Did the Protestant Reformation do anything good?

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Here we go again…

May I ask you, what is the point of saying it in Latin? How is it better? To answer your question “What’s wrong with Latin,” well, I don’t know if you’ve heard the latest news, but it turns out NOBODY SPEAKS IT.
Erras nimis. Vere haec aetas barbarissima est; nos etiam qui latinitatem preservare volumus sape paucissimum sapimus et multos solecismos facimus. Ecclesia tamen non vita huius saeculi vivit, et non solam linguam haec aetatis loquitur.

Or, to put it more practically and in English–the answer to the problem of no one speaking the ancient language of the Western Church is to teach them.

Edwin
 
The only thing I can think of…and this is half joking but half serious…

Protestants have written some great music. There are an amazing number of songs that Protestants have written that may have not been written.

The best defense for Lutherans is the fact that the greatest composer of all time, J.S. Bach, was a Lutheran.

It is a great tragedy and I hope all Christians are unified one day in the Catholic Church.

All we can do is be the best Catholics we can be, know how to explain our faith, stand up for our faith, be willing to suffer for our faith, and pray to God that “his will be done on earth as it is in heaven.”
Handel’s Messiah was from a Lutheran.👍
 
Here we go again…

May I ask you, what is the point of saying it in Latin? How is it better? To answer your question “What’s wrong with Latin,” well, I don’t know if you’ve heard the latest news, but it turns out NOBODY SPEAKS IT. You call that a universal language? If all masses are said in Latin, how would it be better than me going to, say, a Korean mass? Either way I wouldn’t be able to understand the words and would have to follow in a missal. What difference then would it make for me if mass were in Korean or Latin? May I ask you, what makes you think anything is wrong with the vernacular?
It is my understanding that the Magesterium conducts councils in Latin.:eek:

Nobody speaks latin would be incorrect. Latin is not spoken commonly would be correct.👍
 
Erras nimis. Vere haec aetas barbarissima est; nos etiam qui latinitatem preservare volumus sape paucissimum sapimus et multos solecismos facimus. Ecclesia tamen non vita huius saeculi vivit, et non solam linguam haec aetatis loquitur.

Or, to put it more practically and in English–the answer to the problem of no one speaking the ancient language of the Western Church is to teach them.

Edwin
Ita.

GKC

whose daughter was a* magistra* of the language.
 
Here we go again…

Latin is like Ovaltine. It used to be real popular … and you can still find it if you look hard enough … The people that still claim it it is the best are as rare as veterans of the Civil War.
 
CompSciGuy;8304258:
Here we go again…

Latin is like Ovaltine. It used to be real popular … and you can still find it if you look hard enough … The people that still claim it it is the best are as rare as veterans of the Civil War.
The Catholic Church Western Rite uses latin. They are more numerous thatn the veterans of the civil war. This is the first sign of humor you have shown.🙂
Ecclesiastical Latin (sometimes called Liturgical or Church Latin) is the Latin used by the Latin Rite of the Catholic Church in all periods for ecclesiastical purposes. Having developed as a style of Late Latin called sermo humilis, used to preach and otherwise communicate to the people in ordinary language, it can be distinguished from Classical Latin by some lexical variations, a simplified syntax in some cases, and, commonly, in modern times, an Italianate pronunciation. It appears in various contexts, including theological works, liturgical rites, and dogmatic proclamations, and in various styles: as syntactically simple as in the Vulgate, as hieratic as in the Roman Canon of the Mass, as terse and technical as the language of Aquinas’ Summa Theologica, and as Ciceronian as in Pope John Paul II’s encyclical letter Fides et Ratio.
👍
The Holy See has no obligation to use Latin as its official language and, in theory, could change its practice. However, such a change appears unlikely in the foreseeable future. As a language no longer in common use (a dead language, though some would dispute whether it should be called “dead”), Latin has the advantage that the meaning of its words is less likely to change radically from century to century.
🙂
 
Luther might have been a decent guy, I don’t know. But he was a real loose cannon.
… it just amazes me how people go off, on cue, about Luther … and at the same time figure out a way to dismiss Leo X & Co … the reason for the outrage… Leo and his entourage were like Nero’s court.

… The RCC’s top leaders were as corrupt as corruption can be when Martin Luther had the temerity to say something about it… and people are still ticked of at him. He was a Holy Prophet that had a very tough job… and forced the RCC to stop standing by while the Medicis and Leo X led the church into an abyss.

Martin Luther was the wake up call that saved what was left of the RCC.
 
… it just amazes me how people go off, on cue, about Luther … and at the same time figure out a way to dismiss Leo X & Co … the reason for the outrage… Leo and his entourage were like Nero’s court.

… The RCC was as corrupt as corruption can be when Martin Luther had the temerity to say something about it.

Martin Luther was the wake up call that saved what was left of the RCC.
socrates58.blogspot.com/2008/05/martin-luthers-regrets-as-to-relative.html

Have you seen what Luther says about his work?:eek:
  1. Luther says: “As soon as our Gospel began . . . decency . . . and modesty were done away with, and everybody wished to be perfectly free to do whatever he liked.” [Walch. V. 114]
  2. “We deserve that our Evangelicals (the followers of the new Gospel) should now be seven times worse than they were before. Because after having learnt the Gospel, we steal, tell lies, deceive, eat and drink (to excess), and practice all manner of vices.” [Walch. III. 2727]
  3. “After one Devil (Popery) has been driven out of us, seven worse ones have come down upon us, as is the case with Princes, Lords, Nobles, Citizens and Peasants.” [Walch. III. 2727]
. . . ]
  1. “I think it must needs be the case, that those who follow the Gospel . . . should be worse after (receiving) the Gospel than they had been before, not on account of the Gospel, but on account of the people who so abuse the Gospel.” [Walch. XIII. 2193]
  2. “The more and the longer we preach, the worse matters grow.” [Walch. XII. 2120]
  3. “People are now possessed with seven Devils, whereas formerly they were possessed with one Devil; the Devil now enters into the people in crowds, so that men are now more avaricious, unmerciful, impure, insolent . . . than formerly under the Pope.” [Walch. XIII. 19]
  4. "After the dominion and power of the Pope has ceased . . . the people, while despising the true doctrine, are now changed into mere irrational animals and beasts;
[p. 55]

the number of holy and pious teachers becomes constantly less." [Walch. I. 615]

. . . ]
  1. . . . about seven months before his death, Luther wrote to his wife, “Away from this Sodom (Wittenberg) . . . I will wander about, and sooner beg my bread than allow my poor old last days to be martyred and upset with the disorder of Wittenberg.” [July 1545. de Wette. V. 753]
  2. . . . “See how foolishly the people everywhere behave towards the Gospel, so that I scarcely know whether I ought to continue preaching or not.” [Walch. XI, 3052]
  3. . . . “If God had not closed my eyes, and if I had foreseen these scandals, I would never have begun to teach the Gospel.” [Walch. VI. 920]
  4. In 1538, . . . Luther dwells on the same thought: “Who would have begun to preach, if we had known beforehand that so much unhappiness, tumult, scandal, blasphemy, ingratitude, and wickedness would have been the result?” [Walch. VIII. 564]
  5. . . . “I confess, that I am much more negligent, than I was under the Pope, and there is now nowhere such an amount of earnestness under the Gospel, as was formerly seen among Monks and Priests.” [Walch. IX. 1311]
Luther is going off on Luther.👍
 
socrates58.blogspot.com/2008/05/martin-luthers-regrets-as-to-relative.html

Have you seen what Luther says about his work?:eek:
  1. Luther says: “As soon as our Gospel began . . . decency . . . and modesty were done away with, and everybody wished to be perfectly free to do whatever he liked.” [Walch. V. 114]
  2. “We deserve that our Evangelicals (the followers of the new Gospel) should now be seven times worse than they were before. Because after having learnt the Gospel, we steal, tell lies, deceive, eat and drink (to excess), and practice all manner of vices.” [Walch. III. 2727]
  3. “After one Devil (Popery) has been driven out of us, seven worse ones have come down upon us, as is the case with Princes, Lords, Nobles, Citizens and Peasants.” [Walch. III. 2727]
. . . ]
  1. “I think it must needs be the case, that those who follow the Gospel . . . should be worse after (receiving) the Gospel than they had been before, not on account of the Gospel, but on account of the people who so abuse the Gospel.” [Walch. XIII. 2193]
  2. “The more and the longer we preach, the worse matters grow.” [Walch. XII. 2120]
  3. “People are now possessed with seven Devils, whereas formerly they were possessed with one Devil; the Devil now enters into the people in crowds, so that men are now more avaricious, unmerciful, impure, insolent . . . than formerly under the Pope.” [Walch. XIII. 19]
  4. "After the dominion and power of the Pope has ceased . . . the people, while despising the true doctrine, are now changed into mere irrational animals and beasts;
[p. 55]

the number of holy and pious teachers becomes constantly less." [Walch. I. 615]

. . . ]
  1. . . . about seven months before his death, Luther wrote to his wife, “Away from this Sodom (Wittenberg) . . . I will wander about, and sooner beg my bread than allow my poor old last days to be martyred and upset with the disorder of Wittenberg.” [July 1545. de Wette. V. 753]
  2. . . . “See how foolishly the people everywhere behave towards the Gospel, so that I scarcely know whether I ought to continue preaching or not.” [Walch. XI, 3052]
  3. . . . “If God had not closed my eyes, and if I had foreseen these scandals, I would never have begun to teach the Gospel.” [Walch. VI. 920]
  4. In 1538, . . . Luther dwells on the same thought: “Who would have begun to preach, if we had known beforehand that so much unhappiness, tumult, scandal, blasphemy, ingratitude, and wickedness would have been the result?” [Walch. VIII. 564]
  5. . . . “I confess, that I am much more negligent, than I was under the Pope, and there is now nowhere such an amount of earnestness under the Gospel, as was formerly seen among Monks and Priests.” [Walch. IX. 1311]
Luther is going off on Luther.👍
All of this proves that Luther hated corruption … and that your response fits the pattern I describe …
If the RCC, during that era, had done what Christ commissioned … Luther would have had no reason to call attention to the people and reasons that people still refuse to acknowledge. The fact that Luther had self doubt only proved his humanity. Many of those mentioned in the hall of faith in the book of Romans … were strongly less than perfect … but they got the job done.
Isaiah spoke, with deep frustration, against corruption for an entire generation … and God’s chosen … mocked him mercilessly and things only grew worse. It did not in any way diminish the messenger.
 
Here we go again…

May I ask you, what is the point of saying it in Latin? How is it better? To answer your question “What’s wrong with Latin,” well, I don’t know if you’ve heard the latest news, but it turns out NOBODY SPEAKS IT. You call that a universal language? If all masses are said in Latin, how would it be better than me going to, say, a Korean mass? Either way I wouldn’t be able to understand the words and would have to follow in a missal. What difference then would it make for me if mass were in Korean or Latin? May I ask you, what makes you think anything is wrong with the vernacular?
Funny, I never did say there was anything wrong with the vernacular. Isn’t it interesting how one can read more into things than there are, or think they are reading things that aren’t actually there? (I may be guilty of this myself at times.) First when you said you wouldn’t be able to “understand the words,” I thought you were a lapse or lazy Catholic (one that doesn’t attend Mass enough to know it by heart), but then I see your profile says you just converted, so I’ll give you some slack. I can tell you one thing, having to follow along in a missal will make you memorize it faster! I know, I’m speaking from experience!

I think going to a Latin Mass instead of a Korean one, or an Italian one (I go to an Italian Mass sometimes here in LA), or spanish, or english…is “better” because it would signify our unity as a universal (Catholic) church. Today in many places we see parishes divided into different vernacular or linguistic Masses and even whole ministries and programs. There is a separate Spanish Mass here at my church that has more attendees than any of the english!! Imagine that!! Practically a whole other church we don’t worship with simply because they speak another language! (And because it’s in the vernacular.) **Even though it is exactly the same Mass!! **(in fact I told that to a Hispanic parishiner at my church who asked me, in very good english, when the spanish Mass was!) And since it is spoken only by a few ( a recent phenomenon jn the West: it used to be required at some colleges/unversities and even a few high schools in Western society, and churchmen still speak it, along with Greek and, I would hope, Hebrew, and since parts of the Mass everywhere does have some Latin parts, especially on high holy days and seasons), it just adds more of the mystycism, mystery and ***beauty ***to the Mass. It makes one feel like you are entering a whole other world, which is exactly what the Mass is suppose to be like, in it we get a glimpse of Heaven and worship God with the Church Triumphant and all the saints… that is actual Catholic theology on the Mass…

Yes, I think saying the Mass in Latin is “better”, only in my humble and personal opinion,*** not as a declaration of fact,*** than the vernacular. But I never said there was anything intrinsically “wrong” with the vernacular.

That’s all. Why the harsh reaction? Why so defensive?

-Chris
 
One should not rejoice on things that are displeasing to God, it is evil in His sight. Sure, priests facing people is pleasing to man but it might not be to God. When we Catholics repent, we shall return to Him again and do His Way and not man’s way. I am sure many would rejoice seeing the CC falling in the hands of man.
The early Christians celebrated Mass around the table, imitating the Last Supper. The priest with his back to the community was, in its time, a modernisation. Even the taking of Communion after a vigil, was, in its time, a modernisation. Communion in the early Church was taken after supper. This was changed because some of the participants were drunk. To avoid the offence to God, a vigil was imposed.
 
From a Catholic perspective, might the Protestant Reformation be considered part of G-d’s plan to spread Christianity, which, although fractured, will eventually be reconciled? Similarly, according to some of the Jewish faith, Christianity may be looked at as part of G-d’s plan to spread ethical monotheism, and the Jewish and Christian (both Catholic and Protestant) faiths will also be reconciled at the end of days.
This is a belief I wholeheartedly share, and I’d add Islam into the picture too. The Dalai Lama once said that any Faith which brings us closer to God is good, and who could disagree with that?
 
… it just amazes me how people go off, on cue, about Luther … and at the same time figure out a way to dismiss Leo X & Co … the reason for the outrage… Leo and his entourage were like Nero’s court.
I don’t see anyone here “dismissing” the sins of Leo X and his courtiers. And you obviously don’t know much about Nero.
Martin Luther was the wake up call that saved what was left of the RCC.
By cutting off one-third of the Church’s members and leaving them and their descendants to wander into ever more far-fetched heresies over the next 500 years?

You remind me of the army officer during the Vietnam war who said “We had to destroy the village in order to save it.”

But God’s Providence saw to it that these souls lost from the Church were almost immediately replaced manifold by the conversion of the New World.
 
… it just amazes me how people go off, on cue, about Luther … and at the same time figure out a way to dismiss Leo X & Co … the reason for the outrage… Leo and his entourage were like Nero’s court.
Evidence for this? Leo was a worldly man who seems to have cared more about art than anything else. There were rumors that he was homosexual, but they are only rumors and there’s a lot of debate as to whether he was sexually immoral as Pope.

Erasmus and other reformist humanists thought Leo had a lot of good points because he made some efforts to promote peace among the European rulers (in contrast to his predecessor, who had been widely criticized as a warmonger).
… The RCC’s top leaders were as corrupt as corruption can be when Martin Luther had the temerity to say something about it
But that wasn’t Luther’s primary concern at all. Luther said nothing particularly remarkable about papal corruption (well, the line about building St. Peter’s with the fleece and bones of the sheep was pretty cool, though at that point Luther was at least officially holding back from blaming the Pope). Luther was upset primarily with scholastic theology and the way he thought it had gotten the doctrine of penance wrong. That was his starting point. That made his criticism of indulgences something different than the standard complaint against abuses. He was implicitly attacking some of the assumptions about penance that lay behind indulgences. That was what got him in trouble, and also what made him so important a figure in church history.

Where do people get this idea that Luther was the first person to object to corruption in the Church? It’s just completely unhistorical.
… and people are still ticked of at him. He was a Holy Prophet that had a very tough job
Let’s just be sure your idea of Luther’s job is the same as his (of course, you can argue that he had a holy task that wasn’t the one he thought he had, but in that case we need to be clear that that’s what you are saying). Luther thought that his job was to straighten out soteriology. And one of the principal pillars in Luther’s soteriology was the complete denial of human free will. Luther told Erasmus–the person who had actually been criticizing corruption in the Church for years before anyone heard a peep out of Luther–that Erasmus had correctly identified the key issue between Luther and the Catholic Church as free will. Since Erasmus believed that human beings have some degree (heavily qualified) of free will, from Luther’s perspective Erasmus (the great enemy of corruption in the Church) was on the wrong side. You can read this in Luther’s 1525 Bondage of the Will.

Do you stand with Luther’s holy task of eliminating free will? Or do you disagree with him as to what his task was?

(To be fair, one could also argue that the claim in Bondage was one of Luther’s polemical exaggerations. But even the fact that he could exaggerate that way indicates that what he thought he was doing was rather different than what you think he was doing.)
Martin Luther was the wake up call that saved what was left of the RCC.
I have previously given my reasons for disagreeing with this. There were reform efforts before Luther, and the reaction to Luther made the RCC more defensive, more intolerant, more belligerently hierarchical than it had been before. In fact, Luther arguably created the RCC (by reaction). I wouldn’t call the medieval Catholic Church the “RCC,” though that’s a semantic choice with which I’m sure many would disagree.

Edwin
 
That doesn’t imply that the whole Bible was translated into English. In fact, the only such translation in Chaucer’s day was done by the Lollards, who were considered heretics. (There’s a lot of debate as to whether Chaucer and other writers of that time had Lollard sympathies.) There were bits of the Bible in English before that, and there was a lot of paraphrase and explanation of the Bible.
Edwin, I know you are a learned man but this is nonsense. Not only the Preface of the original King James Bible which I mentioned, but 16th century writers such as Thomas More and the staunch protestants Foxe and Cranmer, all testify that the whole Bible was translated into English since shortly after the conversion of England in the seventh century, and translated anew in each century as Anglo-Saxon became Anglo-Norman then Middle English then Early Modern English. Not by heretics but by perfectly orthodox Catholics and the translations approved by the English bishops.

Yes it’s true that no complete English Bible from the early middle ages is known to have survived to this day. The main reason being, as Protestant writers testify, that as many as could be found were deliberately destroyed during the “stripping of the altars” by protestants during the reigns of Edward VI and Elizabeth I, when every sign of Catholicism was attempted to be destroyed. (And often the mere presence of a cross on the cover, or the fact that it was found in the home of a Catholic, was enough for the protestants to consign a book to the flames, or use it as toilet paper). Oliver Cromwell’s “saints” finishing off what little remained in the following century.
 
All of this proves that Luther hated corruption … and that your response fits the pattern I describe …
If the RCC, during that era, had done what Christ commissioned … Luther would have had no reason to call attention to the people and reasons that people still refuse to acknowledge. The fact that Luther had self doubt only proved his humanity. Many of those mentioned in the hall of faith in the book of Romans … were strongly less than perfect … but they got the job done.
Isaiah spoke, with deep frustration, against corruption for an entire generation … and God’s chosen … mocked him mercilessly and things only grew worse. It did not in any way diminish the messenger.
Totally absurd.

So this excuse must be sound: I told him to come home early for dinner. He didn’t do as he was told so I shot him.

Luther had more than self-doubt. Scrupolosity is a medical condition. It is akin to OCD.
 
From a Catholic perspective, might the Protestant Reformation be considered part of G-d’s plan to spread Christianity, which, although fractured, will eventually be reconciled? Similarly, according to some of the Jewish faith, Christianity may be looked at as part of G-d’s plan to spread ethical monotheism, and the Jewish and Christian (both Catholic and Protestant) faiths will also be reconciled at the end of days.
I don’t think so for that would be attributing evil to God.

How I think it works is that knowing how badly we mess things up, God works with our mess and creates something beautiful out of that and this actually shows His greatness more than had he not allowed us the free will to choose evil at all.

To make a vase is creative. To make an even more beautiful vase out of the broken pieces of the the original is creative genius. But I don’t think the breaking was part of the plan.
 
Edwin, I know you are a learned man but this is nonsense. Not only the Preface of the original King James Bible which I mentioned, but 16th century writers such as Thomas More and the staunch protestants Foxe and Cranmer, all testify that the whole Bible was translated into English since shortly after the conversion of England in the seventh century, and translated anew in each century as Anglo-Saxon became Anglo-Norman then Middle English then Early Modern English. Not by heretics but by perfectly orthodox Catholics and the translations approved by the English bishops.
Respectfully, I’m pretty sure you are mistaken here. The KJV preface refers to the Psalter and various other parts of Scripture being translated in Anglo-Saxon times, which is quite correct (the first six books of the OT were translated for sure, as were the Gospels). However, that was not the whole Bible, and at any rate would have been unreadable to most people (if not to everyone) by the later Middle Ages. I don’t think that so much of the Bible was ever translated into English again until the “Wyclif” Bible of the 14th century, though certainly parts (mostly the NT) were translated at times and far more was paraphrased. The KJV preface’s references to “Trevisa,” and to complete manuscript copies of the English Bible, are almost certainly talking about the Wyclif Bible. I have been told before on this forum (or a similar one) that St. Thomas More refers to an English Bible being translated for the use of a monastic community, but I have not seen documentation of this. Of course, the fact that sixteenth-century people claimed that something had happened does not necessarily mean that it did happen.

So I am afraid I have to stand by my claim: there is no convincing evidence for a complete translation of the English Bible before the Reformation except for the “heretical” Bible associated with Wyclif and his followers. Large parts of the Bible were certainly translated, together with much more extensive paraphrasing and general Biblical catechesis. One of the huge mistakes made by Protestants is to assume that because the Church was nervous about people simply sitting down and reading a more or less literal translation of the Bible (which the late medieval Church definitely was), therefore the Church didn’t try to teach people the Bible at all. And of course I haven’t even mentioned art. Lay piety in the later Middle Ages was saturated with the Bible, even if people weren’t reading a chapter a day in the approved later Protestant fashion!

The Catholic Encyclopedia has a good list of the medieval versions known to exist at the time the CE was published. The article mentions the sixteenth-century claims to which you allude, but I repeat: these claims do not prove much. I do study the sixteenth century, and I know how loose sixteenth-century writers can be in their claims about history.
Yes it’s true that no complete English Bible from the early middle ages is known to have survived to this day. The main reason being, as Protestant writers testify, that as many as could be found were deliberately destroyed during the “stripping of the altars” by protestants during the reigns of Edward VI and Elizabeth I, when every sign of Catholicism was attempted to be destroyed. (And often the mere presence of a cross on the cover, or the fact that it was found in the home of a Catholic, was enough for the protestants to consign a book to the flames, or use it as toilet paper). Oliver Cromwell’s “saints” finishing off what little remained in the following century.
I think you’re making a bit of a leap when you assume that they would have destroyed Bibles. Yes, it’s possible that such a thing did happen because mobs or soldiers just thought a book looked “Papist.” But it’s a huge stretch to conclude from the theoretical possibility that copies of the Scriptures were sometimes destroyed that therefore whole Bibles must have existed in the Middle Ages!

What we have actual evidence for is, as I said, very extensive partial translations in the Anglo-Saxon era; somewhat less extensive manuscript translations in the Middle English period before Wyclif (and I should add that there’s not a lot of evidence that these were widely circulated); and then the highly controversial Wyclif Bible.

Edwin
 
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