What, exactly, is that difference? And how should it sway one's decision to convert to RC? It is called the Counter Reformation because their goal was to limit or eliminate as much of the reforms as possible.
Sure, stamp out the overt corruption that makes the RCC look bad. But real change, for the sake of God alone? No.
It has taken four and a half centuries of "reformers" to accomplish a fraction of what Luther did in one brief lifetime. That comparison is extremely difficult to place in a favorable light, but you are welcome to try.
This is why the reformers within have undertaken the changes slowly, and with more success than the reforms of Luther outside. Vatican II, in the long run, will have more of an impact than Luther's desire to adopt the vernacular, simply because of the scope of Christianity affected by the second Vatican council.
I see the reformers inside the Roman church as those who were either too cozy with or too fearful of the corrupting influence of power to make a stand for the truth. For at least two full centuries after Luther any reformer was literally risking torture and death. The RCC compromised the truth and fought against change, generation after generation.
It is saddening that Luther's reforms soon fell under the same corruption. Those who rose to power become persecutors against reform. Likewise for C of E, Calvin et al., and even Presbyterians to a small degree.
The saddest part of all is that the modern RCC may admit that Luther was right but can't admit that the Popes and Cardinals were wrong. The same pride consists the very heart of Roman Catholicism and can never be excised.
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