What they were protesting was the Second Diet of Speyer in 1529.You are referring to the term. I was referring to what they were protesting.
Your point seems to be that it is the canon of scripture that defines “Protestant”.Even if they do, then they wouldn’t be embracing the canon of the Reformers, which is where the origination of “Protestant” came from. Anyone can call themselves “Protestant,” but if they embrace a canon that is different from Protestant Reformers, then how can they call themselves Protestant?
The original Protestant reformers were Lutheran. Therefore, those calling themselves Protestant believed in the real presence, baptismal regeneration, infant baptism, aurricular confession to a priest/pastor. Can I therefore say: Anyone can call themselves “Protestant,” but if they embrace a view of sacraments that is different from the original (Lutheran) Protestant Reformers, then how can they call themselves Protestant?
My point is not to change the subject to sacraments, but to point out that there is only one modern meaning of the term Protestant: a western Christian communion/tradition/ denomination or individual not in communion with the Bishop of Rome.
There may be similarities in some teachings, but I as a Lutheran have many beliefs that are far closer to Rome than to American evangelicals, for example.
On this we agree. As I said, Luther’s view of the canon is shaped by the views within the early Church.Luther embraced this “smaller” canon for three main reasons: 1) Jerome preferred it & stated the church in his time considered them “edifying” but not canonical & doctrines were not based on them; 2) the Jews of antiquity did not embrace them; and 3) The deuteros were not found in the Targums (Aramaic paraphrases of the Hebrew Bible from the 1st century BC to 1st century AD).
He also treated the Antilegomena of the NT that way.It’s extremely relevant, because Scripture is either God-breathed or it’s not. There is no middle ground. Luther was treating the deuteros no different than the early church did - they treated them as edifying, but not God-breathed.
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