The American Catholic Church?
https://www.xenofact.com/2026/05/03/the-american-catholic-church/Church leaders in Oriental Mindoro lead solar shift in 7 parishes
Authority, Scripture, and Who Gets to Speak for God
By Cliff Potts
Editor-in-Chief, WPS News
Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 3, 2026
Christianity presents itself as a faith grounded in revealed truth. Yet from its earliest centuries, it has been equally grounded in argument—over texts, authority, interpretation, and power. These debates are not modern intrusions or signs of decline. They are structural. Christianity has never existed without human hands deciding who speaks for God, what counts as Scripture, and how certainty is enforced.
That tension matters, because claims of absolute authority still shape law, culture, and politics. If those claims rest on historical processes rather than self-evident divine transmission, then authority itself must be examined honestly.
This essay emerges from the long arc of questions explored in SpiritFlight (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DKXPLBXL)—not as answers delivered, but as questions finally allowed to be asked. That work does not claim theological authority, nor does it attempt to replace belief with certainty. Instead, it traces how faith survives once institutional explanations fail, and how Scripture becomes more complicated—not weaker—when its human transmission is taken seriously. The questions raised here are not academic abstractions, but the product of lived experience, historical study, and decades spent inside the tension between belief and authority.
Who Decided What Counts as Scripture—and When?
The New Testament did not arrive as a finished book. For the first several centuries after Jesus, Christian communities circulated letters, gospels, homilies, and apocalyptic texts with no universally agreed canon. Some texts were read aloud in worship; others were disputed, ignored, or rejected outright.
Formal canonization unfolded gradually, primarily between the fourth and sixth centuries. Councils and church leaders weighed criteria such as apostolic attribution, doctrinal consistency, and liturgical usefulness. These were not neutral filters. They reflected theological priorities and institutional needs—especially once Christianity became aligned with imperial power.
What is often forgotten is that Paul’s letters were not universally treated as Scripture for generations. They circulated as correspondence and instruction, not as settled holy writ. Their later elevation required interpretation, translation, and theological framing long after Paul himself was gone.
The Meaning of a Canon Codified Centuries Later
The fact that the biblical canon was finalized long after Jesus raises a basic problem for claims of immediate, self-authenticating authority. Whatever one believes about inspiration, the form of Scripture believers now hold is the result of historical decisions made by fallible people responding to specific contexts.
This does not negate faith—but it does undermine certainty claims that pretend the Bible simply “fell from heaven” complete and unambiguous. The canon reflects continuity and conflict, preservation and exclusion. Some voices were elevated; others were silenced.
Catholic and Protestant Bibles: One Authority or Many?
The differences between Catholic and Protestant canons expose the fragility of claims to a single, self-evident authority. The inclusion or exclusion of the Deuterocanonical books was not settled by revelation but by institutional allegiance.
If Scripture were truly self-interpreting and universally obvious, such divergence would be inexplicable. Instead, it reveals that authority is mediated—transferred through churches, traditions, and power structures that assert legitimacy after the fact.
On What Basis Did Reformers Redefine Scripture?
Reformers claimed the right to alter or redefine Scripture by appealing to conscience, original languages, or divine mandate. Martin Luther removed books he judged theologically suspect. Henry VIII asserted ecclesiastical authority largely to resolve a dynastic crisis.
Their appeals to Scripture over church authority were themselves acts of authority. They did not escape power; they relocated it. The Reformation did not eliminate institutional control—it multiplied institutions.
Inerrancy and the Problem of Missing Originals
Modern claims of “inerrancy in the original manuscripts” collapse under their own logic. No original manuscripts exist. What remains are copies of copies, shaped by translation choices, scribal errors, and theological agendas.
Inerrancy functions less as a historical claim than as a doctrinal safeguard—a way to protect authority by relocating perfection to an unreachable past. It asks believers to trust certainty that cannot be examined.
Scripture, Tradition, and Institutional Power
Early Christianity relied heavily on oral tradition. Written texts gained authority gradually, often in response to heresy disputes and administrative needs. Orthodoxy and heresy were not discovered; they were defined.
This process was deeply influenced by philosophy. Plato shaped Christian metaphysics indirectly through thinkers like Augustine of Hippo, whose synthesis of Greek thought and Christian doctrine profoundly influenced Western theology. These developments were responses to empire, culture, and intellectual inheritance—not fresh revelation descending intact.
Faith Versus Institutional Authority
None of this demands the abandonment of faith. Belief can remain meaningful without pretending that authority is pure, singular, or immune to history.
What must be questioned is certainty—especially when it is enforced rather than lived. Institutional claims of divine authority often mask human struggles for control, legitimacy, and continuity. Scripture may inspire faith, but institutions define how that inspiration is constrained.
Christianity’s debates over authority are not signs of corruption. They are foundational tensions. Honest faith does not deny them—it confronts them.
If authority is humanly transmitted, how much certainty can it honestly claim?
If you read this and it matters, help me keep it going: https://www.patreon.com/cw/WPSNews
#AugustineOfHippo #biblicalCanon #biblicalInerrancy #CatholicChurch #ChristianTheology #churchHistory #earlyChristianity #faithAndAuthority #HenryVIII #MartinLuther #Plato #ProtestantReformation #religiousAuthority #ScriptureAndPower #theologyAndEmpirePope Leo signals shift away from Catholic Church’s focus on sex
Pontiff Reinforces Church Stance Against Formalized Gay Unions, Stresses Broader Moral Focus
Pope Leo XIV says the Catholic Church will not allow formal blessings for same-sex couples. He wants to focus more on justice and freedom.
#PopeLeoXIV, #CatholicChurch, #SameSexBlessings, #ChurchUnity, #ReligiousMorality
https://newsletter.tf/pope-leo-xiv-no-formal-gay-union-blessings/
Pope Leo XIV has clearly stated that the Catholic Church will not approve formal blessings for same-sex couples. This is a firm stance against recent moves in some parts of the church.
#PopeLeoXIV, #CatholicChurch, #SameSexBlessings, #ChurchUnity, #ReligiousMorality
https://newsletter.tf/pope-leo-xiv-no-formal-gay-union-blessings/