It’s always been my understanding that the Church was corrupted in Luther’s day, and even though the teachings of the church may not have been wrong, the clergy were unfairly taking advantage of their parishes and getting them to pay for indulgences. Luther protested against this practice and eventually took issue with the fact that only priests were able to read the bible, so he translated it into German. Somewhere along the way his followers got out of hand and decided to seperate entirely. It is sad that Christianity splintered so much and that there is now so much disagreement among Christ’s followers, but I don’t think it would have been good for the corrupt Church to go unchallenged, as it really was getting people to think they could buy salvation.
That’s mostly understanding I got from my mom when she was thinking of converting to Catholicism. Correct if wrong.
Hello Kamaduck:
Though there may have been some corrupt practices going on in the Catholic Church in Luther’s day, it would we incorrect to say that the whole Church and all catholics were corrupt. There are a number of holy men and women who lived during this time who were very faithful to the Catholic Church and who have been canonized by the Church and that’s not to mention the very many holy men and women who haven’t been canonized. To name just a few of the canonized saints: St Teresa of Avila, St John of Avila, St Ignatius of Loyola, St Francis Xavier, St Francis Borgia, St Thomas More.
That the clergy needed reform St Ignatius of Loyola also admitted. Again, this is not to say that all the clergy were corrupt. But reform does not mean that the hierarchy of the Church should be abolished or that the teachings of the Church should be abolished. The reform we are talking about here is especially personal reform and conversion. Where Luther went wrong is that he didn’t want to submit to the Pope and bishops, i.e., the hierarchy of the Church. In fact, Luther seems to have had a hatred for the Pope and the Church’s hierarchy. St Ignatius of Loyola is the exact opposite. The members of the order he founded, The Society of Jesus, take a vow of obedience to the Pope. In his Rules for Thinking with the Church, St Ignatius writes:
The First Rule. With all judgement of our own put aside, we ought to keep our minds disposed and ready to be obedient in everything to the true Spouse of Christ our Lord, which is our Holy Mother the hierarchical Church.
Thirteenth Rule. To keep ourselves right in all things, we ought to hold fast to this principle: What seems to me to be white, I will believe to be black if the hierarchical Church thus determines it. For we must undoubtedly believe, that the Spirit of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the Spirit of the Catholic Church His Spouse, by which Spirit we are governed and directed to salvation, is the same.
That Luther may have hoped for some kind of reform of the Church is one thing. But he held to a number of heretical doctrines that were contrary to the faith and teaching of the Catholic Church and he did not recant. Thus, he was excommunicated from the Church in 1521. The rest is history. Many people followed Luther and his teaching and many did not.
You say that the Church was getting people to think that they could buy their salvation. I think here you probably refer to the buying and selling of indulgences. This is an incorrect interpretation of what the Church means by indulgences. You can’t gain or buy your salvation by an indulgence and the Church has never said you could. The gaining of an indulgence is simply the remittance of the temporal punishment attached to sins whose guilt has already been remitted either by confession or other means. In times past, the Church granted indulgences to the faithful who gave money for special works of the Church such as the building of a Church or maybe a hospital or home for the poor. I see nothing wrong with this for giving money for projects such as these is a good work. Apparently, however, there were some abuses and the Church had to reform the practice. Even today, however, we can gain a partial indulgence every time we give compassionately of ourselves or of our goods to serve our brothers or sisters in need. This is the second general grant in the Manual of Indulgences.