You can read this week’s article here.
Today’s article is on ordination. More specifically today’s article is about bishops and what the office of bishop had become in Luther’s day and age. You see the expectation was that to be properly ordained, you had to be ordained by a bishop. It was not that this was necessarily a bad idea. The scriptures don’t say that you have to be ordained by a bishop and they don’t say that you can’t be ordained by a bishop. Where the problem came was that, in Luther’s day, being a bishop was more about political power than it was about service to God’s people in the church. Now I am sure that was not the case each and every time, but for the most part, this is the way it was.
So the question is really about who can serve in the church and what is the best way to set that up. It is a debate that continues even to this day. Not about bishops and ordination, but about who is qualified to be ordained, and how does a person best meet the educational requirements for this to happen.
So where does the rubber hit the road on this one? Well, there is nothing wrong with good order. So I don’t know that we need to throw out ordination. But it is good to have people ordained, or set aside in order to equip the people of God for works of ministry. At the end of the day, that is why we have clergy, to help God’s people do the work that God has given them to do. Not to do that work for them. Not to lord their ordination over them. Not even to be walked on and abused by them. But to equip them for works of ministry, to point them to Jesus, and to help them to grow as God’s people. So it is a good thing.
I pray God’s blessings for you this week in all that you do.
Sincerely,
Pastor CJ
