P
Peter_J
Guest
Duh, weāre people with computers. (How many of the reformers could have said that?)Wellā¦if the bishop gave his okā¦who are we to disagreeā¦
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Duh, weāre people with computers. (How many of the reformers could have said that?)Wellā¦if the bishop gave his okā¦who are we to disagreeā¦
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Holy Moly.The question for me, in RCIA is whether Martin Luther did anything to change the Catholic Church, which from what I have seen he didnāt. Martin Luther had absolutely no impact on the Catholic Church, so here is the Catholic Church today, entirely uninfluenced by Martin Luther.
I hear a roaring boar coming through the vineyardHoly Moly.
http://www.planetsmilies.com/smilies/confused/confused0059.gif
Iām not sure if I can say anything that would convince you otherwise, but fwiw I believe you are mistaken.
Right. Recognizing our faults doesnāt justify the schismatic actions but opens up the opportunity to get better. After all, truth is a 2-way street - it convicts all of us.
P.S. I should add ā although it may go without saying, but yānever know ā that I donāt want to overstate Lutherās importance. Who knows, if he hadnāt been around perhaps someone else would have filled those shoes. I just want to stress that Catholics have changed a lot in the last 5 centuries, and a good chunk of that was in response to Lutherās criticisms.

Clearly Lutherans donāt āhang on Lutherās every wordā and wish some statements by Luther had never been uttered *As a non-Catholic, I no more follow Martin Luther than I do Neitche or Descarte.
I follow God/Jesus, and what they told us directly in the Bible!
If others hang on Lutherās every word, we must pray for them, not ridicule them.
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How about listing ALL THOSE changes attributable to Luther.
P.S. I should add ā although it may go without saying, but yānever know ā that I donāt want to overstate Lutherās importance. Who knows, if he hadnāt been around perhaps someone else would have filled those shoes. I just want to stress that Catholics have changed a lot in the last 5 centuries, and a good chunk of that was in response to Lutherās criticisms.
Right off the bat:How about listing ALL THOSE changes attributable to Luther.
To make this a team effort, Iāll add the (technically illegal, but in some places tolerated) sale of indulgences.How about listing ALL THOSE changes attributable to Luther.
Luther may have not had a direct impact on the RCC, but I would argue that the indirect, lasting effects are tgere. It was a catalyst for reform in the RCC because they were now no longer the only church in town. They had to get it together, or run the risk if losing an increasing amount of people to Protestantism. The RCC has been greatly shaped by its opposition to Protestantism and, in certain cases, has been influenced by it. I donāt think Vatican II would be what it was apart from it.It seems that today there are some who regard Luther as a saint, and some who regard Luther as well-meaning but misguided. The question for me, in RCIA is whether Martin Luther did anything to change the Catholic Church, which from what I have seen he didnāt. Martin Luther had absolutely no impact on the Catholic Church, so here is the Catholic Church today, entirely uninfluenced by Martin Luther.
The one thing he has impacted on the world is that he has given licence to create your own church, and your own creeds and your own confessions and your own statements of faith, your own doctrines, your own reforms, your own sacraments, your own structure, your own revivals, your own revisionist roots, all the while the non-Christians scratch their heads and wonder why they need to put down the Church when they do a perfectly good job of that on their own.
No Luther was over-rated as a crux but his impact is quite frankly a mess, and most definitely not what Jesus promised.
The plack Over Our Lordās head was written in 3 languages John 19:20 all working languages of the dayRight off the bat:
Mass in the vernacular
Communion in both kinds
The plack Over Our Lordās head was written in 3 languages John 19:20 all working languages of the day
When Jesus instituted the 1st Eucharist
*]Aramaic was used ( ~33 a.d.)
*]then as the Church grew the languages used were Aramaic, Latin, & Greek
*]then in 1965 after Vat II, mass permission was given for the vernacular
Luther hardly had anything to do with the CC using the vernacular.
As for communion in the hand, the first we see of that is at the Last Supper. The CC had that practice early on, then moved to the tongue which is preferred, and in the hand is also done.
Therefore, Luther had nothing to do with those 2 issues.
catholic.com/quickquestions/does-the-catholic-church-still-sell-indulgencesTo make this a team effort, Iāll add the (technically illegal, but in some places tolerated) sale of indulgences.
The Church has used both species for as long as it has existed, but has never made it a requirement because Jesus is truly present in both species. This was not an influence of Luther on the Catholic Church.So praying Mass in Latin up to 1965, contrary to all other Christian bodies, was just a minor thing? Communion in both kinds refers to the Host and Cup; not hands!
You know, there was probably a big āto-doā when the Mass was changed from Greek to Latin as well. It was changed to Latin because that was the vernacular. No doubt that the Church is very slow in changing anything. There is a reason for this. Regardless, the change to the vernacular had nothing to do with Luther. Where is your evidence for this?So praying Mass in Latin up to 1965, contrary to all other Christian bodies, was just a minor thing? Communion in both kinds refers to the Host and Cup; not hands!
Wellā¦it looks like you have accepted as factā¦legends on the sale of indulgences:To make this a team effort, Iāll add the (technically illegal, but in some places tolerated) sale of indulgences.
Luther translated the Bible into German. The Mass was said in Latin for a brief time but later translated into German, also. It would be interesting to find out if the Eastern Church used vernacular at the time of the Schism. I understood that Luther/ Lutherans and Anglicans were the first European Christians to read the Bible and hold Mass in native languages. Yes?You know, there was probably a big āto-doā when the Mass was changed from Greek to Latin as well. It was changed to Latin because that was the vernacular. No doubt that the Church is very slow in changing anything. There is a reason for this. Regardless, the change to the vernacular had nothing to do with Luther. Where is your evidence for this?
Who specifically are you talking about?So praying Mass in Latin up to 1965, contrary to all other Christian bodies, was just a minor thing?
As scripture points out 1 Corinthians 11:27 "whosoever shall eat this bread, or drink the chalice of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and of the blood of the LordCommunion in both kinds refers to the Host and Cup
All the reformers lived before Al Gore invented the internet, so there you goā¦Duh, weāre people with computers. (How many of the reformers could have said that?)
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