The Way of Salvation in the Lutheran Church eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about The Way of Salvation in the Lutheran Church.

The Way of Salvation in the Lutheran Church eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 177 pages of information about The Way of Salvation in the Lutheran Church.

This is the simple and appropriate ceremony we call confirmation.  We claim for it no magical powers.  It is not a sacrament.  It adds nothing to the sacrament of baptism, for that is complete in itself.  There is no conferring of Grace by the pastor’s hands, but simply a directing of the Church’s prayers to the individual.

The confirming, strengthening and establishing of—­the catechumen in Grace, is effected primarily alone through Christ’s own means of Grace, viz.:  the Word and the Sacraments.  The Word has been applied to mind and heart all along from tenderest childhood.  It is now brought home in the review and admonition of the pastor, amid specially solemn surroundings.  The previous administering of baptism, and the perpetual efficacy of that sacrament, are now vividly recalled and impressed.  And this unusually impressive application of the power of Word and Sacrament confirms and strengthens the divine life in the catechumen.  Thus the means of Grace do the confirming, or rather the Holy Spirit through these means.  Instrumentally also the pastor may be said to confirm, since he, as Christ’s ambassador or agent, applies His means of Grace.

In still another, though inferior sense, the catechumen confirms.  He receives the offered means of Grace, assents to their truth and efficacy, obtains divine virtue and strength through them, and with this imparted strength lays hold on Christ, draws nearer to Him, is united to Him as the branch to the vine, and thus confirms and establishes the covenant and bond that unites him to his Saviour.

We do not claim for the rite of confirmation a “thus saith the Lord.”  We do not claim that it possesses sacramental efficacy, or that it is absolutely essential to salvation.  We do claim, however, that there is nothing unevangelical or anti-scriptural in this ceremony.  On the contrary, we believe it is in perfect harmony with the whole tenor and spirit of the Gospel.  If we cannot trace it to apostolic usage, we can find it in all its essential features in the pure age of the Church immediately succeeding the Apostles.  In some form or other it has been practiced in the Church ever since.

True, it has often been and is still grossly abused.  It has often been encumbered and entangled with error and superstition; and therefore there have not been wanting radical purists who have not only set it aside, but cried it down as Romish and heathenish.  The more sober and conservative churches have been content to purge it of its error and superstition.  In its purified form they prize it highly, cherish its use, practice it, and find it attended by God’s richest blessing.

It is a significant fact also that some of those who were once its most bitter opponents are gradually returning to its practice.  We find, for example, that certain Presbyterian churches confirm large classes of catechumens every year.

Certain Methodist book concerns and publishing houses also-publish confirmation certificates, from which we infer that some of their churches also must practice this rite.  Again, we find in certain “pastors’ record books,” gotten up to suit all denominations, columns for reporting the number of confirmations.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Way of Salvation in the Lutheran Church from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.