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submariner2
Guest
I think perhaps you do not understand what Catholic doctrine is. Actually there is very little of it that relates to doctrine.
I am sure Martin Luther would agree. That was what angered him about the practice in the first place. In addition the practice was cheating the people of his parish. If you ever take the time to read those 95 you can perceive the anger in him as he penned those lines.It is a theological impossibility to “sell” an indulgence. The mere appearance that this was being done in the first place is an abuse and a fraud. It had nothing to do with doctrine. It is a departure from doctrine.
But his 95 theses contained more than mere objections to the sale of indulgences. In fact the pope got so upset about it that he sent Luther a Papal Bull demanding that he recant those theses. Why that action if it had nothing to do with doctrine? You tell me.
Naturally that Papal Bull set him off big time because he knew he was right. The rest is history. But it started with the 95 theses.
I have read many of his books. You have read none. That alone should indicate that I understand him better than you do. He simply teaches history and bible. He is not hard to understand. It has nothing to do with anti-Catholic or pro-Catholic.I did not say he was, Rob. I said that you are. When you read him, you are reading with your anti-Catholic lens, the lens that is formed by your own experiences. It is you that denies his Catholicity, not him.
Also, what he teaches is in line with other scolars, both Catholic and protestant, regarding the history of our church and what the authors of the NT intended when they wrote it. In fact Fr. Brown taught for a time in a top class protestant seminary. Protestant pastors and bishops learned from him on Church history, the bible, and what the authors of the bible meant.
If you would actually read one of his books you might better understand what he is getting at.
Rob