Francis, first, your reply does not demonstrate that you grasped what I said. Your reply is non-sequitur and has little to do with my statement. I am not suggesting you did this on purpose, I think you simply do not know anything about the passing down of manuscripts. Because you know nothing about the 5700+ Greek manuscripts, you cannot grasp the point.
I don't know anything about the variety of Greek manuscripts? Really? You think that? Wow, maybe it's time for me to leave again, I don't need such comments. I clearly stated several times in this very thread that there are a variety of manuscripts TO PROVE MY POINT about knowing whether a book, in of itself, could be self-authenticatingly infallible. I am hoping this is just a slip of the tongue and not some lame ad hominem attack.
Since we don't have the original autographs, how can you call a book infallible based merely upon reading it? ESPECIALLY considering the variety of manuscripts which differ in some ways. That's the point that you failed to digest.
I talk about the passing down of written manuscripts, and you make a statement about me receiving the written tradition as infallible. If the autographs are not infallible, in what way can anyone claim to be "Christian." We would be adrift in the sea of secularism.
WE DON'T HAVE ANY AUTOGRAPHS, MONDAR. Let me shout that out to you. Yes, you know that, you state that, but you are not making the logical connection, are you. NO, you aren't... On their own merit, without witnesses, HOW are you going to tell me they are infallible??? I never said the autographs are not infallible. You don't have any autographs, so what good is that argument from you? By internal investigation, how can you know INFALLIBLY that you have the actual writings of Paul? Did you live with Paul? Do you know someone who is familiar with Paul's actual writings (rather than the
claims of Paul's writings)?
By themselves, we cannot even know that the writings that we have are from the supposed authors. Remember the manuscript argument that I made?
Is this sinking in yet?
We depend upon a witness who cannot be mistaken to verify that such writings are indeed Paul's. This witness
MUST be infallible. You cannot use a circular argument to "prove" that the Bible is infallible from itself. That goes way beyond even knowing who the author is of the writings...
You ask "in what way can anyone claim to be Christian"? Because people believe that the Church is a valid witness of Jesus Christ. As such, they believe what she says regarding the teaching of Jesus, to include the Bible and its interpretation. It CERTAINLY is not from studying in an ivory tower with the 28th edition of some tome, when the 29th edition will blow Romans 3:28 out of the water.
I think the part of the problem is that you do not fully understand the concept of "infallibility". You have admitted as such in your poor example regarding the knowledge of what your wife would do. Infallible means "without possibility of error". There is NO human endeavor that can have such a statement attached to it, without God being involved. Thus, we cannot use merely human means of IDENTIFYING those same writings and calling them infallible.
RC Sproul aside, the argument of "fallible table of contents giving an infallible book" shows a lack of knowledge on the very concept of infalliblity. For some book to be "infallible", one must be absolutely certain that it is presented without error. For the BIBLE as an entire entity to be infallible, each and every SECTION must be infallibly selected to an infallible content. Thus, there CANNOT BE a fallible decider of an infallible work, for fallible authority CAN be incorrect - which defeats the entire notion of an infallible book to begin with. The argument utterly fails. I pray that this is seeping in.
You ask for evidence of the truth of Romans? You want proof that John says anything worth reason? What would you accept as evidence?
That's not what I am asking for. Again, you do not understand the concept of infallibility. Of course there is truth in Romans. There is truth in the newspaper. Infallible truth? You are going to need some external proof of that.
Will you accept "external evidence" alone? No internal evidence would be allowed because it would be circular?
Internal evidence is not necessarily circular, so no to your question. If a book actually STATED that "this is the infallible word of God" or any such preface, we would have some internal evidence that could then be debated on its veracity. The Koran would pass such an internal test. Naturally, it would have to ALSO pass external evidence, as well. Now, if we had autographs, again, that is internal evidence - what is called "self-authentication". Courts of today have such standards. Unfortunately, the New Testament has very little internal evidence.
Fortunately, Jesus Christ was not concerned with apostles presenting an infallible book, but rather, an infallible Church, guaranteed by the Spirit of Truth.
Of course I know that infallible written tradition is tradition. Paul never recognized others as ghost writers, but most likely did use an amanuensis. Again, your broad brush things to make using an amanuensis sound like a ghost writer. Its not the same thing.
You didn't appear to know that a few posts ago. But don't worry, we'll drop discussion about traditions for now.
You seem to be saying that the writing can only be infallible if there is an authority over it to say it is infallible.
Yes. Otherwise, it is just an opinion, which is fallible. The contents cannot be infallible if we cannot trust of an impossibility of error.
BY DEFINITION, an infallible book must have been infallibly selected/recognized as such. ANY possibility of error taints the very idea of "infallible book", Mondar. I have been trying since the first post to make this clear to you...
So then, sola ecclesia for you and the scriptures for me.
Sola Scriptura for you. But you misrepresent my argument and what the Catholic Church teaches. The Church CANNOT teach something that contradicts the Apostolic Tradition, whether oral or written traditions. Thus, the Church is bound by the past handing down (and interpretations) of that tradition. Thus, the Church cannot call Mary "God" in an attempt to further devotion to her. Sola ecclesia would state, by definition, that the Church could change such beliefs found in Sacred Scriptures or taught by a different generation. That's the very idea of faithfully handing down the tradition once given. I am not allowed to further discuss that here...
How would you know that the Roman Catholic Church is infallible? Your whole approach only puts the same question off one more level and does not answer anything.
We are now off topic and are not allowed to talk about that, nor do I have to... The question is not about my beliefs, but how you have come to know about an infallible book without an infallible authority. You have yet to answer it with your long winded posts.
Again, if you want me to defend the infallibility of the scriptures, what would you accept as evidence?
That's your burden. To prove that fallible people cannot make a mistake on the contents of a book. You believe this, so how did you come to that belief?