Chapter 2 On revelation
The
same holy mother church holds and teaches that God, the source and
end of all things,
can
be known
with
certainty from the consideration of created things,
by
the natural power of human reason : ever since the creation of the
world, his invisible nature has been clearly perceived in the things that
have been made.13
It
was, however, pleasing to his wisdom and goodness to reveal
himself
and
the
eternal laws of his will
to the human race by another, and
that a supernatural, way.
This
is how the Apostle puts it : In many and various ways God spoke of old to
our fathers by the prophets; but in these last days he has spoken to us
by a Son14 .
It
is indeed thanks to this divine revelation, that those matters concerning
God
which
are not of themselves beyond the scope of human reason,
can,
even in the present state of the human race, be known
by
everyone
without
difficulty,
with
firm certitude and
with
no intermingling of error.
It
is not because of this that one must hold revelation to be absolutely necessary;
the reason is that God directed human beings to a supernatural end,
that
is a sharing in the good things of God that utterly surpasses the
understanding of the human mind; indeed eye has not seen, neither has ear
heard, nor has it come into our hearts to conceive what things God has
prepared for those who love him15 .
Now
this supernatural revelation, according to the belief of the universal
church, as declared by the sacred council of Trent, is contained in
written
books and
unwritten
traditions,
which were
received
by the apostles from the lips of Christ himself,
or
came to the apostles by the dictation of the holy Spirit,
and
were passed on as it were from hand to hand until they reached
us16.
The
complete books of the old and the new Testament with all their parts, as
they are listed in the decree of the said council and as they are found in
the old Latin Vulgate edition, are to be received as sacred and
canonical.
These
books the church holds to be sacred and canonical
not
because she subsequently approved them by her authority after they had
been composed by unaided human skill,
nor
simply because they contain revelation without error,
but
because,
being
written under the inspiration of the holy Spirit,
they
have God as their author,
and
were as such committed to the church.
Now
since the decree on the interpretation of holy scripture, profitably made
by the council of Trent, with the intention of constraining rash
speculation, has been wrongly interpreted by some, we renew that
decree and declare its meaning to be as follows: that
in
matters of faith and morals,
belonging
as they do to the establishing of christian doctrine,
that
meaning of holy scripture must be held to be the true one,
which
holy mother church held and holds,
since
it is her right to judge of the true meaning and interpretation of holy
scripture.
In
consequence, it is not permissible for anyone to interpret holy
scripture in a sense contrary to this, or indeed against the unanimous
consent of the fathers.
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