S
Shibboleth
Guest
This is why Lutheran’s do not have valid holy orders and might as well have a Justice of the Peace consencrate the bread and wine… and why has the Lutheran Church neglected these tidbits?I am not sure it has “nothing to do” with the Apostles being all male, as such fact supports the orthodox Lutheran position that God calls only males to the Office of Holy Ministry.
Here is how the Smalcald Articles address the matter:
X. Of Ordination and the Call.
1] If the bishops would be true bishops [would rightly discharge their office], and would devote themselves to the Church and the Gospel, it might be granted to them for the sake of love and unity, but not from necessity, to ordain and confirm us and our preachers; omitting, however, all comedies and spectacular display [deceptions, absurdities, and appearances] of unchristian [heathenish] parade and pomp. 2] But because they neither are, nor wish to be, true bishops, but worldly lords and princes, who will neither preach, nor teach, nor baptize, nor administer the Lord’s Supper, nor perform any work or office of the Church, and, moreover, persecute and condemn those who discharge these functions, having been called to do so, the Church ought not on their account to remain without ministers [to be forsaken by or deprived of ministers].
3] Therefore, as the ancient examples of the Church and the Fathers teach us, we ourselves will and ought to ordain suitable persons to this office; and, even according to their own laws, they have not the right to forbid or prevent us. For their laws say that those ordained even by heretics should be declared [truly] ordained and stay ordained [and that such ordination must not be changed], as St. Jerome writes of the Church at Alexandria, that at first it was governed in common by priests and preachers, without bishops.
bookofconcord.org/smalcald.html#ordination
**… it is our greatest wish to maintain church polity and the grades in the Church, even though they have been made by human authority. For we know that church discipline was instituted by the fathers, in the manner laid down in the ancient canons, with a good and useful intention. . . . Furthermore, we wish here again to testify that we will gladly maintain ecclesiastical and canonical government, provided the bishops only cease to rage against our Churches. This our desire will clear us both before God and among all nations to all posterity from the imputation against us that the authority of the bishops is being undermined.
Apology XIV, 24
According to divine right, therefore (as said above), it is the office of the Bishop to preach the Gospel, forgive sins, judge doctrine and condemn doctrine that is contrary to the Gospel, and exclude from the Christian community the ungodly whose wicked conduct is manifest. All this is to be done not by human power but by God’s Word alone. On this account parish ministers and churches are bound to be obedient to the Bishops according to the saying of Christ in Luke 10:16, “He who hears you hears Me.”
**Augsburg Confession XXVIII, 21-22 (German)