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The Errors of Martin Luther's German Bible
http://www.cogwriter.com/luther.htm ^

Posted on 11/01/2011 6:08:48 PM PDT by rzman21

Sola Scriptura or Prima Luther? What Did Martin Luther Really Believe About the Bible?

By COGwriter

Most people realize that the Living Church of God (or any of the true Churches of God) cannot be part of the Roman Catholic Church. However, some do not realize that the Living Church of God is not part of the Protestant reformation movement led by Martin Luther (our history predates Luther, and the actual Roman Catholic Church for that matter, please see the History of Early Christianity).

Regarding the Bible, the Living Church of God believes that "All Scripture is given by inspiration of God and, and is profitable for doctrine" (II Timothy 3:16, NKJV throughout unless otherwise stated).

Did Martin Luther agree?

Martin Luther publicly taught that only the Bible should be used as doctrine. One of the rallying cries of his movement was sola Scriptura (translated in English as 'the Bible alone'). This is one of the major positions that many professing Protestants respect Martin Luther for.

Although Martin Luther stated that he looked upon the Bible "as if God Himself spoke therein" he also stated,

My word is the word of Christ; my mouth is the mouth of Christ" (O'Hare PF. The Facts About Luther, 1916--1987 reprint ed., pp. 203-204).

[Specifically, what Martin Luther wrote in German was ""Ich bin sehr gewiss, dass mein Wort nitt mein, sondern Christus Wort sei, so muss mein Mund auch des sein, des Wort er redet" (Luther, 682) - also translated as "I am confident that it is not my word, but Christ's word, so my mouth is His who utters the words"(God's words - the violence of representation. Universitatea din Bucuresti, 2002. http://www.unibuc.ro/eBooks/filologie/meanings/1.htm, September 25, 2003).]

Did Martin Luther really revere and believe the Bible more than his own opinions? This article will quote Martin Luther extensively to assist the reader in answering that question.

Martin Luther Added to the Book of Romans

The Bible, in Romans 3:28, states,

Therefore we conclude that a man is justified by faith apart from the deeds of the law.

Martin Luther, in his German translation of the Bible, specifically added the word "allein" (English 'alone') to Romans 3:28-a word that is not in the original Greek. Notice what Protestant scholars have admitted:

...Martin Luther would once again emphasize...that we are "justified by faith alone", apart from the works of the Law" (Rom. 3:28), adding the German word allein ("alone") in his translation of the Greek text. There is certainly a trace of Marcion in Luther's move (Brown HOJ. Heresies: Heresy and Orthodoxy in the History of the Church. Hendrickson Publishers, Peabody (MA), 1988, pp. 64-65).

Furthermore, Martin Luther himself reportedly said,

You tell me what a great fuss the Papists are making because the word alone in not in the text of Paul…say right out to him: 'Dr. Martin Luther will have it so,'…I will have it so, and I order it to be so, and my will is reason enough. I know very well that the word 'alone' is not in the Latin or the Greek text (Stoddard J. Rebuilding a Lost Faith. 1922, pp. 101-102; see also Luther M. Amic. Discussion, 1, 127).

This passage strongly suggests that Martin Luther viewed his opinions, and not the actual Bible as the primary authority--a concept which this author will name prima Luther. By "papists" he is condemning Roman Catholics, but is needs to be understood that Protestant scholars (like HOJ Brown) also realize that Martin Luther changed that scripture.

Perhaps it should also be noted that Martin Luther also claimed that the word for "alone" was needed for a translation into the German language, but that is really only true if one feels that the word alone must be added (according to one person I consulted with who studied German). The truth is that Martin Luther intentionally added a word and many sadly relied on it.

A second rallying cry for followers of Martin Luther was the expression sola fide (faith alone). But it appears that Martin Luther may have intentionally mistranslated Romans 3:28 for the pretence of supposedly having supposed scriptural justification for his sola fide doctrine.

He also made another change in Romans. Romans 4:15 states,

...because the law brings about wrath; for where there is no law there is no transgression.

Yet in his German translation, Martin Luther added the word 'only' before the term 'wrath' to Romans 4:15 (O'Hare, p. 201).

This presumably was to attempt to justify his position to discredit the law.

Martin Luther Made At Least One Other Intentional Mistranslation

Martin Luther has also been charged with intentionally mistranslating Matthew 3:2, Acts 19:18, and many other scriptures (ibid, p. 200).

Matthew 3:2 states,

"Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!"

Martin Luther, in his German translation, according to at least one Catholic source, changed the word 'repent' to 'mend' or 'do better' (ibid, p. 201), presumably to justify his position that one does not need to obey God's laws through repentance. Others disagree on that point and indicate that the German term chosen can or should be translated as repent.

Yet, irrespective of the translation (as I do not know enough German to have a strong opinion), Martin Luther did not seem to teach strong real repentance as he taught,

Be a sinner, and sin boldly, but believe more boldly still. Sin shall not drag us away from Him, even should we commit fornication or murder thousands and thousands of times a day (Luther, M. Letter of August 1, 1521 as quoted in Stoddard, p.93).

Martin Luther seemed to overlook what the Book of Hebrews taught:

For if we sin willfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful expectation of judgment, and fiery indignation which will devour the adversaries (Hebrews 10:26-27).

The Bible, in Acts 19:18, states,

"And many who had believed came confessing and telling their deeds..."

Yet according to one source, Martin Luther rendered it, "they acknowledged the miracles of the Apostles" (O'Hare, p. 201).

There are several possible reasons why Martin Luther intentionally mistranslated Acts 19:18, but the point on this article is to show that he did.

Another point to be made is that by making mistranslations of the Bible, Protestants have given Catholics reasons to ignore them (cf. 2 Peter 2:1-3). Here is what one Catholic priest has written:

The proponents of Protestantism made false translations of the Bible and misled people into their errors by apparently proving from the "Bible" (their own translations) the correctness of their doctrines. It was all deceit, lying and hypocrisy. (Kramer H.B. L. The Book of Destiny. Nihil Obstat: J.S. Considine, O.P., Censor Deputatus. Imprimatur: +Joseph M. Mueller, Bishop of Sioux City, Iowa, January 26, 1956. Reprint TAN Books, Rockford (IL), p. 224).

Perhaps I should add that many important Protestant-accepted doctrines would have been understood as false if later Protestant translators also would not have made their own intentional mistranslations of other parts of the Bible, especially in the New Testament. Yet, many who profess sola Scriptura even in the 21st century do not know that some of what they have relied on has been intentionally mistranslated.

Martin Luther Preferred to Change John 1:14

Martin Luther also taught,

And John 1 says: "The Word was made flesh," when in our judgment it would have been better said, "The Word was incarnate," or "made fleshly" (Disputation On the Divinity and Humanity of Christ February 27, 1540 conducted by Dr. Martin Luther, 1483-1546 translated from the Latin text WA 39/2, pp. 92-121 by Christopher B. Brown).

This was apparently done to justify his belief that Jesus was fully God and fully human while on the earth.

As Martin Luther correctly pointed out, John 1:14 states that "the Word was made flesh", yet John 1:14, combined with Philippians 2:6-7 show that Jesus 'emptied Himself' (the proper Greek translation; see Green JP. Interlinear Greek-English New Testament, 3rd ed., 1996, p. 607) of His divinity while on the earth.

If not, He could not have been tempted as we are, which He was,

"For we do not have a High Priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but was in all points tempted as we are, yet without sin" Hebrews 4:15-16).

This is discussed more in the article on Binitarianism.

Martin Luther Stated Jesus Meant the Opposite of What He Said

The Bible, in Luke 10:28, states,

"And he said unto him, Thou hast answered right: this do, and thou shalt live" (KJV).

Yet Martin Luther taught,

To do means to believe-to keep the law by faith. The passage in Matthew: Do this and thou shalt live, signifies Believe this and thou shalt live. The words Do this, have ironical sense, as if our Lord should say: Thou wilt do it tomorrow, but not today; only make an attempt to keep the Commandments, and the trial will teach thee the ignominy of thy failure (O'Hare, p.205).

Although Martin Luther mentioned Matthew's account (which is in Matthew 19:16-21), the quote in question is actually from Luke 10:28. It is because of such misinterpretations of what the Bible states that many Protestants have tossed out the necessity to keep the ten commandments, even though scholars agree that they were kept by the early Christians (please see the article The Ten Commandments and the Early Church).

Martin Luther's comments clearly suggest that he felt that Jesus meant the opposite of what He said in Matthew 19:16,

"But if you want to enter into life, keep the commandments".

Two articles of related interest may include What Did Jesus Teach About the Ten Commandments? and Hope of Salvation: How the Living Church of God differ from most Protestants

Martin Luther Taught Certain Books of the Bible Were Questionable

Martin Luther had different views of various books of the Bible. Specifically, he had a fairly low view of the Books of Hebrews, James, Jude, and Revelation.

The Catholic Encyclopedia claims:

As for Protestantism, the Anglicans and Calvinists always kept the entire New Testament But for over a century the followers of Luther excluded Hebrews, James, Jude, and Apocalypse (Reid, George J. Transcribed by Ernie Stefanik Canon of the New Testament. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume III Copyright © 1908 by Robert Appleton Company. Nihil Obstat, November 1, 1908. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York).

Martin Luther himself was the obvious reason why, as he wrote,

Up to this point we have had the true and certain chief books of the New Testament. The four which follow have from ancient times had a different reputation. In the first place, the fact that Hebrews is not an epistle of St. Paul, or of any other apostle (Luther, M. Prefaces to the Epistle of the Hebrews, 1546).

Regarding the New Testament Book of Hebrews Martin Luther stated,

It need not surprise one to find here bits of wood, hay, and straw (O'Hare, p. 203).

He also wrote,

St. James' epistle is really an epistle of straw…for it has nothing of the nature of the gospel about it" (Luther, M. Preface to the New Testament, 1546).

and

In the first place it is flatly against St. Paul and all the rest of Scripture in ascribing justification to works…Besides, he throws things together so chaotically that it seems to me he must have been some good, pious man, who took a few sayings from the disciples of the apostles and thus tossed them off on paper. Or it may perhaps have been written by someone on the basis of his preaching (Luther, M. Preface to the Epistles of St. James and St. Jude, 1546).

Interestingly the Epistle of James is the only place in the Bible to actually use the term 'faith alone':

You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith alone (James 2:24).

One would have to assume that the fact that James 2:24 contradicted Martin Luther's sola fide teaching would have been a major reason that he discounted this book of the Bible.

Protestant scholars have recognized that Martin Luther handled James poorly as they have written:

The great reformer Martin Luther...never felt good about the Epistle of James...Luther went to far when he put James in the appendix to the New Testament.

(Radmacher E.D. general editor. The Nelson Study Bible. Thomas Nelson Publishers, Nashville, 1997, p. 2107)

Martin Luther taught,

Concerning the epistle of St. Jude, no one can deny that it is an extract or copy of St. Peter's second epistle…Therefore, although I value this book, it is an epistle that need not be counted among the chief books which are supposed to lay the foundations of faith (Luther, M. Preface to the Epistles of St. James and St. Jude, 1546).

To me, Jude does not sound that similar to 2 Peter, but if even it is, should it be discounted? Maybe Martin Luther discounted it because it warns people:

...to contend earnestly for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints (Jude 3). And this, sadly, is not something that Martin Luther really did (though he did sometimes make some efforts towards that).

Perhaps none of Martin Luther's writings on the Bible are as harsh as what he wrote about "The Revelation of Jesus Christ" (Revelation 1:1). Specifically he wrote,

About this book of the Revelation of John...I miss more than one thing in this book, and it makes me consider it to be neither apostolic nor prophetic…I can in no way detect that the Holy Spirit produced it. Moreover he seems to me to be going much too far when he commends his own book so highly-indeed, more than any of the other sacred books do, though they are much more important-and threatens that if anyone takes away anything from it, God will take away from him, etc. Again, they are supposed to be blessed who keep what is written in this book; and yet no one knows what that is, to say nothing of keeping it. This is just the same as if we did not have the book at all. And there are many far better books available for us to keep…My spirit cannot accommodate itself to this book. For me this is reason enough not to think highly of it: Christ is neither taught nor known in it" (Luther, M. Preface to the Revelation of St. John, 1522).

Another reason Martin Luther may not have been able to accommodate this Revelation of Jesus Christ is because he clearly violated this warning,

For I testify to everyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book: If anyone adds to these things, God will add to him the plagues that are written in this book; and if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part from the Book of Life, from the holy city, and from the things which are written in this book (Revelation 22:18-19).

Martin Luther took away from this book through his comments about it, and this is the same Martin Luther who (as shown previously in this article) added words to the Bible that were not there.

Martin Luther's Comments on Books of the Old Testament Show A Hate for Things Jewish

As the following quotes show, Martin Luther did not care for several books in the Old Testament either:

"Job spoke not as it stands written in his book, but only had such thoughts. It is merely the argument of a fable. It is probable that Solomon wrote and made this book."…

"Ecclesiastes ought to have been more complete. There is too much incoherent matter in it...Solomon did not, therefore, write this book."…

"The book of Esther I toss into the Elbe. I am such an enemy to the book of Esther that I wish it did not exist, for it Judaizes too much..."

"The history of Jonah is so monstrous that it is absolutely incredible." (as quoted in O'Hare, p. 202).

Furthermore, Martin Luther had little use for the first five books of the Old Testament (sometimes referred to as the Pentateuch):

Of the Pentateuch he says: "We have no wish either to see or hear Moses" (Ibid, p. 202).

Martin Luther hated the Jews, which may be why he was against Esther, the first five books of the Bible, and other parts of the Hebrew scriptures.

Notice that Martin Luther advised his followers,

...to burn down Jewish schools and synagogues, and to throw pitch and sulphur into the flames; to destroy their homes; to confiscate their ready money in gold and silver; to take from them their sacred books, even the whole Bible; and if that did not help matters, to hunt them of the country like mad dogs (Luther’s Works, vol. Xx, pp. 2230-2632 as quoted in Stoddard JL. Rebuilding a Lost Faith, 1922, p.99).

Accordingly, it must and dare not be considered a trifling matter but a most serious one to seek counsel against this and to save our souls from the Jews, that is, from the devil and from eternal death. My advice, as I said earlier, is: First, that their synagogues be burned down, and that all who are able toss in sulphur and pitch (Martin Luther (1483-1546): On the Jews and Their Lies, 1543 as quoted from Luther's Works, Volume 47: The Christian in Society IV, (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1971). pp 268­293).

More on Martin Luther and the Jews (as well as some of his other doctrinal positions) can be found in the article The Similarities and Dissimilarities between Martin Luther and Herbert W. Armstrong.

Martin Luther Claimed that John Was the Only True Gospel

Although Martin Luther decried John for penning the Revelation of Jesus Christ, he did like John. According to Martin Luther,

The first three speak of the works of our Lord, rather than His oral teachings; that of St. John is the only sympathetic, the only true Gospel and should undoubtedly be preferred above the others. In like manner the Epistles of St. Peter and St. Paul are superior to the first three Gospels (O'Hare, p. 203).

Martin Luther's position on this, and some of his other matters, appear to be blasphemous and in contraction to II Timothy 3:16.

Martin Luther' German Translation of the Bible

Perhaps it should be mentioned, that while some have credited Martin Luther with being the first person to translate the Bible into German, this was not the case.

The first translation of the Bible into Teutonic (old German) was apparently by Raban Maur, who was born in 776 (O'Hare, p.183). Actually, by 1522 (the year Martin Luther's translation came out) there were at least 14 versions of the Bible in High German and 3 in Low German (ibid).

However, it is true that Martin Luther's translation, became more commonly available, and possibly more understandable (in a sense)--even though it did include his intentional translating errors.

Martin Luther Preferred to Change a Commandment

Martin Luther seemed to believe that the Sabbath command had to do with learning about God's word, as opposed to rest, as he wrote about it,

What does this mean? We should fear and love God so that we do not despise preaching and His Word, but hold it sacred and gladly hear and learn it (Luther's Small Catechism with Explanation. Concordia Publishing House, St. Louis, 1986, p. 10).

"We sin against the Third Commandment when we despise preaching and the Word of God...What does God require of us in the Third Commandment? A. We should hold preaching and the Word of God sacred" (Ibid, p. 68).

The Lutheran Confessions admit:

As we study Luther's expositions of the Decalog, or the Ten Commandments, we find that he does not quote the Third Commandment in its Old Testament form: 'Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy', but rather in the spirit of the New Testament: 'Thou shalt sanctify the holy day' (Mueller, John Theodore. The Lutheran Confessions. Circa 1953, p.10).

In another place, Martin Luther wrote,

Now follows the Third Commandment: "Thou shalt hallow the day of rest." (Luther, M. A treatise on Good Works together with the Letter of Dedication, published 1520. In Works of Martin Luther. Adolph Spaeth, L.D. Reed, Henry Eyster Jacobs, et Al., Trans. & Eds. Philadelphia: A. J. Holman Company, 1915, Vol. 1, pp. 173-285).

It should be noted that Lutherans (and Roman Catholics) consider the Sabbath to be the Third, not Fourth, Commandment. The order that Martin Luther chose to accept was an order changed by Augustine (please see the article Which Is Faithful: The Roman Catholic Church or the Church of God?) and not the order from the Bible or that as understood by the early Church (please see the article The Ten Commandments and the Early Church). Sadly, Martin Luther often accept Roman Catholic changes instead of believing what the Bible actually taught (and of course, he came up with other teachings that neither the Bible nor the Roman Church supported).

Martin Luther Preferred to Teach Doctrines That Did Not Have Proper Scriptural Support

Martin Luther apparently decided that he could not understand God, but that he should teach the unbiblical doctrine of the trinity. Notice what one Protestant scholar wrote:

For Luther, as for the German mystics, God is Deus absconditus, the "hidden God," inaccessible to human reason...

By emphasizing the sole authority of Scripture and downgrading the work of the church fathers and the decisions of the ecumenical councils, Luther created a problem for his followers. One the one hand, Luther wanted to affirm traditional theology with respect to the doctrine of the Trinity and Christ, but on the other those doctrines are not explicit in Scripture. They are the product of church fathers and the councils (Brown HOJ. Heresies: Heresy and Orthodoxy in the History of the Church. Hendrickson Publishers, Peabody (MA), 1988, p. 314).

It should be noted here that NONE of the so-called "church fathers" prior to the end of the second century espoused any trinitarian position (more can be found in the article Did the True Church Ever Teach a Trinity?).

A French Protestant named Rabaud declared,

Luther has no fixed theory of inspiration: if all his works suppose the inspiration of the Sacred Writings, all his conduct shows that he makes himself the supreme judge of it (Rabaud, Histoire de la doctrine de l inspriaation dans les pays de langue francaise depuis la Reforme jusqu a nos jours Paris, 1883, p.42 as quoted in O'Hare, p. 203).

Thus even Protestant scholars realize that Martin Luther considered Prima Luther to be of more importance than Sola Scriptura--those interested in doing God's will should heed the Bible, and most should read the article The Bible and Tradition.

Martin Luther held many doctrinal positions that did not have biblical support, as well as some that did (please see the documented article The Similarities and Dissimilarities between Martin Luther and Herbert W. Armstrong.

Martin Luther Declared That Part of Three Days Equaled Three Days and Three Nights

The Catholic-supporting Augustine declared through an odd calculation that three days and three nights equaled thirty-six hours as ratios of twelve came to thirty-six (please see the article What Happened in the Crucifixion Week?).

Martin Luther, who had been a Roman Catholic, also did not accept that Jesus was in the grave for three days and three nights as he wrote,

How can we say that he rose on the third day, since he lay in the grave only one day and two nights? According to the Jewish calculation it was only a day and a half; how shall we then persist in believing there were three days? To this we reply that be was in the state of death for at least a part of all three days. For he died at about two o'clock on Friday and consequently was dead for about two hours on the first day. After that night he lay in the grave all day, which is the true Sabbath. On the third day, which we commemorate now, he rose from the dead and so remained in the state of death a part of this day, just as if we say that something occurred on Easter-day, although it happens in the evening, only a portion of the day. In this sense Paul and the Evangelists say that be rose on the third day (Luther M. Of Christ's Resurrection from volume II:238-247 of The Sermons of Martin Luther, published by Baker Book House (Grand Rapids, MI). It was originally published in 1906 in English by Lutherans in All Lands Press (Minneapolis, MN), as The Precious and Sacred Writings of Martin Luther, vol. 11).

However, Jesus clearly said He would be in the grave for three days AND three nights and this would be the sign religious leaders should pay attention to:

An evil and adulterous generation seeks after a sign, and no sign will be given to it except the sign of the prophet Jonah. For as Jonah was three days and three nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth (Matthew 12:39-40).

Jesus being the Messiah was to be proven by Him being three days and three nights in the heart of the earth like Jonah was in the belly of the great fish.

Should we believe the Bible or human tradition? Does anyone really believe that ratios of 12 are how Jesus expected His words to be understood?

Notice what the Book of Jonah states:

Now the LORD had prepared a great fish to swallow Jonah. And Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights (Jonah 1:17).

Does any one really feel that Jonah was only in the belly of the fish for less than three days and three nights?

(Most Protestant commentators hedge on this and claim that parts of days is acceptable so 49 hours is possible--see The Wycliffe Bible Commentary, Electronic Database. Copyright (c) 1962 by Moody Press. Of course the problem with this is that even with 49 hours, it is not possible that Jesus was buried before sunset, about 6:00pm, on Friday and rose prior to sunrise, about 6:00am, on Sunday as that only adds up to 36 hours. Furthermore, if one takes the fact that Jesus died about 3:00 pm, as opposed to the time He was buried, that only makes 39 hours. Hence there is no way that any who actually believes the scriptures over personal interpretation can agree with Martin Luther.)

Conclusion

This author cannot agree with Martin Luther's assessment of the books of the Bible, nor Martin Luther's personal changes.

It appears that Martin Luther truly preferred the concept of prima Luther (the primacy of Luther) and not sola Scriptura when it came to doctrine.

Those of us in the Living Church of God believe that all 66 books of the Bible are inspired and profitable for doctrine (II Timothy 3:16). Because we also believe that we are not allowed to add or subtract from the Bible (see Revelation 22:18-19), we cannot follow the teachings of Protestant reformers such as Martin Luther—who changed or diminished the importance of at least 18 of them (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Esther, Job, Ecclesiastes, Jonah, Matthew, Luke, John, Acts, Romans, Hebrews, James, Jude, and Revelation).

For a more complete background on the history of the Living Church of God, please request its free booklet God's Church Through the Ages or read it online at http://www.lcg.org/files/booklets/gca/default.htm.

For more information on how the Living Church of God differs from Protestantism, please read the article, Hope of Salvation: How the Living Church of God differs from most Protestants. To understand the the relationship between the Bible and tradition, please read Tradition and Scripture: From the Bible and Church Writings.

For specific information regarding the teachings of Martin Luther, please see the article The Similarities and Dissimilarities between Martin Luther and Herbert Armstrong.

Back to home page www.cogwriter.com

Thiel B., Ph.D. Sola Scriptura or Prima Luther? What Did Martin Luther Really Believe About the Bible? www.cogwriter.com (c) 2003/2006/2007/2008/2009/2011 1024


TOPICS: Evangelical Christian; Orthodox Christian; Religion & Politics
KEYWORDS: bible; luther; lutheran; martinluther; revisionisthistory
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To: cva66snipe
St. Cyprian of Carthage c. 250 AD On the Unity of the Church Chapter 6 The spouse of Christ cannot be defiled; she is uncorrupted and chaste. She knows one home, with chaste modesty she guards the sanctity of one couch. She keeps us for God; she assigns the children whom she has created to the kingdom. Whoever is separated from the Church and is joined with an adulteress is separated from the promises of the Church, nor will he who has abandoned the Church arrive at the rewards of Christ. He is a stranger; he is profane; he is an enemy. He cannot have God as a father who does not have the Church as a mother. If whoever was outside the ark of Noe was able to escape, he too who is outside. the Church escapes. The Lord warns, saying: 'He who is not with me is against me, and who does not gather with me, scatters.' He who breaks the peace and concord of Christ acts against Christ; he who gathers somewhere outside the Church scatters the Church of Christ. The Lord says: 'I and the Father are one.' And again of the Father and Son and the Holy Spirit it is written: 'And these three are one.' Does anyone believe that this unity which comes from divine strength, which is closely connected with the divine sacraments, can be broken asunder in the Church and be separated by the divisions of colliding wills? He who does not hold this unity, does not hold the law of God, does not hold the faith of the Father and the Son, does not hold life and salvation. If the Bible is so simple, why can't those of you who embrace the heresy of Sola Scriptura agree on basic matters of scriptural interpretation?
321 posted on 11/02/2011 7:45:41 PM PDT by rzman21
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To: cva66snipe

“dogma can’t save you”

we agree!!

baptism now saves you, don’t you agree?


322 posted on 11/02/2011 7:47:15 PM PDT by one Lord one faith one baptism
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To: one Lord one faith one baptism
you missed the point. they were considered Scripture by the local Corinthian Church. once the Roman persecution ended in the early 4th century, Christians knew just as there is only One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism, One Eucharist and One Church, there can only be One Canon of Scripture. they also knew only one authority on earth had the power to declare the canon, The Church. so the Church met in Councils and declared 73 books to be canonical. this went unchallenged until the 16th century, when certain sects arose and tossed 7 books from the OT, but retained the Catholic 27 book NT. you have no divine mandate to decide the canon and i don’t either. only the One Church, evidenced by apostolic succession has this authority. we must accept this authority as this pleases the Lord.

On the contrary, I understood what you were trying to assert and, as I explained, the letters from Clement to the church in Corinth (a local church, BTW) may have been important to them, held by them as binding, treasured and honored but they WERE NOT part of Holy Scripture. I know we have had this discussion numerous times so I wonder why this simple truth has never broken through - the early believers HAD the teachings of the Apostles and their disciples that they themselves received from Jesus and then through divine inspiration. Do you actually think that Peter didn't get around to teaching that the Gospel truths were preached through the power of the Holy Spirit until he wrote about it in his first epistle (I Peter 1:12)?

Those very same truths that were being taught in all the local congregations came from the inspiration of the Holy Spirit and that same Spirit led those men to write down those truths for dissemination throughout the Christian world - the very same ones we even have in our possession today. They were given to the church under the seal of apostolic authority and, because of that, they were accepted. From the link http://www.the-highway.com/ntcanon_Warfield.html:

Accordingly not only was the gospel they delivered, in their own estimation, itself a divine revelation, but it was also preached “in the Holy Ghost” (I Pet. i. 12); not merely the matter of it, but the very words in which it was clothed were “of the Holy Spirit” (I Cor. ii. 13). Their own commands were, therefore, of divine authority (I Thess. iv. 2), and their writings were the depository of these commands (II Thess. ii. 15). “If any man obeyeth not our word by this epistle,” says Paul to one church (II Thess. iii. 14), “note that man, that ye have no company with him.” To another he makes it the test of a Spirit-led man to recognize that what he was writing to them was “the commandments of the Lord” (I Cor. xiv. 37). Inevitably, such writings, making so awful a claim on their acceptance, were received by the infant churches as of a quality equal to that of the old “Bible “; placed alongside of its older books as an additional part of the one law of God; and read as such in their meetings for worship — a practice which moreover was required by the apostles (I Thess. v. 27; Col. iv. 16; Rev. 1. 3). In the apprehension, therefore, of the earliest churches, the “Scriptures” were not a closed but an increasing “canon.” Such they had been from the beginning, as they gradually grew in number from Moses to Malachi; and such they were to continue as long as there should remain among the churches “men of God who spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.”

As regarding the establishment of the canon, Dr. Warfield from the same link says:

What needs emphasis at present about these facts is that they obviously are not evidences of a gradually-heightening estimate of the New Testament books, originally received on a lower level and just beginning to be tentatively accounted Scripture; they are conclusive evidences rather of the estimation of the New Testament books from the very beginning as Scripture, and of their attachment as Scripture to the other Scriptures already in hand. The early Christians did not, then, first form a rival “canon” of “new books” which came only gradually to be accounted as of equal divinity and authority with the “old books”; they received new book after new book from the apostolical circle, as equally” Scripture “ with the old books, and added them one by one to the collection of old books as additional Scriptures, until at length the new books thus added were numerous enough to be looked upon as another section of the Scriptures.

The earliest name given to this new section of Scripture was framed on the model of the name by which what we know as the Old Testament was then known. Just as it was called “The Law and the Prophets and the Psalms” (or “the Hagiographa”), or more briefly “The Law and the Prophets,” or even more briefly still “The Law”; so the enlarged Bible was called “The Law and the Prophets, with the Gospels and the Apostles” (so Clement of Alexandria, “Strom.” vi. 11, 88; Tertullian, “De Præs. Hær.” 36), or most briefly “The Law and the Gospel” (so Claudius Apolinaris, Irenæus); while the new books apart were called “The Gospel and the Apostles,” or most briefly of all” The Gospel.” This earliest name for the new Bible, with all that it involves as to its relation to the old and briefer Bible, is traceable as far back as Ignatius (A.D. 115), who makes use of it repeatedly (e.g., “ad Philad.” 5; “ad Smyrn.” 7). In one passage he gives us a hint of the controversies which the enlarged Bible of the Christians aroused among the Judaizers (“ad Philad.” 6). “When I heard some saying,” he writes, “‘Unless I find it in the Old [Books] I will not believe the Gospel,’ on my saying, ‘It is written,’ they answered, ‘That is the question.’ To me, however, Jesus Christ is the Old [Books]; his cross and death and resurrection, and the faith which is by him, the undefiled Old [Books] — by which I wish, by your prayers, to be justified. The priests indeed are good, but the High Priest better,” etc. Here Ignatius appeals to the “Gospel” as Scripture, and the Judaizers object, receiving from him the answer in effect which Augustine afterward formulated in the well-known saying that the New Testament lies hidden in the Old and the Old Testament is first made clear in the New. What we need now to observe, however, is that to Ignatius the New Testament was not a different book from the Old Testament, but part of the one body of Scripture with it; an accretion, so to speak, which had grown upon it.

This is the testimony of all the early witnesses — even those which speak for the distinctively Jewish-Christian church. For example, that curious Jewish-Christian writing, “The Testaments of the XII. Patriarchs” (Benj. 11), tells us, under the cover of an ex post facto prophecy, that the “work and word” of Paul, i.e., confessedly the book of Acts and Paul’s Epistles, “shall be written in the Holy Books,” i.e., as is understood by all, made a part of the existent Bible. So even in the Talmud, in a scene intended to ridicule a “bishop” of the first century, he is represented as finding Galatians by “sinking himself deeper” into the same “Book” which contained the Law of Moses (“Babl. Shabbath,” 116 a and b). The details cannot be entered into here. Let it suffice to say that, from the evidence of the fragments which alone have been preserved to us of the Christian writings of that very early time, it appears that from the beginning of the second century (and that is from the end of the apostolic age) a collection (Ignatius, II Clement) of “New Books” (Ignatius), called the “Gospel and Apostles” (Ignatius, Marcion), was already a part of the “Oracles” of God (Polycarp, Papias, II Clement), or “Scriptures” (I Tim., II Pet., Barn., Polycarp, II Clement), or the” Holy Books “or “Bible” (Testt. XII. Patt.).

The number of books included in this added body of New Books, at the opening of the second century, cannot be satisfactorily determined by the evidence of these fragments alone. The section of it called the “Gospel” included Gospels written by “the apostles and their companions” (Justin), which beyond legitimate question were our four Gospels now received. The section called “the Apostles contained the book of Acts (The Testt. XII. Patt.) and epistles of Paul, John, Peter and James. The evidence from various quarters is indeed enough to show that the collection in general use contained all the books which we at present receive, with the possible exceptions of Jude, II and III John and Philemon. And it is more natural to suppose that failure of very early evidence for these brief booklets is due to their insignificant size rather than to their non-acceptance.

It is to be borne in mind, however, that the extent of the collection may have — and indeed is historically shown actually to have — varied in different localities. The Bible was circulated only in hand-copies, slowly and painfully made; and an incomplete copy, obtained say at Ephesus in A.D. 68, would be likely to remain for many years the Bible of the church to which it was conveyed; and might indeed become the parent of other copies, incomplete like itself, and thus the means of providing a whole district with incomplete Bibles. Thus, when we inquire after the history of the New Testament Canon we need to distinguish such questions as these: (1) When was the New Testament Canon completed? (2) When did any one church acquire a completed Canon? (3) When did the completed canon — the complete Bible — obtain universal circulation and acceptance? (4) On what ground and evidence did the churches with incomplete Bibles accept the remaining books when they were made known to them?

The Canon of the New Testament was completed when the last authoritative book was given to any church by the apostles, and that was when John wrote the Apocalypse, about A.D. 98. Whether the church of Ephesus, however, had a completed Canon when it received the Apocalypse, or not, would depend on whether there was any epistle, say that of Jude, which had not yet reached it with authenticating proof of its apostolicity. There is room for historical investigation here. Certainly the whole Canon was not universally received by the churches till somewhat later. The Latin church of the second and third centuries did not quite know what to do with the Epistle to the Hebrews. The Syrian churches for some centuries may have lacked the lesser of the Catholic Epistles and Revelation. But from the time of Irenæus down, the church at large had the whole Canon as we now possess it. And though a section of the church may not yet have been satisfied of the apostolicity of a certain book or of certain books; and though afterwards doubts may have arisen in sections of the church as to the apostolicity of certain books (as e. g. of Revelation): yet in no case was it more than a respectable minority of the church which was slow in receiving, or which came afterward to doubt, the credentials of any of the books that then as now constituted the Canon of the New Testament accepted by the church at large. And in every case the principle on which a book was accepted, or doubts against it laid aside, was the historical tradition of apostolicity.

323 posted on 11/02/2011 8:00:26 PM PDT by boatbums ( Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us. Titus 3:5)
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To: one Lord one faith one baptism; cva66snipe
I cannot let this stand.

It is the blood of Christ that saves. Not baptism. If baptism could have saved anyone why did Christ have to die for our sins? And don't bother to re-quote the Scriptures you gave earlier. They are part of the gospel of the Kingdom. We are presently in the gospel of the grace of God. Where there is only one baptism: the spiritual baptism by the Holy Spirit of believers into the Body of Christ. It has nothing to do with water and everything to do with the finished work of Christ. It is so ironic that "one baptism" is in your screenname and you don't seem to understand what that baptism is. Just like circumcision is spiritual circumcision, baptism is spiritual baptism. Performed by the Holy Spirit the moment we are saved. Col. 2:9-13.

324 posted on 11/02/2011 8:03:00 PM PDT by smvoice (Who the *#@! is Ivo of Chatre & why am I being accused of not linking to his quote?)
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To: rzman21
Believe what you wish. My judge will not be St. Cyprian of Carthage it will be GOD. BTW just for the record what did Jesus say when the Disciples became jealous of a man?

Mark Ch 9 38John said to Jesus, “Teacher, we saw a man using your name to cast out demons, but we told him to stop because he isn’t one of our group.” 39“Don’t stop him!” Jesus said. “No one who performs miracles in my name will soon be able to speak evil of me. 40Anyone who is not against us is for us. 41If anyone gives you even a cup of water because you belong to the Messiah, I assure you, that person will be rewarded.

Jesus said that. Do you not think He did not know there would be many followers from many sects? Ones just as believing and by their fruits showed it. I base my faith on The Holy Bible not on added writs past The Revelation. I believe and have seen The Holy Spirit work in persons lives and do miracles or give answers including my own life.

By the Glory of GOD I have gotten to where I am and have accomplished what I have. Not because of who I was or am but because He lead me and I obeyed. Christ found me when I was about 12-13. Yes a year or so later I was baptized. My life 18-27 was not one I needed to continue on the path of. My world got turned unpside down and I faced some situations in my life where hard choices had to be made. The Holy Spirit had a one on one with me. Not that I was worthy I wasn't. I wasn't even given a direction at first. But rather an assurance It's OK the events happening were to be.

In faith and prayer I made some very serious choices that would determine not just my future but that of three others one of which I loved dearly. I look at the fruits of my choice and see the results. Not just in the lives affected but my own because I grew in Christ. What does your church say about a man marrying a woman who has been divorced? Especially if it was not her fault and she was abandoned? What if she were critically ill but would live? What if she could not ever again walk and still had kids too raise? What if you were 28 year old man and your wife died months earlier? Then you meet someone as a friend and then this happens? Tested faith?

The 28 year old I was would have ran in fear. The 28 year old was not ready for this emotionally nor even monetary wise. Prayer was said with two preachers laying on hands for healing. Four person present. The Holy Spirit entered and one heard the message. I know how your church looks down upon marriages where the spouse is paralized. There was a case a few years back whhere church saifd no to a man and woman because the man was paralized.

Our marriage has endured trial, tribualtion, and major adversities. GOD was with us and is with us. We married 26 years ago in a Mercy Hospital chappel attended by Nuns a Priest and our Baptist minister who officiated our service. She came home four months later the kids came home the next day. Not everything is cut and dry as you would like to believe.

What did Christ say about other true believers outside the Disciples sect?

One other case in point. there is a ministry too the disabled started by a woman who was 16 and had a diving accident. Can anyone deny the fruits of Joni Tada's ministry too the disabled? That woman was an inspitation too us as well.

I know the Roman Catholic church my cousin is a Priest and Vicar General. He officiated or did the service for my first wife a non Catholic like myself.

325 posted on 11/02/2011 8:22:51 PM PDT by cva66snipe (Two Choices left for U.S. One Nation Under GOD or One Nation Under Judgment? Which one say ye?)
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To: boatbums; Cronos

what you never answered from a previous thread, was the question is there an authority on earth that can infallibly say this book is Scripture and this book is not?
WOULD YOU LIKE TO ANSWER THAT QUESTION NOW?

the answer Christians would give for 2,000 years is yes and that authority is the Church. the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church is the only authority that had Divine authority received directly from Jesus Himself to baptize and teach. the authority passed from the Apostles to their successors by the laying on of hands. The Church Fathers all attest that the true Church could always trace their history back to the Apostles.
you state the Corinthian Church was a “local” Church, as if that means it was independent from the Catholic Church. absolutely not, it was the Catholic Church in Corinth, under the authority of Clement. you state Clement’s letter was not Scripture. How do you know, without the authority of Catholic Tradition? what criteria do you use to make this judgement. the Corinthians thought it was Scripture for over 100 years, why did they do this?
many books claimed to be from the Apostles, have you never heard of the Gospel of Thomas and the Gospel of Peter? why aren’t they in your canon? have you read them? are we all supposed to read every book that claims to be Scripture or can we just rely on the Catholic Church’s authority to know the canon?
how do we KNOW the book of Hebrews is canonical when we don’t even know for sure who the author is? why do you believe it is Scripture?
finally, Catholics absolutely believe all the Apostles preached the Gospel for decades before the NT books were written. this is why the UNIVERSAL FAITH took such a hold on the known world, doctrines such as baptismal regeneration, the Eucharist , infant baptism, etc were UNIVERSALLY believed and practiced BEFORE the NT books were written. it was this Catholic Faith, recieved from the Apostles that was the standard the Church used to determine which books agreed with this Faith and therfore were Scripture and which books contradicted the Catholic Faith therefore were rejected.
We Catholics did the work for you, guided by the Holy Spirit. you don’t need to reject the peter and thomas gospels, we did it for you already.
remember that next time you see someone attack Catholic Sacred Tradition, it’s the basis of the canon.


326 posted on 11/02/2011 8:26:39 PM PDT by one Lord one faith one baptism
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To: one Lord one faith one baptism; smvoice

I don’t believe YOU are this Matt person, so why did you not include a link where this “article” is posted? An email address hardly supplies the source for something posted verbatim nor obeys Free Republic rules for such. Thank you.


327 posted on 11/02/2011 8:29:40 PM PDT by boatbums ( Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us. Titus 3:5)
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To: smvoice

1 Peter 3:21 states differently.

the problem is people don’t understand what baptism is and how the blood of Christ relates to baptism.

the ignorance is stunning!

Paul says there is one baptism, the Scriptures no where teach “water baptism” and “spirit baptism” no, that would mean there are two baptisms, Ephesians blows that heresy right out of the water. ( no pun intended )


328 posted on 11/02/2011 8:30:38 PM PDT by one Lord one faith one baptism
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To: one Lord one faith one baptism; fortheDeclaration
Again with the unsourced quotations! Are you trying to get Free Republic in trouble?

Let me make this easy for you. Jesus himself said he would give them the sign of Jonah who was three days AND three nights in the belly of the fish, but here we have those who want to contradict Jesus and explain away their own misguided computations. I could not care less what "theologians" say. What Jesus said is what counts. Listen to him.

329 posted on 11/02/2011 8:38:05 PM PDT by boatbums ( Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us. Titus 3:5)
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To: cva66snipe
"He officiated or did the service for my first wife a non Catholic like myself."

At least we have gotten to the root of your antipathy towards the Church. The Church frowns on serial polygamy.

330 posted on 11/02/2011 8:39:13 PM PDT by Natural Law (Transubstantiation - Change we can believe in.)
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To: boatbums

read post #288, it’s sourced and makes it so plain to understand, even you will get it.

Jesus died on Friday, just as Christians have believed for 2,000 years. How does the Church know for sure, it was there on the first Easter Sunday!!


331 posted on 11/02/2011 8:44:59 PM PDT by one Lord one faith one baptism
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To: one Lord one faith one baptism

Source?


332 posted on 11/02/2011 8:45:50 PM PDT by Religion Moderator
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To: Religion Moderator

Catholic Encyclopedia, New Advent “Chronology of the life of Jesus Christ”

website is www.newadvent.org


333 posted on 11/02/2011 8:50:19 PM PDT by one Lord one faith one baptism
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To: Mr Rogers
“I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel of God.” Not most of it, or the parts I thought you should know, but “I did not shrink from declaring to you the whole counsel of God.”

Amen! And Paul even had to set Peter straight on it as well.

334 posted on 11/02/2011 8:56:22 PM PDT by boatbums ( Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us. Titus 3:5)
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To: Natural Law
At least we have gotten to the root of your antipathy towards the Church. The Church frowns on serial polygamy.

LOL not hardly. So what would your answer be?

335 posted on 11/02/2011 9:03:10 PM PDT by cva66snipe (Two Choices left for U.S. One Nation Under GOD or One Nation Under Judgment? Which one say ye?)
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To: boatbums; fortheDeclaration; All

for all those who don’t understand what the Jews meant by days and nights and think Jesus meant a literal three full days and three full nights and further believe He died on wednesday, let’s count the days and nights.

if He died Wednesday at 3:00pm, the three nights would be Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. the three days would be Thursday, Friday and Saturday. so this means Jesus rose from the day on Saturday, the Sabbath Day and not Sunday, the first day of the week.

how does that square with the Scriptures?

but i am glad to agree with you “ what Jesus said is what counts” Let’s apply that to the Eucharist!!!


336 posted on 11/02/2011 9:04:58 PM PDT by one Lord one faith one baptism
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To: one Lord one faith one baptism
Jesus died on Friday, just as Christians have believed for 2,000 years. How does the Church know for sure, it was there on the first Easter Sunday!!

Reality check. There is not one shred of historical evidence that Christ Himself ever sanctioned the celebration of 'easter'.

There is NO way, any way it is attempted, to get 'three days and three nights' in the tomb out of a doctrine of sacrifice on the 6th day and being risen before the dawn on the '8th' day. Most especially since the new day began at 'sun' down and ended at the following 'sun' going down. IF as has been preached Christ was placed into the tomb before the sun set on the 6th day of the week, what we now call Friday to the 7th day (what we now call Saturday) 'sun' down is only one day and night.... Yet He Christ was not in the tomb before the 'sun' rose on the first day of the week, what we now call Sunday. What is the point and purpose to ignore/reject what we are literally told in regard to how long Christ would be in the tomb? IF the claim is that for 2000 years what is preached/believed as purpose/point, people have been wrong since 'before' the foundation of this age. And as it is written there is nothing 'new' under the sun.

Apparently it was 'noteworthy' from Christ about the length of time as He said Jonah was the ONLY 'sign' for His followers to have. Maybe the 'smart' guys do not believe that Jonah did what he wrote and so Christ was misguided in using Jonah as His only reference point for length of time. One consolation is that once we all return to the Maker that sent us through this flesh journey all traditions/doctrines will get a thorough editing.

337 posted on 11/02/2011 9:17:13 PM PDT by Just mythoughts (Luke 17:32 Remember Lot's wife.)
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To: cva66snipe
"LOL not hardly."

So what exactly did you think marriage vows meant?

338 posted on 11/02/2011 9:17:42 PM PDT by Natural Law (Transubstantiation - Change we can believe in.)
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To: Just mythoughts; one Lord one faith one baptism
"There is not one shred of historical evidence that Christ Himself ever sanctioned the celebration of 'easter'."

Unless someone finds a first century painting showing Jesus blowing out birthday candles he didn't celebrate Christmas either.....but so what.

339 posted on 11/02/2011 9:21:35 PM PDT by Natural Law (Transubstantiation - Change we can believe in.)
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To: Natural Law
Unless someone finds a first century painting showing Jesus blowing out birthday candles he didn't celebrate Christmas either.....but so what.

Strange is it NOT there is NOT even ONE first century painting of anything Christ doing anything? But there is all manner of imagery done 'guessing' the likeness of what the 'flesh' man Christ appearance might be for the traditions. Who celebrates as their 'birthday' the date of their conception? Luke recorded a very deliberate chronology to tells us the 'date' of the conception, and I can only guess Luke the physician, would consider that people who can count could approximate the 'season' within days as to the birth. I do not know anyone who celebrates the literal 'birth-date' of Christ....

As to the 'so what' apparently referring to 'easter', people can celebrate whatever they want, but there is NO, NONE evidence to wrap the last perfect sacrifice in a pagan orgy that is as old as this flesh age. How quaint is it to 'dip' Christ in spring time orgies of quick like a bunny from 'eggs'. AND of course I know that what is already programmed into the minds of the masses of traditions, mixed and leavened as 'holy' will continue to exist until the final grain of the sands of this age fall. Peter says all that offends the Heavenly Father is going to be destroyed... so that is the so what.

340 posted on 11/02/2011 9:42:02 PM PDT by Just mythoughts (Luke 17:32 Remember Lot's wife.)
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