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Peter_J
Guest
No offense, but it sounds to me like you have a very strange understanding of Catholicism (or Lutheranism, or both).LC-MS Lutherans believe that there is only one holy order given in Holy Scripture, the “Office of the Holy Ministry”, which combines the office of bishop and presbyter. The parish pastor truly is ‘pope in his own parish’, for good or bad.
FWIW, this doesn’t convince me that “The parish pastor truly is ‘pope in his own parish’.” (Sorry for jumping on a moving bandwagon. I just found this thread this morning.)The Circuit Counselor, District President, and Synod President might be analogous to the Bishop, Archbishop, and Pope, but nothing more. Unlike true bishops, the Synod cannot excommunicate, legislate canon law, or teach with binding authority. In the LC-MS each congregational is functionally independent, with the Synod acting as a unifying organization for the sake of cooperation and to provide services that can’t be reasonably performed by a single parish. To make my statement about “pope in his own parish” in the context of this thread more clear, I mean that the pastor can change the worship of his parish as he sees fit, which I have seen occur again and again.
I guess this may be another example of Orthodox really, really wanting to find all kinds of similarities between Rome and protestants.