I think we agree, but correct me if you think I am wrong. The Formula of Concord was written and codified more than 60 years after Luther’s initial Revolt, From my perspective, there was absolutely NO REASON for the Formula to go completely overboard in naming the pope (or papacy) as the antichrist, and describing lay Catholics as ‘adherents’. The Formula MUCH MORE than the Augsburg Confession stands as a huge barrier to the unity that we all hope for. But then that only applies to those Lutheran denominations which hold that the Forumla is authoritative. Those like yours, which as I understand it, have NEVER made a confessional statement about the Pope as the antichrist, should NOT have to answer for those who have. This is especially true if you consider the Formula as a departure from Lutheranism.
Yes.
OK, so does your church teach transubstantiation?
It has never given a definitive statement on it, except by codifying
Confessio Augustana as a confessional document. I’m not saying that most priests in the Church of Norway believe in, or teach, transubstantiation, but that there is nothing in
Confessio Augustana that is contrary to it, and that if you read the relevant article -
art. X - carefully, and in the context of the entire document, it seems that an embrace of transubstantiation is actually the most natural interpretation.
I will have to admit that I don’t understand your point here.
When
Confessio Augustana was issued, at
the Diet of Augsburg in 1530, it was issued not as a document declaring that its authors or adherents were ‘Lutherans,’ but that they belonged in the Church, together with the Roman Catholics. This is especially clear in the preface, in the conclusion of the first part (art. I-XXI, at the end of XXI), and in the conclusionto the entire document. It was seen as a profession of the catholic and apostolic faith, and avoided any denominational labeling (except som condemnations of Anabaptists and others, based upon the catholic and apostolic tradition).
In the
Formula of Concord, on the other hand, the author(s) - probably Martin Chemnitz - and the adherent
define themselves in opposition to Roman Catholics (or ‘Papists,’ as they prefer).
The Church of Norway has never defined herself thusly. We define ourselves in light of the catholic and apostolic faith, as the ancient Church of the Norwegian realm.
OK, but if it is an ‘ecclesial tradition’ then how does that differ from the rest of the traditions that were the result of the Reformation?
Well, for a start the tradition defined itself as catholic and apostolic, and not in ‘opposition.’
It seems that we might agree that the ‘words of the Formula’ are extremely clear. What bothers me is when people claim that the Formula is authoritative but then find it necessary to interpret to mean something that it clearly does not say.
Yeah.
Ok Father Kjet. As a Lutheran Pastor, and knowing that you are not a “Formula Guy”, do you think it is even possible for the ‘Formula Lutherans’ to refute or eradicate those sections of the Forumla which are so offensive to Catholics? Or would that be to ‘admit too much’, and begin possibly a slide down a slippery slope?
I think they would have to. To say, in an interchristian dialogue, that the leader of the one you are having the dialogue with, or his office, is the enemy of Christ is, well, ‘counterproductive.’
I take it from this comment that you believe that the Church of Norway of the 17th century was a valid continuation of the Church that existed in Norway in the 15th. Is that what you are saying? If so, then what about the huge doctrinal dislocation that occurred in the 16th? What about the fact of the change in obedience to the Bishop of Rome?
Well, the question is: Is that obedience - not only that the Roman Pontiff is the Western patriach and
primus inter pares - but that he has supremacy - supreme universal jurisdiction - part of the catholic and apostolic faith?
Exactly Father! The way I look at it, if people cannot even begin to explain why they believe in something as important as the Formula being Authoritative, then they should seriously consider the possibility that they should not. I do love the idea that those Formula Lutheran communions should consider the possibility of declaring the Formula to be NON-Authoritative.
Yeah.
My guess is that the ‘Formula Lutherans’ are dwindling as a percentage of overall Lutheranism. You recently said that the ‘Forumlas’ are less than half of Lutheranism. What do you believe their percentage is?
I have no idea, and prefer not to speculate.