1 Iron wrote:Second, which is my contention, is the group that includes the longer standing traditions that may not claim inerrancy but tie their claims to authority from God back to the Bible. Could the Catholic church accept the possibility that there is human interpretation involved in Matthew 16:18 without some discomfort, for example?
Of course there is human interpretation in scripture. It was written by humans, in a context of their time, experiences, culture, etc.
A few of the earliest writings, such as some of Paul's letters, were copied and shared across the different churches (churches in the sense of ordinariates..the Church in Ephesus, the Church in Corinth, etc). But these were not a Bible. They supported what the ordained presbyters, the successors to the Apostles, were teaching and handing on to the faithful, and to those they trained as presbyters (Bishops). The first presbyters having been taught by the Apostles, directly.
These earliest writings did not exist outside of the liturgical and oral tradition.
They came from it.As the Apostles began to die off, there became an imperative to write down the Apostolic teachings. From this, came the later writings. The churches (now growing in number), copied and circulated these writings (again) and by the mid-fourth century, a table of contents begins to emerge and is being described in early Christian writings.
Again, the writings being held as important and scriptural, because they describe the Apostolic Faith, which handed on in its entirety, is scriptural, liturgical, sacramental, and oral.
The history continues on from there, but my point is, any catholic (by that I mean anyone of the Universal Church), understands this history from a very early age.
But, I'll quote this from the introduction to Matthew, that is in my Catholic Bible (New American Bible)
http://www.usccb.org/nab/Bible/matthew/intro.htm:
"The questions of authorship, sources, and the time of composition of this gospel [Matthew] have received many answers, none of which can claim more than a greater or lesser degree of probability. The one now favored by the majority of scholars is the following.
The ancient tradition that the author was the disciple and apostle of Jesus named Matthew (see Matthew 10:3) is untenable because the gospel is based, in large part, on the Gospel according to Mark (almost all the verses of that gospel have been utilized in this), and it is hardly likely that a companion of Jesus would have followed so extensively an account that came from one who admittedly never had such an association rather than rely on his own memories. The attribution of the gospel to the disciple Matthew may have been due to his having been responsible for some of the traditions found in it, but that is far from certain.
The unknown author, whom we shall continue to call Matthew for the sake of convenience, drew not only upon the Gospel according to Mark but upon a large body of material (principally, sayings of Jesus) not found in Mark that corresponds, sometimes exactly, to material found also in the Gospel according to Luke. This material, called "Q" (probably from the first letter of the German word Quelle, meaning "source"), represents traditions, written and oral, used by both Matthew and Luke. Mark and Q are sources common to the two other synoptic gospels; hence the name the "Two-Source Theory" given to this explanation of the relation among the synoptics.
In addition to what Matthew drew from Mark and Q, his gospel contains material that is found only there. This is often designated "M," written or oral tradition that was available to the author. Since Mark was written shortly before or shortly after A.D. 70 (see Introduction to Mark), Matthew was composed certainly after that date, which marks the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans at the time of the First Jewish Revolt (A.D. 66-70), and probably at least a decade later since Matthew's use of Mark presupposes a wide diffusion of that gospel. The post-A.D. 70 date is confirmed within the text by Matthew 22:7, which refers to the destruction of Jerusalem.
As for the place where the gospel was composed, a plausible suggestion is that it was Antioch, the capital of the Roman province of Syria. That large and important city had a mixed population of Greek-speaking Gentiles and Jews. The tensions between Jewish and Gentile Christians there in the time of Paul (see Gal 2:1-14) in respect to Christian obligation to observe Mosaic law are partially similar to tensions that can be seen between the two groups in Matthew's gospel. The church of Matthew, originally strongly Jewish Christian, had become one in which Gentile Christians were predominant. His gospel answers the question how obedience to the will of God is to be expressed by those who live after the "turn of the ages," the death and resurrection of Jesus.
The principal divisions of the Gospel according to Matthew are the following:
The Infancy Narrative (Matthew 1:1-2:23)
The Proclamation of the Kingdom (Matthew 3:1-7:29)
Ministry and Mission in Galilee (Matthew 8:1-11:1)
Opposition from Israel (Matthew 11:2-13:53)
Jesus, the Kingdom, and the Church (Matthew 13:54-18:35)
Ministry in Judea and Jerusalem (Matthew 19:1-25:46)
The Passion and Resurrection (Matthew 26:1-28:20)"
Peace.
Being a Christian is not the result of an ethical choice or a lofty idea, but the encounter with an event, a person, which gives life a new horizon and a decisive direction -Pope Benedict XVI