Hi Mary,
Thanks for your response. You made some excellent points.
Your post is another example of why the non Catholic posters here are confused by Catholics not reacting to the JDDJ as if it were on stone tablets. The same issue occurred in Luther’s day with laity and scholars alike confusing dogma and doctrine and not understanding not all teaching authorities in the Church are equal. Perhaps a discussion of the difference between binding Dictrine, doctrine vs dogma would help non Catholics understand that Luther’s time had the same confusion. Just a thought.
I agree. It seems to me that Catholics and Protestants understand ‘authority’ completely differently. A True Catholic understands that it is the Church which has authority. With Protestants, the authority lies much more with the individual. The Confessional Lutherans profess that it is their church which has the authority to teach, and I am sure that that is mostly true for some. But embedded in the very core of Protestantism and especially Lutheranism, is the ‘right’ of the individual over the corporate, the ‘right’ to rebellion. You see it here all the time in the comments of Confessional Lutherans about how they consider ‘swimming’. If they REALLY believed that their communion had the authority to teach, they wouldn’t consider swimming. That being said, once people have swum the Tiber, virtually all of them dry off for good. The journey which may have included many stops, is then complete.
The Catholic who believes that the Church is what it claims to be should strive to make sure that they follow the teachings of the Church. But it seems that with Protestants it is much more about ‘whether my church agrees with ME.’ Leaving for another communion or another Protestant denomination altogether seems to be of much less gravity than such a move would be for us.
As we have seen, there is no doubt that there was confusion about Salvation in Luther’s time. The teaching at Erfurt was wrong and what Luther was exposed to was not the official teaching of the Church.
“Luther’s reforms, it is clear, were neither an opportunistic attack on the morals of the church nor a piecemeal demand for reform here and there. His fundamental conviction was that the church of his day had lost sight of some of the fundamental themes of the Christian gospel. **After all, the theology he had been taught at Erfurt now seemed to him to be heretical, amounting to the idea of “justification by works” – the notion that humanity can achieve its own salvation by it’s morals or religious achievements” **McGrath, “Dangerous” pg. 58
Of course anyone who sees themselves as being NOTHING but sin and finds it necessary to confess for as much as six hours a day is not going to find much solace in Salvation by Works. Luther believed that even his good works were nothing but sin. This warped belief left him with NO way to Salvation, which didn’t exactly provide the Salvational certainty he so desperately needed. The solution? To create your own theology on Salvation and to ‘find’ something in Scripture which could be ‘interpreted’ to support it.
Everyone assumes (especially if they are denominationally predisposed to do so) that Luther, as a PhD and a priest, was very well educated and understood the teachings of the Church extremely well. That was not the case.
In essence, what Luther was rebelling against was a misperception of what the Church actually taught on Salvation. The Church has NEVER taught Salvation by Works, and in fact, it is a heresy. Luther misunderstood this important teaching of the Church, and began the ‘Reformation’ on the basis of his poor understanding of Church Teaching,
But this does not mean that Luther would not have revolted if he had understood the teachings of the Church correctly. It seems that Luther would never have accepted the correct teaching of the Church because that would not have given him the Salvational certainty that he so desperately needed to have. Thus, while Luther blundered into his Revolt against the Church, he would have revolted even if he had understood Church teachings well.
God Bless You Mary, Topper