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First of all, sorry but I can't possibly follow all the posts that have been added on this thread. However, I think that one of the arguments that Catholics are making in defense of the Magisterium of the RCC lies in that the Bible is ambiguous or, as St Augustine would have said, heretics can use Scripture to support almost anything twisting the language and such.
However, the Magisterium creates its own set of problems. Mainly that the Magisterium expresses itself in documents (Constitutions, Letters, Bullas and so on...) that can or must be interpreted. And they are, resulting in different branch of RC theologians interpreting the Magisterium in different ways. One example would be the question of papal infallibility.
Quite true. Another example would be the radical reinterpretation of the doctrine of Purgatory.
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