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Is Sola Scriptura Scriptural? Part III: Circular Reasoning

Ken Hensley
February 27, 2018 Articles, Blog

This is part of an ongoing series by Ken Hensley- read the previous installments: Introduction – Part IPart II

At this point in my theological journey — still an ordained Protestant minister — all I could think about was this issue of sola Scriptura.

I could see now that it was the key issue, the foundational issue, between Protestantism and Catholicism. I had always assumed it to be true. Every Christian I knew assumed it to be true. It was for most of us the unquestioned and — let’s be honest — unexamined presupposition of our entire way of thinking about Christian truth.

But now I was beginning to have questions.

The Practice of the Faithful in the Old and New Testaments

It was clear at a mere glance that among the faithful living during both Old and New Testament times, no one was practicing sola Scriptura. No one living then believed what Protestant Anthony Lane describes as the “heart of the meaning” of sola Scriptura: “The belief that Scripture remains the final authority to which one can appeal against all ecclesiastical authority.” ¹

Of course, there is a sense in which Holy Scripture, being inspired by God Himself, does remain the final authority. And I learned that Catholics hold to the “primacy of Scripture.”

The problem is, and has always been, that someone has to interpret Scripture. Someone has to draw out the correct teaching of Scripture; and this entails the interpretation of many passages, the assembling of many threads of thought, the drawing out of implications, etc.

And when I say that no one “practiced” sola Scriptura, what I mean is that no believing Jew (living during Old Testament times) or believing Christian (living during the New Testament) thought he could appeal to his private interpretation of Holy Scripture against that of God’s chosen ecclesiastical authorities.

In fact, what seemed increasingly clear to me is that what we see in the New Testament is a “fulfilled” version of what we see in shadow form in the Old Testament. There the faithful lived under the authority of Scripture, but as interpreted by prophets, high priests, Levites, and judges, whose decisions had binding authority. In the New Testament the faithful lived under the authority of Scripture, but as interpreted by the Apostles, who could at times meet in council with other ecclesiastical leaders to settle disputes and render infallible, binding decisions under the guidance of the Holy Spirit (see Acts 15:28, “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us”).

This much was clear to me: whether one looks at the Old Testament or the New, the faithful are not practicing sola Scriptura.

The Teaching of the New Testament

I wanted to read the New Testament once again, this time with one specific question in mind: Do the Apostles say anything about what the rule of faith and practice will be once they are no longer around to provide a living authoritative voice for the Church? Do they say anything about where authority will reside when that time comes?

It seemed to me that, if with the death of the Apostles, the Bible was going to become the “sole, infallible rule of faith and practice” for Christians and for the Church, the New Testament ought to clearly teach this — especially given that God’s people from Moses to Peter and Paul had never been “Bible only” believers.

But there’s more. Sola Scriptura actually includes the idea that Christians should only hold as certainly true — and should only bind the consciences of other Christians to hold as certainly true! — what can be shown to be “clearly taught” in the pages of Scripture.

If, therefore, sola Scriptura isn’t “clearly taught” in the pages of Scripture, it seemed to me it would amount to what logicians refer to as a “self-refuting proposition,” a doctrine that refutes itself.

With these questions and thoughts in mind, I began to examine the writings of the Apostles. And as I described in Part II (here) what I found was this: not only is sola Scriptura not “clearly taught” in the writings of the Apostles, the Apostles often speak in ways that evidence a mindset entirely other than what one would expect — if they believed that when they had departed the scene their spiritual children would become “Bible only” Christians.

I found no evidence to suggest that the Apostles had the future practice of sola Scriptura in their minds.

The Protestant Biblical Case

But of course, our Evangelical brethren do not agree with this and insist that the Bible does in fact “clearly teach” sola Scriptura.

The primary passage brought forward as strong evidence of this — if not proof — is 2 Timothy 3:16-17.

All Scripture is inspired by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect [or complete], thoroughly equipped for every good work.

Here’s how the argument goes:

  1. Paul tells Timothy here that Scripture can make him “perfect, thoroughly equipped for every good work.”
  2. But if Scripture is sufficient to accomplish this, then clearly nothing else is needed.
  3. Thus sola Scriptura is established — the Bible is all that is needed for faith and practice.

Now, while there are a few things that could be said in response to this argument, here are the two main points that led me to reject the idea that this passage in 2 Timothy is teaching sola Scriptura.

1. Paul’s use of the word “profitable” 

You see, saying Scripture is “profitable” for accomplishing the goal of making you and me “perfect, thoroughly equipped for every good work” simply doesn’t mean that other things might not also be profitable, or even necessary for the accomplishment of the goal.

Let me illustrate what I mean. My daughter has seven children. Now, imagine I say to her: “Daughter of mine, make sure to feed your children plenty of milk, because milk is profitable for supplying children with Vitamin D, calcium, and protein to build strong muscles and bones, so that they may be perfect, thoroughly equipped to run and jump and play (and fight) all the day long!”

Would anyone imagine that my intention was to say that all my grandchildren need in order to be perfectly healthy is milk? Nothing else? No vegetables? No fruit? No exercise? Just milk?

It seemed to me that the Protestant reading was attempting to squeeze more out of Paul’s words to Timothy than is reasonable, to infer more than can reasonably be inferred.

It’s certainly clear that Paul’s intention in 2 Timothy 3:16-17 was to emphasize the important role sacred Scripture would play in Timothy’s life and ministry. He wants to remind Timothy that Scripture is inspired by God (literally “God-breathed”) and therefore “profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly equipped for every good work.”

But was it Paul’s intention to assert that nothing else would be needed in order to accomplish this task?

A passage in the first chapter of the Epistle of St. James convinced me that my reading of 2 Timothy 3:16-17 was correct.

2. James 1:2-4

Count it all joy, my brethren, when you meet various trials, for you know that the testing of your faith produces steadfastness [or patience]. And let steadfastness have its full effect, that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing (emphasis added).

Notice the obvious parallel to Paul’s words to Timothy.

Now, it’s true that the Greek words James uses here translated “perfect and complete, lacking in nothing,” are not the same Greek words Paul uses in 2 Timothy 3:16-17. But I think you can see that the basic structure of thought is exactly the same.

James is speaking here of what will make the man of God spiritually mature, complete, lacking in nothing. He says it is patience in suffering and steadfastness that will accomplish this.

Therefore, the question we asked of the passage in 2 Timothy needs to be asked here as well: does anyone reading James 1:2-4 think James intends to teach that in order to be “perfect and complete, lacking in nothing” all a Christian needs is patience?

Is James telling his readers that they, for instance, don’t need Scripture to be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing? That they don’t need prayer? That they don’t need the work of the Spirit within them, or the grace of the sacraments, or anything else? Just patience?

I think it’s clear that what James intends in this passage is to emphasize how important it is to his reader’s growth in holiness that they exercise steadfastness in the face of trials — not to teach that patience is all one needs to be perfect.

I concluded that the same was true of 2 Timothy 3:16-17. Paul’s intention wasn’t to teach that the Bible is all one needs to complete and equipped for every good work.

Circular Reasoning

One of the books I was reading at the time was Roman Catholics and Evangelicals: Agreements and Differences by Evangelical Protestant scholars Norman Geisler and Ralph MacKenzie.

In their section on sola Scriptura, the authors presented a number of other New Testament passages in support of the doctrine.

    1. They noted that Scripture is revelation from God, inspired and infallible, and that the holy men who wrote Scripture wrote as they were “moved by the Holy Spirit” (2 Peter 1:21).
    2. They pointed out that Jesus repeatedly quoted Scripture as authoritative and that the Apostles did the same.
    3. They referenced where Jesus said to the scribes and Pharisees “You err, not knowing the Scriptures” (Matthew 22:29).
    4. They mentioned Revelation 22:18, where readers are explicitly warned against adding to “what is written here.”

In other words, they brought forward a string of passages that clearly teach that Scripture is inspired and authoritative and not to be tampered with. Added together, these were taken as clear evidence that the New Testament teaches that: “The Bible, nothing more, nothing less — and nothing else — is all that is needed for faith and practice.”²

Now, Geisler and MacKenzie admitted up front that sola Scriptura is not formally stated or taught anywhere in Scripture.

But this doesn’t weaken their case, they explained, because, after all, neither is the doctrine of the Trinity formally stated or taught anywhere in the Bible. Sometimes the truths of Scripture are implied rather than explicitly stated. And I agree with them.

Sola Scriptura, they insisted, was one of these truths.

It was clear to me that for them sola Scriptura was a truth implied by passages that speak of Scripture as inspired, infallible, and authoritative. It was for them a logical deduction from the New Testament teaching on the nature of Scripture.

But then the thought hit me: these Evangelical scholars are arguing in a circle. Not only do the passages they cite not formally teach sola Scriptura, they only imply sola Scriptura because Geisler and MacKenzie have ruled out in advance the existence of the kind of Church we see clearly functioning in the New Testament — a Church that could speak with infallible authority!

In other words, Geisler and MacKenzie were offering as clear evidence of sola Scriptura one passage after another from the New Testament that indeed implied sola Scriptura — but only if the Catholic view of the Church is wrong! And isn’t the Catholic view of the Church precisely the issue in dispute between Protestantism and Catholicism? Isn’t this the key issue at hand?

What I found particularly enlightening was that these Evangelical scholars didn’t seem to notice what they were doing. Because they were operating with the assumption that the kind of authoritative Church we see functioning in Acts 15 no longer exists, any passage of Scripture that talked about the inspiration and authority Scripture sincerely looked to them like a proof of sola Scriptura!

It was then that something important became clear to me: sola Scriptura isn’t something most Protestants embrace because they can see it as actually “taught” in the pages of the New Testament; it’s something they embrace because they no longer believe in the existence of an authoritative Church.

I say “no longer” because until the time of the Reformation, Christians did believe in the existence of an authoritative Church.

Now many do not. And if there is no authoritative Church on earth possessing the ability under the guidance of the Holy Spirit to authoritatively preserve, pass down and define the teachings of the Christian faith, what option is there but to stand on the Bible alone?

Up next: Is Sola Scriptura Scriptural? Part IV: Why Do Protestants Embrace It?

———————————————————

 1. Anthony N. S. Lane, “Sola Scriptura? Making Sense of a Post–Reformation Slogan” in P.E. Satterthwaite and D.F. Wright, A Pathway into the Holy Scripture, p. 327.
2. Norman Geisler and Ralph MacKenzie, Roman Catholics and Evangelicals: Agreements and Differences, p. 178.

Ken Hensley

Ken is a well-known Catholic speaker and author on staff with CHN. To subscribe to his personal email list and browse his many recorded talks on Catholic apologetics, visit his website at kennethhensley.com


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