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Neither did the Apostles have to wait for any Catholic Council to tell them that their belief in the divinity of Christ, the divinity of the Holy Spirit, and of God the Father were three distinct persons and yet formed one God. The Catholics may have called it the trinity. Do you think that made a difference to the Apostles??
No, they did not because it was their Oral
Sacred Tradition that they believed so! But even the apostles had to convene to solve the controversy over the need for circumcision for Christians. And by the time the doctrine of the "Trinity" was challenged, it was defined!
There is an old saying: "Doctrine is not defined until it is challenged!" This is exactly what the Church had to do from time to time…
I last said:
My ultimate point is, if Sola Scriptura did not exist as a doctrine at one time, how can it be true in a later time, when finally, we have the New Testament, compiled by the only authority around that could do such a thing in the 3rd century, and then declare it, somehow, as our "sole source of faith and doctrine" or however you may want to define it in Sola Scriptura terms? Did the very authority that did this - the Church - loose that authority into thin air after the New Testament was finally declared canonical, God's written word, the New Testament?
Sola Scriptura, as I prefer to define it--our final authority in all matters of faith and practice. I like the word final better than only, because it makes the definition more clear. We do use other sources (authorities). I am not opposed to quoting from a historian or even a church father from time to time. But the final authority must be the Word of God. All other authorities pale in contrast to its authority.
Then that is another definition of Sola Sciptura, which deviates from the use of the term, "sola" in it's very description! Pardon me, but even in Protestant doctrines, you people cannot come up with one that will satisfy all, can you?
So, am I to take this to mean that while the New Testament was not written, then all authority was indeed, in the Church?
BUT when the New Testament was finally compiled, canonized and declared authority, it suddenly becomes the
only authority, and thus the
final authority as you say?
Let's take this to it's logical conclusion: The authority of the Church, expended totally in it's final efforts to produce the New Testament, goes "poof," goes away, now only existent in the Bible. The
final effect is for the Church to become a non-entity, a shell of it's former self, all authority in now in scripture for all to see, read and define as the holy Spirit moves them (all now think) and with the obvious lack of "self interpreting" that is implied here, finds us with (what is the latest figure?) 20,000 separate and distinct Christian denominations, sects and cults?
Sola Scriptura is not only self-defeating in it's effect, so also is "Final Authority in Scripture" (not knowing how to do this in Latin) crashing is flames in the same obviously observed effects - an explosion of denominations, sects and cults.
"If sola scriptura did not exist as a doctrine at one time." You may put a stop right there, and do away with the IF. Sola Scriptura has existed from the beginning of time. Right from the creation of Adam and Eve, God told Adam not to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil. That was God's revelation to man. It was authoritative. He could either choose to obey God's revelation or disobey it. You know the outcome. Man has had those same choices concerning the revelation of God's Word, and his obedience to it, ever since. God, in every age, has revealed himself to man.
DHK, none of the accounts of Genesis existed on scrolls until Moses wrote it!
Now, can you show me evidence of the doctrine of Sola Scriptura in the Old Testament? By now, you should realize that it does not exist in the New Testament, for such an important doctrine to be effective, it should have been there, at least strongly implied.
Did the oral authority of any of the prophets disappear when they finally had their words recorded on scrolls, sir? I am not denying the authority of the Old Testament as it was being written, after all, it is the authoritative word of God, given to the prophets now "etched in concrete" if you will. But it being done so takes away none of the authority of the prophet who wrote it (God's hand in the process is a given.)
Look at Heb.1:1,2
Heb 1:1 God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets,
2 Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds;
OK…
In Old Testament times God revealed himself in various ways through the prophets. Now, in these days, God has spoken to us through His Son. Everything that we need to know about the Son of God is revealed to us in the Bible.
How do you know that, DHK? Please find me one scrap of evidence that the bible is
formally sufficient as you declare. It may be
materially sufficient, in that reading it brings you to Christ to salvation, just as the Constitution of the United States may be
materially sufficient to tell you something about the workings of our government, but to be completely sufficient, in that in and of it self, you need nothing else to demonstrate our government in action (
formal sufficiency) is obviously false, isn't it?
And by the way, Judaism, in the old covenant, had it's sacred traditions too. In fact, Christ cited them a time or two. Can you name me the two magicians who defied Moses in Pharaoh's court? You will not find it in the Old Testament, DHK, but you will see it etched in the New Testament, from the mouth of Jesus.
I quote………..
BTW where was the Gospel before inscripturation? Where did Paul get
the notion that Christ said 'it is better to give than to
receive'-since he didn't have a written Scripture to go by--these
words are not found in the Gospels? Where in the OT did Our Lord draw
the words 'Moses seat' in meaning an authority inherited from Moses,
to Joshua etc.. down to the Pharisees--an institution Our Lord made
clear possessed a morally binding authority(Matt 23:2)? Why in the
world didn't Paul reject the extra-biblical idea of the
rolling rock
in the wilderness (take a look at the notes in many commentaries noting
the Rabbinical tradition) rather than create a Christological type
simply from the word 'rock'(1 Cor 10:4)? Or why didn't Paul reject the
extra-biblical idea of the names of the magicians of
Jannes and
Jambres that opposed Moses rather than using them(without their names)
as examples of false teachers(2 Tim 3:8)? Why didn't Jude reject the
extra-biblical notions of the archangel's dispute over Moses body
rather than derive doctrines and principles from them(Jude 9,14)?
These few examples prove Pedro that neither Our Lord nor the Apostles
practiced Sola Scriptura, contrary to your reading might conclude.
End of quote……
Taken from Joe Gallegos' famous
papacy.zip available in HTML form at the following site:
http://www.cin.org/users/jgallegos/pv_church.htm
Before the Bible was completed either Jesus Christ walked among them personally, or He gave them spiritual gifts to "make up the gap" between his death and the completion of the Bible, a time of transition for all the believers of that period--the Apostolic Age.
And you can find this idea where, DHK? it is seldom I do this, as it is a Protestant question to us Catholics, DHK, but it is applicable here as well: Where do you find this in the Bible, DHK?
From the days of creation onward God has always given us an authority in the form of revelation--whether that revelation came from a prophet of the Old Testament, or an Apostle of the New Testament--it was authoratitive. It was the final authority. No one, no person, no church, no organization had the right to put their stamp of interpretation and claim that it had the only private interpretation of the Bible such as the Catholic Church and its magesterium has done. The Scriptures are of no private interpretation (including the magesterium's private interpretation).
Now, don't take me wrong here, but I do indeed believe in a "final authority" from God, but not in the Sola Scriptura (or should I now say, "Sola Fina Scriptura" (taking a stab at the Latin) That the Word of God, given orally by Christ, was "final" in it's instillation into the hearts and minds of the apostles. Nothing is really lacking at all, even while not a drop of ink has touched papyrus in it's being recorded or "etched in concrete" as I would say. Nothing is missing, even while it is solely in oral form. But when
some of it (or even all of it, if that were possible) were written down, nothing insofar as the finality of the Word of God via the teachings and the gospel message of Jesus Christ is concerned. It was final when He taught them; it was final when He ascended to the Father in heaven; it was final when the holy Spirit came at Pentecost, and it was final when the canon of scripture was "finally" determined in the latter part of the 3rd century!
Yet you see scripture as "authoritive" without substance! Who told you this? How do you actually know that scripture is the divinely inspired "God breathed" Word of God, DHK? You know it only because a physical existing authoritative Church told you so!
Or do you believe in the circular logic that "The bible declares itself divinely inspired of God, therefore it is divinely inspired"?
Moslems declare that as well for the
Koran, DHK…
I last said:
First of all, this is the first time I have ever seen as association of the "gifts" you speak of as being entirely connected to the inscripturation of the New Testament. In fact, I see that it was enough for the apostles to simply know in their hearts and minds what the "Word" of Christ is, without the tongues, certainly, but only conjecture as to "prophecy and revelatory knowledge" that seems to be applicable to the book of Revelation mostly, with little seen (from my viewpoint) in the rest of the New Testament, even the gospels beyond the actual words of Christ. (For example, the prediction of Christ of the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem.)
First, it wasn't just the Apostles that had the spiritual gifts. There was no apostle at the church in Corinth after Paul left. He wrote chapters 12 to 14 of his first letter to correct the abuses of spiritual gifts. They were given to those within that church who would provide New Testament revelation from God before the canon was finished. That was the purpose of gifts such as prophecy. "We know in part, and we prophesy in part."
First of all, I am sure there was an "overseer" left at Corinth when Paul left. And no, he was no more an apostle then Timothy was. But I do agree that the gifts were not within the apostles alone, but were manifested in many of the lay Christians as well.
Secondly, the Apostle Paul established over 100 churches on 3 missionary journeys. It would be impossible for the 12 apostles, or even any one of them to be present at all of these churches, if they alone had the Word of God memorized in their hearts.
I am not sure what you point is here…
Certainly, not all of the apostles could be everywhere, even in the approximate holy Land areas at the time. Travel by foot was rather limiting, I am sure!
You said,
"it was enough for the apostles to simply know in their hearts and minds what the "Word" of Christ is, without the tongues,"
It was not enough. The apostles could not cover all 100 plus churches at once, not to mention the ones that Thomas started in India. How could they spread themselves so thinly, if they were the ones that had all the knowledge. God evidently had some other way of communicating revelation.
What has this to do with the "Word," being on the hearts and minds of the apostles? I'm loosing you here, DHK.
But you do touch upon an issue that would have caused Paul and the other apostles to appoint successors, one notable one being Timothy! How about Stephen as well, DHK? He was not an apostle either! Certainly, not all 12 are going to "make disciples of all nations" per Matthew 28:19 until and unless they appoint successors to continue the job, still continuing to this day, as they lay in the dusty graves all these 2,000 years! You have just swerved into the subject of
apostolic succession, but we can save it for another day!
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