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Notes -
Marxism also doesn’t have “a single point of authority defining it.” It’s a whole corpus of thought, with hundreds of writers (maybe thousands) chiming in and adding their analysis and refinement of other writers’ ideas. It’s like how Christianity has long transcended sola scriptura and includes a massive world of commentary and schisms and church authorities and whatnot. “Woke”, to the extent that the word is anything other than a boo light, undoubtedly refers to a specific offshoot or sect of Marxism.
Sola Scriptura is actually extremely rare in Christianity; both Catholic and Orthodox Christians believe their church predates the codification and indeed writing of the scriptures and doctrine-heavy protestants in practice hold to definite-enough interpretations of scripture that tradition and church authority play a strong role(and have for a very long time; the Augsburg confession was literally written by Martin Luther). But almost all of these Christian branches have a single point of authority defining them, indeed rather notoriously so in the case of Catholicism.
The Protestants would also affirm that their church predates the codification and writing of the scriptures (at least of the new testament).
The Augsburg confession was written by Melanchthon. Edit: Luther did play a role in its drafting.
But this is pretty close to being true, at least, if you're construing sola scriptura as talking about use of other authorities in general, rather than whether there exist other final authorities accessible to the modern church.
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