Thanks for the additional information Kathleen. It’s also a very good thing for Catholics as well as for Lutherans who claim the title Catholic to review a basic outline regarding Trent’s findings concerning Lutheran doctrine.
(1) Original justice was connatural to Adam, like sight to the eyes.
(2) Original sin (loss of original justice) has, therefore, corrupted intrinsically human nature in such a way that man is longer capable of doing any good at all.
(3) By original sin human reason has degenerated and free will no longer exists.
(4) Therefore, man is no longer responsible for his acts, especially since he is tyrannically dominated by concupiscence, which is intrinsically sinful even in its instinctive movements.
(5) Man, fallen through original sin, is incurable, so deeply that not even God can heal him anymore. Therefore the Redemption is entirely a work extrinsic to us, a work done by Christ, who substitutes Himself for us in order to pay the penalty of our sins to the divine justice (penal substitution). Human justification is done extrinsically - in a negative way, i.e., by covering up sin (not by removing it), and in a positive way, i.e., by attributing ((name removed by moderator)utatio) to us the holiness and the merits of Christ.
(6) There is no habitual grace in us; actual grace is not a power or a quality of the soul, but it is God Himself working in us.
(7) The only good act man can do is the act of fiducial faith or abandonement of self to God, by which He confides in His mercy and trusts that his sins have been pardoned.
(8) Consequently, the sacraments have no longer any rasion d’ etre: Luther keeps baptism, penance (by which the remission of sins is declared but not effected), and the Supper (which is no longer the Mass). The bread and wine in the Eucharist remain as they are, but Christ makes Himself present in them (companation), not through consecration alone, but also by virtue of the faith of the faithful.
(9) The monarchical Church with its hierarchy is a human institution: there is no intermediary between the individual and God. The only source from which man and must draw divine truth is the Bible, interpreted individually under the illumination of God (free thought and inquiry). Tradition has only a human value. The true Church of Christ is the invisible Church (influence of Wycliffe and Huss).
(10) The denial of indulgences, of purgatory, of the invocation of saints, of prayers for the dead.
Lutheranism may be characterized as an individualistic pseudo- supernaturalism.