What's a Lutheran?

While there are a variety of
ways one could answer this question, one very important answer is simply
this, "A Lutheran is a person who believes, teaches and confesses the
truths of God’s Word as they are summarized and confessed in the Book of
Concord." The Book of Concord contains the Lutheran confessions of
faith. They are available to for you to read at
BookofConcord.org Let’s take a look at the various items
contained in the Book of Concord and then we will talk about why the
Lutheran Confessions are so important for what it means to be a
Lutheran.
What are the
Ecumenical Creeds?
The three ecumenical creeds in the Book of Concord
are the Apostles’ Creed, the Nicene Creed and the Athanasian Creed. They
are described as "ecumenical" [universal] because they are accepted by
Christians worldwide as correct expressions of what God’s Word teaches.
What is the
Augsburg Confession and
Apology of the Augsburg Confession?
In the year 1530, the Lutherans were required to
present their confession of faith before the emperor in Augsburg,
Germany. Philip Melanchthon wrote the Augsburg Confession and it was
read before the imperial court on June 30, 1530. One year later, the
Lutherans presented their defense of the Augsburg Confession, which is
what "apology" here means. It too was written by Philip Melanchthon. The
largest document in the Book of Concord, its longest chapter, is devoted
to the most important truth of the Christian faith: the doctrine of
justification by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone.
What are the
Small and
Large Catechisms?
Martin Luther realized early on how desperately
ignorant the laity and clergy of his day were when it came to even the
most basic truths of the Christian faith. Around 1530, he produced two
small handbooks to help pastors and the heads of families teach the
faith.
The Small Catechism and the Large Catechism are
organized around six topics: the Ten Commandments, the Apostles’ Creed,
the Lord’s Prayer, Holy Baptism, Confession, and the Sacrament of the
Altar. So universally accepted were these magnificent doctrinal
summaries by Luther, that they were included as part of the Book of
Concord.
What are the
Smalcald Articles and the
Treatise on the Power and Primacy of the Pope?
In 1537, Martin Luther was asked to prepare a
statement of Lutheran belief for use at a church council, if it was
called. Luther’s bold and vigorous confession of faith was later
incorporated into the Book of Concord. It was presented to a group of
Lutheran rulers meeting in the town of Smalcald. Philip Melanchthon was
asked to expand on the subject of the Roman pope and did so in his
treatise, which also was included in the Book of Concord.
What is the
Formula of Concord?
After Luther’s death in 1546, significant
controversies broke out in the Lutheran Church. After much debate and
struggle, the Formula of Concord in 1577 put an end to these doctrinal
controversies and the Lutheran Church was able to move ahead united in
what it believed, taught and confessed. In 1580, all the confessional
writings mentioned here were gathered into a single volume, the Book of
Concord. Concord is a word that means, "harmony." The Formula of Concord
was summarized in a version known as the " Epitome"
of the Formula of Concord. This document too is included in the Book of
Concord.
What is the connection between the
Bible and the Confessions?
We confess that, "The Word of God is and should
remain the sole rule and norm of all doctrine" (FC SD, Rule and Norm,
9). What the Bible asserts, God asserts. What the Bible commands, God
commands. The authority of the Scriptures is complete, certain and
final. The Scriptures are accepted by the Lutheran Confessions as the
actual Word of God. The Lutheran Confessions urge us to believe the
Scriptures for "they will not lie to you" (LC, V, 76) and cannot be
"false and deceitful" (FC SD, VII, 96). The Bible is God’s "pure,
infallible, and unalterable Word" (Preface to the BOC).
The Lutheran Confessions are the "basis, rule, and
norm indicating how all doctrines should be judged in conformity with
the Word of God" (FC SD RN). Because the Confessions are in complete
doctrinal agreement with the written Word of God, they serve as the
standard in the Lutheran Church to determine what is faithful Biblical
teaching, insofar as that teaching is addressed in the Confessions.
What is the main point of the Lutheran
Confessions?
The Lutheran Reformation was not a "revolt," but
rather began as a sincere expression of concern with the false and
misleading teachings, which, unfortunately, even to this very day,
obscure the glory and merit of Jesus Christ. What motivated Luther was a
zealous concern about the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Here is how the
Lutheran Confessions explain what the Gospel is all about:
Human beings have not kept the law of God but
have transgressed it. Their corrupted human nature, thoughts, words,
and deeds battle against the law. For this reason they are subject
to God’s wrath, to death and all temporal afflictions, and to the
punishment of the fires of hell. As a result, the Gospel, in its
strict sense, teaches what people should believe, namely, that they
receive from God the forgiveness of sins; that is, that the Son of
God, our Lord Christ, has taken upon Himself the curse of the law
and borne it, atoned and paid for all our sins; that through Him
alone we are restored to God’s grace, obtain the forgiveness of sins
through faith and are delivered from death and all the punishments
of our sins and are saved eternally. . . . It is good news, joyous
news, that God does not want to punish sin but to forgive it for
Christ’s sake (FC SD, V, 20).
What is a "confessional" Lutheran?
The word "confession" is used in a variety of ways,
but when we speak of a "confessional" Lutheran we mean a Lutheran who
declares to the world his faith and most deeply held belief and
conviction, in harmony with the documents contained in the Book of
Concord. You will catch the spirit of confessional Lutheranism in these,
the last words written in the Book of Concord:
Therefore, it is our intent to give witness
before God and all Christendom, among those who are alive today and
those who will come after us, that the explanation here set forth
regarding all the controversial articles of faith which we have
addressed and explained–and no other explanation–is our teaching,
faith, and confession. In it we shall appear before the judgment
throne of Jesus Christ, by God’s grace, with fearless hearts and
thus give account of our faith, and we will neither secretly nor
publicly speak or write anything contrary to it. Instead, on the
strength of God’s grace, we intend to abide by this confession (FC
SD, XII, 40).
What is an "unconditional
subscription" to the Confessions?
Confessional Lutheran pastors are required to
"subscribe" unconditionally to the Lutheran Confessions because they are
a pure exposition of the Word of God. This is the way our pastors, and
every layman who confesses his belief in the Small Catechism, is able
with great joy and without reservation or qualification to say what it
is that he believes to be the truth of God’s Word.
Dr. C. F. W. Walther, a significant Lutheran theology
and church leader in the 19th century, explained the meaning of an
unconditional confessional subscription in words as clear and poignant
today as they were then:
An unconditional subscription is the solemn
declaration which the individual who wants to serve the church makes
under oath that he accepts the doctrinal content of our Lutheran
Confessions, because he recognizes the fact that they are in full
agreement with Scripture and do not militate against Scripture in
any point, whether the point be of major or minor importance; and
that he therefore heartily believes in this divine truth and is
determined to preach this doctrine.
So what is it to be a Lutheran?
Being a Lutheran is being a person who believes the
truths of God’s Word, the Holy Bible, as they are correctly explained
and taught in the Book of Concord. To do so is to confess the Gospel of
Jesus Christ. Genuine Lutherans, confessional Lutherans, dare to insist
that "All doctrines should conform to the standards [the Lutheran
Confessions] set forth above. Whatever is contrary to them should be
rejected and condemned as opposed to the unanimous declaration of our
faith" (FC Ep. RN, 6). Such a statement may strike some as boastful. But
it is not; rather, it is an expression of the Spirit-led confidence that
moves us to speak of our faith before the world To be a confessional
Lutheran is to be one who honors the Word of God. That word makes it
clear that it is God’s desire for His church to be in agreement about
doctrine, and to be of one mind, living at peace with one another ( 1
Cor. 1:10;
2 Cor. 13:11). It is for that reason that we so treasure the
precious confession of Christian truth that we have in the Book of
Concord. For Confessional Lutherans, there is no other collection of
documents, or statements or books that so clearly, accurately and
comfortingly presents the teachings of God’s Word and reveals the
Biblical Gospel as does our Book of Concord. Hand-in-hand with our
commitment to pure teaching and confession of the faith, is, and always
must be, our equally strong commitment to reaching out boldly with the
Gospel and speaking God’s truth to the world. That is what "confession"
of the faith is all about, in the final analysis. Indeed, "It is
written: 'I believed; therefore I have spoken.' With that same spirit of
faith we also believe and therefore speak" (2
Cor. 4:13). This is what it means to be a Lutheran.
For Further Study:
Robert Preus,
Getting into the Theology of Concord: A Study of the Book of Concord
(St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1977).
David Scaer, Getting
into the Story of Concord: A History of the Book of Concord
(St. Louis, Concordia
Publishing House, 1977). |