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The weakest link? The canon and the infallibility of scripture

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MLA citation style

Foord, Martin. The Weakest Link? The Canon and the Infallibility of Scripture. Moore Theological College. 2005. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/f9043855-b43a-471e-ae16-1b3a3a89e5d3.

APA citation style

Foord, M. (2005). The weakest link? The canon and the infallibility of scripture. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/f9043855-b43a-471e-ae16-1b3a3a89e5d3.

Chicago citation style

Foord, Martin. The Weakest Link? The Canon and the Infallibility of Scripture. Moore Theological College. 2005. Retrieved from the Atla Digital Library, https://images.quartexcollections.com/moore/thumbnails/preview/f9043855-b43a-471e-ae16-1b3a3a89e5d3.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.

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  • Foord looks at what causes people to convert from Christianity to Catholicism, mainly that they stumble over the Bible being the sole authority. The challenge is the creation of the canon. Foord looks at how the canon was created. He expounds the doctrine of sola scriptura. 1. The Roman Catholic objection 2. The Apocraphya 3. Rome's claim to infallibility 4. Sola scriptura - what is it? 5. The extent of the canon in church tradition 6. Determining the books in the canon and recognising the canon 7. Jesus expressing his authority within the church - authority structure
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  • In copyright - educational use permitted. This item may be used for the purposes of research and study. Please acknowledge that it is held by Moore Theological College