It has already happened in the Lutheran-Catholic Dialogue with the conclusion that “church dividing” issues are essentially gone.
Hi EV,
Thanks for your response.
Remember I left for my Christmas vacation, I told you I would read “From Conflict to Communion”. I read all 89 pages and I also read the Jimmy Akin article that Jon recommended. You see, I really would like to see our two communions reach a REAL communion, meaning one where the things that divide us are actually addressed and dealt with, rather than just being ignored for the sake of an agreement in name only.
It might not be surprising, but if I were involved in the joint dialogue between Catholics and Lutherans, I would probably be ‘more aggressive’. This thing has been going on for 50 years, and to date, they have not addressed papal infallibility. They are nibbling around the edges and dealing with all of the small stuff. I applaud the progress, but seriously – 50 years and to date they have ignored one of the fundamental issues? At this rate it will be a couple of hundred years before anything of any importance will be decided.
What do you think the Lutherans are going to be willing to concede? Do you think they will withdraw that insulting official teaching that the pope is the anti-Christ? After all, they haven’t in 50 years, so why should we Catholics think they will in the next 50?
There is a benefit to these discussions though. It seems that it has furthered the trend of Lutheran Theologians converting to Roman Catholicism. Dr. Michael Root is listed in the “From Conflict to Communion” as a 2009 Lutheran participant. In 2010, one year later, he swam the Tiber, following in the path of a series of notable Lutheran Theologians:
Richard John Neuhaus (1990)
Robert Walkin (1994)
Paul Quist (2005)
Richard Ballard (2006)
Paul Abe (2006),
Thomas McMichael
Mickey Mattox
David Fagerberg
Bruce Marshall
Reinhard Hutter
Philip Max Johnson
It appears that Root, after being introduced to Catholic theology in a way that forced him to actually think about it, was compelled to ‘swim’. I think that the more of this will happen as more people become familiar with what the Church actually teaches rather than what they have heard or read from the its opponents.
I believe that your statement that “’church dividing’ issues are essentially gone”, is massively ‘optimistic’, that is unless Lutherans have decided to sign on to papal infallibility and the authority of Ecumenical Councils to determine dogma (for starters). It seems that you believe that Lutherans and Catholic now agree on the doctrine of Salvation. In the past I have seen (mostly liberals of both our communions) focus on the ‘nice sounding’ phrases which would lead people to believe that there is meaningful agreement on the tough issues.
On the other hand it appears that there has been progress, and for that Praise God. As an example, and in the context of your comment, there has been some progress on Salvation, however, a great deal still divides us. As the Akin article points out, we might be working towards becoming better able to define terms (such as ‘faith’) in a common manner. However, on issue of the requirements for Salvation, we are far apart.
Jimmy Akin puts this in perspective:
“We may be put the relationship between the two concepts (Protestant and Catholic belief on Salvation) as follows:
Protestant idea of faith = Catholic idea of faith + Catholic idea of hope = Catholic idea of charity”
I think this is an excellent synopsis of the situation. The Protestant version of Salvation is correct, as far as it goes, but it doesn’t ‘go far enough’. In other words, it is incomplete, and because it is incomplete, it is not correct. Now – this is not to say that some Protestants don’t agree with the Catholic version of Salvation, because I think some do. If I remember, Dave Armstrong once wrote that there at least 17 different competing Protestant versions of Salvation. What a mess!
However, if you are one of those who actually agree with the Catholic teaching on salvation, then you are opposed to Luther’s version. So EV, this is ‘pick your poison’ time, because you can’t have it both ways. You can’t claim that Protestants and Catholics agree on Salvation, AND that they also agree with Luther, because it is very clear that Luther did not agree with anybody previous to himself on salvation. His radical Salvation by Faith Alone had never been taught in previous Christian history, and if you need proof of that fact, we have Luther himself as evidence. He never spent any time doing anything but refuting the Church on the issue, and never (as was his habit), ever backed up one little bit trying to find common ground or claiming that he had been ‘misunderstood’.
If you want to admit that you believe differently than Luther, you can of course claim that he was ‘right for the wrong reasons’ or maybe ‘wrong for the right reasons’, or maybe even ‘wrong for the wrong reasons’. But unless you agree with him, then you will have to admit that the Rebellion that he fostered was done for the purpose of promoting a doctrine which you have found to be false. Furthermore, it was on the basis of his belief in Salvation that Luther criticized the canon, so if you disagree with his version of Salvation, then you must agree that his criticism of the canon was wrong/misplaced/errant (insert a term).
So again, pick your poison. Which way is it?
God Bless You EV, Topper