fhansen
Oldbie
- Sep 3, 2011
- 15,915
- 3,981
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Catholic
- Marital Status
- Married
One can speculate that such is the case, or... the church simply teaches what she heard from the beginning. People with any kind of rational, objective mindset should be more impressed by the similarities between the east and west, after centuries of isolation, on issues such as infant baptism, baptismal regeneration, the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, the possible need for some kind of final purification before entrance into heaven, veneration of Mary, as the Theotokos, Mary's not undergoing a normal physical death, their liturgies, their positions on justification, sacramentology, the priesthood, to name just a few all of which date back to time immemorial, rather than going out of our way to emphasize perceived differences. Such doctrines and practices are actually almost uncannily similiar in fact, especially in light of the fact that many are dismissed as irrelevant or just plain heretical by many SS adherents, while others are often disputed among themselves.That's true, but the thread concerns Sola Scriptura which holds that Scripture is the ultimate authority. It is concerned with what we consult when deciding on essential doctrine. Sola Scriptura does not deal with the interpretations that any individual may make of Scripture.
And yet the emperor has no clothes; there's no recognized mechanism for determining/deciding what is essential doctrine. The doctrine of Sola Scriptura merely recognizes that Scripture is the Word of God and then presents a claim that we-or someone?-should be guaranteed arrival at essential Christians truths by appealing to it. Then anyone who reads Scripture may well be convinced that such is the case with themselves, in which case they've made themselves a sort of pope even as they may also take comfort in the fact that they might find others who agree with them.
That's not quite the way to put it. Your church teaches what is called Tradition--customs, opinions, etc.--which it says have developed over time. That's the point of Tradition, at least in theory...i.e. that it is what it is (a second revelation from God after the Bible) BECAUSE the belief, whatever it is, has developed over time and consistently been held by the church all that time.
Upvote
0