Oh, so NOW you look to the Vatican for an authoritative position???
Just kidding, Jonā¦I understand why you would ask, and itās a good question.
Jon
Oh, so NOW you look to the Vatican for an authoritative position???
Just kidding, Jonā¦I understand why you would ask, and itās a good question.
For any of the LCMS Posters.Hi Michael
Confessional Lutherans are committed to the confessions, particularly the Augsburg Confession and small Catechism as the are written. More liberal Lutherans tend to be willing to evaluate he confessions in light of modern understandings.
On dialogue;
firstthings.com/onthesquare/2013/02/roman-catholics-and-confessional-lutherans-explore-deeper-ties
Jon
If they were Catholics in their beliefs they would convert to Catholicism.I think there are more than a few LCMS that are already Catholic in their beliefs, they are just used to calling themselves Lutherans.
Augsburg Confession:For any of the LCMS Posters.
do the Lutheran confessions specifically forbid women pastors and if so where?
Thanks,
Mary.
Article XIV: Of Ecclesiastical Order.
We also look at scripture and the historic Church.Of Ecclesiastical Order they teach that no one should publicly teach in the Church or administer the Sacraments unless he be regularly called.
The anti-Catholic raving from some LCMS members is usually cultural, and from what I can see, itās a mile wide and an inch deep.On this forum several Lutherans call themselves Catholics yet profess the Lutheran confessions. Itās not the norm where I live for LCMS members to do so.
We are not called to be proud.I could not be more proud of what happened yesterday.
From āIf I Were a Preacherā, originally published in the LONDON DAILY TELEGRAPH, Dec 31, 1928, republished in Chesterton/THE COMMON MAN, 1950, p. 246, as āIf I had only One Sermon to Preachā, the original title.We are not called to be proud.
āIf I had only one sermon to preach it would be a sermon against pride.ā - G.K. Chesterton
Which raises the question: When will the LCMS break communion with the ELCA?Correction⦠People calling themselves Lutheran but who reject the Bible, the Creeds, and the Lutheran Confessions are accepting female clergy.
Itās a free country, so we are free to call ourselves anything. But those of us who still have the seemingly rare power of reading comprehension are also free to defend the faith.
The LCMS are still, as a body, fundamentally not-Catholic - axiomatically, while they believe in the real presence, they donāt teach transubstantiation. (Which, definitionally, makes them Consubstantialists, even tho they reject the term. And Consubstantiation is anathematized heresy.) And they teach only two sacraments as sacraments: baptism and eucharist; they retain the form but not the substance of ordination, confirmation, last rites, and marriage. I donāt recall if the LCMS still uses individual confession/penance.I think there are more than a few LCMS that are already Catholic in their beliefs, they are just used to calling themselves Lutherans.
The LCMS has never shared communion with the ELCA. Some of its predecessor bodies, yes, but that stopped by the time the ELCA was formed in 1988. In fact, not only has the LCMS broken fellowship, it doesnāt even consider the ELCA to be an orthodox Lutheran body: blogs.lcms.org/2009/kieschnick-comments-on-elca-report-recommendationWhich raises the question: When will the LCMS break communion with the ELCA?
-Former LCMS President Kieschnek, quoting a Synod-wide resolution which quoted former LCMS President Barry. The idea that the ELCA is not orthodox is not a new idea in the LCMS.[W]hile we cannot consider [the ELCA] to be an orthodox Lutheran church body ⦠we of the LCMS recognize that many of our brothers and sisters of the ELCA remain faithful to the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ and we resolve to reach out to them in love and support.
You have quite a few misconceptions about the LCMS, here. I wonāt address them all because this is not the purpose of my original post, but I canāt ignore a huge pet peeve - Lutherans do not profess Consubstatiation. This has been explained in many threads, most recently here: forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=814452The LCMS are still, as a body, fundamentally not-Catholic - axiomatically, while they believe in the real presence, they donāt teach transubstantiation. (Which, definitionally, makes them Consubstantialists, even tho they reject the term. And Consubstantiation is anathematized heresy.) And they teach only two sacraments as sacraments: baptism and eucharist; they retain the form but not the substance of ordination, confirmation, last rites, and marriage. I donāt recall if the LCMS still uses individual confession/penance.
While we certainly wish for all of His children to be united and pursue all useful avenues for resolving doctrinal disputes, any LCMS parish that is intentionally teaching Transubstantiation is not clearly reflecting the Lutheran Confessions; we do not ascribe to any Aristotelian explanation of the miracle - whether it be Transubstantiation, Consubstantiation or something else.That all said, there are some LCMS parishes that do accept transubstantiation, and wish to become Catholic, as in, in communion with Rome, but also wish to retain the Lutheran liturgical praxis.
Youāre probably right, should one ever happen on a large scale. Whatever happened to the Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church? Do they still exist, or are they entirely Roman Catholic now?A Lutheran union would probably be very much like the LCMS in praxis, and like the Anglican Ordinariate in organization.
As Don has mentioned, the LCMS is not in communion with the ELCA=Aramis;11101417]Which raises the question: When will the LCMS break communion with the ELCA?
Much discussion has taken place here recently regarding Lutheran teaching regarding consubstantiation. I would encourage you to read those posts and threads. Definitionally, we are consubstantiationists anymore than Catholics are Mary worshippers. But a quote from 17th century Lutheran theologian, Carpzov:The LCMS are still, as a body, fundamentally not-Catholic - axiomatically, while they believe in the real presence, they donāt teach transubstantiation. (Which, definitionally, makes them Consubstantialists, even tho they reject the term. And Consubstantiation is anathematized heresy.)
Bolding is mine.ā¦When this presence is called substantial and bodily, those words designate not the MODE of presence, but the OBJECT. When the words in, with, under, are used, our traducers know, as well as they know their own fingers, that they do NOT signify a CONSUBSTANTIATION, local co-existence, or impanation. The charge that we hold a local inclusion, or Consubstantiation, is a calumny.
Actually, we are free to consider Confession/Holy Absolution is a third sacrament, which I do - established by Christ, with a promise of grace - and held to beso in the early confessional documents. We actually do retain form and substance of all of these. Calling them a sacrament, or not calling them a sacrament, does not change or alter this fact.And they teach only two sacraments as sacraments: baptism and eucharist; they retain the form but not the substance of ordination, confirmation, last rites, and marriage. I donāt recall if the LCMS still uses individual confession/penance.
Yes, there have been a few, but generally they have broken from the LCMS.That all said, there are some LCMS parishes that do accept transubstantiation, and wish to become Catholic, as in, in communion with Rome, but also wish to retain the Lutheran liturgical praxis.
I would expect a reconciliation to look something like this.A Lutheran union would probably be very much like the LCMS in praxis, and like the Anglican Ordinariate in organization.
āAnd you shall not steal.āIn the ELCA, a parish can also leave the Synod in consultation with the bishop, but the church building may very well stay in the ELCA.
We decline to join the LWF precisely because there are synods there whose practices do not conform to the confessions or to scripture, including the subject of the thread. I have asked you before state from scripture and the confessions where ordination of women is approved.The comment that LCMS Lutherans are essentially āCatholicsā is incorrect. The LCMS is the only major Lutheran body in North America [if not the planet] without episcopacy and Apostolic Succession. LCMS tends to be congregational in polity, which means if a parish wants to leave the Synod they can just leave without permission from a bishop. In the ELCA, a parish can also leave the Synod in consultation with the bishop, but the church building may very well stay in the ELCA.
The Church Growth Movement [Protestant-like worship] is probably most prevalent in the LCMS; it was even taught at Concordia Seminary for a while.
Dialogue between Lutherans and Catholics has been under the auspices of the Lutheran World Federation; the organization of worldwide Lutherans that the LCMS declines to join.
A Lutheran Ordinariate sounds good to me.A Lutheran union would probably be very much like the LCMS in praxis, and like the Anglican Ordinariate in organization.
As a Lutheran, I am not suggesting that episcopacy/ Apostolic Succession are necessary but it is the norm in Lutheranism as the Church continues to restore catholicity. The Provoo Communion in Europe and full communion between the ELCA and Episcopal Church in the USA was based on AS to strengthen unity. If a Reformed minister is called to serve a Lutheran parish, the blessing of the bishop confers Apostolic Succession on him/ her as well. In its effort to find communion among other Christians, the ELCA is influencing spiritual thought and devotion to such things as the Real Presence, weekly Mass, Holy Absolution, etc.We decline to join the LWF precisely because there are synods there whose practices do not conform to the confessions or to scripture, including the subject of the thread. I have asked you before state from scripture and the confessions where ordination of women is approved.
On the topic of AS, you know quite well that presbyter ordination is acceptable under divine law, that it was practiced even before the Reformation (Cistercian abbots, as an example). AS is not the wedge issue between the ELCA and the LCMS. The wedge issue in ordination is the ELCAās ordination of women, and now openly practicing gays.
And lest there be any misunderstanding, it is not the LCMS that has changed, or is out of step with the historic Lutheran Church, or the Church Catholic. It is the ELCA and some other Lutheran synods that have decided to redefine ordination, not based on scripture or the confessions, but on what appears from the outside to be a desire to conform to the secular worldās definition of āequal rightsā. If Iām wrong about this, please correct me.
I will agree that to state that the LCMS is essentially Catholic (meaning here those in communion with the Bishop of Rome) understates the important differences we must still overcome.
Jon
But letās be honest, there is no significant theological difference between Lutherans. What it comes down to is how we, as Christians, deal with others and the greater good of inclusion. Female ordination is becoming a non-issue among Lutherans, Anglicans and many other denominations. Human sexuality is viewed quite differently today than what was the mores of past centuries. Pope Francis is certainly touching on these issues also.āIII. Infant Communion
In all the frenzy over the Reformed and Episcopal proposals and the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification at recent ELCA church-wide assemblies, an equally or even more theologically and historically significant departure from Lutheran doctrine was overlooked: the adoption of infant communion. "Infants and children may be communed for the first time during the service in which they are baptized . . ."31
This is not just a theoretical possibility, proposed for study. Infant communion is now the official position of the ELCA ā and was adopted by an overwhelming majority (857 to 44), with little dissension or even discussion.32 And even those congregations which do not implement infant communion are expected to provide it to infants from congregations which do.33
confessionallutherans.org/papers/vogts.html
We were thinking it, you said it. :clapping:āAnd you shall not steal.ā
Agreed. This should be the first order of business. Until we are reconciled with our Orthodox brothers and sisters, the status of Protestants should always be secondary. No, I didnāt get this from the Vatican, only from common sense.Ecumenism with the Protestant churches is dead. The only meaningful dialogue to be had is with the Orthodox.