I hope that you now have a different understanding of the Augsburg Confession and the manner in which it was written and defended. In fact, I would hope that you will not portray it in the future in the same way you have in the past.
I would appreciate your comments.
God Bless You Jon, Topper
Hi Topper,
My understanding of the CA has not changed one iota. The Augsburg Confession in articles I through XXI give a clear and concise reflection of the Catholic Christian faith. And to each and every one of those articles, I say without reservation or reluctance, “this is most certainly true.” You have provided no reason for me to change that view.
You see, Topper, you’ve provided no evidence that those articles are not “most certainly true”. You’ve provided no alternative to those articles, and why you think those alternatives speak more decisively the Gospel. Without that, Topper, your posts, so lengthy and highlighted with quotes, so seemingly filled with research, do nothing to convince any Lutheran to even consider a transfer of membership to communion with the Bishop or Rome. Why? Because a transfer of membership must be a positive event, one that looks to something better. Topper, you’ve provided nothing better.
Nobody changes, (or nobody should change), their views of the teachings of their communion based on attacks from the outside. This is where the likes of Jack Chick fail.
I would think that few if any Catholics have become whatever Chick is because of the cartoons he has written.
In a similar way, though by no means placing you in a category with Chick, I don’t believe or disbelieve what the Augsburg Confession teaches because of your claims regarding it. With your posts, I consider the source, plain and simple.
If Melanchthon had a flaw during the colloquies and committees at Augsburg, it was not his desire to seek reconciliation. That desire should be applauded! It was his belief that reconciliation can be won through concession and compromise.
We see this today in efforts toward unity. Some are willing to compromise, and honestly believe doing so will bring a lasted reconciliation. It will not. They are not bald faced liars for it. They’re just wrong. Instead, and as Pope Benedict said when he visited the Lutheran Church in Rome in 2010, unity is only possible through the efforts of the Holy Spirit. We should and must work toward such an end, not through compromise, but through the earnest and respectful dialogue of our leaders.
Jon