M
marywarfield
Guest
I’m not so sure of that Topper. I believe Luther wasPart 3: Luther/SS+PI/Protestant Doctrinal Dissention Connections
Next we have the great Calvinist Theologian R. C. Sproul:
“Two of the great legacies of the Reformation were the principal of private interpretation and the translation of the Bible into the vernacular. The two principals go hand in hand and were accomplished only after great controversy and persecution. Scores of persons paid with their lives by being burned at the stake (particularly in England) for daring to translate the bible into the vernacular. One of Luther’s greatest achievements was a translation of the Bible into German so that any literate person could read it for himself.” R.C. Sproul, (Protestant Theologian) “Knowing Scripture”, pg. 33
First of all, if Private Interpretation is one of the two great legacies of the Protestant Reformation, then doesn’t it follow that Protestant Doctrinal Confusion has been a positive development? After all, it is a direct result of PI. As for the other half of the ‘legacy’ – Protestantism did not translate the Bible into the vernacular. There were at least 26 different German Bibles prior to Luther’s ‘translation’.
Sproul continues:
“It was Luther himself who brought the issue of private interpretation of the Bible into sharp focus in the sixteenth century. Hidden beneath the famous response of the Reformer to the ecclesiastical and imperial authorities at the Diet of Worms was the implicit principal of private interpretation.
When asked to recant of his writings, Luther replied, “Unless I am convinced by Sacred Scripture or by evident reason, I cannot recant. For my conscience is held captive by the Word of God and to act against conscience is neither right nor safe. Here I stand, I can do no other, God help me.” Notice that Luther said “unless I am convinced…….” In earlier debates at Leipzig and Augsburg,** Luther had dared to presume to interpret Scripture contrary to interpretations rendered by Popes and by church councils. That he would be so presumptuous led to the repeated charge of arrogance by church officials. Luther did not take these charges lightly but agonized over them.** He believed that he could be wrong but maintained that the Pope and councils could also err. For him only one source of truth was free from error. He said, “The Scriptures never err.” Thus, unless the leaders of the church could convince him of his error, he felt duty-bound to follow what his own conscience was convinced Scripture taught. With this controversy the principal of private interpretation was born and baptized with fire.” R.C. Sproul, (Protestant Theologian) “Knowing Scripture”, pg. 33-4
What baffles me to no end is how Sproul could depict PI as a positive development. Did he not read either Scripture or any of the Fathers on the subject? Doesn’t he realize what the results of PI have been? Or, alternatively, does he believe that doctrinal diversity is (somehow) a ‘good thing’?
“He really substituted for all external authorities the enlightened conscience of the individual Christian. The Bible he read for himself and admitted the claim of no council or body of men to read it for him. This, in principle, though he never fully realized it, and seldom acted upon it, meant the right of private judgment in religious things, and in it lay the promise of a new age.” Presbyterian Theologian Arthur Cushman McGiffert, “Martin Luther, the Man and His Work”, pg. 144-5 Ibid
I have to disagree with McGiffert on one point. Luther relied constantly on private judgment. Of course he would claim that his teachings were Scriptural, but of course all they really were were his Private Interpretations of Scripture, which is exactly what has created an uncountable number of denominations. He certainly did not rely on the teachings of the Catholic Church, which he hated beyond reason. He used HIS Private Interpretation to decide what was correct and what was incorrect.
In regards to Luther’s teaching that all were Priests: “**Such a view was fraught with far-reaching consequences for the theory of the Church, **and Luther’s own view of the Church was derivative from his theory of the sacraments. His deductions however, were not clear-cut in this area, because his view of the Lord’s Supper pointed in one directly and his view of baptism in another. That is why he could be at once to a degree the father of the congregationalism of the Anabaptists and of the territorial church of the later Lutherans.” Bainton, pg. 130
Bainton is probably the most ‘generous’ of Luther’s more recent biographers (towards Luther), and yet……he calls him at least to a degree, the ‘father of the Anabaptists’. It seems to me that all of these respected (mostly Protestant) Scholars are much more interested in presenting the Truth and their professional reputations than they are in protecting the false Legend of Martin Luther, which has, for centuries been depicting him in an excessively favorable light. These people seem to be able to admit the truth and still remain Protestants, including still remaining Lutherans, although as we have learned, Lutheran Scholars seem to ‘defect’ at a greater rate than Lutheran laypeople.
So why can’t Lutheran apologists admit the truth also?
God Bless
rather reserved or conservative on matters of private
interpretation. Wasn’t it the Anabaptists that took off
running on private interpretation so the Lutherans
and us took turns doing them in?