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Don_Ruggero
Guest
That would be delightful. The problem is that I would not have enough time to tell that many years of stories.
No it is not. However, it does make the point that Protestants are not baptized “into the Catholic Church” as people keep claiming, and was one of three pieces of evidence I gave to support that.Is heresy a matter of Canon Law? Honestly asking because I don’t know how that works.
I have quoted both St. John Paul and Pope Francis. I did not know of this quote by Pope Benedict. You know, if I found myself at odd with the all of the Popes in my life time (or time as a Catholic) I would at least question my position. (which has actually happened for me on one issue.)My answer wouldn’t have Pope Benedict’s eloquence in 2011
Because commemorating (as others have admitted, really celebrating) Martin Luther and the reformation with Protestants is not an amicable discussion.How can amicable discussions with fellow Christians be “a waste of time?”
Commemorating (as has been admitted to, celebrating) the 500th anniversary of Martin Luther’s schism from the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church and his 95 theses condemning the Mass does not help better understand each other, it does the exact opposite.How can better understanding of each other be “a waste of time?”
The commemoration/celebration of the 500th anniversary of Martin Luther, which does none of those things other then create scandal and heresy within our own Church.Your objections to those is . . .?
I also don’t give Martin Luther a lot of credit for “creating” Protestantism. He happened to be a small spark in the right place at the right time. I think even he was aware of that.Ultimately what made the Reformation fly was several northern European rulers seeing the opportunity to rid themselves of what at the time was a meddlesome, and let’s be perfectly honest, very corrupt Church.
The way in which Luther nailed his thesis to the church door makes for a good ‘hook’. The fact that it is still re-enacted today, and is a well known act of Luther attests to it’s influence as being seen as a ‘heroic’ moment.As to Luther’s influence, we’ll I’d say it’s hard to minimize it. To one extent or another the 95 Theses inspires just about every Protestant group that came after.
It may not have been Luther who ended up being the one who was involved so significantly if it hadn’t been for the Gutenberg inventing the printing press. That became the “social media” of that era. If it weren’t for that it would have been someone else especially given the climate that you described at the time.The Church had plenty of warnings prior to Luther’s 95 Theses that there was trouble brewing in Northern Europe. First of all, there was the longstanding grievances by some German princes at what they viewed as Rome’s interference within their jurisdictions (like the Investiture Controversy and other excommunications of various princes).
Then there was the forceable suppression of other other pre-Protestant reformist movements (ie.the Hussites) and other more blatant heterodox movements (the Cathars).
The Church had spent a thousand years after the Fall of Rome using its significant political power, sometimes, maybe even most of the time for good, but also to its own benefit. Ultimately what made the Reformation fly was several northern European rulers seeing the opportunity to rid themselves of what at the time was a meddlesome, and let’s be perfectly honest, very corrupt Church. One cannot assert moral authority when one is so personally deficient in it.
I think there are some legal issues with that approach now, far as I know.Or maybe we can burn them at the stake. Hey, it worked before, right? Right?
The “new” CAF has indeed become something of a wild west town. :cowboy_hat_face:There was a time, back when CAF was a nice place, when threads like this one would’ve been shut down. We actually had a sub-forum for non-Catholic religions that had sensible, rational, collaborative discussions.
But then CAF flipped and now it’s just a wild west town. Trolls like kinghenry17 aren’t hiding under rocks anymore. They’re attacking people in broad daylight without any consequence. The whole CAF town is riddled with street violence. It’s like one of those futuristic dystopias where compassion, understanding, and common decency are ridiculed.
On the plus side, if the refs aren’t calling fouls, then the good people ought to take the opportunity to take this town back from the trolls.