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The issues with Sola Scriptura

Truth Lover

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I would like to know what things you are thinking were changed?
 
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Uber Genius

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A veritable calcareous of straw men riding by disguised as logical arguments.

Sola Scriptura

The Council of Trent in the 16th century declared that the revelation of God was not contained solely in the Scriptures. It declared that it was contained partly in the written Scriptures and partly in oral tradition and, therefore, the Scriptures were not materially sufficient.

It was neither grounded in scripture or in the church tradition ironically.

Here is a quick definitional statement of sola scriptura as held by the Church until Trent.

"The Bible claims to be the sole and sufficient rule of faith for the Christian Church. The Scriptures are not in need of any supplement. Their authority comes from their nature as God-breathed revelation. Their authority is not dependent upon man, Church or council. The Scriptures are self-consistent, self-interpreting, and self-authenticating. The Christian Church looks at the Scriptures as the only and sufficient rule of faith and the Church is always subject to the Word, and is constantly reformed thereby." Dr. James White

All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work. (‭2 Timothy‬ ‭3‬:‭16-17‬ ESV)

Paul didn't add anything else to his list as rules of faith other than God-breathed scripture. Paul doesn't suggest you can be almost complete. He doesn't suggest that the man of God is partially equipped given the right penance, and sacramental means of grace.

Further, The Early Church Fathers (Ignatius, Polycarp, Clement, the Didache, and Barnabus) taught doctrine and defended Christianity against heresies. In doing this, their sole appeal for authority was Scripture.

"This seal have thou ever on thy mind; which now by way of summary has been touched on in its heads, and if the Lord grant, shall hereafter be set forth according to our power, with Scripture proofs. For concerning the divine and sacred Mysteries of the Faith, we ought not to deliver even the most casual remark without the Holy Scriptures: nor be drawn aside by mere probabilities and the artifices of argument. Do not then believe me because I tell thee these things, unless thou receive from the Holy Scriptures the proof of what is set forth: for this salvation, which is of our faith, is not by ingenious reasonings, but by proof from the Holy Scriptures." (Cyril of Jerusalem mid-4th century)

The very foundation of the canon was a call by God to write. We see the church father and popes argue from scripture as their primary source not rest on tradition.Luther's attempt to reform the horrible corrupt Catholic Church was based on bring it back to its former foundations. The Council of Trent was the death knell for the Catholic Church. They instantiated their corrupting methods and paint a gospel unrecognizable to the early popes and church fathers.

Read more at: http://www.christiananswers.net/q-eden/sola-scriptura-earlychurch.html
 
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thecolorsblend

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???

Irenaeus never even referred to Sacred Scripture there. He simply pointed to the authority of the Church as the ultimate guarantor of the faith.

Origen seems to agree. He points to the teaching of the Church and to apostolic succession.

But there's more.

And then comes something a bit more explicit...

Broadly, I can either put my trust in man-made rules like Sola Scriptura (the definition of which nobody seems to agree upon anyway) or I can join with the ancients and trust the authority of the Church. It was an easy choice for me.
 
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Uber Genius

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Irenaeous does not refer to the scriptures???

What do you take, "Peter and Paul, that church which has the tradition and the faith which comes down to us after having been announced to men by the apostles," to mean?

How do we have Peter and Paul's teachings?

Announced to men by the Apostles?


With Your comments about Origin we see the confusion.

What is "succession" modifying?

"Teaching" is the subject.

Who's teaching? "From the Apostles"

How did we get it?

"Handed down through an order of succession"

Where is this teaching now (Origin's time)? It remains in the Church.

The subject is not ecclesiastical succession.


Both are making the point about the origin (no pun intended) of their traditions being rooted in the teaching the apostles. Their is no room to read in or equivocate here. The apostles tradition refers to the things recorded in the scriptures.

As to you later quotes I already granted that both sides could marshall evidence of Early Church Fathers support. So these aren't meaningful in that they are making my point that there are a wide variety of ancient opinions supporting both sides of the sola scriptura argument. So you are making my point. Thx
 
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ToBeLoved

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Guess some of us do not care what the Council of Trent thinks.
 
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Uber Genius

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Guess some of us do not care what the Council of Trent thinks.
Did you not understand why I made that comment?

Do you think it was in support of Catholic doctrine somehow?
 
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ToBeLoved

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Did you not understand why I made that comment?

Do you think it was in support of Catholic doctrine somehow?
I guess I did.

I like Dr. James White's commentary. He is very good, watched a few of his shows on Youtube. Don't agree with one of his stances, but he is very knowledgeable of scripture and even if you disagree you learn something.
 
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thecolorsblend

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Correct. My point in citing those quotations was to establish the notion that the Church Fathers had an understanding of the concept of authority quite different from how a lot of Protestants would view the matter.

How many quotations are enough? How often must well known Church figures advocate something akin to Sacred Tradition before the idea is accepted by non-traditional Christians?
 
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Uber Genius

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Opps,

Think you missed the whole point. You misrepresented (by accident) the quotes to represent something their context doesn't represent. You misunderstand my point that I have popes and church fathers galore contradicting the various doctrines handed down by other popes and magisterium all claiming infallibility.

Finally, my main point is that there are good reasons to believe RCC has it right, including quotes from scripture and especially post-nicene creed church fathers. There are also good reasons to believe scripture, not tradition, was the foundation. Scriptural data, the very process of canonization, and quotes from ante-nicene fathers especially support the sola scriptura inference.

So how much evidence do Catholics need, or your version, "How many quotations are enough, for ideas to be accepted for non-traditional Christians," is

THE WRONG QUESTION.

It assumes a clear picture from the data, which is not in evidence.

It relies on ignorance by the investigator, namely they won't look into the massive amount of material (100s of thousands of pages.) written over a thousand years.

It assumes that cherry-picked data will suffice.

It ignores the hundreds of places where Church Fathers and Popes disagree despite all claiming certainty.

It assumes infallibility when no such promise has been documents!

For those reasons I maintain that the data can be argue with two, or more inferences. One pro-RCC another Pro-Sola.

And here the point is

"Catholics do not believe that Protestants who are baptized, who lead a good life, love God and their neighbor, and are blamelessly ignorant of the just claims of the Catholic Religion to be the one true Religion (which is called being in good faith), are excluded from Heaven, provided they believe that there is one God in three Divine Persons; *that God will duly reward the good and punish the wicked; that Jesus Christ is the Son of God made man, who redeemed us, and in whom we must trust for our salvation; and provided they thoroughly repent of having ever, by their sins, offended God."

Quote from "Some Things That Catholics Do Not Believe,"
Very Rev. Joseph Di Bruno, D.D.

EWTN.COM (A RCC apologetic site)

So no one's eternal salvation is on the line it seems. Although on scripture the "leads a good life," quote seems not only suspect but impossible as scripture repeatedly affirms there is no one who is good" , and things like "your righteous deeds are like filthy rags" but that is more a discussion for sola gratia than sola scriptura.
 
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ToBeLoved

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Broadly, I can either put my trust in man-made rules like Sola Scriptura (the definition of which nobody seems to agree upon anyway) or I can join with the ancients and trust the authority of the Church. It was an easy choice for me.
Interesting enough, everyone who says that seems to be Catholic. lol.

Nice excuse with the problem that no one agree's upon a word's definition. lol. Rock On!
 
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DJKWord

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I can either put my trust in man-made rules like Sola Scriptura (the definition of which nobody seems to agree upon anyway) or I can join with the ancients and trust the authority of the Church. It was an easy choice for me.

Well, I can tell you why I heed the Bible alone; it's because Christ did. All though the four Gospels he quotes the OT, refers people to it, corrects people from it. And he reprimanded the Pharisees for adding their own traditions.
 
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faroukfarouk

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Interesting enough, everyone who says that seems to be Catholic. lol.

Nice excuse with the problem that no one agree's upon a word's definition. lol. Rock On!
The counterpoint would possibly be Sola Ecclesia (which you and I would struggle with).
 
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Albion

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Interesting enough, everyone who says that seems to be Catholic. lol.

Nice excuse with the problem that no one agree's upon a word's definition. lol. Rock On!
It's only been explained here about 50 times, but all the usual opponents insist that they haven't any idea what it means and that no one else does either. However, they tell us what it's supposed to mean every time they take to the keyboard to tell us what's wrong with it!
 
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thecolorsblend

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Nice excuse with the problem that no one agree's upon a word's definition.
Do you disagree with that assertion? Not naming names but many on this board have very different ideas about what the term means.

Well, I can tell you why I heed the Bible alone; it's because Christ did. All though the four Gospels he quotes the OT, refers people to it, corrects people from it. And he reprimanded the Pharisees for adding their own traditions.
He castigated their legalism. He also criticized their scrupulosity in following the exact letter of the Law but not adhering to the intended spirit and purpose of the Law.

Beyond that though, the Pharisees and others blithely invented new practices and expected others to live up to them (again, legalism). This is something quite apart from what traditional Christians do. From the Catechism...


More broadly though, and speaking of some level of tradition (eg, not necessarily Sacred Tradition), I've never been able to find a specific reference to the Star of Bethlehem in the Old Testament. And yet, the magi from St. Matthew's gospel speak to Herod as though the star's relation to Our Lord is common knowledge. What's up with that, do you think?

I usually make it a point to ignore your posts. But this comment intrigues me since it implies only Protestants are welcome to invent their own definitions of "Sola Scriptura". Catholics, it seems, are expected to abide by... well, someone's definition other than their own.
 
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Albion

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I usually make it a point to ignore your posts.
Yes, and I do appreciate that.

But this comment intrigues me since it implies only Protestants are welcome to invent their own definitions of "Sola Scriptura".
No, it doesn't.

That's your contention, but Sola Scriptura is no more difficult to understand than a hundred other theological terms we all use. It's certainly more clear cut than Purgatory, Tradition, and Worship, and yet we've all discussed these at length here even though Catholics have all sorts of different ideas about what these words mean them.
 
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Albion

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Ah yes, I knew we'd get there in the end. You enter the thread, write as though you're the only one in recorded history to truly understand what Sola Scriptura means
Why don't we just drop the act and face the fact that Sola Scriptura has a meaning and we can discuss it just like all the other discussions we have here? You can look it up. It's not some mystery or anything of the sort.

But of course doing that would spoil the "Protestants are just soooo divided on everything tsk tsk" game, wouldn't it?
 
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faroukfarouk

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I guess I did.

I like Dr. James White's commentary. He is very good, watched a few of his shows on Youtube. Don't agree with one of his stances, but he is very knowledgeable of scripture and even if you disagree you learn something.
I've certainly enjoyed a lot of Dr James White's ministry also.
 
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ToBeLoved

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Do you disagree with that assertion? Not naming names but many on this board have very different ideas about what the term means.
It's really not a complicated thing. You either beleive all of the Bible literally, being God-breathed or you do not.
Simplification is not bad. Some make something out to be so complicated what is so simple.
 
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