Protestantism affirms Sola Scriptura:
Scripture alone is the sole infallible rule of faith and practice. No tradition, council, pope, or individual interpretation possesses infallible authority. All human reception, tradition, and interpretation of Scripture is fallible by definition.
The Church is the pillar and ground of the truth (1 Tim 3:15):
Scripture itself declares that the Church (not merely the text of Scripture) is the pillar and ground (στηλὴ καὶ ἑδραίωμα) of the truth. This is not a weak or secondary claim. In context, it presents the Church as the upholding and stabilizing foundation for divine truth in the world — the visible, communal guardian and transmitter of objective Christian doctrine.
If no infallible interpretation or tradition exists, objective truth in doctrine becomes inaccessible in principle: Truth in theology is not merely “in the text” as an abstract object. It must be received, understood, and proclaimed by subjects (believers and the Church).
Without any infallible mechanism to bind the meaning of the text authoritatively, every interpretation remains provisional and revisable. Multiple, contradictory interpretations (e.g., on baptismal regeneration, the Real Presence, justification, church government, eschatology) become equally plausible on Protestant grounds.
This collapses into epistemic subjectivism for doctrine: there is no guaranteed way for the Church to uphold one objective truth over against error. Fallible individuals and fallible communities can only offer “best guesses.”
Analogy: Imagine a constitution whose meaning is left entirely to fallible judges with no supreme court that can issue binding, irreversible rulings. The constitution exists objectively, but there is no stable “pillar and ground” of constitutional truth — only perpetual legal chaos and competing schools. The same applies here.
This directly falsifies 1 Timothy 3:15:
If the Church cannot infallibly uphold and stabilize the truth (because it has no infallible interpretive authority), then Scripture’s claim about the Church is false. The Church becomes, at best, one fallible voice among many competing ones — not the pillar and ground.
If Scripture errs on this central ecclesiological claim, the entire foundation collapses: Deuteronomy 18:22 (and the broader biblical test of true prophecy) marks a speaker as false if their words do not come to pass or if they lead people into error. A false statement about the nature and function of the Church (a core matter of faith) disqualifies the claim of divine inspiration.
Therefore: If Sola Scriptura is true → Scripture is materially false on a key point → Christianity (as a coherent revealed religion) is false.
Key Strengthenings AddedAddresses object/subject: The argument grants that Scripture is objectively infallible as text. The failure is in the transmission and stabilization of its meaning without an infallible Church. Objective truth that cannot be reliably accessed or upheld by the community God appointed is functionally useless for “the pillar and ground” role.
Grace and illumination: Even granting the internal work of the Holy Spirit, Protestant history shows persistent, intractable division on major issues among sincere, Spirit-led believers. Grace does not appear to produce the public, visible unity and stability that 1 Tim 3:15 requires of the Church.
Perspicuity/clarity: The classic Protestant claim that “necessary things are clear” fails in practice. The most contested doctrines (sacraments, soteriology, ecclesiology) are precisely those most central to Christian life. If the “pillar” cannot settle them authoritatively, it is not upholding truth.
Historical test: Early Church practice relied on conciliar definitions and apostolic tradition to combat heresy (e.g., Nicaea, Chalcedon). Protestantism’s rejection of this as binding leads to the very fragmentation 1 Tim 3:15 seems designed to prevent.
Avoids epistemic nihilism charge: The dilemma does not claim “no truth at all exists.” It claims that without an infallible Church, there is no reliable public pillar for truth — exactly what Scripture says the Church must be. Private subjective certitude is insufficient for the corporate, visible role assigned to the Church.
This version makes the argument harder to dismiss via quick epistemological distinctions. It forces the Protestant to either:
Deny that 1 Tim 3:15 requires the Church to have real stabilizing authority, or
Admit some form of binding, infallible tradition/interpretation (moving toward Catholic/Orthodox ecclesiology), or
Accept that Scripture’s claim is overstated or false.
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