Lutheran History


Origin of the Lutheran Denomination of the Christian Church

Martin Luther (b. November 10, 1483, in Eisleben, Germany,
d. February 18, 1546 in Eisleben) is known as the Father of Protestantism.  
He had studied to become a lawyer before becoming an Augustinian monk in 1505,
and was ordained a priest in 1507.   While continuing his studies in pursuit of a
Doctor of Theology degree, he discovered significant differences between
what he read in the Bible and the theology and practices of the church.  
On October 31, 1517, he posted a challenge on the church door at  
Wittenberg University to debate 95 theological issues.  
Luther's hope was that the church would reform its practice and preaching
to be more consistent with the Word of God as contained in the Bible.

What started as an academic debate escalated to a religious war, fueled by fiery
temperaments and violent language on both sides.  As a result, there was not a
reformation of the church but a separation.  "Lutheran" was a name applied
to Luther and his followers as an insult but adopted as a
badge of honor by them instead.

Lutherans still celebrate the Reformation on October 31 and still hold to the basic
principles of theology and practice espoused by Luther,
such as
Sola Gratia, Sola Fide, Sola Scriptura:

We are saved by the grace of God alone --
not by anything we do;
Our salvation is through faith alone --
we only need to believe that
our sins are forgiven for Christ's sake,
who died to redeem us;
The Bible is the only norm of doctrine and life --
the only true standard by which teachings
and doctrines are to be judged.

Another of Luther's principles was that Scriptures
and worship need to be in the language of the people.

Many Lutherans still consider themselves as a reforming movement within the
Church catholic, rather than a separatist movement, and Lutherans have engaged  
in ecumenical dialogue with other church bodies for decades.  In fact, the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America has entered into cooperative "full communion"
agreements with several other Protestant denominations.  

From the ELCA website:   http://www.elca.org/communication/brief.html
St. John Lutheran Church
Luther’s Seal
785.476.3155          stjohnken@ruraltel.net