Matheus

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Although Luther was ultimately excommunicated and much of Protestant theology was met with anathemas at the Council of Trent, the subsequent Catholic tradition recognized that Luther (and Protestantism generally) cannot simply be rejected. This is evident not only in the lifting of anathemas and the affirmation of sola fide in recent ecumenical dialogue but also in the willingness to acknowledge that something valuable was recovered in the sixteenth century.
What It Means to Be Protestant: The Case for an Always-Reforming Church
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