Abstract:
From personal experience, this article shares to what degree the Faculty of Theology at
the University of Pretoria was and continues to be a gateway to the future, challenging
among others the divisions that characterise the Church of Christ worldwide. The article
argues that for the 16th-century Reformers the unity of the church was a given and that
the (Lutheran) confessions were written to establish such a unity through agreement in
confession and joint rejection of false doctrines. However, such statements of faith did not
overcome the divisions, but institutionalised them, leading to a divided Church of Christ.
Political intervention to work unity between Lutherans and Reformers deepened divisions
more than ever, leading among others to a break of fellowship at the Lord’s Supper. Applying
Luther’s hermeneutical principle of was Christum treibet (what drives Christ), the author
seeks to rediscover a way of interpreting Scripture by focusing not on literal differences, but
on that which is foundational to Scripture, namely the Christ event. This is applied in
particular to the topic of table fellowship and divisions in Corinth with regard to the Lord’s
Supper, addressed in 1 Corinthians 11, culminating in a critical deconstruction of past
practices in confessional Lutheran churches. In view of doctrinal differences, a hermeneutics
of conversation is proposed that can vigorously debate differences of understanding,
without threatening the unity that is worked by Christ himself.