FLBear5630 said:Mothra said:FLBear5630 said:Mothra said:Sam Lowry said:Mothra said:Sam Lowry said:Mothra said:Doc Holliday said:
Scripture does not interpret itself. Without a singular, visible, and continuous teaching authority (the Church) Christianity inevitably fragments and begins absorbing secular moral frameworks. This isn't speculative…it's observable. Once doctrinal authority became decentralized, moral authority soon follows. The result is what we see today: denominations and even individual congregations affirming abortion, woke ideology, redefining righteousness along cultural lines, and preaching assurance of salvation in ways that collapse into practical antinomianism.
This is not an accidental byproduct, it's a structural consequence. If no final authority exists to definitively say "this is the apostolic faith and this is not," then disagreement has no principled stopping point. Interpretation becomes governed not by tradition but by preference, culture, and institutional survival.
Christianity did not function this way in the past. For the first millennium, doctrine was guarded by the Church as a unified body: conciliar, sacramental, and hierarchical. The rupture in 1054 was not a cultural or political dispute; it marked a fundamental challenge to how authority itself was understood and exercised. Once that challenge was normalized, further fragmentation became inevitable.
The Protestant reformers repeated this pattern in a more radical form. Rejecting both Rome and the early conciliar Church, authority was relocated from the historical Church into the judgment of the individual or local community. In practice, this produced not freedom but a multiplication of competing "final authorities," each functionally operating as its own pope, without the apostolic continuity or corrective mechanisms that historically restrained doctrinal drift.
By contrast, the claim of the Orthodox Church is not that bishops are infallible individuals, but that the Church as a whole, guided by the Holy Spirit and preserved through apostolic succession, serves as the living interpreter of Scripture. Scripture belongs to the Church, not the other way around.
Once that principle is abandoned, Christianity doesn't remain neutral. It doesn't simply "stick to the Bible." It slowly conforms to the moral assumptions of the surrounding culture. The present state of doctrinal and moral confusion across much of Western Christianity is not a mystery, it's the predictable outcome of rejecting a singular, historical authority in favor of interpretive autonomy.
ChatGPT hogwash. It took Martin Luther merely reading Romans for the first time to begin the reformation. He went against the great weight of tradition and Catholic teaching in reaching his conclusions, simply because he read Romans for himself. The idea that all scripture requires some historical or traditional context to understand it is just pure nonsense. We don't need "His Imminence" to explain salvation.
How to talk about interpretation with someone who doesn't know they're interpreting? It's just amazing.
Looks like you and I are using the term "interpretation" very differently. If by interpretation, you are generally (and broadly) referring to someone's understanding of the meaning of text, sure, we all "interpret." But as as you of course well know, I was using that term much more narrowly (and appropriately in this context) to refer to passages of scripture that are difficult to comprehend, and therefore may require reference to either other passages, elders, or theologians to decipher.
In other words, there are some passages of scripture that are difficult to comprehend, undoubtedly. Others are stated plainly and succinctly, and don't require outside sources to understand their true meaning. We know their plain meaning just by reading them.
Not difficult concepts if one is not obtuse.
The problem is that so much of what you consider self-evident is actually interpretation by you or whatever church traditions you've been influenced by. It might make sense to you that no one was smart enough to see what's plainly obvious until you and Luther came along, but others would question that assumption. I'm not necessarily saying your beliefs are wrong, but anyone should see that they're at least debatable.
I don't disagree that environment influences how we think about things, including scripture. What I do dispute is that church tradition is the lens through which one must look to understand and find meaning in scripture - a position which you (and Doc) seem to hold.
The question should be for those of us seeking the truth in scripture is what does the great weight of scripture convey? Does it contradict the beliefs I've been taught, or that my particular denomination holds? These things can be understood often times by simply reading scripture with an open mind.
Being that the Bible was constructed by the early Church, consecrated over a series of Church Councils and even the Protestants that broke away were trained by the Church wouldn't that be the only way you could truly understand the context?
You said earlier that all Luther had to do was read Romans for himself. I would disagree, as an Augustinian Monk that is ALL he did was read scripture. There was another impetuous that prompted the action he took and another support group that nurtured it. It was not that he was finally allowed to read Romans after 10 years as a priest. There were other outside forces playing into the equation.
You need to read some biographies on Luther. His reading of Romans for the first time is what sparked his conversion.
It is neither here nor there. Whether he had an "Aha!" moment or it came to him over time is debated as his own writings contradict themselves.
I know the Lutheran's like the flash of light and ground shaking the first time he laid eyes on Romans. But, scholars disagree. For one thing, his age and being a new Professor. It would be highly unlikely for someone that new to have the confidence to do what he did. His writings on the first time were in the 1840's and the contradictory writings are from something like 1813 to 1815. But being a scholar he read the Bible quite regularly. Who knows that notion may have stuck with him. It is a debatable item though.
My Wife was Lutheran (WELS), so I have been down the Luther road once or twice. Seems to me it depends on what point they are making. If it is a scriptural point, it is the "AHA!" Romans moment. If it is a Catholic Church corruption point it is John Tetzle. If it is a "we are not worthy" point, it is when he was cleaning and the box of rags story. Or, the God is all powerful is the Lightning bolt story...
To the contrary, it is completely on point. When Luther himself attributed his conversion to reading Romans for himself the first time, that is kind of all you need to know.
I prefer to take the man's words than attribute it to speculative reasons, as you are doing.