The Church is the People of God, the mystical Body of Christ, and Temple of the Holy Spirit as constituted by the means of grace. The means of grace create and sustain the Church because they contain the promise of the gospel. This gospel, then, creates and maintains faith. The means of grace create faith because Jesus Christ, who is the living and eternal Word of God, is present in there in the power of the Spirit. Just as in the beginning the Word of God in the power of the Spirit called the original creation into existence (Gen. 1), so too, the same Word of God and Holy Spirit bring about a new creation in the life and person of Jesus (Jn. 1, 2 Cor. 5:17).
Lutherans have historically divided the means of grace into the categories of the Word and the Sacraments. For example, Lutheran theologian Robert Kolb suggests essentially four distinct forms of the Word of God: Christ, Scripture, the proclamation of the Church, and the sacraments.1 Nevertheless, there are certain difficulties with the two-fold division between Word and Sacrament. First, the risen Jesus is equally present in the power of the Spirit in both the Word and the Sacraments. Therefore, the same word of the gospel spoken through the preaching office is also spoken in the sacraments, although in a different manner [as discussed later].
Secondly, God addresses humans through both visible words and auditory words. As Hermann Sasse observed: “The sacrament is the verbum visibile (visible Word); the Word is the sacramentum audibile, the audible and heard sacrament.”2 All creatures are God’s visible words. No visible word lacks an auditory word attached to it by God. At minimum, God has attached the word “very good” to all his creatures. Likewise, God never gives an auditory word apart from a visible word. The auditory word either refers to the visible word or is attached to it as law or promise. Hence, the strict division of proclamation and teaching as bare auditory words, and sacraments as auditory words united with physical objects is not fully possible.
Continue reading “Power in the Blood: Grace Flowing from the Five Wounds”