You didn't answer the question. "Why would their (Paul's letters) inclusion in the Bible by the same church whose other teachings are suspect suddenly make them irrefutable?"Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Thu Dec 04, 2025 2:29 pm [
Actually, no.
And you can find that out for yourself, if you wish to take the time; so you don't have to take my word for it. But the later dictates of popes and councils have often even wildly gone against what Scripture has said. And that's actually what produced Luther's rebellion against the RC's, and generated the Reformation. It was that gap between the Bible and the RC authorities that was the cause of the conflict, and the reason that the Reformers insisted that "only Scripture" (sola scriptura) should be the rule of faith.
Catholic theology demands total obedience to the Pope. What the Pope declares from his throne (they call this "ex cathedra") is taken by Catholics to be the absolute word of God, and the more recent word of God than anything in Scripture. So it replaces whatever Scripture says, in their thinking, with something newer and more authoritative, they say.Why would their inclusion in the Bible by the same church whose other teachings are suspect suddenly make them irrefutable?
Remember that this is the great "advantage" Catholics claim for their view of divine revelation: that they say it's "organic" and "grows" over time. This means it changes, and it changes to conform to whatever the Popes, bishops and councils declare it should say. But Protestants insist (or "protest") that only the Bible is authoritative, and any religious authorities must bow to God's revealed Word, the Bible. So "sola scriptura" it is, for them.
And now you know what made the Reformation happen. The differences between the two views of what the Word of God was became too profound. And Luther et al. noticed, and tried to "reform" the existing Catholic theology, bringing it back closer to the Biblical text -- obviously, without success.
It seems to me that faith in the inerrancy of other dictates of the church is not so different from faith in the Bible. The church decided what writings should be canonized. If the church is fallable, doesn't it follow that the Bible is?
By the way, I don't doubt that Luther addressed these questions. But I don't know in what manner.