Ok…so I’m not so good with keeping up with the ole blog! I may be a few months off my mark for getting these entries in, but I’ll get there eventually! Anyway, I want to try a new approach. The other “doctrine” posts have taken me several hours to complete (which may be why I haven’t been as faithful to it as I should!), so I’m going to TRY to not be so technical on this post and see how that works! Here’s the thing. I’m not a trained apologist like the incredible folks at Catholic Answers. (NOTE – If you ever need to know ANYTHING about the Catholic Church, try listening to Catholic Answers Live or visiting Catholic.com!) What I am, is a man who is in love with the Catholic faith, so that’s really what my blog should be about: telling you what the Church is about and why I love it! That said, off we go to explore the ever-argued topic of “Sola Scriptura”!
~cracks knuckles~
During my years of life BC (Before Catholicism), I was a strict believer in what I thought was “Sola Scriptura” (Scriptrue Alone) which means that everything I believed concerning God and my faith came from Scripture. As it turns out, that was incorrect. What I actually believed, and what most Pentecostals believe, is called “Prima Scriptura” (Scripture First). This means that there are other sources of acceptable guidance besides scripture (i.e., your pastor, perhaps a message that comes by tongues and interpretation, the inner direction of the Holy Ghost in a person, etc) but all of these things are completely secondary to and must be tested by Scripture. For example: Let’s say that Pastor Smith says, “We need to do some fasting. Everyone please fast this week from _____.” Perhaps, the Holy Spirit speaks during the service and calls the church to fast and pray. OR maybe someone just feels in their heart that they should. The message is the same. “Fast and pray.” Now the Scriptures don’t say, “First Tabernacle Church of the Mighty Holy Ghost and Fire Baptized Believers in the Liberating Power of Jesus Name International Incorporated, LLC must fast the week of May 23, 2010 – May 30, 2010.” [ps…for those of you not familiar with Pentecostal humor, I made that church name up for example purposes. J] However, the Bible does teach us to fast, so it is perfectly acceptable to obey that guidance from the pastor and/or Holy Spirit. Conversely, if a pastor recommends or a person feels an inner urge to do something contrary to what scripture teaches as acceptable, then that guidance should be questioned because the Scripture is a higher authority than any man or feeling. Now that we established the difference between these two lines of thought, I will point out that while they both have admirable qualities, they are not the teaching of the Catholic Church.
The Church teaches something called “Sola Dei Verbum” (The Word of God Alone). As much as I love Latin and its translation, lets break it down a little. Shall we?
When I first heard of “The Word of God Alone”, I thought. “Right! Scripture Alone!”. While the concepts seem to be the same, they are actually quite different in doctrinal terms. You see, as Catholics, we believe that the Word of God consists of Scripture PLUS tradition. * pausing to allow ample time for the non-Catholics to cringe a bit before continuing * Allow me to explain via an entirely too brief look at how Church teaching has looked throughout the years. Jesus, who is THE WORD of God (John 1:1), taught the apostles the Truth about God. Of course, Jesus is also the Truth. So basically, Jesus taught the apostles [about] Himself! Then when he was about to ascend into Heaven, He told them, “Go therefore and teach all nations…teaching them to observe ALL that I have commanded you.” (St. Matthew 28:19) The book of Acts records a good deal of these first few years of the Church’s history. Knowing, that they were given the ability and obligation to teach THE faith with authority, the apostles did so by writing letters to the Churches AND preaching to them “in person”. Was their teaching less important if they didn’t write it down first? Of course not! Their teaching concerning Christ and His Church was infallible whether written or spoken and the churches were required to obey BOTH the written and spoken directions of the apostles (II Thessalonians 2:15). As the Church grew more men were ordained to take the care of the souls of the new faithful. (See Acts 1:15-26 to learn that the authority of the apostles, that of a Bishop, could, can, and must be passed on to others.) And that practice of ordaining new Bishops to keep, uphold, protect, and pass on the faith received from Jesus Himself continues today! That means that every validly ordained Catholic Bishop was ordained by someone who was ordained by someone who was ordained by someone else who was ordained by someone….who was ordained by an apostle who was commissioned by CHRIST! That is a POWERFUL testimony to the identity of the Catholic Church and her teachings! I said all that to say this [there’s a little more evangelical humor for you…if you don’t get it, don’t worry about it lol]: Jesus told the apostles to PREACH and they did, and their successors still are! Thankfully, the original leaders of the Church were moved by Holy Spirit to write as well as speak the truth about the Truth!
So why not believe in Sola/Prima Scriptura? There are many reasons, but I will just offer a few to get you started thinking. J First of all, if EVERYTHING that we believe must come from Scripture, then Scripture must say that, and it doesn’t. What it DOES say is to obey what is preached and written from the apostles. There was no indication that this COMMAND WRITTEN IN SCRIPTURE would be rescinded when the canon of scripture was completed. But how can we obey the unwritten “traditions and commands” of the apostles if we have no living link to them? We couldn’t if we didn’t have the Catholic Church to preserve and hand them down to us.
Secondly, if EVERYTHING we believe must come from Scripture, then the first 1500 years or so of Christians are lost! The canon (or official set of books) or Scripture wasn’t officially determined and declared “unalterable” in until the Council of Trent in 1546! And that was most likely because Martin Luther decided to “decanonize” some of the books that had been commonly accepted as scriptural since the 300s. So how did people learn the Word of God before the books were officially decided on and before most people were able to read and afford their own copy of the Bible? They went to Mass! That’s right! Every Sunday Mass has an Old Testament reading, a reading from the Psalms, a reading from the Epistles or the Book of Acts, AND a reading from the Gospels. Granted, the number and/or order of the readings were most likely different, but the principle stands that the CHURCH has been the way people learned truth throughout church history.
Thirdly, scripture is NOT the foundation of truth! THE CHURCH IS THE FOUNDATION OF THE TRUTH! (I Tim 3:15) Thus the Church is NOT a product of Scripture. Rather, the Scripture is a work of the Holy Spirit THROUGH the Church.
Finally, without the Church, one is left to interpret the Scripture privately, which St Peter forbids as destructive! (II Peter 1:20, 3:16). Take for instance the number of non-Catholic denominations—over THIRTY THOUSAND!!! I would venture to say that almost every one of them would say that they take scripture for their final authority for all things doctrinal, and yet there is almost no agreement between them on issues of baptism, salvation, Heaven, Hell, and sin! The Bible is not enough on its own…we must have a proper interpretation of it for it to benefit us at all. For “how can I [understand the scriptures] unless someone teaches me?” (Acts 8:30-31).
OK…well I think my soapbox is about to collapse! haha Anyway, for those of you who don’t know me personally, please understand that everything I write, even if its passionately presented, is written with love. I’m not writing out of hatred of others or a belief that they are stupid. I just really REALLY believe these things and want to share them with others.
May God grant us all the grace to believe “the Truth, the Whole Truth, and nothing but the Truth”!
Saturday, May 22, 2010
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Hi there,
ReplyDeleteGood post overall, I'd just add one suggestion:
It's not accurate to say "Thirty Thousand" denominations. I've looked into the source of that statistic and it's not quite accurate. It's fair to say there are hundreds if not thousands of denominations, but the "thirty thousand" stat isn't accurate.
Building upon a lot of what you said, I've written some posts against Sola Scriptura:
http://catholicnick.blogspot.com/2010/04/sola-scriptura-is-unscriptural.html
http://catholicnick.blogspot.com/2010/02/sola-scriptura-is-self-refuting.html
Granted! Thanks NIck for the correction! (Serves me right for not checking my sources' sources. haha)
ReplyDeleteThe World Christian Encyclopedia (promoted by Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary) claims to have counted 9,000 different non-Catholic groups, and that number includes "marginals". Really though...33,000 or 9,000...both sufficiently illustrate the danger of private interpretation of Sacred Scripture, but accuracy is important to me! So for now, I'll say 9,000 until/unless I can't find reliable proof for the other statistic.
Thanks for the comment too!