Present Day Lutheran-Catholic Relations

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Entropy is defined as being a ‘lack of order or predictability; gradual decline into disorder.’ Luther built entropy into Protestantism and it can only get worse, which is the nature of entropy. Catholicism does not suffer from this problem.
But there are lots of Catholics who don’t believe in all the official teachings of the Church (such as on contraception, for example) and although they don’t usually form another rival Catholic denomination, they nonetheless ignore the teachings they don’t like. So there is an appearance of unity, but divisions under the surface nonetheless.
 
But there are lots of Catholics who don’t believe in all the official teachings of the Church (such as on contraception, for example) and although they don’t usually form another rival Catholic denomination, they nonetheless ignore the teachings they don’t like. So there is an appearance of unity, but divisions under the surface nonetheless.
Yes, that is true. And those Catholics who obey need to pray and make sacrifices for them, that they may enter fully into what the Lord is asking of them.

The non-acceptance of those Catholics to the authoritative teachings does not eclipse the Truth that the Church teaches.
 
Yes, that is true. And those Catholics who obey need to pray and make sacrifices for them, that they may enter fully into what the Lord is asking of them.

The non-acceptance of those Catholics to the authoritative teachings does not eclipse the Truth that the Church teaches.
Hi Dorothy,
There is a lot of truth in this statement. It really doesn’t matter what members of a communion say or believe, or what outsiders say a communion teaches. What matters is what that communion itself says.

Jon
 
Hi Dorothy,
There is a lot of truth in this statement. It really doesn’t matter what members of a communion say or believe, or what outsiders say a communion teaches. What matters is what that communion itself says.

Jon
Hi John,

I cannot resist saying this: I love Papa…he was put there for a reason.

Peace and Prayers,

Dorothy
 
Yes, that is true. And those Catholics who obey need to pray and make sacrifices for them, that they may enter fully into what the Lord is asking of them.

The non-acceptance of those Catholics to the authoritative teachings does not eclipse the Truth that the Church teaches.
Well said, Dorothy. 👍
 
And therein lies the problem Jon. Within Catholicism, there is ONLY ONE official teaching on each issue that has reached the status of dogma. There is ONLY ONE Magisterium, ONLY ONE teaching authority. Within Lutheranism, there are who knows how many competing and conflicting synods. Your synod speaks for about two percent of Lutheranism overall and that’s it.
You are still comparing one Church – the churches, patriarchates, dioceses and archdioceses in communion with the Roman Pontiff – to an ecclesial tradition.

So why is it a problem for Lutherans in, say, the Church of Norway or the LCMS, that Lutheranism is disunited, but not a similar problem for Byzantines in, say, the Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church or the Russian Greek Catholic Church, that Byzantinism is disunited?
 
You are still comparing one Church – the churches, patriarchates, dioceses and archdioceses in communion with the Roman Pontiff – to an ecclesial tradition.

So why is it a problem for Lutherans in, say, the Church of Norway or the LCMS, that Lutheranism is disunited, but not a similar problem for Byzantines in, say, the Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church or the Russian Greek Catholic Church, that Byzantinism is disunited?
But these Byzantines basically all have the same teachings…and those not in communion with Rome…the only difference is their communion with the Pope.

From what I can glean with your posts, Father K…you believe in 7 sacraments, those on here in the USA, believe in only two…as far as I know, all Byzantines believe in 7, whether they are Orthodox or in communion with Rome.
 
But these Byzantines basically all have the same teachings…and those not in communion with Rome…the only difference is their communion with the Pope.

From what I can glean with your posts, Father K…you believe in 7 sacraments, those on here in the USA, believe in only two…as far as I know, all Byzantines believe in 7, whether they are Orthodox or in communion with Rome.
Ditto.

Even if one is only using the Augsburg Confession and Small Catechism, the greatest number of sacraments one can come to is 3. Now, one could say that the documents don’t reference it because the number of sacraments wasn’t in dispute. However, this wouldn’t be consistent with the writings of the Lutheran Reformers as a number of them repudiate the numbering of the sacraments used by Rome. In addition, the fact that they do include some sacraments and not others indicates that was what they thought the number of sacraments were.
 
But these Byzantines basically all have the same teachings…and those not in communion with Rome…the only difference is their communion with the Pope.
No, they do not ‘basically all have the same teachings.’ There are a lot of major differences, but the papacy, and perhaps the Filiique, is the most significant one. The differences are so big, in fact, that many Byzantine Orthodox even don’t consider the Roman Pontiff as part of the one Christ of Christ. I have in fact discussed with a lot of Greek and Russian Orthodox Christians who claim that the reason the last fourteen of the councils considered ecumenical by the Roman Catholic Church shouldn’t be seen as ecumenical is not, as one would suspect, that it only consisted of part of the Church, but that the Roman Pontiff, and the churches in communion with him, is not part of the one Christ of Christ at all. That tells us that there is a lot more disagreements than ‘being in communion with the Pope.’ Are you suggesting that the only difference between, say, a diocese of the (Byzantine) Russian Orthodox Church and a diocese of the (Byzantine) Russian Greek Catholic Church is that the former has as its leader Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, while the latter has as its leader Pope Francis? Really?
From what I can glean with your posts, Father K…you believe in 7 sacraments, those on here in the USA, believe in only two…as far as I know, all Byzantines believe in 7, whether they are Orthodox or in communion with Rome.
You are approaching this from a (frankly misinformed) practical viewpoint, when the question is actually principal in nature.

First, there are much more to the split between the many Orthodox and Greek Catholic Byzantines than ‘their communion with the Pope.’ But secondly, and most importantly, the differences are of a fundamental nature. Does the Pope have supremacy over the entire Church, or does he not? That is not a minor question.

So again; why is it not a problem for the Byzantine tradition as such that there are Byzantine churches who are not in communion with each other, while it is a major problem for the Lutheran tradition as such – almost a proof of its invalidity – that there are Lutheran churches who are not in communion with each other?

This is NOT a numbers game. This is a principal question which demands a principled answer.
Even if one is only using the Augsburg Confession and Small Catechism, the greatest number of sacraments one can come to is 3.
Says who? Where in either of these confessions does it say that there is only three sacraments? My point, which it seems that I have to hammer through repeatedly, is that you need to look at each Church, or each communion of churches, in turn. The Augsburg Confession and the Small Catechism is only part of my Church’s confessional documents, namely the ‘Lutheran parts.’ You also have to take a look at liturgies, Canon Law, episcopal ordinances and orders, etc.
Now, one could say that the documents don’t reference it because the number of sacraments wasn’t in dispute. However, this wouldn’t be consistent with the writings of the Lutheran Reformers as a number of them repudiate the numbering of the sacraments used by Rome. In addition, the fact that they do include some sacraments and not others indicates that was what they thought the number of sacraments were.
You should always do your home work before making claims. The fact is that if we actually see at the history of my Church – the Church of Norway – we see that the emphasis has been on all seven, even though the word ‘sacrament’ has not been used directly in all rituals and ordinals. But there is a fact that in one of our matrimonial ordinals (from 1685, in use until approximately 1889) marriage is called a sacrament: “…and in there [Holy Matrimony] signified your beloved Son’s Jesus Christ and the Holy Church’s, his bride’s sacrament…” (“…og der i betegnet din kiere Søns Jesu Christi og den hellige Kirkis, hans Bruds Sacramente…”)*

Now, there were no doctrinal change in the Church of Norway in 1889 (where the change was made, in the ordinal, from ‘sacrament’ to ‘union’), so the Church of Norway actually do teach that marriage is a sacrament. The same with confirmation, where baptism is confirmed, with Holy Orders, which in Lutheranism denotes a grace given to the priest, and with extreme unction, where the distinct act is seen as a going back to the grace given in baptism.

And, as I never tire of repeating, Lutheran doctrine, like Byzantine doctrine, needs to be taken an a case by case basis – or better, a Church by Church basis – and it is not based on what the Reformers privately held.
  • For this you will unfortunately have to read Norwegian (p.8). But there is a significant Lutheran defence of the sacramentality of holy matrimony. See Wolfhart Pannenberg, , volume 3Systematic Theology (Eearman 1998): 336-369 (‘The Ambivalence of the Word “Sacrament” and the Special Case of Marriage’).
 
Says who? Where in either of these confessions does it say that there is only three sacraments?
The confessions in question. The Augsburg only explicitly refers to Baptism and the Lord’s Supper as sacraments. Why would anyone think there are more than that if the Confession doesn’t call any others as such? You could only come away with Confession as a sacrament if you interpret Luther in the Small Catechism to be teaching such.
My point, which it seems that I have to hammer through repeatedly, is that you need to look at each Church, or each communion of churches, in turn. The Augsburg Confession and the Small Catechism is only part of my Church’s confessional documents, namely the ‘Lutheran parts.’ You also have to take a look at liturgies, Canon Law, episcopal ordinances and orders, etc.
You should always do your home work before making claims. The fact is that if we actually see at the history of my Church – the Church of Norway – we see that the emphasis has been on all seven, even though the word ‘sacrament’ has not been used directly in all rituals and ordinals. But there is a fact that in one of our matrimonial ordinals (from 1685, in use until approximately 1889) marriage is called a sacrament: “…and in there [Holy Matrimony] signified your beloved Son’s Jesus Christ and the Holy Church’s, his bride’s sacrament…” (“…og der i betegnet din kiere Søns Jesu Christi og den hellige Kirkis, hans Bruds Sacramente…”)*
But what is in question, at least as it pertains to what I stated, is the confessions, not individual church beliefs. I wasn’t addressing the Church of Norway. I assure you, I’ve done my homework on the confessions themselves. I understand, of course, that individual church bodies accepted some, or all of the confessions.
 
Jonathon and David as well as Ruth and Naomi were actually homosexual partners
!!! Please help me pick my jaw up from the floor !!!

Not to take the quote out of context, the poster was saying that is what some think…
 
The confessions in question. The Augsburg only explicitly refers to Baptism and the Lord’s Supper as sacraments. Why would anyone think there are more than that if the Confession doesn’t call any others as such? You could only come away with Confession as a sacrament if you interpret Luther in the Small Catechism to be teaching such.
But then you have completely ignored the rest of my points – that you need to take each Church at a time, and also need to take into consideration the liturgies, Canon Laws, episcopal ordinances and orders, etc.
But what is in question, at least as it pertains to what I stated, is the confessions, not individual church beliefs. I wasn’t addressing the Church of Norway. I assure you, I’ve done my homework on the confessions themselves. I understand, of course, that individual church bodies accepted some, or all of the confessions.
But the confessions are not used in a vacuum. Just as the Byzantine tradition is not used in a vacuum. It exists within particular churches. And that is the point I have been making. A tradition can have different manifestations without there being a problem with that tradition as such.

So once again I ask the question: Why is it not a problem for the Byzantine tradition as such – and for particular churches in that tradition (such as the Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church or the Russian Greek Catholic Church) – that there are Byzantine churches who are not in communion with each other, while it is somehow a major problem for the Lutheran tradition as such – and for particular churches in that tradition (such as the Church of Norway or the LCMS) – that there are Lutheran churches who are not in communion with each other?

People here use the disunity between churches in the Lutheran tradition as a major problem, even as a proof of the invalidity of that tradition, while the disunity between churches in the Byzantine tradition (including churches in communion with Rome) is for some reason not a problem.
 
No, they do not ‘basically all have the same teachings.’ There are a lot of major differences, but the papacy, and perhaps the Filiique, is the most significant one.

The one major difference is the papacy…all the others fail in siginificance or will be resolved with the resolution of the papacy…that is why I only mentioned the papacy.
The differences are so big, in fact, that many Byzantine Orthodox even don’t consider the Roman Pontiff as part of the one Christ of Christ. I have in fact discussed with a lot of Greek and Russian Orthodox Christians who claim that the reason the last fourteen of the councils considered ecumenical by the Roman Catholic Church shouldn’t be seen as ecumenical is not, as one would suspect, that it only consisted of part of the Church, but that the Roman Pontiff, and the churches in communion with him, is not part of the one Christ of Christ at all.
 
So once again I ask the question: Why is it not a problem for the Byzantine tradition as such – and for particular churches in that tradition (such as the Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church or the Russian Greek Catholic Church) – that there are Byzantine churches who are not in communion with each other, while it is somehow a major problem for the Lutheran tradition as such – and for particular churches in that tradition (such as the Church of Norway or the LCMS) – that there are Lutheran churches who are not in communion with each other?
As pablope has pointed out, the different Byzantine churches are either Catholic or Orthodox, which means they either accept the dogma of the papacy as defined in the Latin ecumenical councils, or they don’t. The situation is markedly different in Lutheranism.

The Lutheran tradition is a distinctive break with apostolic tradition (as conservative as that may be when compared with Reformed theology); that is to say, it represents a subtraction of the apostolic faith that is not present with either Orthodoxy or Catholicism.
 
The one major difference is the papacy…all the others fail in siginificance or will be resolved with the resolution of the papacy…that is why I only mentioned the papacy.
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But within Lutheranism....there are numerous issues...sacraments, the pope as Anti-Christ...church goverance, Apostolic succession.....:shrug:
Perhaps, although you are simplifying the differences to the extreme. But anyway; how does that change my point? Why is it A-OK for Byzantines to be disunited, but disasterous for Lutherans to be so? Is it perhaps that you have argued yourself into a corner and the only way to get out is either to admit that the problem isn’t in Lutheranism as such, or that if it is a problem, it is equally one for those Byzantines in communion with Rome?
 
Perhaps, although you are simplifying the differences to the extreme. But anyway; how does that change my point? Why is it A-OK for Byzantines to be disunited, but disasterous for Lutherans to be so? Is it perhaps that you have argued yourself into a corner and the only way to get out is either to admit that the problem isn’t in Lutheranism as such, or that if it is a problem, it is equally one for those Byzantines in communion with Rome?
Where have I stated it is AOk for Byzantines to be disunited? The CC is trying to reunite them.

Perhaps you are missing something in your attempt to equate the Catholic and Orthodox Byzantines with Lutheranism…the Orthodox Byzantines are still united under their respective Patriarchs…though there may be autocephalous ones…which I think is the situation in the Orthodox Churches.
 
As pablope has pointed out, the different Byzantine churches are either Catholic or Orthodox, which means they either accept the dogma of the papacy as defined in the Latin ecumenical councils, or they don’t. The situation is markedly different in Lutheranism.
Yes, that is the only difference. Nothing more. :rolleyes:
The Lutheran tradition is a distinctive break with apostolic tradition (as conservative as that may be when compared with Reformed theology); that is to say, it represents a subtraction of the apostolic faith that is not present with either Orthodoxy or Catholicism.
Then please show where. Where, in Confessio Augustana, is this supposed break with apostolic tradition? And remember: Just as the case is within Byzantinism, you need to take each Church (and her teachings) in turn. It is not my problem that some theologian in WELS teaches something I do not, just as it is not the problem of Bishop Joseph Werth that Patriarch Kirill of Moscow teaches something he does not.
 
Which Byzantine churches that are in communion with Rome are not in communion with each other?
:confused: That was not what I said. If it is a problem for me that I am not in communion with someone from WELS, that it is an equal problem for a Byzantine in communion with Rome that he is not in communion with a person in the Russian Orthodox Church.
 
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