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[PleaseReadBeforeJudging] Why Only Catholicism Can Make Protestantism Work: Bouyer on Reformation
Catholic Dossier/ CERC ^ | MARK BRUMLEY

Posted on 01/05/2002 11:55:52 AM PST by Brian Kopp DPM

Why Only Catholicism Can Make Protestantism Work: Louis Bouyer on the Reformation    MARK BRUMLEY


ABSTRACT: Louis Bouyer contends that the only way to safeguard the positive principles of the Reformation is through the Catholic Church. For only in the Catholic Church are the positive principles the Reformation affirmed found without the negative elements the Reformers mistakenly affixed to them.

Martin Luther
Interpreting the Reformation is complicated business. But like many complicated things, it can be simplified sufficiently well that even non-experts can get the gist of it. Here's what seems a fairly accurate but simplified summary of the issue: The break between Catholics and Protestants was either a tragic necessity (to use Jaroslav Pelikan's expression) or it was tragic because unnecessary.

Many Protestants see the Catholic/Protestant split as a tragic necessity, although the staunchly anti-Catholic kind of Protestant often sees nothing tragic about it. Or if he does, the tragedy is that there ever was such a thing as the Roman Catholic Church that the Reformers had to separate from. His motto is "Come out from among them" and five centuries of Christian disunity has done nothing to cool his anti-Roman fervor.

Yet for most Protestants, even for most conservative Protestants, this is not so. They believe God "raised up" Luther and the other Reformers to restore the Gospel in its purity. They regret that this required a break with Roman Catholics (hence the tragedy) but fidelity to Christ, on their view, demanded it (hence the necessity).

Catholics agree with their more agreeable Protestant brethren that the sixteenth century division among Christians was tragic. But most Catholics who think about it also see it as unnecessary. At least unnecessary in the sense that what Catholics might regard as genuine issues raised by the Reformers could, on the Catholic view, have been addressed without the tragedy of dividing Christendom.

Yet we can go further than decrying the Reformation as unnecessary. In his ground-breaking work, The Spirit and Forms of Protestantism, Louis Bouyer argued that the Catholic Church herself is necessary for the full flowering of the Reformation principles. In other words, you need Catholicism to make Protestantism work - for Protestantism's principles fully to develop. Thus, the Reformation was not only unnecessary; it was impossible. What the Reformers sought, argues Bouyer, could not be achieved without the Catholic Church.

From Bouyer's conclusion we can infer at least two things. First, Protestantism can't be all wrong, otherwise how could the Catholic Church bring about the "full flowering of the principles of the Reformation"? Second, left to itself, Protestantism will go astray and be untrue to some of its central principles. It's these two points, as Bouyer articulates them, I would like to consider here. One thing should be said up-front: although a convert from French Protestantism, Bouyer is no anti-Protestant polemicist. His Spirit and Forms of Protestantism was written a half-century ago, a decade before Vatican II's decree on ecumenism, Unitatis Redintegratio, yet it avoids the bitter anti-Protestantism that sometimes afflicted pre-conciliar Catholic works on Protestantism. That's one reason the book remains useful, even after decades of post-conciliar ecumenism.

In that regard, Bouyer's brief introduction is worth quoting in full:

This book is a personal witness, a plain account of the way in which a Protestant came to feel himself obliged in conscience to give his adherence to the Catholic Church. No sentiment of revulsion turned him from the religion fostered in him by a Protestant upbringing followed by several years in the ministry. The fact is, he has never rejected it. It was his desire to explore its depths, its full scope, that led him, step by step, to a genuinely spiritual movement stemming from the teachings of the Gospel, and Protestantism as an institution, or rather complexus of institutions, hostile to one another as well as to the Catholic Church. The study of this conflict brought him to detect the fatal error which drove the spiritual movement of Protestantism out of the one Church. He saw the necessity of returning to that Church, not in order to reject any of the positive Christian elements of his religious life, but to enable them, at last, to develop without hindrance.

The writer, who carved out his way step by step, or rather, saw it opening before his eyes, hopes now to help along those who are still where he started. In addition, he would like to show those he has rejoined how a little more understanding of the others, above all a greater fidelity to their own gift, could help their 'separated brethren' to receive it in their turn. In this hope he offers his book to all who wish to be faithful to the truth, first, to the Word of God, but also to the truth of men as they are, not as our prejudices and habits impel us to see them.

Bouyer, then, addresses both Protestants and Catholics. To the Protestants, he says, in effect, "It is fidelity to our Protestant principles, properly understood, that has led me into the Catholic Church." To the Catholics, he says, "Protestantism isn't as antithetical to the Catholic Faith as you suppose. It has positive principles, as well as negative ones. Its positive principles, properly understood, belong to the Catholic Tradition, which we Catholics can see if we approach Protestantism with a bit of understanding and openness."

The Reformation was Right

Bouyer's argument is that the Reformation's main principle was essentially Catholic: "Luther's basic intuition, on which Protestantism continuously draws for its abiding vitality, so far from being hard to reconcile with Catholic tradition, or inconsistent with the teaching of the Apostles, was a return to the clearest elements of their teaching, and in the most direct line of that tradition."

1. Sola Gratia. What was the Reformation's main principle? Not, as many Catholics and even some Protestants think, "private judgment" in religion. According to Bouyer, "the true fundamental principle of Protestantism is the gratuitousness of salvation" - sola gratia. He writes, "In the view of Luther, as well as of all those faithful to his essential teaching, man without grace can, strictly speaking, do nothing of the slightest value for salvation. He can neither dispose himself for it, nor work for it in any independent fashion. Even his acceptance of grace is the work of grace. To Luther and his authentic followers, justifying faith . . . is quite certainly, the first and most fundamental grace."

Bouyer then shows how, contrary to what many Protestants and some Catholics think, salvation sola gratia is also Catholic teaching. He underscores the point to any Catholics who might think otherwise:

"If, then, any Catholic - and there would seem to be many such these days - whose first impulse is to reject the idea that man, without grace, can do nothing towards his salvation, that he cannot even accept the grace offered except by a previous grace, that the very faith which acknowledges the need of grace is a purely gratuitous gift, he would do well to attend closely to the texts we are about to quote."

In other words, "Listen up, Catholics!"

Bouyer quotes, at length, from the Second Council of Orange (529), the teaching of which was confirmed by Pope Boniface II as de fide or part of the Church's faith. The Council asserted that salvation is the work of God's grace and that even the beginning of faith or the consent to saving grace is itself the result of grace. By our natural powers, we can neither think as we ought nor choose any good pertaining to salvation. We can only do so by the illumination and impulse of the Holy Spirit.

Nor is it merely that man is limited in doing good. The Council affirmed that, as a result of the Fall, man is inclined to will evil. His freedom is gravely impaired and can only be repaired by God's grace. Following a number of biblical quotations, the Council states, "[W]e are obliged, in the mercy of God, to preach and believe that, through sin of the first man, the free will is so weakened and warped, that no one thereafter can either love God as he ought, or believe in God, or do good for the sake of God, unless moved, previously, by the grace of the divine mercy . . . . Our salvation requires that we assert and believe that, in every good work we do, it is not we who have the initiative, aided, subsequently, by the mercy of God, but that he begins by inspiring faith and love towards him, without any prior merit of ours."

The Council of Trent, writes Bouyer, repeated that teaching, ruling out "a parallel action on the part of God and man, a sort of 'synergism', where man contributes, in the work of salvation, something, however slight, independent of grace." Even where Trent insists that man is not saved passively, notes Bouyer, it doesn't assert some independent, human contribution to salvation. Man freely cooperates in salvation, but his free cooperation is itself the result of grace. Precisely how this is so is mysterious, and the Church has not settled on a particular theological explanation. But that it is so, insist Bouyer, is Catholic teaching. Thus, concludes Bouyer, "the Catholic not only may, but must in virtue of his own faith, give a full and unreserved adherence to the sola gratia, understood in the positive sense we have seen upheld by Protestants."

2. Sola Fide. So much for sola gratia. But what about the other half of the Reformation principle regarding salvation, the claim that justification by grace comes through faith alone (sola fide) ?

According to Bouyer, the main thrust of the doctrine of sola fide was to affirm that justification was wholly the work of God and to deny any positive human contribution apart from grace. Faith was understood as man's grace-enabled, grace-inspired, grace-completed response to God's saving initiative in Jesus Christ. What the Reformation initially sought to affirm, says Bouyer, was that such a response is purely God's gift to man, with man contributing nothing of his own to receive salvation.

In other words, it isn't as if God does his part and man cooperates by doing his part, even if that part is minuscule. The Reformation insisted that God does his part, which includes enabling and moving man to receive salvation in Christ. Man's "part" is to believe, properly understood, but faith too is the work of God, so man contributes nothing positively of his own. As Bouyer points out, this central concern of the Reformation also happened to be defined Catholic teaching, reaffirmed by the Council of Trent.

In a sense, the Reformation debate was over the nature of saving faith, not over whether faith saves. St. Thomas Aquinas, following St. Augustine and the patristic understanding of faith and salvation, said that saving faith was faith "formed by charity." In other words, saving faith involves at least the beginnings of the love of God. In this way, Catholics could speak of "justification by grace alone, through faith alone," if the "alone" was meant to distinguish the gift of God (faith) from any purely human contribution apart from grace; but not if "alone" was meant to offset faith from grace-enabled, grace-inspired, grace-accomplished love of God or charity.

For Catholic theologians of the time, the term "faith" was generally used in the highly refined sense of the gracious work of God in us by which we assent to God's Word on the authority of God who reveals. In this sense, faith is distinct from entrusting oneself to God in hope and love, though obviously faith is, in a way, naturally ordered to doing so: God gives man faith so that man can entrust himself to God in hope and love. But faith, understood as mere assent (albeit graced assent), is only the beginning of salvation. It needs to be "informed" or completed by charity, also the work of grace.

Luther and his followers, though, rejected the Catholic view that "saving faith" was "faith formed by charity" and therefore not "faith alone", where "faith" is understood as mere assent to God's Word, apart from trust and love. In large part, this was due to a misunderstanding by Luther. "We must not be misled on this point," writes Bouyer, "by Luther's later assertions opposed to the fides caritate formata [faith informed by charity]. His object in disowning this formula was to reject the idea that faith justified man only if there were added to it a love proceeding from a natural disposition, not coming as a gift of God, the whole being the gift of God." Yet Luther's view of faith, contents Bouyer, seems to imply an element of love, at least in the sense of a total self-commitment to God. And, of course, this love must be both the response to God's loving initiative and the effect of that initiative by which man is enabled and moved to respond. But once again, this is Catholic doctrine, for the charity that "informs" faith so that it becomes saving faith is not a natural disposition, but is as much the work of God as the assent of faith.

Thus, Bouyer's point is that the doctrine of justification by faith alone (sola fide) was initially seen by the Reformers as a way of upholding justification by grace alone (sola gratia), which is also a fundamental Catholic truth. Only later, as a result of controversy, did the Reformers insist on identifying justification by faith alone with a negative principle that denied any form of cooperation, even grace-enabled cooperation.

3. Sola Scriptura. Melanchthon, the colleague of Luther, called justification sola gratia, sola fide the "Material Principle" of the Reformation. But there was also the Formal Principle, the doctrine of sola Scriptura or what Bouyer calls the sovereign authority of Scripture. What of that?

Here, too, says Bouyer, the Reformation's core positive principle is correct. The Word of God, rather than a human word, must govern the life of the Christian and of the Church. And the Word of God is found in a unique and supreme form in the Bible, the inspired Word of God. The inspiration of the Bible means that God is the primary author of Scripture. Since we can say that about no other writing or formal expression of the Church's Faith, not even conciliar or papal definitions of faith, the Bible alone is the Word of God in this sense and therefore it possesses a unique authority.

Yet the supremacy of the Bible does not imply an opposition between it and the authority of the Church or Tradition, as certain negative principles adopted by the Reformers implied. Furthermore, the biblical spirituality of Protestantism, properly understood, is in keeping with the best traditions of Catholic spirituality, especially those of the Fathers and the great medieval theologians. Through Scripture, God speaks to us today, offering a living Word to guide our lives in Christ.

Thus, writes Bouyer, "the supreme authority of Scripture, taken in its positive sense, as gradually drawn out and systematized by Protestants themselves, far from setting the Church and Protestantism in opposition, should be the best possible warrant for their return to understanding and unity."

The Reformation was Wrong

Where does this leave us? If the Reformation was right about sola gratia and sola Scriptura, its two key principles, how was it wrong? Bouyer holds that only the positive elements of these Reformation principles are correct.

Unfortunately, these principles were unnecessarily linked by the Reformers to certain negative elements, which the Catholic Church had to reject. Here we consider two of those elements: 1) the doctrine of extrinsic justification and the nature of justifying faith and 2) the authority of the Bible.

1. Extrinsic Justification. Regarding justification by grace alone, it was the doctrine of extrinsic justification and the rejection of the Catholic view of faith formed by charity as "saving faith." Bouyer writes, "The further Luther advanced in his conflict with other theologians, then with Rome, then with the whole of contemporary Catholicism and finally with the Catholicism of every age, the more closely we see him identifying affirmation about sola gratia with a particular theory, known as extrinsic justification."

Extrinsic justification is the idea that justification occurs outside of man, rather than within him. Catholicism, as we have seen, holds that justification is by grace alone. In that sense, it originates outside of man, with God's grace. But, according to Catholic teaching, God justifies man by effecting a change within him, by making him just or righteous, not merely by saying he is just or righteous or treating him as if he were. Justification imparts the righteousness of Christ to man, transforming him by grace into a child of God.

The Reformation view was different. The Reformers, like the Catholic Church, insisted that justification is by grace and therefore originates outside of man, with God. But they also insisted that when God justifies man, man is not changed but merely declared just or righteous. God treats man as if he were just or righteous, imputing to man the righteousness of Christ, rather than imparting it to him.

The Reformers held this view for two reasons. First, because they came to think it necessary in order to uphold the gratuitousness of justification. Second, because they thought the Bible taught it. On both points, argues Bouyer, the Reformers were mistaken. There is neither a logical nor a biblical reason why God cannot effect a change in man without undercutting justification by grace alone. Whatever righteousness comes to be in man as a result of justification is a gift, as much any other gift God bestows on man. Nor does the Bible's treatment of "imputed" righteousness imply that justification is not imparted. On these points, the Reformers were simply wrong:

"Without the least doubt, grace, for St. Paul, however freely given, involves what he calls 'the new creation', the appearance in us of a 'new man', created in justice and holiness. So far from suppressing the efforts of man, or making them a matter of indifference, or at least irrelevant to salvation, he himself tells us to 'work out your salvation with fear and trembling', at the very moment when he affirms that '. . . knowing that it is God who works in you both to will and to accomplish.' These two expressions say better than any other that all is grace in our salvation, but at the same time grace is not opposed to human acts and endeavor in order to attain salvation, but arouses them and exacts their performance."

Calvin, notes Bouyer, tried to circumvent the biblical problems of the extrinsic justification theory by positing a systematic distinction between justification, which puts us in right relation to God but which, on the Protestant view, doesn't involve a change in man; and sanctification, which transforms us. Yet, argues Bouyer, this systematic distinction isn't biblical. In the Bible, justification and sanctification - as many modern Protestant exegetes admit - are two different terms for the same process. Both occur by grace through faith and both involve a faith "informed by charity" or completed by love. As Bouyer contends, faith in the Pauline sense, "supposes the total abandonment of man to the gift of God" - which amounts to love of God. He argues that it is absurd to think that the man justified by faith, who calls God "Abba, Father," doesn't love God or doesn't have to love him in order to be justified.

2. Sola Scriptura vs. Church and Tradition. Bouyer also sees a negative principle that the Reformation unnecessarily associated with sola Scriptura or the sovereignty of the Bible. Yes, the Bible alone is the Word of God in the sense that only the Bible is divinely inspired. And yes the Bible's authority is supreme in the sense that neither the Church nor the Church's Tradition "trumps" Scripture. But that doesn't mean that the Word of God in an authoritative form is found only in the Bible, for the Word of God can be communicated in a non-inspired, yet authoritative form as well. Nor does it mean that there can be no authoritative interpreter of the Bible (the Magisterium) or authoritative interpretation of biblical doctrine (Tradition). Repudiation of the Church's authority and Tradition simply doesn't follow from the premise of Scripture's supremacy as the inspired Word of God. Furthermore, the Tradition and authority of the Church are required to determine the canon of the Bible.

Luther and Calvin did not follow the Radical Reformation in rejecting any role for Church authority or Tradition altogether. But they radically truncated such a role. Furthermore, they provided no means by which the Church, as a community of believers, could determine when the Bible was being authentically interpreted or who within the community had the right to make such a determination for the community. In this way, they ultimately undercut the supremacy of the Bible, for they provided no means by which the supreme authority of the Bible could, in fact, be exercised in the Church as a whole. The Bible's authority extended only so far as the individual believer's interpretation of it allowed.

The Catholic Church and Reformation Principles

As we have seen, Bouyer argues for the Reformation's "positive principles" and against its "negative principles." But how did what was right from one point of view in the Reformation go so wrong from another point of view? Bouyer argues that the under the influence of decadent scholasticism, mainly Nominalism, the Reformers unnecessarily inserted the negative elements into their ideas along with the positive principles. "Brought up on these lines of thought, identified with them so closely they could not see beyond them," he writes, "the Reformers could only systematize their very valuable insights in a vitiated framework."

The irony is profound. The Reformation sought to recover "genuine Christianity" by hacking through what it regarded as the vast overgrowth of medieval theology. Yet to do so, the Reformers wielded swords forged in the fires of the worst of medieval theology - the decadent scholasticism of Nominalism.

The negative principles of the Reformation necessarily led the Catholic Church to reject the movement - though not, in fact, its fundamental positive principles, which were essentially Catholic. Eventually, argues Bouyer, through a complex historical process, these negative elements ate away at the positive principles as well. The result was liberal Protestantism, which wound up affirming the very things Protestantism set out to deny (man's ability to save himself) and denying things Protestantism began by affirming (sola gratia).

Bouyer contends that the only way to safeguard the positive principles of the Reformation is through the Catholic Church. For only in the Catholic Church are the positive principles the Reformation affirmed found without the negative elements the Reformers mistakenly affixed to them. But how to bring this about?

Bouyer says that both Protestants and Catholics have responsibilities here. Protestants must investigate their roots and consider whether the negative elements of the Reformation, such as extrinsic justification and the rejection of a definitive Church teaching authority and Tradition, are necessary to uphold the positive principles of sola gratia and the supremacy of Scripture. If not, then how is continued separation from the Catholic Church justified? Furthermore, if, as Bouyer contends, the negative elements of the Reformation were drawn from a decadent theology and philosophy of the Middle Ages and not Christian antiquity, then it is the Catholic Church that has upheld the true faith and has maintained a balance regarding the positive principles of the Reformation that Protestantism lacks. In this way, the Catholic Church is needed for Protestantism to live up to its own positive principles.

Catholics have responsibilities as well. One major responsibility is to be sure they have fully embraced their own Church's teaching on the gratuitousness of salvation and the supremacy of the Bible. As Bouyer writes, "Catholics are in fact too prone to forget that, if the Church bears within herself, and cannot ever lose, the fullness of Gospel truth, its members, at any given time and place, are always in need of a renewed effort to apprehend this truth really and not just, as Newman would say, 'notionally'." "To Catholics, lukewarm and unaware of their responsibilities," he adds, the Reformation, properly understood, "recalls the existence of many of their own treasures which they overlook."

Only if Catholics are fully Catholic - which includes fully embracing the positive principles of the Reformation that Bouyer insists are essentially Catholic - can they "legitimately aspire to show and prepare their separated brethren the way to a return which would be for them not a denial but a fulfillment."

Today, as in the sixteenth century, the burden rests with us Catholics. We must live, by God's abundant grace, up to our high calling in Christ Jesus. And in this way, show our Protestant brethren that their own positive principles are properly expressed only in the Catholic Church.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Mark Brumley. "Why Only Catholicism Can Make Protestantism Work: Louis Bouyer on the Reformation." Catholic Dossier 7 no. 5 (September-October 2001): 30-35.

This article is reprinted with permission from Catholic Dossier. To subscribe to Catholic Dossier call 1-800-651-1531.

THE AUTHOR

Mark Brumley is managing editor of Catholic Dossier. A convert from Evangelical Protestantism, he was greatly influenced by Bouyer's book The Spirit and Forms of Protestantism, when he first read it over twenty years ago. Recently, Scepter Books has republished The Spirit and Forms of Protestantism, which can be obtained online at www.scepterpub.org or by calling 1-800-322-8773.

Copyright © 2001 Catholic Dossier


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KEYWORDS: catholiclist; cerc; christianlist; hughhewitt; markbrumley
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To: the_doc
Augustine was emphatic in teaching an absolute, sovereign, double predestination. And Rome has emphatically denied this.

I don't know where you get emphatic. It all sounds pretty convoluted to me, and I don't know where you showed that Rome "emphatically" denies that Augustine taught this. Did this interpretation from Mt. 11 originate with Augustine? And what, by the way, is the point? Are you trying to prove that Calvinists are the sole keepers of the true faith? By proving that Augustine agreed with your founder? Or do you go through all these mental gymnastics merely to expose what you would characterize as a Roman lie. I can honestly tell you I have never heard anyone in the Church preach that Augustine did not ever teach "absolute double predestination."

1,481 posted on 02/04/2002 10:37:59 PM PST by St.Chuck
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To: St.Chuck
So kissing a pagan religion's holy book is good? is he showing respect for it-and if so why? Would he kiss a Satanic bible in the name of respect?
1,482 posted on 02/05/2002 5:46:53 PM PST by GreaserX
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To: St.Chuck
As for your allegation that kissing a book, kissing a baby, kissing a championship trophy, or giving any sign of affection, show of respect, honor, or dignity to anyone or anything is automatic idolatry...well, that is silly.

Chuck me thinks you do protest too much :>)) You know that a kiss has significance..do you really think it is OK for any Christian to honor the book which glorifies a false god? Most Protestants are appalled at that. Perhaps is is because Jesus was betrayed with a kiss that it has special spiritual significance.

Luke 22
47 And while he yet spake, behold a multitude, and he that was called Judas, one of the twelve, went before them, and drew near unto Jesus to kiss him.
48 But Jesus said unto him, Judas, betrayest thou the Son of man with a kiss?

The Pope is supposed to speak with the authority of Christ Chuck..and he kissed the book of the moon god..giving it equal footing in the eyes of many with the Holy Bible.(I will bet the Mullas laughed out loud at the PR that got them!)

1,483 posted on 02/05/2002 7:12:36 PM PST by RnMomof7
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To: GreaserX
So kissing a pagan religion's holy book is good? Is he showing respect for it - and if so why? Would he kiss a satanic bible in the name of respect?

I believe that he was showing respect to the people who revere the book. In retrospect, perhaps he was prescient in recognizing the need to strengthen the relationship between Islam and Christianity. Of course, he could also launch a crusade, but no matter what he does, he will always be villified.You can be certain of that.

1,484 posted on 02/05/2002 7:33:35 PM PST by St.Chuck
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To: Dynamo
Matthew 6:7..."But when ye pray, use not vain repetitions as the heathens do.

The key word is "vain" not "repetitions. If repetition of prayer is the teaching, then Jesus Himself violated this when He prayed three times the same prayer in the garden of Gethsemane:

Matthew 26:39 "...My Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as Thou wilt."

1,485 posted on 02/05/2002 7:46:27 PM PST by Irisshlass
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To: Irisshlass
not this again! Jesus prayed 3 times, but not directly in a row! He said a prayer then went to check on the disciples and they were asleep. Then he went back and prayed again. Then he went to check on the disciples again, talked to them again and went back to pray for a third time.He did not just kneel there and say the whole prayer three times in a row! How do you compare that with the rosary? I am so amazed at how you twist scripture to match your man-made rituals! You guys have them same mind set as all of the cult people I talk to. There is no reasoning with you and you always have a twisted answer for everything! The hare krishnas say that Jesus was a vegetarian and can dig up scriptures to support that. They also say that John the Baptist was the reincarnation of Elliaja! You do the same thing, but are completely decieved!
1,486 posted on 02/05/2002 8:04:23 PM PST by GreaserX
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To: Irisshlass
Also why does the Pope show respect for a pagan religion? False religions are of the devil, and last I checked we are the enemy of the devil! Well, everyone but the Pope that is! Did the 3 children in the fiery furnace bow down to pagan gods? Not even to the threat of death! We are not to bow to falsehoods. But if you pray to idols and a pagan goddess Mary, I guess this just comes naturally! ;)
1,487 posted on 02/05/2002 8:07:46 PM PST by GreaserX
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To: GreaserX
Talking to a fool is like a cracked pot glued together.
1,488 posted on 02/05/2002 8:14:35 PM PST by Irisshlass
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To: Cicero
A true Christian will show faith. But the false Christian may proclaim faith while his works or lack thereof proclaim otherwise.

A true Christian will show works. But the false Christian may show works which demonstrate no faith, or worse, an antithesis to faith.

If one has faith, one will have works.

1,489 posted on 02/05/2002 8:17:03 PM PST by wattsmag2
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To: RnMomof7
Chuck, me thinks you do protest too much....Hee hee..I believe you have the roles reversed. I am in the traditional defense mode. Others are in the traditional protestant role.

Do you think it is OK for any Christians to honor the book which glorifies a false god? Most Protestants are appalled by that.

As are many Catholics. But perhaps those appalled aren't aware that the Koran exhorts it's believers to submit to the God of Abraham. Thus the false god accusation isn't entirely applicable.

The pope is supposed to speak with the authority of Christ....and he kissed the book of the moon god.

Our Lord was also accused of blasphemy and engaging in scandalous activities. He was ridiculed for associating with sinners,allowing prostitutes to wash his feet,and for performing miracles on the sabbath, to give a few examples off the top of my head. Apparantly the pope is ascribing to the spirit of the law and not the letter, as his Master taught.

I will repeat here that one should not look upon the gesture as reverence for the book, but more as an act of respect for the people who revere the book.

1,490 posted on 02/05/2002 8:29:41 PM PST by St.Chuck
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To: St.Chuck; OrthodoxPresbyterian
I don't know where you get emphatic. It all sounds pretty convoluted to me...

Let me back up a bit.

The doctrine of predestination was the topic of what was arguably Augustine's most important contribution to Christian theology. Augustine correctly understood something which most people refuse to grasp--which is that true predestination and true free will can be and, in fact, are both true. He discovered this truth in the Bible itself.

The idea that the actions of creatures endued with true free will can be and are absolutely predestined was perhaps the most striking thing about Augustine's confession of his Creator. It lies at the very heart of his faith. The doctrine of predestination told him Who God really is. It told Augustine what it meant when he confessed from the heart that Jesus is LORD.

(Needless to say, if Augustine was correct about this doctrine of absolute predestination, then most churchgoers don't clearly know Augustine's God and may not know Him at all. And if Augustine was correct, then the fact that so many people will publicly confess Jesus as Lord means next to nothing.

The problem is, using Jesus' name means nothing in an idolater--i.e., in someone who refuses to grasp the Being and nature of the Lord. When a lost person uses the Lord's name, it's merely a violation of the Third Commandment. It just aggravates that fool's looming damnation in lipservice hypocrisy, in self-deceptive religiosity.)

What I am saying in all of this is that the doctrine of predestination is rather important for knowing Who our Creator is and Who is the True Lord of the true Christian.

It therefore behooves us to be sure we learn what Augustine learned. This discussion is no place for petty denominational pride masquerading as a noble spirit.

"No problem," says today's typical RC. "Augustine is our guy."

But this is precisely the kind of attitude which RCs must not, have under the circumstances. It turns out that it will block the RC from understanding Augustine. The RC will try to read Augustine as upholding the RCC's modern doctrine of predestination. And that bias is the source of all the "convolutions" to which you referred in your post to me. My goodness, Augustine actually opposes the modern RCC position. If you weren't so busy trying to make him agree with your modern RC notions, you would immediately see this.

The funny thing is, we Calvinists see Augustine's exposition of Matthew 11 as remarkably straightforward, not convoluted at all. One of the main reasons why we have no trouble reading Augustine is because we are not RCs. We don't bring modern RC presuppositions into the study. We just read what he says. (It's a refreshing approach. You should try it. But RCs are taught not to do this.)

***

The overarching question in our discussion is this: Did Augustine teach a real predestination, i.e., one in which God truly fixes the future, including the issues of salvation, with true certainty?

In other words, Did Augustine regard God as the Planner and First Cause of all things, including the salvation and damnation of individual souls? And if you will pardon a bit of a redundancy, Did Augustine specifically understand the Scriptures as teaching that non-elect sinners are predestined to hell?

Augustine's exposition of Matthew 11 gives what I personally regard as a crystal clear answer. He declares, point blank, that Tyre and Sidon did not believe because God deliberately withheld the very means by which they might have believed. In other words, they were not chosen for conversion to God in Christ; in other words, God had no intention of converting them to Himself. God even went through the planning step of considering what it would take to draw them to Himself and chose not to draw them in this way.

This is a severe position, but Augustine asserts that it is quite evidently the correct way to understand the text and the overall Biblical doctrine of predestination. In fact, when an objector proposes to Augustine what would appear to be a softer position, Augustine immediately and quickly slaps him down with a counter-counterargument. In this way, Augustine is hammering his point home. He reaffirms that the severe position is the correct one. (Never mind that truth-suppressing sinners have a hard time swallowing this bitter pill of doctrine!)

And Augustine even goes on to say that he believes that his own counter-counterargument is unanswerable.

Under the circumstances, I do regard Augustine as being pretty emphatic.

and I don't know where you showed that Rome "emphatically" denies that Augustine taught this.

I admit that I didn't bother to "show" this. But read the articles in the RCC's standard sources covering Augustinian predestination. The RC articles are a convoluted mess. They pretend that Augustine disagreed with Calvin as to the very absoluteness, the very doubleness of predestination. But this is ridiculous. Calvin and Augustine were both absolute, double predestinarians.

The RCC has denied this for more than four-and-a-half centuries. When you understand the doctrine of predestination, it's rather funny. Rome has simply refused to accept Augustine's position but does not have the nerve to repudiate him. So, Rome just fakes the whole thing.

Did this interpretation from Mt. 11 originate with Augustine?

I dunno. It doesn't much matter to me, since I can defend the doctrine of God's absolute predestination directly from the Bible. As far as I can tell, Augustine got his position from the Bible, too.

And what, by the way, is the point? Are you trying to prove that Calvinists are the sole keepers of the true faith?

I think I have made my point clear in many many posts--so clear, in fact, that I have irked a lot of RCs. But let me make it again. My point is that the RCC and its members are dishonest. Today's RCs will not admit that Augustine agreed with Calvin. And the doctrine of predestination was one of the most important, controversial doctrines of the Reformation. (Luther regarded the predestinarian doctrine of total depravity as the pivotal doctrine of the Reformation. I personally believe he was correct!) Not surprisingly, today's RCs can't even read Augustine in a straightforward, honest way.

The big picture which I am painting for you is that of Rome's apostasy from the faith once delivered unto the saints.

...By proving that Augustine agreed with your founder?

Calvin is not the "founder" of my "movement." Gosh, I am a Baptist. (BTW, the Anabaptists kept Augustine's views of predestination alive in their "movement" outside the RCC for 1100 years, until Luther and Calvin learned the Biblical doctrine of predestination, too." The history of this doctrine is strange. Rome walked away from it and pretended to be still in line with Augustine's position.)

Or do you go through all these mental gymnastics merely to expose what you would characterize as a Roman lie.

Please see what I said above.

I can honestly tell you I have never heard anyone in the Church preach that Augustine did not ever teach "absolute double predestination."

The problem is, the RCC does not uphold a real predestination. Rome's notion of what Augustine taught, the notion which Rome tries to convey to its parishioners, is that predestination is just some kind of vague mystery wherein God intervenes here and there to keep His plan on track with respect to broad points in the plan.

What Augustine really did teach or really did not teach concerning God's predestination never comes up in a way which most RCs would notice anyway. But read the gobbledygook in the Catholic Encyclopedia about Augustinian predestination. It's a smarmy, convoluted mess attacking Calvin and Luther--and doing so in Augustine's name!

Oh, great.

1,491 posted on 02/05/2002 10:13:31 PM PST by the_doc
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To: St.Chuck
Chuck the problem is they do not worship the God of Abraham..allah is a take off of a pagan god..were you not around right after 9/11 ?

Mohammad made up his religion out of whole cloth..he started with a Egyptian pagan god, he then added some Jewish customs and some christian customs in order to attract both groups into his personal religion. The quran is no more "true" or "holy" than the Book of Mormon. I once worked with a JW we became friends..she told me they looked for Catholics because they didn't know the Bible..they were ordered to stay away from "born agains"

This is just more evidence of the truth of her statement.

Link to history of the moon god

1,492 posted on 02/06/2002 4:51:22 AM PST by RnMomof7
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To: St.Chuck, the_doc
Thank you for summing up your exegis on Augustine. I sincerely appreciate the time you took to explain your point of view. I found the discussion most interesting and very informative. Are there other scriptural references to the doctrine of predestination?

Many more examples could be cited, these are a few.

1,493 posted on 02/06/2002 5:30:45 AM PST by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: St.Chuck, the_doc
I can honestly tell you I have never heard anyone in the Church preach that Augustine did not ever teach "absolute double predestination." 1481 posted on 2/4/02 11:37 PM Pacific by St.Chuck

They would have to, in order to remain Roman Catholic. This is the box into which the Bishop of Rome has dictated that Augustine's theology must be made to fit... whether he fits or not.


1,494 posted on 02/06/2002 6:07:20 AM PST by OrthodoxPresbyterian
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To: Irisshlass
Ah, I see! Anyone that questions the Pope or the RC church is a fool! Ha! Ha! Classic avoidance techniques! Why don't any of you ever comment on the Hare Krishna references I make? Their reasoning about scripture is very familiar to your scripture-chopping. In the bible, it says that either you are for Christ or against him. Is the Muslim faith for Jesus? Do they believe that Jesus is the Som of God? I think you know the answer. The question is, which side are you on?
1,495 posted on 02/06/2002 6:32:32 AM PST by GreaserX
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To: St.Chuck
Oh this just keeps getting better! You are saying that Muslims pray to the same God as Christians! What a belly-buster! Muslims don't believe that Jesus is the Son of God! Isn't that a problem? Also, anything Mohammad says takes precence over Jesus. Finally, how dare you compare Jesus and his ways to the Pope kissing the book of a false religion! Did Jesus pray to false Gods? Did he bow down to the devil? Was he taught by Buddists as the new agers believe? This is all non-sense! Do you guys really know anything about cults or the other world religions? Probably not since you don't have an understanding of our own scriptures! Jeeze! Please don't stop posting! I like being shocked and amazed by the stuff you come up with!
1,496 posted on 02/06/2002 6:39:28 AM PST by GreaserX
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To: GreaserX
Where is everyone? I'm lonely and cold and in the dark!
1,497 posted on 02/06/2002 6:47:05 PM PST by GreaserX
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Comment #1,498 Removed by Moderator

Comment #1,499 Removed by Moderator

To: penny1
ping.
1,500 posted on 02/07/2002 12:57:07 AM PST by irishtenor
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