H
hn160
Guest
Charles Porterfield Krauth said that "Men must be honest in their difference, if they are ever to be honest in their agreement.To be honest, I too am uncomfortable with the path some American Lutherans have taken. I am uncomfortable with some even within my own Missouri Synod (a direction I would consider more toward American evangelicalism). I’m also convinced that Luther, were he alive today, would also express (perhaps more harshly, knowing his approach), similar concerns. That said, I still consider the Augsburg to be a confession I can make with a clear conscience, and certainlty that it is a truly catholic confession.
There are, for me personally, ways I could cross the Tiber, however. Among them; unity between Rome and Orthodoxy, an exceptance by Rome of the Augsburg Confession as a Catholic confessions, something Cardinal Ratzinger once alluded to, unity between my synod and Rome, or a complete swerve away from the confessions by my synod, leaving me Rome as my only alternative.
Jon
Krauth, Charles P. (Charles Porterfield), 1823-1883. The conservative reformation and its theology : as represented in the Augsburg Confession, and in the history and literature of the Evangelical Lutheran Church (Kindle Location 5527). Philadelphia : J.B. Lippincott.
This is true, I would very much like to see honest talks between Rome and the LC-MS. We have much more in common than the LWF does with Rome.