My "desire for certainty"???AGC said:Dad-O-Lot said:AGC said:Dad-O-Lot said:AGC said:Dad-O-Lot said:Mostly Peaceful said:
Simply put, sola scriptura means that no "Christian" teaching can contradict Scripture.
This statement makes the position untenable and contradictory in itself.
Some argue that the Bible contradicts itself. With no central or single teaching authority, schisms are created within Christianity based on variations in interpretation.
Who is the final arbiter on what "contradicts" scripture?
There was an episcopal structure that didn't have a central or single teaching authority prior to the papal revolution (hence the original councils) and it seemed to do ok.
And is there a current analog to this?
(Disclosure, I am Catholic and believe the Papacy began with Peter, long before any "Papal revolution" but if I were wrong, I would be seeking a single teaching authority)
Yes, I'm aware you're roman catholic. It's hard to offer something palatable to you when you're 1000 years downstream of the papal revolution and hugely invested in it.
I'm not looking for "palatable". I'm looking for truth. Is there a current analog to what you believe existed as the teaching authority of the Church in the first centuries after the resurrection?
I don't have to 'believe' something existed. We know about the counsels and who went to them to discuss heresy and agree upon doctrine. We know the administration process across the church universal before the schism and papal revolution. We know about the three fold offices of bishop, priest, and deacon and how they exercised their authority. Why would I present a 'current' analog? That structure is preserved in other traditions and was in the roman church for a long time too.
Edit: I view your desire for certainty to be a western artifact as well, not specific just to Rome. The church fathers didn't always agree on everything, and not all things must be agreed upon as not all are clear in scripture. Can we be comfortable in the tension where scripture does not plainly explain everything, leaving something to mystery and recognizing it is not perfect theology that brings us closer to God but the practice of our faith with our belief?
I started by pointing out that the statement "No Christian can contradict scripture" is an untenable and illogical position unless there is a single central authority that can rule/determine what "contradicts scripture". The logical conclusion is that no one could call themselves a Christian because there will always be someone, somewhere who would say that such and such belief you hold contradicts scripture.
Ecclesial authority predates scripture. I believe that authority still exists on earth.
People of integrity expect to be believed, when they're not, they let time prove them right.