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EvangelCatholic
Guest
Does that mean that Catholics are offended by Benedict when he made this statement?Hi Topper: As you most likely already know it appears that most Lutheran’s are going to defend Luther no matter what since it was he who started their church. Now there seems to be a factured church since at least here in the USA they are not in union with many of the things that have been accepted in some of their churches. It also seems that not all Lutheran’s agree with all of the confessions and concord, so do while others only agree with some of it, but so far it seems if I understand it these confession cannot be change though I might be wrong about that. #39 I think is a real problem since till that changes, I do not see a reunion. I think it offensive to Catholic’s, But I do understand that it was written in the 1500’s and may not apply in our day and age, yet, at least one thinks it true so I wonder at it all.
And that Catholics are offended by the Vatican theologians/ scholars and U.S. Bishops where they wrote this?Commenting on this point, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger, prefect of the Congregation on the Doctrine of the Faith, wrote in 1993 to Bavarian Lutheran bishop Johannes Hanselmann:
I count among the most important results of the ecumenical Dialogues the insight that the issue of the Eucharist cannot be narrowed to the problem of ‘validity.’ Even a theology oriented to the concept of succession, such as that which holds in the Catholic and in the Orthodox church, need not in any way deny the salvation-granting presence of the Lord [Heilschaffende Gegenwart des Herrn] in a Lutheran [evangelische] Lord’s Supper.166
- A step in this direction was taken by Vatican II, which permitted limited Eucharistic sharing between Catholics and Orthodox,122 even though the latter do not normally accept (and even at times explicitly reject at least one or more of) the dogmas in question. The situation of the Orthodox and Lutherans, though different in many ways, is similar at least in the following: both find themselves for the most part unable to accept one or more of these teachings as part of the deposit of faith. If this inability on the part of the Orthodox does not preclude all Eucharistic sharing with Catholics, the same inability on the part of Lutherans should not of itself do so either. Lack of Christian faith would and should so preclude.
.”301 Particularly in praise and adoration of God at the Lord’s table, the apparent division marked
by death melts away. Lutherans and Catholics can together affirm what the Lutherans said in an
earlier round of this dialogue that:
[F]aith does not mean individualism, but rather a being born anew into the
communion of believers, the body of Christ which is the church. As members of the church,
believers participate by grace in the divine Trinitarian life—in a “mystical union” (unio
mystica) that anticipates the full future glory of Christ “beheld with an unveiled face” (2 Cor.
3:18; cf. 5:1-10 and Rom. 8:20-30 in the context of 8:18-39).302
I’ve noticed spina that you don’t often respond to direct questions and hope you will enlightening us with your insight. You do encourage other Catholics. I wonder if they are comfortable with your comments as well as Topper’s position on the Roman Catholic Church?
- The question of the reality of the presence of Jesus Christ in the Lord’s
Supper is not a matter of controversy between Catholics and Lutherans.
The Lutheran–Roman Catholic dialogue on the Eucharist was able to
state: »The Lutheran tradition affirms the Catholic tradition that the
consecrated elements do not simply remain bread and wine but rather
by the power of the creative word are given as the body and blood of
Christ. In this sense Lutherans also could occasionally speak, as does
the Greek tradition, of a change« (Eucharist 51).50 Both Catholics and
Lutherans »have in common a rejection of a spatial or natural manner
of presence, and a rejection of an understanding of the sacrament as
only commemorative or figurative« (Eucharist 16).51
Common
