godelian wrote: ↑Sat Jul 27, 2024 1:30 pm
Luther tried to claim during his trial that it should be allowed to use logic in scriptural matters:
If you can show me through scripture and reason that I am mistaken, I will retract what I have written. Neither the prosecutor of the Church nor the Emperor were particularly impressed with that defense.
You're going to have to tell that story to somebody who has a reason to care. So far as Christianity was concerned, Luther was right, and the "dying old men" were simply wrong. I have no clue why you think it should impress me. I'm not Catholic.
...the belief that there was one true religion and that it was the duty of the civil authorities to impose it, forcibly if necessary, in the interest of saving the souls of all citizens.
You don't understand Christianity, I'm afraid. It's actually impossible to "impose" a belief.
Remember that Christians believe the condition of the heart is more important even than the compliance of the limbs? As John Locke famously said, anybody who tried to impose a religion by force would actually be working against God. For God holds all men individually accountable, and they cannot be accountable for that which they've been forced to do, or forced not to do. They had no choice.
So you've just got the story so badly wrong that you can't expect any response. I wouldn't accept your suppositions under any conditions, because I'm simply not a Catholic, and only a Catholic would. I'm a Christian. And you'll find that that is quite a different thing.
As for what men may do, my answer is the same as the apostle Peter's:
"...we must obey God rather than men." Essentially, that was Luther's stand, too...and it's mine. Loyalty belongs to God, not to some ecclesiastical poser in a gown. Shouldn't that be obvious?
I see you're having the problem so many people have when they come to try to understand Christianity. They simply impose the suppositions of their own religion onto Christianity, and guess that "it must be the same." But it's not. Every religion has its own features: that's what makes it different from the others. And in the case of Christianity, those differences are so profound that it's not even accurate to call it a "religion" at all.
But all that you will not guess so long as you're thinking an Islamic way of thinking can simply be slapped onto Christianity, and that it will fit. It simply doesn't. We're not a religion OF commandments; we're a belief WITH commandments in it. We're not a system of jurisprudence, but a call for individual faith. We're not an institution, but a relationship with God. None of those things will, of course, resonate at all with Islam. But that's how it really is, whether you know it or not.
I'm just telling you how it is -- no hard feelings -- I don't really expect that from an Islamic set of suppositions you'll have any real idea what a Christian is. And I understand why you mistakenly think it's a Catholic, because the Catholics fit the Islamic pattern much better. They, too, have a self-arranged clergy, a preference for whatever that clergy says above the authority of Scripture, a focus on legalities and commandments, invented rituals, a history of conquest (though milder than the Islamic one, of course), a geographic center, big, splashy buildings, denigration of logic in favour of compliance, and all that other stuff.
But real Christianity has none of these. So you're bound to find it tough to get a handle on what it really is. But I'm trying to help you out on that, if you're interested.
If you're not, then we can move on.