- Sep 29, 2015
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Philosophy, yes. Interpersonal charity, absolutely. And hopefully the philosophy gets to the methods of interpretation. For me, I see Scripture as authoritative, but that Scripture cannot be Nuda Scriptura, Scripture outside of the context of the Church that it was written for and that indeed wrote it. The text and the community are inter-related. Which brings in the witness of the Fathers as helpers understanding how the Church got here.Sure, as Christians, we all believe that in one way or another, the Bible is authoritative. The problem with that affirmation, though, is that the Bible doesn't really give any of us a comprehensive method by which to apply what we could posit as a sanctified and inspired method of interpretation.
So, because the biblical writers didn't give us a comprehensive, step-by-step method for how to interpret their writings, each individual person (or council, even) brings his own interpretive abilities and theoretical preferences to the table when placing a historical item (like the figure of Mary) into the theological test tube for examination. Some individuals (or councils, even) through the centuries have had different interpretive methods, to say the least, and this is the case, again, where a figure like Mary is concerned. Appealing to the Bible alone isn't going to resolve or explain for correction these interpretive differences (or comparative traditions). No, we'll need philosophy for that if there's a hope of resolving our interpretive battles. We'll also need a bit of interpersonal charity ...............
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