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Exactly.Yeah...
we'll have to WATCH THAT, W2L -- else we might wind up in sects of RCC, Orthodox, Protestant - etc
that TRADITION is a tricky one
but you have to admit --
the SCOPE OF ONE'S SCRIPTURE is determined by their tradition !!
too many books
too few books
in that old Bible
depending on ye tradition
On a personal level the scriptures are enough. They are actually more than enough. Who needs to argue over traditions and theological differences? I choose liberty from all that.If I've got this right, it looks like the party line on this is...
01- Sacred scripture is the only authority.
02- Sacred scripture isn't always very clear.
The "liberty" you choose is perpetual disagreement over even the basics of Christian doctrine while the body's unity fragments more and more each year?On a personal level the scriptures are enough. They are actually more than enough. Who needs to argue over traditions and theological differences? I choose liberty from all that.
If I've got this right, it looks like the party line on this is...
01- Sacred scripture is the only authority.
02- Sacred scripture isn't always very clear.
Ever since Bishop of Rome tried to excommunicate another patriarch, Catholics seem to want to relitigate the faith every generation. And so far, it looks as though they chip more and more away from the faith every time.
well, so say your own critics of Vatican II -- makin the faith unrecognizable, blah blah blah
The true body is not fragmented. Christs body is not divided.The "liberty" you choose is perpetual disagreement over even the basics of Christian doctrine while the body's unity fragments more and more each year?
Ever since Martin Luther first nailed stuff to doorways, Protestants seem to want to relitigate the faith every generation. And so far, it looks as though they chip more and more away from the faith every time.
Assuming Protestantism even has another hundred years, I think it's fair to ask if it will even be recognizably Christian anymore because of how much it might have jettisoned by that point.
What's this "we" stuff? A lot of "sola scriptura" adherents even on this forum don't abide by the same view you describe above.We do not say that Scripture is the only authority for the Christian. Christians are also called to submit to their churches, to governments, slaves are called to submit to masters, wives to husbands, children to parents, etc.
So, humanly speaking, the Church wrote the New Testament and was protected from error during that process. The Church went on to compile the biblical canon and was similarly protected from error during that entire process.We say that the Scriptures are the only infallible authority. Governments, churches, husbands, masters, and parents can all be wrong and often are wrong in their judgments.
Doesn't that set the bar rather low? The Holy Spirit could've clarified a few (or a lot of) sections and saved the Protestant ecclesial communities a lot of unnecessary disunity, right? Surely that would've been preferable to being in such doctrinal disagreement with each other, wouldn't it?The Bible is sufficiently clear. But it is not exhaustively clear.
The only way that can possibly be true is if doctrine is a completely irrelevant concept.The true body is not fragmented. Christs body is not divided.
The only way that can possibly be true is if doctrine is a completely irrelevant concept.
What's this "we" stuff? A lot of "sola scriptura" adherents even on this forum don't abide by the same view you describe above.
So, humanly speaking, the Church wrote the New Testament and was protected from error during that process. The Church went on to compile the biblical canon and was similarly protected from error during that entire process.
But the Church won't (or can't?) be protected from error at any other time in any other context?
Doesn't that set the bar rather low? The Holy Spirit could've clarified a few (or a lot of) sections and saved the Protestant ecclesial communities a lot of unnecessary disunity, right? Surely that would've been preferable to being in such doctrinal disagreement with each other, wouldn't it?