po18guy
Well-known member
“IF” you examine the Catholic faith closely, you find that “de fide” pertains to matters of faith which are binding on all Catholics. All else is subject to the virtue of prudential judgment. The faith has dogma, but does not exist primarily to be dogmatic.
The Church, for example, does not teach that Martin Luther was a saint and only got off track while bringing the Church back to her foundations.
In fact, he radically altered some of the core beliefs of Christianity. He denied free will - 100% opposing Christ’s teaching via His Church. He wrote Melanchthon that one thousand mortal sins in a day would have no effect on his justification before God - again, 100% against Catholic teaching and 100% nonsense.
The fact that millions came to believe in him and follow him (honoring him by naming their communion after him) is evidence only of human persuasiveness and gullibility. Look at the LDS and JWs. Millions of them.
Did the Church hierarchy require reformation? Yes, as it does today. Did Church teaching require reformation? Absolutely not. Was the Church mandated to enact each of the 95 opinions that Luther cobbled together? No. The internal reformation was already underway, and those who remained faithful while pressing for that reform - at huge personal cost - are the true saints and reformers.
Poor Martin Luther was so utterly consumed with visceral hatred of the Pope that he became what he hated - pope of a radically new and different communion. Those who disagreed with him received the most vile and profane condemnation.
I believe that he began from instability and devolved into a form of ego-driven insanity.
The Church, for example, does not teach that Martin Luther was a saint and only got off track while bringing the Church back to her foundations.
In fact, he radically altered some of the core beliefs of Christianity. He denied free will - 100% opposing Christ’s teaching via His Church. He wrote Melanchthon that one thousand mortal sins in a day would have no effect on his justification before God - again, 100% against Catholic teaching and 100% nonsense.
The fact that millions came to believe in him and follow him (honoring him by naming their communion after him) is evidence only of human persuasiveness and gullibility. Look at the LDS and JWs. Millions of them.
Did the Church hierarchy require reformation? Yes, as it does today. Did Church teaching require reformation? Absolutely not. Was the Church mandated to enact each of the 95 opinions that Luther cobbled together? No. The internal reformation was already underway, and those who remained faithful while pressing for that reform - at huge personal cost - are the true saints and reformers.
Poor Martin Luther was so utterly consumed with visceral hatred of the Pope that he became what he hated - pope of a radically new and different communion. Those who disagreed with him received the most vile and profane condemnation.
I believe that he began from instability and devolved into a form of ego-driven insanity.