"Vatican to Issue Stamp Featuring Martin Luther"

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The hard truth is, at that time the Church badly needed reform, and the Reformation, starting with Luther, gave the Church the nudge it needed. Do you really think without Luther, there would have been a Council of Trent?
Yes, i do. The Lord has raised up reformers throughout the History of the Church. Reformers that did not find it necessary to divide the Church, apostatized, and create a new religion based on their own interpretations of Scripture all while defaming the Holy Catholic Church and the Pope.
 
Maybe not; ideally, there would have been no Council to settle things that were to be hold as divinely revealed as Scripture, settled more than 1000 years before Luther anyway, and Tradition (settled pretty much with Christ).

It is true, the Church needed readjustment, but a Saint Francis, a Catherine of SIena could have been found. But so is history. Despite some good consequences, let’s call them so, we cannot say here “Oh, happy fault!” It is excatly what one shouldn’t do: do evil to get a good outcome.
But then perhaps God used Martin Luther to reform the Church ?

Luther never intended to leave the Catholic Church, he was excommunicated.

Jim
 
But then perhaps God used Martin Luther to reform the Church ?

Luther never intended to leave the Catholic Church, he was excommunicated.

Jim
I don’t think God would use antine who would leads people astray. Luther didn’t intend First, but did.
 
I don’t think God would use antine who would leads people astray. Luther didn’t intend First, but did.
So what about when the Church was leading people astray by charging money for indulgences to avoid purgatory, which was the cause of Martin Luther’s protest ?

What about the Pope riding a white horse wearing gold plated armor, as he led the papal army into Rome after going to war ?

In 1500’s, when Martin Luther saw what the Church was doing, it was corrupt, have no doubt about it.

Luther didn’t intend to leave the Catholic Church, the Pope excommunicated him.

Jesus does not lead people astray, but people lead others astray as many in the Church did over the centuries including our own time, with the sex abuse scandal that has rocked the Church.

Today, it is Jesus who is leading Lutherans and Catholics back together.

Should we be so proud of our religion that we reject this ?

Jim
 
So what about when the Church was leading people astray by charging money for indulgences to avoid purgatory, which was the cause of Martin Luther’s protest ?

What about the Pope riding a white horse wearing gold plated armor, as he led the papal army into Rome after going to war ?

In 1500’s, when Martin Luther saw what the Church was doing, it was corrupt, have no doubt about it.

Luther didn’t intend to leave the Catholic Church, the Pope excommunicated him.

Jesus does not lead people astray, but people lead others astray as many in the Church did over the centuries including our own time, with the sex abuse scandal that has rocked the Church.

Today, it is Jesus who is leading Lutherans and Catholics back together.

Should we be so proud of our religion that we reject this ?

Jim
The Church has never led anyone astray.

Even if some preachers made a mistake when discussing indulgences or any other topic, the Church hierarchy has always set them straight: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Tetzel#Doctrinal_position

From the 8th Century until 1870, the Pope was not only head of the Church, but was also sovereign of the Papal States. It’s just a fact of history. Today the Pope is still the monarch of a sovereign state - the Vatican. And sometimes he even wears gold. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papal_regalia_and_insignia

In the 1500s, Martin Luther conveniently served the interests of northern European monarchs who didn’t like seeing money leave their provinces to pay for Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome.

Pope Leo X warned Martin Luther to recant for his heresies. In response, Martin Luther publicly burned the Pope’s warning. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Luther#Excommunication It was in response to this that the Pope excommunicated Martin Luther.

In every age, Jesus leads everyone to the truth through the ministry of the one Holy Roman Catholic Church.
 
Yes, i do. The Lord has raised up reformers throughout the History of the Church. Reformers that did not find it necessary to divide the Church, apostatized, and create a new religion based on their own interpretations of Scripture all while defaming the Holy Catholic Church and the Pope.
Yes, but then a Trent-like council would have been much later.

Luther sparked Reformation, which led to a Counter-Reformation. Cause and effect.
 
If you wish to believe that, fine. I disagree. Pax.
Wait, so you disagree that:

A. Luther sparked the Reformation;
and that
B. his movement compelled the Church to respond to it with a Counter-Reformation?

This is fact, not opinion.
 
Did anybody consider that God wanted the Reformation to take place? We are ingrained to feel that it’s our religion, but it isn’t. We often go as far as to take pride in “our” religion, which is perhaps the worst form of pride ever. Would the Western World be where it’s at today had the Reformation had never happened? Are there people in the Vatican who are aware of this and know that it’s just a matter of time before not just Christianity comes together, but all the world’s great religions? If we believe in one God, does it not make sense that our world eventually has but one religion?
“This is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put my laws into their minds, and write them on their hearts, and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And they shall not teach everyone his fellow or everyone his brother, saying, ‘Know the Lord,’ for all shall know me, from the least of them to the greatest.”
-Hebrews 8:10-11
 
Did anybody consider that God wanted the Reformation to take place? We are ingrained to feel that it’s our religion, but it isn’t. We often go as far as to take pride in “our” religion, which is perhaps the worst form of pride ever. Would the Western World be where it’s at today had the Reformation had never happened? Are there people in the Vatican who are aware of this and know that it’s just a matter of time before not just Christianity comes together, but all the world’s great religions? If we believe in one God, does it not make sense that our world eventually has but one religion?
I am not sure the Church would have survived the Renaissance without the Reformation - in any meaningful sense. I personally think it unlikely. Basically where we are at here in ‘modernity’ would have happened then. Complete marginalization of the faith from mainstream Western culture - vast majority of citizens not engaged in the faith. The Reformation bought us some time - let’s put it that way. But went nowhere fast I admit that too - within 100 years even. It will take all of us to make a Church - I believe this has always been the Church anyway. God knows his Church - we don’t, never will.
 
The Church has never led anyone astray.

.
The indulgences used at the time of Martin Luther, were from the hierarchy of the Church, to refurbish the Church coffers which had been depleted by extravagant living and wars.

Even when Christ called St Francis to rebuild the Church, Christ did so because the Church was in fact leading people astray.

Yeah, it was great that Jesus called St Francis to reform the Church, but by the time Martin Luther came along, those who called out the errors of the Pope and Bishops, were imprisoned, tortured and even burned at the stake.

So the Reformation could’ve have been according to God’s plan to get the Church back on the gospel.

Whenever religions get in bed with the political power structures, it looses the tenets of the faith in which the founders had originally established.

Its no different for the Catholic religion.

Heck, even in our own time, the sex abuse scandal has certainly led people away from the Church, which you call “astray.”

It’s a tap dance to say it wasn’t the Church, but just members of the Church. The members are the Church.

It is a historical fact we’ve had bad popes, bad bishops and bad priests.

Heck, read up on the Borgia Pope’s and don’t get too upset about it, especially Pope Alexander VI.

It’s better to acknowledge the dirty laundry in Church history than turn a blind eye to it as if it never happened.

Jim
 
Wait, so you disagree that:

A. Luther sparked the Reformation;
and that
B. his movement compelled the Church to respond to it with a Counter-Reformation?

This is fact, not opinion.
Selective use of facts may not provide the full picture. No doubt, there is some truth in your assertion. But it would be overly simplistic to argue the Council of Trent was conceived because of Martin Luther. Generally, the Council was needed years and years before Luther was even on the scene. This was evident by doctrinal teachings, decrees and condemnation of hereries decided by the Council that were outside and beyond with what Luther said.

There is too much about Council of Trent that I don’t think it is possible to discuss it fully on this forum. The link below to New Advent discusses it in great details:

newadvent.org/cathen/15030c.htm
 
Selective use of facts may not provide the full picture. No doubt, there is some truth in your assertion. But it would be overly simplistic to argue the Council of Trent was conceived because of Martin Luther. Generally, the Council was needed years and years before Luther was even on the scene. This was evident by doctrinal teachings, decrees and condemnation of hereries decided by the Council that were outside and beyond with what Luther said.

There is too much about Council of Trent that I don’t think it is possible to discuss it fully on this forum. The link below to New Advent discusses it in great details:

newadvent.org/cathen/15030c.htm
Yes, it was needed for years and years. Anyone who knows anything about anything in Church history knows this.

Funny thing is, in the newadvent entry you cited above about the Council of Trent, the fourth sentence already mentions Luther!

Let’s face it: the Church needed a nudge! Luther exposed the Church’s abuses, and the Church had to take a good hard look at Herself even as She was condemning Luther’s heresies. I’m not saying that what Luther did was good. Only that good came from the evil.
 
Yes, it was needed for years and years. Anyone who knows anything about anything in Church history knows this.

Funny thing is, in the newadvent entry you cited above about the Council of Trent, the fourth sentence already mentions Luther!

Let’s face it: the Church needed a nudge! Luther exposed the Church’s abuses, and the Church had to take a good hard look at Herself even as She was condemning Luther’s heresies. I’m not saying that what Luther did was good. Only that good came from the evil.
The Council of Trent is a fascinating study - conflicting factions within the RCC - had it gone differently I don’t think the Church would have fragmented so tragically on and on and on. Every one had a hand in the tragedy that was the schism. Blaming one person or event is silly. For approx 100 years before Luther there were individuals and groups basically pushing for similar reforms in different European countries. A mess.
 
Wait, so you disagree that:

A. Luther sparked the Reformation;
and that
B. his movement compelled the Church to respond to it with a Counter-Reformation?

This is fact, not opinion.
I disagree with your premise that Luther was beneficial to the Church. Luther did not start a movement. Luther created schism, tore a wound in the Body of Christ, and gave the rulers of what is now Europe a way to confiscate Church property, persecute Priests, Nuns and religious and create state sponsored false churches.
Try reading this article, in its entirety, then tell me how we should thank Martin Luther or any of the other reformers…

newadvent.org/cathen/12700b.htm
 
Wine was used in the earliest celebrations of the Lord’s Supper: “The chalice of benediction, which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of Christ? And the bread, which we break, is it not the partaking of the body of the Lord? For we, being many, are one bread, one body, all that partake of one bread.”[1]
In the Early Church both clergy and laity received the consecrated wine by drinking from the chalice, after receiving a portion of the consecrated bread.
Due to many factors, including the difficulty of obtaining wine in Northern European countries where the climate was unsuitable for growing grapes, drinking from the chalice became largely restricted in the West to the celebrating priest, while others received communion in the form of bread only. This also reduced the symbolic importance of choosing wine of red colour.[2]
Leaders who accepted the Protestant Reformation, such as the Lutheran Church, insisted on use of wine in celebrating the Lord’s Supper. As a reaction to this, even in those Western European countries that, while remaining Roman Catholic had continued to give the chalice to the laity, this practice faded out, in order to emphasize Catholic belief that the whole Christ is received under either form. The Eastern Churches in full communion with Rome continued to give the Eucharist to the faithful under the forms of both bread and wine. The twentieth century, especially after the Second Vatican Council, saw a return to more widespread sharing in the Eucharist under the forms of both bread and wine. In the Anglican Communion (of which the Church of England and the Episcopal Church of the United States are members), the use of wine is obligatory; consumption of the bread alone does not make a valid communion.
In the Eastern Orthodox Church the clergy continued to receive the consecrated wine by drinking directly from the chalice, but in order to avoid the danger of accidentally spilling some of the Blood of Christ the practice was developed of placing the consecrated Body of Christ in the chalice and administering Holy Communion to the faithful, under both species, with a sacramental spoon.
The Coptic Orthodox Church continues the ancient practice to this day.
Next time you sip your communion wine / Christ’s blood, thank Luther. 😉
 
Yes, it was needed for years and years. Anyone who knows anything about anything in Church history knows this.

Funny thing is, in the newadvent entry you cited above about the Council of Trent, the fourth sentence already mentions Luther!

Let’s face it: the Church needed a nudge! Luther exposed the Church’s abuses, and the Church had to take a good hard look at Herself even as She was condemning Luther’s heresies. I’m not saying that what Luther did was good. Only that good came from the evil.
Indeed, the Council addressed Martin Luther in name and in deeds. But it was so much more to the Council than addressing the selling of indulgences, sola Scriptura, and justification.

It’s also worth noting that “Protestant reformation” started hundreds of years before Martin Luther was alive.
 
I disagree with your premise that Luther was beneficial to the Church. Luther did not start a movement. Luther created schism, tore a wound in the Body of Christ, and gave the rulers of what is now Europe a way to confiscate Church property, persecute Priests, Nuns and religious and create state sponsored false churches.
Try reading this article, in its entirety, then tell me how we should thank Martin Luther or any of the other reformers…

newadvent.org/cathen/12700b.htm
Do you understand that the newadvent encyclopedia is from 1917 ?

Much understanding about the history of Martin Luther and the Reformation has come out since.

We need to live in the present, not 500 years ago…

Jim
 
Do you understand that the newadvent encyclopedia is from 1917 ?

Much understanding about the history of Martin Luther and the Reformation has come out since.

We need to live in the present, not 500 years ago…

Jim
Some Catholics have a purely triumphalist view of Catholic Church history. Sanitization and historical spin.
 
Some Catholics have a purely triumphalist view of Catholic Church history. Sanitization and historical spin.
A lot of times you hear this spin from converts. Or traditionalists. I am not pointing fingers - just calling out general trends. Exceptions to every rule. I personally thought we Catholics were all over this and were friends with Protestants, especially liturgical Protestants, until I came onto CAF. (mind you I was very ignorant of Church affairs back than but even today most priests, bishops I come across / read don’t do the ‘blood dripping off the fangs’ thing against Luther; it’s certain niches of laity that I can see.)
 
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