Since you seem unable to understand the plain words I have used, let me be even clearer. I have already said it more than once
Look at that post again. Yes, we
celebrated Martin Luther’s 500th birthday. In 1983. That was when he was proclaimed
by the Catholic Church as Witness of Jesus Christ
Regarding the 500th anniversary of the Reformation – which is a larger event than the person of Martin Luther – this is Rome’s position
- In 2017, Lutheran and Catholic Christians will commemorate together the 500th anniversary of the beginning of the Reformation. Lutherans and Catholics today enjoy a growth in mutual understanding, cooperation, and respect. They have come to acknowledge that more unites than divides them: above all, common faith in the Triune God and the revelation in Jesus Christ, as well as recognition of the basic truths of the doctrine of justification
- Already the 450th anniversary of the Augsburg Confession in 1980 offered both Lutherans and Catholics the opportunity to develop a common understanding of the foundational truths of the faith by pointing to Jesus Christ as the living center of our Christian faith. On the 500th anniversary of Martin Luther’s birth in 1983, the international dialogue between Roman Catholics and Lutherans jointly affirmed a number of Luther’s essential concerns. The commission’s report designated him “Witness to Jesus Christ” and declared, “Christians, whether Protestant or Catholic, cannot disregard the person and the message of this man”
- The year 2017 will see the first centennial commemoration of the Reformation to take place during the ecumenical age. It will also mark fifty years of Lutheran–Roman Catholic dialogue. As part of the ecumenical movement, praying together, worshipping together, and serving their communities together have enriched Catholics and Lutherans /…/ Therefore, they long to commemorate 2017 together
- These changes demand a new approach. It is no longer adequate simply to repeat earlier accounts of the Reformation period, which presented Lutheran and Catholic perspectives separately and often in opposition to one another /…/
Now my question to you is: Are you, in fact, in complete submission to the authority of the hierarchy with regard to their authoritative declarations at and after Vatican II on how the Church proceeds on our relations with our sisters and brothers who are baptised into the one Body of Christ, but are non-Catholic? Or do you dissent from these? Because if you are in dissent, you are not a lay person I have any wish to have any contact with at all – rather your pastors, obviously, need to provide you with remedial catechesis
Finally as you are a lay person who clearly has never studied theology – or even bothered to learn the thought of the Church on these issues – you should be very cautious in calling a heretic not only a priest but a priest who holds a mandate from the hierarchy in this field…because you will face the judgment of Almighty God for that insolence, which will be far more exacting than ecclesial interdict or punishment
I trust these words are transparently comprehensible to you