Well, the citation is pretty clear and strait forward.I'm not much familiar with Augustine (I explained the EO position re: Augustine previously).
Irrelevant. Clearly he believed Scripture to be of a more weightier authority:Who also appealed to Tradition.
for divine Scripture is sufficient above all
Like I said, Augustine's beliefs are quite clear.as above
Sola Scriptura does not negate the possibility of people misunderstanding or misrepresenting the meaning of Scripture. Nobody has ever said that SS guarantees that all people will understand and represent Scripture correctly.Arius used the scripture to support his position, too.
That does not negate the fact he considered Scripture to be the higher authority. He didn't just say "inquire from Scripture," he said: I exhort and entreat you all, disregard what this man and that man thinks about these things, and inquire from the Scriptures all these thingsOf course we are to inquire from scripture (have you read much of Chrysostom on the reading of scripture ? pretty amazing). And he was - as this was a homily - speaking to those in the Church;
Then please show us the context and explain how it affects the meaning of this citation.the context is missing. The Church was the guidance for the interpretation.
Yup, but he speaks from within a context; his Catechetical Lectures also contain numerous supporting quotes from the Liturgy.
Come on, your skirting the issues, avoiding the assertions and not providing evidence to support your comments. So, show us how "context" clarifies this statement: this salvation which we believe
depends not on ingenious reasoning, but on demonstration of the Holy Scriptures
Do you really think you are making headway with these comments?as above
Actually, I have read Irenaeus. He was one of the first fathers I read.Have you read Irenaeus ? I haven't -
And your point is what? The heresies he addressed were most likely based upon distorted interpretations of Scripture.but I think it not unlikely that some of the heresies he battles claimed scriptural support.
Thekla, this is why we provide sources (or links when available) so that people can see for themselves what is said "in context." That's how I got started reading the fathers myself. Nothing your have said address SS or invalidates it. You've only shown what we all already know--some people misrepresent and incorrectly teach SS.In literary analysis, one must be familiar with the authors works (rhetorical conceits, context, tone, etc.) before employing a quote -- sort of like, one should read all of Ulysses by Joyce before using a passage from the novel to argue something in general about the novel. Likewise, having read Homer's "Ulysses" would be most helpful with the understanding of Joyce's version. And then, being somewhat familiar with both, the movie "Oh Brother Where Art Thou" would be more enjoyable. But the understanding of each particular version of Ulysses relies on the familiarity with the author, era (place in history), culture, and particular genre of each particular treatment of the myth.
But, it does nothing to disprove the fact that many of the ECFs did teach and adhere to SS.This is really the same with any author, including the ECFs.
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