S
Saints_Alive
Guest
Do we really want another 50 years of division between Catholics ?

Very insightful and nice post!I pray for unity very often. The vast majority of my friends are various forms of protestants. The majority of them are beautiful people and beautiful Christians - trying hard to live a life following Christ. They despise the Catholic church. They may not all admit it, though some do, but they seem to exist to 1) love Christ and 2) denigrate the Catholic church - and not always in that order. I know that sounds a little strong, but I see it all the time.
Do they have wild misunderstandings of the Catholic church - yes. Do they care to hear my āclarifications?ā Not really. Do we have great discussions about loving Christ, helping others, growing in faithā¦absolutely - theyāre marvelous. But then we get back to āwhatās with you Catholics and confessionā¦ā āyou realize Mary wasnāt a virgin?ā āwhy do Catholics worship statuesā¦ā the same old stuff. Iām often simultaneously filled with hope, and then heartbroken.
My wife often says ājust imagine what we could do working directly together.ā Amen!
Give me a break, Mormons love Luther. The first article is just mainly history, the second article is just a twisting of Luther. Joseph Smith and the rest of the Mormon hierarchy probably never rever read any of Lutherās writings or the Lutheran Confessions and are just running off at the mouth.JonNC - hereās a couple of links regarding the Mormons and Martin Luther.
lds.org/ldsorg/v/index.jsp?hideNav=1&locale=0&sourceId=52ae48bf641ab010VgnVCM1000004d82620a____&vgnextoid=21bc9fbee98db010VgnVCM1000004d82620aRCRD
blog.mrm.org/2010/04/martin-luther-and-mormonism/
Truth is not a matter of majority opinion. The fact that more people believe an idea does not make it any more true.Code:Remember that they (other Christian believers of the trinity) consider Jesus' church to include ALL denominations, not just the one centered in Rome.
Amen!Remember too of what Jesus promised. Matthew 16:18 āā¦and all the powers of hell will not conquer it.ā We must greet our fellow humans as Brethren with Love. To turn the other cheek does not being weak in doing so.
You have continually asserted the doctrines in which you place your faith, which are Calvanistic. I think you see it as non-proselytizing. You say you are here to learn about Catholicism.I am definitely not promoting Calvinism.
On what basis do you make such an assertion? Why should the CC react any differently to such heresies than she did to those of the Judiazers in the first centuries?The issues of a Calvinistās understanding of predestination, the sovereignty of God, and free will should NEVER divide the body of Christ.
I am not sure what you are trying to say here, but I do agree that most Christians to agree in the majority of errors. These issues are not ādifficultā for us, though. It is a simple matter to either accept what the Apostles once for all deposited to the Church, or to accept doctrines created 1500 years later. Such a decision is not difficult for an informed Catholic.Code:Most Protestants under these issues very similar to what most Catholics believe on these very difficult issues.
the fact that we can agree to disagree does not create unity. It amicably allows the disunity to exist between us.A step toward unity in the body of Christ is to learn to disagree agreeably on many issues.
This statement seems to confirm what was noted above, that what you seem to be wanting us to do is to set aside our faith so that we can all have a warm fuzzy feeling toward one another.When we defend our personal view of Christianity in too strong of a way, the result will be disunity and division in the body of Christ.
Yes, this is Catholic.Protestants see the church to not be an exclusive denomination or branch of Christianity. We see the church universal to be those in Christ from all the different denominations and branches of Christianity.
Yes, we do see this concept in the Scriptures, though the Scriptures reflect One Church (not any denominations). Particular Churches in the NT are all Catholic, of the same mind, same doctrine. They are all part of one unified whole, not āmultiple churchesā in the sense that we have today with contradictory doctrines, rejecting the authority appointed by Christ over the flock.I think you see this concept in the Sacred Scriptures⦠because there are verses in Scripture which speak of multiple churches.
Mr. G,Truth is not a matter of majority opinion. The fact that more people believe an idea does not make it any more true.
Jesusā church, by definition, cannot āincluded ALL denominationsā. This is because the action of ādenominatingā means to ātake oneās name fromā. All non-Catholic ecclesial communities are defined by which parts, and how much of the Apostolic faith they reject.
And, as has been pointed out, the one thing ALL denominations agree upon is that the CC does not have it right.
The CC teaches something similar to what you are saying here, in that we believe that the Body of Christ includes all who are joined to Christ in baptism and faith. This concept does not apply to ādenominationsā but to persons.
Amen!
You have continually asserted the doctrines in which you place your faith, which are Calvanistic. I think you see it as non-proselytizing. You say you are here to learn about Catholicism.
On what basis do you make such an assertion? Why should the CC react any differently to such heresies than she did to those of the Judiazers in the first centuries?
Why is your authority to give us āSHOULDSā of more value than the Apostles, who instructed us NOT to accept such a different gospel?
I am not sure what you are trying to say here, but I do agree that most Christians to agree in the majority of errors. These issues are not ādifficultā for us, though. It is a simple matter to either accept what the Apostles once for all deposited to the Church, or to accept doctrines created 1500 years later. Such a decision is not difficult for an informed Catholic.
the fact that we can agree to disagree does not create unity. It amicably allows the disunity to exist between us.
This statement seems to confirm what was noted above, that what you seem to be wanting us to do is to set aside our faith so that we can all have a warm fuzzy feeling toward one another.
Catholics are not at liberty to set aside the One Faith which has been entrusted to us. We also cannot fail to make a vigorous defense for the faith. You also might not realize it, but you defend your personal view of Christianity quite strongly as well.
Yes, this is Catholic.
We also consider all those who are not visibly identified as Christian or in Church that may be mystically joined to Christ as part of HIs One Body.
Yes, we do see this concept in the Scriptures, though the Scriptures reflect One Church (not any denominations). Particular Churches in the NT are all Catholic, of the same mind, same doctrine. They are all part of one unified whole, not āmultiple churchesā in the sense that we have today with contradictory doctrines, rejecting the authority appointed by Christ over the flock.
Found on page 40/41 of the USA Catechism for Adultsā¦A Christian was bound to take without doubting all that the Apostles declared to be revealed; if the Apostles spoke, he had to yield an internal assent of his mind; it would not be enough to keep silence, it would not be enough not to oppose: it was not allowable to credit in a measure; it was not allowable to doubt. No; if a convert had his own private thoughts of what was {197} said, and only kept them to himself, if he made some secret opposition to the teaching, if he waited for further proof before he believed it, this would be a proof that he did not think the Apostles were sent from God to reveal His will; it would be a proof that he did not in any true sense believe at all. Immediate, implicit submission of the mind was, in the lifetime of the Apostles, the only, the necessary token of faith; then there was no room whatever for what is now called private judgment. No one could say: āI will choose my religion for myself, I will believe this, I will not believe that; I will pledge myself to nothing; I will believe just as long as I please, and no longer; what I believe today I will reject tomorrow, if I choose. I will believe what the Apostles have as yet said, but I will not believe what they shall say in time to come.ā No; either the Apostles were from God, or they were not; if they were, everything that they preached was to be believed by their hearers; if they were not, there was nothing for their hearers to believe. To believe a little, to believe more or less, was impossible; it contradicted the very notion of believing: if one part was to be believed, every part was to be believed; it was an absurdity to believe one thing and not another; for the word of the Apostles, which made the one true, made the other true too; they were nothing in themselves, they were all things, they were an infallible authority, as coming from God. The world had either to become Christian, or to let it alone; there was no room for private tastes and fancies, no room for private judgment.
thank-you, that was what I heard as well, but havenāt looked up the documents. My understanding is that this joint declaration which was 30 years in the works was really a decapitation of what Luther taught on faith and works. It wasnāt that the Catholic Church compromised in this area but that the Lutherans groups involved moved to a more Catholic understanding. To quote this as some sign that Lutherans and Catholics are agreeing on something new is bogus at best because not all Lutherans were on board or even agreed with it and became another divisive issues again.Guan, the LCMS and WELS churches rejects the joint declaration. The LCMS calleded it a ābetrayal of the gospelā Iād post a link, but hard to do on a smartphone. Google it. From my understanding, the LCMS will not be unifying with Rome anytime soon. High Church Lutherans see themselves as the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. I agree.
I would like to point in with this picture of Billy Graham with JP II is that Billy Graham came to see the Pope, not the Pope to Billy Graham. Popes have and do meet with all sorts of religious leaders not just the Christian ones. JP II met the Dalai Lama more than any other religious leader. That doesnāt mean the we are joining forces with Buddhism. Billy Graham is probably considered Americaās pastor of sorts and would be perhaps be the most well known and prominent Evangelical leader. I am sure that Billy Graham got flack for going to met the Pope.
Rob,I would like to point in with this picture of Billy Graham with JP II is that Billy Graham came to see the Pope, not the Pope to Billy Graham. Popes have and do meet with all sorts of religious leaders not just the Christian ones. JP II met the Dalai Lama more than any other religious leader. That doesnāt mean the we are joining forces with Buddhism. Billy Graham is probably considered Americaās pastor of sorts and would be perhaps be the most well known and prominent Evangelical leader. I am sure that Billy Graham got flack for going to met the Pope.

I said the Mormons highly regard Luther, not love him.Give me a break, Mormons love Luther. The first article is just mainly history, the second article is just a twisting of Luther. Joseph Smith and the rest of the Mormon hierarchy probably never rever read any of Lutherās writings or the Lutheran Confessions and are just running off at the mouth.
The main point about the Mormons and Luther is this (not whether they loved him):Give me a break, Mormons love Luther. The first article is just mainly history, the second article is just a twisting of Luther. Joseph Smith and the rest of the Mormon hierarchy probably never rever read any of Lutherās writings or the Lutheran Confessions and are just running off at the mouth.
And the OO, and the western divisions.=lax16;10127281]
Are you referring to the East and West?
No. My first post was not a response to you, but the general tone of the thread.Have I accused you of something?
Well, weāre quite the lovable peopleWill provide more info.
(I had a conversation with a Lutheran a few months back and she was saying how it is great to do business with the Mormons because they just love āus Lutheransā.)
No man has come between me and the Church of Christ, except myself and my sin on too many occasions.That is what the Mormons say. (However, I am aware of the vast differences in your theology!)
Obviously there is a man that comes between the Church Jesus began 2,000 years ago and where you attend church today.
I generally donāt include the infallibility issue because it is a whole other issue, but universal jurisdiction of the pope is acentral issue, not only of the Great Schism, but also the Reformation.I am sorry if I missed you saying that before.
Are you referring to papal infallibility? What is universal jurisdiction?
And with us as well.I was referring to some lay Catholics.
Yes, the Church of England has obviously had great success with Pope Benedict bridging the gap between the churches.
Thanks. I spend very little time at other sites because this is clearly the best.I am glad to hear you say that.
I guess it depends on what one means by warranted. I think, yes, for the unity of the Church Militant, that should be the goal.I guess it is a question being asked in Lutheran circles. I had no idea.
Do you think not being in communion with the Bishop of Rome is anymore warranted?
Iāve read the joint deceleration several time and I personalty though it was generally upheld Lutheran confessional teaching. As for the LCMS rejection, I think where it comes short is that they feel that the Catholic church hasnāt quite fully abandoned works, only that they have diminished it to insignificance. Personally, I feel that the Catholic position in the Joint Deceleration amounted to an agreement with the historic Lutheran position - only in that it came from a different direction.thank-you, that was what I heard as well, but havenāt looked up the documents. My understanding is that this joint declaration which was 30 years in the works was really a decapitation of what Luther taught on faith and worksā¦
I completely agree, Ben. You know, the Catholic Church issued a clarification after the JDDJ was signed. thereās no reason the LCMS couldnāt sign on, and issue a clarification.Iāve read the joint deceleration several time and I personalty though it was generally upheld Lutheran confessional teaching. As for the LCMS rejection, I think where it comes short is that they feel that the Catholic church hasnāt quite fully abandoned works, only that they have diminished it to insignificance. Personally, I feel that the Catholic position in the Joint Deceleration amounted to an agreement with the historic Lutheran position - only in that it came from a different direction.
IF the LDS church highly regards Luther, they probably admire him as a man and his apparent audacity. And IF they say they highly regard Lutherās teaching then I would quite surprised.I said the Mormons highly regard Luther, not love him.![]()
For all the LCMS Lutherans on this forum:I completely agree, Ben. You know, the Catholic Church issued a clarification after the JDDJ was signed. thereās no reason the LCMS couldnāt sign on, and issue a clarification.
I, too, have read the document, and consider it well within Lutheran teachings.
I wonder if the real reason we havenāt signed is because the LCMs leadership is more embarrassed to sign on with the ELCA/LWF than it is with the CC.
Jon
TOWARD TRUE RECONCILIATION
A Comment on Lutheran-Roman Catholic Relations
You may have heard that a declaration was signed that claims to resolve a key difference between the Lutheran Church and the Roman Catholic Church. What you may not have heard is that more than 45 percent of the Lutheran church-bodies in the world did not support the declaration.
The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod is the oldest and second-largest Lutheran church-body in the United States. We would like to explain why we could not support the declaration.
We rejoice that we have much in common with our fellow Christians in the Roman Catholic Church. Because of what we have in common, we are committed to working toward true reconciliation of our important differences. We could not support the declaration because it does not actually reconcile the difference between us concerning the most important truth of Christianity.
What is that truth? God loved the world so much that He sent His Son, Jesus Christ, to live a perfect life in our place and to die for our sins. God declares us to be totally righteous and completely forgiven because of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. God gives us eternal life as a free gift through trust in Christ alone.
The Roman Catholic Church teaches that something more than trust in Christ is necessary for us to be saved. It teaches that we are able to merit, through our works, eternal life for ourselves and others. We believe this teaching obscures the work of Jesus Christ and clouds the central message of the Bible.
Therefore, despite what has been reported in the public media about the Lutheran-Roman Catholic declaration, very significant differences remain in regard to how we understand salvation, a fact that the Roman Catholic Church acknowledges.
We pray for genuine reconciliation of differences among Christians. Our church is intent on working for the day when the pure Gospel of Jesus Christ is proclaimed with one voice. We will continue to work toward true reconciliation.
A Statement from the Office of the President
The Lutheran ChurchāMissouri Synod
International Center
1333 South Kirkwood Road
St. Louis, Missouri 63122-7295
Thank you batman. I am glad to learn that the refusal to support it is based upon a misunderstanding.For all the LCMS Lutherans on this forum:
LCMS}The Roman Catholic Church teaches that something more than trust in Christ is necessary for us to be saved. It teaches that we are able to merit said:I get very frustrated too with the use of the term āmeritā by the Roman Catholic Church. In seminary, I studied Greek, and my Latin is not even servicable. I think sometimes the use of Latin terminology creates a lot of these kinds of misunderstandings.
The CC uses āmeritā where the Gk uses ārewardā. When these terms are substituted into statements they clearly render a very different meaning for our non-Catholic brethren. Here is an example of how āmeritā is understood:
Phil 1:27
7 Only let your manner of life be worthy of the gospel of Christ
We are called to become that which God has declared us to be (holy in his sight), and live a life that is meritorious, or worthy of that high gift.
2 John 7-8
8 Look to yourselves, that you may not lose what you have worked for, but may win a full reward.
Now all of us would agree that we cannot obtain salvation by āworking forā it, and we would also agree that salvation is not a payment for anything we have done (wage). But, we also agree that work is needed, and expected (unless a person dies right after baptism).
The Catholic understanding of āmeritā is that we actually become worthy of the gift that has been given to us. In the words of St. John the Baptist, bear fruit that befits repentance".
Col 1:9-11
ā¦that you may be filled with the knowledge of his will in all spiritual wisdom and understanding, 10 to lead a life worthy of the Lord, fully pleasing to him, bearing fruit in every good work and increasing in the knowledge of God.
āMeritā means that we are bearing fruit, and engaging in every good work that God has designed for us since the foundation of the world.
Another use of the Catholic concept of āmeritā is a refelction of how we conduct ourselves:
1 Peter 3:1-2
:1 Likewise you wives, be submissive to your husbands, so that some, though they do not obey the word, may be won without a word by the behavior of their wives, 2 when they see your reverent and chaste behavior.
When our behavior āmeritsā our status in life (submitted to Christ and walking by the Spirit) then others will consider our calling a meritorious one (worthy).
So yes, the CC teaches that we can āmeritā for ourselves (become the righteousness of God in Christ) and for others. Our good works can benefit others in many ways, but specifically in this context:
1 Peter 4:7-9
8 Above all hold unfailing your love for one another, since love covers a multitude of sins.
Not only our own sins, but those of others. This is a work of grace, working through faith. We are not claiming that anything of ourselves can cover sins!
1 Cor 7:14-16
14 For the unbelieving husband is consecrated through his wife, and the unbelieving wife is consecrated through her husband. Otherwise, your children would be unclean, but as it is they are holy. 15 But if the unbelieving partner desires to separate, let it be so; in such a case the brother or sister is not bound. For God has called us to peace. 16 Wife, how do you know whether you will save your husband? Husband, how do you know whether you will save your wife?
We will all agree that a wife cannot āsaveā her husband, or vice versa, so what is the Apostle saying?
If a believing husband or wife is able to demonstrate the character of Christ in the relationship, this will cover a multitude of sins. The partner may be won over by the merit of the spouse. This is not something that either partner āearnsā, but it is grace, working through faith, bringing reward into the relationship.
So also do we āmeritā with God when we are obedient. As Jesus illustrates in the parable of the talents, to those who have, more will be given. If we are faithful in small things, He will give us larger. This is grace, not ego.
We both agree that we are saved by grace, through faith. We also agree (as is stated in the Declaration) that it is a certain KIND of faith. It is faith that works.