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The Catholic Church Would “Deal with such a provocation in a different and better way”

September 4th, 2009 Leave a comment Go to comments
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The Catholic Church would, however, “today deal with such a provocation in a different and a better way,” said the bishop. And so ends an interesting article on what a Roman Catholic bishop in Osnabrück, Germany had to say about Martin Luther.

Interesting comments indeed. I welcome them, as should all confessing Lutherans, but….I would find the kind words about Luther to be a tad more satisfying, to say the least, if the Vatican at some point would apologize for Luther’s excommunication and the Vatican’s role in having him declared a public criminal. But, for what it is worth, it’s nice to read these kinds of moderating remarks, and frankly, these comments are better than we hear most of the time from much of the leadership of the German state union churches, which are a mixtum compositum of truth, error, Lutheran, Reformed, and only God knows what else!

German Catholic bishop says Luther is a ‘fascinating personality’
ENI-09-0711

Osnabrück, Germany, 4 September (ENI/epd)–The Roman Catholic bishop of Osnabrück in northern Germany has said that the 16th-century Protestant Reformer Martin Luther offers a “positive challenge” to Protestant and Catholic churches.

“It’s fascinating just how radically he puts God at the centre,” Bishop Franz-Josef Bode said in an interview with the German Protestant news agency epd, in advance of a 6 September service Osnabrück’s Lutherkirche at which the bishop will preach on Luther.

Luther, said Bode, had rightly denounced failures in the Church and he had recalled the roots of faith.

Bode described Luther as a “fascinating personality for both churches”, noting that the Reformer had not intended to divide the Church though the dissemination of his 95 Theses of 1517, but that his teaching had later been exploited by other people for their own purposes.

Luther had been more concerned in dealing with the fundamental question of how God turns towards human beings.

In the Church of that era there had been tendencies that contributed to “misunderstandings”, said Bode citing grace and forgiveness of sins as things that certainly can not be bought, in a reference to the practice in Luther’s time of the Catholic Church selling indulgences.

“The focus on Christ, the Bible and the authentic Word – are things that we as the Catholic Church today can only underline,” said Bode. He noted that especially with the Second Vatican Council, the Catholic Church has been able to understand and address in a new way Luther’s thought and his esteem for the Word of God.

The Second Vatican Council met from 1962 to 1965 and it led to the Catholic Church accepting for the first time that there could be coexistence of different forms of faith in Christ, said the bishop.

The 50th anniversary of the council in 2015 takes place in the decade preparing for the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation in 2017. Bode said he would work within the German (Catholic) Bishops’ Conference to ensure that the ecumenical aspects of the Second Vatican Council are underlined.

Still, said Bode, there remain elements of division between the Catholic Church and Luther. These divisions centre on the understanding that Luther developed from his own experience of the Church, the priesthood and the sacraments.

The Catholic Church would, however, “today deal with such a provocation in a different and a better way,” said the bishop. [408 words]
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Categories: Roman Catholicism
  1. Joshua G.
    September 4th, 2009 at 12:41 | #1

    “I would find the kind words about Luther to be a tad more satisfying, to say the least, if the Vatican at some point would apologize for Luther’s excommunication and the Vatican’s role in having him declared a public criminal.”

    I can see this, however, in fairness to the bishop, those words are about as much as he can say, in having no right to speak on the Vatican’s behalf.

    I am convinced that, regardless of how organized and hierarchical the structure of a Church is, REAL change (especially of the heart) always comes from the bottom up. And I say this as Orthodox Christian.

    My point is that although Vatican II opened the doors for more open discourse between herself and other Churches (such as yours), the bishop (and many bishops like him) wouldn’t be offering words like these if there weren’t a TRUE acceptance of the Spirit of Vatican II at the lay-level. So, this bishop’s words are sign that the Catholic people are increasingly open to real dialog with the Lutherans.

    Just my thoughts.

    Josh

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