Nope. The Apostles were not walking books. Their teachings were oral, they were spread by way of oral methods to the 97% of Jews that couldn't read and the 90% of Greeks who couldn't read. And yes, those numbers are accurate.
Meaning they are a estimation based on scarce data and restricted locations and how one defines literacy and who it includes (
in the Hellenistic period (323-21 B.C.) literacy among freeborn urban men reached perhaps 40 percent), but which is hardly relevant, as the argument assumes that SS requires literacy among all, which is does not. SS preachers can and do preach Scripturally substantiated Truths to illiterate people, and (contrary to the intent of the Puritan's
Old Deluder Act) in largely Protestant America illiteracy has been the norm for the majority for much of its history.
In 1870 (during the Third Great Awakening), 80 percent of the black population was illiterate. By 1960, 42 percent of males, 25 years old and over, still had completed no more than the eighth grade,
https://nces.ed.gov/naal/lit_history.asp
And even today most of what church goers are taught is largely oral. Some more than others. Listen to Charles Stanley preach day and day out and he will hardly read any Scriptures (which he should do).
But that is not contrary to Scripture alone being the only infallible standard for faith and morals, and sufficient in its formal and material aspects combined, and under the latter the teaching office is affirmed. Souls may be deprived of all the grace God would have them have, as in the lack of Scripture, yet they can hear Scriptural preaching, and will be judged according to the grace given.
All may lack a complete and accurate printer manual, but it is still the standard for the teacher of it, which he is subject to examination by, once people are given more grace.
And as Scripture became the standard for faith and obedience, therefore all preaching is subject to examination by it, as was that of the apostles, (Acts 17:11) and which the Lord and the NT so heavily invoked, as
the very "gospel of God" was what was "promised afore by his prophets in the holy scriptures,' Romans 1:1-2) as was the inclusion of the Gentiles, and which is where the NT offices and powers flow from etc.
Nor does SS mean that this was always operative, as at one time oral teaching was indeed the supreme basis for faith and obedience, as God revealed Himself in a very limited manner to a very limited amount of people, whose status God supernaturally attested to. Yet this limited manner was sufficient for the time, and as now, men are always judged according to the light and grace given, even though God can give more.
But when God chose to reveal Himself to and thru an entire nation, and as their rebellious nature required it, then the Lord revealed Himself and will in a much more comprehensive and preserved express manner, that of writing, thru a most manifest man of God as one whose authority He clearly supernaturally attested to.
And as is
abundantly evidenced, the word of God/the Lord was normally written, even if sometimes first being spoken, and that as written, Scripture became the transcendent supreme standard for obedience and testing and establishing truth claims as the wholly Divinely inspired and assured Word of God.
And which formally provides what is necessary for one to be saved, so that one can read a text such as Acts 10:43-47 and be born again just as the hearers there were, and grow in grace.
However, God gives more grace, from convicting oral preaching of the gospel to the guidance of the Spirit (for one, most SS preacher hopes God will "speak" to souls during the offering) to the magisterial office, etc. which Scripture records, commands, sanctions and otherwise
materially provides for.
Moreover, Scripture also reveals that souls correctly discerned men and writings of God as being so, without an infallible magisterium (contrary to the claims of Catholicism), and even contrary to the judgment of the historical magisterium of the instruments and stewards of Scripture, (Rm. 3:2; 9:4,5) to which general obedience was bound, (Mt, 23:2) as men whose office could bind and loose (Dt. 17:8-13) with dissent being a capital crime.
But which the NT church itself began in dissent from, following a (God)Man and men who had no official sanction but were itinerant preachers in the eyes of the magisterium, but who established their Truth claims upon Scriptural substantiation in word and in power.
And as Scripture provides for souls correctly discerning men and writings of God as being so, thus in principal it provides for a canon, and the doctrine of SS.
Nor are your arguments against SS that Scripture does not record all that can be known (which is not necessary, nor can Catholicism claim to provide this: 2Cor. 12:4; Rv. 10:4) , and that Scripture is not clear enough to prevent disagreements any more valid than arguing that the magisterial office of the church is not the supreme judge since it also fails to address all issues and can be and is variously interpreted in what is does teach.
Therefore SS as described here is clearly Scriptural and arguments refuted, with the NT church establishing its Truth claims upon Scriptural substantiation in word and in power, and additional conflative and complementary writings becoming established as being of God, essentially due to their unique heavenly qualities and attestation, like as men of God are established by.
While the powers that be are to affirm such, they do not always do so, (as was the case with John the baptizer and the Christ: Mk. 11:27-33) however valid their office, but that which is from God is still from Hi regardless.
Meanwhile, what is not Scriptural is the Cath. alternative to SS, that of sola ecclesia, in which the church is effectively the supreme standard as assuredly infallibly declaring what Scripture and the word of God consist of and means (not simply making binding, if fallible, judicial judgments, which it is the supreme governmental office for), and which thus cannot be wrong in any conflict. This is more pronounced in Rome, with the basis for veracity being the novel premise of ensured perpetual magisterial infallibility, which is unseen and unnecessary in Scripture.
The Apostles did not write the Scriptures and then preach the gospel.
Regardless, they did not preach as men whose veracity was based on ensured infallibility, but whose preaching was both subject to OT Scripture and who invoked it, and or the supernatural attesting that it reveals God giving to His Truth, under Scripture.
They preached the gospels and wrote letters that they show evidence of not being sure if they are Scripture in the very writing of them.
Sometimes true but irrelevant, as this was no doubt also the case with OT writers, but they looked to what had been established as being of God, and Scripture is the only substantive body of Truth that is affirmed to be wholly inspired of God, thus being the assured word of God with its unique anointing, (Heb. 4:12) to which all Truth claims are subject.
The fact that it was spread by oral methods is key. Oral Tradition is the only practice of people who cannot read. And when that makes up more than 90% of your people, then you're going to have a hard time trying to spread the doctrine of SS.
Also irrelevant, as a complete engine manual would still be the standard for operation even if no one could read, and would make the teacher of it subject to examination thereby once the subjects had that ability.
Likewise the fact that some souls are without a church would not negate the church being the supreme infallible standard for faith and obedience, if it were.
You are assuming SS means that all must have the Scriptures in possession, and that SS excludes the teaching office, neither of which is true, nor contrary to SS being the only sufficient wholly inspired infallible standard.
And don't give me that "it was given to Abraham" stuff. The gospel given to Abraham could mean anything.
What?! How could you say such a thing? It seems you have a very superficial view of Scripture, as in reality what Abraham believed was affirmed by those whom Scripture also commends as being of like faith, and under Moses more was provided by the God of the faith ,as was the gospels.
It certainly did not mean that it was given in full to him. Only what was necessary for him was given.
Yes, and likewise Scripture need not contain all that can be known in order to be the sole supreme infallible standard. For some today their conscience and culture is all they have have, which they will be judged by insofar as it conforms to the supreme law, which Scripture reveals.
Specifically, all that we know he knew is that he would bring forth a great nation, and through that nation the world would be blessed. Anything beyond that is speculation.
That is absurd as it leaves Abraham more morally ignorant than the ignorant who "
have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law, are a law unto themselves: (Romans 2:14)
Your statement even argues against oral tradition, and both by inanate sense as well as what was passed on via tradition the record of Abraham evidences that he knew such things as that lying, adultery, stealing etc,. were wrong, as well as that he could not save himself any more than he could have a great nation with a body and wife which could not procreate (though he could still run in old age). But as a man of faith with a poor and contrite spirit then he could be saved.
The gospel of Christ was passed along by word of mouth from person to person. Illiteracy did not prevent a person from spreading the gospel. He was still able to spread it without being able to read. Therefore, it had to be compatible with Oral methods.
This is why Paul very specifically refers to two paths of Tradition in II Thessalonians 2:15, the written epistles (some of the epistles had been written at this time), and the Oral teaching of the Apostles
No, as besides providing new revelation which your church does not claim to do, the apostles preached Scriptural truths, and a SS preacher today can enjoin obedience to both what he orally preaches as well as Scripture, as the former presumes the validation of the latter.