| |
| | FLC - Augsburg Confession |
 | | However, as part of these agreements, we and the other church bodies are asking each other to understand, and in some cases, to accept, the validity of each other's teachings. |
 | | My source will be the Book of Concord, the collected confessions of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, and specifically, for the next 28 issues, the Augsburg Confession, the 1530 document which cemented the Reformation of the Church. |
 | | This will be, however, a place where we can briefly touch on what it means to be a Lutheran Christian today, and how the Lutheran Confessions can inform our faith, and be "true witnesses and faithful expositions" of the Scriptures (words taken from the service of ordination). |
| www.toad.net /~flc/augsburg.html (303 words) |
|