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MaryT777
Guest
I meant catholic creeds in my creed post. Small C as in universal as well.When we say " catholic ", it means universial.
I meant catholic creeds in my creed post. Small C as in universal as well.When we say " catholic ", it means universial.
Traditional Roman Catholics and Anglicans do, also on Trinity Sunday as has been the practice in mediaeval times. Eastern Christians (Catholic or Orthodox) do not. We must remember that the Athanasian Creed basically embraces the filioque (“The Holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Son; neither made, nor created, nor begotten; but proceeding.”), so naturally the Eastern Christians would not accept it.The ecumenical or universal creeds include the Athanasian Creed [named after St. Athanasius] that Lutheran profess on the Feast of the Holy Trinity. Do Roman Catholics, Angilcan, Orthodox also include this long creed in worship?
I must admit that the recitation of the Athanasian creed can be tediousTraditional Roman Catholics and Anglicans do, also on Trinity Sunday as has been the practice in mediaeval times. Eastern Christians (Catholic or Orthodox) do not. We must remember that the Athanasian Creed basically embraces the filioque (“The Holy Ghost is of the Father and of the Son; neither made, nor created, nor begotten; but proceeding.”), so naturally the Eastern Christians would not accept it.![]()
So do some adults.I must admit that the recitation of the Athanasian creed can be tediousIt is so long and minutely detailed; the kids get bored.
I must admit that the recitation of the Athanasian creed can be tediousIt is so long and minutely detailed; the kids get bored.
I reluctantly agree. As detailed a statement of doctrine as it may be, reciting it leaves you rather winded. I suppose that’s why it never really caught on in the other denominations.So do some adults.
Jon
It is easy to chant the Athanasian creed with help from the choir.I reluctantly agree. As detailed a statement of doctrine as it may be, reciting it leaves you rather winded. I suppose that’s why it never really caught on in the other denominations.
It’s amazing, isn’t it? It’s the longest of the three creeds, but it achieves this feat by simply focusing on the Holy Trinity and the Person of Christ. Only the last four sentences cover other elements of the faith. It stands testament to the kinds of challenges to the doctrine of the Trinity that the Church must have faced so early on in its history.
If we thought this was tiring, it might interest us to know that prior to the reforms of the Divine Office in 1960, the Athanasian Creed was also recited during the Early Morning Prayer of Sundays After Pentecost and Sundays After Epiphany as well. I’ll settle for once a year, thanks.![]()
Thank God He gave us antiphonal forms.It is easy to chant the Athanasian creed with help from the choir.
So if he says that creed on Sunday, why not believe in Apostolic Succession?Yet he confesses that “One Holy catholic and **Apostolic **Church” every week.
Jon
Well, that’s only if they want to come into communion, but there are several denominations of Lutherans. The synods that are likely to come into communion with the Church tend to be the traditional ones that do not recognise female ordination to begin with. Those will have no issue with discarding female ordinations.For all the Lutheran Synods that ordain women, they would have to do away with that. That might make it a bit sticky.
Very true. I do see it as Synod comming into full communion but rather more on a individual level. I could be wrong.Well, that’s only if they want to come into communion. There’s a reason why there are several denominations of Lutherans. Anyway, the synods that are likely to come into communion with the Church tend to be the traditional ones that do not recognise female ordination to begin with. If a synod is ordaining women, it speaks volumes of their (lack of) respect for Church and Biblical Tradition, so I wouldn’t expect that they would be itching to join an even more traditional Catholic Church.![]()
The confessions do support AS.So if he says that creed on Sunday, why not believe in Apostolic Succession?
but many Synods do not. Why?The confessions do support AS.
Jon
Our church came to America because a Calvinist price was forcing a choice on us: become Reformed, or die.but many Synods do not. Why?
In Synods that have moved away from orthodoxy anyway, I suppose it’s simply easier to ignore AS rather than attempt to maintain it.but many Synods do not. Why?
Yes, the reaction to the German union of Lutheran and Reformed Christians in the 1800’s did trigger resentment among segments of both denominations. The formation of the Missouri Synod is a result.Our church came to America because a Calvinist price was forcing a choice on us: become Reformed, or die.
We rebelled against him, and we lost everything in the move, including our Bishops.
This is also why our church frowns on most forms of eccuminiusm - as historically it meant being killed or converting.
Sadly, the examples from the ELCA leadership give us even more cause to be cautious.thus the ELCA commitment to ecumenism.
I don’t know about many. The PorVoo conf. in Europe has it through the Anglicans, and the ELCA claims it through the Episcopal Church. It is true, however, that some Lutherans either don’t or just don’t see any value in it.but many Synods do not. Why?
I don’t want to get into an inter-Lutheran feud on a Roman Catholic site and repeat the insults hurled at one another on Lutheran websites. Surfeit is to say, that Lutherans no longer divide themselves in the 21st Century, thank God.The leadership of the ELCA will never give up their ordination of women and practicing homosexuals ( see www.herchurch.org ), and it’s Altar & Fellowship with the Reform Churches ( UCC, PSA, Moravian Church, Methodist Churches and The Episcopal Church ). All these Churches ordain women and homosexuals and they have the same social gospel. This is why my wife and I jumped ship to the LC-MS and never been happier at our confessional church. The LC-MS has problems, but nothing like the ELCA. One thing, in all the ELCA churches that we belonged, they could do liturgy, but their sermons were all screwed up.