Hi Jon,
Thanks for your response.
Actually, what I meant about staying positive was that I would not respond to your polemical tactics in a like manner.
An example of a staying positive and providing facts from a Catholic POV can be found in PR’s
post.
It is the difference between positive intent in apologetics on the one hand, and mere polemics on the other.
Maybe it serves your purposes to refer to my ‘polemical tactics’, but actually I do what I do here to serve as something of a counterbalance to the (unintentional) misinformation that is presented here regarding Martin Luther and the history of the early Reformation. Plus to have someone who bears the name of Martin Luther chide ME for MY ‘polemical tactics’ actually did make me chuckle. Thanks
As we all know, Protestantism has not been exactly honest about Luther’s actions and teachings. Your depiction of the Augsburg Confession as being something admirable, well, that really wasn’t the ‘whole story’ was it?
Rather than deal with the facts as presented by Carroll, you avoid them, preferring to make ME the subject of discussion. CLASSIC!
I would love to have your comments about how the Lutherans at Augsburg refused to return the property that they had stolen from the Church, and also Luther’s comments at the time that:
“Remember that you are not dealing with human beings when you have affairs with the Pope and his crew, but with veritable devils! . .”
If ‘staying positive’ means ignoring the historical evidence that the Reformation was not a Reformation at all but a religious rebellion, and that the Church was RIGHT to condemn them as heretics, then I will NOT be ‘staying positive’.
Here’s the thing Jon, I would think that IF you could refute my arguments or the historical facts that I present, you would. In fact, I wish that you would try, because then we could have a discussion on the facts and their implications, rather than all of this avoidance.
BTW, since you are not able to give any ground at all, it isn’t just Carroll who points to the Augsburg Confession as being less than honest. In fact, Grisar, another Catholic Church Historian makes the same point when he says that the Confession was a less than complete or honest representation of Lutheran belief. In addition, he suggests that Melanchthon went out of his way to describe Lutherans as being in agreement on Transubstantiation and, yes, even justification. As we know, that is NOT what Lutherans believed. It was just I guess Melanchthon trying to ‘stay positive’. He mentions a minimizing the hindrances to mutual agreement, a phenomenon that I am very familiar with and has been commented on by Nestingen the Lutheran Scholar in his comments (recently posted) about ‘evangelical catholics’ (small ‘c’).
Catholic Hartmann Grisar, Vol. III, pg. 329:
"In the " Confession of Augsburg," where the author shows himself a past-master in the art of presentation,** Melanchthon presents the Lutheran doctrine under the form most acceptable to the opposite party, calculated, too, to prove its connection with the teaching of the Roman Church as vouched for by the Fathers**.** He passes over in silence certain capital elements of Lutheran dogma, for instance, man s unfreedom in the performance of moral acts pleasing to God, likewise predestination to hell, and even the
rejection on principle of the Papal Primacy, the denial of Indulgences and ofPurgatory. A Catholic stamp was impressed on the doctrine of the Eucharist so as to impart to it the semblance of the doctrine of Transubstaiitiation; even in the doctrine of justification, any clear distinction between the new teaching of the justifying power of faith alone and the Catholic doctrine of faith working by love(" fides formata charitate ") is wanting. **Where, in the second part, he deals with certain traditions and abuses which he holds to have been the real cause of the schism,
he persists in minimising the hindrances to mutual agreement, or at least to toleration of the new religious party……”
Topper: Even the doctrine of justification is misrepresented in an effort to deceive. is NOTHING SACRED?
