Wait for it....wait for it.... wait for it...
If we're patient, I'm pretty sure we'll see more of the same bald assertions that the "hundreds" of scriptures posted teach and thunder forth the "wonderful, beautiful" truth of
sola fide (despite the fact that not a single one of those verses posted state that one "is justified by faith
alone".)
We'll also see more of the continued lumping of all the disparate Protestant sects together (aka, 'The Good Guys') while the Roman Catholics are lumped in with such nonChristian cults as the Mormons, JWs, Koresh, etc (aka, 'The Bad Guys')--because, you see, 'The Good Guys' are good because they don't let anyone tell them what to believe about Scripture and are free to come to
their own conclusions about it's meaning (however
contradictory those conclusions may be) as they work hand in hand in "the harvest"; while 'The Bad Guys', who have come to
their own conclusions about the meaning Scripture (however
vastly different those conclusions may be) try to
force every one else (at least their 'minions') what to think!
Never mind that many of 'The Good Guys' don't even subscribe to "sola fide"--the doctrine which the church allegedly stands or falls. Also, it's ironic that an increasing number of 'The Good Guys' (non-Roman Catholic Prots, such as Thomas Oden and DH Williams) are teaching about the importance of the Church's shared Tradition, particularly that of her first formative centuries, in coming to a consensus regarding the faith, as this consensus has indeed acted historically in hammering out the great Creeds and the Conciliar Trinitarian and Christological definitions. In other words, in contrast to the idea of
individual private interpretation, these 'Good Guys' acknowledge that, as Matt has mentioned, the Church by the guidence of the Holy Spirit has interpreted
corporately the faith and the Scriptures which she has
corporately received from the Apostles. In doing so, these men have recognized the obvious
common ground they have with (gasp!)
certain of the 'Bad Guys'--the Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox--as opposed to the
heresies of
other 'Bad Guys'--Mormons and JWs. (So much, I guess, for the hard and fast categorical distinction between 'Good Guys' and 'Bad Guys'...)
Of course, this appeal to the Church's shared Apostolic Tradition is nothing new in the "Protestant" (aka, 'Good Guy') world:
classical Anglicans have appealed for years to the orthodox catholic consensus of the Undivided Church (particularly the first five centuries) in interpreting the Scriptures and Christian faith handed down by the Apostles. (Looks like Matt and I are about to be moved to 'Bad Guy' status since we apparently don't think for ourselves :tongue3

. They believed that such a consensus was the only sure basis of reform and protest against medieval papal abuses without succumbing to the increasing number of novel and conflicting private heterodox opinions, particularly prevalent on the Continent at that time.