Thank your for the reply.
By this definition, there is no such thing as a sacrament then, according to most churches I have ever attended. According to those churches, there is no forgiveness of sins outside of confessing to God.
Well, I don't know that we can say that categorically. As we've already discussed, one is saved by Faith. But we do fall and sin in our lifetimes, for which we want God's reassurance of his forgiveness. The sacraments are not short cuts to salvation or a substitute or replacement for saving Faith. But they do convey God's forgiveness to the recipient just as they give grace for daily living. FWIW, this question has been put to theologians many times and they do not see any contradiction.
I have generally been taught that communion and baptism are the only things instituted by Christ.
That is indeed what most churches say.
But there was no specific teaching that they were the means to forgive sins.
Ah, but if you read the verses in Scripture that deal with each of them, you will find it mentioned.
Whether or not grace was imparted was never discussed, that I can recall.
Not by that word, but Christians have long believed that blessings accompany the reception of them and that the way Christ instituted each of them suggests this.
I realize that some of this is a grey area. It's always been that way with Christians, too. While Baptism and the Lord's Supper have been recognized by the church since the beginning, the exact standing and meaning of them and other similar observances has been a hot topic ever since.
We can see that on the forums here. There are fewer subjects more nit-picked than the meaning and administration of Baptism and the Holy Communion, and that's to say nothing of the other one, five, or thirty acts that someone or other in Christian history has called a "sacrament."
Would that be correct then? There are no sacraments in the evangelical church?
Virtually every Evangelical church recognizes two sacraments, although some of them prefer to call them "ordinances."
There are only two well-known churches out of tens of thousands of Protestant churches that DO NOT consider these two (Baptism and the Supper) to be sacraments or ordinances: the Quakers and the Salvation Army. Throw in the Unitarians, too, if you wish, but most people don't consider the Unitarians to be Protestant any longer.
As I said in my last post, I am guessing that the Lutheran church would regard Baptism and the Eucharist as sacraments?
Absolutely. There's no question about it.