To the question of the thread..
This is actually an extremely important question!
MY view...
IF Tradition and Scripture are equal, then we've embraced a circular, self-authenticating principle of accountability that provides no accountability whatsoever.
An illustration:
The Church of Bob teaches that Jesus had 100 children. This is part of the "Tradition" of the Church of Bob (hereafter referred to as CB). The CB self-claims that God told them that little ditty and they are now "stewards" of that Tradition, and CB notes with glee that NOTHING whatsoever in the Bible remotely suggests otherwise, so it's not "in conflict with" Scripture.
Many Christians question this teaching. But CB (embracing Sola Ecclesia and rejecting Sola Scriptura) insists that only CB can act as the arbiter for religious doctrine - they are the "sole final arbiter" so this question will be given to the Leadership of the CB who alone is entrusted with this authority. The Leadership of CB is made up entirely of clergy who have vowed (upon death) to uphold, defend and promote the Tradition of CB which, of course, includes that Jesus had 100 children. And what will the Leadership of the CB use as it's norma normans (the Rule, the Canon, the Standard) for the self-evaluation of self-teachings? The teachings of CB - the Tradition that they were given by God and so is correct, which, of course, includes the Tradition that Jesus had 100 children.
Soooooooooo, this teaching about the 100 children of Jesus will be evaluated/arbitrated by the group that teaches that, by those who have vowed upon death to uphold the teachings of the self-same group, and will use the teachings of the self-same group to norm the teachings of the self-same group.
Wanna guess what their conclusion will be????
And using their embrace principle of norming, is it justified?
BUT wait, there's more!!! Because CB will self-claim that that conclusion is infallible!
And because it's infallible, it's unaccountable.
So the whole process is moot and unnecessary.
Whatever CB says is True.
End of story.
Put your hand down.
End of illustration.
There's a teacher (person, congregation, denomination). The teachings (doctrines, claims, interpretations, etc.) which are embraced are "Tradition." The "Tradition" of that teacher (person, congregation, denomination).
Let's say that teaching (Tradition) of that teacher (person, congregation or denomination) is questioned - especially in light of the firm warnings about false teachings and antichrists and those that would lead many astray.
Under Sola Ecclesia, the teacher insists that he alone is the "sole final arbiter" for himself for he self-claims only he has such authority. So, the teacher will be the sole evaluator for the teachings of himself and he will have final "say" here.
But that still leaves the issue of the norma normans - WHAT will serve as the Rule, the Canon for this evaluation? The teacher insists that his teachings will serve as the Canon or Rule for his teachings, the Standard to which his teachings will be evaluated or normed.
Now, the teacher can certainly add WHATEVER he wants to this formula - sharing the "norma normans" spot with his own teachings, it will not (and can not) change the outcome, since his own teachings is also a norm. The conclusion will be the same, reglardless of what OTHER things might be added. The most someone could note is that some other factor doesn't specifically teach what he does - but his teachings do, so the point is moot.
A case in point:
Mormons (who embrace Sola Ecclesia too) put it this way:
God established the LDS as The Church of Jesus Christ. God have it Authority to teach and God works through His Church in a unique way.
The LDS is a teacher - it teaches many things. People inside and outside (the apostate) the Church are invited and encouraged to investigate and evaluate their teachings.
However, such can only be done Authoritatively by the Church, since it alone has that Authority. The LDS will tell you if the LDS is correct or not, for only it can say. It is the Body of Christ, it is His Church, it alone has this Authority.
Now, the LDS is very open about the fact that not all it teaches is contained within the pages of the Bible - which it regards as apostolic and authoritative BUT it does NOT contain all Truth. Nope. God has revealed much more to and through His Church. This is called "Tradition." Unlike the Catholic Church, Mormons quickly wrote this down (by revelvation) for all the world to see and to provide accountability for themselves. This can be found by all in the Book of Mormon, the Pearl of Great Price and Doctrines and Covenants. It's written so LDS leaders cannot misrepresent it and so all can know it. The Word is not limited to the Bible and these additional Scriptures, but these are the written Word from God and serve as the 'norma normans.'
The Bible and Tradition are also joined by the official rulings and decisions of His Church - which are equally authoritative. Jesus works via His Church which alone has Authority on earth. It ALONE can interpret the Bible and Tradition with Authority. It alone can apply the Bible and Tradition with Authority. So, we have what Mormons call "A Three Legged STOOL" = Bible, Tradition, Church.
The KEY to this is that all 3 are equal and inseparable!!!!! It is only when this is understood that they dynamics of Sola Ecclesia come clearly into view.
Because none is accountable or subject to any other, logically all must be in agreement, which is what the LDS insists is so. There's no need for accountability among them because there is no conflict between them. Got it?
Because there is no conflict between them, they all MUST teach the same things, even if such is not explicit in any one of the 3. This is why all 3 must be viewed together, as a set, each supplying with the other may not clearly. Got it?
Therefore, Tradition says what the Bible says and what the Church says. The Church says what the Bible says and what Tradition says. The Bible says what Tradition says and what the Church says. They CANNOT be in conflict, they must be viewed as a set. If something in the Bible appears to be in conflict with the Tradition of the Church - such is a wrong appearance, as the Church will point out. And if the Bible says nothing specifically about something in Tradition, well - that's why we need Tradition. Not everything is contained in the Bible! And if note everything is in either the Bible or Tradition, well, that's why we need the Church! As Brigham Young said, "The Church doesn't need the bible, the bible needs the Church."
MY thoughts....
What are yours?
Pax.
- Josiah
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