Neo-Lutheranism

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Neo-Lutheranism was a 19th century revival movement within Lutheranism, which began as a reaction against rationalism and pietism. This movement focused on a reassertion of the identity of Lutherans as a distinct group within the broader community of Christians, with a renewed focus on the Lutheran Confessions as a key source of Lutheran doctrine. Associated with these changes was a renewed focus on traditional doctrine and liturgy, which paralleled the growth of Anglo-Catholicism in England[1]. It was sometimes even called "German Puseyism" [1]. In Roman Catholic Church in Germany neo-Lutheranism was paralleled by Johann Adam Möhler.

Neo-Lutheranism was reaction against the Prussian Union [2] like Tractarianism against Government's decision to reduce the number of Irish bishoprics. A divide developed in neo-Lutheranism where one side held to repristination theology which tried to restore historical Lutheranism and on the other the theology of the Erlangen School. The repristination theology group was represented by Ernst Wilhelm Hengstenberg, Carl Paul Caspari, Gustav Adolf Theodor Felix Hönecke, Friedrich Adolf Philippi, and C.F.W. Walther [2]. Repristination theology is the mother of later Confessional Lutheranism. Confessionalism to the Erlangen School was not to be static but was to be dynamic. The Erlangen School tried to combine Reformation theology with the new learning. Those of the Erlangen School included Franz Hermann Reinhold von Frank, Theodosius Harnack, Franz Delitzsch, Johann Christian Konrad von Hofmann, Karl Friedrich August Kahnis, Christoph Ernst Luthardt and Gottfried Thomasius [2].

However, neo-Lutheranism is sometimes called only theology and activity represented by Theodor Friedrich Dethlof Kliefoth, August Friedrich Christian Vilmar, Johann Konrad Wilhelm Löhe, August Friedrich Otto Münchmeyer and Friedrich Julius Stahl who had particularly high ecclesiology. They were polemic against idea of invisible church, strongly claiming church as an outward, visible salvation institution and therefore laid emphasis on ordained ministry instituted by Christ and significance of sacraments above word as Means of Grace. However, unlike Erlangen School, this neo-Lutheranism did not made lasting inluence to Lutheran theology. Properly speaking, High Church Lutheranism began in Germany much later, 1917, inspired by 95 theses Stimuli et Clavi, exactly 100 years after Claus Harms' 95 theses.

Neo-Lutheranism should not be confused with term Neo- Protestantism, represented e.g. by Adolf von Harnack and his followers, which means exclusively liberal theology.

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[edit] References

  1. ^ Scherer, James A. (1993). "[http://www.lsfmissiology.org/Essays/SchererTriumphofConfessionalism.pdf The Triumph of Confessionalism in Nineteenth-Century German Lutheran Missions]". Missio Apostolica 2: 71–78. This is an extract from Scherer's 1968 Ph.D. thesis, "Mission and Unity in Lutheranism". Scherer was Professor of World Mission and Church History at the Lutheran School of Theology at Chicago until his retirement.
  2. ^ a b c Elevation article in Christian Cyclopedia
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