Hi Edwin,
Thanks for your response.
I made that remark jokingly, to make the point that I’m not theologically committed to defending Luther but rather have personal empathy for him and want to see him fairly treated. You have twisted it and misused it repeatedly.
My apologies Edwin. I had no idea that I was mischaracterizing your opinions. That was not my intent. On the other hand, you could have mentioned that you were joking before now.
I don’t think Luther was right to challenge the Church on basic doctrinal issues that had been consistently taught throughout the Tradition (such as the role of good works in final justification and the value of good works done in a state of grace, or the value of the monastic life as a state of life committed to following the “counsels of perfection,” and so on). So you’re just lumping me in with Lutherans in order to discredit me when I call you on your bias and unfairness.
Do I have a bias – of course I do, just like everyone else here. The difference between me and many here is that I can verbalize WHY, specifically and exactly, I hold the opinions that I do. I am not at all a ‘fan’ of the man who began the Revolt that ended up with almost 30% of today’s Christianity being separated from the Historic Church. I am not a fan of the man who claimed that the Pope was the anti-Christ and hated Catholics like me. In other words I have very good reasons for opposing Luther and his modern day communions. Biased – Yes – but unfair – not at all. The Truth is neither fair nor unfair, and as I think you would agree, the negative aspects of Luther’s person and career, would NEVER be known without someone bringing it up. Lutheran scholarship has gotten much better in the last few generations, to the point where they honestly discuss those negative aspects. If Lutheran apologists were that intellectually honest, I probably wouldn’t have the focus that I do. What is unfair is the misrepresentation of the man in that it makes him (and Lutehranism) look better than they deserve, and correspondingly, the Catholic Church look worse that it deserves.
When I see these things being misrepresented or spun past a certain point, I speak, and when I do I almost always have the historic facts at my back.
I repeat: my problem with your methods is that you seem to think that if you just rub Protestants’ noses in the nasty stuff about their tradition they will see the light. This makes no sense. It’s not only an unpleasant and degrading method, damaging to your own soul and that of those who read you, but it’s pointless. I understand that you are engaging in this misguided approach out of the best motives. But you’re really having trouble engaging with Lutherans in particular (I don’t know what you have against Lutherans:shrug

in a respectful and substantive way. You keep looking for “Gotcha!” moments.
What bothers me is the Protestant (including Lutheran) habit of stating opinions as if they are facts. This is another of Luther’s legacies. You can call my approach misguided. That is your opinion. However, ‘damaging to my soul’. On what authority Edwin could you possibly make that kind of statement? That is ridiculous and extremely presumptuous.
It’s an important ecumenical document and points the way forward, I think.
I don’t deny it’s importance. It might end up providing a way forward, but whey don’t they simply GET ON WITH IT? There is not one concrete change in the doctrinal teaching of either side in what – 50 years? How many generations is it going to take?
If you’re talking about LCMS folks, then sure, a well-catechized and confident LCMS person is pretty hard to convince of anything

. But you’re certainly not any more likely to get somewhere by throwing dirt than by substantive argument, and if you do you don’t deserve to
If people believe in the teachings of the LCMS and the Lutheran Confessions, they will NEVER become Catholic. Never. There are many solid arguments that point to the extremely weak foundation of Protestantism. Pointing out the weaknesses of that foundation draws a lot of anger, just like it did in Luther. When these points are made in a less robust manner, people who don’t want to think about them just blow them off, only pretending to deal with them.
For all other Protestants, however, the likelihood of their being brought to question some of their assumptions about salvation is much greater. And even with regard to the LCMS, in my experience teaching in Indiana there are a lot of young LCMS folks who are disillusioned with the rigidity of the LCMS. Many of them drift toward non-denominational evangelicalism. I don’t know if your focus on Lutheranism is due to your personal context or to a (mistaken, in my opinion) belief that if you can refute Lutheranism you will have refuted Protestantism and so the methods are the same either way.
Again, that is your opinion. As for them drifting towards non-denominational evangelicalism, what other outcome could there be generally? When there are more liberal and ‘more understanding’ alternatives, which don’t have so many of those pesky moral teachings, fallen man will, as a rule, gravitate towards them.