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I didn't say that it is.Where's it say "That which is of God is only written"?
Where is this found?Not necessarily; but I would view them as authorized.
There were sacrifices required of priests and elders in the case of an incorrect ruling. The people were still required to follow that ruling until the elders corrected it. The sin was not attributed to the people, but to the elders.
Where is this found?
I'm unsure what you refer to.
Ok, basically your post says the Apostolic Churches have bad doctrine because they don't adhere to Prebysterian hermeneutics. Fine.some kind of intergenerational growth beyond what the Christ has delivered to us, seems quite a stretch beyond what the Scriptures seem to say.
Sola scriptura?
"If the high priest sins, bringing guilt upon the entire community,Leviticus 4:3.
Ok, basically your post says the Apostolic Churches have bad doctrine because they don't adhere to Prebysterian hermeneutics. Fine.
Prehaps I am a little guilty of straying away too, but the question and topic of this thread remains what method of preservation of doctrine---whether it be good doctrine, like the Presbyterian's have, or horrible doctrine, like the Catholics have----based on commonality in beliefs over time. Has that been done by exercising some form of Tradition and Scripture with an authoritative body or by applying sola scriptura? If I'm not mistaken, you have not given your opinion.
I've given my opinion. The radical view of solo scriptura is all that's being assailed here. When there's an address of sola scriptura -- that one's infallible, and the other's a redeemed witness -- the answer's pretty clear. Requiring tradition to be infallible instead of humanly credible is simply treading out of bounds.Ok, basically your post says the Apostolic Churches have bad doctrine because they don't adhere to Prebysterian hermeneutics. Fine.
Prehaps I am a little guilty of straying away too, but the question and topic of this thread remains what method of preservation of doctrine---whether it be good doctrine, like the Presbyterian's have, or horrible doctrine, like the Catholics have----based on commonality in beliefs over time. Has that been done by exercising some form of Tradition and Scripture with an authoritative body or by applying sola scriptura? If I'm not mistaken, you have not given your opinion.
I mentioned this in another thread, and I think it applies here as well...there's a difference between following a tradition because we think it's correct, and following it because we think it's infallible. I can openly and freely follow Presbyterian (Methodist, Baptist, etc.) tradition because I think it's correct without thinking it's the infallible voice of God.
That last part really wasn't meant to sound sarcastic, so I apologize if it comes across that way.
Traditions that are correct are only of man.
Traditions that are infallible are from God.
Hence sola scriptura. Traditions are man-made, though may be correct. They are not from God so they may be incorrect as well. I dunno, I still don't really know what to believe yet.
Scripture is infallible.
[/QUOTE]The church is infallible, it's what gave us scripture... unless you can show infallible scripture choosing itself.
The gates of hell will not prevail against the Church -- surely this means the Church is infallible?Church is us.
WE are not infallible.
WE did not give us Scripture
God did.
imo
with love