The Protestant View of the Bible
The lecture discusses the view of some Protestants toward the Holy Scripture, especially the belittling of the Old Testament and some rational practices that lead to deleting or marginalizing parts of the Scripture. His Holiness the Pope calls for an integrated understanding of Scripture, not relying on a single verse to build a doctrine, and the need to link verses together to reach a correct conclusion.
Main points (subheadings):
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Belittling the Old Testament: The speaker points out that some Protestants respect the New Testament and do not give the same respect to the Old Testament, considering that its rules belonged to a past time.
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Excessive rational application: He criticizes the rationalist tendency in some churches (such as part of the Episcopal church) that leads them to accept what agrees with their reason and reject what does not, even to the extent of admitting women to the priesthood and deleting books.
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Danger of using a single verse: He warns against deducing from one verse without linking it to other verses, and stresses collecting all verses related to a topic to derive a complete biblical teaching.
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Illustrative biblical examples: The lecturer cites verses and stories (Acts, John, Titus, the story of Philip and the eunuch, the story of Cornelius) to show that Scripture links water and spirit and that the testimony of the Spirit appears and then is followed by the outward act like baptism.
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Knowledge preparedness for the servant: He urges servants to memorize many verses and know their locations so they can answer with logic and context in discussions and defend the faith.
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Educational guidance: He advises teaching children and youth the Holy Scriptures from childhood so they become firm in doctrine and not exposed to deception by a single verse or superficial conclusions.
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