C. F. W. Walther was the first president of The Lutheran Church—Missouri Synod, the President of Concordia Seminary, and the pastor of a number of parishes in St. Louis. The following is from an editorial he wrote for the predecessor of our periodical The Lutheran Witness:
Whenever the divine service once again follows the old Evangelical-Lutheran agendas (or church books), it seems that many raise a great cry that it is “Roman Catholic”: “Roman Catholic” when the pastor chants “The Lord be with you” and the congregation responds by chanting “and with thy spirit”; “Roman Catholic” when the pastor chants the collect and the blessing and the people respond with a chanted “Amen.” Even the simplest Christian can respond to this outcry: “Prove to me that this chanting is contrary to the Word of God, then I too will call it “Roman Catholic” and have nothing more to do with it. However, you cannot prove this to me.
If you insist upon calling every element in the divine service “Romish” that has been used by the Roman Catholic Church, it must follow that the reading of the Epistle and Gospel is also “Romish.” Indeed, it is mischief to sing or preach in church, for the Roman Church has done this also . . .Those who cry out should remember that the Roman Catholic Church possesses every beautiful song of the old orthodox church. The chants and antiphons and responses were brought into the church long before the false teachings of Rome crept in. This Christian Church since the beginning, even in the Old Testament, has derived great joy from chanting... For more than 1700 years orthodox Christians have participated joyfully in the divine service. Should we, today, carry on by saying that such joyful participation is “Roman Catholic”? God forbid!Therefore, as we continue to hold and to restore our wonderful divine services in places where they have been forgotten, let us boldly confess that our worship forms do not tie us with the modern sects or with the church of Rome; rather, they join us to the one, holy Christian Church that is as old as the world and is built on the foundation of the apostles and prophets. Der Lutheraner (Vol. 9, No. 24, p. 163, July 19, 1853)
I agree with you. The fact that the Catholic Church has strayed in many theological areas does not mean we need to reject the liturgical parts which the Lutheran church has often used. Only in areas where Mary and the saints are framed in a worship content need be rejected at once, Regarding Mary, the earthly mother of Our Lord, who never desired to be worshipped, the Protestant position has been to avoid mentioning her except in connection with the Nativity. We should at least, as Lutherans, remember to mention her in a sermon on occasion.
ReplyDeleteI would rather rejoice with Roman Catholics over the points of shared doctrine and practice that we possess and affirm the truths contained in the scriptures, and continue to address those points of doctrine and practice where we disagree than give up on the hope of one day being one Church again.
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