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The "apostolic tradition" IS the Bible or rather, the gospel. I think anyone who understands the nuances of the argument gets that.
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How do you think the Church was operating for the first three centuries of its existence?The "apostolic tradition" IS the meaning of Bible or rather, the gospel.
We can't have the meaning without the Scriptures.
I was shown how to use cross references to all four sections of the entire Bible every time I study even a single verse.
No, but it also doesn't agree with it wholesaleNothing in John 1 disagrees with what I said.
I agree but solid_core may have a different opinion on this, which is why I'm questioning them as I am.From a Christian perspective, shouldn't doctrine come from the Spirit of truth? That truth can come through scripture. I would not be comfortable classing that as natural reason/theology
Very disjointedly and fragmented, which is why they eventually formed the canon.How do you think the Church was operating for the first three centuries of its existence?
And that PERSON is the most observant Orthodox Jew that ever lived.No, but it also doesn't agree with it wholesale.
The point of John 1 is that the "Word of God" is a person, which then leads one to make a distinction between the Word of God and the Bible.
Given how the Bible was used and quoted by the Church Fathers, and even how Jesus uses the Old Testament (how he uses scripture) I'm not sure I'm entirely on board with claiming the Bible is only a Liturgical book - but I would be interested in hearing that expanded or clarified as it sounds like an interesting idea.That doesn’t make any sense given that the Bible was and is a Liturgical book, the Bible was never made for personal devotion, although you could use it as such that was not its historic purpose.
I'm sorry, I think there may be a grammatical typo which could make me misread what you're saying, but I will try anyway and forgive me if I misunderstand.The Church not only formed the canon it also wrote the Bible by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, all the writers of the New Testament were part of the same Apostolic Church. Given that, how does your statement make any sense the Bible is a product and part of Apostolic tradition, it is not the tradition itself. The Bible itself a development of that same oral Apostolic tradition tradition.
I don't see how that follows. Sola scriptura does not negate Tradition or the Church Fathers (it never has). It simply makes the FINAL authority to be the Bible, not the ONLY authority.You know that even Protestant scholars admit that Sola Scriptura didn’t exist before Martin Luther which technically makes all the Church Fathers heretics.
No it doesn't really. I don't see how it could. As I said above, scripture is FINAL authority not ONLY authority.The irony in all this is even Protestant scholars have to use and appeal to early Apostolic tradition to actually study the history of the Bible and its authors, that in of itself pretty much proves that Sola Scriptura never existed before the “reformation” and is erroneous.
I don't know of any part of the Bible that appeals to Oral Tradition. I know those that appeal to scripture, and Acts 2:42 appeals to the teaching of the apostles, which, as I've stated, appears to be finalised by the canon. (And why wouldn't it be?)There is no single verse in the Bible that says we trust in scripture alone or anything alike to it and when we actually appeal to the Bible as a whole we will see a constant appeal of the scriptures to inspired oral tradition both in the Old and New Testament.
I'm not sure where you're going with this.And that PERSON is the most observant Orthodox Jew that ever lived.
Galatians 4:4
But when the fullness of the time came, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the Law,
Hebrews 4:15
For we do not have a high priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but One who has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin.
So your saying they basically had no established doctrines before they formed the Biblical canon?Very disjointedly and fragmented, which is why they eventually formed the canon.
That is where i am going with this. It is not the Gentile Church's authority or understanding that properly interprets scripture. The text says it is JEWISH interpretation that has to carry it.It's the authority of the Church over the Bible that is in question. Not whether the Church put together the canon of scripture.
No.So your saying they basically had no established doctrines before they formed the Biblical canon?
I agree that the Jewish interpretation can help, but not always, otherwise we'll just have to all become Jews. At some point there is a divergence into the more fuller understanding of what God meant by making a People for Himself.That is where i am going with this. It is not the Gentile Church's authority or understanding that properly interprets scripture. The text says it is JEWISH interpretation that has to carry it.
The text was written by Jews and much of it was written TO Jews. Even the texts written to gentiles require a Jewish cultural understanding to properly apply what is written.
Christ is the Word of God but he is not the Scripture of God. It seems we are conflating the word with the Word. Sola Scripture means "scripture alone" so if want to use its Latin counterparts "Word" (logos) is Verbum or "Sola Verbum Dei" / "Word of God alone" which is a Catholic doctrine that is contrasted with Sola Scriptura.Here comes a grenade!
But a helpful conversation, I believe.
I've seen many people take issue around these forums with sola scriptura - not just Catholics, but even non-traditional Protestants (for want of a better term).
Something that I've been exploring and that has been hugely helpful is understanding that the "Word of God" is not primarily the same thing as the Bible. The Word of God is the gospel of Jesus Christ, and (of course) you find that in the Bible but difficult parts of the Bible ought to be interpreted through the gospel.
The distinction is helpful (and I would argue, true) for many reasons, but when we're dealing with sola scriptura, I want to quote an article at biblicaltraining.org that talks about Luther's understanding of the "Word of God" and how he used that understanding to form a sola-scriptura outlook, and how he defended that against critics.
"We need to recognize that the notion that the Word of God is Jesus Christ himself allowed Luther to respond to the main objections Catholics raised to his doctrine of the authority of Scripture over the Church. They argued that since it was the Church that determined which books to be included in the Canon of Scripture it was clear that the Church had authority over the Bible. Luther responded that it was neither the Church that had made the Bible nor the Bible that had made the Church, but the Gospel of Jesus Christ that had made both the Bible and the Church. Final authority rests neither in the Church nor in the Bible, but in the Gospel, in the message of Jesus Christ, who is the incarnate Word of God."
Full article (for more context and interest) here: Free Online Bible Classes | What was Martin Luther's theology of the Word of God?. It's not a long read.
Hmm, sure. And the Church received and proclaimed the gospel before a word of the New Testament was written. C’mon, people don’t necessarily agree on the gospel to begin with, going by Scripture alone!Here comes a grenade!
But a helpful conversation, I believe.
I've seen many people take issue around these forums with sola scriptura - not just Catholics, but even non-traditional Protestants (for want of a better term).
Something that I've been exploring and that has been hugely helpful is understanding that the "Word of God" is not primarily the same thing as the Bible. The Word of God is the gospel of Jesus Christ, and (of course) you find that in the Bible but difficult parts of the Bible ought to be interpreted through the gospel.
The distinction is helpful (and I would argue, true) for many reasons, but when we're dealing with sola scriptura, I want to quote an article at biblicaltraining.org that talks about Luther's understanding of the "Word of God" and how he used that understanding to form a sola-scriptura outlook, and how he defended that against critics.
"We need to recognize that the notion that the Word of God is Jesus Christ himself allowed Luther to respond to the main objections Catholics raised to his doctrine of the authority of Scripture over the Church. They argued that since it was the Church that determined which books to be included in the Canon of Scripture it was clear that the Church had authority over the Bible. Luther responded that it was neither the Church that had made the Bible nor the Bible that had made the Church, but the Gospel of Jesus Christ that had made both the Bible and the Church. Final authority rests neither in the Church nor in the Bible, but in the Gospel, in the message of Jesus Christ, who is the incarnate Word of God."
Full article (for more context and interest) here: Free Online Bible Classes | What was Martin Luther's theology of the Word of God?. It's not a long read.
Interesting.Here comes a grenade!
But a helpful conversation, I believe.
I've seen many people take issue around these forums with sola scriptura - not just Catholics, but even non-traditional Protestants (for want of a better term).
Something that I've been exploring and that has been hugely helpful is understanding that the "Word of God" is not primarily the same thing as the Bible. The Word of God is the gospel of Jesus Christ, and (of course) you find that in the Bible but difficult parts of the Bible ought to be interpreted through the gospel.
The distinction is helpful (and I would argue, true) for many reasons, but when we're dealing with sola scriptura, I want to quote an article at biblicaltraining.org that talks about Luther's understanding of the "Word of God" and how he used that understanding to form a sola-scriptura outlook, and how he defended that against critics.
"We need to recognize that the notion that the Word of God is Jesus Christ himself allowed Luther to respond to the main objections Catholics raised to his doctrine of the authority of Scripture over the Church. They argued that since it was the Church that determined which books to be included in the Canon of Scripture it was clear that the Church had authority over the Bible. Luther responded that it was neither the Church that had made the Bible nor the Bible that had made the Church, but the Gospel of Jesus Christ that had made both the Bible and the Church. Final authority rests neither in the Church nor in the Bible, but in the Gospel, in the message of Jesus Christ, who is the incarnate Word of God."
Full article (for more context and interest) here: Free Online Bible Classes | What was Martin Luther's theology of the Word of God?. It's not a long read.
The article points out that the Word of God was the spoken word so it logically follows that doctrine would be spoken.So your saying they basically had no established doctrines before they formed the Biblical canon?
Here comes a grenade!
But a helpful conversation, I believe.
I've seen many people take issue around these forums with sola scriptura - not just Catholics, but even non-traditional Protestants (for want of a better term).
Something that I've been exploring and that has been hugely helpful is understanding that the "Word of God" is not primarily the same thing as the Bible. The Word of God is the gospel of Jesus Christ, and (of course) you find that in the Bible but difficult parts of the Bible ought to be interpreted through the gospel.
The distinction is helpful (and I would argue, true) for many reasons, but when we're dealing with sola scriptura, I want to quote an article at biblicaltraining.org that talks about Luther's understanding of the "Word of God" and how he used that understanding to form a sola-scriptura outlook, and how he defended that against critics.
"We need to recognize that the notion that the Word of God is Jesus Christ himself allowed Luther to respond to the main objections Catholics raised to his doctrine of the authority of Scripture over the Church. They argued that since it was the Church that determined which books to be included in the Canon of Scripture it was clear that the Church had authority over the Bible. Luther responded that it was neither the Church that had made the Bible nor the Bible that had made the Church, but the Gospel of Jesus Christ that had made both the Bible and the Church. Final authority rests neither in the Church nor in the Bible, but in the Gospel, in the message of Jesus Christ, who is the incarnate Word of God."
Full article (for more context and interest) here: Free Online Bible Classes | What was Martin Luther's theology of the Word of God?. It's not a long read.
Agreed.Absolutely. However, whatever we may receive from God as revelation today will not contradict the written word. It is our safety net to protect us from heresy, lying signs and wonders and the like.
Here comes a grenade!
But a helpful conversation, I believe.
I've seen many people take issue around these forums with sola scriptura - not just Catholics, but even non-traditional Protestants (for want of a better term).
Something that I've been exploring and that has been hugely helpful is understanding that the "Word of God" is not primarily the same thing as the Bible. The Word of God is the gospel of Jesus Christ, and (of course) you find that in the Bible but difficult parts of the Bible ought to be interpreted through the gospel.
The distinction is helpful (and I would argue, true) for many reasons, but when we're dealing with sola scriptura, I want to quote an article at biblicaltraining.org that talks about Luther's understanding of the "Word of God" and how he used that understanding to form a sola-scriptura outlook, and how he defended that against critics.
"We need to recognize that the notion that the Word of God is Jesus Christ himself allowed Luther to respond to the main objections Catholics raised to his doctrine of the authority of Scripture over the Church. They argued that since it was the Church that determined which books to be included in the Canon of Scripture it was clear that the Church had authority over the Bible. Luther responded that it was neither the Church that had made the Bible nor the Bible that had made the Church, but the Gospel of Jesus Christ that had made both the Bible and the Church. Final authority rests neither in the Church nor in the Bible, but in the Gospel, in the message of Jesus Christ, who is the incarnate Word of God."
Full article (for more context and interest) here: Free Online Bible Classes | What was Martin Luther's theology of the Word of God?. It's not a long read.
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