Luther Did Not Start the Reformation

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Therefore, he intended to do what he did.
I don’t see what the two things have to do with each other. Luther rejected the role of the Pope, and did not consider the Bull valid. He did not believe that the Pope had the authority to excommunicate him because he abdicated any authority by abusing his office. That is why Luther saw himself in a valid continuation of the Catholic Church.
(I have had some friends tell me that this area of history is not taught in Catholic Schools. I don’t know if that is true in every region.)
I certainly was not taught anything about it.
The “Lutheran” Church began while Luther was in hiding.
This is one reason it seems ludicrious to accuse him of founding it!
Though he didn’t initially decide to start a new church, it still came to pass by the influence of his actions and his desire that the papacy be done away with.
Yes, but this was as much political and economic as it was theological.
I am certain that he was pleased with what came to pass, what with Protestantism taking over Europe and all in the middle ages.
No, on the contrary, he was quite vexed that Zwingli and Calvin rejected the doctrine of the Real Presence, and was continually frustrated that Sola Scriptura resulted in contradictory doctrines.
He must have realized when he stopped believing in the tenets of the Catholic faith that a new church would have to be formed for his ideas to gain any sort of acceptance early on.
I don’t see any evidence that he did. He believed that he rediscovered the Gospel of Christ that had been hiding within the Church.
 
The Catholic Church does not allow heretics to teach ideas that are contrary to the Faith. That’s why he was excommunicated. So no, not speculation.
A priest who has embraced heresies will have their faculties suspended (told they are not allowed to teach). Rarely does this continue to the point of excommunication, and in no case does it mean the offender intends to start their own Church. Luther believed that he had discovered the true Gospel of Christ, and that he was bound before God to proclaim it.
NO he did’t; but He IS the Father of the Reformation; the one who gave it form and life
He certainly provided the tools which were used.
 
Just because he translated the New Testament from Greek not Latin to German doesn’t make it unofficial. Or the fact that he encouraged the population to learn to read by providing religious instruction in German. Or used the printing press better then the Catholic Church. I recommend this book on Luther and the printing press.

 
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steve-b:
Therefore, he intended to do what he did.
I don’t see what the two things have to do with each other. Luther rejected the role of the Pope, and did not consider the Bull valid. He did not believe that the Pope had the authority to excommunicate him because he abdicated any authority by abusing his office. That is why Luther saw himself in a valid continuation of the Catholic Church.
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steve-b:
How does that contradict what I said?

He intended to do what he did”.
how can you disagree with that? He was also delusional along with being a heretic
 
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I’m pretty convinced Luther suffered from some kind of OCD and other mental issues.

Also, OP, why do you post so much about Luther? I don’t really see anyone talking about him until a thread like this is made, and you’ve made several.
 
Thank you JonNC. Our Theresa is a titch out of her depth on the historical front (no shade, T…it’s just notable).
 
Regrettably for you, Martin Luther has nothing of the kind. I suggest a thorough reading of his catalogue of sermons, lectures and writings; plus a decent grounding in the historical and secondary literature on his astonishing theological charism, before you make any such rash calculations about the man.
 
The question for me isn’t whether he started the movement called the Reformation. It’s whether his teaching corresponded to the Gospel. I’m not ashamed to answer “No.”
 
Just because he translated the New Testament from Greek not Latin to German doesn’t make it unofficial.
I was very specific not to deride or judge his translation.

The only “official” bibles were those translated and published under authority of the RCC. Thus, Luther’s bible was unofficial. It’s not about the quality of his work.
 
Luther certainly was there as reformation began in his German region. However had Luther never been born or never became a monk, there undoubtedly still would have been a reformation of sorts. The political climate was right, and people were receptive to the message. I don’t know if anyone believes that Luther caused the start of Anglicanism in England. That would have happened even without Luther’s influence.
Quite right. Political secularism was the cause of of the lasting “reformations” in England and continental Europe.

Henry VIII wanted to remove papal suzerainty over himself and his dominions.

On the mainland, some French and Imperial princes wanted much of the same. Thus the petty rabble ever-prone to rebellion (because, admittedly, feudalism was awful) finally had something they typically lacked in the last 1500 years of Church history -

The support of at least part of the state.

Naturally, this was made possible due largely to the irreparable crack in Catholic Authority that was the triple-papacy of the Avignon Crisis (aka “Western Schism”).
 
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He was also delusional along with being a heretic
I don’t see how it helps to call his point of view delusional. Maybe many of the rest of us see it differently (we are looking backwards through history, after all), but part of literary criticism is understanding what a person wrote from the point of view they had when writing.
The question for me isn’t whether he started the movement called the Reformation. It’s whether his teaching corresponded to the Gospel. I’m not ashamed to answer “No.”
It is not really possible to do an all or nothing thing with Luther. There is a lot of his work that is quite consistent with the CC. Besides, such a position is not consistent with the Church Teaching.

http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/p...hrstuni_doc_20160531_week-prayer-2017_en.html
 
It is not really possible to do an all or nothing thing with Luther. There is a lot of his work that is quite consistent with the CC. Besides, such a position is not consistent with the Church Teaching.
So sola fide and sola scriptura are part of Catholic teaching? Because those teachings aren’t consistent with Church teaching and from what I know a little leaven leavens the whole lump.
 
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steve-b:
He was also delusional along with being a heretic
I don’t see how it helps to call his point of view delusional. Maybe many of the rest of us see it differently (we are looking backwards through history, after all), but part of literary criticism is understanding what a person wrote from the point of view they had when writing.
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steve-b:
Definition of delusional = believing things that aren’t true DELUSIONAL | meaning in the Cambridge English Dictionary

Luther believed he had authority he didn’t have, AND believed other people didn’t have the authority they actually had. And Luther acted on his errors

He was delusional AS WELL AS he was a heretic.
does that answer your objection
 
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Yes, as to Henry. There was a long history of power struggles between the Throne and Rome, in the island.

Plus, of course, his dynastic and hormonal issues.
 
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