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LutheranStudent
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I would like to dispel the horrible internet rumors that the WELS is more liberal than the LCMS. That’s crazy-talk. If anyone is interested ask me why…
Close. The AECC is a Communion of Churches to which the ECC-L belongs. The ACC-AC joined the ECC-L less than a year ago. The AECC and the ECC-L are both actively working for union with the Roman Catholic Church and they want to bring as many Lutherans into the Catholic Church along with them as possible. Their clergy and bishops are in Apostolic Succession; all their worship is conducted using the rites of the Catholic Church exclusively including for ordinations; their Holy Synod (council of bishops) has accepted the principles of Papal Supremacy and Papal Infallibility and the authority of all the Ecumenical Councils and of the Magesterium of the Church, and they have become solidly Marian. Their polity is a mirror (scaled down) of that of the Catholic Church; two of their bishops are Opus Dei Cooperators, and at least one senior Mosignor is a Benedictine Oblate.You will note that a few include “Catholic” in their ecclesial name - these are very “High Church” bodies, most of which have actively sought out episcopal consecrations that enhance the likelihood that their bishops would be deemed by Rome to be in Apostolic Succession. At least two of them (the AECC and ACC-AC) have a goal of ultimately entering communion with Rome; less obviously in active search of union with the Catholic Church, but very Catholic in praxis, are the ECC and ECC-L.
You are right. the WELS once was quite liberal - when it was founded - but that was a long, long time ago, and now they are among the most rigidly conservative Lutherans in America - like the SSPX “on steroids.”I would like to dispel the horrible internet rumors that the WELS is more liberal than the LCMS. That’s crazy-talk. If anyone is interested ask me why…
This is wonderful to hear!The ELCA is the only Lutheran Church in the United States that is a member of the Lutheran World Federation, the international body that is a signatory to the Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification. In addition, some individual synods within the ELCA have entered into covenant relationships with local Catholic dioceses, in which they agree to pray for one another, to work to increase understanding between Catholics and Lutherans, and to encourage cooperation among their parishes in ministry to their communities.
I’d like to see some support for this claim. Exactly what do you mean by Calvinist influences?Both the WELS and LCMS, however, have been strongly affected by Calvinism to the degree that in many ways both are as Calvlinist as they are Lutheran.
I’m very surprised to hear that this is more the case for LCMS than for ELCA. Crypto-Calvinism in the 16th century referred primarily to the Eucharistic position of Melanchthon and his followers. I could see that someone like Samuel Schmucker in the 19th century could be put in that camp–but was he LCMS?The LCMS has been accused historically of what is called, “crypto-calvinism,”
A sensible position. Fighting over labels is always silly.and has been through a couple of “crypto-calvinist” controversies the last of which (in the late 1800’s to the early 1900’s sort of died down when the LCMS in effect said, “so what if we are?”
This doesn’t make any sense. Isn’t the BoC the official confessional authority for Lutherans? So why do you make it sound as if this is some kind of illegitimate undertaking? If the later documents are more influenced by Calvinists (again, since you aren’t specific I’m not sure what you are talking about–are you talking about the Variata version of the Augsburg Confession? Did that make it into the BoC?), then who cares? Why shouldn’t Lutherans admit the truth in Calvinism as much as the truth in anything else?Both are careful to justify their Calvinist-influenced positions with quotes from the Book of Concord, (usually from the later documents in that book which had varying degrees of Calvinist influence) and try to present them as being confessionally Lutheran.
I can see how you would interpret it that way, but I’m not sure this is the most accurate way to speak about it.Pietism was another attempt to bring Lutheranism in line with Calvinism.
But Pietism was in some respects a move toward Catholicism–the emphasis on inner change and regeneration rather than forensic justification; the reliance on late medieval Catholic piety for inspiration; the generally more ecumenical attitude and willingness to recognize true piety wherever it was found. (And yes, of course you have to set that against the focus on subjectivity and the suspicion of ritual and sacramentalism, etc.)It has always been opposed, but has had a profound influence on Lutheranism. The LCMS has been influenced by German Pietism and by the Prussian Union (an attempt to fuse Lutherans and Calvinists into one Church.) The ELCA has been influenced by the (German) Pietists of Halle, Hesse, and by Norwegian Haugian Pietism and various lines of Swedish Pietism. In general, the more Calvinist influence a Lutheran Church has, the more Protestant it has become.
The BofC is not the official confessional authority for the more extreme among today’s Evangelical Catholic Lutherans. That would be the Magesterium of the Roman Catholic Church including the decrees and documents of Trent, Vatican I and II, and all the other Roman Catholic Magesterial documents and Catechisms.Isn’t the BoC the official confessional authority for Lutherans? So why do you make it sound as if this is some kind of illegitimate undertaking? If the later documents are more influenced by Calvinists (again, since you aren’t specific I’m not sure what you are talking about–are you talking about the Variata version of the Augsburg Confession? Did that make it into the BoC?), then who cares? Why shouldn’t Lutherans admit the truth in Calvinism as much as the truth in anything else?
That’s fine, and I respect your position, but as a church historian I’m obliged to point out that you are the ones departing from what has historically gone under the name “Lutheranism.” My objection is simply to your implicit suggestion that you are the “real” Lutherans while more historically mainstream Lutherans are contaminated by Calvinism. This may be true theologically–i.e., arguably you are what Lutherans ought to have been. But the danger of movements such as yours is that you slide very easily into describing what ought to have been while claiming to describe what has been.The BofC is not the official confessional authority for the more extreme among today’s Evangelical Catholic Lutherans. That would be the Magesterium of the Roman Catholic Church including the decrees and documents of Trent, Vatican I and II, and all the other Roman Catholic Magesterial documents and Catechisms.
But that phrase begs the question–does the AC agree with Catholicism? By saying “insofar as” you’re putting off the real issue, allowing for a certain comfortable ambiguity.We consider the influence of Calvin and Calvinism as “illligetimite” because to us, it is. Lutherans of the Evangelical Catholic stripe (in some small Churches as well as within both the ELCA and LCMS ) accept the BofC only insofar as it agrees with authentic (Roman) Catholic faith and tradition; and more specifically they only accept the Unaltered Augsburg Confession (AC) and its Apology (AAC) but only insofar as it agrees with authentic (Roman) Catholic faith and tradition
Well, Luther would find this idea very strange. The early Lutherans were convinced that they were not the ones in schism, because they were not the ones who had adulterated the Gospel. [Certainly they professed their willingness to reunite with the Pope as soon as the Pope allowed them to preach the Gospel, but that doesn’t mean that they thought they were in schism as long as they remained without the Pope.] I know about this evangelical Catholic tradition within Lutheranism, but it’s historically revisionist, just like it’s Anglo-Catholic counterpart.As recently as the 1970’s, a collegue who graduated from Lutheran Southern Seminary (LCA - a predecessor of the ELCA) was taught there that Lutherans were Catholics in an involuntary, expernally imposed schizm, and when conditions were favorable on the Roman side, were conscience-bound to return to the Roman Catholic Church.
I do know something about these controversies, though my acquaintance with the smaller high-church bodies to which you refer is limited to the occasional Internet encounter such as this one. I’m familiar with the writings of Fr. Neuhaus, and I have some limited personal acquaintance with Mickey Mattox and Reinhard Hutter, both of whom, like Fr. Neuhaus, have followed the logic of this branch of Lutheranism into union with Rome. A friend of mine from grad school, Jeff McCurry, falls into the same category. While doing research in Germany, I attended the Bruderkirche in Braunschweig, which is part of the state church but is definitely part of the evangelical Catholic wing of Lutheranism (they have a limited communion policy which the pastor summed up for me in the words “no Calvinists at the altar!”). So your perspective isn’t entirely new to me.Fr. Raymond Brown lectured there, and Pope John Paull II visited there. Calvinist concepts were presented as something to be removed whenever and wherever found.
Considering how we Lutherans tend to keep to ourselves and keep our controversies among ourselves “in house,” “off the radar screen,” I am not suprised that you are unfamiliar with Lutheran controversies or the teachings of the Lutheran equivalent to the most Catholic of the Anglo-Catholics inside and outside TEC.
I have no quarrel with either of these goals. But you began your earlier post with the claim that the two largest Lutheran bodies in this country were both “affected by Calvinism” to the point that they were as much Calvinist as Lutheran. This implies that there is a historic entity called Lutheranism and that your version preserves it in its purity, while the larger churches adulterate it with something else called Calvinism. On further examination, it appears that your version of Lutheranism is not identical with anything that has historically existed (as far as I can tell) under that name, but rather is a version of Lutheranism revised so as to make it conform to Catholicism. I respect this as a theological move, but your manner of describing it is necessarily misleading. When most people hear the claim that certain churches are a mixture of Lutheranism and Calvinism, they assume that you are speaking of the historic confessional bodies that have gone under these names, not (in the case of Lutheranism) of an ahistorical “pure” Lutheranism refined by the exclusion of “Calvinist” elements that have been present as long as Lutheranism has defined itself confessionally. (If they haven’t, then perhaps you could point out what exactly these elements are and when Lutheranism existed without them.)What I am trying to do on this thread is to show our Roman Catholic brothers and sisters the diversity within the Lutheran Churches (which are quite misunderstood - and that is our fault by keeping to ourselves.) The late Swedish Lutheran Bishop Nathan Soderblom considered Lutheranism to be a third separate version of Western Christianity alongside Catholicism and Protestantism which is as broad and diverse as Christianity itself. A secondary purpose is to present a thread of Lutheranism (the Evangelical Catholic variety) which is little known, close in faith, praxis, and polity to themselves; and which has the ecumenical goal of being being absorbed within the Catholic Church sooner or later.
I apologize for failing to note the commitment of Evangelical Catholics to reunion with Rome.As an Evangelical Catholic Lutheran, what Pastor Gary says is true but only up to a point. the WLF is not alone in approaching Rome. Some of the small Evangelical Catholic Lutheran Churches are also actively working toward visible, corporate reunion / return (incorporation as either a sui juris Church, a Priestly Society of Lutheran Heritage, or some modified form of Personal Prelacy - any of these will work) with the Roman Catholic Church, creating a structure of Lutheran heritage within the Catholic Church into which Evangelical Catholic Lutherans may find it easier to enter - starting, in effect, a new, second wave of the counter-reformation but this time driven by those on the Lutheran side of the Tiber. They consider Rome to be home, and are now ready to go home.
The Unaltered AD (there are a number of altered ones - the first being written by Melancthon himself presented positions which were quite Catholic in the light of the 4th Lateran council and the Council of Florence before several issues were clarified by the Council of Trent.But that phrase begs the question–does the AC agree with Catholicism?
Not really. Where the UAC departs from authentic Catholic faith and tradition, we side with the Roman Catholic Church. Someone asked, possibly on this thread, if we disagreed with anything the Catholic Church teaches. My answer was, “not really.” Had they gone on and asked if I disagreed with anything taught by the two largest Lutheran Churches in the US: The ELCA and the LCMS, my answer would have been, “yes! We disagree with a lot of their teachings”By saying “insofar as” you’re putting off the real issue, allowing for a certain comfortable ambiguity.
Actually my Church - the ECCL - is actively; working on that now. That is its ecumenical goal and that of its Communion, the AECC. That will happen. It is only a question of when and in what form (sui juris Church vs. Priestly Society (like SSPX) vs. some form of Personal Prelacy (like Opus Dei.)I’m pushing this because I find myself in a similar situation. In many ways I’m deeply sympathetic to the Anglo-Catholic movement within Anglicanism (and its counterpart in Methodism–yes, there is one). I would say that I subscribe to the Articles of Religion insofar as they are in agreement with the historic faith of the Catholic Church. I would not say specifically the Roman Catholic Church, because then I would simply become Roman Catholic–which given your position I really think you have no excuse for not doing.
I am sure you are aware of the fine job then Fr. (and later Cardinal) John Henry Newman sis in reconciling the Anglican Articles of Religion/U] with the Catholic faith as defined at the time.I am living in that same ambiguity that I criticize in you. However, at least I recognize the ambiguity and I don’t see it as characteristic of my entire community. ECUSA and the UMC (the two church bodies to which I have some sort of ties) have lots of ambiguities, but they make no pretense to subject their formularies to the approval of Rome. My ambivalence derives from my status as an individual layman, with divided loyalties to the tradition(s) of Christianity in which I have heard the Gospel and to which I find myself bound on the one hand and to the Universal Church Visible on the other.
That depends on whether you focus on what in our (Lutheran) circles is called, “the young, Catholic Luther” or “the old, Protestant Luther.” Our movement focuses on the “young, Catholic Luther” prior to and at the time of his meeting around 1520 with Cardinal Cajetan. We do not think Luther matured and learned over time. We think he “went downhill” and eventually more or less “lost it” over time.Well, Luther would find this idea very strange. The early Lutherans were convinced that they were not the ones in schism, because they were not the ones who had adulterated the Gospel. [Certainly they professed their willingness to reunite with the Pope as soon as the Pope allowed them to preach the Gospel, but that doesn’t mean that they thought they were in schism as long as they remained without the Pope.]
Perhaps revisionist is the wrong term. Rather than “revising History,” our movement holds that Lutheranism actually “went off the rails,” and hold on to what the goals were in the very earliest phase of the Wittenberg movement. In a very real sense, we are not at all “children of the Reformation,” Nor are we proud of the Reformation. To us it was a catastrophe with tragic results - something to be ashamed of. along those lines, we do not attempt to recruit Roman Catholics. They are just fine where they are. Typically we just ask them to pray for the visible, corporate reunion of the Church under the Bishop of Rome, as part of the Church of Rome.I know about this evangelical Catholic tradition within Lutheranism, but it’s historically revisionist, just like it’s Anglo-Catholic counterpart.
Thanks, Gary. The STS is a fine organization. The ECCL’s Metropolitan has recommended that the Church’s clergy join the STS. (One priest has so far.)Irl,
I apologize for failing to note the commitment of Evangelical Catholics to reunion with Rome.
I would also note that the Society of the Holy Trinity, a Lutheran ministerium of which I am a member, includes the following statement as part of its rule: “this ministerium is dedicated to the Lutheran vocation of reform of the Church and the Lutheran ecumenical destiny of reconciliation with the bishop and church of Rome.” The Society is made up of Lutherans from a variety of synods, mostly ELCA and LC-MS.
Peace,
Pastor Gary
That’s interesting but this kind of anecdote doesn’t prove much. I’m interested in the specific Calvinist ideas you say were absorbed.Edwin, a friend who is an LCMS Pastor told me not long ago, "so what if we have absorbed a lot of Calvinism? Luther was an enthusiastic Catholic priest and there were a lot of things needing reform which he could not see but which John Calvin, as a layman, could.
I don’t. I’ll never forget the venerable and learned retired pastor at the Bruderkirche whose comment on the 1536 Wittenberg Concord was, “Bucer lied.”Do not underestimate the antagonism many EC’s have for Calvinism.
That is an intriguing comment, but again I’d like to see more specifics.One of the Church History professors (Ph.D) at the Southern Baptist Seminary where I took my Greek and Hebrew (they had the best language teachers in the area) often put it this way: "The separation of Lutheranism from Roman Catholicism was not complete, and is still not complete. Lutheranism prior to the adoption of the Formula of Concord was a minimal and reluctant reformation at best.
Knox wasn’t a colleague of Calvin. Calvin thought Knox was a graceless firebrand–which he was.He then would go on and show how men like Calvin and his colleagues John Knox, etc. continued the work of reform.
Well, all I can say is this baffles me. Melanchthon was dead long before the FoC was formulated, and the FoC condemns the opinions of Melanchthon’s followers on several points (ironically, on the question of synergism/free will, Melanchthon’s influence was the opposite of Calvin’s).(He has a good opinion of Melancthon who, to him, through his work on the Formula of Concord with (name removed by moderator)ut from Calvinist colleagues, set Lutheranism on a course into what he calls “real reformation” in the future.)
With all due respect, you’re doing more than that. You’re making an argument about the relationship of Calvinism and Lutheranism that I find unconvincing–or rather, I think you’re defining terms in ways that are confusingly unlike the ways they are normally used, labelling anything you don’t like about historic Lutheranism “Calvinism.”Edwin, what I am doing for the Catholics on this Forum is to simply show the diversity and range of views within Lutheranism.
Which brings to mind–what is the position of your church on divorce and birth control? In my experience, even conservative Anglo-Catholics tend to be much laxer in these respects than Roman Catholicism.The present Senior of the STS, Pr. Frank Senn, wrote a paper suggesting that perhaps Lutherans should begin relying on the Magesterium of the Catholic Church in controversies of our day which involve Moral Theology.
I may do just that.If you want to explore this beyond the parameters of this Catholic Answers Forum, please send me an e-mail.![]()
My Church’s (ECCL’s) teachings on both are identical to those of the Roman Catholic Church and differ from both the major Lutheran Churches and the Anglocatholics, though the Anglican Catholic Church can be quite tough on this issue. Some of their Bishops spend much of their time on anullment cases.Which brings to mind–what is the position of your church on divorce and birth control? In my experience, even conservative Anglo-Catholics tend to be much laxer in these respects than Roman Catholicism.
I feel for you. Why the Lutheran church is looking more Baptist is a puzzle to me. We have a beautiful liturgy but you rarely hear it. Its very sad. Like you I have left but I miss what I used to have.This is one of the reasons that my husband and I left the Lutheran Church. It may appeal to some people but my husband is a life long Lutheran and he feels like his church is abandoning him by trying to become non-denominational. The last straw was when we went to the regular (traditional) service and instead of being the regular service, they had a band with a power point presentation. No communion, no sermon just praise music and testimonials. My dh told the Pastor that if he wanted to go to a Baptist type church that’s what he’d do and never went back. He feels that the Catholics are the only one’s who are still reverent and we are in the process of converting.
I agree. It is sad.I feel for you. Why the Lutheran church is looking more Baptist is a puzzle to me. We have a beautiful liturgy but you rarely hear it. Its very sad. Like you I have left but I miss what I used to have.
True, but members of his party, the Phillipists were not, and continued his work. This is from encycl.opentopia.com/term/Catholic_Evangelical : “In early Lutheranism the Gnesio-Lutherans like Andreas Musculus with a strong understanding of the sacraments, and in the era of Lutheran orthodoxy theologians especially like Martin Chemnitz and Johann Gerhard, who were deeply rooted in patristic theology, saw the continuity of Catholicism in Lutheranism. They understood it to be not a re-formation of the Church, but rather, a renewal movement within and for the Catholic Church, from which they had been involuntarily and only temporarily separated. The Gnesio-Lutheran party, especially, were strongly opposed to any compromise with Calvinism and Zwinglianism on the one hand, and with the Roman Catholic Church on the other. They were strongly opposed to disciples of Philipp Melancthon called Philippists, and the accommodations they made with Calvinists in the preparation of the Formula of Concord.” (The underlining is mine.)Well, all I can say is this baffles me. Melanchthon was dead long before the FoC was formulated,