sastark
Puritan Board Graduate
(Note: I hope this thread can be used to discuss the doctrines of "infallibility" and "inerrancy." It is not my intention to discuss the merits or lack thereof of different textual traditions. That is why I am placing this thread in the "Theological Forum" and not the "Translations and Manuscripts" forum.)
I am reading Theodore Letis' The Ecclesiastical Text. It is quite an interesting and thought-provoking book. One of the major issues he discusses is the idea of the "inerrancy of the autographa." He posits that this concept was introduced to Princeton by Warfield. He argues that up to that point, Reformed theologians (namely, the scholastics like Turretin and Owen and the Princetonians like Archibald Alexander and Charles Hodge) had maintained the infallibility of the apographa (extant texts) as represented in the Received Text.
My question is: is the pre-19th century idea of infallibility the same as the post-Warfield idea of inerrancy? I understand that Warfield applied inerrancy to the autographa exclusively, but I wonder if the words "inerrancy" and "infallibility" would be interchangeable to someone who held to the pre-Warfield doctrine of infallibility of the apographa? Is it correct to say that our current extant texts, as represented in the Received Text, are inerrant?
Perhaps this question will be answered as I continue to read Letis, but I thought I'd ask now, anyway.
I am reading Theodore Letis' The Ecclesiastical Text. It is quite an interesting and thought-provoking book. One of the major issues he discusses is the idea of the "inerrancy of the autographa." He posits that this concept was introduced to Princeton by Warfield. He argues that up to that point, Reformed theologians (namely, the scholastics like Turretin and Owen and the Princetonians like Archibald Alexander and Charles Hodge) had maintained the infallibility of the apographa (extant texts) as represented in the Received Text.
My question is: is the pre-19th century idea of infallibility the same as the post-Warfield idea of inerrancy? I understand that Warfield applied inerrancy to the autographa exclusively, but I wonder if the words "inerrancy" and "infallibility" would be interchangeable to someone who held to the pre-Warfield doctrine of infallibility of the apographa? Is it correct to say that our current extant texts, as represented in the Received Text, are inerrant?
Perhaps this question will be answered as I continue to read Letis, but I thought I'd ask now, anyway.