Scripture Versus Tradition?
One of the more anachronistic mistakes people make when discussing the early church is imagining that the fathers operated with the same “Bible versus tradition” framework that dominates so many modern debates. They usually did not. In fact, the very men most frequently quoted by Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox Christians in defense of tradition were often equally emphatic about the supremacy and sufficiency of Scripture. The tension is not nearly as neat as internet polemics make it sound. What the fathers faced was not a world where heretics denied Scripture altogether. Quite the opposite. Nearly every major heretical movement arrived carrying a Bible under its arm. Arius quoted Proverbs and John. Sabellius appealed to Scripture. The Donatists did the same. So did Pelagius. Even the Gnostics, bizarre as some of their cosmologies became, often wrapped themselves in biblical language. That created a real interpretive crisis. If everyone claims the Bible, how do you distinguish ap...