S
Steadfast
Guest
My evidence is Luther’s Deutsche Bibel.I will only withdraw the charge if you can provide the evidence I requested. This is not a court of law, so the burden of proof does not lie with the prosecutor. Burden of proof lies with the defender. I have provided two sources to serve as witnesses that he was challenged or influenced by his supporters. You have provided nothing.
Are you really asking me for a quote from Luther to the effect of “I’m going to include Hebrews in my translation because I think it’s a good idea.”?
How about a quote from Bonapart saying he was going to defeat the Austrians at Austerlitz? The fact that he did is evidence enough of the intention.
If someone came and said Bonapart didn’t really want to but was talked into it by Josephine, then there’d be something needing proof.
Do you think I’m stupid? Do you think I don’t know what you’re doing?
You haven’t a leg to stand on and you’re trying (again) to move the goal posts.
It seems that, in the interest of charity and integrity, you would require no conditions. For, surely, you are an honest man. Surely you don’t make things up. Surely you don’t just type the first thing that comes into your head because it seems to be damning of someone you despise. Surely it is nothing for you to back up your statements. Surely you don’t manipulate the words of people you despise in order to make them look bad.
It seems to me that just in the interest of maintaining your own integrity you’d be willing to prove your point without placing conditions on doing so because, after all, if it’s true, it costs nothing.
All this could be avoided if you’d merely began by saying, “I think…” or “I am of the opinion that…”, or, even, “What if…”
But you didn’t. You stated it as fact.
That Luther intended to include the books because he actually, in the event, did so is not necessary of proof. It is a reasonable assumption.
That he did so only because he was culled into it, is a reasonable assumption only to someone who enjoys pillorying dead Reformers.