T
Teflon93
Guest
Umm, because the quote, which is my sig, is using Catholic in the Catholic Church sense. Do you really believe Luther spent all that ink mocking the “apostolic church”, an anachronism you’ve read backward to the dawn of the Reformation?…because you say so? What’s your reasoning for knowing that I’m wrong?
There was only ONE Church in Western Europe in Luther’s day.
Sounds like a problem for those relying on Luther for “sola fide” and “sola scriptura” to me.Then perhaps Luther was in error as well. That’s a reasonable possibility to my mind, given how many other things he was in error about.
Ask the lurkers.Claims like this help nothing. I say you’re being selective. You say I’m being selective. Where does that get us?
Congratulations! You’re now qualified to join The Jesus Seminar.So, in that case, how can we trust the scriptures at all, or the writings of the early fathers? For all we know, they’re just the words of confused men misunderstanding Jesus completely.
Spoken like an English major. Luther was speaking of the Catholic Church. That’s the only context available to him. Comments like this just display a really appalling ignorance of history and a willingness to read backward into it whatever you believe; it is not the mark of a serious nor an honest inquirer.As you might have noticed if you read my original words, you’d see that I said that either (1) the interpretation which finds Luther speaking about the RCC is wrong or (2) Luther himself was wrong if the RCC was what he was truly speaking of originally. You’ve focused on countering the former by showing that it was Luther’s intent to speak of the RCC, but you neglect the latter.
The Catholic Church makes claims which can be tested.No one has answered the key point, however – what is the source by which you validate the RCC? Can anyone say it doesn’t ultimately come down to their personal belief that the RCC is right about its interpretation of history, etc? And if you can’t suggest another ultimate source, are you also willing to admit that you are a fallible creature, capable of misjudging things?
Had Catholic Europe been conquered by the Muslims in the 15th century, as may well have happened, her claim to be the Church of Christ would have been utterly rejected. Why? Because Christ assured us the gates of Hell would not prevail against his Church.
The fact that the Catholic Church, and she alone, has existed from Pentecost to today is a rather compelling indication that her claims are true.
Protestantism is quite simply 1,500 years too late to claim anything of the sort; thus the need to distort and to read backward into history ridiculous claims.
Meanwhile, constant schism and novel heresies refute Protestant claims daily. We can’t even speak without blushing of Protestantism in any real sense anymore, because five centuries of schism and heresy have destroyed any minimal unity which Protestants had in the 16th century.
It is certainly understandable why you would be a relativist—after all, how could you be anything else given the anarchy of Protestantism today? To insist upon absolute truths is to invite still more fracturing and schism within your own community, as those who disagree invariably split off to form their own version with their own absolutes. Such is the price of the Reformers.