Hi Novo,
Thanks for your response.
Over the years I have noticed that there is a downside to posting quotes from Protestant Scholars which appear to be embarrassing to the Protestant cause. Rather dealing with the actual text of the quotes and the obvious qualifications of the Scholar, and instead of dealing with the facts and actual ideas in those quotes, far too often, Protestant apologists prefer to make me, the poster of the quotes (me – Topper) the focus of their response. “Topper, you misunderstand, you have misstated, you incorrectly ………….Topper you are wrong on that one. (what was the subject again?)
If I were in your shoes I would not like to have to respond to something like these McGrath quotes, but you know what? I would.
“Since the Second World War, there has been a growing hesitation within many sections of Protestantism concerning the traditional way of speaking about salvation. (See McGrath, “Institia Dei”, pg. 406-420). While some have insisted that Protestants are bound by their tradition to speak and think in this manner, others have expressed anxieties over its continued use, especially in the light of a growing consensus among New Testament scholars that the notion of ‘justification by faith’ is not central to the thought of the New Testament scholars, or even Paul himself, as Luther and others appear to have believed.” McGrath, “Dangerous”, pg. 250
“Many follow Albert Schweitzer (Lutheran pastor and Theologian), who suggested that the idea of justification was only a ‘subsidiary crater’ in Paul’s thought, rather than constituting its core and center. Why, many Protestant scholars have asked, should the movement be obliged to replicate Luther’s interpretation of Paul when it appears questionable at points? Are not Protestants meant to constantly reexamine their ideas in the light of biblical material rather than accept interpretation inherited from the past, however venerable or influential?”, McGrath, “Dangerous”, pg. 250
“Yet while many Protestants no longer regard Catholicism as an enemy, it is still widely seen as a rival. This perception has been catalyzed by a significant development since about 1990 – prominent Protestants, including evangelicals, having been converted, either by ‘crossing the Tiber’ to Catholicism or “crossing the Bosporus” to Orthodoxy. In 1990 the leading Lutheran Richard John Neuhaus converted to Catholicism, setting a trend that has escalated since then. Recent defections from the Evangelical Lutheran Church of America (ELCA) illustrate this trend well. Robert Wilken, a leading Lutheran patristics scholar teaching at the University of Virginia, became a Roman Catholic. The preeminent church historian Jaroslav Pelikan, Sterling Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Yale University, became a member of the Orthodox Church. Leonard Klein, pastor of Christ Church, a large Lutheran parish in York, Pennsylvania, and sometime editor of “Lutheran Forum”, converted to Catholicism with his family and is studying for priesthood. Bruce Marshall, one of America’s most significant younger Lutheran theologian, recently converted to Catholicism. The list goes on.” McGrath, “Dangerous”, pg. 411-2,
“What is causing these conversions? It is clear that a variety of factors are involved. One of the reasons so many evangelicals are ‘crossing the Bosphorus’ is that they are alarmed at evangelicalism’s lack of historical roots and institutional continuity with the New Testament and they see Orthodoxy as having particularly strong credentials in this area.” McGrath, pg. 412
“Other Protestants are uneasy about the bibilical foundations of one of the core ideas of the first phase of the Reformation – the doctrine of justification by faith alone. Catholic critics regularly argue that this is unbiblical: not only, they insist, is there no New Testament passage which affirms this idea, but one passage explicitly condemns the idea.” McGrath, pg. 412
“A third group is concerned about developments within their denominations that they regard as departing from historic Christianity; therefore, they have transferred to churches with a strong record of defending the tradition. The long term implications of this trend, if continued, remain uncertain. Yet all indications are that it has not led to increased hostility between Catholicism and Protestantism but is actually the outcome of increased understanding, which makes ecclesiastical transitions easier. While the evidence is that some Catholics do convert to forms of Protestantism, the traffic appears to be primarily in the other direction.” McGrath, pg. 412
To summarize McGrath - Many Protestant theologians follow the idea that justification was not central to Paul’s thought and that Luther’s interpretation appears questionable at points. Since 1990, prominent Protestants are converting to Catholicism. While a variety of factors are involved, it appears to be that they are alarmed by evangelicalism’s lack of historical roots and continuity with the NT. Another factor for some Protestants is that they are uneasy about the biblical foundations (or lack thereof) for the doctrine of justification by faith alone. While some people do convert from the Church to Protestantism, the traffic appears primarily in the other direction.
To which I would add, that it is obviously partly because these Protestant Theologians disagree with Luther’s version of Salvation that they are leaving for Protestantism. In other words, in the estimation of these Theologians, Luther was wrong about salvation, which BTW is the bedrock of Protestant Theology.
God Bless You Novo, Topper