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The
Differences Between the ELCA and the LC-MS
A. L. Barry, President,
The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod
August 1997 will
be long remembered as an important time in the history of
the Lutheran church here in America. The Evangelical Lutheran
Church in America [ELCA] made a number of very significant
decisions during that month. It declared full communion with
three Reformed churches: the United Church of Christ, the
Reformed Church of America, and the Presbyterian Church-USA.
It based this decision on its opinion that there is no longer
essential disagreement between the ELCA and these Reformed
churches.
Furthermore, the
ELCA decided that the long-standing differences between Lutheranism
and the Roman Catholic Church over the question of how we
are saved have been resolved.
These decisions
have caused considerable confusion within the ELCA as well
as within our own church, The Lutheran Church—Missouri
Synod [LC-MS]. It has caused many people to wonder what the
differences are between the ELCA and the LC-MS, even though
our two churches both use the name "Lutheran."
The LC-MS
has a tremendous opportunity to make it very clear, both to
our own members, as well as to the world at large, what it
means to remain committed to the full truth of the Holy Scriptures
and the historic confessions of the Lutheran church. This
pamphlet is intended to offer a brief overview of the key
differences between the ELCA and the LC-MS. Hopefully, it will
help you understand these differences so that you will be
able to discuss them with others.
Our
Difference Over the Bible
Our differences over the authority of
the Lutheran Confessions
Our differences over what is necessary
for church fellowship
An opportunity for faithful clarity
Our
Difference Over the Bible
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The
LC-MS and the ELCA disagree about the nature and authority
of the Bible. While both of our churches profess allegiance
to the Reformation principle that Scripture alone is the supreme
authority for the church's doctrine and life, our two church
bodies have significant differences when it comes to putting
this principle into practice.
The LC-MS believes
that the Bible is actually the Word of God, and therefore,
is totally truthful, reliable and free from any error. We
believe that the Scriptures are the final standard by which
we must judge everything that we believe, teach and confess.
The ELCA, on the other hand, avoids making statements that
confess the full truthfulness of the Bible.
It holds that Scripture
is not necessarily always accurate or trustworthy in all its
details and parts. The ELCA tolerates and encourages methods
of interpreting the Scripture that presuppose that the Bible
contains error and is unclear about various doctrinal matters.
Our difference over the Bible explains other more visible
differences. For example, our churches disagree about the
ordination of women to the pastoral office, the issue of homosexuality
and the question of abortion. The LC-MS does not ordain women
to the pastoral office, while the ELCA does, in spite of the
fact that Holy Scripture clearly teaches otherwise.
The LC-MS unequivocally
teaches that homosexual behavior is intrinsically sinful because
it is contrary to God's Word. In love, we want to help the
person caught up in the homosexual life to repent of his sin
and receive God's forgiveness. The ELCA has been unable to
take a clear Biblical stand against homosexual behavior. It
also tolerates groups within its midst that openly advocate
the homosexual lifestyle both for clergy and laity. The LC-MS
has repeatedly condemned willful abortion as contrary to God's
clear commandment not to murder. The ELCA has not been able
to speak out clearly against abortion, and, sadly, even pays
for willful abortion procedures for members in its health
insurance plan.
While there are
other examples, these three serve to make the point that our
differences over the authority and reliability of God's Word
lie at the heart of the other differences between the ELCA
and the LC-MS.
Our
differences over the authority of the Lutheran Confessions
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Our
two churches also disagree about the authority of the historic
Lutheran confessional statements contained in The Book of
Concord. The LC-MS binds itself to the entire doctrinal content
of the 16th century Lutheran confessional writings. We agree
with the confessions of our church not merely insofar as they
agree with the Bible (a position which would allow individual
members to reject certain doctrines), but because these confessional
statements are in complete harmony with God's inspired and
inerrant Word. We therefore accept without reservation all
the confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church as a true
and unadulterated statement and exposition of the Word of
God, normative also for the church today.
The ELCA, on the
other hand, does not require that its church workers and congregations
pledge unqualified acceptance of the full doctrinal content
of the Book of Concord. The ELCA views the Lutheran Confessions
as historical expressions of the faith held to be true at
the time that they were written, but not necessarily as normative
standards for teaching and practice today.
Our
differences over what is necessary for church fellowship
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Given
its approach to the Holy Scriptures and the Lutheran Confessions,
it comes as no surprise that the ELCA would consider it possible
to enter into fellowship with churches that teach things that
are clearly contrary to the Word of God and the Lutheran Confessions.
These sorts of fellowship arrangements are a reflection of
the attitude that absolute truth is unable to be known, confessed
and asserted. This attitude is contrary to the confessional
principle of the Lutheran church that is characterized in
the Book of Concord with two very important phrases: "We
believe, teach, and confess" and "We reject and
condemn." These phrases reflect the Lutheran church's
firm belief that God's Word is clear, that it does assert
truth that is binding for all times and all peoples, and that
we are able with joy to confess and proclaim this truth.
The LC-MS believes
that the Bible requires full agreement in doctrine before
it is possible to join in altar and pulpit fellowship with
other churches (Rom. 16:17). On the other hand, the ELCA believes
that disagreement in important doctrinal truths does not prohibit
altar and pulpit fellowship with other churches.
A good example
of this attitude is found in the documents the ELCA used to
establish church fellowship with the three Reformed churches.
In these documents, it is admitted that "important theological
differences... remain between our two churches in such questions
as the understanding of the Lord's Supper and Christology."
These differences are viewed "not as disagreements that
need to be overcome, but as diverse witnesses to the one Gospel
that we confess in common."
What this means
is that the ELCA is willing to tolerate the Reformed church's
denial that Jesus Christ is really present in the consecrated
bread and wine of the Lord's Supper. The Reformed believe
Jesus is present only "spiritually" but not really
present in a miraculous manner in the bread and wine. Lutheranism
has never accepted the Reformed Church's denial of our Lord's
real presence in Holy Communion. The ELCA now claims that
the errors of the Reformed church regarding the Lord's Supper
and the doctrine of the person and work of Christ are acceptable
options. This has never before been the position of the Lutheran
church, and reveals a decided movement away from historic
Lutheranism on the part of the ELCA.
The ELCA's attitude
toward doctrine obscures the vital relationship that exists
between the saving Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ and all
other teachings of Scripture that are centered and rooted
in that Gospel—teachings our Lord Himself has given
to us to believe and to share with others (Matt. 28:20). The
ELCA position regarding church fellowship compromises Scripture's
clear mandate to confess and proclaim "the whole counsel
of God" (Acts 20:28)—in all its Gospel-centered
truth and purity.
An
opportunity for faithful clarity
[top]
All
Lutherans have a wonderful opportunity to wrestle with the
question of what it means to be a confessional Lutheran church
in this day and age. What does it mean to say that we embrace
the Holy Scripture as the inerrant and inspired Word of God?
What teachings will therefore be rejected? What truths will
be raised high as positions that can never be compromised
or bargained away for the sake of external church unity? What
does it mean to say we agree unconditionally with the Lutheran
Confessions as pure expositions of the Word of God? Given
this unqualified subscription to the Lutheran Confessions,
what issues are non-negotiable and can never be surrendered
or given up by Lutherans who wish to remain genuinely confessional
Lutherans? What makes for true church union? Is "agreeing-to-disagree"
an appropriate attitude for Lutherans when it comes to establishing
church fellowship?
The differences
between our two churches are a source of great sadness for
the LCMS. We take no pleasure in talking about these differences.
We wish that our two churches could share a common confession
of what it means to be Lutheran. It is important that the
members of LCMS congregations have a clear picture of why
our two churches are not in fellowship. Knowing the basic
differences between our two churches will help us talk with
our ELCA friends and family members in a loving and kindly
manner. |