This is a bit ticklish, as I am sure you probably know. In Catholicism the Bible is part and parcel of Holy Tradition. This Tradition includes much more than the Bible and the Bible is given equal weight, at best, within the Tradition. There are many doctrines within Catholicism which are not contained in the Bible but stem from Tradition. The ultimate determination of doctrine in Catholicism is not the Bible itself.
When did you graduate from a Jesuit Seminary (not that I did)--or were you even educated in a Catholic School (which I was)?
There are parts of your faith that you use and believe because it is YOUR tradition. The Reformers were ALL educated in the Catholic Church, so they MIGHT have had an inkling of what they were talking about. You belong to a non-denominational church, which is a smooth way of getting around saying a denomination of ONE congregation. And I'll bet you that your church started (because the "pastor" always starts it--with one or two members in a core group) a "Bible Believing Church" where someone can really hear the word of God. If you grew up non-denominational or some Protestant denomination, then you don't know a lot about the what the Catholic Church even teaches. If you did grow up Catholic, then what seduced you from the True faith?
Now that we have gotten the polemics out of the way, you accuse me of holding to Traditions that are not in the Bible. True, there are more things to Christianity than what is in the Bible. But you accept them too.
As I mentioned in an earlier post, in Western Europe (which is where all of the Reformers lived) the Roman Catholic Churches gave you the Bible. What I mean by that is that ALL of the Word of God was oral history at one time. Moses wrote down the Torah, and passed it on. From there, ALL of the Histories, Psalms, Wisdom, Prophecies, were ALL oral tradition until such time as Baruch wrote them down. In the New Testament, the Gospels were written down, yes. but most were not promulgated until the 2nd Century. The Letters were written, true, but they were passed around, copied, recopied, and so on.
There was a lot of false stuff that was being passed around as well, some edifying, and some not. It wasn't until almost the end of the 3rd Century that the Canon that
WE prize so highly was determined, and that was done by a council that, while not a full ecumenical council (which means that the Emperor of Rome called it, not something Roman Catholic or something like that), still had the authority to decide what would be in the Canon.
From the end of the 3rd Century until the 15th Century, ALL of the Bibles were hand written on parchment or vellum by pious monks (somewhat more pious than myself) using a quill. Almost all were commissioned by the aristocracy, as they were the only ones that had the money to pay for the work.
It wasn't until Gutenberg invented printing using movable type that a printed Bible could even be produced, and he didn't give any of them away, either. But it was from THAT time forward that Bibles could be made in a relatively inexpensive manner. The Reformation had to WAIT until such time as Bibles could be accessible to the regular working man.
So, from the 1st Century--the Apostles, etc.--it was only by the grace of God that Bibles in European languages--German, French, Spanish, Italian, English and so on were available at all, except for the Roman Catholic Church. So the next time you even THINK about saying anything less than complimentary about Catholics, first of all, get down on your knees and thank GOD that He provided you the ability to read at all, much less read a Bible, because if it hadn't been for those ****** Roman Catholics, you would not HAVE a Bible to read!
And BTW, without a Bible, YOU would lost in your sins, election or no.