BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam LowryAs I've said, authorship was a significant factor but not the only one. Have a good night. said:Quote:Quote:Quote:
You're still arguing canonization, which the argument was not about. You argued that I could not link the writings of the New Testament to the original apostles without relying on your Church's authoritative "judgement" that it was so. I explained how this is false. That was the whole discussion. Anyone can go back and see this for themselves.
You started to shift your argument towards canonization, because you realized that you were losing the argument about authorship. Then I steered you back towards your original argument, which you then denied. It's all on record. (Btw, you'd lose the argument about canonization too. It's essentially the same argument).
I can only hope that this is a lesson for you, that it's better just to stop digging when you're in a hole. I'm much more gracious to those who just admit they're wrong, than those who try ridiculous schemes to save face. Because you can actually have a rational discussion with the former, but not with the latter.
I don't know where all these twists and turns came from, but you're right about one thing. It is essentially the same argument.
Essentially the same, but it involves more "judgement" than the historical argument for authorship. That's why you shifted to try that angle. But it's a flawed argument in the same way. The "judgement" about what was God's word was made by the entirety of the body of Christ throughout history rather than by a formal authoritative decree from a council. If the latter were true and we are relying upon that judgement, then we'd have the same Bible as you. But we don't. So it isn't.
I don't know what you're on about with your shifting angles. We have the same NT, which was delivered to us by a chain of witnesses, and we know this because the Church established the fact. Why you don't trust the Church's judgment regarding the OT is for you to figure out.
Here's where your flawed argument centers around your equivocation of the concept of "church".
I trust the church's witness and judgement involving the canon. I don't trust the Church's witness and judgement involving the canon.
That's for you to figure out.
I understand the difference between the capital and lower-case concepts.
This is why you are not a serious person and you get no respect here.
I understand the difference between the concept denoted by the word "church" and the concept denoted by the word "Church."
Better?
It'd be better if you actually incorporated that understanding into your positions and stopped equivocating. The Church isn't the church. The authorship of the New Testament is known from the church, not the Church. The canon is given by God and recognized and recieved by the church, not recognized and received by the Church to be given to the church.
Except that it wasn't fully recognized and received by the church until the Church gave it. That's the historical fact that keeps getting in the way of your dogma.
This is the lie that your Church keeps telling the church. The church had already fully accepted the OT and the vast majority of the New Testament long before the Church said so. Whatever remaining books that the Church formally recognized had already been widely recognized and received by the church as well, and each writing was determined by the church to be canon not by fiat from the Church, but based on a Spirit-led discernment of the writings' own inherent characteristics, recognizable to the church as having been given to them by God, not the Church.
And again, obviously the fact that always gets in the way of your dogma is that the church didn't receive the canon from your Church, because we don't have the same Bible.
Widely recognized, sure. But there was still significant controversy over many of the books, and it had to be resolved somehow. Until then no one was in any position to proclaim "sola scriptura!"