Why it matters
The Augsburg Confession is one of the most important Protestant doctrinal standards. It was written to show that the Lutheran reformers were not inventing a new religion, but defending what they believed to be the catholic faith purified by Scripture.
Its early articles cover God, sin, Christ, justification, ministry, new obedience, the church, and the sacraments. The later articles criticize abuses such as mandatory monastic vows, the sacrificial understanding of the mass, and restrictions around clerical marriage.
- - Strong on justification by faith
- - Retains a structured doctrine of church and sacraments
- - Defines Lutheran identity in relation to Rome and other reformers