How do protestants explain history

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Here is history both Catholic and Protestant:

Local church starts with foot firmly planted in the Gospel and begins to grow. Overtime the institution becomes corrupted by the World and Heresy creeps into the organization. The Organization splits and some peopled continue on their corrupt path while other start a new local church firmly planted on the Gospel. The circle starts again and repeats.
The new church is persecuted by the old.

We are blessed with a Gospel that doesn’t bend. Unfortunately, we are flawed people.

We all must be vigilant and look at our local church practices and judge whether our organization is inline with the Gospel.

A false church is full or unrepentant sinners and often persecutes other Christ followers:

In 2 Corinthians 11:26 Paul refers to the perils of the false brethren. The Catholic Church and others are guilty of this (Inquisition, witch trials, etc.). Today the LA Diocese is still covering the sins of their priests. There are plenty of examples both Catholics and Non Catholics taking advantage of their position for sinful lusts. We are all injured by these crimes and coverups.

The Scripture is the corrective force for our doctrinal mistakes. 2 Timothy 3:16
All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:

If you don’t have faith in the Gospel then you just have religion and your faith is lax.
Start with the sinners prayer, repent and take Jesus as your resurrected Lord and Savior (Rom 10:9). Accept his offer of salvation by Grace through faith. (Eph 2:8) Ask the Holy Spirit to guide you and lead you to strengthen your church or to join with another who shares your convictions.
I would like to point out that there were protestant witch hunts and trials during the reformation. And there were if history serve’s me correctly, the Salem witch hunts and trials, so it was not just Catholic’s and as for the Inquisition that was a Spainish thing decreed by the King and Queen of Spain, not but the catholic Church.
 
I’ve built up a pretty good immunity… I could probably take an asperging without melting.
Fear not Ben - Lutherans sprinkle too. At least, our parish does at the Easter Vigil. I have to say that some of the congregation were open-mouthed with shock and awe.
 
Here is history both Catholic and Protestant:

Local church starts with foot firmly planted in the Gospel and begins to grow. Overtime the institution becomes corrupted by the World and Heresy creeps into the organization. The Organization splits and some peopled continue on their corrupt path while other start a new local church firmly planted on the Gospel. The circle starts again and repeats.
So, is it your opinion then that the “true” church must be devoid of sinners?
You do realize that such a belief is unscriptural?

Here’s something to consider: dissension and splitting of the Body of Christ is itself a sin. Therefore, in it’s very “birth,” a “new local church” is committing a sin. So, it’s corruption is instantaneous.
 
The Scripture is the corrective force for our doctrinal mistakes. 2 Timothy 3:16 All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:

Start with the sinners prayer
I was going to start with the sinners prayer but I can’t find the chapter and verse.🙂
 
I would like to point out that there were protestant witch hunts and trials during the reformation. And there were if history serve’s me correctly, the Salem witch hunts and trials, so it was not just Catholic’s and as for the Inquisition that was a Spainish thing decreed by the King and Queen of Spain, not but the catholic Church.
The Pilgrims sold the natives into Slavery not long after the first “thanksgiving” and they where freed by Jesuits and many became catholic. At least this is what I read on church militant.

There is a great video on the crusades and why it was a positive for Christianity
Check out this video on YouTube:

youtu.be/RLVXRrzm0kc
 
The Pilgrims sold the natives into Slavery not long after the first “thanksgiving” and they where freed by Jesuits and many became catholic. At least this is what I read on church militant.

There is a great video on the crusades and why it was a positive for Christianity
Check out this video on YouTube:

youtu.be/RLVXRrzm0kc
I haven’t seen the video in question, so maybe it’s fine- and it is ture there is a lot of mythology surrounding the crusades but I would not get my history from Church Militant if I were you. Voris has a habit of stating his rather debatable opinions as fact without blinking an eye.
There is no denying that horrible sins occurred in the Crusades, but there is also no denying that the original crusade had good intentions.
 
Hi Adamski: I forgot about the Pilgrims selling the natives off as slaves after the first Thanksgiving and were freed by the Jesuits. You are correct in that. I am not to sure where Mike So Cal is going with his posts, but it sounds to me that he does not think much of the Catholic Church from the remarks he made.
 
The Pilgrims sold the natives into Slavery not long after the first “thanksgiving” and they where freed by Jesuits and many became catholic. At least this is what I read on church militant.

There is a great video on the crusades and why it was a positive for Christianity
Check out this video on YouTube:

youtu.be/RLVXRrzm0kc
Are you talking about King Phillip’s War? And how and where did the Jesuits come into this?

GKC
 
Are you talking about King Phillip’s War? And how and where did the Jesuits come into this?

GKC
Would like to know more as well.

While not in the U.S.

San Pedro Claver was instrumental in the fight against slavery in what now is Colombia and Venezuela. He was a Jesuit.

ETA: I forgot to add San Pedro’s timeline: 1581–1654.
 
Would like to know more as well.

While not in the U.S.

San Pedro Claver was instrumental in the fight against slavery in what now is Colombia and Venezuela. He was a Jesuit.

ETA: I forgot to add San Pedro’s timeline: 1581–1654.
Inquiring minds are inquiring.

Am familiar with Peter Claver

GKC
 
Hi Don,
It is this quote from Melanchthon that answers the question about lifting the charge of anti-Christ against the office of the papacy. It recognizes his role as leader of the bishops, and closes any doubt if confessional Lutherans could recognize the primacy of the pope. We could, indeed, if reconciliation were to occur.
Jon
Hi Jon,

I would say ‘nice try’, but your statement is wrong on numerous levels.

First of all, Melanchthon’s statement that he could accept the authority of the Bishop of Rome IF the Church would refute it’s 1500 year old teachings on several important subjects, is ridiculous on the face of it.

Secondly, that statement was made in 1530, and therefore was superseded by the text that I have posted which was written in 1537. Melanchthon could not possibly have contradicted something that was not yet written.

Thirdly, Melanchthon’s position in 1530 was his personal position. In no was he speaking for Lutheranism. That being said, if the Church actually HAD capitulated on everything that the Lutherans wanted doctrinally, THEN maybe Lutherans MIGHT have allowed for the authority of the Pope. Luther could still have been a stumbling block, which is not exactly hard to imagine.

Forth, Melancthon was actually the author and one of the 31 signatories of the treatise which I quoted before. Just to make sure everyone knows what this document says:

The Formula of Concord - A Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope, Treatise Compiled by the Theologians Assembled at Smalcald – 1537
INTRODUCTION TO THE TREATISE ON THE POWER AND PRIMACY OF THE POPE

“39] Now, it is manifest that the Roman pontiffs, with their adherents, defend [and practice] godless doctrines and godless services. And the marks [all the vices] of Antichrist plainly agree with the kingdom of the Pope and his adherents.

57] Therefore, even though the bishop of Rome had the primacy by divine right, yet since he defends godless services and doctrine conflicting with the Gospel, obedience is not due him; yea, it is necessary to resist him as Antichrist.

59] But those who agree with the Pope, and defend his doctrine and [false] services, defile themselves with idolatry and blasphemous opinions, become guilty of the blood of the godly, whom the Pope [and his adherents] persecutes, detract from the glory of God, and hinder the welfare of the Church, because they strengthen errors and crimes to all posterity…”

#39 makes it very clear that ‘all the marks of antichrist’ are on ‘Roman pontiffs, with their adherents’. #57 makes it very clear that the Pope – ‘him’ is antichrist. The ‘him’ is personal. There is absolutely NO mention of the ‘office’ in this document. #59 again mentions the Pope AND his ‘adherents’.

Just who, specifically and exactly, are we supposed to believe that these ‘adherents’ are, IF NOT Catholics loyal to the Church with the Bishop of Rome at It’s head? Is there some ‘creative way’ to interpret these statements other than referring to Catholics in general? Are we supposed to believe that ‘adherents’ refers to the Pope’s head lice or something?

The Catholic Church still teaches the same ‘Godless doctrines’ that it was teaching when Melanchthon wrote this ‘gem’. Somehow the Church managed to resist the temptation to succumb to this ‘opportunity’. (What could the leadership of the Church possibly have been thinking?)

The treatise that Melanchthon authored is STILLL an authoritative doctrinal statement of the Lutheran church which Lutherans are supposed to hold to.

Jon – I was done with the whole thing about the Pope and his adherents as being the marks of the antichrist. But I simply cannot allow a misrepresentation of the cold hard brutal facts go unchallenged. We can go over this matter as many times as you wish. There is a lot more information that has yet to be revealed. However, unless you disagree, I think that I have made my point in an exceedingly clear and compelling manner.

I very much appreciate the fact that you disagree with your church’s confessional statement on this matter, but these statements are STILL official Lutheran church doctrine. Your claim that Melanchthon’s personal opinion ‘lifts the charge of antichrist against the office of the papacy’ does not at all square with the facts. The text from the F of C does NOT refer to the ‘office’ at all, but is directed to both the Pope as a person, AND to his ‘adherents’ meaning to faithful Catholics.

Here’s what I would like to see. I would like to see the various Lutheran denominations come together and make a public statement about how they are officially removing those offensive statements from the F of C. Do you think that is reasonable? How about doable?

As to your statement that ‘It recognizes the role………” – I would like to explore that statement because it doesn’t make any sense to me. It’s really a chicken and egg thing. The issue of the authority of the Bishop of Rome would have to be accepted by Lutherans BEFORE a reconciliation could occur, not at some time after. I would suggest that this will be an insurmountable stumbling block for the Lutheran denominations. It goes back to our very undeveloped discussion about how the Lutherans would have 3 votes to the 50+ for the Catholics at a hypothetical Ecumenical Council. Lutherans would never attend such a council. As such, the only way to achieve reconciliation is – one person at a time. If you disagree, I would like to hear why. Also, if you have a potential list of doctrinal issues on which you think the Lutheran church should (or would) defer to Catholics on, I would appreciate knowing what they are.

God Bless You Jon, Topper
 
The manner in which you are bringing this up is not in tune with the conversation. The gist of the topic is that the Sabbath was originally on Saturday and changed by Constantine rather strategically, to Sunday. You must not be Catholic?? Because try telling the Vatican that you’d like to institute a new Sabbath day (on any day that hits your fancy).
You may not like his answer because it refutes your false history.
The sabbath day issue predates Constantine, it goes back to the time the Apostles were still recording the New Testament. These words from St. Paul…
Colossians 2:16-17 Let no man therefore judge you in meat, or in drink, or in respect of an holyday, or of the new moon, or of the sabbath days: Which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ.
What he is telling you is that Constantine did not change the day of worship from Saturday to Sunday because it has already been changed by the Apostles.

A point needs to be made the Sabbath Is Friday sunset to Saturday sunset. Not entirely Saturday or Friday. The Sabbath is still that time however what was changed was not the Sabbath but the day of Worship and as I have already stated that was changed by the Apostles.
Guess you just don’t know your Protestant history well enough.
I guess you don’t know history which is proven by the following statement.
Jesus rising from the grave has nothing to do with the topic at hand.
The reason that Sunday became the new day of worship because Jesus rose from the dead on Sunday.
I gave valid sources, you just choose to ignore them in favor of your traditional ideologies.
I like Wikipedia but I don’t think you can really say it is a valid source nor is a blog. Your source of Ch 101 is very interesting and non supportive of your assertion.

Yes Constantine issued an edict but it was a civil law that confirmed what was already the day of worship. What you have been challenged to provide was that he actually changed it from the Jewish Sabbath to Sunday which none of your sources do.
 
Well, we have folks that are more or less bishops. We just don’t call them that. That would sound way too Catholic. That’s a bad word, please don’t say it around me.
As a Catholic, I appreciate your sharp wit. Some may not get it, but I do.

Paul
 
I gave valid sources, you just choose to ignore them in favor of your traditional ideologies.
Two of your sources are directly SDA, therefore I don’t find them valid.

The thing that amazes me (I guess a discovery), is that according to anti-Constantines, as soon as Christians were no longer being persecuted, they all gladly adopted all things pagan within one generation by the sheer genius of a devious Constantine who was simply feigning care for those Christians. Fickle bunch those early Christians, one moment willing to die for their beliefs, next minute pagan. Honestly, do you really think genuine people are that gullible?

Constantine has been accused of everything under the Sun by revisionist protestants. The changer of times and seasons even.
 
=Topper17;11740532]Hi Jon,
I would say ‘nice try’, but your statement is wrong on numerous levels.
No. My statement is fine, your opinion of it notwithstanding.
First of all, Melanchthon’s statement that he could accept the authority of the Bishop of Rome IF the Church would refute it’s 1500 year old teachings on several important subjects, is ridiculous on the face of it.
Secondly, that statement was made in 1530, and therefore was superseded by the text that I have posted which was written in 1537. Melanchthon could not possibly have contradicted something that was not yet written.
Thirdly, Melanchthon’s position in 1530 was his personal position. In no was he speaking for Lutheranism. That being said, if the Church actually HAD capitulated on everything that the Lutherans wanted doctrinally, THEN maybe Lutherans MIGHT have allowed for the authority of the Pope. Luther could still have been a stumbling block, which is not exactly hard to imagine.
Forth, Melancthon was actually the author and one of the 31 signatories of the treatise which I quoted before. Just to make sure everyone knows what this document says:
Exactly! His personal position. Exactly what I stated in my post! My personal position, that today, not 450 years ago, today, in the current thawing of relationships between our communions as a result of, primarily, Vatican II and the resulting ecumenical dialogue, were the issues between our communions resolved, yes, even the issue of the power of the papacy, Lutherans could and would abandon the language and belief that the office of the papacy is antiChrist. In the same way, were our communion, today, not 450 years ago, today come to reconciliation, as much as that might terrify some on both sides of our division, the Catholic Church would lift the anathamas against Lutherans in Trent.

Yes. This would not happen without agreement between our communions, the dialogue about which neither you nor I have a say in. So, before you go about telling me what Lutherans can and can’t do, do and don’t believe, the fact is you don’t even have say in what the Vatican does in dialogue, much less what Lutheran leaders and theologians do.
The Formula of Concord - A Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope, Treatise Compiled by the Theologians Assembled at Smalcald – 1537
INTRODUCTION TO THE TREATISE ON THE POWER AND PRIMACY OF THE POPE
“39] Now, it is manifest that the Roman pontiffs, with their adherents, defend [and practice] godless doctrines and godless services. And the marks [all the vices] of Antichrist plainly agree with the kingdom of the Pope and his adherents.
57] Therefore, even though the bishop of Rome had the primacy by divine right, yet since he defends godless services and doctrine conflicting with the Gospel, obedience is not due him; yea, it is necessary to resist him as Antichrist.
59] But those who agree with the Pope, and defend his doctrine and [false] services, defile themselves with idolatry and blasphemous opinions, become guilty of the blood of the godly, whom the Pope [and his adherents] persecutes, detract from the glory of God, and hinder the welfare of the Church, because they strengthen errors and crimes to all posterity…”
#39 makes it very clear that ‘all the marks of antichrist’ are on ‘Roman pontiffs, with their adherents’. #57 makes it very clear that the Pope – ‘him’ is antichrist. The ‘him’ is personal. There is absolutely NO mention of the ‘office’ in this document. #59 again mentions the Pope AND his ‘adherents’.
Just who, specifically and exactly, are we supposed to believe that these ‘adherents’ are, IF NOT Catholics loyal to the Church with the Bishop of Rome at It’s head? Is there some ‘creative way’ to interpret these statements other than referring to Catholics in general? Are we supposed to believe that ‘adherents’ refers to the Pope’s head lice or something?
Did you read the documents I provided? It tells you how it works. If you choose to believe only your own interpretation about it, fine, but don’t ask the same questions about it over again. Lutherans believe that Catholics, and yes the pope and the cardinals, and bishops and priests and deacons are all Christian. The Catholic Church in communion with the Bishop of Rome is a Christian Church, because it preaches the word and administers valid sacraments. Catholic clergy are validly ordained. All you have to do is read it, and put aside your preconceived bias and listen to what every Lutheran on this board has told you since you’ve been here.

Why would we lie about? Of what value would there be in that? Just to get along? Why? On a Catholic website? Why would we care what you thought of us if we thought or believed Catholics weren’t Christian? Why would our leaders meet with Catholic leaders except for perhaps friendly relations?

What’s really odd about this is you seem to want to believe we think you are not Christian. I would have thought your reaction would be, “Whew, thank God. Its really good to here that Lutherans aren’t monsters I thought they were.” But you seem to want to make us defend something we don’t believe. Read the links I provided. Read what the Lutherans on this board tell you we believe. And please stop trying to tell us what we believe. You’re wrong, and its just as annoying as when protestants try to tell Catholics what they believe.

continued
 
QUOTE]Jon – I was done with the whole thing about the Pope and his adherents as being the marks of the antichrist. But I simply cannot allow a misrepresentation of the cold hard brutal facts go unchallenged. We can go over this matter as many times as you wish. There is a lot more information that has yet to be revealed. However, unless you disagree, I think that I have made my point in an exceedingly clear and compelling manner.
Oh, I’m sorry. Since you were done with it, I shouldn’t have supported Don’s post. :cool:

It seems what you “simply can’t allow” is your posted misunderstanding of it to be refuted.
I very much appreciate the fact that you disagree with your church’s confessional statement on this matter, but these statements are STILL official Lutheran church doctrine. Your claim that Melanchthon’s personal opinion ‘lifts the charge of antichrist against the office of the papacy’ does not at all square with the facts. The text from the F of C does NOT refer to the ‘office’ at all, but is directed to both the Pope as a person, AND to his ‘adherents’ meaning to faithful Catholics.
Now you are outright misrepresenting what I said. Melanchthon’s quote and my response to it is conditional.
Here’s what I would like to see. I would like to see the various Lutheran denominations come together and make a public statement about how they are officially removing those offensive statements from the F of C. Do you think that is reasonable? How about doable?
Here’s what a number of Lutherans here at CAF would like to see: you dialogue in a charitable manner that doesn’t try to tell us what we believe, but instead asks us what we believe.
Here’s something I would like to see. I would like to see you actually portray Catholic teaching in such a positive light that it wouldn’t matter what Lutherans say. It seems like the only time you mention the CC is to criticize ecumenism.

Since these are in the realm of doable here on this board, let’s start with those, shall we?

Jon
 
Two of your sources are directly SDA, therefore I don’t find them valid.

The thing that amazes me (I guess a discovery), is that according to anti-Constantines, as soon as Christians were no longer being persecuted, they all gladly adopted all things pagan within one generation by the sheer genius of a devious Constantine who was simply feigning care for those Christians. Fickle bunch those early Christians, one moment willing to die for their beliefs, next minute pagan. Honestly, do you really think genuine people are that gullible?

Constantine has been accused of everything under the Sun by revisionist protestants. The changer of times and seasons even.
If one of my sources is acceptable that means you agree with it, but you didn’t say what you agree with specifically.

The question is more that I think the early Christians (after the Apostles were martyred) fell away from the truth as Paul prophesied would happen:

“For I know this, that after my departure savage wolves will come in among you, not sparing the flock. And also from among yourselves men will rise up, speaking perverse things, to draw away the disciplesafter themselves.” (Acts. 20:29-30)

It was those very grievous wolves (Constantine was probably the most influential) that changed things, the early church having fallen away from Christ and the Apostles.
 
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