Hi Jon,
Thank your for your response,
I deny his was a revolt. I deny his was a rebellion. That said, I’m not sure it is helpful to shift the conversation to developing doctrine without the whole Church involved.
Jon, didn’t you see the list of 50 important doctrines that Luther challenged or refuted, before he was excommunicated? Maybe the problem here is the words “revolt” and “rebellion”. Maybe those are not ‘positive’ enough, but I assure you, that they fit extremely well with the facts and in fact are mild compared to what Luther actually did.
Personal interpretation? The CCC says: 817 In fact, "in this one and only Church of God from its very beginnings there arose certain rifts, which the Apostle strongly censures as damnable. But in subsequent centuries much more serious dissensions appeared and large communities became separated from full communion with the Catholic Church - for which, often enough, men of both sides were to blame."
Again, this ignores the facts. There is no argument that both sides were at fault. Luther was 100% right and 100% within his rights to chastise the Church for it’s errors in regards to practices. While that is where Luther started out, rebuking abuses of practices, it does not logically follow that those rebukes would then turn to challenging so much doctrinally. Where is the connection? The connection was that Luther HAD to ‘find’ Salvation by Faith Alone and then, believe it, and in order to do that he had to cast aside the authority of the Church.
And I would suggest that the fracturing of the Church, and yes, Rome is one of those fractures, the central one to be sure, but one of the fractures, is founded in human sin, not in any means of norming doctrine, which is what sola scriptura is.
Seriously – Rome is one of the fractures? Does your position require that kind of interpretation of history? So when Luther and the Church became separated, the Church was one of the fractures and Luther was the other? Is that your position?
I frankly find the numbers irrelevant if it is more than one. Sadly the true Church is currently in a state of more than one.
My point is that in 1000 years the EOC has fractured into only 17 separate doctrinally independent factions because it took “more truth” from the Church than did Protestantism, which has fractured into an uncountable number in half the time, because it took far LESS Truth from the Church when it left. It is the Truth that resides within the Church, among other things, which protects it from division.
Your response to this is that you find the numbers irrelevant. Of course, what else could you possibly say? I do believe this though – if you had had a compelling response, you would have been more than happy to post it. Also, I would suggest that you would think that the numbers were very relevant if they provided evidence in your favor of rather than against your position.
There are 7 ecumenical councils, the tenants of which Lutheranism accepts. We do not accept Trent because it is not ecumenical.
I that this is extremely misleading. Can you imagine Luther attending Trent, agreeing beforehand to abide by the decisions made there? As early as 1519 he was claiming that neither Councils nor Popes were infallible, so to Luther, or for that matter, of what use would it be to attend a Council? Of course, Luther saw no value in attending an Ecumenical Council. Of course, when it suited his purposes to call for a council, he did, but when the Council was actually eminent, he opposed attendance. Your response though does point to the lack of a coherent Lutheran understanding of which Councils should be followed and which ones should not. You can’t complain about Trent not being ‘Ecumenical’ for two reasons. Luther did not want to attend and he didn’t believe that they were infallible. If they weren’t infallible, then he wouldn’t have to follow their decisions if he didn’t like them. So Jon, you can’t have it both ways.
Part two to follow