What is keeping Orthodox and Lutherans from unifying?

  • Thread starter Thread starter concretecamper
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
If JonNC truly understood what the Catholic Church believes about the Holy Eucharist, he would become a Catholic It’s because he just thinks he understands that prevents his conversion. The truth is the truth whether he believes it or not. He can’t change that no matter what.God Bless, Memaw
Perhaps you could explain to JonNC what the RCC believes about the Holy Eucharist. That might help.

GKC
 
If JonNC truly understood what the Catholic Church believes about the Holy Eucharist, he would become a Catholic It’s because he just thinks he understands that prevents his conversion. The truth is the truth whether he believes it or not. He can’t change that no matter what.God Bless, Memaw
I’m not speaking for Jon, but if you generally want to know know why Lutherans don’t come rushing to Rome, here’s an overview: (warning it has a slightly naughty word)

achristianthing.wordpress.com/2013/08/02/too-damn-catholic/

Generally, Lutherans view the church as where the Gospel is proclaimed and the Sacraments are administered. It’s also why we don’t ‘sheep steal’ from Oxford Anglicans, Catholics, and Orthodox - we view you as valid (but just-a-little messed up.)

Again, speaking for myself, I understand (mostly) your viewpoint, but it doesn’t bother me in the slightest and wish you well.
 
This may have been posted previously, but I just discovered it in another thread and thought it sounded relevant to this one.

Original found here: christianitytoday.com/ch/asktheexpert/feb08.html

Luther was generally positive toward the Eastern Orthodox church, especially because it rejected many of the things he most disliked about the Roman Catholic church: clerical celibacy, papal supremacy, purgatory, indulgences, and Communion by bread alone. He frequently referred to the beliefs and practices of the “Greek church,” as he called it, as evidence that Catholics had deviated from principles upon which Christians formerly agreed.

Luther never attempted to build a bridge to the Eastern church, but some of his followers did. Philipp Melanchthon worked with Demetrios Mysos, a deacon sent by the patriarch of Constantinople to find out about the new religious movement in Germany, to complete a Greek translation/paraphrase of the Augsburg Confession, called the Augustana Graeca. Mysos was supposed to take the document back to Constantinople, but he died on the journey.

Some Lutheran theologians at Tubingen tried to establish an even closer connection. The “Eastern Orthodoxy” entry in The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Reformation, edited by Hans J. Hillerbrand, reports:

The Lutherans were convinced that they, rather than Rome, were the true apostolic and catholic church, and thus to establish contact with the venerable Greek church, to enlist its support against the papacy, and perhaps even to enter into communion with this apostolic church would have been a sensational victory. Thus in 1575 they sent the Augustana Graeca to Patriarch Jeremias II (d. 1595), asking his opinion. There ensued over the next six years a friendly but candid exchange of extensive doctrinal correspondence (three letters from both sides totaling over four hundred printed pages). Prominent topics discussed included the authority of scripture and tradition; the filioque; the nature of the church; grace, free will, and synergism; justification, faith, and good works; eucharistic practices; the priesthood and the ministry; prayers for the departed; the invocation of saints; feasts and fasting; and monasticism. Except for those doctrines and customs of the Roman church that the East had never accepted, the changes in church teaching and polity advocated by the Lutherans were rejected by the Orthodox, who thus implicitly agreed on most issues with the Catholics.

+++

Now, as a Catholic I have to ask: If the Orthodox also rejected Lutheranism, shouldn’t that give Lutherans real cause for concern?
 
If JonNC truly understood what the Catholic Church believes about the Holy Eucharist, he would become a Catholic It’s because he just thinks he understands that prevents his conversion. The truth is the truth whether he believes it or not. He can’t change that no matter what.God Bless, Memaw
No, Jon shares our beliefs about the eucharist. His objection is the universal jurisdiction of the pope.
 
I’m not speaking for Jon, but if you generally want to know know why Lutherans don’t come rushing to Rome, here’s an overview: (warning it has a slightly naughty word)

achristianthing.wordpress.com/2013/08/02/too-damn-catholic/

Generally, Lutherans view the church as where the Gospel is proclaimed and the Sacraments are administered. It’s also why we don’t ‘sheep steal’ from Oxford Anglicans, Catholics, and Orthodox - we view you as valid (but just-a-little messed up.)

Again, speaking for myself, I understand (mostly) your viewpoint, but it doesn’t bother me in the slightest and wish you well.
Yeah…too “Catholic” to be Roman Catholic. :rolleyes:

But it’s pretty simple, really…either you’re with the pope or you’re not.

If you’re not…well, everybody wants to be called Catholic…
 
Yeah…too “Catholic” to be Roman Catholic. :rolleyes:

But it’s pretty simple, really…either you’re with the pope or you’re not.

If you’re not…well, everybody wants to be called Catholic…
I don’t mind what you call me.

GKC
 
Yeah…too “Catholic” to be Roman Catholic. :rolleyes:

But it’s pretty simple, really…either you’re with the pope or you’re not.
And there’s the distillation of the problem - the ‘creed of Trent’ if you will.

Perhaps you could you explain how binding one’s conscious to one of God’s creatures in particular would be a requirement for salvation?
 
And there’s the distillation of the problem - the ‘creed of Trent’ if you will.

Perhaps you could you explain how binding one’s conscious to one of God’s creatures in particular would be a requirement for salvation?
We demonstrate odebience by obeying those ordained with authority:

1 Samuel 15:22-23
22 But Samuel replied:
“Does the Lord delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices
as much as in obeying the Lord?
To obey is better than sacrifice,
and to heed is better than the fat of rams.
23 For rebellion is like the sin of divination,
and arrogance like the evil of idolatry.
Because you have rejected the word of the Lord,
he has rejected you as king.”

An excerpt below:

Ecclesial Deism

calledtocommunion.com/2009/07/ecclesial-deism/

Aquinas believed that faith in Christ necessarily involves trusting the Church, because Christ cannot fail to guide and protect the development of His Church.

I came to see that I did not fully trust Christ, not because I thought Him untrustworthy, but because I had not understood that Christ founded a visible hierarchically organized Body of which He is the Head, and which He has promised to protect and preserve until He returns. I had not apprehended the ecclesial organ Christ established through which the members of His Body are to trust Him. I came to see that faith in Christ is not something to be exercised invisibly, from my heart directly to Christ’s throne, as though Christ had not appointed an enduring line of shepherds. Inward faith was to be exercised outwardly, by trusting Christ through those shepherds Christ sent and established. Jesus had said, “The one who listens to you listens to Me, and the one who rejects you rejects Me; and he who rejects Me rejects the One who sent Me.”29

This is the sacramental conception of faith, not simply belief that, but belief through. This is the sacramental conception of the Church, the basis for the priest speaking in persona Christi.

But upon coming to understand that Christ founded a visible hierarchically organized Body of which He is the Head and which He promised to preserve, I came to see that the way to trust Christ is to trust His Church of which He is the Head, just as the early Christians trusted Christ precisely by trusting the teaching of the Apostles. Trusting the Apostles did not subtract from (or compete with) their trust in Christ. On the contrary, when Jesus tells the Apostle Thomas, “Blessed are they who did not see, and yet believed,”30 He implies that greater faith is required and shown in those who trust in Christ not by seeing Him, but by believing the testimony of the Apostles. Jesus refers to this way of believing when He prays, “I do not ask in behalf of these alone, but for those also who believe in Me through their word.”31
 
+++

Now, as a Catholic I have to ask: If the Orthodox also rejected Lutheranism, shouldn’t that give Lutherans real cause for concern?
Why should it? All it means to the Lutheran is that the orthodox as well as the Roman church have deviated from what the apostles gave. It might only hold concern if the Lutherans accepted apostolic succession.
 
Why should it? All it means to the Lutheran is that the orthodox as well as the Roman church have deviated from what the apostles gave. It might only hold concern if the Lutherans accepted apostolic succession.
Actually, we do.

From the Apology of the Augsburg Confession
The Fourteenth Article, in which we say that in the Church the administration of the Sacraments and Word ought to be allowed no one unless he be rightly called, they receive, but with the proviso that we employ canonical ordination. Concerning this subject we have frequently testified in this assembly that it is our greatest wish to maintain church-polity and the grades in the Church [old church-regulations and the government of bishops], even though they have been made by human authority [provided the bishops allow our doctrine and receive our priests]. For we know that church discipline was instituted by the Fathers, in the manner laid down in the ancient canons, with a good and useful intention. 25] But the bishops either compel our priests to reject and condemn this kind of doctrine which we have confessed, or, by a new and unheard-of cruelty, they put to death the poor innocent men. These causes hinder our priests from acknowledging such bishops. Thus the cruelty of the bishops is the reason why the canonical government, which we greatly desired to maintain, is in some places dissolved. Let them see to it how they will give an account to God for dispersing 26] the Church. In this matter our consciences are not in danger, because since we know that our Confession is true, godly, and catholic, we ought not to approve the cruelty of those who persecute this doctrine. 27] And we know that the Church is among those who teach the Word of God aright, and administer the Sacraments aright, and not with those who not only by their edicts endeavor to efface God’s Word, but also put to death those who teach what is right and true; 28] towards whom, even though they do something contrary to the canons, yet the very canons are milder. Furthermore, we wish here again to testify that we will gladly maintain ecclesiastical and canonical government, provided the bishops only cease to rage against our Churches. This our desire will clear us both before God and among all nations to all posterity from the imputation against us that the authority of the bishops is being undermined, when men read and hear that, although protesting against the unrighteous cruelty of the bishops, we could not obtain justice.
Jon
 
We demonstrate odebience by obeying those ordained with authority:
Good stuff!

But I’m afraid that while we Lutherans understand the desire (if not need) for a united church, and for communion with all of God’s adopted children, we just don’t see the necessity of condemning (or at least saying they are anathema) if they are not in communion with one particular person.
 
Good stuff!

But I’m afraid that while we Lutherans understand the desire (if not need) for a united church, and for communion with all of God’s adopted children, we just don’t see the necessity of condemning (or at least saying they are anathema) if they are not in communion with one particular person.
Nor do we say that they are condemned, simple by being in communion with one said person.

Jon
 
Actually, we do.

From the Apology of the Augsburg Confession

Jon
Lutherans define apostolic succession differently, it is not a historical succession which is important to the lutheran church (or else they could barely justify their existence) it is the faith which is true wherein the true apostolic succession is. I think APostolic succession with faith requires that historical lineage from the desciples or else we are no better than the gnostics.

So would you hold to apostolic succession as Iraneaus defined it? The succession of Bishops from the apostles to the current day? No.
 
Lutherans define apostolic succession differently, it is not a historical succession which is important to the lutheran church (or else they could barely justify their existence) it is the faith which is true wherein the true apostolic succession is. I think APostolic succession with faith requires that historical lineage from the desciples or else we are no better than the gnostics.

So would you hold to apostolic succession as Iraneaus defined it? The succession of Bishops from the apostles to the current day? No.
A quote from Irenaeus would help, but let me just say that the document claims that we would accept AS with that historical lineage, our differences as to whether or not they are of divine command or human notwithstanding. We justify our existence based on historic practice of the Church that presbyter ordination is valid by divine law when bishops are not available or willing to ordain.

Jon
 
It’s also why we don’t ‘sheep steal’ from Oxford Anglicans, Catholics, and Orthodox - we view you as valid (but just-a-little messed up.)
I’d say that we Catholics are taking a similar approach (see for example the quote in my signature).

🙂
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top