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Then how is that not sola scriptura testing of all doctrine, tradition, faith and practice?
How ELSE do you test it if not via the Mark 7 model that Jesus himself used.
A model that did not blindly hand off to the Jewish magesterium so they would simply tell him what to think?
in Christ,
Bob
Well, that's kind of my point, Bob. What is sola scriptura to you? And how do the various Churches interpret Scripture.
The Orthodox Church holds Scripture as the highest authority. Nothing may contradict it. The Church's interpretation of Scripture is formed within Tradition. (loosely stated) They do not consider themselves sola scriptura.
CL told me that the Lutheran Church holds Scripture as the highest authority. Nothing may contradict it. The Lutherans' (and early Reformers') interpretation of Scripture is informed by Tradition. They consider themselves sola scriptura.
But how much difference is there? I was actually surprised to learn that that was the intent of sola scriptura and how it was intended to function.
Today, we have churches that are (sometimes distant) descendants of the Lutherans and other early Reformers. The hold Scripture as the only authority. Nothing may contradict it. Their interpretation of Scripture is done within their own framework (even personal framework in the case of some). They consider themselves sola scriptura too.
But it is a different kind of sola scriptura. And it has produced results that, to my eyes, seem very different from the early Reformers who framed the very concept of sola scriptura in the first place.
That was why I brought up the fact that I was surprised how sola scriptura was defined and applied in the first case, and yet the result was that the Catholics, the Lutherans, the Orthodox, and those others who interpret Scripture at least informed by tradition ... largely agree.
Everyone else ... largely doesn't.
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