ToxicFemininitySucks
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This is a spin off question from another thread, but didn't want to threeadjack
(I apologize if my sources for now are wikipedia articles, i plan on going through the online primary sources referenced as i get a chance)
For example, we have peter of bruys
Are these not doctrines that are found in some protestant/evangelical churches today?
True, there are some errors, such as the fact that the Bible doesn't say that believer's baptism saves either (and he had a generally unfavorable view of the old testament and the epistles). But i think this serves as proof that these doctrines were around before the reformation.
This came up in the other thread because of the allegation that before the protestant reformation all there was as far as Christianity was roman catholicism. Now only is this factually incorrect - there was also eastern orthodoxy since the schism in the 1000s - but if we look at the beliefs of some of the men considered to be "heretics" in the pre-reformation age we can see some "protestant" beliefs.And, in my personal opinion, the fact that the reformation age men are called "reformers" but pre-reformation age men are "heretics" is suspicious in it's own right. But that's probably a discussion suited better for another thread...
(I apologize if my sources for now are wikipedia articles, i plan on going through the online primary sources referenced as i get a chance)
For example, we have peter of bruys
Peter of Bruys - Wikipedia
en.m.wikipedia.org
This man preached believer's baptism instead of infant baptism; that the church is composed of the believers, not a magnificent building; that crosses (as icons) are not to be venerated; that transubstantiation does not occur and is unecessary for salvation; and that prayers for the dead do nothing.Peter of Bruys (also known as Pierre De Bruys or Peter de Bruis; fl. 1117 – c.1131) was a medieval French religious teacher. He was called a heresiarch (leader of a heretical movement) by the Roman Catholic Church because he opposed infant baptism, the erecting of churches and the veneration of crosses, the doctrine of transubstantiation and prayers for the dead.[1][2] An angry Roman Catholic mob murdered him in or around 1131.
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The first "error" was their denial "that children, before the age of understanding, can be saved by the baptism... According to the Petrobrusians, not another's, but one's own faith, together with baptism, saves, as the Lord says, 'He who will believe and be baptized will be saved, but he who will not believe will be condemned.'"[6] That idea ran counter to the medieval Church's teaching, particularly in the Latin West, following the theology of Augustine, in which the baptism of infants and children played an essential role in their salvation from the ancestral guilt of original sin.[7][8]
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The Petrobrusians are quoted as saying, 'It is unnecessary to build temples, since the church of God does not consist in a multitude of stones joined together, but in the unity of the believers assembled.'"
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The third error enumerated by Peter the Venerable was that the Petrobrusians "command the sacred crosses to be broken in pieces and burned, because that form or instrument by which Christ was so dreadfully tortured, so cruelly slain, is not worthy of any adoration, or veneration or supplication, but for the avenging of his torments and death it should be treated with unseemly dishonor, cut in pieces with swords, burnt in fire."[6] That was seen as an iconoclastic heresy and as acts of sacrilege by the medieval Church and still is by Catholics today.
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Petrobrusians denied sacramental grace, rejecting the rite of Communion entirely, let alone the doctrine of the Real Presence or the nascent Scholastic account of transubstantiation: "They deny, not only the truth of the body and blood of the Lord, daily and constantly offered in the church through the sacrament, but declare that it is nothing at all, and ought not to be offered to God. They say, 'Oh, people, do not believe the bishops, priests, or clergy who seduce you; who, as in many things, so in the office of the altar, deceive you when they falsely profess to make the body of Christ and give it to you for the salvation of your souls.'"[6] The term, transubstantiation, used to describe the transformation of the consecrated bread and wine into the body and blood of Christ, was first used by Hildebert de Lavardin in about 1079.
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they deride sacrifices, prayers, alms, and other good works by the faithful living for the faithful dead, and say that these things cannot aid any of the dead even in the least... The good deeds of the living cannot profit the dead, because transferred from this life their merits cannot be increased or diminished, because beyond this life, there is no longer place for merits, only for retribution. Nor can a dead man hope to gain from anybody that which he did not obtain while alive in the world. Therefore those things are pointless that are done by the living for the dead, because they are mortal and have passed by death beyond the way for all flesh, into the state of the future world, and took with them all their merit, to which nothing can be added
Are these not doctrines that are found in some protestant/evangelical churches today?
True, there are some errors, such as the fact that the Bible doesn't say that believer's baptism saves either (and he had a generally unfavorable view of the old testament and the epistles). But i think this serves as proof that these doctrines were around before the reformation.