A
ajcstr
Guest
So, I’m pulling this off a different thread because its off topic there but it really intrigued me and I wanted to continue discussing:
And as far as the Canon of Scripture, my argument is that the 73 books of the Bible were the same 73 found in the Latin Vulgate which was THE Catholic Bible for over 1,000 years and it contained all these books.
So my response would be yes, Trent discussed several disputed topics (as all prior councils did) but to say the Catholic Church is really 50 years younger than the Lutheran Church… well lets see. Using this logic, the Council of Nicaea defined a doctrine of the Trinity that never existed before (sound familiar).The Protestant Reformation sparked the Catholic Counter- Reformation and the Decrees of the Council of Trent, which finalized the structure of your church ( in that sense, the Catholic Church is nearly fifty years younger than the Lutheran Church… so, out goes the " older brother argument"), the Canon of Scripture was finalized at Trent ( so, the Books Luther omitted were actually in dispute anyway).
And as far as the Canon of Scripture, my argument is that the 73 books of the Bible were the same 73 found in the Latin Vulgate which was THE Catholic Bible for over 1,000 years and it contained all these books.
