To me it sure does, but then ofcourse I really wasnt speaking to you PilgrimToChrist but posting to the OP. I said in my post I would add more when I had adequate time
Sorry for snapping. I was trying to get you to give some explanation and interpretation of the many verses that you posted.
I find joy in Him and in his words
As do I, which is why I should probably be getting to bed and say Compline before I fall asleep at the computer... Debating religion is certainly not as important as actually practicing it, arguing shouldn't cut into my prayer time.
I dont find much joy in or much worth while conversation among some which do very much appear to make it their sole mission to cast doubt on Him and His words.
I would hope and pray that no one here intends to cast doubt on God and His words! We may argue but we are all still Christians and hold Sacred Scripture in the highest regard.
When we discuss and debate the issue of Scripture between Catholics/Orthodox and Protestants what we are really asking is not whether or not the Scriptures are inspired by God and infallible (leave that to The Jesus Seminar and other modernist assaults on the faith). What we really are asking is this:
What is the Bible to you?
To the Protestant, the Bible is a collection of writings upon which he bases his faith -- it tells him about Jesus and how to live rightly and worship God.
To the Catholic or Orthodox, the Bible is a collection of works written by the Church, it is
part of the sacred teachings of the Church which has been written down. The sacred teachings of the Church
as a whole tell him about Jesus and how to live rightly and worship God.
When Catholics see Protestants saying that we must build a church which conforms to what the New Testament says, it sounds to us quite strange, like saying that we should build a community named "Israel" by conforming to what the Old Testament says. Certainly, Israel existed before the Old Testament was written down and there were teachings and practices of the Israelites which did not get written down. The Old Testament is a chronicle of the Israelites, it shows us history and the words of the prophets.
In the same way, the New Israel -- the Church -- existed before the New Testament was written down and there are teachings and practices of the Church which did not get written down. The New Testament is a chronicle of the Church, it shows us the life of Jesus (Gospels), history (Acts), letters to bishops and other individuals in different cities (Epistles) and prophecy (Revelation).
The New Testament didn't just fall from Heaven intact like Mohammed or Joseph Smith who claimed to receive scriptures from an angel. Most of the New Testament is composed of letters between different cities and people in the Church (mostly by St. Paul), so clearly there was a Church that was thriving even while the New Testament was being written.
And I'm reasonably sure that St. Paul had no idea that what he was writing was going to be put on the same level as the Jewish Scriptures (Old Testament), he was just writing letters trying to educate the Church in different cities about the faith. The faith already existed, he wasn't creating it out of thin air or even by being inspired by God. He was just preaching the faith that already was being taught throughout the Church, in order to strengthen the believers in different cities. Most of what was written in the New Testament was not new to the Church (Revelation being an exception), but it was explained in a way that was inspired by God the Holy Ghost (though St. Paul and the other authors had their own style).
So if the Church existed before the New Testament was compiled and even before and while it was being written, how can the Church be a construction based on the New Testament? Not anymore than Israel was a construction based on the Old Testament.
That's the underlying problem of "Sola Scriptura", it has nothing to do with any sort of assault on the integrity and importance of Scripture. The real question is:
What is the Bible, specifically the New Testament? Is it writings
upon which the Church is founded or is it writings
of the Church? Is the Church based on the Bible or is the Bible based on the Church? If it the former, Sola Scriptura is a necessity; if it the latter, it is an absurdity.