Hi Ben,
Thanks for your response.
Topper, these recent discussions with you have ben a joy.
I am enjoying our honest and open dialogue very much also.
Iâd certainly be more understanding, but I couldnât accept their errors.
I think it comes down to whether âtheyâ are willfully teaching and believing something that they know to be false. Maybe it comes down to whether God âs Absolute Truth can be known. Personally I believe that we can know it, but in order to find âthemâ responsible, we have to believe that they SHOULD have âknown betterâ.
I donât think we could effectively change their minds, but we could show them that weâre not at all hostile to Godâs sinners. The best way to reach them would be to renew our invitation for all of Godâs sinners - that they could fine new life with Christ.
I understand what you are saying but donât know how you would specifically carry that out. Plus, I am not sure what you mean by âsinnersâ. Are you suggesting that it is a âsinâ for a Lutheran to âgo againstâ or to ignore the Lutheran Confessions?
I donât think this is just a Private Interpretation problem - but a larger problem of not binding the will to Christ.
Same comment as above, but again, how are we supposed to know that they donât THINK that they ARE not binding the will of Christ? Again, I think the difference goes possibly to âintentâ.
Even presented with facts and correct interpretations, we would be confronted with a mind already made up to follow itself.
We see this in Lutheran circles - where the Confessions are ready and available, but people chose to ignore them.
And we see this in Catholic circles - where the Magisterium is clear, but the people pick and chose what to accept.
You mention âcorrect interpretationsâ, which of course is very subjective. âTheyâ could theoretically (and actually DO) say that THEY have shown YOU the âcorrect interpretationsâ. All of this goes directly to how, specifically and exactly, we are supposed to KNOW what is and what is not 'correct interpretations, or better put, Godâs Absolute Truth (doctrinally).
In my mind, IF Godâs Absolute Truth can be known by us here on earth, then there must be a specific means by which we are to know it. In other words, one âmethodâ SHOULD stand out as being superior when we look at all of the competing âmethodsâ side by side.
Sola Scriptura clearly is NOT that method because it has produced tremendous doctrinal dissension. Nor is the answer in the âproper useâ of SS, because Scripture does not explicitly describe how it is to be interpreted. Plus, if the correct âuseâ of SS were really âso clearâ, there wouldnât be such a tremendous variety of explanations as to that âuseâ.
As for the Lutheran Confessions and the Catholic Magisterium, the way I see it, Luther himself set a precedent for refuting the dogmatic beliefs of oneâs own âCommunionâ. In other words, Lutherans have no leg to stand on when claiming that their members do not have the authority to ignore, or refute, or believe things opposed to the Lutheran Confessions. On the other hand, there is no such precedent in Catholic teaching.
May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ be with you too.
Thanks Ben and God Bless You, Topper