A Question for Lutherans - One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic

  • Thread starter Thread starter christus_vincit
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
For those unfamiliar with Lutheranism, the Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope, a binding document in the Lutheran Confessions…
Well, it’s only binding on some Lutherans. In the Church of Norway, which became Lutheran in 1537, only the three ecumenical (Western) Creeds, the Augsburg Confession and Luther’s Small Catechism is binding. The king, who inititated the Danish-Norwegian Reformation didn’t want to be part of the debates on the continent and therefore he only included two (early) Lutheran documents, thank God!
 
Well, it’s only binding on some Lutherans. In the Church of Norway, which became Lutheran in 1537, only the three ecumenical (Western) Creeds, the Augsburg Confession and Luther’s Small Catechism is binding. The king, who inititated the Danish-Norwegian Reformation didn’t want to be part of the debates on the continent and therefore he only included two (early) Lutheran documents, thank God!
While I’m sure that there are earnest Lutherans in The People’s Church, I’m not sure that the body itself can be categorized as recognizably Lutheran in its practices or in its agreements with other communions, despite whatever portion of the Lutheran Reformation it historically may have accepted. What I’m saying, with respect, is that a body can’t be partially Lutheran.

By the way, welcome to CAF! Glad to have a European among us Colonists. 😃
 
While I’m sure that there are earnest Lutherans in The People’s Church, I’m not sure that the body itself can be categorized as recognizably Lutheran in its practices or in its agreements with other communions, despite whatever portion of the Lutheran Reformation it historically may have accepted. What I’m saying, with respect, is that a body can’t be partially Lutheran.
Nor can a body be partially Catholic, despite whatever portion of the Original Church it may have historically accepted. 😉
 
From yet another Lutheran –
Lutherans are a part of the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church, but we don’t claim that we are the exclusive inhabitants of that church. Any Christian body which affirms the three ecumenical creeds fits in.
Just for reference, the Anglican Church has a similar view. Personally I would tend to prefer that a Christian be (conservative) Anglican, RC, Orthodox or Lutheran, etc (the latter, my apologies for what might seem as crassness, as a distant fourth). I have no problem however, with associating with a multitude of “mere Christians” (to use C. S. Lewis’ term) though, and I’m too much of a sad example of a sinful person to be in the business of sitting on a high horse in the “more legit than thou” game.
 
Nor can a body be partially Catholic, despite whatever portion of the Original Church it may have historically accepted. 😉
😃 Well played, Steve.

But on second thought… even we Lutherans can claim a “ray of truth,” yes? 😉
 
Just for reference, the Anglican Church has a similar view. Personally I would tend to prefer that a Christian be (conservative) Anglican, RC, Orthodox or Lutheran, etc (the latter, my apologies for what might seem as crassness, as a distant fourth). I have no problem however, with associating with a multitude of “mere Christians” (to use C. S. Lewis’ term) though, and I’m too much of a sad example of a sinful person to be in the business of sitting on a high horse in the “more legit than thou” game.
No apology necessary. Sometimes, even we Lutherans feel the same. :o

Welcome to CAF.
 
If Lutheran’s do not ultimately understand themselves as the one church, do Lutherans maintain that they do not possess the fullness of the faith?
 
While I’m sure that there are earnest Lutherans in The People’s Church, I’m not sure that the body itself can be categorized as recognizably Lutheran in its practices or in its agreements with other communions, despite whatever portion of the Lutheran Reformation it historically may have accepted. What I’m saying, with respect, is that a body can’t be partially Lutheran.

By the way, welcome to CAF! Glad to have a European among us Colonists. 😃
To be clear. I am part of the Church of Norway, but I’m opposed to the ordination of women, to homosexual ‘marriage’ and to ordination for practicing homosexuals. This is ‘perfectly’ acceptable in the Church of Norway, and on June 15 I will be ordained priest.

And a couple more points. The Church of Norway has traditionally seen herself a confessiona, but she has never accepted any Lutheran confession outside the Augsburg Confession and Luther’s Small Catechism. She went through the reformation in 1537.
 
And to chime in on some of the questions being discussed here.

Episcopal or presbyter ordination: Not all Lutherans believe that presbyter ordination is valid. And I’m not talking about the Liberals. I certainly don’t see presbyter ordinations as valid, and wouldn’t go to communion if I knew the priest or pastor was ordained by a presbyter. And I am far from liberal.

In Norway we have had bishops continually, though they used to call them superintendents. We lost apostolic succession for ‘couple of years,’ but got it back through the Church of England.

The immaculate conception: The immaculate conception – and the belief that Mary is ever virgin – is in fact Lutheran beliefs. It is right there in the Smalcald articles, which states that Christ “was born of the pure, holy [and always] Virgin Mary” (part I, IV)

I do not hold these articles to be binding, but they do reflect the beliefs of the Lutheran Reformers.
From the Lutheran perspective, the immaculate conception and the assumption is true.

Just not “if you don’t believe this you cause damnation upon yourself” true.

As I understand it, before December 7th 1854 Catholics felt the same way about the IC.
This is where it becomes apparant that there is a difference of terminology. The Orthodox doesn’t regard it as a dogma either – but they would equally claim that it could be damnable to deny it. Orthodox use ‘dogma’ almost exclusively with things directly concerning the person of Christ and the Trinity, but Catholic, AFAIK, use ‘dogma’ to mean something true and revealed, and not just things directly concerning the person of Christ and the Trinity. I say that if it is true we ought to hold to it, simply because God wants us not only to be saved, but also to follow truth.
 
And to chime in on some of the questions being discussed here.

Episcopal or presbyter ordination: Not all Lutherans believe that presbyter ordination is valid. And I’m not talking about the Liberals. I certainly don’t see presbyter ordinations as valid, and wouldn’t go to communion if I knew the priest or pastor was ordained by a presbyter. And I am far from liberal.

In Norway we have had bishops continually, though they used to call them superintendents. We lost apostolic succession for ‘couple of years,’ but got it back through the Church of England.

The immaculate conception: The immaculate conception – and the belief that Mary is ever virgin – is in fact Lutheran beliefs. It is right there in the Smalcald articles, which states that Christ “was born of the pure, holy [and always] Virgin Mary” (part I, IV)

I do not hold these articles to be binding, but they do reflect the beliefs of the Lutheran Reformers.

This is where it becomes apparant that there is a difference of terminology. The Orthodox doesn’t regard it as a dogma either – but they would equally claim that it could be damnable to deny it. Orthodox use ‘dogma’ almost exclusively with things directly concerning the person of Christ and the Trinity, but Catholic, AFAIK, use ‘dogma’ to mean something true and revealed, and not just things directly concerning the person of Christ and the Trinity. I say that if it is true we ought to hold to it, simply because God wants us not only to be saved, but also to follow truth.
Welcome KjetilK; great to have more European expression.

The Shrine of St Olav rests in the Nidaros Cathedral.

Wasn’t apostolic succession via the Church of Sweden? Per Provoo full communion?
 
=KjetilK;12039874]And to chime in on some of the questions being discussed here.
Episcopal or presbyter ordination: Not all Lutherans believe that presbyter ordination is valid. And I’m not talking about the Liberals. I certainly don’t see presbyter ordinations as valid, and wouldn’t go to communion if I knew the priest or pastor was ordained by a presbyter. And I am far from liberal.
In Norway we have had bishops continually, though they used to call them superintendents. We lost apostolic succession for ‘couple of years,’ but got it back through the Church of England.
The immaculate conception: The immaculate conception – and the belief that Mary is ever virgin – is in fact Lutheran beliefs. It is right there in the Smalcald articles, which states that Christ “was born of the pure, holy [and always] Virgin Mary” (part I, IV)
I do not hold these articles to be binding, but they do reflect the beliefs of the Lutheran Reformers.
I’m curious about this. On the one hand, you reference Smalcald to defend, rightfully, the ever Virgin, but on the other hand you reject the validity of presbyter ordination, which was also maintained by the Reformers, and defended in the Apology. Why the apparent dichotomy?

Jon
 
The immaculate conception: The immaculate conception – and the belief that Mary is ever virgin – is in fact Lutheran beliefs. It is right there in the Smalcald articles, which states that Christ “was born of the pure, holy [and always] Virgin Mary” (part I, IV)

I do not hold these articles to be binding, but they do reflect the beliefs of the Lutheran Reformers.

This is where it becomes apparant that there is a difference of terminology. The Orthodox doesn’t regard it as a dogma either – but they would equally claim that it could be damnable to deny it. Orthodox use ‘dogma’ almost exclusively with things directly concerning the person of Christ and the Trinity, but Catholic, AFAIK, use ‘dogma’ to mean something true and revealed, and not just things directly concerning the person of Christ and the Trinity. I say that if it is true we ought to hold to it, simply because God wants us not only to be saved, but also to follow truth.
Thank you for this. It is insightful, and hopefully out non-Lutheran friends gain some insight on how Lutherans historically understand Marian beliefs.
Episcopal or presbyter ordination: Not all Lutherans believe that presbyter ordination is valid. And I’m not talking about the Liberals. I certainly don’t see presbyter ordinations as valid, and wouldn’t go to communion if I knew the priest or pastor was ordained by a presbyter. And I am far from liberal.

In Norway we have had bishops continually, though they used to call them superintendents. We lost apostolic succession for ‘couple of years,’ but got it back through the Church of England.
Forgive me if I misunderstand, but are you insinuating that your communion was absent pastors to properly administer Word and Sacrament for years? :eek: I understand that AS is the preferred method of ordination (and agree wholeheartedly), but to deny that presbyter ordination is “valid” would deny the ordinations of your own communion, communions with which you share full fellowship, the early church (which knew only presbyter ordination!) – and Confessio Augustana. How can you possibly reconcile rejection of presbyter ordination with Article XVI? On a related note, two questions: 1)Does your communion consider the Apology as binding? 2)Is your subscription to the Confessions of a quia or quatenus nature?
 
Keeping things in perspective. Luther asked the bishops to ordain Lutheran priests? And waited decades. That was intolerable and contrary to the Gospel. Lutherans were denied apostolic succession in Germany but not in Scandinavia and Baltic countries. The necessity of presbyter ordination no longer applies. Come back to the Catholic faith in apostolic belief/ practice, Why insist on something that doesn’t matter any more? I have no way of knowing but don’t most LCMS ordinations include the laying on of hands of the district president, anyway?
 
This is a photo of a LCMS ordination. The district president is there but the pastor is in the middle not the bishop.
 
I’m curious about this. On the one hand, you reference Smalcald to defend, rightfully, the ever Virgin, but on the other hand you reject the validity of presbyter ordination, which was also maintained by the Reformers, and defended in the Apology. Why the apparent dichotomy?
Did you not read the last part? I reject the Smalcald articles as binding, but referenced them to point out that this was held by Luther. It was for historical reference. And I referenced it since benjohnson clearly sees them as binding. And if they are binding on him, then he must believe in the immaculate conception lest he reject the creeds which the LCMS holds fast to. My further point was that ‘dogma’ or ‘doctrine’ has a somewhat ‘broader’ sense in the Roman Catholic Church, referring to true beliefs in general. ‘Dogma’ (coming from Gk. δόγμα, ‘opinion, tenet’) simply means teaching. And the teachings are then arranged by how certain they are. According to the Catholic Church, this is de fide, certain, and must be believed. The reason is not, as we see in the Eastern Orthodox use of ‘dogma,’ that it is very important in regards to Christology or Trinitarian doctrine, but simply that it is true. And every Lutheran who holds to the Smalcald articles must believe it, since it right there in the text. The question, then, seems to be one of terminology.

Is ‘dogma’ supposed to be used broadly or narrowly? Regardless of what answer we choose to give, both Roman Catholics and Lutherans following the Smalcald articles must hold it as true that Mary was conceived immaculately, that she remained pure, and that she remained virgin. I do not follow the Smalcald articles, since it has never been part of the ‘doctrinal package’ of the Church of Norway, but I hold the immaculate conception simply because it is part of the faith delivered to us throughout the centuries. Because it is part of Tradition.

When it comes to the presbyter ordination, this cannot be found in the Augsburg Confession or Luther’s Small Catechism, so I’m not bound to hold it. And since it isn’t part of Tradition, but the necessity of episcopal ordination is, then I follow that. I am not a Protestant. I am a Evangelical Catholic, following “the Scriptures, the Church Catholic and the Church of Rome as known from the writings of the Fathers,” to paraphrase the the conclusion of the doctrinal part of the Augsburg Confession.
Forgive me if I misunderstand, but are you insinuating that your communion was absent pastors to properly administer Word and Sacrament for years?
I didn’t say that. We lost apostolic succession, but we had bishops from the start.
I understand that AS is the preferred method of ordination (and agree wholeheartedly), but to deny that presbyter ordination is “valid” would deny the ordinations of your own communion, communions with which you share full fellowship, the early church (which knew only presbyter ordination!) – and Confessio Augustana. How can you possibly reconcile rejection of presbyter ordination with Article XVI?
Three points:

(1) I might be using AS differently from you. By AS I am not referring to bishops as such, but bishops with strict ties back to the apostles, and without any impediments. If we are to believe Apostolicae Curae, the Church of England lost apostolic succession because they changed the ordination rite (although they had the historic connection). They got it back, however, partly from Old Catholic bishops, and we got it back through the Porvoo agreement.

(2) What makes you think that the early church only knew ‘presbyter ordination’?

(3) What does CA XVI have to do with this? Did you mean XIV? That simply states that those who publicly teach or administer the Sacraments should be ‘regularly called.’ The text itself doesn’t say anything about who calls.
On a related note, two questions: 1)Does your communion consider the Apology as binding? 2)Is your subscription to the Confessions of a quia or quatenus nature?
(1) No, in the Church of Norway the only binding texts, outside Scripture, are the three ecumenical creeds, the Augsburg Confession, and Luther’s Small Catechism.

(2) I hadn’t heard about those before, but I would have to say the latter, although the former fits with my rejection of parts of the Book of Concord, for instance. For instance, I see absolutely no warrant to hold that the Pope or the Papacy is the Anti-Christ, which is part of the Book of Concord. Therefore I reject that.
 
=KjetilK;12040746]Did you not read the last part?
Yes, I did, and that was why I was curious
I reject the Smalcald articles as binding, but referenced them to point out that this was held by Luther. It was for historical reference. And I referenced it since benjohnson clearly sees them as binding. And if they are binding on him, then he must believe in the immaculate conception lest he reject the creeds which the LCMS holds fast to.
I would agree, particularly since it is further confirmed in the Solid Declaration of the Formula of Concord. Not speaking about Ben here, but I generally do not understand why Lutherans would not believe it
My further point was that ‘dogma’ or ‘doctrine’ has a somewhat ‘broader’ sense in the Roman Catholic Church, referring to true beliefs in general. ‘Dogma’ (coming from Gk. δόγμα, ‘opinion, tenet’) simply means teaching. And the teachings are then arranged by how certain they are. According to the Catholic Church, this is de fide, certain, and must be believed. The reason is not, as we see in the Eastern Orthodox use of ‘dogma,’ that it is very important in regards to Christology or Trinitarian doctrine, but simply that it is true. And every Lutheran who holds to the Smalcald articles must believe it, since it right there in the text. The question, then, seems to be one of terminology.
Is ‘dogma’ supposed to be used broadly or narrowly? Regardless of what answer we choose to give, both Roman Catholics and Lutherans following the Smalcald articles must hold it as true that Mary was conceived immaculately, that she remained pure, and that she remained virgin. I do not follow the Smalcald articles, since it has never been part of the ‘doctrinal package’ of the Church of Norway, but I hold the immaculate conception simply because it is part of the faith delivered to us throughout the centuries. Because it is part of Tradition.
I get that.
When it comes to the presbyter ordination, this cannot be found in the Augsburg Confession or Luther’s Small Catechism, so I’m not bound to hold it. And since it isn’t part of Tradition, but the necessity of episcopal ordination is, then I follow that. I am not a Protestant. I am a Evangelical Catholic, following “the Scriptures, the Church Catholic and the Church of Rome as known from the writings of the Fathers,” to paraphrase the the conclusion of the doctrinal part of the Augsburg Confession.
So, here’s my question, hopefully better phrased so you don’t think I’m attacking your position, because I’m not; Luther and the Reformers believed that presbyter ordination, under the circumstances of Bishops withholding ordination, citing the Cistercian abbots of a century earlier using presbyter ordination (with the pope’s blessing), and the fact that in the early Church, initially all clergy were one order, presbyter. From this position of scripture and Tradition, I was simply wondering why you would therefore be willing to cite the Apology and Tradition in defense of presbyter ordination.
I might be using AS differently from you. By AS I am not referring to bishops as such, but bishops with strict ties back to the apostles, and without any impediments. If we are to believe Apostolicae Curae, the Church of England lost apostolic succession because they changed the ordination rite (although they had the historic connection). They got it back, however, partly from Old Catholic bishops, and we got it back through the Porvoo agreement.
That’s a blessing. I know you said you opposed women’s ordination. Do you think that calls into question the validity of your communion’s orders in any way?
No, in the Church of Norway the only binding texts, outside Scripture, are the three ecumenical creeds, the Augsburg Confession, and Luther’s Small Catechism.
Certainly, in our communion, those are the primary
I hadn’t heard about those before, but I would have to say the latter, although the former fits with my rejection of parts of the Book of Concord, for instance. For instance, I see absolutely no warrant to hold that the Pope or the Papacy is the Anti-Christ, which is part of the Book of Concord. Therefore I reject that.
You do understand that this is not a doctrine, as the charge is historically conditional. In many ways, however, I see no further need of the charge, myself.

I want you to know how pleased I am to have you among us, to give us a different perspective on our shared Lutheranism. I would especially like, at some point, to hear your perspective on Finnish Lutheran Dr. Tuomo Mannermaa, and his ideas on theosis and Luther. But that’s another thread. 🙂

Jon
 
So, here’s my question, hopefully better phrased so you don’t think I’m attacking your position, because I’m not; Luther and the Reformers believed that presbyter ordination, under the circumstances of Bishops withholding ordination, citing the Cistercian abbots of a century earlier using presbyter ordination (with the pope’s blessing), and the fact that in the early Church, initially all clergy were one order, presbyter. From this position of scripture and Tradition, I was simply wondering why you would therefore be willing to cite the Apology and Tradition in defense of presbyter ordination.
But if it was with the pope’s blessing, would it really count as presbyter ordination in the same way that Luther and the first Reformers saw it? And in the Catholic Church, abbots have certain rights that normal parish priests do not have. I recognise that my position puts me in a place of disagreement with our Reformer, but I don’t think his, or the Reformers’ words are law. I could perhaps admit that presbyter ordination would be OK if, and only if, it was approved by a bishop, archbishop or above. That, of course, means that I do not recognise the orders of some free church Lutheran pastors.

If I were to place myself in a ‘box,’ I could call myself a Lutheran, Norwegian version of an Anglo-Catholic or Anglo-Papalist. I believe the Church of Norway is the ecclesial continuity in Norway, the same way an Anglo-Papalist sees the Church of England as the ecclesial continuity in England. I believe we ought to be in communion with Rome, but the Church of Norway is for the time being out of that communion. I also strongly believe that we ought to have ‘people’s churches’ (churches for the people, not run by the people). If I were to conclude that I couldn’t stay in the Church of Norway, I would probably swim the Tiber before joining a Lutheran free church.
That’s a blessing. I know you said you opposed women’s ordination. Do you think that calls into question the validity of your communion’s orders in any way?
No, not necessarily. It means, of course, that I do not recognise the validity of the ordinations of men ordained by women bishops, but I try carefully not to slip into Donatism.
Certainly, in our communion, those are the primary
Yes, but aren’t the rest of the Book of Concord also canonically binding in the LCMS?
I want you to know how pleased I am to have you among us, to give us a different perspective on our shared Lutheranism. I would especially like, at some point, to hear your perspective on Finnish Lutheran Dr. Tuomo Mannermaa, and his ideas on theosis and Luther. But that’s another thread.
I haven’t read much of him, so I couldn’t say much. But I do have a friend who wrote his master’s thesis on the new Finnish interpretation of Luther, if I recall correctly. It could be online somewhere, but it is probably written in Norwegian.
 
Keeping things in perspective. Luther asked the bishops to ordain Lutheran priests? And waited decades. That was intolerable and contrary to the Gospel. Lutherans were denied apostolic succession in Germany but not in Scandinavia and Baltic countries. The necessity of presbyter ordination no longer applies. Come back to the Catholic faith in apostolic belief/ practice, Why insist on something that doesn’t matter any more? I have no way of knowing but don’t most LCMS ordinations include the laying on of hands of the district president, anyway?
I might add the only reason it doesn’t matter to you is that if did matter, the Lutheran church project falls apart. I think my original example remains valid in this regard. Who would dare start a church when the apostles were walking around without their permission, without being raised to the position to shepherd the community? Only a Gnostic heretic would dare such a thing.

The question can be shifted then to the second century. The successors of the apostles are clearly in place, could a Lutheran church be established without the laying of hands then? I think only the most radical of protestant would say “Yes we don’t need those the apostles established.”

What about the third century? Is then permissible? The protestant argument, the lutheran argument, seems to be that it was justified to break away from apostolic succession because it was either non important from the beginning (which I do not think Lutherans can consistently believe without denying the history of the church) or that the church got to such a point of corruption that it demanded a breaking of communion. It would have been one thing if the Lutheran’s had gone to an apostolic church, but they like the rest of the reformers did something entirely radical, almost Gnostic. Without regard to the standard as set within history (here is where the Lutheran says, well its not in the bible therefore we don’t have to believe it, but we don’t reject the fathers or the history of the church), they unlike the Roman, Oriental and Orthodox churches when they broke communion (at least in Germany it seems and generally this seems to be the accepted fact amongst the entire Lutheran church that no one has an apostolic succession going back to the apostles, but rather a succession going back to Luther) could not even convince a bishop. If the Lutheran’s had convinced the german Bishops to abandon the Roman church they would (like the anglicans) proclaim proudly that “We are in apostolic succession, we have a right to be counted amongst the ancient churches.”

If Luther, instead of going in the radical direction he did, acted like Saint Maximos the confessor who avoided communion with the Patriarch for his heresy, he might have been remembered a Saint in the Catholic church. Might have, historical what ifs are entirely impossible to judge mind you.

I do think apostolic succession matters, it is not unimportant or the most elegant game of pass the parcel in history, but is the succeeding power of the Christian faith from one generation to the next. I do have a question before any Lutheran responds. Do Lutheran’s lay their hands on each other to ordain ministers? Is this a maintained practice?
 
I do think apostolic succession matters, it is not unimportant or the most elegant game of pass the parcel in history, but is the succeeding power of the Christian faith from one generation to the next. I do have a question before any Lutheran responds. Do Lutheran’s lay their hands on each other to ordain ministers? Is this a maintained practice?
Yes. The pastors from surrounding churches in the district (dioceses) are present for the ordination and the laying on of hands. This is done to confirm that the Apostolic Teaching has been maintained in the church’s calling of the qualified men to the ministry. The act is certainly not superfluous. Here is where it should be noted that Lutherans generally, like the early church, understand only one ‘tier’ of priests to exist - each pastor functions as bishop in his locality. So Lutheran pastors are typically confirmed by around 10 or 12 bishops, not just 3. ;)😛 More below.
(3) What does CA XVI have to do with this? Did you mean XIV? That simply states that those who publicly teach or administer the Sacraments should be ‘regularly called.’ The text itself doesn’t say anything about who calls.
Yes, I did mean Article XIV. Sorry for the typo! I can tell you know where I’m going with this, though, so I’m anxious to learn your response. Correct, the brief text in this Article does not explicitly state who calls, but this is because it was unanimously understood among the Lutheran Reformers that it is the church who calls men to administer Word and Sacrament, and it is the church -in general- who therefore holds the power to ordain. What I’m saying is that words must not be interpreted in a vacuum, but rather in the intention of the Reformers. In the Apology, Article XIV is explained clearly - that the polity and grades of the church are simply human-made (though certainly useful, desired and prescribed by the fathers!).
I didn’t say that. We lost apostolic succession, but we had bishops from the start

(1) I might be using AS differently from you. By AS I am not referring to bishops as such, but bishops with strict ties back to the apostles, and without any impediments. If we are to believe Apostolicae Curae, the Church of England lost apostolic succession because they changed the ordination rite (although they had the historic connection). They got it back, however, partly from Old Catholic bishops, and we got it back through the Porvoo agreement.
Thank you for the clarification, and your patience with my misunderstanding. I think I understand your position.
(2) What makes you think that the early church only knew ‘presbyter ordination’?
As has been noted, all presbyters in the early church were of one ‘tier.’
(1) No, in the Church of Norway the only binding texts, outside Scripture, are the three ecumenical creeds, the Augsburg Confession, and Luther’s Small Catechism.

(2) I hadn’t heard about those before, but I would have to say the latter, although the former fits with my rejection of parts of the Book of Concord, for instance.
Thank you. I had guessed as much, but I wanted to make sure without presumption.
 
I might add the only reason it doesn’t matter to you is that if did matter, the Lutheran church project falls apart. I think my original example remains valid in this regard. Who would dare start a church when the apostles were walking around without their permission, without being raised to the position to shepherd the community? Only a Gnostic heretic would dare such a thing.

The question can be shifted then to the second century. The successors of the apostles are clearly in place, could a Lutheran church be established without the laying of hands then? I think only the most radical of protestant would say “Yes we don’t need those the apostles established.”

What about the third century? Is then permissible? The protestant argument, the lutheran argument, seems to be that it was justified to break away from apostolic succession because it was either non important from the beginning (which I do not think Lutherans can consistently believe without denying the history of the church) or that the church got to such a point of corruption that it demanded a breaking of communion. It would have been one thing if the Lutheran’s had gone to an apostolic church, but they like the rest of the reformers did something entirely radical, almost Gnostic. Without regard to the standard as set within history (here is where the Lutheran says, well its not in the bible therefore we don’t have to believe it, but we don’t reject the fathers or the history of the church), they unlike the Roman, Oriental and Orthodox churches when they broke communion (at least in Germany it seems and generally this seems to be the accepted fact amongst the entire Lutheran church that no one has an apostolic succession going back to the apostles, but rather a succession going back to Luther) could not even convince a bishop. If the Lutheran’s had convinced the german Bishops to abandon the Roman church they would (like the anglicans) proclaim proudly that “We are in apostolic succession, we have a right to be counted amongst the ancient churches.”

If Luther, instead of going in the radical direction he did, acted like Saint Maximos the confessor who avoided communion with the Patriarch for his heresy, he might have been remembered a Saint in the Catholic church. Might have, historical what ifs are entirely impossible to judge mind you.

I do think apostolic succession matters, it is not unimportant or the most elegant game of pass the parcel in history, but is the succeeding power of the Christian faith from one generation to the next. I do have a question before any Lutheran responds. Do Lutheran’s lay their hands on each other to ordain ministers? Is this a maintained practice?
Without much information, I understand that the Church of Sweden/ Finland never lost apostolic succession nor have Lutheran Orders ever been questioned by Rome where apostolic succession was maintained. St Olaf as well as other saints rest in Lutheran cathedrals.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top