M
Madaglan
Guest
I considered Lutheranism for a while..
I swam the river TO Lutheranism…
WHY? A complex question and one difficult to address without the possibility of offense. And, from my prespective, the “swim” wasn’t far or long. There is MUCH we have in common. Nor was my “swim” a negative one, I have no regrets for my years in Catholicism. I was blessed richly and deeply there, and I’m grateful for that! And I CERTAINLY regard The Catholic Church as a fully valid denomination, one I hold in considerable esteem. I regard all believers in her as my FULL and UNseparated and in every sense equal brothers and sisters in Christ. And I regard nothing it officially teaches as heretical in the sense of being contrary to Scripture and Tradition. I realize none of this is mutual, but that’s okay with me - it doesn’t turn my heart negative. When I left The Catholic Church, I told my priest that I probably agree with 95% of what I was taught. He laughed and said, (this is a verbatim quote, I’m sure) “That’s a whole lot better than most Catholics, Josiah! It’s probably better than a whole lot of priests!” He may be right on both counts… In any case, I love and respect the CC.
While I “hold on” to MUCH, there are some things I “left”…
All that said, I pray daily for God’s richest blessings to The Catholic Church and her members, ministers and Holy Father. And on those occasions when I participate at a Catholic Mass, I embrace all there FULLY even if it’s not mutual.
- The Theology of Glory, for the Theology of the Cross.
- The insistance on RCC individualism, institutionalism and unaccountability for a sense of community, humility and accountability.
- While I don’t deny some RCC dogmas, I don’t docilicly just accept them as dogma (Infallibility of the Pope, Transubstantiation are a couple of examples) and thus, according to CCC 87, I cannot be a faithful and true Catholic. I don’t want to live a lie or as all too many of my Catholic friends, live in a “don’t ask and I won’t tell” or “I say I believe this at church but at home I believe this” type of life. For me, my departure was largely a matter of personal integrity and honesty.
- Again, while I agree with very MUCH in Catholicism - I found all of that in Lutheranism, so I had to “give up” nothing at all.
- While I probably agree with 95% of what’s in the Catechism, my largest issue were with Catholic ecclesiology and epistemology. The first I saw as unsubstantiated and divisive, the second as well… not sound, this especially became large to me as I studied the LDS and cults in America.
I hope that helps.
Pax
- Josiah
While I found it in exterior similar to Latin Catholicism, I found it quite different from Catholicism in soteriology. The divine monergism of Lutheranism and the synergism of Catholicism (and Orthodoxy) is one point of marked difference. I found the same marked difference in regards to the Mass: the Lutherans reject the sacrifice of the Mass whereas for Catholics it is central to the Mass.
Some of what Lutheranism teaches struck me as true, but many beliefs, such as divine mongergism and rejection of the sacrifice of the Mass, along with rejection of most of the sacraments, struck me as contrary to what the Church has taught since the beginning.