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Sola
Scriptura
Logic
and the Foundations of Protestantism
Fr. Brian W. Harrison
From
the Editor
Marcus Grodi
Your
Are That Man
Mark Connell
"What
is Truth?" An Examination of Sola Scriptura
Dwight Longenecker
The
Practical Problems of Sola Scriptura
James Akin
The
Perspicuity ("Clearness") of Scripture
David Armstrong
"Pastor,
Can I Ask You Something?"
Marcus C.
Grodi
Oral
Tradition in the New Testament
David Palm
When
Evangelicals Treat Catholic Tradition Like Revelation
Mark P.
Shea
What
Do Catholics Believe About Scripture?
Catechism
of the Catholic Church
Did
the Church Fathers Believe in Sola Scriptura?
Joseph Gallegos
Before
You Object - Sola Scriptura: A Stony Path
Marcus C.
Grodi
Other
Journals
Mary
Mother of God
Salvation
and Justification
The
Eucharist
Authority
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Did
the Church Fathers Believe in Sola Scriptura?
by Joseph Gallegos
William Webster
in an essay titled "Sola Scriptura and the Early Church" has
attempted to transform the early Church Fathers into proponents of sola
Scriptura. In my contribution in Not by Scripture Alone (Santa
Barbara:Queenship,1997) Chapter 8 and the Appendix, I delineate three
approaches used by Protestant apologists in defending sola Scriptura
in patristic thought. Mr. Webster has chosen the third approach; equating
sola Scriptura with the material sufficiency of Scripture.
Mr. Webster writes:
"The Reformation
was responsible for restoring to the Church the principle of sola Scriptura,
a principle which had been operative within the Church from the very
beginning of the post apostolic age. Initially the apostles taught orally
but with the close of the apostolic age all special revelation that
God wanted preserved for man was codified in the written Scriptures.
Sola Scriptura is the teaching and belief that there is only one special
revelation from God that man possesses today, the written Scriptures
or the Bible, and that consequently the Scriptures are materially sufficient
and are by their very nature as being inspired by God the ultimate authority
for the Church."
Two points are to be noted
here. First, Mr. Webster equates sola Scriptura with the material sufficiency
of Scripture. Second, according to Mr. Webster, the Reformers were responsible
for restoring this narrow understanding of sola Scriptura. Sola Scriptura
consists of a material and a formal element. First, sola Scriptura affirms
that all doctrines of the Christian faith are contained within the corpus
of the Old and New Testaments. Hence, Scripture is materially sufficient.
Secondly, Scripture requires no other coordinate authority such as a teaching
Church or Tradition in order to determine its meaning. Sola Scriptura
affirms the formal sufficiency of Scripture. Catholics are allowed to
affirm Scripture’s material sufficiency, therefore Mr. Webster’s case
directed at proving the Fathers belief in Scripture’s material sufficiency
is completely off target. In order for Mr. Webster to make his case for
sola Scriptura he must prove that the Fathers affirmed the formal sufficiency
of Scripture. The Fathers affirmed both the material sufficiency and formal
insufficiency of Scripture.
Mr. Webster states:
"And there is
no appeal in the writings of these fathers to a Tradition that is oral
in nature for a defense of what they call Apostolic Tradition. The Apostolic
Tradition for Irenaeus and Tertullian is simply Scripture."
Notice the sleight of hand
by Mr. Webster. He equates St. Irenaeus’s and Tertullian’s understanding
of Tradition to mean Scripture. Both of these Fathers clearly understood
Tradition as a substantive and coordinate authority alongside Scripture.
These same Fathers believed that the doctrines of the Catholic Church
are found in Tradition as well as in Scripture. However, they do not make
the misguided conclusion that Tradition is equated to Scripture since
Tradition includes the same doctrines that Scripture contains. The primary
difference between Scripture and Tradition is that they convey the same
teaching but through different mediums. One transmits the doctrines via
the written Scriptures while Tradition transmits these same doctrines
through the life, faith and practice of the Church. If Scripture is equated
with Tradition than the writings of St. Irenaeus and Tertullian are reduced
to nonsense.
St. Irenaeus writes
as if he was anticipating proto-Protestants:
"When, however,
they are confuted from the Scriptures, they turn round and accuse these
same Scriptures, as if they were not correct, nor of authority, and
[assert] that they are ambiguous, and that the truth cannot be extracted
from them by those who are ignorant of tradition...It comes to this,
therefore, that these men do now consent neither to Scripture or tradition"
(Against Heresies 3,2:1).
"Suppose there
arise a dispute relative to some important question among us, should
we not have recourse to the most ancient Churches with which the apostles
held constant intercourse, and learn from them what is certain and clear
in regard to the present question? For how should it be if the apostles
themselves had not left us writings? Would it not be necessary, [in
that case,] to follow the course of the tradition which they handed
down to those to whom they did commit the Churches?" (Against Heresies
3,4:1).
According to Irenaeus, Tradition
is substantive in content, normative in authority and continues to live
in the Apostolic churches. Likewise Tertullian writes:
"Error of doctrine
in the churches must necessarily have produced various issues. When,
however, that which is deposited among many is found to be one and the
same, it is not the result of error, but of tradition. Can any one,
then, be reckless enough to say that they were in error who handed on
the tradition" (Prescription against the Heretics,28).
Similarly, the words of
Tertullian are reduced to nonsense if we apply Mr. Webster’s understanding
of Tradition.
Mr. Webster continues:
"Irenaeus and
Tertullian had to contend with the Gnostics who were the very first
to suggest and teach that they possessed an Apostolic oral Tradition
that was independent from Scripture. These early fathers rejected such
a notion and appealed to Scripture alone for the proclamation and defense
of doctrine."
First, St. Irenaeus and
Tertullian had no issue with the concept of an authoritative Tradition
alongside Scripture. Their criticism of the Gnostics was with a tradition
that was private and available to only the Gnostic elect in contrast to
a Tradition that was public, above board, taught and preserved by the
Catholic Church. This was the point that was foisted in the face of the
Gnostics by St. Irenaeus and Tertullian:
"But, again, when
we refer them to that tradition which originates from the apostles,
[and] which is preserved by means of the successions of presbyters in
the Churches, they object to tradition, saying they themselves are wiser..."
(Irenaeus, Against Heresies 3,2:2).
"His testimony,
therefore, is true, and the doctrine of the apostles is open and steadfast,
holding nothing in reserve; nor did they teach one set of doctrines
in private, and another in public" (Against Heresies 3,15:1).
"[The Apostles]
next went forth into the world and preached the same doctrine of the
same faith to the nations. They then in like manner rounded churches
in every city, from which all the other churches, one after another,
derived the tradition of the faith, and the seeds of doctrine, and are
every day deriving them, that they may become churches. Indeed, it is
on this account only that they will be able to deem themselves apostolic,
as being the offspring of apostolic churches. Every sort of thing must
necessarily revert to its original for its classification. Therefore
the churches, although they are so many and so great, comprise but the
one primitive church, (founded) by the apostles, from which they all
(spring). In this way all are primitive, and all are apostolic, whilst
they are all proved to be one, in (unbroken) unity, by their peaceful
communion and title of brotherhood, and bond of hospitality, — privileges
which no other rule directs than the one tradition of the selfsame mystery"
(Tertullian, On Prescription Against the Heretics 20).
Mr. Webster’s understanding
that the Fathers appealed to Scripture alone is simply a fantasy.
In support of Mr. Webster’s
novel idea that St. Irenaeus and Tertullian embraced sola Scriptura he
cites Ellen Flessman-Van Leer, a non-Catholic scholar. Unfortunately for
Mr. Webster, Ellen Flessman-Van Leer has written in depth and without
equivocation on St. Irenaeus’ and Tertullian’s understanding of Apostolic
Tradition. Mr. Webster wants to leave us with the impression that Van
Leer and the Fathers embraced sola Scriptura. Nothing could be further
from the truth.
"For Irenaeus,
on the other hand, tradition and scripture are both quite unproblematic.
They stand independently side by side, both absolutely authoritative,
both unconditionally true, trustworthy, and convincing" (Tradition
and Scripture in the Early Church, p139).
Elsewhere Van Leer comments
on Tertullian:
"Tertullian says
explicitly that the apostles delivered their teaching both orally and
later on through epistles, and the whole body of this teaching he designates
with the word traditio...This is tradition in the real sense of the
word. It is used for the original message of the apostles, going back
to revelation, and for the message proclaimed by the church, which has
been received through the apostles" (ibid.,pp. 146,147,168).
Van Leer concludes:
"Irenaeus and
Tertullian point to the church tradition as the authoritative locus
of the unadulterated teaching of the apostles, they can no longer appeal
to the immediate memory, as could the earliest writers. Instead they
lay stress on the affirmation that this teaching has been transmitted
faithfully from generation to generation. One could say that in their
thinking, apostolic succession occupies the same place that is held
by the living memory in the Apostolic Fathers" (ibid., p.188).
Clearly, Mr. Webster has
not understood Van Leer, St. Irenaeus and Tertullian. Mr. Webster continues:
"The Bible was
the ultimate authority for the fathers of the patristic age. It was
materially sufficient and the final arbiter in all matters of doctrinal
truth. As J.N.D. Kelly has pointed out: ‘The clearest token of the prestige
enjoyed by (Scripture) is the fact that almost the entire theological
effort of the Fathers, whether their aims were polemical or constructive,
was expended upon what amounted to the exposition of the Bible. Further,
it was everywhere taken for granted that, for any doctrine to win acceptance,
it had first to establish its Scriptural basis’ (Early Christian Doctrines,
San Francisco: Harper & Row,1978,pp. 42,46).’"
Here we have Mr. Webster
misrepresenting the faith of J.N.D. Kelly, the Anglican patristic scholar.
Interesting how Mr. Webster failed to cite the following from the same
work:
"It should be
unnecessary to accumulate further evidence. Throughout the whole period
Scripture and tradition ranked as complementary authorities, media different
in form but coincident in content. To inquire which counted as superior
or more ultimate is to pose the question in misleading terms. If Scripture
was abundantly sufficient in principle, tradition was recognized as
the surest clue to its interpretation, for in tradition the Church retained,
as a legacy from the apostles which was embedded in all the organs of
her institutional life, an unerring grasp of the real purport and meaning
of the revelation to which Scripture and tradition alike bore witness"
(Early Christian Doctrines, pp. 47-48).
Mr. Webster then cites several
paragraphs from St. Cyril of Jerusalem, St. Gregory of Nyssa, and St.
Basil the Great in support of sola Scriptura. Mr. Webster summarizes his
findings in the ancient Church:
"These fathers are
simply representative of the fathers as a whole. Cyprian, Origen, Hippolytus,
Athanasius, Firmilian, Augustine are just a few of the fathers that
could be cited as proponents of the principle of sola Scriptura, in
addition to Tertullian, Irenaeus, Cyril and Gregory of Nyssa. The early
Church operated on the basis of the principle of sola Scriptura and
it was this historical principle that the Reformers sought to restore
to the Church."
For a complete rebuttal
to the above claim I refer to my contribution in Not by Scripture Alone
(Santa Barbara: Queenship, 1997), Chapter 8 "What did the Church
Fathers teach about Scripture, Tradition and Church" and Appendix:
"A Dossier of Church Fathers on Scripture and Tradition."
There are a couple of recurring
themes throughout the writings of the Church Fathers on the rule of faith.
First, the Fathers affirmed that the most perfect expression of the Apostolic
faith is to be found in Sacred Scripture. The Fathers affirmed the material
sufficiency of Scripture. According to the Fathers, all doctrines of the
Catholic faith are to be found within its covers. Secondly, the Fathers
affirmed in the same breath and with equal conviction that the Apostolic
faith also has been transmitted to the Church through Tradition. According
to the Fathers, the Scriptures can only be interpreted within the Catholic
Church in light of her Sacred Tradition. The Fathers, particularly those
who combated heresies, affirmed that the fatal flaw of heretics was interpreting
Scripture according to their private understanding apart from mother Church
and her Tradition. In sum, when the Fathers affirmed the sufficiency and
authority of Scripture, they did so not in a vacuum, but within the framework
of an authoritative Church and Tradition. Let me cite passages from the
same Fathers Mr. Webster used.
St. Cyril of Jerusalem(c.A.D
315-386), Doctor and Catholic bishop of Jerusalem between A.D.348-350
writes: "But in learning the Faith and in professing it, acquire
and keep that only, which is now delivered to thee by the CHURCH, and
which has been built up strongly out of all the SCRIPTURES" (Catechetical
Lectures, 5:12).
Mr. Webster provided this
passage but I add it here to draw attention to St. Cyril’s Catholic understanding
of the rule of faith. Elsewhere, St. Cyril points to the Church not to
Scripture for the definition of the canon: "Learn also diligently,
and from the Church, what are the books of the Old Testaments, and what
those of the New" (Catechetical Lectures ,4:33).
St. Gregory of Nyssa(c.A.D.
335-394),brother of St. Basil the Great, Doctor of the Catholic Church
and bishop of Nyssa writes:
"[F]or it is enough
for proof of our statement, that the TRADITION has come down to us from
our fathers, handed on, like some inheritance, by succession from the
apostles and the saints who came after them. They, on the other hand,
who change their doctrines to this novelty, would need the support of
arguments in abundance, if they were about to bring over to their views,
not men light as dust, and unstable, but men of weight and steadiness:
but so long as their statement is advanced without being established,
and without being proved, who is so foolish and so brutish as to account
the teaching of the evangelists and apostles, and of those who have
successively shone like lights in the churches, of less force than this
undemonstrated nonsense?" (Against Eunomius,4:6).
St. Basil the Great(A.D.
329-379), Doctor of the Catholic Church, bishop of Caesarea, and brother
St. Gregory of Nyssa’s writes:
"Of the dogmas
and kergymas preserved in the Church, some we possess from written teaching
and others we receive from the tradition of the Apostles, handed on
to us in mystery. In respect to piety both are of the same force. No
one will contradict any of these, no one, at any rate, who is even moderately
versed in manners ecclesiastical. Indeed, were we to try to reject the
unwritten customs as having no great authority, we would unwittingly
injure the Gospel in its vitals; or rather, we would reduce kergyma
to a mere term" (Holy Spirt 27:66).
Irenaeus, Cyril of Jerusalem,
Gregory of Nyssa, and Basil are the only Fathers cited by Mr. Webster
in support of sola Scriptura. I have provided passages from these same
Fathers to provide the necessary balance. It would be easy for anyone
to cut and paste the Fathers to their liking, however to find the authentic
faith of a Father we must look at their entire writings.
It is clear the early Church
Fathers appealed to Tradition alongside Scripture. This Tradition was
normative, substantive, available to all, and preserved by the Apostolic
Churches, particularly the See of Rome.
Joseph A. Gallegos is a
graduate of the University of California, Irvine and West Coast University,
Los Angeles. He is very active in Catholic Apologetics, having created
Corunum Apologetics BBS in 1992, and an international web site
(http://www.cin.org/users/jgallegos)
for his expertise on patristic thought regarding the Papacy and Tradition.
He is the author of What Did The Church Fathers Teach About Scripture,
Tradition, and Church Authority in Not By Scripture Alone (Queenship
Publishing, 1997).
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