Of course that’s what you think it means. Many Lutherans think it means exactly the same in the opposite direction, and you are very critical of that position. What did Spock say? “Sauce for the goose.”=Topper17;12795807]OK, but that means that IF there is going to be doctrinal unity between Lutheranism and the Church, then it is Lutheranism that is going to have to bend. Since you respect that the Church cannot and will not change its’ dogmas, then you have to ‘respect’ that it is Lutheranism which will have to yield.
I think the that idea places both traditions in an inescapable box. When one reads “The Hope of Eternal Life”, for example, one doesn’t see either side “submitting”, but instead coming to a convergence, sometimes rephrased, where both sides find mutual agreement.
Why would you ask me a question such as this, when it is the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity that makes that decision. I suspect it is because they feel that Lutheranism, more than any other western tradition within the Church (other than perhaps some Anglicans) is closest in teaching to the CC, and chances of improvement in relations are there.Jon, it was actualy YOU that I asked and the reason that I asked you is because I wanted your point of view. Turning the questions around without yourself answering them can only be done up to a point without the intent being obvious. I would suggest that we are WAY past that point.
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and you here dodge the tough one about Unam sanctam. When you accept our explanation for our teaching, I will gladly accept the CC’s, particularly as Abu has presented it. Until then, we are not “way past it”.Again Jon, when I asked the question I knew it was a ‘tough one’, and that you would struggle with it. Again, we are way past that point.
Why duck the question with polemics? My point is our leaderships may be past the sniping about these issues, discussing it with charity and firmness, but not the polemics.Again, we are way past that point. Avoiding the ‘tough questions’ only futhers our divisions.
The CC schismed from the other patriarchates, and they from Rome. That is undeniable from history.Jon, this would suggest that Luther, as an individual, and the Church as a whole, ‘schismed from each other’. That is ridiculous.
I provided a number of sources.BTW, I made the claim that the Dialogue has not yet, in 50 years, addressed the issue of Papal Infallility. You claimed that they have. I asked you for specifics and you avoided the question. This is your second chance to prove that I was wrong. What are the specifics of that discussion?
Whether or not you are compelled to read them is quite irrelevant to me.If you have something you would like to make a point from this or that website, then quote it and take a position. Of course that means that your position could be scrutinized. But just posting a couple of links without making that point is not exactly compelling.
It is amasing how you miss the point completely. Both names were originally intended to be slurs, intended to marginalize them. In both cases, the simply chose to keep those names. You are no more Roman (unless you’re from Rome), than I am Luther.That as opposed to Lutheranism which was named for a particular man, Martin Luther, 15 centuries later. In addition, I could point out that your communion is named the ‘Missouri Synod’, thereby admitting its being of very recent American origin rather than being a world-wide communion. Furthermore, the Roman Catholic Church was NOT named after a MAN who made his ‘name’ by defying the rightful authority of the Roman Catholic Church. Men of this ‘nature’ started the following heresies which became named for them PERSONALLY:
how many of the other Lutherans that you have quoted have left Lutheranism?As you know Jon, Pelikan was one of the brightest, most productive and best educated of the Lutheran Scholars of the last century. When you read what he wrote, it was very clear that he understood enough about the history of the early Reformation that his ‘defection’ from Lutheranism was a forgone conclusion. That fact that he chose to be EO rather than Roman Catholic is relatively unimportant. What he did with all of that wisdom, intellect and knowledge was LEAVE Lutheranism.
And Staltzman said he became Catholic because: *What I have always sought—since seminary on—is to be in a church that finally gives expression to the catholicity of the Augsburg Confession. There is no Lutheran expression doing that. Most of my 17 years as editor of Forum Letter was spent, so it seems, showing Lutherans how far we have fallen from the practice of parish life described in our own confession. *If you want an example of ‘laughable’ I have one for you. I was once told by a Lutheran that Pelikan chose to be an EO because he thought it was ‘more Lutheran’ than Lutheranism.
The Catholicity of the Augsburg Confession
Says the man who will not click on a link to the USCCB.What bothers me Jon is that I cannot seem to get answers to very important questions
Jon
