No. Christ was the founder of the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church, of which Lutherans are members.
Hi Jon,
I think everyone is aware that this is generally the claim as made by the Lutheran church, or more accurately, the various competing and conflicting Lutheran communions, some of which will not even commune with each other. However, as you know but failed to mention, this is not the position of the Catholic Church, which happens to disagree with this claim.
Lutherans and all other Protestants are held by the Church to be in ‘imperfect union’ with the Church that Christ established at Pentecost, but not in complete union. We hold you to be completely Christian, but not in possession of the ‘fullness of the Truth’.
You claim that Luther did not start your church? The church that you attend has a sign out on the street which says somewhere in the text “Lutheran”, signifying that you are to at least some degree, followers of the doctrines taught by Martin Luther. Your hymnals and your church bulletin also identify your congregation as being “Lutheran”. I would also suggest to you that nowhere, and I do mean nowhere, in the official documents of your denomination or of your local congregation, will the term ‘Evangelical Catholic’ to found to designate the identity of your church. That is something that you and others have personally adopted as an individual identity.
You claim that Lutherans are members of the ‘One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church’, which of course demands a very much watered down definition of the phrase, one which allows for a plethora of competing and conflicting communions to be included, all of them potentially teaching contradictory doctrines. This makes a mockery of the term “One” in the above phrase.
The Catholic Church was begun by Christ at Pentecost. The Lutheran denominations were begun by Martin Luther AFTER he was excommunicated by that Church. With Luther’s excommunication, he was cut off from the Apostolic Succession which ties the Catholic Church back to the Apostles. Your particular communion does not even claim to have Apostolic Succession in the way that a few Lutheran communions wrongfully do. Their claim makes a mockery of the whole concept of Apostolic Succession. One of the most important aspects of Apostolic Succession is that, when properly held, it insures the continuation of the doctrinal teachings of the Apostles.
The claim of those Lutheran communions in regards to their supposed Apostolic Succession are with the full admission that their doctrinal teachings are radically different than the Church from which they supposedly ‘obtained’ their ‘Succession’. It is a claim which doesn’t take too much thought to identify as patently false.
The same can be said of your claim that Lutherans are part of the “One Holy Catholic and Apostolic” Church. You can’t be “One” unless you are actually “One” in faith, in doctrine, in the fundamental beliefs of the faith. You can’t be “One” and decide to make significant alterations to the Holy Sacraments or a number of other elements of the faith, such as Sola Scriptura, among many others.
Your communion calls itself by the name Lutheran, in part as an indication that it was Martin Luther who was the originator of much of what differentiates its teachings from those of the Catholic Church. BTW I know all about how Luther didn’t want a church named after him and that is not at all the point here.
If Lutherans should be considered to part of the “One”, then this would open the Church up to the claims of ALL whose founders have been excommunicated and many who were not. The Arians, Montanists, the Pelagians and the whole of the heretical alphabet soup would have claims that they believe just as much as you do to being in the “One”, and with exactly the same justification.
Luther’s excommunication meant that he no longer had the sanction of the Church that actually did have that so important Apostolic Succession. What he did from that point on he did completely on his own, as one who was outside of the “One”. As such, the communion that he founded independent of the “One” is not OF the “One”.
As Always, God Bless You Jon, Topper