I respectfullly disagree that Scripture is errant.
Strawamn. Who said Scripture was errant? Not I.
I think it is FAR more likely that 7.7 billion people pointing to some individual feeling each has about some private "revelation" each claims to have is far more likely to be errant than God's inscripturated words
You can't escape the veracity of my position - you can only misrepresent it at best.
- (1) For example you're overlooking the fact that feelings of certainty govern us all. For instance, when you research an issue in Scripture, at what point do you become resolute on the issue? I'll tell you when. At the point when you
feel certain - a degree of certainty to your satisfaction. And you won't bother to research issues where you already feel certain. Naturally.
- (2) On that note, exegesis won't leave you 100% certain (this is one of its many inferiorities to Direct Revelation) because it is a man-tainted process. For example where do you learn Hebrew and Greek? From a man-made lexicon! Plus exegesis has to start
somewhere - hence with man-made assumptions! Because no matter how much you research the issues (context, culture, history, language, etc), the specter of fallibility looms.
- (3) Let's consider again what you said. First of all, you're talking about random, unregulated prophecy -
any feelings whatsoever, even if they are at less than 100% certainty. That's a mere caricature of my position. You said:
I think it is FAR more likely that 7.7 billion people pointing to some individual feeling each has about some private "revelation" each claims to have is far more likely to be errant than God's inscripturated words
Basically you're insinuating that prophecy doesn't work. (And those who authored the Scriptures know that it does work). Again, what you should be admitting is, "I don't understand under what conditions it does work."
And it doesn't have to work. Remember, God won't judge you objectively. He will judge you subjectively, based on your subjective experience of, and fidelity to, this one rule:
"If I feel certain that action-A is evil, and B is good, I should opt for B".
- (4) Apparently Paul opted for the wrong epistemology when he wrote Romans. According to you, he had a much better chance of getting his doctrine right, when he set out to write Romans, if he relied on biblical scholarship, instead of Direct Revelation. He played the part of a fool, evidently. Or maybe we are the foolish ones?
This thread isn't about ANY system. Read post 165.
Strawman. Semantic quibbling.
I think what HAS failed in terms of resolving disputed dogmas among us is for each "side" to simply claim that self feels self is right so self is right. Or each self claiming that each self can't be wrong so each self thus is right.
You're confusing my position with yours. That is YOUR claim. Because:
(1) Sola Scriptura is the position that a Christian has the right to propagate his interpretations of Scripture (his exegesis) simply because he feels certain about it - even if it's less than 100% certainty! There is no objective standard of certainty! If a doctrine "feels right", go for it!
(2) Prophets had to be sure -
really sure (100% certain) - after all, if they were in error, they could be stoned for it! Totally different standard.
... some Rule/Norm that is more objectively knowable by all in the dispute than the black-and-white universally knowable words found in the Bible, more accepted by all in the dispute is reliable and truthful in these matters than God's inspired, inscripturated, black-and-white words of the Bible. If you have such an alternative rule/norm, state it. But "how each one feels about what each one claims is a direct subjective relevation" wounldn't be it. Have you studied any of the cults?
Gotcha. Paul played the part of a fool when he wrote Romans. I guess he had never studied any of the cults.
Shall we consider Christ's comparison of the two systems here?
(1) Bible scholarship - the practice of forming chains of reasoning and proofs for the sake of deductively drawing conclusions.
(2) Direct Revelation - the practice of waiting upon God in prayer to hear
HIS conclusions, accepted according to the degree one feels certain that God is speaking (preferably 100%).
Which of these two systems did Jesus
officially endorse? Bear in mind the following. If system-1 is correct, then Bible scholars would outpace prophets. Meaning, prophets would be stranded in comparative darkness compared to the Bible scholars unraveling all the mysteries of Scripture. But we know for a fact that the opposite is the case, right? Jesus put it like this:
"At that time Jesus said, "I praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden these things from the wise and learned, and
revealed them to babes".
You see that word "revealed" ? It's the term used throughout the NT to designate Direct Revelation. A babe lacks sufficient scholarship to evaluate his father's claims. Rather, he accepts his father's voice based on
feeling certain of its authenticity and reliability.
Lastly, since you've entirely resorted to erecting strawmen, I want to expose another one. I was very clear that I use exegesis as a temporary crutch (until I become a prophet). Yet your summaries of me are of the caricature, "You want to rely on any random feeling". You go even further than that, by insinuating, "You want to even accept ANYONE'S feelings as truth, such as the feelings of Joseph Smith." Again, I don't care what others CLAIM to feel certain about. What matters is whether I myself feel certain.