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AugustTherese
Guest
“Luther is assuming that genuine repentance is taking place after those sins.”Wrong. You’re twisting Luther. In this comforting letter to his close friend Phillip Melanchthon, Luther is assuming that genuine repentance is taking place after those sins (as his ol’ Phillip, being himself a polyglot with decades of experience in biblical study, would also have understood, and you would too if you actually read the correspondence. Phillip was feeling like his sins were too great to be forgiven).
Interesting. I thought genuine repentance meant to “sin no more”, as Our Lord instructed and commanded, as opposed to “sin, and sin boldly”. To “assume” something on behalf of Luther in which neither his words nor the context even accidentally allude to, is seemingly dishonest to me. If to “sin, and sin boldly” intrinsically means “genuine repentance is taking place after those sins”, then I have absolutely no attempt of rebuttal.
No, mortal sin causes the Christian to fall from grace; “unrepentant sin” keeps him/her there. As for your insinuations, they merely beg the question while concurrently attempting to set up a straw man. To put words in my mouth, so to speak, immediately discredits your position, no offense. Not only that, but if your implications carried some weight, I still would be in no position to “condemn” anyone; I, nor God, condemns anyone. Your retort, “What meek god do you worship”, is self-indicative of where your heart really seems to be.Obviously, unrepentant sin causes the Christian to fall from Grace. But if you think that God will not forgive that murderer or adulterer, even if the sinner’s repentance is genuine, then you’ve just condemned ever person who has ever lived to eternal death – all are murderers and adulterers in the heart. Is there a sin too great for God to forgive? Too wretched for Christ to bear on the Cross? What meek god do you worship?
I did not “name-call” anyone and/or their moral state! What I did was call someone’s works/words what there really are. And, it does NOT make me feel better about anything; it is a sad and heart-breaking reality how many souls get lost (no, I am NOT implying you) because of what certain doctrines may cause people to do, or not do.Ah, now we’re getting into the name-calling. Whatever makes you feel better about leaving your old communion, dude.![]()
Interesting; I wonder why John Wycliffe did not insert the word ‘alone’ in his transliteration if it was so abundantly apparent. No, this is not a “crisis” for me; it is no longer my affair, but what is sad is how many think it is not a concern or “existential crisis” for them.He inserted the German word “allein” because that’s what the text there means. Words get added in translation because translation is an art, not a science. Hopefully this doesn’t cause too much of an existential crisis for you, but:
“Why do Roman Polemicists” - and you accused me of name-calling!? If Luther “obviously” meant that “be a sinner” meant to “confess your sins”, I can no longer help here.Why do Roman Polemicists continue to trot out this flimsy “gotcha” bit? Luther is obviously saying ‘be a sinner’ in the sense of ‘confess your sins!’ Even Roman Catholic leaders have acknowledged this.