F
Fauken
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Full disclosure: Are you Lutheran?
On his profile, his religion is “Reformed” if that helps.It would be helpful to know why the OP is so emotional on this question.
Full disclosure: Are you Lutheran?
On his profile, his religion is “Reformed” if that helps.It would be helpful to know why the OP is so emotional on this question.
She.po18guy:![]()
Full disclosure: Are you Lutheran?On his profile, his religion is “Reformed” if that helps.It would be helpful to know why the OP is so emotional on this question.
It had not occurred to me that Catholics might be frustrated with evangelicals using Luther as a tool to annoy them. I had not seen it.v
Like I said, two way street my friend.
God Bless
We (the Reformed) are much, much further from the Catholic Church than the Lutherans. In our view the Lutherans only half-heartedly reformed. They don’t see it that way, of course. If you object to Luther, wait until you read Knox.
I am interested in observing how it goes with the Lutherans and the Catholic Church, because the CC is also knocking on our door. What can we expect, I ask myself.
The answer is the same to both. The goal of Ecumenism is to end all the divisions from the Catholic Church. There is only one Church, Jesus established on Peter and those in union with Peter. And Jesus wants perfect unity in His Church. The Catholic Church.steve-b:![]()
But that’s not my question. If the issue was Church authority for Luther, why not for Cathilics today regarding how to do ecumenism?Not every approach is true ecumenism.
For the record, I’m pretty sure a Catholic becoming Lutheran is viewed no differently now than pre-Vatican II
I never said I object to Luther. Like I said in my post I actually use him quit often in my defense against evangelicals who will point to Luther as their “Hero” when it suits them.We (the Reformed) are much, much further from the Catholic Church than the Lutherans. In our view the Lutherans only half-heartedly reformed. They don’t see it that way, of course. If you object to Luther, wait until you read Knox.
Shouldn’t ecumenism be done in the way the Church says to do it? In the way you do it you have set yourself against the church and thus separated yourself from it. You have criticized, on this thread, the “soft” approach now undertaken. I think you are in schism.JonNC:![]()
The answer is the same to both. The goal of Ecumenism is to end all the divisions from the Catholic Church. There is only one Church, Jesus established on Peter and those in union with Peter. And Jesus wants perfect unity in His Church. The Catholic Church.steve-b:![]()
But that’s not my question. If the issue was Church authority for Luther, why not for Cathilics today regarding how to do ecumenism?Not every approach is true ecumenism.
For the record, I’m pretty sure a Catholic becoming Lutheran is viewed no differently now than pre-Vatican II
what?? The Church hasn’t spoken infallibly on any sort of ecumenical approach. You have this idea that because some clergy take a certain approach with ecumenism that the rest has to do the same. That is not the case.Shouldn’t ecumenism be done in the way the Church says to do it? In the way you do it you have set yourself against the church and thus separated yourself from it. You have criticized, on this thread, the “soft” approach now undertaken. I think you are in schism.
You are supposed to follow your leaders, even when they have not spoken infallibly. The ‘some clergy’ here are the post-V2 popes. Apparently as a Catholic you are free to ignore Church leadership whenever you feel like it? News to me. But that seems to be the prevalent attitude here.SojournerOnEarth:![]()
what?? The Church hasn’t spoken infallibly on any sort of ecumenical approach. You have this idea that because some clergy take a certain approach with ecumenism that the rest has to do the same. That is not the case.Shouldn’t ecumenism be done in the way the Church says to do it? In the way you do it you have set yourself against the church and thus separated yourself from it. You have criticized, on this thread, the “soft” approach now undertaken. I think you are in schism.
And the Catholic Church from other Christian communions. Because division is always two-way.The answer is the same to both. The goal of Ecumenism is to end all the divisions from the Catholic Church.
And that Church exists wherever people gather around word and sacrament. Peter is not limited to one see, anymore than Christ is. The order of the keys, given first to Peter then to the rest for the entire Church is not exclusively in the control of the Bishop of Rome.There is only one Church, Jesus established on Peter and those in union with Peter. And Jesus wants perfect unity in His Church. The Catholic Church.
Good point. Nor can the fact he was declared a heretic as wellA valid excommunication cannot be lifted posthumously.
How is quoting Luther’s filthy works verbatim, ‘bashing him’?! Can we not expose his works to stir the hearts of those who ignorantly follow his theology, to reconcile them back to the Church Christ founded?You just leap at the chance to bash him, don’t you?
Is this following your popes’ example on ecumenical relations?
Right, ‘commemorated’, and not celebrated. Huge distinction there.The 500th anniversary of the Reformation was commemorated
So now I see what you mean: you think that speaking of unpleasant facts constitutes bashing, and you have an odd fantasy that things recent Popes have said confirm that. You’re wrong on both counts; nothing the Holy Fathers have said can rationally be construed as meaning what you think, and your claims to the contrary reflect poorly on you.You just leap at the chance to bash him, don’t you?
Well, maybe, just maybe if any of those Lutheran pastors would have let us in on the real Martin Luther and his works, and how he really felt about the Pope, Jews (of which Our Blessed Lord is a Jew), his denigration of women, his obsession with the devil and farting, the removal of seven canonical books of Scripture etc. etc. then, maybe we would not feel the innate urge to expose these facts to those Lutherans who still have no idea. And, for those Lutherans who are aware of the real Luther and keep coy and mum on purpose… oh, my, dear…It’s been my observation that many Luther-bashers are converts from Lutheranism who suffered some bad experience in the church and now feel some need to vindicate themselves in their conversion