Continuing on....
I then pointed out how Arians, who disregarded the Apostolic Tradition (ie "pattern of sound words" handed down in the Church) would throw proof texts--interpreted in light of their
presuppositions (ie their "take" of the nature of God, etc)--back in forth with the orthodox catholics in arguing their case. I then mentioned how the Church, having recourse to her Tradition which guided it's interpretation of Scriptures, were able to proclaim the truth she had always believed by using a more refined "formula" to more specifically exclude heresy. You followed with this....
EricB said:
The key words there: "their own 'take'--influenced by their own philosophical convictions"
The scriptures said what they mean, and passages like John 1 are clear. It is only when one comes up with their own presupposition (e.g. if he's man, he can't be God; etc) that reinterpretation is forced. Whatever oral apostolic and worship teaching will naturally agree with the meaning of scripture.
What you say is true, as far as it goes. However, one man's "philosophical conviction" and "logical meaning" may be another man's "forced interpretation". I mean, you and I agree that those who misintrepret John 1 ignore the clear meaning--the one you and I both agree on describing Christ's deity and preexistence. However, due to the philosophical lenses through which others view the text, what's clear to us may not be obvious to them. Another case in point is
our disagreement on the
meaning of the Eucharistic passages. We've been through this before (and I don't have time tonight to hash it out again), but what I see as the natural clear meaning when reading these texts (ie supporting the realist position), you see differently because of your different presuppositions (specifically stated or implied in previous discussions about this). And examples can be multiplied--Calvinism vs Arminianism (or monergism vs synergism), etc. The point is, in the cases of the real presence (in the Eucharist) and synergism (in soteriology), I can point to the consensus of the Church--across time and space--as agreeing with my reading; just as I can in appealing to this consensus in supporting orthodox/biblical Trinitarianism and Christology.
What you're doing is suggesting is that the scriptures are actually AMBIGUOUS; potentially supporting EITHER interpretation, so its the oral tradition that must come in with its additional details to settle the score.
Not really "ambiguous", but lesser or greater degrees of "perspicuity"--particularly for those of us centuries removed from the thought patterns/culture in which the Scriptures were written. After all, even the Apostle Peter said there were some
hard things in Paul's writings that were twisted by untaught and unstable men (like they did with other Scriptures). As to the point of oral tradition "settling the score", I'll just quote Kelly again (and this actually follows immediately in the book after the sentence I already cited above):
"
To inquire which counted as superior or more ultimate is to pose the question in misleading and anachronistic terms. If Scripture was abundantly sufficient in principle, tradition was recognized as the surest clue to its interpretation, for in tradition the Church retained, as a legacy from the apostles which were embedded in all the organs of her institutional life, an unerring grasp of the real purport and meaning of the revelation to which Scripture and tradition alive bore witness." (ibid. p 48). I think this sums up the matter nicely, and is remarkably similar to the point Vincent of Lerins made regarding the relationship between Scripture and the Chruch's standard of Tradition in his famous
Commonitory.
(Which makes the notion of "twisting" scripture moot. The "tradition" is what they twisted, using scripture, rather than the other way around, according to your view)
Not at all. It's not one or the other--it's both. The heretics twisted Tradition in the process of twisting Scripture (and vice versa) since Scripture
is the authoritative
written Tradition. As mentioned above, Scripture and Tradition are complimentary, distinct yet inseperable (again, "media different in form, but coincident in content"--Kelly), as they testify to the same TRUTH.
Just because people USED proof texts or sola scriptura and came up with wrong ideas doesn't mean we throw out the baby with the bathwater. The Church used tradition and still split right down the middle, and did all sorts of things during the Dark Ages.
Actually there was a failure to apply and abide by tradition as mentioned by St. Vincent's rule of "universality, antiquity, and consent" (particularly concerning the papacy and the filioque), and unfortunately there was a lot sinful pride on both sides. :tear:
As far as "throwing the baby out with the bathwater",
sola Scriptura was never the "baby" to begin with.

If
anyone threw out the "baby with the bathwater", it was the
sola Scripturists of the Reformation who to varying degrees and in different ways departed from the Apostolic Tradition in their protests (many legitimate) against Rome.
I had inquired what you found wrong about Nicene creed, and you replied...
(I also said the Nicene formula was the best of the competing views; though I do not believe it is perfect).
Thanks for the clarification. But in what way is it not perfect, how would you improve it? If you mean by "perfect" the ability to "fully grasp" the Trinity, then I agree and would add that there will never be such a "perfect" formula. However, if the purpose of the Creed was to clarify, in response to opposite heretical "extremes", how we are
not to think about the Trinity--ie proclaiming what ideas of the Trinity are "out of bounds"--then I think the formula does it's job perfectly.
(I would respond to what you said about "wolves", but I have run out of time...and "out of gas" so to speak...)
Peace