Tuesday, May 17, 2022

Excerpts from R. C. Sproul, “The Establishment of Scripture"

  

Though Luther did not challenge the infallibility of Scripture he most emphatically challenged the infallibility of the church. He allowed for the possibility that the church could even err, even when the church ruled on the question of what books properly belonged to the canon. (R. C. Sproul, “The Establishment of Scripture,” in Sproul, Scripture Alone: The Evangelical Doctrine [Phillipsburg, Pa.: Presbyterian and Reformed, 2005], 11)

 

That the canon was originally established by a historical selection process, undertaken by fallible human beings and fallible institutions, is no reason to exclude from our consideration the role of the providence of God in these affairs. Some in the Reformed tradition have pointed to a providentia specialissima (special providence) in this regard. (Ibid., 62)

 

It is one thing to say that the church could have erred; it is another thing to say that the church did err. (Ibid., 12)

 

In response to the above when it appeared in Sola Scriptura! The Protestant Position on the Bible, one Catholic apologist responded thusly:

 

Objection #52: “It is one thing to say that the church could have erred; it is another thing to say that the church did err.

 

Answer: Again, we can’t help but see in this proposition a convenient way for the apologist to “have his cake and eat it too.” On the one hand, from a theoretical perspective, he maintains the possibility of error in the Church so as to allow himself to be free of Church rule on issues with which he disagrees. If he can reserve for himself the prerogative of saying when the Church has erred, then he can dismiss the Church’s rule when he deems it necessary. On the other hand, since he is not comfortable with having his theoretical proposition of the canon become fact, he disclaims that the church has, in fact, erred in its decision on the canon. What is his basis for making this distinction? It is supported by another theory about the “providence” of God a few pages later. He writes, “It was also His providence that the original books of the Bible were preserved and accorded the status of Canon” (p. 94). This is quite convenient for him. He can simply attribute all that has occurred to the “providence of God” and out of this convince himself that he possesses an error-free canon. This apologist has fallen into the trap of thinking that “as long as it agrees with what I believe, it is certainly the providence of God working in my life.” The problem is however, that the “providence of God” can apply to all that exists. Everything is in God’s control and plan. But this also means that very bad things are in the “providence of God.” The rebellion of Satan, the sin of Adam, the Bubonic plague, the Hitler regime, were all in the “providence of God,” but that doesn’t mean at all that they were good or error-free. In fact, in basing the argument on God’s providence, there is equal justification from the Protestant perspective to say either the Church received a fallible canon or that it received an infallible canon. Moreover, using the “providence” argument, Catholics can claim that God “providentially” gave the early Church the very doctrines with which this Reformed apologist disagrees – and there are many of them (e.g., Baptismal Regeneration, the Real Presence, etc.). We all want God’s providence to be on “our side” and accomplish the things we desire, but that is not the way the real world operates. We cannot just invoke God’s providence to judge whether a certain event in history is good or bad, true or false. Providence means only that, whatever happens, good or bad, all is in God’s control and he will work it out the way he sees fit. Thus, the “providence” line of argumentation does not help this apologist escape his problem. In actuality, it shows how very weak his position is, since its foundation is so weak. (Robert A. Sungenis, "Point/Counterpoint: Protestant Objections and Catholic Answers," in Not By Scripture Alone: A Catholic Critique of the Protestant Doctrine of Sola Scriptura, ed. Robert A. Sungenis [2d ed.; State Line, Pa.: Catholic Apologetics International Publishing, Inc., 2013], 254-55)

 

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