I recently read Archbishop Paul of Finland’s booklet
The Faith We Hold (St. Vladimir
Press, 1978), which offers a basic introduction to Eastern Orthodoxy. In an
opening chapter on “The Sources of Doctrine” he writes the following:
Why
is the church given priority as the subject of the first chapter in this book?
Because the Church came into being first, and only afterwards, little by
little, did the books of the NT, the Gospels and Epistles, appear….
The
prime importance of Tradition is plainly shown by the fact that it was not
until the fifth century that the Church established conclusively which books in
circulation should be regarded as genuinely inspired by God’s revelation. Thus,
the Church itself determined the composition of the Bible….
It is
our belief that the Bible by itself, without the Tradition as its living
interpreter, is insufficient as a source of truth (pp. 18-19).
I used that quote in my conference
message on canon at Redeeming Grace to illustrate the Orthodox view on the authority of Scripture.
The contrasting Protestant position is well articulated by the Puritan William Whitaker in his 1588 book A Disputation on Holy Scripture:
The contrasting Protestant position is well articulated by the Puritan William Whitaker in his 1588 book A Disputation on Holy Scripture:
The
Scripture is autopistos [self-authenticating]
that is, hath all its authority and credit from itself; is to be acknowledged,
is to be received, not only because the church hath so determined and
commanded, but because it comes from God, not by the church, but by the Holy
Ghost (pp. 279-280).
For Protestants, it is not the
church who chooses the canon. Rather, it is best to say that the church
acknowledges or recognizes the self-authenticating canon of Scriptures as being the inspired Word
of God.
JTR
2 comments:
Nicely said. Thank you so much. Still learning.
Ariella, thanks for the comment. Glad the post could be of help. Still learning too.
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