DHK, Oh golly wogs, you still have not answered my question,
I have answered all your questions and many times over. You simply ask the same questions over and over again, but worded differently. If you want to see whose questions go unanswered just start reading back a few pages. It is scripture you are unable to refute. Why? You don't believe it.
I figured you could answer that question ''in a snap" being your the Bible Alone advocate.
Did you actually have an honest question?
But, of course I do understand that if you answer honestly you would then witness your whole position collapsing in ruins.
No, it wouldn't.
To answer your last post, you do realize that everything that those first Century Christians were taught came from the few teachers that could read and what they read to those early neophytes "only"came from the Old Testament, for the NT was non-existant then and for quite sometime after.
I have answered this many times. If I answer it again, now, will it make a difference. Will you understand and accept it? Or will you just reject it and go back to your RCC rants?
Your mindset is no different than the Pharisees of that first century:
Acts 4:13 Now when they saw the boldness of Peter and John, and
perceived that they were unlearned and ignorant men, they marvelled; and they took knowledge of them, that they had been with Jesus.
--Peter and John were just fishermen--ignorant fishermen, perhaps illiterate as you are assuming just like the Pharisees did. That is your mindset.
However, both Peter and John, knew: Hebrew, Aramaic, Greek, Latin, and possibly one or two other languages. But you think they were illiterate bumpkins. Astonished like the crowd at Pentecost you say: "Are these not all Galileans," as if to say they must all be uneducated. That is your opinion.
But let's set the record straight.
Under Roman rule, the Romans gave the world roads, a means of transportation throughout the known empire at that time.
But before Rome was Alexander the Great who also conquered the world. What legacy did Alexander leave? It wasn't roads. He left the world a language. By the time the Romans came all the known world knew Greek. It had become a universal language. In fact even a slave could read and write in the language; it was that common. God had been preparing the world for the entrance of a King, so that, "when the fullness of time had come God sent forth his Son..." (Gal.4:4)
Thus you are wrong in saying that just a few could read. No, almost everyone could read. It was a very literate society that they lived in. When Paul wrote a letter to Philemon it was very probable that the slave, Onesimus, could have read it.
They had to know Greek. It was the universal language of the day.
The Jews had to know the language of Hebrew, taught in their synagogues, the language in which their scriptures were written in. Aramaic was close to it, and some parts of the OT were also in Aramaic.
Latin was the official language being the Roman empire. All official documents were written in Latin. No businessman could survive without knowing Latin.
For example, Lydia would have had to know Latin.
This was not the Dark Ages. The Dark Ages were later on in history created by the nasty deeds of the RCC.
So 'no" your answer does make sense when speaking about 1St. Century Christians. So my answers are still correct in that Jesus along with His Apostles only used the OT to quote from along with Sacred Apostolic Oral Teaching, Sacred because it came literally from the mouth of Jesus to His Teaching Apostles.
The Apostles used the OT.
The Apostles used NT Scripture as it came available (1Pet.3:15,16).
The Apostles used the very words of Christ as the Holy Spirit promised that he would bring them into memory.
The Lord promised to give to the
churches spiritual gifts such as prophecy to make up for any lack of revelation that they might have had until the canon of Scripture was completed. (1Cor.13:8-13).
There was no Oral Tradition in place.
Paul taught Timothy the scriptures. He expounded them.
Timothy taught faithful men who in turn taught others. The Scriptures were always their final authority.
2 Timothy 2:2 And the things that thou hast heard of me among many witnesses, the same commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also.
The canon was finished by the end of the first century. It wasn't necessary for every church to have every book at one time. In due course they would. It wouldn't take long. They still knew which books were inspired and which were not. They were taught by the apostles themselves. Do not accuse the apostles of stupidity in not knowing which books were inspired and then claiming that only the RCC did. No one believes such fables.