sola scripturists don't have agreement on whether sola scriptura is a practice, a rule, a teaching, a principle or a doctrine. I'm pretty sure the Catholics on this thread have read post #11 and know that in your opinion, sola scriptura is a practice.
And in post 462, you stated that you agree it's a practice.
So, we're in agreement: Those 17 words are the historic, formal, official definition that no Protestant appears to disagree with, that I did NOT get into a time machine and write those words in 1577, and that it is a practice..... wow..... all things Catholics (including you, I think) have insisted upon here at CF.
Yes, I have stated, that while TYPICALLY when Protestants state "doctrine" they are referring to their doctrine of SCRIPTURE (which they see as an explanation for WHY Scripture should be embraced for this purpose among us), not to the practice itself. But yes, SOME are pretty sloppy and use the word "doctrine" for ANYTHING sound - including practices - a usage I don't support. But it seems silly and absurd to me to insist that ERGO they have a different definition of the practice. I think Catholics (and Mormons elsewhere) have gone to absurd, silly, laughable lengths to TRY to construct some confusion that only insists in themselves (which, at least Catholics admit - insisting they don't know what they are talking about because they don't know what it is that they insist is condemnable, wrong, sinful, bad, unbiblical, new - all the condenmnations of what they insist they don't know what is), or as you, condemning "sola scripturologisticerists" for doing what you claim you don't know what is.
Yes, those 17 words are the definition. No Protestant disagrees that that IS what Sola Scriptura is.
Yes, they were first written within Protestantism in 1577 and NOT personally by me getting into a time machine and going back to 1577. Of course, they were written by others long, long before that.
Yes, DOING this is a practice. There may be doctrines involves as to WHY Scripture is so used, but using it is a practice.
No, it's not hermeneutics, it's not arbitration, it's not a teaching (practices are incapable of teaching anything). ALL the enormous, incredible, persistent (and I admit very crafty!) Catholics efforts to evade, dodge and circumvent the subject by trying to hijack the thread to those other topics is simply documentation of their unwillingness or inability to discuss the subject at hand.
Yes, I've given the reason why the RCC rejects and protests this practice (with verbatim quotes), which not only no Catholic has challenged but actually supported and affirmed over and over and over and over (for years now).
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