READING THE SCRIPTURE WITHOUT REFERRING TO THE TEACHING
AUTHORITY OF THE CHURCH CAN BE MISLEADING AND CAN BE USED BY THE DEVIL TO TAKE
OUT THE SOUL FROM THE TRUE CHURCH OF THE LIVING GOD.
Luther's state of mind and the condition of his weakening faith at that time fell exactly on the very same trap that the Evil One, Satan tried unsuccessfully to use against our Lord Jesus Christ in the story of the Temptation of Jesus in the Bible. The action of Luther started with a protest based on his own understanding of the scriptures then followed by his act of defiance and disobedience against the orders of his superiors being a member of the Catholic Church as a former priest and monk himself. He then ultimately and permanently renounced his priesthood in the Catholic Church and founded his independent church the Lutheran Church. It is the same action taken by many of the heretics like him that have taught heresies creating confusion, schisms, falling away from the true faith, and ultimately leaving the true and only church founded and built by Jesus Christ through the Apostles led by St. Peter sometime in 30-33 AD.
All of them who have listened to their own voices and their
own personal interpretation of the Scriptures have ultimately ended up leaving
the Catholic Church. They have gone out of the church of the Living God and
chose to found and build their own churches thereby opposing the original and
the true church. They chose a different path instead of submitting themselves
to the authority of the Church of God they instead followed their own authority
and build their own church of Man. Instead of helping in building the church of
Jesus Christ by calling for true reformation within the Catholic Church as St.
Athanasius did when some leaders of the Catholic Church were taking the wrong
direction, they opted to have their own founded church according to their own desires
and personal interests. Then they oppose the true church vigorously to attract
members with itching ears.
Having gone out of the Catholic Church and building their own churches, they have to take an opposite position otherwise there is no justification for their reckless and irreversible action of leaving the true church. So therefore its no longer the truth that they are fighting for but the survival of their own church which they alone founded. In a sense their own survival and their own immortality to be counted among the greats. To put it bluntly they have fallen victims of their own pride, ambition, and vanities of which there is no escape. They have become captives of the devil, Satan the Evil One who believes in his own lies being the Father of All Lies even had the contempt as to test the Son of God who became true human being using the scriptures. Yes the Devil according to the bible in John even used the same scripture of the Word of God to tempt and mislead many souls. He tried to do it against our Lord and God Jesus Christ when he tempted him in the desert saying: "If you are the Son of God, 'throw yourself down for it is written: He will command his angels concerning You, and they will lift You up in their hands, so that You will not strike Your Foot against a stone". Satan used the verse in Psalm 91:11-12 in the account of John in his gospel. But Jesus rebuked him with a reply from Deuteronomy 6:16 "On the other hand, it is also written, 'You shall not put the Lord your God to the test". Here Jesus is like reminding Satan I may have become a true man but I remain the Lord and God and you cannot tempt me using the very same words from me.
Having gone out of the Catholic Church and building their own churches, they have to take an opposite position otherwise there is no justification for their reckless and irreversible action of leaving the true church. So therefore its no longer the truth that they are fighting for but the survival of their own church which they alone founded. In a sense their own survival and their own immortality to be counted among the greats. To put it bluntly they have fallen victims of their own pride, ambition, and vanities of which there is no escape. They have become captives of the devil, Satan the Evil One who believes in his own lies being the Father of All Lies even had the contempt as to test the Son of God who became true human being using the scriptures. Yes the Devil according to the bible in John even used the same scripture of the Word of God to tempt and mislead many souls. He tried to do it against our Lord and God Jesus Christ when he tempted him in the desert saying: "If you are the Son of God, 'throw yourself down for it is written: He will command his angels concerning You, and they will lift You up in their hands, so that You will not strike Your Foot against a stone". Satan used the verse in Psalm 91:11-12 in the account of John in his gospel. But Jesus rebuked him with a reply from Deuteronomy 6:16 "On the other hand, it is also written, 'You shall not put the Lord your God to the test". Here Jesus is like reminding Satan I may have become a true man but I remain the Lord and God and you cannot tempt me using the very same words from me.
How can it be? Satan using the scriptures, the very word of God to tempt the Son of God, Jesus Christ? Well St James said in James 2:19 You believe that there is one God. Good! Even the demons believe that—and shudder. This demonstrates that using the "Scripture Alone or Bible alone" is dangerous and one needs the authority of Jesus to fully understand their meaning because Satan can also use the same scriptures to give one a wrong interpretation and thereby be misled himself or mislead others. Jesus clearly made the clarification refuting what Satan claim using the words of God in the scripture in its real meaning. Because Jesus and the Church he founded and built through the Apostles are one, then the true church becomes the Pillar and Foundation of Truth as taught by St. Paul. In the same manner that Jesus in the story of temptation shows to the devil he is the authority on matters of the scripture likewise the church has become the teaching authority of the scripture once Jesus ascended to heaven. The evidence of this is that the Holy Spirit is sent to the true church on Pentecost Day not to any church founded by men so that it can continue to teach and lead the true church to the Truth. On matters of Faith therefore the true Church has the final say.
WHAT IS SOLA SCRIPTURA FOR THE PROTESTANTS?
Sola Scriptura or Bible Alone is the doctrine of the Reformation
Movement led by Luther, Zwingli, Calvin and many others that followed them. It
means they don't recognize any other doctrine, dogmas, and teaching from the
Catholic Church that are not specifically taught in the scriptures contained in
the Bible. For Protestants, the Bible is the only source of divine revelations
and authority on all matters of Christian Faith. This doctrine is one of the
Pillars of Protestantism beliefs by which they will stand and fall. In
Protestantism, there is no other source of religious authority but the Bible.
It is the only source of the truth, the only rule of faith of the Christians.
Thus they call themselves the Bible-believing Christians.
HOW DID LUTHER COME UP WITH SOLA SCRIPTURA
We know that Martin Luther, the 16th century German monk
broke away from the Catholic Church when he started the Reformation Movement.
There were series of confrontations between him and the Church hierarchy which
centered on the Church authority legitimacy on the rule of faith for Christians.
He then accused the Catholic Church of having corrupted Christian doctrines and
distorted biblical truths.
It is reasonable to believe that fearing for his own safety
knowing the power and influence of the Roman Catholic Church in the middle ages
all-over Europe, Luther may have thought that the only option remaining for him
was to vigorously question and oppose the authority of the Catholic Church
riding on the discontent of many Europeans who have been victims of the abuses
of some of the clergies who managed to enter the church not for spiritual
services but for temporal enrichment. Such men have caused corruption within
the Church that has sowed discontent and rebellion from the lay Catholics at
that time. Thus the Reformation Movement of Luther which at first sought
reforms in the way the clergymen administer and run the Church has become an
open rebellion that resulted in the breakaway of Luther and his followers
resulting in the founding of the Lutheran Church. To sustain his church, Luther
needed central doctrines as legs to stand on against the doctrines of the
Catholic Church. He came up with the starting point from which all the other
Protestant doctrines have evolved, Sola Scriptura or Bible Only.
By Sola Scriptura, Luther and his fellow leaders in the
Reformation Movement have made their break away from the Catholic Church
secured and permanent. By Sola Scriptura, they have thrown out the window the
Teaching Authority, the Sacred Traditions, and many of the doctrines and dogmas
of the Catholic Church that have been believed as authoritative on all matters
of faith and morals from its founding by Jesus Christ in the first century up
to the present time except those who embraced the Protestant rebellion. But
then Luther and company did not realize that by their new heresy of promoting
Bible Alone they have opened more gates of hell than they ever imagined. From
the moment Bible Alone Doctrine was introduced and accepted by their followers
the fragmentation of Luther's independent church also began to take shape.
Instead of uniting, the Bible Alone resulted in different interpretations and
used by the men with abilities to teach and preach to open up their independent
churches based on their own readings and understanding of the Bible and nothing
can stop them. Instead of genuine restoration of Biblical Truth as what Luther
hoped for, it resulted in the promulgation of the individual personal views on
Christian Authority.
HERE ARE THE 21 REASONS FROM WRITINGS OF DAVE ARMSTRONG ON
SOLA SCRIPTURA. WE CAN LEARN FROM THE WRITING THAT IS SHARED TO YOU HERE THAT
SOLA SCRIPTURA IS IN ITSELF NOT BIBLICAL, NOT SCRIPTURAL MEANING IT VIOLATES
ITS OWN TEACHING AND IS A DANGEROUS DOCTRINE TO THE SOULS
Following are twenty-one considerations which will help the
reader scrutinize Luther’s doctrine of Sola Scriptura from Biblical, historical
and logical bases and which show that it is not, in fact, a genuine Biblical
truth, but rather a man-made doctrine.
1. The Doctrine of Sola Scriptura is not taught anywhere
in the Bible
Perhaps the most striking reason for rejecting this doctrine
is that there is not one verse anywhere in the Bible in which it is taught, and
it, therefore, becomes a self-refuting doctrine.
Protestants often point to verses such as 2 Timothy 3:16-17
or The Apocalypse (Revelation)22:18-19 in defense of Sola Scriptura, but close
examination of these two passages easily demonstrates that they do not support
the doctrine at all.
Let's take a close look In 2 Timothy 3:16-17, “All
Scripture, inspired of God, is profitable to teach, to reprove, to correct, to
instruct in justice, that the man of God may be perfect, furnished to every good
work.”
There are five considerations which undermine the Sola
Scriptura interpretation of this passage:
1) The Greek word ophelimos (“profitable”) used in verse 16
means “useful” not “sufficient.” An example of this difference would be to say
that water is useful for our existence – even necessary – but it is not
sufficient; that is, it is not the only thing we need to survive. We also need
food, clothing, shelter, etc. Likewise, Scripture is useful in the life of the
believer, but it was never meant to be the only source of Christian teaching,
the only thing needed for believers.
2) The Greek word pasa, which is often rendered as “all,”
actually means “every,” and it has the sense of referring to each and every one
of the class denoted by the noun connected with it. (2) In other words,
the Greek reads in a way which indicates that each and every “Scripture” is
profitable. If the doctrine of Sola Scriptura were true, then based on Greek
verse 16, each and every book of the Bible could stand on its own as the sole
rule of faith, a position which is obviously absurd.
3) The “Scripture” that St. Paul is referring to here is the
Old Testament, a fact which is made plain by his reference to the Scripture’s
being known by Timothy from “infancy” (verse 15). The New Testament as we know
it did not yet exist, or at best it was incomplete, so it simply could not have
included in St. Paul’s understanding of it was meant by the term “scripture.”
If we take St. Paul’s words at face value, Sola Scriptura would, therefore,
mean that the Old Testament is the Christian’s sole rule of faith. This is a
premise that all Christians would reject.
Protestants may respond to this issue by arguing that St.
Paul is not here discussing the canon of the Bible (the authoritative list of
which books are included in the Bible), but rather the nature of Scripture.
While there is some validity to this assertion, the issue of
canon is also relevant here, for the following reason: Before we can talk about
the nature of Scripture as being theopneustos or “inspired” (literally,
“God-breathed”), it is imperative that we identify with certainty those books
we mean when we say “Scripture“; otherwise, the wrong writings may be labeled
as “inspired.” Paul’s words here obviously took on a new dimension when the
New Testament was completed, as Christians eventually considered it, too, to be
“Scripture.”
It can be argued, then, that the Biblical canon is also the
issue here, as St. Paul – writing under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit –
emphasizes the fact that all (and not just some) Scripture is inspired. The
question that begs to be asked, however, is this: “How can we be sure we have
all the correct writings?” obviously, we can only know the answer if we know
what the canon of the Bible is. Such a question poses a problem for the
Protestant, but not for the Catholic, as the latter has an infallible authority
to answer it.
4) The Greek word artios, here translated “perfect,” may at
first glance makes it seem that the Scriptures are indeed all that is needed.
“After all,” one may ask, “if the Scriptures make the man of God perfect, what
else could be needed? Doesn’t the very word ‘perfect’ implies that nothing is
lacking?”
Well, the difficulty with such an interpretation is that the
text here does not say that it is solely by means of the Scriptures that the
man of God is made “perfect.” The text – if anything – indicates precisely the opposite to
be true, namely, that the Scriptures operate in conjunction with other things.
Notice that it is not just anyone who is made perfect, but rather the “man of
God” – which means a minister of Christ (cf. 1 Tim. 6:11), a clergyman. The
fact that this individual is a minister of Christ presupposes that he has
already had training in teaching which prepared him to assume his office. This
being the case, the Scriptures would be merely one item in a series of items
that will make this man of God “perfect.” The Scriptures may complete his list
of necessary items or they may be one prominent item on the list, but surely
they are not the only item on his list nor intended to be all that he needs.
By way of analogy, consider a medical doctor. In this
context we might say something like, “The Physician’s Desk Reference [a
standard medical reference book] makes our General Practitioner perfect, so
that he may be ready to treat any medical situation.” Obviously such a statement
does not mean that all a doctor's needs is his PDR. It is neither the last item
on his list or just one prominent item. The doctor also needs his stethoscope,
his blood pressure gauge, his training, etc. These other items are presupposed
by the fact that we are talking about a doctor rather than a non-medical
person. So it would be incorrect to assume that if the PDR makes the doctor
“perfect,” it is the only thing which makes him so.
Also, taking this word “perfect” as meaning “the only the
necessary item” results in a biblical contradiction, for in James1:4 we read
that patience – rather than the Scriptures – makes one perfect: “And patience
hath a perfect work; that you may be perfect and entire, failing in nothing.”
Now it is true that a different Greek word (teleios) is used here for
“perfect,” but the fact remains that the basic meaning is the same. Now, if one
rightly acknowledges that patience is clearly not the only thing a Christian
needs in order to be perfect, then a consistent interpretive method would
compel one to acknowledge likewise that the Scriptures are not the only thing a
“man of God” needs in order to be perfect.
5) The Greek word exartizo in verse 17, here translated
“furnished” (other Bible versions read something like “fully equipped” or
“thoroughly furnished”) is referred to by Protestants as “proof” of Sola
Scriptura, since this word – again – may be taken as implying that nothing else
is needed for the “man of God.”
However, even though the man of God may be “furnished” or
“thoroughly equipped,” this fact in and of itself does not guarantee that he
knows how to interpret correctly and apply any given Scripture passage. The
clergyman must also be taught how to correctly use the Scriptures, even though
he may already be “furnished” with them.
Consider again a medical analogy. Picture a medical student
at the beginning of internship. He might have at his disposal all the equipment
necessary to perform an operation (i.e., he is “thoroughly equipped” or
“furnished” for a surgical procedure), but until he spends time with the
doctors, who are the resident authorities, observing their techniques, learning
their skills, and practicing some procedures of his own, the surgical
instruments at his disposal are essentially useless. In fact, if he does not
learn how to use these instruments properly, they can actually become dangerous
in his hands.
So it is with the “man of God” and the Scriptures. The
Scriptures, like the surgical instruments, are life-giving only when properly
used. When improperly used, the exact opposite results can occur. In once case
they could bring physical ruin or even death; in the other case they could
bring spiritual ruin or even spiritual death. Since the Bible admonishes us to
handle rightly or rightly divide the word of truth (cf. 2 Tim. 2:15), it is
therefore possible to handle incorrectly or wrongly divide it – much like an
untrained medical student who incorrectly wields his surgical instruments.
Regarding The Apocalypse (Revelation) 22:18-19, there are
two considerations that undermine the Sola Scriptura interpretation of these
verses. The passage – almost the very last in the Bible – reads:
“For I testify to every one that heareth the words of the
prophecy of this book: If any man shall add to these things, God shall add unto
him the plagues written in this book. And if any man shall take away from the
words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the
book of life, and out of the holy city, and from these things that are written
in this book.”
1) When these verses say that nothing is to be added to or
taken from the “words of the prophecy of this book,” they are not referring to
Sacred Tradition being “added” to the Sacred Scripture. It is obvious from the
context that the “book” being referred to here is Revelation or The Apocalypse
and not the whole Bible. We know this because St. John says that anyone who is
guilty of adding to “this book” will be cursed with the plagues” written in
this book,” namely the plagues he described earlier in his own book,
Revelation. To assert otherwise is to do violence to the text and to distort
its plain meaning, especially since the Bible as we know it did not exist when
this passage was written and therefore could not be what was meant. (3)
In defense of their interpretation of these verses,
Protestants will often contend that God knew in advance what the canon of
Scripture would be, with Revelation being the last book of the Bible, and thus
He “sealed” that canon with the words of verses 18-19. But this interpretation
involves reading a meaning into the text. Furthermore, if such an assertion
were true, how is it that the Christian knows unmistakably that Revelation
22:18-19 is “sealing” the canon unless an infallible teaching authority assures
him that this is the correct interpretation of that verse? But if such an
infallible authority exists, then the Sola Scriptura doctrine becomes ipso
facto null and void.
2) The same admonition not to add or subtract words is used
in Deuteronomy 4:2, which says, “You shall not add to the word that I speak to
you, neither shall you take away from it: keep the commandment of the Lord your
God which I command you.” If we were to apply a parallel interpretation to this
verse, then anything in the Bible beyond the decrees of the Old Testament law
would be considered non-canonical or not authentic Scripture – including the
New Testament! Once again, all Christians would reject this conclusion in no
uncertain terms. The prohibition in Revelation 22:18-19 against “adding,”
therefore, cannot mean that Christians are forbidden to look to anything
outside the Bible for guidance.
2. The Bible Indicates That In Addition To The Written Word,
We Are To Accept Oral Tradition.
St. Paul both commends and commands the keeping of oral
tradition. In 1 Corinthians 11:2, for instance, we read,
“Now I praise you, brethren, that in all things you are
mindful of me: and keep my ordinances as I have delivered them to you.” (4)
Paul is obviously commending the keeping of oral tradition
here, and it should be noted in particular that he extols the believers for
having done so (“I praise you….”). Explicit in this passage is also the fact
that the integrity of this Apostolic oral tradition has clearly been
maintained, just as Our Lord promised it would be, through the safeguarding of
the Holy Spirit (cf. John16:3).
Perhaps the clearest Biblical support for oral tradition can
be found in 2 Thessalonians2:14(15), where Christians are actually commanded:
“Therefore, brethren, stand fast; and hold the traditions which you have
learned, whether by word, or by our epistle.” This passage is significant in
that it shows the existence of living traditions within the
Apostolic teaching, it tells us unequivocally that believers are firmly
grounded in the Faith by adhering to these traditions, and it clearly states
that these traditions were both written and oral. Since the Bible distinctly
states here that oral traditions – authentic and Apostolic in origin – are to
be “held” as a valid component of the Deposit of Faith, by what reasoning or
excuse do Protestants dismiss them? By what authority do they reject a
clear-cut injunction of St. Paul?
Moreover, we must consider the text in this passage. The
Greek word krateite, here translated “hold,” means “to be strong, mighty, to
prevail.” (5) This language is rather emphatic, and it demonstrates the
importance of maintaining these traditions.
Of course one must differentiate between Tradition
(upper-case “T”) that is part of divine Revelation, on the one hand, and, on
the other hand, Church traditions (lower-case “t”) that, although good, have
developed in the Church later and are not part of the Deposit of Faith. An
example of something that is part of Tradition would be infant Baptism; an
example of a Church tradition would be the Church’s calendar of feast days of
Saints.
Anything that is part of Tradition is of divine origin and
hence unchangeable, while Church traditions are changeable by the Church.
Sacred Tradition serves as a rule of faith by showing what the Church has
believed consistently through the centuries and how it is always understood any
given portion of the Bible. One of the main ways in which Tradition has been
passed down to us is in the doctrine contained in the ancient texts of the
liturgy, the Church’s public worship.
It should be noted that Protestants accuse Catholics of
promoting “unbiblical” or “novel” doctrines based on Tradition, asserting that
such Tradition contains doctrines that are foreign to the Bible. However, this
assertion is wholly untrue.
The Catholic Church teaches that Sacred Tradition contains
nothing whatsoever that is contrary to the Bible. Some Catholic thinkers would
even say that there is nothing in Sacred Tradition which is not also found in
Scripture, at least implicitly or in seminal form.
Certainly the two are at least in perfect harmony and always
support each other. For some doctrines, the Church draws more from Tradition
than from Scripture for its understanding, but even those doctrines are often
implied or hinted at in the Sacred Scripture. For example, the following are
largely based on Sacred Tradition: infant Baptism, the canon of Scripture, the
perpetual virginity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Sunday (rather than Saturday)
as the Lord’s Day, and the Assumption of Our Lady.
Sacred Tradition complements our understanding of the Bible
and is therefore not some extraneous source of Revelation which contains
doctrines that are foreign to it.
Quite the contrary: Sacred Tradition serves as the Church’s
living memory, reminding her of what the faithful have constantly and
consistently believed and who to properly understand and interpret the meaning
of Biblical passages. (6)
In a certain way, it is Sacred Tradition which says to the
reader of the Bible “You have been reading a very important book which contains
God’s revelation to man. Now let me explain to you how it has always been
understood and practiced by believers from the very beginning.”
3. The Bible Calls the Church and not the Bible the “Pillar
and Ground of the Truth.” It is very interesting to note that in I Timothy 3:15
we see, not the Bible, but the Church – that is, the living community of
believers founded upon St. Peter and the Apostles and headed by their
successors – called “the pillar and ground of the truth.”
Of course, this passage is not meant in any way to diminish
the importance of the Bible, but it is intending to show that Jesus Christ did
establish an authoritative and teaching Church that was commissioned to teach
“all nations.” (Matt. 28:19). Elsewhere this same Church received Christ’s promise that
the gates of hell would not prevail against it (Matt. 16:18), that He would
always be with it (Matt. 28:20), and that He would give it the Holy Spirit to
teach it all truth. (John16:13).
To the visible head of His Church, St. Peter, Our Lord said:
“And I will give to thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever thou
shalt bind upon earth, it shall be bound also in heaven: and, whatsoever thou
shalt loose on earth, it shall be loosed also in heaven.” (Matt. 16:19).
IT IS PLAINLY EVIDENT FROM THESE PASSAGES THAT OUR LORD
EMPHASIZED THE AUTHORITY OF HIS CHURCH AND THE ROLE IT WOULD HAVE IN
SAFEGUARDING AND DEFINING THE DEPOSIT OF FAITH. IT IS ALSO EVIDENT FROM THESE PASSAGES THAT THIS SAME CHURCH
WOULD BE INFALLIBLE, FOR IF AT ANY TIME IN ITS HISTORY IT WOULD DEFINITIVELY
TEACH ERROR TO THE CHURCH AS A WHOLE IN MATTERS OF FAITH OR MORALS – EVEN
TEMPORARILY – IT WOULD CEASE BEING THIS “PILLAR AND GROUND OF THE TRUTH.” Since
a “ground” or foundation by its very nature is meant to be permanent support,
and since the above-mentioned passages do not allow from the possibility of the
Church ever definitively teaching doctrinal or moral error, the only plausible
conclusion is that Our Lord was very deliberate in establishing His Church and
that, He was referring to its infallibility when He called it the “pillar and
ground of the truth.”
THE PROTESTANT, HOWEVER, HAS A DILEMMA HERE. BY ASSERTING
THE BIBLE TO BE THE SOLE RULE OF FAITH FOR BELIEVERS. IN WHAT CAPACITY, THEN,
IS THE CHURCH THE “PILLAR AND GROUND OF THE TRUTH” IF IT IS NOT TO SERVE AS AN
INFALLIBLE AUTHORITY ESTABLISHED BY CHRIST? HOW CAN THE CHURCH BE THIS “PILLAR
AND GROUND” IF IT HAS NO TANGIBLE, PRACTICAL ABILITY TO SERVE AS AN AUTHORITY
IN THE LIFE OF A CHRISTIAN? THE PROTESTANT WOULD EFFECTIVELY DENY THAT THE
CHURCH IS THE “PILLAR AND GROUND OF THE TRUTH” BY DENYING THAT THE CHURCH HAS
THE AUTHORITY TO TEACH.
Also, Protestants understand the term “church” to mean
something different from what the Catholic Church understands it to mean. Protestants see “the church” as an invisible entity, and for
them it refers collectively to all Christian believers around the world who are
united by faith in Christ, despite major variations in doctrine and
denominational allegiance.
Catholics, on the other hand, understand it to mean not only
those true believers who are united as Christ’s Mystical Body, but we
simultaneously understand it to refer to a visible, historical entity as well,
namely, that one – and only that one – organization which can trace its lineage
in an unbroken line back to the Apostles themselves: the Catholic Church. IT IS
THIS CHURCH AND THIS CHURCH ALONE WHICH WAS ESTABLISHED BY CHRIST AND WHICH HAS
MAINTAINED AN ABSOLUTE CONSISTENCY IN DOCTRINE THROUGHOUT ITS EXISTENCE, AND IT
IS THEREFORE THIS CHURCH ALONE WHICH CAN CLAIM TO BE THAT VERY “PILLAR AND
GROUND OF THE TRUTH.”
Protestantism, by comparison, has known a history of
doctrinal vacillations and changes, and no two denominations completely agree –
even on major doctrinal issues. Such shifting and changing could not possibly
be considered a foundation or “ground of the truth.” When the foundation of a
structure shifts or is improperly set, that structure’s very support is
unreliable (cf. Matt. 7:26-27). Since in practice the beliefs of Protestantism
have undergone change both within denominations and through the continued
appearance of new denominations, these beliefs are like a foundation which
shifts and moves. Such beliefs therefore cease to provide the support necessary
to maintain the structure they uphold, and the integrity of that structure
becomes compromised, Our Lord clearly did not intend for His followers to build
their spiritual houses on such an unreliable foundation.
4. Christ tells us to submit to the Authority of the
Church
In Matthew 18:15-18 we see Christ instructing His disciples
on how to correct a fellow believer. It is extremely telling in this instance
that Our Lord identifies the Church rather than Scripture as the final
authority to be appealed to. He Himself says that if an offending brother “will
not hear the Church, let him be to thee as the heathen and publican” (Matt.
18:17) – that is, as an outsider who is lost. Moreover, Our Lord then solemnly
re-emphasizes the Church’s infallible teaching authority in verse 18 by
repeating His earlier statement about the power to bind and loose (Matt.
16:18-19), directing it this time to the Apostles as a group (7) rather than
just to Peter: “Amen I say to you, whatsoever you shall bind upon earth, shall
be bound also in heaven; and whatsoever you shall loose upon earth, shall be
loosed also in heaven.” (Matt. 18:18).
Of course there are instances in the Bible where Our Lord
does appeal to Scripture, but in these cases He, as one having authority, was
teaching the Scriptures; He was not allowing the Scriptures to teach
themselves. For example, He would respond to the Scribes and the Pharisees by
using Scripture precisely because they often tried to trip Him up by using
Scripture. In these instances, Our Lord often demonstrates how the Scribes and
Pharisees had wrong interpretations, and hence He corrects them by properly
interpreting Scripture.
His actions do not argue that Scripture should be sola, or
an authority in itself and, in fact, the only Christian authority. Quite the
contrary; whenever Christ refers His hearers to the Scriptures, He also
provides His infallible, authoritative interpretation of them, demonstrating
that the Scriptures do not interpret themselves.
The Catholic Church readily acknowledges the inerrancy and
authority of Scripture. But the Catholic doctrine is that the immediate rule of
faith for the Christian is the teaching authority of the Church – an authority
to teach and interpret both Scripture and Tradition, as Matt. 18:17-18 shows.
It should also be noted that implicit (perhaps even
explicit) in this passage from Matthew is the fact that the “Church” must have
been a visible, tangible entity established in a hierarchical fashion.
Otherwise, how would anyone have known to whom the wrongdoer should be
referred?
If the Protestant definition of “church” were correct, then
the wrongdoer would have to “hear” each and every believer who existed, hoping
that there would be unanimity among them regarding the issue at hand. The
inherent absurdity of this scenario is readily apparent. The only way we can
make sense of Our Lord’s statement here is to acknowledge that the church was a
definite organization, to which an appeal could be made and from which a
decisive judgment could be had.
5. Scripture itself states that it is insufficient of
itself as a teacher, but rather needs an interpreter.
The Bible says in 2 Tim. 3:17 that the man of God is
“perfect, furnished to every good work.” As we noted above, this verse means
only that the man of God is fully supplied with Scripture; it is not a
guarantee that he automatically knows how to interpret it properly. This verse
at most argues only for the material sufficiency of Scripture, a position which
is held by some Catholic thinkers today.
“Material sufficiency” would mean that the Bible in some way
contains all the truths that are necessary for the believer to know; in other words,
the “materials” would thus be all present or at least implied. “Formal
sufficiency,” on the other hand, would mean that the Bible would not only
contain all the truths that are necessary, but that it would also present those
truths in a perfectly clear and complete and readily understandable fashion. In
other words, these truths would be in a useable form,” and consequently there
would be no need for Sacred Tradition to clarify and complete them or for an
infallible teaching authority to interpret them correctly or “rightly divide”
God’s word.
SINCE THE CATHOLIC CHURCH HOLDS THAT THE BIBLE IS NOT
SUFFICIENT IN ITSELF, IT NATURALLY TEACHES THAT THE BIBLE NEEDS AN INTERPRETER.
The reason the Catholic Church so teaches is twofold:
first, because Christ established a living Church to teach
with His authority. He did not simply give His disciples a Bible, whole and
entire, and tell them to go out and make copies of it for mass distribution and
allow people to come to whatever interpretation they may.
Second, the Bible itself states that it needs an
interpreter.
Regarding the second point, we read in 2 Peter 3:16 that in
St. Paul’s epistles there are “certain things hard to be understood, which the
unlearned and unstable wrest [distort], as they do also the other scriptures,
to their own destruction.”
In this one verse we note three very important things about
the Bible and its interpretation:
a) the Bible contains passages which are not readily
understandable or clear, a fact which demonstrates the need for an
authoritative and infallible teacher to make the passages clear and
understandable; (8)
b) it is not only possible that people could“wrest” or
distort the meaning of Scripture, but this was, in fact, being done from the
very earliest days of the Church; and
c) to distort the meaning of Scripture can result in one’s
“destruction,” a disastrous fate indeed. It is obvious from these
considerations that St. Peter did not believe the Bible to be the sole rule of
faith. But there is more.
In Acts 8:26-40 we read the account of the deacon St. Philip
and the Ethiopian eunuch. In this scenario, the Holy Spirit leads Philip to
approach the Ethiopian when Philip learns that the Ethiopian is reading from
the prophet Isaias, he asks him a very telling question:
“Thinkest thou that thou understandest what thou readest?”
Even more telling is the answer given by the Ethiopian: “And how can I, unless
some man show me?”
Whereas this St. Philip (known as “the Evangelist”) is not
one of the twelve Apostles, he was nonetheless someone who was commissioned by
the Apostles (cf. Acts6:6) and who preached the Gospel with authority (cf. Acts
8:4-8). Consequently, his preaching would reflect legitimate Apostolic
teaching. The point here is that the Ethiopian’s statement verifies the fact
that the Bible is not sufficient in itself as a teacher of Christian doctrine,
and people who hear the Word do need an authority to instruct them properly so
that they may understand what the Bible says. If the Bible were indeed
sufficient of itself, then the eunuch would not have been ignorant of the
meaning of the passage from Isaias.
There is also 2 Peter 1:20, which states that “no prophecy
of scripture is made by private interpretation.”
Here we see the Bible itself stating in no uncertain terms
that its prophecies are not a matter for which the individual is to arrive at
his own interpretation. It is also most telling that this verse is preceded by
a section on the Apostolic witness (verses 12-18) and followed by a section on
false teachers (chapter 2, verses 1-10). Peter is obviously contrasting
genuine, Apostolic teaching with false prophets and false teachers, and he
makes reference to private interpretation as the pivotal point between the two.
The clear implication is THAT PRIVATE INTERPRETATION IS ONE PATHWAY WHEREBY AN
INDIVIDUAL TURNS FROM AUTHENTIC TEACHING AND BEGINS TO FOLLOW ERRONEOUS
TEACHING.
6. The first Christians did not have a Bible
Biblical scholars tell us that the last book of the New
Testament was not written until the end of the 1st century A.D., that is, until
around the year 100 A.D. (9) This fact would leave roughly a 65-year gap
between Our Lord’s Ascension into Heaven and the completion of the Bible as we
know it. The question that begs to be asked, therefore, is this: “WHO OR WHAT
SERVED AS THE FINAL, INFALLIBLE AUTHORITY DURING THAT TIME?”
If the Protestant doctrine of Sola Scriptura were true, then
since the Church existed for a time without the entire written Word of God,
there would have been situations and doctrinal issues which could not have been
resolved with finality until all of the New Testament books were complete.
The ship would have been left without a rudder, so to speak,
at least for a time. But this goes contrary to the statements and promises that
Our Lord made about His Church – particularly, “behold I am with you all days,
even to the consummation of the world” (Matt. 28:20) – not to mention that He
told His disciples: “I will not leave you orphans.” (John14:18).
This issue is of particular importance, as the first several
decades of the Church’s existence were tumultuous. Persecutions had already
begun, believers were being martyred, the new Faith was struggling to grow, and
some false teachings had already appeared (cf. Galatians 1:6-9). If the Bible
were the Christian’s only rule of faith, and since the Bible was not fully
written – much less settled in terms of its canon – until 65 years after
Christ’s Ascension, how did the early Church possibly deal with doctrinal questions
without an authority on how to proceed?
Now the Protestant may be tempted to offer two possible
responses:
1) that the Apostles were temporarily the final authority
while the New Testament was being written, and
2) that the Holy Spirit was given to the Church and that His
direct guidance is what bridged the time gap between Our Lord’s Ascension and
the completion of the New Testament.
Regarding the first response, it is true that Jesus Christ
invested the Apostles with His authority; however, the Bible nowhere indicates
that this authority’s active role within the Church would cease with the death
of the last Apostle.
Quite the contrary, the Bible record is quite clear in that
a) it nowhere says that once the last Apostle dies, the writtenform of God’s
Word will become the final authority; and b) the Apostles clearly chose
successors who, in turn, possessed the same authority to “bind and loose.”
This is shown in the election of Matthias as a replacement
for Judas Iscariot (Cf. Acts 1:15-26) and in St. Paul’s passing on his
Apostolic Authority to Timothy and Titus (cf. 2 Timothy1:6, and Titus 1:5). If
anything, a Protestant only gives credence to the Catholic teaching by
insisting on the authority of the Apostles.
Regarding the second response – that the Holy Spirit’s
direct guidance bridged the time gap – the problem with such a position is that
the direct guidance of the Holy Spirit Himself is an extra-Biblical (That is,
“outside of the Bible”) source of authority.
Naturally the Bible speaks very clearly of the Holy Spirit’s
presence among the believers and His role in teaching the disciples “all
truth,” but if the direct guidance of the Holy Spirit were, in fact, the
ultimate authority during those 65 years, then the history of the Church would
have known two successive ultimate authorities: first the direct guidance of
the Holy Spirit, with this guidance then being replaced by the Scriptures,
which would have become sola, or the “only” ultimate authority. And if this
situation of an extra-Biblical ultimate authority is permissible from a
Protestant perspective, does this not open the door to the Catholic position,
which says that the teaching authority of the Church is the direct ultimate
authority – deriving her authority from Christ and her teaching from Scripture
and Tradition, guided by the Holy Spirit.
THE HOLY SPIRIT WAS GIVEN TO THE CHURCH BY JESUS CHRIST, AND
IT IS EXACTLY THIS SAME SPIRIT WHO PROTECTS THE CHURCH’S VISIBLE HEAD, THE
POPE, AND THE TEACHING AUTHORITY OF THE CHURCH BY NEVER PERMITTING HIM OR IT TO
LAPSE INTO ERROR.
The Catholic believes that Christ indeed did give the Holy
Spirit to the Church and that the Holy Spirit has always been present in the
Church, teaching it all truth (John16:13) and continually safeguarding its
doctrinal integrity, particularly through the office of the Pope. Thus the
Gospel would still have been preached – authoritatively and infallibly – even
if not a single verse of the New Testament had ever been written.
7. The Church produced the Bible not vice-versa
The doctrine of Sola Scriptura overlooks – or at least
grossly underemphasizes – the fact that the Church came before the Bible, and
not the other way around. It was the Church, in effect, which wrote the Bible
under the inspiration of Almighty God: the Israelites as the Old Testament
Church (or “pre-Catholics”) and the early Catholics as the New Testament
Church.
In the pages of the New Testament we note that Our Lord
gives a certain primacy to the teaching authority of His Church and its
proclamation in His name. For instance, in Matthew 28:20 we see Our Lord
commissioned the Apostles to go and teach in His name, making disciples of all
nations. In Mark 16:15 we note that the Apostles are commanded to go and preach
to all the world. And in Luke 10:16 we see that whoever hears the seventy-two
hears Our Lord. These facts are most telling, as nowhere do we see Our Lord
commissioned His Apostles to evangelize the world by writing in His name. The
emphasis is always on preaching the Gospel, not on printing and distributing
it.
Thus it follows that the leadership and teaching authority
of the Church are indispensable elements in the means whereby the Gospel
message is to reach the ends of the earth. Since the Church produced the
scriptures, it is quite biblical, logical and reasonable to say that the Church
alone has the authority to interpret properly and apply them. And if this is
so, then by reason of its origin and nature, the
Bible cannot serve as the only rule of faith for Christian
believers. IN OTHER WORDS, BY PRODUCING THE SCRIPTURES, THE CHURCH DOES NOT
ELIMINATE THE NEED FOR ITSELF AS TEACHER AND INTERPRETER OF THOSE SCRIPTURES.
Moreover, is it not unreasonable to say that simply by
putting Apostolic teaching into writing, the Church somehow made that written
teaching superior to her oral teaching? Like the teaching organization Our Lord
established, His Word is authoritative, but because the word is one form rather
than another does not mean one form is to be subjugated to the other. Since
God’s one Revelation is twofold in form, to deny the authority of one form
would be to deny the authority of the other form as well. The forms of God’s
Word are complementary, not competitive. Thus, if there is a need for the
Scriptures, there is also a need for the teaching authority which produced
them.
8. The idea of the Scripture’s Authority existing apart
from the authority of the Teacher Church is utterly foreign to the Early
Church.
If you look at the writings of the Early Church Fathers, you
will see references to the Apostolic Succession, (10) to the bishops as
guardians of the Deposit of Faith, (11) and to the primacy and the authority of
Rome. (12)
The collective weight of these references makes clear the
fact that the early Church understood itself has having a hierarchy which was
central to maintaining the integrity of the Faith.
Nowhere do we see any indication that the early followers of
Christ disregarded those positions of authority and considered them invalid as
a rule of faith. Quite the contrary, we see in those passages that the Church,
from its very inception, saw its power to teach grounded in an inseparable
combination of Scripture and Apostolic Tradition – with both being
authoritatively taught and interpreted by the teaching Magisterium of the
Church, with the Bishop of Rome at its head.
To say that the early Church believed in the notion of “the
Bible alone” would be analogous to saying that men and women today could
entertain the thought that our civil laws could function without Congress to
legislate them, without courts to interpret them and without police to enforce
them.
All we would need is a sufficient supply of legal volumes in
every household so that each citizen could determine for himself how to
understand and apply any given law. Such an assertion is absurd, of course, as
no one could possibly expect civil laws to function in this manner. The
consequence of such a state of affairs would undoubtedly be total anarchy. How
much more absurd, then, is it to contend that the Bible could function on its
own and apart from the Church which wrote it?
It is precisely that Church – and not just any Christian –
who alone possesses the divinely given authority to interpret it correctly, as
well as to legislate matters involving the conduct of its members. Were this
not the case, the situation on any level – local, regional or global – would
quickly devolve into spiritual anarchy, wherein each and every Christian could
formulate a theological system and develop a moral code based simply upon his
own private interpretation of Scripture.
Has not history actually seen precisely this result since
the 16th century, when the so-called Reformation occurred? In fact, an
examination of the state of affairs in Europe immediately following the genesis
of the Reformation – particularly in Germany – will demonstrate that the direct
result of Reformation teaching was both spiritual and social disorder. (13)
Luther himself bemoaned the fact that, “Unfortunately, it is our daily
experience that now under the Gospel [his] the people entertain greater and
bitterer hatred and envy and are worse with their avarice and money-grabbing
than before under the Papacy.” (14)
9. Heresiarchs and heretical movements based their
doctrines on Scripture interpreted apart from Tradition and the Magisterium.
If you look at the history of the early Church, you will see
that it continually struggled against heresies and those who promoted them. We
also see the Church responding to those threats again and again by convening
Councils (15) and turning to Rome to settle disputes in matters of doctrine and
discipline.
For example, Pope Clement intervened in a controversy in the
Church at Corinth at the end of the 1stcentury and put an end to a schism
there. In the 2nd century, Pope Victor threatened to excommunicate a large
portion of the Church in the East because of a dispute about when Easter should
be celebrated. In the earlier part of the 3rd century, Pope Callistus
pronounced the condemnation of the Sabellian heresy.
In the case of these heresies and/or conflicts in discipline
that would arise, the people involved would defend their erroneous beliefs by
their respective interpretations of Scripture, apart from the Sacred Tradition
and the teaching Magisterium of the Church. A good illustration of this point
is the case of Arius, the 4th-century priest who declared that the Son of God
was a creature and was not co-equal with the Father.
Arius and those who followed him quoted verses from the
Bible to “prove” their claims. (16) The disputes and controversies which
arose over his teachings became so great that the first Ecumenical Council was
convened in Nicaea in 325 A.D. to settle them. The Council, under the authority
of the Pope, declared Arius’ teachings to be heretical and made some decisive
declarations about the Person of Christ, and it did so based on what Sacred
Tradition had to say regarding the Scripture verses in question.
HERE WE SEE THE TEACHING AUTHORITY OF THE CHURCH BEING USED
AS THE FINAL SAY IN AN EXTREMELY IMPORTANT DOCTRINAL MATTER.
If there had been no teaching authority to appeal to, then
Arius’ error could have overtaken the Church. As it is, a majority of the
bishops at the time fell for the Arian heresy. (17) Even though Arius had based
his arguments on the Bible and probably “compared Scripture with Scripture,” the
fact is that he arrived at an heretical conclusion. It was the teaching
authority of the Church – hierarchically constituted – which stepped in and
declared he was wrong.
The application is obvious. If you ask a Protestant whether
or not Arius was correct in his belief that the Son was created, he will, of
course, respond in the negative. Emphasize, then, that even though Arius
presumably “compared Scripture with Scripture,” he nonetheless arrived at an
erroneous conclusion. If this were true for Arius, what guarantee does the
Protestant have that it is not also true for his interpretation of a given
Bible passage? The very fact that the Protestant knows Arius’ interpretations
were heretical implies that an objectively true or “right” interpretation exists
for the Biblical passages he used.
The issue, then, becomes a question of how we can know what
that true interpretation is. The only possible answer is that there must be,
out of necessity, an infallible authority to tell us. That infallible
authority, the Catholic Church, declared Arius heretical. Had the Catholic
Church not been both infallible and authoritative in its declaration, then
believers would have had no reason whatsoever to reject Arius’ teachings, and
the whole of Christianity today might have been comprised of modern-day Arians.
IT IS EVIDENT, THEN, THAT USING THE BIBLE ALONE IS NOT A
GUARANTEE OF ARRIVING AT DOCTRINAL TRUTH. THE ABOVE-DESCRIBED RESULT IS WHAT
HAPPENS WHEN THE ERRONEOUS DOCTRINE OF SOLA SCRIPTURA IS USED AS A GUIDING PRINCIPLE,
AND THE HISTORY OF THE CHURCH AND THE NUMEROUS HERESIES IT HAS HAD TO ADDRESS
ARE UNDENIABLE TESTIMONY TO THIS FACT.
10. The Canon of the Bible was not settled until the 4th
Century.
One historical fact which proves extremely convenient for
the Protestant is the fact that the canon of the Bible – the authoritative list
of exactly which books are part of inspired Scripture – was not settled and
fixed until the end of the 4thcentury.
Until that time, there was much disagreement over which
Biblical writings were considered inspired and Apostolic in origin. The
Biblical canon varied from place to place: some lists contained books that were
later defined as non-canonical, while other lists failed to include books which
were later defined as canonical. For example, there were Early Christian
writings which were considered by some to be inspired and Apostolic and which
were actually read in Christian public worship, but which were later omitted
from the New Testament canon. These include The Shepherd of Hermas, The Epistle
of Barnabas, and The Didache, among others. (18)
IT WAS NOT UNTIL THE SYNOD OF ROME (382) AND THE COUNCILS OF
HIPPO (393) AND CARTHAGE (397) THAT WE FIND A DEFINITIVE LIST OF CANONICAL
BOOKS BEING DRAWN UP, AND EACH OF THESE COUNCILS ACKNOWLEDGED THE VERY SAME
LIST OF BOOKS. (19)
From this point on, there is in practice no dispute about
the canon of the Bible, the only exception being the so-called Protestant
Reformers, who entered upon the scene in 1517, an unbelievable 11 centuries
later.
Once again, there are two fundamental questions for which
one cannot provide answers that are consonant with Sola Scriptura:
A) Who or what served as the final Christian authority up to
the time that the New Testament’s canon was identified?
B) And if there was a final authority that the Protestant
recognizes before the establishment of the canon, on what basis did that
authority cease being final once the Bible’s canon was established?
11. An “Extra-Biblical” Authority Identified the Canon of
the Bible.
Since the Bible did not come with an inspired table of contents,
the doctrine of Sola Scriptura creates yet another dilemma: How can one know
with certainty which books belong in the Bible – specifically, in the New
Testament?
THE UNADULTERATED FACT IS THAT ONE CANNOTKNOW UNLESS THERE
IS AN AUTHORITY OUTSIDE THE BIBLE WHICH CAN TELL HIM. Moreover, THIS AUTHORITY
MUST, BY NECESSITY, BE INFALLIBLE, SINCE THE POSSIBILITY OF ERROR IN
IDENTIFYING THE CANON OF THE BIBLE (20) would mean that all believers run the
risk of having the wrong books in their Bibles, a situation that would vitiate
Sola Scriptura. But if there is such an infallible authority, then the doctrine
of Sola Scriptura.
ANOTHER HISTORICAL FACT VERY DIFFICULT TO RECONCILE WITH THE
DOCTRINE OF SOLA SCRIPTURA IS THAT IT WAS NONE OTHER THAN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH
WHICH EVENTUALLY IDENTIFIED AND RATIFIED THE CANON OF THE BIBLE.
The three councils mentioned above were all councils of this
Church. The Catholic Church gave its final, definitive, infallible definition
of the Biblical canon THE COUNCIL OF TRENT in 1546 – naming the very same list
of 73 books that had been included in the 4th If the Catholic Church is able,
then, to render an authoritative and infallible decision concerning such an
important matter as which books belong in the Bible, then upon what basis would
a person question its authority on other matters of faith and morals?
Protestants should at least concede a point which Martin
Luther, their religion’s founder, also conceded, namely, that the Catholic
Church safeguarded and identified the Bible: “WE ARE OBLIGED TO YIELD MANY
THINGS TO THE CATHOLICS – (FOR EXAMPLE), THAT THEY POSSESS THE WORD OF GOD,
WHICH WE RECEIVED FROM THEM; OTHERWISE, WE SHOULD HAVE KNOWN NOTHING AT ALL
ABOUT IT.” (21)
12. The Belief that Scripture is “Self-Authenticating”
Does Not Hold Up under Examination
Lacking a satisfactory answer to the question of how the
canon of the Bible was determined, Protestants often resort to the notion that
Scripture is “self-authenticating,” that is, the books of the Bible witness to
themselves that they are inspired of God.
The major problem with such an assertion [that is the books
are “self-authenticating”] is simply that even a cursory examination of
ecclesial history will demonstrate it to be utterly untrue. For example, several
books from the New Testament – James, Jude, 2 Peter, 2 John, 3 John, and
Revelation– were disputed in terms of their canonical status for some time. In
certain places they were accepted, while simultaneously in others they were
rejected.
Even spiritual giants like St. Athanasius (297-373), St.
Jerome (c. 342-420) and St. Augustine (354-430) had drawn up lists of New
Testament books which witnessed to what was generally acknowledged as inspired
in their times and places, but none of these lists corresponds exactly to the
New Testament canon that was eventually identified by the Catholic Church at
the end of the 4thcentury and which is identical to the canon that Catholics
have today. (22)
If Scripture were actually “self-authenticating,” why was
there so much disagreement and uncertainty over these various books? Why was
there any disagreement at all? Why was the canon of the Bible not identified
much earlier if the books were allegedly so readily discernible? The answer
that one is compelled to accept in this regard is simply that the Bible is not
self-authenticating at all.
Even more interesting is the fact that some books in the
Bible do not identify their authors. The idea of self-authentication – if it
were true – might be more plausible if each and every Biblical author
identified himself, as we could more easily examine that author’s credentials,
so to speak, or at least determine who it was that claimed to be speaking for
God. But in this regard the Bible leaves us ignorant in a few instances.
Take Matthew’s Gospel as one example; nowhere does the text
indicate that it was Matthew, one of the twelve Apostles, who authored it. We
are therefore left with only two possibilities for determining its authorship:
1) what Tradition has to say, 2) Biblical scholarship. In either case, the
source of determination is an extra-Biblical source and would therefore fall
under condemnation by the doctrine of Sola Scriptura.
Now the Protestant may be saying at this point that it is
unnecessary to know whether or not Matthew actually wrote this Gospel, as one’s
salvation does not depend on knowing whether it was Matthew or someone else.
But such a view presents quite a difficulty. What the Protestant is effectively
saying is that while an authentic Gospel is God’s Word and is the means by
which a person comes to a saving knowledge of Christ, the person has no way of
knowing for certain in the case of Matthew’s Gospel whether it is Apostolic in
origin and consequently has no way of knowing it if its genuine (i.e., God’s
Word) or not. And if this Gospel’s authenticity is questionable, then why
include it in the Bible? If its authenticity is certain, then how is this known
in the absence of self-identification by Matthew? One can only conclude that
the Bible is not self-authenticating.
The Protestant may wish to fall back on the Bible’s own
assertion that it is inspired, citing a passage like 2 Timothy 3:16 – “All
scripture, inspired of God, is profitable…”
However, a claim to inspiration is not in and of itself a
guarantee of inspiration.
Consider the fact that the writings of Mary Baker Eddy, the
founder of the Christian Science sect, claim to be inspired. The writings of
Joseph Smith, the founder of the Mormon sect, claim to be inspired.
These are but two of many possible examples which
demonstrate that any particular writing can claim just about anything.
Obviously, in order for us to know with certainty whether or
not a writing is genuinely inspired, we need more than a mere claim by that
writing that it is inspired.
The guarantee of inspiration must come from outside that
writing. In the case of the Bible, the guarantee must come from a non-Biblical
source. But outside authentication is excluded by the doctrine of Sola
Scriptura.
13. None of the Original Biblical Manuscripts is Extant.
A sobering consideration – and one which is fatal to the
doctrine of Sola Scriptura – is that we do not possess a single original
manuscript of any book of the Bible.
Now it is true that there are thousands of manuscripts
extant which are copiesof the originals – and more likely than not they are
copies of copies – but this fact does not help the Sola Scriptura position for
the simple reason that without original manuscripts, one cannot know with
certainty if he actually possesses the real Bible, whole and entire. (23) The
original autographs were inspired, while copies of them are not.
The Protestant may want to assert that not having original
Biblical manuscripts is immaterial, as God preserved the Bible by safeguarding
its duplication down through the centuries. (24)
However, there are two problems with this line of reasoning.
The first is that by maintaining God’s providence with regard to copying, a person
claims something which is not written in Scripture, and therefore, by the very
definition of Sola Scriptura, cannot serve as a rule of faith. In other words,
if one cannot find passages in the Bible which patently state that God will
protect the transmission of manuscripts, then the belief is not to be held. The
fact of the matter is that the Bible makes no such claim.
The second problem is that if you can maintain that God
safeguarded the written transmission of His Word, then you can also rightly
maintain that He safeguarded its oral transmission as well (recall 2
Thessalonians 2:14 [15] and the twofold form of God’s one revelation). After
all, the preaching of the Gospel began as an oral tradition (cf. Luke 1:1-4 and
Rom. 10:17). It was not until later on that some of the oral tradition was
committed to writing – becoming Sacred Scripture – and it was later still that these
writings were declared to be inspired and authoritative. ONCE YOU CAN MAINTAIN
THAT GOD SAFEGUARDED THE ORAL TRANSMISSION OF HIS TEACHING, YOU HAVE
DEMONSTRATED THE BASIS FOR SACRED TRADITION AND HAVE ALREADY BEGUN SUPPORTING
THE CATHOLIC POSITION.
14. The Biblical Manuscripts Contain Thousands of
Variations
It has just been noted that there are thousands of Biblical
manuscripts in existence; these manuscripts contain thousands of variations in
the text; one writer estimates that there are over 200,000 variations. (25)
Whereas the majority of these deal with minor concerns – such as spelling, word
order and the like – there are also variations of a more important nature:
a) the manuscript evidence shows that scribes sometimes
modified the Biblical texts to harmonize passages, to accommodate them to
historical fact, and to establish a doctrinal correctness; (26) and
b) there are portions of verses (i.e., more than just a
single word in question) for which there are several different manuscript readings,
such as John 7:39, Acts 6:8, Colossians 2:2 and 1 Thessalonians 3:2. (27) These
facts leave the Protestant in the position of not knowing if he possesses what
the Biblical authors originally wrote. And if this is the case, then how can a
Protestant profess to base his beliefs solely on the Bible when he cannot
determine with certainty the textual authenticity of the Bible? (28)
More importantly, there are several more major textual
variations among New Testament manuscripts. The following two examples will
illustrate the point:
First, according to the manuscripts that we have, there are
four possible endings for Mark’s Gospel: the short ending, which includes
verses 1-8 of chapter 16; the longer ending, which includes verses 1-8 plus
verses 9-20; the intermediate ending, which includes 2 to 3 lines of text
between verse 8 and the longer ending; and the longer ending in expanded form,
which includes several verses after verse 14 of the longer ending. (29) The
best that can be said about these different endings is that we simply do not
know for certain, from the Bible itself, where St. Mark’s Gospel concluded,
and, depending on which ending(s) is/are included in a Protestant’s Bible, the
publisher runs the risk of either adding verses to or omitting verses from the
original text – thus violating the doctrine of Sola Scriptura, which requires
“the Bible alone and in its entirety” as the basis of faith. Even if a
Protestant’s Bible includes all four endings with explanatory comments and/or
footnotes, he still cannot be certain which of the four endings is genuine.
Second, there is manuscript evidence for alternate readings
in some pivotal verses of the Bible, such as John1:18, where there are two
possible wordings. (30) Some (such as the King James Version) read along the
lines of the Douay-Rheims: “No man hath seen God at any time: the only begotten
Son Who is in the bosom of the Father, he hath declared him.” Either wording is
substantiated by manuscript evidence, and you will therefore find Biblical scholars
relying on their best educated judgment as to which one is “correct.” A similar
situation occurs at Acts 20:28, where the manuscript evidence shows that Saint
Paul could be referring to either the “church of the Lord” (Greek kuriou) or
the “church ofGod” (Greek theou). (31)
Now this point may seem trivial at first, but suppose you
are trying to evangelize a cult member who denies the divinity of Jesus Christ.
While John 1:18 and Acts 20:28 are clearly not the only passages to use in
defense of Our Lord’s divinity, you still may be unable to utilize these verses
with that person, depending on which manuscript tradition your Bible follows.
That would leave you marginally less able to defend a major Biblical doctrine,
and the very nature of this fact become quite problematic from the perspective
of the doctrine of Sola Scriptura.
15. There Are Hundreds of Bible Versions.
As mentioned in Point 14 above, there are thousands and
thousands of variations in the Biblical manuscripts. This problem is compounded
by the fact that history has known hundreds of Bible versions, which vary in
translation as well as textual sources.
The question which begs to be asked is, “Which version is
the correct one?” or “Which version is closest to the original manuscripts?”
One possible answer will depend on which side of the Catholic/Protestant issue
you situate yourself. Another possible answer will depend upon which Bible
scholars you consider to be trustworthy and reputable. The simple fact is that
some versions are clearly inferior to others.
Progress in the field of Biblical research made possible by
archaeological discoveries (e.g., the Dead Sea Scrolls) has vastly improved our
knowledge of the ancient Biblical languages and settings.
We know more today about the variables impacting upon
Biblical studies than our counterparts of 100, 200, or 1,000 years ago. From
this point of view, modern Bible versions may have a certain superiority to
older Bible versions.
On the other hand, Bibles based on the Latin Vulgate of
Saint Jerome (4thcentury) – in English, this is the Douay-Rheims – are based on
original texts which have since perished, and thus these traditional versions
bypass 16 centuries of possible textual corruption.
This fact causes a considerable problem for the Protestant,
because it means that modern Protestants may have in some respects a “better”
or more accurate Bible than their forbears, while in other respects they may
have a “poorer” or less accurate Bible – which in turn means that modern
Protestants have either a “more authoritative” final authority or a “less
authoritative” final authority than their predecessors.
But the existence of degrees of authoritativeness begins to
undermine Sola Scriptura, because it would mean that one Bible is not as
authentic a final authority as another one. And if it is not as authentic, then
the possibility of transmitting erroneous doctrine increases, and the
particular Bible version then fails to function as the final authority, since
it is not actually final. Another point to consider is that BIBLE TRANSLATORS,
AS HUMAN BEINGS, ARE NOT COMPLETELY OBJECTIVE AND IMPARTIAL.
Some may be likely to render a given passage in a manner
which corresponds more closely with one belief system rather than with another.
An example of this tendency can be seen in Protestant Bibles where the Greek
word "paradise" is Since Protestants deny the existence of Sacred
Tradition, some Protestant translations of the Bible render this word as “teachings”
or “customs” rather than “tradition,” as the latter would tend to give more
weight to the Catholic position. Yet another consideration is the reality that some versions
of the Bible are outright perversions of the Biblical texts, as in the case of the
Jehovah’s Witnesses’ New World Translation.
Here the “translators” render key passages in a manner that
suits their erroneous doctrines. (32) Now unless there is an authority outside
of the Bible to declare such translations unreliable and dangerous, by what
authority could someone call them unsuited for use in teaching doctrine?
If the Protestant responds by saying that this issue can be
determined on the basis of Biblical scholarship, then he is ignorant of the
fact that the Jehovah’s Witnesses also cite sources of Biblical scholarship in
support of their translation of these passages! The issue then devolves into a
game of pitting one source of scholarship against another – one human authority
against another.
Ultimately, THE PROBLEM CAN ONLY BE RESOLVED THROUGH THE
INTERVENTION OF AN INFALLIBLE TEACHING AUTHORITY WHICH SPEAKS ON BEHALF OF
CHRIST. THE CATHOLIC KNOWS THAT THAT AUTHORITY IS THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH AND
ITS MAGISTERIUM OR TEACHING AUTHORITY. In an exercise of this authority, Catholic
Bishops grant an imprimatur (meaning “Let it be printed”) to be included on the
opening pages of certain Bible versions and other spiritual literature to alert
the reader that the book contains nothing contrary to the teachings of Christ
and the Apostles. (33)
16. The Bible Was Not Available to Individual Believers
until the 15th Century.
Essential to the doctrine of Sola Scriptura is the idea that
the Holy Spirit will enlighten each believer as to the correct interpretation
for a given Bible passage. This idea presupposes that each believer possesses a
Bible or at least has access to a Bible.
The difficulty with such a presumption is that the Bible was
not able to be mass-produced and readily available to individual believers
until the advent of the printing press in the 15thcentury. (34) Even then, it
would have taken quite some time for large numbers of Bibles to be printed and
disseminated to the general population.
The predicament caused by this state of affairs is that
millions upon millions of Christians who lived prior to the 15th century would
have been left without a final authority, left to flounder spiritually, unless
by chance they had access to a hand-copied Bible.
Even a mere human understanding of such circumstances would
make God out to be quite cruel as He would have revealed the fullness of His
Word to humanity in Christ, knowing that the means by which such information
could be made readily available would not exist for another 15 centuries.
On the other hand, we know that God is not cruel at all, but
in fact has infinite love for us. It is for this reason that He did not leave
us in darkness.
He sent us His Son to teach us the way we should believe and
act and this Son established a Church to promote those teachings through preaching
to both the learned and the illiterate.
“FAITH THEN COMETH BY HEARING; AND
HEARING BY THE WORD OF CHRIST.” (Rom. 10:17). CHRIST ALSO GAVE TO HIS CHURCH HIS GUARANTEE THAT HE WOULD
ALWAYS BE WITH IT, NEVER ALLOWING IT TO FALL INTO ERROR.
God, therefore, did not abandon His people and make them
rely upon the invention of the printing press to be the means whereby they
would come to a saving knowledge of His Son. Instead, He gave us a divinely
established, infallible teacher, the Catholic Church, to provide us with the
means to be informed of the Good News of the Gospel – and to be informed
correctly.
17. The Doctrine of Sola Scriptura Did Not Exist Prior to
the 14th Century.
As difficult a reality as it may be for some to face, THIS
FOUNDATIONAL DOCTRINE OF PROTESTANTISM DID NOT ORIGINATE UNTIL THE 14TH CENTURY
AND DID NOT BECOME WIDESPREAD UNTIL THE 16H CENTURY – a far, far cry time-wise
from the teachings of Jesus Christ and His Apostles.
This simple fact is conveniently overlooked or ignored by
Protestants, but it can stand alone as sufficient or enough reason to discard the
doctrine of Sola Scriptura.
The truth that the doctrine of Sola Scriptura did not exist
before John Wycliffe (forerunner of Protestantism) in the 14th century and did
not become widespread until Martin Luther came along in the 16th century and
began setting up his own “traditions of men” in place of authentic Christian
teaching.
THE DOCTRINE, THEREFORE, NOT ONLY LACKS THE HISTORICAL
CONTINUITY WHICH MARKS LEGITIMATE APOSTOLIC TEACHING, BUT IT ACTUALLY
REPRESENTS AN ABRUPT CHANGE, A RADICAL BREAK WITH THE CHRISTIAN PAST.
Protestants will assert that the Bible itself teaches Sola
Scriptura and therefore that the doctrine had its roots back with Jesus Christ.
However, as we have seen above, THE BIBLE TEACHES NO SUCH
THINGS. THE CLAIM THAT THE BIBLE TEACHES THIS DOCTRINE IS NOTHING MORE THAN A
REPEATED EFFORT TO RETROJECT THIS BELIEF BACK INTO THE PAGES OF SCRIPTURE.
The examination of historical continuity (or lack thereof) provides indications whether or not a particular belief originated with Jesus
Christ and the Apostles or whether it appeared somewhere much later in time.
THE FACT IS THAT THE HISTORICAL RECORD IS UTTERLY SILENT ON THE DOCTRINE OF
SOLA SCRIPTURAPRIOR TO THE 14TH
18. The Doctrine of Sola Scriptura Produces Bad Fruit,
Namely, Division and Disunity.
If the doctrine of Sola Scriptura were true, then it should
be expected that Protestants would all be in agreement in terms of doctrine, as
the Bible could not simultaneously teach contradictory beliefs.
And yet the reality is that there are literally thousands
(35) of Protestant sects and denominations, each of which claims to have the
Bible as its only guide, each of which claims to be preaching the truth, yet
each of which teaches something different from the others.
Protestants claim that they differ only in non-essential or
peripheral matters, but the fact is that they cannot even agree on major
doctrinal issues such as the Eucharist, salvation, and justification – to name
a few.
For instance, most Protestant denominations teach that Jesus
Christ is only symbolically present in the Eucharist, while others (such as
Lutherans and Episcopalians) believe that He is literally present, at least to
some extent.
Some denominations teach that once you are “saved” you can
never lose your salvation, while others believe it is possible for a true
Christian to sin gravely and cease being “saved.”
And some denominations teach that justification involves the
Christian’s being merely declared righteous, while others teach that the
Christian must also grow in holiness and actually become righteous.
OUR LORD CATEGORICALLY NEVER INTENDED FOR HIS FOLLOWERS TO
BE AS FRAGMENTED, DISUNITED AND CHAOTIC AS THE HISTORY OF PROTESTANTISM HAS
BEEN SINCE ITS VERY INCEPTION. (36)
Quite the contrary, He prayed for His followers: “That they
all may be one, as thou, Father, in me, and I in thee; that they also may be
one in us.” (John 17:21). And St. Paul exhorts Christians to doctrinal unity
with the words, “One body and one Spirit… One Lord, one faith, one baptism.”
(Eph. 4:4-5).
HOW, THEN, CAN THE THOUSANDS OF PROTESTANT DENOMINATIONS AND
SECTS ALL CLAIM TO BE THE “TRUE CHURCH” WHEN THEIR VERY EXISTENCE REFUTES THIS
CLAIM? How can such heterodoxy and contradiction in doctrine be the unity for
which Our Lord prayed?
In this regard, the reader should be reminded of Christ’s
own words: “For by the fruit the tree is known.” (Matt. 12:33). By this
standard, THE HISTORICAL TESTIMONY AFFORDED BY PROTESTANTISM DEMONSTRATES THAT
THE TREE OF SOLA SCRIPTURA IS PRODUCING BAD FRUIT.
19. The Doctrine of Sola Scriptura Does Not Allow for a
Final, Definitive Interpretation of any given passage of Scripture.
As we have seen above, the doctrine of Sola Scriptura
maintains that the individual believer needs only the Bible as a rule of faith
and that he can obtain a true interpretation of a given Scripture passage
simply by comparing it with what the rest of the Bible teaches. In practice,
however, this approach creates more problems than it solves, and it ultimately
prevents the believer from knowing definitively and with certainty how any
given passage from the Bible should be interpreted.
THE PROTESTANT, IN REALITY, INTERPRETS THE BIBLE FROM A
STANDPOINT OF SUBJECTIVE OPINION RATHER THAN OBJECTIVE TRUTH.
For example, say Protestant person A studies a Scripture
passage and concludes interpretation X. Protestant B studies the identical
passage and concludes interpretation Y. Lastly, Protestant C studies the same
passage and concludes interpretation Z. (37) Interpretations X and Y and Z are
mutually contradictory. Yet each of these people, from the Protestant
perspective, can consider his or her interpretation to be “correct” because
each one has “compared Scripture with Scripture.”
Now there are only two possible determinations for these
three Protestants:
a) each of them is incorrect in his interpretation, or
b)
only one of them is correct – since three contradictory interpretations cannot
simultaneously be true. (38)
The problem here is that, without the existence of
an infallible authority to tell the three Protestants which of their respective
interpretations is correct (i.e., objectively true), there is no way for each
of them to know with certainty and definitively if his particular interpretation
is the correct one. Each Protestant is ultimately left to an individual
interpretation based on mere personal opinion – study and research into the
matter notwithstanding. Each Protestant thus becomes his own final authority –
or, if you will, his own “pope.”
Protestantism in practice bears out this fact. Since the
Bible alone is not sufficient as a rule of faith (if it were, our three
Protestants would be in complete accord in their interpretations), every
believer and denomination within Protestantism must necessarily arrive at
his/her/its own interpretation of the Bible. Consequently, if there are many
possible interpretations of Scripture, by definition there is no ultimate
interpretation. And if there is no ultimate interpretation, then a person
cannot know whether or not his own interpretation is objectively true.
A good comparison would be the moral law. If each person
relied on his own opinion to determine what was right or wrong, we would have
nothing more than moral relativism, and each person could rightly assert his
own set of standards. However, since God has clearly defined moral absolutes
for us (in addition to those we can know by reason from the natural law), we
can assess any given action and determine how morally good or bad it is. This
would be impossible without moral absolutes.
Of course any given denomination within Protestantism would
probably maintain that its particular interpretations are the correct ones – at
least in practice, if not formally. If it did not, its adherents would be
changing denominations! However, if any given denomination claims that its
interpretations are correct above those of the other denominations, it has
effectively set itself up as a final authority. The problem here is that such
an act violates Sola Scriptura, setting up an authority outside Scripture.
On the other hand, if any given denomination would grant
that it’s interpretations are no more correct than those of other
denominations, then we are back to the original dilemma of never knowing which
interpretation is correct and thus never having the definitive truth.
But Our Lord said, “I am the way, and the truth, and the
life.” (John14:6). The predicament here is that each and every denomination
within Protestantism makes the same claim – either effectively or formally –
regarding its interpretations being “correct.”
What we are left with are thousands of different
denominations, each claiming to have the Scriptural “truth,” yet none of which
is capable of providing an objective determination regarding that “truth.”
The result is an inability to obtain a definitive,
authoritative, and final interpretation of any given Scripture passage. In other
words, the Protestant can never say that “the buck stops here” with regard to
any given interpretation for any given passage of the Bible.
20. The Protestant Bible Is Missing 7 Entire Books
Much to their chagrin, Protestants are actually guilty of
violating their own doctrine. THE DOCTRINE OF SOLA SCRIPTURA PROHIBITS ANYONE
FROM ADDING TO OR DELETING FROM THE BIBLE, but Protestants have, in fact,
DELETED SEVEN ENTIRE BOOKS FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT, as well as portions of two
others. The books in question, which are wrongly termed “the Apocrypha” (“not
authentic”) by Protestants, are called the “deuterocanonical” (“second canon”)
books by Catholics: they are TOBIAS (TOBIT), JUDITH, 1 AND 2 MACCABEES, WISDOM,
ECCLESIASTICUS (OR SIRACH), AND BARUCH. PORTIONS OF DANIEL AND ESTHER are also
missing. In defense of their deficient Old Testament canon, Protestants
invariably present one or more of the following arguments:
1) the shorter, Pharisaic (or Palestinian) canon (39) of the
Old Testament was accepted by Christ and His Apostles, as they never quoted
from the deuterocanonical books;
2) the Old Testament was closed by the time of Christ, and
it was the shorter canon;
3) the Jews themselves accepted the shorter, Pharisaic canon
at the Council of Jamnia (or Javneh) in 90 A.D.; and
4) the deuterocanonical
books contain unscriptural material.
EACH OF THESE ARGUMENTS IS WHOLLY FLAWED.
1) Regarding the claim that Christ and His Apostles accepted
the shorter, Pharisaic canon, an examination of the New Testament’s quotation
of the Old Testament will demonstrate its fallacy. The New Testament quotes the
Old Testament about 350 times, and in approximately 300 of those instances
(86%), the quotation is taken from the Septuagint, a Greek translation of the
Old Testament in widespread use at the time of Christ. The Septuagint contained
the Deuterocanonical books. It is therefore unreasonable and presumptuous to
say that Christ and His Apostles accepted the shorter Old Testament canon, as
the clear majority of the time they used an Old Testament version which did
contain the seven books in question.
Or, take the case of Saint Paul, whose missionary journeys
and letters were directed to Hellenistic regions outside of Palestine. It has
been noted, for example, that his sermon at Antioch in Pisidia “presupposed a
thorough acquaintance among his hearers with the Septuagint” and that once the
Christian community was founded, the content of his letters to its members
“breathed the Septuagint.” (40) Obviously, Saint Paul was supporting the longer
canon of the Old Testament by his routine appeal to the Septuagint.
Moreover, it is erroneous to say either that the
deutero-canonical books were never quoted by Christ (41) and His apostles or
that such citation is a prerequisite for a book’s inclusion in the Biblical
canon. According to one list, the deutero-canonical books are cited or alluded
to in the New Testament not less than 150 times! (42) In addition, there are Old
Testament books, such as Ecclesiastes, Esther and Abdias (Obadiah), which are
not quoted by Christ or the Apostles, but which are nonetheless included in the
Old Testament canon (both Catholic and Protestant). Obviously, then, citation
by Christ or the Apostles does not singlehandedly determine canonicity.
2) Regarding the claim that Christ and the Apostles worked
with a closed Old Testament canon – which Protestants maintain was the shorter
canon – the historical evidence undermines the allegation. First, there was no
entity known as thePalestinian canon, for there were actually three canons in
use in Palestine at that time, (43) in addition to the Septuagint canon. And
second, the evidence demonstrates that “Judaism in the last two centuries B.C.
and in the first century A.D. was by no means uniform in its understanding of
which of its writings were considered sacred. There were many views both inside
and outside of Israel in the first centuries B.C. and A.D. on which writings
were deemed sacred.” (44)
3) Using the Council of Jamnia in support of a shorter canon
is manifestly problematic for the following reasons:
a) The decisions of a Jewish council which was held more
than 50 years after the Resurrection of Christ is in no way binding on the Christian
community, just as the ritual laws of Judaism (e.g., the prohibition against
eating pork) are not binding on Christians.
b) It is questionable whether or not the council made final
decisions about the Old Testament canon of Scripture, since “the list of books
acknowledged to ‘defile the hands’ continued to vary within Judaism itself up
through the 4th century A.D.” (45)
c) The council was, to some extent, a polemic directed
specifically against the “sect” of Christianity, and its tone, therefore, was
inherently opposed to Christianity. These Jews most likely accepted the shorter
Pharisaic canon precisely because the early Christians accepted the longer
Septuagint canon.
d) The decisions of this council represented the judgment of
just one branch of Pharisaic Judaism within Palestine and not of Judaism as a
whole.
4) Lastly, for Protestants to aver that the
deutero-canonical books contain unscriptural material is decidedly a case of
unwarranted dogmatism. This conclusion was reached simply because the so-called
Reformers, who were clearly antagonistic toward the Catholic Church, approached
the Bible with an a priori notion that it teaches “Reformed” (Protestant)
doctrine. They discarded the deutero-canonical books because in certain
instances these books contain decidedly Catholic doctrine, as in the case of 2
Machabees 12:42-46, which clearly supports the doctrine of prayers for the dead
and hence of Purgatory: “It is, therefore, a holy and wholesome thought to pray
for the dead, that they may be loosed from sins.” (2 Mach. 12:46). Luther, in
fact, wanted to discard also the New Testament books of Revelation and James,
the latter of which he termed an “epistle of straw” and which he felt had
“nothing evangelical about it” (46) – NO DOUBT BECAUSE IT CLEARLY STATES THAT
WE ARE SAVED BY FAITH AND WORKS (cf. James 2:14-26), in contrast to Luther’s
erroneous “faith alone” doctrine. Luther was ultimately persuaded by his
friends to retain these books.
In addition to the above is the fact of historical testimony
and continuity regarding the canon of the Bible. While we have seen that there
were disputes regarding the Biblical canon, two considerations are nonetheless
true:
1) the deuterocanonical books were certainly used by
Christians from the 1st century onward, beginning with Our Lord and His
disciples, and
2) once the issue of the canon was settled in the 4th
century, we see no change in Christian practice regarding the canon from that
point onward. In practice, the only challenge to and disregard of these two
realities occur when the so-called Reformers arrive on the scene in the 16th century and decide that they can simply trash an 11-centuries-long continuity
regarding the canon’s formal existence and a nearly 15-centuries-long
continuity regarding its practical existence.
The fact that any individual would come along and
single-handedly alter such a continuity regarding so central an issue as which
books comprise the Bible should give the sincere follower of Christ serious
pause. Such a follower is compelled to ask, “By whose authority does this
individual make such a major change?” Both history and Luther’s own writings
show that Luther’s actions were based on nothing but his own personal say-so.
Surely such an “authority” falls grossly short of that which is needed for the canonical change he espoused, especially considering that the process of
identifying the Bible’s canon was guided by the Holy Spirit, took centuries,
and involved some of the greatest minds in Christianity as well as several
Church Councils. More disturbing still is the fact that the other so-called
Reformers – and Protestants ever since – have followed suit by accepting
Luther’s changed canon, yet all the while they claim to honor the Bible and
insist that nothing can be added to or deleted from it.
21. The Doctrine of Sola Scriptura Had its Source in
Luther’s Own Emotional Problems.
If anything at all can be said with certainty about Martin
Luther, it is that he was deeply and chronically troubled by a combination of
doubts and despair about his salvation and a sense of utter impotence in the face
of temptation and sin. Luther himself notes, “My spirit was completely broken
and I was always in a state of melancholy; for, do what I would, my
‘righteousness’ and my ‘good works’ brought me no help or consolation.” (47)
In light of this reality, one must assess Luther’s
psychological and emotional frame of mind in terms of their impact on the
origins of his Sola Scriptura doctrine. Even a cursory examination will
demonstrate that this doctrine was born out of Luther’s need to be free from
the guilt feelings, despair, and temptation which “tortured” him.
Considering that Luther himself admits to an obsessive
concern with his own sinfulness, as well as an inability to resist temptation,
it seems reasonable to conclude that he suffered from scrupulosity, and even
Lutheran scholars will admit to this. (48)
Scrupulosity means that a person is overly anxious about
having committed sins when there is no real basis for such anxiety, and a
scrupulous person is one who often exaggerates the severity of his perceived
sinfulness, with a corresponding lack of trust in God. It is also relevant to
note that scrupulosity “often seems to be based on some psychological
dysfunction in the person.” (49)
In other words, Luther probably never had a moment of
emotional or psychological peace, since the voice of “conscience” always
pricked him about some matter, real or imagined. It would be quite natural for
someone so plagued to seek refuge from that voice, and FOR LUTHER THAT REFUGE
WAS FOUND IN THE DOCTRINE OF SOLA FIDE, OR SALVATION BY “FAITH ALONE.”
But since the avoidance of sin as well as the performance of
good works are necessary components for our salvation, and since these facts
were steadfastly taught and defended by the Catholic Church, Luther found
himself diametrically opposed to the teaching authority of the Church. BECAUSE
THE CHURCH ASSERTED THE NECESSITY OF DOING EXACTLY WHAT HE FELT INCAPABLE OF
DOING, LUTHER MADE A DRASTIC DECISION – ONE WHICH “SOLVED” HIS SCRUPULOSITY
PROBLEM: HE REJECTED THE TEACHING AUTHORITY OF THE CHURCH, EMBODIED IN THE
MAGISTERIUM WITH THE POPE AT ITS HEAD, AND CLAIMED THAT SUCH WAS CONTRARY TO
THE BIBLE. IN OTHER WORDS, BY CLAIMING SOLA SCRIPTURA TO BE TRUE CHRISTIAN
DOCTRINE, LUTHER DISMISSED THAT AUTHORITY WHICH COMPELLED HIM TO RECOGNIZE THAT
HIS OWN SPIRITUALITY WAS DYSFUNCTIONAL.
Summary
For all these reasons, then, IT IS EVIDENT THAT THE
PROTESTANT DOCTRINE OF SOLA SCRIPTURA IS AN UTTERLY UNBIBLICAL, MAN-MADE,
ERRONEOUS BELIEF WHICH MUST BE WHOLLY REJECTED. Those who are genuine Christian
believers and who have a commitment to the truths that Jesus Christ taught –
even if those contradict one’s current religious system – should be compelled
by the evidence to see the inherent flaws in this doctrine, flaws which are clearly
obvious from Scripture, logic, and history.
THE FULLNESS OF RELIGIOUS TRUTH, UNMIXED WITH ERROR, IS
FOUND ONLY IN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH, THE VERY CHURCH WHICH JESUS CHRIST HIMSELF
ESTABLISHED. According to the teaching of this Church, founded by Christ, SOLA
SCRIPTURA IS A DISTORTED, TRUNCATED VIEW OF CHRISTIAN AUTHORITY. RATHER, THE
TRUE RULE OF FAITH FOR THE FOLLOWERS OF CHRIST IS THIS:
THE IMMEDIATE OR DIRECT RULE OF FAITH IS THE TEACHING OF THE
CHURCH; THE CHURCH IN TURN, TAKES HER TEACHING FROM DIVINE REVELATION – BOTH THE
WRITTEN WORD, CALLED SACRED SCRIPTURE, AND THE ORAL OR UNWRITTEN WORD, KNOWN AS
“TRADITION,” WHICH TOGETHER FORM THE REMOTE OR INDIRECT RULE OF FAITH.
SCRIPTURE and TRADITION are the inspired sources of
Christian doctrine, while the RCH – a historical and visible entity dating back
to St. Peter and the Apostles in an uninterrupted succession – is the
infallible teacher and interpreter of Christian doctrine. It is only by
accepting this complete Christian rule of faith that followers of Christ know
they are adhering to all the things that He commanded His Apostles to teach
(cf. Matt. 28:20). It is only by accepting this complete Christian rule of
faith that the followers of Christ are assured of possessing the whole truth
which Christ taught, and nothing but that truth.
Footnotes
Note: Among the references are a few Protestant authors;
their works are not cited as “recommended reading,” but they show that the
points made in the present work are valid even by Protestant standards.
The Protestant Reformation was not a reform in the true
sense of the word, but rather it was a revolution – an upheaval of the
legitimate established religious and civil order of the day.
W. E. Vine [Protestant Author], Vine’s Expository Dictionary
of New Testament Words (McLean, VA: MacDonald Publishing House, n.d.), p. 387.
Cf. St. Alphonsus Liguori, An Exposition and Defense of all the Points of Faith
Discussed and Defined by the Sacred Council of Trent; along with a Refutation
of the Errors of the Pretended Reformers, etc. (Dublin: James Duffy, 1846), p.
50.
While all the books of the New Testament are considered to
have been written by the time St. John finished The Apocalypse(Revelation),
they were not formally identified as “the Bible” until much later on.
The word translated as “ordinances” is also translated as “teachings” or “traditions”; for example, the New International Version gives
“teachings,” with a footnote: “Or traditions.”
Vine, op. Cit., p. 564.
One example of this interpretive memory involves
Revelation12. The Early Church Fathers understood the “woman clothed with the
sun” to be a reference to the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary. For
someone to assert that this doctrine did not exist until 1950 (the year Pope
Pius XII formally defined the doctrine) represents the ignorance of ecclesial
history. Essentially, the belief was held from the beginning, but it was not
formally defined until the 20th century. Bear in mind that the Church often did
not have a need to define a doctrine formally until it was formally challenged
by someone (usually a heretic). Such occasions gave rise to the need officially
to define the “parameters” of the doctrine in question.
Catholic teaching states that “the body of bishops,”
successors of the Apostles, also teach infallibly when they, in union with the
Pope, “exercise the supreme Magisterium,” above all in an Ecumenical Council.”
(Cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church, #891). Also, “binding and loosing” is
Rabbinical terminology, and it refers to the power to pronounce authoritatively
interpretations and teachings. Christ clearly intended, then, for His Apostles,
under the leadership of Saint Peter (for Saint Peter alone received the power
of the keys), to possess the authority to render these authoritative
interpretations and teachings.
The assertion by Protestants that the Bible is its own
interpreter is nothing more than an exercise in futility. They claim that a
person can correctly interpret any given Scripture by comparing it with what
the rest of the Bible teaches. The problem with this line of reasoning can be
readily demonstrated. Ask ten people to give their respective interpretations
of a given Scripture passage, and you could get as many as ten different
explanations. If the Bible were able to interpret itself, as Protestants claim,
why do you not always obtain ten identical interpretations, even if you allow
these people an ample amount of time to conduct study and research? And if this
diversity of interpretation is true for a mere ten people, imagine the results,
when you multiply that number by one hundred, or one thousand, or one million.
History has already seen such a result, and its name is Protestantism.
There are some Biblical scholars who maintain that 2
Peter was actually the last New Testament book written, dating it sometime in
the earlier part of the 2nd century. Since there is not a consensus among
scholars that this date is accurate, it is sufficient for our purposes here to
accept the generally held view that all of the New Testament books were
complete with the composition of Revelation.
See, for instance: Irenaeus’ Against Heresies, Book 3,
Chapter 3; Tertullian’s Prescription against Heretics, Chapter 32; and Origen’s
First Principles, Book 1, Preface.
See, for instance: Ignatius’ Letter to the Smyrnaeans,
Chapters 8-9; Ignatius’ Letter to the Philadelphians, Introduction, and Chapters
1-4; and Ignatius’ Letter to the Magnesians, Chapter 7.
See, for instance: 1 Clement, Chapters 2, 56, 58, 59;
Ignatius’ Letter to the Romans, introduction and Chapter 3; Irenaeus’ Against
Heresies, Book 3, Chapter 3, no. 2; Tertullian’s Prescriptions against
Heretics, Chapter 22; and Eusebius’ Ecclesiastical History, Book 5, Chapter 24,
no. 9.
See Msgr. Patrick F. O’Hare, LL.D., The Facts about Martin
Luther(Cincinnati: Pustet, 1916; Rockford, IL: TAN, 1987), pp. 215-255.
Walch, XIII, 2195, as quoted in The Facts About Luther
(Cincinnati: Pustet, 1916; Rockford, IL: TAN, 1987), pp. 215-255.
Bear in mind that the decrees of an Ecumenical Council had
no binding force unless they were ratified by the Pope.
Two favorite verses for Arians of all ages to cite in
support of their beliefs are Proverbs 8:22 and John 14:28.
See John Henry Newman, The Arians of the Fourth Century.
Henry G. Graham, Where We Got the Bible: Our Debt to the
Catholic Church (St. Louis: B. Herder, 1911; Rockford, IL: TAN, 1977,
17thprinting), pp. 34-35.
This list is the same as the list given in the Church’s
final, definitive, explicit, infallible declaration as to which books are to be
included in the Bible, which was made by the Council of Trent, Session IV, in
1546. Earlier lists of canonical books were the list in the “Decretal of
Gelasius,” which was issued by authority of Pope Damasus in 382, and the canon
of Pope Saint Innocent I, which was sent to a Frankish bishop in 405. Neither
document was intended to be an infallible statement binding the whole Church,
but both documents include the same 73 books as the list of Trent some 11
centuries later. (The Catholic Encyclopedia[New York: The Encyclopedia Press,
1913], Vol. 3, p. 272).
The reader must note that the Catholic Church does not claim
that by identifying the books of the Bible it rendered them canonical. God alone
is the author of canonicity. The Catholic Church instead claims that it and it
alone has the authority and responsibility of infallibly pointing out which books
comprise the Biblical canon already authored by God.
Commentary on John, chapter 16, as cited in Paul Stenhouse’s
Catholic Answers to “Bible” Christians(Kensington: Chevalier Press, 1993), p.
31.
Graham, op. cit., p. 31.
The earliest copies of the Bible, Codex Vaticanus, and Codex
Sinaiticus, both date from the 4thcentury A.D., and neither one contains the
entire Bible, as parts of the manuscripts, has been lost or destroyed. The vast
majority of the manuscripts that exist are only portions of the Bible.
The irony here is that it was due to the tireless efforts of
Catholic monks working laboriously in their monasteries that the written Word
of God survived down through the centuries. The claim that the Catholic Church
did everything in its power to suppress the Bible is a most pernicious
falsehood and it can readily be refuted by even the most cursory examination
of and research into Church history. Quite the contrary, the Catholic Church,
in its unique role as guardian of the Deposit of Faith, protected the Bible’s
integrity from spurious and faulty translations and it was these spurious and
faulty copies of the Bible which it burned or destroyed to prevent false
gospels from being circulated.
Raymond F. Collins, Introduction to the New Testament(Garden
City, NY: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1983), p. 77.
Ibid., pp. 100-102.
Bruce M. Metzger (Protestant author), The Text of the New
Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption, and Restoration(Oxford University
Press, 1992), pp. 221-225, 234-242.
It has been maintained by Protestants that in all the
variations in Biblical manuscripts, not one touches upon a major doctrine. Even
though this assertion is untrue, it does not alter the fact that the Protestant
is here admitting, at least obliquely, that it is permissible to accept
something which is less than or different from the “real” Bible. And if this is
true, then the Protestant himself has begun to undermine Sola Scriptura.
Metzger, op. cit., pp. 226-228.
Collins, op. cit., p. 102.
Metzger, op. cit., p. 234.
Of the numerous examples which could be cited, space
considerations confine us to just a few to illustrate the point. In John1:1,
the NWT reads, “… and the Word was a god” rather than “and the Word was God,”
because Witnesses deny the divinity of Jesus Christ. In Colossians1:15-20, the
NWT inserts the word “other” into the text four times because Witnesses believe
that Jesus Christ Himself was created. In Matthew26:26 the NWT reads “… this
means my body…” instead of “This is my body,” because Witnesses deny the Real
Presence of Christ in the Eucharist.
Moreover, the old Latin Vulgate version of the Bible
received a very particular approval by the Church at the Council of Trent among
all the Latin editions of the Scriptures then in circulation. The Council of
Trent declared: “Moreover, the same Holy Council [of Trent]… ordains and
declares that the old Latin Vulgate Edition, which, in use for so many hundred
years has been approved by the Church, be in public lectures, disputations,
sermons and expositions held as authentic, and that no one dares or presumes
under any pretext whatsoever to reject it.” (Fourth Session, April 8, 1546).
Hence, as Pope Pius XII stated in his 1943 encyclical letter Divino Afflante
Spiritu(“On the Promotion of Biblical Studies”), the Vulgate, “when interpreted
in the sense in which the Church has always understood it,” is “free from any
error whatsoever in matters of faith and morals.”
In 1907 Pope Saint Pius X (1903-1914) initiated a revision
of the Vulgate to achieve even greater textual accuracy. After his death, this
huge project was carried on by others. In 1979 Pope John Paul II promulgated a
“New Vulgate” as “Editio typical” or “normative edition.
It should be noted that the inventor of the printing press –
Johannes Gutenberg – was Catholic, and that the first book he printed was the
Bible (circa1455). It should also be noted that the first printed Bible
contained 73 books, the exact same number as today’s Catholic Bible.
Protestants deleted 7 books from the Old Testament after the Bible had already
begun being printed.
By some estimates, there are approximately 25,000 different
Protestant denominations and sects. In the approximately 500 years since
Protestantism’s origin with Martin Luther (usually dated at 1517), this number
translates into an average of one new Protestant denomination or sect every
week! Even if you take a conservative estimate of 10,000 denominations and
sects, you still have a new one developing every 2 ½ weeks.
Even the original “Reformers” – Martin Luther, John Calvin
and Ulrich Zwingli – did not agree on doctrinal matters and labeled each
other’s teachings heretical.
The quantity of three is used here for illustrative purposes
only. The actual historical quantities (i.e., the number of variant
interpretations for various passages) are far larger.
It is not denied here that a given passage from Scripture
can have different levels of interpretation or that it may have different
levels of meaning in terms of its application in the life of a believer. It is,
however, denied here that a given passage can have more than one theological or
doctrinal meaning in the face of opposing interpretations. For example, if two
people assert, respectively, “X” and “not-X” for a given interpretation, they
cannot both be correct. Take the doctrine of the Holy Eucharist, for instance.
If the first person says that the bread and wine at Mass actually become the
Body and Blood of Jesus Christ and the second person say that they do not, it
is impossible for both views to be objectively true.
The Pharisaic canon, which was used by Jews in Palestine,
did not contain the deuterocanonical books. The Septuagint or Alexandrian
canon, which was used largely by Jews living in the Dispersion (i.e.,
Hellenistic regions outside of Palestine), did contain the deuterocanonical books.
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