I think we all need to take a step back and settle down here; no one is calling for a celebration of the Reformation, especially the Church. There’s a big difference between a “commemoration” and a “celebration”, as
Mr. Keating so eloquently put it. How could any Christian possibly celebrate the fracturing of the Body of Christ? We can only hope and pray that this 500th anniversary will ultimately lead closer to a full reconciliation, much like we’ve seen with the three Personal Ordinariate which utilize the Anglican Use. That is ecumenism fully and truly realized.
Fr. Dwight Longennecker raises the question about the possibility of similar “Lutheran Ordinariates” so that our Lutheran brothers and sisters may finally come home to Rome, and ecumenism here may be fully realized.
And I’ve raised this question before, but who on this thread has hate for Luther? Where is it? I think Luther being “praised” is a strong word. What should he be “praised” for? Furthermore, why should the Catholic Church be “honoring Luther in some more formal way”? What exactly is this “honor” that should be given him? What is the “formal way” in which this should be done? I ask in all seriousness, because I can’t think of a single good reason this man should be honored in our churches.
Instead, I’d rather honor and emulate such people who never forsook the Church, who never forsook their vows, and who never denounced the Rock upon which Christ’s holy Church was built upon. Instead of honoring Luther, I’ll honor the memories of such people as the Martyrs of Gorkum. Saints Nicholas Pieck and his companions were executed in 1572. These men were true witnesses to the Gospel, never abandoning our Lord and the teachings of His holy Church. All 19 of these saints were hanged, and then their bodies were mutilated immediately afterwards, some of them still breathing while this took place. As Butler’s noted, “these men gave their lives for the Catholic faith in general, and for the truth of its Eucharistic teaching
and the primacy of the Roman pontiff in particular.”
Luther may have held on to his belief in the Eucharist, but he castigated the Roman pontiff in an extremely foul manner. St. Nicholas and his companions are honored every year in the Catholic Church on July 9th.
Another man I’d rather “honor” instead of Luther, also from the 16th century is a man who’s feast day we just celebrated yesterday, Blessed William Patenson, who was beatified more recently in 1929. This man witnessed beautifully to our Lord, by converting and reconciling six other prisoners to Holy Mother Church before they were executed. That’s right, some of those men had left the Church during the aftermath of the Reformation, but Blessed William was able to bring them back into full communion with the Church before they were executed. And because Bd. William had done this, he was cut down early during his hanging, and was drawn and quartered while still alive. Did Luther do anything to bring any souls back to the Catholic faith and the rock that Church is built on in the days before his death? I will instead be honoring Bd. William, and praying for his intercession tonight.
I do wonder if Bd. William has ever had his face on a stamp… but either way, I see no reason to give any honor to Luther when we already have a cloud of witnesses before us that we should duly honor and venerate. There are so many more holy men and women from the 16th century that I haven’t mentioned. And that’s not hate, that’s just the truth. If only a “minority” (how one quantifies that is beyond me) feel this way, then maybe the so-called “majority” would do well to remember and honor our own heroes before we seek to honor those that did not live a life worthy of imitating.