- Evangelical Catholic
The term "Evangelical Catholic" is used by
Christian believers who consider themselves both "catholic " and "evangelical." "Evangelical Catholic" ("catholic" is the noun with "evangelical" modifying) can refer to: evangelical Protestant Christians who consider themselves catholic Christians identified with the historicChristian Church , who believe that the earlyecumenical councils and theProtestant Reformation were both part of the progressive illumination of theHoly Spirit ;Roman Catholics who want to identify themselves more closely with evangelical Protestants with similar ecumenical ideals and "progressive illumination"; Catholics who simply want to define themselves according to a penchant forevangelism . Evangelical Catholics may include Eastern Rite Catholic Churches or other churches that are not Roman Catholic, such asAnglican , Lutheran,Reformed ,Baptist , orPentecostal .Lutheran Evangelical Catholicity
In
Lutheranism , the term "evangelical catholic" has special meaning. Lutheranism can be regarded as Protestant, but never Reformed [ A comparison toAnglicanism here is interesting, because Anglicanism often regards itself as reformed but not Protestant ] . Lutheran Protestantism differs historically from all other kind of Protestantism in that Lutheranism is the only historical Protestant denomination that confesses belief in the efficacy ofsacraments : regeneration in HolyBaptism ,Confession as the sacrament ofAbsolution , and TheReal Presence of Christ inHoly Eucharist . [Also inside of Anglican Church there has been similar sacramentalism than in orthodox Lutheranism, but historically eucharistic doctrine has been there more towards Calvinism, which can be seen e.g. fromBlack Rubric . On the other hand those who today have strong belief of Real Presence like in historical Lutheranism, usually do not want to call themselves Protestants.] TheAugsburg Confession stresses that "in doctrine and ceremonies nothing has been received on our part against Scripture or the Catholic Church." [ [http://www.bookofconcord.org/augsburgconfession.html#conclusion/ Conclusion of the Augsburg Confession] ] In early Lutheranism, theGnesio-Lutherans like Joachim Westphal andAndreas Musculus had a strong understanding of thesacraments but were strongly opposed to any compromise withCalvinism andZwingli as with the Roman Catholic Church. In the era ofLutheran orthodoxy , theologiansMartin Chemnitz andJohann Gerhard (the latter'sConfessio Catholica ) were deeply rooted inpatristic theology) saw the continuity of Catholicism in Lutheranism, which they understood not as a re-formation of the Church, but rather a renewal movement within and for the Catholic Church, from which they had been involuntarily and only temporarily separated. The only real evangelical feature of Lutheranism is characterized byjustification by faith , as defined byLaw and Gospel andsimul iustus et peccator . The term "evangelical" has a very different origin and meaning inLutheranism than inEvangelicalism . Thus it can be also in the names of church bodies likeEvangelical Lutheran Church in America without any specific meaning. After EnlightenmentSchleiermacher created in his theological system a contradiction of Protestantism and Catholicism, which changed radically traditional Lutheran understanding and deepened gap to orthodox Lutheran evangelical catholicity [The Catholicity of the Augsburg Confession by Avery Dulles] .The term "Evangelical Catholic" is often used instead of
High Church Lutheranism (as are the terms Anglo-Catholic andOld Catholic in their respective traditions) because it is a theological term and genuinely Lutheran. Evangelical Catholic Lutheranism is not strictly defined, and can mean, for example, the theologically, biblically, and socially conservative ultra-high church Lutheranism of the strongly Roman Catholic-orientedAnglo-Lutheran Catholic Church and the moreEastern Orthodox -orientedEvangelical Catholic Church , the relative high churchConfessional Lutheran ism found in theLutheran Church - Missouri Synod andArthur Carl Piepkorn , the "Evangelical Catholic Orthodoxy" ofGunnar Rosendal , the more theologically-liberal highecclesiology ofCarl Braaten , the very liberal "Evangelical Catholicism" ofNathan Söderblom , even more liberal Catholicism ofFriedrich Heiler , or ecumenical vision ofHans Asmussen andMax Lackmann . TheEvangelical Lutheran Church in Canada defines its doctrinal basis as such: "We derive our teachings from the Holy Scriptures and confess the three ecumenical creeds of the Christian church. We hold to orthodox catholic theology as enunciated in the ecumenical councils of the first five centuries of Christianity." [ [http://www.elcic.ca/who.html/ ELCIC — Who] ]Some small, specifically Evangelical Catholic Lutheran, church bodies include the
Evangelical Catholic Church ,Anglo-Lutheran Catholic Church ,Lutheran Orthodox Church ,Evangelical Marian Catholic Church ,International Lutheran Fellowship , andAssociation of Independent Evangelical Lutheran Churches .Nordic Catholic Church in Norway has roots in High Church Lutheranism.Among other church bodies
In recent years, the term "Evangelical Catholic", has been adopted by high church elements of the
Methodist and Reformed Churches. This is especially apt among the Reformed, given that one of the older documented uses of the term is byJohn Williamson Nevin andPhilip Schaff , during their efforts (from roughly 1841 forward) to repristinate the theology of the German Reformed Church in the United States. In1849 the "Mercersburg Review" was founded as the organ of their "Mercersburg Theology ".Beginning in
1851 ,William Augustus Muhlenberg , Episcopal clergyman of Lutheran background and father ofRitualist movement in Episcopal Church in the United States of America [ [http://anglicanhistory.org/usa/ascension_chicago_giles/intro.html/ History of the Church of the Ascension, by George C. Giles, Jr. (1984) ] ] also published a periodical called "The Evangelical Catholic."Already earlier, there was an evangelical revival in
Roman Catholic Church inGermany , involving Boos, Gossner and Feneberg. This evangelical revivalist movement contributed also to German Lutheranism.Lusitanian Catholic Apostolic Evangelical Church inPortugal has its origins inOld Catholic movement of the 19th century. Today it belongs to theAnglican Communion .In England,
Ulric Vernon Herford (1866-1938), Mar Jacobus, Bishop of Mercia & Middelesex, founded The Evangelical Catholic Communion. His succession line was brought to the United States in the 1960s and continues inEvangelical Apostolic Church of North America . [ [http://www.eacna.org/whoweare.html :: www.eacna.org :: ] ]New Church Bodies
In the end of 20th century,
Convergence Movement has formed some new church bodies, likeCharismatic Episcopal Church . One of the new Catholic Evangelical church is theKing's Family of Churches . It governs by an Episcopal polity, embraces the Charismatic renewal, use different liturgical versions in worship, both Anglican and Lutheran, and it has a strong focus in missions and church planting according to its Mission Statement [Mission of the King's Family of Churches http://www.thekingsfamily.org/index.php/christs-mission-2/] .Apart from the Convergence Movement,
The Evangelical Old Catholic Communion has its roots inIndependent Catholic ism.See also
*
Catholicism
*Christian ecumenism
*Evangelicalism
*Protestantism
*Branch theory
*Primitive Catholic
*Porvoo Communion
*Robert Jenson
*High church
*Liturgical Movement
*Anglo-Catholicism
*Independent Catholic
*Old Catholic Church
*Reformed Catholic Church
*Reformed Catholics
*Scottish Church Society Further reading
*Brodd, Sven-Erik: Evangelisk katolicitet. Ett studium av innehall och funktion under 1800- och 1900-talet. Uppsala 1982.
*Pryzywara, Erich: Evangelische Katholizität - Katholische Evangelizität. Katholische Krise. Düsseldorf 1967
*Aulén, Gustaf: The Catholicity of Lutheranism. A Contribution to the Ecumenical Discussion (World Lutheranism Today. A Tribute to Anders Nygren 15 November 1950. Lund 1950)References
* [http://www.jstor.org/view/00224189/ap040266/04a00040/0 "The Catholicity of the Augsburg Confession"] by
Avery Dulles , S.J. (JSTOR , The Journal of Religion, Vol. 63, No. 4, Martin Luther, 1483-1983. (Oct., 1983), pp. 337-354.)
* [http://www.ctsfw.edu/library/files/pb/999 "Evangelical and Catholic — A Slogan in Search of a Definition"] by David P. Scaer, Concordia Theological Quarterly 65:4, October 2001.
* [http://www.luthersem.edu/word&world/Archives/9-3_Finality/9-3_Face_to_Face.pdf "Evangelical Catholicity: A Lutheran Faction" (PDF)] by Walter Sundberg. Word & World 9/3 (1989)
* [http://global-dialogue.com/swidlerbooks/VANGUARD.htm "The Ecumenical Vanguard — The History of the Una Sancta Movement"] byLeonard Swidler .
* [http://www.jstor.org/stable/view/3165653?seq=1 "Lutheran and Catholic Reunionists in the Age of Bismarck"] by Manfred Fleischer. Church History, Vol. 57, Supplement: Centennial Issue (1988), pp. 89-107 (JSTOR )
* [http://books.google.fi/books?id=yaecVMhMWaEC&pg=PA213&lpg=PA213&dq=evangelical+catholicity&source=web&ots=fyW-RLrWGG&sig=_XxUWYhjKppO_QLihAMlEyERHL0&hl=fi#PPA213,M1 "Evangelical Catholicity"] , article in "The Encyclopedia of Christianity" by Erwin Fahlbusch, Geoffrey William Bromiley, David B. Barrett. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing 1999, ISBN 9004116958External links
Roman Catholic links
* [http://www.evangelicalcatholic.com/ The Evangelical Catholic]
* [http://www.econi.org/ Centre for Contemporary Christianity in Ireland]
* [http://www.religioustolerance.org/chr_caev.htm Catholic - Evangelical Cooperation]
* [http://www.CatholicBridge.com/ CatholicBridge.com - Center for Catholic and Evangelical Dialogue]Lutheran links
* [http://www.e-ccet.org/ Center for Catholic and Evangelical Theology]
** [http://www.e-ccet.org/princeton_proposal.htm "The Princeton Proposal for Christian Unity"]
* [http://www.piepkorn.info Arthur Carl Piepkorn Center for Evangelical Catholicity]
* [http://web.archive.org/web/20060430170834/orthodoxlutheran.fws1.com/notprot.html "Lutherans are not Protestants"] by Darel E. Paul, 2001
* [http://risenchristlutheran.org/is_your_church_catholic_enough.php "Is Your Church Catholic Enough?"] by J.P. Winsor, March 7, 2002
* [http://www.evmcc.org/ Evangelical Marian Catholic Church]
* [http://www.associationofindependentevangelicallutheranchurches.org/ Association of Independent Evangelical Lutheran Churches]Other links
* [http://www.thekingsfamily.org/ King's Family of Churches]
* [http://www.evangelicalcatholicchurch.org/ Independent Evangelical Catholic Church of America]
* [http://www.eacna.org/ The Evangelical Apostolic Church of North America]
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