Biblia

Concord

Concord

CONCORD

Form of.

Form of concord, in ecclesiastical history, a standard-book among the Lutherans, composed at Torgaw in 1576, and thence called the book of Torgaw, and reviewed at Berg by six Lutheran doctors of Germany, the principal of whom was James Anderae. This book contains, in two parts, a system of doctrine, the subscription of which was a condition of communion, and a formal and very severe condemnation of all who differed from the compilers of it; particularly with respect to the majesty and omnipresence of Christ’s body, and the real manducation of his flesh and blood in the Eucharist. It was first imposed upon the Saxons by Augustus, and occasioned great opposition and disturbance. The dispute about it was revived in Switzerland in 1718, when the magistrates of Bern published an order for adopting it as a rule of faith; the consequence of which was a contest that reduced its credit and authority.

Fuente: Theological Dictionary

Concord

lit., “a sounding together” (sun, “with,” phone, “a sound;” Eng., “symphony”), is found in 2Co 6:15, in the rhetorical question “what concord hath Christ with Belial?” See AGREE, A, No. 1.

Fuente: Vine’s Dictionary of New Testament Words