Catholic Exchange

The Tide Is Turning Toward Catholicism: Scripture Study Among the Laity

It had long been a common, but mistaken, belief among Protestants that Catholics did not need to know the Scriptures because they did not carry a Bible into church. However, outsiders often did not realize that both the New and Old Testament are read at Mass. The Catholic Church gave the world the Bible and yet, for some strange reason, Catholics had to defend their interpretation of the Scriptures and their knowledge about them.

After several Church Councils, Pope Damasus declared the Canon of the Bible complete in 382 AD. While some of the Old Testament books were taken out of the Bible by some Protestant leaders after the Reformation, the Protestant New Testament is the same Bible that the Councils and Pope Damasus agreed on through the intercession of the Holy Spirit. So every time a Protestant refers to his New Testament as "God's Word" or "Scripture," he is unwittingly assenting to the authority of the Church. However, the Church believes that Scripture and Sacred Tradition together form the deposit of apostolic faith. St. Paul tells us the importance of tradition in 2 Thessalonians 2:15 and 1 Timothy 3:15. If we didn't believe in tradition, how would we have the Bible? The contents of the Bible were passed down orally before they were written.

The Church has never forbid Catholics from reading the Bible, but in the Middle Ages few could read or write and, before the invention of the printing press, each copy had to be made by hand. Therefore, few people owned Bibles. Ultimately, the printing press and education changed all of that. In 1920, Pope Benedict XV proclaimed that every Catholic should have a Bible. Lately many Catholics are turning to Bible studies as well as purchasing Study Bibles such as the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible or the Navarre Bible. This growing embrace of the study of Scripture by lay Catholics is chronicled in my book, The Tide Is Turning Toward Catholicism. The rise of the new apologetics, led by the likes of Dr Scott Hahn, has brought long-ignored Bible passages to the forefront, helping explain 2,000 years of Church teaching. It is not that Catholics and Protestants were unaware of these verses, but, with the help of the new apologetics movement and the Internet, the Church's interpretation of them was made more widely known. Cradle Catholic apologists like Patrick Madrid worked in cooperation with converts such as Dave Armstrong, Dr. Ray Guarendi, Dr. Scott Hahn, Mark Shea, and Tim Staples to help Catholics and non-Catholics understand the Church's teachings. During the last ten years, Catholic Bible Study and the sale of Catholic book dealing with the understanding of Scripture have skyrocketed.

 Whether it is the Eucharist, Confession, Mary, or the role of the pope, the aforementioned apologists, among others, have given Catholic teaching greater exposure. Could Christ have been any clearer on the importance of the Eucharist in John 6:22-69? The same clarity could be claimed for Saint Paul's words in 1 Corinthians 11:23-30. These two passages have helped many Catholics and non-Catholics appreciate this great Sacrament. The unmistakable words of Jesus, and His first words after the Resurrection, addressed the Sacrament of Reconciliation in John 20:19-23.

The role of the pope, the successor to Saint Peter, has been brilliantly explained by these new apologists. Jesus gave Peter the keys to the kingdom and told him he had the power to loose and bind. Whatever he bound on earth would also be bound in heaven and whatever he loosed on earth would also be loosed in heaven (Matthew 16:16-19). Keys were very significant in ancient Jewish culture for they signified ownership which had to be passed down. The keys would be passed down as they were in Isaiah 22:15-25. Early Christians would have understood precisely the meaning of this verse. The writings of Pope Clement (the fourth pope) and others made clear the importance of the Holy Father even in the earliest days of the Church.

As we can see, our faith is built upon Scripture and Tradition. It could not have lasted for 2,000 years if it was not the Church Christ established. There are over 34,000 Protestant denominations and non-denominational churches just in the United States. However, in the whole world there is but one Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. With the study of the Scriptures, we see why. Indeed the tide is turning!

Comments

  1. Guest Avatar
    Guest

    Thank you for an excellent article.  Ignatius Catholic Bible Study by Dr. Scott Hahn and Curtis Mitch and the Navarre Bible Study are excellent for private or group bible study.  The Ignatius Catholic Bible Study provides references to the Catechism of the Catholic Church.  The Catechism and the Bible Study commentaries help us to interpret Scripture passages.

    Presently our parish bible study group is studying Acts of Apostles by Stephen K Ray provided by Catholic Scripture Study International.  Acts of Apostles is a wonderful study about the history of the early Church and the guidance of the Holy Spirit.  Each lesson includes the Holy Spirit in the early Church as well as invaluable references to the Catechism of the Catholic Church.

     But you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be my witnesses in Jerusalem and in all Judea and Samaria and to the end of the earth” Acts.1:8.  This happened, and this passage accurately prophesies the geographical spread of Christianity described in the book of Acts.

    I am thankful to the late Pope John Paul II and Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, now Pope Benedict XVI, who gave us the Catechism of the Catholic Church in the mid 1990s.  The Catechism is key to learn Scripture and our Catholic faith that is built upon Scripture and Tradition.  It helps us to put our faith into action.

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    Excellent article.  In our parish we have several Bible Study groups active at any one time.  And all of the groups have good attendance.

    I recently taught my CCD/Sunday School class about our liturgy and the Bible.  One of my bright 6th graders commented that her friends at school said that Catholics don't use the Bible.  I then was able to point out that Catholics that attend mass everyday will read the entire Bible in 3 years.  And our readings in the missal are all from the Bible.  We have readings from the Old testament.  Something form Psalms.  A reading from the Gospels and a reading from the other books of the new testament.  I took this opportunity to show these young people where in the Bible the readings come from.

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    Thank you, Tarheel!

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    Read this post comparing Catholics and Protestants on their attitudes to religion – Protestants v Catholics – Faith Irony.

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    I am a mentor for a young lady in a correctional facility and we actually discussed this last night.  The protestant groups told her that their bible was the only true bible and that the Catholic Bible wasn't the real bible.  I did explain that the Catholic Church put together the bible, but the Protestants took some of the books out.  Someone had even asked her where were the saints recorded in the bible ???

    We went on to have a lively discussion about several different books in the Old & New Testament.  It really helped that I've read the entire bible and the different stories recorded there, even if I don't have the whole thing memorized. 

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    I have a question for the Catholics on here and I know I have presented this question before but in a different form so please, bear with me.

     

    I just cannot grasp the role that Mary play in Catholicism, could someone explain it to me?  I get that she is the Mother of the Christ, plays a central role in the birth of the Christ, was at the Cross but the place of her in Catholic faith teaching is something I have trouble grasping.  This is not meant as some disrespectful Baptist mouthing off about Catholics engaging in "Mary worship" but a question about why she has the place she does in Catholic teaching.

     

    Joseph Bailey

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    Dearest Joseph,  May I take a quick crack at this question?  I know you've raised it before (and probably will again, which is okay), and I'm thinking the only one who can adequately answer your question is Mary herself.

    However, I heard one of those pithy little sayings several years ago that has become a favorite meditation for this convert.  It's almost too simple, but if you think about it……….

    "Jesus spent 3 hours on the cross.

     Jesus spent 3 days in the tomb.

     Jesus spent 3 years teaching and discipling.

     But, He spent 30 years at home with Mary."

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    Hi Joseph!  I converted to Catholism and I am definately not an expert on Mary.  But this is what I came to understand about Mary. 

    Mary is the ultimate spiritual hero for us.  She is the greatest saint the world has ever known.  She suffered greatly because of her love for God and her love for Jesus.  Mary said "yes" to God.  Without Mary's "yes", our Lord would not have been made flesh, lived among us and died on the cross for our sins.  Salvation was brought into the world through Jesus, but also because Mary said "yes" to God.  Mary's "yes" is the opposite of Eve's "no".  Eve's "no" was selfish.  Mary's "yes" was absolutely selfless.  Mary loved God above everything and everyone else in the whole world.  She willing gave her life and her will to God.  Mary's faith in God, belief in God, and love for God is so great that we honor her, above every other human being in the world.  Her whole life glorified God and her son Jesus.  Yet, Mary never called attention to herself, only to her son Jesus.  We may give her much honor and praise, but it is only because of her son that we do so. 

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