I’m not sure we’re disagreeing here, Randy. I thought I explained pretty clearly why today’s Lutherans use the title; for simple identification.
Well, some of you do, actually. The term “Roman Catholic” was the Evangelical Catholic counter to those who called us “Lutherans.” In today’s world, the terms have more or less lost the bite they had in the 1500’s.
Sure. I think that’s fair to say of many of today’s Lutherans. We’re “Catholics of the Lutheran Rite.”
See, this is what gets me. You can cut and paste a single sentence, joke or hyperbolic statement from just about anybody and make him into a Godless monster. With the exception of Luther’s comments on the Jews (which is a product of the times shared by many other Catholics of his day, anyway) there is really nothing in the OP’s list that is damning when enjoyed in the full context. A little bit of reading and history, and the list is rather foolish.
I style myself an Evangelical Catholic. I’m “Lutheran” insofar as the moniker is commonly associated with the beliefs of my communion. I don’t understand what you imply by your last sentence.
Your PP analogy is faulty; Lutheranism is not based off of a drunken monk’s ramblings. It’s the collective work of a movement, as recorded in the Augsburg Confession. I tried explaining this earlier. Perhaps the fault lies in my explanation…