Would you have believed that if you were born, and had lived, in the first 1,000 years of Christianity?I don’t believe Peter alone had the keys.
Yes…JonNC:![]()
Would you have believed that if you were born, and had lived, in the first 1,000 years of Christianity?I don’t believe Peter alone had the keys.
And, where would you have gone to receive the Sacraments?AugustTherese:![]()
Yes…JonNC:![]()
Would you have believed that if you were born, and had lived, in the first 1,000 years of Christianity?I don’t believe Peter alone had the keys.
Did your mother remain Catholic?I am the son of an LCMS Pastor, who married a Roman Catholic.
I can unofficially vouch for the LCMS that as a catechumen for the past several months I was taught that while the church essentially says they believe themselves to be the most correct church doctrinally (doesn’t every church?) including thinking they are more “correct” than the RCC. The pastor only insisted to us that all out apostasy exists in the LDS, JWs, etc and all non Christian religions.Some people just have a hard time understanding that church bodies can hold fundamental disagreements while still affirming the Christian identity of another body.
Luther’s words are from late 1537, several months after the Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope was written. (That’s the document that lives in overblown infamy for labeling the Papacy “antichrist” – don’t freak out yet. More on that word later…) So obviously Luther and other Lutherans did not consider that to be a complete impediment for Christianity to exist.Yes, we ourselves… concede—as we must—that so much of what they say is true: that the papacy has God’s Word and the office of the apostles, and that we have received Holy Scripture, Baptism, the Sacrament, and the pulpit from them. What would we know of these if it were not for them? Therefore faith, the Christian Church, Christ, and the Holy Spirit must also be found among them… Thus we are also compelled to say: “I believe and am sure that the Christian Church has remained even in the papacy…” some of the papists are true Christians, even though they, too, have been led astray, as Christ foretold in Matt. 24:24. But by the grace of God and with His help they have been preserved in a wonderful manner.
It is no wonder that Luther is responsible for coining the phrase “Don’t throw the baby out in the bath water!” Lutherans are unique in this regard; while denouncing the errors they perceive in other church bodies (often harshly and with words archaic or offensive to modern ears), they do not pretend to know the mind of God by denying other baptized Christians their rightful place within Christ’s body. They acknowledge RC orders and calls and ordinations as ‘valid.’Now if Christianity exists under the pope, it must be Christ’s true body and members. If it is His body, then it has the right Spirit, Gospel, Creed, Baptism, Sacrament, keys, preaching office, prayer, Holy Scriptures, and everything that Christianity should have. Therefore we do not rave like the ‘enthusiasts’ that we reject everything in the papacy.
The Eastern Patriarchs would have something to say about that. Lutherans, as Western Christians, often object only to the bit about “Divine Right.” Yes, that means many Lutherans would be totally cool with a pope if he didn’t claim to rule in the place of God, but rather out of human necessity. In fact, Philip Melanchthon, who wrote the Augsburg Confession, signed the Treatise saying precisely that.
- “The Roman Pontiff has claimed for himself [in the first place] that by divine right he is [supreme] above all bishops and pastors [in all Christendom]."
Lutherans do not recognize the Pope to be the ruler of the secular world or to have the power to appoint kings or presidents or members of Congress. The Papacy hasn’t really exercised this supposed power since the coronation of Napoleon in the 1800s, but still technically claims it.
- “[The Papacy] claims the [earthly] authority also of bestowing kingdoms [enthroning and deposing kings, regulating secular dominions etc.].”
In other words, Lutherans understand the Papacy to go beyond the Scriptural “outside the church there is no salvation,” to a “you must do this work (of giving fealty to a certain bishop) in order to be saved.” That would seem to do away with the need for Christ’s sacrifice. The focus of the Lutheran’s theology, as Pope Benedict XVI repeatedly noted, is the Cross, the Cross, the Cross.
- “[The Papacy] claims that to believe this is necessary for salvation.”
In a footnote, the Commission adds:“The LCMS does not teach, nor has it ever taught, that any individual Pope as a person, is to be identified with the Antichrist. The historic view of LCMS on the Antichrist is summarized as follows by the Synod’s Theological Commission:
The New Testament predicts that the church throughout its history will witness many antichrists (Matt. 24:5,23-24; Mark 13:6,21-22; Luke 21:8; 1 John 2:18,22; 4:3; 2 John 7). All false teachers who teach contrary to Christ’s Word are opponents of Christ and, insofar as they do so, are anti-Christ… Concerning the historical identity of the Antichrist, we affirm the Lutheran Confessions’ identification of the Antichrist with the office of the papacy whose official claims continue to correspond to the Scriptural marks listed above. It is important, however, that we observe the distinction which the Lutheran Confessors made between the office of the pope (papacy) and the individual men who fill that office. The latter could be Christians themselves. We do not presume to judge any person’s heart. Also, we acknowledge the possibility that the historical form of the Antichrist could change. Of course, in that case another identified by these marks would rise.
Furthermore, the LCMS continues to work together with RCs on many social programs. Before becoming President of the LCMS, Rev. Dr. Matthew Harrison started the joint Lutheran-Catholic St. Peter/Zion Project for Neighborhood Renewal, which is now nationally-known. The LCMS and the Archdiocese of St. Louis regularly make joint statements on Life issues. The LCMS even joined Archbishop Lori in testifying before Congress in protest against mandated coverage for abortion (if you only click one link, let this be it).To the extent that the papacy continues to claim as official dogma the canons and decrees of the Council of Trent which expressly anathematizes, for instance, the doctrine “that justifying faith is nothing else than trust in divine mercy which remits sins for Christ’s sake, or that it is that trust alone by which we are justified,” the judgment of the Lutheran confessional writings that the papacy is the Antichrist holds. At the same time, of course, we must recognize the possibility, under God’s guidance, that contemporary discussions and statements (e.g., 1983 U.S. Lutheran-Roman Catholic dialogue statement on “Justification by Faith”) could lead to a revision of the Roman Catholic position regarding Tridentine dogma.”
Since universal jurisdiction was not the position of the universal Church, it would not have been an issueJonNC:![]()
And, where would you have gone to receive the Sacraments?AugustTherese:![]()
Yes…JonNC:![]()
Would you have believed that if you were born, and had lived, in the first 1,000 years of Christianity?I don’t believe Peter alone had the keys.
So, where would you have gone to receive the Sacraments?AugustTherese:![]()
Since universal jurisdiction was not the position of the universal Church, it would not have been an issueJonNC:![]()
And, where would you have gone to receive the Sacraments?AugustTherese:![]()
Yes…JonNC:![]()
Would you have believed that if you were born, and had lived, in the first 1,000 years of Christianity?I don’t believe Peter alone had the keys.
I did not know that quoting, verbatim, from the LCMS website was sharing ‘false information’, let alone breaking one of the 10 Commandments.Because some on this board continue to share false information about the LCMS, and to keep them from doing so knowingly and therefore being guilty of bearing false neighbor
And, where might that be? Could you point me to where the 'Word is rightly preached and the Sacraments rightly administered?that the true church is found “in the congregation of saints, in which the Word is rightly preached and the Sacraments rightly administered.”
But, the LCMS Brief Statement calls the ‘RCC’ ‘apostate’. Care to explain how an ‘apostate’ Church could be found in the ‘true church’?This includes, by definition, the RCC
We’re Catholics, we do not get ‘offended’ at false claims. Christ was labeled as demon-possessed, how much more His household?To anyone who is offended about the choice of language used in the Treatise, consider that the RCC itself is not bothered
The LCMS teaches that a divine office, established by Christ Himself, is ‘anti-to-Christ’? Let me guess, this ‘office’ only became ‘anti-to-Christ’ right around the Council of Trent? But, before then, it wasn’t?This point cannot be stressed enough; the LCMS explicitly teaches that the office of the papacy is, in its current form, anti-to-Christ; it does not teach that the Christian men who hold that office are themselves antichrist.
Actually what they say is that the See of Rome was given an authority found neither in scripture nor in the early councils. An innovation.The LCMS teaches that a divine office, established by Christ Himself, is ‘anti-to-Christ’? Let me guess, this ‘office’ only became ‘anti-to-Christ’ right around the Council of Trent? But, before then, it wasn’t?
Many things can be quoted verbatim without context or explanation. Just look at how Pope Francis was quoted, verbatim, by the press and promoted by those with a certain agenda to be in favor of homosexuality. They were either ignorant of what he was actually saying, or knowingly bearing false witness against him. Do you understand this?I did not know that quoting, verbatim, from the LCMS website was sharing ‘false information’, let alone breaking one of the 10 Commandments.
You are welcome to come to my church anytime. It is often fun to meet the person on the other end of the computer screen.And, where might that be? Could you point me to where the 'Word is rightly preached and the Sacraments rightly administered?
I did. It is the teaching of Works Righteousness that the LCMS considers an apostasy from pure Christianity. The RCC has refined its teachings in this regard since the Brief Statement was penned in 1932 (which was only 62 years after the pope declared himself infallible!), most dramatically at the Second Vatican Council, and continuing in various dialogues. I don’t think even the most ardent Roman Catholic today would espouse the Works Righteousness condemned in the Brief Statement. At least, the folks who write the article for CAF don’t:But, the LCMS Brief Statement calls the ‘RCC’ ‘apostate’. Care to explain how an ‘apostate’ Church could be found in the ‘true church’?
This should give all Christians hope that reunion, or at least some agreement on doctrine, might not be a dream saved for the Last Day.A key question at this point is how the magisterium handles James 2:24, which says that we are “justified by works and not by faith alone.” In popular discussions, this verse is often presented to Protestants as if it proves that we are justified by faith and works, with nothing more to be said. Confronted with this claim, the Protestant may respond, “But that’s not the kind of justification that James is talking about.” Before dismissing this claim, a Catholic should be aware of one thing: The magisterium agrees with it. At least, the magisterium doesn’t quote James 2:24 in connection with the justification that occurs at the beginning of the Christian life.
Verbatim, from the papal bull, Unam Sanctum:I did not know that quoting, verbatim, from the LCMS website was sharing ‘false information’, let alone breaking one of the 10 Commandments.