=josephback;13404732]This is true and an excellent reason to consider Catholicism. I was infant baptized Lutheran and grew up in the AoG/Baptist traditions. Growing up, the Reformation was always cast as the Glorious Revolution that “set the Gospel free,” as you say. From a vantage point outside the movement or its offshoots it was a very bloody, chaotic time in history that witnessed the breakup of medieval Christianity, a catastrophe that Western society is still reeling from.
Indeed it was a bloody, chaotic, and sometimes fiery (if you catch my drift) time. Neither side was immune from the brutality brought on by corruption within the Church, and pride on the part of many involved
Furthermore, Martin Luther being right would not only call into question God’s integrity and make him elitist(hiding the truth in a book almost no one could read), it would mean that Jesus lied to Peter when he said the gates of hell would not overcome the Church. If the professed kingdom of God on earth lost the truth about salvation(a point separate from the moral lives of the clergy or faithful), then we’re all on our own and God’s a jerk. The Reformation has consequences for theology, and they are not pretty. Why not consider that God was faithful?
Of all the Catholic apologetic arguments, I find this the least believable. First it assumes that the gates of Hell overcame the Church, a proposition which is not possible, on a number of grounds, primary being that said overcoming would mean an overcoming of the entire Church. On this All Saints Day one can recognize that the gates of Hell cannot overcome the Church Universal, which includes the Church Triumphant. It also assumes that the Church Militant is only and exclusively found in communion with the Bishop of Rome, a patently false assumption.
Second, it assumes that the failure of the middle ages Church was God’s fault, when in fact it was the fault of humans, not the least of which, though not limited to, being popes and cardinals of that time. It is also clear that this wasn’t the first time the Church was unable to “hold it together”. That Great Schism wasn’t God’s fault either.
So, Jesus didn’t lie (as if that was possible), and God is not a jerk (as if the one who made salvation possible could even be), but people can really screw things up. Even when we do, however, His word and His sacraments, the tools of the Holy Spirit, see believers through the turmoil of schism and division brought about be men.
So, Joseph, don’t blame God for the failure of men to stay unity with each other. Instead, we must blame ourselves. Pope Leo X and Father Martin are dead nearly 500 years. Even they deserve little blame anymore, be we ourselves.
Jon