Through all of this, I think you missed my point of view. Most likely it is because I failed to state it clearly.
I am so sorry to have to tell you this…but no, Luther died a little while back
That's cute. Are you proud of that?
You know what I mean. If you want to be literal, Luther does LITERALLY live today in heaven. He is one of the saints who make up the universal church which consists of people living both on earth and heaven.
Luther lives- quite literally.
But it is not only the man that a decent person ought to want to honor. It is his legacy. The legacy is a treasure trove of wealth that blesses you every day of your life today.
and is not around to receive honors as indicated in Romans 13.
There is no requirement of proximity in that text.
He is not in a position of authority,
Yes, he IS in a position of authority. He is called the good doctor, the doctor of grace and his ideas carry much more weight than mine though he parted nearly 500 years ago.
He is an authority on the doctrine of justification by faith alone.
He is THE authority on the errors of ex cathedra and other popish doctrines.
Authority means you have sway. What you say carries weight. There is no president or potentate on earth today whose words carry any where close to the weight of the Doctor of Grace.
That IS authority.
although thankfully his works survive. I am grateful for the rich Luther's contributions.
No you're not.
In the course of human and church history was Luther the most important human being since Paul? I doubt it.
Nobody with five minutes of church history class would say what you say here.
Honestly.
There were other Church heroes before Luther that paved the way for a Reformation. Was the Reformation one of the most important events in terms of Church history since the early church? I believe so.
This proves I am wasting my time.
The difference is that you seem to attribute the Reformation as mostly a result of Luther while I believe if we step back we can see it as an act of God.
Everything is an act of God. No electron ever circumnavigated the inside of a single atom but by the power and brilliance and plan of God.
Of COURSE it was an act of God!
Yet, God still says we ought to give honor to whom honor is due.
Of elders in the church he says we ought to give those who labor in the word and doctrine DOUBLE HONOR. H
e is one of the most important laborers of word and doctrine in history.
Of course it was an act of God. So what?
Great - glad you can. There’s always a dumb one in the bunch and today it’s me. I need you to explain how Luther is in a position of civil authority and therefore Romans 13 1-7 applies to him or provide other sources that confirm your interpretation (I provided 3 that were contrary to your interpretation, so maybe it isn’t that obvious to everyone).
As I said above Luther IS an authority.
Serious??? Luther advocated execution by sword for those who taught Anabaptist doctrine. I hold to some of the teachings for which they would be condemned.
I am familiar with what Luther did in this regard and I agree with much of it. Anabaptists were largely heretical troublemakers who the likes of Luther were very patient with.
If civil law said "Don't do this under this penalty," and you did it, then you pay the piper. I don't have a problem with that. I would like to carry my firearm wherever I go. There are thousands of places where that is illegal. I sincerely disagree with those policies and find them to be very anti-American. I may disobey anyway. When the penalty comes, I accept it. I felt like it was worth it.
The passage you keep referring to says EXACTLY that, right?
3For rulers hold no terror for those who do right, but for those who do wrong. Do you want to be free from fear of the one in authority? Then do what is right and you will be commended. 4For the one in authority is God’s servant for your good. But if you do wrong, be afraid, for rulers do not bear the sword for no reason. They are God’s servants, agents of wrath to bring punishment on the wrongdoer. 5Therefore, it is necessary to submit to the authorities, not only because of possible punishment but also as a matter of conscience.
But what I want you to do is cite specific examples of Luther killing anabaptists so that we can see them (and by we I mean you) in CONTEXT.
We can go back and forward on this one. I celebrate Independence Day because we adopted the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776. You, I suppose, celebrate it in memory of….George Washington?
George Washington and the thousands of others who "for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor."
In case you didn't know, that is the Declaration of Independence which is the foundation of Independence Day.
An event is not something that you can honor. You honor the people who made the event possible.
Every time you go to a funeral you don't do it to honor the DEATH of the person in the coffin. You do it to honor the PERSON.
Every time you stand when the National Anthem is played you are not honoring a piece of colored cloth- or you are an idiot. You are honoring the men who made possible what that cloth stands for.
Why on earth do you think I’d refuse to recognize it just because I don’t celebrate Luther - especially when I said I understood recognizing the Reformation in its entirety?
Because you are being an ingrate. You draw daily from a wonderful well which Luther dug for you and your family and the whole world and you get on baptistboard and write a post why you don't honor him.