T
Topper17
Guest
Hi Ji,
You say that God made Scripture ‘so that it could be understood clearly when read in whole”. How can that be when Protestantism has developed so many different understandings of virtually each and every doctrinal issue? Doesn’t that fact disprove the whole ‘clarity of Scripture’ thing that Luther developed and which has become the foundation of Protestantism?
You say that Lutheranism has ‘avoided the individualism of rejecting tradition’, but isn’t that exactly what Luther and early Lutheranism did in rejecting that of the Catholic Church? This brings us directly back to the authority that underlies your Confessions? By what Authority did your Reformers develop a brand new Confession in 1530? Then again, BWA did they do so again almost a half a century later with the development of the Formula?
God Bless You Ji, Topper
You say, ‘when read properly’, which of course admits that a LOT of people don’t read it properly. So then the question then becomes: Who is it specifically and exactly who decides (for all) how to read Scripture ‘properly’?From the Lutheran perspective, the idea was that scripture is clear enough that, when read properly (and Lutherans spend a lot of time talking about what that means, ie Law and Gospel, etc.), the conclusion would be clear. In other words, God made scripture so that it could be understood clearly when read in whole.
You say that God made Scripture ‘so that it could be understood clearly when read in whole”. How can that be when Protestantism has developed so many different understandings of virtually each and every doctrinal issue? Doesn’t that fact disprove the whole ‘clarity of Scripture’ thing that Luther developed and which has become the foundation of Protestantism?
First of all, given it’s extremely anti-Catholic nature, I am not a big fan of the Book of Concord. I don’t see it as anything other than a document written by 16th century men who were in Rebellion against Christ’s Church. If you believe otherwise, then you should be able to provide some kind of explanation as to why the Formula is “Authoritative” and all those other ‘Confessions’ are not.Secondly, the Book of Concord clearly lays out who has the authority in the Lutheran scheme: the Church, which is led by those who hold the keys, the office of the ministry. Presumably they are the ones responsible for ensuring the truth is taught, but their job is basically to reassert what scripture already makes clear or to apply those scriptural truths to complex modern problems. The idea that an interpreter is needed because scripture isn’t clear really isn’t a Lutheran concept at all.
First of all, I very much appreciate that you posted that quote. That does not mean that I agree with you though.Further, I think the following is very insightful (It’s about how Lutherans and the so-called “Magisterial Reformers” decided to interpret scripture:
The above description is not written by a particularly famous theologian or anything, but based on a lot of the reading I have done, it sums things up very nicely and accurately.
You say that Lutheranism has ‘avoided the individualism of rejecting tradition’, but isn’t that exactly what Luther and early Lutheranism did in rejecting that of the Catholic Church? This brings us directly back to the authority that underlies your Confessions? By what Authority did your Reformers develop a brand new Confession in 1530? Then again, BWA did they do so again almost a half a century later with the development of the Formula?
God Bless You Ji, Topper