Volume 71:3/4 The Metamorphosis of Confessional Lutheranism David P. Scaer ........................................................................ 203 Confessional Lutheranism in an Ecumenical World Carl E. Braaten ...................................................................... 219 Confessional Lutheranism in an Ecumenical World: A Missouri Synod Challenge Samuel H. Nafzger ................................................................... 233 Crossing Old Line Boundaries: Works of Lutheran Charity Matthew C. Harrison .............................................................. 251 So2a Fide: Luther and Calvin ............................................................................... Phillip Can. 26.5 Luther, Lutheranism, and the Challenges of Islam Adam S. Francisco .................................................................. 283 "The Noblest Skill in the Christian Church": Luther's Sermons on the Proper Distinction of Law and Gospel Robert Kolb .......................................................................... 301 The Argument over Women's Ordination in Lutheranism as a Paradigmatic Conflict of Dogma Arrnin Wenz ............................................................................. 319 Contemporary Spirituality and the Emerging Church John T . Pless .............................................................................. 347 Theological Observer .......................................................................... 364 The Consecration of the Bishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Siberia The Reception of the Llctlzeran Sewice Book "The God Squad: Towards a Common Religion Book Reviews ..................................................................................... 374 Books Received ..................................................................................... 382 Indices for Volume 7l ......................................................................... 391 Confessional Lutheranism in the Ecumenical World: A Missouri Synod Challenge Samuel H. Nafzger In the spring of 2004, a Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod (LCXIS) pastor doing graduate studies at General Theological Seminarq. in New York sent me a copt- of an essay he had written for the Anglican/Lutheran Historical Conference. The title of his paper was "The Ecumenical Agenda of The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod." IIe began this paper ivith these irords: Curious things happen whenever "ecumenism" and The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod are mentioned in the same breath. Eyebrows are raised. Laughter, registering everything from incredulity and sarcasm to exasperation and unease, can be heard. Invariably someone utters some form of "NOW, I've got to hear that!" Even more curious is the fact that ver? often these reactions arise from within the Synod's membership. The topic of this paper . . . produced some rather interesting reactions. One individual was rather astonished. "You mean there actually is an ecumenical agenda?" Another provided the gentle reminder that, unless the conference w7as considering composer John Cage, a blank sheet of paper would hardly qualify as acceptable, although it might be eminently readable. Still another posed the rather intriguing question, "How many w7ays can >-ou find to say the I\-ord 'Nof?"' An e-mail I received a couple of weeks ago while I was working on this presentation illustrates this point of view. Its author asked: In vieiv of Svnod's Constitution (Article 111, Sec. 1) why does the h~issouri Synod not consider the subject of Ecumenism to be a top priority? I have been a member of LC-MS congregations now for 01-er 75 ?ea;s, and there does not seem to be any interest at all in this subject, on the part of congregations, Districts, or the Synod as a whole. . . . I know ive have occasional talks and dialogues with the ELCA, but there Ed~vard 1. Callahan, "The Ecumenical Agenda of The Lutheran Church-hfissour~ Synod" (unpublisl~ed paper in the Commission on Theolop and Church Relations files, 2004) Snln~rel H. Nrrfz~eu is tl~e Esecutizle Director of the Co??zmissiol~ 0)7 nteol~gy rind Cilurciz ~elati;i?s qf Tl~e Lutheran Cllurch - Missouri Synod, St. Louis, Missouri. is no true emphasis on Ecumenism, and there are many in our Synod that wonder whv.2 It is also true, however, that not everyone agrees with the viewpoint expressed above. There are those who feel that the Missouri Synod has already gone overboard in its involvement in ecumenism. When it was announced in the Synod's official paper, Rie Rqorter, for example, that the LCMS had accepted an invitation to rejoin the Lutheran/Roman Catholic Dialogue in the USA, a layman from the Southeastern District of the Sqrnod sent me the following letter: Perhaps . . . the Catholics now see a glimmer of hope that they may drag some more Lutherans down the abyss with them as they have done with the ELCA. Before we go chasing after new doctrines, perhaps we should get our own house in order. . . . The message we have, the Catholics have already heard and rejected. I believe participation in this proposed round of discussions to be nothing more than an ego trip for LChlS e.~ecutiaes! In my opinion, you will be squandering the Lord's treasury if you spend one cent, or even one minute, on this endeavor, while there are so many true mission opportunities to the unchurched needing our support! Do I sound outraged? You bet I am.3 Each of these viewpoints is reflective of attitudes and positions regarding ecumenical endeavors not only of lay but also clergy members of the LCMS. These polar opposite positions on Missouri Synod involvement (or lack thereof) in ecumenical endeavors are indicative of the spectrum of views which are present in the Missouri Synod about ecumenism, views that 1 have sought to take into account as I worked on this assignment.' In order to address the challenge that "the world of ecumenism" poses for the Missouri Synod, which certainly wants to be a confessional Lutheran church, I believe that it would be most helpful if we first of all took a look at what the Lutheran Confessions have to say about the church and its unity.5 It will then be helpful if we sketch out the position of the 2 E-mail message to author, December 13,2006 (on file in the CTCR oftices). 3 Letter to the author, December 2, 2005 (on file in the CTCR offices); emphasis in the original. 4 This article was originally a paper delivered at the 2007 Symposium on the Lutheran Confessions in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The topic of this paper was assigned. All members of the Synod, which includes the congregations of the Synod, have signed its constitution. The Confessional article of the LCMS constitution says that every member of the Synod accepts without reservation "all the Syntbolical Books of the Nafzger: Confessional Lutheranism in the Ecumenical World 235 Missouri Synod on ecumenism as presented in the Synod's constitution, doctrinal statements, and resolutions, as well as consider what the Synod has actually done bj- way of involvement in ecumenical endeavors. Only then will it be possible to say sometlung about the nature of the challenge which the ecumenical world poses for the LCMS. I. The Lutheran Confessions on the Doctrine of the Church and Its Unity The Lutheran confessional writings do not explicitly address the topic of ecumenism. They do present a clear doctrine of the church, however, wklch, as Robert Preus has pointed out, is "well thought through,"hnd which lays out the theological foundation for the ecumenical endeavors of a confessional Lutheran church, and which does indeed talk about how to work for external unity in the church. The "one holy, catholic church," says Philipp Melanchthon in Augsburg Confession VII, is "the assembly of all believers" (CA VII, 1; German) or "the assembly of saints" (CA VII, 1; Latin). The Apology of the Augsburg Confession calls the church "a spiritual people. . . reborn through the Holy Spirit" (Ap VII and VIII, 14). Martin Luther, in the Large Catechism, states that the church is "a holy little flock and community of pure saints under one head, Christ" (LC 11, 5l), and in the Smalcald Articles he refers to the church as "holj- believers and 'the little sheep who hear the voice of their shepherd"' (SA 111, 12, 2). In so describing the church, the Lutheran confessors demonstrate their agreement with the understanding of the church and its unity presented in the Nicene Creed where it is confessed that we believe "in one holy, catholic, and apostolic church."' Evangelical Lutheran Church as a true and unadulterated statement and exposition of the Word of God." LCMS Constitution, art. 2, sec. 2. It is therefore to the writing5 contained in 771e Book of C~mcord that we must turn in order to see what confessional Lutheranism believes the Scriptures teach about the doctrine of the church and its unity. - Robert Preus, "The Basis for Concord," in Forrrluli~ .for Concord: Essnys (St. Louis: Cummission on Theolop and Church Relations, The Lutheran Church-Xlissouri Synod, 1977), 17. The inclusion of the three Ecumenical creeds in The Book of Concord provides a clear insight into the Lutheran confessors' understanding of ecumenism. Robert Kolb and Timothy U'engert, in the "Editors' Introduction to The Three Ecumcnical Creeds," state: "The compilers of the Book of Concord itself understood the Augsburg Confession as a creed or, using the Greek and Latin term they preferred, 'symbol' of their time, reflecting the same faith as found in the three ecumenical creeds. . . Inclusion of the ecumenical creeds in sixteenth-century books of docme dates back at least to the Ciirp~s doctrirlne Pirilippisiirrl of 1560. . . . Their inclusion underscored the deep convictioli Lest he be misunderstood in the Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Melanchthon not only says what the church is; he also confesses what it is . . not. The Apology expressly rejects the position of Roman Catholicism that the church consists of all those who profess the Christian faith ad who are also under the rule of legitimate pastors and the Roman Pope. According to Melanchthon and the Lutheran confessors, the church is not essentially a visible, tangible, entity or institution."e church is the assembly of believers, of those who truly have faith in their hearts in Jesus Christ. This understanding of the church and its unity leads the Lutheran coi~essors to make a fundamental distinction between what they referred to as the church properly speaking (proprie dicta), and the church broadly speaking (late dicta). Responding to Rome's rejection of the understanding of the church as "the assembly of the saints" (CA VII, I), Melanchthon writes: "We grant that in ths life hypocrites and evil people are mingled with the church and are members of the church according to the external association of the church's signs-that is, the Word, Confession of faith, and sacraments-especially if they have not been excommunicated" (Ap VII and VIII, 3). However, this does not mean, he continues, that the among Evangelical theologians that the Reformation, far from breaking with the ancient church, upheld and recovered the chief teachings of the universal Christian faith. Tluoughout the history of the church, people have witnessed to that gospel, as the creeds themselves bear testimony." In 771e Bwk of Coizcorii: n~e Co1!fe5sinn? qf the Et~~i~gelicnl Lufhernn Cllurch, ed. Robert Kolb and Timothy J. I.tTengert, tr. Charles Arand et al. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2000), 19. 3 Cf. Robert Bellarmine, who writes: "The church is an assembly of men, an assembly which is visible and perceptible to the senses just like an assembl! of the Roman citizeq, or the kingdom of France or the Republic of Venice." Di