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Reformation Reminders: Rome & Her Desecration of Christ
The CrippleGate ^ | OCTOBER 28, 2015 | Eric Davis

Posted on 10/30/2015 11:11:35 AM PDT by fishtank

Reformation Reminders: Rome & Her Desecration of Christ

By Eric Davis

OCTOBER 28, 2015

This Saturday, October 31, commemorates nearly 500 years since one of the greatest movements of God in church history; the Protestant Reformation. Up to the time of the Reformation, much of Europe had been dominated by the reign of Roman Catholicism. To the populace was propagated the idea that salvation was found under Rome and her system alone.

But as the cultural and theological fog cleared in Europe and beyond, God's people gained a clarity that had been mostly absent for centuries. The Reformers gained this clarity from keeping with a simple principle: sola scritpura, or, Scripture alone. As they searched the word of God, they discovered that Rome deviated radically on the most critical points of biblical Christianity. With one mind, God's people discerned from Scripture that, tragically, Roman Catholicism was a desecration to the Lord Jesus Christ.

(Excerpt) Read more at thecripplegate.com ...


TOPICS: Catholic; Evangelical Christian; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; catholicbashing; reformation
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1 posted on 10/30/2015 11:11:35 AM PDT by fishtank
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To: fishtank

This paragraph is also worth posting:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/religion/2327607/posts?page=13#13

“On my Catholic education:

8 years Catholic grade school

4 years Catholic high school

Extra (optional) weekly CCD classes by quite conservative Novus Ordo RCC priest

Parents subscribed to National Catholic Register, the Wanderer, Fidelity and The Remnant, and I read them while growing up.

My parents fought the Novus Ordo modernism tooth and nail and are now in an Eastern Rite church - I would politely challenge you to ask them if they considered me to be inadequately catechized.

I subscribed to Fidelity and Remnant in undergrad college and never stopped contending against modernism in the Catholic Church.”


2 posted on 10/30/2015 11:14:33 AM PDT by fishtank (The denial of original sin is the root of liberalism.)
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To: fishtank
The Reformers gained this clarity from keeping with a simple principle: sola scritpura, or, Scripture alone.

"clarity" is an odd term for it... since the Bible doesn't teach "sola Scriptura", anywhere. Not even close.

Care to try again?
3 posted on 10/30/2015 11:17:44 AM PDT by paladinan (Rule #1: There is a God. Rule #2: It isn't you.)
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To: fishtank
At a time when our country is facing a grave existential threat from Islam because moderate Islam is ancient Islam, we ought to consider that modern America is modern America because Martin Luther gave us the Reformation.

The idea advanced by Martin Luther that any man could communicate directly with his Creator on equal access basis with any other man without the intercession of the church, an institution which had sanctified the medieval secular hierarchy over men, was indispensable to the Declaration of Independence.

If no Martin Luther, no Declaration of Independence, at least not by the path we came to it, and no concept that All Men Are Created Equal. This was a revolution in the epistemology of the world and nailing 95 thesis to a church door was absolutely indispensable to getting here.


4 posted on 10/30/2015 11:29:24 AM PDT by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat, attack!" Bull Halsey)
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To: nathanbedford
The idea advanced by Martin Luther that any man could communicate directly with his Creator on equal access basis with any other man without the intercession of the church, an institution which had sanctified the medieval secular hierarchy over men, was indispensable to the Declaration of Independence.

What a bunch of manure. There is some serious self-importance that gets promulgated in the protestant ranks.

"The Declaration of Independence dogmatically bases all rights on the fact that God created all men equal; it is right [to do so].... There is no basis for democracy except in a dogma about the divine origin of man."

-- G.K. Chesterton (a Roman Catholic)

5 posted on 10/30/2015 11:43:30 AM PDT by pgyanke (Republicans get in trouble when not living up to their principles. Democrats... when they do.)
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To: fishtank

No Protestant Reformation, no endless views of Christianity.


6 posted on 10/30/2015 11:47:32 AM PDT by ex-snook
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To: pgyanke
Let me put it this way for you: the medieval church sanctified and apologized for a governing system we call feudalism which puts God on top and the King or the Pope (they battled incessantly for the honor) as a divinely ordained and therefore unchallengeable, then the nobility and finally the peasantry.

Under this arrangement there was no communication between man and God except by way of intercession of the church. Until the divine right of kings was shattered there was no hope of an expression of all men being created equal. That medieval epistemology could not be shattered so long as the will of God was exclusively determined by the clergy and the secular authority was not only endorsed but sanctified by the clergy.

The 95 thesis began the process of unraveling all of that and initiated a re-knitting, new understanding of the relationship between man and God, man and sovereign and man and man which ultimately led to a new epistemology so eloquently and economically described in the Declaration of Independence.


7 posted on 10/30/2015 12:16:45 PM PDT by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat, attack!" Bull Halsey)
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To: fishtank

October 31. The day the ghouls come out. It’s also Halloween I hear.


8 posted on 10/30/2015 12:38:45 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: nathanbedford

There are some mistakes in your mini-treatise.

“Under this arrangement there was no communication between man and God except by way of intercession of the church.”

That is patently false - or else no lay person would have prayed in the Middle Ages yet they did daily even hourly.

“Until the divine right of kings was shattered there was no hope of an expression of all men being created equal.”

Except the “divine right” of kings was an idea that showed up late in the Middle Ages and flourished well into the early modern era - including in Protestant countries. Apparently you’ve never heard of the Basilikon Doron of James VI of Scotland.


9 posted on 10/30/2015 12:46:40 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: nathanbedford
To any unbiased individual, it should be obvious the dramatic effect the Reformation had on the flow of history. Before the Reformation, aptly named “the dark ages,” a totalitarian scripture-suppressing system ruled Europe, enter the Reformation, enter William Tyndale, who said of the Papacy:

While I am sowing in one place, they ravage the field I have just left. I cannot be everywhere. If Christians had the Scriptures in their own tongue, they could themselves withstand these sophists: without the Bible it is impossible to establish the laity in the truth. If God give me life, ere many years the ploughboys shall know more of the Scriptures than you do.

The availability of the Bible, the word of God, was an emancipation to Europe, being emancipated from the chains of political-ecclesiastical slavery individual freedom began to spring up everywhere. It bore great fruit in Britain, but the greatest expression of it was to be in America.

Traced to its roots, it is to the Bible Americans owe their great system of liberty.

Totalitarian Romanists hate Sola Scriptura, like the totalitarian communist left hates the Constitution. The former sees Sola Scriptura the enemy, the latter sees both their enemy.

10 posted on 10/30/2015 12:50:10 PM PDT by sasportas
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To: nathanbedford
Let me put it this way for you: the medieval church

Stop there, for a moment. Since I'm a stickler for logic and proper use of terms (and since many anti-Catholics use the word "medieval" as a sort of swear word--rather than as a genuine descriptor of a time period, as any rational historian would do): could you please tell me the date (during the medieval period) when this alleged "Papal coup" took place? Rounding to the nearest decade is fine.

sanctified and apologized for a governing system we call feudalism which puts God on top and the King or the Pope (they battled incessantly for the honor) as a divinely ordained and therefore unchallengeable, then the nobility and finally the peasantry.

Forgive me, but: regarding both the terms and the concepts, I see no evidence that you know what you're talking about, on this particular point. First of all: feudalism was a tremendous step UPWARD from its preceding systems (i.e. slavery), and it involved a local lord/noble exchanging protection and stability for fealty from the serfs and peasants. It was hardly the monstrosity you make it out to be. Secondly: I hardly think you'd object to "God on top", right? Thirdly: "king or Pope" is a slippery bit of opinion-laden, content-free editorial, on your part... which served only to express the fact that you have disdain for both.

Under this arrangement there was no communication between man and God except by way of intercession of the church.

Where on earth are you getting this nonsense? "No communication"? You mean to say that the Catholic Church forbade people to pray? That's news to me (and to the rest of the world which follows history instead of polemics). Yes, the Church is necessary... because Christ founded it, and because He established it as the pillar and foundation of the truth (cf. 1 Timothy 3:15). But to say that there was "no communication" between God and men by any indirect means is simply silly.

Until the divine right of kings was shattered there was no hope of an expression of all men being created equal.

So... you think Christ should have represented Himself as a president or prime minister (or some other egalitarian, democratic/republic-based figure), rather than the King of Kings? The presence or absence of a king has absolutely NOTHING to do with the fact that all men are created equal, in the Image and Likeness of God. Any suggestion to the contrary is simple fantasy and fluff.

Luther's 95 Theses (have you actually read them?) contained some legitimate complaints (against abuses perpetrated by individual clerics) mixed with a jumbled mess of misunderstandings, heresies, and incoherencies. He invented his unbiblical ideas of "sola Scriptura" and "sola fide" out of whole cloth, and used them to anoint himself "his own pope", by which he gave himself permission to do whatever he wished, morally (including endorsement of polygamy [cf. Philip of Hesse], encouraging others to sin [cf. Jerome Weller], and a potty-mouth which would get his writings barred from most public recitations, were they to be rendered in equivalent English). Rarely has a man been more responsible for more moral and religious disaster than was Luther (and Calvin, and the other notable heresiarchs).

Suffice it to say that the Declaration of Independence could easily have been written by a faithful Catholic; the fight against tyranny isn't the sole province of Protestantism (nor did Protestantism always encourage it--cf. Luther, Calvin, Zwingli, etc., who all benefited from the protection of sympathetic lords and princes--Luther owed his life to some of them, in fact).

Hint: when one finds that one needs to rewrite history in order to make a claim, then that claim is probably not a true one.
11 posted on 10/30/2015 12:50:24 PM PDT by paladinan (Rule #1: There is a God. Rule #2: It isn't you.)
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To: nathanbedford

Democracy not a “child of the Reformation”

Modern democracy is often asserted to be the child of the Reformation. Nothing is farther from the truth. Robert Filmer, private theologian of James I of England, in his theory of Divine right, proclaimed, The king can do no wrong. The most sacred order of kings is of Divine right. John Neville Figgis, who seems little inclined to give Catholicism undue credit, makes the following assertions. Luther based royal authority upon Divine right with practically no reservation (Gerson to Grotius, p. 61). That to the Reformation was in some sort due the prevalence of the notion of the Divine Right of Kings is generally admitted. (Divine Right of Kings, p. 15). The Reformation had left upon the statute book an emphatic assertion of unfettered sovereignty vested in the king (ibid. p. 91). Luther denied any limitation of political power either by Pope or people, nor can it be said that he showed any sympathy for representative institutions; he upheld the inalienable and Divine authority of kings in order to hew down the Upas tree of Rome. There had been elaborated at this time a theory of unlimited jurisdiction of the crown and of non-resistance upon any pretense (Cambridge Modern History, Vol III, p. 739). Wycliffe would not allow that the king be subject to positive law (Divine Right of Kings, p. 69). Lord Acton wrote: Lutheran writers constantly condemn the democratic literature that arose in the second age of the Reformation....Calvin judged that the people were unfit to govern themselves, and declared the popular assembly an abuse (History of Freedom, p. 42).

A closer study of the Declaration of Independence discloses its dissimilarity with the social-contract or compact theories as explained with slight variations, by Rousseau, Hobbes, Locke, Puffendorf, Althusius, Grotius, Hooker, Kant, or Fichte. The American Declaration, like the political doctrine of Cardinal Bellarmine, declared political power as coming, in the first instance, from God, but as vested in a particular ruler by consent of the multitude or the people as a political body. The social-contract or compact theories sought the source of political power in an assumed social contract or compact by which individual rights contributed or yielded their individual rights to create a public right. Contracts of individuals can create individual rights only, not public or political rights. According to the American Declaration and Cardinal Bellarmine, government implies powers which never belonged to the individual and which, consequently, he could never have conferred upon society. The individual surrenders no authority. Sovereignty receives nothing from him. Government maintains its full dignity, it is of Divine origin, but vested in one or several individuals by popular consent.

The names of Montesquieu, Rousseau, and James Berg are often mentioned as possibly having influenced the spirit and contents of our American Declaration. The Spirit of Laws by Montesquieu, though read in America, did not present that theory of government which was sought by the Fathers of our Country. Rousseau’s writings were less widely known than Montesquieu’s. George Mason, not knowing French, in all probability never read the Contract social nor had Rousseau’s writings obtained currency in Virginia in 1776. The book of James Berg appeared in 1775, rather too late to have rendered service in May of 1776, even if it had discussed such general principles as are laid down in these two American Declarations.
http://www.catholiceducation.org/en/controversy/common-misconceptions/catholic-sources-and-the-declaration-of-independence.html


12 posted on 10/30/2015 12:50:32 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: vladimir998
You missed the point of the mini treatise, the recognition of man as the building block of legitimate government could not come until the institution which ordained a top-down rather than a bottom-up legitimacy was reformed.


13 posted on 10/30/2015 12:55:24 PM PDT by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat, attack!" Bull Halsey)
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To: paladinan

Hi.

I was raised with the same view you now hold.

It is very helpful to read what Jesus Himself says about the Word, the Scripture.

On top of that, much of what Rome teaches contradicts God’s Word, which all by itself indicated to me that Rome is not the leader, that they are a distraction.


14 posted on 10/30/2015 1:02:22 PM PDT by fishtank (The denial of original sin is the root of liberalism.)
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To: nathanbedford

“You missed the point of the mini treatise, the recognition of man as the building block of legitimate government could not come until the institution which ordained a top-down rather than a bottom-up legitimacy was reformed.”

1) Which is more legitimate: God or man?

2) If you really believe there is a “bottom-up legitimacy” to the U.S. government then wouldn’t it have to be based upon “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness”? Doesn’t that mean everything good men have is from a Creator and they must act in accordance to have life, liberty and happiness”?

So how is that any less “top down” than the framework you erroneously applied to medieval society?


15 posted on 10/30/2015 1:19:32 PM PDT by vladimir998 (Apparently I'm still living in your head rent free. At least now it isn't empty.)
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To: pgyanke

One only needs to compare North America to South America to see the fruits of Protestantism versus Catholicism, once it spread to the New World. It’s not a theoretical exercise, the experiment was already performed and we can all see the results.


16 posted on 10/30/2015 1:27:50 PM PDT by Boogieman
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To: sasportas
"The availability of the Bible, the word of God, was an emancipation to Europe, being emancipated from the chains of political-ecclesiastical slavery individual freedom began to spring up everywhere."

Yeah, right. Protestantism was institutionalized in plenty of nations with as great a degree of totalitarianism as any Catholic country well before the majority of people could read.

Your impression of history is a muddled hodgepodge build on the false notion that everything good must have necessarily arose from Protestantism. If you want to talk about freedom and liberty, then you can thank Catholics for the fact that you aren't speaking Turkish right now. When the Ottomans were on the march, it was those evil Catholic states that pushed them back, while many Protestant fronts were rendering and receiving aid from the Turk.

"Totalitarian Romanists hate Sola Scriptura"

It's a made-up, false tradition of men not found anywhere in Scripture, so why wouldn't we hate it?

17 posted on 10/30/2015 1:41:49 PM PDT by Wyrd bið ful aræd (Exsurge, Domine, et judica causam tuam)
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To: vladimir998
The ranking problem is not between man and his God but between man and man, that is to say between man and sovereign. Both regimes always recognized that legitimacy came from God to man, the problem is the church ranked one man more "legitimate" than another man rather than created them as equal.

We still missed, intentionally so?


18 posted on 10/30/2015 1:45:10 PM PDT by nathanbedford ("Attack, repeat, attack!" Bull Halsey)
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To: ex-snook

“No Protestant Reformation, no endless views of Christianity.”

Except the Eastern church, the gnostics, the Cathars, the Copts, the Nestorians, etc.


19 posted on 10/30/2015 1:47:28 PM PDT by Boogieman
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To: Boogieman
"One only needs to compare North America to South America to see the fruits of Protestantism versus Catholicism, once it spread to the New World. "

This is a gross simplification that disregards dozens of factors. If it were true, then you'd be laying abortion, homosexuality, rampant political-correctness, obesity, and who knows what else, at the door of Protestantism.

20 posted on 10/30/2015 1:51:35 PM PDT by Wyrd bið ful aræd (Exsurge, Domine, et judica causam tuam)
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