A Brief Statement of the Doctrinal Position of
The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod
Of the Church
(St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, N.D.)
[Adopted 1932]
Of the Church
24. We believe that there is one holy Christian Church on earth,
the Head of which is Christ and which is gathered, preserved, and
governed by Christ through the Gospel.
The members of the Christian Church are the Christians, that is,
all those who have despaired of their own righteousness before God and
believe that God forgives their sins for Christ's sake. The Christian
Church, in the proper sense of the term, is composed of believers
only, Acts 5:14; 26:18; which means that no person in whom the Holy
Ghost has wrought faith in the Gospel, or -- which is the same thing
-- in the doctrine of justification, can be divested of his membership
in the Christian Church; and, on the other hand, that no person in
whose heart this faith does not dwell can be invested with such
membership. All unbelievers, though they be in external communion with
the Church and even hold the office of teacher or any other office in
the Church, are not members of the Church, but, on the contrary,
dwelling-places and instruments of Satan, Eph. 2:2. This is also the
teaching of our Lutheran Confessions: "It is certain, however,
that the wicked are in the power of the devil and members of the
kingdom of the devil, as Paul teaches, Eph. 2:2, when he says that
`the devil now worketh in the children of disobedience,"' etc.
(Apology, Triglot, p. 231, Paragraph 16; M., p. 154.)
25. Since it is by faith in the gospel alone that men become
members of the Christian Church, and since this faith cannot be seen
by men, but is known to God alone, 1 Kings 8:39; Acts 1:24; 2 Tim.
2:19, therefore the Christian Church on earth is invisible till
Judgment Day, Col. 3:3, 4. In our day some Lutherans speak of two
sides of the Church, taking the means of grace to be its "visible
side." It is true, the means of grace are necessarily related to
the Church, seeing that the Church is created and preserved through
them. But the means of grace are not for that reason a part of the
Church; for the Church, in the proper sense of the word, consists only
of believers, Eph. 2:19, 20; Acts 5:14. Lest we abet the notion that
the Christian Church in the proper sense of the term is an external
institution, we shall continue to call the means of grace the
"marks" of the Church. Just as wheat is to be found only
where it has been sown, so the Church can be found only where the Word
of God is in use.
26. We teach that this Church, which is the invisible communion of
all believers, is to be found not only in those external church
communions which teach the Word of God purely in every part, but also
where, along with error, so much of the Word of God still remains that
men may be brought to the knowledge of their sins and to faith in the
forgiveness of sins, which Christ has gained for all men, Mark 16:16;
Samaritans: Luke 17:16; John 4:25.
27. Local Churches or Local Congregations. -- Holy Scripture,
however, does not speak merely of the one Church, which embraces the
believers of all places, as in Matt. 16:18; John 10:16, but also of
churches in the plural, that is, of local churches, as in 1 Cor.
16:19; 1:2; Acts 8:1: the Churches of Asia, the church of God in
Corinth, the church in Jerusalem. But this does not mean that there
are two kinds of churches, for the local churches also, in as far as
they are churches, consist solely of believers, as we see clearly from
the addresses of the epistles to local churches; for example,
"unto the church which is at Corinth, to them that are
sanctified, in Christ Jesus, called to be saints," 1 Cor. 1:2,
Rom. 1:7, etc. The visible society, containing hypocrites as well as
believers, is called a church only in a improper sense, Matt.
13:47-50, 24-30, 38-43.
28. On Church-Fellowship. -- Since God ordained that His Word only,
without the admixture of human doctrine, be taught and believed in the
Christian Church, 1 Pet. 4:11; John 8:31, 32; 1 Tim. 6:3, 4, all
Christians are required by God to discriminate between orthodox and
heterodox church-bodies, Matt. 7:15, to have church-fellowship only
with orthodox church-bodies, and, in case they have strayed into
heterodox church-bodies, to leave them, Rom. 16:17. We repudiate
unionism, that is, church-fellowship with the adherents of false
doctrine, as disobedience to God's command, as causing divisions in
the Church, Rom. 16:17; 2 John 9, 10, and involving the constant
danger of losing the Word of God entirely, 2 Ti. 2:17-21.
29. The orthodox character of a church is established not by its
mere name nor by its outward acceptance of, and subscription to, an
orthodox creed, but by the doctrine which is actually taught in its
pulpits, in its theological seminaries, and in its publications. On
the other hand, a church does not forfeit its orthodox character
through the casual intrusion of errors, provided these are combated
and eventually removed by means of doctrinal discipline, Acts 20:30; 1
Tim. 1:3.
30. The Original and True Possessors of All Christian Rights and
Privileges -- Since the Christians are the Church, it is self- evident
that they alone originally possess the spiritual gifts and rights
which Christ has gained for, and given to, His Church. Thus St. Paul
reminds all believers: "All things are yours," 1 Cor. 3:21,
22, and Christ Himself commits to all believers the keys of the
kingdom of heaven, Matt. 16:13- 19, 18:17-20, John 20:22, 23, and
commissions all believers to preach the Gospel and to administer the
Sacraments, Matt. 28:19, 20,; 1 Cor. 11:23-25. Accordingly, we reject
all doctrines by which this spiritual power or any part thereof is
adjudged as originally vested in certain individuals or bodies, such
as the Pope, or the bishops, or the order of the ministry, or the
secular lords, or councils, or synods, etc. The officers of the Church
publicly administer their offices only by virtue of delegated powers,
and such administration remains under the supervision of the latter,
Col. 4:17. Naturally all Christians have also the right and the duty
to judge and decide matters of doctrine, not according to their own
notions, of course, but according to the Word of God, 1 John 4:1; 1
Pet. 4:11.