T
Thekla
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God decided which books. It is His special revelation and He is perfectly capable of maintaining it.![]()
"And the spirits of the prophets are subject to the prophets." 1 Cor 14
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God decided which books. It is His special revelation and He is perfectly capable of maintaining it.![]()
There is a disparity in Scripture texts, thus per your argument all Scripture texts are wrong (none of them is "divine").
How?Actually I have. The disparity of doctrine and beliefs among the apostolic churches now proves the point.
Yes, I agree with this.Today's apostolic churches holding to both scripture plus "T"radition are not in communion with each other simply because they disagree in matters of doctrine so having both as coauthoritative does not guarantee "proper" doctrine.
Agreed here too, except they're definitely not apostolic.BTW- That Arian heresy still alive and well now. The JWs that we were discussing earlier are a perfect example.
Thekla, the disparity in scripture texts are deutocanonical and more a matter of human ego than anything else. There is no disparity with the books of the NT since even the Syriac tradition now accepts Revelation and other books (I know there were a few but can not remember the rest now). All of today's mainstream churches accept the same NT.
Of course, but everyone claims to be aware of this - in fact, Paul figured it out without recourse to the New Testament.
But, the use of Sola Scriptura does not address this problem at all - it just claims that one or some of the many variant texts absent interpretation are "divine" or "the norm". So what ? If the Scripture isn't used, isn't lived, it's dead - or does it save ?
I answered in the post before this one but to me what smacks of a challenge to the person of Christ is to make the very concept of "T"raditions as authoritative when he so argued passionately against them as coauthoritive with what we know to be from Him.And essential to answer - after all, if Scripture is divine in itself (and I still think that smacks of a challenge to the person of Christ), those that vary from the one must be not divine.
Is "T"radition based on the right ___________? Can't think of the word. lolIs Sola Scriptura based on the right text, or one of the wrong texts ?
So if we start with variants of "T"radition which are inherently human and prong to error versus starting with scripture which is inherently divine is a better option? Mmm......
I answered in the post before this one but to me what smacks of a challenge to the person of Christ is to make the very concept of "T"raditions as authoritative when he so argued passionately against them as coauthoritive with what we know to be from Him.
Is "T"radition based on the right ___________? Can't think of the word. lol![]()
Nope - there are disparities between the MT and LXX OT (not including the Deuterocanon), and disparities between textual versions/source for the NT texts.
(Not to mention wide disparities in translations of any of these texts.)
If God can work in some people "apart from their desires" that would mean that indeed there are are "set apart" to do just that? How can people do things apart from their desires? I cannot fathom that except if you are talking about predestination.Unfortunately to make your argument work you would have to remove the indewlling of the Holy Spirit from everyone else and impart it strictly to those that participated in the councils. That position is untenable. The HS indeed guided the council participants in choosing the books but it was in spite and apart from their desires.
The majority of the NT books were already considered scripture from their writing by the many congregants of the many churches that they circulated through. The council merely adopted what Christianity corporately already knew would be adopted. Sure there was debate but ultimately the books are what they are simply because they are those chosen by God not by the council participants alone.
Nothing in scripture. It's the inability to come to a firm consensus and agreement on its' meaning due to divergent views.I find this comment quite curious. What exactly appears in the scriptures alone that would preclude you from believing in the works of Christ as your Lord and Savior?
There are disparities between the MT and the LXX with the LXX having the most disparities with the Hebrew text. Likewise there are many disparities among the apostolic churches so claiming disparity is not going to solve the problem. The translational disparities to be expected. Even today we have disparities between the same language translations as we see in English paraphrase translations versus literal translations. This is not the error of scripture but of man.
However, even with the disparities between the extant manuscripts the whole of the original text is discernible with an unparalleled level of accuracy. If you have not read "New Testament Documents: Are the they reliable?" by FF Bruce I would suggest it.![]()
Which version, and which translation is inherently divine ?
Or are all versions and all translations inherently divine ?
Kinda skips the question.
So to say that text is 100% divine and 100% matter means that it is like God acting through water in healing and Baptism ?
My contention is that the only inherently divine text is the original text. Copies, while extremely accurate, do have errors. But I am not understanding your argument. Do you don't believe in the inerrancy and divinity of scripture?
To say that a church is 100% divine with no errors is unparalleled simply because it is composed of errant men. The scriptures, as originally rendered, are 100% inerrant. The origin is divine. The mechanism of writing is divine (even if men wrote the words). One can not say the same thing of any church since all churches have erred. Also, one can not say the same thing about councils since councils have erred. But this is probably a discussion for another thread. lol
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St. Cyril of Jerusalem (c.310-386):
For concerning the divine and holy mysteries of the Faith, not even a casual statement must be delivered without the Holy Scriptures; nor must we be drawn aside by mere plausibility and artifices of speech. Even to me, who tell you these things, give not absolute credence, unless you receive the proof of the things which I announce from the Divine Scriptures. For this salvation which we believe depends not on ingenious reasoning, but on demonstration of the Holy Scriptures.
(Catechetical Lectures, IV:17, in The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers [Grand Rapids, Michigan: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1983 reprint], Second Series, Vol. VII, p. 23.)
St. Gregory of Nyssa (330-395):
...we are not entitled to such license, namely, of affirming whatever we please. For we make Sacred Scripture the rule and the norm of every doctrine. Upon that we are obliged to fix our eyes, and we approve only whatever can be brought into harmony with the intent of these writings.
(On the Soul and the Resurrection, quoted in Jaroslav Pelikan, The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition [Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1971], p. 50.)
St. Gregory of Nyssa:
Let the inspired Scriptures then be our umpire, and the vote of truth will be given to those whose dogmas are found to agree with the Divine words.
(On the Holy Trinity, in The Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Second Series, Vol. V, p. 327.)
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This still does not negate the fact that there are disparities; to claim that the through the disparities are discernable is reliant on academic theory and speculation.
1. This claim is in itself interpretive.
2. The claim that the original can be discerned through the disparities is interpretive.
So it seems that you claim that be using the tradition of men, we discern the divine text (which is no longer extent).
Thus, all existing texts are not the divine text, and as that one is no longer in existence, we rely on academics (which espouses ever shifting method, theory, and standards).
Are these academics part of the infallible tradition ?
And, I thought discernment was a gift from God, not a theoretical stance.
(Why am I supposed to read some guy, and find him credible ? Isn't he subject to error ?)
Why would the Fathers agree with a concept that was not evidently in "use" at the time and they opposed it regarding the ARian controversy?Excellent examples! I think that for some to say these do not represent SS, they use a different definition of that than I do.
(Why am I supposed to read some guy, and find him credible ? Isn't he subject to error ?)
Excellent examples! I think that for some to say these do not represent SS, they use a different definition of that than I do.