I will get back to your previous post this weekend. As for this:
I am, and have been most willing to criticize Luther when need be. And there are plenty of opportunities for that. I am just thankful that I don’t have as voluminous a paper trail to be quoted, twisted, misconstrued, and spun every which way.
When Luther looks foolish, Luther looks foolish, jusdt like when Ecke looks foolish, or Pope Leo looks foolish, they look foolish.
Jon
Hi Jon,
I am glad to hear that you are unbiased enough to criticize Luther “when need be”. Given that he very clearly recommended that wives be executed for refusing to submit to their husbands sexually, I would think that this is one of those times when Luther ‘needs’ to be criticized. I am looking forward to your comments on Luther’s recommendation.
You mention Eck and Leo, along with Luther, claiming I think that when those individuals look foolish, they simply look foolish as individuals. Nothing could be further from the truth. Neither Leo nor Eck were innovators. Neither of them took off on their own accord and developed a brand new version of Christianity (as Luther did). Neither Leo nor Eck charged off on their own self-professed authority and challenged/changed dozens of well-established Christian doctrines. Luther did and as a result, Luther the man, the individual, must be scrutinized to a far greater degree than Leo or Eck.
Luther took far more responsibility upon his shoulders than any Pope or Catholic theologian ever has. In fact, Luther proclaimed, for himself, far, far more authority to change or create doctrine than any dozen Popes combined. Again, as such, it is extremely important that we investigate Luther, the man himself and his teachings, to determine if that authority that he took for himself was valid.
When we see things like recommending that reluctant wives be executed (and there are many, many more) this man Luther does not look like a man who was doing God’s will in his teaching. You can claim him where you agree with him (personally) and then dismiss him where you disagree with him (personally), but you cannot claim that you have no association with him. You can’t have your cake and eat it too. You identify yourself as a Lutheran, using his last name. When Luther looks foolish, it impacts the credibility of Protestantism generally, and Lutheranism specifically. In this case, where he recommended the death of wives, he looks more than foolish, he looks like he cannot understand simple Christian truths. In addition, he looks like a horrible Exegete of Scripture and also like a man who incorrectly thought he was teaching what God wanted him to teach. One has to wonder how many more issues there are like this one and how many it would take to cause people to actually consider the possibility (as remote as it might be) that Luther’s teachings were invalid in God’s eyes.
Again, I look forward to your thoughts on the execution of the wives thing. Hopefully, they will show that we can look forward to a productive, honest, and respectful dialogue.
God Bless You Jon, Topper