Books (available to be purchased at online retailers)
Bettenson,
Henry and Chris Maunder, Documents of the
Christian Church. Oxford: University Press,
3rd Ed. 1999.
Cairns,
Earle E., Christianity through the Centuries:
A History of the Christian Church. Grand Rapids:
Zondervan, 3rd Ed. 1996.
Gonzalez,
Justo L., The Story of Christianity Vol.
1 & 2. San Francisco: Harper Collins Publishers,
1984.
Jones,
Timothy Paul, Christian History Made Easy.
Torrance: Rose Publishing, 2009.
Kuiper,
B. K., The Church in History. Grand Rapids:
Eerdmans Publishing Co., 1964.
McBeth,
H. Leon, The Baptist Heritage. Nashville:
Broadman Press, 1987.
Introduction
In
the early 1500s, one of the ways the Pope made
money for the Catholic church was by selling
indulgences. These were pieces of paper that
could cancel the sin of the person who purchased
them. Martin Luther, a professor of theology
at the University of Theology, had his own views
on the subject of sin. He believed that faith,
and only faith, could free a man from sin. So
when a seller of indulgences came to a nearby
town in 1517, Luther publicly challenged this
appalling approach to sin. He posted a series
of theses on the door of the church in Wittenberg.
These statements became known as Luther's 95
Theses and they started a very important period
in Europe, the Protestant Reformation.
Disputation
on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgences Commonly
Known as the 95 Theses
Out
of love and concern for the truth, and with
the object of eliciting it, the following heads
will be the subject of a public discussion at
Wittenberg under the presidency of the reverend
father, Martin Luther, Augustinian, Master of
Arts and Sacred Theology, and duly appointed
Lecturer on these subjects in that place. He
requests that whoever cannot be present personally
to debate the matter orally will do so in absence
in writing.
1.
When our Lord and Master, Jesus Christ, said
"Repent", He called for the entire life of believers
to be one of penitence.
2.
The word cannot be properly understood as referring
to the sacrament of penance, i.e. confession
and satisfaction, as administered by the clergy.
3.
Yet its meaning is not restricted to penitence
in one's heart; for such penitence is null unless
it produces outward signs in various mortifications
of the flesh.
4.
As long as hatred of self abides (i.e. true
inward penitence) the penalty of sin abides,
viz., until we enter the kingdom of heaven.
5.
The pope has neither the will nor the power
to remit any penalties beyond those imposed
either at his own discretion or by canon law.
6. The pope himself cannot remit guilt, but
only declare and confirm that it has been remitted
by God; or, at most, he can remit it in cases
reserved to his discretion. Except for these
cases, the guilt remains untouched.
7.
God never remits guilt to anyone without, at
the same time, making humbly submissive to the
priest, His representative.
8.
The penitential canons apply only to men who
are still alive, and, according to the canons
themselves, none applies to the dead.
9.
Accordingly, the Holy Spirit, acting in the
person of the pope, manifests grace to us, by
the fact that the papal regulations always cease
to apply at death, or in any hard case.
10.
It is a wrongful act, due to ignorance, when
priests retain the canonical penalties on the
dead in purgatory.
11.
When canonical penalties were changed and made
to apply to purgatory, surely it would seem
that tares were sown while the bishops were
asleep.
12.
In former days, the canonical penalties were
imposed, not after, but before absolution was
pronounced; and were intended to be tests of
true contrition.
13.
Death puts and end to all the claims of the
Church; even the dying are already dead to the
canon laws, and are no longer bound by them.
14.
Defective piety or love in a dying person is
necessarily accompanied by great fear, which
is greatest where the piety or love is least.
15.
This fear or horror is sufficient in itself,
whatever else might be said, to constitute the
pain of purgatory, since it approaches very
closely to the horror of despair.
16.
There seems to be the same difference between
hell, purgatory, and heaven as between despair,
uncertainty, and assurance.
17. Of a truth, the pains of souls in purgatory
ought to be abated, and charity ought to be
proportionately increased.
18.
Moreover, it does not seem proved, on any grounds
of reason or Scripture, that these souls are
outside the state of merit, or unable to grow
in grace.
19.
Nor does it seem proved to be always the case
that they are certain and assured of salvation,
even if we are very certain ourselves.
20. Therefore the pope, in speaking of the plenary
remission of all penalties, does not mean "all"
in the strict sense, but only those imposed
by himself.
21.
Hence those who preach indulgences are in error
when they say that a man is absolved and saved
from every penalty by the pope's indulgences;
22. Indeed, he cannot remit to souls in purgatory
any penalty which canon law declares should
be suffered in the present life.
23. If plenary remission could be granted to
anyone at all, it would be only in the cases
of the most perfect, i.e. to very few.
24.
It must therefore be the case that the major
part of the people are deceived by that indiscriminate
and high-sounding promise of relief from penalty.
25.
The same power as the pope exercises in general
over purgatory is exercised in particular by
every single bishop in his bishopric and priest
in his parish.
26.
The pope does excellently when he grants remission
to the souls in purgatory on account of intercessions
made on their behalf, and not by the power of
the keys (which he cannot exercise for them).
27.
There is no divine authority for preaching that
the soul flies out of the purgatory immediately
the money clinks in the bottom of the chest.
28.
It is certainly possible that when the money
clinks in the bottom of the chest avarice and
greed increase; but when the church offers intercession,
all depends in the will of God.
29. Who knows whether all souls in purgatory
wish to be redeemed in view of what is said
of St. Severinus and St. Pascal? (Note: Paschal
I, pope 817-24. The legend is that he and Severinus
were willing to endure the pains of purgatory
for the benefit of the faithful).
30.
No one is sure if the reality of his own contrition,
much less of receiving plenary forgiveness.
31. One who _bona fide_ buys indulgence is a
rare as a _bona fide_ penitent man, i.e. very
rare indeed.
32.
All those who believe themselves certain of
their own salvation by means if letters of indulgence,
will be eternally damned, together with their
teachers.
33.
We should be most carefully on our guard against
those who say that the papal indulgences are
an inestimable divine gift, and that a man is
reconciled to God by them.
34.
For the grace conveyed by these indulgences
relates simply to the penalties of the sacramental
"satisfactions" decreed merely by man.
35.
It is not in accordance with Christian doctrines
to preach and teach that those who buy off souls,
or purchase confessional licences, have no need
to repent of their own sins.
36.
Any Christian whatsoever, who is truly repentant,
enjoys plenary remission from penalty and guilt,
and this is given him without letters of indulgence.
37.
Any true Christian whatsoever, living or dead,
participates in all the benefits of Christ and
the Church; and this participation is granted
to him by God without letters of indulgence.
38.
Yet the pope's remission and dispensation are
in no way to be despised, form as already said,
they proclaim the divine remission.
39.
It is very difficult, even for the most learned
theologians, to extol to the people the great
bounty contained in the indulgences, while,
at the same time, praising contrition as a virtue.
40.
A truly contrite sinner seeks out, and loves
to pay, the penalties of his sins; whereas the
very multitude of indulgences dulls men's consciences,
and tends to make them hate the penalties.
41.
Papal indulgences should only be preached with
caution, lest people gain a wrong understanding,
and think that they are preferable to other
good works: those of love.
42.
Christians should be taught that the pope does
not at all intend that the purchase of indulgences
should be understood as at all comparable with
the works of mercy.
43.
Christians should be taught that one who gives
to the poor, or lends to the needy, does a better
action than if he purchases indulgences.
44.
Because, by works of love, love grows and a
man becomes a better man; whereas, by indulgences,
he does not become a better man, but only escapes
certain penalties.
45.
Christians should be taught that he who sees
a needy person, but passes him by although he
gives money for indulgences, gains no benefit
from the pope's pardon, but only incurs the
wrath of God.
46.
Christians should be taught that, unless they
have more than they need, they are bound to
retain what is only necessary for the upkeep
of their home, and should in no way squander
it on indulgences.
47.
Christians should be taught that they purchase
indulgences voluntarily, and are not under obligation
to do so.
48.
Christians should be taught that, in granting
indulgences, the pope has more need, and more
desire, for devout prayer on his own behalf
than for ready money.
49.
Christians should be taught that the pope's
indulgences are useful only if one does not
rely on them, but most harmful if one loses
the fear of God through them.
50.
Christians should be taught that, if the pope
knew the exactions of the indulgence-preachers,
he would rather the church of St. Peter were
reduced to ashes than be built with the skin,
flesh, and bones of the sheep.
51.
Christians should be taught that the pope would
be willing, as he ought if necessity should
arise, to sell the church of St. Peter, and
give, too, his own money to many of those whom
the pardon-merchants conjure money.
52.
It is vain to rely on salvation by letters if
indulgence, even if the commissary, or indeed
the pope himself, were to pledge his own soul
for their validity.
53.
Those are enemies of Christ and the pope who
forbid the word of God to be preached at all
in some churches, in order that indulgences
may be preached in others.
54.
The word of God suffers injury if, in the same
sermon, an equal or longer time is devoted to
indulgences than to that word.
55.
The pope cannot help taking the view that if
indulgences (very small matters) are celebrated
by one bell, one pageant, or one ceremony, the
gospel (a very great matter) should be preached
to the accompaniment of a hundred bells, a hundred
processions, a hundred ceremonies.
56.
The treasures of the church, out of which the
pope dispenses indulgences, are not sufficiently
spoken of or known among the people of Christ.
57.
That these treasures are note temporal are clear
from the fact that many of the merchants do
not grant them freely, but only collect them.
58.
Nor are they the merits of Christ and the saints,
because, even apart from the pope, these merits
are always working grace in the inner man, and
working the cross, death, and hell in the outer
man.
59.
St. Laurence said that the poor were the treasures
of the church, but he used the term in accordance
with the custom of his own time.
60.
We do not speak rashly in saying that the treasures
of the church are the keys of the church, and
are bestowed by the merits of Christ.
61.
For it is clear that the power of the pope suffices,
by itself, for the remission of penalties and
reserved cases.
62.
The true treasure of the church is the Holy
gospel of the glory and the grace of God.
63.
It is right to regard this treasure as most
odious, for it makes the first to be the last.
64.
On the other hand, the treasure of indulgences
is most acceptable, for it makes the last to
be the first.
65.
Therefore the treasures of the gospel are nets
which, in former times, they used to fish for
men of wealth.
66.
The treasures of the indulgences are the nets
to-day which they use to fish for men of wealth.
67.
The indulgences, which the merchants extol as
the greatest of favours, are seen to be, in
fact, a favourite means for money-getting.
68.
Nevertheless, they are not to be compared with
the grace of God and the compassion shown in
the Cross.
69.
Bishops and curates, in duty bound, must receive
the commissaries of the papal indulgences with
all reverence;
70.
But they are under a much greater obligation
to watch closely and attend carefully lest these
men preach their own fancies instead of what
the pope commissioned.
71.
Let him be anathema and accursed who denies
the apostolic character of the indulgences.
72.
On the other hand, let him be blessed who is
on his guard against the wantonness and licence
of the pardon-merchant's words.
73.
In the same way, the pope rightly excommunicates
those who make any plans to the detriment of
the trade in indulgences.
74.
It is much more in keeping with his views to
excommunicate those who use the pretext of indulgences
to plot anything to the detriment of holy love
and truth.
75.
It is foolish to think that papal indulgences
have so much power that they can absolve a man
even if he has done the impossible and violated
the mother of God.
76.
We assert the contrary, and say that the pope's
pardons are not able to remove the least venial
of sins as far as their guilt is concerned.
77.
When it is said that not even St. Peter, if
he were now pope, could grant a greater grace,
it is blasphemy against St. Peter and the pope.
78.
We assert the contrary, and say that he, and
any pope whatever, possesses greater graces,
viz., the gospel, spiritual powers, gifts of
healing, etc., as is declared in I Corinthians
12 [:28].
79. It is blasphemy to say that the insignia
of the cross with the papal arms are of equal
value to the cross on which Christ died.
80.
The bishops, curates, and theologians, who permit
assertions of that kind to be made to the people
without let or hindrance, will have to answer
for it.
81.
This unbridled preaching of indulgences makes
it difficult for learned men to guard the respect
due to the pope against false accusations, or
at least from the keen criticisms of the laity;
82.
They ask, e.g.: Why does not the pope liberate
everyone from purgatory for the sake of love
(a most holy thing) and because of the supreme
necessity of their souls? This would be morally
the best of all reasons. Meanwhile he redeems
innumerable souls for money, a most perishable
thing, with which to build St. Peter's church,
a very minor purpose.
83.
Again: Why should funeral and anniversary masses
for the dead continue to be said? And why does
not the pope repay, or permit to be repaid,
the benefactions instituted for these purposes,
since it is wrong to pray for those souls who
are now redeemed?
84. Again: Surely this is a new sort of compassion,
on the part of God and the pope, when an impious
man, an enemy of God, is allowed to pay money
to redeem a devout soul, a friend of God; while
yet that devout and beloved soul is not allowed
to be redeemed without payment, for love's sake,
and just because of its need of redemption.
85.
Again: Why are the penitential canon laws, which
in fact, if not in practice, have long been
obsolete and dead in themselves,-why are they,
to-day, still used in imposing fines in money,
through the granting of indulgences, as if all
the penitential canons were fully operative?
86. Again: since the pope's income to-day is
larger than that of the wealthiest of wealthy
men, why does he not build this one church of
St. Peter with his own money, rather than with
the money of indigent believers?
87.
Again: What does the pope remit or dispense
to people who, by their perfect penitence, have
a right to plenary remission or dispensation?
88.
Again: Surely a greater good could be done to
the church if the pope were to bestow these
remissions and dispensations, not once, as now,
but a hundred times a day, for the benefit of
any believer whatever.
89. What the pope seeks by indulgences is not
money, but rather the salvation of souls; why
then does he not suspend the letters and indulgences
formerly conceded, and still as efficacious
as ever?
90.
These questions are serious matters of conscience
to the laity. To suppress them by force alone,
and not to refute them by giving reasons, is
to expose the church and the pope to the ridicule
of their enemies, and to make Christian people
unhappy.
91.
If therefore, indulgences were preached in accordance
with the spirit and mind of the pope, all these
difficulties would be easily overcome, and indeed,
cease to exist.
92.
Away, then, with those prophets who say to Christ's
people, "Peace, peace," where in there is no
peace.
93.
Hail, hail to all those prophets who say to
Christ's people, "The cross, the cross," where
there is no cross.
94.
Christians should be exhorted to be zealous
to follow Christ, their Head, through penalties,
deaths, and hells;
95.
And let them thus be more confident of entering
heaven through many tribulations rather than
through a false assurance of peace.
Apostles'
Creed
1.
I believe in God the Father, Almighty, Maker
of heaven and earth:
2.
And in Jesus Christ, his only begotten Son,
our Lord:
3.
Who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of
the Virgin Mary:
4.
Suffered under Pontius Pilate; was crucified,
dead and buried: He descended into hell:
5.
The third day he rose again from the dead:
6.
He ascended into heaven, and sits at the right
hand of God the Father Almighty:
7. From thence he shall come to judge the quick
and the dead: 8. I believe in the Holy Ghost:
9.
I believe in the holy catholic church: the communion
of saints:
10.
The forgiveness of sins:
1l.
The resurrection of the body:
12.
And the life everlasting. Amen.
Nicene
Creed
Introduction
A
seemingly minor difference in the wording of
this simple text had a profound impact on European
history. The Nicene Creed, or Symbol of Faith,
was written by the First Ecumenical Council
at Nicaea in 325 C.E., with additions (the 3rd
paragraph and following) by the first Council
of Constantinople (381). There is an unresolved
controversy over the words 'and the Son' (in
Latin filioque). This language was added in
587 by the local council of Toledo, Spain, in
an attempt to combat the Arian heresy. Pope
Leo III (795-816) forbade the use of the filioque
version and had it engraved without 'and the
Son' on the walls of St. Peter's Basillica.
After a failed attempt to unite by marriage
Charlemagne's Frankish holdings with that of
the Byzantine Empress, Charlemagne challenged
Byzantinium's claim of universal jurisdiction
as the successor to Rome by claiming in 792
that among other things, that the Byzantines
had omitted the filioque from the original text.
The filioque was finally accepted by the Romans
in the year 1014, and the revision has been
part of Catholic doctrine ever since. The "filioque,"
the significance of Roman primacy, and geo-political
conflict led to the the Great Schism of 1053.
To this day, the Eastern Orthodox Churches do
not accept the filioque and raise this as one
of many reasons that prevent re-unification
with the Roman Catholic Church. --jbh
Nicene
Creed
I
believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker
of heaven and earth, and of all things visible
and invisible.
And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the only-begotten
Son of God, begotten of the Father before all
worlds; God of God, Light of Light, very God
of very God; begotten, not made, being of one
substance with the Father, by whom all things
were made.
Who,
for us men for our salvation, came down from
heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy Spirit
of the virgin Mary, and was made man; and was
crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate;
He suffered and was buried; and the third day
He rose again, according to the Scriptures;
and ascended into heaven, and sits on the right
hand of the Father; and He shall come again,
with glory, to judge the quick and the dead;
whose kingdom shall have no end.
And
I believe in the Holy Ghost, the Lord and Giver
of Life; who proceeds from the Father and the
Son; who with the Father and the Son together
is worshipped and glorified; who spoke by the
prophets.
And
I believe one holy catholic and apostolic Church.
I acknowledge one baptism for the remission
of sins; and I look for the resurrection of
the dead, and the life of the world to come.
Amen.