R
RSiscoe
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I am going to copy and past an article that discusses Martin Luther and the Bible. It begins with a quote from a Lutheran minister and then shows what Luther really believed. It contains many good quotes to use when discussing the subject with Protestants.
Luther and the Bible
*Before Luther was a Lutheran, he was a professor of theology at the University of Wittenberg and lectured on the Holy Scriptures. During his entire career, Luther taught the Bible, translated the Bible, and preached from the Bible. For him, it was the Christian book par excellence, and he valued it above all others because it brought him the good news of Jesus Christ the Savior. *
*In point of fact, [for many years] Luther did not yet understand the [true] Gospel … When Luther finally realized… the good news, he also came to a new appreciation of the Scriptures as first and foremost God’s instrument for bringing us all the comfort, consolation, and power of this Gospel. Almost immediately, he tells us, he began using it as a key to understanding the entire Bible; and in all of his work thereafter, the Gospel became the center of his preaching and teaching the Scriptures, and the Scriptures became his norm for understanding the Gospel. *
Luther was surprised to find out that this approach to the Bible provoked all kinds of controversy. … Although Luther had great respect for Christian theologians of the past like Augustine or Bernard of Clairvaux, and confessed the ancient creeds of the church, he accepted the fathers only as witnesses to the truth of Scripture and the creeds merely as statements of what the Bible taught. He understood the Scriptures alone as the ultimate touchstone of what constituted Christian doctrine. …
Once having discovered the Gospel in the Scriptures, Luther was of no mind to abandon it for the opinions of others no matter how powerful or prestigious they might be. God had given the Bible to men for the sake of their salvation. Therefore, the Bible and the Bible alone must establish the Church’s teaching and preaching. Otherwise, once again the Gospel would be in danger of obscurity and corruption from the teachings of men. (Rev. Dr. Cameron A. MacKenzie, Professor of Historical Theology at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Indiana).
Martin Luther, The Great Reformer, had a great love and deep respect for the Word of God. It was his love for the Bible that forced him, almost against his own will, to leave the Catholic Church in order to restore Christianity to its original pristine state. It came to pass that in reading the Bible - which had been kept under lock and key for well over a thousand years - Luther found out just how far the Catholic Church had strayed from the teachings of the apostles. Therefore, impelled by Divine Charity, for His love of truth, and his deep respect for the word of God, Luther, against all odds, and not fearing for his own life, set in motion the great reform of Christianity, which had been in a state of apostasy and deterioration since the days of Constantine.
So goes the myth that most Protestants have been taught from their childhood. But is it true? Did Luther really have a great respect for the Word of God, or did he treat it like the modernists today who accept what they like, and reject what they don’t (e.g. the Jesus Seminar)? Did Luther base his teachings - Sola Fide and Sola Scriptura - on the Bible; that is, did he discover these truths through studying the Bible? Or did he “invent” these teachings, then attempt to justify them using the Bible?
The time is long over due for the myth of Luther to be exposed. Far too many sincere and well-intentioned people have been misled by the errors of Luther. Let us look past the facade of flowery commentary to the evidence of his writings, wherein Luther is exposed and condemned by his own words. ***“for by thy own words thou shalt be justified, and by thy own words thou shalt be condemned” (Mt. 12:37). ***
continue…
Luther and the Bible
*Before Luther was a Lutheran, he was a professor of theology at the University of Wittenberg and lectured on the Holy Scriptures. During his entire career, Luther taught the Bible, translated the Bible, and preached from the Bible. For him, it was the Christian book par excellence, and he valued it above all others because it brought him the good news of Jesus Christ the Savior. *
*In point of fact, [for many years] Luther did not yet understand the [true] Gospel … When Luther finally realized… the good news, he also came to a new appreciation of the Scriptures as first and foremost God’s instrument for bringing us all the comfort, consolation, and power of this Gospel. Almost immediately, he tells us, he began using it as a key to understanding the entire Bible; and in all of his work thereafter, the Gospel became the center of his preaching and teaching the Scriptures, and the Scriptures became his norm for understanding the Gospel. *
Luther was surprised to find out that this approach to the Bible provoked all kinds of controversy. … Although Luther had great respect for Christian theologians of the past like Augustine or Bernard of Clairvaux, and confessed the ancient creeds of the church, he accepted the fathers only as witnesses to the truth of Scripture and the creeds merely as statements of what the Bible taught. He understood the Scriptures alone as the ultimate touchstone of what constituted Christian doctrine. …
Once having discovered the Gospel in the Scriptures, Luther was of no mind to abandon it for the opinions of others no matter how powerful or prestigious they might be. God had given the Bible to men for the sake of their salvation. Therefore, the Bible and the Bible alone must establish the Church’s teaching and preaching. Otherwise, once again the Gospel would be in danger of obscurity and corruption from the teachings of men. (Rev. Dr. Cameron A. MacKenzie, Professor of Historical Theology at Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Indiana).
Martin Luther, The Great Reformer, had a great love and deep respect for the Word of God. It was his love for the Bible that forced him, almost against his own will, to leave the Catholic Church in order to restore Christianity to its original pristine state. It came to pass that in reading the Bible - which had been kept under lock and key for well over a thousand years - Luther found out just how far the Catholic Church had strayed from the teachings of the apostles. Therefore, impelled by Divine Charity, for His love of truth, and his deep respect for the word of God, Luther, against all odds, and not fearing for his own life, set in motion the great reform of Christianity, which had been in a state of apostasy and deterioration since the days of Constantine.
So goes the myth that most Protestants have been taught from their childhood. But is it true? Did Luther really have a great respect for the Word of God, or did he treat it like the modernists today who accept what they like, and reject what they don’t (e.g. the Jesus Seminar)? Did Luther base his teachings - Sola Fide and Sola Scriptura - on the Bible; that is, did he discover these truths through studying the Bible? Or did he “invent” these teachings, then attempt to justify them using the Bible?
The time is long over due for the myth of Luther to be exposed. Far too many sincere and well-intentioned people have been misled by the errors of Luther. Let us look past the facade of flowery commentary to the evidence of his writings, wherein Luther is exposed and condemned by his own words. ***“for by thy own words thou shalt be justified, and by thy own words thou shalt be condemned” (Mt. 12:37). ***
continue…