The Catholic Church has never taught that one can buy forgiveness or salvation. Even Tetzel, who spent his last years broken-hearted confined to a monastery, was appalled that his evangelism had been so misconstrued and misrepresented.
Before Luther’s death, the Church had abolished almsgiving as a means of gaining indulgences for remission of the temporal punishment due to already forgiven sins, so as to avoid even the appearance of any suggestion of the “sale” of indulgences, much less the sale of forgiveness or the purchase of salvation.
In his old age Luther lamented that evnts had overtaken him , driven by the power-hungry Geman princes, and he lamented that “each man is now his own pope” and the multiplication of mutually contradictory doctrines, to correct which he forecast a future Ecumenical Council would be necessary. (The Council of Trent was indeed convened a year before his death, although Lutheran representatives were gfuaranteed safe passage to attend it they refused to do so.)
I believe that Luther in his last years wished to rejoin the Church but lacked the courage to do so, given what he knew he would face from the powerful protestant princes.
Very nice post. Thanks for joining the thread!
It is so hard to know what a man who lived in a completey different world would do today.
I suggest that the factors would involve whether he felt that the CC had sufficiently restated its understanding on the doctrine upon which the Church stands or falls, and whether the papacy had sufficiently reformed itself.
Hard to know.
Jon
I knew you would post on here lol. I believe no man is above the Church but the Church is above man. When we start thinking we know better than the Church instituted by Christ, we run into problems. I believe Luther had good intentions. There were some corrupt priest and bishops at the time. Even a few corrupt Popes. I do not believe, or I hope not, that any faithful Catholic would say otherwise. Christ knew the people of power in the Church as sinners. He gave authority to Peter, who denied Christ three times, to build his Church.
Here is an example where one priest, like Luther (we often forget he was a Catholic priest), decided you knew more than the Church. There is a priest in the town I live in. He was a priest at a local parish for a few years. It came out that he was homosexual and he confirmed it. Furthermore, it came out that he was having a relationship with someone. The Bishop, showing grace and mercy, told the priest to take some time off and reflect on the vows he took to God and Church. The priest took time off, left the Catholic Church and started his own Independent Catholic Church. He is in a openly gay relationship now. He decided he knew more than the Church.
Now obviously I am not comparing the two in such a nature, but I am stating that Luther felt he knew what was best for the children of God. Am I wrong?
Lutherans say that the office of the Pope, not the Pope himself, is against Christ. Why is it then do Lutherans always refer to Luther when trying to explain the Lutheran teachings. I have a friend that hates when I say “the Church says” but he never blinks and eye when saying “Luther said.” How is that any different?
I cannot vote on the poll, but I believe Luther would not convert back to Catholicism if given the chance. His own pride and ego would not allow him. As I stated above, when one man thinks he is above the church, the Church cannot be above him. :twocents: