The very fact that you think that the Bible is an infallible book indicates that you infallibly know (either by your own superior infallible knowledge or an infallible authority told you), which books are the written works of Paul and which are not. Or the rest of the writers of the NT. Let's not even discuss the Gospels, which occupy a higher pride of place then the Pauline literature, since they discuss Jesus Christ directly.
Nope, the "very fact" that the Bible is infallible does not indicate that I or anyone else possesses that same infallibility. That is a mere assumption on your part. I already gave an illustration of how this works. Let me repeat the same illustration that you ignored.
How would the mods of this forum know that what I wrote in this post is from me. If we consider what I wrote infallible, do the mods know that it infallibly came from my brain? It could be I am having one of the ministers from my church write this and I am plagiarizing what they wrote. In fact the only person that infallibly knows if I wrote this or not is me. Now the mods could look at the grammar, vocabulary, sentence syntax, and compare it with other things I wrote, but how would they actually know without error that I wrote this post? Even if every word (verbal) and the whole of what I write (plenary) is true without any error or infallible, they can see the truth of what I wrote, but they can never infallibly know that I wrote this post. They can observe that it is written in the first person (I am using the word "I"), they can observe many things that lead them to believe I wrote this post, but they themselves can never know this infallibly.
So, it is obvious that the infallible nature of a writing can be recognized in a fallible way. To just keep screaming (as you are doing) that this is impossible, is not logic, it is not evidence, but rather it is simple ranting. Please raise the bar in your responses some.
And so we are back to one of my first posts to you.
Now, explain your infallible source that CANNOT err, Mondar, since you claim to be "different".
Well, if you read what I have been saying, I made no such claim that there is an infallible source of transmission. Also, nowhere did I claim to be "different." All along I have said I am as fallible as anyone else, including councils and popes who err.
Are you so daft to claim that no one else can write "Paul, a servant of Jesus Christ..." etc., and not see that this does not prove that PAUL HIMSELF ACTUALLY WROTE THAT...
When I put the verses in the post that claimed Pauline authorship, that was an illustration that there is "evidence." The issue is evidence. Your argument is based upon the liberal world view that Paul could not have written the epistles of Paul. In fact I am aware, that even if I went to the work of demonstrating that the internal and external evidence points to Pauls authoriship, you would reject any such evidence.
So then, the question of evidence relates to presuppositions. You presuppose that no such evidence can possibly be used to approach the NT as an infallible book unless some infallible council infallibly determines that the book is infallible. What you were really asking for was "infallible evidence." Of course as soon as I answer that question, I would be starting with your wrong presupposition. I do not believe that there is any infallible evidence. Your starting presupposition colors the way you look at the term "evidence." On the basis of your presupposition you will reject any "evidence" that I present. That is why I asked you the question... "What would you accept as evidence." You ignored the question because your presupposition does not allow for "evidence" because you require it to be infallible evidence.
The fact that Paul starts an epistle might not be evidence that you accept, but that does not mean it is not evidence. If your asking for evidence that you would accept, well, because of your presupposition, there cannot be any possible evidence.
The name of an apostle is not the only evidence. Of course any and all evidence presented can be disputed because no amount of evidence would make us to have an infallible decision.
I'm not saying that someone else did, but you are using this as internal evidence. We don't have the AUTOGRAPHS. Jeez. Are you stating that some scribe couldn't edit what he had and add in some gloss? You've already implied as much that the Church is a terrible witness and cannot even remember what they did the day before, so we should bother listening to anything they have to say.
Since you don't have the original autograph, you cannot INFALLIBLY CLAIM anything about whether Paul wrote what WE NOW CALL "Romans", or whatever, based upon internal evidence.
Sheesh.
Again, another paragraph in which you can think only in terms of infallibly knowing what is the word of God. All along I have been denying that anyone infallibly knows what books are canonical. I am amazed at how thick you presuppositions are. You cannot even begin to grasp what I am saying because you presuppositions do not allow for a fair conversation.
Notice your statement..... "
Since you don't have the original autograph, you cannot INFALLIBLY CLAIM anything about whether Paul wrote what WE NOW CALL "Romans", or whatever, based upon internal evidence."
Of course we cannot "Infallibly" claim to know anything about Paul or Romans. As soon as we do, we cease speaking as protestants. You argue constantly that we cannot say we infallibly know Paul or Romans, and I constantly answer "yes, but we fallibly know Paul and Romans."
Since I do not claim infallibility, the question is actually how do you know that Paul and Romans is infallible. Now we both know why you claim that, and it is the real circular reasoning. Some denominations do claim infallibility. I do not have to defend the view that the 1689 London Baptist Confession infallibly declared what the word of God says because the 1689 LBC does not claim infallibility.
So then, I do not have to answer the question how do I "infallibly know anyting about whether Paul wrote what we now call Romans..." Thats a question you have to answer, not me. And your not getting that because of your thick presuppositions.
( Snip )
Yea, it's funny. You don't. And it is correct that you admit that you do not understand infalliblity. You have already demonstrated (and will demonstrate in a future post) that you do not understand the concept of NOT ANY CHANCE of making an error. NO CHANCE, Mondar. That rules out pretty much anything you write, doesn't it. It rules out any hope of judging another person's charecter or what they would do. Since you cannot know that without possibility of being wrong.
LOL, Francis, When I say that I understand what the term "fallible, and infallible" means I am not saying that I infallibly know what the term infallible means.
Your whole discussion has a huge glaring weakness. Lets just assume that you denomination can infallibly determine a doctrine. When it is put in writing by the curia, or council, and people read what the curia wrote, they all get different opinions on what it means. Even Roman Catholic scholars disagree on what councils were saying about some modern issue. So even if you assume that the council was infallible, what the council wrote has to be read by fallible people. You might claim that later councils clarified what earlier councils said, but that is irrelevant. At some point, people interpret what was said... fallible people.
My point here is that the whole concept of infallible councils only puts off a problem one more step.
(Snip)
Can you actually explain how a fallible person can judge that a book/letter is infallible, especially when he doesn't even have the original, NOR does he even know INFALLIBLY who wrote it???
Actually, I am not going to answer the question. As soon as I answer this question you confuse everything because of your presuppositions.
Also, the whole question reverses the burden of proof. Your the one making claims that your denomination is infallible. The burden of proof is actually upon you to demonstrate this. I do not have to demonstrate that I am fallible, or that I can know something even though I am fallible.
No, you can't. You prefer illogical arguments and such pitiful phrases as "any intelligent reader will grasp this"...
Well, your right here. I did overstep the boundaries of courteous conversation. My apologies. I will try to remain more restrained in my claims.