonicity is a major problem for the Scripture-Alone teaching.

As a final point, verse 15 suggests only the Old Testament as Scripture since the New Testament was written after Timothy's childhood. Taken in context, verses 16-17 apply only to the Old Testament. "All Scripture" simply means all of the Old Testament. If verses 16-17 were to prove that Scripture is enough for Christians, then verse 15 would prove that the Old Testament is enough!
Some Christians may cite 1 Corthinians 4:6 as more proof for the Scripture-Alone belief:

I have applied all this to myself and Apollos for your benefit, brethren, that you may learn by us not to go beyond what is written, that none of you may be puffed up in favour of one against another. [1 Cor. 4:6, RSV]

This verse does not condemn Sacred Tradition but warns against reading-between-the-lines in Scripture. The Corinthians had a problem of reading more into the Scripture text than what was actually there. The main question with this verse is which Sacred Writings are being referred to here? Martin Luther and John Calvin thought it may refer only to earlier cited Old Testament passages (1 Cor. 1:19, 31; 2:9 & 3:19-20) and not the entire Old Testament. Calvin thought that Paul may also be referring to the Epistle Itself. The present tense of the clause, "beyond what is written" excludes parts of the New Testament, since the New Testament was not completely written then. This causes a serious problem for the Scripture-Alone belief and Christians.

Bible verses can be found that show the importance of Sacred Scripture but not Its sufficiency or contents. There are Bible verses that also promote Sacred Tradition. In Mark 7:5-13 (Matt. 15:1-9), Jesus does not condemn all traditions but only those corrupted by the Pharisees. Although 2 Thessalonians 2:15 does not directly call Sacred Tradition the word of God, it does show some form of teachings "by word of mouth" beside Scripture and puts them on the same par as Paul's Letters. Elsewhere the preaching of the Apostles is called the "word of God" (Acts 4:31; 17:13; 1 Thess. 2:13; Heb. 13:7). The Scripture-Alone theory must assume that the Apostles eventually wrote all of these oral teachings in the New Testament. At least for St. John, this does not seem to be the case (John 21:25; 2 John 12 & 3 John 13-14). Also no Apostle listed in the New Testament which Books belong in Scripture. Now these oral teachings were eventually written down elsewhere to preserve their accuracy, e.g. St. Clement's Epistle to the Corinthians, written 96 A.D. (Phil. 4:3) or St. Ignatius' seven letters written 107 A.D. Clement's letter is found in the Codex Alexandrinus (an ancient Bible manuscript) and was even considered by some early Christians to be part of Scripture.

Both Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition are the word of God, while the Church is "the pillar and bulwark of the truth." [1 Tim. 3:15] The Holy Spirit through the Church protects Both from corruption. Some Christians may claim that doctrines on Mary are not found in the Bible, but the Scripture-Alone teaching is not found in the Bible. Promoters of Scripture-Alone have a consistency problem, since this is one teaching not found in Scripture.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Evangelical Christian
KEYWORDS: bible; freformed; scripture
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To: presently no screen name; small voice in the wilderness
I did accuse you of using a strawman argument and I stand by that.

CORRECTION: I did not accuse you. I did accuse "small voice". I apologize for my error. I am still awaiting the response that was requested numerous times to the correct poster.

401 posted on 07/17/2010 5:35:44 AM PDT by don-o (Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner.)
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To: small voice in the wilderness

“”BTW, what is a Paulician?””

We can start with someone like maricion who believed Saint Paul knew more about Christ than anyone else.

Examples of Marcion being a paulican from NTCanon .org...

Marcion and the Pauline Epistles

“Marcion was convinced that among the early apostolic leaders only Paul understood the significance of Jesus Christ as the messenger of the Supreme God”
http://www.ntcanon.org/Marcion.shtml

Maricion was an early version of calvin in many ways because of his belief in and angry dualistic zeus type God who created evil


402 posted on 07/18/2010 2:22:15 PM PDT by stfassisi ((The greatest gift God gives us is that of overcoming self"-St Francis Assisi)))
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To: MarkBsnr

Meant to add you to post 401


403 posted on 07/18/2010 2:24:12 PM PDT by stfassisi ((The greatest gift God gives us is that of overcoming self"-St Francis Assisi)))
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To: daniel1212
Which came first, the Church or the Scripture?

Though your underlying premise is faulty, yet most precisely, Scripture came first, but not in its complete form. . The bulk of written Divine revelation preceded the birth of the church, and without it the church would not exist. Now the next question is, “Which came first, Israel or Scripture?” As the answer to that is the former, so (consistent with Rome's logic) they too must have been infallible in faith and morals, and thus Christianity is disallowed.

Your first statement is wrong. My underlying premise is not faulty. Scripture did not come first. Revelation by God did. God revealed Himself to Adam and Eve much prior to the OT being written (and the Jews believe that the Torah was dictated verbatim to Moses which occured significantly after those events).

Your second statement is wrong as well. The OT could be called the history of God trying to get the Jews to pay attention for more than a day or two and failing.

The Second Great Revelation of Jesus also occured prior, in some cases significantly prior to the NT being written. We have no indication of anything being written during the lifetime of Jesus - indeed Luke 1 indicates the Gospel writing formula and we have no other.

Your premise is that Rome wrote and choose the New Testament Scripture, and that thus it is the infallible interpreter of them.

Negative. I never said anything about Rome and would ask you provide evidence that I did or retract that statement.

This assertion presumes that she is the New Testament church, but which is ultimately based upon her foundational circular reasoning

Negative again. Scripture itself says that the Church is the authority that Jesus created - I trust that adequate Scriptural proof has been posted for your edification and if not, then I will endeavour to do so on this thread.

It was also individual men who penned Scripture, versus it being a ecclesiastical project by the church of Rome,

Nobody said anything about Rome. Please provide evidence or a retraction. Those individual men you refer to are mostly clergy (and most of them bishops) who penned the NT Scripture, and later Councils of the Church selected what is now the NT. If you read the history of the Church closely, you may realize that the Church did not make rulings on things that were understood by just about everybody; they only made rulings on things that heretics and apostates preached that was apart from Church teaching.

Indeed there was, as nowhere will you find a separate class of sacerdotal priests, but all believers are priests, and bishops/elders were overseers, versus priests, as the latter's main function was that of offering up expiational sacrifices.

Negative again. Jesus is fairly clear; Paul is more clear about the separation of duties of the various types of individuals. Jesus, in the Gospels, is normally direct as to what the duties of the Apostles are (the bishops of His Church) as opposed to the believing people, as opposed to the non believers.

Agree. The Peter of the Bible. But unlike even Judas, the Holy Spirit evidences no successor being named for James when he died, nor an expected one or formal means of providing one for Peter whose demise was near, as is provided for pastors.

True, however, we have in the Pauline epistles as well as some examples in Acts, of how replacements were chosen. The lack of succession for Peter not being in Scripture does not mean that Peter is not to be succeeded, given the examples that are outlined, as well as extra-Scriptural writings of the early Church.

With that said, we reach a point here where you may indicate that you wish to debate strictly under SS. If that is said, then that is the debating field and you may not argue anything from any other source including the Catholic Catechism and any rulings that the Church has made over the centuries. Including the selection of the NT Scripture itself. Please indicate your preference.

And which presumes that that the LORD did not speak Greek, or that Matthew was written in Hebrew, or or that the Holy Spirit, who it can be shown, often expands and varies Jesus words to provide a fuller revelation, did not use Greek to provide the most precise meaning.

But since you have no Scriptural affirming source, how can you debate the point?

However, even this is not the real issue as regards SS, but the issue is what Rome has derived from this, this being that the teaching magisterium being the supreme doctrinal authority, being incontestably infallible when speaking in accordance with its infallibly defined criteria. Holding Scripture as supreme does not even exclude that Rome can teach some infallible truth, and again, those who hold to SS assent to many foundational truths we both agree one, as these can pass Scriptural muster, but which her claim to assured infallibility does not, nor teachings which rely upon it.

Rome again? The Church does not say that it is the supreme doctrinal authority. Indeed, the bishops of the Church are the stewards of Christ; St. Peter being given the keys to Heaven (as a king goes on a journey, he leaves the keys of the kingdom to his steward). Jesus Christ Created the Church and the Holy Spirit commissioned it at Pentecost. We have no Supreme Authority except for Jesus Christ.

The Scriptural warrant for pastoral care is established, but for a perpetuated Petrine papacy and assuredly infallible magisterium it is not, while the supremacy of Scripture is. As for men like Luther, they also are not infallible teachers, and SS holds that we are “not to think of men above that which is written,” (1Cor. 4:6) Some of what they belief has been tried and found wanting, as proved according to the premise of the supremacy of Scripture.

Some? Remember that men wrote Scripture and men chose Scripture and the men selected by the Holy Spirit in His Church interpret Scripture. Those who claim differently are different in what way? They claim the same authority. And, with the words of Jesus, Peter, Paul and James ringing in our ears, we must reject the claims of authority of ordinary men.

Moreover, the growth of Roman Catholicism is largely attributable to the Rome's unBiblical use of the sword and carnal means of the state, versus the spiritual means of the poor but powerful New Testament church. Protestants were also wrong in the lesser degree to which they sometimes used such in its early years, versus later evangelical awakenings.

Carnal means of the state? You mean that they caused people to be meat eaters? What do you mean?

Use of the sword? The last Battle of Vienna was conducted entirely with Catholic soldiers, whilst the Protestants waited to see what leavings they could pick up. Didn't stop the German Lutherans and the Swiss Calvinists from enjoying the protection from the Muslims who would have killed them all. Use of the sword? Take a look at the history of the American colonies. Do you know why the 1st Amendment was enacted? To prevent the Protestant colonies from enacting their own state religion and enforcing it on American soil against mostly their fellow Protestants, including Baptists and Quakers, but also on any stray Catholics who wandered away.

In addition, as said before, the authenticity of the church is not based upon institutional lineage, but faith, and God is able to raise up leaders from stones like Peter, who effectually confess Jesus s the Divine Son of God, and is so doing, across evangelical denominations who preach repentance and salvation by grace through faith, and by such the kingdom of God is enlarged, by their grace and to the glory of God, though they are attacked by the institutionalized church.

Read through the first millennium of the Church's history and see the attacks upon it both directly and due to doctrinal departure. See why Nicea had to come up with the doctrine of the Trinity, for instance. You may be amazed.

404 posted on 07/20/2010 6:23:58 PM PDT by MarkBsnr ( I would not believe in the Gospel if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: stfassisi

Thank you. You did a fine job.


405 posted on 07/20/2010 6:25:15 PM PDT by MarkBsnr ( I would not believe in the Gospel if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: MarkBsnr; Quix; caww; metmom; wmfights; Titus Quinctius Cincinnatus; presently no screen name
Formatting: Blue=my previous response; Red=your latest; Black=my current. Other interested posters copied in.

Which came first, the Church or the Scripture?

Though your underlying premise is faulty, yet most precisely, Scripture came first, but not in its complete form. . The bulk of written Divine revelation preceded the birth of the church, and without it the church would not exist. Now the next question is, “Which came first, Israel or Scripture?” As the answer to that is the former, so (consistent with Rome's logic) they too must have been infallible in faith and morals, and thus Christianity is disallowed.

Your first statement is wrong. My underlying premise is not faulty. Scripture did not come first.

No, you fail to understand the use of “yet,” which denotes that the faulty premise refers to something besides the premise that Scripture came first, this something being the the logic behind your question, which presumes that those through whom Scripture was written, and entrusted, are the assuredly infallible interpreters of it, but which would require us all to convert to Judaism.

Scripture did not come first. Revelation by God did.

You have use this sophistry before. Divine revelation certainly came first, and but the fact is that written Divine revelation preceded the birth of the church, and substantiates it.

Your second statement is wrong as well. The OT could be called the history of God trying to get the Jews to pay attention for more than a day or two and failing. The Second Great Revelation of Jesus also occured prior, in some cases significantly prior to the NT being written. We have no indication of anything being written during the lifetime of Jesus - indeed Luke 1 indicates the Gospel writing formula and we have no other.

Your argument is simply in-credible. You reject that their church would not exist apart from the foundation, and then marginalize the Old Testament as basically being that of God just trying to get the Jews to pay attention for more than a day or two and failing! Of course, you have prior expressed that the NT does not have its foundation in the Old, which is patently absurd, and i would be surprised if any Catholic agreed with you (any here?) Do you ever read cross references? Do you recall that the numerous time Jesus and the apostles and the inspired writers substantiated both that He was the Christ and the gospel and teaching by the O.T. Please look up the following and recant your error before you yourself are further marginalized:

Mat. 2:5; 4:4,6,7,10; 11:10; 21:13,42; 22:29; 26:24,31,54,56; Mk. 1:2; 9:12,13; 7:3; 11:17; 14:21,47; 12:24; 14:49; Lk. 2:3,23; 3:4; 4:4,8,10; 10:26; 19:46; 20:17; 22:37; 24:22.27,32,45,46; Jn. 5:39; 6:31,45; 8:17; 12:14; 15:25; Acts 1:20; 7:42; 13:33; 15:15; 17:2,11; 18:24,28; 23:5; Rom 1:2,17; 2:24; 3:4,10; 4:17; 8:36; 9:3,13,33; 10:15; 11:8,26; 12:19; 14:11; 15:3,4,9,21; 16:16; 1Cor. 1:19,31; 2:9; 3:19; 4:6; 9:9,10; 10:7; 14:21; 15:3,4,45,54; 2Cor. 4:13; 8:15; 9:9; Gal. 3:10,13; 4:22,27; 2Tim. 3:15; Heb. 10:7; 1Pet. 1:16; 5:12; 2Pet. 3:16; 1 Jn. 2:21; Rev. 1:3

Your premise is that Rome wrote and choose the New Testament Scripture, and that thus it is the infallible interpreter of them.

Negative. I never said anything about Rome and would ask you provide evidence that I did or retract that statement.

I wish you were negative here, but as you must know, “Rome” refers to the Roman Catholic church, and to disagree you must deny that the Roman Catholic church in particular is the only assuredly infallible interpreter “since the Church wrote and chose Scripture under the authority of Jesus and the Holy Spirit.”

This assertion presumes that she is the New Testament church, but which is ultimately based upon her foundational circular reasoning

Negative again. Scripture itself says that the Church is the authority that Jesus created - I trust that adequate Scriptural proof has been posted for your edification and if not, then I will endeavour to do so on this thread.

So you hold that i can be sure the Rome is the OTC and infallible interpreter of Scripture based upon Scripture? This is well. The condescending attempts to establish such i have seen, which fail, and effectively rest upon her infallible declaration that she is infallible, when speaking in accordance with her infallibly defined formula.

It was also individual men who penned Scripture, versus it being a ecclesiastical project by the church of Rome,

Nobody said anything about Rome. Please provide evidence or a retraction.

Again, if the New Testament church was not the church which is now called the Roman Catholic church then what is your argument? Even if you were Orthodox, then the refutation would is still be valid by application.

Indeed there was, as nowhere will you find a separate class of sacerdotal priests, but all believers are priests, and bishops/elders were overseers, versus priests, as the latter's main function was that of offering up expiational sacrifices.

Negative again. Jesus is fairly clear; Paul is more clear about the separation of duties of the various types of individuals. Jesus, in the Gospels, is normally direct as to what the duties of the Apostles are (the bishops of His Church) as opposed to the believing people, as opposed to the non believers.

Only your assertions have been negative so far, and continuing. The point here, which i think is obvious, is not that there are functional differences among ecclesiastical offices, and between rulers and “laity,” but that pastors are not a separate class of sacerdotal priests which uniquely offer up expiational sacrifices, and this title (priests) is never used distinctly for them; rather they are called bishops/elders, which refer to the same office, regardless of scope, and belong to the class called pastors/shepherds.

Agree. The Peter of the Bible. But unlike even Judas, the Holy Spirit evidences no successor being named for James when he died, nor an expected one or formal means of providing one for Peter whose demise was near, as is provided for pastors.

True, however, we have in the Pauline epistles as well as some examples in Acts, of how replacements were chosen. The lack of succession for Peter not being in Scripture does not mean that Peter is not to be succeeded, given the examples that are outlined, as well as extra-Scriptural writings of the early Church.

We have been here before, while ordination of elders and deacons was carefully given and examopled, the issue is that of replacing apostle, who were sovereignly chosen for a special purpose. If your example of Judas being replaced is to establish a perpetuation, then, as said before, we should have manifestly seen a successor for the martyred apostle James, (Acts 12:2) the brother of John, son of Zebedee, one of the sons of thunder, (Mt. 4:21; Mk. 3:17) but we do not. In addition, the selection of Matthias in Acts 1 was due to maintaining the number of apostles, which seems to have a special significance, (Rev 21:14) while Paul was purely sovereignly chose to be an apostle.

With that said, we reach a point here where you may indicate that you wish to debate strictly under SS. If that is said, then that is the debating field and you may not argue anything from any other source including the Catholic Catechism and any rulings that the Church has made over the centuries. Including the selection of the NT Scripture itself. Please indicate your preference.

Your assertion relies upon a SS strawman, for which cause i often posted this. Day after day noted evangelicals which hold to SS use historical accounts in their exegesis of Scripture, and for hundreds of years the most famous evangelical scholars and commentators have done likewise. Many staunch proponents of SS also often invoke the church fathers. What SS holds is that all such sources are not infallible, and so must be proved in the light of that only objective authority which is affirmed to be 100% inspired of God. (2Tim. 3:16)

And which presumes that that the LORD did not speak Greek, or that Matthew was written in Hebrew, or or that the Holy Spirit, who it can be shown, often expands and varies Jesus words to provide a fuller revelation, did not use Greek to provide the most precise meaning.

But since you have no Scriptural affirming source, how can you debate the point?

Since you have no strawman, your matches are of no use, while you cannot establish otherwise. We can, however, provide evidence that the Holy Spirit can expand or recast Jesus words to provide a fuller revelation.

However, even this is not the real issue as regards SS, but the issue is what Rome has derived from this, this being that the teaching magisterium being the supreme doctrinal authority, being incontestably infallible when speaking in accordance with its infallibly defined criteria. Holding Scripture as supreme does not even exclude that Rome can teach some infallible truth, and again, those who hold to SS assent to many foundational truths we both agree one, as these can pass Scriptural muster, but which her claim to assured infallibility does not, nor teachings which rely upon it.

Rome again? The Church does not say that it is the supreme doctrinal authority. Indeed, the bishops of the Church are the stewards of Christ; St. Peter being given the keys to Heaven (as a king goes on a journey, he leaves the keys of the kingdom to his steward). Jesus Christ Created the Church and the Holy Spirit commissioned it at Pentecost. We have no Supreme Authority except for Jesus Christ.

Judge not by appearances. What the church says (interprets) is one thing, the real basis for its interpretation being authoritative is another. If it affirms that doctrinal certainty can be realized by the Scriptures, then it has just shot itself in the foot. Instead, as it affirms that it alone is the assuredly infallible magisterium, we must accept this, Scriptural contentions notwithstanding, and thus its authority relies upon its infallible declaration that it is (conditionally) infallible, based upon its infallible interpretation of Scripture, history and her nebulous oral tradition.

The Scriptural warrant for pastoral care is established, but for a perpetuated Petrine papacy and assuredly infallible magisterium it is not, while the supremacy of Scripture is. As for men like Luther, they also are not infallible teachers, and SS holds that we are “not to think of men above that which is written,” (1Cor. 4:6) Some of what they belief has been tried and found wanting, as proved according to the premise of the supremacy of Scripture.

Some? Remember that men wrote Scripture and men chose Scripture and the men selected by the Holy Spirit in His Church interpret Scripture. Those who claim differently are different in what way? They claim the same authority. And, with the words of Jesus, Peter, Paul and James ringing in our ears, we must reject the claims of authority of ordinary men.

And how did the noble Bereans examine the apostles? (Acts 17:11) You have men being held infallible because they claim to be selected by the Holy Spirit, and this is not allowed to be doubted, while we see the preaching of holy men who added to Scripture being substantiated by Scripture, (Mt. 22; Lk. 24:27:45; Acts 2:13-40; 17:2; 18:28; 28:23), and often attested to by overt supernatural Divine power, with their apostolic authority manifested thereby. (Rm. 15:18,19; 2Cor. 6:1-10; 12:12)

Preaching and teaching of truth in this age thus must also conflate with the class of revelation which has been established as inspired by God due to its unique and enduring qualities, with its regenerative fruits. While this means must allow for different interpretations, versus implicit trust in an assuredly infallible magisterium, the latter is not what is close to what is establish as the normal means of assurance. Jesus purposely was enigmatic sometimes, and appealed to human reasoning, as truth is revealed only to those who continue in the light given them, and His word a lamp unto their feet. (Ps. 119:105) The Bible evidences that it presumes honest souls can reason and believe salvific truth and true faith, (Acts 17:2,11; 2Cor. 4:2) but materially provides for teachers as well, and that some truths are more primary, (1Cor. 15:1-6; Gal. 1:6-9; 1Jn. 4:2,3) and that not all things are equally evident, (and full doctrinally unity was ever a goal) and some souls will wrest some less evident things in the Scriptures to their own damnation. (2Pet. 3:16)

Moreover, the growth of Roman Catholicism is largely attributable to the Rome's unBiblical use of the sword and carnal means of the state, versus the spiritual means of the poor but powerful New Testament church. Protestants were also wrong in the lesser degree to which they sometimes used such in its early years, versus later evangelical awakenings.

Carnal means of the state? You mean that they caused people to be meat eaters? What do you mean?

Think Biblically. This is what i meant. "For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds;" (2 Cor 10:4) "But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit, even so it is now." (Gal 4:29)

Meaning not meat, which is not denigrated, but as attested to elsewhere, spiritual means, "By the word of truth, by the power of God, by the armour of righteousness on the right hand and on the left," (2 Cor 6:7) "For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places." (Eph 6:12)

Thus the New Testament church never used physical force in order to subdue her spiritual enemies and or expand her dominion, though it suffered such from them, nor did it use such in order to chastise its members, but invoked a spiritual rod, besides disfellowshipping. (1Cor. 4:21; 5:5,11) Nor did it rule over those without, or want to, (1Cor. 5:13) yet sanctioned the just use of the Sword by the State. (Rm. 13:1-7; 1Pet. 2:14,15)

Use of the sword? The last Battle of Vienna was conducted entirely with Catholic soldiers, whilst the Protestants waited to see what leavings they could pick up. Didn't stop the German Lutherans and the Swiss Calvinists from enjoying the protection from the Muslims who would have killed them all. Use of the sword? Take a look at the history of the American colonies. Do you know why the 1st Amendment was enacted? To prevent the Protestant colonies from enacting their own state religion and enforcing it on American soil against mostly their fellow Protestants, including Baptists and Quakers, but also on any stray Catholics who wandered away.

I know of the context of the first amendment, and the Baptist who were for it, nor it is not the use of the sword that is the issue, but by whom and for what. And the fact that some Protestants used it early on does not impugn upon my statement of Rome's reliance upon it, while the greatest growth of the evangelical church has been after discarding it and as they relied upon prayer and preaching. Even so that in the U.S, during the years between the inaugurations of Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln, historians see "evangelicalism emerging as a kind of national church or national religion."

In addition, as said before, the authenticity of the church is not based upon institutional lineage, but faith, and God is able to raise up leaders from stones like Peter, who effectually confess Jesus s the Divine Son of God, and is so doing, across evangelical denominations who preach repentance and salvation by grace through faith, and by such the kingdom of God is enlarged, by their grace and to the glory of God, though they are attacked by the institutionalized church.

Read through the first millennium of the Church's history and see the attacks upon it both directly and due to doctrinal departure. See why Nicea had to come up with the doctrine of the Trinity, for instance. You may be amazed.

“Come up with” is not the best wording, as da Vinci code theorists imagine this was unsubstantiated, rather than it being a doctrine which is Scripturally derived and basically demanded in order to reconcile all that is said on the subject. But holding to the supremacy of Scripture does not mean that one cannot receive what is or was taught by others, from the Jews to Trent, as long as it is indeed warranted by the wholly inspired Scriptures. Thus those who in do hold to the supremacy of Scripture and salvation by grace through faith not only uphold the foundational truths which we both agree on, but are among, or the, foremost contenders against those who deny such core truths such as the Deity of Christ. And which types of aberrations are typically part of groups which effectively hold to an authority as supreme over the Bible, from the Watchtower headquarters to the LSD living prophet to manifestly wild fire elitist “prophets” and teachers. But Rome's teachings on such things as praying to saints in glory is part of such.

406 posted on 07/21/2010 11:47:15 AM PDT by daniel1212
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To: daniel1212
Thanks for the ping, that was a great read.

Thus the New Testament church never used physical force in order to subdue her spiritual enemies and or expand her dominion, though it suffered such from them, nor did it use such in order to chastise its members, but invoked a spiritual rod, besides disfellowshipping.

So true, Christianity is a faith of the heart. You cannot coerce someone into belief.

407 posted on 07/21/2010 1:26:56 PM PDT by wmfights (If you want change support SenateConservatives.com)
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To: daniel1212; MarkBsnr

Very informative debate .....more please?


408 posted on 07/21/2010 7:31:13 PM PDT by caww
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To: caww; daniel1212

Another day. I wish to reply in depth in a manner deserving of Daniel’s post.


409 posted on 07/21/2010 8:06:02 PM PDT by MarkBsnr ( I would not believe in the Gospel if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: MarkBsnr

Thanks Mark...you both are very good at articulating your positions. I think we all truly enjoy a good debate when it is done as this has shown. Nice to see this amid all the otherwise “stuff”. Thanks again...looking forward then.


410 posted on 07/21/2010 8:30:21 PM PDT by caww
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To: daniel1212
No, you fail to understand the use of “yet,” which denotes that the faulty premise refers to something besides the premise that Scripture came first, this something being the the logic behind your question, which presumes that those through whom Scripture was written, and entrusted, are the assuredly infallible interpreters of it, but which would require us all to convert to Judaism.

I should have been clearer. My point is that God's revelation to mankind (Adam and Eve) occured long before Moses wrote the Torah. The rest of the OT was written by men. Now comes Jesus. The first writings that we have indication of occured at least 20 years after the Ascension. In both cases, the Revelation significantly preceded Scripture; we do not consider a conversion to Judaism in light of the NT. Without the NT, a conversion to Judaism is the only option.

You have use this sophistry before. Divine revelation certainly came first, and but the fact is that written Divine revelation preceded the birth of the church, and substantiates it.

Not the Christian Church in relation to the NT. The Church began with the calling of the Apostles. The NT tells of the Church's beginnings and the teachings of Jesus.

Your argument is simply in-credible. You reject that their church would not exist apart from the foundation, and then marginalize the Old Testament as basically being that of God just trying to get the Jews to pay attention for more than a day or two and failing! Of course, you have prior expressed that the NT does not have its foundation in the Old, which is patently absurd, and i would be surprised if any Catholic agreed with you (any here?)

Are you saying that the NT does not have its foundation in Jesus Christ? Without Jesus, the NT does not stand; in fact it could not exist at all. The NT cannot be found in the OT except in oblique or occasional references. Without Jesus, there is no way that the NT could be written. However, the NT could exist without the OT, given that God Almighty chooses His revelation to men in the manner which He chooses.

I wish you were negative here, but as you must know, “Rome” refers to the Roman Catholic church, and to disagree you must deny that the Roman Catholic church in particular is the only assuredly infallible interpreter “since the Church wrote and chose Scripture under the authority of Jesus and the Holy Spirit.”

Refer all you want. The fact is that the Latins are one branch of the Church and the Roman Catholics are under the Latin branch. There are five bishops who are pares. The Pope is one of the pares. Patriarch Kirill is another.

So you hold that i can be sure the Rome is the OTC and infallible interpreter of Scripture based upon Scripture? This is well. The condescending attempts to establish such i have seen, which fail, and effectively rest upon her infallible declaration that she is infallible, when speaking in accordance with her infallibly defined formula.

Nice try. I do not say Rome. I say that since the Church wrote Scripture, chose Scripture and has kept Scripture throughout these millennia, they also have the authority to interpret Scripture. Not any of Luther's milkmaids.

Again, if the New Testament church was not the church which is now called the Roman Catholic church then what is your argument? Even if you were Orthodox, then the refutation would is still be valid by application.

I'm not sure what you are saying here. Could you please restate?

Only your assertions have been negative so far, and continuing. The point here, which i think is obvious, is not that there are functional differences among ecclesiastical offices, and between rulers and “laity,” but that pastors are not a separate class of sacerdotal priests which uniquely offer up expiational sacrifices, and this title (priests) is never used distinctly for them; rather they are called bishops/elders, which refer to the same office, regardless of scope, and belong to the class called pastors/shepherds.

I never said that pastors are a separate class. I said that priests are. The early Church found that only two separate functions were necessary - deacon and bishop - but even that changed in Scripture. Paul found it necessary to ordain bishops under him and there are indications that there were individuals who took care of a specific church location versus a territorial jurisdiction. Scripture is not as specific as the early Church Fathers as to that separation and distinction of duties. St. Irenaus is an early indicator of the levels of the Church during the late 1st and early 2nd Centuries.

We have been here before, while ordination of elders and deacons was carefully given and examopled, the issue is that of replacing apostle, who were sovereignly chosen for a special purpose. If your example of Judas being replaced is to establish a perpetuation, then, as said before, we should have manifestly seen a successor for the martyred apostle James, (Acts 12:2) the brother of John, son of Zebedee, one of the sons of thunder, (Mt. 4:21; Mk. 3:17) but we do not. In addition, the selection of Matthias in Acts 1 was due to maintaining the number of apostles, which seems to have a special significance, (Rev 21:14) while Paul was purely sovereignly chose to be an apostle.

That is where we rely on Church and Apostolic Fathers documentation for proofs. Scripture is not entirely specific; the early Church records are much more complete. However, Paul appointed a number of bishops and instructed the parishioners to receive them as they did him.

Your assertion relies upon a SS strawman, for which cause i often posted this. Day after day noted evangelicals which hold to SS use historical accounts in their exegesis of Scripture, and for hundreds of years the most famous evangelical scholars and commentators have done likewise. Many staunch proponents of SS also often invoke the church fathers. What SS holds is that all such sources are not infallible, and so must be proved in the light of that only objective authority which is affirmed to be 100% inspired of God. (2Tim. 3:16)

This is a word game. In other words, if something can be considered to be authoritive from Scripture or through Scripture or by some logic from Scripture, then by extension, other things can be as well. No sir. If you claim sola, then sola it is. If not sola, then not sola. We have been honest with each other so far. I can debate you on either level.

Judge not by appearances. What the church says (interprets) is one thing, the real basis for its interpretation being authoritative is another. If it affirms that doctrinal certainty can be realized by the Scriptures, then it has just shot itself in the foot. Instead, as it affirms that it alone is the assuredly infallible magisterium, we must accept this, Scriptural contentions notwithstanding, and thus its authority relies upon its infallible declaration that it is (conditionally) infallible, based upon its infallible interpretation of Scripture, history and her nebulous oral tradition.

The Church's interpretation is built on 2000 years of Magisterial authority, based upon the Holy Spirit's inspiration. We believe that the Bible is inspired. We also believe that, since Jesus Created the Church and made promises of protection, of the possession of the Keys of Heaven and the attendance of the Holy Spirit, that the Church possesses all that Jesus promised.

Since you have no strawman, your matches are of no use, while you cannot establish otherwise. We can, however, provide evidence that the Holy Spirit can expand or recast Jesus words to provide a fuller revelation.

A fascinating statement. Please provide that evidence.

And how did the noble Bereans examine the apostles? (Acts 17:11) You have men being held infallible because they claim to be selected by the Holy Spirit, and this is not allowed to be doubted, while we see the preaching of holy men who added to Scripture being substantiated by Scripture, (Mt. 22; Lk. 24:27:45; Acts 2:13-40; 17:2; 18:28; 28:23), and often attested to by overt supernatural Divine power, with their apostolic authority manifested thereby. (Rm. 15:18,19; 2Cor. 6:1-10; 12:12)

We come back to this: are the words of Jesus Christ, the Lord God Almighty subordinate to the words of men?

Preaching and teaching of truth in this age thus must also conflate with the class of revelation which has been established as inspired by God due to its unique and enduring qualities, with its regenerative fruits.

What does this mean?

The Bible evidences that it presumes honest souls can reason and believe salvific truth and true faith, (Acts 17:2,11; 2Cor. 4:2) but materially provides for teachers as well, and that some truths are more primary, (1Cor. 15:1-6; Gal. 1:6-9; 1Jn. 4:2,3) and that not all things are equally evident, (and full doctrinally unity was ever a goal) and some souls will wrest some less evident things in the Scriptures to their own damnation. (2Pet. 3:16)

Are you saying that if you are honest and reasonable you are saved? I would ask you to explain this further as well.

Thus the New Testament church never used physical force in order to subdue her spiritual enemies and or expand her dominion, though it suffered such from them, nor did it use such in order to chastise its members, but invoked a spiritual rod, besides disfellowshipping. (1Cor. 4:21; 5:5,11) Nor did it rule over those without, or want to, (1Cor. 5:13) yet sanctioned the just use of the Sword by the State. (Rm. 13:1-7; 1Pet. 2:14,15)

No, in fact, the Church was extremely pacifist. But 1 Corinthians 5:13 says nothing about ruling outside. And Romans 13 says nothing about the use of force by the State. Neither does 1 Peter 2. What are you getting at here? Your Scriptural references are oblique to your statements.

I know of the context of the first amendment, and the Baptist who were for it, nor it is not the use of the sword that is the issue, but by whom and for what. And the fact that some Protestants used it early on does not impugn upon my statement of Rome's reliance upon it, while the greatest growth of the evangelical church has been after discarding it and as they relied upon prayer and preaching. Even so that in the U.S, during the years between the inaugurations of Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln, historians see "evangelicalism emerging as a kind of national church or national religion."

Some do. But the enactment of the 1st Amendment is still justified completely and only by the inhumanity of the strong Calvinist state religions of the early colonies and the conduct of those Calvinists who ran them.

“Come up with” is not the best wording, as da Vinci code theorists imagine this was unsubstantiated, rather than it being a doctrine which is Scripturally derived and basically demanded in order to reconcile all that is said on the subject. But holding to the supremacy of Scripture does not mean that one cannot receive what is or was taught by others, from the Jews to Trent, as long as it is indeed warranted by the wholly inspired Scriptures.

It may not be the best wording, but it is accurate enough. The Church was under attack by yet another set of heretics and had to formulate the Trinity to repudiate them. The problem with your statement about teachings warrented by Scripture is that is a weasel. It simply dilutes the idea of Scriptural proofs to those of 'warrented' by Scripture while still trying to maintain the semblence. No, sir, I must insist the sola means only. If not only, then abandon the sola.

Thus those who in do hold to the supremacy of Scripture and salvation by grace through faith not only uphold the foundational truths which we both agree on, but are among, or the, foremost contenders against those who deny such core truths such as the Deity of Christ. And which types of aberrations are typically part of groups which effectively hold to an authority as supreme over the Bible, from the Watchtower headquarters to the LSD living prophet to manifestly wild fire elitist “prophets” and teachers.

There are many that we agree upon; there are many we do not. I suspect that Transubstantiation is one. Yet that is a fundamental Truth of Christianity, held from the beginning. The Church Fathers write extensively on it.

But Rome's teachings on such things as praying to saints in glory is part of such.

Also Scriptural (Maccabees) as well as practiced by the Church Fathers. Again, a practice of the fledgling Church. Again, another objection by the Reformation 1500 years later.

411 posted on 07/22/2010 6:11:13 PM PDT by MarkBsnr ( I would not believe in the Gospel if the authority of the Catholic Church did not move me to do so.)
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To: MarkBsnr; caww; Quix; wmfights


I should have been clearer. My point is that God's revelation to mankind (Adam and Eve) occured long before Moses wrote the Torah. The rest of the OT was written by men. Now comes Jesus. The first writings that we have indication of occured at least 20 years after the Ascension. In both cases, the Revelation significantly preceded Scripture; we do not consider a conversion to Judaism in light of the NT. Without the NT, a conversion to Judaism is the only option.

No clarification is needed, except (again) that of the actual contention which you are missing or avoiding. I did not disagree that revelation preceded any writing of it, but the fact remains that my statement (in response to your question) that their bulk of Scripture preceded the church is true.

As for Judaism, the point was that your logic, that since the church was the instrument of Holy Writ, and the discerners and preservers of it, the it is the assuredly infallible interpreters of all Divine revelation, would compel us to accepts the interpretation of the Jewish magisterium, as the Jews were explicitly stated to be such.

Not the Christian Church in relation to the NT. The Church began with the calling of the Apostles. The NT tells of the Church's beginnings and the teachings of Jesus.

Again, the Christian Church's relation to the NT was not my contention. The statement which you pronounced was wrong was that “Scripture came first, but not in its complete form,” which is true, despite your rejection of it. And the NT tells of the Church's beginnings and the teachings of Jesus, enabling the fulfillment of what was written beforehand, which it abundantly refers to, despite your marginalization.

Are you saying that the NT does not have its foundation in Jesus Christ? Without Jesus, the NT does not stand; in fact it could not exist at all. The NT cannot be found in the OT except in oblique or occasional references. Without Jesus, there is no way that the NT could be written. However, the NT could exist without the OT, given that God Almighty chooses His revelation to men in the manner which He chooses.

Affirming that the New Testament has its basis in the Old Testament does not mean that all truth does not have its foundation in Jesus Christ, the Word of God. But your contention that the NT does not have its basis in the OT is still absurd, compounded by your statement that the NT could exist without the OT, which is true, but with multitudes of references (as to what was written) to nowhere.

But all of your responses misses the real issue which is behind “which came first,” which is that being the instruments as well as the interpreters and preservers of Holy Writ does not confer assured infallibility to all that they state is infallible, based upon their formula.

Refer all you want. The fact is that the Latins are one branch of the Church and the Roman Catholics are under the Latin branch. There are five bishops who are pares. The Pope is one of the pares. Patriarch Kirill is another.

Being more ecumenical will not solve the problem, for your premise is faulty.

Nice try. I do not say Rome. I say that since the Church wrote Scripture, chose Scripture and has kept Scripture throughout these millennia, they also have the authority to interpret Scripture. Not any of Luther's milkmaids.

The issue is actually not restricted to Rome, but can apply to any church which claims to assured infallibility, after the manner of Rome does, and using different language, the Orthodox (while affirming far fewer councils as ecumenical), and which many cults effectively do.

And when implicit faith in an assuredly infallible magisterium is fostered then we end up with statements like this:

The intolerance of the Church toward error, the natural position of one who is the custodian of truth, her only reasonable attitude makes her forbid her children to read or to listen to heretical controversy, or to endeavor to discover religious truths by examining both sides of the question.” “The reason of this stand of his is that, for him, there can be no two sides to a question which for him is settled; for him, there is no seeking after the truth: he possesses it in its fulness, as far as God and religion are concerned. His Church gives him all there is to be had; all else is counterfeit.” (John H. Stapleton, Explanation of Catholic Morals, p. 35, 1904; Nihil Obstat. Remy Lafort, Censor Librorum. Imprimatur, John M. Farley, Archbishop of New York )

I'm not sure what you are saying here. Could you please restate?

Regardless of which church you affirm was the instrument of Holy Writ, and the discerners and preservers of it, this does not confer assured infallibly, as Rome has most manifestly has infallibly defined itself to conditionally be.

I never said that pastors are a separate class. I said that priests are. The early Church found that only two separate functions were necessary - deacon and bishop - but even that changed in Scripture. Paul found it necessary to ordain bishops under him and there are indications that there were individuals who took care of a specific church location versus a territorial jurisdiction. Scripture is not as specific as the early Church Fathers as to that separation and distinction of duties. St. Irenaus is an early indicator of the levels of the Church during the late 1st and early 2nd Centuries.

Priests are also pastors, though the term can be used more broadly, and thus the point is that a separate class of sacerdotal priests does not exist in the New Testament church. And there is no change in titles, though the scope of the pastorate of some bishops/elders was broader than others.

That is where we rely on Church and Apostolic Fathers documentation for proofs. Scripture is not entirely specific; the early Church records are much more complete. However, Paul appointed a number of bishops and instructed the parishioners to receive them as they did him.

Again, the issue is not bishops/elders, but successors to the apostles and their function, which is not established in Scripture.

This is a word game. In other words, if something can be considered to be authoritive from Scripture or through Scripture or by some logic from Scripture, then by extension, other things can be as well. No sir. If you claim sola, then sola it is. If not sola, then not sola. We have been honest with each other so far. I can debate you on either level.

This is not a word game. “Sola” here, as only” refers to Scripture alone being the supreme doctrinal authority on earth, versus “sola ecclesia.” To hold that SS rejects any use of history, etc., is a strawman. Your logic is also incorrect, as Scripturally substantiated teaching rests upon Scripture being established as the wholly inspired objectively authority of God, and is uniquely affirmed therein to be so, while other sources do not enjoy that, though their testimony can help understanding it.

The Church's interpretation is built on 2000 years of Magisterial authority, based upon the Holy Spirit's inspiration. We believe that the Bible is inspired. We also believe that, since Jesus Created the Church and made promises of protection, of the possession of the Keys of Heaven and the attendance of the Holy Spirit, that the Church possesses all that Jesus promised.

Proclaim what you will, but all of your preceding lofty affirmations do not make them so, but as they do not supremely depend upon demonstrable Scriptural warrant, they rely on her infallible declaration which makes her declarations infallible, and thus incontestable by Scriptural or historical challenges.

A fascinating statement. Please provide that evidence.

All one has to do is examine word for word the duplicate accounts of the words of certain souls and note the variations, and ask whether such happened more than once, which is often possible, or whether the Holy Spirit somewhat recast what was said in the interest of His application and a fuller revelation by way of complementary accounts. It seems certain that Jesus (the judge of all) stood trial before the Sanhedrin only once, but see the examination of the differences between accounts at the bottom of this page:

Another example would be the reference to Is. 6:8-10 (cf. Is. 44:18) in Mat. 13:13-15 and Jn. 12:39-41 (and which strongly attests to Jesus Divinity).

This is not a liberal interpretation, but recognizes that the Holy Spirit can reveal more truth by somewhat reiterating or recasting it in slightly different ways, which was typical in ancient communication, but without actual contradiction.

Nor is this aspect some radical Protestant doctrine. The officially approved (Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur, reflecting “what is generally accepted as sound doctrine in the Catholic tradition”) commentary in your own New American Bible (the official Roman Catholic Bible for America) asks, “Did Jesus “answer exactly as as related in the Bible” and answers, “It is not certain,” and that “it is difficult to know whether the words or sayings attributed to Him are written exactly as He spoke them.” But it further states that the writers took put theological elaboration into original words, and took “narratives and frequently even remolded and refashioned them to bring out the lessons which they wanted to teach.”

Yet it even goes beyond this and speculates that some of the miracle stories of Jesus in the New Testament (the fulfillment of of the Hebrew Bible) may be adaptations of similar ones in the Old Testament,” (St. Joseph edition, 1970; How to read your Bible, 6f, 13e, f, g. and i)

It additionally conveys such things as that Matthew placed Jesus in Egypt to convince his readers that Jesus was the real Israel, and may have only represented Jesus giving the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew, to show that Jesus was like Moses who received the law on Mount Sinai.

Even more, it also relegates Old Testament stories of supernatural events such as Gn. cps 2-4; 6-8; 11 (creation, the Flood, Tower of Babel) to being allegorical folk tales, and stories such as Num. 22 (Balaam's vocal donkey) to being a fable, and Gn. 12-50 (records of Abraham and Joseph) to being "historical novels!" (“6, Literary Forms")

Pertinent quotes:

"Think of the ‘holy wars’ of total destruction, fought by the Hebrews when they invaded Palestine. The search for meaning in those wars centuries later was inspired, but the conclusions which attributed all those atrocities to the command of God were imperfect and provisional."

"The Bible is God’s word and man’s word. One must understand man’s word first in order to understand the word of God." ((NAB published by the Catholic Book Publishing Co., New York, 1986. Nihil Obstat, and the Imprimatur from the Archbishop of Washington.)

However, as Scripture interprets Scripture, we see that the Holy Spirit refers to such accounts which Rome delegates as fables as being factually literal. “The serpent beguiled Eve through his subtlety” (2Cor. 11:3; Rev. 12:9), and Balaam's donkey did indeed speak (2Pet. 2:16), and Jonah did indeed spend 3 days and 3 nights in the belly of the whale (Mt. 12:40), and Israels history is always and inclusively treated as literal. And it is a slippery slope when historical statements are made out to be literary devices.

Rather than being an amalgam of God's words and man's, the whole of Scripture is God's word, and while it was written through men, in which, like a wind orchestra, each has its own distinctive sound and human instrumentation, yet the breath is of God, and the conductor is the Holy Spirit, and together they play the complex but complementary revelatory hymn of God, and to His glory.

We come back to this: are the words of Jesus Christ, the Lord God Almighty subordinate to the words of men?

False dilemma (and shallow logic). The issue is one of discernment, and examining doctrine that is claimed to be from that which is established as being from God actually manifests that men are subject to God, while presuming to be assuredly infallible, and unreprovable, based upon one's declaration and definition, effectively places one in their temple declaring that he is as God (which at least one pope claimed).

The question is, what means has God provided that we may know what the words of God versus men are? For men like Moses and the apostles, who wrote written revelation and affirmed that which was, God made that manifestly evident by overt attestation, and such became the standard which other revelation would be examined by. (Is. 8:20; 2Tim. 3:14-17; 2Pet. 1:19-21; 3:16, etc.) And like such men, the writings which were Scripture became established as of God, due to their unique accompanying and enduring qualities, with the selection of those are having become progressively more universally established due to their qualities, and the quickening of their Holy Spirit.

As Scripture has been established as such, and it attests that even being instruments and stewards of Scripture did not confer assured infallibility to the magisterium (though God yet preserved true faith), it commends those who examine preaching by it, and abundantly invokes it in attesting to are the words of Jesus Christ, the Lord God Almighty.

What does this mean?

That class being the Scriptures, which ecclesiastical decrees do not make inspired of God, nor can they, as helpful as they may be, be essentially responsible for its enduring acceptance, but rather this is due to the inherent qualities of this Divine classic, which qualities include their accompanying (think Moses and the apostles) supernatural attestation, (Ex. 20:18-22) and enduring resultant transforming power, (Ps. 19:7-11) predictive accuracy, (Dan. 9:2; Josh._23:14-15) wisdom virtue and doctrine, (Ps. 119; Rm. 2:17-20; 15:4), with further revelation being consistent with that which was already established, (see under marginalized” in prior post) and attestation by those whose virtue and power was supremely attested to.

Are you saying that if you are honest and reasonable you are saved? I would ask you to explain this further as well.

It means that by appealing to souls to reason, rather than require implicit trust in men who claim to be assuredly formulaically infallible, then presumes that Berean-type souls will be convinced by Scriptural preaching, and that God looks to those who are of a poor and contrite spirit which deeply reverence His words, (Is. 66:2) and saves such, (Ps. 34:18) as such as those of Jn. 3:21, while the proud resist God and vice versa, (1Pt. 5:5) and whom he devil blinds, (2Cor. 4:4) and that good and honest hearts bring forth much fruit. (Lk. 8:15)

I hope the rest is comprehensible to you.

No, in fact, the Church was extremely pacifist. But 1 Corinthians 5:13 says nothing about ruling outside. And Romans 13 says nothing about the use of force by the State. Neither does 1 Peter 2. What are you getting at here? Your Scriptural references are oblique to your statements.

May God help you to see. (1 Cor 5:12-13) "For what have I to do to judge them also that are without? do not ye judge them that are within? {13} But them that are without God judgeth. Therefore put away from among yourselves that wicked person."

The context here is that of discipline, and Paul's words are that it is not his job to govern those without the church, while believers are exhorted to be in subjection to civil powers outside the church, (1Pt. 2:13,14) versus the church being Caesar.

As for Rom 13:4: "For he is the minister of God to thee for good. But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil", and

1 Pet 2:13-14: "Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord's sake: whether it be to the king, as supreme; {14} Or unto governors, as unto them that are sent by him for the punishment of evildoers, and for the praise of them that do well,"

You must either presume that the sword refers to a spiritual one, used by the church, or that the latter is to use the sword of men. The Catholic NAB commentary itself interprets Rom 13:1-7 are referring to obedience to Caesar, and 1Pet. 2:13,14 to being the subjection to human government. And the weapons of the church are spiritual.

Some do. But the enactment of the 1st Amendment is still justified completely and only by the inhumanity of the strong Calvinist state religions of the early colonies and the conduct of those Calvinists who ran them.

Indeed it is justified, rightly contextually understood (versus the ACLU), and evangelicals requested and supported it over the more institutionalized counterparts. The issue was that of Rome's more predominate unScriptural use of the sword of men to expanding its rule, which still stands condemned.

It may not be the best wording, but it is accurate enough. The Church was under attack by yet another set of heretics and had to formulate the Trinity to repudiate them. The problem with your statement about teachings warrented by Scripture is that is a weasel. It simply dilutes the idea of Scriptural proofs to those of 'warrented' by Scripture while still trying to maintain the semblence. No, sir, I must insist the sola means only. If not only, then abandon the sola.

While you must insist upon your straw man as it is critical to your defense of the church as the sole supreme doctrinal authority, “solo scriptura,” which refers to the Bible as the only admitable source for doctrinal truth (i.e. nothing outside scripture) and which is held only by a few fringe groups, is not the same as sola scriptura, which accepts that history, tradition, creeds, etc., have their place, as long they are subject to the Scriptures, that being alone (sola) the assuredly infallible supreme authority on earth. As Sproul notes, “The great councils of Nicea, Ephesus, Chalcedon, and Constantinople receive much honor in Protestant tradition. The Reformers themselves gave tribute to the insights of the church fathers. Luther's expertise in the area of Patristics was evident in his debates with Cajetan and Eck. He frequently quotes the fathers as highly respected ecclesiastical authorities. But the difference is this: For the Reformers no church council, synod, classical theologian, or early church father is regarded as infallible. All are open to correction and critique. We have no Doctor Irrefragabilis of Protestantism.

As for what is “warranted,” it is not surprising that you would reject this provision, as while the Bible presupposes such is a realty by its many references in support of doctrine, and examples how such can be, it is support for an assuredly infallible magisterium after the manner of Rome which fails of warrant, with the contrary being exampled.

There are many that we agree upon; there are many we do not. I suspect that Transubstantiation is one. Yet that is a fundamental Truth of Christianity, held from the beginning. The Church Fathers write extensively on it.

Transubstantiation is indeed a most fundamental doctrine if you make it necessary for salvation, which many do by invoking Jn. 6:53 in support of it. In which case the apostle's should have been preaching it as necessary for regeneration. And while if you looked you my linked page, you would have known that i hold that the Roman Catholic doctrine that the bread and wine actually become Jesus corporeal flesh and blood is contrary to what is best evidenced, yet i allow one can hold to this aspect itself and yet be saved, if they believe the Biblical gospel of grace, versus one that fosters faith in one's works of faith or that of their church as being meritorious for salvation.

As for the “fathers” on this, contrary to the “ unanimous consent of the Fathers which Rome claims and requires for such, (Vatican 1, Session III, April 24, 1870, Dogmatic Constitution on the Catholic Faith: pgs. 222-223, confirming the decree of the Council of Trent--Fourth Session, April, 1546) this is not what this or many other doctrines enjoy (including Mt. 16:18), to varying degrees. As regards the Eucharist, Schaff, states: “…we distinguish three views: the mystic view of Ignatius, Justin Martyr, and Irenaeus; the symbolical view of Tertullian and Cyprian; and the allegorical or spiritualistic view of Clement of Alexandria and Origen…(History of the Christian Church, Vol. III, ch.7, part 95)

Also Scriptural (Maccabees) as well as practiced by the Church Fathers. Again, a practice of the fledgling Church. Again, another objection by the Reformation 1500 years later.

Including Maccabees itself as canonical can be considered an objection, as it chose to follow a tradition which is arguably the weaker within Catholicism in pronouncing the apocryphal books to be inspired. And as shown before, it is praying to such is without any support, but it contrary to what is stated on prayer as to the object of its address.

1. provide just one example, among the multitude of prayers in the Bible, where any believer prayed to anyone else in heaven but the Lord.

2. provide one place where exhortations, commands or instruction on prayer directed believers to pray to the departed. "i.e. "Our mother, who art in heaven...")..

3. show where believers cannot have direct access to Christ in heaven, or where any insufficiency exists in Christ that would require or advantage another intercessor in heaven between Christ and man, besidwes the Holy Spirit.

4. show where departed souls in heaven are hearing prayers.

5. provide where any communication that took place between earthlings and heavenly beings besides God took place Apart from a personal visitation.

6. provide where making supplication to beings in heaven besides God is sanctioned.

7. show where anyone else is called "Queen of heaven" other than Jer 44:17 (But we will certainly do whatsoever thing goeth forth out of our own mouth, to burn incense unto the queen of heaven) who is a heavenly object of devotion and prayer.

8. show where any believer has already been crowned in heaven, or why everyone else has to wait until Jesus appearing to receive his. (2Tim. 4:8; 1Pt. 5:4)

9. show that earthly relations always correspond to heavenly ones, so that just as we may feed each other, and married people have sexual relations, so we are to spiritually do so with the departed now. Or where directly praying telepathically to each other on earth is promoted.

412 posted on 07/24/2010 7:42:21 AM PDT by daniel1212
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To: daniel1212

WOW. A great post.

May be able to digest more of it this evening.

Thx for the ping.


413 posted on 07/24/2010 7:44:45 AM PDT by Quix (THE PLAN of the Bosses: http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2519352/posts?page=2#2)
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To: Quix

To God be the glory.


414 posted on 07/24/2010 10:16:00 AM PDT by daniel1212
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To: daniel1212
To God be the glory.

Amen, Brother!

I want to go through the "book" you posted before responding, but what I scanned was edifying.

It seems to me that of the 5 Solas the one that produces the greatest opposition is the simple straightforward idea that Scripture stands Alone as the final authority. We all have to decide for ourselves what that final authority in matters of Faith will be. I know for me my eyes opened like never before when I began to try and discern the rightness of things based on Scripture Alone.

415 posted on 07/24/2010 10:33:03 AM PDT by wmfights (If you want change support SenateConservatives.com)
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To: wmfights

Thank God for anything that helps.

In brief, as the only objective, material source which is affirmed and established to be 100% inspired by God, (2Tim. 3:16) then it must stand as the authority over an office which effectively calls for implicit faith in itself, as being assuredly infallible, based upon its infallibly interpretation of Scripture, history and its mysterious tradition.

Confidence and understanding of both the Bible or the infallible magisterium requires appeal to fallible human reasoning, in convincing souls to trust and to understand them, and church dogmas also require some degree of interpretation, but the Bible, in so appealing, evidences that seekers who want the light will be salvifically persuaded by Scripture, as the Bereans were, and the manner of attestation it evidences (not simply blind faith). And those who do not are those who “wrest” the Scriptures, (2Pet. 3:16) which evidences they can be wrested, which wresting is what presuming to be the assuredly infallible supreme doctrinal authority, as per Rome, requires (but which she infallibly denies is possible in her infallible case).

While the Berean method can result in men differing on salvific truth, and therefore an assuredly infallible office, which men let do all such thinking for them, is appealing, but the Bible does not promise or evidence such as Rome examples, and even Jesus (though being God, He need not have) substantiated His truth claims by the Scriptures, and reproved by the Scriptures those who taught, as if they were infallible, unScriptural traditions as doctrines which were to be obeyed. (Mt. 15:1-9)

Sound doctrine is evident by its demonstrable Scriptural conformity, and its overall manner of fruit (Acts 2:41; 8:36-39) and attestation, to varying degrees, while contentious souls who rebel against it are manifest by the doctrinal example of the Pharisees, and their reliance on the arm of flesh, as a practice, both in specious speeches (Rm. 16:18) and in persecuting their theological adversaries, (Gal. 4:29) as the natural branch of the Jews did. (Gal. 4:29)

If Rome had not done likewise, but all its teaching were as demonstrably Scriptural as those foundational truths which those who hold to SS most universally agree on and contend for, its claim to be infallible would have some evidence (as promising that its decrees would always fulfill this criteria). But instead, its claims need not truly rely on Scriptural substantiation, but are infallible when fulfilling her formulaic criteria, which allows promulgating Scripturally unsupported tradition as equal with Scripture, even if they also fail of “unanimous consent of the Fathers.”


416 posted on 07/24/2010 12:29:06 PM PDT by daniel1212
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To: daniel1212

Thank you Daniel and Mark. Great debate....formatted well for our understanding of the dialogue. Challenging reading to be sure. Thank you again.


417 posted on 07/24/2010 6:31:35 PM PDT by caww
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