Does Vicar of Christ=Anti-Christ?

  • Thread starter Thread starter IGotQuestions
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
This is ludicrous and misguided at best. I simply REJECT the teaching of Lutherans on the doctrine of the AntiChrist (the Pope sits in the seat of the antichrist) and the SDA’s as well and any other Church body that teaches as such.

I reject it not those that embrace and believe such nonsense. It is a doctrine of the devil who would love nothing less than denigrate the Pope the leader of the Church that Jesus Christ founded and stated was the Pillar and Foundation of truth.

Mary.
You do realize that is was the truth that Peter professed ( the Gospel of Jesus) that is the foundation of his church not Peter , right ?

And , again most Lutherans do not accept that the pope is the antichrist . Martin Luther himself encouraged the bishop of Rome to be a better Christian leader.
 
I have heard from preachers when I went to a fundamental Baptist church that since the Roman Pope is addressed as the Vicar of Christ, that means he is declaring himself to be in the place of Christ. So that means he is openly saying he is the anti-Christ.
Is this true? Why or why not.
It seems to me to be a situation in a lot of fundamental churches. They have been given a bad translation of The Book of Revelation and somehow come up with the Pope as the Anti Christ and the Catholic Church as the beast. It is terrible how they do this and say the horrible things they do about the Holy Father.
 
This is ludicrous and misguided at best. I simply REJECT the teaching of Lutherans on the doctrine of the AntiChrist (the Pope sits in the seat of the antichrist) and the SDA’s as well and any other Church body that teaches as such.

I reject it not those that embrace and believe such nonsense. It is a doctrine of the devil who would love nothing less than denigrate the Pope the leader of the Church that Jesus Christ founded and stated was the Pillar and Foundation of truth.

Mary.
Well, of course you do, Mary. You’re a good Catholic.
I reject the teaching of universal jurisdiction. I’m a good Lutheran.

Jon
 
Actually, the issue is inherent in the discussion because of the reasons for the charge of anti-Chirst regarding the office of the pope.
I think that it is appropriate at this point to flesh out the historical background behind the ridiculous and pathetic Lutheran claims about the Bishop of Rome being the antichrist. These historical details, at least from my perspective, make your Lutheran Founders (including Martin Luther) appear to be MUCH different than the Lutheran Legend:

On the question as to whether the Catholic Church is or is not “the Church”

The Smalcald Articles are part of the (held to be Authoritative) Book of Concord. In the Smalcald Articles Luther wrote the following of the church:

"XII. Of the Church.

1] We do not concede to them that they are the Church, and [in truth] they are not [the Church]; nor will we listen to those things which, under the name of Church, they enjoin or forbid. 2] For, thank God, [to-day] a child seven years old knows what the Church is, namely, the holy believers and lambs who hear the voice of their Shepherd. For the children pray thus: I believe in one holy [catholic or] Christian Church. 3] This holiness does not consist in albs, tonsures, long gowns, and other of their ceremonies devised by them beyond Holy Scripture, but in the Word of God and true faith." :bookofconcord.org/smalcald.php#church

We constantly hear that Luther was simply one of a number of Theologians who contributed to Lutheran theology. That really isn’t completely accurate. In fact, as demonstrated by the inclusion of the Smalcald Articles, those who hold to the Book of Concord actually believe that what Luther wrote there is Authoritative and is binding upon Lutherans.

As if Luther was not clear about whether the Catholic Church was really a Church, he wrote in 1541:

“If they are not the church but the devil’s whore that has not remained faithful to Christ, then it is irrefutably and thoroughly established that they should not possess church property.” (Wider Hans Wurst, or Against Jack Sausage, 1541, LW, vol. 41, 179-256, translated by Eric W. Gritsch; citation from p. 220)

Charming. So we are the ‘devil’s whore’! We should not possess Church property? I have actually had Lutheran posters claim that, EVEN today, the Catholic Church should not be allowed to possess property because it is NOT a valid Church. When I asked if it would be acceptable then to steal things from a Catholic Church, his answer in a round about way, was – yes. Luther’s call to steal the possessions of the Catholic Church were answered by – surprise – wholesale looting of Church properties.

This Jon, along with thousands of other ‘lesser known’ facts, points out the nature of the foundation of Protestantism overall and specifically, Lutheranism.

Luther here ‘authorized’, meaning, by his own personal ‘authority’, granted people the right to ‘help themselves’ to Church property. History informs us as to what happened of course.

Luther goes further though. He demands that the Catholic Church “prove” that it is the Church, and that if it cannot (to his personal satisfaction of course), then it is NOT the Church. He of course does not demand the same of his brand new tradition. It is PRESUMED to be right in the Eyes of God. Luther did NOT allow that presumption to be challenged.

“However, so that we may not completely waste our time with Harry’s devilish dirt, but may offer the reader something better and more useful—though not for the sake of Harry or those who incite him, for they are “self-condemned; they have ears, but hear not”—we will come to the point at issue, namely, why the papists, through their Harry, call us heretics. And the point is that they allege that we have fallen away from the holy church and set up a new church. This then is the answer: since they themselves boast that they are the church, it is for them to prove that they are. If they can prove it with a single reason (I don’t ask for more), then we shall give ourselves up as prisoners, willingly saying, “We have sinned, have mercy upon us.” But if they cannot prove it, they must confess (whether they like it or not) that they are not the church and that we cannot be heretics since we have fallen away from what is not the true church. Indeed, since there is nothing in-between, we must be the church of Christ and they the devil’s church, or vice versa. Therefore it all turns on proving which is the true church.” Against Hanswurrst, Luther Works, Vol 41, p 193, (c) Fortress Press

In my experience, you cannot ‘prove’ anything to someone who has already come to the conclusion that they cannot be in error.

That being said, here I actually agree with Luther. It “all turns on proving which is the ‘true Church.”

The True Church cannot teach conflicting doctrines. Either Lutheran or Catholic teachings are True in God’s Eyes. It cannot be both. That of course is not to say that Lutherans are not ‘imperfectly connected’ to the Catholic Church.

We are called as Catholics to accept Protestants as our brother’s in Christ. That does NOT mean however that we are required to believe that their teachings are correct, or are ‘equal’ to those of the Church where they disagree. That is what it seems Lutherans here want. They seem to me to want the Church to agree that their beliefs are just as valid in God’s Eyes as the teachings of the Church.

Number of sacraments - that’s just an insignificant detail.

Whether or not the Pope is the Antichrist is absolutely inconsequential compared to somebody getting their ‘feelings hurt’.

Whether the Mass is evil or not should not be a matter of concern. What is the most important is that peoples beliefs not be questioned.
 
Would you also consider Russ Saltzmann in that list?
An interesting thought would be how many of these came out of the liberal ELCA type synods, as opposed to more confessional ones.
I have posted on Saltzmann before and include him in the list. In fact, Stilldream posted information about him:

My brothers and sisters in the Catholic Church are gaining a remarkable new member, Russ Saltzman. Those of you who read First Things will recognize him as a columnist there; he was also formerly the editor of the Lutheran Forum.

I expect to read more from him from your side of the Tiber in the future, but here is his announcement of his intentions to enter the Catholic Church in the ALPB Forum Online in a thread titled, " Is it Just Me: Does Evangelical Catholicism Lead to Roman Catholicism?"

He states:

“What I have always sought - since seminary on - is to be in a church that finally gives expression to the catholicity of the Augsburg Confession. There is no Lutheran expression doing that. Most of my 17 years as editor of Forum Letter was spent, so it seems, showing Lutherans how far we have fallen from the practice of parish life described in our own confession……….

Yet, this is not for ease nor is it out of mere unhappiness with the state of Lutheranism. It rises from true conviction that has grown in strength since Richard’s (Neuhaus) death, that the essence - more like fullness - of the Church of Christ is in found communion with churches in communion with the bishop of Rome. It is not safe to deny one’s conscience or renege on conviction.

Topper: Now we have another noted Lutheran, Russ Saltzman who has swum the Tiber. As I have noted in prior threads, it is extremely interesting that, proportionally, there are so many more Lutheran Theologians swimming the Tiber than Lutheran lay people. Needless to say, Saltzmann’s prior ignorance was not invincible.
Obviously, I know a little of the Catholic side on this, and you know the Lutheran side. We also know the EO position which more closely aligns with ours.
That seems to be at odds with your usual reference to the EOs as being some sort of justification for the Protestant Revolt against the Church.
The ECF’s, as I am reminded often by Catholics, do not set Church doctrine, though as Chemnitz reminds us, they are of such great value. The ECF’s also would have had no knowledge of the Schism that resulted in the church, primarily from this issue. But the early councils provide for no such supremacy, no universal jurisdiction. (Nicaea canon 6).
The ECFs do not so much establish Church doctrine but are much more of an indication of what was being taught by the Church at the time. Granted, almost all of the ECFs were Bishops and as such were responsible for teaching. However, to say that they do not set Church doctrine is potentially misleading. When their writings are virtually all in agreement, we can be certain that they are representing what the Church of their day taught.

You have placed a tremendous number of chips on the table with regard to the ECF’s supposedly holding to your particular view of the supremacy of honor for the Bishop of Rome. It seems that you wish to portray the Fathers as being in line with Lutheran thought with regards to the Pope.

Jon, let me assure you that NO FATHER EVER REFERRED TO THE BISHOP OF ROME AS THE ANTICHRIST. NOT ONE. Past that, the overwhelming consensus of the Fathers is that the Bishop of Rome held an authority that is FAR GREATER than Luther or Lutherans or Protestants will allow.

Let me ask you an important question Jon.

What would it mean to you personally if it could be shown, with complete certainty that the Fathers held to a belief in the authority of the Bishop of Rome which is FAR greater than what you currently believe?

Please note that this is a very specifically worded question. What would it mean to you if your view of the Fathers on the subject is found to be in error?
 
I think that it is appropriate at this point to flesh out the historical background behind the **ridiculous and pathetic Lutheran claims about the Bishop of Rome being the antichrist. ** These historical details, at least from my perspective, make your Lutheran Founders (including Martin Luther) appear to be MUCH different than the Lutheran Legend:
You realize that when you start this way, it shuts discussion down.
If you want to discuss this, fine. But I am frankly not going to participate when you start in this way.

Jon
 
Hi Mary,
After reading the comments from the Confessional Lutherans (the Lutherans the profess the fact the Pope is in the seat of the AntiChrist) I personally believe there will be no unity between confessional Lutherans and Catholics on this side of heaven.

Personally I desire no unity with such a Church body teaching as such and see no possibility of it on a “corporate” level. We have made huge strides with the ELCA on the issue of justification with the signing of the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification which the LCMS of course did not sign.

Time to shake the dust off and spend time dialoguing with Church bodies more open to ecumenism.

Mary.
Sadly I have come to pretty much the same conclusions.

500 years ago Luther’s hatred of the Catholic Church and its leaders poisoned his mind to such a degree that it was impossible for him to see the Truth. As a result of that hatred, he ‘formalized’ his hatred into several of the Lutheran Confessional documents. Those Lutheran communions which were wise enough to reject those writings as being ‘Confessional’, are today, less anti-Catholic and less blinded than those who did.

Those accusations are obviously seen as being ridiculous by any unbiased observer, and yet they are actually DEFENDED as if they are actually reasonable, and worse yet, that they are in keeping with Scripture.

I also agree that there cannot be corporate agreement with the more anti-Catholic Lutheran bodies. As we have seen though, their leadership are much more likely to become ‘swimmers’ than their generally lesser educated laity.

As I have expressed on several occasions, I believe that Lutheran conversions are much more likely when individual Lutherans learn about the ‘lesser known’ details of their early history and the early Reformers. By ‘lesser known’ I mean the issues, actions and teachings that they are NOT exposed to by their communions.

God Bless You Mary, Topper
 
Jon, let me assure you that NO FATHER EVER REFERRED TO THE BISHOP OF ROME AS THE ANTICHRIST. NOT ONE.
I’d wager that St. Peter was a vastly different Bishop of Rome than Giovanni di Lorenzo de’ Medici.
 
=Topper17;13268900]I have posted on Saltzmann before and include him in the list. In fact, Stilldream posted information about him:
My brothers and sisters in the Catholic Church are gaining a remarkable new member, Russ Saltzman. Those of you who read First Things will recognize him as a columnist there; he was also formerly the editor of the Lutheran Forum.
Yes. Already read it. As I said about Root, I admire him.
“What I have always sought - since seminary on - is to be in a church that finally gives expression to the catholicity of the Augsburg Confession. There is no Lutheran expression doing that. Most of my 17 years as editor of Forum Letter was spent, so it seems, showing Lutherans how far we have fallen from the practice of parish life described in our own confession……….
I share his concern here.
Yet, this is not for ease nor is it out of mere unhappiness with the state of Lutheranism. It rises from true conviction that has grown in strength since Richard’s (Neuhaus) death, that the essence - more like fullness - of the Church of Christ is in found communion with churches in communion with the bishop of Rome. It is not safe to deny one’s conscience or renege on conviction.
My conscience does not yet put me in his place, but as I said, I admire and respect his choice.
That seems to be at odds with your usual reference to the EOs as being some sort of justification for the Protestant Revolt against the Church.
The EO has never been an excuse, but the Schism caused by some of the very teachings we are speaking of is, in some ways, parallel.
The ECFs do not so much establish Church doctrine but are much more of an indication of what was being taught by the Church at the time. Granted, almost all of the ECFs were Bishops and as such were responsible for teaching. However, to say that they do not set Church doctrine is potentially misleading. When their writings are virtually all in agreement, we can be certain that they are representing what the Church of their day taught.
Representing is not setting. The councils set doctrine.
You have placed a tremendous number of chips on the table with regard to the ECF’s supposedly holding to your particular view of the supremacy of honor for the Bishop of Rome. It seems that you wish to portray the Fathers as being in line with Lutheran thought with regards to the Pope.
Again, not my point. My point is that the ECF’s would not have known the teaching of universal jurisdiction or papal infallibility ex cathedra. Their writing cannot reflect what they could not have envisioned, a split of the patriarchs, one on side, the rest on the other.
Jon, let me assure you that NO FATHER EVER REFERRED TO THE BISHOP OF ROME AS THE ANTICHRIST. NOT ONE. Past that, the overwhelming consensus of the Fathers is that the Bishop of Rome held an authority that is FAR GREATER than Luther or Lutherans or Protestants will allow.
As I said, no Father would have thought that the papacy would claim universal jurisdiction, either.
Let me ask you an important question Jon.
What would it mean to you personally if it could be shown, with complete certainty that the Fathers held to a belief in the authority of the Bishop of Rome which is FAR greater than what you currently believe?
It isn’t me you have to prove it to. You have to prove it to the Eastern Orthodox first. If you can prove it to them, I will accept it.

Jon
 
Hi Mary,

Sadly I have come to pretty much the same conclusions.

500 years ago Luther’s hatred of the Catholic Church and its leaders poisoned his mind to such a degree that it was impossible for him to see the Truth. As a result of that hatred, he ‘formalized’ his hatred into several of the Lutheran Confessional documents. Those Lutheran communions which were wise enough to reject those writings as being ‘Confessional’, are today, less anti-Catholic and less blinded than those who did.

Those accusations are obviously seen as being ridiculous by any unbiased observer, and yet they are actually DEFENDED as if they are actually reasonable, and worse yet, that they are in keeping with Scripture.

I also agree that there cannot be corporate agreement with the more anti-Catholic Lutheran bodies. As we have seen though, their leadership are much more likely to become ‘swimmers’ than their generally lesser educated laity.

As I have expressed on several occasions, I believe that Lutheran conversions are much more likely when individual Lutherans learn about the ‘lesser known’ details of their early history and the early Reformers. By ‘lesser known’ I mean the issues, actions and teachings that they are NOT exposed to by their communions.

God Bless You Mary, Topper
He did not hate he viewed it correctly as needing reform. And reform it he did, I repeat he NEVER hated the church.
 
Hi pab,
To make the claim the Lutheran confessions did not fail…what would be the basis for making this claim?

When making the claim they did not fail…is this not an act of making an infallible action? an infallible claim? Otherwise, why make the claim and why believe it?

So when Lutheran reformers confessed and affirmed the Lutheran charge of the pope being the Anti-Christ…that this did not fail…do you affirm then that this charge of the pope being the anti-Christ is not subject to failure?

Do you believe this charge was made with the guidance of the Holy Spirit?

So when Lutheran reformers confessed and affirmed the Lutheran charge of the pope being the Anti-Christ…that this did not fail…do you affirm then that this charge of the pope being the anti-Christ is not subject to failure?

Do you believe this charge was made with the guidance of the Holy Spirit?
Good luck in getting answers to these very important questions. I have been asking for years as to why Lutherans believe that their Confessions are authoritative. Even the best of answers are extremely circular, such as:

“We believe them because they conform to the correct interpretations of Scripture”.

Then when you ask who correctly interprets Scripture you are told that it is Scripture which interprets Scripture – proving of course how seductive the concept of Sola Scriptura really is.

It’s the same as asking why they believe that the Lutheran Confessions have not failed. The answer seems to be: “Because they have not.”

We ask why we should believe that Trent was wrong and the Lutheran Confessions were right and the answer seems to be: “Because Trent was wrong and the Lutheran Confessions are right.”

It seems that we are asked to believe that somehow the writers of the Lutheran Confessions were able to sort out all of the wheat from the huge volume of chaff in Luther’s teachings, and produce a document that, if not infallible, is close enough that Lutheranism has no qualms in demanding that all believe it. We are also asked to believe that, for some inexplicable reason, the Council of Trent was somehow unable to correctly judge Luther’s teachings.

What was it about the two groups which supposedly insured that one should be judged as being right and the other wrong?

I have to ask pab:

Have you ever gotten any answers to these questions which make any sense? If so could you tell me what they were?

God Bless You pab, Topper
 
Hi Mary,
This is ludicrous and misguided at best. I simply REJECT the teaching of Lutherans on the doctrine of the AntiChrist (the Pope sits in the seat of the antichrist) and the SDA’s as well and any other Church body that teaches as such.

I reject it not those that embrace and believe such nonsense. It is a doctrine of the devil who would love nothing less than denigrate the Pope the leader of the Church that Jesus Christ founded and stated was the Pillar and Foundation of truth.

Mary.
How strange and hypocritical that the people who teach, officially, that the Pope is the Antichrist, believe that they can turn around and lecture us on Christian charity and the need to be ‘inclusive’. Its ridiculous.
 
Hi Mary,

How strange and hypocritical that the people who teach, officially, that the Pope is the Antichrist, believe that they can turn around and lecture us on Christian charity and the need to be ‘inclusive’. Its ridiculous.
Most do not teach that the pope is the antichrist , of those who do , they teach it out of concern , not of spite , in direct contrast to that is some people who run them into the ground.
 
This question has been answered numerous times, not with silence or a changing of the subject, but by a clear and concise message that there is a requirement for agreement between our communions regarding the power and primacy of the Bishop of Rome. Both sides require it. AFAIK, neither Pope Benedict nor Pope Francis have heeded the requests for Eucharistic hospitality during the 500th anniversary commemoration of the posting of the Ninety-five Theses made by some Lutheran leaders. Why? The reason is clear; we lack unity and agreement. The same applies to this topic.
It is true, that as long as we have a dispute regarding the pope’s jurisdiction and the necessity of being in communion with him, the harsh language, both ways, remains, sadly.
The language hurts the modern Christian ear: antiChrist, heretic, schismatic, etc. I believe what we consider an error in teaching regarding the primacy of the Pope could be called heterodox, but the difference in our views is still a difference.

Jon
👍
 
Most do not teach that the pope is the antichrist , of those who do , they teach it out of concern , not of spite , in direct contrast to that is some people who run them into the ground.
Bingo. Some people seek only to sow more hate. Lord have mercy on those who can’t see value in others - or worse, present themselves as the persecuted party whenever someone disagrees with them.
 
Bingo. Some people seek only to sow more hate. Lord have mercy on those who can’t see value in others - or worse, present themselves as the persecuted party whenever someone disagrees with them.
This thread is specifically about the AntiChrist so it is on topic to discuss. This post is an overemotional comment regarding a real thought that both denominations cannot be right,

Plus I notice that people that post this are always referring to the “other posters” not themselves.

Mary.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top