You keep referring to justification by Faith Alone as a radical theory.
Jon, I am not sure I understand how you can claim that Luther’s Salvation by Faith Alone was not radical. Alister McGrath, who is my favorite Protestant scholar claims (over and over again) that SBFA IS radical.
“Yet even more dangerous was the idea that Luther developed over the period 1513 to 1516 as he wrestled with the text of the Bible, anxiously trying to discern what it really says about salvation. There are few ideas with the capacity to dismantle great institutions and invert the judgments of previous generations……By developing his doctrine of justification by faith, however, would dismantle such ideas and offer such a radical, alluring alternative……More radically still, Luther insisted that the believer is ‘at one and the same time a righteous person and a sinner’……….Perhaps the most radical aspect of Luther’s doctrine of justification is its conceptualization of the relationship between humanity and God……The most radical element of Luther’s doctrine of justification is its concept of salvation as a matter affecting God and the individual.” McGrath, Dangerous, pg. 42-43
For the record, the definition of ‘radical’ is as follows: “very different from the usual or traditional: extreme”. So when I say that Luther’s Salvation by Faith Alone (SBFA) was radical, there is no question that this is true. And in fact, no less a Scholar than Alister McGrath mentions SBFA as being ‘radical’ 4 times in the two pages I quoted.
If it wasn’t ‘radical’, as you seem to suggest, then, specifically and exactly, who had taught it prior to Luther? And if nobody did, then how can we possibly believe that it is clearly expounded in Scripture, when nobody ever ‘noticed’ it there before?
The fact is that Luther judged the canon and the apostolicity of various books, on, among other things, how well they agreed or disagreed with his radical theory of Salvation by Faith Alone. That is very much putting the cart before horse.
Furthermore, we have no choice but to see Luther as being the source of the Lutheran concepts of the NT homologoumena and antilegomena. Those books which Luther judged to be of secondary rank are Hebrews, James, Jude, and Revelation. You explain, repeatedly, how the Lutheran church has done this in because of the judgments of the ancient Church.
“Luther knew that those books had been disputed in earlier days: that, however, is not his main reason for relegating them to a secondary status. He appears to have had no difficulty with 2 Peter or 2 or 3 John, which had also been disputed. His main reason is that in the four relegated books he could not find that clear promotion of Christ which was the principle note of holy scripture. (Protestant) F. F. Bruce, “The Canon of Scripture”, pg 244, from a Dave Armstrong article
So why didn’t Luther and why don’t Lutherans question the canonicity of 2 Peter, and 2 and 3 John? After all, if they “follow” the ancient Fathers, then they would have to place these three books in the Antilegomena. To not do so is to be very subjective, which of course is a charge that Protestantism is used to dealing with (but not successfully).
Jon, I would like to know if you can explain how the Lutheran church divided up the NT into the homologoumena and the antilegomena. In addition, I would like to understand how 2 Peter, and 2 and 3 John were not cordoned off from the ‘better part’ of the NT with the books that Luther judged to be ‘lesser’. Also, I would like to know who, specifically and exactly, it was that made this decision for Lutheranism. Where were these people from? Did they represent Christianity from across the whole world, or were they a small group of extremely like minded people from a very small geography?
God Bless You Jon, Tim