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Simul Justus et Peccator: Ecclesiological and Ecumenical Perspectives

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 September 2014

Robert Kress*
Affiliation:
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Abstract

The Lutheran formula “simul Justus et peccator” originally applied to the individual Christian believer. However, it can also apply to the ecclesial community of believers and it can also have ecumenical dimensions and consequences. This article investigates these dimensions and consequences in view of the discussions which were occasioned by Vatican II.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The College Theology Society 1984

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References

1 Texts from Luther's writings containing the simul (gerecht und Sünder zugleich) are assembled in: Althaus, Paul, The Theology of Martin Luther (Philadelphia: Fortress, 1966), pp. 242–45;Google ScholarPesch, Otto Hermann, Theologie der Rechtfertigung bei Martin Luther und Thomas von Aquin (Mainz: Griinewald, 1967), pp. 109–22Google Scholar, and Existential and Sapiential Theology—The Theological Confrontation Between Luther and Thomas Aquinas” in Wicks, Jared, ed., Catholic Scholars Dialogue with Luther (Chicago: Loyola University Press, 1970), pp. 62–82, at 69.Google Scholar I have used the English translation of the simul in Althaus' Introduction.

2 Hermann, Rudolf, Luthers These, “Gerecht und Sunder zugjeich” (2nd. ed.; Gütersloh: Mohn, 1950[1930]), pp. 7, 9.Google Scholar On the other hand, Pesch, O. H., Gerechtfertigt aus Glauben (Freiburg: Herder, 1982), p. 135Google Scholar, emphasizes that “it is in any case [only] one summary of Luther's teaching on justification.”

3 DS 1515, 1524, 1528-30, 1561-62.

4 Pesch, , Gerechtfertigt, p. 135.Google Scholar

5 On all this, see Kress, Robert, “Leise Treten: An Irenic Ecumenical Hermeneutics,” Theological Studies 44 (1983), 407–37, esp. 411–13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

6 However dominant the sola in Luther's theology, the “et … et” is not completely absent, as Pesch, notes in Gerechtfertigt, pp. 7278.Google Scholar Also to be consulted in this regard is the classic article of Althaus, Paul, “Sola Fide Numquam Sola: Glaube und Werke in ihrer Bedeutung für das Heil bei Martin Luther,” Una Sancta 16 (1961), 227–35.Google Scholar

7 In regard to the difficulty of understanding Luther, this point is well made by McCue, James F. in a book review in Theological Studies 44 (1983), 511CrossRefGoogle Scholar: “And the long-standing debates within Lutheranism over the right interpretation of Luther suggests that it may be more than scholastic habits of mind or lack of sympathy that make a balanced understanding of Luther difficult.”

8 Wulf, H., “Simul Justus et peccator,” Lexikon für Theologie und Kirche 9 (Freiburg: Herder, 1964), pp. 778–80.Google Scholar

9 That, however, the Pauline and the Lutheran positions do not simply and perfectly coincide has been amply shown by Joest, Wilhelm, “Paulus und das Luthersche simul Justus et peccator,” Kerygma und Dogma 1 (1965), 269320.Google Scholar

10 That Luther's “individualism” was not essentially and irretrievably anti-ecclesial is amply documented by Kinder, Ernst, Der evangelische Glaube und die Kirche (Berlin: Lutherisches Verlagshaus, 1960), pp. 5964.Google Scholar

11 Theology, p. 244.

12 Theology, p. 243.

13 Pesch, , Gerechtfertigt, p. 127;Google ScholarTheologie, pp. 114, 118; “Existential,” p. 70; Gottes Gnadenhandeln als Rechtfertigung des Menschen” in Feiner, Johannes and Löhrer, Magnus, eds., Mysterium SaJutis 4/2 (Einsiedeln: Benziger, 1973), p. 889.Google Scholar

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17 Hermann, , Luthers These, p. 50.Google ScholarPesch, , Gerechtfertigt, p. 127Google Scholar, speaks of “the theological definition as the events [Ereignissse; my emphasis] of the relationship to God. …”

18 “Gottes,” p. 887; Theologie, p. 120.

19 This point is emphasized by Kösters, Reinhard, “Luthers These ‘Gerecht und Sünder zugleich’ zu dem gleichnamigen Buch von Rudolf Hermann,” Catholica 18 (1964), 48–77, 193–217;Google Scholar 19(1965), 138-62, 171-85.

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33 I have used the version of Abbott, Walter, ed., The Documents of Vatican II (New York: America, 1966).Google Scholar

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40 According to Joseph Burgess, Director of Theological Studies for the Lutheran Council in the U.S.A. He continues, “but it's not yet a full consensus,” although the document itself speaks of “consensus” (1964). See Austin, Charles, “Lutherans and Catholics in U.S. Agree on Key Salvation Doctrine,” New York Times (Sept. 20, 1983), A21.Google Scholar

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72 See Evdokimov, pp. 156-58; Lanne, pp. 907, 912, 920.

73 Scrima, Andre, “Das II. Vatikanum in orthodoxer Sicht” in Danhardt, A., ed., Theologisches Jahrbuch 1966 (Leipzig: St. Benno, 1966), p. 493.Google Scholar

74 Lanne, p. 924, referring to George Florovsky.

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76 La Sainte Eglise, p. 135; see also Lanne, p. 917.

77 Evdokimov, pp. 155 (quoting Khomiakoff), 128, 158.

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82 See Congar, Yves, La Sainte Eglise, p. 135.Google Scholar

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89 Would to deny this not require flight to a ploy once very popular in the West, the distinction, namely, between Church (holy) and members (sinful). This discredited and now abandoned approach has been described as reducing the Church to “eine rein ideologische Grosse, die beinahe mythologischen Charakter hätte” by Rahner, Karl, Schriften zur TheoIogie 6 (Einsiedeln: Benziger, 1965), p. 344.Google Scholar This distinction would reduce the real, actual Church to a “Zwischenwesen, irgendwo schwebund zwischen Gott und den Menschen,” according to Küng, Hans, Die Kirche (Freiburg: Herder, 1967), p. 563.Google Scholar The English translation (The Church [New York: Sheed and Ward, 1967], p. 481Google Scholar) has lost the flavor of Küng's rhetoric.

90 Kress, Robert, “Leise Treten: An Irenic Ecumenical Hermeneutics,” Theological Studies 44 (1983), 407–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

91 I have found support for my approach in Fries, Heinrich and Rahner, Karl, Einigung der Kirche— Reale Möglichkeit (Freiburg: Herder, 1983).Google Scholar I have also found support for it in the L/RC Dialogue's Justification by Faith, which distinguishes “theology as well as piety” (22), “theology and spiritual … theology and piety” (29), “dogmatics in practical theology” (65), “experiential impact … rather than with systematic description” (70). Similar distinctions can be found in 23, 38, 79, 85, 92, 102, 118, 121, 148, 150-53.

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99 Is this not the fundamental significance of Pius X's anti-Modernist insistence that the sacrament of penance did not gradually evolve, but was present in the Church from the beginning (DS 3446, 3447).

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103 A favorite idea of the L/RC Dialogue, Justification by Faith; for example, 24, 101.

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