Hello Pastor…
You said:
gcnuss;5033217The Lutheran church was NOT built by Luther. Had it sprung up
ex nihilo through Luther’s efforts, I might agree with you. However, that is not the case. Had it been so, we most likely would would not believe in the Holy Trinity, the creeds, and much else that we hold as the true faith.
Do you believe that the Lutheran church and the C.C. are one and the same?? Would you agree that Protestantism is one of the major movements within Christianity, stemming from the 16th century? Was Martin Luther a German monk, theologian, university professor, priest, and church reformer whose ideas started the Protestant Reformation and changed the course of Western civilization?
If you speak of the church as an ecclesiastical organization, none existed when Jesus spoke those words.
Yes.
You are referring to Matthew 16 and 18? If so, then I agree with you!!! However, Jesus’ One Church, as an ecclesiastical organization, was eventually established; when did this occur?
Why is it a big deal?? I would welcome you in the church I serve. It isn’t we Lutherans – at least not all of us – who shut the door.
As a practicing catholic, you would welcome me into your church? Wow, that sure is refreshing, and I’m not surprised based on your other posts; you are a good man and no doubt a wonderful Pastor!!!
That argument is a
reductio ad absurdum. Are you saying that Lutherans have dropped baptism, eliminated any of the commandments, etc.? If you did what you suggested above, I would say that – just on the basis of your comment on baptism – you would cease to be part of the church.
Absurd in what way? I never said Christians belonging to the Lutheran church dropped baptism

; where did you get that idea from? The C.C. and the E.O.C. has 7 sacraments; the multifarious protestant churches have 2 sacraments; is that a correct assessment? If the protestant churches can drop the Eucharist, which was believed by everyone since Pentecost, as baptism was, then I should be able to drop baptism, and still believe that my new church is a part of Jesus’ Body; is that an equitable assessment?
I think, too, that your reference to
sola scriptura shows an ignorance of good Lutheran teaching. That’s not to say that you haven’t heard Lutherans express a poor understanding of it as well.
Perhaps you are right!
Sola scriptura simply means that scripture is the ultimate authority, the norm that norms all other norms.
Scripture as the ultimate authority…the final benchmark for Christianity has divided Jesus’ One church; If it didn’t then why all the division, segregation and estrangement within the non-Catholic world? I simply cannot agree with your supposition, I’m afraid, but that’s cool; to each their own!

Viewing scripture as the ultimate authority is the very reason why I came back to the C.C.; I was never really gone in spirit!
If that were the case, then why did Jesus confer authority/power onto His One church, AND NOT THE HOLY BIBLE?

–which was infused with said authority/power on Pentecost by the Holy Spirit, in perpetuity to teach everything Jesus commanded? I’m not saying that the Holy Bible isn’t an infallible, supernatural, authoritative treasure trove; I’m saying that the Holy Bible is an infallible, supernatural, authoritative treasure trove, thanks to the C.C.! When people were arguing over which scrolls were apostolic and which scrolls were not, what did they do? They took this unresolvable issue to Jesus’ One church! The C.C. via the power of the Holy Spirit settled the matter once and for all in 393 AD; why should things be any different today? No C.C…no Holy Bible!
Jesus built a church, and, incontrovertibly, selected and charged certain individuals to be His witnesses in His stead, starting in Jerusalem, throughout Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth, upon receiving “power” from the Holy Spirit, circa 33 AD, not circa 1500 AD… to make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the holy Spirit,
teaching them to observe all that Jesus commanded… to be authoritative minister of the good news, 300 years before the good news was codified/canonized; the U.S. isn’t even 300 years old; that is a very long time! He gave His church sinful, fallible delegates the authority to do the preceding and we can trust His established church to teach and properly interpret the Holy Bible because she codified/canonized the Holy Bible, and is being guided by God! If we cannot trust the bride to properly interpret the Bible then we cannot trust the Bible; is that a fair assessment?
Do you believe that the Constitution of the U.S. is the ultimate authority, the norm that norms all other norms? I do! However, the body of people at the various conventions/councils that codified the US Constitution, the national framework of government, is the benchmark, not the constitution. By itself, it’s just a collection of decrees which would surely be violated if left in the hands of just anyone, and the same applies to the Bible! People with authority breath life, order and structure into these documents; remove this authoritative body and chaos, anarchy and division would ensue, sadly, just as it has in the protestant world. Jesus’ established church is no different; that is why Jesus gave us a teaching Institution as per the bible, and not the Holy Bible. Once Jesus’ Bible was finally codified/canonized by the C.C., It became a written teaching tool, just as high school/college books are, just as long as there is a teacher to correctly impart the knowledge! However, unlike today, very few people owned this written teaching tool; they relied on Jesus’ One church for pastoral guidance and teaching, and this was the case for 1500 years, and still is in the C.C.; that is the very reason why she is still one and united, and has been for 2000 years! We take it to the church as per Matthew 18:17, not the Bible to resolve our issues vis-a-vis faith and morals!!!
It is not a denial that any other authorities exist, only that they are subject to, and subordinate to, scripture. Otherwise, we Lutherans would contradict ourselves when we proclaim the Lutheran Confessions to be true explications of the Gospel.
Continued…