Friday, May 8, 2026

Sanitizing The Middle Ages: Patrick Madrid’s Fictional Bible History

          Patrick Madrid’s portrayal of medieval Bible access smooths over too many historical rough edges to be taken at face value. By emphasizing rare examples of openness and downplaying the structural barriers that shaped ordinary people’s experience, he offers a partial, and therefore distorted, account. His own article can be read by interested parties here:

          https://patrickmadrid.substack.com/p/the-myth-that-the-catholic-church

          Madrid builds his case on a modern fantasy about medieval access to Scripture. He treats the mere existence of vernacular manuscripts as if this automatically proves that Christians throughout Europe could freely read and study the Bible. This is not history. It is a convenient illusion. Medieval manuscript culture was not a world of personal Bibles on bedside tables. A full Bible required the skins of hundreds of animals, months of labor, and a financial investment that only monasteries, nobles, and wealthy institutions could afford. Madrid’s insistence that vernacular manuscripts existed does nothing to show that ordinary Christians ever saw them. He confuses the presence of a text in a monastic library with meaningful access, a fundamental misunderstanding of how medieval textual culture worked.

          He also fails to acknowledge that vernacular manuscripts were not evenly distributed across Europe. Germany and the Low Countries had relatively more vernacular biblical material, while Italy, Spain, and much of France had far fewer. Even where vernacular texts existed, they were often partial, psalters, gospel harmonies, or paraphrases, not full Bibles. Madrid’s argument depends on treating every vernacular scrap as evidence of widespread lay access, when in reality these texts were often produced for clergy, religious houses, or elite patrons. The existence of a handful of manuscripts in a region tells us nothing about whether ordinary Christians could read, obtain, or afford them.

          Patrick Madrid’s treatment of literacy is equally superficial. He waves away the linguistic and educational barriers of the medieval world by claiming that Latin was no obstacle because educated people knew it. This is a remarkable admission, since it quietly concedes that Scripture was effectively limited to the educated elite. Even vernacular biblical prose required a level of training that most Christians did not possess. The Roman Catholic Church’s reliance on oral liturgical proclamation was not a charming pastoral choice. It was a structural reality that placed Scripture firmly under clerical control. Madrid’s attempt to portray this as a sign of openness is historically naïve. Rome did not need to forbid what most Christians could not read in the first place.

          What Madrid never confronts is the power dynamic inherent in medieval biblical culture. When only clergy and a tiny literate minority could read Scripture, the Catholic Church did not need to issue sweeping prohibitions to maintain interpretive authority. Control was built into the system. The clergy determined what passages were read, how they were interpreted, and how they were applied. The laity’s access to Scripture was mediated entirely through sermons, liturgy, and visual art. Madrid’s argument treats the absence of universal bans as proof of freedom, when in reality the structure of medieval society made such bans unnecessary.

          His handling of ecclesiastical regulation is even more problematic. Madrid mentions the Oxford Constitutions of 1408 only to sanitize them. He presents them as a simple quality‑control measure when, in fact, they were part of a coordinated English effort to crush unauthorized religious expression after the Peasants’ Revolt and the spread of Wycliffite teaching. The Constitutions did not merely require episcopal approval. They forbade the translation and reading of English biblical texts, publicly or privately, without explicit permission. This was not a scholarly concern about accuracy. It was a political act aimed at preventing Scripture from becoming a tool of dissent. Madrid’s refusal to acknowledge this context allows him to pretend that medieval regulation was gentle and pastoral when it was often coercive and punitive.

          Madrid also ignores the fact that the Oxford Constitutions were enforced. People were arrested, interrogated, and punished for possessing Wycliffite texts. Some were imprisoned; others were forced to recant. The Constitutions were not symbolic. They were part of a broader campaign to suppress a movement that used Scripture to challenge clerical authority and social hierarchy. Madrid’s portrayal of these measures as benign “quality control” is historically indefensible.

          Madrid’s silence about the Synod of Toulouse of 1229 is equally revealing. He does not mention it because it contradicts his narrative. Toulouse issued one of the clearest medieval prohibitions on vernacular Scripture, allowing only a few liturgical books. This was not a minor local curiosity. Toulouse was a major cultural center, and the prohibition was part of a deliberate campaign to reassert clerical control in a region where alternative religious movements had gained influence. Madrid’s omission of this major historical event is not accidental. It is a strategic choice that allows him to present a sanitized version of medieval policy.

          Nor was Toulouse an isolated anomaly. The Council of Tarragona (1234) ordered that vernacular Bibles be surrendered and burned. The Council of Béziers (1246) issued similar restrictions. These were not fringe events. They were part of a coordinated response to perceived threats from lay religious movements. Madrid’s narrative collapses the moment one acknowledges that medieval Catholic authorities did, in fact, prohibit vernacular Scripture when they believed it endangered doctrinal or social stability.

          His use of Thomas More is another example of selective reading. More’s claim that English translations existed before Wycliffe is vague, polemical, and unsupported by manuscript evidence. Modern scholarship shows that pre‑Wycliffite English biblical material consisted mostly of paraphrases, glosses, and partial translations, not full Bibles. More was defending the Catholic Church against Protestant accusations, not offering a neutral historical survey. Madrid treats More’s rhetorical flourish as if it were documentary fact, which reveals more about Madrid’s method than about medieval history.

          Madrid also ignores the physical evidence of suppression. Surviving Wycliffite manuscripts often show signs of having been hidden, rebound, or stripped of identifying features. Some contain marginal warnings about secrecy. These are not the marks of a culture in which vernacular Scripture was welcomed. They are the fingerprints of a world in which the Roman Catholic Church’s regulation of religious texts was real, enforced, and sometimes severe. Madrid’s narrative cannot account for this evidence, so he simply pretends it does not exist.

          Even after the medieval period, Madrid’s narrative falters. The Index of Forbidden Books, first issued in 1559, placed sweeping restrictions on vernacular Bibles without episcopal approval. In Italy and Spain, these restrictions were enforced strictly for centuries. Ordinary Catholics could not legally own a vernacular Bible without special permission. Madrid’s attempt to portray Rome as consistently enthusiastic about "common" attendees reading the Bible is contradicted by its own post‑Tridentine disciplinary apparatus.

          Finally, Madrid’s appeal to modern Roman Catholic teaching to defend medieval practice is anachronistic. Rome's modern encouragement of Bible reading developed in a world shaped by printing, mass literacy, and Protestant emphasis on Scripture. Medieval Christianity operated under different assumptions: that Scripture was dangerous in untrained hands, that interpretation belonged to the clergy, and that religious unity required control over textual transmission. These assumptions were not malicious, but they were real. Madrid’s insistence that the Catholic Church always encouraged the reading of Scripture among the masses is not history. It is apologetic wishful thinking.

          If anyone possessed the authority to remove the Scriptures from corrupt or misguided interpreters, it was Jesus Himself, yet He never confiscated scrolls from the scribes or Pharisees, even though He condemned their hypocrisy, exposed their distortions, and rebuked their misuse of the Law. He corrected them through teaching, not through restricting their access to the text. Jesus allowed even His fiercest opponents to retain the Scriptures they mishandled, insisting instead on right interpretation rather than controlled possession. This stands in sharp contrast to later ecclesiastical policies that treated the Bible as something to be withheld from religious dissidents. If the incarnate Word did not strip Scripture from the hands of erring religious authorities, then it becomes difficult to justify later institutional efforts to do precisely that.

The Problem With Calling Transubstantiation A Miracle

          Roman Catholics defend transubstantiation by saying that a miracle does not need to be visible or detectable. They argue that God can act directly on the “substance” of the bread and wine even if nothing changes in how they look, taste, or behave. This is meant to answer the objection that transubstantiation cannot be a miracle because nothing observable happens. But this answer creates a serious problem. If a miracle is something that cannot be detected in any way, then calling it a miracle does not actually describe anything. A claim that cannot be confirmed or denied becomes empty. Saying “a miracle happened” becomes no different from saying “I believe something special happened,” which is a statement about belief, not about the world.

          This problem becomes even clearer when we look at how the Roman Catholic Church treats other miracles. In every other case, Rome insists on evidence. Healings must be medically verified. Apparitions must have witnesses. Eucharistic miracles that involve visible changes are promoted precisely because they can be seen. Even the process of declaring someone a saint requires proof of a miracle that doctors cannot explain. In all these situations, the Catholic Church treats miracles as events that leave some kind of trace. Yet with transubstantiation, it suddenly abandons this standard and says that a miracle can occur with no sign at all. This inconsistency suggests that the definition is being changed only to protect this one doctrine, not because it is a stable or coherent definition.

          There is also an issue of fairness and consistency across religions. If Catholics can claim an invisible miracle in their ritual, then any religion could do the same. Any group could say that something miraculous happens during their ceremonies, even if nothing changes and no one can detect anything. If Catholics reject those claims from other religions, they need a neutral reason for doing so. But once they say miracles do not need to be observable, they lose any basis for distinguishing their own invisible miracle from someone else’s. The result is special pleading: the Catholic invisible miracle is accepted, while others are dismissed, not because of evidence, but because of loyalty to a tradition.

          Another problem is that the idea of a miracle has always been tied to the idea of a sign. In the Bible and in ancient thought, miracles were meant to be seen. They were public acts that showed divine power. A miracle that cannot be perceived by anyone is not a sign at all. It becomes a private claim rather than a public event. By redefining miracles as invisible, Catholic theology moves away from the original meaning of the word and turns miracles into something that cannot fulfill their original purpose.

         There is also the issue of the metaphysics behind transubstantiation. The doctrine depends on an old philosophical idea from Aristotle that separates “substance” from “accidents.” According to this view, the substance of the bread changes, but the accidents, everything that one can see or measure, stay the same. But this way of thinking is not used in modern science or philosophy. It does not match anything we know about matter or physical reality. Outside of Catholic theology, the distinction is not considered useful or necessary. If the metaphysical system needed to explain transubstantiation is outdated, then the miracle claim loses its foundation. Without that system, the idea of an invisible change in substance becomes impossible to make sense of.

          Finally, if transubstantiation is considered a miracle, it raises another problem: it happens every day, thousands of times, all over the world. But miracles, by definition, are extraordinary events. They stand out because they are rare. If something happens constantly and predictably, it stops being a miracle and becomes part of the normal order of things. Calling something a miracle while also saying it happens all the time drains the word of meaning. A miracle that is routine is no miracle at all.

          When all these points are taken together, the Roman Catholic defense of transubstantiation becomes very weak. By redefining miracles as invisible, Rome makes the concept empty. By treating transubstantiation differently from every other miracle, it becomes inconsistent. By allowing invisible miracles, it opens the door for any religion to make the same claim. By abandoning the historical meaning of miracle, it loses the idea of a sign. By relying on outdated metaphysics, it loses its foundation. And by calling a daily event a miracle, it strips the word of its meaning. The attempt to defend transubstantiation ends up undermining the very idea of miracle itself.

Thursday, May 7, 2026

Why The Old Testament Pattern Of Covenant Meals Undermines Transubstantiation

          Throughout Scripture, meals function as powerful covenantal symbols, moments where God and His people share fellowship, reaffirm loyalty, and remember His saving acts. Yet despite their theological weight, these meals never involve a transformation of the food itself. Bread remains bread, wine remains wine, and sacrificial meat remains ordinary meat. The significance lies not in the elements’ substance, but in what the meal represents within the covenant relationship. This symbolic pattern is consistent across Israel’s history and becomes especially important when considering later Christian claims about the eucharist. The Roman Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation asserts that the bread and wine become the literal body and blood of Christ in their essence, introducing a metaphysical category foreign to the Old Testament’s covenantal framework.

          When the eucharist is understood as the fulfillment of Old Testament covenant meals, the question naturally arises: does fulfillment imply continuity with the symbolic pattern, or does it introduce an entirely new metaphysical reality? Examining the Old Testament’s major covenant meals, such as the Sinai meal, the peace offerings, and Wisdom’s banquet, reveals a consistent symbolic logic that stands in tension with later claims of ontological transformation. These meals are sacred, relational, and theologically rich, yet they remain materially unchanged. Understanding this pattern is essential for interpreting the nature of the Lord’s Supper and assessing whether the biblical trajectory supports symbolic participation or metaphysical change.

          The Sinai covenant meal in Exodus 24:9-11 is especially striking. After the blood of the covenant is sprinkled on the people, Moses, Aaron, Nadab, Abihu, and seventy elders ascend the mountain and “see the God of Israel.” The text emphasizes the visual encounter, describing the pavement under God’s feet as sapphire, yet it never suggests that God is somehow in the food or that the meal mediates His presence through ingestion. Instead, the narrative highlights the paradox of proximity: they behold God and yet live. The meal functions as a covenant ratification ceremony, a sign of peace between God and Israel. The food remains ordinary, and the fellowship is relational rather than sacramental in a metaphysical sense. This creates a tension with later claims that covenant meals require ontological transformation of elements to mediate divine presence. The Sinai account shows the opposite: God’s presence is direct, while the meal is symbolic.

          The peace offerings in Leviticus 7:11-21 deepen this pattern. These offerings are unique because they culminate in a shared meal between the worshiper, the priest, and God. The fat is burned for the Lord, the priest receives a portion, and the worshiper eats the rest “before the Lord.” The Hebrew phrase liphnê YHWH (“before the Lord”) signals covenant proximity, not metaphysical ingestion. The worshiper does not consume God; rather, the meal symbolizes restored fellowship after atonement. The text is meticulous about ritual purity, emphasizing that the meat must be eaten within a certain timeframe and must not touch anything unclean. These regulations underscore that the meat is still ordinary meat, subject to decay and contamination. If the meat were transformed into something divine, the purity laws would be incoherent. The tension here is that the meal is profoundly sacred, yet materially unchanged. This reinforces the symbolic nature of covenant meals and challenges interpretations that require ontological transformation.

          Wisdom’s banquet in Proverbs 9:1-6 provides a different but equally important angle. Here the meal is explicitly metaphorical: Wisdom prepares a feast and invites the simple to eat her bread and drink her wine so they may “walk in the way of insight.” The imagery is pedagogical, not sacramental. The food represents the acceptance of Wisdom’s teaching, and the transformation occurs in the person, not in the elements. This literary use of meal imagery reinforces the broader biblical pattern: meals signify covenantal or relational realities without requiring any change in the substance of the food. The tension arises when later theological systems treat meal imagery as inherently metaphysical. Proverbs shows that biblical authors freely use meal language symbolically, without implying ontological change.

          Taken together, these examples reveal a consistent Old Testament pattern: covenant meals function as acts of remembrance, expressions of loyalty, signs of fellowship, and moments of covenant renewal. They never involve a change in the substance of the food, nor do they suggest that God becomes physically present in the elements. The tension between the sacred significance of these meals and the ordinary nature of the food is intentional. The power of the meal lies in what it signifies, not in what it becomes. This symbolic framework is deeply embedded in Israel’s worship and identity.

          If the eucharist fulfills these Old Testament covenant meals, then the natural interpretive trajectory is symbolic participation rather than substantial transformation. Fulfillment deepens meaning but does not overturn the category. Passover becomes the Lord’s Supper, but the pattern remains: the meal represents covenant truths rather than embodying them in a metaphysical sense. The Roman Catholic doctrine of transubstantiation introduces a metaphysical category foreign to the biblical pattern, asserting a change in substance where Scripture consistently presents symbolic representation. The Old Testament trajectory points toward representation, not transformation; relational communion, not physical ingestion; covenant symbolism, not metaphysical change.

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

When The Chalk Lines Do Not Add Up: Casey Chalk’s Case Against Perspicuity

          Casey Chalk’s attack on biblical perspicuity undermines itself. The standards that he uses to critique it, if applied consistently, would dismantle the coherence of his own Roman Catholic tradition:

          https://www.calledtocommunion.com/2023/11/the-obscurity-of-scripture/

         His critique of biblical perspicuity can be challenged on its own internal logic without appealing to Protestant distinctives, since his argument depends on philosophical assumptions and historical claims that do not hold up under scrutiny. Chalk begins by assuming that Scripture must be capable of producing doctrinal unity in order to be considered “clear,” yet he never demonstrates that this is Scripture’s intended purpose. This is a premise he imports from a Roman Catholic ecclesiology and then uses to judge Scripture, which makes his argument circular from the outset. A text can be clear in what it asserts without eliminating all disagreement among readers; disagreement is a sociological reality, not a semantic property of a written text. When Chalk repeatedly argues that interpretive diversity proves Scripture is obscure, he commits a category mistake. If disagreement were evidence of obscurity, then even the most straightforward human communications, such as legal contracts, medical consent forms, or scientific abstracts, would have to be labeled unintelligible simply because readers sometimes dispute their implications. The fact that people argue about a text does not tell us what the text is like; it tells us what people are like.

          Chalk’s use of the Arian controversy illustrates this problem vividly. He argues that the existence of Arianism proves Scripture is unclear on the Trinity, but this logic undermines Roman Catholicism as much as Protestantism. If the mere existence of dissenting groups proves doctrinal obscurity, then Catholic dogma is equally unclear, given the existence of modernists, traditionalists, sedevacantists, Old Catholics, and Eastern Orthodox, all of whom reject or reinterpret Catholic teachings while claiming fidelity to the same sources. By Chalk’s own standard, Catholicism would fail the clarity test. The Arian controversy shows that communities fracture for many reasons, political pressures, philosophical presuppositions, linguistic differences, not simply because a written text is unclear. Chalk treats doctrinal conflict as a hermeneutical failure rather than a human one, which is historically naive.

          His critique of “individual interpretive authority” also falters because it ignores how interpretation works in every tradition, including his own Catholic tradition. Catholics must interpret councils, papal encyclicals, canon law, catechisms, and the writings of the fathers. Catholics disagree about the death penalty, religious liberty, the meaning of Vatican II, the limits of papal infallibility, and the status of the Latin Mass. If interpretive diversity implies a lack of clarity or authority, then Roman Catholicism is equally vulnerable. Interpretation is a universal human activity; no authority structure eliminates it. Chalk faults Protestantism for something that is simply a feature of human cognition.

          Casey Chalk's critique of the Protestant “rule of faith” similarly misunderstands how traditions function. Chalk treats tradition as if it must be a fixed, algorithmic standard, but traditions, Catholic, Protestant, Jewish, Islamic, or otherwise, are historically layered, communally negotiated, and interpretively dynamic. Catholicism itself selectively canonized some fathers and ignored others, accepted some councils and rejected others, and reinterpreted earlier teachings in light of later developments. Chalk’s charge that Protestants use tradition arbitrarily applies equally to Catholicism, which also exercises selective reception and retrospective harmonization.

          Chalk’s appeal to the magisterium as an “objective guardrail” is contradicted by Catholic history. Councils have contradicted earlier councils, popes have contradicted earlier popes, and theologians disagree about what counts as infallible. The condemnation of Pope Honorius as a heretic, the reversal of earlier papal teaching on religious liberty, and the shift in Catholic teaching on the death penalty all show that magisterial authority is not the stable, unambiguous interpretive anchor Chalk imagines. His argument depends on an idealized abstraction of the magisterium rather than its historical reality.

          Even Chalk’s sociological critique backfires. He claims that belief in perspicuity leads to arrogance and accusations of obstinacy, but Roman Catholic history is full of inquisitions, anathemas, excommunications, and suppression of dissent. If the Protestant problem is that people think others are wrong, Catholicism hardly solves that. Chalk critiques Protestant sociology while ignoring Catholic sociology.

          Finally, Casey Chalk’s argument is self‑refuting. He insists that Scripture cannot be understood without an authoritative interpreter, yet he expects readers to understand his own book without such an authority. If human reason is capable of evaluating his arguments, the fathers, councils, and historical evidence, then human reason is capable of evaluating Scripture. Chalk cannot simultaneously trust human reason to assess his book while distrusting human reason to assess the biblical text. This internal contradiction undermines the entire project.

Monday, April 27, 2026

The Moment God Filled Humanity Full

"In His Person all that Grace and Truth which had been floating so long in shadowy forms, and darting into the souls of the poor and needy its broken beams, took everlasting possession of human flesh and filled it full. By this Incarnation of Grace and Truth, the teaching of thousands of years was at once transcended and beggared, and the family of God sprang into Manhood."

Excerpt taken from A Commentary, Explanatory and Practical, on the Whole Bible, Robert Jamieson, Andrew Fausset, and David Brown, on John 1:14

The Case For Coherence: Why Sola Scriptura Does Not Require Uniformity

          Critiques of Sola Scriptura often assume that the doctrine collapses once interpretive diversity appears, yet that assumption misunderstands what the doctrine actually claims:

          https://www.catholic.com/audio/cot/refuting-protestantisms-clarity-doctrine-of-scripture

          Trent Horn and Casey Chalk build their critique of perspicuity on a confusion between the clarity of a text and the uniformity of its interpreters. Both men repeatedly argue that Protestant disagreement proves Scripture is obscure. This assumes that clarity is measured by the number of people who reach identical conclusions. That assumption is flawed because disagreement is a property of readers, not a property of the text. If disagreement were the measure of obscurity, then Aristotle would be obscure, Aquinas would be obscure, the Catechism would be obscure, and Vatican II would be obscure. Horn and Chalk collapse the distinction between what a text is and what readers do with it. Once that distinction is erased, no text can ever be called clear again, and this undermines the very Catholic documents they rely on.

          Horn and Chalk also treat perspicuity as if it were a claim about global transparency rather than local intelligibility. They assume that if Scripture is clear then it must be clear in all its parts and in a way that produces a single doctrinal system. This is not how clarity works in any domain of human communication. A map can be clear even if some regions are faint. A legal code can be clear even if some clauses require expert interpretation. A medical textbook can be clear even if some chapters are dense. Horn and Chalk attack a maximalist version of perspicuity that Protestants do not hold. Their critique refutes a doctrine that exists only in their imagination.

          A deeper problem is that both men assume clarity must be self‑authenticating. They treat perspicuity as if Protestants claim that Scripture must be equally clear to every reader regardless of education or maturity. This is an unrealistic standard because no communication works that way. A child and a scholar can read the same sentence and understand it at different depths without the sentence becoming obscure. Horn quotes the Westminster Confession, yet ignores its actual claim that Scripture is clear to the ordinary believer using ordinary means. Ordinary means include preaching, study, community, and the accumulated wisdom of the church. Horn and Chalk treat these means as concessions that undermine perspicuity, yet Catholics rely on the same means to understand magisterial documents. If the need for teachers undermines clarity, then Roman Catholicism collapses along with Protestantism.

          Both men also assume that the Roman Catholic magisterium provides interpretive finality that Protestants lack. This is asserted rather than demonstrated. The magisterium issues authoritative statements, yet those statements themselves require interpretation and Catholics disagree about their meaning. The magisterium has not resolved debates over religious liberty, the interpretation of Humanae Vitae, the nature of predestination, or the meaning of “subsists in” in Lumen Gentium. Horn and Chalk speak as if the magisterium were a living oracle that can be consulted at will, yet in practice the magisterium speaks rarely and often in ways that require further clarification. They never explain why infallibility is necessary for understanding, nor why the existence of an infallible authority eliminates interpretive diversity. History shows that it does not.

          Their philosophical assumptions are equally problematic. Both men assume that divine revelation must be structured in a way that eliminates ambiguity. This mirrors certain atheist arguments that claim if God exists, then He would make His existence unmistakably clear, and since He has not, He must not exist. Horn and Chalk apply the same logic to Scripture. If God intended Scripture to guide us, then He would make it unmistakably clear, and since Protestants disagree, Scripture must not be clear. This assumes that God’s purpose in revelation is to eliminate interpretive struggle. Scripture itself contradicts this assumption. Jesus speaks in parables that are intentionally difficult. Paul writes things that Peter says are “hard to understand.” The prophets deliver oracles that require discernment. Horn and Chalk presuppose a model of divine communication that Scripture does not endorse.

          They also misrepresent Protestant ecclesiology by treating perspicuity as a claim about epistemic autonomy. They assume Protestants believe each individual is his own pope. This is false. Protestants do not deny the need for teachers tradition or communal interpretation. They deny that any human authority is infallible. Horn and Chalk conflate “no infallible interpreter” with “no interpreter at all.” Protestants have confessions, synods, seminaries, and exegetical traditions that function as stabilizing forces. They simply do not elevate these to the level of infallibility. Neither man explains why fallible but authoritative structures cannot preserve orthodoxy.

          Finally, Horn and Chalk fail because they treat perspicuity as a theory of everything. They assume perspicuity must explain all doctrinal unity, all interpretive success, and all ecclesial cohesion. Perspicuity was never meant to bear that weight. It is a modest claim that Scripture is sufficiently clear in its central message that the church can proclaim the gospel without needing an infallible interpretive office. Horn and Chalk inflate perspicuity into a totalizing epistemology, then criticize it for failing to do what it never claimed to do. This is a category mistake, not a refutation.

Sunday, April 26, 2026

When ‘Doing Something’ Becomes A Cheap Argument: Why Collapsing Faith Into Work Distorts The Logic Of Justification

          This analysis explores the central claims in Trent Horn’s argument and considers whether they remain consistent once Paul’s categories are applied to them:

          https://www.catholic.com/video/ex-catholic-claims-we-add-works-to-salvation-wav-2

Trent Horn’s argument against the claim that Roman Catholicism “adds works to salvation” follows a familiar pattern, but its internal logic collapses under scrutiny. His central move is to assert that Protestants misunderstand Catholic teaching, insisting that Catholics do not believe they earn salvation or that God owes them grace because of their actions. Instead, he frames Catholicism as a system in which works are performed “in grace” and therefore do not constitute meritorious contributions. Yet this reframing does not change the structure of the Catholic system itself, which explicitly includes human cooperation, sacramental participation, and moral effort as components of justification. Whether or not Catholics describe these actions as “earning,” they undeniably function as works within the process of salvation.

Horn then attempts to neutralize the Protestant critique by arguing that Protestants also require humans to “do” something. He points out that Protestants call people to believe, repent, trust Christ, or accept the gospel, and he concludes that these are all actions. Therefore, he argues, Protestants cannot object to Catholics requiring actions such as receiving sacraments or cooperating with grace. This is the heart of his argument, and it rests on a fundamental equivocation. Horn treats any human activity whatsoever as a “work,” collapsing the biblical distinction between faith and works. Scripture, however, does not define “works” as any human action; Paul explicitly contrasts believing with working, stating that “to the one who does not work but believes, his faith is counted as righteousness.” Horn’s argument requires redefining faith as a work, a move that directly contradicts Paul’s categories and undermines the very distinction that grounds justification by faith.

To reinforce his point, Trent Horn appeals to infant baptism as evidence that Catholicism cannot be works-based. Babies, he notes, cannot do anything, yet Catholics believe baptism saves them. This example is meant to demonstrate that Catholic salvation is fundamentally grace-driven. But this argument proves too much. If infants can be saved without faith, then faith is not necessary for salvation at all, which contradicts the New Testament’s universal call to believe. Moreover, the example shifts the discussion away from the question of whether Catholicism includes works in the process of justification and instead raises deeper issues about sacramentalism and the nature of saving faith. Rather than defending Catholic teaching on works, the infant baptism example sidesteps the issue entirely.

          Horn also shifts the conversation toward the question of whether salvation can be lost, arguing that Protestants who deny eternal security still require ongoing human action, such as continuing to believe. This move is a red herring. The original question is whether Catholicism adds works to salvation, not whether it can be forfeited. And even granting that certain Protestants reject eternal security, that concession does nothing to bolster Horn’s argument, since the central debate is not about the duration of salvation but its ground. By redirecting the discussion, Horn avoids addressing the structural role that works play in Catholic soteriology. The issue is not perseverance but the nature of justification itself, whether it is a single declaration received by faith alone or a process that increases and decreases based on human cooperation.

Underlying all of Trent Horn’s reasoning is a selective use of Scripture that avoids the clearest Pauline statements on justification. Paul repeatedly emphasizes that justification is “not by works,” “not by works of righteousness,” and “not by works of the law,” and he draws a sharp line between working and believing. Horn’s argument requires erasing this line by redefining faith as a work, which not only contradicts Paul but also undermines the very concept of grace. If believing is a work, then salvation involves human contribution, and grace is no longer grace. Horn attempts to avoid the charge of Pelagianism, but the logic of his argument leads directly toward it.

          The Protestant framework does not need to juggle categories to stay consistent. In that view, God declares a person righteous on the basis of Christ alone, and faith is simply the means by which that verdict is received, not a contribution toward it. Faith is not treated as spiritual currency, but as the posture of someone who has nothing to offer. The moral transformation that follows is real, but it flows from that settled verdict rather than feeding back into it. The Roman Catholic system, by contrast, does not leave justification in that fixed position. It begins with grace, yes, but then folds human performance back into the equation, justification can expand through obedience, collapse through mortal sin, and be revived through sacramental acts. The result is a moving target: grace initiates, but human action continually recalibrates one’s standing before God. This is a works-involving system, regardless of whether Catholics describe it as “earning.”

Friday, April 24, 2026

A Theorem Without Axioms: Why Matt Fradd’s Church Infallibility Argument Fails

  • Discussion:
          -Some argue that if God reveals truth, the church must be able to teach without error. But that leap is not as simple as it might seem. This article breaks down the assumptions behind that claim:

          “The claim to infallibility, while a bold one, is actually quite sensible in its own way.”

          Calling the claim “sensible” is rhetorical framing, not argument. Infallibility is an extraordinary assertion: that a human institution can, under certain conditions, teach without the possibility of error. That is not self‑evidently sensible, but precisely what needs justification. The sentence softens the reader before presenting the real claim, but it does not defend the claim itself.

          “It is virtually a tautology, in fact, since it amounts to saying nothing more than this: if God has revealed himself, then what he has revealed is true, and the Church can come to know over time in a definitive way what God has revealed.” 

          This is not a tautology. The first clause (“if God has revealed himself, then what he has revealed is true”) is tautological. The second clause (“the Church can come to know…in a definitive way”) is an additional, highly contested claim. You can affirm divine revelation without granting that a particular institution has an infallible interpretive mechanism. The conclusion is smuggled in as if it were contained in the premise, but it is not.

          “These are not in themselves very astonishing claims.” 

          They are astonishing. The idea that a specific hierarchical body can issue error‑free doctrinal statements binding on all believers is a monumental claim. Minimizing its magnitude does not make it less controversial. The sentence functions to normalize something that is, historically and philosophically, anything but normal.

          “They rest on a more fundamental claim, namely that God has revealed himself.” 

          They rest on two fundamental claims: that God has revealed himself, and that God has guaranteed that this particular church can infallibly identify that revelation. The second does not follow from the first. Many religious traditions affirm divine revelation without attributing infallibility to any institution. The argument conflates revelation with a specific ecclesiology.

          “But if that has occurred, why would it be so strange that God should assist the Church over time, in and through controversy and dispute, and despite the terrible moral and intellectual limitations of her adherents, to come to know the truth he has revealed?” 

          “Assist” is ambiguous and does not imply infallibility. Assistance could mean guidance, inspiration, correction, or providential care, none of which require a guarantee of error‑free teaching. The argument slides from “God helps” to “God prevents error,” which is a leap. It also assumes that “the Church” refers specifically to the Roman Catholic magisterium, which is precisely the point under dispute.

          “What would be stranger, indeed illogical in its own right, would be the claim that God has revealed himself, most certainly, but that we might just as certainly deny the Church’s capacity to identify his teaching with certitude.” 

          This confuses the certainty of divine truth with the certainty of human interpretation. It is not illogical to say that God’s revelation is certain while our grasp of it is limited or fallible. Human fallibility does not undermine divine truth. It simply acknowledges our limitations. The argument also presumes a single, unified interpretive authority is necessary, which is historically and theologically doubtful.

          “If the Church cannot teach infallibly, then we are in fact required to say something absurd of just this kind: God has revealed himself, but the Church can never say with assurance what God has revealed.” 

          This is a false dilemma. It assumes that without infallibility, there can be no meaningful assurance at all. But human knowledge routinely operates with high confidence without requiring infallibility, in science, ethics, history, and daily life. Fallible but reliable knowledge is not absurd. It is the human condition. The argument artificially restricts the options to force the conclusion.

          “In that case we might claim that there is an infallibly true revelation of God, but we must also admit that we cannot identify it, practically speaking, in any realistic way.” 

          This overstates the consequences of rejecting infallibility. Not being able to identify revelation infallibly does not mean that we cannot identify it at all. Traditions, consensus, reason, experience, and communal discernment can yield substantial, meaningful understanding without requiring a guarantee of zero error. Even within Catholicism, doctrinal development, internal disagreement, and non‑definitive teachings show that practical certainty is not as absolute as this sentence suggests.

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Disemboweling Jeff Mirus' Historical Revisionism On The Acceptance Of The Four Gospels

  • Discussion:
          -Early Christian history is often more textured than the tidy narratives built on it. Mirus’ reading of Charles E. Hill is one such case, where careful historical evidence becomes an overstated theological conclusion:

          “Hill… shows that the four gospels were universally regarded as authoritative from the beginning.”

          Hill’s work does not establish universality, but early prevalence. That is an important distinction. The four gospels appear early and widely, but the surviving evidence does not allow us to speak of a uniform, empire‑wide consensus. The second‑century church was geographically dispersed, often isolated, and lacked any centralized mechanism for enforcing doctrinal or textual conformity. The Gospel of the Hebrews among Jewish‑Christian groups, the Gospel of Peter in Syria, and the long‑standing use of the Diatessaron in the East all demonstrate that the textual landscape had a degree of diversity to it.

          “Christians never regarded themselves as having a choice about which gospels to accept.”

          This statement imports later canonical consciousness into a period that did not yet possess it. Early Christians did not think in terms of “choosing” or “not choosing” gospels, but received the texts available to them, evaluated them based on apostolic connection, and used them in worship. That is not the same as believing that no choice existed. The presence of alternative texts in some regions, such as the Gospel of the Egyptians or the Gospel of the Ebionites, shows that early Christians did encounter competing claims, even if they did not frame those encounters in later canonical terminology. Jeff Mirus oversimplifies a far more complex historical process.

          “This acceptance depends on Apostolic authority… which Protestants cannot account for.”

          Apostolic authority is indeed central to the recognition of the gospels. Apostolicity is a historical question: Who wrote this text? What community received it? How early is its attestation? These are matters of evidence, not ecclesiastical decree. The Muratorian Fragment, for example, appeals to authorship and internal coherence rather than to magisterial pronouncement. Even Irenaeus, who strongly emphasizes apostolic succession, argues from public teaching and historical continuity, not from an infallible adjudicator. The claim that Protestants “cannot account for” apostolic authority ignores the fact that apostolicity is established through historical inquiry, not institutional fiat.

          “Hill proves that the four gospels were accepted everywhere, always, and by all.”

          What Hill demonstrates is that the four Gospels were widely used and highly regarded across many regions by the mid‑second century. The persistence of alternative traditions, such as the Diatessaron’s dominance in Syria until the fifth century, shows that the fourfold gospel did not immediately displace all competitors. Hill’s argument is historical and descriptive. Mirus' interpretation is theological and expansive. The two should not be conflated.

          “Derivative works like harmonizations show that only the four canonical gospels were used.”

          Harmonizations reveal which texts were most influential, not which were officially sanctioned. Tatian’s Diatessaron includes the four Gospels because they were the texts most widely circulated in his environment, not because a council had declared them exclusive. Meanwhile, other communities produced harmonizations or expansions based on different texts, such as the Gospel of the Hebrews. The absence of apocryphal harmonizations in surviving manuscripts cannot be taken as evidence that they never existed. Manuscript survival is notoriously uneven.

          “The four gospels were handed down from the beginning.”

          In a general sense, this is true: the four gospels have deep roots in the earliest Christian communities. But Jeff Mirus uses this phrase to imply a continuous, centrally supervised transmission, which does not reflect the historical reality. The early church was a network of local congregations, not a unified administrative body. Texts circulated through missionary activity, personal correspondence, and regional exchange. The fact that the four gospels eventually became dominant does not mean they were transmitted through a single, uninterrupted chain of institutional oversight. The long‑standing use of the Diatessaron in the East is a reminder that “handing down” was a diverse and sometimes uneven process.

          “Acceptance of the gospels depends on Apostolic authority… which requires a living authority to resolve disputes.”

          This argument assumes that disagreement necessitates an infallible adjudicator, a premise that does not hold in other areas of Christian life or historical inquiry. The early church resolved disputes through councils, correspondence, and communal discernment, not through a single, centralized authority with unilateral power. The Quartodeciman controversy, for example, was not settled by papal decree but through regional synods and ongoing debate. The existence of disagreement does not prove the necessity of an infallible Magisterium. It simply reflects the normal process by which the church has always wrestled with doctrinal and textual questions.

          “Jerome and Augustine disagreed… so how was the dispute resolved without a Magisterium?”

          Late‑antique canon questions were not settled by authoritative decrees, but by the slow convergence of local practice, liturgical usage, and the copying habits of scribes. Jerome continued to distinguish the Hebrew books from the others, Augustine continued to defend the broader list, and both positions coexisted within the Latin West for generations. What eventually emerged was not the product of a single adjudicating authority but the cumulative effect of ordinary ecclesial life. The persistence of divergent Eastern and Western canons only underscores that no universal mechanism existed to impose uniformity. This question rests on a false premise.

          “Protestants cannot explain how Scripture, Tradition, and Magisterium form a seamless whole.”

          This statement presupposes the very framework it claims Protestants cannot explain. The "seamless integration of Scripture, Tradition, and Magisterium" is a Catholic construct, not a historical given. The early church’s textual history is marked by diversity, regional variation, and gradual convergence, not by a single, unified triad of authorities. To assert the Roman Catholic model as the only coherent one is to assume the conclusion in advance. Protestant scholarship affirms the value of tradition and the importance of historical continuity, but it does not require a later ecclesial structure to validate the authority of Scripture.

          “Hill’s work validates the Catholic understanding of authority.”

          False. Hill’s work validates the early prominence and apostolic grounding of the four Gospels. Mirus commits a category error by treating historical evidence as though it were theological endorsement. Manuscript distribution, patristic citations, and early harmonizations cannot be used to prove the necessity of a later hierarchical authority structure. Hill’s argument is historical; the article’s conclusion is ecclesiological. The two should not be conflated.

Monday, April 6, 2026

Debunking Jeff Mirus On Church Authority And The Canon

  • Discussion:
          -Jeff Mirus wrote an article in which he attempts to argue that the Roman Catholic Church is immune to biblical critique. He appeals to Rome's authority and its alleged role in the compilation of the canonical writings to make his case. Excerpts from the author are cited in bold and followed by critical commentary of each claim:

          “The key question is… whether Scripture stands the test of Catholicism.”

         This inverts the natural direction of authority. A community cannot be the final judge of the text that originally shaped it. That would be like saying a constitution must “stand the test” of the government it authorizes. In any coherent system, the founding document is the standard by which the institution is measured. If Scripture must pass the test of the Roman Catholic Church, then it becomes accountable only to itself, which collapses authority into circular self‑validation. Sola Scriptura avoids this by grounding authority in something that precedes and transcends the community.

          “The Catholic Church gave rise to the Bible.”

         This confuses historical sequence with causal authority. A museum curator does not “give rise” to the artifacts that he catalogs. A scientific community does not “give rise” to the laws of physics it formalizes. The biblical writings existed and carried authority before they were ever evaluated. Sola Scriptura rests on the idea that the authority of the text is intrinsic, not conferred.

          “Revelation was not given to a book but to persons.”

         Revelation given to persons is inherently unstable. Human memory is fallible, oral transmission mutates, and institutional recollection is shaped by politics and power. Writing is the stabilizing technology that prevents drift. Every society that values the preservation of truth eventually commits its foundational revelations to writing. The written form is not a downgrade. It is the only medium capable of preserving revelation with fidelity across generations. Sola Scriptura recognizes that a written revelation is the only form capable of functioning as a stable, public, universally accessible authority.

          “Only the Church could identify which books were inspired… Scripture is the Church’s book.”

          Gatekeeping is not authorship. Communities often recognize truths that they did not create. Philosophers did not create logic; they discovered it. Linguists did not create grammar; they described it. The recognition of inspired writings is an act of discernment, not authorization. If the Bible were truly “the church’s book,” then the church could theoretically alter it, expand it, or redefine it. But the Roman Catholic Church itself denies having that power. Sola Scriptura treats the text as the formative authority, not the product of the community.

          “Protestants ask the question backwards… they insist Scripture is the source of Revelation.” 

          This misstates the Sola Scriptura position. Scripture is not the source of revelation, but the preserved form of revelation. The distinction matters. A photograph is not the source of the event it captures, but it is the most reliable record of it. Oral recollection is fragile; institutional memory is political; written testimony is stable. Sola Scriptura is not about privileging a book over a community. It is about privileging a stable medium over a mutable one. The author’s critique misunderstands the epistemological motivation behind the doctrine.

          “She [the Church] created the Bible by proclaiming which writers were inspired.”

          This is like saying that astronomers “created” the stars by cataloging them. The recognition of the canon is rooted in history, but the authority of the texts does not arise from that event. If the church’s declaration creates inspiration, then inspiration becomes a human act, which undermines the very idea of divine revelation. Sola Scriptura avoids this by grounding inspiration in the act of God, not in the later recognition of a human institution.

          “Only an idiot would submit the Church to the judgment of the text.” 

          This reverses how foundational texts function in every other domain. Constitutions judge governments. Scientific papers judge scientific institutions. Foundational charters judge organizations. The idea that a community should not be judged by its founding documents is foreign to every field of human knowledge. If the Catholic Church cannot be judged by Scripture, then the church becomes self‑authenticating, which is indistinguishable from authoritarianism.

          “The key question is whether Scripture is Catholic.” 

          This makes the Roman Catholic Church the interpretive center of reality. But no community can be the standard by which its own origins are judged. That is epistemically incoherent. It is like asking whether the U.S. Constitution is “American,” the Constitution defines America, not the other way around. Sola Scriptura insists that the text defines the community, not the community the text. Otherwise, the community becomes unfalsifiable, which is the hallmark of closed systems rather than truth‑seeking ones.

          “Only an affirmative answer makes the Bible worth reading at all.”

          This treats the Catholic Church as the source of the Bible’s value, which collapses divine revelation into institutional endorsement. A text is worth reading because of what it is, not because of who approves it. Shakespeare is valuable without a literary academy. Euclid is valuable without a mathematics council. Scripture’s worth is intrinsic to its content, not derivative of ecclesial approval. Sola Scriptura recognizes that divine revelation carries its own authority, independent of institutional validation.