The Shape of Sola Scriptura

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The Shape of Sola Scriptura
AuthorKeith Mathison
LanguageEnglish
SubjectChristianity
Protestant Reformation
Sola Scriptura
GenreNon-Fiction
PublisherCanon Press
Publication date
1 April 2001
Pages366
ISBN978-1-885767-74-5

The Shape of Sola Scriptura is a 2001 book by Reformed Christian theologian Keith Mathison. Mathison traces the development of sola scriptura from the early church to the present. Matthison, a Reformed theologian at Ligonier Ministries and Whitefield Theological Seminary, views the Protestant Reformation as a time of recovery of the doctrine that had been under assault from the fourth century. He argues that relativism and individualism permeate present-day teaching on the subject, and that widespread misunderstanding of the doctrine of sola scriptura has been eroding the church from within. This, in Mathison's view, has led to conversions from Protestantism to other religions, and has undermined the relationship among Scripture, church tradition, and individual believers as set forth by the early church and restated by the Magisterial Reformers.[1]

A Presbyterian (PCA) reviewer wrote that the book "points to the importance of covenant communities — the organized church — and away from an individualized interpretation of Scripture."[2] A Latin Rite Roman Catholic reviewer objected to Matthison's book in detail. In summary, he wrote "Sola scriptura enthrones one’s own personal interpretation of the bible and dethrones the proper authority, the Church."[3] Another Catholic reviewer wrote that "many Protestants and Catholics alike believe [it] to be the best recent defense of sola Scriptura."[4]

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