Where does Luther say that this is, in fact what gave Luther “permission to divorce himself” from communion with the Bishop of Rome?Ok.
Then I am confused by the assertions you’ve made in the past that Lutherans need to be obedient to their communion. That is, to their church leaders.
Respectfully, it seems like you’re embracing contradictory paradigms. Luther was permitted to divorce himself from the Church because he said the Church is those gathered around the Word and Sacrament.
But then it seems like you’re also saying that you are not permitted to divorce yourself from your communion.
Do you see the conflict here?
I am currently embroiled in a controversy in my parish, and with the Synod at large, because I believe the Synod is allowing our parish (and others) to do something that appears to violate the confessions. What do I do? I take it to the Church.
Clearly, conscience can drive some to “divorce” themselves from the communion they are in, and join another. There are Catholics who actually post the date that they did this in their profile (“Tiber Swim Team …”). And there are a few Lutherans who have made it clear that they were once Catholics. OTOH, over the years here, I’ve had a few Catholics contact me privately about becoming Lutheran, and I have always encouraged them to first go to their priest, or another priest, and be sure, be certain. It is at least as important to know what you are leaving behind, as it is to know where you are going.
Russell Saltzman has been mentioned in this forum before,
***“What I have always sought—since seminary on—is to be in a church that finally gives expression to the catholicity of the Augsburg Confession.” *** If I get to the point that Saltzman got to, yes, I will give myself permission to act on conscience, to seek out the catholicity I expect from the Church of the Augsburg Confession.
To say that Luther gave himself permission to divorce himself for the Church seems, at least to me, to be a rather simplistic explanation of the history (noting, of course, that on a forum such as this, brief explanations are often necessary).
Jon