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TertiumQuid
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I was one of those “protesters” who came across Mr. Gray’s blog entry when he posted a link to it here. I also left a few comments for him on his blog entry. Mr. Gray has revised his entry by including a postscript which claims:Thanks so much for all of the feedback. This compilation has received much more interest from protestors than I thought it would. All of this stuff is already online, so I admit I wasn’t careful be as rigorous about as I would have been for a grad school school. LOL
Nevertheless, over the weekend I did take care to read all of the critiques from blogs and message boards that linked to it, and I added an addendum at the bottom in response to that. True to form, it seems even Protestants don’t all agree on the quality of these quotes, but I posted what they do seem to agree on in the addendum.
Again, I appreciate everyone’s feedback. I AM NOT AN APOLOGIST. I NEVER CLAIMED TO BE. Who I am and what I do I spell out clearly on my about page and about us page.
I’m going to continue the series on the 500 Years of Protestantism, and I hope if you find time you stop by for more helpful comments and critiques.![]()
What he doesn’t do, is provide any examples. Certainly each of us is prone to error, and each of us comes with a set of presuppositions. I make no claim to be infallible, just someone who looks stuff up to see what the actual and historical context says.In some cases Swan was spot on, but in other cases he would have been much better off not trying to contextualize or excuse Luther. In those cases, Swan’s intellectually honesty is betrayed by his passion for Luther.
One irony in Mr. Gray’s blog entry is that I took the time to look up one of his Luther quotes that I had not gone over before (#18). It turns out, Luther didn’t write the quote Gray posted, Melanchthon did.
I also mentioned to Mr. Gray that even the first quote he uses is grossly out of context. In fact, in context I can’t believe that any Catholic would have a problem with what Luther meant. Similarly, I can go through many of the other quotes he posted and prove they’re out of context. Certainly Luther wasn’t perfect and was a man of times with sins and failures, but as I always say, he did not kick the cat on his way to post the 95 Theses
JS