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dronald
Guest
I’m interested what makes you believe Luther was a reformer, not a heretic and Hus was a heretic, not a reformer? (if that’s what you’re saying)Hi Jon,
Thanks for your response
That’s fine of course, but does your decision to not deal with those quotes indicate are you conceding that Luther is responsible, as the quotes indicated, at least in part for the doctrinal disunity of Protestantism?
Of course the reasons for the “Reformation” are extremely complex, but again the point that I made was that it was Luther’s teaching of Private Interpretation which set the precedent for those other groups to do exactly what he did (develop his own doctrine) and come to vastly different conclusions. Again, the quotes that I posted don’t really seem to speak so much of ‘concurrent’ movements as they do about Luther as being, among other things, an ‘immense’ influence.
Jon, Huss was NOT a ‘reformer’. He was a heretic and was proclaimed as such by an Ecumenical Council. If you claim that he wasn’t, then you are going to have to decide whether Arius, Pelagius, etc were heretics. Do we ALL get to decide personally whether these men were heretics or is that up to the Church?
You are asking the wrong question, because you seem to wish to believe that the ONLY way that Luther could be ‘responsible’ for the doctrinal dissention of Protestantism is if ALL of those early groups sprung DIRECTLY from Luther. Not all of them did. OF COURSE they came to different conclusions than Luther did. IF ONLY he had been wise enough to have accepted the warnings that that would be the case. In fact, Duke George, never depicted as an intellectual heavyweight, was astute enough as early as 1518 to recognize that Luther’s teachings would lead to doctrinal disunity:
Duke George “wrote to Pope Leo X saying that Luther’s doctrines, ‘if not strenuously opposed, would imperil the unity of the faith, and private opinion would take the place of traditional dogma’ (exactly what was to happen in Protestant Christianity) and that ‘out of love for the unity of the faith he would support any measures the Pope might take against Luther.’” From Grisar, III, pg. 95, in Carrol, “The Cleaving of Christendom”, pg. 8
If only Luther had been as astute as the ‘lightminded’ Duke George.
Should I take it then that your position is that Luther should not be criticized for teaching the Right to Private Interpretation, and that the fact that he did has absolutely nothing to do with the doctrinal dissentions of his time and of ours within Protestantism?
Yes Jon, but Chelcicky was a HUSSITE, a heretic, and heretics ALWAYS teach Private Interpretation, and the reason that they do is because it is the only (supposedly) plausible way that they can justify their opposition to the Church. Are we all to pick and choose which of the historic heretics we personally want to hold to be ‘orthodox’? If so, then how, specifically and exactly, without using YOUR Personal Interpretation? Isn’t it really the role of the Church to proclaim various beliefs to be heresy?
OK, so if Lutherans were the original Protestants, then why would it be inappropriate for them to be referred to as such? After all, historically, it WAS the Lutherans who were described as “Protestants”:
"On April 25, 1529, the Lutheran minority published a “Protest” declaring that conscience forbade their acceptance of this decree (the Edict of Worms);… The term ‘Protestant’ was applied to the signers of this Protest, and gradually came into use to designate the German rebels from Rome.” Durant, “The Reformation”, pg. 442
My criticism is NOT directed at “Lutherans”. After all, Luther taught Private Interpretation (cluelessly) and then retracted it LONG before the Confessions, and long before the founding of the LCMS. Therefore Lutheranism should not have for him. He must be defended or criticized as an individual.
Maybe it comes down to this Jon. Do you think that Luther should be criticized for his teaching on Private Interpretation? Also, what role do you think that teaching had on Protestant doctrinal disunity? IOW, would you claim that doctrinal dissention ‘just happened’ to explode right at the time that Luther began his revolt?
God Bless You Jon, Topper