The Teaching Office Das Lehramt (De statu ecclesiastico sive de ministerio ecclesiastico) by Dr. theol. Adolf Hoenecke Director and Professor of the Seminary of the General Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan and other States in Wauwatosa, Wis. Published in his Ev.-Luth. Dogmatik 1909 Volume 4: 175-205 Doctrinal Thesis 1 The teaching office, by which we here understand the estate (Stand) of the ministers of the word, the pastors, is a divine institution. Remark: The preaching office (Predigtamt) can be spoken of abstracte (in abstract), that is, so as to mean the means of grace. The scripture itself does so, for example, in 2 Cor. 3:4-8, where the apostle Paul designates the law as the office of the letter but the gospel as the office of the Spirit. So the Augustana too speaks of the preaching office abstracte. Article V teaches: ^ÓTo obtain such faith God has instituted the preaching office, given gospel and sacrament, through which he, as through means, gives the Holy Spirit^Ô etc. The preaching office, however, can be spoken of concretely, by which one includes those who bear the office, that is, those who administer the office in abstracto. So the scripture itself speaks this way of the preaching office, for example, in 1 Cor. 1:17, Eph. 4:11. While at times it speaks (for example Ps. 68:11) of the office in both ways. We are dealing here with the preaching office considered concretely, that is, the office of ministering with the word (Dienstamt am Wort). The scripture teaches that the office considered thus concretely, just as the office considered abstractly, is a divine institution, or de iure divino (1 Cor. 12:28; 2 Cor. 5:18; Jer. 3:15; Joel 2:23). And indeed, the establishment of the office in the concrete sense is attributed not only to God in general, as in the last verse, but also of the individual persons (of the Godhead), of the Father (Heb. 1:1; Gal. 1:16), of the Son (Matt. 10:1; Luk 9:1; Matt. 28:19; Mk 16:15; Eph. 4:11; Jn. 20:21; 1 Cor. 1:17; 4:1-2; 2 Cor 5:20); of the Holy Spirit (Acts 20:28; 1 Cor. 12:4-6 - accordingly called ^Ódiakonia tou pneumatos^Ô). Quenstedt says, ^ÓGod is the author of the ministry, 1 - by promising teachers for the church (Jer. 3:15; 23:4; Joel 2:23); 2 - by giving what he promised (1 Cor. 12:28; 2 Cor. 5:18); 3 - by preserving the ministry until the end of the ages (Eph. 4:11); 4 - by executing the office of teaching Himself (Heb. 1:1); 5 - by providing the teachers of the church with the necessary gifts (2 Cor. 3:5).^Ô (1) We find the divine institution of the preaching office also in the concrete sense to be contrary to the view that the preaching office was a free office arising from the Christian spirit and was only an function (Tätigkeit) called an office. By this doctrine (of the divine institution) it is taught that: 1. The apostles were called to a true office by the Son of God. a. They were called (Matt. 10:1; Lk 6:13, where Christ gives the name ^Óapostle^Ô to them; Lk 9:1-10; Mk 6:7; Matt. 28:18-20; Mk 16:15) and truly established (eingesetzt) as apostles by the Son of God. b. It is explicitly called an office in Acts 1:17-25; Rom. 1:5: ^Ógrace and the office of apostle^Ô, from which it is clear that the office is not a mere product of the Christian spirit for then it would be contained in the word ^Ógrace^Ô and Paul would not have added ^Óand the office of apostle.^Ô From this addition the office appears as something existing which can be given to someone. Rom. 15:15-16 designates Paul as a servant of God, as given by God. He was also set in an office of ministry (Dienstamt) by God, which office already existed through divine institution. In 1 Cor. 9:17 (following his comments in verse 16) Paul says: ^ÓStill the office is commended to me.^Ô Here it is clear that Paul does not merely call his function an office for love of it and because he is thinking of his constant involvement with it. Rather, he recognizes an office established by God, which does not depend on his Christianity and his spiritual impulse (Geistestrieb) etc., but instead, in reality exists without all of that, through a divine institution. 2. God has given copious direction and (many) commands in regard to the relationship of Christians to the ministers of the word. For when God gives such commands and explains the transgression of these as sin, the concrete office, which these commands concern, can not rest upon a human institution or mere spiritual impulse, but rather must be de iure divino. The antithesis to the scriptural doctrine of the divine institution of the office in the concrete sense can be seen in part in the antithesis to the scriptural doctrine of the call. Still, those theories which claim that the concrete office of ministry in the word (Dienstamt am Wort) rests upon a human institution can here be called antitheses. In support of these ideas, a misunderstanding of Luther^Òs remarks concerning the universal priesthood and the priestly rights of all believers is produced, according to which believers are suited for the preaching office and are not in need first of the pope^Òs consecration in order to have a spiritual character.(2) Already Köstlin went this way. And Höfling especially defended him.(3) So it became common to put forward as genuine Lutheran doctrine that the preaching office exists only for the sake of good order. So Hase: ^ÓAccording to strict Lutheran doctrine the spiritual estate comes forth from the congregation (Gemeinde), which is entrusted with all the spiritual power of the church and this only for the sake of order.^Ô(4) Luthardt says: ^ÓProtestantism proceeds from the means of grace, which are given to the church (in the essential sense) and therefore require a common office of administration This is the office in the essential sense (which we call the office in abstracto) in distinction from its empirical reality (here we refer to the office in concreto), which is determined according to historical circumstances. In the first sense, namely the abstract sense meaning word and sacrament, the office is de iure divino, but in the second sense de iure humano.^Ô(5) Palmer says: ^ÓThat which is always necessary is an inner necessity (which Luther was obliged to explain as churchly order) which is based on universal human ethical grounds as much as it originates from the essential nature of the Christian congregation (Gemeinde), the church. This makes it necessary for the church, the congregation of saints in the Protestant sense, to establish the spiritual office from within itself.^Ô He judges as contrary to scripture the doctrine ^Óthat the spiritual office should be an unmediated, direct institution of Christ, indeed, that it is the decided will of the Lord that there be a true estate to which this office is entrusted.^Ô Further, ^Ówherever the New Testament speaks of the office you can not read in the idea of church government (kirchenregimentlichen Begriff) as 2 Cor. 3:7 shows.^Ô Palmer also maintains that the word ^Óoffice^Ô in the New Testament does not mean that which we call the preaching office, rather it refers to the word (of God) itself. In the text referred to by Palmer and others (2 Cor. 3:7) this is so but not in many others. For example, Rom. 11:13: ^ÓFor in as much as I am the apostle to the Gentiles, I want to praise my office.^Ô It would indeed be absurd if Paul would praise the word because he is an apostle. So also, in 1 Tim. 1:12 we can not understand the word ^Óoffice^Ô to mean the ^Óword.^Ô Paul says here: ^ÓAnd set in the office.^Ô It is clear that ^Óoffice^Ô is not the word itself. For where does the scripture say, ^Óset someone in the word^Ô? This also clearly shows that the office does not derive from the spiritual impulse of the apostle but rather is already outside of him, otherwise he could not come into it. This antithesis to the divine institution of the preaching office as an estate of the minister of the word calls forth strong opposition. But this opposition itself, on the other hand, again becomes an antithesis to the scriptural doctrine of the preaching office. This antithesis explains the church not as a congregation (Gemeinde) but as an institution (Anstalt). That which is built on the foundation is not souls but rather things: doctrines, orders, in a word, the material of the community (Flörke )(6). Among these things of the community is the spiritual office. It is not only commanded by God and not only an office of ministry for the administering of the grace of God through the means of grace, but rather it is in and of itself a means of grace. ^ÓWe have no intention of assigning to the office of the New Testament a place among the means of grace or among the sacraments in the wider sense. ... If it is not agreed that the holy office is to be set among the word of God, baptism, and the Lord^Òs Supper as in one group, then it would be unacceptable to use the name of the means of grace in the wider sense ... to designate the holy office. However, that the holy office like the gospel and sacrament indeed is a means to receive the Holy Spirit is nothing else than a spiritual fact.^Ô (Karl Lechler, ^ÓLehre vom neutestamentlichen Amt^Ô, 1857). Besides Flörke and Lechler, there are representatives of this romanizing school of thought who ultimately base the effectiveness of the true scriptural means of grace upon the office as a means of grace. Kliefoth, ^ÓAcht Buecher von der Kirche^Ô, 1854; Loehe, ^ÓKirche und Amt^Ô, 1851; Münchmeyer, ^ÓBericht ueber die Leipz. Konferenz^Ô, 1851, and ^ÓDas Dogma von der sichtbaren und unsichtbaren Kirche^Ô: Wucherer, ^ÓAusführlicher Nachweis, dass das ev. -luth. Pfarramt. .... goettlicher Stiftung sei.^Ô Doctrinal Thesis 2 No one can become a public minister of the word in any other way than through an external, legitimate call (vocatio legitima). Remark: God calls in part immediately (vocatio immediata, Mt. 10:1; Mk. 3:14; 1 Kings 17:2; Is. 6:8; Ez. 6:2; Mt. 4:21-22; 9:9; Acts 9:16 etc.), in part mediately (vocatio mediata), namely, through the church. Just like the immediate call the mediate call is also divine. Our dogmaticians prove that the mediate call is divine by showing that: 1. It is to be traced back to God (Ps. 68:12; Jer. 3:15; 1 Cor. 12:28; Eph. 4:11); 2. It is founded (sich stütze) on the apostles who were led by the Holy Spirit (Acts 14:23; 1 Tim. 4:14; 2 Tim. 1:6; 2:2; 1 Tim. 3:2; 1 Tim. 5:21). 3. It has God^Òs promise (1 Tim. 4, 14-16; 2 Cor. 3:6; Eph. 4:12). 4. It is based upon the right and the authority (Recht und Gewalt), which God himself has given to the church, and which the church made use of already at the time of the apostles. The proof in connection with the divine institution of the unique apostolic office and the ordered (ordentlichen) preaching office, which is essential to it and instituted at the same time, goes like this: 1. The ordered preaching office is the continuation, desired by God himself, of the unique office of the apostle, and it is a divine institution in and with the office of apostle. The divine institution of the concrete office of apostle is proven in the first thesis. A. It is, however, certain from scripture, that the ordered preaching office is essentially the same as the office of the apostle. Indeed: a. According to the institution. The apostles are servants and householders (Haushalter, stewards) (1 Cor. 4:1). Likewise the preachers, for 1 Cor. 4:6 concerns Paul and 5:1 concerns Apollo. Explicitly the scripture places the preachers as servants of Christ, workers etc. as equal to the apostles (1 Tim. 4:6; Col. 4:7; Phil. 2:25; 1 Pet. 5:1; 2 Thes. 1:1; 1 Cor. 1:1; James 1:1). b. According to duty The duty of the apostles is shepherding and the administration of the sacraments (John 21:15-17; Matt. 28:18ff.); The duty of the preachers is the same (Acts 20:28; 2 Tim. 1:13; Compare 2 Tim. 4:5 with 5:6). c. According to power The apostles are to rule in the church (2 Tim. 1:6), exercise oversight, uphold discipline etc. Likewise, the preachers have oversight (Acts 20:28; 1 Tim. 1:3), authority to teach (1 Tim. 4:11-12), commanded spheres of work (1 Tim. 4:11), ordinations (1 Tim. 4:14; 2 Tim. 2:2; 1 Tim. 3:1-7), teaching (1 Tim. 3:2), ruling (1 Tim. 3:5; cf. 5:17; Tit. 1:5; 1:7-9), to demand obedience (Heb. 13:17). d. According to goal. The preaching office has the same goal as the office of apostle, namely, salvation of souls (1 Cor. 3:5). B. The ordered preaching office is the continuation of the extraordinary office of apostle desired and ordered by God. Proof: a. Christ desires to always have servants, that is, preachers, teachers, bishops, and describes his church in no other way even until the last day (Matt. 19:28) than that the preaching office is to be found in it with preachers, whom he places (Matt. 22:3-4; 24, 45). In the last text, where the Lord still speaks to the disciples as stewards and servants, the topic is about servants whom he places. - Lk. 12:42-48, cf. 41. It is important that that in Luke 12:43 it is the Lord^Òs will that they be servants (such the apostles are named: Rom. 1:1; Gal. 1:10; Phil 1:1 along with the ordered preachers Phil. 1:1; Rev. 1:1; James 1:1), until he comes again. b. That Christ desires the ordered preachers who have the preaching office through a mediate call to be the continuation of the extraordinary office of the apostles for all time after the apostles until the last day is shown by the fact that he allows the rights and duties in regard to these preachers be established by the apostles. a. Duties - Paul enjoined the chief duties for the elders in Ephesus for the time after his departure (Acts 20:25-31; 1 Tim. 3:2-7). And indeed they are explicitly described as bound to give answer to the Lord and thereby also as those whom he had established and empowered (Heb. 13:17). b. Rights - In Hebrews 13:17, the chief right of the preachers is enjoined, namely, to demand obedience, and this with consideration to the time after the apostles (v. 7). Accordingly it is clear, that Christ himself desired the office and established it. c. The scripture clearly teaches that the apostles, just as they were established by the Lord, in the name of the Lord established others, and commissioned them to again establish others as servants and preachers. a1. Paul described himself as set in the office by the Lord as a preacher (2 Tim. 1:11). b1. Paul himself commended the office to others (2 Tim. 2:2; cf. v. 4; 15; 24; 4:5 where he speaks of the work and office of the preacher; see in addition 2 Tim. 1:11 where Paul calls himself a preacher.) c1. Paul commissions those to whom he has commended the office to commend it again to others (2 Tim. 2:2; 1 Tim. 5:22; Tit. 1:5 after which the description of the bishops follows as in 1 Tim. 3:1-7 according to which they are entirely the preachers of today.) d1. According to everything that has been said, the ordered preaching office of today is the continuation desired by God of the extraordinary office of the apostles and is essentially the same, just as the scripture also in many ways explicitly confirms: a. through the explanation that the churches are commended to the preachers (1 Pet. 5:2) and indeed not through ecclesiastical authority but by Christ. This is stated in verse 4 as the preachers are explained to be answerable to Christ as the chief shepherd and also to be under shepherds. b. through the explanation that the preachers are set in the church (Gemeinde) by the Holy Spirit. c. through the comparison of the preachers to the apostles (Col. 4:7; Phil. 2:25; 1 Cor. 1:1; 4:1; 1 Pet. 5:1). d. And this continuation should endure according to God^Òs ordinance until the last day. The proof is Matt. 28:19ff.: ^ÓI am with you always, until the end of the world.^Ô This is a promise of comfort, which can only imply: I am with you so that you can do that which I want done until my return. However, since the Lord promises help until the end for executing (the office), he also extends the command of executing the office until the end. 2. The mediate call, and indeed through the congregation (Gemeinde), is an ordinance established by God himself and solemnly confirmed as holy. A. Consider the first important calling, that of Matthias, which occurred through the congregation (Acts 1:15). Since the congregation chose, they thereby called. Peter laid the matter of calling before the members of the congregation (v. 15). They put forward candidates (v. 23) and through the lot which fell upon Matthias. And so he was added to the eleven present apostles. B. This election and calling appears in the scripture as something established. Peter says in verse 16: ^ÓThe scripture must be fulfilled.^Ô and that which must be fulfilled was: ^Óanother should receive his episcopate.^Ô For the execution of this ^Ómust^Ô, Peter gathered the congregation. And so the business of the congregation is included in that ^Ómust^Ô and is shown to us as something that is required by the scripture. Perhaps the assertion will be made: the entire thing was a purely human matter; God had chosen Paul as the twelfth. Against this we say: C. God solemnly confirmed the call of Matthias through the election of the congregation. On Pentecost the Holy Spirit fell on all the apostles for Peter was gathered with the eleven (v 14). So Matthias too is numbered with them. God himself also chose him as an apostle through his word. The twelve were apostles for the twelve tribes (of Israel) while Paul has apostle for the Gentile nations (Gal. 2:7-9). Further callings through the congregation are: Acts 6:2 - Election of the deacons, who are only an offshoot of the preaching office; Acts 13:1 - the setting apart of Paul and Barnabus; Acts 14:23 - ^Ócheirotonesantes^Ô, that is to allow to be chosen through the congregation; Acts 15:12ff. The conclusion is that God himself established and instituted in the church the calling through the congregation as an ordinance pleasing to him. Perhaps it will be asserted that Jesus however still called Paul immediately and he alone again establishes pastors. Contrary to this we say: a. Through his ordinance God does not bind his own hands, only ours. b. That another must be put into the place of Judas is clear from the scripture; however, that there should be another apostle to the Gentiles could not be known by the believers. c. One must take note how the establishment of the minister of the word was done by Paul. He established (ministers) where there was yet no congregation but wherever congregations were he did it through them (cheirotonesantes^Ô, Acts 14:23). 3. To call is a holy right of the congregation, granted by God. A. The preaching office as an office established by God is an office of stewardship over particular things, word and sacrament, but the original possessor of these things is the church. And it is the church which can give these over to someone for administration. If someone asks, who truly possesses the spiritual things which the preaching office administers, there are only two possible answers: the preacher as bearer of the office, the church or congregation. But concerning the preachers the scripture says that they are ministers (Diener) of God and also the congregation (Col. 1:25); but a servant is not a lord (2 Cor. 1:24; 1 Pet. 5:3) and not a possessor. But concerning the congregation the scripture says that it is the original possessor of all these things (Col. 1:18). Christ is according to verse 18 the head of the congregation; in whom is all fullness (v. 19) and therefore also in the congregation (Eph. 1:23). Paul calls himself a minister of this congregation and thus designates the congregation as lord and possessor. According to Ephesians 1:3 and 22-23, the Christians are blessed in Christ with heavenly goods (v. 3), with knowledge through preaching (v. 9 & 10). Christ is the head of the congregation (v. 22); the congregation is the fullness of him who fills all things and therefore the rich bearer and possessor of all goods (Eph. 4:4-12). The church is the body of Christ (v. 4). Christ has given her gifts (v. 8) and these gifts are the apostles, obviously not according to their persons but according to their preaching and their ministry overall. The church is the one given the gifts and the possessor of them. Israel herself certainly belongs to the church (Rom. 9:4) according to election, covenant and worship, law and promise. In Romans 15:27 Paul ascribes the spiritual things to the Christians as theirs. Paul says in 1 Cor. 3:21: ^ÓAll is yours.^Ô Paul says here: why do you name yourselves according to the persons and one boasts himself to be mine, another Apollo^Òs, as if the preaching were our good thing and possession which you first received with our persons. Everything is indeed yours from Christ. Conclusion: The preacher is only one who administers; the congregation is the possessor. B. What does the scripture say about the power to place preachers into office? a. It names the entire power and church authority the authority of the keys of heaven, and says that as much as the pastors (Matt. 16:19; John 20:22-23), the entire congregation (Matt. 18:18; 1 Cor. 5:12-13) has the keys. b. The scripture shows however that the pastors have the authority of the keys always first through a special call, but that the congregation has them beforehand, as a congregation, on account of their Christianity and also that it has the keys originally while the pastors have them in a derived fashion (abgeleiteterweise). Matthew 28:17-20 is proof. The congregation has the keys and indeed, according to verse 20, when gathered in Christ^Òs name, that is, according to their status of grace in the faith. Concerning the pastors, the scripture says that they do not have the office of the keys already on account of their status of grace but rather through a special call (Heb. 5:4; Art. Smalcald 24). The church as the natural possessor of the keys or all church authority, does not first need any kind of special empowerment in regard to calling pastors. The church and indeed each individual congregation has this complete power. C. On whom finally does the duty rest to place preachers in the office? a. The preachers have the command to preach, however, so does the church (1 Pet. 2:5-9; Rom. 15:16). b. The church has this duty first and originally, immediately through their being Christians and their priesthood (1 Pet. 2:5ff.; 1 Tim. 3:15: ^ÓThe congregation of the living God, a pillar and foundation of truth^Ô; Gal. 4:26: ^ÓThat is the free woman; she is the mother of us all^Ô. Since the church is the mother, she has the duty first and immediately to care for the children); compare Art. Smalcald. 67. Summary 1. It is God^Òs will that the preaching office should continue until the last day. 2. The mediate call is set forth in scripture as an ordinance established and validated by God. 3. The congregation as the church, as from God originally and in itself, has the right and duty to call. Also, the mediate call through the congregation is in the fullest sense a divine call. Finally, God has given the church the authority of the keys and the commission to call. In principle these belong obviously only with the church in the strictest sense, for the believers are the royal priesthood and have all good things, but the unbelievers have nothing, whether goods or rights. However, just as a visible particular congregation (Partikulargemeinde) which contains some godless people who have not become known and have still not been excluded, is on account of the believers truly the church and called such, so also the use of the authority, which is given to the believers alone, comes to the particular congregation. Matthew 18:17 teaches this. Here the authority of the keys are given to the visible particular congregation. For when it says: ^ÓSo tell it to the congregation^Ô, I am not sent to the invisible church. For no one infallibly knows who the believers are and therefore nothing can be said to them. The visible particular congregation is intended. And to this visible particular congregation is given the power to reveal heathens and publicans, that is, the authority of the keys. In verses 19 and 20 it is revealed further that already two or three have such authority. Assertion: Since a visible particular congregation has the authority of the keys only on account of the believers hidden in her she would have no such authority and also no right to call if the entire particular congregation, as is possible, were unbelieving. Answer: 1. It is unnecessary to consider such a circumstance because even though it is an imaginable circumstance, still we would not be able to prove it and therefore (ecclesiastical) practice can not depend upon it. 2. According to the example of Elijah and the church of his time which had entirely fallen from (true) doctrine, it is to be hoped that believers still remain hidden rather than not. 3. This (assertion) is indeed out of the question, when young children are present. 4. Therefore it must suffice to consider the call of even a very corrupted congregation as divine, if it still recognizes God^Òs Word, uses the sacrament rightly, confesses itself to be part of the Lutheran church, and recognizes its duty to allow itself to be ruled according to God^Òs word. 5. The fact that the particular congregation has the right of calling and through the call gives the public administration of the authority of the keys, indicates, in other words, that one may not publicly use the authority of the keys in a congregation if the congregation has not given such administration to him through a call. God also forbids with explicit words that one should take an office to himself, that is, administer it without an orderly call (Heb. 5:4-6). So also says our confession.(7) In antithesis to all of this stand the following: 1. The papists, in so far as they take away the right of calling from the church and make the pastor into a pastor through ordination. We will handle the papists^Ò antithetical stand in the next thesis. 2. The Arminians. These, like the papists, take the right of calling from the congregation, however, in distinction from the papists, they give it the oversight. They also establish a Caesareopatum while the papists have a Papocaesareatum. A further antithesis of the Arminians relates to the necessity of the call, which is discussed further later. Also the ruling of the church by the state has for the most part cut off the right of calling of the congregation. 3. Anabaptists and other enthusiasts, who, in full contrast to the unconditional necessity of the call established through the scripture (Heb. 5:4-6; Rom. 10:15), explain that the use of the preaching office without a special call is a matter of freedom for every Christian on account of his spiritual priesthood. The Socinians also are in this camp. According to their doctrine, since the completion of the church through the apostle, the call to the preaching office has on the whole ceased. Cat. Racov (8): What truly do you say concerning these apostolic words, that ask how they should teach unless they are sent? (Rom. 10:15)? In the answer it says: Since truly there is no preaching of this type with the teachers of this age, as we taught in brief before, a sending of this type unto it is hardly necessary. The Cat. Racov. expresses here that the apostolic preaching was new and as of yet unfulfilled, and therefore a sending was necessary. A preaching that is not new and not unfulfilled no longer needs the sending. Socinus says: ^ÓTo every Christian man it is allowed to legitimately perform his own office (eius rei munere) without any special thing demanded of him, to exercise love towards a neighbor.^Ô(10) Indeed, however, to privately point individual people to Christ is an entirely different thing than to gather people and exercise the preaching office publicly. Smalcius: ^ÓThe thing in question is whether an ordinance of this type is completely necessary for the establishment of the ministry of the word of God, this however we deny.^Ô(10) Call and office should not have a right to necessity but rather in the greatest way to propriety. Volkelius says: ^ÓLet ministers really administer the Lord^Òs supper and baptism in the established churches, as both Paul and perhaps others did, for the purpose of preserving order and decor, not however because some necessity also requires that these things be done.^Ô(11) Likewise the Arminians teach the same thing. The Apolog. Confess. says: A sending, whether immediate, as in the case of the apostles, or mediate, as it is called and as was the case with the ordination of bishops through the apostles or their successors, is not to be considered as completely necessary to the establishing of the evangelical ministry, or for this, that someone rightly and legitimately should preach before other men the gospel preached through the apostles.^Ô(12) They also make a distinction between established and yet to be established congregations. Only for the first do they recognize a certain necessity for a call, but also there only a necessity of order and decor, not of the command of God. Still more radically, the Weigelianer and Quakers reject the mediate call. They attempt to weaken the texts of scripture which are witnesses against them. So with Romans 10:15 and Hebrews 5:4 the claim is made that the first speaks only of the apostles and the last only of Aaron. But to the contrary both texts are general statements. Romans 10:15 speaks generally of sending just as it is generally stated that no one can hear if no one preaches to him. And the apostle was already sent long before so that this sentence would be superfluous if it were only to refer to the apostle. As for the second text, Quenstedt rightly says: ^ÓThe text is general, no one is to take the honor to himself. The example of Aaron is an unrestricted illustration of the universal rule.^Ô(13) Our confession speaks the judgment of rejection concerning all of these enthusiasts.(14) The rejection of the enthusiasts also applies to those who see the inner call as that which makes a preacher into a preacher. Against them is 1 Cor. 9:17. Compare John 1:1-3. Doctrinal Thesis 3 Ordination makes no one a pastor, rather it confirms a pastor as a legitimately called pastor. Comment: Whoever has a legitimate call of a congregation, he is a pastor and needs nothing else in order to be a pastor. Ordination is nothing else than this, that the church recognizes and confirms someone^Òs call. This consists of two things. Most importantly they see the call as legitimate and therefore confirm it as divine. Secondly, they confirm the one called as competent and that that the congregation can call him with good consideration as before God. Therefore, we teach concerning ordination that it gives no one the preaching office because the scripture says and commands nothing (concerning this). Only that which God commands in his word must occur and is necessary. Our confession agrees with this: ^ÓAnd therefore ordination has been nothing else than such a confirmation.^Ô(15) Luther commenting on Genesis 41:16: ^ÓWe, however, lay hands upon the ministers of the word and make our prayer to God, but only that we might thereby witness, that it (the office) is God^Òs ordinance, both in this and also all other offices of the church, whether of the government of the state or house.^Ô(16) He says further: ^ÓThe custom and practice of laying on of hands is a very old custom, and came into the New Testament from the fathers as is seen by the example of Paul in 1 Tim. 5.^Ô(17) So he expresses himself in the writing titled An Example, to Consecrate a Right Christian Bishop of 1542. Chemnitz says: ^ÓThough, therefore, ordination does not make the call, if nevertheless someone is legitimately called, this rite is a declaration and public confirmation that the call which occurred previously is legitimate.^Ô(18) Baldwin states: ^ÓOrdination is nothing more than a public and solemn confirmation of the call ... Ordination is not simply or absolutely necessary ... nor is it a divine precept such that it could not be omitted.^Ô(19) As antithetical to this stand the following: 1. Papists: They explain the necessity of the call as applying to the exercise of the office but give the right of calling to the priestly station and especially to the pope. Conc. Trid.: The holy synod in addition teaches that in the ordination of bishops, priests and other orders, neither the consensus, call, or authority of the people, or of the magistrates of some secular power is thus required such that without them ordination is invalid. Belarmin states: Catholic teachers teach with highest consensus that the power of ordaining and calling a bishop in no way is able to pertain to the people. The power of electing, however, in some way once was in the power of the people, but only by pontifical concession or convention, not by divine law.^Ô(20) The papists too recognize that the right of calling derives from the authority of the keys. Therefore also their strong fortress is the word of Christ to Peter in Matthew 16:19: ^ÓAnd I will give you the keys of heaven.^Ô They claim: The apostle Peter received the keys in the person of the whole church, because he accepted them for the use and usefulness of the whole church.^Ô(21) This (explanation of the) acceptance (of the keys) fails when the Lord not only gives the keys to all the disciples (John 20:23) but also to the entire church (Matt. 18:18). Hardly worth mention and certainly not refutation is Belarmin^Òs assertion by which he seeks to limit Matthew 18:18, namely, ^ÓTell it to the church^Ô means: Tell it to the prelates or the council. Through this word: Tell it to the church, is understood the prelates or the council of prelates. A favorite papist argument is: It is not for the sheep to elect the pastors. The magistrate and the people are sheep however. Quenstedt rightly gives the final decisive reply: Arguments taken from dissimilar things prove nothing. The papists stand further in antithesis in that they explain ordination to be a sacrament. Conc. Trid.: If someone should say that order or holy ordination is not truly and properly a sacrament instituted by Christ the Lord, or that it is some human thing thought up by men ignorant of ecclesiastical things, or that it is merely some right of electing ministers of the word of God and the sacraments, let him be anathama. Just as it is certain from the scripture that ordination is not necessary and essential for the preaching office because it is nowhere expressly commanded in the scripture, so it is also certain from the scripture that it can in no way be a sacrament for the scripture, because (in those places) where it mentions ordination, it does not mention any special external sign. Chemnitz: ^ÓFor in baptism and in the Lord^Òs supper, the son of God himself instituted, prescribed, and commanded a certain external element, a certain ceremony, or a rite. In truth, in ordination, as it is now understood, Christ once added an external symbol when on the day of resurrection he breathed on the disciples, John 20. But he did not add a command that the church should imitate that rite of breathing in ordination of the ministers ... We have said that on account of restraint the apostles did not want to usurp the symbol of breathing in ordination which Christ used, because it did not have the command of Christ and since without a divine promise they did not want to take up this sign themselves as if their breathing out were able to confer the Holy Spirit. But the suffragan (the consecration bishop, now title bishop, originally the episcopi in partibus inferioribus, who stood by the side of the active bishops in order to help them) among the papists arrogates this to himself without shame. Breathing out among the ordinands he says: Receive the Holy Spirit. But where is this command? Where the promise? And it is blasphemy to invent the notion that the Holy Spirit is contained in the foul panting of the suffragan, such that the suffragan is able to say: Receive the Holy Spirit. ... But unction is that for which the papists fight the most when they argue about the sacrament of order, a fact that the fifth canon does not conceal. It is truly manifest that neither Christ, nor the apostles, made use of unction in the ordination of ministers of the word and sacraments.^Ô Even the later church did not do this as Chemnitz proves: ^ÓAnd in all of ecclesiastical history, even in the Tripartia (The church history by Socrates, Sozomen, and Theodoret), where many examples of ordination are described, no mention of unction is made in regard to those ordained, rather only the imposition of hands.^Ô Many Lutherans follow in the footsteps of the papists, insofar as they take the right of calling from the church and claim that preachers are made not through the call but rather through ordination as a sacrament. This is true, namely, in so far as: 1. they take the right of calling, which they consider a possession of the entire church, more or less away from the particular congregation and at least explain that in calling the particular church makes use of the right of the entire church (Buffalo Synod, the separated Lutheran in Prussia, the Breslauer Lutherans). 2. they more or less ascribe decisive importance and effectiveness to the results of ordination such that these make a pastor in so far as those who occupy the office, with whom the office truly rests, confer it to him who is called. Hereby, not a few even until now have had the intention to ascribe to ordination a sacramental dignity and action so as to imagine it imprints an indelible character. So says Lechler: ^ÓOrdination is the custom of giving the one called the special blessing of office in the name of Christ.^Ô(22) The expression of 2 Tim. 1:6: ^ÓThat you awaken the gift of God which is in you through the laying on of my hands^Ô, is supposed to provide proof ^Óthat the gift inside the recipient given by means of the laying on of hands, can be present without that presence being obvious.^Ô It is supposed to be just as an apparently cold piece of coal that still glows red.^Ô With Timothy it was still certainly not in slumber and so an awakening can not be meant. With ordination he ^Ówho blesses spreads out his hands to God in order to receive the requested gifts which the blessing requires and distributes them to this person in that he turns the hands upon him. This blessing is not a conferral of personal characteristics upon another person but rather an effective, that is, an imparting type of intercession. ^ÓThe laying on of hands is .... the naturally necessary gesture for this occasion. It is the request in bodily form (this is a directing to the external element of a sacrament). The lifting of ordination to a regular ecclesiastical celebration and as a result of this to an important article of church law is so important to the spirit of Christianity that this custom must develop itself out of its own self. And when until today almost without exception the necessity of ordination before the entrance to the office is held fast, so a church which allows its candidates without any consecration to administer the sacraments, can not remove itself from the accusation of a unworthy negligence. It diminishes the office to a part of the general type of callings in the world. So essential a blunder in regard to an ordinance of the Holy Spirit can not remain without severe injury.^Ô On pages 330ff, the following things are given in dark words as harm caused by this mistake: ordination is seen only as an exigency of holy propriety (with this misconstrued expression the Lutheran doctrine that ordination is simply a confirmation is made despicable and put forward as disposable) and not as a matter ^Óthrough which the true and essential thing is worked.^Ô Here, in hidden fashion, it is said that the office along with the works of the office, preaching and administration of the sacraments, are truly first effective for the building of the congregation through ordination. This becomes even clearer through the listing of the effects (p. 331ff) of ordination. This is a blessing. But a blessing is a divine promise. Such a promise is, however, taken from the divine word. And the divine word, spoken by the church or a believer in faith, can not fail to perform its work (Is. 55:11). Therefore the blessing of ordination has the advantage of ^Óunconditional effectiveness.^Ô ^ÓThat which pertains to the word itself, must be ascribed in intensified amount to the blessing in the specific commission to office (an essential commission?) administered by the church.^Ô Here in hidden manner ordination is put forward as commanded by God. And so it says further: ^ÓIt is also to be maintained that ordination is effective under all circumstances and is accompanied by essential results for the congregation as well as for the one ordained.^Ô (p. 332). Here the congregation is mentioned especially. And that says much. By this the author says more clearly than before that it is through ordination that the office first becomes effective (wirksam) for the congregation. Now the concept of sacrament is claimed for ordination. ^ÓOrdination therefore falls into line with all the other sacramental actions of the church, with baptism and the Lord^Òs supper, with the marriage and confirmation blessings, indeed with preaching.^Ô (p. 332). Take note that ordination, to which sacramental effects were ascribed, was separated from baptism and the Lord^Òs supper, but alongside these true means of grace is supposed to be effective in and of itself. In this way, an effectiveness ex opere operato is taught under a misuse of the scriptural truth that word and sacrament objectively administer salvation, such that this supposed working of word and sacrament is conferred to ordination. This explanation implies the conclusion that ordination keeps its effectiveness forever so that it makes one into a pastor forever and not only for that time during a call. For when a pastor himself mixes the preaching office with some worldly office afterwards no new ordination is necessary. ^ÓAt least the comparison with other ecclesiastical consecration demands such.^Ô Here baptism is being thought of. But he considers it in a right Roman manner such that it imprints an indelible character upon a man, something of which remains even in someone who falls from faith. That is recognized as the seed-doctrine (Keimlehre) of the new theology. Therefore, it is not surprising that the entire argument ends with the (obviously entirely untrue) explanation: ^ÓAccordingly, the evangelical Lutheran church also teaches in a certain sense an inextinguishable character of ordination.^Ô (p. 333). Indeed, on page 335 it says ^Óthat ordination establishes a true distinction between the clergy and the laymen.^Ô Afterwards, the attempt is made to put forward this entire doctrine as that of the Confessions.^Ô Thus on page 336 it says: ^ÓThe preaching office itself is to the Lutheran church the means through which God gives the Holy Spirit^Ô (Augsburg Confession V). It is as clear as the sun, that article V speaks of the preaching office in abstracto. And one sees how questionable it is when even correct theologians take this article as proof for the office in concreto. See Walther (23). An especially hard nut to crack for this false doctrine is the passage of the Smalcald Articles (24). Lechler says simply of this text that one must not put to much emphasis on this word of Luther^Òs. The entire portrayal of Lechler is an example of romanizing fantasies concerning the office, which all the others are like more or less. According to pure, evangelical doctrine, the office , which is to be conferred and which the office bearer should fill, rests with no one else than the church. And by the church we mean the believers, even the few who may be found in some place even if only two, and by the smaller or larger number of people who are gathered anywhere about the word among whom the fewest believers are found. In other words, we mean the any particular congregation. Therefore, it can only be proven that a particular congregation can not confer the office through their call and does not confer it without the help of any act of ordination if it is first proven that the hidden believers in a congregation are not possessors of all the goods and treasures of Christ. Doctrinal Thesis 4 The authority and right of the preaching office is: to preach the gospel, to administer the sacraments, to forgive or retain sins, and to exercise discipline. Remark: Proof for the authority to preach the gospel is Matthew 28:19, Mark 16:15; for the authority to administer the sacraments is Matt. 28:19; 1 Cor. 4:1; Tit. 1:7; for the authority to forgive or retain sins is John 20:23; Matt. 16:19; for the authority to exercise discipline 1 Cor. 5:3-5. The authority of preaching and administering the sacraments is included together under the expression potestas ordinis (authority of order). The authority of the keys is included in the expression potestas clavium (authority of the keys), and also the potestas jurisdictionis (authority of jurisdiction). Concerning the authority of the keys Gerhard says: ^ÓThe authority of jurisdiction, which they call ^Ókritikehn^Ô, consists of the use of the keys. There are, however, two powers of the keys, loosing and retaining, Matthew 16:19, John 20:23. Although there is one ministry of the word by which sins are loosed and retained, just as also generally one key is effective for opening and closing the kingdom of heaven, nevertheless, the one key is said to be for a diversity of objects, goals, and effects. These are: the loosing of sins by which the penitent are absolved of sins and heaven is opened to them, the other is retaining by which sins are retained for the impenitent and heaven is closed to them. The first is called absolution the second excommunication. Both may be exercised either publicly or privately. Public absolution is when remission of sins on account of Christ is announced to all the truly repentant. Private (absolution) is when sins are remitted to a particular penitent face to face. Public excommunication is when the anger and eternal damnation of God is announced from the law to all who are impenitent and do not believe. Private (excommunication) when the retention of sins is announced harshly face to face to a particular wicked person. By reason of gradation two types of excommunication are established, namely, minor and major. The first is the exclusion or suspension from the use of the Lord^Òs Supper. It is an ejection from the fellowship of the church. The other is called ^Ókathairesis^Ô (destroying), it is truly ^Óaphorismos^Ô (rejected).^Ô(25)In addition to these remarks the following is to be noted: The distinction between minor and major excommunication has only historical meaning for us. The last refers to what is called the ban or banishment and was carried out by the church with the help of the government. Luther says in his ^ÓSermon on the Ban^Ô: A bishop and pope may separate someone from this fellowship (of the sacraments) and forbid him to partake of them because of his sins. And that is called to put under the ban. This ban was previously almost solely in use and is now called the minor ban. For over and beyond this one is forbidden burial, to buy, to sell, to go here and there, and all fellowship of mankind, and finally also (as they say) water and fire. That is the major ban. Even with this some are not satisfied but rather over and above this use all governmental power against the one banned. ... But these are new additions to the essential meaning of the scripture. For to handle matters with the worldly sword belongs to the emperor etc. and the rulers of the world and indeed not to the spiritual estate whose sword is not iron but rather should be spiritual, that is the word and command of God (Eph. 6:17); compare the Smalcald Articles, IX. 2. The state church, also in Lutheran lands, knew something like the major ban along side the minor ban. 3. Today we understand the exclusio ab usu coenae dominicae to not be the same as the suspensio ab usu. The last we understand to be a temporary denial of the Lord^Òs supper which a pastor uses on his own authority as a keeper of souls before public handling of an instance of sin or discipline and also before the entrance into the second grade of discipline, as he hopes for good fruit therefrom. It is not to stretch out into a long period of time. 4. The pastor does not carry out a true exclusion from the Lord^Òs supper as he who decrees it for only the congregation, before which an instance of discipline of the third grade comes, can do that. Rather he does it as he who carries out the exclusion put forth by the congregation (1 Cor. 5:2-5). Absolution is no mere announcement. It works not declarative, but effective; it truly frees. Quenstedt: ^ÓThe ministers of the church have the power of remitting sins and not only ^Óhistorikohs^Ô, as a declaration and announcement, but also effectively, although ^Óorganikohs^Ô (the pastor is indeed only the instrument of God), remit sin. That is the doctrine of scripture, for: 1. the keys of binding and loosing are given to the ministers of the word. The keys are however not only an announcement of an opening. And ^Óto bind^Ô and ^Óto loose^Ô do not mean in any language to explain or to announce a binding and loosing, but rather truly, actu, to bind and loose, although these occur through the means of the word. 2. That which pertains to the apostle pertains to all ministers of the word. Also moreover the keys are given to the whole church, not to the apostles only. In antithesis to this stand the Calvinists, the Arminians, the Sozinians, all branch sects of the Cavinists, all enthusiasts, the Schwenkfeldians, the Weigelians, the modern Methodists, and also the United Protestants. All of these explain absolution to be a pure announcement. The pastor is according to them only a herald, one who proclaims. Thus says Olevianus: ^ÓJust as the legate himself does not give punishment or faith (2 Tim. 2:19-20), thus he also does not justify or absolve sinners himself. But rather he is a witness and constituted a herald of such a great thing which properly belongs to the divine majesty.^Ô(26) What foolishness is that, especially from the reformed stand point! To what purpose is the herald when forgiveness must be much more certain to the elect (who are the only ones to actually receive it) through the Holy Spirit in him than through the proclamation of the herald? It is foolishness even from a non reformed stand point to make absolution as proclamation a mere witness of that which not it but only God himself gives and this not through the word as a means. Such a thing as a witness is entirely superfluous. Generally, the Calvinists twist the Lutheran doctrine as if it were taught that forgiveness comes from the pastor out of his own power. But above Quenstedt showed the opposite with his ^Óorganikohs^Ô. He who truly forgives is God. But the preacher loosing is the actual operative means established by God himself. The viewpoint of the Calvinists of a word of absolution that works nothing is entirely in agreement with their fundamental opinion of the word itself according to which it is nothing more than mere representation and teaching and is ineffective in itself. Schwenkfeld, out of this same misunderstanding of the Lutheran doctrine, how he understands the Calvanist doctrine, in his Postille, p. 295 says: ^ÓThe priest has no power to forgive sins. God alone forgives sins and no man.^Ô The Sozinianer Wolzogen says of Matthew 16:19: ^ÓThe apostles do not have any successors in their own power and authority of forgiving sins. So also believe the Arminians. Our theologians also place ceremonies and rites in the hands of the ministers or pastors. Still it is obvious that they do not have power to create something in regard to ceremonies and rites without the previous decision of the congregation. Even so it is obvious that no rite or ceremony may be created ratione cultus aut meriti erga Deum, that is, in the name of service or merit towards God. See the Augsburg Confession.(27) Heb. 13:17, 1 Thess. 5:12-13, Phil. 2:29, 1 Thess. 4:8, and Lk 10:16 all say the Christian ought be obedient to the pastors. But no obedience is required that is over and against God^Òs word.(28) God himself forbids that we should follow false teachers (Matt. 7:15; Gal. 1:8). Sins of the preacher are false doctrine, false use of the keys, an evil life. The preacher who endures in false doctrine after sufficient admonition is to be removed. Whoever leads an evil life can in general no longer administer the preaching office because he has destroyed his good name (Acts 6:3; 1 Tim. 3:7-8). A preacher is without his office as soon as the congregation takes or demands from him the authority given through the congregation^Òs call, that is, as soon as they remove him from office. To call any one a preacher who has no congregation is a misuse of the word. The pastorate is an office, not a station in life (Stand). Doctrinal Thesis 5 In essence all preachers are equal in rights and position. Remark: Acts 20:28, where the bishops are given the office to shepherd the sheep and to give attention to the same, gives proof that there is no essential distinction of position among the pastors. Also in Phil. 1:1 where Paul makes himself, Timothy, and the bishops and ministers equal. Also in Titus 1:5ff. where Timothy is supposed to install elders, who in verse 7 are called bishops and house stewards and according to verse 9 are to administer the office just as the bishops in Acts 20:28. Also in 1 Tim. 4:14, where the elders are said to have laid hands on Timothy himself in placing him in the office of bishop. And finally in 1 Pet. 5:1 where Peter calls himself a fellow elder of the elders. The scripture also makes the bishops and elders equal. Quenstedt: ^ÓWe retain in our churches an order among the ministers so that some are bishops, some are presbyters, others deacons, because also in the apostolic and primitive church there were distinct grades of ministers and indeed were divinely constituted, 1 Cor. 12:28; Eph. 4:1. However, we say that to every minister of the church pertains the same power of the ministry consisting in preaching the word and administering the sacraments and the power of jurisdiction in the use of the keys.^Ô(29) Likewise Chemnitz: ^ÓBut the question is, of what grade in the ecclesiastical minister is the bishop; what are the duties of the bishop? And the solution to this question is quickly found in that it is explicitly dealt with by Jerome. For he shows and proves that at the time of the apostles the bishops and the presbyters were the same, or he who was a bishop was himself a presbyter. One is the name of the office and dignity, the other the name of the age (of the office holder).^Ô(30) In antithesis to this are: 1. The papists. Bellarmin: ^ÓThe catholic church recognizes and teaches a distinction that by divine right the episcopacy is greater than the presbytery by the power of order and also of jurisdiction. For thus says the Council of Trent, session 24, chpt. 4: For the holy synod declares that bishops who are successors in the place of the apostles pertain to the hierarchical order before other ecclesiastical grades and are placed, just as the apostle says, by the Holy Spirit to rule the church of God and are to be superior to the presbyters. And canon 6: If someone should say that in the catholic church the hierarchy, which consists of bishops, presbyters, and ministers, is not instituted by divine ordination, let him be anathama.(31)And canon 7: If someone should say bishops are not superior to presbyters etc. let him be anathama.^Ô Bellarmin puts forth the effort to weaken the passages of scripture which were quoted above and which are against him. Against Phil. 1:1 he brings various church fathers forward and thinks that finally the passage of Chrysostom clarifies it best: ^ÓThe comments of John Chrysostom and many others are best, who teach that at the time of the apostles the names ^Ñbishop^Ò and ^Ñpresbyter^Ò were common to all priests, to the greater which we now call bishops, as well as to the lesser which we name presbyters. The names were common even though the thing itself and the powers were distinct.^Ô(32) It is noteworthy that the scripture should give these names without distinction to the priests of various order while the (very idea of the) existence of the distinction of order, of the real distinction between bishop and presbyter, is built upon the distinction of the names. Still, when Bellarmin is unable to find a better overall evasion of the fact that all priests, in spite of the fact that they are said to have different spiritual power and dignity (an idea that indeed until now no papist has been able to prove from scripture), still have the common names of presbyter and bishop, he turns this also upon other texts and dismisses them thus: ^ÓBut with one word we can respond to all these things . The names at that time were common and therefore in all these places the true bishops are called presbyters.^Ô(33) He also works hard to give the words of Jerome a meaning favorable to papism. That this is impossible is shown in that the well known Michael Medina says ^Óin the work de sacroroum hominum origine et continentia, book 1, chapter 5: And thus in other respects those men were most holy, most experienced in the holy scriptures. Nevertheless, whose opinion the church first condemned in Aerius, then in the Waldensians, and finally in John Wycliff.^Ô(34) Bellarmin adds: ^ÓMoreover this idea of Medina^Òs is very thoughtless.^Ô He does not prove, however, that his own judgment is correct and that on the contrary Medina has wrongly understood Jerome. 2. In this antithesis also stand the so-called romanizing Lutherans, who hold that church government (Kirchenregiment), whereby persons are ordered above and below one another, is divinely ordained and has a supposedly divinely ordained hierarchy. Thus are the separated Lutherans under the Breslau Church college. In their ^ÓPublic Declaration^Ô from the year 1878, it says: a. that the office of church government in and of itself, that is, the commission of particular persons with the public administration of church government functions, is instituted by God and not by the congregation and it exists and works according to divine and not merely human rite. (p. 3.28). b. that church orders made by men that are beyond scripture yet not contrary to it, pertain not merely according to human rite but also according to divine rite and consciences are bound to obedience to it for God^Òs sake. (p. 3.44) The Breslauers continuously call upon Eph. 4:11 (compare 1 Cor. 12:28ff) like the papists for here a divine institution of distinct offices with their churchly duties is supposedly taught. But against this: 1. This verse does not talk about a divine institution of distinctions of rank between offices laid out by grade in steps. (The Roman church numbers their seven thus: Priests, that is, bishops and presbyters together, deacons, sub deacons, who together make up the three higher grades, acolytes, who attend the bishops and is now the highest of the lower grades, the readers, the exorcists, and the doorkeepers. The last four grades are designated the ^Óminor orders^Ô and merely receive the lesser consecration which does not impint the character indelebis, and therefore it is permitted to leave these grades.) Namely, 1 Corinthians 12:28ff. shows that what is being talked about is rather functions and aptitudes being used for the best of the church. In one and the same context the gift of healing, or doing wonders, and of tongues are mentioned. If these are not offices distinguished according to grade and rank with different power and dignity of office, or if they are not made such through being mentioned, then those in the Ephesians passage aren^Òt either. In other words, when different offices are mentioned they are still not enumerated in such a way as to set forth offices truly and essentially distinguished, that is, distinct offices distinguished by rank. 2. Here the true functions contained originally in the office of the episcopacy, or office of presbyter, or ministry of serving the church in word and sacrament are brought forth. These were first joined in the apostate and so also they can remain joined in the ordered office of bishop, presbyter, or pastor. However, on account of need, as in the office of deacon, or on account of a great advantage to be gained, when there were people in the congregations who had received a greater aptitude for one or the other functions than the already present presbyters, the functions where conferred to various people. In similar fashion, Chemnitz says correctly concerning Ephesians 4:11: Here there are five grades of the ministry enumerated: a. Apostles, who, being called immediately, had a universal call and all gifts of doing miracles and whose preaching and teaching was inspired and in the true sense was God^Òs word and source of doctrine for others; b. Prophets, who interpret tongues and the scriptures (1 Cor. 14:16); c. Evangelists, who were not apostles, but were sent out with the general mission to preach the gospel, ^Óergon poiehson euangelistou^Ô; So Philip (Acts 21:8), Timothy (2 Tim. 4:5), Tychikus (Acts 20:4; Eph. 6:21; Col. 4:7). d. Pastors, who work with a particular flock of the church (1 Pet. 5:2); e. Teachers, ^Ódidaskalon nepiohn^Ô (Rom. 2:20; Heb. 5:12), apparently the later catechists.(36) However, Chemnitz says, the apostles have included these different grades together under both the names ^Óbishops and presbyters^Ô. An especially important proof is Col. 4:7; Eph. 6:21; where Paul designates Tychikus who clearly was an evangelist, as a minister and fellow servant, and 1 Pet. 5;12 where Peter calls himself a fellow elder and like unto the presbyters (v. 2) as pastors and shepherds. Also, verses like 1 Tim. 3:1ff. indicate a new unity of the office functions, which were originally separated and performed by different people, into being performed by one person. This is indicated when it is said that a person must be fit to teach (v. 2) if he is to lead (v 4 and 5), and shepherd as well as rule. And from verses like Eph. 4:11, 1 Cor. 12:28, a divine institution of an ecclesiastical hierarchy of the roman or romanizing type can not be proven. Chemnitz finishes his explanation with the clarification that the enumerations of Eph. 4:11 and 1 Cor. 12:28 only show which grades the obligations and duties of the one and the same office of the church or preaching office was distributed. Finally he sets forth the following fundamental principles: a. That the Word of God does not establish any particular number of grades. b. From the scripture it is clear that at the time of the apostles the same grades were not present in all congregations. c. Even so it is clear from the scripture that the separation into grades was not a necessity such that not often all the functions were unified in one person. And furthermore, the entire order was a matter of freedom and was implemented according to need and for the good of the church. d. All grades were not offices in addition to the preaching office but were themselves true offices of the ministry of the word and sacraments. 1. Theol. did. pol. pars IV, cap. XII, sect. I, thes. III, nota, p. 394. 2. For example see his writing on the Private Mass, Lpz. Ausg., XXI, 50. 3. Grundsätze der ev.-luth. Kirchenverfassung, 1853. 4. Hutterus redivivus, 125, p. 332. 5. Kompendium, 74.2, p. 371. 6. From Rudelbachs Zeitsch. für lutherische Theologie und Kirche. 7. Aug. Conf. XIV. 8. Qu. 506, p. 1036. 9. Tractat. de ecclesia, lib. 10, tom. I, 325. 10. Disput. IV de ordine eccles. contra Franz., 377. 11. Respons. ad vanam refutat. dissoluti nodi Gordici, XVII, 171. 12. XXI, 225. 13. Theol. did. pol., IV.12.2, ques. 1, ekdik., 400. 14. Apolog. 13. 15. Art. Smal., 70. 16. Leipz. Ausg, B. III, 146. 17. L. C. B. III, 375. 18. Loci, de ecclesia. 19. De causibus conscientiae, 1032. 20. Disp., tom. II, de clericis, lib. I, cap. II, 6, 139. 21. L. c, VII, 17. 22. Lehre vome neutestamentlichen Amt, part III, I, 2. ^ÓDie Uebertragung des heiligen Amts^Ô. 23. Church and Ministry, Thesis II on the ministry. 24. Article X. 25. Loci tom. XIII, loc. XXIV, cap. V , sect. I, CXCIV. 26. De substantia foederis gratuiti, p. 282. 27. Art. 15. Art. 28. 28. Augs. Conf. 28. 29. Theol. did. pol., part IV, cap. XII, sect. I, thes. XIV, nota VI, p. 396. 30. Ex. pars II, de sacramento ordinis p. 223. 31. Disputat., tom. II, de clericis, lib. I, cap. XIV, 2; p. 156. 32. L. c., cap. XI, 5. 33. L. c., 10. 34. In Bellarmin, l.c., 15. 35. Examen., II, p. 217f. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- This text was translated and converted to ascii format for Project Wittenberg by Mark Nispel M.A., 1997. It is in the public domain. You may freely distribute, copy or print this text. Please direct any comments or suggestions to Rev. Robert E. Smith of the Walther Library at Concordia Theological Seminary. E-mail: cosmith@ash.palni.edu Surface Mail: 6600 N. clinton St., Ft. Wayne, IN 46825 USA Phone: (219) 452-2123 Fax: (219 452-2126 --------------------------------------------------------------------------