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MoreCoffee
Guest
Well, isn’t that exactly what “who started your church” is asking. Obviously if a “portion” of the Catholic Church broke away to create a new church then it is no longer a portion of the Catholic Church. And since it broke away in the early 16th century it had a founder who was alive and active in the creation of that new religion in the early 16th century. In this case, the case of Lutheranism, the founder was Martin Luther. I think that your interlocutor got it right.It’s interesting… you seem to think that the reformation was something different to what it was.
The reformation was a portion of the Catholic Church who disagreed with what the Church was teaching.
The Catholic Church is always reforming herself, always combating wickedness both within and without her confines and always reforming her laws and practises to make them less capable of abuse and more proof against error. However, breaking away from the Church does not reform her it merely creates a new religion with new doctrines and practises, or in some cases, it separates into parts that ought to have remained one. But in the case of Martin Luther the separation was doctrinal and practical and political and a host of other things including economic. This is not to say that the Catholic Church of that time was free from abuses and errors in her midst, such things existed and needed reformation and such reform came with the calling of a council in the 16th century and subsequent councils called in later centuries addressed other issues as they arose and showed themselves to be corruptions.The belief was that much of what the Church was teaching was not of God but of man… as in men perverting God’s truth for their own ends.
Jesus called the body of his disciples a vine and his Father the tender of the vine. He pointed out that the Father tends the vine carefully, cutting away branches that bear no fruit. Such is the case in the church, God tends his church and removes those branches that bear no fruit. The fruit is, of course, the good fruit of righteousness and of the Spirit. Martin Luther’s doctrinal divergences led to the branch he founded being cut away from the Catholic Church. God willing, some good will come of it and those who once were cut away will return for the mutual benefit of all.
Saint Peter’s role is always to strengthen the brethren. The brethren’s role is always to help Peter. It is simple I think.There are many many excellent examples of this happening in our church history (of which the protestant and lutheran church both share with the catholic church). So thus the reformers decided to break away from the church … seemed to suit both parties (both the Church & reformers) and follow what they believed to be ‘the truth’.
As for ‘where is peter in the church’… that’s a whole other argument again!

