K
KjetilK
Guest
The bishops in question were bishops when the Scandinavian Reformation started, and many of them continued as bishops.KjetilK, just a point of interest. What was the arrangement for those Catholic Bishops that you mentioned? I am unfamiliar with the church you mentioned but it is interesting to know they retained their apostolic succession.
One problem is that Lutheranism, at least on this forum (since most here are from North America), is seen through American eyes. In Europe, and especially in Northern Europe, it was more of a nationalistic move. The national churches (the Church of Sweden; the Church of Denmark-Norway, later the Church of Denmark and the Church of Norway; the Church of England, etc.) broke from Rome. That may have been wrong, but there is no principled difference, in these specific cases, between this and the breach from Rome by the Church of Russia, the Church of Constantinople, etc.
And this is one of the points I keep mentioning on this forum: the Lutheran tradition is just that, a tradition, and not a Church. You cannot talk of ‘the Lutheran Church,’ just as you cannot talk of ‘the Byzantine Church.’ The bare minimum of the Lutheran tradition is an adherence to the Apostles’ Creed, the Nicene Creed, the Athanasian Creed, the Augsburg Confession, and Luther’s Small Catechism (and the latter only as a catechetical tool). There are other writings too, that some people claim is part of the Lutheran tradition (such as the Smalcald Articles or the Formula of Concord), but a text doesn’t become a confession just because some theologian in a given tradition chooses to write it. It becomes confessional by ecclesial decree, and these writings were rejected by most Lutheran churches in Europe. Luther is not a ‘pope.’ He was a pastor, yes, but not a bishop.
The same way we could extract a bare minimum that unites the various churches of the Byzantine tradition. But that is exactly my point. Lutheranism is a tradition, not a Church, and you must evaluate each Church for itself, with her liturgy, Canon Law, confessions, episcopal rulings, etc.
This may sound weird, but that is because America is ecclestiastically weird. While it was perfectly natural to have a national Church in a European country (in or our of communion with Rome), this doesn’t seem to work in the US. So naturally most churches seem very ‘low.’