| dc.description.abstract | In this impassioned theological essay, Siegbert W. Becker defends the historic Lutheran doctrine of the Church’s invisibility against contemporary formulations suggesting a “visible manifestation” of the Una Sancta. Becker argues that the true Church—composed solely of believers united by faith—is invisible by nature and cannot be visibly represented by any earthly institution or denomination. He critiques ambiguous language in doctrinal theses that risk conflating visible church bodies with the spiritual attributes of the invisible Church. Drawing extensively from Scripture, Luther, and Lutheran dogmaticians, Becker emphasizes the Church’s unity, catholicity, and holiness as spiritual realities known only to God. He warns against compromising pure doctrine for outward unity or worldly recognition, asserting that faith, not external appearance, defines the Church. The essay concludes with a plea for theological clarity and fidelity to Scripture, urging the removal of misleading terminology to safeguard the Gospel.
Abstract prepared by Microsoft Copilot (GPT-4). | |