N
Nun_ofthe_Above
Guest
Hi matthias,Oh… Also…
When you go to confession to a Lutheran Minister does he say the following…
“Do you believe that my forgiveness is God’s forgiveness?
Let it be done for you as you believe. And I, by the command of our Lord Jesus Christ, forgive you your sins in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Amen. Go in peace.”
I am no longer Lutheran but I’m real curious if any Lutherans practice this really “Catholic” behavior which is part of their faith?
As a soon-to-be Lutheran, I can say that whilst I am not baptized yet, and have not partaken of confession; I was talking to my Pastor only a few days ago and he said we still practice private confession, and many within the Parish partake of this. I intend to once I am baptized. (Which is only weeks away, praise the Lord!)
The part of confession you reference above (which is the 4th part of Lutheran Confession) goes-:
Tell the Pastor about the sins that are worrying you. At the end, say something like this:
I am sorry for what I have done.
I ask God to have mercy on me.
I will try not to do it again.
Your confessor asks you:
When I forgive you your sins,
do you believe that this forgiveness
comes from God?
Then you answer:
Yes I believe. (Only do this if you truly believe)
The confessor then says:
What you believe
will be done for you.
By the authority
of our Lord Jesus Christ
I forgive you your sins
in the name of the Father
and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit. Amen
Peace be with you.
In love and peace, it may seem like Catholic behaviour, but you must remember Luther had no issue with certain things within the Church, including Confession, and Our Lady’s perpetual Virginity…
Lutherans are able to follow any tradition of the Catholic faith, (or any other denomination for that matter) which does not contradict the bible. If there is no reference either good or bad, you may also follow a tradition. (This was in accordance with one of the Early Church Fathers…possibly Irenaeus, but I am not 100% certain, so you may like to check that one.) This is why I still abide by many of the Catholic Church’s teachings, and still use the Deuterocanonicals. I believe in Purgatory, and I don’t believe the Catholic Church or the Pope is the anti-Christ. (You never know, one day I might ‘join’ the Catholic Church, but still have some issues to work out…)
Peace and love in Him.