Hi Ben,
Thanks for your response.
Sorry for being slow to respond. I’m away from home for the next week.
Over the years I have heard Protestants claim that the Catholic Church was wrong to excommunicate Martin Luther. The following is a list of 50 doctrines that Luther challenged/refuted/revised and ALL before he was excommunicated in 1521.
You asked for it, but I have to tell you that I post the list with some reservations. It seems that every time I post it, I get several responses which claim that of course he was right to do so because the poster personally agrees with one of the 50 doctrinal issues (probably using their Private Interpretation to do so).
- Separation of justification from sanctification.
- Extrinsic, forensic, imputed notion of justification.
- Fiduciary faith.
- Private judgment over against ecclesial infallibility.
- The tossing out of seven books of the Bible.
- Denial of venial sin.
- Denial of merit.
- The damned should be happy that they are damned and accept God’s will.
- Jesus offered Himself for damnation and possible hellfire.
- No good work can be done except by a justified man.
- All baptized men are priests (denial of the sacrament of ordination).
- All baptized men can give absolution.
- Bishops do not truly hold that office; God has not instituted it.
- Popes do not truly hold that office; God has not instituted it.
- Priests have no special, indelible character.
- Temporal authorities have power over the Church; even bishops and popes; to assert the contrary was a mere presumptuous invention.
- Vows of celibacy are wrong and should be abolished.
- Denial of papal infallibility.
- Belief that unrighteous priests or popes lose their authority (contrary to Augustine’s rationale against the Donatists).
- The keys of the kingdom were not just given to Peter.
- Private judgment of every individual to determine matters of faith.
- Denial that the pope has the right to call or confirm a council.
- Denial that the Church has the right to demand celibacy of certain callings.
- There is no such vocation as a monk; God has not instituted it.
- Feast days should be abolished, and all church celebrations confined to Sundays.
- Fasts should be strictly optional.
- Canonization of saints is thoroughly corrupt and should stop.
- Confirmation is not a sacrament.
- Indulgences should be abolished.
- Dispensations should be abolished.
- Philosophy (Aristotle as prime example) is an unsavory, detrimental influence on Christianity.
- Transubstantiation is “a monstrous idea.”
- The Church cannot institute sacraments.
- Denial of the “wicked” belief that the mass is a good work.
- Denial of the “wicked” belief that the mass is a true sacrifice.
- Denial of the sacramental notion of ex opere operato.
- Denial that penance is a sacrament.
- Assertion that the Catholic Church had “completely abolished” even the practice of penance.
- Claim that the Church had abolished faith as an aspect of penance.
- Denial of apostolic succession.
- Any layman who can should call a general council.
- Penitential works are worthless.
- None of what Catholics believe to be the seven sacraments have any biblical proof.
- Marriage is not a sacrament.
- Annulments are a senseless concept and the Church has no right to determine or grant annulments.
- Whether divorce is allowable is an open question.
- Divorced persons should be allowed to remarry.
- Jesus allowed divorce when one partner committed adultery.
- The priest’s daily office is “vain repetition.”
- Extreme unction is not a sacrament (there are only two sacraments: baptism and the Eucharist).”
The above from, Armstrong, “Martin Luther, Catholic Critical Analysis and Praise”, Chapter One, Was Martin Luther a “Revolutionary” Who Had Many Fundamental Disagreements With the Catholic Church?
This is a list of things that Luther differed with the Church over BEFORE his excommunication.
Of course even very traditional Catholics can probably find one of the 50 with which they agree, but that is not at all the point. The point is the number of doctrinal issues which Luther rejected or revised.
**
Where did Luther ‘get’ the Authority to reject the teachings of the Catholic Church? ** No Church would put up with this kind of ‘independence’ (arrogance) and as we know, the Lutheran church certainly would not.
Did Luther’s ‘authority’ to demand that he was right (and everybody who disagreed with him was wrong) come from God? Did it come from Scripture? Did it come from his role as a monk, a priest, a Theologian, a Professor? Exactly what was it that should cause us to believe that Luther was right and the Church was wrong?
This thread is about why Luther was excommunicated. Rejecting/revising 50 important doctrines should be seen as the answer. It was the magnitude of Luther’s Revolt that resulted in his excommunication.
As we have learned, Lutherans are not allowed to use their Private Interpretation on doctrinal matters, and yet when I point this out to Lutherans as ask why what Luther did should be acceptable, I get nothing but silence.
Ben, rather than addressing one or more of the various 50 things, could you please address, from a Lutheran perspective, why what Luther did in rejecting SO MUCH of Catholic doctrine, is not exactly what the Lutheran church condemns.
God Bless You Ben, Topper