Appealing to "the Fathers, the Creeds, and the Councils" doesn't eliminate interpretation, it just re-locates it. The Fathers disagreed frequently (on icons, atonement, free will, rebaptism, papal primacy), and multiple parties claimed their position was the consensus. The first seven councils themselves presuppose Scripture as the supreme norm they were interpreting, not replacing. Councils don't float free of exegesis.
Moreover, "once delivered" (Jude 1:3) does not mean "never rearticulated." The Trinity and Christology were developments in precision, and they were very often forged through controversy. Saying Orthodoxy hasn't "developed" is rhetorical, not historical, as icon theology, and Marian dogmas clearly evolved over time.
As for fragmentation, truth isn't validated by institutional uniformity. Rome is unified too, yet Orthodoxy rejects its claims. Scripture itself predicted false teachers; diversity of errors doesn't refute a true standard. Even Paul was dealing with such fragmentation in his epistles. The real question isn't how many groups exist, but what is the final, testable authority. Scripture can judge bishops, councils, and traditions. An appeal to "consensus" cannot judge itself.
In short: Orthodoxy borrows Scripture's authority, not vice versa, and Luther didn't create that fact.
Moreover, "once delivered" (Jude 1:3) does not mean "never rearticulated." The Trinity and Christology were developments in precision, and they were very often forged through controversy. Saying Orthodoxy hasn't "developed" is rhetorical, not historical, as icon theology, and Marian dogmas clearly evolved over time.
As for fragmentation, truth isn't validated by institutional uniformity. Rome is unified too, yet Orthodoxy rejects its claims. Scripture itself predicted false teachers; diversity of errors doesn't refute a true standard. Even Paul was dealing with such fragmentation in his epistles. The real question isn't how many groups exist, but what is the final, testable authority. Scripture can judge bishops, councils, and traditions. An appeal to "consensus" cannot judge itself.
In short: Orthodoxy borrows Scripture's authority, not vice versa, and Luther didn't create that fact.