How do protestants explain the 1500 year gap.

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I don’t think the Roman Catholic Church is “His Church”, only a part of it as is mine.
But, in the year 1500 (and 1400, and 1300, …, 100), it WAS “His Church”, as there was no other with that claim. And in the year 1500, YOU CLAIM that it was OK to disobey and split from that Church … His Church.

Why?

Either it became NOT His Church, meaning He defected on His promise, or the disobedient sinned by splitting.
 
Huge logical misstep.

You’re assuming that the Church = Rome, which we’ve already established is a premise that House doesn’t hold.
Right. Logically and historically, the Church = the Catholic Church (not Rome, BTW. See this article).
Second, you’re assuming any kind of adulteration of doctrine would represent a breach of that promise;
No, I’m assuming (actually, logically deducing) that any kind of doctrinal error serious enough to split the church, which is expressly forbidden by scripture and which Christ prayed would never happen, would constitute a breach of that promise.
it doesn’t seem logically impossible to suppose that the promise might merely guarantee that the essentials of orthodox Christianity (i.e. the preaching of the Gospel and the administration of the sacraments) be preserved within the Church, despite the presence of some error.
The promises that Christ gave were to the leaders of the Church, to guide the Church.
 
Right. Logically and historically, the Church = the Catholic Church (not Rome, BTW. See this article).
Yep, but you know in what sense I’m referring to Rome. C.f. the footnote to the article you link: “Popes and Councils have sometimes included “Roman” among the distinctive marks of the Church, as in “One, Holy, Catholic, Roman and Apostolic” and similar, or used Roman Church as inclusive of the whole. This usage reflects the reality that the One Church of Christ is Petrine and thus Roman, having Peter and his successors in the See of Rome as its temporal head”
No, I’m assuming (actually, logically deducing) that any kind of doctrinal error serious enough to split the church, which is expressly forbidden by scripture and which Christ prayed would never happen, would constitute a breach of that promise.
Yet such splits have, in fact, occurred. Cf. the particular Eastern Churches, which we’re constantly told on this forum don’t differ greatly in doctrine from the Roman Church.
The promises that Christ gave were to the leaders of the Church, to guide the Church.
Exactly. Any failure is on their part, not his. The endpoint of your argument is not so much a condemnation of Luther et al., but the recognition that the charisms of the Church don’t work the way Rome teaches. The Papacy, supposedly the great guarantor of Church unity, has failed utterly in preserving the visible unity of the Church Catholic. Placing one’s ecclesiological faith in the occupant of that See - however holy and venerable he may personally be - is to set oneself up for a fall.
 
What were the Orthodox Churches, then?
That’s a very common red herring. Unless you’re an EO, or becoming one, then it doesn’t apply. We’d have to start a thread on this issue, but suffice it to say that they are the “other lung” of the Church.

But now that I’ve answered your question, perhaps you could address my post?
 
Exactly. Any failure is on their part, not his. The endpoint of your argument is not so much a condemnation of Luther et al., but the recognition that the charisms of the Church don’t work the way Rome teaches.
You’ll need to guide me through that logical leap. I don’t see it.
The Papacy, supposedly the great guarantor of Church unity, has failed utterly in preserving the visible unity of the Church Catholic.
How so?

The Catholic Church is still unified. That some have chosen to split from it is indicative of their shortcomings, not the Church’s, and not Christ’s.
Placing one’s ecclesiological faith in the occupant of that See - however holy and venerable he may personally be - is to set oneself up for a fall.
We place our faith in Christ, and His promises regarding St. Peter, such as:
Lu 22:31 “Simon, Simon, behold, Satan demanded to have you, that he might sift you like wheat,
32 but I have prayed for you that your faith may not fail; and when you have turned again, strengthen your brethren.”

Joh 21:15 When they had finished breakfast, Jesus said to Simon Peter, “Simon, son of John, do you love me more than these?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” He said to him, “Feed my lambs.”
16 A second time he said to him, “Simon, son of John, do you love me?” He said to him, “Yes, Lord; you know that I love you.” He said to him, “Tend my sheep.”
17 He said to him the third time, “Simon, son of John, do you love me?” Peter was grieved because he said to him the third time, “Do you love me?” And he said to him, “Lord, you know everything; you know that I love you.” Jesus said to him, "Feed my sheep.
 
That’s a very common red herring. Unless you’re an EO, or becoming one, then it doesn’t apply. We’d have to start a thread on this issue, but suffice it to say that they are the “other lung” of the Church.

But now that I’ve answered your question, perhaps you could address my post?
Not a red herring at all. So they’re orthodox(ish) particular churches out of communion with Rome. Your implication that there were only Roman Catholics in 1500 etc. was incorrect.
 
Not a red herring at all. So they’re orthodox(ish) particular churches out of communion with Rome. Your implication that there were only Roman Catholics in 1500 etc. was incorrect.
I never said there were “only Roman Catholics in 1500”. In fact, I pointed out that the term Roman Catholics is itself technically incorrect. Please don’t put words in my mouth.

But you’re avoiding the main issue, which is why this is the very definition of a red herring.
 
There are two problems in this thread.

First, many, not all, of the Roman Catholic participants use the term ‘Protestant’ to include everything from a LCMS Lutheran to a non-denominational evangelical anabaptist. It’s like asking about ‘people.’

Second, many, not all, of the Roman Catholic participants keep hampering on the 1500 year old gap, as if that is a neutral premise in the debate. I can assure you all that none of the Lutherans here believe that there is such a gap, but see the Lutheran church in continuation with the Church of History. We can, of course, debate if that is an accurate estimation, but to keep bringing up the ‘1500 year old gap’ – as the starting point of such a discussion – is simply to beg the question.

It is also important to note that the term Lutheran was not coined by Lutherans themselves, and in many countries, in Germany, for instance, the preferred term is ‘evangelical’ (Ger. evangelische, not to be confused with the modern American use of that phrase) or ‘evangelical catholic.’
 
There are two problems in this thread.

First, many, not all, of the Roman Catholic participants use the term ‘Protestant’ to include everything from a LCMS Lutheran to a non-denominational evangelical anabaptist. It’s like asking about ‘people.’
True.

But that’s because there are such a myriad of discordant beliefs throughout Protestantism that we can’t possibly address them all.
It is also important to note that the term Lutheran was not coined by Lutherans themselves, and in many countries, in Germany, for instance, the preferred term is ‘evangelical’ (Ger. evangelische, not to be confused with the modern American use of that phrase) or ‘evangelical catholic.’
See? We can’t even use that name you’d prefer since there’s another group of, well, protestants that have taken on that name, and using it would be confusing to all.
 
But that’s because there are such a myriad of discordant beliefs throughout Protestantism that we can’t possibly address them all.
Then why address ‘Protestantism’ at all? Why not address Calvinists, Lutherans, Baptists, etc? By using the term in the way you are using it, you are lumping a Lutheran and an Anabaptist into the same group. That makes as much sense as to say that a Democratic and a Republican senator is the same because ‘they’re both politicians.’ The point I’m trying to make is that an argument that works to tear up the claim of an anabaptist is not destined to work on a Lutheran or vice versa. We simply aren’t the same.
See? We can’t even use that name you’d prefer since there’s another group of, well, protestants that have taken on that name, and using it would be confusing to all.
But that is the debate. You lay claim to the word ‘catholic,’ a claim that Lutherans do not agree to. I am a Western Catholic, in the Church of Norway. I claim to follow the Catholic faith and the Church Fathers, centring on the definitions of Nicea and Chalcedon, cf. Confessio Augustana articles I, III, and XXI. For a Lutheran perspective on the catholicity of Confessio Augustana, read Wolfhart Pannenberg’s article «The Confessio Augustana as a Catholic Confession and a Basis for the Unity of the Church,» in The Role of the Augsburg Confession: Catholic and Lutheran Views, ed., Joseph A. Burgess (Philadelphia, PA: Fortress Press 1980): 27-45. Pannenberg is a German Lutheran systematic theologian.
 
There are two problems in this thread.

First, many, not all, of the Roman Catholic participants use the term ‘Protestant’ to include everything from a LCMS Lutheran to a non-denominational evangelical anabaptist. It’s like asking about ‘people.’

Second, many, not all, of the Roman Catholic participants keep hampering on the 1500 year old gap, as if that is a neutral premise in the debate. I can assure you all that none of the Lutherans here believe that there is such a gap, but see the Lutheran church in continuation with the Church of History. We can, of course, debate if that is an accurate estimation, but to keep bringing up the ‘1500 year old gap’ – as the starting point of such a discussion – is simply to beg the question.

It is also important to note that the term Lutheran was not coined by Lutherans themselves, and in many countries, in Germany, for instance, the preferred term is ‘evangelical’ (Ger. evangelische, not to be confused with the modern American use of that phrase) or ‘evangelical catholic.’
My cynical side suggests that some Catholics like to use the word ‘Protestant’ to encompass all non-Catholics [besides Orthodox] because it is easier and doesn’t require much if any insight. They then go on to complain about the many Christian denominations as some sort of example of Martin Luther’s fault.

Serious study of church history makes the distinction that most Christians consider their roots back to the 1st Century. Lutherans affirms the entire history of the Church-Catholic as our ancestry. Only in the Lutheran Confessions do we identify various differences from the Church of Rome and taken into the context of contemporary theological consensus, there are very little if any significant differences between the two historic Churches of the Reformation.
 
It doesn’t seem too far-fetched to me that those who protest against the authority and jurisdiction of the Catholic Church should be called Protestants. They may protest about different things, but protesting, as most of them so on this thread, is what binds them together. Maybe some Protestants feel that they are better or more enlightened then other denoms, and don’t want to be lumped in together with them. But from the Catholic POV, they’re all still protesting.
 
It doesn’t seem too far-fetched to me that those who protest against the authority and jurisdiction of the Catholic Church should be called Protestants. They may protest about different things, but protesting, as most of them so on this thread, is what binds them together. Maybe some Protestants feel that they are better or more enlightened then other denoms, and don’t want to be lumped in together with them. But from the Catholic POV, they’re all still protesting.
That was not my point. You are using the word ‘Protestant’ as if it denotes any significant similarity between the various groups. Take, for instance, Anabaptists and Lutherans. We do not agree on fundamental issues such as baptism, and thus it makes no sense to lump us together. Or take those who are in the Salvation Army, and see that as their only church. They do not celebrate the Eucharist, and they do not baptise. Thus they aren’t even a church in Lutheran terms (cf. VIIConfessio Augustana). The word ‘Protestant,’ though perhaps accurate, is too general. It is like talking about ‘people’ or ‘Europeans.’

And it is a word that I do not use, since it defines me not in relation to Tradition (as we see in Confessio Augustana articles *(“http://bookofconcord.org/augsburgconfession.php#article1”), III, and XXI.
 
That was not my point. You are using the word ‘Protestant’ as if it denotes any significant similarity between the various groups. Take, for instance, Anabaptists and Lutherans. We do not agree on fundamental issues such as baptism, and thus it makes no sense to lump us together. Or take those who are in the Salvation Army, and see that as their only church. They do not celebrate the Eucharist, and they do not baptise. Thus they aren’t even a church in Lutheran terms (cf. Confessio Augustana VII
). The word ‘Protestant,’ though perhaps accurate, is too general. It is like talking about ‘people’ or ‘Europeans.’

And it is a word that I do not use, since it defines me not in relation to Tradition (as we see in Confessio Augustana articles *(“http://bookofconcord.org/augsburgconfession.php#article1”), III, and XXI.

Their similarity is in the fact that they all protest against the authority and jurisdiction of the Catholic church.
 
Their similarity is in the fact that they all protest against the authority and jurisdiction of the Catholic church.
Do you refer to the Orthodox, Old Catholics, and Polish National Catholics as Protestant?
 
Do you refer to the Orthodox, Old Catholics, and Polish National Catholics as Protestant?
You know that there’s a difference between the Protestant situation and the Orthodox. Protestant is the term that’s used to refer to those who separated due to or after the Protestant reformation. Old Catholics are referred to as Old Catholics.
 
You know that there’s a difference between the Protestant situation and the Orthodox. Protestant is the term that’s used to refer to those who separated due to or after the reformation.
Okay. What I was wondering is whether disagreeing with the jurisdictional authority of the Latin church is what defines one as Protestant.
 
Not at all, unless you think the Church Triumphant has been over run.

Jon
Hey Jon, the Church Triumphant is comprised of the saints in Heaven, therefore it would be impossible for the gates of hell to prevail against…👍

Regarding the following question, I am talking specifically of the Church militant comprised fallible/sinful Christians on earth (leaders/laity) subject to the attacks of Satan and company, i.e. “…the rulers of the darkness of this world…spiritual wickedness in high places” attempting to alter the teachings of Jesus which, in a real way, would translate to the gates of hell prevailing…

So, if it’s true and we have to wait for Jesus to return to complete His guidance of His universal Catholic Church militant, then it’s safe to say that perhaps, on a doctrinal level, the gates of Hell have temporarily prevailed against His Church militant, at least until Jesus returns?
 
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