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Whence sola scriptura?

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seebs

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A. believer said:
Infallibility doesn't refer to knowledge, itself, but to the nature of the source of information. I'm defining knowledge, though, as a belief with ample justification for that belief. But as humans, we know fallibly, because we're fallible. What does it mean to have 100% confidence in our knowledge?

This is a good distinction to draw.

I have not yet found anything to give me the idea that any source of information I have is meaningfully infallible. I came to this question originally, years ago, having reasonable confidence that there is something out there which is similar enough to what people mean when they say "God" that I'll use the term... I have never been led to conclude that I have access to any infallible source of information, however. I would be interested in seeing sources which support the infallibility of the Bible. Obviously, when I'm wondering how reliable the Bible is, I can't use it as a source; that would be circular.
 
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InquisitorKind

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seebs said:
I can be saved by Jesus by His very nature, without ever seeing a Bible or hearing any words from it; I cannot be saved by the Bible unless Jesus has that nature.
Hello seebs,

If you have the time, I have three questions:

1) How can anyone, in our day and age, "be saved by Jesus" without the Scriptures to provide knowledge of Him? (i.e. what other ways are there to know him?)

What do you consider an "error"? The Bible is full of claims about the natural world which are simply not true. We can go to great lengths to twist words to get away from four-legged insects, or we can just admit that the scope of Biblical infallibility is faith and morals.
2) What is the extent of faith and morals?

What is the non-circular source for this belief? I have never found one.
3) If you come to the text believing it's a fallible, non-inspired document, then come to understand that God Himself authored it, isn't it natural to attribute infallibility to it?

Thanks,
~Matt
 
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seebs

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InquisitorKind said:
Hello seebs,

If you have the time, I have three questions:

1) How can anyone, in our day and age, "be saved by Jesus" without the Scriptures to provide knowledge of Him? (i.e. what other ways are there to know him?)

Having a personal relationship with God; it's been the only thing that will save us forever, and it's still the only thing that will save us.

If you accept Him, then He can save you.

Think of it as like science. Anyone can drop a ball. A physicist can tell you about gravity, and about the attraction between the earth and the ball, and knows how it works, but the fact is, anyone can drop a ball.

We have some idea of how salvation works. You don't need to understand it to actually be saved.

2) What is the extent of faith and morals?

I'm not sure I can see any way to improve on those words. Faith and morals. Not science, not mathematics, and mostly not history.

3) If you come to the text believing it's a fallible, non-inspired document, then come to understand that God Himself authored it, isn't it natural to attribute infallibility to it?

It might be. But I don't, as of yet, think God "authored" the Bible; inspired, yes. Authored, no.

I think too much has been read into the word "inspired", and that the result is overclaiming, which tends to lead to bibliolatry.
 
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InquisitorKind

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seebs said:
Having a personal relationship with God; it's been the only thing that will save us forever, and it's still the only thing that will save us.

...

We have some idea of how salvation works. You don't need to understand it to actually be saved.
I'm just trying to reconcile how you believe that you don't need to hear or read a word of the Scriptures yet are able to be saved. i.e. How do people have "some idea of how salvation works" without the Scriptures to indicate to them (either directly or through someone else) the process?

I'm not sure I can see any way to improve on those words. Faith and morals. Not science, not mathematics, and mostly not history.
I understand, generally speaking, what faith and morals are, as opposed to facts of the other said areas. The issue is that I find it hard to determine the extent of what, exactly, "faith and morals" constitutes. It's rather ambiguous, especially since the Scriptures are a historical narrative; I can imagine parts of passages being infallible, or only the moral stance behind the passage being infallible, etc. with much legitimate debate over differing positions within that spectrum. Do you have a concrete definition of what does and does not fall into the category of "faith and morals"?

It might be. But I don't, as of yet, think God "authored" the Bible; inspired, yes. Authored, no.
If you don't mind explaining, what's the functional difference?

~Matt
 
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InquisitorKind

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Bastoune said:
I'm guessing that someone would explain it paraphrasing... It is not Scripture that saves (cf. John 5:37-40) but God, and the message of the Gospel...
The issue is how someone can know the message of the Gospel without the Scriptures to relate it to them, either directly or indirectly, not an issue over whether it's the Scriptures or God that saves people.

~Matt
 
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eldermike

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God is Spirit, a relationship with God is Spirtual. God seeks to change "hearts", the heart is not a "thinking thing". The word of God changes those that are elected to be changed by it. The bible clearly says that we know the truth by hearing it, scripture is a method of protecting us from what we might hear without it. Understanding that there is no way to test this theory, one can only try it.
 
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A. believer

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Bastoune said:
Well, if the person is illiterate, he/she really cannot check the Scriptures against what they hear. We have to trust in God's power (and is it not written the law of God is written on all hearts?) and grace, that they alone are sufficient.

The message, whether by word of mouth or written in the Bible, is all the same Gospel... believe and be saved. I don't have to read the Bible to believe in Jesus Christ, if I am told about Him and I have the faith to accept the Gospel ("blessed are they who do not see, but believe.")

Do you think if a person never reads the Bible, he/she cannot be saved?
The message is from the Scriptures, regardless of whether or not any given person can read it for themselves, Tim.
 
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A. believer

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Bastoune said:
Is it from Scriptures... or from the Lord Jesus Christ...?



(cf. Luke 1:1-3)
It's from what the church has always recognized as the only infallible testimony of Jesus Christ. I just changed my signature yesterday, so I no longer have this as my signature quote, but Augustine makes the point quite clearly,
What knowledge or belief can we have of Christ, but on the authority of Scripture? Or if there is falsehood in the Gospel which has been widely published among all nations, and has been held in such high sacredness in all churches since the name of Christ was first preached, where shall we find a trustworthy record of Christ? If the Gospel is called in question in spite of the general consent regarding it, there can be no writing which a man may not call spurious if he does not wish to believe it. (Augustine, NPNF1: Vol. IV, Reply to Faustus the Manichaean, Book XVI, §11.)

 
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seebs

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InquisitorKind said:
I'm just trying to reconcile how you believe that you don't need to hear or read a word of the Scriptures yet are able to be saved. i.e. How do people have "some idea of how salvation works" without the Scriptures to indicate to them (either directly or through someone else) the process?

In General Apologetics, someone reported (I have no idea whether or not it's true) meeting a former Muslim who converted to something which had exactly the same tenets as Christianity, without having ever heard the Gospel, because Jesus came to him in a dream.

I don't think you need to have any idea how salvation works to be saved. Salvation is not theology. You don't need to understand it; you need to live it.

"Blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be filled."

If you seek righteousness, and the Holy Spirit regenerates you, what does it matter whether or not you know what's happening, or could describe it in words that anyone else would recognize?

Antibiotics work even if all you know is "these pills will make you better". In fact, they work on infants, who don't even know they're taking medicine. All they know is that mommy is feeding them, and they come to feel better.

I understand, generally speaking, what faith and morals are, as opposed to facts of the other said areas. The issue is that I find it hard to determine the extent of what, exactly, "faith and morals" constitutes. It's rather ambiguous, especially since the Scriptures are a historical narrative; I can imagine parts of passages being infallible, or only the moral stance behind the passage being infallible, etc. with much legitimate debate over differing positions within that spectrum. Do you have a concrete definition of what does and does not fall into the category of "faith and morals"?

Nope. I believe that any attempt to impose the limitations of language on the truth will serve as a barrier to that truth. In practice, I know what kinds of advice I will take from the Bible, and what kinds I won't. I don't, for instance, use the Bible as a field guide to taxonomy or biology.

If you don't mind explaining, what's the functional difference?

Authored implies picking every last word. Inspired doesn't.

There's a fairly broad range of what the word could mean. On the one extreme, you have mere hinting; you are "inspired" by something, and you create an entirely new thing that you came up with in relation to that thing. On the other extreme, you have word-for-word precision. This makes a great deal of difference. If every word is chosen exactly by God, then every word matters, and we should care about subtle distinctions, such as tenses, or whether the Centurion uses two different words for "servant", and we should assume that the distinctions indicate God's intention for us. If the words may have been chosen by human writers, we need to think in terms of what those human writers meant, but we are doing so only to learn about what God's message to them might have been.

I tend to think that Biblical inspiration is somewhere in the middle. There are some passages in which I recognize God's voice directly; there are others which seem to me to be people describing God, but which I think were probably written by people.
 
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A. believer

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seebs said:
The reason I say that epistemologies aren't Christian is the same reason I say that animals aren't Christian, and physics isn't Christian; it's simply unrelated.
All truth is God's truth; all facts are God's facts. Nothing is unrelated to its source, and the source of all things is the Triune God of Christianity.

It seems to me that a great number of Christians have found their way to the faith without accepting revelation as an unassailable premise, and done quite well. Indeed, the entire concept of apologetics rejects this premise.
I'm not suggesting that unbelievers who come to believe do so because of an a priori presupposition of the truth of revelation. It's by the work of the Holy Spirit that one's eyes are opened to the truths revealed in Scripture and, through faith, one is saved. What I'm saying, though, is that only by starting with the correct premises--the truths revealed in Scripture--can one reason logically and consistently to the correct conclusions.

This is absolutely, totally, wrong.

There is no rebellion in reason. God gave us reason.
I didn't say that reason is rooted in rebellion. I said autonomous reason is rooted in rebellion. Autonomous reason starts with false premises. Keep in mind that Scripture teaches that all unbelievers are in rebellion against God.

Indeed. This is the foundational problem of epistemology.
Correction. It's a foundational problem of autonomous reasoning. But humans weren't created to reason autonomously. Remember that it was the desire for autonomy that led to the fall in the first place. Satan tempted Adam and Eve by suggesting that they could know apart from God.

Indeed. This is fairly obvious, and I've been arguing it for years

However, these tools, while insufficient, are necessary. You cannot succeed without them.
One cannot reason without them, but one cannot reason consistently to ultimate truth even with them without the proper ultimate starting point.

But I reject the claim that the Bible is "the Word". It is "the words". The Bible is not Jesus. I can be saved by Jesus by His very nature, without ever seeing a Bible or hearing any words from it; I cannot be saved by the Bible unless Jesus has that nature.
The Bible teaches that Jesus is the Word, but it also refers to Scripture as the Word. Certainly Jesus is the ultimate expression of the Word of God--He is the incarnate God is--how better could God reveal Himself to man? But God-breathed Scripture is also referred to as the word of God in Scripture itself. By denying it, you're denying the Scriptural testimony. Since you don't have the opportunity to interact with Jesus face to face, but you do have Scripture, and you've chosen to reduce it to a fallible book, you're essentially rejecting the fullest expression of the Word of God available to you.

Even the Bible acknowledges that the nature of God can be learned from His creation.
Yes, but it also acknowledges that fallen man needs more than creation alone to rightly know God, and even more significantly, it acknowledges that unregenerate man suppresses the knowledge of God that's revealed in nature and the conscience.

I am not judging the Word. I am judging material things of this world which were offered to me as substitutes for Him.
This is your error. Where Scripture testifies about itself, for example,
"For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart." (Hebrews 4:12)
You call the living word a "substitute" for God. We don't have Jesus here with us, (although, even if we did, apart from the regenerative work of the Holy Spirit, we'd reject Him as well). And we're not yet in the presence of God. But God has given us His written Word for our spiritual sustenance. If we reject that Scripture is what it claims to be, then we're rejecting God's provision and calling it insufficient.

hat do you consider an "error"? The Bible is full of claims about the natural world which are simply not true. We can go to great lengths to twist words to get away from four-legged insects, or we can just admit that the scope of Biblical infallibility is faith and morals.
Tobit...contains certain historical and geographical errors such as the assumption that Sennacherib was the son of Shalmaneser (1:15) instead of Sargon II, and that Nineveh was captured by Nebuchadnezzar and Ahasuerus (14:5) instead of by Nabopolassar and Cyaxares....Judith cannot possibly be historical because of the glaring errors it contains...[In 2 Maccabees] there are also numerous disarrangements and discrepancies in chronological, historical, and numerical matters in the book, reflecting ignorance or confusion.... (Zondervan Pictorial Encyclopedia of the Bible, Vol. 1, 207-210; cf., the discussion in Geisler and Nix, A General Introduction to the Bible, pp. 167-177 and Encyclopedia Britannica, Macropaedia, Vol. 2, 932ff. )
I'm talking about genuine documented errors such as what's referred to above. What you'd refer to as errors in actual Scripture are not of this nature. The fact that Scripture describes things in different categories than the ones that were developed thousands of years later isn't error. It's merely communication that was written to be meaningful to its original audience.

It seems odd that you would assert that my positions are "uncritical", especially given the amount of Catholic doctrine I don't acceptt.
I didn't say that your positions are uncritical. I said that you've uncritically accepted a Roman Catholic view of church history. Obviously you reject Roman Catholicism for other reasons.

I think "demonstrably proven" is a fairly solid over-claim. If you want to say there's a reasonable argument for it, go right ahead.
What, specifically, about this claim has not been sufficiently demonstrated as true in the article I linked you to?

It matters a lot to me, because it suggests strongly that I should not trust anyone's claims about what is, or is not, part of Scripture. Why should I trust the Catholic Church? Why should I trust you? Should I believe the scribes who translated the King James, or should I believe the people who excised the Apocrypha from it later? Should I be listening to the Ethiopians, who have more books? What of someone who reads through the writings of the Early Church Fathers, and finds a paragraph so perfect it practically burns the page with its perfection, and asserts that this one paragraph was clearly inspired by God?
Not every compilation of Scripture that included the apocrypha between its covers held the apocrypha as God-breathed Scripture, so your reference to the King James is meaningless. Since Scripture testifies that the OT Scriptures were entrusted to the OT ecclesia, Israel, and therefore, the NT church inherited the canon from them, the real question to answer is simply, what did Israel consider canonical Scripture? Once you ask the right question, then examine the arguments of both Roman Catholics and evangelicals as to what OT Israel held as their canon, and the answer is apparent. In fact, ultimately the only answer the Roman Catholic Church has to offer is that we must accept the canon on the basis of its authority alone.

My answer is simple: I don't believe any of the people out there claiming a source of infallible truth are right, and I test everything, just as Scripture suggests.
Scripture doesn't just "suggest" this, we're commanded to do so. But what, pray tell, do you test everything against? What's your ultimate standard? The standard we're given is the revelation of God. If you reject the idea of an infallible source of revelation, then you have nothing against which to test truth claims but your own autonomous judgment.

Okay. So, what's the extra-Biblical, non-tradition, evidence that the Bible is infallible? I understand the reasons to reject the authority of Tradition.
Why do you ask for extra-Biblical evidence? There's a great deal of internal evidence for the divine nature of Scripture, but who or what is above God who can authoritatively testify on His behalf? Again, the ultimate premises from which we reason cannot be logically proven. You seem to understand that, but you don't seem to understand that if God has spoken, that must be the ultimate reference point that cannot and need not be proven. You say that you recognize God's voice in Scripture, and yet you deem it right to demand proof for the infallibility of Scripture.

You come to me with a book, and say "this is infallible". Why should I believe you? I shouldn't use the book; that would be begging the question.

What is the non-circular source for this belief? I have never found one.

I believe the Bible to be sound, not because someone told me, but because I recognize one of the people in it as someone I know.
There is no non-circular source for the ultimate reference point. You should believe that the Bible is infallible if you believe God. I can't convince you that it's God speaking. The Scriptures, themselves, claim to be "God-breathed" which has a much stronger connotation than the kind of "inspiration" one would be talking about in the context of an "inspired" sermon or something.

That wasn't a "demonstration", that was an "assertion". I was not convinced by it, and indeed, it strengthened my belief that calling the Bible the "Word" is idolatrous.
It was an assertion with Biblical backing. Jason showed you how this is an appropriate way to speak of Scripture according to Scripture, itself. To reject it is to reject Scripture. You may say that you're only rejecting Jason's interpretation of Scripture, but I didn't see a single person on that thread offer anything to rebut Jason's interpretation.

The Bible is the words of God, the trail of breadcrumbs which the Holy Spirit illuminates that we may find our way home.
This is your testimony of Scripture--it isn't in line with the Scriptural self-testimony.

Oddly, when I read the Bible, I see it teaching that God's creation is good.
Indeed, but you certainly must also see that it teaches that man fell into sin and rebellion, and that unregenerate man is at enmity with God.

seebs said:
This is a good distinction to draw.

I have not yet found anything to give me the idea that any source of information I have is meaningfully infallible. I came to this question originally, years ago, having reasonable confidence that there is something out there which is similar enough to what people mean when they say "God" that I'll use the term... I have never been led to conclude that I have access to any infallible source of information, however. I would be interested in seeing sources which support the infallibility of the Bible. Obviously, when I'm wondering how reliable the Bible is, I can't use it as a source; that would be circular.
I don't know how much you've looked into the evidence for the reliability of Scripture presented in places such as Lee Strobel's book, Josh McDowell's books, etc. They certainly present strong evidence. But, by definition, no limited and fallible mind can autonomously "prove" the truth of an unlimited and infallible God, and I think you know that full well. The worldview revealed in Scripture is proven not by evidences, but by the impossibility of the contrary. Since only the Christian worldview can make reality intelligible, while all opposing worldviews render reality unintelligible, this is the proof for the reliability of Scripture. But the persuasion is of the Holy Spirit.
 
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seebs

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A. believer said:
It's from what the church has always recognized as the only infallible testimony of Jesus Christ. I just changed my signature yesterday, so I no longer have this as my signature quote, but Augustine makes the point quite clearly,
What knowledge or belief can we have of Christ, but on the authority of Scripture? Or if there is falsehood in the Gospel which has been widely published among all nations, and has been held in such high sacredness in all churches since the name of Christ was first preached, where shall we find a trustworthy record of Christ? If the Gospel is called in question in spite of the general consent regarding it, there can be no writing which a man may not call spurious if he does not wish to believe it. (Augustine, NPNF1: Vol. IV, Reply to Faustus the Manichaean, Book XVI, §11.)


Funny you should mention Augustine, who said also:

“For my part, I should not believe the Gospel except as moved by the authority of the Catholic Church.” (Against the Epistle of Manichaeus, Called Fundamental,Ch.5)

I find the history of the canonization process fascinating. The process by which people who disagreed on which texts were inspired, and which were not, came to compromises is particularly informative to my understanding of the nature of the Bible.
 
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A. believer

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seebs said:
Funny you should mention Augustine, who said also:

“For my part, I should not believe the Gospel except as moved by the authority of the Catholic Church.” (Against the Epistle of Manichaeus, Called Fundamental,Ch.5)
Augustine said many things. I first ran across the quote you posted when a Roman Catholic used it to try to show that Augustine held the same ecclesiology as modern Roman Catholics do. That was a few years ago, and it was at that time that I first began reading the church fathers. I began by reading the documents that the Roman Catholics' pet quotes came from so that I could see the context, and I was astounded to find that, in virtually every case, the context made them to say something completely contrary to what Roman Catholics were implying. It was then that Roman Catholic apologists began to lose credibility in my eyes.

As for the quote you posted, I remember well reading that document, because I found in Augustine's reasoning against the Manichaeans (a cult Augustine had formerly been a part of) a wonderful articulation of the very problem I had with Roman Catholics! About a year later, I learned from pastor David King that Calvin had made the same observation, only in a much more detailed way, in response to that quote being presented by the Roman Catholics at the time of the Reformation. I'll post what Pastor King posted in a separate post because it's long. It may take more than one post.

I find the history of the canonization process fascinating. The process by which people who disagreed on which texts were inspired, and which were not, came to compromises is particularly informative to my understanding of the nature of the Bible.
How so?
 
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seebs

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A. believer said:
All truth is God's truth; all facts are God's facts. Nothing is unrelated to its source, and the source of all things is the Triune God of Christianity.

This may be true of how they come to be, but it is not true of how we come to know them.

What I'm saying, though, is that only by starting with the correct premises--the truths revealed in Scripture--can one reason logically and consistently to the correct conclusions.

I guess we disagree, quite strongly, then. I do not believe that Christianity can be defended only by begging the question. I believed the truth of the message first, and then discovered that the Bible described it.

I didn't say that reason is rooted in rebellion. I said autonomous reason is rooted in rebellion. Autonomous reason starts with false premises. Keep in mind that Scripture teaches that all unbelievers are in rebellion against God.

I am well aware that this interpretation is quite popular. On the other hand, I engaged in autonomous reason, and found God. If I was "in rebellion", it's sort of odd that the process led me to the right place anyway, no?

But humans weren't created to reason autonomously. Remember that it was the desire for autonomy that led to the fall in the first place. Satan tempted Adam and Eve by suggesting that they could know apart from God.

This is a very creative interpretation, but it is an interpretation that contradicts the nature of God, and I will not be persuaded.

One cannot reason without them, but one cannot reason consistently to ultimate truth even with them without the proper ultimate starting point.

Once again, you seem to be condemning Christianity to rot in the bin with every other philosophy, saying it can only be supported if you start by accepting it. This is a very weak sort of truth indeed.

The Bible teaches that Jesus is the Word, but it also refers to Scripture as the Word.

So, you're saying that the Bible claims itself to be God? This is the only possible conclusion I can draw; the Bible clearly says that the Word is God.

If you think the Bible is God, I don't see how we can communicate. If you think the Bible is not God, then you must maintain a distinction between the Word and any textual representation of God's words.

Certainly Jesus is the ultimate expression of the Word of God--He is the incarnate God is--how better could God reveal Himself to man? But God-breathed Scripture is also referred to as the word of God in Scripture itself. By denying it, you're denying the Scriptural testimony.

I do not interpret those passages the same way you do.

Do you consider yourself to be "denying the Scriptural testimony" when you disagree with, say, the Catholics, on the interpretation of passages involving the nature of communion, or apostolic authority? If not, then why would you accuse me of doing it when I, too, refuse to accept some human's instructions to me about how I should interpret Scripture?

Since you don't have the opportunity to interact with Jesus face to face,

Perhaps our faiths are indeed very different. Physical presence? Not that I've ever noticed. Presence? Undeniably.

but you do have Scripture, and you've chosen to reduce it to a fallible book, you're essentially rejecting the fullest expression of the Word of God available to you.

No, I'm not. I'm rejecting your claims about a book.

The fullest expression of the Word available to me is that, when I pray, and I open myself to Him, I am transformed. This is enough.

Yes, but it also acknowledges that fallen man needs more than creation alone to rightly know God, and even more significantly, it acknowledges that unregenerate man suppresses the knowledge of God that's revealed in nature and the conscience.

If we are to take this at face value, then we have unequivocal testimony that those who come to know God were no longer unregenerate when they did so.

This is your error. Where Scripture testifies about itself, for example,
"For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart." (Hebrews 4:12)

And what makes you think that refers to a book, rather than to the Living Word?

You call the living word a "substitute" for God.

No. I call a bunch of paper, ink, and glue, a "substitute" for the living word.

Maybe your Bible is different. Maybe it moves under its own power, or maybe in yours, the Gospel according to John says "and the Word became paper, ink, and glue, and sat on our shelves".

We don't have Jesus here with us, (although, even if we did, apart from the regenerative work of the Holy Spirit, we'd reject Him as well).

I am very sorry that you do not believe Jesus is with us. At this point, I really don't see any fruitful basis for communication between us. I believe in a living and present God, whose presence in this world is constantly manifest.

"For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them."

Does your Bible omit this passage?

The comment about the regenerative work of the Holy Spirit seems a red herring at best. People are regularly moved towards God, so obviously the Holy Spirit is doing a whole lot of regenerating. Since we are in no position to impose limit's on God's decision to regenerate people, this is a meaningless qualification. God will regenerate people whenever He feels like it.

And we're not yet in the presence of God.

Once again, I call your attention to Matthew 18, verse 20.

But God has given us His written Word for our spiritual sustenance. If we reject that Scripture is what it claims to be, then we're rejecting God's provision and calling it insufficient.

It seems to me that demanding that Scripture be the Word, and claiming that it is useless otherwise, is rejecting what God has given us, and calling it insufficient.

I know people who believe the Bible to be a text, written by people, testifying to their relationship with God, whose only virtue is that it is a signpost to get you onto the road with God... And yet, some of these people are so full of the Holy Spirit that it's occasionally surprising that they have to buy wine instead of just running it from the tap.

Sufficient? What is sufficient is air to breathe, and food to eat. This is sufficient to lead us to God, and even the Bible grants that nature itself shows us this. That, and grace, is sufficient. We have no need of talismans or authorities to be saved, save the One from whom all authority comes.

The Bible is really neat, and I'm glad we have it, but it seems to me that you're the one denying the sufficiency of things which are plainly sufficient.
I'm talking about genuine documented errors such as what's referred to above. What you'd refer to as errors in actual Scripture are not of this nature.

They seem similar enough to me.

The fact that Scripture describes things in different categories than the ones that were developed thousands of years later isn't error. It's merely communication that was written to be meaningful to its original audience.

The fact that Scripture refers to six-legged creatures as having four legs, and talks about flying things which walk on four legs, suggests to me that it is plainly factually wrong on at least one point. Same goes for the "smallest" of all seeds, the mustard seed, which isn't the smallest seed by far.

As you say; it is written to be meaningful to its original audience.

I didn't say that your positions are uncritical. I said that you've uncritically accepted a Roman Catholic view of church history. Obviously you reject Roman Catholicism for other reasons.

I don't think that's true either, though. I don't necessarily accept all of their claims about church history.

What, specifically, about this claim has not been sufficiently demonstrated as true in the article I linked you to?

The whole thing, really. It's not demonstrably proven, it's asserted and marginally supported.

Not every compilation of Scripture that included the apocrypha between its covers held the apocrypha as God-breathed Scripture, so your reference to the King James is meaningless.

Not at all; that would give us a distinction between "books in the Bible" and "scripture".

Once you ask the right question, then examine the arguments of both Roman Catholics and evangelicals as to what OT Israel held as their canon, and the answer is apparent.

Well, the answer I came to is "Israel did not have firm agreement on this question at that time".

In fact, ultimately the only answer the Roman Catholic Church has to offer is that we must accept the canon on the basis of its authority alone.

Indeed. I think they're entirely right; I have found no evidence to support the idea that there is any other organization that has any records at all to testify to what is or isn't "really" Scripture.

Scripture doesn't just "suggest" this, we're commanded to do so. But what, pray tell, do you test everything against?

Everything else.

What's your ultimate standard? The standard we're given is the revelation of God.

Indeed.

If you reject the idea of an infallible source of revelation, then you have nothing against which to test truth claims but your own autonomous judgment.

You're right.

I am where I am for the same reason that so many people in this forum reject the convenience of having a teaching authority to infallibly guide you in understanding Scripture; I am not yet convinced.

It's a little scary, but as long as God sticks with me, I am not alone.

Why do you ask for extra-Biblical evidence?

Because I refuse to engage in question-begging.

There's a great deal of internal evidence for the divine nature of Scripture, but who or what is above God who can authoritatively testify on His behalf?

I'm not asking for testimony for God, but testimony that this book you keep waving around has anything to do with Him.

Again, the ultimate premises from which we reason cannot be logically proven.

Right. So, we have faith. You have faith that the Bible is infallible in a specific way. I don't. I still have faith in other things, just not that one.

You seem to understand that, but you don't seem to understand that if God has spoken, that must be the ultimate reference point that cannot and need not be proven.

I don't understand it because it's wrong. If three things, or a dozen things, have spoken, and each claims to be God, then I must indeed test them to find out which one is true. You claim you know what God says, but so do the Mormons, and the Muslims, and the Jews.

You say that you recognize God's voice in Scripture, and yet you deem it right to demand proof for the infallibility of Scripture.

Indeed. I do this because, when I read Scripture, God shows me how proud He is of His people... but He seems to lead me to be impressed by the insights of people into His nature, which would make no sense if He actually wrote the book. The only time I recognize His voice directly is in this one Jew who shows up a lot in the New Testament. You might have heard of him. He's the Word of God.

There is no non-circular source for the ultimate reference point. You should believe that the Bible is infallible if you believe God.

Get in line with the people who want me to believe that the Koran is infallible, because I should believe that if I believe God.

If you can't show me a reason to accept your claim that a given text is actually authored by God, then I won't accept it.

I can't convince you that it's God speaking. The Scriptures, themselves, claim to be "God-breathed" which has a much stronger connotation than the kind of "inspiration" one would be talking about in the context of an "inspired" sermon or something.

So some people say, but I have not found the argument convincing. Furthermore, many texts claim to be written by God, or dictated by God, or whatever.

It was an assertion with Biblical backing. Jason showed you how this is an appropriate way to speak of Scripture according to Scripture, itself. To reject it is to reject Scripture.

No. It's to reject human interpretation.

You may say that you're only rejecting Jason's interpretation of Scripture, but I didn't see a single person on that thread offer anything to rebut Jason's interpretation.

So? Something can be false and unrebutted. I read the thread long enough to understand that this was just another bit of human theology tacked onto God, and stopped worrying about it.

Indeed, but you certainly must also see that it teaches that man fell into sin and rebellion, and that unregenerate man is at enmity with God.

The way I understand this is doubtless very different from the way you understand this.

The worldview revealed in Scripture is proven not by evidences, but by the impossibility of the contrary. Since only the Christian worldview can make reality intelligible, while all opposing worldviews render reality unintelligible, this is the proof for the reliability of Scripture. But the persuasion is of the Holy Spirit.

This is the worst argument ever; presuppositionalism is, so far as I can tell, contrary to both faith and reason. It's also just plain dodgy. Even if we grant the theoretical assumption that knowledge can only come from an infallible revelation, you've offered no reason for it to be the one you like. Furthermore, I don't see any reason I should accept that perfectly reliable knowledge is possible to me; indeed, it seems very unlikely.

The religion I hold to can be supported without question-begging. Perhaps I do not believe every true thing I could; perhaps I am mistaken about some things I do believe. Hoowever, I am being as honest as I can, and seeking truth as best I can, and I would rather have uncertainty than smugness. God answers my prayers in the way He sees fit, and I am content with this.
 
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Jason1646

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Hello A. Believer,

Hey, I just wanted to piggy-back off a couple of points taken from your excellent post.

A. Believer said:
One cannot reason without them, but one cannot reason consistently to ultimate truth even with them without the proper ultimate starting point.

And I'll add ... one cannot give account for these tools (logic) apart from accepting what we learn in the Scriptures.

A. Believer said:
You call the living word a "substitute" for God. We don't have Jesus here with us, (although, even if we did, apart from the regenerative work of the Holy Spirit, we'd reject Him as well). And we're not yet in the presence of God. But God has given us His written Word for our spiritual sustenance. If we reject that Scripture is what it claims to be, then we're rejecting God's provision and calling it insufficient.

Can't help but think of Jesus' response to the rich man here, who was just sure that sending someone back from the dead would be more effective to convince his brothers of the truth than the Scriptures:

29 "Abraham said to him, 'They have Moses and the prophets; let them hear them.' 30 "And he said, 'No, father Abraham; but if one goes to them from the dead, they will repent.' 31 "But he said to him, 'If they do not hear Moses and the prophets, neither will they be persuaded though one rise from the dead.' " (Luke 16:29 - 31)

I have to laugh a little when someone claims that Scripture is insufficient for convincing men of the truth when Jesus tells this story wherein it is more effective than talking to a dead relative who comes back to life to tell you about the afterlife!

Keep up the great work, A. Believer. :wave:

~Jason
 
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seebs

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Jason1646 said:
I have to laugh a little when someone claims that Scripture is insufficient for convincing men of the truth

Doesn't the Bible say that, without the Holy Spirit, Scripture is indeed insufficient?

It seems clearly demonstrated, by the Bible itself, that Scripture alone is not enough; we need some form of conviction. This comes from the Holy Spirit, yes?

Make fun of me if you must, but I don't think you should be mocking the necessity and function of the Holy Spirit.
 
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Jason1646

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seebs said:
Doesn't the Bible say that, without the Holy Spirit, Scripture is indeed insufficient?

It seems clearly demonstrated, by the Bible itself, that Scripture alone is not enough; we need some form of conviction. This comes from the Holy Spirit, yes?

Make fun of me if you must, but I don't think you should be mocking the necessity and function of the Holy Spirit.

That was not my intent. The Scriptures are sufficient proof, and yes, the Holy Spirit is necessary for persuasion, but that is not because of any ontological deficiency in the Scriptures. The 'problem' is a moral one that lies in us and can only be overcome by a new heart, not by additional information.

Regards,

~Jason
 
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seebs

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Jason1646 said:
That was not my intent. The Scriptures are sufficient proof, and yes, the Holy Spirit is necessary for persuasion, but that is not because of any ontological deficiency in the Scriptures. The 'problem' is a moral one that lies in us and can only be overcome by a new heart, not by additional information.

There is an epistemological problem, which is that everyone makes this claim about their particular ideas about God. I think we need some kind of chain of evidence connecting a given text with God before that can be overcome.

Note that I have such a chain of evidence. That's why I don't have a problem with saying it's useful or necessary to support the Bible; it's not as if I'm asking for something that doesn't exist.

Anyway, I think at this point that I have a pretty good idea of where Sola Scriptura comes from, and it's become clear to me that the gaps between my position and Sola Scriptura are large enough that I don't think further debate on the topic will be exceptionally productive. I doubt either side will be getting convinced any time soon, and it seems to me that this discussion is beginning to cross the line from learning about other peoples' beliefs to being in conflict, so I'd rather just drop it.

Thanks to all who participated, I feel as though I have a better understanding of this position now.
 
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A. believer

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seebs said:
There is an epistemological problem, which is that everyone makes this claim about their particular ideas about God. I think we need some kind of chain of evidence connecting a given text with God before that can be overcome.

Note that I have such a chain of evidence. That's why I don't have a problem with saying it's useful or necessary to support the Bible; it's not as if I'm asking for something that doesn't exist.

Anyway, I think at this point that I have a pretty good idea of where Sola Scriptura comes from, and it's become clear to me that the gaps between my position and Sola Scriptura are large enough that I don't think further debate on the topic will be exceptionally productive. I doubt either side will be getting convinced any time soon, and it seems to me that this discussion is beginning to cross the line from learning about other peoples' beliefs to being in conflict, so I'd rather just drop it.

Thanks to all who participated, I feel as though I have a better understanding of this position now.
I left off my last post saying that I'd post more on the Augustine quote. If you're interested let me know. It seems fairly apparent that you got the quote from a particular Roman Catholic poster who supplied it to you privately because he didn't want to be warned for debating in the PRE, so I suspect you don't really have much interest in where Augustine was coming from, but if I'm wrong, let me know.
 
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