M
Metamorphoo
Guest
Interesting thread … God holds His People to a higher standard because they are His ambassadors to a lost world. Moral failure by those who profess Christ, regardless of its form, damages the reputation of ALL Christians–and has been the cause of more than a few people to reject Christ altogether. In the evangelical Protestant world, we’ve had the moral failings of people like Ted Haggard, Jimmy Swaggert, Jim Bakker. In the Catholic Church, we’ve had the pedophile scandal. The sins of these and other Christian leaders have damaged the cause of Christ in ways we probably cannot imagine.
The Bible contains a number of examples of Israelites whose sin caused “the enemies of God to blaspheme” His Name. In Solomon’s case, his sin of idolatry resulted in the division of Israel into two–a rending decreed by the Lord Himself. Although the split did not occur until after Solomon’s death, the Bible clearly states that Solomon’s sin was the cause of this division. (ref: I Kings 11)
Any honest reading of Church history shows that nepotism, sexual immorality, and materialistic excess/corruption among the clergy were problematic during the Renaissance period. The sin extended to the papacy itself. Perhaps the most notorious was Pope Alexander VI (1492-1503), whose lifestyle was about as ungodly as it gets: openly hosting sexual orgies in the Vatican itself, with the Papal Curia joining in. (Note: Luther’s 95 Theses were posted in Wittenberg in 1517, only 14 years after Alexander’s death.)
Could it be possible that the divisions which occurred during the Reformation were the spiritual consequences of ongoing, gross sin by those who sat in positions of spiritual authority within the RCC? Could the Reformation have been the Lord’s means of getting the RCC leadership’s attention?
I am not trying to justify the divisions within Protestantism (which are ridiculously too numerous to count). But I do understand how it would have been extremely difficult for anyone who desired to follow Christ to submit to the spiritual authority of someone who is in flagrant sin. Regardless of your view on Savanarola, I can empathize with his view that Alexander VI was neither a pope nor a Christian.
When spiritual trust is broken, it is very easy for people to “throw the baby out with the bath water.” I think that Catholics all too often want to castigate Luther (and other Protestant Reformers), forgetting the disgust–and mistrust–that the sins of many clerics spawned within the people.
Just my two cents …
The Bible contains a number of examples of Israelites whose sin caused “the enemies of God to blaspheme” His Name. In Solomon’s case, his sin of idolatry resulted in the division of Israel into two–a rending decreed by the Lord Himself. Although the split did not occur until after Solomon’s death, the Bible clearly states that Solomon’s sin was the cause of this division. (ref: I Kings 11)
Any honest reading of Church history shows that nepotism, sexual immorality, and materialistic excess/corruption among the clergy were problematic during the Renaissance period. The sin extended to the papacy itself. Perhaps the most notorious was Pope Alexander VI (1492-1503), whose lifestyle was about as ungodly as it gets: openly hosting sexual orgies in the Vatican itself, with the Papal Curia joining in. (Note: Luther’s 95 Theses were posted in Wittenberg in 1517, only 14 years after Alexander’s death.)
Could it be possible that the divisions which occurred during the Reformation were the spiritual consequences of ongoing, gross sin by those who sat in positions of spiritual authority within the RCC? Could the Reformation have been the Lord’s means of getting the RCC leadership’s attention?
I am not trying to justify the divisions within Protestantism (which are ridiculously too numerous to count). But I do understand how it would have been extremely difficult for anyone who desired to follow Christ to submit to the spiritual authority of someone who is in flagrant sin. Regardless of your view on Savanarola, I can empathize with his view that Alexander VI was neither a pope nor a Christian.
When spiritual trust is broken, it is very easy for people to “throw the baby out with the bath water.” I think that Catholics all too often want to castigate Luther (and other Protestant Reformers), forgetting the disgust–and mistrust–that the sins of many clerics spawned within the people.
Just my two cents …