Hi Novo,
Thanks for your response,
Sure: the repeated condemnation of Jan Hus; that it is the will of the Spirit that heretics be burned; condemnation of Luther himself. I assume that Confessional Lutherans are offended by those things.
The truth can often be ‘offensive’ to some people, but in my experience, those people are always the ones who are on the wrong side of the truth. Some people are often upset when I post historical facts about the early Reformation, or when I post the opinions of well-known Scholars. However, it isn’t me, personally, who is committing the offense, but rather it is the historical facts. If those facts paint a picture that runs against your predispositions, maybe those predispositions should be questioned.
Of course Lutherans are offended by the condemnation of Luther by the Catholic Church. I ask them regularly if they think that the Church should not have excommunicated him. It seems that nobody is willing to say that; there is just a lot of dancing around. Of course he deserved excommunication and condemnation. If somebody thinks otherwise, please make your case specifically and exactly, so that we can all decide if that case is compelling.
Throughout Christian history, the Church has condemned the various heretics and schismatics that have been disobedient. The Arians were offended by the Church’s condemnation of Arius, and the same can be said of a whole slew of groups which called (or call as in the present sense) their groups after the men who founded their ‘version’ of Christianity.
My point is that obviously it doesn’t matter if Hus or Luther’s condemnations are offensive. The question is whether they should have been condemned or not.
That is precisely the point Novo! I agree. What is the Church supposed to do? Is it supposed to just roll over and proclaim that any ole version of the Gospel is just as good as any other? Or should it fight for the Truth, and oppose those who are, in many cases through no fault of their own, teaching error? A few hurt feelings here and there are NOTHING compared to the importance of God’s Absolute Truth.
IF people actually did believe that that Truth is the MOST IMPORTANT THING, they would absolutely welcome challenges to their beliefs, because the Truth would be more important than their ‘feelings’. In meeting those challenges in that way, they could defend those beliefs and allow everyone to see that their position is strong. On the other hand, if their position is not strong at all, they are probably not going to be all that thrilled at being challenged.
BTW, if you want to do some interesting reading, take a look at the historical facts about Hus and his condemnation by the Church. What shocked me was the striking biographical similarities between Hus and Luther.
Here’s a straight up question for you Novo - Do you think the Church was right to excommunicate Luther? Yes or no? (Followed by your explanation of course).
God Bless You Novo, Topper