Also, for me there's an important theological concept related to this, which is that Jesus Christ, the Word of God, and not the New Testament, which came after Him, is God's final revelation. Also, for me there's an important theological concept related to this, which is that Jesus Christ, the Word of God, and not the New Testament, which came after Him, is God's final revelation. What God accomplished through the apostles was not to add something more to that, but to propagate that final revelation of God in the life, death, and resurrection of His Son, and to found the Church as the outworking of that revelation. Even their ministry was essentially a conservative, traditional one, passing on what they had received from Jesus. Innovating was not their commission. The developments and changes that occurred under their leadership, such as we read in Acts 15 and elsewhere, were born out of what God had already revealed through Jesus, sometimes as their recognition of natural consequences of that revelation which they had not previously understood, but that once they understood it, it was clear that it comported with the way of the Lord. The Church's understanding of theology will continue to develop in a way like this even today, as we reflect on what God revealed to us in His Son, and apply the truths revealed to new circumstances and questions previously not asked or adequately considered. But for us today to be able to do this, we are not in the position the apostles were in, having experienced firsthand the incarnation, life, teachings, miracles, deeds of compassion, death, and resurrection, of Jesus. For us, when we want to appeal to that standard of God's final revelation through His Son, we must go to the writings left by that first generation, and what they tell us that revelation was. We cannot trust a person who comes to us today and claims to be an untimely born apostle like Paul, with some new knowledge about what God revealed 2000 years ago in His Son, which was only now revealed to him.
I highlighted your first sentence because in it you make an error my friend. And this error is what renders the rest of what you have said in the post into error, and you not grasping that which you have yet failed to understand about the faith in Christ.
There is still much we have not seen and not learned yet about God.
God continues to reveal Himself, not only to the world but to every human soul. Christ is the Lord and Savior in truth, and the
greatest revelation of God in the history of mankind.
The story, however, has not yet ended. Christ has been preparing His Kingdom and assigning His saints. Indeed, the story of the Church
just begins even though the Book of Acts abruptly ends. (It's abruptness, by the way, should be a big hint).
The truth is that even as the Holy Canon of Scripture are sufficient in defining the
dogmas of the faith,
they were never considered to be the only or last works of God in creation or only source of authority in teachings and instructions. For it was advantageous that Christ would go as He said so that we might receive the Holy Spirit. For it is in the Holy Spirit as members of His Church which we will know and enter the Kingdom of God. The Church relies not on the mere works of men, but Him Who give the gifts of His grace and deifies a man by the Holy Spirit. God being
in the man,
abiding in him, to the fullness and stature of Jesus Christ Who has made this possible in ways which men could barely begin to count.
And similar to Jesus Christ, the works of the Holy Spirit is not limited or definable in any book written by men, for God is not a collection of books
but the Uncreated God beyond the mind of men and the eternal and uncreated Source of all being.
However some seem to do this. To idolize the Scriptures and hold it above God
by putting limits upon Him and His great wisdom. The Apostles sure as heck could not be accused of such a thing. For none of the writers or people in the New Testaments say "you must only read these four Gospels, and these selected letters." Nor does it say 'at the end of the Scriptures, the ministry of apostolicity has ceased and there is nothing more to reveal'. Nowhere does the Holy Bible prophecize or even imply some kind of book written by the hands of men which would contain the sum total of God's revelations and workings in the world through His Holy Spirit. There is only
one Book of Life, and no one knows it but God and to those to whom He wishes to reveal it to.
As an aside, I would like to say that as a historical investigator, one can have much knowledge of things. But to limit oneself to one collection of witnesses of God's revelations and place limits on the Holy Spirit and ignore the vast remaining wondrous and grace filled workings of the Holy Spirit within the life of the Church (which is the guardian and foundation for the truths because of the same Holy Spirit quickening it and guiding it), is to miss out on much of the beauty, wonder, and joy of what it means to live a life in Christ, in real holy communion with Him and His saints within the Church.
The wonders within the canonical Bible are the (incomplete) records of the wonders of the Holy Spirit in the history and life of the Church, a collection of writings until only the middle to end of the first century. It begins the story of which the Church bears witness to and gives meaning to, and continues to through blood and flesh and in the Holy Spirit.
By the grace of God in the Holy Spirit, this Church survives.
I would implore you erowe to read St. Basil's "On the Holy Spirit" in order to understand God's active and continuing works and revelations of Himself within the world and the people in the word. Christ has not gone to sleep, and the Holy Spirit did not have a timer.
St. Ignatius spoke the Apostolic faith not merely because he was the apostle in which they sent out, but because he had Christ abiding in Him, and he became a temple of the Holy Spirit. His authority did not just fulfill the ministry of man, in the actual touching and laying of hands, but fulfilled as apostolic
by the very life-giving Spirit of God and in the mysteries of grace.
And the Spirit was graced upon him according to the love he had for God and for those he was anointed to care for. He was given much by God because he loved much, and that is the greatest legacy of St. Ignatius and not his ecclesiological exhortations. His letters demonstrate so much love, that one can see the image of Christ imprinted within them. This holy man was indeed holy and full of the gifts of the Holy Spirit and his faithful flock loved him and collected his martyred bones and buried them, and remember him to this day in the eternal Kingdom of God.
Jesus said:
If a man love me, he will keep my words: and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him.
St. Ignatius' apostolic authority is not only through apostolic succession in a human, material, created, and historical way, but in the
mystical way, the spiritual way, in holy communion through Christ, partaking of His divine nature, and abiding in Him in the Holy Spirit.
When we doubt St. Ignatius, let us be careful we do not doubt the Holy Spirit working in him.
Christ is the greatest revelation,
but not the final one. For there is much we have yet seen, and the story of mankind has not ended by a long shot. When we limit ourselves to a collection of books as the final and end of God's truths and revelations, we have done what no Apostle or Evangelist of Church Father ever said nor implied. Yes, the Scriptures are sufficient in establishing dogma about who Christ is, but not as the complete revelation of all God's truths and to be held above the authority of the living Church, the Bride of Christ, the one to whom Christ has prepared the Kingdom of Heaven for. This is the simple truth which keeps getting ignored or cannot seem to be understood. We cannot create a dogmatic assertion that the Scriptures shall be the ultimate and final authority and source of all truth,
when it is not even dogmatically stated in it's very pages. To do so would be absurd and illogical. It should and would have been on every other page if that was the true apostolic understanding. But it wasn't then, just as it has never been,
for in that same book it clearly explains where the pillar and foundation for truths are, and that is not in a 4th century collection of early Church writings, as holy as they are. Instead, it is the living, breathing, and contending
Church, made of its members who are His faithful and obedient workers.
The holy inspired letters and sermons and other patristic writings provides the voice of the Holy Spirit in the world, as revealed through the very lives, words, and actions and these saints. Until you can understand that the Church,
which are the saints, is the pillar and foundation of the faith and not the Holy Bible which is one part of the Holy Tradition of the Church, then you will greater understand the power and authority of those who are called saints, and their place and purpose within it in God's continuing revelation to mankind.