Dulcimer:
No, I was genuinely asking questions…see the initial post.
I quoted the initial post. Where do you think I got all your questions from if not from the initial post?
Dulcimer:
Perhaps it would be easier to understand if you hadn’t misquoted me.
I didn’t misquote you. I pointed out a contradiction in what you said.
Dulcimer:
I said MUTUAL church history, because I believe that both Catholic and Protestant churches believe in Jesus Christ and are therefore Christian.
Is the following what you said?
Dulcimer:
What I’m getting at, is there are a number of shameful things in our mutual Church history that I do not agree with, and if the Catholic church did not address those things, did not deal with those things, did not repent of those things, then I’m glad of the split.
The way you worded ‘what you are getting at’ in the initial post led me to believe that there were shameful things shared in the Church history and that that Church history was mutual. Therefore it would follow that accountability for those shameful things would fall both on those who stayed in the Church and on those who left the Church.
If you did not mean this, then perhaps a less ambiguous wording would have served ‘what you are getting at’ more efficiently.
Furthermore, in your view, did the Catholic church "not address those things… not deal with those things… not repent of those things?
Dulcimer:
I also believe (and was looking for clarification/correction) that PERHAPS the Protestant split was occasioned by some abuses by the existing Catholic church (which should then–if true–accept some of the blame for the Split).
The heavy rhetoricism of your initial post leads me to question any ambivalance you might hold in this matter. Moreover, when I gave you a list of causes for the Reformation, you rejected them even though they were
bona fide causes of the Reformation. So ‘perhaps’ doesn’t swing a lot of weight in this context.
It seems to me that the direction you are taking is along the lines of abuses in the Church being the cause of the Reformation. – At least the cause you want to discuss. And that is fair. But if you had wanted to limit the discussion only to abuses in the Church, then you should have said so. As it stands you asked a string of questions, any one of which we can legitimately answer according to the rules of the forum.
As for the Church accepting some of the blame for the split, I believe the Church already has. The problem is that the Church cannot legitimately accept all of the blame for the split, as I have demonstrated.
Dulcimer:
…and IF all the above was true, then I thought the split was actually a good thing…in the same way that I believe Paul SHOULD have embarrassed Peter by publicly denouncing the sin of his hypocrisy…not to keep Peter in humiliation, but TO CORRECT THE ERROR AND MOVE ON.
The Church corrected the error. The Reformers moved on, but not in the sense of letting dead dogs lie or of not beating dead horses. The Reformers moved on in the sense of never moving on, never moving past the errors which the Church had corrected.
The Reformers were unforgiving. Moreover, they heavily indulged themselves in projective identification, given the long list of abuses they themselves perpetrated on their own peoples. They moved on to magnify a hundred thousand fold the chaos and violence surrounding Luther himself.
Just a thought.
