JonNC,
I own books by Luther, have read the large and small catechisms, have read accounts of the various diets and colloquys and councils and synods and confessions that the early Protestants took part in, both with Catholics and just with themselves. But there is always more to learn, and I am happy to do so.
The statements I have made concerning Protestantism you have not rebutted though. For instance, I originally said that all Protestants reject
sacramental confession and that Luther was ambiguous on it. You were right to nuance this that some Lutheran groups teach that it is sacramental. Others don’t. Both are acceptable within Lutheranism. Those who do believe in sacramental confession are in the tiny minority among all Protestants. So while it’s great that you believe that, it is still true that the vast majority of Protestants do not believe it is a sacrament. And it is true that Luther was unclear about it.
Similarly, I said Protestants use the 66-book Bible. You argued that Lutherans can also include disputed books in their Bibles like the deuterocanonicals, that they can be read but not used for doctrine. You linked to the internet monk post that showed how Lutherans are reflecting the complex history of the canon (with some books disputed, rejected, accepted). While it is certainly valuable to look to the history of the canon and the particular books–in fact it must be done–basing your canon on the history of the books cannot ultimately give conscience-binding certainty on your canon. Please read this article to understand why:
calledtocommunion.com/2012/02/the-canon-made-impossible-ehrman-mcdowell-an-unlikely-agreement/
Having a fuzzy canon does not pose the same problem for Eastern Orthodox as it does for sola Scriptura Protestants, because the EOs are not Bible alone but believe in Holy Tradition as well as apostolic succession of their bishops, who have teaching authority. Protestants must absolutely be able to say this book is inspired and this one isn’t, because they base their doctrine off the inspired books of Scripture.
Regarding the confessions, I don’t think you read the article I linked to:
calledtocommunion.com/2009/11/solo-scriptura-sola-scriptura-and-the-question-of-interpretive-authority/
It is not enough to simply counter-assert that sola doesn’t reduce to solo. The authors of the article (all Protestant converts) syllogistically demonstrate that sola reduces to solo with respect to ultimate interpretive authority. If true, this is a back-breaker for Protestantism. To show otherwise you would need to show whether their syllogism fails.
My intentions are for all Christians to be visibly united in the fullness of the truth. My book is not polemical, does not use straw-men, but quotes from Luther, Calvin, and scholars and documents Protestants recognize as important (e.g. Westminster Confession, solid Lutheran and Anglican leaders/bishops, etc.). It is certainly within the spirit of Pope Benedict.
I would say, my challenge to you is to wait until the new book comes out from Catholic Answers, and I will buy you a copy and send it to you free of charge. You can then read it and make your own judgment. Sound fair?
In any case, I have enjoyed the discussion here and appreciate you guys engaging seriously on these issues. They are important. I will make this truly my last comment on the post. Always feel free to go to my blog and there is my email address if you want to contact me, or message me through these forums.
God bless,
Devin