Consider the scenario: You are at the park, minding your own business
and enjoying a day off from your labors. Suddenly, he appears. The
well-meaning Christian who wants to "save" you from damnation. In
his zeal to enlighten your wretched soul, he whips out his handy
Bible and fires off a few choice New Testament phrases. He is
confident you will be dazzled.
He begins by citing St. Paul in the ever-popular 2 Tim 3:16, "All
scripture is inspired by God and is useful for teaching, for
refutation, for correction and for training in righteousness..."
This is rapidly followed by Christ's admonition to the Sadducees in
Mt. 22:29, "...You are misled because you do not know the scriptures
or the power of God." Finally, he clinches the deal with the story
of the learned Jew turned believer named Apollos who, in Acts 18:28,
"...vigorously refuted the Jews in public, establishing from the
scriptures that the Messiah is Jesus."
He appears quite pleased with his efforts. Having shown you the
preeminence of the scriptures in the selected passages, he hopes
you'll conclude, as he has, that the Bible is all you need for
salvation. No creed, no church, and no hierarchy are required.
Taking a long pull on your coffee, you look him square in the eye.
With devastating kindness, you thank him for honoring the authority
of the Catholic Church. He stiffens up immediately. Like a dog
looking at a clock, his facial expression belies a complete lack of
understanding. He is momentarily silent, for he has no pithy
rejoinder to such a bizarre comment.
He finally gathers his thoughts enough to inquire as to what your
response could possibly mean. You politely declare that you are a
Catholic and, as such, believe that the fullness of Truth resides in
the Catholic Church, not simply in the Bible. The Bible, you affirm,
is part of a much larger deposit of revelation. In fact, the
Catholic Church is the mother of the Bible.
Shocked at your impunity, he immediately fires back that you are
calling into question the very Word of God, hoping that will cow you
into submission. You smile and offer to share some insights to
defend your position. He agrees to listen, half-expecting to be
amused as you concoct some wild story.
You begin by explaining that the New Testament letters and accounts
he cited earlier of Paul, Matthew, and Luke (author of Acts) were
written during the first century. While Christianity survived
underground during the ensuing centuries of persecution, these
documents, along with others, were scattered across the Roman
Empire. There was no New Testament yet; there was no Bible as we
know it today.
You remind him that it wasn't until the Christian faith was
legitimized by Emperor Constantine's decree in the fourth century
that the Church could publicly begin to compile a canon, or rule, of
sacred writings. The task required sorting through hundreds of
letters and texts attributed to Apostles, evangelists, bishops and
saints. The goal was, in essence, to distill the truly inspired
works from those that were merely inspiring.
Pope St. Damasus I in 382 AD first proposed a list of twenty-seven
"books" that would comprise the canon. Gatherings, known as synods,
of esteemed bishops were then convened in the north African cities
of Hippo (393 AD) and Carthage (397 AD). These synods prayerfully
attempted to discern the will of the Holy Spirit in deciding what
texts belonged in the canon and which did not. The Church well
understood the import of this task. Once the canon was decided, it
would be closed forever to preclude any tampering.
In the year 419 AD a second Council of Carthage was convened under
the leadership of no less a figure than St. Augustine, a bishop and
one of the Fathers of the Church. This council confirmed the canon
as approved by the earlier synods and forwarded it to Pope Boniface
in Rome. The pope then authorized and promulgated the text and the
New Testament became a reality, almost four centuries after Christ.
The New Testament, then, only came into existence because the
Catholic Church, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, declared it
so. Written reference to the New Testament's existence or its
legitimacy are nowhere to be found in the Bible itself. Instead,
these spring solely from the singular authority of the Catholic
Church. This same New Testament canon was reaffirmed a millennium
later at the Council of Florence in 1442 and the Council of Trent in
1546.
He seems intrigued by the history lesson, so you go for the closer.
You delicately explain that in every Bible text he cited earlier,
when the writer referred to "scripture" he therefore had to be
referring to the Jewish scriptures or what we would call the Old
Testament. The New Testament, as you just described, was centuries
from being becoming a reality. It follows, then, that your new
friend's rigid belief in Bible supremacy puts him in a difficult
position. In citing the New Testament, he is actually using a source
that is "unbiblical." This means that since there is no place in the
Bible that legitimizes or sanctions the validity of the New
Testament, he cannot use it to support his own arguments. By
declaring the New Testament to be a source of truth he is de facto
sanctioning the authority of the Catholic Church.
To aid his understanding, you go on to explain that no thing or
person can declare itself a source of authority. Such authority must
come from outside itself. To make the point, you use the example of
the people making the laws in Washington. They did not simply drive
there on their own and begin drafting legislation. They derive their
authority through a formal election process authorized by the
Constitution. In like manner, police officers do not roam the
streets with guns because they like uniforms and weapons. They are
empowered by a city or town charter to carry out their duties and
those duties have strict limits and oversight.
The same logic applies with Sacred Scripture. Christ wrote nothing
down. A book such as the Bible cannot declare itself authoritative,
it must be declared so by something outside itself. That something
is the Catholic Church. The Catholic Church compiled, authorized and
promulgated the New Testament and, combining it with the Old
Testament, created a Bible for all to use. This is the same Catholic
Church that suffered the Roman persecutions, preserved the faith
through the Dark Ages, fought the Crusades and has survived over
2,000 years with unbroken apostolic succession. It is Christ's only
Church, the one St. Paul called the "...pillar and foundation of
truth." (1 Tim 3:15)
His face says it all. Your learned response went far beyond what he
was trained to handle. It was not in the script. You did not engage
in a duel of scripture phrase for scripture phrase. Rather, you
presented a historical perspective, one which he has never heard. In
a few minutes, you managed to sow confusion in his comfortable world
of biblical supremacy. You can tell he is unable to reconcile using
Sacred Scripture as a conversion tool for his brand of Christianity
when every phrase he cites reaffirms the authority of the Catholic
Church.
He realizes his conundrum and admits that he has a lot of homework
to do. Highly intrigued, he asks if you might be a regular visitor
to the park. He goes on to say that he wants to visit with you again
in the future. You smile and offer to bring the coffee.
About the Author:
Gary Shirley, his wife, and three children are members of St.
Catherine of Siena Parish (http://www.searchlogixgroup.com)in
Kennesaw, Georgia, where Gary serves as catechist in the adult
education program. Gary is an Archdiocese of Atlanta certified
catechist (both PSR and RCIA) with 14 years teaching experience.
Email him at mailto:backtothebasicspr@searchlogixgroup.com.