- Dec 8, 2007
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hmmm, this is all very new to me
I thought Lutherans rejected the idea of Transubstantiation whole heartedly
also, some Lutherans have women priests
I know not all do, but the Lutheran Churches supported by the States in the Nordic countries all have women priests and the ELCA has women priests, is not the ELCA the biggest Lutheran Church in the USA?
There in lies the issue.
Even in the LCMS (the second largest Lutheran Chruch in the USA) and LCC where female clergy are not an issue, where same sex unions are not an issue, where pro-life/pro-choice is not an issue (as it is between the CC and the ELCA), there are still the issues of the use of the doctrine of Transubstantiation to describe the real presence; Papal authority and Papal infallibility.
Until all of these issues affecting the ELCA are resolved, inter-communion is only a utopian dream; while the LCMS/LCC seem to have a leg up on the moral, ethical and Theological issues that separate the ELCA and the Catholic Church, we understand that we are still a very long way off from sharing fellowship of the Altar. There are, however, many other ways that we can cooperate regarding society and the world. One example I gave above, would be to stand together on issues such as female ordination, same sex unions and Pro-life. On these things the LCMS/LCC and the CC are already on the same page, and we are already supporting each other publicly in these matters.
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