Right to the point as usual Mary!
……the topic at hand as a reminder of course is “Looking back at what the Reformation has done” which has splintered the Church into denominations galore all based on the same Sola Scriptura principal with the Lutherans split into synods with various beliefs especially over issues such as morals, abortion, homosexuality, and female ordination.
In my opinion Luther would roll over in his grave if he saw the state of the Lutheran Church today and would have some harsh (to say the least given Luther’s mouth) words to say to some Lutherans. I wonder who he would consider the true Lutherans? LCMS
WELS? who knows?
You may also believe things were more charitable before Topper got here (In your opinion of course) but I digress and disagree. It’s easy when we don’t discuss the difficult issues. Fluffing up the differences will never lead to agreement in doctrine. Facing the issues head on does.
I might add it’s the Lutheran confessions that seem to make the biggest deal of what Catholics teach and it seems the religion Lutheran itself is based on what the Catholics teach is wrong. We reject this and that and the other thing of Catholicism.
As you note, the question before us today is the same one that we have been considering now for three weeks and more than 400 posts. Obviously the subject is one of great interest. The question posed by the OP is:
If Luther could have foreseen clearly what has happened to western Christianity over the past 500 years, would Luther have said and done the things that history records of him?
This question requires that we understand a number of things. First of all, what is it, specifically and exactly that ‘happened to western Christianity over the past 500 years’? Secondly, we need to know what it is, specifically and exactly, that Luther actually ‘said and did’. Thirdly, we need to make an assessment, based on an hopefully educated assessment of the man, his nature, temperament, and character, as to whether he would have ‘done what he did’ had he foreseen the results of his teaching. It would seem that this process would require us to have a good understanding of Martin Luther. The research necessary should include the comments of Lutheran and non-Lutheran Scholars. Lutheran Scholars have been quoted here in far greater numbers than their proportion of Christianity.
Mark U. Edwards is probably Lutheranism’s most prolific Luther Scholar. His book “Luther and the False Brethren” documents Luther’s ugly battles with other Protestants, the very people who had used the very ‘Authority to Interpret’ that Luther had established. In regards to a very telling exchange with Heinrich Bullinger Edwards comments:
**
“Bullinger took strong exception to Luther’s labeling the Zurichers ‘revealed liars,’ and he totally rejected Luther’s charge that they were ruled by the devil. To Luther’s characterization of the sacramentarians as ‘vain spirits,’ Bullinger countered that the real ‘vain spirit’ was Luther: “He boasts of being the German prophet and apostle who need learn from no one, but from whom all others learn.’ **He accused Luther of trying to be the final authority that allowed of no contradiction: ‘If someone does not say what he says or if someone wishes to say more than he says, then he is banished and condemned as a heretic’………
Bullinger’s evaluation of the differences between Luther’s polemics and those of the prophets and apostles raises some fascinating questions. ** Bullinger argued that the servants of God – the prophets, John the Baptist, the apostles, and Jesus Christ himself – sometimes used sharp, almost coarse language. They had kept within the bounds of moderation, and their rebukes had been accompanied with good arguments which powerfully attracted the people to them. In contrast, Luther had observed no moderation and presented few arguments, and when God provided him with a good argument, he obscured it with evil and disgusting language. **While the servants of God rebuked bravely and without frivolity, Luther’s rebuking was much too frivolous and showed little bravery. The servants of God sought God’s honor, not their own; they did not promote their own quarrels or seek to increase their own reputations; they sought only the salvation of sinners. And therefore, although their words were pungent and sharply spoken, still they had a fatherly spirit. **But Luther pushed his own affairs and quarrels, made a great show, and immediately committed to the devil all those who did not yield to him. ** So there was much hostile spirit in all his rebuking and little fatherly spirit. The servants of God sharpened or softened their chastisement according to the size and number of misdeeds. But Luther, with his argument that error on one article made worthless the adherence to all others, threw out the baby with the bath. The servants of God rebuked only those deserving of rebuke. Luther, on the other hand, raged against the innocent and the guilty alike and reviled the innocent no less furiously than the most malicious rascals. **Therefore, Bullinger concluded, the manner in which God’s holy prophets and apostles delivered their rebukes did not justify Luther’s polemics at all… **
For our purposes the “Short Confession” was the culmination of Luther’s dispute with the sacramentarians. It was Luther’s last testament against the false brethren.” Edwards”, pg. 195-6
The last text posted was actually the end of the chapter. Edwards doesn’t waste one sentence in a defense of Luther against Bullinger’s accusations. How could he?
Is Edwards ‘uncharitable’ or just representing history as it actually accurately? Should Edwards be chastised for his comments?
God Bless You Mary, Topper