Luther And Calvin Doctrine

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Luther and Calvin doctrine makes it clear that it is only by the faith that a man can attain the spirit, and with the spirit alone, would he be able to overcome the power of the flesh. Luther on the other persuaded his followers to have a strong faith and to recite “I will by faith and hope lay hold upon Christ, and by his word I will raise up myself, and being so raised up, I will not fulfill the lust of the flesh.” Whenever they committed a sin. (Many faces of Evil page 113). Based on what I read in Luther's biography, I believe Luther is a kind of person that find it hard to control his bad habits or mostly what he considered a “sin” and because his guilt feeling never seized. And as a leader, a monk, and a teacher, he was struggling to suppress his guilt and also to expose the corruption in the Catholic leadership in order for the people to know that “nobody is holy” or sin-free, even the priest; although they might present themselves to the people like the most holy; the idea, Luther felt much guilt of, because he figured; it was a way to embezzle people and also to acquire a kind of immunity from the state. …show more content…
But my question is, can a teaching of subjugating of guilt of being wrong prevent a sinner from sin over again?. The answer is