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Sola Scriptura – An Unbiblical Recipe for Confusion
Tim Staples' Blog ^ | January 18, 2014 | Tim Staples

Posted on 01/25/2014 6:51:38 AM PST by GonzoII

Sola Scriptura – An Unbiblical Recipe for Confusion

Sola scriptura was the central doctrine and foundation for all I believed when I was Protestant. On a popular level, it simply meant, “If a teaching isn’t explicit in the Bible, then we don’t accept it as doctrine!” And it seemed so simple. And yet, I do not recall ever hearing a detailed teaching explicating it. It was always a given. Unchallenged. Diving deeper into its meaning, especially when I was challenged to defend my Protestant faith against Catholicism, I found there to be no book specifically on the topic and no uniform understanding of this teaching among Protestant pastors.

Once I got past the superficial, I had to try to answer real questions like, what role does tradition play? How explicit does a doctrine have to be in Scripture before it can be called doctrine? How many times does it have to be mentioned in Scripture before it would be dogmatic? Where does Scripture tell us what is absolutely essential for us to believe as Christians? How do we know what the canon of Scripture is using the principle of sola scriptura? Who is authorized to write Scripture in the first place? When was the canon closed? Or, the best question of all: where is sola scriptura taught in the Bible? These questions and more were left virtually unanswered or left to the varying opinions of various Bible teachers.

The Protestant Response

In answer to this last question, “Where is sola scriptura taught in the Bible?” most Protestants will immediately respond as I did, by simply citing II Tm. 3:16:

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 complete, equipped for every good work.

“How can it get any plainer than that? Doesn’t that say the Bible is all we need?” Question answered.

The fact is: II Timothy 3—or any other text of Scripture—does not even hint at sola scriptura. It says Scripture is inspired and necessary to equip “the man of God,” but never does it say Scripture alone is all anyone needs. We’ll come back to this text in particular later. But in my experience as a Protestant, it was my attempt to defend this bedrock teaching of Protestantism that led me to conclude: sola scriptura is 1) unreasonable 2) unbiblical and 3) unworkable.

Sola Scriptura is Unreasonable

When defending sola scriptura, the Protestant will predictably appeal to his sole authority—Scripture. This is a textbook example of the logical fallacy of circular reasoning which betrays an essential problem with the doctrine itself. One cannot prove the inspiration of a text from the text itself. The Book of Mormon, the Hindu Vedas, writings of Mary Baker Eddy, the Koran, and other books claim inspiration. This does not make them inspired. One must prove the point outside of the text itself to avoid the fallacy of circular reasoning.

Thus, the question remains: how do we know the various books of the Bible are inspired and therefore canonical? And remember: the Protestant must use the principle of sola scriptura in the process.

II Tim. 3:16 is not a valid response to the question. The problems are manifold. Beyond the fact of circular reasoning, for example, I would point out the fact that this verse says all Scripture is inspired tells us nothing of what the canon consists. Just recently, I was speaking with a Protestant inquirer about this issue and he saw my point. He then said words to the effect of, “I believe the Holy Spirit guides us into all truth as Jesus said in Jn. 16:13. The Holy Spirit guided the early Christians and helped them to gather the canon of Scripture and declare it to be the inspired word of God. God would not leave us without his word to guide us.”

That answer is much more Catholic than Protestant! Yes, Jn. 16:13 does say the Spirit will lead the apostles—and by allusion, the Church—into all truth. But this verse has nothing to say about sola scriptura. Nor does it say a word about the nature or number of books in the canon. Catholics certainly agree that the Holy Spirit guided the early Christians to canonize the Scriptures because the Catholic Church teaches that there is an authoritative Church guided by the Holy Spirit. The obvious problem is my Protestant friend did not use sola scriptura as his guiding principle to arrive at his conclusion. How does, for example, Jn. 16:13 tell us that Hebrews was written by an apostolic writer and that it is inspired of God? We would ultimately have to rely on the infallibility of whoever “the Holy Spirit” is guiding to canonize the Bible so that they could not mishear what the Spirit was saying about which books of the Bible are truly inspired.

The fact is, the Bible does not and cannot give us the answer to this question about the canon. It is an historical fact that the Church used Sacred Tradition outside of Scripture for her criterion for the canon. And the early Christians, many of whom disagreed on the issue of the canon, also needed the Church in council to give an authoritative decree on the whole matter.

In order to put this argument of my friend into perspective, can you imagine if a Catholic made a similar claim to demonstrate, say, Mary to be the Mother of God? “We believe the Holy Spirit guides us into all truth and guided the early Christians to declare this truth.” Would the Protestant respond with a hearty, amen? I think not! I can almost hear the response. “Show me in the Bible where Mary is the Mother of God! I don’t want to hear about God guiding the Church!” Wouldn’t the same question remain for the Protestant concerning the canon? “Show me in the Bible where the canon of Scripture is, what the criterion for the canon is, who can and cannot write Scripture, etc.”

Will the Circle be Unbroken?

The Protestant response at this point is often an attempt to use the same argument against the Catholic. “How do you know the Scriptures are inspired? Your reasoning is just as circular because you say the Church is infallible because the inspired Scriptures say so and then say the Scriptures are inspired and infallible because the Church says so!”

The Catholic Church’s position on inspiration is not circular. We do not say “the Church is infallible because the inspired Scriptures say so.” The Church was established historically and functioned as the infallible spokesperson for the Lord decades before the New Testament was written. The Church is infallible because Jesus said so. However, it is true that we know the Scriptures to be inspired because the Church has told us so. That is also an historical fact. However, this is not circular reasoning. When the Catholic approaches Scripture, he or she begins with the Bible as an historical document, not as inspired. As any reputable historian will tell you, the New Testament is the most accurate and verifiable historical document in all of ancient history. To deny the substance of the historical documents recorded therein would be absurd. However, one cannot deduce from this that they are inspired. There are many accurate historical documents that are not inspired. However, the Scriptures do give us accurate historical information whether one holds to their inspiration or not. Further, this testimony of the Bible is backed up by hundreds of works by early Christians and non-Christian writers like Suetonius, Tacitus, Pliny the Younger, Josephus, and more. It is on this basis that we can say it is an historical fact that Jesus lived, died and was reported to be resurrected from the dead by over 500 eyewitnesses. Many of these eyewitnesses went to their deaths testifying to the veracity of the Christ-event (see Lk. 1:1-4, Jn. 21:18-19, 24-25, Acts 1:1-11, I Cr. 15:1-8).

Now, what do we find when we examine the historical record? Jesus Christ—as a matter of history–established a Church, not a book, to be the foundation of the Christian Faith (see Mt. 16:15-18; 18:15-18. Cf. Eph. 2:20; 3:10,20-21; 4:11-15; I Tm. 3:15; Hb. 13:7,17, etc.). He said of his Church “He who hears you hears me and he who rejects you rejects me, and he who rejects me rejects him who sent me” (Lk. 10:16). The many books that comprise what we call the Bible never tell us crucial truths such as the fact that they are inspired, who can and cannot be the human authors of them, who authored them at all, or, as I said before, what the canon of Scripture is in the first place. And this is just to name a few examples. What is very clear historically is that Jesus established a kingdom with a hierarchy and authority to speak for him (see Lk. 20:29-32, Mt. 10:40, 28:18-20). It was members of this Kingdom—the Church—that would write the Scripture, preserve its many texts and eventually canonize it. The Scriptures cannot write or canonize themselves. To put it simply, reason clearly rejects sola scriptura as a self-refuting principle because one cannot determine what the “scriptura” is using the principle of sola scriptura.

Sola Scriptura is Unbiblical

Let us now consider the most common text used by Protestants to “prove” sola scriptura, II Tm. 3:16, which I quoted above:

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 complete, equipped for every good work.

The problem with using this text as such is threefold: 1. Strictly speaking, it does not speak of the New Testament at all. 2. It does not claim Scripture to be the sole rule of faith for Christians. 3. The Bible teaches oral Tradition to be on a par with and just as necessary as the written Tradition, or Scripture.

1. What’s Old is Not New

Let us examine the context of the passage by reading the two preceding verses:

But as for you, continue in what you have learned and have firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it and how from childhood (italics added) you have been acquainted with the sacred writings which are able to instruct you for salvation through faith in Jesus Christ.

In context, this passage does not refer to the New Testament at all. None of the New Testament books had been written when St. Timothy was a child! To claim this verse in order to authenticate a book, say, the book of Revelation, when it had most likely not even been written yet, is more than a stretch. That is going far beyond what the text actually claims.

2. The Trouble With Sola

As a Protestant, I was guilty of seeing more than one sola in Scripture that simply did not exist. The Bible clearly teaches justification by faith. And we Catholics believe it. However, we do not believe in justification by faith alone because, among many other reasons, the Bible says, we are “justified by works and not by faith alone” (James 2:24, emphasis added). Analogously, when the Bible says Scripture is inspired and profitable for “the man of God,” to be “equipped for every good work,” we Catholics believe it. However, the text of II Tim. 3:16 never says Scripture alone. There is no sola to be found here either! Even if we granted II Tm. 3:16 was talking about all of Scripture, it never claims Scripture to be the sole rule of faith. A rule of faith, to be sure! But not the sole rule of faith.

James 1:4 illustrates clearly the problem with Protestant exegesis of II Tim. 3:16:

And let steadfastness (patience) have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.

If we apply the same principle of exegesis to this text that the Protestant does to II Tm. 3:16 we would have to say that all we need is patience to be perfected. We don’t need faith, hope, charity, the Church, baptism, etc.

Of course, any Christian would immediately say this is absurd. And of course it is. But James’ emphasis on the central importance of patience is even stronger than St. Paul’s emphasis on Scripture. The key is to see that there is not a sola to be found in either text. Sola patientia would be just as much an error as is sola scriptura.

3. Traditions of Men Vs. The Tradition of God

Not only is the Bible silent when it comes to sola scriptura, but Scripture is remarkably plain in teaching oral Tradition to be just as much the word of God as is Scripture. In what most scholars believe was the first book written in the New Testament, St. Paul said:

And we also thank God… that when you received the word of God which you heard from us, you accepted it not as the word of men but as what it really is, the word of God… (I Thess. 2:13)

According to St. Paul, the spoken word from the apostles was just as much the word of God as was the later written word. Further, when St. Paul wrote II Thessalonians, he urged the Christians there to receive both the oral and written Traditions as equally authoritative. This would be expected because both are referred to as the word of God.

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

A common problem among Protestants at this point is a matter of semantics. “Tradition” is often viewed in a negative light because of Jesus’ condemnation of “the tradition of men” in Mark 7:8.

You leave the commandment of God, and hold fast the tradition of men.

Notice, this verse makes very clear what kind of tradition it was that Jesus condemned. Jesus condemned the tradition of men, not all tradition. And obviously so; otherwise, you would have Jesus contradicting St. Paul. In fact, you would have Jesus contradicting himself in Matthew 23:2-3:

The scribes and Pharisees sit on Moses’ seat; so practice and observe whatever they tell you, but not what they do; for they preach, but do not practice.

Jesus both refers to an oral tradition—the chair of Moses—and commands the apostles to believe and obey it.

Sola Scriptura is Unworkable

When it comes to the tradition of Protestantism—sola scriptura—the silence of the text of Scripture is deafening. When it comes to the true authority of Scripture and Tradition, the Scriptures are clear. And when it comes to the teaching and governing authority of the Church, the biblical text is equally as clear:

If your brother sins against you go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone … But if he does not listen, take one or two others with you … If he refuses to listen … tell it to the church; and if he refuses to listen even to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector. (Mt. 18:15-17)

According to Scripture, the Church—not the Bible alone—is the final court of appeal for the people of God in matters of faith and discipline. But isn’t it also telling that since the Reformation of just ca. 480 years ago—a reformation claiming sola scriptura as its formal principle—there are now over 33,000 denominations that have derived from it?

For 1,500 years, Christianity saw just a few enduring schisms (the Monophysites, Nestorians, the Orthodox, and a very few others). Now in just 480 years we have this? I hardly think that when Jesus prophesied there would be “one shepherd and one fold” in Jn. 10:16, this is what he had in mind. It seems quite clear to me that not only is sola scriptura unreasonable and unbiblical, but it is unworkable. The proof is in the puddin’!

But Didn’t Jesus Himself Believe Sola Scriptura?

When the Devil tempted Jesus three times in Matthew 4, Jesus always responded with Scripture. In fact, with the second of the three temptations the Devil himself began with Scripture. As an aside, I would have to say that was not very smart of the Devil. If you are going to tempt the Word of God, do you really think you are going to outsmart the Word of God with the word of God?

At any rate, in Matt. 4:6, the Devil begins, “If you are the Son of God, throw yourself down [from the pinnacle of the Temple]; for it is written, ‘He will give his angels charge of you’ and ‘On their hands they will bear you up, lest you strike your foot against a stone’ (quoting Psalm 91:11-12).”

Jesus then responded with Scripture in Matt. 4:7, “Again it is written, ‘You shall not tempt the Lord your God’ (quoting Deut. 6:16).” Doesn’t this prove Jesus believed in sola scriptura?

Absolutely not!

Just because someone quotes Scripture as an authority, this does not mean he believes in sola scriptura. The Catholic Church quotes Scripture all the time and teaches that Scripture is the inerrant word of God. But what does that prove?

The key here is to understand Jesus not only quoted Scripture as authoritative, but he also referred to Tradition as authoritative in texts like Luke 16:22 (ever read anywhere of “Abraham’s Bosom” in the Old Testament? No, this was Jewish Tradition), Matt. 2:23 (Jesus refers to an Oral Tradition “spoken by the prophets” that is nowhere to be found in the Old Testament), and Matt. 23:1-3, which we saw above, where he speaks of the Tradition of “the chair of Moses”).

He also refers to his own authority when he says over and over, “You have heard it said,” and he often quotes Scripture immediately thereafter, but then he says, “But I say unto you…” He then either introduces new revelation or gives an authoritative interpretation of a biblical text (see Matt. 5:21-48) or, sometimes he simply gives an authoritative interpretation of what Scripture truly means, such as in Matt: 5:10-20.

So did Jesus Christ believe in sola scriptura? By no means! Neither should his Church. And while the Church cannot give new revelation as this ended with the death of the last apostolic man (and we know that because of, you guessed it, Tradition in order to understand texts of Scripture like Jude 3), the Church employs Scripture and Tradition just like her Lord, using her teaching authority she receives from her Lord (Matt. 18:15-18).

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TOPICS: Catholic; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: bible; catholic; scripture; solascriptura; timstaples
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To: Kansas58; daniel1212

“And Scripture is NOTHIHG other than the Oral Tradition, reduced to writing, some 200 to 300 years AFTER the death of the last Apostle.”

So when Paul wrote to the Thessalonians that he was writing the epistle in his own hand, that was not actually written until 200-300 years later?

Just reading Polycarp’s epistle to the Philippians shoots down that theory. Then again Roman Catholic schools have been teaching for decades that the OT was fable and the NT was not written by the original authors who were claimed by the early fathers.


321 posted on 01/28/2014 5:17:42 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: Kansas58; metmom

“Jesus never commanded a Bible. Not once.”

Matthew 4:4, 7, 10 NABRE

He said in reply, “It is written: ‘One does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes forth from the mouth of God.’” Jesus answered him,

“Again it is written, ‘You shall not put the Lord, your God, to the test.’”

At this, Jesus said to him, “Get away, Satan! It is written: ‘The Lord, your God, shall you worship and him alone shall you serve.’”

Seems Messiah was firmly rooted in His own Words.


322 posted on 01/28/2014 5:22:28 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: Kansas58; metmom

“THERE WAS NO BIBLE WHEN PAUL SPOKE THOSE WORDS!”

The above is a fallacious argument. Or do you deny there were written Holy Scriptures in the 1st century? What scroll did Jesus pick up and read in Luke 4? Why did Peter call Paul’s works scripture? So the apostles had keys but nothing to write with? What was written on the books and parchment Paul commands to be taken to him along with his cloak?


323 posted on 01/28/2014 5:28:13 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: redleghunter

Huh?
Your quotes support nothing and prove nothing.
And we do not have “Every Word” -— not even close.


324 posted on 01/28/2014 6:49:40 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: redleghunter

We should probably use the word “Sacred Scripture” since EVERYTHING written was Scripture at that point in time, or chiseled in rock or scratched on metal plates.

Yes, Paul wrote letters, but it is the original Apostles works were not all reduced to writing for a very long time after their deaths.


325 posted on 01/28/2014 6:51:47 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: redleghunter

Please understand, the BIBLE is the collected, recognized, Cannon which was NOT decided and compiled in one “book” form until LONG after the resurrection.

Yes there were separate pieces of very perishable, hand crafted, hand written SACRED Scripture. However:

It was RARE in the Early Church for ANYONE to come in contact with more than one Book of the New Testament.

Even in the Dark Ages, it was so expensive and time consuming to actually produce a Bible that they became priceless works of Art.

Think, my Protestant friends. Some of you seem to think they went to Office Max and copied out all the Books from the very beginning and carried them all around, bound together.

Of course, I am exaggerating, but the Early Church had rivalries between those who traced their linage to a particular Apostle or Church Father precisely BECAUSE the Books of the NT were NOT bound in one volume for centuries.


326 posted on 01/28/2014 6:59:46 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: redleghunter

How often does one NT Book reference another NT Book?

How often does ANY portion of the Bible reference a “Bible” at all?

Where in the Bible does the Bible make clear what IS and is NOT Sacred Scripture?


327 posted on 01/28/2014 7:03:38 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: Kansas58

We have EVERY Word of God revealed.


328 posted on 01/28/2014 7:04:00 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: Kansas58

How can actual letters written in the life time of the apostles not be written until much later? Makes no sense.


329 posted on 01/28/2014 7:06:06 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: redleghunter

Logic, logic, logic Please.

What Paul said in your quote is undeniably SCRIPTURE NOW.

How ever, how could it have been “Scripture” the first time it was spoken, before it was written down anywhere?

Many very good Christians never actually SAW a “Bible” in their entire lives.


330 posted on 01/28/2014 7:07:07 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: Kansas58

That was a nice assertion however the evidence we have is the early father’s quoted extensively from multiple NT books. 17 of 27 were quoted by Polycarp. Which tells us epistles were copied and shared between the churches.


331 posted on 01/28/2014 7:10:22 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: redleghunter
Of course the Letters of Paul were “Scripture” but let me take this moment to point out that not even the King James Version classifies EVERYTHING Paul wrote as “Sacred Scripture” deserving to be part of the Cannon.

Biblical historians are well aware of this fact.

Again, some of you are being a bit naive, spoiled by modern conveniences, thinking that putting something, anything, into print would be an easy task. It was not easy at all at that time. And to copy anything in any type of permanent form was very time consuming, difficult and expensive.

332 posted on 01/28/2014 7:12:05 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: redleghunter

There were elite leaders who had access to more than one author, true.

Again, think of the masses, think of the entire Christian population.

Many only heard from ONE Church Father due to the manuscripts or Scripture that was available in that geographic area.

It is completely absurd to say that, since ONE person, or even 100 people, had access to more than one NT “Book” that ALL Christians had the same.


333 posted on 01/28/2014 7:19:32 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: Kansas58

You can keep asserting the term “Bible” where I clearly stated Holy Scriptures. If you truly are asking where Jesus and the apostles quote scriptures in the NT, and where Peter called Paul’s epistles scriptures, then perhaps you need to “hit the Good Book” a bit more.

I also see you did not address my question of what is the unifying theme throughout the NT?

In answer to your where in the Scriptures do we find an affirmation of what are Holy Scriptures see Luke 24 and again the Words of Jesus confirming “it is written”


334 posted on 01/28/2014 7:20:09 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: Kansas58

Wow now the KJV left out letters of Paul? Care to reference that? Which letters were not part of the “KJV canon”?


335 posted on 01/28/2014 7:27:00 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: Kansas58

It is not absurd given the apostles, specifically Paul, Peter and later John worked extensively in the churches. Most of these early churches had scrolls from synagogues. Jesus told the disciples they could find Him in the OT. Again the example of Polycarp’s epistle shows a wide use of multiple NT books. 17 of 27 used.


336 posted on 01/28/2014 7:33:04 PM PST by redleghunter
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To: redleghunter
You know, you could use Google yourself sometimes.

Not every letter Paul wrote was required in the Cannon. There is general disagreement over authorship for some. For others, they were simply repetitive or not the best work on a particular topic.

And again, if Paul wrote something about “Scripture” in AD 35, and that writing was later considered part of the Cannon, would the same apply to something Paul wrote in AD 40? What Paul wrote in AD 40 was not part of the SAME “Scripture” Paul mentioned in 35. How could it have been?

My point is that it is entirely possible to get to Heaven without knowledge of the full Bible, or even without ever having read or seen a Bible.

You either agree with me on that point, or you consign much of the Early Church followers to Hell.

Even after the first Bible Cannon was agreed to by the Church Fathers, there were far more than a million Christians for every full Bible in existence, for quite some time thereafter.

You are demanding that I except a logical impossibility.

337 posted on 01/28/2014 7:36:43 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: redleghunter

When does JESUS give us the TITLES of all of the Books and Scriptures and Writings which should be considered Sacred Scripture part of the Bible?

More to the point:

2,000 years from now, one historian might make note that some people in our age lived in luxury.
Another might come along and say EVERYONE lived in luxury since it is clear that some did.

YES, the ELITE in the Early Church, the motivated and the financed and those entrusted with Authority (The early Catholic Church) DID have access, often, to more than one separate scroll or manuscript.

It is simplistic to think that the poor, uneducated and often illiterate masses had access over vast geographic areas.

Christianity was an ORAL tradition for the vast majority of Early Christians.

That remained pretty much the case for many until the Printing Press.

If you MUST have a Bible for Salvation, you have condemned many very good Christians to Hell.

The Bible is a tool, created by the Catholic Church, to assist in the work of spreading the Good News, and to make Disciples of All Nations.

It is a valuable tool in that effort, but millions of Christian souls have made it to Heaven having never once even seen a Bible.


338 posted on 01/28/2014 7:46:14 PM PST by Kansas58
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To: Kansas58
what a lot of hot air.

I would suggest some books regarding formation of biblical canon, but the bag will need suffice for the time being.

339 posted on 01/28/2014 8:01:05 PM PST by BlueDragon ("the fans are staying away from the ballpark...in droves" Yogi Berra)
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To: Kansas58
And did Paul tell us what Books were Scripture, in his mind, and which Books were not?

Jesus did and Peter did.

Jesus constantly said *It is written...* and referred to Scripture and Peter (the guy you all claim is your first pope) called Paul's writings *Scripture*.

340 posted on 01/28/2014 8:13:22 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith....)
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