Stephen III
New Member
(Sorry for the length, I guess the moderators will not accept one post that is this long -I tried!)
THE CATHOLIC PERSPECTIVE FROM THE THREAD WOULD BE:
You see what most Protestants reading this thread may have overlooked is the fact that this thread is really about the implied authority of Sola-Scriptura.
I won't bother getting into an acceptable definition of the term for everyone. Let's leave it at SOLA = one, only
Scriptura = Scriptures
And if Scriptures are the Sole (or only)authority then where in the Bible do we find:
1.) The Canon
and,
2.) The right to include and exclude certain books (as seen in the issuance of the KJV)
Hope this helps,
God Bless
Stephen
THE CATHOLIC PERSPECTIVE FROM THE THREAD WOULD BE:
I believe the Scriptures in my bible are the Word of God because I believe that the canon (the list of Scriptures which are divinely inspired) has been divinely revealed through the Church which Christ founded, the Church which is the pillar and foundation of truth. The Church supports the authority of the Scriptures (and Tradition), and the Scriptures (and Tradition) support the authority of the Church.
I also believe that divine revelation is the only acceptable reason for belief in the divine inspiration of the Scriptures. I don't believe any reasoning which derives solely from human experience or thought is enough to assure the divine inspiration of Scripture.
The whole point of this thread is to show the folly of those who make the claim that a book (whether it is the Bible or the Koran, the Book of Mormon etc. can prove the fact of its being the inspired Word of God. A book cannot make this claim in and of itself. Otherwise ANY book could make this same claim. Granted every inspired Christian will clamor that this book is different, and indeed it is, but it is exactly circular reasoning to say that the Bible proves the claim for and of itself.
It takes an outside authority to tell us that the Bible is the Word of God.
if it was OK to "correct" (remove quotes if you're non-Catholic ) the canon 1500 years after Christ, who is to say it won't be OK to "correct" it again, tomorrow or next year or next century?
I think besides all these quotes being tedious to read, they patently show the mental gymnastics Protestants must perform to deny the logical conclusion that a Church or governing body (if you prefer) is NECESSARY just to get the Canon. Not to even mention for instruction towards a proper translation.the point is sufficiently made that an outside authority is required to make the claim as to the Bible being the inspired Word of God. Just as it took an outside authority to define the canon in the first place.
And whether Protestants are willing to admit this fact or not won't change the historical fact that they themselves through their "committees" played the outside authority in changing the canon as they saw fit.
You see what most Protestants reading this thread may have overlooked is the fact that this thread is really about the implied authority of Sola-Scriptura.
I won't bother getting into an acceptable definition of the term for everyone. Let's leave it at SOLA = one, only
Scriptura = Scriptures
And if Scriptures are the Sole (or only)authority then where in the Bible do we find:
1.) The Canon
and,
2.) The right to include and exclude certain books (as seen in the issuance of the KJV)
Hope this helps,
God Bless
Stephen