Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Doc Holliday said:
Just so we're clear on the historical facts: the Church existed before a fixed New Testament canon: the canon did not exist before the Church. The New Testament canon emerged gradually and only reached broad consensus through 4th century ecclesial judgments. Whatever one's theology, Scripture historically presupposes the Church rather than creating it.
There is no version of history in which the canon drops from heaven already bound and indexed. There's no coherent account of the canon, Protestant, Catholic, or Orthodox, in which human beings are not actively involved in identifying, delimiting, and excluding books. Calling that process "recognition" does not remove the element of judgment, it renames it.
Everyone agrees God is the source of Scripture. The question is not who gives the canon, but how humans can know with binding certainty which books God gave. Disagreements over Hebrews, James, Revelation, and other books show that this knowledge was not self evident and required authoritative resolution.
If the authority involved is fallible, then the canon is fallible. If the canon is infallible, then the authority that identified it must also be infallible. There is no third option that avoids reliance on human authority.
If you're listening to the authority of God (i.e. Jesus Christ), then you've been told what that canon is - the Tanakh and the words of the apostles, whom he sent to the world to proclaim his word.
But the Apostles were fallible. Not everything they said was inspired by God.
So again, how do we know what's inspired and what isn't?
Jesus said their testimony of him IS inspired by God. I guess you really AREN'T paying attention.
So, everything the Apostles said was inspired by God?
So, are you really this dull?
Let's say I am. Were the Apostles infallible or not? And if not, how do we know everything they wrote in the New Testament was inspired?
"Know" in what way?
Any way you choose to define it.
We know by faith in the testimony of the apostles of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.