25
June 1580 A.D. Lutheran
Book of Concord Went on Sale
Mr. Graves tells the story.
At last. Agreement on what we
believe." When the Book of Concord went on sale in Germany, its buyers
might have thumped its cover with satisfaction. For years, Lutheran theologians
had wrangled over the doctrines of law, faith and free will. But at last they
had worked out a "treaty" acceptable to their different camps.
It had not been easy. Lutheran
differences came to a head after the Catholic emperor Charles V beat their army
in 1547. Charles demanded religious concessions. But how much was it right to
concede? Different theologians had different opinions. Those who identified
with the teachings of Philip Melanchthon were ready to give more ground than
others. They were known as Philippists. Those who wanted to resist Charles were
called Gnesio-Lutherans.
Some Lutherans hoped to find a
middle ground. Martin Chemnitz, a Philippist and Jakob Andreae, a
Gnesio-Lutheran headed efforts to bring the two sides together. Their talks
began late in the 1560s. It was not until 1577 that they worked out a formula
that would allow them to agree.
They gathered key Lutheran
documents into a collection called the Book of Concord. These included three
short statements of faith: the Apostle's Creed, the Creed of Nicea and the
Creed of Athanasius. Needless to say, they didn't leave out the three great
Lutheran confessions: Martin Luther's short and long catechisms and
Melanchthon's Augsburg Confession.
Luther's Smalcald Articles were
included because it had identified the theological points that could be
negotiated and those that had to stand untouched. Melanchthon's explanation of
the Augsburg Confession and his book on the Power and Primacy of the Pope also
found its way between these covers.
Alongside these documents were
the short and long versions of the Formula of Concord. In this agreement, the
theologians, working from the Bible, set out the most important Lutheran
beliefs. For three years the draft of the Book of Concord circulated among
Lutheran pastors, teachers and theologians. Over 8,000 signed their approval of
it.
Concord means
"agreement." The Book of Concord went on sale in Dresden on this day,
June 25, 1580. This was the 50th
anniversary of the Augsburg Confession.
Not everyone thought that the
Book of Concord would bring agreement. In 1533, Denmark had fought a civil war
over the Reformation. King Frederic II of Denmark looked at the Book of Concord
then threw it into the fire. "This book will do nothing but bring
strife," he said.
Lutherans hold differing opinions
on the Book of Concord. Some accept its confessions as a faithful reflection of
God's word. Others accept them only as far as they are a faithful exposition of
God's word.
Bibliography:
1. Book of Concord, the. Project
Wittenberg. Lutheran Electronic Archive. http://www.ctsfw.edu/etext/boc/
2. "Book of Concord - Formula
of Concord - Concordia." http://mb-soft.com/believe/txh/concord.htm.
3. "Concord, Formula and Book
of." The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. Edited by F. L. Cross
and E. A. Livingstone. Oxford, 1997.
4. Weber, Erwin. From Luther to
1580; a pictorial account : places, persons, and events leading to the Book of
Concord; text by Ingetraut Ludolphy; pref. by Conrad Bergendoff. St. Louis :
Concordia Pub. House, 1977.
5. Various internet and encyclopedia
articles.
Last updated May, 2007.
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