*Paul* said:
But how can it be shown that any tradition currently held does predate the writing down of the scriptures some 15-30 years after christ, it is a very small timeframe, Cyprian doesn't appeal to any oral tradition but rather says that what is taught must be tested against scripture. Obviously as you pointed out scripture is the rule or how we measure truth and error. So why should a tradition have any authority at all if it is not in the scriptures? This oral tradition idea sounds like gnostic leven.
You're still trying to separate Scripture from Tradition as though the former wasn't part of the latter. It doesn't matter if I can show you a part of Tradition not found in Scripture that pre-dates its writing because the very fact that we have Scripture written down after the Crucifixion proves that the oral Tradition predates Scripture. As for oral Tradition, there's nothing gnostic about it. Do you know what that word actually means? There are no hidden teachings in Orthodoxy, no knowledge or enlightenment that can make you worthy of salvation, so there is nothing gnostic about any of it.
Scripture does allow for that interpretation, scripture is given for the purpose that we might believe on Jesus and by believeing have life in his name, they are complete for that purpose. Also scripture is given so that we can be fully furnished for every good work. It tells us how we are to conducts ourselves in and out of the church. For reproof, nurture and chastisment. I cannot see what scripture could possibly be lacking, in my openeing statement on this thread i posted a link in which i give a list of how scripture is complete.
No, Scripture does not allow for the idea that everything taught has been written down. It, in fact, expressly says that it was not. John says that all the books in the world couldn't hold the things that Christ said and did and Paul clearly refers to the transmission of oral teachings as well as written. You can suppose that these teachings were later written down if you like, but it's nothing more than baseless supposition.
The church is lead by fallible men but the word of God can not fail.
No, the Church is not lead by men at all, if by that you mean individuals - our ecclesiology simply doesn't work that way. The Church is lead by the Holy Spirit and no individual can lead it astray. Heirarchs who have tried are deposed, which is one of the reasons we so strongly opposed a monarchical papacy. The Church is an organism which does not stand or fall with the errors of any one member - hence all the synods.
Christ has authority over us as, all we have now is his Spirit and His writings and the writings of the apostles which he founded.
I don't believe we have any of Christ's writings as I don't believe He wrote anything. Surely you didn't mean that? I would add to that list, though, the writings of the Fathers, the hymns, prayers and liturgies of the Church, the canons of the Ecumenical Councils etc. It's this - all of this - which constitutes Holy Tradition.
This has yet to be shown, what tradition if any is not contained in scripture, predates scripture and is apostolic without reasonble dispute.
In whose Scripture must it not be contained, mine or yours? That would produce a rather different answer, of course. What Scripture must it predate? Just the very last book to be written? Do you consider the Didache to be 'Apostolic without reasonable dispute' (after all, those who compiled the canon did)? Whose dispute would be reasonable? Only one from your side? Your question is impossible to answer in a way that would satisfy you, I'm quite sure, but that doesn't mean it's unanswerable.
As i said before we have traditions, if scripture doesn't comment either way then there can be no problem so long as the tradition does not weaken or contradict what the bible teaches. But that kind of tradition is better thought of as a custom not a tradtion with a capital T. The problem I have is with authoritative Traditions which are treated as though they are from God with no proof.
No, the practice of celebrating certain feasts is Tradition. We also have a distinction between traditions and Tradition and this seems quite clear. You really do, however, seem to have a very grave misunderstanding as to what Tradition actually is. Might you perhaps tell me what it is you are describing as Tradition because it just sounds like you're arguing against something other than what we mean by the term.
I'll have a look at that soon.
Take your time - you'll need it.
The first church under the apostles needed reforming at many times as did the churches in asia that Jesus exhorted in Revelation. We can fall into error and if we do we must be brought back into line with the word of God, our hearts must say with Jesus "lo, I come to do Thy will O God".
You are talking of practice, not faith. Reforms of practice happen all the time, A particular church does something out of keeping with the faith, is corrected, etc. The faith cannot change, though. That was what I was talking about, not whether you have an iconostasis or an altar rail or how long your priests's beard is.
Should the church of God be a time capsule? You are forced into this because you value your traditions so highly and dare not change them, change isn't always an admission of error or something wrong. THe church of God is to reach the common man this it what it did in it's youth and this is something that must not change.
Again, I was talking of changes in th faith, not in the externals. The externals have changed in that time, but I cannot find one thing, not one article of faith that we hold to now that wasn't held to by the early Fathers and yes, this is down to holding fast to Tradition. The externals can and do change. You seem to be misunderstanding what I'm talking about completely.
Karl keating says it. For the protestant the church is a living organism, a vine it must adapt to it's surroundings to survive and bear fruit but it must never leave it's root.
That's pretty much what I'm saying, though the Church needs not adapt to its surroundings all that much at all (as in, I see little need for adaptation of the externals occurring very often) but the changes I was referring to were indeed changes to the root - doctrines that appear from nowhere and are grafted on and that cannot be found in the early Church. Ironically, the solas are exactly such doctrines, and that is what we are discussing.
James