Just a few things I want to say:
As a Catholic, I have a very deep respect for the confessional Lutheran Churches. I think they are the closest Protestant denomination to Catholicism: shared creed, doctrine, Eucharist, Real Presence. I put them up there with the Orthodox and traditional Anglicanism. As far as comments on this thread, I would say I have more sympathy and empathy with the Lutheran side than the comments coming from many of my Catholic “brothers and sisters.”
I earlier talked about going through a stage of 16 century polemics, where Catholic and Protestant Christians work out core issues of their faith in terms of the conflicts of the past. One hopes the next stage is the part where they work out how to live and engage with one another in mutually respectful, even loving, dialogue and unity as members of the body of Christ. The “separated
brethren” part.
The one sad thing about confessional Lutheranism (which I have considered joining), is that by its nature, it is trapped in 16th century polemics. It is a product of history - the Pope defined as the anti-Christ. This comes from the origins of the Lutheran Church at the height of the conflict - and truth be told,
in general terms, by which I mean the whole conflict taken in its entirety, I think Luther had the better side of the argument and was wronged. The Reformation was tragic, but also allowed by God for the good of the Church. But where does this leave the confessional Lutherans today? Post Vatican II? Today’s Catholic Popes are not the Popes of the 16th century. The state of Christianity is so different for both Churches. Yet, by definition confessional Lutherans are still locked in combat with the 16th century Catholic Church. They claim to be the true reformed Catholic Church.
What to do now? Frankly, it would drive me up the wall were I a confessional Lutheran - I am not saying they should come back to the RCC. Right or wrong, I like having different branches of Christianity because I think they keep us honest - I don’t trust the Church in this world to ever get it right 100% of the time. If truth is temporarily thwarted one place, it springs forth elsewhere, then nourishes and opens the original block. But the Lutherans do need to evolve past their original definition somehow and come to terms with the present - have a Vatican II. And I think
in practice they have for the most part. Again, they are one of the very few authentic Christian Churches at least to my mind - pure creed, doctrine, Real Presence. Much of the anti-Christ talk on the books is merely technical now, and often a source of embarrassment.
Perhaps this is as good as it will get: Catholics and Lutherans are sisters and brothers in Christ, separated by history, the past, theology. Get over it and live with one another, in today’s Church, not dismissing our past, but not polemicizing about it 24/7. I feel like I am watching real decent people on this thread passionately attack one another for stuff that happened 500 years ago. Really tear each other apart, inflict wounds. Absolutely nothing comes from it but pain. Is there deeper understanding, empathy? I don’t see it.
As for Catholics who choose to carry on this spat, I have no words, I really don’t. I don’t mean to offend anyone but it is beyond me just what the hell this kind of vitriol is supposed to achieve. It is an embarrassment. I can’t even read some of these posts through for shame, sadness.
Last point: At least the Lutherans have decent theology thanks to Luther - I always thought the Anglican Henry VIII ‘get me a divorce damn it’ foundation was somehow lacking in heroism, inspiration, authenticity - I love that Luther worked from his core, soul - what he genuinely believed was truth. And what a brain; the man is a genius and there is much of God’s truth (and love) in his work. Maybe this fight goes on just because we can have such substantive, fascinating debates…
Just my opinion, carry on. Peace to all…