Thursday, January 21, 2010

CyberBrethren-A Lutheran Blog » The Church Fathers and Lutheranism

CyberBrethren-A Lutheran Blog » The Church Fathers and Lutheranism

One of Lutheranism's giants. The Examination of the Council of Trent by Chemnitz is a must-have. Romanism is simply devastated by this "Second Martin of the Reformation."

The opinion of these fathers is that a thing should not be believed or accepted because someone of the fathers either thought or said so, unless he proves what he says from the canonical Scriptures, that the fathers could have thought differently from what truth demands, and that we have been called by the Lord to that liberty that we may freely judge about the writings of any and all persons according to the canonical writings, and that when we disapprove of anything in the writings of the fathers which does not agree with the Scripture and reject it, this is done without rashness but by a just judgment, without injury or disgrace to the fathers, without prejudice to their honor, and with their consent, and this is done by those also who are incomparably inferior to the fathers.

Martin Chemnitz, Examination of the Council of Trent, I:261

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