Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
I believe you're referring to a line in the Book of Revelation which speaks of adding to that book only.If the 66 book bible were breathed by God, written by God and completed by God and sealed by God then word stands alone . what's the point in adding to the complete bible when the bible said don't add to it? God said don't add to His Word
I think your statement about not adding to the Bible is based on a verse in the Book of Revelation which actually says that nothing should be added to that particular revelation (not to the whole of the Bible).Can you rephrase that?
I think your statement about not adding to the Bible is based on a verse in the Book of Revelation which actually says that nothing should be added to that particular revelation (not to the whole of the Bible).
You came pretty close to defining it right there--Scripture Alone is the defining authority for determining doctrine. It does not mean any of the other notions that opponents of SS (and those who simply don't know what it means) often say about it. For example, that it means everyone is free to believe whatever he personally thinks, or that tradition has no place in church life, or that SS means you cannot do anything unless it's specifically approved of somewhere in the Bible.
It's an interesting question about whether John was referring only to Revelation or to the whole NT. In the OT, we find the same command at Deut. 12:32 not to add or subtract.If the 66 book bible were breathed by God, written by God and completed by God and sealed by God then word stands alone . what's the point in adding to the complete bible when the bible said don't add to it? God said don't add to His Word
It's an interesting question about whether John was referring only to Revelation or to the whole NT. In the OT, we find the same command at Deut. 12:32 not to add or subtract.
Based on the idea that we believers are built on foundation of prophets (OT) and apostles (NT), I favor the understanding of a sealed canon.
Both of those commands are narrowly focused. That's no argument for modifying the canon (or the contents thereof), merely the acknowledgement those commands are not necessarily absolute. If they were, the mere existence of the NT canon is tough to justify, not to mention any NT books written after Revelation (and there could have been some).It's an interesting question about whether John was referring only to Revelation or to the whole NT. In the OT, we find the same command at Deut. 12:32 not to add or subtract.
Ditto but not because there's some command saying so printed in Sacred Scripture itself.I favor the understanding of a sealed canon.
I think the problem is that this thread from the OP intermixes authorities in the church with scriptural authority. Most all churches have authorities; teachers, deacons, pastors, bishops. When I write scripture is supreme, I mean over other authorities in the church. That means as Acts17:11 says, to test everything that anyone says in the church against scripture.I don't know why it would. The definition as given clearly included the word "Alone."
So if Sola Scriptura is sufficient for salvation, what does a non-Protestant think it not sufficient for?The Orthodox would disagree with this interpretation. Yes, we are the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, no, this does not mean Protestants are inherently damned.
Both of those commands are narrowly focused. That's no argument for modifying the canon (or the contents thereof), merely the acknowledgement those commands are not necessarily absolute. If they were, the mere existence of the NT canon is tough to justify, not to mention any NT books written after Revelation (and there could have been some).
RC cannot have and never will have a sealed canon given that their Tradition is ever continuing (think Marian dogmas).Ditto but not because there's some command saying so printed in Sacred Scripture itself.
Indeed it does but not because of the Scriptural passages you cited. Those passages warn against modifying those specific texts. They say nothing about editing the entire Scriptural canon. In order to do so, they would logically need to define what the Scriptural canon is. Clearly those passages make no attempt to do so. And that is ultimately for the good since the literal application you supply for the OT passage would invalidate the canonicity of the entire NT.Again, the idea of a closed canon makes sense,
The Catholic Church can and the Catholic Church does. Invoking infallibility does not somehow categorize, say, a papal encyclical as Sacred Scripture. Papal encyclicals are papal encyclicals. Sacred Scripture is Sacred Scripture. The two are not the same thing.RC cannot have and never will have a sealed canon given that their Tradition is ever continuing (think Marian dogmas).
It's only "funny" if you don't understand what Sacred Scripture and the Magisterium are. All due respect but I'm not sure you recognize the distinction between the two. A core Catholic teaching is that God speaks to the world through the Catholic Church and Holy Scripture rather than just Holy Scripture alone. This, however, does not mean the Church considers herself at liberty to classify, say, Pope Paul VI's Humanae Vitae encyclical as Scripture.Besides, RC very definition of "God's word" is both written and oral. There is no sense of a closed canon given their definition. Sorta funny actually.
I think the problem is that this thread from the OP intermixes authorities in the church with scriptural authority. Most all churches have authorities; teachers, deacons, pastors, bishops. When I write scripture is supreme, I mean over other authorities in the church. That means as Acts17:11 says, to test everything that anyone says in the church against scripture.
The supremacy of scripture over authorities in the church does not imply that other methods may be used to generate spiritual truths and that scripture is just the highest. That is Prima scriptura. So in regards to spiritual truths sufficient to salvation, scripture alone is recognized.
In regard to traditions, Martin Luther did place value on traditions in the practice of faith and the understanding of scripture, just not to extend scripture.
Indeed it does but not because of the Scriptural passages you cited. Those passages warn against modifying those specific texts. They say nothing about editing the entire Scriptural canon. In order to do so, they would logically need to define what the Scriptural canon is. Clearly those passages make no attempt to do so. And that is ultimately for the good since the literal application you supply for the OT passage would invalidate the canonicity of the entire NT.
The Catholic Church can and the Catholic Church does. Invoking infallibility does not somehow categorize, say, a papal encyclical as Sacred Scripture. Papal encyclicals are papal encyclicals. Sacred Scripture is Sacred Scripture. The two are not the same thing.
It's only "funny" if you don't understand what Sacred Scripture and the Magisterium are. All due respect but I'm not sure you recognize the distinction between the two. A core Catholic teaching is that God speaks to the world through the Catholic Church and Holy Scripture rather than just Holy Scripture alone. This, however, does not mean the Church considers herself at liberty to classify, say, Pope Paul VI's Humanae Vitae encyclical as Scripture.