A
Alexander_Roman
Guest
Dear Peter - again, I am only a fallible inquirer!
For Luther, those five books were not of the “essence” of the New Testament which is why he separated them from the NT itself. He called the Letter of James “an epistle of straw” because of the emphasis on faith and works, for example.
I think it is the strength of Lutheranism that it doesn’t slavishly follow even the mind of its founder. Of course, it considers itself a reform movement within the Church and we all pray that our Lutheran brothers and sisters can one day soon become one with us.
But I’m not going to start a society to canonize Luther. And I hope you aren’t either . . .
Alex
For Luther, those five books were not of the “essence” of the New Testament which is why he separated them from the NT itself. He called the Letter of James “an epistle of straw” because of the emphasis on faith and works, for example.
I think it is the strength of Lutheranism that it doesn’t slavishly follow even the mind of its founder. Of course, it considers itself a reform movement within the Church and we all pray that our Lutheran brothers and sisters can one day soon become one with us.
But I’m not going to start a society to canonize Luther. And I hope you aren’t either . . .
Alex