Angie Leming

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Schaff thus argued that the Council of Trent ultimately represented a departure from catholicity. By making herself the final arbiter of Scripture and tradition, the Church of Rome not only blocked communion with any and all Christian traditions dissenting from her pronouncements, but also removed the possibility of any meaningful internal reform of her own prior magisterial teaching.
What It Means to Be Protestant: The Case for an Always-Reforming Church
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