Tuesday, August 19, 2014

The Unity of the Church and the Holy Scriptures

The Unity of the Church and the Holy Scriptures

       Some attempt to drive a wedge between the Holy Scriptures and the Church, pitting one against the other.  But such attempts reflect a lack of understanding of both.  There is no conflict, contradiction, or competition between the Gospel, the Holy Scriptures, and the Church.

    During the first 300 plus years of Church history, there were numerous letters and gospels circulating.  Some were authentic; some were not.  Some were written by the evangelists and apostles, and some that claimed to be were fraudulent.   So how were the true and authentic Gospel and teachings of Christ and the apostles determined, preserved and passed on? 

        Christ the Saviour proclaimed the Gospel (the truth in all its fullness) and taught it to His apostles.  They in turn taught it and passed it on to their successors.  The Gospel was transmitted primarily through word of mouth, example, and the divine services of the Church for some 300 years before there was an “official canon”.   The true teachings of Christ and His apostles were a living truth and way of life preserved as life within the Church by the Holy Spirit – the Holy Tradition of the Church.  This is why St. Paul admonished the Church at Thessalonica to “...stand fast, and hold the traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word, or our epistle” (2 Thess. 2: 15) 

            Finally, in the fourth century the bishops of the Church gathered in a council and sorted through the various writings that had been circulating and determined which ones should be considered authentic and used in the worship of the Church.  All the writings were compared to the Holy Tradition of the Church as it had been lived and passed down for some 300 years and in this way determined which Gospels and Epistles to include in what we now call the canon. 

          The Holy Scriptures (New Testament) were written in the Church (the evangelists and apostles), for the Church, and were authenticated by the Church.  Together, they are one Holy Tradition.  The Scriptures do not contradict the Church and the Church does not contradict the Scriptures since they form one Holy Tradition in the unity of one Holy Spirit.   Since the Church, by the Life-giving Holy Spirit, conceived and gave birth to the Scriptures, and the Holy Spirit was given to the Church to guide her into all truth (St. John 16:13), the Church alone can rightly proclaim and interpret them.   We naturally know and understand that the author of a book knows, understands, and interprets the meaning of his own words and intentions as no stranger can do.

        Christ set forth His Church as His bride, His temple, His foundation or guardian of truth, His New Jerusalem and New Israel.  This was not some invisible, indefinable, unknowable, nebulous notion, thought, or hoped for dream.  The Church was a concrete and knowable reality – the body of Christ in every place where the believers continued steadfastly in the apostles’ doctrine, koinonia, the breaking of the bread, and the prayers – in the life and unity of the one Faith, one Lord, one Hope, one Baptism and one Holy Spirit.  He proclaimed that He would build His Church and the gates of hell would not prevail against it (Matt 16:18).  He appointed His Church as the guardian and foundation of the truth, “…the church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth” (1 Tim. 3:15).

     The Church, which is the body of Christ on earth, should never be set in opposition to the Scriptures.  The Scriptures are the written word, written under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, but the Church is the pillar, ground and interpreter of that truth.  When the Scriptures are used apart from the Church to belittle, denigrate or teach contrary to the Church it is a serious misuse of the Holy Scriptures – a form of bibliolatry.

       It is strange that those who have full confidence that the Church was led by the Holy Spirit to determine the canon do not believe the rest of what those same holy men and that same Holy Church proclaimed as the voice of the same Holy Spirit.   It is likewise interesting to note that I have been told that the word for heresy comes from a word that means to pick and choose.