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  #1  
Old Jun 28, '12, 7:40 am
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ahs ahs is offline
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Default The Reformation...reforming to What?

The Reformers, or at least Luther, claimed to be fighting abuses in the Church. Why, then, did Luther not address the abuses without trying to change Doctrine? But then again, Luther did not claim to ONLY be fighting abuses, he also claimed that many of the Church’s Doctrines were wrong.

But what did he, and other Reformers, base this on? The Papacy, the Sacrament of Penance(aka Reconciliation/Confession), Scripture AND Tradition, etc…were rejected by all the Reformers…but on what precedent, or on based on what standard, on what authority?

And the main point I'd like to drive home is this: Either the Reformers “reformed” back to what Christianity had been from the beginning…in which case we should see some early Christian writings that support their doctrines…or they changed what Christianity had always been…in which case we should be able to see some proof of their authority to do this. Right?
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Old Jun 28, '12, 7:46 am
Credo ergo sum Credo ergo sum is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

Did you only just now realise protestantism is false?
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  #3  
Old Jun 28, '12, 8:27 am
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

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Originally Posted by Credo ergo sum View Post
Did you only just now realise protestantism is false?
NO! No, what I'm am trying to do is understand how a protestant can justify a belief that what the "Reformers" did was correct. If protestants believe that the "Reformers" were right to do what they did...then I want to see why they believe this.

Like I said, Either the Reformers “reformed” back to what Christianity had been from the beginning…in which case we should see some early Christian writings that support their doctrines…or they changed what Christianity had always been…in which case we should be able to see some proof of their authority to do this.

The fact is, we DON'T see any early writings supporting ANY of the "reformed" beliefs. Neither so we see any source of authority from which the Reformers could draw from to make the changes they made...which were indeed changes...because we see the earliest Christians believing the exact same things (Doctrinally) as Catholics did in the 16th century (and to present day).
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Old Jun 28, '12, 9:01 am
Credo ergo sum Credo ergo sum is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

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Originally Posted by ahs View Post
NO! No, what I'm am trying to do is understand how a protestant can justify a belief that what the "Reformers" did was correct. If protestants believe that the "Reformers" were right to do what they did...then I want to see why they believe this.

Like I said, Either the Reformers “reformed” back to what Christianity had been from the beginning…in which case we should see some early Christian writings that support their doctrines…or they changed what Christianity had always been…in which case we should be able to see some proof of their authority to do this.

The fact is, we DON'T see any early writings supporting ANY of the "reformed" beliefs. Neither so we see any source of authority from which the Reformers could draw from to make the changes they made...which were indeed changes...because we see the earliest Christians believing the exact same things (Doctrinally) as Catholics did in the 16th century (and to present day).
The answer is conspiracy theories. They would suggest that those writings where written or edited centuries later or that the Church Fathers were apostates and the writings of the 'bible-believing christians' from the first few centuries burned.
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  #5  
Old Jun 28, '12, 9:05 am
pablope pablope is online now
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

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Originally Posted by ahs View Post
NO! No, what I'm am trying to do is understand how a protestant can justify a belief that what the "Reformers" did was correct. If protestants believe that the "Reformers" were right to do what they did...then I want to see why they believe this.

Like I said, Either the Reformers “reformed” back to what Christianity had been from the beginning…in which case we should see some early Christian writings that support their doctrines…or they changed what Christianity had always been…in which case we should be able to see some proof of their authority to do this.

The fact is, we DON'T see any early writings supporting ANY of the "reformed" beliefs. Neither so we see any source of authority from which the Reformers could draw from to make the changes they made...which were indeed changes...because we see the earliest Christians believing the exact same things (Doctrinally) as Catholics did in the 16th century (and to present day).


http://www.calledtocommunion.com/201...tholic-church/


Maybe a book recommended here in this story (link above), which I will cite (the book is on my reading list):


As I began to dig down to the most foundational differences dividing Protestants and Catholic, the book The Spirit and Forms of Protestantism by Louis Bouyer was recommended to me. Bouyer was a Lutheran minister who converted to Catholicism mid-last century.................What piqued my interest now was the peculiar thesis of this one book. Bouyer claimed that the Catholic Church is necessary for the full flowering of the principles of the Reformation. Put differently – Protestantism needs Catholicism in order to become all it aspires to be, which, of course, if true means the Protestant Reformation was completely unnecessary. Worse, it means that the Reformation was impossible from the outset because the reformers had unwittingly cut themselves off from the only source that could make their vision fruitful. To my Reformed and Presbyterian ears this sounded more than strange. Given my understanding of Catholic teaching, Bouyer’s idea was akin to saying a terminal illness is integral to the full flowering of bodily health. Or a fire is best fueled by depriving it of oxygen. Or the growth of a plant is impossible without rooting it in infertile soil. In my mind, Bouyer’s absurdity had to be explained, so I picked up the book and read.
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  #6  
Old Jun 28, '12, 11:25 am
_DLM_ _DLM_ is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

The Reformation did help the RC Church. I believe the RC church calls it the "Counter Reformation" where many RC practices were defined.

In addition, it will never be possible to reform the RC church due to Papal/Magesterial Infalibility. If the RC church reformed any doctrine than it would be admitting error and the church will never do that.
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  #7  
Old Jun 28, '12, 11:31 am
SaintPatrick333 SaintPatrick333 is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

If every protestant actually looked into their church history and studied theology then there wouldn't be any protestants. The only problem is that they get their understanding from their bible studies and whatever their parents and pastor so and so tells them is absolute law. They have nothing credible to fall back on because historically speaking, spiritually speaking and theologically speaking, protestantism has no foundation. It crumbles in the light of Truth and reasoning. For some people they are just ignorant of the Truth and it's our job to try and find a way to break through that programming that was instilled in them as children to share the light of Christ with them and call them to Communion with the Lord. For others they are too full of pride to acknowledge they are wrong (keep in mind pride is hardly exclusive to protestants, many Catholics suffer from this as well as I'm sure everyone would openly agree too). It's a long battle and a slippery slope but we have Christ and the Holy Spirit on our side guiding our actions. They are seeking Christ as much as any one of us. We just have to pray that in their life time they can find a way to break through the block of protestantism they are stuck at, that they might freely come to Christ and join His One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, as was His will.
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  #8  
Old Jun 28, '12, 12:07 pm
_DLM_ _DLM_ is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

That's not entirely true, the Reformed/Presbyterian community relies heavily on Church History and the Church Fathers.

I agree to an extent. Many RC's and Protestants have a very shallow knowledge of their faith in regards to history. But to say that the Protestants don't have history is like erasing the church up until the Reformation. Protestantism was birthed out of the RC church excommunicating the reformers.

It was not the reformers purpose to split the church but to take it back to how the early church was before corruption crept in. Anyone would be very ignorant (i don't mean that in a bad way) to deny the corruption that was rampant in the church during the middle ages.
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  #9  
Old Jun 28, '12, 12:18 pm
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EricFilmer EricFilmer is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

Quote:
Originally Posted by _DLM_ View Post
It was not the reformers purpose to split the church but to take it back to how the early church was before corruption crept in. Anyone would be very ignorant (i don't mean that in a bad way) to deny the corruption that was rampant in the church during the middle ages.
Sure, there were elements of corruption and many things in the Church did, indeed, need correction. Martin Luther, for example, learned that there were brothels which had clergy as their exclusive clientele. But as the OP pointed out, the Reformers felt that the correction needed to involve doctrine as well. There is, after all, a big difference in saying that it was wrong for the clergy to visit brothels and to say that...

...there is no Purgatory
...marriage is not a sacrament
...the saints in heaven are incapable of intervening on our behalf
...Sola Scriptura is the test for doctrinal validity
(etc.)
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  #10  
Old Jun 28, '12, 12:28 pm
gcnuss gcnuss is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

Hi there, SP,

I find your thoughts interesting, but I don't think they are accurate reflections of where many protestants are in their faith journey.

Quote:
If every protestant actually looked into their church history and studied theology then there wouldn't be any protestants. The only problem is that they get their understanding from their bible studies and whatever their parents and pastor so and so tells them is absolute law.
There are many protestants who are quite familiar with church history and theology who are convinced that they are on the right path. If anything, it is a characteristic of protestants to resist accepting a teaching just because someone in authority tells them it is so. This is a blessing and a curse. Questioning of doctrine or authority is not a bad thing as it leads to greater understanding. Of course, we can certainly find examples where it has led to error.

Quote:
They have nothing credible to fall back on because historically speaking, spiritually speaking and theologically speaking, protestantism has no foundation. It crumbles in the light of Truth and reasoning.
It's probably good to remember that the basis for what most protestants believe is what has been taught by the church from the beginning and which is summarized rather well in the three ecumenical creeds. The first fifteen centuries of Christian history have not been erased from protestant memory.

Quote:
For some people they are just ignorant of the Truth and it's our job to try and find a way to break through that programming that was instilled in them as children to share the light of Christ with them and call them to Communion with the Lord. For others they are too full of pride to acknowledge they are wrong (keep in mind pride is hardly exclusive to protestants, many Catholics suffer from this as well as I'm sure everyone would openly agree too).
I appreciate your zeal for bringing protestants to the Truth, but there are probably many from the protestant side who are equally zealous for bringing Catholics to the Truth. For the present, my hope is that we can all find a common ground, perhaps in the creeds, and work from there. There is truth in all expressions of Christianity, even though we don't always see it. I recall a quote from a Lutheran theologian who was asked if Lutherans had the Truth -- his response was something like "yes, but we aren't the only ones who have it."

Quote:
It's a long battle and a slippery slope but we have Christ and the Holy Spirit on our side guiding our actions. They are seeking Christ as much as any one of us. We just have to pray that in their life time they can find a way to break through the block of protestantism they are stuck at, that they might freely come to Christ and join His One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, as was His will.
I'm sure you are aware that protestants, of every stripe, are equally convinced that they have Christ and the Holy Spirit on their side and guiding their actions. And, you are right, all protestants are seeking Christ just as all Catholics seek him. None reject him.

Just a few thoughts from a Lutheran who holds the Catholic Church in respect even as I live out my faith where I am.
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  #11  
Old Jun 28, '12, 12:32 pm
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EricFilmer EricFilmer is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

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Originally Posted by _DLM_ View Post
That's not entirely true, the Reformed/Presbyterian community relies heavily on Church History and the Church Fathers.
I'm not quite sure what you mean. Are you saying that the Reformers themselves researched and relied upon Church history and the ECFs (when formulating their teachings on Christianity) or that, generally speaking, it is the practice of today's Protestants to do this?
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  #12  
Old Jun 28, '12, 12:58 pm
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ahs ahs is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

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Originally Posted by pablope View Post
Beautiful testimony! I love the fact that he put his preconcieved notions aside and set out to find Truth.

Quote:
Originally Posted by _DLM_ View Post
That's not entirely true, the Reformed/Presbyterian community relies heavily on Church History and the Church Fathers.

It was not the reformers purpose to split the church but to take it back to how the early church was before corruption crept in. Anyone would be very ignorant (i don't mean that in a bad way) to deny the corruption that was rampant in the church during the middle ages.
They do [rely heavily on Church history and the ECF's]? Perhaps they really do...yet they don't take in the full context of the writings if this is so? The article Pablope linked actually addresses this exact point.

At any rate, if the reformers' purpose was to take the Church back where it had been, then why do we not see any of the reformed theology represented in the "back then" history? Where did the ECF's, or Christ for that matter, teach "sola scriptura" or "sola fide"? Did corruption in the Church justify changing the Doctrines of Christianity...or did it only justify addressing the corruption?

Quote:
Originally Posted by EricFilmer View Post
Sure, there were elements of corruption and many things in the Church did, indeed, need correction. Martin Luther, for example, learned that there were brothels which had clergy as their exclusive clientele. But as the OP pointed out, the Reformers felt that the correction needed to involve doctrine as well. There is, after all, a big difference in saying that it was wrong for the clergy to visit brothels and to say that...

...there is no Purgatory
...marriage is not a sacrament
...the saints in heaven are incapable of intervening on our behalf
...Sola Scriptura is the test for doctrinal validity
(etc.)
Yes, that.

Quote:
Originally Posted by gcnuss View Post
I appreciate your zeal for bringing protestants to the Truth, but there are probably many from the protestant side who are equally zealous for bringing Catholics to the Truth. For the present, my hope is that we can all find a common ground, perhaps in the creeds, and work from there.
I realize this was addressed to someone else, but, Yes! It is important to find a common ground and proceed from there. I think that understanding what the reformers are understood to have been workign toward, compared to what they actually did, and how they went about it, will help shed some light on that...somehow...

Quote:
Originally Posted by EricFilmer View Post
(...repsonding to DLM...) I'm not quite sure what you mean. Are you saying that the Reformers themselves researched and relied upon Church history and the ECFs (when formulating their teachings on Christianity) or that, generally speaking, it is the practice of today's Protestants to do this?
DLM, I also am kinda confused on that point.
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  #13  
Old Jun 28, '12, 1:32 pm
_DLM_ _DLM_ is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

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Originally Posted by EricFilmer View Post
I'm not quite sure what you mean. Are you saying that the Reformers themselves researched and relied upon Church history and the ECFs (when formulating their teachings on Christianity) or that, generally speaking, it is the practice of today's Protestants to do this?
The Reformers themselves, were as familiar with the ECF's as any RC at the time. Of course Luther was a very intelligent man who studied his entire life.

Specifically, what I was saying was that the ECF's and their teachings are relied upon heavily in the Reformed Tradition. I am not saying that all Reformed/Presbyterians are familiar with the EFC's teachings the same way not all RC's are familiar with EFC's.
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Old Jun 28, '12, 2:15 pm
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

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Originally Posted by _DLM_ View Post
The Reformers themselves, were as familiar with the ECF's as any RC at the time. Of course Luther was a very intelligent man who studied his entire life.

Specifically, what I was saying was that the ECF's and their teachings are relied upon heavily in the Reformed Tradition.
I'm sorry but I am still not sure what you mean by "relied upon heavily". I'm not trying to come across as being obstinate, but I simply don't see how a group of Reformers relied heavily upon the ECFs when formulating their particular Christian teachings and yet still came up with the principle of Sola Scriptura. So please clarify exactly what the Reformer's process of relying heavily upon the ECFs involved (taking Sola Scriptura into consideration).


Quote:
I am not saying that all Reformed/Presbyterians are familiar with the EFC's teachings the same way not all RC's are familiar with EFC's.
I agree that there is a notable lack of knowledge and appreciation of Patristics among both Catholics and Protestants. (Of course I'm speaking generally here)
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  #15  
Old Jun 28, '12, 2:16 pm
neophyte neophyte is offline
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Default Re: The Reformation...reforming to What?

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Originally Posted by ahs View Post
NO! No, what I'm am trying to do is understand how a protestant can justify a belief that what the "Reformers" did was correct. If protestants believe that the "Reformers" were right to do what they did...then I want to see why they believe this...
I believed it because it's what I had been taught, I had been educated in effective ways of defending it to myself, and was unable (or unwilling) to examine the false presuppositions and incoherent reasoning of the position.
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