=pablope;11144180]
But…no matter how you massage it, or rationalize it…you are still protestant…for you do not recognize the pope…and refer to him as anti christ…
Isn’t this what defines protestantism?
No. The roots of the term are in the protest of the Second Diet of Speyer in 1529, and that was not a protest against the pope or Catholicism, at least not directly. It was a protest against governmental attempts to limit the religious freedom of the Evangelical churches.
You mean where Constantinople wanted to be equal or above Rome in 1054 or so?
Equal to, as in Nicea canon 6.
And why is it, that prior to Luther, a reformer named Catherine of Sienna can effect reforms in the Church without resorting to schism or the splitting of the Church?
Why is it that Catherine can call the pope to reform withou being excommunicated?
What makes Luther a better reformer than Catherine?
Perhaps it has to do with the fact that Luther’s call for reform was a threat to a money stream for Rome.
Is it a stumbling block because you make it a stumbling block? It is your choice, to make it stumbling block, isn’t it?
We didn’t make the stumbling block. Neither did Orthodoxy or the early Church.
Can the Reformation even succeed, can there be unity without the bishop of Rome?
Yes, and no.
What alternative do you then offer if you do believe the bishop of rome to be anti Christ?
We offer the alternative of, by dialogue, a return to an understanding of primacy being that which was understood in the early Church, for the way that the Bishop of Rome is opposed to Christ is in the claim that he is supreme among all the bishops, claiming universal jurisdiction, and in the claim that salvation can only be found through being in communion with him.
Jon