Sunday, October 13, 2024

Matthias Scheeben (RC) vs. the Protestant Understanding of the Bible and Sola Scriptura

  

§18. The false and self-refuting position and significance of Sacred Scripture in the Protestant system

{245} As the immediate divine record of revelation, Sacred Scripture has in itself, according to the preceding paragraphs, the highest dignity, unsurpassable by any other source or rule or communication of the faith; as a written record, it is naturally able and designed to be a constant, permanent source, as well as a constant rule of faith. But therefore it cannot and should not be the sole source, much less the sole rule, nor the complete, proximate, and general rule of faith, i.e. one that is immediately accessible to all believers and immediately necessary for each individual. It cannot even be acknowledged publicly and completely as a source of faith and continue overtly as such without a living organ, distinct from Scripture itself, which through its activity publicly authenticates, supports, and asserts the latter. In a word: Sacred Scripture cannot and should not have in all these respects the meaning that the Protestants in fact ascribe to it, so as to be able to deny the position and importance of the living teaching apostolate, or else must ascribe to it, because they deny the teaching apostolate and yet want to have an organ that performs its duties. Assuming the institution of a permanent teaching apostolate, it is evident that Sacred Scripture need not have and in fact does not have the significance ascribed to it by the Protestants. However it is also evident and easy to see that it cannot have this significance, which is to be demonstrated here in detail.

{246} I. The fact that Sacred Scripture is not the sole source of revelation, in other words, cannot form the entire apostolic deposit, is established later on in §21.

{247} II. Far less can Scripture be the sole rule of faith. For—apart from the fact that 1) it is a materially incomplete rule, in that manifestly it cannot serve as a rule for those truths which are not contained in it as a source, and therefore both another source and also another rule would necessarily be required, at least for these truths—Scripture itself, with reference to the truths contained in it, therefore cannot be the sole rule of faith, because 2) it is not a formally complete rule and therefore must be supplemented by another rule. However it is formally incomplete as a rule, despite all the perfection of its dignity and its content, because in its capacity as a dead book—one moreover that is not systematically formulated, but rather in manyplaces obscure and difficult and exposed to multiple misunderstandings—it is not at all suited, much less designed, to carry out by itself all the functions and to perform the duties that are necessary for the effective, uniform, and general regulation of the faith, i.e. one that strikes down all errors and doubts and asserts the truth in its full purity and certainty, firmness and decisiveness. In order for such regulation to take place, another principle, the living, authoritative proclamation of doctrine, which includes a true judicial authority, must be added to Sacred Scripture, in order to apply and assert fully the regulatory significance that is essentially inherent in Sacred Scripture as a source of faith, and hence to appear as the proximate rule. It follows at the same time that another reason why Scripture must not be the sole rule is that 3) although it too in a certain sense is a rule of faith, nevertheless it can only be a remote rule and not the proximate rule of faith. The final reason why it cannot be the sole rule of faith is because then 4) it would necessarily be an altogether general rule, i.e. one that is immediately applicable to all men at all times and in all places, which obviously is not the case; for precisely the circumstance that otherwise constitutes its intrinsic value—namely the fact that it is a written record, one that is so voluminous, profound, and written in the language and manner of the original organs of revelation—necessarily means that it has remained in itself until now entirely impervious to the use and the understanding of most of the faithful and, at least in its full extent, will always remain inaccessible. (Matthias Scheeben, Handbook of Catholic Dogmatics, Book 1, Part 1 [trans. Michael J. Miler; Steubenville, Ohio: Emmaus Academic, 2019], §18 nos. 245-47)

 

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