Hi Mary,
Thanks for your response.
Good point Topper. The Church does not “negotiate” doctrine. The Church had no alternative but to excommunicate Luther and hope he repented.
First of all, as we learned in my last post, more than 2 years before his actual excommunication, Luther declared that he “would not accept excommunication if the Church decreed it for him.”
Rather than consider the possibility that the Church was right and he was wrong, even at this early date, he believed that HE had more authority than the WHOLE Church.
This attitude was reflected in later writings.
The Book of Concord, The Confession of the Lutheran Church,
The Smalcald Articles, Part III, Article XII. Of the Church.
**1] We do not concede to them that they are the Church, and [in truth] they are not [the Church]; **nor will we listen to those things which, under the name of Church, they enjoin or forbid. 2] For, thank God, [to-day] a child seven years old knows what the Church is, namely, the holy believers and lambs who hear the voice of their Shepherd. For the children pray thus: I believe in one holy [catholic or] Christian Church. 3] This holiness does not consist in albs, tonsures, long gowns, and other of their ceremonies devised by them beyond Holy Scripture, but in the Word of God and true faith."
Here we learn Mary, that it is the official position of the Lutheran church that WE, the Catholic Church, are NOT the Church. Maybe here I should comment on ‘source and intent’.
The ‘source’ of this sentiment is of course Martin Luther, who wrote the Smalcald Articles in 1537.
Nothing Luther ever wrote was ‘isolated’.
“However, so that we may not completely waste our time with Harry’s devilish dirt, but may offer the reader something better and more useful—though not for the sake of Harry or those who incite him, for they are “self-condemned; they have ears, but hear not”—we will come to the point at issue, namely, why **the papists, through their Harry, call us heretics. And the point is that they allege that we have fallen away from the holy church and set up a new church. This then is the answer: since they themselves boast that they are the church, it is for them to prove that they are. If they can prove it with a single reason (I don’t ask for more), then we shall give ourselves up as prisoners, **willingly saying, “We have sinned, have mercy upon us.”
But if they cannot prove it, they must confess (whether they like it or not) that they are not the church and that we cannot be heretics since we have fallen away from what is not the true church. Indeed, since there is nothing in-between, we must be the church of Christ and they the devil’s church, or vice versa. Therefore it all turns on proving which is the true church.” Against Hanswurst, Luther Works, Vol. 41, p 193, (c) Fortress Press
This is an amazing bit of ‘logic’. After 1500 years of representing Christ on Earth, the Catholic Church must PROVE to Martin Luther, a young Professor at Europe’s least distinguished university, that THEY are the Church. If the Church does not prove that to Luther (to Luther’s satisfaction of course), then they are NOT the Church, and HE is.
Being the new kid on the block, the guy trying to supplant recognized authority, why didn’t HE have the burden of proof on his shoulders rather than vice versa. Isn’t that the way it works normally, the new and radical have to do the ‘proving’.
I think that everyone here can see this for what it is.
That being said, I do agree with Luther on one point. Either the Catholic Church or the Lutheran church is the ‘true Church’, (as Luther argues) with regards to the authority to Teach (correctly). It is NOT POSSIBLE that they both can both be, because they teach so differently on so many issues. There is of course the possibility that NEITHER is correctly representing the Teachings of Christ, but if people have to choose, JUST ONE, of the two, meaning one over the other, it would seem that the choice is pretty clear.
The fact is that Luther’s teachings, and his Revolt, forced people, then, to make that choice, and today, people have tens of thousands of ‘choices’ as a result of Luther’s teachings.
God Bless You Mary, Topper