Why do lutherans call themselves evangelical catholics?

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First, where does she say this, and secondly, which churches were she talking about? As I’ve said countless times now, we have to take each particular Church on its own terms.

It follows logically. The Church of Norway lost its apostolic succession, but regained it from Anglican bishops who had regained it from Old Catholic bishops recognised as valid by Rome.
I thought anglican and episcopal priests did not have valid orders either.
 
History didn’t stop in 1896.
They don’t but if the Norway Church Priests were ordained by someone in the real Old Catholic they do have valid orders. The women don’t and they are in danger of losing that apostolic succession if the women become more prominent.
 
We do not have an archbishop. She has a sort of figure head position, which was created in 2012.

Yes, since it is codified in our Canon Law. If a female priest were to come to my parish and ask to celebrate the Eucharist on, say, a sunday, I could refuse to let her do that. It is probably the result of a compromise like the compromises made when the Church of England allowed female priests in 1992. If those compromises hadn’t been made, in the 1960s, there wouldn’t have been any female priests in the Church of Norway back then, but now there wouldn’t have been room for those who are opposed. Remember that the Church of Norway is an established Church, and thus have to take into consideration also ‘conservative’ (i.e. tradtional and classic) Christianity.

In fact one of the people who have fought strongest to keep these codes of practices in force is one of the female bishops, because, as she has said, if they were to be removed, there would be a mass exodus in her diocese of faithful priests and of the laity who actually goes to Church. She has said that in the small towns and villages, many are opposed, and they shouldn’t be forced. It is, in the end, a question of sacramental assurance.

Yes.

Yes. Not the way he is present in the Eucharist, anyhow.

No. And we do not have an archbishop.
Thanks for the thorough reply KjetilK.

We differ significantly even though our national bishops/ dioceses are in full communion. I may have differences of opinion with the ELCA but I yield to the authority/ spiritual guidance of the my presiding bishop [a woman]. That is why I am proud to be in full-communion with nearly all Lutherans worldwide and many Anglicans. Ironically, these are the synods/ dioceses that follow apostolic succession.

I thought Tor Singsaas was the archbishop of Norway since he is bishop of Nidaros which is an archdiocese. Without an archbishop/ presiding bishop, who supervises the bishops of the 11 dioceses in Norway? Am I correct that priests in Norway are paid by the national government? Are gender issues covered as a human right in Norway?

My sense is that if an ELCA pastor voiced such beliefs regarding sacramental authority absence for females, that he/she would be disciplined. I understand in Sweden that dissent against female clergy is grounds for defrocking.
 
Most likely he is referring to the infusion of Old Catholic orders, after the Agreement of Bonn/1931, and of PNCC orders, similarly, after 1946, into Anglicanism, through agreements of full intercommunion between those Communions. Probably.

GKC
 
Most likely he is referring to the infusion of Old Catholic orders, after the Agreement of Bonn/1931, and of PNCC orders, similarly, after 1946, into Anglicanism, through agreements of full intercommunion between those Communions. Probably.

GKC
Thanks GKC. You never cease to amaze me with the knowledge you have on this topic.

I am not sure if old catholics are still in communion with Rome today.
 
Thanks GKC. You never cease to amaze me with the knowledge you have on this topic.

I am not sure if old catholics are still in communion with Rome today.
No they are not in communion they left the Catholic Church at Vatican I. Bishops left therefore when bishops even in schism ordain priests they have valid orders much like the Orthodox priest.
 
Most likely he is referring to the infusion of Old Catholic orders, after the Agreement of Bonn/1931, and of PNCC orders, similarly, after 1946, into Anglicanism, through agreements of full intercommunion between those Communions. Probably.

GKC
Are there Anglicans who can trace their orders back to the Old Catholics?
 
How early, Annie? Nicea doesn’t seem to imply papal mandate:

Jon
I don’t know if the issue came up before Zosimus but this is the first that I know of.

Pope Zosimus

When Pope Innocent died in March 417, his successor, Zosimus, made a major change in the Church in Gaul. On March 22, he wrote to the bishops of Gaul, granting extraordinary privileges to Patroclus, bishop of Arles. “It has pleased the Apostolic See,” the pope wrote, that clerics of any rank coming to Rome from Gaul must have litterae formatae, canonical letters of recognition from Patroclus, otherwise they “absolutely cannot be received by us.” The pope added that he had informed all quarters of this order, “so that all regions may realize that what we establish is altogether to be observed,” warning: “if anybody attempts to violate these beneficially established constitutions, let him know that, of his own volition he is separated from our communion.” [PL 20: 642-3]

The next paragraph gave the metropolitan of Arles, “as he has always had,” authority regarding ordinations in three different provinces: the Viennoise, and First and Second Narbonnaise. Whoever dares to give or receive ordination in these provinces without the consent of the bishop of Arles is deposed from the priesthood, Zosimus declared, asserting that he was confirming immemorial privileges held by the Church of Arles since the time of Trophimus, a bishop sent from Rome, from whose mission, attributed to the most distant antiquity, the Catholic faith had spread throughout Gaul. [PL 20: 644-5]

For decades, Arles had been growing in civil importance; it had even become the seat of an imperial prefecture. In the ecclesiastical hierarchy, Arles belonged to the province of Viennoise, whose metropolis was Vienne. The Council of Turin [c. 400] had proposed an arrangement in which each city-- Arles and Vienne-- would share metropolitan rights over the cities closer to its immediate vicinity. Now, thanks to Pope Zosimus, the see of Arles had secured the primacy in Gaul. [Cf. Mansi 3: 861]

In September, the pope disciplined two bishops ordained without the approval of Patroclus. Writing to bishops throughout Africa, Gaul and Spain, Zosimus, citing numerous irregularities, announced that the bishops, Ursus and Tuentius, were illicitly ordained and could not be admitted to communion. [PL 20: 661-5]

When Hilary, bishop of Narbonne, wrote asserting his rights to ordain bishops in First Narbonnaise, the pope replied on September 26, 417. Citing the mission of St. Trophimus, Zosimus declared that the right to ordain bishops in Viennoise and First and Second Narbonnaise belonged to the bishop of Arles. Invoking the authority of the Apostolic See and his own recent “most evident definition,” Pope Zosimus, under pain of excommunication, deprived Hilary of the right of ordaining bishops in First Narbonnaise. [PL 20: 667-8]

Two other metropolitans incurred the pope’s displeasure: Proculus of Marseilles and Simplicius of Vienne. Zosimus wrote to their provinces in late September, outraged that Proculus, in denigration of the Apostolic See, had cited the authority of the Council of Turin and that Simplicius of Vienne had shown similar “impudence” by ordaining bishops in Viennoise. In the name of antiquity, for which the decrees of the Fathers required reverent observance, Pope Zosimus asserted that Proculus and Simplicius had violated the statutes of the Fathers and the reverence due to Trophimus, first metropolitan of Arles sent by the Apostolic See. On September 29, the pope wrote to Patroclus, reaffirming rights that Patroclus enjoyed in Gaul by the authority of the Apostolic See. [PL 20: 665 sq.]

In March 418, Pope Zosimus reaffirmed the extensive authority that Patroclus enjoyed “by pronouncement of the Apostolic See.” The pope also wrote to the clergy and people of Marseilles, entrusting them to the care of Patroclus until they received a new bishop. [PL 20: 673-5]

Meanwhile, answering a consultation from Hesychius, bishop of Salona, who in the pope’s words had called for “a precept of the Apostolic See,” Zosimus reminded him that candidates for orders, whether monks or laymen, must pass through the usual grades and canonical intervals. Surprised that the “statutes of the Apostolic See” had not reached Hesychius, Zosimus directed him to pass on these instructions to the bishops of the neighboring provinces, declaring that whoever ignored “the authority of the Fathers and of the Apostolic See” were subject to severe punishment, and even in danger of losing their rank. [PL 20: 670-73]
 
Thanks GKC. You never cease to amaze me with the knowledge you have on this topic.

I am not sure if old catholics are still in communion with Rome today.
They are not. And were not, since years before Apostolicae curae was issued. It’s complicated.

GKC
 
No they are not in communion they left the Catholic Church at Vatican I. Bishops left therefore when bishops even in schism ordain priests they have valid orders much like the Orthodox priest.
The situation with Old Catholics is a little more complicated than that, running back to the early 1700s. But what you say is so, as far as that goes.

GKC
 
Are there Anglicans who can trace their orders back to the Old Catholics?
Sure. Since the inter-communion agreements I mentioned, Anglican bishops have been (on such occasions as that happens) jointly consecrated by Anglican and OC bishops. And as the Anglican bishops proceeded about their episcopal affairs, consecrating and ordaining all over the place, the OC/PNCC lines spread. My late rector was ordained by a bishop who was himself consecrated by a bishop with Anglican/PNCC lines, received at his consecration in1962.

GKC
 
The situation with Old Catholics is a little more complicated than that, running back to the early 1700s. But what you say is so, as far as that goes.

GKC
Oh really?! Hmmm where can I read about this? We’re they actually in schism then or just threatening?

Annie
 
Sure. Since the inter-communion agreements I mentioned, Anglican bishops have been (on such occasions as that happens) jointly consecrated by Anglican and OC bishops. And as the Anglican bishops proceeded about their episcopal affairs, consecrating and ordaining all over the place, the OC/PNCC lines spread. My late rector was ordained by a bishop who was himself consecrated by a bishop with Anglican/PNCC lines, received at his consecration in1962.

GKC
And the Catholic Church doesn’t accept this? is a puzzlement.

Annie
 
And the Catholic Church doesn’t accept this? is a puzzlement.

Annie
I have no idea what the RCC says on the matter (or the intent, etc, etc. I do that a lot). But certainly, following the logic expressed in Ott/p.458, something would seem to be happening. But it’s not for me to say.

GKC
 
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