Wednesday, November 6, 2024

Notes on Luther's Theology of the Priesthood from Voss, "The Priesthood of All Believers" (2016)

  

The Source of Luther’s Spiritual Priesthood

 

A common misunderstanding assumes that the doctrine begins with 1 Pet 2:5-9, but this passage is not the most foundational for Luther. Like the NT authors, the source of Luther’s doctrine is the identification of Jesus, the Anointed One (Christos), with the eschatological Melchizedekian Priesthood described in Ps 110:4. Luther’s understanding grew from his exegesis of Psalm 110 and its treatment in Hebrews. (Hank Voss, The Priesthood of All Believers and the Missio Dei: A Canonical, Catholic, and Contextual Perspective [Princeton Theological Monograph Series; Eugene, Oreg.: Pickwick Publications, 2016], 135-36)

 

 

According to Luther, verse four [of Psa 110] unites “the kingly and priestly functions in one person.” (LW 13:305) It indicates that Christ’s eschatological priesthood will be entirely different from the Levitical priesthood. (LW 13:306) It finds its proctology in the Melchizedekian royal priesthood described in Genesis 14 (LW 13:309-15) and in the oath given by God to Abraham in Gen 12:3. (LW 13:308) For Luther, the pope set up “his own priestcraft” (Pfafferey) in opposition to the Melchizedekian office of Christ. (LW 13:315) IN contrast to Rome’s mass-priests (Mess Pfaffen), Luther expounds upon three functions of Christ’s royal priesthood . . . (LW 13:315-29) He concludes with “some remarks about the way in which we Christians, too, are priests.” (LW 13:29; see 29-34) This 1535 sermon provides the clearest statement of Luther’s doctrine. For Luther, the only true priesthood is Christ’s Melchizedekian priesthood, in which disciples participate through the new birth and baptism. (Ibid., 136-37, emphasis in original)

 

 

SEEDS AND SIBLINGS OF THE PRIEST KING:
THE ROYAL PRIESTHOOD OF BELIEVERS

 

Luther’s claim has two implications for baptized believers: 1) Believers are ordained to royal priesthood at their baptism; 2) All believers are called to priestly discipleship. Furst, Luther teaches that baptism represents a new birth whereby we enter the priestly family of Christ as his children and siblings. God works through “the Gospel and Holy Baptism” to make those born of him “true children of a priest [Priesters Kinder]” who “Inherit the same name from their father. Consequently every baptized Christian is a priest already. (LW 13:329)

 

During the medieval period, the power and wonder of baptism had gradually been overshadowed by emphasis on penance and the Eucharist. Luther recovered a sense of the awe felt by early Christians when they discussed their baptism. (Luther, Large Catechism, Baptism 42) Luther repeatedly emphasized that there is only one priesthood (Christ’s) and only one priestly ordination (Baptism). “We are all consecrated priests through baptism” LW 44:127. See also LW 30:63; 40:19)

 

All Christian priesthood finds its source in baptism, because that is where the believer is united with Christ’s baptism. (WA 51:111)

 

IF baptism both units believers with Christ and ordains them for service in the royal priesthood, this is because both actions are closely tied to justification by faith. Faith makes a Christian a priest, not simply baptism.

 

For faith must do everything. Faith alone is the true priestly office. It permits no one else to take its place. Therefore all Christian men are priests, all women priestesses, be they young or old, master or servant, mistress or maid, learned or unlearned. Here there is no difference unless faith be unequal. (LW 35:101; 12:289) (Ibid., 137-38)

 

 

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