P
pnewton
Guest
I don’t know about others here, but I do see value in commemorating without celebration. I would not object to a stamp of the Twin Towers, for example, but I do not think of it as celebrating anything.Martin Luther, who accepted most Marian doctrines, would find himself in sharp conflict with Lutherans of today.
Still, as Karl Keating noted in a recent article: “Many people—mostly Protestants, of course, but also not a few Catholics—are talking of “celebrating” the Protestant Reformation. I am not one of them, because there is nothing to celebrate…”
I do not mean to dwell on past mistakes, but Martin Luther did not rise in a vacuum. If not him, it would have been another person that rose in response to some serious mistakes the Church made at the time. We should never forget the Reformation. It was the turning point away from increased secularization of the Church. Because of this tragedy, we have the great Council of Trent that did so much for the Church.