I'm still looking for examples of where the Protestant church was before Luther...

I'm still looking for examples of where the Protestant church was before Luther? There's a solid 1000 years at least where all Christians seem to have been apostolic… Also, how can you be Sola Scriptura before the invention of the printing press? Can illiterataes have a direct, unmediated relationship with God if they can't read the Bible?

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Unironically the Protestant "church" is a spook.

I can't find any examples of actual churches/movements that professed faith alone. Even though you can point to church fathers who seem to espouse theology that says faith alone, they still adhered and practiced in what was the Cathodox church.

The Reformation wasn't needed until the Church went full-blown heretical. God's Church is the invisible body of all Believers, not any one institution.

A predenominational Christian is a Christian or disciple of Christ who seeks to base all of his religious beliefs and practices upon the New Testament itself, starting with the teachings of the Lord Jesus Christ Himself. He desires to recover original New Testament Christianity, or the faith once delivered unto the saints. He is neither Catholic nor Protestant and rejects any and all Catholic and Protestant traditions that are inconsistent with or contrary to the New Testament, no matter how deeply-entrenched these traditions may have become. His overriding goal is to be true to Christ and true to the New Testament.

Succinctly they think that all the accumulated tradition is a burden and not a treasure. I'm not Protestant but I can understand it.

And you won't find it. The oldest sources, st. Justin and st. Ignatius of Antioch are clearly Apostolic, saying that they believe in real presence, Ignatius talks about the importance of bishops and the Church, etc. There maybe be scraps of protestantism in writings of some Church fathers, but people forget Church fathers sometimes made mistakes in their theology. The tradition is clear.

you mean Baptist?

but why wouldn't God preserve some kind of practice where the eucharist is symbolic not sacrificial?

I think much of the faith alone comes from not understanding the Greek verb tenses, which actually point to salvation being more of a process than one time event.

The Church has always held the same things. It didn't 'go heretical'. It went corrupt, so a bunch of people decided that it's too hard to be a Catholic anyway and named that corruption as the main reason to leave the Church. Just think about it, a Catholic has to go to church no excuses, confession, sacraments, feast days, daily prayer such as Angelus, no premarital sex, no contraception, no abortion, etc. It's a breeze being protestant though.

The Bible is certainly not clear on that. But the tradition has always stated it's faith+works, it was never a point of contention in the Church until Luther.

I mean, if the Greek tenses describe salvation as an indefinite process than it doesn't make sense to make a distinction between faith and works, because salvation is a lived experience. I could be wrong though. Still working on my Greek.

There is no "Protestant church" but if you want to find those who protested against Rome's errors you could to the Waldensians look in the north of Italy or in the graveyards of Prague.

Still leaves a solid 800 years of Cathodox faith+works churches going back to Constantine.

Glad we agree Cathodoxy started with Constantine.

lol

Some prots unironically believe that. It's one of their more amusing conspiracy theories.

At its core Lutheranism is Catholicism minus heresy and unbiblical doctrines. Therefore, even though you can give a date to the day Luther nailed the 95 theses to the church door, the actual faith did not start then or anywhere near that date, being of the same old root as Catholicism and even before that the early Christian church.

Sola scriptura does not prohibit teaching. However it prohibits the sorts of traditions that are basically the Catholic equivalent to the Jewish Talmud.


Lutherans believe in the Real Presence and have bishops.

Not as amusing as the crackpot, historically unsupportable theory that it started with Jesus and Peter.

The Solas and the theses were not in the early Church, ever. That's true for both West and East. And as a fun part, I rarely even quote Catholic sources on this because Copts and Syrians have plenty of material on it.

Sure, by Peter our Lord said Zwingli actually. Thanks for the clarification.

None of the Holy Fathers believed that Matthew 16 referred to the Bishop of Rome. Peter's rock was his confession of faith, not the Pope.

Oh so none of those Holy Fathers, who were Roman Catholic and Orthodox priests/bishops, believed the pope was their pope and the successor of st. Peter? Really?
Can you also explain to me the epistle of st. Clement and explain why did the Corinthians write to Rome while st.. John was still alive and not far off in Asia Minor?

sitting in the council of orange, that's where.

It's amusing how simply saying "We/I just follow the Bible" will trigger these G-d's chosen self-proclaimed apostolics to the moon and back lmao

moon is fake…don't you study david icke?

sry m8 my bad, I swear I'm not a globalist

Who are:

...

A year later, it gave $400,000 to the anti-Sandinista opposition in Nicaragua and then another $2 million in 1988. It used its financial muscle in the mid-1990s to persuade a right-wing party to draw up a “Contract with Slovakia” modeled on Newt Gingrich’s Contract with America; persuaded free marketeers to do the same in Mongolia; gave nearly $1 million to Venezuelan rightists who went on to mount a short-lived putsch against populist leader Hugo Chavez in 2002; and then funded anti-Russian presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko in Ukraine in 2005, and the later anti-Russian coup there in 2014.

What all this had to do with democracy is unclear, although the NED’s role in advancing U.S. imperial interests is beyond doubt. Rather than “my country right or wrong,” its operating assumption is “my country right, full stop.” If Washington says Leader X is out of line, then the endowment will snap to attention and fund his opponents. If it says he’s cooperative and well-behaved, meaning he supports free markets and financial deregulation and doesn’t dally with any of America’s military rivals, it will do the opposite. It doesn’t matter if, like Putin, the alleged dictator swept the last election with 63.6 percent of the vote and was declared the “clear” winner by the European Union and the U.S. State Department. If he’s “expanding [Russia’s] influence in the Middle East,” as NED President Carl Gershman puts it, then he’s a “strongman” and an “autocrat” and must go.

America’s own shortcomings meanwhile go unnoticed. Meanwhile, the NED, as it nears the quarter-century mark, is a bundle of contradictions: a group that claims to be private even though it is almost entirely publicly funded, a group that says democracy “must be indigenous” even though it backs U.S.-imposed regime change, a group that claims to be “bipartisan” but whose board is packed with ideologically homogeneous hawks like Elliott Abrams, Anne Applebaum, and Victoria Nuland, the latter of whom served as assistant secretary of state during the coup in Ukraine. Historically speaking, the NED feels straight out of the early 1980s, when Washington was struggling to overcome “Vietnam Syndrome” in order to rev up the Cold War. The recovery process began with Ronald Reagan declaring at his first inaugural, “The crisis that we are facing today [requires] our best effort, and our willingness to believe in ourselves and to believe in our capacity to perform great deeds, to believe that together with God’s help we can and will resolve the problems which now confront us. After all, why shouldn’t we believe that? We are Americans.”

The U.S. was apparently not just a nation, but something like a religion as well. Additional input for the new NED in 1983 came from spymaster William Casey, CIA director from 1981 to 1987, who, after the intelligence scandals of the 70s, had swung around to the view that certain covert operations were better spun off into what the British call a “quango,” a quasi-non-government organization. “Obviously we here should not get out in front in the development of such an organization,” he cautioned, “nor do we wish to appear to be a sponsor or advocate.” It was a case of covert backing for an overt turn.

Others who helped lay the groundwork were:

Neoconservative ideologue Jeane Kirkpatrick, Reagan’s ambassador to the UN, famous for her argument that “traditional authoritarian governments” should be supported against “revolutionary autocracies” because they are “less repressive” and whose UN aide
Carl Gershman would become NED president and serves to this day
Human rights Democrats who believe that America’s job is to enforce democratic standards throughout the world, however idiosyncratic and self-serving they may be
Old-fashioned pluralists who maintained that the power to succeed existed in different groups’ working separately toward a common goal, in this case, spreading democracy abroad
The result was an ideologically lethal package that assumed whatever Americans did was democratic because God is on our side, that old-fashioned CIA skullduggery was passé, and that the time had come to switch to more open means. “We should not have to do this kind of work covertly,” Gershman later explained. “We saw that in the 60s, and that’s why it has been discontinued. We have not had the capability of doing this, and that’s why the endowment was created.”

In the interests of pluralism, the NED adopted a quadripartite structure with separate wings for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the AFL-CIO, the GOP, and the Democrats, each working separately yet somehow together.

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Pluralism helped tamp down debate and also shore up support on Capitol Hill. Liberal Democrats were initially skeptical due to the NED’s neocon tilt. Michigan Congressman John Conyers Jr. tried to kill it in 1985, and The Nation magazine complained a few years later that the group served as little more than “a pork barrel for a small circle of Republican and Democratic party activists, conservative trade unionists, and free marketeers who use endowment money to run their own mini State Department.”

But when the House voted unexpectedly to defund the agency in 1993, beneficiaries sprang to its defense. Major-league pundits like George Will, David Broder, and Abe Rosenthal “went into overdrive,” according to The Nation, as did the heavy hitters of the Washington Post editorial page. Vice President Walter Mondale, a member of the NED board of directors, worked the phones along with Lane Kirkland, George Meany’s successor as head of the AFL-CIO. Ronald Reagan wrote a letter, while Senators Richard Lugar, Orrin Hatch, and John McCain pitched in as well. So did prominent liberals like Paul Wellstone, John Kerry, Tom Harkin, Ted Kennedy, and Carol Moseley-Braun. These people normally couldn’t bear to be in the same with one another, but they were of one mind when it came to America’s divine right to intervene in other nations’ affairs.

The anti-NED forces didn’t stand a chance. Twenty-five years later, the endowment is again under attack, although this time from the right. Gershman started the ball rolling when, in October 2016, he interrupted his busy pro-democracy schedule to dash off a column in the Washington Post accusing Russia of using “email hackers, information trolls and open funding of political parties to sow discord” and of “even intervening in the U.S. presidential election.” Since there was no question whom Russia was intervening for, there was no doubt what the article amounted to: a thinly veiled swipe at a certain orange-haired candidate.

Never one to forget a slight, Trump got his revenge last month by proposing to slash the NED budget by 60 percent. The response was the same as in 1993, only more so. Uber-hawk Senator Lindsey Graham pronounced the cut “dead on arrival,” adding: “This budget destroys soft power, it puts our diplomats at risk, and it’s going nowhere.” Gershman said it would mean “sending a signal far and wide that the United States is turning its back on supporting brave people who share our values,” while Washington Post columnist Josh Rogin moaned that the administration was guilty of an “assault on democracy promotion.” The ever-voluble Democratic Congresswoman Nita Lowey accused the administration of “dismantling an agency that advances critical goals.”

“The work our government does to promote democratic values abroad is at the heart of who we are as a country,” added Senator John McCain. America is democracy, democracy is America, and, as history’s first global empire, the U.S. has an unqualified right to do unto others what others may not do unto the U.S. Only a “Siberian candidate,” “a traitor,” or “a Russian stooge” could possibly disagree.

Daniel Lazare is the author of The Frozen Republic: How the Constitution Is Paralyzing Democracy (Harcourt Brace, 1996) and other books about American politics.

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What does Peter have to do with the Catholic church, though? There is no evidence that he was the first pope.

You prefer John the Sprinkler, I suppose?

Lol

Lutheranism is actually closer to Catholicism than it is to Baptist.

Still leaves a large gap, and did they believe in faith alone?

what is it and why is it here

Do you have a rebuttal?

St. Thomas Aquinas and Augustine - the two greatest theologians of the Catholic Church - believed in sola fide.
So I don't think sola fide was a big deal until the Council of Trient anyway.

Yes, and I'm not arguing against sola fide especially. It's more of, well why didn't they have Baptist-tier churches throughout history?

Am I wrong to think that Luther didn't make as much of a distinction between faith and works, he was merely arguing against the necessity of Catholic works (ie the only path to salvation is through Roman Catholic sacraments)?

From my understanding that is correct.
And Luther's reformation was not as radical as for example Zwinglis or Müntzners, as you said above: It was closer to catholicism than to baptists.
If you read the confessio augustana from 1530 you can see that lutherans do not claim that the old catholic church was wrong since St. Peter/Constantine/Council of Nicea (whereever you want to let it start), but that addition of unbiblical doctrines, growing papal influence etc. started a series of reformation attempts, some part of the Catholic church (Cluny, the many different Orders) and some deemed heretical (Waldensians, Lollards, Hussites)