Hi Jon,
Thanks for your response, which was to this comment:
Martin Luther’s horrific recommendations about how the Jews should be dealt with is a perfect example of the results of Sola Scriptura. Of course, nobody actually practices Sola Scriptura in the strictest sense. Everybody ‘adds’ something to Scripture. It might be the Confessions of your particular denomination, or it might be the teachings of your favorite TV Evangelist. In the case of the Catholic Church it is the Bishop of Rome, the Ecumenical Councils and the Teaching Magisterium. In the case of Martin Luther, and not just on the matter of the Jews, it was a rather twisted sense of Christian Charity and his hatred of various groups that ‘informed’ his interpretations of Scripture.
Your response was:
Sola scriptura, in the strictest sense, allows for Confessions, creeds, councils, etc. the practice doesn’t excludes them.
Actually Jon, there is no such thing as a ‘strictest sense’ of Sola Scriptura. You can claim, if you like, I suppose, that the Lutheran ‘sense’ of Sola Scriptura is the ‘best’ or ‘strictest’, and there would be some justification for your ‘sense’ whatever that might be. After all, it was Luther himself who introduced (or re-introduced) this concept into Christianity. Of course, every Protestant communion believes that they are the ones who ‘do’ Sola Scriptura ‘right’.
With Sola Scriptura, everybody has the right to decide how Scripture should be ‘used’ or interpreted and there is absolutely nothing that anybody who disagrees can say about it because they ALL use the same (lack of) logic and reason.
What I think is shocking is how early it was in Luther’s ‘career’ that he ‘accepted’ Sola Scriptura as being the rule.
“The exact date when Luther began to accept the principal of Sola Scriptura cannot be determined, but it is very probably during his first year of teaching at the University of Wittenberg, 1508 to 1509.” (Lutheran Professor) Dr. E. G. Schwiebert, “Luther and His Times”, pg. 158
Schwiebert’s massive tome (900 pages) is an excellent biography of Luther and is extremely well researched and documented. If Schwiebert says that Luther accepted Sola Scriptura in 1508-9, we can pretty much take it to the bank. The reason that this is significant is that at that point, Luther was still 3-4 years away from his Doctorate of Theology. In fact, at that point, he was only a Biblical Baccalaureate and ‘Sentenarius’, which means that he was just barely allowed to teach ANYTHING at the University, and would only be allowed to teach Theology 3-4 years later. AND YET, even with very little education, already Luther had ‘determined’ that Sola Scriptura was to be the rule of faith. How impossibly arrogant for one so unprepared to determine ANYTHING.
As for your comment that SS ‘allows for Confessions etc’………I would suggest that NEVER in Christian history has a doctrine been SO likely to produce massive doctrinal anarchy. As evidenced by Protestantism itself, Sola Scriptura is only half of the equation. Each and every Sola Scriptura Christian (or denomination) is ‘allowed’ by Sola Scriptura to determine what is ‘added’ in order to Interpret Scripture. After all, neither Scripture nor Sola Scriptura provides a clear understanding about how Scripture is to be interpreted. The proof that Sola Scriptura is NOT a teaching of Christ or the Apostles is that it has led to such massive doctrinal dissention.
As Luther first conceived SS, Scripture had added to it the ‘Right of the Individual to Interpret’. This was a combination that was deadly to Christian unity and doctrinal certainty. Some still add their own personal interpretation to Scripture exactly as Luther foolishly first taught. Others add this or that Confession or ‘Statement’ or ‘whatever’, proving nothing more than the fact that all of those Confessions and Statements are OF MAN, and when you add something OF MAN to Holy Inspired Scripture, the RESULT is OF MAN and is FRACTURED.
As I am sure you know, the Catholic Church is does NOT teach ANY version of Sola Scriptura. However, because the Catholic Church is the ORIGINAL Church, the Church that Christ founded, and had His Authority from day one, the ONLY way that rebellious men and groups could even attempt to claim their own authority was to FIRST pronounce Sola Scriptura as the rule of faith.
With all that being said Jon, do you think that Luther’s teaching of Sola Scriptura has led to doctrinal disunity within Protestantism?
If it wasn’t Luther’s Sola Scriptura (+PI), then, specifically and exactly, what was it that has led to that disunity?
Also, please note that this question has absolutely nothing to do with the Lutheran Confessions, but everything to do with what Luther taught and the results of those teachings? After all, Sola Scriptura had ‘proven’ itself LONG before the first word of your Confessions were written.
May God Continue to Bless You and Yours During this Most Holy of Weeks, Topper
BTW, were you aware that Luther probably ‘accepted’ SS as early as 1508-9?