American Lutheranism Vindicated; or, Examination of the Lutheran Symbols, on Certain Disputed Topics - Including a Reply to the Plea of Rev. W. J. Mann by S. S. (Samuel Simon) Schmucker
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page 31 of 200 (15%)
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leading divines of our church, one part of which is the right and
obligation to form our own views of Scripture truth, and to avow them to the world. No individual can justly pronounce the Platform an invasion of his rights; for it has never even been proposed by _its friends_ to any Synod other than those at the request of whose members it was prepared; and should it, at any time hereafter, be presented, it will possess no authority unless conferred on it by Synodical action, in which each minister has a right to participate. The war that has been and is still waged against the Platform, by old Lutheran Synods, and papers, to whom it was never proposed for adoption, is wholly offensive; and whilst we do not deny the right of any Synod to take it up by way of counsel, the intolerant and aggressive principles avowed by Old School papers, is a direct assault on the rights of American or New School Lutherans, which cannot in the end fail to unite them in measures of self-defence. _Secondly_, the Plea is mistaken, in supposing that the friends of the Platform profess to be the true representatives of the Lutheran Church in the _symbolic_ sense of the term: for have they not reiterated, in a score of publications, for five and twenty years past, that they do not hold all the views of the former symbols; and does not the Platform itself explicitly disclaim any such idea, by publicly protesting against the errors of those books? _Thirdly_, the idea of our "unchurching others," is openly disclaimed by the Platform, as was proved above. Again, says the Plea: "Those who undertake to change the doctrinal basis of a church, take upon themselves an awful responsibility," p. 7. |
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