Hi Mary,
Thanks for your response.
Topper I was thinking the same thing when I read this post.
“Primarily” leaves door open for others in this category.
It seems we are referred to the Lutheran Confessions for the official Lutheran doctrine
yet we read the Pope and his adherents, and get “primarily” from this thread as an explanation which is not was the document says.
I agree Mary, except that I think the word ‘primarily’ is an admission that there are laypeople who are also considered to be ‘adherents’, which the text actually more than suggests. The question becomes this:
Which laypeople are considered to be ‘adherents’ and on what basis are some ‘chosen’ and not others? The text makes no such distinction, leaving us with a clear conclusion. After all, the Confessions are in large part based on Luther’s ‘feelings’ about Catholics. Lutheran Professor Mark U. Edwards comments:
**
“Luther hated the pope as antichrist and Catholics as the agents of Satan,” **Edwards, “Luther’s Last Battles”, pg. 36
In depicting lay Catholics as ‘adherents’ this Treatise which is part of the Confessions certainly reflects Luther’s ‘sentiments’.
We ask about the AntiChrist and get that is the “office” not the Pope, but perhaps some early popes were Anti Christ. We get well universal jurisdiction etc. are teachings against Christ but yet some express a fondness for Pope Benedict who teaches the same as any other Pope regarding universal jurisdiction. We had a most interesting comment from a Lutheran that they believe we might need or could use a Pope like the early ones. I might think that Luther and all his adherents would roll over in their grave to hear a Lutheran elder say any such thing.
And yet, there is no reference to the ‘office’ of the papacy in the text. The concept and the term were known at the time and COULD have been incorporated IF it was the office that the document intended to portray as the antichrist. The original intent seems pretty obvious.
Thus the confessions in my opinion are blatantly clear and we are hearing a watered down version of personal opinions regarding Lutheranism by some here who are in direct contradiction to what they profess and teach officially.
Agreed. Which leads us to ask – What is the point of having Confessions at all if everyone who is supposed to be held to them can simply ‘reinterpret’ the such that they fit with THEIR personal beliefs and spirit?
To be a Lutheran is to be held to the beliefs expressed in Lutheran Confessions including those expressed in “The Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope”. Because the Confessions are largely based on Luther’s beliefs, to “be Lutheran” is to agree the beliefs of Luther which have been formalized in the Confessions. This includes those offensive statements about the Church, the Pope, the mass, laypeople, etc.
It seems to me that to be ‘Confessional’ one has to actually believe what they clearly say. We hear a lot here about how this or that communion is ‘not Confessional’ and yet at the same time all of this ‘reinterpretation’ of the Confessional text.
I think Mary that maybe you and I find these ‘later day reinterpretations’ to be unacceptable and dangerous is because we are Catholics, Faithful to the Teachings of the Church. Protestantism is based upon the idea that the individual is responsible for judging the teachings that are put before them, that they are ultimately responsible for interpretation of the Holy Scriptures. When you take that kind of ‘personal approach’ to Holy Scripture, reinterpreting the Lutheran Confessions so that they match up with your beliefs, is a pretty minor thing. We have seen massive evidence that neither Sola Scriptura OR the various Confessions can even pretend to protect the unity of belief called for by Christ, the Apostles, or Scripture.
The claim can be made that Lutherans defer to the church on matters of doctrine, but the fact is that Lutheranism was founded on one man’s Rebellion against the teachings of HIS Church. As such the claim about holding to the teachings of the Church begs the question – Which Church Specifically and Exactly?
Hmmm.
Why? I don’t know. That said not all Catholics agree with the doctrine of the Catholic Faith but it’s weird to refer to the confessions and then “explain away” what they really directly say. Luther did not mince words nor the writers of the confessions. I am convinced they mean what they say, and say what they mean.
There is a big difference though isn’t there? Of course there are Catholics who deny the teachings of the Church. That has always been true and always will be. But you CANNOT deny those teachings and start your own ‘tradition’ or ‘communion’ and remain WITHIN the Catholic Church. Once you do that you are excommunicated by your own actions. Protestantism has no such safeguard. It is perfectly acceptable to deny the teachings of your communion and start your own. People can claim that it is not, but the evidence of the tens of thousands of competing and conflicting denominations says that, in the REAL WORLD, it is completely ‘acceptable’. All you have to do is proclaim, as Luther did, and only to his own satisfaction, that: ‘They are not the Church, WE are the Church.’ Once you have decided that for yourself, the ‘sky is the limit’ in terms of how much authority you can self-proclaim. Furthermore, once you have ‘gone there’ you have absolutely no authority to tell anyone that they should not rebel against you the way that you rebelled against ‘them’.
This is the reason that Lutherans need a pope. Scratch that, they need THE Pope and they need to be united to him in the “Catholic Sense” and not just as to some sort of glorified figurehead.
God Bless You Mary, Topper