=JRKH;9407217]With all due love and respect Jon…I find this a bit difficult to incorporate seriously…I know you are sincere, but still…
Hi James,First, you wish to say that others are heterodox - that is that they have accepted, “opinions or doctrines at variance with an official or orthodox position” (wiki), and yet Lutheranism itself is founded upon just such a foundation.
I’m not convnced that this is the fact of our foundation.
Lutherans accept the early councils. I would contend that it is what happened subsequent to them that the Lutheran reformers complained about. I think the better phrasing of your second question is, where are the Lutheran councils to prevent the swerving from our own doctrines by some who claim to be Lutheran - women’s ordination and the like.Second - you say that you don’t “agree to disagree” but where were the early councils among reformers to resolve these matters? Where are the councils anywhere in the last 500 years among reformers and various protestant sects designed to embrace and enforce the instruction and example of the NT “Church” authority to rule on doctrinal disagreement?
Perhaps an example, my friend.Just so you do not think I am being hi-handed in this, I fully recognize the role of the “bull-headed” elements of the RC leadership (as well as various political aspects) in the initial protestant separation (I will not say break) from Rome.
But - I find it difficult to swallow that those who claim most fiercely to believe and follow the Bible failed, so quickly and so permanently, among themselves to submit to the obvious instructions and example of the NT in such matters…In fact - denying, in many protestant, communions that the clear instructions mean what they clearly DO mean.
Well, I can’t speak for other communions, but the Lutheran confessions speak to our issue with the authority of the Bishop of Rome. And I would say that this, even beyond and before the Reformation, is the 600 pd gorilla in the room. IOW, what exactly does Nicea canon 6 mean?The historical result has been, not a “reform” of the Church by Luther and others, but a splintering of the attempt at reform -The rejection of Rome as authority did not result in the establishment of a new common, councilior “Church” authority, but rather a general rejection of authority and a willingness of groups to go their own way.
This is the 600 pd gorilla in the protestant house that no one seems to want to talk about.
And the regard is equally mutual.Jon you know me and that I mean no disrespect to you - I hold you in high regard and so I know you will not be offended by what I have written here.
Of course, the question is what is the universal Church authority? But beyond that, our confessions clearly confess a desire to remian within that authority, and as a result, we contend that, “…in doctrine and ceremonies nothing has been received on our part against Scripture or the Church Catholic. For it is manifest that we have taken most diligent care that no new and ungodly doctrine should creep into our churches.”I also know that Lutheranism, at least the Lutheranism that you hold to, recognizes the need for church authority and submission to that authority. Yet that belief - by your communion - cannot prevent you from "agreeing to disagree with other communions, because the underlying rejection of universal Church authority prevents your communion from doing anything else…
On this basis, and the reality of what the confessions teach, we have no choice but to not agree to disagree, when it comes to doctrine.
And also with you, my friend.Peace
Jon
