The Big Protestant Granfalloon!

  • Thread starter Thread starter Captain_America
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Jon,

You mentioned Old Catholics which we both know are not in communion with the Pope Francis. Correct?

Forgive me Jon, but I am trying to gain an understanding of the theological teachings between what may be called the Old Lutherans and the New Lutherans and which body of teachings faithfully carry out the continuation of the Catholic Church.

Since roughly the 19th century, the New Lutherans, in contradistinction to the Old Lutherans, formed a party, if you will, without, however, agreeing among themselves. These New Lutherans indeed hold firmly to the justification theory of Luther, the “sola fides”; but with it they associated a sacramental church, with so-called ordination of the preacher, contrary to the Old Lutheran theory of the invisibility of the Church and of a priesthood common to all Christians. Some theologians of these views, Lohe for instance, describe the Lord’s Supper as the central point of all Christian worship, and place preaching on a much lower footing. Back in the day, many considered Vilmar, von Hoffman, Kahnis, Kliefoth, Goschel and Stahl as the most eminent men among the New Lutherans. It is my understanding the the differences between the Old Lutherans and the New Lutherans became so great at that time that the Old Lutherans decried the New as “German Puseyites, and as already standing quite near to the gates of Rome.”

So, back to my original question Jon, which of these different Lutheran teachings faithfully carries out the contention the Lutheran Church is the continuation of the Catholic Church?
Jon,

Please, your response.
 
I understand your confusion at these similar-sounding terms, but “Old Catholic” and “Old Lutheran” are not remotely analogous. “Old Catholics,” as we all know, are a schismatic group that left the Roman Catholic church. “Old Lutherans” is simply a term used to describe Lutherans who refused -at the threat of the sword- to join with the Prussian state church. There were good Lutherans who did join those state churches, and remained there in the hopes of bringing that body to a proper understanding of the Word (not unlike those faithful who remain in heterodox “Lutheran” churches today). Of course, there were also those who caved in to the Calvinistic Reformed churches on doctrinal issues; these I would not consider Lutheran, but Reformed.

There are not “different Lutheran teachings” - there is only Lutheranism according to the Confessions. Lutherans are identified by their subscription to the Confessions as they were intended. If you are trying to better understand Lutheranism, I would encourage you to use the Confessions as your basis.
steido01,

The fact remains, steido, the Lutherans you “consider” (translated: private judgment) heterodox might well consider your branch of Lutheranism heterodox as well interpreting the Confessions differently than you.

No authority, no unity. It always comes down to this doesn’t it?

And, if I might add, one mark of the true Catholic Church is unity.
 
steido01,

The fact remains, steido, the Lutherans you “consider” (translated: private judgment) heterodox might well consider your branch of Lutheranism heterodox as well interpreting the Confessions differently than you.

No authority, no unity. It always comes down to this doesn’t it?

And, if I might add, one mark of the true Catholic Church is unity.
Indeed! And the Old Catholics will consider the Vatican as heterodox because the CC has claimed for itself an infallibility never before approved by the whole Church.

So, this mark of the true Catholic Church is missing. It is missing because of schism, because of division. The western patriarchate is not in unity with the other patriarchates. It is not in unity with other western Christians. Disunity is a shared sin, and the CC has its full measure, with the rest of us, in this sin. Pray for unity.
 
Indeed! And the Old Catholics will consider the Vatican as heterodox because the CC has claimed for itself an infallibility never before approved by the whole Church.

So, this mark of the true Catholic Church is missing. It is missing because of schism, because of division. The western patriarchate is not in unity with the other patriarchates. It is not in unity with other western Christians. Disunity is a shared sin, and the CC has its full measure, with the rest of us, in this sin. Pray for unity.
Jon,

Sorry Jon,

I suspect you know the truth of the matter regarding Old Catholics, Lutherans, Calvinists, Baptists, etc., etc. in regards to their relationship with the Catholic Church. The truth of the matter is that throughtout the last 2,000 years the Catholic Church has authoritatively safeguarded the flock by pointing out the errors of all of these disgruntled groups, Lutherans included.

Are individual Catholics sinful? Yes we are. Is the Catholic Church sinful? Absolutely not.
The reason the Catholic Church is not sinful is that it is the full, literal extension of the Incarnation, Christ’s Mystical Body on earth extended in the Catholic Church to the end of time. This is a sublime fact that is proclaimed by St. Paul himself in his epistles. To call the Catholic Church sinful is the exact same thing as calling Christ sinful.

Lutheran theology has never been able to authoritatively address the fact that the true Church of Christ is his Mystical Body on earth. With no one within worldwide Lutheranism to proclaim this doctrine authoritatively it is absolutely clear to any Catholic who knows his faith that Lutheranism, with all of its competing divisions, is absolutely not the correct continuation of the Catholic Church. And why is this so you may ask? The answer is simple, the Protestant dogma of “Private Judgment”.

And, in the future Jon, please don’t ask for a “link” to substantiate any of this. For if you do, I will just refer you to the dialog we have just shared on this thread. The sad divisions within Lutheranism which you and others have outlined have confirmed everything I have mentioned. Worldwide Lutheranism is all over the place theologically with no one in authority to straighten it all out. Sadly, it can be no other way for Lutherans. It is inherent in your theology.
 
steido01,

The fact remains, steido, the Lutherans you “consider” (translated: private judgment) heterodox might well consider your branch of Lutheranism heterodox as well interpreting the Confessions differently than you.

No authority, no unity. It always comes down to this doesn’t it?

And, if I might add, one mark of the true Catholic Church is unity.
And the many groups that call themselves Catholic claim the very authority of God and yet still have no unity. 🤷

I have not asked you to defend the innumerable groups that claim to be Catholic, or that have broken from Rome (Though perhaps I should - have you fixed that Lutheran/Anglican/Calvinist/Congregationalist/Anabaptist/Methodist/Pietist/Pentacostal/Unitarian/etc. issue yet?). From the forum rules and guidelines on Interfaith Dialogue:
Expecting members of any Church to defend or answer for the excesses or extremism of bodies that have broken with it is a technique that has no merit and can’t be defended.
We cannot be held responsible for groups that no longer profess the Lutheran Confessions in their original intention no more than you can be held responsible for the existence of non-Roman Catholics.

And to say that another’s church body has no authority is rather presumptive and Romocentric (some would even take offensive); our authority over our communion’s affairs are not dependent upon Rome. You know that we Lutherans consider ourselves to be a proper continuation of the Western church. The LCMS has authority over our own affairs, and Rome has authority over its own.

The church catholic is much greater than any single denomination or communion; I would not limit God to man-made constructs (Matt. 18:20, Mark 10:27). Even your own communion, while stating the truth that there is no salvation outside the Church, acknowledges that “the Church” encompasses more than just those in communion with Rome (you know, those of us who remain “invincibly ignorant”).
 
=Tomster;11027218]Jon,
Sorry Jon,
I suspect you know the truth of the matter regarding Old Catholics, Lutherans, Calvinists, Baptists, etc., etc. in regards to their relationship with the Catholic Church. The truth of the matter is that throughtout the last 2,000 years the Catholic Church has authoritatively safeguarded the flock by pointing out the errors of all of these disgruntled groups, Lutherans included.
See, Tomster, I don’t know or necessarily accept this as fact, since there is no real way of knowing if the communion you are in is, by itself, authoritative for the whole Church Catholic.
Are individual Catholics sinful? Yes we are. Is the Catholic Church sinful? Absolutely not.
The reason the Catholic Church is not sinful is that it is the full, literal extension of the Incarnation, Christ’s Mystical Body on earth extended in the Catholic Church to the end of time. This is a sublime fact that is proclaimed by St. Paul himself in his epistles. To call the Catholic Church sinful is the exact same thing as calling Christ sinful.
If you are speaking of the institutional Catholic Church, that communion specifically of the Bishop of Rome, I would respectfully disagree. So, lets be clear, the Church Militant, since it is made of sinful human beings, has the appearance of sin, though by its connection to the Church Triumphant, the Communion of Saints, guided by the Holy Spirit, could be said to be above the sin of human beings. I think it’s a walk that isn’t necessary to take, but there it is.
Lutheran theology has never been able to authoritatively address the fact that the true Church of Christ is his Mystical Body on earth. With no one within worldwide Lutheranism to proclaim this doctrine authoritatively it is absolutely clear to any Catholic who knows his faith that Lutheranism, with all of its competing divisions, is absolutely not the correct continuation of the Catholic Church. And why is this so you may ask? The answer is simple, the Protestant dogma of “Private Judgment”.
I don’t think we deny this at all, but I think I’ve asked before, where is this Protestant dogma written down? Since there is no such thing as a Protestant Church, who does this dogma cover?
And, in the future Jon, please don’t ask for a “link” to substantiate any of this. For if you do, I will just refer you to the dialog we have just shared on this thread. The sad divisions within Lutheranism which you and others have outlined have confirmed everything I have mentioned. Worldwide Lutheranism is all over the place theologically with no one in authority to straighten it all out. Sadly, it can be no other way for Lutherans. It is inherent in your theology.
I think you would find that, doctrinally, true Lutherans are not all over, but of one mind, that found and confessed in the Lutheran confessions. There are, of course, groups who call themselves Lutheran but do not tie themselves confessionally to that confession.

And if we wish to extend this, regardless of an authoritative bishop, the Catholic Church seen schism and division for a thousand years. Even an authoritative human leadership is not immune from sin, and the divisions it has caused.

Jon
 
For some reason the word “consensus” in one of my exchanged posts above sticks with me here. Can we agree that there has NEVER been “consensus” among believers? I think we have to! If you look deeply into any era of the church, you will find controversies, excommunications, schisms and bar fights… Humans are a fractious bunch.

Perhaps, the better argument for Catholicism is NOT that we’ve claimed the title “catholic” and thus own the trademark, but that our understanding of revelation is that Jesus established a visible and knowable authority (apostolic office in general and Petrine office in particular) to deal with the predictable human fractiousness he HAD to have known was coming. Every other group seems to claim that other principles are the unifying authority in Christianity, but all those groups lack the recognition that such an approach unavoidably leads to insoluble conflicts over the interpretation of those principles. I just can’t get past the fact that those approaches to authority innately imply that God is rather naïve! I don’t think He is.

The purpose of apostolic authority is demonstrably NOT to prevent divisions. As Jon has noted, if that were the case, history has proven Jesus’ plan to have failed (or catholics to be wrong). But that’s not how Catholicism understands apostolic authority. Rather the purpose of apostolic authority was to provide a visible unifying presence for those who understand it and are humble enough to submit to it. Jesus didn’t leave us with a book and vague well wishes, or the assurance of the guidance of the Holy Spirit (if that were the case, history would be testimony to the impotence of the Holy Spirit!). He gave us a home to gather in. It’s damaged by divisions, but still recognizable.
 
For some reason the word “consensus” in one of my exchanged posts above sticks with me here. Can we agree that there has NEVER been “consensus” among believers? I think we have to! If you look deeply into any era of the church, you will find controversies, excommunications, schisms and bar fights… Humans are a fractious bunch.

Perhaps, the better argument for Catholicism is NOT that we’ve claimed the title “catholic” and thus own the trademark, but that our understanding of revelation is that Jesus established a visible and knowable authority (apostolic office in general and Petrine office in particular) to deal with the predictable human fractiousness he HAD to have known was coming. Every other group seems to claim that other principles are the unifying definition of Christianity, but all those groups lack the recognition that such an approach unavoidably leads to insoluble conflicts over the interpretation of those principles. I just can’t get past the fact that those approaches to authority innately imply that God is rather naïve! I don’t think He is.
I think that’s reasonable, Manual. The question now is does that apostolic / Petrine office hold the authority it once did, now that its divided?
Jon
 
I think that’s reasonable, Manual. The question now is does that apostolic / Petrine office hold the authority it once did, now that its divided?
Jon
Good question that I think has been wrestled with within Catholicism pretty thoroughly. To argue that division dissipates apostolic and Petrine authority is to negate the idea of authority entirely. It can’t be an authority if it dissolves in the face of the first conflict.

And we have a pretty clear record of controversies that go further back than today’s seemingly intractable division of east/west and Rome/protestant. If one asserts that authority vanishes in the face of significant disagreement, then we need to go back and re-examine disputes like the Arian controversy. After all, it was the assertion of authoritative judgment that finally put the nails in that coffin. If those nails don’t exist, then Arianism will come right back out like a vampire!

It’s also why there have been such rigorous discussions on the nature and process of apostolic succession. Some protestants presume that Rome capriciously declare rebels and dissenters to be cut off, but this isn’t the case. Groups like the Eastern Orthodox churches or Polish National Catholic Church (the first two words are serious misnomers!) are still considered churches though not fully in communion since they retain apostolic succession, but not unity with the pope. Lutherans are considered to be “ecclesial communities” since (IIRC) they repudiated the Sacrament of Holy Orders as received by the Church. Anglicanism is also considered to not have Holy Orders even though they have restored the theology of it since it was determined that there was a faulty theology long enough in the early years for the valid bishops to die out. These aren’t capricious dismissals, but honest attempts to apply reason to revelation and apply it via the judgment of the pope.

I realize you likely have a different view, but wasn’t sure if you’d heard the catholic side of it before.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top