K
KjetilK
Guest
But this is not a matter of opinion. It is a matter of historical fact. Confessio Augustana is not just a ‘collection of Luther’s ideas.’Ok, we will disagree.
No, I don’t remember articles I’ve never read. Do you have a link?I contend that Lutheranism was a tremendous doctrinal departure from the Catholic and Apostolic Faith. Remember Dave Armstrong’s list of 50 important doctrines that Luther challenged/refuted/rejected/reformulated even BEFORE he was excommunicated.
Again, this word ‘Lutheranism.’ The interesting thing is how the Lutheran tradition (which basically boils down to the three ancient creeds, Confessio Augustana, and Luther’s Small Catechism) plays out in a particular Church (just as with Byzantinism).We also disagree on the ‘level of authority’ that Luther claimed and apparently also on how that authority was viewed by Lutheranism, at least early Lutheranism.
Luther may have claimed authority. That doesn’t mean he was given it by any particular Church.
Only if Luther had that kind of authority, and only if Luther was the ‘founder’ of Lutheranism. But the ‘Lutheran tradition’ (whose name was given by those who were opposed to it) wasn’t ‘founded’ by Luther the way, say, Mormonism was founded by Joseph Smith. Your ‘logic’ only works if you ignore the facts.I’m sure that you are well aware of the many ridiculous, and quite frankly nutty sounding claims that Luther made in regards to his own personal authority. Logic dictates that either he was right, and that God approved of his claims to Authority, OR, his claims to authority were NOT in accord with God’s Absolute Truth, which would mean that Lutheranism was founded by means of an ‘authority’ which God does NOT support. It would seem that the question needs to be viewed in light of Luther’s specific claims to authority.
Yes, many people agreed with him. I fail to see the significance to this discussion. The question is: Did he have formal authority within a given Lutheran Church? Well, he didn’t, and don’t, in mine. And note that I am talking about formal authority.There is also the issue of how early Lutheranism viewed Luther’s ‘authority’. Lutheran Professor of Systematic Theology Robert Kolb wrote a very revealing book entitled “Martin Luther as Prophet, Teacher, and Hero.”, which is basically a history of the way that Lutheranism has ‘viewed’ Luther over the first 100 years (1520-1620). The title of the book is indicative of the ‘progression’ – “Martin Luther as Prophet, Teacher, and Hero”. Needless to say, the book contains a lot of references by Luther as to his being a Prophet, and a lot more from people who, during that time period and afterward, basically agreed.
But that claim is false. ‘Lutheranism’ is not founded by Luther alone. And ‘Lutheranism’ is not a Church.The fact is that Lutheranism was founded upon Martin Luther’s personal claims to authority and if that extreme level of authority is found to be false, then it means that Lutheranism was founded on Luther’s false claim to personal authority.
I did not merely refer to Scripture. I referred specifically to Scripture, the Fathers and the Canons.But Father K - all of those ‘other’ Protestant communions claim that THEIR beliefs are ‘backed up by reference to Scripture’ also. I think that we would both agree that they only THINK that their beliefs are actually backed up by Scripture and that those beliefs are really the doctrines of man. OK, so what is it specifically and exactly that allows Lutheranism to claim that their beliefs are ‘different’?
Again with this term ‘Lutheranism.’ In the Church of Norway the pope is seen as the bishop of Rome, and he has episcopal authority there. He is also primus inter pares, which does not entail that he can rule all. In my own Church we have a bishop who has that role. That bishop speaks on behalf of the other bishops, but doesn’t have any more formal authority than the others.OK, so if within Lutheranism, the Bishop of Rome has ‘primacy’ but not ‘supremacy’, what does that mean exactly? What does that ‘primacy’ mean within Lutheranism? Is it just a meaningless title or does the Bishop of Rome have some kind of a ‘special role’ within Lutheranism? If so, where is the evidence of this within Lutheranism?