All,
I am somewhat confused. How, when Jesus instituted the Supper did He also institute the historic sucession of bishops? I know Acts does help verify the idea, and it was also agreed upon by the early Lutheran church, but the question to bear in mind is not just whether the Lutheran church is apostolic, but is the Roman Church from the Reformation till now? What is Papal Primacy and when, if it were used in the early church would we have vastly different doctrine than we do?
It has been argued that the Keys of the Kingdom were given to just St. Peter, but this is made false by the later passage where Christ gives the authority to bind and loose sins to the decision of a minimum of two disciples. Luther wanted the equality of Bishops as it was practiced in the early church councils. If the early councils had practiced the primacy as it is now practiced, Pope Honorious would never have been excommunicated after his death, nor condemned by Constantinople III! Instead Honorious would have stayed fast in his heretical beliefs because he was St. Peter’s successor. Clearly the early church did not recognize that St. Peter’s sucessor was infallible in matters of doctrine…it was the CHURCH represented by the bishops, EQUAL in authority, who were infallible in such matters.
We as Lutherans accept any ordination done in a priest’s church to be true by divine right. Hence, we do have an Office of the Holy Ministry, but it is not a sacredotal priesthood because all Christians are priests (1 Peter 2:9-10) with Christ as the sole High Priest (Hebrews 9). While I understand that the priest stands in for Christ during the Mass, Christ never hinted that that is what his disciples should do…they should merely do what Christ did in remembrance of Him. In other words, this is a gift, given to us, not offered as Christ did on the holy cross. I would also point out that the
Didache which is very possibly the teachings of the Twelve with regard to worship, does not have a portion where the priest offers sacrifice…in fact the two chapters on the Eucharist begin with “Now concerning the Eucharist, give THANKS this way,” indicating that it is not a sacrifice redone or reoffered, but a gift to be received from the one true sacrifice. Indeed even the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom mentions a bloodless sacrifice of spiritual worship during the Eucharist…this we do not deny, and indeed practice…but to reoffer Christ outside of time as has been mentioned earlier still makes it a bloody sacrifice!
It has also been said that only a truly ordained sacredotal priest would be able to effect the change considered in the Eucharist…where does Christ say this? Where is it said in the pre-Schism canons? I may be wrong here, but I’m still confused where the Roman church is still the first and true church…the true church on earth, in my opinion either does not exist anymore after the Great Schism, or it is in the East where the equality of bishops is still practiced.
Sorry for the poor quality of this post. I was out of town for the weekend, and had some car trouble, and am tired, and…well, you get the idea.

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Pax Christi,
Chris Heren