One of the more interesting reasons Catholics will offer for why the Protestant Reformation was a spiritual error is that, by allowing people to read the Holy Scriptures for themselves, Martin Luther had made each person a pope of their own interpretation of those scriptures.
In truth, however, it is the belief that there is an infallible Pope that convinces Catholics that they're claims are infallible truth, even though not a single Christian agrees completely with any other single Christian in what that "infallible truth" actually is, in every detail.
Far from leading to the practice that everyone is their own pope about the truth of God, the ability of people to read the bible for themselves, thanks in large part to that heretic Martin Luther, lead to a greater diversity, and thus a greater understanding of how "truth" is always a collaborative process, not a dictatorial one, anchored in Rome.
In truth, however, it is the belief that there is an infallible Pope that convinces Catholics that they're claims are infallible truth, even though not a single Christian agrees completely with any other single Christian in what that "infallible truth" actually is, in every detail.
Far from leading to the practice that everyone is their own pope about the truth of God, the ability of people to read the bible for themselves, thanks in large part to that heretic Martin Luther, lead to a greater diversity, and thus a greater understanding of how "truth" is always a collaborative process, not a dictatorial one, anchored in Rome.
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