An open question for Lutherans

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guanophore;12266830:
If that is true, why are you not in unity with them?

I am.

No one is saying that faith doesn’t produce good works.
But in a way the Lutheran Church does teach that by Faith Alone one is saved. once again Luther said that. That is 1 of the reasons why he wanted to get rid of James from the Bible.
 
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Which successor of Peter? The bishop of Rome?  We aren't in unity with him because he teaches serious error and we believe he is the antichrist. Why isn't the pope in unity with all the other bishops who are successors of Peter?
All valid Bishops today are successors of the Apostles (not necessarily of Peter) but there is a line of Bishops emanating from Antioch that is older than the line of Peter in Rome.

Why are you not in unity with those Successors of the Apostle?
 
He did say that, but you are taking the statement out of context. So it is your contention that Jesus has given us a commandment that He has made it impossible to follow?

Paul also says:

Eph 1:3-5

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places, 4 just as he chose us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be holy and blameless before him in love.

He has given us every spiritual blessing so that we can live holy and blameless before Him.

And also Peter:

1 Peter 1:15-16
15 Instead, as he who called you is holy, be holy yourselves in all your conduct; 16 for it is written, “You shall be holy, for I am holy.”

Paul here is speaking about Jews and Gentiles, and how the Jews do not have special status before God because they are chosen people. He is also speaking in the past tense. Once we enter Christ, the bondage to sin is broken.

Rom 6:17-19
17 But thanks be to God that you, having once been slaves of sin, have become obedient from the heart to the form of teaching to which you were entrusted, 18 and that you, having been set free from sin, have become slaves of righteousness.

Thus it is a grave heresy to claim that sin must have power over us, and that we do not have the ability, through the grace of God to avoid sin.
He did say that, but you are taking the statement out of context. So it is your contention that Jesus has given us a commandment that He has made it impossible to follow?
Not him, us. We made it impossible due to our sinful nature. Christ commands us to be perfect as our Heavenly Father is perfect. An impossible task. That’s why we need the gospel.
He has given us every spiritual blessing so that we can live holy and blameless before Him.
Every spiritual blessing is the Cross. We can live blameless because God has declared us blameless by Christ’s Cross. Not any of our works, but Christ’s work.
Paul here is speaking about Jews and Gentiles, and how the Jews do not have special status before God because they are chosen people. He is also speaking in the past tense. Once we enter Christ, the bondage to sin is broken.
Fine.
Thus it is a grave heresy to claim that sin must have power over us, and that we do not have the ability, through the grace of God to avoid sin.
Sin doesn’t have any power over us, the power of sin is death. Death has been conquered. But we still have our sinful human nature. And that nature causes us to be unable to please God with our works or our goodness.
 
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 Not him, us.  We made it impossible due to our sinful nature.
So you don’t really believe what Scripture says, that we are no longer enslaved to sin…you believe the power of sin was really not broken at the cross…that “us” (our sinful human nature") is really stronger than the Holy Spirit, so that God is not really able to make us stand. He cannot fulfill His commandment in us because He did not really defeat sin?
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 Christ commands us to be perfect as our Heavenly Father is perfect.  An impossible task.  That's why we need the gospel.
You won’t get an argument about me on that point, just that for Catholics, that Gospel means that He defeated sin.

Col 2:13-15
13 And when you were dead in trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made you alive together with him, when he forgave us all our trespasses, 14 erasing the record that stood against us with its legal demands. He set this aside, nailing it to the cross. 15** He disarmed the rulers and authorities and made a public example of them, triumphing over them in it. **

For Catholics, works of the flesh are unregenerate “dead works” that have been triumphed over through the cross.

Heb 6:1-2
Therefore let us go on toward perfection, leaving behind the basic teaching about Christ, and not laying again the foundation: repentance from dead works and faith toward God,

Every spiritual blessing is the Cross. We can live blameless because God has declared us blameless by Christ’s Cross. Not any of our works, but Christ’s work.
Sin doesn’t have any power over us, the power of sin is death. Death has been conquered. But we still have our sinful human nature. And that nature causes us to be unable to please God with our works or our goodness.
This is an important difference, then, between Catholic believe and yours. We believe that the Holy Spirit is more powerful than fallen human nature, and that our fallen nature cannot “cause” us to be unable to please God unless we allow it to do so, since we are no longer slaves to sin.
 
All valid Bishops today are successors of the Apostles (not necessarily of Peter) but there is a line of Bishops emanating from Antioch that is older than the line of Peter in Rome.

Why are you not in unity with those Successors of the Apostle?
Because they rejected our confession in 1575.

Why aren’t you in union with those successors of the apostles?
 
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Because they rejected our confession in 1575.
Can you provide me with a link or a source so I can learn more about this?
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Why aren't you in union with those successors of the apostles?
Originally because of misunderstandings largely cultural and linquistic (although politics and economics did play a part) then more recently, for a lot of the same reasons you are, which is why I was wondering. The development of doctrine, councils in which they did not participate, and the Infallible proclamations ex cathedra.
 
So you don’t really believe what Scripture says, that we are no longer enslaved to sin…you believe the power of sin was really not broken at the cross…that “us” (our sinful human nature") is really stronger than the Holy Spirit, so that God is not really able to make us stand. He cannot fulfill His commandment in us because He did not really defeat sin?

You won’t get an argument about me on that point, just that for Catholics, that Gospel means that He defeated sin.

Col 2:13-15
13 And when you were dead in trespasses and the uncircumcision of your flesh, God made you alive together with him, when he forgave us all our trespasses, 14 erasing the record that stood against us with its legal demands. He set this aside, nailing it to the cross. 15** He disarmed the rulers and authorities and made a public example of them, triumphing over them in it. **

For Catholics, works of the flesh are unregenerate “dead works” that have been triumphed over through the cross.

Heb 6:1-2
Therefore let us go on toward perfection, leaving behind the basic teaching about Christ, and not laying again the foundation: repentance from dead works and faith toward God,

Every spiritual blessing is the Cross. We can live blameless because God has declared us blameless by Christ’s Cross. Not any of our works, but Christ’s work.

This is an important difference, then, between Catholic believe and yours. We believe that the Holy Spirit is more powerful than fallen human nature, and that our fallen nature cannot “cause” us to be unable to please God unless we allow it to do so, since we are no longer slaves to sin.
So you don’t really believe what Scripture says, that we are no longer enslaved to sin…you believe the power of sin was really not broken at the cross…that “us” (our sinful human nature") is really stronger than the Holy Spirit, so that God is not really able to make us stand. He cannot fulfill His commandment in us because He did not really defeat sin?
No the power of sin was death. That power was broken on the Cross. The cross is the only thing that can free us from that power was well by grace through faith. We still sin, because of our sinful nature. But God has declared he will not hold our sin against us by virtue of the Cross.
This is an important difference, then, between Catholic believe and yours. We believe that the Holy Spirit is more powerful than fallen human nature, and that our fallen nature cannot “cause” us to be unable to please God unless we allow it to do so, since we are no longer slaves to sin.
Yes I vehemently disagree with Catholic teaching surrounding how we are made righteous before God. We cannot become pleasing to God because we choose to be.
 
Can you provide me with a link or a source so I can learn more about this?

Originally because of misunderstandings largely cultural and linquistic (although politics and economics did play a part) then more recently, for a lot of the same reasons you are, which is why I was wondering. The development of doctrine, councils in which they did not participate, and the Infallible proclamations ex cathedra.
Can you provide me with a link or a source so I can learn more about this?
Sure.

Here is a good one from an EO source:

web.archive.org/web/20130128052302/http://www.stpaulsirvine.org/html/sixteenthcentury.htm
 
HI Chemo 23: I would like to add something to your #121 that I think might help explain why Luther did not understand what both Paul and James were saying. I seems to me that one needs to understand the history of the times and the events that were taking place which caused each to write concerning faith, works and justification. Much of Pauls’ wrings concern the relationship between faith, works and justification were written to Gentile Christians in response who were under a significant amount of Jewish influence, many by their own Jewish heritage and others by the Jewish Christian influences within the Church.
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 Paul and James were addressing different audiences in different situations about different problems. In Paul's case in order to combat convert Pharisees who were teaching converted Gentile Christians that to be saved they had to be circumcised and observe ritual requirements and follow the law of Moses, to which Paul was refuting.

 On the other hand James was combatting the teachings of converted Pharisees who were saying that professing faith in God alone was enough for one's salvation. In refuting this false teaching, James stresses that Christians must put their faith  into concrete action since not to do so is faith that is dead.
Luther claimed that James epistle was made of straw, but that is because Luther really did not understand what each, that is Paul and James were saying and intending by what they wrote. Luther was so consumed by tormented thoughts that no matter what he did he would not be saved. The poor man had to come up with something that would bring some peace and some assurance that he was saved. But because of this faith alone so many that came afterwards over the centuries have misunderstood what James and Paul’s were saying and meaning.
 
Yes. I disagree with that as well.
Why do you disagree with what is in the Joint Declaration?

Perhaps I am wrong to interpret your perfunctory tone and rejection of efforts toward unity by the CC to be coming from hostility??

Your identification of yourself as an “ex Catholic” and your apparent misunderstanding of Catholic thought perhaps led me to a wrong conclusion.
I can speak for any other WELS person. But the general feeling amongst folks in the pews is pretty much one of indifference or slight hostility towards the Pope. We all agree with the confessions that the office of the Pope is the antichrist. Because of that, you won’t find much support for seeing the pope as any visible sign of unity.
 
Why do you disagree with what is in the Joint Declaration?

Perhaps I am wrong to interpret your perfunctory tone and rejection of efforts toward unity by the CC to be coming from hostility??

Your identification of yourself as an “ex Catholic” and your apparent misunderstanding of Catholic thought perhaps led me to a wrong conclusion.
Why do you disagree with what is in the Joint Declaration?
Because it sells both of our denominations short. Even many Catholics I have spoken to reject the declaration.
Perhaps I am wrong to interpret your perfunctory tone and rejection of efforts toward unity by the CC to be coming from hostility??
Totally wrong.
Your identification of yourself as an “ex Catholic” and your apparent misunderstanding of Catholic thought perhaps led me to a wrong conclusion.
Indeed. Also where have I misunderstood any Catholic teaching?
 
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Fine.
That is one of those perfunctory replies I was noting. 😃

You didn’t answer the question. Do you accept that Jesus’ changed the name of Simon to Peter? Do you agree that whenever God changed the name of someone it had massive import to their identity and mission?
No. It’s because the HS says don’t murder people.

God can take or give life as he pleases. We can’t.

Its immoral then and its immoral now. No matter who is doing it.
It would not be appropriate for us to diverge into the death penalty here, and to whether or not there is a difference between that and "murder’. I am mindful of Paul’s statement:

1 Cor 5:4-5
When you are assembled, and my spirit is present, with the power of our Lord Jesus, 5 you are to deliver this man to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.

For the purpose of this thread, and since the Pope has not called for a death penalty for several centuries, do you think you could consider not holding this against the current pope?

I don’t know how much attention you have given to Pope Frances, but I don’t think you need to be concerned that he would support such an outcome. 😉
 
That is one of those perfunctory replies I was noting. 😃

You didn’t answer the question. Do you accept that Jesus’ changed the name of Simon to Peter? Do you agree that whenever God changed the name of someone it had massive import to their identity and mission?

It would not be appropriate for us to diverge into the death penalty here, and to whether or not there is a difference between that and "murder’. I am mindful of Paul’s statement:

1 Cor 5:4-5
When you are assembled, and my spirit is present, with the power of our Lord Jesus, 5 you are to deliver this man to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.

For the purpose of this thread, and since the Pope has not called for a death penalty for several centuries, do you think you could consider not holding this against the current pope?

I don’t know how much attention you have given to Pope Frances, but I don’t think you need to be concerned that he would support such an outcome. 😉
You didn’t answer the question. Do you accept that Jesus’ changed the name of Simon to Peter? Do you agree that whenever God changed the name of someone it had massive import to their identity and mission?
Sorry, by “fine” I mean yes I accept both of those statements.
It would not be appropriate for us to diverge into the death penalty here, and to whether or not there is a difference between that and "murder’. I am mindful of Paul’s statement:
1 Cor 5:4-5
When you are assembled, and my spirit is present, with the power of our Lord Jesus, 5 you are to deliver this man to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that his spirit may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus.
For the purpose of this thread, and since the Pope has not called for a death penalty for several centuries, do you think you could consider not holding this against the current pope?
I don’t know how much attention you have given to Pope Frances, but I don’t think you need to be concerned that he would support such an outcome.
Indeed. In fact most modern popes and most Catholics I know are opposed to the death penalty, at least used in the current sense. I was commenting on past papal error.
 
Because it sells both of our denominations short. Even many Catholics I have spoken to reject the declaration.

Certainly it is incomplete (it is only a start) but what about it sells your denomination short? Do you not adhere to the Lutheran definition of faith as a faith that works?
Totally wrong.
Only time will tell, I guess. 🤷

It is clear that you hold your faith very “dear”, so the idea that you should reliquish any part of it is at the least unsettling, and perhaps intolerable.
Indeed. Also where have I misunderstood any Catholic teaching?
The perception that an office (of a Bishop) can “over reach” demonstrates a lack of understanding of the office of an Apostle, or Bishop.
 
Im surprised our Lutheran brethren didn’t reply to your comment.
Luther’s extreme points and the reaction of others to these points are uncomfortable truths, especially the work of Fr. Theobald Beer with regards to Luther and his gnostic beliefs.

I recommend reading the interview with Fr. Theobald Beer on the topic of Luther, and also the interview of now Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI of Luther and unity of the churches.
 
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