Protestants have continued to debate, among other …
Years: 1577 - 1577
Protestants have continued to debate, among other issues, adiaphorism, the opinion that certain doctrines or practices in morals or religion are matters of indifference because they are neither commanded nor forbidden in the Bible.
After two political conferences in 1558 and 1561 had failed to produce agreement on the effort to heal the divisions in German Lutheranism after Martin Luther's death in 1546 and to keep the Lutheran churches from being absorbed into an all-Protestant union, the Lutheran rulers in Germany entrust the project to several theologians, who produce the Formula of Concord, essentially an interpretation of the Augsburg Confession.
Written primarily by the theologians Jakob Andreä and Martin Chemnitz, and put in final form in 1577, this work, which further defines the Lutheran position in reference to controversies both within and outside the ranks, inaugurates the era of Lutheran orthodoxy.
The Formula attempts to settle the matter of adiaphorism by stating that rites and ceremonies that are matters of religious indifference cannot be imposed during times of controversy.
Locations
Groups
- Christians, Roman Catholic
- Saxony, Electorate of
- Palatinate, Electoral (Wittelsbach)
- Lutheranism
- Protestantism
- Hesse-Kassel, Landgraviate of
