The Office of Holy Ministry: Lutheran Ordination and the External Call
1 Timothy 4:12-16 • 2 Timothy 2:15
Ordination to the Office of Holy Ministry — the external call, preaching the Word and administering the sacraments, the rite of ordination (not a sacrament)
Lutheran
Law and Gospel, justification by faith alone
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The Office of Holy Ministry: What Augsburg Article V Says
The Mailman
The mailman does not write the letters. The mailman delivers them. The faithfulness of the mailman is measured not by their own literary skill but by whether the letters arrive — intact, undistorted, on time. Lutheran ordained ministry is the ministry of the mailman: delivering the Word and the Sacraments that God has written and entrusted to the church. The minister does not improve on the message. The minister delivers it faithfully.
Source: Lutheran theology of ordained ministry / Augsburg Confession Article V
The External Call: How Luther Understood Legitimate Ministry
A Rite, Not a Sacrament: Lutheran Ordination and Holy Orders
Applications
- 1[MINISTER_NAME], deliver the Word and the Sacraments faithfully. That is the whole of the office. Do not add to it or subtract from it.
- 2[CONGREGATION], listen to the Word preached from this pulpit with the expectation that the Spirit works through it. The office exists to deliver the means of grace to you.
- 3Support your minister's study. The Lutheran office requires a minister who can handle the Word rightly. Give [MINISTER_NAME] time and resources to study.
- 4Honor the external call. The congregation and minister are in a mutual commitment — honor it on both sides.
Prayer Suggestions
- Lord, You have established the Office of Holy Ministry so that through the Word and Sacraments Your Spirit might create and sustain faith. Honor that promise in [MINISTER_NAME]'s ministry.
- Give [MINISTER_NAME] the faithfulness to deliver what You have entrusted — the Gospel, rightly preached; the Sacraments, properly administered.
- Make [CONGREGATION] a community of eager hearers — those who receive the Word as the Word of God and not merely the word of [MINISTER_NAME].
- Veni Creator Spiritus — through the ministry of Word and Sacrament, create faith where there is doubt and sustain faith where it grows weak. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
The Postman (1997)
In the film, the postman becomes a symbol of restored civilization — not because of personal greatness but because of faithful delivery. Every letter delivered is a connection restored, a hope maintained, a community reconstituted. Lutheran ordained ministry is the postman ministry: the minister who delivers the Word and Sacraments faithfully is restoring connections, maintaining hope, reconstituting community — through the means God has appointed.
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Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
The Office of Holy Ministry exists to deliver the means of grace — Word and Sacrament. The minister who does this faithfully fulfills the office. That is enough.
The external call matters. Do not minimize it. The church's call to [MINISTER_NAME] is part of what makes this ministry legitimate. Honor both the internal and external calls.
Luther fought the enthusiasts who claimed direct divine authority without going through the external call. If a minister bypasses the church's formal call and just declares themselves a minister, they have ordained themselves — not God.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the "Office of Holy Ministry" in Lutheran theology?
The Office of Holy Ministry (Augsburg Confession Article V) is the office established by God to deliver the means of grace — the Gospel and the sacraments — through which the Holy Spirit creates and sustains faith. The ordained minister's primary calling is to preach the Word rightly and administer the sacraments properly.
Why don't Lutherans consider ordination a sacrament?
Luther restricted sacraments to those with a divine promise attached to an external element (baptism and the Lord's Supper). Ordination has no such promise — it is a rite of the church, not a sacrament. The laying on of hands publicly installs the minister in the office, but it does not convey an indelible spiritual character or ontological change.
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