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Catholic_Dude
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TertiumQuid-
Also I have been interested in what exactly Luther had in mind for justification, ie did the person really have their sins erased? I ask because I have heard of the accusation of Luther saying something to the effect, “our sins are like a pile of dung, when justified it is as if that dung is COVERD with snow”. I am interested in finding the work that came from. Also I have heard something to the effect of Luther believed justification was like being in a courtroom, the person on trial was impure, but God as judge would overlook that fact on those whom were justified. Again, I dont believe these things till I see the quote from Luther, at the same time I dont think people would make this up.
I havent been interested in the quote “sin boldly”, I dont recall making any reference to this quote, I was interested in the “no sin will separate us” quote. Also I was willing to look into what Luther did have to say from what Contarini put out, the commentary on Galatians.As I pointed out in the paper, the “sin boldly” quote is an obscure saying of Luther’s from a fragment of a letter. The letter has no address, salutation, or signature. In other words, it has no beginning or ending, thus lacking a complete context. I strongly doubt anyone besides Melanchthon was aware of this remark until many years (if not a hundred or two or three) after Luther’s death. The letter was originally part of a private collection that was published, I believe in the 1800’s.
If you have been following this thread you will see I have used multiple quotes of Luther. The “people reading stuff like this will get the wrong impression” is one main theme in this thread, I have used multiple quotes and am interested in other works of Luther to see what he believed.After being published, Catholic scholars (and some liberal protestant scholars) with a strong bent against Luther jumped all over it (this is reviewed in my paper as well-see part 5). This is the reason that would cause “people reading stuff like that and getting the wrong impression on what sin is.” In other words, because Roman Catholic authors cited it out of context and blew it out proportion, common laymen (both Protestant and Catholic) were given a faulty understanding of Luther’s theology of justification by faith alone (see particularly my remarks about the Catholic Encyclopedia). Thus, I blame anti-Luther writings (pre-Joseph Lortz) for causing the confusion over this quote.
I did see that, but I didnt know what the context of all those quotes were, I have looked on google to find a place that lists all his works but I cant find any page that does.Luther’s actual consistent understanding of faith, works, sin and sanctification abound throughout his writings, and are detailed extensively in my paper in section VI.
Of course no pastor would say its ok. But do they deny a marriage to previously divorced people?I know of no serious conservative bible believing Reformed or Luther congregation that say divorce is okay. Luther was known for a very strong stance against divorce.
I never held the impression that luther encouraged grave sins. What I did have the impression was that of cheap grace and should a person do even a single grave sin the magnitude of it would be diminished. Thats really the sticking point which you didnt address in your page, what happens afterwards, ie when a person commits a grave sin after “justification” by faith alone.In terms of “sin” Luther spoke out strongly against it, repeatedly and often. The remnants of sin were not a license to “sin boldly”. Commenting on Romans 7:17, the sins that remain in a believer’s life are there to be fought:
Also I have been interested in what exactly Luther had in mind for justification, ie did the person really have their sins erased? I ask because I have heard of the accusation of Luther saying something to the effect, “our sins are like a pile of dung, when justified it is as if that dung is COVERD with snow”. I am interested in finding the work that came from. Also I have heard something to the effect of Luther believed justification was like being in a courtroom, the person on trial was impure, but God as judge would overlook that fact on those whom were justified. Again, I dont believe these things till I see the quote from Luther, at the same time I dont think people would make this up.
I agree with this, but the idea that they are separate from justification is where the issue lies. A person should not have to show their works to anyone, if they must show their fruits then works are a part of the equation.Further our good works and good lives show that we are really Christians: