OK...I think I am starting to understand a little more of where at least Paul and NetDoc are coming from...bear with me for a few more questions...
Paul, I am assuming you would reject a gospel of Jesus that is not included in the Bible as we know it today (ex. the Gospel of Thomas). If I am wrong on this assumption, please let me know. If I am correct, can you please let me know why you would reject this Gospel?
Regarding the scripture evidence you provided for the Trinity, I still don't see God described as the Trinity. I see scripture evidence to support the Trinity, but nothing from which you could draw the conclusion from the text alone.
From the brerath of God to being written on paper yes it came into form at the hands of men as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.
Absolutely. I agree 100%. And it was the Holy Spirit who moved through the councils that rejected some of the false books and accepted the true books of the Bible. Would you agree with that?
NetDoc,
But then again, most who would "condemn" us to believe in sola scriptura miss the real point: we believe the Spirit still works in the life of the believer and we don't need a seperate priestly class to interpret the words for us.
I don't believe scripture would support your position here. The gospels and NT have several references to commanding the apostles to go out and teach.
I would urge you to be careful of condemning those who do not believe in SS of not believing the Spirit works in the hearts of believers. The significant difference is that we believe that the scriptures came forth from a deposit of faith given to the apostles (which makes more sense chronologically IMO). These apostles taught the scriptures, and wrote them down as well. Not all things that were taught were written explicitly in the scriptures - and this is where Tradition comes into our understanding.
Dude, they didn't WRITE a single word of these scriptures. They were around before this council and they continued after it disappeared. You give them way too much credit.
No they did not, but they did reject some books that were, at the time, popular in circulation. And they did accept some books which to many would not seem inspired.
Let me ask you this: why is it that you haven't read the Gospel of Thomas? What lead you to accept the books that are included in your Bible? You may say it came through Divine inspiration to you, but have you ever decided which books you believed to be inspired and which ones were not?
My point being, by using the Bible that we have today, you are recognizing that God worked through these councils to give us the Bible as we have it today. The Bible alone does not tell us what books belong in the Good Book.
The biggest problem with MOST modern denominations? Outright legalism. They look at the scriptures, their prayer books, their clergy as a substitute for the LAW. It was for freedom Christ has set me free... I don't need a bunch of man made rules to encumber me. The Spirit is my counselor.
I would disagree that we look to these things a substitute - rather the Church is here as a guide to help teach us the faith which was given to us by Christ. You continually refer to 'man-made' law and rules, but do you recognize that it may be possible that the Spirit has actually worked through these men to guide people closer to Christ?