I’ll be happy to Pm with you about this, if you wish.=Topper17;13266557]First of all, I find it very revealing that you refer to my comments as only “Post #33”.
If someone has no desire to accept what is said, lacks the willingness to listen, no amount of proof matters.Next – if you or anyone else had actually ‘proven’ something, the issue would not still be open. IF something has been proven, I would have remembered it. Where is that proof?
It isn’t a matter of excusing it.You will have to excuse my skepticism.
We’re not the ones who try to make men infallible. We accept the fallibility of men, including all bishops, and it doesn’t matter if the chair upon which he sits was the see founded by St. Peter.What I fail to understand is how Lutheranism can demand that its adherents believe in and hold to their Confessions while at the same time admitting that they are not ‘infallible’. If they are not infallible (and on this we agree), then they are nothing more than the interpretations of man. The ‘man’ in this case is actually a group of men, or groups of men who, non-infallibly decided what was the ‘best estimate’ of Christian doctrine. If this is just a game of semantics, then you should actually define the Lutheran understanding of the authority of your confessions and then we can discuss that.
I understand that this is your opinion. I would feel the same if I were in communion with the Pope. Equally, I believe the claims that the Pope has universal jurisdiction, is infallible ex cathedra, and being in communion with him is in any way a determining factor fpr salvation is ridiculous, over the top, and completely unnecessary, all through history and now.First of all, I think that the specific reasons for the charge of the Bishop of Rome being the antichrist are ridiculous, over the top, and completely unnecessary, both when they were made and also now. Furthermore, you seem to be saying that Lutheranism actually COULD change the Confessions and eliminate those ridiculous accusations.
Of course the charge, based on the previously posted teachings, could change. Topper, when will the teachings change? One is directly linked to the other.
Actually, that’s not what I said. I have said, countless times to you on this issue, that if our communions came to a mutually accepted understanding of the primacy of the pope, then the charge no longer applies. It’s moot, unneeded, done away with, thanks be to God.In other words, the Confessions can never be altered but will be moot ONLY when the Catholic Church changes its teachings and organizational structure such that it accommodates Lutheran beliefs.
The larger question is, is the Catholic Church willing or even able to dialogue on the issues addressed? I have heard many Catholics over my years here express the claim that Catholic teaching cannot be changed. If that’s the case, then it sounds like the “cannot change” shoe actually belongs on the Catholic foot.
As you know, there are significant differences in the ECF’s understanding of papal primacy, and the supremacy/ universal jurisdiction/infallibility teachings that have arrived since.As you know the universal jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome is very prominent in the writings of Early Church Fathers.
And Catholicism seems to think Lutheranism should alter its teachings such that they satisfy Catholicism and only Catholicism.Somehow Lutheranism seems to believe that the Catholic Church should alter its teachings such that they satisfy Lutheranism and only Lutheranism.
As we have seen on other threads, your Catholic leadership has written, for centuries, indicating that there will be unity with the Lutheran Church ONLY when the Church changes its teachings. These statements leave open NO possibility that the Catholic Church is willing to adjust their doctrinal positions. It’s all very “Papal supremacy” in terms of approach.As we have seen on other threads, your LCMS leadership has written, in recent years, indicating that there will be unity with the Catholic Church ONLY when the Church changes its teachings. These statements leave open NO possibility that the LCMS is willing to adjust their doctrinal positions. It’s all very ‘Martin Lutheran’ in terms of approach.
Jon