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Radio Replies First Volume - "Bible Only" a false principle
Celledoor.com ^ | 1938 | Fathers Rumble & Carty

Posted on 07/16/2009 12:27:42 AM PDT by GonzoII

"Bible Only" a false principle



565. The Gospel of Christ is simplicity itself.

In one way it is. It tells us clearly that Christ established a definite Church which He commissioned to teach all nations. It is very simple from this point of view, for men have but to accept the Catholic Church, and be taught by that Church.

But the Gospel is not simplicity itself in the way you intend. Men have devoted their lives to the study of the Gospels, preparing themselves for the task by profound research in the Hebrew, Syrian, Arabic, Greek, and Latin languages. And even then, many passages are most difficult to understand.

566. But at least the plan of salvation can be understood by the simplest person. We Protestants even tell our children to read their Bibles in order to discern it.

According to the findings of your simple readers there must be hundreds of conflicting plans of salvation, all revealed by the one Christ! As for the capacity of your children, you might as well give them the article in the Encyclopaedia Brittanica on Spectroscopic Analysis as the subject matter of their studies. But the Bible itself is against your theory. Thus St. Peter says that in Scripture there are certain things "hard to be understood, which the unlearned and unstable wrest, as they do also the other Scriptures, to their own destruction." 2 Pet 3:16. To his mind the private interpretation of Scripture can be most dangerous.

567. God has given us brains to think for ourselves. We do not need Help to understand Scripture.

God had given men brains before He came to teach them Himself, and He came to teach them precisely because their brains could not succeed in finding out the things which were to their peace. If you say that His revealed teachings in the Scriptures together with our brains are enough, those very revealed teachings tell you that they are not. Even in the Old Law God said, "The lips of the Priest shall keep knowledge, and they shall seek the law at his mouth." Mal 2:7. In the New Law Christ sent His Church to teach men, transferring to His Church that authority of God once possessed by the Priests of the Old Law. In the New Testament itself we find Philip the Deacon saying to the Ethiopian, who was reading the Scriptures, "Thinkest thou that thou understandest what thou readest?" and the Ethiopian replying, "And how can I unless some man show me?" Acts 8:30. St. Peter, too, explicitly refutes your ideas. "No prophecy of Scripture," he writes, "is of any private interpretation." 2 Pet 1:20.

568. St. Peter means that the Prophets did not prophesy by their own will, but by the Holy Spirit. He does not refer to interpretation by us.

Your own Protestant Bishop Ellicott says of these verses, "The words private interpretation might seem to mean that the sacred writers did not get their prophecies by private interpretation, but by divine inspiration. But this is certainly not the meaning. The real meaning is that the reader must not presume to interpret privately that which is far more than ordinary human thought."

569. Any man who can think has the moral right to interpret anything.

He has not. The very laws of the state are not subject to the interpretation of each and every citizen. There is such a thing as thinking erroneously. In difficulties of civil law a man consults a lawyer who knows legal practice and parallel statutes. Who gives you the right to take greater liberties with divine legislation? A man who knows nothing of Hebrew or Greek, and is quite untrained in Scriptural exegesis, would misapprehend the sense of Scripture in hundreds of places.

570. Did not Christ promise that He would send the Holy Spirit to teach us all truth?

He did not promise that the Holy Spirit would teach each individual separately. If every individual were under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, all who read Scripture sincerely should come to the same conclusion. But they do not. The frightful chaos as to the meaning of Scripture is proof positive that the Holy Spirit has not chosen this way of leading men to the truth. It is blasphemy to say that the Holy Spirit does not know His own mind, and that He deliberately leads men into contradictory notions. Christ promised to preserve His Church as a Church by the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and the only Church which shows signs of having been preserved is the consistent Catholic Church. The individual is guided by the Holy Spirit to a certain extent in the ways of holiness, but in the knowledge of revealed truth he is to be guided by the Catholic Church which Christ sent to teach all nations.

571. I don't see the need of learning to understand a simple story for simple people.

The Bible is not a simple story for simple people. We live thousands of years after the Bible was written, and our language and customs are very different now. No book written at one age is easy for another age. The study of antiquities demands a knowledge of primitive languages of which few are capable, and for which still fewer have the time. Anyway God never intended the Bible to be the sole guide to religion for all time. Christ taught orally and with authority, and He sent His Church to teach in the same way and with the same authority.

572. Hoiv does it help to know Hebrew or Greek?

Because one must know what the original words meant in the language in which Scripture was written. A knowledge of Hebrew and Greek soon shows that the translators do not always find an English word to express the exact sense of the original. God inspired the thoughts of the original writers, not the work of the translators. And if you read a sense into Scripture which God did not intend at all, you no longer have God's Word.

573. Christ chose poor fishermen, not learned men.

He trained them personally, and infused into their minds an exact knowledge of His doctrine. We cannot claim to have received a similar revelation, that we should rank ourselves with them.

574. Then Catholics have to believe just what the Priest likes to tell them?

The Priest cannot tell the people just what he likes. He is obliged to teach just what Christ taught, and which has been taught him in the Name of Christ by the infallible Catholic Church.

575. Is your Church afraid that people will form opinions for themselves?

If we consider some of the opinions people have formed for themselves from their private reading of Scripture there is need to be afraid. Christ's method was to establish a teaching Church. Protestants have a peculiar method of their own, but you cannot blame the Catholic Church for not using the Protestant method, a method which has led to nothing but uncertainty and widespread unbelief.

576. Admitting the necessity of guidance, are not our Protestant ministers as capable as Catholic Priests in telling us what Scripture means?

They might be, if Priests had not an infallible Catholic Church to guide them. The Catholic Church rejoices in the special assistance of the Holy Spirit, and the Priest has the help of her defined doctrines and the constant Catholic tradition as a safeguard. But your Protestant ministers do not claim to be spokesmen of an infallible Church. On their own principles they have to admit that they are possibly wrong. And as a matter of fact, where all Priests are agreed in the essential teachings of Scripture, your ministers come to all kinds of contradictory conclusions. The unity of teaching among Catholic Priests is a greater indication of capability than the chaos which prevails outside the Catholic Church. But the capability of Catholic Priests has little to do with relative personal attainments. It is derived from the authority of the infallible Catholic Church.

577. You speak of the authority of the Church and the weight of tradition. But I have been taught that Scripture is the only rule of faith.

You have been taught wrongly. Scripture itself denies that it is the only rule of faith. The last verse of St. John's Gospel tells us that not all concerning Our Lord's work is contained in Scripture. St. Paul tells us over and over again that much of Christian teaching is to be found in tradition. One who clings to the reading of the Bible only might be able to cite hundreds of texts yet not know Christian doctrine by any means. In fact, the adoption of the Bible only has led to as many opinions as there are men amongst non-Catholics. Finally, Scripture tells us most clearly that the Catholic Church is the rule of faith, that Church which Christ sent to teach all nations and which He commanded men to hear and obey. He who believes in Scripture as his only guide ends by believing in his own mistaken interpretations of the Bible, and that means that he ends by believing in himself.

578. Is not the Church built on the knowledge it gets from the Bible?

No. The Catholic Church was built by Christ and upon Christ before a line of the New Testament was written. She received her doctrine immediately from the lips of Christ, and is safeguarded from error in her teaching by the Holy Spirit. Between 40 and 80 years after her foundation, some of her members wrote the Books of the New Testament. If the Gospels were the only rule of faith, then before they were written there could have been no Christian rule of faith at all!

579. Christ gave us the command to search the Scriptures. Jn 5:39.

That was a retort, not a command, and you cannot turn a particular rebuke into a universal law. Were it a universal law, it would have been impossible of fulfillment by the vast majority during the fourteen centuries prior to the invention of the printing press! But take the context. The Jews, who boasted of their fidelity to the Mosaic Law, would not believe in Christ. He challenged them: "(You) search the Scriptures, for you think in them to have life everlasting; and the same are they that give testimony of me." The Catholic Church could say in the same way to Protestants: "You are ever speaking of searching the Scriptures as opposed to my methods, and think in them to have everlasting life independently of me; yet the same are they that give testimony of me."

580. Do we not read that the early Christians searched the Scriptures daily? Acts 17:11.

They first received the true doctrine from the teaching Church, and then merely checked it in the Scriptures. That is the right procedure, and Catholics today do the same. But your way is not first to be taught by the Church, and then verify, but to try to make out your own religion from the Bible with an untrained mind and by that private interpretation which Scripture itself forbids.

581. Well, I am afraid of nothing as long as I have the pure Word of God to fall back upon.

Without the Catholic Church you cannot prove it to be the pure Word of God. Nor need anyone be afraid of the pure Word of God. What we must fear is the Word of God adulterated by people who read into it whatever they like.

Encoding copyright 2009 by Frederick Manligas Nacino. Some rights reserved.
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0
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TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic
KEYWORDS: catholic; radiorepliesvolone
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To: annalex

Bible Only is a just misnomer made by Catholics. I am never sure what the point is except to try to prove some false premise.


41 posted on 07/16/2009 1:07:58 PM PDT by Always Right (Obama: more arrogant than Bill Clinton, more naive than Jimmy Carter, and more liberal than LBJ.)
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To: Ruy Dias de Bivar

You wrote:

“Since the church was before the New Testament, why do the sermons and letters of the Apostles differ so much from later church teaching?”

They don’t. What differs is your Protestant interpretation from reality.

“Can you reconcile wht is taught in ROMANS (the bible within a bible)with the early and later church fathers?”

Yes, without any difficulty whatsoever. It’s already been done (by Protestants no less): http://www.amazon.com/Romans-Ancient-Christian-Commentary-Scripture/dp/083081356X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1247775587&sr=8-1


42 posted on 07/16/2009 1:20:33 PM PDT by vladimir998
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To: Always Right

“Bible Alone” and “Faith Alone” are two cornerstone, and faulty, principles of the Reformation, proclaimed by Luther.


43 posted on 07/16/2009 1:21:18 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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To: Always Right

You wrote:

“You can either take that interpretation or you can be consistent with the rest of the Bible and conclude Matt 16:18 is referring to the confession of Peter that Christ is the son of the living God is the cornerstone/foundation.”

That’s not consistent at all since that’s not what Christ said.

“Peter is a small rock, like the rest of believers, who make up the Church.”

No, that old, tired and erroneous argument is known to be wrong even according to reputable Protestant scholars such as D.A. Carson.

“The self-serving Catholic interpretation ignores many passages throughout the Bible including 1 Peter 2:5-6, Acts 4:11, and 1 Cor 3:11. Christ is the cornerstone.”

Nope. It doesn’t ignore anything. It just gets it all right.


44 posted on 07/16/2009 1:25:12 PM PDT by vladimir998
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To: Always Right

You wrote:

“My Church started when Jesus came to the earth.”

Nope. If you were to state the name of your sect we could prove that easily enough.

“The only requirement is that you accept Jesus as the son of the living God who died for your sins. The NT serves as a testimony for that. It doesn’t matter when the NT was written or when the NT was first printed for the masses or any other random date you come up with. Any of that is irrelevant.”

No, it matter for what we’re talking about. You have to insist it doesn’t because that false line of reasoning is all you have.


45 posted on 07/16/2009 1:27:11 PM PDT by vladimir998
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To: annalex
If you accept authority other than the Bible then you agree that Bible Only is a false principle

Hardly, I said that the Bible Only contains the inspired words of God.

Those words affirm the authority of the church and of true guidance from the Holy Spirit.

46 posted on 07/16/2009 1:46:21 PM PDT by xzins (Chaplain Says: Jesus befriends all who ask Him for help.)
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To: xzins
I'm having trouble following you on this....

Hardly, I said that the Bible Only contains the inspired words of God.

As in, "only the Bible contains the inspired words of God?" If so, then I don't see how you could square it with this:

Those words affirm the authority of the church and of true guidance from the Holy Spirit.

But if the Holy Spirit "provides guidance," then that's God providing information from a Source other than the Bible.

So ... what is your definition of "Bible Only?" It seems not to match the way the authors use it.

47 posted on 07/16/2009 1:52:36 PM PDT by r9etb
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To: r9etb

The Bible Only means that no other source is the repository of the Word of God.

That the Bible affirms the authority of a faithful Church or of times when true promptings of the Holy Spirit are made evident does not diminish the authority of the Bible.

How do you see me using it differently?


48 posted on 07/16/2009 1:56:33 PM PDT by xzins (Chaplain Says: Jesus befriends all who ask Him for help.)
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To: xzins

There are many true affirmative statements that can be made with “Bible only” in them. The article presents arguments against certain specific propositions, 565-581 that are characteristic of the principle “Bible Only”, widely adopted by the Protestants since Luther. It makes no argument against any other statement that points to the unique character of the Bible. Do you have a disagreement with the article on its substance?


49 posted on 07/16/2009 1:59:53 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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To: xzins
How do you see me using it differently?

It could be interpreted as you saying it's the only source of the Word of God ... whereas the Holy Spirit is obviously not "the Bible," and yet still expresses the Word of God.

And to be honest, I'm not really sure even what you mean by "repository."

50 posted on 07/16/2009 2:02:27 PM PDT by r9etb
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To: annalex
“Bible Alone” and “Faith Alone” are two cornerstone

Not exactly. It does not mean what is claimed. Sola Scripture just means the Bible is the authoritative source for the Word of God. Not that there aren't others, but other sources must line up with the Bible to be accepted. Bible only is a misnomer.

51 posted on 07/16/2009 2:03:13 PM PDT by Always Right (Obama: more arrogant than Bill Clinton, more naive than Jimmy Carter, and more liberal than LBJ.)
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To: GonzoII

You don’t know anyone who heard Paul teach. They are long dead.

However, God would not fail to include all his necessary teaching in the Bible, or as you say, “It is impossible for Christ to have failed to keep all his truth available to the world.”


52 posted on 07/16/2009 2:07:39 PM PDT by xzins (Chaplain Says: Jesus befriends all who ask Him for help.)
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To: vladimir998

For me, the “Church” is merely the body of believers and all believers are “saints” by definition.


53 posted on 07/16/2009 2:10:07 PM PDT by RobRoy (This too will pass. But it will hurt like a you know what.)
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To: vladimir998
Nope. If you were to state the name of your sect we could prove that easily enough.

Honestly, your inflammatory language is kind of tiresome and unnecessary. I don't put myself in a box defined by any man-made doctrine. I seek the Kingdom of God, not blindly accept a doctrine whether it be Baptist, Pentecostal, or Catholic. Denominations tend to put works and obedience over the Grace of God.

54 posted on 07/16/2009 2:16:58 PM PDT by Always Right (Obama: more arrogant than Bill Clinton, more naive than Jimmy Carter, and more liberal than LBJ.)
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To: Always Right
Sola Scripture just means the Bible is the authoritative source for the Word of God. Not that there aren't others

Very well. I don't argue over words. Indeed there are other inspired and authoritative sources of Christian doctrine.

Do you have objections to the article on substance, points 565-581?

55 posted on 07/16/2009 2:20:05 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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To: r9etb

The Holy Spirit is not a “repository” of God. The HS is God. At least, we trinitarians believe that. I’m assuming you are a trinitarian.

God, however, has seen fit to speak through His servants, the prophets, and the NT contains instances of prophets still being prompted to deliver specific messages to God’s people, none of which rises to the level of Holy Scripture.


56 posted on 07/16/2009 2:30:08 PM PDT by xzins (Chaplain Says: Jesus befriends all who ask Him for help.)
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To: annalex

Just off the top of my head, I would take issue with #’s 567, 569, and 571. I have heartburn with some of the other bold print statements, and some of the regular print explanations.

I do not consider that list to be a clear representation of historic Christianity or of the ideas of the medieval reformers.


57 posted on 07/16/2009 2:39:28 PM PDT by xzins (Chaplain Says: Jesus befriends all who ask Him for help.)
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To: xzins

OK, and what is wrong with these replies?


58 posted on 07/16/2009 2:41:16 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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To: annalex

Are you referring to the numbers I listed?


59 posted on 07/16/2009 2:44:35 PM PDT by xzins (Chaplain Says: Jesus befriends all who ask Him for help.)
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To: xzins

Yes.


60 posted on 07/16/2009 2:47:05 PM PDT by annalex (http://www.catecheticsonline.com/CatenaAurea.php)
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