cP, ^+%*» t«u -/*-*-*> Sr 4 4 - o JO LIBEAEY , Theological Seminary, ^ PRINCETON, N. J Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Princeton Theological Seminary Library http://www.archive.org/details/americanlutherOOschm V i THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH, HISTORICALLY, DOCTRINALLY, AND PRACTICALLY DELINEATED, II? SEVERAL OCCASIONAL DISCOURSES: BY S. S. SCHMUCKER, D. D ., PROFESSOR OF CHRISTIAN THEOLOGY, IN THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY OF TH3 GENERAL SYNOD, GETTYSBDRG, PA. SECOND EDITION. SPRINGFIELD: PUBLISHED BY D. HARBAUGB 1851. Entered according to act of Congress, in the year one thou- sand, eight hundred and fifty-one, by D. Harbaugh and J. B. Butler, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, in and for the District of Ohio. GEO. D. EMERSON & CO. STEREOTYPERS. SPRINGFIELD, OHIO. PREFACE. In offering this work to the public, it is proper that some of the considerations which have actua- ted the publishers, should be stated. The title it- self is significant of the subject on which it treats. The true history, real character, present position, and distinctive features of the Lutheran Church in the world, are little known, often misunderstood, and sometimes grossly misrepresented in this country. Among the causes which may be assigned for this, we mention the want of a proper knowledge of Church History in general, and of Protestantism in particular; non-acquaintance with the German language, and, it is to be feared, denominational bigotry. The Lutheran Church was the first to throw off the yoke of ecclesiastical tyranny, and break the scepter of religious despotism; to maintain the great Protestant principle, that the Bible is the only infallible rule of faith and practice ; to assert the right of private judgment in the interpretation IV PREFACE. of the Scriptures; and to proclaim the doctrine of Justification by Faith alone, as the foundation of a "standing and falling church." Her institutions are second to none on earth; and her literature, embracing every subject of religious inquiry, is the glory of Christendom, furnishing an antidote to false philosophy and rationalism on the one hand, and to vulgar infidelity on the other. Her fundamental doctrines are those of the Reformation, found, in their essential aspects, in all the symbols of Protestantism. Her peculiarities place her in a medium position in Church extremes — in doctrine, worship, rites, and government. Her territory of operation is ex- tended over a large portion of the globe, embracing more than thirty millions of human beings, consti- tuting nearly one-half of Protestantism, and the hope of much of the world. Her history is intimately interwoven with that of the Reformation of the sixteenth century, fur- nishing lessons of wisdom and experience to in- struct and encourage, as well as of presumption and folly to warn and rebuke. All God's dealings with her should teach all her sons, that she was planted, watered, and preserved by Him. But the volume before us treats of the " Ameri- can Lutheran Church." This is a branch of the same vine, planted here more than a century ago, by the right hand of the Lord. Although labor- PREFACE. V mg under many disadvantages, arising from the union of Church and State in Europe, the oppres- sions of their governments, the unsettled state of this country, and the want of a knowledge of its language, she has nevertheless overcome many of them, and extended herself far and wide over our land. The number of her ministers and member- ship has been doubled every fifteen years, by natu- ral increase and immigration; so that she is already in number the third Protestant denomination in the United States. Notwithstanding all this, the remark made at the beginning of this Preface is time, that much ignorance exists, and constant misrepresentations take place, relative to the Lutheran Church in the United States. Although information has been spread through her periodicals and publications, in this country, there is none in which so full and satisfactory an account of the Lutheran Church in America can be found as in the present volume. The First Discourse embraces a history of the rise and progress of the Church in this country. The Second presents her characteristic features — the peculiarities by which she is distinguished from other branches of the Protestant family. The Third gives a biography of her founders, here, showing us the extent of their labors, the soundness of their doctrinal views, the sincerity of their piety, the profundity of their knowledge, the Tl PREFACE. wisdom of their measures, and the success of their labors. The Fourth discusses the nature of the Saviour's presence in the Lord's Supper, in which the corpo- ral presence of Christ's human nature is denied, and his spiritual presence, according to his divine nature, is maintained. The Fifth discusses the question pertaining to her doctrinal basis and ecclesiastical position, in this country; showing that it is neither rigid sym- bolism, binding the conscience to the letter of every doctrine and statement contained in the whole of the symbolical books, nor loose latitudinarianism, discarding all creeds but the adoption of the Augsburg Confession and Luther's Smaller Cate- chism, as teaching the fundamental doctrines of the word of God, "in a manner substantially correct." The Sixth points out her vocation, calling upon her to realize her obligations, to take warning from past errors, to guard against present ^dangers, to develope her various resources, to advance her spir- itual interests, and to extend her blessings to all her children. The Author, the Rev. Dr. S. S. Schmucker, has been, for twenty years, Professor of Theology in the Theological Seminary at Gettysburg, Pennsyl- vania. In the Lutheran Church he is extensively PREFACE. Yli and favorably known ; and no man in this country has done more than he to elevate her character, and to advance her welfare. As a writer,, he is able and clear. His style is chaste and easy, and his arguments strong and convincing. His " Fra- ternal Appeal" to the American churches on Chris- tian union, is a master-piece, which, with his other theological and philosophical works, has made him extensively known, beyond the bounds of his own church, both in America and England. We deem it proper to state, that the Author has no pecuniary interest in the appearance of these Discourses, having given his consent gra- tuitously to their republication. To render the work more acceptable, we have inserted his like- ness, having had it engraved expressly for this volume. In the hope that it may awaken, among Luther- ans, a stronger attachment to their church, and draw forth their benevolence in supplying her wants ; give correct information to all who may de- sire to become better acquainted with the Ameri- can shoot of the trunk of Protestantism; strength- en the hands of our self-denying ministers in all their trials; and encourage the hearts of many of our people, who are yet destitute, and as sheep without a shepherd ; we send it forth, praying that the Great Head of the Church, without yiii PREFACE. whose favor nothing can prosper, would own and bless it to the sanctification and salvation of many souls. D. HARBAUGH, J. B. BUTLER. Springfield, Ohio, August, 1851. CONTENTS. I. DISCOURSE. RETROSPECT OF LUTHERANISM IN THE UNITED STATES. A DIS- COURSE DELIVERED BEFORE THE GENERAL SYNOD AT BALTI- MORE, 1841 ; AND PUBLISHED BY SAID BODY FOR GRATUITOUS DISTRIBUTION, 11 II. DISCOURSE, PORTRAITURE OF LUTHERANISM. A DISCOURSE DELIVERED BY REQUEST, AT THE CONSECRATION OF THE FIRST ENGLISH LUTHERAN CHURCH IN PITTSBURG, OCT. 4, 1840, BEFORE THE SYNOD OF WEST PENNSYLVANIA, AND PUBLISHED BY A RESO- LUTION OF SAID BODY, 41 III. DISCOURSE. THE PATRIARCHS OF AMERICAN LUTHERANISM ; BEING A DIS- COURSE DELIVERED BEFORE THE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OF THE LUTHERAN CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES, DURING THE SESSION OF THE GENERAL SYNOD IN PHILADELPHIA, MAY 17, 1845, AND PUBLISHED BY SAID SOCIETY, 90 i CONTEXTS. IV. DISCOURSE. THE NATURE OF THE SAVIOUR'S PRESENCE IN THE EUCHARIST ; NOW FIRST PUBLISHED, 120 V. DISCOURSE. THE DOCTRINAL BASIS AND ECCLESIASTICAL POSITION OF THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH, 155 VI. DISCOURSE. VOCATION OF THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH; NOW FIRST PUBLISHED, 247 - '■ THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH, I. DISCOURSE. RETROSPECT OF LUTHERANISM IN THE UNITED STATES. Remember the days of old, consider the years of many gener- ations, ask thy father and he will show thee, thy elders and they will tell thee. — Deut. xxxii. 7. Man, my brethren, we are told in the good book of God, is wonderfully and fearfully constructed. This is true not only of the tenement of clay which we inhabit, but far more illustriously true of the immortal mind, which mainly con- stitutes ourself. Possessed of powers of cognition, of feeling and of action, man is adapted for the high destiny marked out by the Almighty, for a sphere little lower than that of angels, encircled with honor and glory. As he journeys through life, he is surrounded on all sides by a certain ex- tent of intellectual vision, which, like the torch of the be- nighted traveler, forms a circle of illumination around him, in which he can safely direct his steps. His powers of cog- nition embrace a knowledge of the present, some certainties- commingled with many probabilities in the future, and co- pious reminiscences of the past. The past is our richest and most instructive teacher ; and it was justly said by one of the most brilliant intellects of heathen antiquity, that not to know what happened before we were born is to remain al- ways a child, This power of retrospection sheds its influ.- T2 RETROSPECT OF LUTHER AKISM. once on every department of human life — on our social, our intellectual, and our religious interests. It is in this field of retrospection that the Christian finds many of his dearest social enjoyments. Fond memory de- lights to dwell on the pleasing* and interesting associations of our early years, especially associations of effort in the cause of the Redeemer. And it is here, too, that " pensive memory retraces scenes of bliss forever fled," it is here she "dwells in former times and places;" it is here she "holds com- munion with the dead." On this occasion, my brethren, these feelings rise commingled in my breast, when I see before me some of those beloved brethren, with whom I shared the toils of early ministerial life, and when I fail to see others, who twenty years ago were co-workers with us, but have gone to their rest. It is in the wide field of retrospection, that we gather our richest treasures of wisdom and experience. It is memory that enables us to appropriate to ourselves the knowledge and experience of past ages ; to hold communion with apostles and prophets and patriarchs, and virtually to extend our life from threescore to a thousand years. It is in the rich fields of retrospection, too, that the Christian finds the incidents, the principles, and many of the evidences of his holy re- ligion ; the glorious displays of Divine Providence, and the heavenly, the expansive power of that gospel, which, aided by the Spirit, serves in every age as the conductor of saving influences from heaven to man. In the Old Testament church, festivals were expressly appointed to cherish the memory of God's mercies to his people. And our blessed Saviour himself not only attended those festivals, instituted by Moses, but appointed a mnemonic rite in his own church, and seems not to have disregarded the feast of dedication which was of mere human appointment. John x. 22. But it is not only in the Old Testament dispensation that the hand of Providence and the power of God's word may be recognized. They are displayed with increased lustre in the developments of the New Testament church throughout her history. They are seen in the Reformation of the six- teenth century, when, after ages of concealment beneath the dust of ignorance and superstition, the seed of the word was brought to light and scattered among the people. They are seen in the history of Pietism in Germany, of the Methodist RETROSPECT OP LUTHER ANISM. 13 church, the Presbyterian, the Episcopal and other churches, and, we ma)' add, in the History of our Lutheran Zion in these United States. Here, too, the precious seed scattered abroad by a few able and faithful servants of Christ, was richly watered by the Spirit, and produced abundant fruit to the praise of his grace ; and here, too, there are abundant materials for the recognition of his Providence. More than two hundred years have rolled away since the first disciples of Christ bearing the name of Luther, trav- ersed the mighty deep to seek a resting-place in thisWestern world. For more than a century has an uninterrupted stream of immigration continued to swell their numbers. Various and interesting and instructive are the incidents which have since transpired ; and as the improvement of such incidents is often enjoined in scripture, it may be well for us to adopt the language of Moses, when about to bid adieu to his brethren after the flesh : "Remember the days of old, consider the years of many generations, ask thy father and he will show thee, thy elders and they will tell thee.' y This will be the more appropriate as we are assembled to delib- erate on the welfare of the church at large, and especially as we are on the eve of a centenary celebration, for which we are expected to make arrangements. It would, indeed, be more grateful to the feelings of the speaker, and we trust of those who hear him, if the contemplated celebration per- tained to the body of Christ at large, and not only to one branch of it ; yet if all invidious comparison be avoided, if with our reminiscences of the goodness of God to our Zion, we forget not his mercies to others, and cherish a deep sense of our unprofitableness ; in short, if the spirit of secta-r rianism be, as I trust it will be, excluded from the celebration, it may tend to the glory of that Redeemer, who would have all his disciples regard each other as brethren, whilst they acknowledge, as their one and only Master, neither Luther, nor Zuingle, nor Calvin, nor Wesley, but Jesus Christ. With these views we invite your attention to A RETROSPECT OF THE LUTHERAN CHURCH IN THE UNITED.) STATES. We shall I. Glance at the history itself ; and, II. Consider several particular topics connected with it 2 14 RETROSPECT OF LUTHE R A N IS M. The history of this portion of Christ's kingdom naturally divides itself into three periods. The I. may be termed the Colonial Era, extending from the first settlement of Lu- therans in this country, (about 1626,) to the Declaration of American Independence in 1776, and embraces about one hundred and fifty years. The II. extends from that period, to the establishment of the General Synod, in 1820, includ- ing forty-four years. This may be regarded as the middle era; and the III. from that period to the present time, which may be styled the era of the General Synod, and includes twenty years. I. THE COLONIAL ERA. The earliest settlement of Lutherans in this country, was made by emigrants from Holland to New York, soon after the first establishment of the Dutch in that city, then called New Amsterdam, which was in 1621. This fact, which is ef some historical interest, rests upon the authority of the venerable patriarch of American Lutheranism, Henry Mel- chior Muhlenberg. '* As I was detained at New York, (says he in his Report to Halle, 1 ) I took some pains to acquire correct information concerning the history of the Lutheran church in that city. This small congregation took its rise almost at the first settlement of the country. Whilst the ter- ritory yet belonged to Holland, the few Low Dutch Lu- therans were compelled to hold their worship in private ; but after it passed into the possession of the British, in 1664, liberty was granted them by all the successive governors to conduct their worship publicly without any obstruction." 2 The establishment of Lutherans was, therefore, made little more than a century after the re-discovery of America by (1) Hallische Nachrichten, p. 360. (2) The Lutheran Herald, vol. in, No. 1, gives us the following particulars : " Indeed, so great was the number of Lutherans, even at this time, that the very next year, 1665, after the English flag had been displayed from fort Amsterdam, they petitioned for liberty to send to Germany a call for a regular pastor. This petition Governor Nicols of course granted, and in February, 1669, two years after he had left the government, the Rev. Jacobus Fabricius arrived in the colony and began his pastoral labors." "On the 13th of October, 1669, Lord Lovelace, who had succeeded Gov. Nicols publicly proclaimed his having received a letter from the Duke of York, expressing his pleasure that the Lutherans should be tolerated." RETROSPECT OF LUTHERAN ISM. 15 Columbus, in 1492 ; ! within a few years of the landing of the Pilgrims on Plymouth rock, 1620, and whilst the Thirty Years' War 2 was raging in Germany, and threatening to exterminate Protestantism from Europe. Their first minister was Jacob Fabricius, who arrived in 1669, but after eight years' labor, left them and connected himself with the Swed- ish Lutherans. 3 The names of his immediate successors we have not found ; but from 1703 to 1747, their pastors were the Rev. Messrs. Falkner ; from 1703 till 1725, Berkenmayer, and Knoll, and subsequently Pvochemdahler, Wolf, Hart- wick and others. The first church (a log building,) was erected 1671, 4 and Mr. Muhlenberg says it was in a dilapi- dated state when it was taken down and its place supplied by one of stone, 5 in the time of Mr. Berkenmayer. The cause of the emigration from Holland we have not seen stated, but it may easily be conjectured, as the emigrants left that country a few years after the famous Synod of Dort (1618,) and whilst the government was enforcing the intoler- ant decrees of that body. To this settlement succeeded that of the Swedes on the Delaware, in 1636, about ten or twelve years after that in New Amsterdam, and sixteen years after the arrival of the pilgrims at Plymouth. This colony was first contemplated during the reign of Gustavus Adolphus, and was sanctioned by that enlightened and illustrious king. It was delayed by the commencement of the Thirty Years' War in Germany ; but after Sweden's noble-hearted monarch had poured out his life's-blood on the plains of Lutzen, it was revived and executed under the auspices of his distinguished prime min- (1) It is now fully established that America was not first discovered by Co- lumbus ; but Greenland had been visited by Eirck, the Red, and New Eng- land by Biarni Heriulphson, the former in 982, the latter in 985. See Discoveries of the North Men. (2) This most memorable of all the wars in the history of Protestantism, which deluged Germany in blood, and had it not been for the magnanimous aid of Gustavus Adolphus and his brave Swedes, would perhaps have extir- pated Protestantism from the earth, was commenced in 1618 and ended ill 1648. (3) Clay's Annals, &c, p. 150. Fabricius took charge of the Swedish church at Wicaco, now Southwark, Philadelphia, where he labored four- teen years, during nine of which he was blind. He died 1692. (4) Lutheran Herald, vol. iii. p. 51. (5) Halliche Nachrichten, p. 363. 16 RETROSPECT OF LIT THE RANIS M. ister, Oxenstiern. 1 For many years this colony prospered, but receiving no accessions from the parent country, it never increased much in numbers ; the rising generation com- mingled with the surrounding English and Germans, and at the present day the Swedish language is entirely abandoned in their worship. For many years their ministers, who were generally men of sterling character, were in habits of the most friendly intercourse and ecclesiastical co-operation with their German Lutheran brethren ; but the prevalence of the English language having early placed them under obligation to our Episcopal brethren, who supplied them with ministrations in that language, these churches, three or four in number, have successively fallen into Episcopal hands. 2 The third settlement of Lutherans in this country was that of the Germans, which gradually spread over Pennsyl- vania, Maryland, Virginia and the interior of New York and the Western States. The grant of Pennsylvania was given to Penn by Charles II. in 1680, and from this date, till about twenty years afterward, many hundreds of families emigrated to Pennsylvania. The tide of German emigration, however, fairly commenced in 1710, when about three thousand Ger- mans, chieliy Lutheran, oppressed by Romish intolerance, went from the Palatinate to England in 1709, and were sent by Queen Ann to New York the succeeding year. In 1713 one hundred and fifty families settled in Schoharie ; and in 1717, welind in the Colonial Records of Pennsylvania, that the Governor of the province felt it his duty to call the atten- tion of the ''Provincial Council" to the fact, "that great numbers of foreigners from Germany, strangers to our lan- guage and constitution, had lately been imported into the province." The council enacted that every master of a ves- sel should report the emigrants he brought over, and that they should all repair to Philadelphia within one month to take the oath of allegiance to the government, 3 that it might be seen whether they were "friends or enemies to his majesty's (1) Clay's Annals of the Swedes, p. 1G. (2) That these churches have dwindled away to almost nothing, would seem to appear from the fact that when their present amiable rector, the Rev. J. C. Clay, was elected, December 5th. 1831, the entire number of votes given, %as, at the "VYicaeo church (Philadelphia,) 16, at Upper Mcrion 29, and at Kiiigsessiiig37. Clay's Annals p. 133. (3) Colonial Records, vol, iii p 18. RETROSPECT OP LUTHERANISM. 17 government." In 1727, the year memorable alike for Francke's death and the origin of the Moravians, a very large number of Germans came to Pennsylvania from the Palatinate from Wurtemberg, Darmstadt and other parts of Germany. This colony was long destitute of a regular min- istry ; there were however some schoolmasters and others, some of whom were probably good men, who undertook to preach ; and as many of the emigrants brought with them the spirit of true piety from Germany, they brought also many devotional books, and often read Arndt's True Chris- tianity and other similar works for mutual edilication. 1 For twelve years, from 1730 till the arrival of the patriarch of American Lutheranism, Dr. Henry Melchior Muhlenberg, the Swedish ministers kindly labored among the Germans, as far as their duties to their own churches admitted. But before we pursue the history of this colony any farther, our attention is claimed by The, fourth settlement of Lutherans in this country, who established themselves irfGeorgia, in 1733, and to designate the gratitude -of their hearts to the God who had protected them, styled their location Ebenezer. These emigrants were from Saltzburg, formerly belonging to Bavaria, and restored to the Austrian dominions at the peace of 1814. Persecuted at home by those enemies of all righteousness, the Jesuits, 2 and by Romish priests and Romish rulers, this band of disciples sought a resting-place in these western wilds, where they could worship God according to the dictates of their consciences, under their own vine and fig- tree, without molestation or fear. Through the instrument- ality of Rev. Urlsperger, of Augsburg, who was a corres- ponding member of the British Society for the Promotion of Christianity, pecuniary aid was afforded by that liberal and noble-minded association, and the oppressed Saltzburgers en- abled to reach the place of their destination. Happily, they were immediately supplied by two able and faithful pastors, Messrs. Bolzius and Gronau. The latter was taken away by death after twelve years labor among the emigrants, but Bolzius was spared to the church about thirty years. In 1738 these colonists erected an orphan house at Ebenezer, (1) See Hallische Nachrichten, p. 665, (2) Heinsius' unparteiiscli Kir* chen historie, vol. hi. p. 291. 2A ;8 RETROSPECT OP LUTrfEHAfllSM. to which work of benevolence important aid was contributed by that distinguished man of God, George Whitelield, who also furnished the bell for one of the churches erected by them. The descendants of these colonists are still numer- ous, and are connected with the Lutheran synod of South Carolina and adjacent states. Soon after the above colonization, numerous Germans coming from Pennsylvania and other states, settled in North Carolina, 1 who enjoyed the labors of many excellent ser^ vants of Christ — Nussman, Arndt, Storch, Roschen, Bern- hard, Shober and others, and whose descendants constitute the present numerous churches in the Carolinas. In 1735 a settlement of Lutherans was formed in Spottsyl- vania, as Virginia was then sometimes called, 2 which we suppose to be the church in Madison county of that state. Their pastor, the Rev. Stoever, visited Germany for aid, and together with several assistants obtained three thou- sand pounds, part of which was expended in the erection of a church, the purchase of a plantation and slaves to work it for the support of their minister, and the balance expended for a library, or consumed by the expenses of the town. 2 As might have been expected, this church seems never to have enjoyed the smiles of our Father in Heaven. In 1739 a few Germans, emigrated to Waldoborough, Maine, to whose number an addition of fifteen hundred souls was made thirteen years afterward. But the title to the land given them by General Waldo proving unsound, many left the colony, and its numbers have never greatly increased. For many years they enjoyed the pastoral labors, success- ively of Rev. SchaeiFer (from 1762,) Croner (from 1785,) and Ritz, and since 1811 are under the charge of Rev. Mr. Starman. 3 Of all these colonies that which in the Providence of God has most increased, and has hitherto constituted the great body of the Lutheran church in this country, is that in the (1) Shober's Luther, p. 137. (2) Ilallische Nachrichten, p. 331. (3) Heinsius speaks of a colony of Swiss Lutherans, who tired of Romish oppression, also sought refuge in this Western world. They came by way of England, under the direction of Col. Parry, who established them in a place called after himself Purrysburg. This colony, if we mistake not, was also in Georgia, but we have notbeen able to find any account of its progress or present condition. Heinsius' Kirchcugeschichte, vol. hi. p. 291. RETROSPECT OP LUTHE R ASIS M. 19 Middle states, Pennsylvania, interior New York, Maryland, , the enemy is the devil." See also Matth. viii. 22 ; or in Gethsemane when Jesus says, "Father, if it be possible let this cup" this trial of affliction, pass away. This rule is based on the universally conceded proposition, that the testimony of our senses fairly and fully ascertained, is stronger than any other evidence, which might seem to overturn it ; and that the obvious and conceded teachings of common sense and rea- son are also true. 2) We must depart from the literal sense, when the pas- sage literally interpreted, contradicts the iccll known opinions of the author, or in regard to the Bible, contradicts some other portions of Scripture, and the passage naturally, in accordance with the laws of language, admits another meaning, that does not labor under these difficulties. Thus, the command of the Saviour: "If thy hand, or foot, or eye offend thee, cut it off, or pluck it out," &c, Matth. xviii. 9, 10, literally interpreted contradicts the command in the decalogue, "thou shalt not kill," and, therefore, the literal sense cannot be retained. 3) The deviation from the literal sense is the more nat- ural and allowable, when the composition is poetic, in which figurative language naturally abounds, in all languages and among all nations. 4) Also, in popular discourses and even narrative com- positions, when the speaker is in the habit of employing figurative style. Thus, after we know from the discourses of the Saviour in general, that often, very often, he speaks in parables, and employs various kinds of figurative expressions ; it is 124 THE NATURE OF THE SAVIOUR'S the more probable, that his meaning in a disputed passage is figurative also ; and it is the more obligatory on us to adopt a tropical interpretation, when a literal one labors under difficulties. We need not enumerate the parables of the Saviour. It is well known that his discourses are more frequently parabolical or figurative, in some form or other, than literal. This is also very frequently the case in regular historical and didactic composition in all languages, although the figures occurring are of a more modest nature, are meta- phorical rather than allegorical. The tropes are rarely kept up through a whole narrative. Such a figurative mode of speaking, is more usual among the orientals in general, than among the other civilized nations. Having thus sketched out the general principles of her- meneutics, so far as they have an immediate bearing on the portions of Holy Writ, relating to the Supper of our Lord ; we proceed, in the second place, to their application. We shall inquire what is the literal import of the words of the institution; whether sufficient difficulties oppress the literal sense to justify its rejection ; what are the several tropical or figurative significations, of which the words in question admit ; and which of these commends itself most strongly to our judgment and conscience, as most accordant with the legitimate principles of interpretation. § 2. The literal sense of the words of the institution. What is the literal sense of the Gospel narrative of the institution of the Lord's Supper? Matth. xxvi. 26. (Mark xiv. 22. Luke xxii. 19. 1 Cor. xi. 23, 24.) Etfdjovrwv ds aurwv, Xa/3wv 6 I^cfeg' resence cannot be true, is proved by those passages of scripture which represent Christ as having left this world, as having returned to the Father, and as being seated at his right hand in heaven ; John xvi. 28, "I came forth from the Father, and am come into the world;" again, "I leave the world, and go to the Father." Matth. xxvi. 11. "For ye have the poor always with you ; but me ye have not always." John xvi. 7. "It is expedient for you that I go away, for if I go not away, the Comforter will not come unto you ; but if I depart, I will send him unto you." We are told by the Saviour him- PRESENCE IN THE EUCHARIST. 131 self, not to yield credence to such as say, "Lo, here is Christ or there." Matth. xxiv. 23. When he took his final leave of his disciples, Luke tells us, "he was carried up into heaven." And although the Saviour left on record the delightful promise, that he would be always with his disciples till the end of the world ; it was in his divine nature, which is omnipresent ; and his next visible appearance, the angels informed the men of Galilee at his ascension, would again be from heaven in like manner, as they had seen him ascend. Acts i. 11. In Acts iii. 21, Peter declares, that " The heavens must re- ceive him until the times of the restitution (atfoxa.piv^v,) originated from the Jewish habit of distinguishing clean from unclean meats, according to the law of Moses. Those were said not to discern or distinguish the meats, who ate indiscriminately both clean and unclean or forbidden meats. See Ezek. xliw 23. Tins- remark is the more important, as the Apostle Paul had, in the previous context (x. 18 and 27) spoken of things offered in sacrifice both by the Jews and Gentiles. 2. The other passage, is 1 Cor. x. 16. The cup of bles- sing which we bless, is it not the communion of the blood of- Christ ? The bread which we break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? "ovyt (Vo coe unto salvation, through faith which is in Christ Jesus." This is represented as the test by which the opinions of men are to be tried. "To the law and the testimony; if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them." And Paul declares that, if an angel from heaven should preach "any other doctrine than that which he taught," and which is recorded in his epistle, "let him be accursed." These facts should make us reflect care- fully, before we erect any other standard of doctrine, in a manner, which, even indirectly, or by human infirmity, might, in any degree, take the place of this inspired rule. Still, the Saviour and his apostles have prescribed certain requisitions to be demanded by those whom they received into the church, of all others who might subsequently ap- ply for admission. For example, applicants had to express SYMBOLICAL REQUISITIONS. 169 their belief, that Jesus was the Christ, that is. the Messiah, &c. This brief acknowledgment, by frequent repetition, acquired a settled form, which, when it first meets us in the literature of the church, had grown into what was called the Apostles' Creed, constituting less than a duodecimo page ; and this is all the creed used in the Christian church in the whole world, so far as is known, for several hundred years, during the golden age of Christianity. We fully coincide with the judgment of the early church, thus ex- pressed, that for the purity of the church, and harmony of its operations, a creed of fundamentals is necessary, or at least useful, if properly employed. Yet it is evident, from many considerations, that it should include only fundamen- tals, only such doctrines as we believe necessary to the Christian character, together with as many points of gov- ernment and discipline, as are requisite for harmony in ac- tion. Otherwise, we destroy the unity of Christ's body,, we violate the charity inculcated in the gospel, and wage a. war of "doubtful disputations" with the brother, whom we : consider "weak in the faith." We, therefore, after much., and prayerful study of this subject, in the light of, scripture and history, approve of the use of the so called Apostles*" Creed, the Nicene Creed, and the fundamentals of the Augsburg Confession, as an expression of the prominent truths we believe the bible to teach, and as tests of admis- sion and discipline in the church. This is the ground which, our fathers in this country practically adopted, half a cen- tury ago ; this is the ground which our General Synod has. formally adopted, and the ground on which we stand. These several positions might be established by numerous, irrefragable arguments, but the present discussion does not properly cover this ground. We return, then, to our next position, that the fathers of our American church soon relaxed from their rigid views of obligation to the symbolical books. There are numerous reasons to authorize the belief, that Dr. Muhlenberg himself, the principal founder of our Amer- ican church, was a man of much more liberality and en- larged views of Christian apostolic liberty, than he has- sometimes received credit for. As evidence of this fact, we will cite his liberality towards some "Separatists," as they are styled in Germany, before he came to America ;- 15 170 EARLY ABANDONMENT OF for which he is censured by the historian Heinsiiis, who was a churchman of the strictest class. Speaking of our church in Philadelphia, he says: 1 "The Ev. Lutheran con- gregation in that place, has recently obtained a preacher, concerning whom we rather wish than can confidently ex- pect, that he will preserve those churches in order and in purity of doctrine, without divisions. This minister is Mr. Muhlenberg, who some time since studied at Goettingen, afterwards officiated as deacon inspector in the baronial Gersdorf-Orphanhouse at Grooshennersdorf, in Lusatia, and who secretly advocated the course of the Separatists in « publication against Dr. Mentz&r." We do not know what points Dr. Muhlenberg vindicated in this work, but it is well known that those Separatists were generally pious per- sons, who saw, or thought they saw, defects in the estab- lished (Lutheran) church, and wished to worship God in what they considered a purer and a more scriptural man- ner. This fact, however, proves that Dr. M. was a man who thought for himself, and disapproved of some things in the Lutheran church in Germany, which were approved by Heinsiiis himself, a rigid Lutheran and a pious man. That Dr. M. did not regard liturgies as very important, is evident from the fact, that twelve years after he had been laboring in organizing and building up churches in this country, where he thought it desirable for the sake of the in public worship to compose a liturgy, he had not a copy of a liturgy used in Germany, nor could one be found ; so that when he and his fellow laborers, Brunnholtz and Handschuh, undertook to form one, they had to take as its basis, the liturgy of the Savoy Lutheran church in London ; for, says he, "we had no other one at hand." 2 "That he did not like a long liturgy, is evident, because they pre- pared a short one," even shorter than "the enlarged''' re- print of it in 1786, which is not more than half as large as that now in use. Nor was he a stickler for the peculiarities of any part of Germany, for he says; "we adapted it to the circumstances of our congregations, which had come from different parts of Germany. (1) Vol. iii. page 3S9, of his "Unpartheiiscke Kirclien Historic Jena, 1754. (£) Hall. Nachrichten, p. 676. SYMBOLICAL REQUISITIONS. 171 That lie and his associates were not ardently devoted to the whole mass of symbolical books, is probable, as they are not named in their Synodical constitution (ministerial ordnung, ) so far as appears from our oldest cop}*, nor in their liturgy, except the catechism, for the instruction of youth. It is worthy of note, also, that the charter for the "congre- gations in and near Philadelphia," which was probably as usual in the case of such documents, written by some law- yer, under the direction of Muhlenberg and his associates, mentions not one of the symbolical books, though dated as early as 1765, and very extended and minute in its specifi- cations, covering four and a half quarto pages. That they were unwilling to receive as binding any of the symbolical books except the Augsburg Confession, is evident, because in the prominent documents in which they mention that sym- bol, they say nothing about the others. Thus, in the (lurchowrdnung) discipline of the church at Philadelphia, written by Muhlenberg himself, in 1762, the ministers are bound in the very first clause to teach according to the un- altered Augsburg Confession, but noticing is said about the other symbolical books. The catechism is subsequently pre- scribed for the instruction of the young. The same disci- pline was introduced into the church at Lancaster, unaltered. The same is the case in the inscription on Muhlenberg's church at the Trappe, dated 1743, the very next year after his arrival in this country, "this church sacred to the soci- ety devoted to the Augsburg Confession," and nothing more. Twenty years afterwards, he remained firm in this distinc- tion, and generally the other symbolical books ; for in his address to his congregation, he again speaks of that church as being founded "on the apostles and prophets and the unaltered Augsburg Confession," without even a reference to the other symbols. Can any impartial mind fail to per- ceive that Muhlenberg desired no other book to be regarded as symbolical, except the Augsburg Confession, when he de- signedly omits them on these solemn, official occasions? Again, we find another proof in an interesting diary of a voyage made by father Muhlenberg near the close of his life, to Charleston, South Carolina, found in the Ev. Review, In a letter which Dr. Muhlenberg addressed to Europe, re- questing the mission of a minister to supply the church in that city, he solicits one "who is able and willing to propa- 172 EARLY ABANDONMENT OF gate the gospel according to the foundation of the holy apostles and prophets, whereof Jesus Christ is the corner stone, and to administer the holy sacraments agreeably to the articles of our unaltered Augsburg Confessio7l. , ' Here, too, it cannot fail to be seen, that this indefatigable servant of Christ, again says not a word of the other symbolic books, and certainly if he wished or expected, that the minister who might be sent over, would here be required to bind himself to the other symbolical books also, he must necessarily have mentioned them, as he so distinctly specifies one of them, the Augsburg Confession. But it is evident, that if the ex- pccted minister differed from the specifications of all the other symbolical books on all the various points not deter- mined in the Augsburg Confession, he would still be such a minister as Dr. M. requested, and as he would not hesitate to ordain. Nay, further, although Ave do not know this to have been the design of Dr. M., and therefore do not assert it, for our cause needs no doubtful interpretations ; yet, he says the gospel is to be preached according to the founda- tion of the holy apostles and prophets, and only of the sacra- ments does he say they shall be administered according to the Au^sburo- Confession. Now, when we recollect he did not feel bound to believe all the minor points even in the Augsburg Confession, that he rejected Auricular Confession, and in all probability, as far as we can judge from his writings, also the imputation of Adam's sin to his posterity ; that he did not use the liturgy of Germany, but for twelve years, as it would seem, none at all, and then made a very "short" one; we may justly claim him as in principle, the father of American Lutheran- ism "so called." For American Lutheranism, as repre- sented in the General Synod, cannot with truth be repre- sented as a creedless system ; on the contrary, it adheres to the fundamentals of the gospel as taught in the Augsburg Confession, whilst it refuses to acknowledge as binding, the other books, however much they may be valued by many amongst us, as theological productions. This is, in fact, also the doctrinal standpoint of the greater part of Evangelical Lutherans in Germany at the present time. With the exception of about one hundred ministers, (the so called Old Lutherans,) out of seven thousand in Germany, none are bound to any thing more than the Augs- *. SYMBOLICAL REQUISITIONS. 173 burg Confession, and that not to every minor doctrine in it. In traveling- through Wurtemberg, we made particular in- quiry of Dr. Schmidt, the principal professor in the Theo- logical Seminary in Tuebingen, himself an orthodox man, and were informed that the clergy of Wurtemberg are obliged only to teach " according to the principles of the Augsburg Confession," (nach den Principien der Aug. Conf.) or as another eminent minister informed us, (nach dem Geist mid Sinn,) according to the spirit and import of the Augsburg Confession. These are the exact words as recorded in our diary at the time. The views of Dr. Muhlenberg as above given, are in per- fect consonance with the statements made to us a few days since, by one of the most aged ministers of our church, our venerable father, who was admitted into that Synod in 1792, and has successively held the highest offices of that body. He asserts, that at the time of his admission, the propriety of requiring a pledge was a matter of doubt and debate ; that in some instances it was exacted and in others no : but some years later it was wholly omitted ; and that Dr. Hel- muth, confessedly, one of the most pious members of that body, who was any thing else than a rationalist, and com- menced his labors in our church as early as 1769, was prom- inent in opposing the requisition of any other creed than the Bible. Muhlenberg himself had already been translated to a better world. Another highly respectable and learned minister of our church, who also entered the ministry about the close of the last century, or beginning of this, in a letter now before me, says: "That the exaction of a promise to conform to the s}-mbolic books ivas ever habitual" with the Synod of Pennsylvania " I do not believe." It is, mor certain that the Synod of New York, one of the olde I in our church, when framing her constitution, introduced a i forbidding the use of any other doctrinal test than the Bible. If then, our fathers, who in Europe were pledged to the whole mass of the symbolic books, (namely, to the three ancient creeds, the Apostles', the Nicene and the Athanasian, the Augsburg Confession, the Apology to the Confession, the Smalkalcl Articles, the smaller and larger Catechisms of Luther, and the Form of Concord,) did on their arrival in this country, or soon after, make a distinction between them, and in their Liturgies, church disciplines, and other \m\ or- 16a 174 EARLY ABANDONMENT OF tant official documents, if they refer to any of the symbolic books, mention only the Augsburg Confession, and omit the other confessions altogether; if they, as early as 1792, were divided on the propriety of exacting any other test than the Bible and some years later entirely omitted the requisition of a pledge to any of the symbolical books ; if all these things are true, as is certain, then it must be admitted, that our fathers, even the oldest of them, soon relaxed from their rigid views of obligation to the symbolical books, which at that time prevailed in Germany, and with which they prob- ably came to this country. It has already been stated, that the founders of our Amer- ican church rejected several of the doctrines of the symbolic books, such as auricular confession, exorcism, the imputa- tion of Adam's sin (or rather of the depraved nature inher- ited from him,) to his posterity as personal guilt, and we may add, at least in regard to some of them, the lax notions of the Augsburg Confession on the Christian Sabbath. It may not be amiss to show these deviations more fully, and also in later days to exhibit somewhat more in detail the ac- tual, prevailing state of doctrine, at the time of the organi- zation of the 'General Synod. Dr. Kunze, propably the most learned of our older min- isters, and no less distinguished for his piety, 1 than learning, in his history of the Christian Religion, thus expresses his views on the imputation of Adam's sin : " To derive original sin from the first man's being the federal head or represen- tative of the human race, seems not -satisfactory to a mind inclined to derive or expect only good and perfect things from the good and perfect Creator. By one man's disobe- dience, it is true, many were made sinners, but not on ac- count of an imputation of this man's sin, but -because by Tlim, sin entered the world." 2 And on the subject of the Christian JSabbath the Doctor took such high and decided grounds as to excite hostility and even persecution from some of his hearers. Dr. Lochman himself, speaking of the Article in the Augs- burg Confession on Natural depravity, uses this language : (1) See lils work, "Eiu "Wortfuer den Yerstand und das Herz passim/ and especially p. 208-211. (2) Locliman's Lutlier/p. 88. SYMBOLICAL KE QU IS I T I N S . 175 The last clause in the above article, namely, the clause "con- demneth all who are not born again of water and of the spirit," is thus explained by some: "If we suffer our de- praved nature to have the rule over us, it will certainly lead us to ruin and condemnation." 1 This we know, from personal interviews with him, to have been -the Doctor's own opinion. The Rev. Schober, of North Carolina, though a warm friend of piety and active advocate of fundamental orthodoxy, did not receive the Augsburg Confession implicitly himself; and though he desired to introduce an acknowledgment of it into the constitution of the General Synod, did not design, had his efforts been successful, to require the belief of all its minor doctrines as a term of admission. Had such been his purpose, he would have excluded himself. In the edi- tion of the Augsburg Confession published by himself, he appended notes to several articles, indicating his dissent from them. Hear his own language on the subject of Confession and Absolution, (Art. xi. of Conf.) ' • This article was inserted at the time of the delivery of this Confession, chiefly to show a conciliatory spirit to the other party; but the practice of private confession and ab- solution is entirely discontinued in our Lutheran churches," p. 107. And of course the doctrine on which it is based, is also rejected. On the doctrine of the Lord's Supper, he follows the Latin copy of Art. x. of the Confession, which omits the word true from before "body," in the German, adds the word " extei'nal" to emblems, which is not found in the Latin or German copy, and in addition to all appends the following note : " As Christ has promised unto his disciples and true followers, that he will be with them to the end of the world, and as he has been pleased to give us the gracious assurance, to be present with us whenever we assemble in his name ; how firmly may we not rely on his promises, especially when we celebrate the Lord's Supper according to his holy insti- tution, in solemn commemoration of his sufferings and death, and appropriate his merits to our own hearts." But he says nothing about receiving the body and blood. of Christ in the ordinance. But to place this matter beyond all doubt, boih in regard (1) p. 86—88 articles. 176 EARLY ABANDONMENT OF to Rev. Schober, and the ministers of the North Carolina Synod, generally, even as early as the year 1 820, we add a document, adopted by that Synod at the very meeting at which delegates were elected, to attend the Convention at Hagerstown, in October of the same year, for the purpose of forming a Constitution for the General Synod. At that meeting a letter was addressed to the North Carolina Synod by a minister of a sister church, to which the following an- swer, prepared by a committee of Synod, was adopted ; and the Rev. Schober requested to forward it to the memorialists, accompanied by " a polite and brotherly address" in the name of the Synod : "To the Rev. James Hill: Rev. and Dear Sir, — In answer to your question, whether water baptism effects regeneration? we say we do not fully know what you mean by the word "effects," as it may have many definitions. But we say, that baptism is beneficial, and ought to be attended to as a command of God ; but we do not believe that all who are baptized with water, are regen- erated and born again unto God, so as to be saved without the operation of the Holy Ghost; or, in other words, with- out faith in Christ. And as to the second question, we do not believe nor teach, that the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Chr'td, are corporeally received along with the bread and wine in the Lord's Supper; but that the true believer does spiritucdlg receive and partake of the same, through fedth in Jesus Christ, and all the saving benefits of his death and passion." 1 Here, then, we cannot fail to see, that this whole Synod, (for they seem all to have been of one mind,) had aban- doned the ground of the Augsburg Confession, and believed only a spiritual presence and perception of the body and blood of Christ, by faith in the eucharist, and this limited, of course, to the believer; and especially was this the doc- trinal position of Mr. Schober, who was the leading and most active spirit in that body, and personally carried on a controversy with David Ilenkel, partly on this very doctrine. But still farther, to show the real doctrinal position of Mr. (1) See Transactions of the Lutheran Synod of North Carolina and ad' jacent States lor 1820, printed at Raleigh* p. 18. SYMBOLICAL REQUISITIONS. 177 Schober and his Synod, at the organization of the General Synod, we add another extract from the same minutes, (p. 6, ) in which Mr. Schober, as Secretary, gives a statement of a discussion which occurred at that meeting, between several, Messrs. Henkels, and the Synod. Mr. Schober says : "They accused us of not teaching water baptism to be regenera- tion, and that we did not accept the elements in the eucharisi as the true body and blood of the Lord, corporeally, and therefore, and because the plan for a general union of oui church, (that is, the General Synod,) which they feared we would adopt, was against the Augsburg Confession; they could not unite with us." These Messrs. Henkels, who had for years been associated with Mr. Schober in the same Synod, and well knew his views, seem to have had little ex- pectation, that the General Synod, which Mr. Schober was so anxious to establish, would have the least desire strictly to enforce the Augsburg Confession ; on the contrary, their standing charge against him and his associates was, that they did not hold the doctrines of that Confession. It has indeed been supposed that a pledge to the unal- tered Augsburg Confession bound its subjects to the whole system, taught also in all the other symbols ! ! This opin- ion is utterly unfounded. Nor can any authority be ad- duced for it. No historian has ever asserted, that an understanding existed in Europe, that whoever signed the unaltered Augsburg Confession, thereby bound himself to adhere to the entire system taught in all the other books. If such an understanding had existed, how absurd, then, was the custom of binding ministers explicitly to the other books also, which prevailed for seven hundred years, until the beginning of this century ? If the matter was so un- derstood, why did Sweden, and Denmark, and Prussia, and a number of other portions of the Lutheran church refuse to receive the Apology to the Confession? And why did the more rigid Lutherans complain of those countries, which received the unaltered Augsburg Confession, but rejected one or more of the other books, if the reception of that one bound them to all ? Why does even Guericke complain that they did not attain symbolic manhood ? In short, we can- not make the supposition tally with history at all, and there- fore, are compelled to regard it, in fact, as unreasonable and unfounded, as it, at first view, appears to be. Guericke 178 AUGSBURG CONFESSION DOES NOT does indeed attempt to show, if we recollect rightly, that those who received the unaltered Augsburg Confession were under a logical obligation to adhere to the others, which we shall prove unfounded ; but the question before us is en- tirely different, namely, whether our fathers did not relin- quish the practice of requiring a pledge to the other sym- bolical books, and confine themselves to the Augsburg Confession, which is a fact to be established by historical evidence. But may it not also be maintained, that the other sym- bolical books, the Catechisms of Luther excepted, were written to explain the Augsburg Confession, and do not teach any different doctrines, but only define the position of the church towards the Calvinists, &c, and therefore, all who receive the latter should receive the former also. To this we reply, if the other books did not touch on any ad- ditional doctrine, (which is, however, not the case,) but only dilated on those more generically stated in the Augs- burg Confession, they would be objectionable as binding creeds ; because, whilst men might agree on the few general specifications of doctrine, delineated in the Augsburg Con- fession, they might, and would differ on many of the ex- planations, ramifications and amplifications of them, con- tained in the other books. As well might we affirm, that all who can agree to pledge themselves to the few generic specifications of the Augsburg Confession, could just as well adopt, as their confession of faith, that excellent and volumnious work, " ReinbecFs (Betrachtungen) Reflections on the Augsbury Confession" in nine ponderous quarto vols.; for they are all written professedly and actually in explana- tion of that symbol. Or, to illustrate the point still more clearly, as well might we assert, that all who adopt the American Constitution, as all our citizens do, can just as well also adopt the many volumes containing explanations of the provisions of that constitution, written by authors of our several political parties. The thing is impossible. Who does not know that these different authors, like the several parties to which they belong, deduce very different, yea, directly contradictory views from that same instrument, and that they could not possibly agree ? And is it not equally notorious matter of history, that different writers, who have all agreed in assenting to the generic statements INVOLVE THE OTHER SYMBOLS. 179 of the Augsburg Confession, have entertained a multitude of different opinions in regard to the minor specifications, the explanations, the circumstances and relations of those doctrines. The proten pseudos, the radical error, of the ultra-Luther- ans on this point, is this, that they lose sight of the difference between generic and specific truths. Religious, as well as other truths, are encircled by a vast multitude of relations and circumstances. Now these truths may be stated more or less generically, that is, in stating them, we may intro- duce more or fewer of those minor relations and circum- stances. And such is the constitution of mind conferred on us by the Creator, that whilst the great mass of men agree in a generic statement of truths, in political or religious science, even of truths derived from the Bible ; the more you enter into an enumeration of specific details, or sup- posed relations, the smaller the number of those, who can agree in them all. Thus, all denominations of Christians, agree to the few generic truths stated in the so-called Apos- tles' Creed, the only one used by Christians during the first three centuries. Yet, when we take up a creed of ten or twenty times its length, such as the Augsburg Confession, the 39 Articles of the Church of England, or the Heidel- berg Catechism, Ave find these same Christians differing concerning the detailed statements of these several symbols on the subject of the very doctrines generically stated in tbe Apostles' Creed. And just in proportion as we extend the creed by adding more specifications and relations, do we also increase the difficulty of its reception by others. The grand reason of this fact is, that these minor circumstances and relations are less clearly revealed in scripture, and in stone instances, are mere human inferences from what is revealed, and also, because the human mind can apprehend sonu of these minor relations less clearly than it does the cardinal facts and doctrines of the gospel. From these considera- tions, we trust our readers will easily perceive the fallacy of the supposition, that whoever can assent to the more generic statement of doctrine in the Augsburg Confession, a pamphlet of something like the size of Matthew's gospel, can also necessarily adopt all the minor specifications of re- lations and circumstances, which are contained in the whole 180 AUGSBURG CONFESSION DOES NOT mass of the former symbolic books, amounting to twice the size of the whole New Testament ! But in order, if possible, to illustrate this point still more clearly, we will select an example taken from the symbol- ical books themselves. Thus, the Augsburg Confession, in its third article, consisting of about twenty lines, contains a historical and generic statement concerning the Person of the Saviour, affirming his divinity, his incarnation or birth of the Virgin Mary, the union of his divine and human nature into one person, who is true God and man, his sufferings, crucifixion and death as a propitiatory sacrifice, not only for hereditary depravity, but also for all actual transgres- sions ; his descent into hell, resurrection, ascension to heav- en, his session at the right hand of God, his everlasting do- minion over all creatures, his sanctification of believers through the Spirit, and protection of them against sin and satan, as also his final appearance to judge the quick and the dead. Now, to all these statements, given in very few more words than we have here employed, all evangelical Christians can cordially assent, except the descent into hell, (which was not in the earliest form of the creed,) and that they would only wish to have changed into the icorld of spirits, which might or might not be hell. But for these- twenty lines, the other symbolic books give us discussions under various captions, to the amount of from fifty to a hundred pages,, in which they not only several times repeat these general- positions, but also add about fifty specifica- tions, and related topics which are not in the Augsburg Confession. The major part of them were regarded as true, but others as erroneous. Among them are such topics as the following: 1. That God is man and man is God. 2. That the Virgin Mary did not conceive and bring forth a mere man but the true Son of God, and therefore, she is the- Mother of God. 3. That it is right to say, that God suf- fered and died for us. 4. That it was not the mere human- ity of Christ that suffered. 5. That the divine and human natures of Christ communicate their attributes and properties to each other. 6. That there are three species of this com- munication. 7. That Chri-st, in his human nature also, is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent. 8. That he ac- quired omnipotent power in his mother's womb. 9. That ihefesh of Christ is a life-giving food, (also, ist das Fleisch INVOLVE THE OTHER SYMBOLS.' 181 Christi eine lebendigmachende Speise.) 10. That the body of Christ received a certain glorification and majesty, not only after his resurrection, and at his ascension to heaven, but at the time when he was conceived in the womb. 1 1. That the one body of Christ can be present at any place in three different ways. We are prepared to support all these topics by explicit quotations from the several symbolical books ; but they would occupy more space than can be allowed. Now, if our readers will examine these specifica- tions, they will find that not one of them is contained in the Augsburg Confession above quoted. So we might pass over all the articles of the Augsburg Confession, and show that a vast multitude of specifications is found in the other books, which are not contained in the Augsburg Confession. It will be seen,, too, that some of these specifications' are, to say the least, very doubtful ; and others obviously erroneous and unscriptural. How it should follow, that whoever re- ceives the Augsburg Confession, either ought or can also receive or bind himself to this host of additional tenets, we confess ourselves at a loss to perceive. We freely acknowl- edge that we can neither see nor feel any such obligation,, either logical, or. theological, or ecclesiastical, or moral. But admitting that there is no obligation of any kind to receive all these books, and bind ourselves to believe their contents ; is it expedient, would it conduce to the glory of God, would it advance the interests of our church ? Most certainly not. As the difficulty of all assenting to any creed is increased just as we augment the number of minor and less important specifications in it; and as even the Augsburg Confession contains a few minor items, which the great mass of our ministers and laymen do not believe ; it would be evident.folly to attempt to bind us to books con- taining ten times as many more such minor and doubtful points. The attempt would unavoidably give rise to end- less contentions, and must necessarily terminate in divisions of the church. Moreover, as our church has been signally blessed of God with doctrinal purity and doctrinal harmony under the General Synod's doctrinal basis, for more than a quarter of a century ; why should we not adhere to it, and devote our energies to supplying the destitute of our church over the land with the preached gospel ? If desired, let us add the Maryland Synod's explanation of the pledge, by 16 152 NO FORMAL RECEPTION OF THE SYMBOLS enumerating what articles are fundamental; which ex- presses exactly what the pledge was intended to convey. The discord and diversity which have in some regions marred the peace of our Zion, had no reference to doctrine, and admit of no doctrinal remedy. They originated and consisted in particular measures, and especially in violations of our Formula of Government and discipline, which strictly forbids all noise and' disorder in the worship of God. The remedy for these is already provided by the General Synod in her Formula ; let the attention of those who lament these disorders, where any prevail, be directed to enforcing the provisions of the Formula, and all will be well. At the same time, let them demonstrate to the disorderly, that their zeal for order does not arise from want of zeal for re- ligion, by redoubling their efforts to promote orderly prayer meetings, and orderly Special Conferences, for the purpose of awakening and converting sinners and edifying believers, and thus winning souls to Christ. Let the catechetical in- struction of the rising generation be more faithfully attended to, wherever it has been neglected ; and children be taught to love the institutions of the church as administered in our own denomination. Let them be taught to love the biblical, liberal, spiritual features of our Lutheran Zion, and the days of peace and harmony among pious Lutherans, the days of conversions and orderly genuine revivals, where they have disappeared, will again return to bless us. CHAPTER ill. The symbolical books of our church in Germany never, formally adopted in this country, though practically used in different cases till near the close of the last CENTURY. The next position claiming our attention is, That our church in America has never formally adopted the symbolical boohs of the Lutheran church of the sixteenth century; though indivi" BY OUR LUTHERAN FATHERS. 183 xh\a\ congregations had acknowledged the Augsburg Con- fession at the erection of their churches, and in some cases assent to the symbols, and especially to the Augsburg Confession, had been required at licensure and ordination. By this we mean that no considerable or respectable Lu- theran Synod or convention of Lutheran ministers in this country ever passed a resolution and published it, acknowl- edging the authority of the former symbolical books of our church in Germany, or of any of them as binding on them and on all who would unite with their body, until it was done within the last few years by several German Synods of the West. 1. It is true that die Governor and Directors of New Am- sterdam, (New York,) then a Dutch colony, had concluded that the doctrines of the Auo-sbur^ Confession might be tol- erated there, and therefore that the Lutherans might worship in private till they could obtain a minister. But, were these grave dignitaries, the Governor and Directors of New York, the ''Lutheran church" in America, when they did not even belong to the Lutheran congregation ? And was their action the action of "our church?" And if they had even been Lutherans, was their resolution to tolerate worship according to the Augsburg Confession, a resolution to make the whole mass of the symbolical books binding? Nor does the fact that the members of that church styled themselves "United members of the unaltered Augsburg Confession" prove any more. It shows that those members professed to believe the Augsburg Confession, a part of the symbolical books, one out of half a dozen of them, but not that even they received the whole of these books, much less was their giving them- selves this name the action of the church, or of a part of it, formally adopting the symbolical books as binding. 2. Again, the Saltzburg emigrants also professed the doc- trines of the Augsburg Confession in Germany, and whilst there contracted with the Trustees of the colony, that several ministers should be maintained among them, to preach to them the word of God "according to the purport of their own confession," and that they should " protect them in the free exercise of their religion according to the import of the Augsburg Confession and other symbolical books of the Evan- gelical church" Now, although this latter phrase, and ' ' other symbolical books" of the Evangelical church, was not of their 184 CASE OF THE GERMAN, own selection, but was contained verbatim in the offer or invitation sent from England to Rev. Ursperger to induce emigrants to go to Georgia, and accepted by them; still admit- ting that these emigrants who were nearly all " farmers or me- chanics, day-laborers or domestics," had all seen and read all the symbolic books, which is certainly a very liberal conces- sion, what does it prove ? It establishes the fact that these emigrants professed the doctrines of the symbolical boohs in Germany, and intended to adhere to the same faith in this country, a point -which we have already asserted of the early Lutherans in general. But were these Saltzburgers, when in Germany, the Lutheran church in this country, or even as yet a part of it? And could this contract, which they formed there, with any propriety be adduced to prove that our church in this country, or even that they, when they subsequently became a part of it, passed a resolution, or took any public step formally adopting the symbolic books as binding on their churches here ? Certainly not. 3. In regard to the founders of our church in Pennsyl- vania, the facts in the case incontestably prove that "our church never formally adopted" the symbolic books, that is, that no synod or convention ever passed an act declaring the symbolical books binding on themselves, and to be required of all who wished to unite with them. The question, whether the patriarchs of our church adopted these sym- bols formally, or substantially, is immaterial in reference to our present duties. The obligation of the present genera- tion of our ministers, both in honor and religion, depends simply on the question, whether they individually bound themselves at their licensure or ordination, to receive any other symbol than the Bible. If not, then, by no course of legitimate reasoning can a mass of human productions, twice as large as the whole New Testament, be imposed upon them, as binding on their consciences. 4. As to the little handful of Swedish Lutheran churches, — they have long since been swallowed up by the Episcopa- lians, and there is not even a single congregation of them that has retained its Lutheran profession. However pious, and noble-minded and liberal, some of their ministers were, they were the servants of their ecclesiastical superiors in Sweden, from whom they derived their subsistence and un- der whose instructions they acted, to which they no doubt DUTCH AND SWEDISH LUTHERANS. 185 conformed. But they never had the right formally to resolve to accept or reject the symbolical books, unless they wished to lose their support, which was paid from Sweden, and be dismissed from the Swedish churches. It is undoubtedly true, that the instructions sent from Sweden, to Governor Printz, directed that the worship of the church of the colony should be conducted, according to the symbolical books and usages of the Swedish church. But we certainly need not in- form the reader, that their ecclesiastical superiors in Sweden were not the Lutheran church in America ; nor is it supposable that these Swedish ministers after their arrival in this coun- try, ever formally adopted a resolution that the symbolic books should be regarded as binding on them, for thai/ was a matter of course. Still, it should not be forgotten, that the Swedish church in Europe did not receive any other Lutheran symbol than the Augsburg Confession, and Lu- ther's Smaller Catechism : so that these Swedish churches on the DelaAvare also certainly rejected all the other books. On the whole, then, it appears that not one of all these case3 bears on the point, whether the Lutheran church in this coun- try ever formally adopted the symbolical books or not, except- ing the several individual cases of ordination, in which a pledge was in fact required. And in several of these the specific contents of the pledge are not known, though they doubtless embraced the Augsburg Confession, and possibly also the other symbolical books. These cases prove the practical adoption of at least a part of the symbolical books ; but do not touch the formal adoption of either a part or the whole by our American church. In corroboration of this position, Ave add a few remarks. It is reasonable to suppose, that if the founders of our American church, had formally adopted even the Augsburg Confession alone, or all the symbolic books, at any synod or convention, they would have recognized these books as symbolic in some part or other of their liturgies or svnod- ical constitutions. But in their liturgy of 1786, even the Augsburg Confession is no where mentioned, much less the other symbolic books ; excepting a direction that Catechu- mens shuold study Luther's Ca:echism. In the liturgy of 1818, there is a formulary for ordination, containing the prayers, address, and even the questions proposed to the candidates ; but neither the Augsburg Confession nor any 16a 136 THE NATURE OF THE SAVIOUR'S speak) namely, the Godhead does not suffer ; still the person which is God, suffers in its other part, that is in its humanity (denn obwohl das eine Stueck (dasz ich so rede) als die Gottheit nicht leidet ; so leidet dennoch die Person, welehe Gott ist, am andern Stuecke, als an der Menschheit.) Thus we say, The king's son has a sore, and yet it is only his leg that is affected : Solomon is wise, and yet it is only his soul which possesses wisdom : Absalom is beautiful, and yet ifc was only his body that is referred to : Peter is gray, and yet it is only his head of which this is affirmed. For as soul and body constitute but one person, every thing which hap- pens either to the body or the soul, yea even to the smallest member of the body, is justly and properly attributed to the whole person. This mode of expression is not peculiar to the Scriptures, but prevails throughout the world, and is also correct. Thus the Son of God was in truth crucified for us, that is, the person which is God ; for this person, I say, was crucified according to its humanity." (Luth. Works, Jena edit. vol. 3, p. 457.) Yet Luther, also, sometimes em- ployed language inconsistent with the statements which he here makes. The theory above referred to, was claimed by its advocates as a legitimate sequence of the hypostatic union of the two natures of Christ, and is known as the Commu- nicaiio Idiomatum, or supposed reciprocal communication of attributes between the two natures of the Saviour, one re- sult of which is to be, that his body now possesses ubiquity; and, therefore, can not only be present simultaneously wherever the Holy Supper is administered, but actually is present every where else in the universe. In support of this opinion several Scripture passages are alleged : Coloss. ii. 9. For in him dwelleth the fullness of the God- head, bodily " (fuparixus. This passage, we think, naturally signifies, in Christ the real, not imaginary, the full divinity and not an inferior deity dwells ; that is, with his human nature the truly divine nature is really, not figuratively, or typically, but actually united Cwjutccnxcos personally, that is, into one person. This signification of the term cuxa, as sig- nifying person, is found both in the N. T. and in classic Greek. James iii. 6. So is the tongue among* our mem- bers that itdefileth the whole body, i. e. person (oa.cv to cwjuta,) for certainly the fact, that "the tongue is a world of in- iquity," does not consist in its polluting the literal body, but PRESENCE IN THE EUCHARIST 137 the person, the character of the individual. Thus also Xenophon uses tfw/jiara sXsu^spa, for freemen, free persons. Lycurgus, and Aeschynes employ rfw.aa in the same sense, to signify a person. The same usage meets us in the Latin language : Longeque ante omnia corpora Nisus emicat. ^Eneid v. 1. 318, where the reference is to the person in gen- eral. And even in our own tongue, the term body has the same meaning, in such phrases as " some body," " no body," &c, for some person, no person, &c. John iii. 34. " For God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him," (but dpsrpws). This may signify, that the in- spiration of the Holy Spirit did not rest on the Saviour, only at particular times and in a limited degree, as it did on the prophets of the Old Testament; but at all times and in an unlimited degree. Or the idea may be, that the actual or entire divinity dwelt in him, i. e. was personally united with him. But there is certainly no intimation in it of the transfer of the divine attributes to the humanity of Christ. Matth. xxviii. 13. "All power (racra. s^Cia all authority, not iro.ia S.vay.i:) is given unto me in heaven and on earth." This certainly does not signify power, omnipotence ; but all or full authority to command and direct all things on earth to the accomplishment of the purposes of his mediatorial reign. In this sense the word (sfstfia), translated power in the passage under consideration, is often employed in the New Testament. Thus, Matth. xxi. 23, the chief priests and elders, came to him, when he was teaching, and said: "By what authority (ifstfia) doest thou these things ?" And (vii. 29,) the people were astonished at his doctrine, "For he taught them as one having authority (sgia'-a), and not as the scribes." In the same general sense, as signifying author- ity, libertv, &c, having no reference to omnipotence or physical power, this word is employed in many other pas- sages, so that the declaration of the Saviour: "All power or authority is given to me," has no necessary reference to physical power or omnipotence. See Matth. ix. 6. Mark ii. 10. Luke v. 24. 1 Cor. ix. 4, 13. 2 Thess. iii. 9. In perfect accordance with this import, is the classic usage of the word e s ' a, as signifying "licentia, potesfcas, aucto- ritas, jus sive facultas moralis; at tJuvavi: vis activa sou facultas naturalis" licence, power, authority, a moral right; 12a 188 THE AUGSBURG CONFESSION A shrewd observer of human nature once remarked, that " : names are things;" and things they doubtless are in the im- portance of their results, although in the language of the schools, they are but signs of our ideas. It cannot be de- nied, a large portion of mankind, learned and unlearned, are often deceived by the mere indefinite or figurative use of words. Of this we have a striking example in the opin- ion under consideration, namely, that our church was founded on the historical basis of these symbols, and there- fore the practical rejection of them by the church subse- quently, cannot remove her from this basis. A brief analy- sis of this opinion will demonstrate its fallacy. By our church is meant the members who constituted it at any par- ticular time, and by our church at the period of its founda- tion, is to be understood the mass of its members at the time of their organization into a regular ecclesiastical so- ciety in this Western world, and not their successors in any other age. To be historically founded, signifies to be founded in history, that is, to be proved by events which are matters of historic record. What, then, are the historical facts con- nected with the organization of our church as recorded in history ? They have constituted the topics of a large por- tion of the discussions in this essay and are briefly these : That the founders of our church, who probably had assented to the symbolical books in Germany, also in vari- ous informal ways avowed their belief of those doctrines here — that in several cases they required assent to one or all of these books at licensure and ordination, and at the erection of church edifices, — but that they never formally, that is, by a resolution of Synod, adopted any of these books as symbolical or binding, as tests of admission or dis- cipline — and that •subsequently, about the close of last century, whilst some of the earlier ministers were yet lin- gering on the stage of action, and mingling in their coun- sels, they wholly relinquished the practice of requiring assmt to any thing but the Bible. Now was there any thing in these events binding future ages? Nay, did not these devoted men practically decide, by ceasing to use and thus practically rejecting the symbolic authority of these books, that they themselves were not bound by their own previous action, after they ceased to regard it as proper? In short, there is a difference between history and prophecy. ALONE VIRTUALLY AVOWED. 189 The one relates only the past, the other the future. A his- torical basis involves no obligation on future ages, other than they approve and voluntarily assume. Thus did Lu- ther reason. He well knew that the errors and superstitions of Rome were "historically founded" in the decrees of councils, bulls of popes, the Romish missal, &c. But did he say, "therefore I must not oppose them? Or, if I wish to advocate other views, I must withdraw from the church thus historically founded on these errors ?" Every tyro in history will answer no. He began to inveigh against these corruptions because he regarded them unscriptural, and he persevered in doing so for years, without the least thought of withdrawing from the church, until he saw that he was to be excommunicated, and then he committed the papal bull to the flames, and renounced all connexion with the church of Rome. As genuine disciples of Luther, we, therefore, recognize no binding authority in the "historical foundation" referred to, as depriving us, in any degree, of our natural and individual obligations and rights. CHAPTER V. The voluntary and personal nature of ecclesiastical obligations: and the obligation of the church in every successive age to conform her confession to the word of God. The position now claiming our attention is the fifth in the series, as formerly enunciated : 5. That ecclesiastical obligations are voluntary and personal; and not either hereditary or compulsory. Hence the church, that is, the ministry and laity of every age, have as good a right, and are as much under obligation to oppose, and, if possible, to change what they believe wrong in the religious practice of their predecessors and to conform it to the word of God, as were Luther and the other christians of the sixteenth century. ISO NATURE OF ECCLESIASTICAL In order fully to appreciate the truth and force of this position, we must recur to first principles. What, then, is the church, whose obligations we are discussing? In a former chapter we showed, that in the view of the inspired Paul, the "Church" consisted of persons, not of things; and of individuals, not of an abstract, ideal, corporate per- sonality. Pie describes it as embracing "those that are sanctified in Christ Jesus, called to be saints, with all that in every place call upon the name of Jesus Christ our Lord." 1 Cor. i. 2. In full accordance with this is the view of Luther, who defines the church to be "the congregation, number or assemblage of all christians in all the world, who are the only bride of Christ and his spiritual body." l Me- lancthon says the visible church is the " ccetus vocatorum seu profitentium evangelium," the assemblage of the called, or of those who profess the Gospel. The New Testament introduces us to a number of such churches, as that at Jeru- salem, at Corinth, at Ephesus, at Rome, those words naturally and properly convey, is a doctrine which we do not believe," (though taught in that creed,) — - pp. 44, 45. Thus the New School Presbyterians also dis- - believe the limited extent of the atonement, agreeing with, the Lutherans and Congregationalists in the belief of it* universality ; and they also freely profess their dissent on, 17 194 NATURE OF ECCLESIASTICAL this point from their Confession of Faith. Exactly the same is the manner in which the churches of the General Synod receive the Augsburg Confession, namely : with the express restriction of its binding authority to the fundamentals of the gospel, and the admission of difference on unfundamental points. So far from our case being in this respect unprece- dented, it is sustained by the example- of the two most respectable sister denominations of our lancb And this is as it should be. The church, that is professing believers, should alter, limit, or reject what is in their judgment unscriptural in the creed, and not the unscriptural creed eject the mem- bers from the church. Or in other words, in the language of our proposition, it is the duty of the church in every other age as much as in that of the Reformation, to reform or re- ject zohat they believe unscriptural in the religious practices of their ancestors, and to conform their own to the infallible word of God." Our sixth proposition naturally flows from the preceding :- 6. Whatever moral obligation the practical requisition of assent to the Augsburg Confession by our fathers, may have imposed on themselves and those thus admitted by them, it was annulled, when, by common consent, they revoked that jwactice. Our duties are not created by our opinions of them, but arise from the nature of things, and from the relations we sustain to the various beings in the universe. Hence, whilst it is reasonable to expect us to retain a practice, so long as in our opinion it is obligatory ; if we change our opinion, it is equally proper, that we should relinquish it. It is also admitted, that good men ordinarily do what they regard as obligatory on them ; hence their habitual conduct is a fair index of their view r s of duty. When, therefore, our fathers under the influence of the views they brought from Europe, at first practically required assent to the Augsburg Confes- sion, it is a just inference that they believed it their duty to do so. With these views of duty, they and those to whom they administered this pledge, were under obligations to adhere in the ministrations of the sacred desk, to all the contents of this symbol. This course the christian public had aright to expect them to pursue, until they professed a change of opinion. But it is equally certain, and for exactly the same reasons, that whenever they did change their opinion of the propriety of such a course, not commanded in scripture, and -C 8 L I G A T I O H S . 1 95 did in fact publicly abandon the practice of requiring any other test than the word of God ; they in like manner thus published to the world their altered conviction of duty, which change absolved them and all persons subsequently admitted, from any such obligation in the view of the pub- lic, on the ground of consistency. The reasons in both cases are found in the positions above established, that it is the duty of the church, that is, of christians, in every age, to search the scriptures, and to act out the honest convic- tions in which such investigation results. To suppose that the practical observance of a custom, not enjoined in scrip- ture, could impose obligations, which a change of opinion in the same persons, or in those succeeding them, could not annul, and from the observance of which an equally pubiie practical rejection of it, would not release us in the eyes of the christian community, is contrary to all sound reason, as well as the ethical principles of scripture. 7. In perfect accordance with the principles here evolved, was the practice of the Great Reformer. He was trained up in the doctrines and usages of the church of Rome, he found them sanctioned by the authority of popes and councils, and confirmed by the practice of many centuries. To crown the whole, he had voluntarily obligated himself by an oath, when he was created Doctor of -Divinity, "to obey the church of Rome, and not to teach any doctrines condemned by her.'* Nevertheless, when in the providence of God he became acquainted with the Scriptures, and his continued study of them taught him the errors of Rome, he fearlessly began the work of Reformation, and in disregard of councils, popes and the holy mother church, and even of his own oath, which he now regarded as null and void, he prosecuted the work of -reform within the church, and when he found this a hopeless enterprise, finally anticipated his excommunica- tion by renouncing the church, and commenced an indepen- dent organization. Numerous passages might be cited in which he avows the principles involved in this course of action, and necessary to its justification. Nor was Luther guilty of the inconsistency of desiring to impose upon others the yoke which he had indignantly cast off. Never did he wish any human composition, either of his own or others, to be made symbolical, or binding on the church. Nor was the symbolic system introduced into the 196 THR EXAMPLE OF LUTHER. church during his lifetime, nor until more than a quarter of a century after his translation to a better world. But, has not the contrary been supposed to be the case ? It has, and therefore it may not be amiss to correct the error. The true origin of the symbolic system of servitude is thus fairly stated by Dr. Kcellner, in his Symbolik, (Vol. I. pp. 106, 107:) "The symbolical books, (as they were after- ward styled,) were first merely an expression of what 2vas believed ; afterwards they became the rule of what must be be believed. But where and how this was first done by public authority, it is very difficult to determine. The traces and evidences of it are often fallacious ; because cases in which such subscription to a creed was merely requested and voluntarily given, may easily be adduced as cases in which the subscription was commanded. It, however, ap- pears to be true, that some individual symbols had so much authority attributed to them, as to be recommended as rules of faith and of instruction, and in some instances also com- manded, long before the formation of the Form of Concord, (which was half a century after the publication of the Augs- burg Confession.) Nevertheless this does not appear every- where to have occurred at the same time, and in the same manner; nor does the principle of binding men to the s} T m- bols, seem to have been a universal and prevailing one, prior to the formation of the Form of Concord, (i. e. 1580,) or before the prevalence of the controversies which origin- ated from its formation. But a change took place about the time the Form of Concord was composed, and on ac- count of its formation, and after it. Prior to this time, some cases had occurred, of oppressive coercion in matters of faith, and of compulsory adoption of the symbols as a rule of faith and instruction ; but afterward they became more numerous." These positions he sustains by numerous au- thorities, which even fix the precise times, when, at differ- ent places, the custom of demanding assent to these symbols was first introduced. That distinguished historian, Dr. Schrceck, bears the following testimony as to the time when the custom of requiring assent to the symbolical books was generally introduced in the electorate of Saxony. "This oath, (says he,) was not prescribed in electoral Saxony until after the time of the Form of Concord, when Christian II., in 1602, (more than half a century after Luther's death,) THE ^EXAMPLE OF LUTHER. 197 prescribed it. Subsequently, in 1661, (more than fifty years later still,) the civil government required it so generally, that throughout the electorate of Saxony all preachers, schoolmasters and officers at court or elsewhere, were re- quired to assume this obligation." Here we perceive that although theological professors had been required to pledge themselves to the Augsburg Confession at an early day, as we stated on a former occasion, yet no such pledge was re- quired of the ministry in general, until half a century after the Augsburg Confession was practically acknowledged as the expose of Lutheran doctrine, even in the electorate of Saxony itself, the residence of Luther, and the head-quarters of the church. Schroeck, sup. cit. vol. IV., pp. 470, 471. It seems evident, then, that the habit of ascribing nor- mative or binding authority to these books, though, in a few instances, it was done at an early day, was of gradual growth, and did not become general for half a century after the Augsburg Confession was published and used as a profes- sion or expose of faith, and many years after the death of Luther. But could this be the case if Luther had from the beginning, or at any time during his life, desired that these books should possess this binding authority? Or if this had been his wish, as it was so partially done, would he not have expressed his desire on this subject ? Yet his works contain no passage of such import. On the contrary, Luther repeatedly expressed his opposition to having his works regarded as binding upon the consciences of others. In his instructions to the visitors in the Electorate of Sax- ony, he uses this noble language: "Nevertheless, we can- not suffer this, (book of instructions,) to go forth as 'rigid commands that we mayjiot issue new Popish decretals, (auf daz wir nicht neue Psepstliche Decretales aufwerfen,) hut only as a historic description, and also as a testimony and Confesssion of our faith," not mere ceremonies and forms of worship.) In his well-known passage, protesting against his followers being called Lutherans, he expressly declares: "I will be no one's master, (Ich will keines Meister seyn.)" In his "Preface to the first part of his ■■German works," written in 1589, only seven years before his death, (vol. 14, p. 420, Walch's ed.,) he says: "Gladly would I have seen all my books neglected and lost." " This was also my opin- ion (or design meinuug) when I began the translation of 17a 198 LUTHER'S CATECHISMS. the scriptures themselves, that I hoped there would be less writing done, and more studying and reading of the Scrip- tures. For all other writings (or publications) should lead us to the Bible, as St. John to Christ, (John iii. 30,) in or- der that each one might for himself drink out of the pure (or fresh) fountain. For neither the councils, nor the fathers, nor we ourselves, can, by our best and most successful efforts, make as good work as the Scriptures, as God himself has made." "Well, then, (since, as he had just said, he could not prevent the republication of his works,) I make the friendly request, that whoever desires, at present, to possess my works, (and he makes no exceptions of those which have since been made symbolic,) shall by no means allow them to hinder him from studying the Scriptures themselves, but shall regard them as I regard the decrees and decisions of the popes and the books of the sophists ; that is, occasionally to examine them and see what they have done, or to calcu- late the history of the times ; not that I regard it a duty to study them, or to practice what they taught.^ Other passages of similar import might be added, but these we would fain hope are sufficient to confirm the positions of Kcellner. and to show that Luther never wished any of his books to "be binding on others." That he desired his cat- echisms to be used as books of instruction, is natural and proper. It was for this purpose that he composed them. But, that he wished them to be regarded as symbolical, as binding on all who should belong to the same religious de- nomination, is quite another thing, and requires very differ- ent, yea, positive evidence. But, if all the above evidence, so satisfactory in itself, were obliterated from the pages of history, the very lan- guage of Luther in his preface to the Smaller Catechism, should, we think, settle it forever. Not only does it not contain a syllable about his wish, that it should be regarded as binding; but the reverse. In this preface, (Baumgarten's Concordeinbuch, pp. 614, 615,) he deplores the ignorance of the people, urges the importance of elementary instruc- tion, and begs those ministers who could not make better ones themselves, to use these forms and tables, i. e. the catechisms which he had prepared. (Bitte ich euch — welche es nicht Cesser vcrmacgen, diese Tafeln und Form vor sick zu nehmen.) And urging the importance of adhering to the very same words LUTHER'S CATECHISMS. 199 in teaching the populace the decalogue, the Lord's prayer, the Apostles' creed, the sacraments, &c, he says : There- fore select ichatform you choose, and adhere to it perpetually, (Darum erweehle welche Form du wilt, und blieb' dabey ewiglich.) Again, after the pupils have committed to mem- ory the text, as he terms it, that is, the decalogue, Lord's pra}*er, stle, " A brother that is weak iu the faith receive thou ; but not to doubtful disputations." 212 TESTIMONY OF DR. REYNOLDS. lively Lutheran ground our entire American Lutheran Church could be happily united. "The formation of the General Synod (says Dr. R.) marks an epoch in the history of the American Lutheran Church, for it was there she first fairly declared her distinctive character. Hitherto she had been slowly growing up, in individual congregations and in sepa- rate synods, in accordance with her original genius and with the free spirit of the institutions of that country to which she had now, for more than half a century, been so happily transplanted. Now, however, she came together, as one body, animated by one spirit, to enter upon and labor in that wide sphere allotted to her. I say she came together, for although two synods still stood aloof, the great mass of the church in America was there united, and a moral union was formed even with those fragments which could not at once be blended into one harmonious whole. And although two synods soon after withdrew, in obedience to the blind impulse of a powerful element admitted into the new system, but not then, nor even now, perfectly assimilated to it, or put into its proper relation to it; I mean the popular prin- ciple, or Congregationalism, yet these two bodies continued in heart integral parts of the union, as was shown by the speedy return of the one, and the frequent efforts of the other to do the same thing. But when in their separation from the General Synod the great mass of the brethren have still co-operated with it and made it a virtual bond of union. Dr. Endress* letter and the constitution of the General Synod tell us the form which the Lutheran church assumed at this important period. She did not cut herself loose from her Germanic stock and form — the one faith of the church of all ages, by a schismatical separation from it and rejection of its doctrines. Neither, 01 the other hand, did she slavishly bind herself to the doctrines and discipline, the liturgy or the symbols of any particular branch of the church, whether national or provincial. She duly appre- ciated the freedom which she had attained by being eman- cipated from the thraldom of the state by which even the bold spirit of Luther himself, much more that of his suc- cessors, in every part of Europe, had been fettered and arrested in its onward career. We might verify this in every part of the American church organization, but for the pres- ent we confine ourselves to her action in regard to the TESTIMONY OF DR. RSY.NOLBS. 213 symbolical hooks. These she neither rejected nor received as an absolute rule of faith. Hence we find in the constitution of the General Synod no action whatever in regard to them, although Art. III., Seo. 3, takes it for granted that our doc- trinal views are based upon them, when it requires synods uniting with it to " hold the fundamental doctrines of the Bible as taught by our church." So when the General Synod afterward drew up a constitution for Synods, it merely required ministers to declare their belief that " the funda- mental doctrines of the Bible were set forth in a manner sub- stantially correct in the Augsburg Confession. Nor did the delegates who formed the General Synod misrepresent their constituents. On the contrary these were then and still con- tinue to be the sentiments of the Pennsylvania and New York Synods, which then embraced the great mass of our ministers and churches. The Pennsylvania Synod, partic- ularly, never required subscription or assent to the symbol* ical books, nor was the least disposition manifested by it to change its ground when, in 1841, it revised its Ministerial Ordnung. But what is still more remarkable and significant in this matter is, that in the liturgy drawn up by a joint committee of the Pennsylvania, New York and Ohio Synods and adopted by those bodies, as also by the Synods of East and West Pennsylvania, and recommended by the General Synod to all the Synods in its connection, there is no refer- ence either in the formula for licensure or in that for ordination to any obligation of the ministry to teacli according to the sym- bolical books. Has the American church then ceased to be Lutheran because she does not subscribe to the Auo-sburo- Confession and other symbolical books? God forbid! for then would she have denied the truth that Luther revived and confessed, viz., the Bible as the only infallible exposition of God's will and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ, as the sole ground of justification. But I need not dwell upon this, as it is the object of Dr. Undress* letter to show what it is that specifi- cally distinguishes Lutherans from all other branches of the church. No one, I think, can doubt that he has clearly shown that the symbolical books are not necessary for this end. There is one idea that seems to have been before Dr. JEndress' mind, which, however, he has not brought out as 214 REV. SHOBER, STORK AND clearly as he might have done, and no doubt would have done, had any one impugned his views — I mean the power of the church in all ages to make and publish her own con- fession of faith. Luther and his compatriots were perfectly right in proclaiming their, faith as they have done in the Augsburg Confession and the other symbols. It is a noble testimony which they bore and do still bear to the truth. But they could not — they did not confess for us, their suc- cessors. It is true there is a communion of faith among the saints of all ages, but that does not consist in these written creeds, however true and excellent they may be. It is a living principle which may exist under various external forms and may speak itself forth in very different language. And there is likewise a historic connection between the church -of all ages, and in reference to this we are prepared to show that the American is a true daughter of the German church, as reformed by Luther himself." CHAPTER VII. Specific testimony concerning individual Synods and Di- vines of the General Synod, showing their doctrinal position to be that of agreement with the augsburg Confession in fundamentals, and acknowledged dissent ON some minor points. We promised to adduce additional, specific testimony, in regard especially to the Synod of North Carolina and Rev. Messrs. Stork, Shober, the Messrs. Sherers and J. Reck, who were among its principal members. As Mr. Shober was confessedly prominent in desiring some recog- nition of the Augsburg Confession at the organization of the General Synod, it has been erroneously inferred, that at least he and his Synod, received that symbol without restriction, and desired its unrestricted recognition by the General Synod. This we proved to be all fabulous in our former series ; yet as it is an important point in the argument, we add other irresistible proof. So far from yielding implicit assent to the NORTH CAROLINA SYNOD. 215 Augsburg Confession, much less to the other former sym- bolical books of our church in Germany, Mr. Shober for years carried on a controversy with the Henkelites, who confessedly received every thing found within the lids of the whole Concordeinbuch. In 1821, the very year of the first meeting of the General Synod, Mr. Shober published a work against David Henkel, who was the leader and princi- pal writer as well as disputant of the Tennessee Conference, under the title of " Review of a pamphlet published by Da- vid Henkel, " &c, containing 64 pages, 8vo, from which we extract the following passages, showing the light in which Mr. Shober, Stork, &c, viewed the doctrines of the ubi- quity of Christ's glorified body, taught in the Form of Con- cord, and the doctrine of the presence and reception of the body and blood of Christ in the Lord's Supper, contained in the Auo-sburq; Confession : 1. From Mr. Shober's Review. P. 4. Mr. Shober says: "That the body of Christ fills all space, none but idiots can believe." P. 28. Mr. S. remarks : " If every body who partook of the elements, partook of the flesh and blood of the Saviour, all those would remain in Christ and Christ in them." Again : " If this mortal body partook of the humanity of Jesus, (as D. Henkel asserted,) in the eucharist, the first enjoyment would make that body incorruptible, and if it par- took of the glorified humanity, it would make the same like his glorified body." P. 33. Mr. S. observes : " But his (D. Henkel's) attempts to convince the reader, that the humanity of Christ is en- joyed, (received in the eucharist,) are so far-fetched that common sense cannot comprehend them, and they are abhorrent to the understanding." P. 34. Mr. S. says : " Let me only repeat again that if all who partook of the Lord's Supper, eat and drink Jesus boflily, they cannot see corruption, they cannot die." P. 38. Here Mr. S. charges D. Henkel with endeavoring "to make the people believe, that the Rev. Mr. Stork was heterodox," because he had said "that one hundred bibles would not convince him that the humanity of Christ was taken into the Godhead, and that therefore Christ obtained all divine perfection." But the Rev. Stork informed Mr. gig REVS. SHOBEK, STORK AND Shober, tliat the conversation referred to was not about the humanity of Christ, but specifically "about the omnipres- ence of the body of Christ/' and the expression occurred in a friendly conversation, for, (says Mr. Stork,) the idea was so absurd that a body coidd be everywhere present, that the expression, though unguarded, was hastily made." P. 39. Mr. S. remarks : " Such is your crafty way to make people believe, that we, (particularly Mr. Stork,) do not teach right, and this only to lead them, if possible, to believe that the body of Christ is everywhere in immensity of space at the same moment." And then Mr. S. subjoins the remark in refutation of HenkePs view, " After his resurrection Jesus was not at the grave, at Emmaus, and with his other disci- ples at the same moment." From these extracts we think our readers will find no difficulty in deciding whether Mr. Shober could have desired the unrestricted recognition of the Augsburg Confession by the General Synod, or not. But we proceed. That Mr. Shober and his Synod, did not adhere implicitly to the Augsburg Confession, is further evident from the declaration and official action of, 2. The Tennessee Conference, Which confessedly did so adhere, and which was the only ecclesiastical body in America at that time which received that symbol without reserve. Of these men, Dr. Bachman, in his Discourse before cited, (p. 12,) gives the following characteristic : " Some years ago several in- dividuals residing in North Carolina, who had previous- ly been members of our church, on account of some dissatisfaction separated themselves from our communion. They chose as a leader an individual by the name of (David) Henkel, (hence they are called Henkelites, ) a weak and illite- rate man, whose ground of dissent, as far as can be gathered from the crude, visionary and inflammatory publications, which have from time appeared, either under his name or that of his sect, was, that the Evangelical Church had de- parted from the true doctrines of the Reformation, which he and his church had attempted to restore." At a meeting of this Tennessee Conference, held in Augusta county, Va., in 1824, a proposition was made to appoint a committee of conference, to meet a similar committee of the North Caro- lina Synod,, to confer on the doctrinal differences between NORTH CAROLINA SYNOD. 217 the two bodies. They also instructed a committee "to place the doctrines of the North Carolina Synod in one col- umn, and those of the Tennessee Conference in another, extracted from their published writings of both, and then th# public can judge which of the two teaches according to the Augsburg Confession" In the same year, (1824,) David Henkel addressed a let- ter to the Synod of Maryland and Virginia, in which he asserts, " The doctrines on which the said ministers of North Carolina have deviated from the doctrines of tbe- Lutheran church, are these: They teach, 1. That baptized or not baptized, faith saves us. 2. That the real humanity of Christ is not omnipresent, and that none but idiots can believe that his body fills all space. 3. Consequently that the real body and blood are not present, administered and received in the Lord's Supper." See p. 4 of his printed; memorial. The same is evident from the letter of D. Henkel and eighteen of his adherents, addressed to Rev. Messrs. Stork, Shober, J. and D. Sherer, 1 charging them with teaching doctrines inconsistent with the Augsburg Confession, and Luther's Catechism, " and inviting them to a public disputa- tion at the time and place of their next synodical meeting."" p. 2 of said letter. The minutes of this Conference for 1827 furnish abun- dance of evidence of the same kind. Page 33 : " The Tennessee Synod impeach them, (the ministers of North Carolina Synod,) with having deviated from the Lutheran, Confession of Faith, and propagating doctrines under the covert of Lutheranism, which are erroneous." " One of the charges against them is that they have deviated from the Lutheran doctrines." p. 35. Again: "The ministers of the North Carolina Synod call themselves Lutherans ; but, as we believe, that they propagate doctrines contrary to the- Augustan Confession, we consider it necessary to require of them to stand an examination. It is necessary to correct a wrong opinion, which is : that Lutheran ministers are at liberty to deviate from the Augustan Confession whereinso- ever they conceive it to be erroneous. Some ministers,, (1) It is proper to remark that the Rev. Mr. Sherer had publicly denied, this charge, aud defined his position. 19 218 REVS. SHAFFER AJD IE.S.S. (namely, of North Carolina Synod,) have declared that they did not care what the Augustan Confession teaches, that they simply taught the doctrines of the Scriptures. Further, that Luther was only a man and liable to err." Finally, that the North Carolina Synod were known to teach doctrines on minor points different from the Augsburg Confession, is proved by the fact, that when a Mr. Seechrist left the North Carolina Synod, and applied for admission in the Tennessee Conference, they examined him, and made him renounce the supposed errors of the Synod of North Carolina and avow his belief in baptismal regeneration and the presence and reception of the body and blood of Christ in the eucharist. See pages 8 and 9 of their Minutes for 1823. 3. From the Testimony of Rev. D. F. Sch^ffer, D. D. In the Lutheran Intelligencer for 1 827, we find an article from the pen of the editor, on the state of the church in North Carolina. On p. 74 he says: "From these, (several recent letters from North Carolina,) we learn, "that those who represented themselves as Lutherans, (the Henkelites,) but taught doctrines diametrically opposite to those which the church approves, are sinking in the estimation of all who know by experience and from the sacred scriptures, {our only guide in matters of faith,) that to be born again and made meet unto salvation, is more than to be baptized." Nay, oth- ers " are induced to inquire into those matters, and acknowl- edge that the doctrines taught by our regularly authorized ministers are scriptural, and that those who have arrogated to themselves the authority to teach without submitting to an examination or ordination by one or other Synod, (allu- ding to David Henkel,) have departed from the true faith." 4. From Rev. Johx Re ex. In a report of a committee on the state of religion in North Carolina, of which this esteemed brother was chair- man, he remarks : " The doctrines of the Bible, as published by the Great Reformer of Saxony, and echoed by the Augs- burg Confession, are substantially taught by us, (that is, by the North Carolina Synod.") Having thus proved that the North Carolina Synod did not receive the Augsburg Con- fession unrestrictedly, from the testimony of their enemies who went out from their midst, from the declarations of her GENERAL SYNOD. 219 prominent ministers themselves, we now close the evidence in regard to them by showing- that they had not only as individuals exercised the right of differing from the Augs- burg Confession when they believed it to differ from the word of God, but that when in 1832. they as a Synod collectively and officially adopted as 5. Their Constitution, the Constitution for Synods, recommended by the General Synod, they avowed their assent to the Confession in the following usual and qualified terms: "We believe thai the scriptures are the only infallible rule of faith and practice, and that the fundamental doctrines of the scriirtures are taught in a manner substantially correct in the doctrinal articles of the Augsburg Confession" See their Minutes for 1832, German copy, p. 20. Our own Position in reference to Henkelism. As this has sometimes been misunderstood, and may be unknown to our younger brethren generally, it may here not be irrelevant to remark that nearly one half of this Tennes- see Conference, which for some years consisted chiefly of David Henkel, his father, and several of his brothers, resided in our pastoral district in Virginia between 1 820 and 1825, and during the whole time carried on the same war- fare against us, charging us with upholding the General Synod and with not adhering to the doctrines of the Augs- burg Confession. Hundreds of our parishioners yet live to testify that w r e never pretended to deny the differences be- tween us, and that in whatever defence we felt called on to make, we represented their peculiarities either as misappre- hensions of the Augsburg Confession, or especially ihk. doctrine of the bodily presence as being remnants of Ro- manism, retained indeed in the Confession, but universally rejected by our church in the present age. Having now established beyond all contradiction the merely fundamental adhesion of the North Carolina Synod to the Augsburg Confession, we may now add a few words concerning several other Synods. We begin with the ancient 220 SYNOD OF PENNSYLVANIA. Synod of Pennsylvania. Although it is a well known fact that this respectable body has not, for about half a century, required assent to any thing more than the Bible, not one of the former symbolical books being ever named at licensure or ordination, as may be seen even from the new Liturgy : and although her merely fundamental accordance in fact with the Augsburg Confession is included in the general testimony of Drs. Hazelius, Bachman, Lochman, Krauth, Lintner, &c, pre- sented in former articles, it will be interesting to hear additional evidence. 1. Rev. Probst, who was a member of that Synod from 1813 until his recent death, and well acquainted with the sentiments of his brethren, in a work published in 1826, for the express purpose of promoting a formal and complete Union of the German Reformed and Lutheran churches in America, entitled, "Reunion of the Lutherans and Re- formed," argues throughout on the supposition that there was no material difference of doctrinal views between them, the Lutherans having relinquished the bodily presence and the Reformed unconditional election. Speaking of the sup- posed obstacles to such union, he remarks: "The doctrine of unconditional election cannot be in the way. This doc- trine has long since been abandoned ; for there can scarcely be a single German Reformed preacher found who regards it as his duty to defend this doctrine. Zwingli's more liberal, rational and scriptural view of this doctrine, as well as of the Lord's Supper, has become the prevailing one among Lutherans and Reformed, and it has been deemed proper to abandon the view of both Luther and Calvin on the subject of both these doctrines." p. 74. Again: "The whole mass of the old Confessions was occasioned by the peculiar circumstances of those troublous times, has become obsolete by the lapse of ages, and is yet valuable only as matter of history. Those times and cir- cumstances have passed away, and our situation both in regard to political and ecclesiastical relations, is entirely changed. We are therefore not bound to these books, but only to the Bible. For what do the unlearned know of the Augsburg Confession, or the Form of Concord, of the Synod of Dort," &c. p. 76. TESTIMONY OF DR. LOCHMAK. 221 Again: "Both churches (the Lutheran and Reformed) advocate the evangelical liberty of judging for themselves, and have one and the same ground of their faith, the Bible. Accordingly, both regard the Gospel as their exclusive rule of faith and practice, and are forever opposed to all violations of the liberty of conscience." p. 76. Finally: "All enlightened and intelligent preachers of both churches agree, that there is much in the former sym- bolical books (or confessions of faith) that must be stricken out as antiquated and contrary to common sense, and be made conformable with the Bible, and that we have no right to pledge ourselves to the mere human opinions of Luther, or Calvin, or Zwingli, and that we have but one master, Christ. Nor is any evangelical Christian bound to the interpretations which Luther or Calvin, or any other person may place on the words of Christ; but each one has the right to interpret them according to the dictates of his own conscience." p. 80. "Inasmuch as all educated ministers of the Lutheran and Reformed churches now entertain more reasonable and more scriptural views on those doctrines which were formerly the subjects of controversy, what necessity is there of a continued separation?" p. 81. 2. Testimony of Dr. Zochman, confessedly one of the most active, distinguished and pious divines of our church, in the preface to his Catechism, published in 1822, after stating that the proper name of our church is Evangelical, and not Lutheran, thus defines The leading Principles of our Church. 1) "That the Holy Scriptures and not human authority ', are the only source whence we are to draw our religious sentiments, whether they relate to faith or practice." 2) "That Christians are accountable to God alone for their religious principles," and therefore no man should be punished by civil governments for his opinion's sake, &c. 3) As Christ has left no express directions for church government, power to forgive andto retain sins.'''' p. Ill, ofBaum- garten. "That everlasting righteousness, the Holy Spirit, and eternal life cannot be obtained, except through the office of preaching and the reception of the sacraments." p. 110. "Absolution was received privately by each one in- dividually, kneeling before the confessional, the confessor imposing his hands at the time." See Funk's Kirchenord- nung, &c, p. 189-190. "Private Confession was to be given only in the church, in which the confessional was so located near the pulpit, that no other person could be near, or hear what ivas said, by the penitent." Idem. p. 190. That this practice is almost universally rejected in Ger- many, except by the few old Lutherans, is certain, and in this country universally, except by the old Lutherans of the West. As this will not be denied, it is unnecessary to pre- sent proof that private confession is not practiced in the American Lutheran Church. c) The doctrine that the true body and blood of Christ are received with the bread and wine by the mouth of every com- municant. In reference to this doctrine, the following, amongst many other specifications, are made in the dif- ferent symbolical books, to which we refer as found in Muller's edition. 1) "The words of the institution, 'this is my body,' &c, are to be understood literally, (wie sie nacb dem" Buchstaben lauten,) p. 539-647. 2) That both the worthy and unworthy communicants receive the true body and blood of Christ, (und werde nicht alien gereicht und emp- Langen von frommen, sondern auch von bosen christen,) p. 320, 540, 649, 660, 650. 3) That it is the omnipotence of Christ, which causes the presence of his body and blood in the eucharist, (und allein der allmachtigen Kraft unseres Herrn Jesu Christe zugeschrieben werden soil.") 4) That we receive the real body and blood of Christ. Apol. to Con- fession, Art. X. " The tenth article (of the Augsburg Con- fession) our opponents, the Papists, do not object to, in which we confess, that our Lord's body and blood are truly present in the eucharist, and are offered and received with the visible articles, bread and wine, as has heretofore been AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH. 241 lelieved in the (Romish) church. 1 " p. 164. They believed as fully as did the Romanists, in receiving the real body and blood of Christ ; only they denied that the bread and wine were changed into such body and blood. 5) That we receive the body of Christ, not only spiritually but orally, p. 647- 653. 6) That when Luther speaks of receiving the body of Christ "spiritually," he does not use the term in the sense of the Sacramentarians (or Zwinglians.) p. 668. On the subject of this doctrine, Melancthon himself sub- sequently changed his views, and in a former chapter we proved by the testimony of Prof. Guericke, that before 1817 the great mass of Lutheran divines had relinquished this doctrine ; as also by other testimony, that it had been gen- erally abandoned in our church in this country. Our own father is regarded as among the few who yet retain some- thing of this view, yet he disclaims the belief of the real presence of the body and blood of Christ altogether, and believes only in a special spiritual presence and influence ; and greatly deplores the movements of those who desire to make binding the old Lutheran view of this or any other non-fundamental doctrine, and thus to disturb the doctrinal basis of the General Synod, namely, fundamental adherence to the Augsburg Confession, with acknowledged liberty of difference on minor points. d) Baptismal regeneration, or the opinion that baptism is necessarily accompanied by spiritual regeneration, and the unconditional necessity of baptism to salvation, are views of baptism, which are taught in the Augsburg Confession, Art. II, IX. " This natural depravity is really sin, and still con- demns and causes eternal death to those who are not regen- erated by baptism and the Holy Spirit." But they are not entertained in this country, as we proved by the testimony of Dr. Miller, of Hartwick, p. 9, of his discourse on the Re- formation, of Dr. Lintner, in his notes on Augsburg Confes- sion, p. 15, and of Dr. Bachman, in his sermon on the doctrines and discipline of the Lutheran church, p. 15, &c. e) The mass, that is, the name and some of the ceremonies of the Romish mass, were retained in the Augsburg Confes- sion ; although the errors in doctrine, by which the Romish mass grew out of the scripture doctrine of the Lord's Sup- per, were rejected in that as well as subsequent symbols. " Our churches (says the Augsburg Confession, Art. XXIV.) 21 242 FEATURES OF THE are unjustly charged with having rejected the mass, (man legt den Unsern mit Unrecht auf, dasz sie die messe sollen abgethan haben.) For it is publicly known, that the mass is celebrated amongst us with greater devotion and earnest- ness than among our opponents." ** Nor has there been any perceptible change made in the public ceremonies of the mass, except that at several places, German hymns are sung along with the Latin ones." " Our custom is on holy days (and at other times also if there be communicants) to say a mass, and those who desire it, receive the Lord's Supper." Subsequently, however, greatchanges were made in the pub- lic ceremonies attendant on the Lord's Supper ; and Luther, in his Smalkald Articles, rejects the mass entirely, both the name and accompanying ceremonies. And soon after the whole Lutheran church followed him. Still, if the Augs- burg Confession were strictly binding on us, we should be under the necessity of adopting on sacramental occasions all the public ceremonies then and now usual in the Romish church in celebrating public mass ! f) The imputation to us as personal and damning guilt of that natural depravity, which has come upon us in consequence of Adam's transgression. Luther and Melancthon both taught the immediate imputation of Adam's transgression to his descendants, and the language of Luther in his Smalkald Articles (Art. I.) falls very little if any thing short of it- He says: "We must here confess, as St. Paul says, Rom. v: 12, That sin is derived from one man, Adam, through whose disobedience all men became sinners, and were subjected to death and the devil.'" Still, the Augsburg Confession only represents our natural depravity as the cause of our con- demnation. That this doctrine has been rejected we proved in parts of this work. We might add to this list a number of other topics taught by the symbolic books, and such as Luther's peculiar views on the mode of baptism, in his Larger Catechism, which were never generally adopted in the Lutheran church, even in Germany ; the omnipresence of the human body of Christ, the omniscience of his human nature, and in general the actual reciprocal transfer of the attributes of his human and divine natures to each other ; that the virgin Mary conceived and brought forth not a mere human being, but the veritable Son of God, and therefore actually is and may properly be AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH. 243 called the mother of God ; the sin-forgiving power of the ministers, (Art. XXVIII. of Augsburg Confession ;) the lax notions of the Augsburg Confession concerning the Christian Sabbath, co-operate with such as cannot conscientiously follow their example. Even the Scandinavian churches, recentlv estab- lished in our North-western States, could probably unite with us, as some of them, at least, whilst adhering to the Augsburg Confession in general, propose to reject some of its provisions, such as private confession and absolution, as also some of the usages of their fatherland, the wearing- of AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH. 273 the gown, the burning of candles on the altar by day, and the churching of women. 1 " In short, they propose to re- store the church system to the simple, pure and evangelical po* silion, that it undoubtedly occupied in the times of the apostles and the first christians." This is exactly the truly enlight- ened, the exalted position of our General Synod. We hail with delight the co-operation of these noble Northmen, and of all others who labor in the same spirit, and bid them a hearty God speed ; assured that in that great day the inquiry of the Master will be, whether we have conformed our doctrines not to the writings of Luther, but to the tuition of his own inspired word. (1) See Mr. Langland's political and religious paper, termed The Demo- crat, issued at Racine, Wisconsin. INDEX. Agreement in generic truths, 179. America, different religious sects in, 98. " Lutherans in. styled the German church, 44. " settlement of Lutherans in, 57. '•' first Lutheran church organized in, 57. " an asylum, 251. American Lutheran Church defined. 233, 234. " " " characteristics of. 237. " origin of, 244. 245. " " " literature and theologians of, 74—84. ** church, transplanted from other countries, 91. Apostolic basis, 66, 67. " creed, 68. Army, clergy in, 24. Authority of the Fathers rejected, 60. Augsburg Confession, not wholly received by the General Synod, 227. " " fundamentals of, only binding, 233, 162. " " symbolical specifications in, 181. " " doctrines of, received by the Saltzburg emigrants, 183, 184. " " ' adopted by the Swedes on the Delaware, 185. ■ " abandoned, 187. " " how received by Synods, 202. " •' essentially adhered to by General Synod, 203. *' " word of God substantially set forth in, 209. " " not received unrestrictedly by Synod of North Caro- lina, 218. " " Henkelites' misapprehension of, 219. " " received on different occasions. 157. ** " an exposition of doctrines, 158, 159. •' " the only symbol received by Muhlenberg and hia associates, 171. «' u Shober dissents from, 175. 276 i x d e x . Augsburg Confession, pledge to, not binding to the other symbols, 177, 173. " " candidates assent to, required, 168. Augustinian view opposed by Melaucthon's theory, 88. Auricular Confession rejected, 159. Awakened persons, how dealt with, 106. Baptismal regeneration, 241. Bible opposed to tradition, 252. , " assent to, alone required, 189, 159. " the only infallible rule of faith and practice, 167, 243. Books referred to as subsidiary to the Bible, 50. Brief creed of General Synod, 271-2. Buonaparte's religion, 66. Catechism, 102. Catechumens examined by the church council, 56. Calvin on the eucharist, 61. Catechism, Westminster, 193. Summary of Christianity, 193, 194. Luther's, 199, 200. Calvinism of Luther. 85 Catechetical instruction. 113, 114. Opposed, 114. Churches in Philadelphia destroyed, 24. " what they could accomplish, 235. Church, state of before the General Synod, 29. " development, 248. " Lutheran, leading principles of, 49. " government, 52-56. " infant membership of, 54. 55. Churches and ministers, number of, 58. Church, revivals in, 38, 93. " duty o?, to give an exposition of her doctrines, 42. " English Lutheran in Pittsburg, 43, 44. " history of, divided into three periods, 14. " in America, 18. " colonial era of, 14. " duty of to adopt short creeds, 69. " not supplied with English preaching, 102. " the New Amsterdam, how styled, 183. " how founded, 188. " of what it consists, 190. " Luther's definition of, 190, " history, importance of, 90, 91 . " progressive, 91, 92. organization, grand design of, 93. * : in Germany, polemic character of, 94. " ideal membership of, 162. m Church Feeling, reply to the writer on, 269, 270, 271. Christianity, introduced among the Germans, 46. Christian church, features of, 155. Change of elementary principles, 47. Christ's spiritual preseuce in the eucharist, 62. Christ's visible church, 41. Communicants, requirement of, 116. INDEX. Converts among the slaves, 110, 111. Corporeal presence in the euchariat, 179. Controversy between Lutheran and Calvinistic divines, 83. Confession of faith in the Lutheran church, 208. Compulsory assent to the symbols, 195. Communion, preparatory exercises to, 64. Confession, private, relinquished, 63. " " approved by some of the reformers. 64. Congregations choose their own pastors, 49. Confession and absolution rejected, 239. Creeds required of applicants for ordination, 63. " approved, 169. " proposed for adoption, 272. Deist reclaimed, 110. Development, church, 247. Discord in the church, 182. Discipline, character of, 32. Doctrines of orthodox denominations, 51. " of Luther introduced into Sweeden and Denmark) 57, 59. " of the svmbolical books rejected, 174. taught in the Theological Seminary, 229, 269. " of General Synod, 226. " in common with other churches, 69, 70. Doctrine, systematic adjustment of, 65. in Duty of churches in reference to symbols and traditions, 250. Duty, views of, 194. East Pennsylvania Synod, co-operation of, 30. Ecclesiastical relations, right to change, 189. Obligations, 159. Electicism of the fathers, 118. Effort to establish institutions, 34. English churches joined by descendants of German Lutherans, 42. " preaching by the early Lutheran fathers, 101- " " church suffers for want of, 102. Episcopal church, Lutherans reject the offer to unite with, 104. Episcopacy, divine right of, 104-5. Errors of old Lutheranism destined soon to perish, 245-6. Europe, union of church aud state in, 235. Eucharist, Melaucthon's views of; change, 241, " Saviour's presence in, 61. " Cranmer and Ridley's views of, 62. " reformers' views rejected, 62, 63. " Lutherans at the present day, view of, 63. Europe, reign of infidelity, 66. Eucharist, real presence in, 215, 216. Exorcism, retained by Luther and Mclancthon, 238, 159. " relinquished in Saxony. 239; rejected, 65. Excitement, religious, through "Whitefield's preaching, 96 fathers, educational period of, 36. " practical piety of, 36. 24 278 ixdex. Fathers to be imitated only as far as they imitate Christ, 256. " and symbolical books, 257. " approve of revivals, 98, 112, 113; labor among all classes, 110. " questions asked at licensure by the, 36, 37. Fashionable vices exposed, 100. Festivals, 54, 103. First Lutheran Synod held, 21. Figurative meaning of the words, "this is my body," &c, 150. " expressions of the Saviour on other occasions, 151. " interpretation by Luther, 126; objections to, 127. Form of Concord, when formed, 258; published, 164; rejected, 165; by the king of Denmark, 261. Fundamentals of Christianity, 248. Germany, Lutheran church in, how affected by symbols, 264, 265, " Reformed church in, 262. " aids in establishing churches in America, 18. '■ the fountain head of Lutheranism, 44. Germans, characteristics of, 45. " religion of, 45, 46. " oppressed by Romish intolerance, 16. " destitution of, 17. " settlement of, in North Carolina, 18. " integrity and benefit of, 27, 28. " sympathize with the American Church, 28, 29. " labor to perpetuate their language, 102. General Synod, doctrinal position of, 160, 161, 257. " " agreement in, 212. " era of, 29. « " influence of, 30. " " how regarded, Luther's catechism, 228. " " graud design of, 232. " " formation of, 14. Georgia, first settlement of Lutherans in, 17. Henkel and the Henkelites, 215, 217. Henkelites, anti-Lutheran doctrines of, 218. Imputation, doctrine of, rejected, 159, 173. of Adam's sin, 242. Inexpedient of binding to the svmbolical books, 182. Infidelity, effects of, 98. Influence of Wesley, 249. Institution, why not established, 34. Instruction of the young, 55. Kirchenagende, the, 26. Koinonia, different significations of, 134. Laity unite in the vocation of the ministers, 32. Lesson that may be learned from the review, 39, 40. Liturgies use! in the worship, 54; composed, 103; when used, 104. Mterary and theological institutions of the church, 58. INDEX. 279 Liberality and christian union, 249. « of Whitefield, 18. Literal sense of a passage, when to be deviated from, 12o. Lord's Supper, design, of, 145-7, 148-9. Luther disregards his oi'fical oath, 195. " opposed to his followers being called by his name, 196. " urges to the study of the Bible, 197-8, 59, 255. " Luther and his Spartan band, 47. Luther's ordination proved valid, 47-8. " views modified by Melancthon, 65. " predestination, 66. Luther regarded as standard of orthodoxy, 60. " opposed to tradition — adheres to the Bible, 253-4. Lutherans in Russia, 57. " in the entire world, 58. Lutheran fathers not inferior to the New England divines, 39. " name, whence derived, 43. " and Reformed churches united, 167, 222-3. " ministers, literary position of, 26, 33 ; labors, 34. " position of, 230. " ministers in New York, 15. " church in Sweden, Norway and Finland, 73, 74. I'jutherans, for want of English preaching, become Episcopal, 16. " first settlement of, 14; second, 15; third, 16. " settle in Maine. 18. " rapid increase of, 21 . " destitution of, 98; youth neglected, 98. Mass retained in the Augsburg Confession, 241. Meeting for catechization, 55, 56. Ministers, parity of, 156. " not bound to the minutiasof creeds, 67. " bound only to the Bible, 184. Muhlenberg and liturgies, 170. " his manner of preaching, 57. arrival of, 19, 20. Names given to Luther, 60. New Testament ordination, 71. Nicene creed, 260. No pardon to the impenitent, 64. Normative authority of symbols, 197. Oath, 196. Obstacles to religion, 21 . Objections to the ubiquity of Christ's body, 138. Old confessions, occasions of, 220. Ordain, passages in which occurs, 72. Order in worship, 105. Ordination, proof texts of, 71, 72. Ordination of ministers, 71. Orphan house erected by the Saltzbergers, 17. Passover, institution of, 143. 280 ijjoex. Pastoral labors, 108-9. Passages supposed to favor Luther's view of the Real Presence, 132-3. Pennsylvania legislature endows a college for the Germans, 27. Piety, decline of, 25. Popular Theology, opinion of Drs. Kurtz and Morris, 231, 270. Preaching, manner of, 99, 100, 101. " in different languages, 33. " of Spener and hranke — revival, 94, 95. Prayer meetings encouraged. 37, 38; established. 106. " " at Philadelphia and Lancaster, 108. " Lutheran fathers, men of, 107. Heal presence held by the Reformers, 201. " " views held by Lutherans of the present day, 201. " " rejected by all Protestants, 13*2. " " and baptismal regeneration, 210, 211. Reformers appear, 4G-7. " men of extensive learning, 59. Retrospect rich in blessings, 38-9. " preliminary remarks on, 11-13. Responsibility, individual, 192. Religious and ecclesiastical obligation not hereditary, 159. Revivals, Dr. Kunzell3. Romish sacrament, validity, 49. " church, corruptions canhonized, 48. " doctrine of transubstantiation, 125. Saviour's person, 180. Saltzburgers, Balzius and Gornau, settle among, 17. School, plan for English and German, 27. Scripture, how interpreted, 122. " language, 121. to be searched, 191, 192. Smalkald Articles, rejected, 165-6. Special conferences, 117-18. Sufferings- of Christ, 86-87. Symbolical book never made a test of discipline, 188. " " how regarded by Synods, 185-6. Symbolic rigor relaxed, 157. Synod, constitutions of, 213. Symbols, extensive occasions of discord, 265-6. Tennessee Conference, position of, 216, 217. " " opinion of the General Synod, 226, 227. Temperance advocated by Muhlenberg, 111. Theological institutions established, 30. Views of Luther and Calvin, how regarded by their followers, 142. Vocation, 2-17. "Words, how derive their meaning, 121. Young, education of, 113. Date Due , L 1 1 Bitim «8fiiia r *~- — a. n^rt^^is^***'* ► 3*^ f J ' " ': "': ■ " ■':. "*:■'•"■ •' .• r-v~"