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... And no, there is no Scripture referenced in it.
Okay, so what's the justification for the definition, why believe and use it?
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... And no, there is no Scripture referenced in it.
The one sufficient revelation of God is Jesus Christ, the Word of God incarnate, to whom the Holy Spirit bears unique and authoritative witness through the Holy Scriptures, which are received and obeyed as the word of God written. The Scriptures are not a witness among others, but the witness without parallel. The church has received the books of the Old and New Testaments as prophetic and apostolic testimony in which it hears the word of God and by which its faith and obedience are nourished and regulated.
The New Testament is the recorded testimony of apostles to the coming of the Messiah, Jesus of Nazareth, and the sending of the Holy Spirit to the Church. The Old Testament bears witness to God's faithfulness in his covenant with Israel and points the way to the fulfillment of his purpose in Christ. The Old Testament is indispensable to understanding the New, and is not itself fully understood without the New.
The Bible is to be interpreted in the light of its witness to God's work of reconciliation in Christ. The Scriptures, given under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, are nevertheless the words of men, conditioned by the language, thought forms, and literary fashions of the places and times at which they were written. They reflect views of life, history, and the cosmos which were then current. The church, therefore, has an obligation to approach the Scriptures with literary and historical understanding. As God has spoken his word in diverse cultural situations, the church is confident that he will continue to speak through the Scriptures in a changing world and in every form of human culture.
God's word is spoken to his church today where the Scriptures are faithfully preached and attentively read in dependence on the illumination of the Holy Spirit and with readiness to receive their truth and direction.
Through the inward witness of the same Spirit
we acknowledge the authority of the Bible.
We accept the Old and New Testaments as the canon,
or authoritative standard of faith and life,
to which no further writings need be added.
The Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments
are necessary, sufficient, and reliable
as witnesses to Jesus Christ, the living Word.
We must test any word that comes to us
from church, world, or inner experience
by the Word of God in Scripture.
We subject to its judgment
all our understanding of doctrine and practice,
including this Declaration of Faith.
We believe the Bible to be the Word of God
as no other word written by human beings.
Today, sola scriptura has all but been squeezed out of the institutional churches. It is looked upon as an important principle and a rallying cry of the Reformation. Nevertheless, as we have seen, the Lutheran, Reformed, and Presbyterian churches, descended as they are from the Magisterial Reformation, never did really put it into practice. Chances are that if you ask the pastor of one of these churches a doctrinal question, he will answer you with a reference to a creed or confession instead of with a Scripture. Too often, Scripture is made to fit the mold of the interpretation imposed on it by the creed or confession, rather than the confession being viewed as merely a statement of belief written by fallible humans.
Are We At the End of the Reformation? Part One: The End of Sola Scriptura--"By Scripture Alone"
One might say a new reformation is afoot, some of the same disputes are emerging once again .
Today, sola scriptura has all but been squeezed out of the institutional churches.
Okay, so what's the justification for the definition, why use it?
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Define that which you claim has been "squeezed out" of "institutional churches."
See post 11
.
This is not my quote...I just shared it.
I think it's safe to say that today we have the most diverse set of Christian doctrines that have ever existed, especially among protestants, most of whom would claim sola scriptura as a base. If the principle of sola scriptura is intended to norm doctrine, then how have we arrived at this state?
Is it not painfully obviously that the notion that scripture alone can norm anything is defective?
But that doesn't make any sense. What alternative is free from your criticism? None. That's easily proven. So how can it be that there is something wrong with relying upon God's word in preference to ... what?If sola scriptura had any normative effect whatsoever - then surely we would have fewer doctrinal variations, not more.
Well now, Sola Scriptura is intended to norm doctrine, but that doesn't mean everyone is going to do it!![]()
[/I]
Define that which you claim has been "squeezed out" of "institutional churches."
See post 11
.
I think perhaps the opposite - that many people are doing it and thus developing their own doctrine.
As to the rest, you have to break it down by denomination which this thread is attempting to do.
Well now, Sola Scriptura is intended to norm doctrine, but that doesn't mean everyone is going to do it!
We have all sorts of people around here who would rather follow some supposedly infallible person's pronouncements or custom or popular legend rather than follow Scripture, but Sola Scriptura still is what it is.
No, that would be the case if Scripture were defective. Or if there were actually some authority higher and more reliable than divine revelation! Are you prepared to argue that there is?
But that doesn't make any sense. What alternative is free from your criticism? None. That's easily proven. So how can it be that there is something wrong with relying upon God's word in preference to ... what?