The difference is, many Catholics who disagree with each other often boils down to some Catholics adhering to the teaching of their Church, and other Catholics dissenting.That is the reason, the Christians differ about interpretations, as I have shown even within Catholism, Christians differ with regards to interpretation of many verses.
And as I said before, the cases of Protestant denominations disagreeing is because they don't have the Tradition, and choose to let their own personal opinions trump everything else.
Some biographical context in order. Augustine's work Confessions was an autobiographical work, chronicling his search for the Truth--from rejecting the Bible and Christianity because of the Old Testament, he went and basically became a Manichaean, ridiculing the Bible and Genesis every chance he got; the Manichaeans considered the Bible too crude, too barbaric to even be considered worth reading when compared to the lofty and profound writings of the classical philosophers. Augustine's philosophical training helped him in tearing the Bible apart.If you read about Augustine, you see, his view gradually changed from literalism, to allegorical interpretation of genesis, until finally when he wrote his book titled 'final confession' he thanked God, that He finally guided Him, and showed Him the Truth.
After spending years as a Manichaean and never finding spiritual fulfillment, never receiving the enlightenment that the Manichaean faith promised, he went and became a spiritual drifter again. He fathered a child with a mistress. One time, he went to Milan and heard St. Ambrose preaching, explaining and defending the literal truth of the Old Testament (and the rest of the Bible) in ways that Augustine had never even conceived of. Being convinced of the truth of the Christian faith through the preaching of St. Ambrose of Milan, Augustine was baptized, and immediately sought to defend the Bible he had once so virulently condemned. More than anything, he had to defend the literal truth of the Bible from his formal Manichaean cohorts. This is the period he spent defending the literal meaning of the Old Testament.
Once he had sufficiently defended the literal meaning of the Old Testament, he was then able to turn his attention to the additional allegorical interpretation of the Bible--this was not a denial of the literal interpretation, but acknowledging that there are additional layers of meaning, without any layer being false.
Augustine's thanking God for showing him the Truth was not Augustine thanking God for showing him the allegorical meaning of the Old Testament. It was Augustine thanking God for showing him the true Faith, Christianity.
Got an exact quote, exact citation (i.e. work title, book/epistle and chapter/verse) and link?Another example is Jesus Himself said in chapter of John such words: "I was speaking Figuratively, the time is coming when I shall speak plainly"
Augustine said that, this verse means when Christ returns, He shall speak plainly about God, and reveal those things He used to speak Figuratively.
They may have different takes on the things that Augustine does, especially when it comes to drawing out allegorical meanings. But these meanings do not necessarily contradict; they compliment each other, and show the depth of the Bible. As long as the Fathers don't differ on major articles of the Faith, such as the Trinity, Jesus being both God and man, the nature of our salvation, the nature of the Church and the Sacraments, etc. there's no problem. Of course each is going to have a slightly different take on certain parts of the Bible, and some will emphasize certain aspects that others don't. In some cases, we might need to separate the wheat from the chaff where one Father makes a small slip-up in this or that area. But overall, taking what the Fathers have a consensus on, and what complimentary views each of the Fathers have, these diverse opinions form a coherent, consistent whole.With regards to other traditions than New Testament, those are the writings of Saints, Christian leaders and scholars, it is obvious, these traditions are not guaranteed to be infallible, or scriptures that are inspired by God. As the interpretations of Saints differ from each other and the opinions of scholars differ from each other, and Christians may prefer interpretations of a particular saint over another, or interpretations of a particular scholar over another.
Now do all Catholics or Orthodox agree on the interpretation of this verse with Augustine? I have seen they say differently. Does it mean Augustine was wrong or others are wrong?
Wrong. The Apostles may not have sat down and written out what they meant when they wrote the Scriptures--but they passed these things on orally to their students and their congregations. You can ask the students of the Apostles what their teachers personally taught them--people like St. Ignatius of Antioch, St. Polycarp, St. Justin Martyr, etc. The Apostolic Tradition, as I have said, is a succession of teaching, passed from teacher to student, parent to child, over the course of history, tracing its source to the Apostles. We are not in the dark as to what the Faith of the Apostles is. We have but to look at the living Tradition of the Church.My friend, to say Christianity have traditions that we can refer to and see the interpretations of verses of Bible with absolute certainty and infallibility is not true in my opinion. Firstly the Traditions in New Testament are subject to interpretations. The apostles did not write a detail interpretation of Bible, and it is not like Paul or other apostles are alive today so that Christians can go and ask them, what they meant when they said this verse, or that verse. Did they mean literal, did they mean allegorical, symbolic...etc. That is why Christians uses their own judgement and opinions to say which is literal, and which is not, and of course most often they disagree, even within the same denomination, as I will show below some examples.
A Christian cannot claim 'I am right, you are wrong' with proof, because as I said, Apostles did not write a detail interpretations, neither they are alive today so you can ask them what they meant, or what Jesus meant, when He said this or that. Therefore all can be done is continuing arguing and debating, as Christian denominations, and sub-denominations, and sub-sub-denominations have been doing for centuries.