and they all come to poles opposite conclusions about what scripture means.
The problem with sola scriputra is EVERYONE not just him can take a view of what it means.
Those who chuck it down the sink, and those who think after blessing it is somethign special that cannot be binned! There is pretty much every permutation in between.
"It is the greatest scandal - every milkmaid now has their own doctrine" he lamented.
Does a cross section of different
(and even contradictory) opinions
on the definitional level invalidate your or my particular opinion though? If the argument is that other opinions cause our views to be unjustifiable, I’m not sure that follows.
Muslims argue about Jesus with us on the definitional level, but my sources on the life of Jesus are 1st century eyewitness biographies, while the Muslims are using 7th century fiction. My beliefs are objectively more justified than theirs regardless of the definitional debate. Disagreement doesn’t matter because they can’t justify their disagreement.
The bread and wine is an interesting example because, so far as my imagination can carry me, it’s only two things according to the umbrella of what we would call Christian perspectives. The bread and wine is either bread and wine, or it’s not simple bread and wine. It either is or it isn’t.
If you wrote me a third
(less plausible) perspective on the level of a definition, as if someone believed
“bread wasn’t bread, it’s just data, every time you said bread I heard data,” I wouldn’t consider
your views unjustified on the grounds that someone else had a different opinion.
Whereas if you other guy had just finished watching the Matrix and he was really high, I’d consider his viewpoint unjustified
He failed to realise that by removing all other authority, EVERYONE else was free to do the same! And they did! They have been in schism ever since.
I never really understood why the common argument that the Protestants are divided into 40,000,000,000,000+ different denominations isn’t actually a gentle slight against the Roman Catholic church
(as many of these places are an indirect or direct product of her.) Replying
“if you didn’t leave you’d still be here” makes sense, that’s a truism, but that’s true for any organisation we reject or are denied entry into.
I don’t think less of the Roman Catholic Church because people abandoned her, no more than I think poorly of any one Protestant church for people dividing her pews. I’ve always felt the sword cut both ways.
If the reply is that an overriding, powerful, singular divine
(yet earthly) institute can put checks and balances on these wacky outlaw believers and their fruity ideas, my first thought is that it hasn’t worked so far. Even great heroes, people who are called “the father of the Catholic Church” (Saint Augustine) had wildly alien views to every modern Roman catholic I’ve ever met. He wasn’t called a one man schism or an inventor despite his portrait of God being the kind of thing that Calvin and Luther drew from.
So, with such radically different views of God, yet many men are described as Roman Catholics, the line of orthodoxy appears to simply be who they’re prepared to bend knee to
(not their actual religious beliefs.) It seems like the spiritual Wild West even with the mega power authority.
So By what authority do you think "your version" of the truth is correct?
All have "thinking" apparatus.
I think because our thinking faculties are God given they’re generally reliable. I believe God is the God of truth and He’s revealed Himself to His creation in a way that we can understand.
Just like how you can generally understand my message without an overseer.
ON TOPIC: I think what would help is if people could describe
a distinction with a different between Sola and Prima Scriptura. I’ve read people teach Prima scripture means scripture first, but that’s no different from my earlier definition of sola Scriptura. So if ignoring my definition helps, please do, but for the sake of defending the topics purpose, is there a recognisable distinction between the two? I don’t feel enough has been said to defend or advance Prima Scriptura.