T
Thorolfr
Guest
Is there something magical about Confessio Augustana that has preserved it from having any errors and require us as Lutherans to be faithful to everything in it? I also can’t help wondering why we must know how the body and blood are present in the Lord’s Supper. Is knowing that and confessing that important for our salvation? In reading Derek Wilson’s recent biography of Luther, it says that while Luther was in the Wartburg, Karlstadt was passing all sorts of new rules and making pronouncements about what people should believe. Wilson says that Luther “disapproved of Karlstadt’s tendency to proclaim as truths binding on all Christians some issues which, Luther believed, were matters of individual conscience.” The Roman Catholic Church, it seems to me, feels a need to make binding statements that all Catholics must believe on all sorts of matters that would, in my opinion, be better left to individual conscience. That’s why I don’t think that I could ever be a Catholic myself.In America, yes. Not in Europe. I have frequently heard the ‘standard’ Lutheran teaching being described as consubstantiation.
That is what I’m saying, yes. If Confessio Augustana, in its 10th article, does not teach transubstantiation, then there IS something in Confessio Augustana art. 1-21 that “varies from … the Church of Rome.” But the claim made by Confessio Augustana is that these articles, including article 10, does NOT teach contrary to Rome, on this issue.
I just take Confessio Augustana at its word. If I have to become a Roman Catholic in order to be faithful to Confessio Augustana, then so be it.