JD, I don’t see how you can make such a claim. If one looks carefully at the teaching of the Reformers (Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, etc.) we see that they agree with the Roman church in many fundamental ways. For example, all would hold to the authority of scripture. All would hold to the importance of tradition. All would hold to the centrality of death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. All would reject relativism. The big difference (and it is a very big one) is over the authority of the church. Granted, the ecclesiastical difference leads to many other disagreements, but it’s simply not true that Protestantism = relativism = falsehood. Such a claim calls into question the veracity of the Roman church as well./QUOTE]
I have something simpler. There is no need for careful study of these guys. They are Catholic priests and a Catholic Lawyer. They took the Catholic Faith and then denied
Authority of the Church
Invented Extrinsic Justification
Invented Sola Scriptura
Invented Sola Fide
Ok then Protestanism and Catholicism are false…there are no truths.
Wel the Protestanis and Catholicism are both entirely true…well then there are two truths
How about there is one truth and within Protestant thought you find many of the truths found from the original truth and within Protestanism there are untruths.
So with the bible alone…all truths would come forth…well…
From the beginning, though Luther and Zwingli were at one in their opposition to Rome, they were unable to agree upon a common religious platform.
The Sacramentarian controversy, confined at first to Luther and Carlstadt, grew more embittered after Zwingli had espoused openly the side of the latter. Several German princes having embraced the views of Zwingli, it was felt necessary to preserve some kind of unity amongst the Reformers, especially in view of the threatening attitude assumed by Charles V. A conference was called at Marburg (1529), at which Luther, Melanchthon, Osiander, and Agricola agreed to meet Zwingli, Oecolampadius, Butzer, and the other Swiss leaders. The conference failed to arrive at a satisfactory agreement, but in 1536 the Concord of Wittenberg was concluded, whereby it was hoped that peace might be restored by the adoption of a very ambiguous formula. Luther, however, refused to allow himself to be bound by the agreement, and the controversy went on as violently as before.
In the meantime Calvin had undertaken to preach doctrines on the Eucharist entirely different from those put forward by either Zwingli or Luther, with the result that Zurich found itself in conflict with Geneva as it had found itself previously in conflict with Wittenberg. To restore some semblance of unity among the Swiss Reformers Bullinger, the recognized head of the Zurich party, entered into communication with Calvin, and a doctrinal agreement was arrived at known as the Consensus Tigurinus (The Zurich Concord) in 1549. Later on this was confirmed by the Confessio Helvetica (1564).
There then followed controversy like antinomism, Osandrists, Adiophrists, persecution of the Anabaptist for not baptizing babies…Sola Scriptura …all truth…Socianism, Herrnhuters, Pietists, Swedenborians, and then Lutheranism, Calvinism, Armenianism/Methodism, Anglicanism, and more…
and so with the authority of Scripture we have …