Monday, May 25, 2026

APOLOGETICS STUDY BIBLE Q&A: "Bakit walang kinalaman si Jesus sa karahasan?"



Pag nagbabasa tayo ng Bible, specifically the Old Testament (OT), minsan mapapaisip ka talaga: Ang daming patayan, no?

When we read about the conquest of Canaan, kung paano bumagsak ang Jericho at kung paano dumaan sa espada ang mga siyudad, it can feel deeply unsettling. Para sa ating mga Pilipino na may mahabang kasaysayan ng pananakop at karahasan, madaling magtanong: Hindi ba delikado na may ganitong mga kuwento sa Bible? Puwede ba itong magamit ng mga Christians as justification para gumamit ng dahas, o worse, mang-ubos ng ibang tao in the name of God?

Ang mabilis at mariing sagot diyan ay: Isang malaking “Hindi!”

Kung titingnan natin ang buong kwento of Scripture, lalo na kapag pumasok tayo sa New Covenant na dala ni Jesus, makikita natin na the Bible never incites believers to commit acts of insurrection, murder, or genocide. Let’s break down exactly why.

Ang Konteksto ng Canaan: Situation-Specific Judgment

First of all, the OT accounts of the conquest of Canaan were entirely situation-specific. Yes, may explicit instruction ang Diyos to take the land by force at paalisin ang mga inhabitants (Numbers 33:52). Pero this was never an eternal, blanket permission for believers to wage war. It was for a highly specific time, place, and redemptive purpose.

Kaya sila na-judge ng Diyos ay dahil sa tindi ng kasamaan at brutalidad ng mga relihiyon nila. The Canaanites were literally sacrificing their firstborn children, sinusunog nila ang mga sanggol nang buhay as offerings to idols (Deuteronomy 18:10-12). This wasn't just an ancient myth; archeologists have actually unearthed thousands of charred remains of infants sa Carthage, a Phoenician (Canaanite) colony. Ganito kagrabe ang kultura na dine-deal ng Israel noon. The violence of the conquest was a localized divine judgment to stop a culture of horrific violence.

Walang Paborito: God’s Judgment on Israel

Baka isipin mo, “Eh ang unfair naman, bakit pag Israel ang gumawa, okay lang?” Actually, the Bible doesn’t play favorites.

Kahit ang mga Israelites ay nakaranas din ng parehong judgment noong ginaya nila ang mga practices ng Canaanites. Foreign armies were allowed to violently invade Israel and Judah as God’s judgment because they refused to distance themselves from pagan practices. Imagine, even kings of Israel and Judah were charged with the exact same sin of child sacrifice (2 Kings 17:17; Ezekiel 16:21). The Bible doesn't condone Israelite violence; it simply records God dealing with systemic evil, regardless of who commits it.

Hindi "Holy" ang Dahas

Kahit na pinayagan sa OT ang physical warfare para linisin ang lupain, the Bible never treats violence as something "sacred" or "holy." In fact, it's the exact opposite.

Tignan natin si King David. He was a great military leader who fought wars with God’s guidance. Pero alam niyo ba na hindi siya pinayagan ng Diyos na magtayo ng Temple sa Jerusalem? Ang rason: sobrang daming dugo sa mga kamay niya (1 Chronicles 28:3). Violence, throughout Scripture, is viewed as an inherently evil symptom of a corrupted, fallen world (Genesis 6:11). The prophet Isaiah looked forward to a day where violence would cease, pointing to a Messiah who would have zero record of violence (Isaiah 53:9).

Ang Bagong Tipan: Jesus and the Radical Paradigm Shift

This brings us to the ultimate game-changer under the New Covenant. As Christians, our defining question isn't just "What did the OT kings do?" but "What did Jesus have to do with violence?"

The answer? A systematic, radical rejection of it.

Under the New Covenant, the physical theocracy of Israel is over. Wala na tayong "Holy Land" na ipinaglalaban gamit ang pisikal na espada. Jesus made it crystal clear na ang Kingdom Niya is completely spiritual, not political. When Jesus was being arrested to be crucified, He completely renounced the use of force, famously telling Peter: "Ibalik mo ang espada mo sa pinaglagyan; dahil ang lahat ng gumagamit ng espada ay mamamatay sa espada" (Matthew 26:52).

He doubled down on this before Pilate: "My kingdom is not of this world. If it were, my servants would fight... But now my kingdom is from another place" (John 18:36). Walang physical holy wars under the New Covenant. Period.

Paano Yung "I came to bring a sword"?

May mga critics na ginagamit ang Matthew 10:34 against Christianity: "Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword."

Context is everything. Kapag binasa mo yung buong chapter, Jesus was explicitly warning His disciples about the persecution they would face. Ang "sword" na tinutukoy Niya dito is not a literal weapon in their hands, kundi yung division and opposition na dadanasin nila dahil sa pagsunod sa Kanya. It was the sword that would be raised against them, not by them.

The Role of the State vs. The Role of the Church

This anti-violent stance was echoed heavily by Paul and Peter in the epistles. They urged early Christians to love their enemies, renounce retaliation, and overcome evil with good (Romans 12:14-21). Walang resbakan sa Christianity.

Does this mean all force is wrong? Not exactly. The New Testament recognizes that the civil government (yung State, even a pagan one) carries the sword to maintain public order and implement justice for the common good (Romans 13:1-7). Pulis, military, law enforcement—trabaho nilang panatilihin ang peace and order. Pero take note: fighting for the state is a matter of public civic duty, not a religious act.

"Ang bawat tao'y dapat pasakop sa mga pinuno ng pamahalaan, sapagkat walang pamahalaang hindi mula sa Diyos, at ang Diyos ang nagtatag ng mga pamahalaang umiiral. Kaya nga, ang lumalaban sa pamahalaan ay lumalaban sa itinakda ng Diyos; at sila'y paparusahan. Ang mga pinuno ay hindi dapat katakutan ng taong gumagawa ng mabuti. Ang mga gumagawa lamang ng masama ang dapat matakot. Kung ayaw mong matakot sa mga namumuno, gumawa ka ng mabuti, at pararangalan ka nila. Sila'y mga lingkod ng Diyos para sa ikabubuti mo. Ngunit kung gumagawa ka ng masama, dapat kang matakot dahil sila'y may kapangyarihang magparusa. Sila'y mga lingkod ng Diyos, na nagpaparusa sa mga gumagawa ng masama. Kaya nga, dapat kayong pasakop sa kanila, hindi lamang upang hindi kayo maparusahan, kundi alang-alang na rin sa inyong budhi. Iyan din ang dahilan kung bakit kayo nagbabayad ng buwis. Ang mga pinuno ng pamahalaan ay mga lingkod ng Diyos at ito ang kanilang tungkulin. Ibigay ninyo sa bawat isa ang nararapat sa kanya. Magbayad kayo sa mga dapat bayaran at magbigay kayo ng buwis sa dapat buwisan; igalang ninyo ang dapat igalang at parangalan ninyo ang dapat parangalan." Mga Taga-Roma 13:1-7 RTPV

Walang "Christian Holy War." Fighting is only ever considered just if it follows principles of objective justice applicable to everyone, not to advance Christianity over another religion.

The Tragedy of "Christendom"

Kung na-maintain lang sana ng mga Christians throughout history itong clear New Covenant distinction, the world would have been vastly different.

Nakakalungkot na starting in the 4th century with the rise of "Christendom" (the unbiblical merging of Church and State politics), tapos sinundan pa ng mga violent reactions tulad ng Crusades laban sa Islamic expansion, many deviated from the gospel. Nag-imbento sila ng aberrant theologies na kino-consider ang warfare against non-Christians bilang "holy," at yung mga namatay sa labanan bilang "martyrs."

Thankfully, the global Church today universally denounces that era. Real, biblical Christianity knows that under the New Covenant, our warfare is no longer against flesh and blood. Ang tawag sa atin ay magdala ng buhay, hindi kumitil nito.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

VIDEO & OUTLINE LESSON#7: "THE COMING OF THE END" MATTHEW 24:29-31



Matthew 24:29–31 (ESV)

"Immediately after the tribulation of those days the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens will be shaken. Then will appear in heaven the sign of the Son of Man, and then all the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. And he will send out his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other."

INTRODUCTION

CENTRAL QUESTION

Did Jesus literally predict the collapse of the physical universe or is He using the prophetic language of the Old Testament to describe the AD 70 fall of Jerusalem?

This is the climax of Jesus' answer to the disciples' first question: "When will these things be?" (Matt 24:3). The cosmic imagery in verses 29–31 must be read through a biblical-covenantal lens, not through a modern Western-scientific one.

Key control verse: Matthew 24:34 (ESV):

Matthew 24:34 (ESV)

"Truly, I say to you, this generation will not pass away until all these things take place."


HERMENEUTICAL KEY

Because Jesus anchors the fulfillment to "this generation" (the generation of His Jewish contemporaries, c. AD 30–70), all of Matthew 24:29–31 must refer to events within that 40-year window not to a distant Second Coming.

PART 1 – THE COLLAPSING UNIVERSE

Matthew 24:29: Cosmic Distress Language

Matthew 24:29 (ESV)
"Immediately after the tribulation of those days the sun will be darkened, and the moon will not give its light, and the stars will fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens will be shaken."


A. The Temporal Signal: "Immediately" (Gk. eutheos)

• The Greek word eutheos appears 13 times in Matthew and always means something happening very soon after a preceding event.

• It directly links verse 29 to the tribulation of verses 15–28 the AD 66–70 war.

• This rules out any long gap between the tribulation and these "cosmic" events.


B. The Old Testament Pattern: Judgment as Cosmic Collapse

Scripture consistently uses sun-moon-stars imagery to describe the fall of earthly nations NOT the end of the physical cosmos. Consider the following parallel passages:






OT Passage                 Nation Judged             Cosmic Language Used

Isa 13:10, 13                 Babylon                             Sun darkened; heavens tremble; earth shaken

Isa 34:3–5                    Edom                                 Sky rolled up like a scroll; stars wither

Ezek 32:7–8                Egypt                              Sun covered; moon gives no light; stars darkened

Jer 4:23–24                Israel (Babylon)          Earth formless; heavens have no light; mountains                                                                                   quake

Joel 2:10                       Israel (OT judgment)    Sun and moon grow dark; stars lose brightness

Matt 24:29                    Israel (AD 70)                Sun darkened; stars fall; powers shaken


CONCLUSION FOR PART 1

When a national government collapses in war and upheaval, the Old Testament prophets routinely portray it as a cosmic catastrophe an "undoing of creation." Jesus is doing exactly the same thing in Matt 24:29, applying this well-established prophetic pattern to the AD 70 destruction of Jerusalem.

PART 2 – THE SIGN OF THE SON OF MAN IN HEAVEN (10 minutes) [7:20 PM]

Matthew 24:30 Vindication, Not Physical Return

Matthew 24:30 (ESV)

"Then will appear in heaven the sign of the Son of Man, and then all the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven with power and great glory."

A. The Greek Syntax: What Actually "Appears"?

Literal Greek word order (kai tote phanesetai to semeion tou huiou tou anthropou en ourano):

Correct Translation

"Then shall appear the sign of the Son of Man in heaven" KJV / ASV / Greek Interlinear. What appears is THE SIGN not the Son of Man Himself. The sign signifies that the Son of Man is NOW in heaven, enthroned and vindicated.

B. What Is the Sign? The Smoke of the Burning Temple

• The fiery destruction of the Temple (AD 70) is the visible sign that Jesus, whom Israel crucified, has been vindicated at the Father’s right hand.

• This fulfils Acts 2:19 "wonders in heaven above... blood, fire, and vapor of smoke" spoken to the men of Israel (Acts 2:14, 22, 36).

"But Peter, standing with the eleven, lifted up his voice and addressed them: “Men of Judea and all who dwell in Jerusalem, let this be known to you, and give ear to my words." Acts 2:14(ESV)

"And I will show wonders in the heavens above and signs on the earth below, blood, and fire, and vapor of smoke." Acts 2:19(ESV)

“Men of Israel, hear these words: Jesus of Nazareth, a man attested to you by God with mighty works and wonders and signs that God did through him in your midst, as you yourselves know." Acts 2:22(ESV)

"Let all the house of Israel therefore know for certain that God has made him both Lord and Christ, this Jesus whom you crucified.” Acts 2:36(ESV)

Acts 2:34–35 (ESV)
"For David did not ascend into the heavens, but he himself says, ‘The Lord said to my Lord, “Sit at my right hand, until I make your enemies your footstool.”’

• Josephus records the Temple fire’s smoke was so massive it looked like "the whole city had been on fire" (J.W. 6:5:1).

“...as the flame burst out from within the holy house, it appeared to resemble the blaze of a furnace. The mountains all around were lit up, and the smoke was so great that one would have thought the whole city had been on fire.” (Jewish War 6.5.1, Whiston trans., p. 737).

• Jesus told the very Sanhedrin who condemned Him: "You will see the Son of Man sitting at the right hand of Power" (Matt 26:64). That "seeing" was fulfilled in AD 70.

"63 But Jesus remained silent. And the high priest said to him, “I adjure you by the living God, tell us if you are the Christ, the Son of God.” 64 Jesus said to him, “You have said so. But I tell you, from now on you will see the Son of Man seated at the right hand of Power and coming on the clouds of heaven.” 65 Then the high priest tore his robes and said, “He has uttered blasphemy. What further witnesses do we need? You have now heard his blasphemy." Matthew 26:63-65(ESV)


C. The "Tribes of the Land" (Gk. ge = land of Israel)

The Greek word ge can mean earth/world or a specific land. In Matthew’s Gospel:

"Land of Judah"Matt 2:6

"Land of Israel" Matt 2:20–21

"All the land" at the crucifixion"Matt 27:45

"Tribes" (Gk. phule) is the standard LXX term for the tribal structure of Israel (Zech 12:10–14). In this context, "all the tribes of the earth" most naturally means the tribes of the Land of Israel mourning the loss of their Temple, city, and national identity.


D. "Coming on the Clouds": OT Judgment Language

Isaiah 19:1 (ESV)
"An oracle concerning Egypt. Behold, the LORD is riding on a swift cloud and comes to Egypt; and the idols of Egypt will tremble at his presence, and the heart of the Egyptians will melt within them."

God did not physically fly to Egypt on a cloud, this describes the Assyrian invasion as God’s judgment. Likewise, "the Son of Man coming on the clouds" in Matthew 24:30 describes God’s judgment-coming in AD 70, not a physical, visible descent.

CONTRA DISPENSATIONALISM

Dispensationalists split Matt 24:29–31 from the preceding verses, claiming it shifts to a still-future Second Coming. But the word "immediately" (v. 29) and the timeframe of "this generation" (v. 34) forbid any such gap. The entire passage is a unified prophecy about AD 70.


PART 3 – THE GREAT JUBILEE (8 minutes) [7:30 PM]

Matthew 24:31 — Gospel Mission, Not Rapture

Matthew 24:31 (ESV)
"And he will send out his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other."

A. The Jubilee Background

The Year of Jubilee (Lev 25:2–14) was proclaimed every 50th year by the blowing of a trumpet (Lev 25:9). It meant:

• Release from bondage and debt

• Return to one’s inheritance

• Cessation of all servile labor

Isaiah 61:1–2 applies Jubilee imagery prophetically to the age of Messiah:

Isaiah 61:1–2 (ESV)
"The Spirit of the Lord GOD is upon me, because the LORD has anointed me to bring good news to the poor; he has sent me to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, and the opening of the prison to those who are bound; to proclaim the year of the LORD’s favor..."

Jesus explicitly inaugurated this fulfillment in the Nazareth synagogue:

Luke 4:18–21 (ESV)
"...he has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives and recovering of sight to the blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim the year of the Lord’s favor." And he rolled up the scroll and gave it back to the attendant and sat down... And he began to say to them, “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.”


B. The Trumpet = Gospel Proclamation

• The "loud trumpet call" (Matt 24:31) echoes the Jubilee trumpet of Lev 25:9, announcing the arrival of ultimate freedom from sin.

• The collapse of the Temple order removes the last major institutional barrier between the Gospel and the Gentile nations.

• In Scripture, the word of God can be described as "a voice like a trumpet" (Isa 58:1; Rev 1:10; 4:1).


C. The Angels = Gospel Messengers

The Greek aggelos simply means "messenger" used of human messengers in Matt 11:10. Here the "angels" are most likely the apostolic missionaries sent out with the Great Commission (Matt 28:19).

Matthew 23:37 (ESV)
"O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, the city that kills the prophets and stones those who are sent to it! How often would I have gathered your children together as a hen gathers her brood under her wings, and you were not willing!"

The same Greek word episunago ("gather") appears in Matt 23:37, 24:31, and Heb 10:25. The gathering is ecclesial: Christ is gathering His elect into the Church from every direction.


D. "From the Four Winds" = Worldwide Gospel Expansion

• "From the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other" = from horizon to horizon (cf. Deut 30:4, LXX).

• This is the fulfilment of the Parable of the Marriage Feast (Matt 22:7–9): Israel rejects the invitation; the King burns their city, then sends servants to the highways the Gentile nations.

• This anticipates and is fulfilled in the Great Commission (Matt 28:19) and the worldwide missionary expansion of the post-AD 70 Church.


CONCLUSION FOR PART 3

Matthew 24:31 is not about a future rapture or second-coming resurrection. It is the Jubilee declaration the gospel trumpet announcing that in Christ, all debt (sin) is forgiven, and the elect are being gathered from every nation into His Kingdom through the preaching of the Word.


CONCLUSION & APPLICATION

Matthew 24:29–31 presents three redemptive-historical movements occurring in and around AD 70:

Redemptive Significance


1.) Matt 24:29: The old covenant world order collapses portrayed in classic OT cosmic-destruction imagery.


2.) Matt 24:30: Christ is vindicated at the Father’s right hand. The smoking ruins of Jerusalem are the sign that Jesus is Lord.


3.) Matt 24:31: The gospel Jubilee is proclaimed worldwide. The elect from every nation are gathered into the Church.


POSTMILLENNIAL IMPLICATION

The fall of Jerusalem in AD 70 did not end history it launched it. The removal of the Judaizing threat and Jewish persecution freed the Church to fulfil the Great Commission globally. This is consistent with a Postmillennial, New Covenant Theology reading: the Kingdom of Christ advances through the preaching of the Gospel until all nations are discipled.


DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

Discussion Question 1
In Matthew 24:29, Jesus uses cosmic imagery the darkening of the sun and moon, and the falling of the stars. How did you once understand these verses? Now, after examining parallel passages in Isaiah, Ezekiel, and Joel, how has your perspective shifted? What impact does this have on the way we read biblical prophecy?

Discussion Question 2
Many Christians interpret the ‘sign of the Son of Man in heaven’ (Matthew 24:30) as Christ’s literal return in the sky. But in our study, the ‘sign’ points to the smoke rising from the burning Temple—the proof that Jesus was vindicated by the Father. How would you explain this interpretation to a friend or fellow believer who is Adventist or Dispensationalist? Which passages would you use to support it?

Discussion Question 3
In Matthew 24:31, the ‘gathering of the elect from the four winds’ is often cited by SDA and Dispensationalists to support an end‑time rapture or second‑coming harvest. Yet our study shows it actually points to the Jubilee the spread of the gospel to all nations after AD 70. If the preterist explanation is correct, what does this mean for the church’s mission today? How does it connect with the Great Commission in Matthew 28:19–20?”

Friday, May 22, 2026

INVESTIGATING ADVENTISM: “How the Seventh-day Adventist Church (SDA) changed what Sola Scriptura really means?”



Introduction

The doctrine of sola Scriptura stands at the heart of the Protestant Reformation and remains a defining principle of classical Protestant theology. It affirms that Scripture alone is the final, infallible authority for Christian doctrine and practice, and that all other authorities, tradition, ecclesiastical judgment, prophetic writings, or theological opinion are subordinate to the biblical canon. While the Seventh-day Adventist (SDA) Church professes adherence to sola Scriptura, the denomination’s historical development and practical theological structure raise questions about how the principle is understood and applied. This essay surveys the biblical and historical foundations of sola Scriptura, examines its articulation within SDA theology, and evaluates divergences between classical Protestant and Adventist interpretations.

Sola Scriptura in Scripture and History

The Latin phrase sola Scriptura (“by Scripture alone”) emerged as one of the core axioms of the Protestant Reformation. It articulated the conviction that the Bible is the only inspired, infallible, and normative rule of faith and practice. As Sabbath School Net summarizes, the principle established that “the Bible is the only infallible, final authority,” while all other sources remain subordinate. ¹

Reformation leaders embraced this doctrine with unshakable resolve. Luther’s statement at the Diet of Worms, “Unless I am convinced by the testimony of the Scriptures … I cannot and will not recant,” has become emblematic of the Reformation’s rejection of ecclesiastical authority when it contradicted Scripture. ² Likewise, Calvin argued that Scripture is “self-authenticating,” meaning that its authority rests not on the church’s approval but on God’s own revelation.³

Historically, sola Scriptura included several sub-principles:

  1. Authority of Scripture: Scripture possesses the final word on faith and practice.

  2. Sufficiency of Scripture: Scripture contains everything necessary for salvation and godly living.

  3. Clarity of Scripture: The essential truths necessary for salvation are understandable.

  4. Finality of Scripture: All doctrines and traditions must be tested by Scripture alone. ⁴

These principles formed the theological scaffolding for Protestantism and remain foundational to its identity.

The Seventh-day Adventist Definition of Sola Scriptura

The SDA Church’s official writings appear, at first glance, to affirm the Reformation meaning of sola Scriptura. Fundamental Belief #1 declares:

“The Holy Scriptures are the supreme, authoritative, and infallible revelation of His will. They are the standard of character, the test of experience, the definitive revealer of doctrines, and the trustworthy record of God’s acts in history.”⁵

Similarly, SDA publications assert that “the Bible alone is the source of doctrines and practice.”⁶ Adventist scholars, including the authors of the Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology, acknowledge that the Reformers grounded doctrine exclusively on Scripture.⁷ Early SDA pioneers such as James White, Uriah Smith, and R. F. Cottrell frequently appealed to the Bible as the church’s rule of faith, even though they did not regularly employ the Latin term sola Scriptura. Ellen G. White likewise affirmed that Scripture is the believer’s authoritative guide and that “the Bible is its own expositor.” ⁸

Thus, in principle, SDA literature recognizes the biblical and historical meaning of sola Scriptura.

SDA Divergence from the Classical Protestant Principle

Despite formal agreement, several features of Adventist practice diverge from the classical Reformation understanding.

1. The Bible + Prophetic Writings Model

Classical sola Scriptura affirms that only the biblical canon is inspired and infallible. Adventism, however, introduces a second authoritative voice: the writings of Ellen G. White. Some Adventist interpretations describe her writings as “inspired no differently than that of the scriptures” and functioning as an “infallible, interpretive guide” to Scripture.⁹ This elevates White’s corpus to a de facto canonical or near-canonical role, resulting in a “Bible + prophet” model inconsistent with the Reformers’ insistence that Scripture alone is the final authority.

2. Institutional Authority as Final Arbiter

Reformation theology insists that ecclesiastical bodies are subject to Scripture and cannot function as infallible interpreters. In contrast, the SDA polity grants significant doctrinal authority to the General Conference in session. Critics note that Adventist leaders have asserted that members must surrender “private independence and private judgment” when doctrinal decisions are made. ¹⁰ This functionally assigns an authority to the institution that the Reformers reserved only for Scripture.

3. Elevation of Pioneer Tradition

Classical sola Scriptura maintains that all human traditions are subordinate to Scripture and amendable when inconsistent with biblical teaching. Adventist rhetoric often emphasizes the theological legacy of the pioneers and cautions against deviating from their views. Statements urging believers to “repeat the words of the pioneers” give their writings quasi-normative status.¹¹ While historical voices can be instructive, elevating them to binding authority undermines the doctrine that Scripture alone normatively establishes truth.

4. Hermeneutical Control Through Fixed Interpretive Frameworks

Reformers interpreted Scripture through the analogy of faith: Scripture interprets Scripture. Adventism often relies on fixed prophetic charts, typological systems, and unique interpretive grids that shape exegesis beyond the plain historical-grammatical meaning. Adventist Today observes that “the life and ministry of Ellen White…dominantly overshadow[s] every other influence” in shaping interpretation. ¹² When external frameworks constrain the text, sola Scriptura is compromised.

Biblical Exegesis of Sola Scriptura: 2 Timothy 3:16–17 and Psalm 19:7

A core biblical foundation for sola Scriptura is found in 2 Timothy 3:16-17:

“Every Scripture is God-breathed and profitable … that the man of God may be complete, equipped for every good work.”

The Greek phrase pasa graphē theopneustos (“every Scripture is God-breathed”) affirms divine inspiration in a way that applies to Scripture alone. The conclusion that Scripture equips the believer “for every good work” supports the sufficiency of Scripture for faith and practice.

Psalm 19:7 likewise declares:

“The law of the LORD is perfect, restoring the soul.”

The Hebrew tôrāh YHWH temimah (“the law of YHWH is perfect”) underscores the completeness and adequacy of God's revealed Word. These texts formed central exegetical pillars of the Reformers’ doctrine.

While SDA writers frequently cite these verses, the presence of additional authoritative voices (EGW, institutional rulings, pioneer tradition) means that Scripture does not, in practice, function as the sole infallible authority.

Reformation Sola Scriptura vs. SDA Functional Model

The contrast can be summarized as follows:

Reformation View

  • Scripture alone is infallible.

  • Church, tradition, and prophetic voices are reformable and subordinate.

  • Scripture interprets Scripture.

  • Believers may appeal to Scripture over church authority.

SDA Functional Model

  • Scripture + EGW + conference decisions + pioneer tradition collectively shape doctrine.

  • Extra-biblical authorities often guide interpretation.

  • Institutional interpretations may override personal biblical study.

  • Scripture is not the sole or final norm in practical theology.¹³

In effect, the “alone” of sola Scriptura is eroded.

Conclusion

Although the SDA Church formally professes the principle of sola Scriptura, its practical theological structure diverges from the classical Protestant doctrine. The elevation of Ellen G. White’s writings, the authoritative role of denominational decision-making bodies, the influence of pioneer tradition, and the dominance of extra-biblical interpretive frameworks collectively result in a “Bible plus authoritative extras” model. This differs significantly from the Reformation conviction that Scripture alone is the infallible, sufficient, and final authority.

For Adventist believers committed to biblical faithfulness, this discrepancy invites critical reflection. If Scripture is truly the supreme and final authority, then every other voice no matter how cherished—must be measured by it. As Jeremiah 6:16 urges believers to “ask for the ancient paths,” so also must Christians ensure that their theology rests on Scripture alone, not Scripture supplemented by institutional or prophetic authorities.


Selected Notes

  1. “Sola Scriptura,” Sabbath School Net.

  2. “The Reformers and Ellen G. White,” Ministry Magazine, October 2016.

  3. Ibid.

  4. “Sola Scriptura – What it Means and Why It Matters,” AskAnAdventistFriend.com.

  5. “Fundamental Belief #1,” Seventh-day Adventist Fundamental Beliefs, atoday.org.

  6. “Sola Scriptura,” ColumbiaUnion.org.

  7. Raoul Dederen et al., Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology (Review & Herald, 2000).

  8. Fernando Canale, “Sola Scriptura and Hermeneutics,” Andrews University Digital Commons, 2016.

  9. “Does the SDA Church Believe in Sola Scriptura?,” AnsweringAdventism.com.

  10. Ibid.

  11. “Pioneer Statements,” Theos Institute; SDAPillars.org.

  12. “Sola Scriptura? It’s Complicated,” AdventistToday.org, November 28, 2022.

  13. Ibid.; AnsweringAdventism.com; Handbook of Seventh-day Adventist Theology



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APOLOGETICS STUDY BIBLE Q&A: "Bakit walang kinalaman si Jesus sa karahasan?"

Pag nagbabasa tayo ng Bible, specifically the Old Testament (OT), minsan mapapaisip ka talaga: Ang daming patayan, no? When we read about th...

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