C
commenter
Guest
Your second sentence implies “truly” before the word “preached”. The problem is illuminated by denominations that formerly preached within what you, and I, would consider Christian orthodoxy but since abandoned it to more or less. Some still administer sacraments, that’s no assurance.… at least the institutionalized communions have, to one degree or another, identified doctrines, and do not place the believer into the position of having figure things out on their own.
… For a Lutheran, the Church is quite visible, as it is where the word is preached and the sacraments administered among the congregation of believers.
Jon
Institutionalized churches seldom deny their identified doctrines, they gradually reinterpret them, and frame their ideas with scripture and tradition, the same framing that the still orthodox churches rely on now. Emphasis on “gradually”.
So the believer IS placed in a “position of having to figure things out on their own”, because he constantly has to evaluate his denomination to see if it is still trustworthy. He can appeal his pastor’s error to the larger body, but those same safeguards (appeal process; reference to scripture, tradition, authoritative documents) were in place in denominations that went from orthodoxy to heresy.The safeguards were tried, and failed. They didn’t openly deny the gospel, or Luther, or whoever, they said this is true; but in the new situation this other Bible verse, or this other work by Calvin, or whoever, is relevant here.
Having a “congregation of believers” around him doesn’t make the believer’s discernment any sharper, if their senses have been dulled in the same direction, by the same weakening guide that dulls him. You can say “if my guide becomes untrustworthy I will go elsewhere.” This ignores the fact that your own ability to notice slowly creeping heresy is altered by your altering guide, as well as the effect of peer pressure. Historical experience shows the pressure is to “go with the flow”. The greater danger is not that you would be unable to appeal your pastor’s error, but you are less able to notice that certain orthodox doctrine is now consistently omitted.