OF
TRANSLATED BY WILLIAM HAZLITT, Esq.
Philadelphia:
The Lutheran Publication Society
Typed by:
Kathy Sewell ksewell@gate.net
June 1, 1997
This book is in the public domain
Martin Luther, Johannes Bugenhagen, Philip Melanchthon, Caspar
Creuziger, Justus Jonas and Vitus Dietrich at the table (Original print 1558).
INTRODUCTION
Dr. Martin Luther's Book, entitled, Colloquia Mensalia, or,
his Divine Discourses at his Table, held with divers learned Men and pious Divines;
such as Philip Melancthon, Caspar Cruciger, Justus Jonas, Vitus Dietrich, John
Bugenhagen, John Forster, etc.: containing Divers Discourses touching Religion,
and other main Points of Doctrine; as also many notable Histories, and all
sorts of Learning, Comforts, Advices, Prophecies, Admonitions, Directions and
Instructions.
The contents of the book themselves were gathered from the
mouth of Luther, by his friends and disciples, and chiefly by Antony Lauterbach
and John Aurifaber (Goldschmidt), who were very much with the great Reformer
towards the close of his life. They consist of notes of his discourses, of his
opinions, his cursory observations, in the freedom of private friendship, in
his walks, during the performance of his clerical duties, and at table.
There can be as little doubt of the completeness as of the
authenticity of their notes. Filled with the most profound respect for
"the venerable man of God," they would have deemed it sacrilege to
omit, or alter, or modify, aught that fell from his lips. The oracle had
spoken; it was their pride and glory to repeat his words with the most
scrupulous fidelity.
___________
The first German edition of the Tischreden, or Table-Talk,
of Martin Luther, a folio volume, was published at Eisleben, in 1566, under the
editorial care of John Aurifaber. This edition was reprinted twice in 1567, and
a fourth time in 1568. The last reprint is prefaced by some new pages from the
pen of the editor, who complains of one Dr. Kugling, as having, in a rival
edition, made material alterations of the text. This rival edition, however,
would appear never to have got beyond the manuscript form; at all events, it is
unknown to bibliographers. The four editions already specified are exact
reproductions, the one of the other, infinite typographical blunders included.
In 1569 appeared a new edition (Frankfurt, folio), with an appendix "of
prophecies which the venerable man of God, just before his holy death,
delivered unto divers learned theologians and ecclesiastics, with many
consolatory letters, opinions, narratives, replies, etc., never before made
public." The dedication "to the Council of Rauschemberg," dated
24th March, 1568, intimates that the editor, John Pink, had derived his new
materials from various books and writings of Martin Luther. The Prophecies, it
is added, were due to the research of George Walther, preacher at Halle.
Fabricius (Centifolium Lutheranum p. 301), mentions two
other editions in folio, Eisleben, 1569 and 1577, but no copies of these
editions are at present known.
The next editor of the Tischreden was Andrew Stangwald, a
Prussian, the continuator of the Centuries of Magdeburg, who, in his preface,
complains of the previous editions as very defective in their matter, and full
of flagrant errors of typography. He states that his own corrected and enlarged
edition had been prepared from various manuscript conversations in his
possession, aided by ample marginal notes to a copy of the original edition,
formerly belonging to one of Luther's intimate associates, Dr. Joachim
Merlinus. Stangwald's compilation, which appeared in 1751 (Frankfurt), was
reprinted in 1590, with a dedication to the council of Mulhausen, and a
preface, wherein the editor announces a supplementary volume of colloquies and
sayings, which, however, was never produced. The same text, but with
Aurifaber's preface in lieu of Stangwald's, was reprinted in 1603 (Jena), and
again in 1621 (Leipzig), and once more, after an interval of 80 years, in 1700
(Leipzig), when Stangwald's preface was given as well as Aurifaber's, and
Walther's collection of Prophecies appended. This arrangement was reproduced in
1723 (Dresden and Leipzig).
Another contemporary with Luther, Nicholas Selneuer, had
also applied himself to the task of arranging his master's Table-Talk, and the
result of his labors, prefaced by a Life of the great Reformer, appeared in
1577, and again in 1580, folio. This edition, however, does not materially
depart from the text of Stangwald.
The Tischreden, which had been hitherto excluded from the
various collective editions of Luther's German works, were incorporated by
Walch in the ponderous edition of 1743 (Halle), but they were never inserted in
the folio editions of the Reformer's Latin works. A selection from them,
indeed, appeared in Latin, immediately after their first publication in German.
This selection (Frankfurt, 1566, 8vo.) is entitled "Silvula
Sententiarum, exemplarum, Historiarum, allegoriarum, similitudinum,
facetiarum,j partim ex reverendi Viri D. Martini Lutheri ac Philippi
Melaethonis cum privatis tum publicis relationibus, partim ex aliorum veterum
atque recentium doctorum monumentis observata." The translator, Dr.
Ericius, however, while making extracts only from Aurifaber, gives a number of
articles omitted by the German editor. Next, in 1558 /1571, Dr. Henry Peter
Rebenstok, pastor of Eschersheim, sent forth in two volumes
(Frankfurt-on-the-Main, 8vo.): "Colloquia, Meditationes, Consolationes,
Consilia, judicia, sententiae, narrationes, responsa, facetiae, D. Martine Lutheri,
pise et sanctae memorizae in mens prandiia et caense et in peregrenationibus
observata et fideliter transcripta." Dr. Rebenstok informs us that his
version was rendered not from Aurifaber, but from later editors. It was from
this translation, couched in the most barbarous Latin, and replete with
blunders of every description, that Bayle criticised the "Colloquia
Mensalia." The edition itself, now excessively rare, is described by
the Marquis du Roure, in his "Analecta-biblion," (Techener,
1840).
It is by the omission carefully considered - of these
repetitions, that I have been enabled to give, in the present version, not
merely the contents of Aurifaber's collection, but large additions from the
various other editors above specified. The chapters, in particular, of
Antichrist, of the Devil and his works, and of the Turks (which Michelet
specifies as peculiarly interesting), have all been materially enlarged in this
way. The ample index now given is an entirely new feature. W. Hazlitt. Middle
Temple.
DR. JOHN AURIFABER'S PREFACE
____________________
To the Honorable and Right Worshipful the Head Governors, the Mayors and
Aldermen of the Imperial Cities, Strasburg, Augsburg, Ulm, Nuremberg, Lubeck,
Hamburg, Brunswick, Frankfurt-on-the-Maine, etc.
GRACE AND PEACE FROM GOD THE FATHER, THROUGH CHRIST JESUS
OUR LORD.
The holy and royal prophet David, in the 78th Psalm, says:
"God made a covenant with Jacob, and gave Israel a law, which he commanded
our fathers to teach their children, that their posterity might know it, and
the children which were yet unborn; to the intent, that when they came up, they
might show their children the same. That they might put their trust in God, and
not forget the works of God, but to keep his commandments." In these words
the great benefits of God are set forth and praised, in that he reveals to
mankind his Holy Word, his covenants and laws, makes himself known, instructs
us of sin and righteousness, of death and life, of condemnation and salvation,
of hell and heaven, and in such wise gathers a Christian church to live with
him everlastingly; and the prophet wills also, that we should learn God's Word
with diligence, and should teach others therein, and should make it known to
all people, and in nowise forget the wonderful works of God, but render thanks
to him for them.
Therefore, when God had suffered the children of Israel a
long time to be plagued with severe servitude in Egypt, and thereby to fall
into idolatry and false serving of God; to suffer great persecutions, and many
other miseries, then he sent unto them Moses and Aaron, who kindled the light
of God's Word again, and drew them from the abominable idolatry of the
heathens, and opened unto them the knowledge of the true God.
Then he led them also with a powerful hand out of the
bondage of Egypt, brought them through the Red Sea, and before their eyes
overthrew and drowned the tyrant Pharaoh, with all the Egyptians. He showed
unto them great goodness also in the Wilderness; namely, he gave his
commandments unto them on Mount Sinai; he fed them with manna, or bread from
heaven, and with quails, and gave them water to drink out of the rock; and
moreover, he gave manifold victories unto them, as against the Amalekites, and
other enemies.
Then he gave unto them strict charge that they should always
remember those unspeakable benefits, that they should speak thereof unto their
children, and should be thankful for the same.
For this cause they were yearly to observe and keep the
feasts of Easter, of whitsuntide, and of the Tabernacles, to the end they might
always be mindful of God's goodnesses towards them; as is written in Exodus
xiii.: "Thou shalt show thy son in that day, saying, This is done because
of that which the Lord did unto me when I came out of the land of Egypt. And it
shall be for a sign unto thee upon thine hand, and for a memorial between thine
eyes, that the Lord's law may be in thy mouth; for with a strong hand hath the
Lord brought thee out of Egypt." But the children of Israel, after their
wonderful deliverance, gave no great thanks to God for so many and great
benefits; for, not long after they erected the golden calf, and danced about
it. As also at the waters of strife they murmured against God, angered him, and
drew his punishments upon them.
We should also place before our eyes this admonition of the
78th Psalm, and should thoroughly consider the example of the children of
Israel, who so soon forgot their deliverance out of Egypt. For we may also well
rejoice, that now, in our days, we have restored to us again God's Word
gloriously bright and clear; so that we should show this inestimable treasure
to our children's children, and how we are delivered and freed from the kingdom
of antichrist, the pope of Rome, and from the traditions of men, which was a right
Egyptian captivity, yea, a Babylonian imprisonment; in which our forefathers
were worse tormented and plagued than the children of Israel were in Egypt. For
God hath given also unto us in Germany a Moses, to be our captain and leader,
namely, the much enlightened and famous man, Martin Luther, who, through God's
special providence, has brought us out of Egyptian slavery, and has unveiled
and cleared all the chief articles of the Christian religion; God so powerfully
protecting and defending his doctrine, that it has remained and stood fast
against the gates of hell.
For although many learned men, universities, popes,
cardinals, bishops, friars, and priests, and after them emperors, kings, and princes,
raised their strong battery against this one man, Luther, and his doctrine,
intending quite to suppress it, yet, notwithstanding, all their labor was in
vain. And this doctrine, which is the true and ancient doctrine of Christ, and
of his apostles, remains and stands fast to this present day.
And we should look back, and consider, how, and in what a
lamentable manner it stood with us fifty years past, concerning the religion
and government of the church, and in what miserable bondage we have been in
Popedom; for this is unknown to our children; yea, we that are old have almost
forgotten it.
And, first, in the temple of God sat the man of sin, and the
child of perdition, namely, the Romish antichrist, of whom St Paul prophesied,
2 Thess. ii; "Who exalteth himself above all that is called God," or
that is worshipped: he altered and perverted God's Word, laws, and statutes;
and, in their place, instituted all manner of divine services, ceremonies, and
ordinances, after his own will and pleasure, and in manifold ways and meanings,
yea, oftentimes the one contrary to the other; so that in Popedome no man could
know what was certain or uncertain, what was true or false, what was commanded
or forbidden.
He sold all things for money; he forced all people under his
yoke, so that emperors were constrained to kiss his feet, and from him to
receive their crowns, no king or prince dared to oppose him, nor once to frown
at his commands or prohibitions.
Hence he boasted, in his decrees and bulls, that he was
God's general vicar on earth; that he was head of the church, supreme bishop,
and lord of all bishops and learned men in the universal world; that he was
natural heir and an inheritor of the empire, and of all kingdoms when they fell
void. His crown at Rome was named regnum mundi, every man must bow to
him as to the most holy father and god on earth. And his hypocritical canonists
maintained that he was not only a man, but that he was both god and man
together; who could not sin, and who had all divine and human wisdom in the
cabinet of his heart; from whose stool or chair even the Holy Scriptures must
have and receive their power, virtue and authority.
He was the master of faith; and he only was able to expound
the Sacred Writ, and to understand it; yea, he was so sanctified, and so far
from reproach, that although he should lead the third part of all the souls of
mankind into the pit of hell, yet no man must dare to question or reprove him,
or to demand why he did it. For every one ought to believe, that his sacred celsitude,
and sanctified power, neither would, should, nor could err. He had authority to
make void and to annihilate both the New and Old Testaments. The church was
built upon him, he could neither err nor fail, whence it followed of necessity
that he was higher and more eminent than all the apostles.
He had also power and authority to erect new articles of
faith, which must be equal in value to the Holy Scripture, and which ought to
be believed if people intended to be saved.
He was likewise far above all councils and fathers, and to
be judged by no terrestrial jurisdiction, but all must be subject only and
alone to his judgment and decrees.
He made his Romish church the mother of all other churches,
whence it came that all the world appealed thither. He was only and alone the
governor of the church, as being far more abler and fitter to govern than the
apostles themselves if they had been living.
He had power to command all people on earth, the angels in
heaven, and the devils in hell. To conclude, the chair of Rome was so holy of
itself, that although a wicked villain had been elected to be pope, yet so soon
as he was set upon that chair, then instantly he was altogether holy.
These boastings the pope gave out himself; and his
dissembling trencher-chaplains, the recorders of his degrees, decretals,
Clementines and extravagants, propagated the same of him in writing; so that
his gorged paunch was puffed up, and he became so full of pride (as by his acts
he showed) that, as a contra-Christ, he brought all into confusion. For it is
apparent in what manner he raged in and about the doctrine of the law, or ten
commandments, and how these were demolished and taken away by him.
He utterly threw down the first three precepts; for he made
a god of man's free-will, in that he taught, with his school-divines, that the
natural strength of man, after the fall, remained sound and unspoiled; and that
a man by his own human strength (if he did but that which only lay in his own
power to do) was able to observe and fulfill all the commandments, and thereby
should stand justified before God. He taught also, that it was not grounded in
the Scriptures, that the assistance of the Holy Ghost, with his grace, was
needful to accomplish good works; but that every man, by his own natural
strength and ability, has a free-will, in divine duties, to do well, good, and
right.
The other seven commandments the pope quite beats down, and
exalted himself above parents and magistrates, and above the obedience due unto
them, and instigated and stirred up children against their parents, and
subjects against their rulers (as plainly appears by the imperial histories);
great and fearful sins and transgressions against the fifth commandment.
He also usurped and drew to himself the temporal sword, and
taught, that it is right and lawful to resist and drive away power with power:
and that it is not an absolute command (but only an advice) to love our
enemies, to suffer wrong, etc. Such doctrine is quite opposite to the sixth
commandment.
Then, contrary to the seventh precept, he forbad his friars,
priests, and nuns, to marry; and made way for them to live in licentiousness,
without reproof; yea, and moreover received a yearly income and rent of such
wretches.
Contrary to the eighth commandment, he usurped to himself
kingdoms, principalities, countries, people, cities, towns, and villages, and
took possession of the most delightful places and dwellings in the world,
sucked poor people, and filled his thievish purse in such manner, that his
spiritual shavelings are richer than temporal princes.
He tore also in pieces, and made void all manner of solemn
vows, promises, and covenants of peace, which were made without his popish
consent and authority, directly against the ninth commandment.
Lastly, and against the tenth commandment, he taught that
the wicked lusts of mankind were no sins, but preceed only out of human
weakness.
In such a manner, and out of a diabolical instinct, did the
pope throw down all God's commandments, and instead thereof erected human laws
and precepts.
The like course he took also touching the preaching of the
gospel. He preached nothing at all of Christ, of his person, works, precious
merits, and benefits; nor in any way comforted distressed sorrowful
consciences. And people were altogether ignorant how or where they might obtain
true remission of their sins, eternal life, and salvation.
The papists declared also to the people, in their sermons,
that the only Mediator between God and man, our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,
was a severe and an angry judge, who would not be reconciled with us, except we
had other advocates and intercessors besides himself.
By this doctrine, people were seduced, and carried away to
heathenish idolatry, and took their refuge in dead saints to help and deliver
them, and made them their gods, in whom they put more trust and confidence than
in our blessed Saviour Christ Jesus; and especially, they placed the Virgin
Mary, instead of her Son Christ, for a mediatrix on the throne of grace.
Hence proceeded the pilgrimages to saints, where they sought
for pardon and remission of sins. They also sought for pardons of the pope, of
the fraternities of friars, and of other orders. And people were taught, that
they must purchase heaven by their own good works, austerities, fastings, and
so on.
And whereas prayer is the highest comfort of a Christian,
yea, his asylum, his shield and buckler against all adversities; therefore the
pope out of prayer made a naked work, a tedious babbling without spirit and
truth. People praying in Latin psalters, and books which they understood not;
they observed in praying, Horae Canonicae, or the seven times, with
garlands of roses, with so many Bridget prayers, and other collects to the dead
saints; and thereby wrought terror of consciences, so that people received no
hope or true comfort at all. Yet, notwithstanding, they were made to believe
that such prating should merit pardons and remissions of sins for the space of
many thousand years.
Baptism, in Popedom, likewise had almost lost its lustre,
for it was not only stained with human toys and additions, as with holy water,
lights, oil, etc., but also it was celebrated in the Latin tongue, so that the
laity, standing by, could not understand it; and in its place they constituted
monkery as a second baptism, of equal value and operation, through which they
were to be as pure and clean as those that received Christ's baptism, taking
therein new names, (as the pope at his election,) condemning their first names,
that they received in Christ's baptism.
The Lord's Supper, in Popedom, also was dishonored,
corrupted, turned into idolatry, and wickedly abused; for they used the same
not in remembrance of Christ, but as the offering of some wicked priest, and a
self-merit of some despairing wretch that daily devoured it without faith, and
afterwards sold it to others for money, to be imparted to the souls in
purgatory, thereby to redeem them; so that out of the Lord's Supper they made a
mere market.
Moreover, the pope treacherously stole away from the laity
the one part of the sacrament, namely, the wine; while the other part, which
was left, was closely shut up and preserved, and yearly, in die Corporis
Christi, with great solemnity, was carried about and worshipped, and
therewith they wrought fearful idolatry.
With confession, the pope likewise brought into confusion
the consciences of the whole world, and the souls of many into despair; giving
people absolution, by reason of their own good works and merits; and thereby, instead
of solace and comfort, he brought fear, disquiet, and discouragement, into the
consciences of distressed and sorrowful people; and, instead of true keys, made
false, thievish picklocks, which he used in all his wicked proceedings.
Now, when he had darkened and falsified God's Word, and the
doctrine of the law and gospel; had frustrated the sweet and comfortable
prayers and true devotion towards God; had dishonored baptism, the Lord's
Supper; then, at last, he proceeded to tread under foot the divine state and
orders in the world; and of the pulpit and church government, made a temporal
rule, wherein he sat as head and monarch, and under him, in order, the
cardinals, archbishops, bishops, prelates, abbots, friars, nuns, priests, and
innumerable other orders; the poor laity being altogether made a scorned tool
of.
By this short relation a man may easily collect in what
state and condition the Christian church stood in Popedom. Such fearful
darkness did God suffer to go over the wicked unthankful world as a just
judgment.
But God, who is abundant in grace and mercy, caused the
light of the gospel again to rise in our time, and dispersed the gloomy clouds
of human traditions, in awakening that most famous man of God, Luther, who,
with his preaching and doctrine, joined battle with Popedom, and, through God's
Word, threw it to the ground, and thereby delivered us from the captivity of
Popedom, led us again into the land of promise, and placed us in a paradise
where God's Word is cleared, and, God be praised, the church cleansed from the
cobwebs of men's traditions, purified and gloriously reformed, for which we
never render sufficient thanks to Almighty God.
For God, through Luther, brought forth the Bible, or the
Holy Scripture, which formerly lay, as it were, under the table; translated by
Luther ex ipsis fontibus, out of the Hebrew into the German tongue, it
may easily be read and understood by young and old, rich and poor, clergy and
laity, so that now, a father or master may daily read the Holy Scriptures to
his wife, to his children, and servants, and may instruct them in the doctrines
of grace, and direct them in the truth and in the true service of God. Whereas,
before, in Popedom, the Bible was known to none; nay, the doctors in divinity
themselves read not therein; for Luther often affirmed in my hearing, that Dr.
Andrew Carlstadt was a doctor in divinity eight years before he began to read
in the Bible; that if we Germans were not blind like the moles, we should
acknowledge these unspeakable graces and benefits of God; with bended knees
daily render hearty thanks, therefore, to God; with the 34th Psalm, say:
"I will always praise the Lord, his praise shall be ever in my mouth: my
soul shall ever make her boast in the Lord." And, with the 103d Psalm:
"Praise the Lord, O my soul, and all that is within me praise his holy
name: Praise the Lord, O my soul, and forget not the good that he hath done for
thee."
We should also pray heartily to God, that he would not
extinguish this light of the Gospel, but suffer it long to shine, that our
children's children and posterity may walk also in this saving light, rejoice
therein and with us eternally be saved.
The devil is a great enemy to this treasure of God's Word
and his holy sacraments; he assaults it fiercely to quench this light, as
plainly appeared after the death of this holy man of God, Luther. For first,
strong attempt was made by the Interim, by what means the doctrine of
justification by faith, of good works and a Christian kind of living, of the
sacraments and well ordered ceremonies in our Christian church, might utterly
be overthrown.
Afterwards approached the conciliators, or the qualifiers,
who sought to mediate between us and the pope, and to arrange them. They
taught, that the nearer one kept himself to the pope, the better; and therefore
they proposed to restore the jurisdiction of the church to the popish bishops,
and to raise up the fallen ceremonies; and whoso refused to follow them, fell
into great danger.
The Antinomians, Swenckfelders, Enthusians, co-agents, were
also very diligent to eclipse again the true doctrines which Luther had cleared
up, and brought again to light.
All that professed to be Christians and upright teachers and
preachers should have resisted these false and wicked errors. But many of them
were dumb dogs, that would not bark, or set themselves against the ravening
wolves to drive them from Christ's sheepfold, to feed the poor sheet, and to
provide them sweet and wholesome pasture. Neither were they any way careful of
Joseph's miseries as the prophet says.
But others, who, like true and constant teachers, fought
against those enemies of God, were reviled and held as rebels, boisterous and
stiff-necked, that would raise needless strifes and divisions, and were
accordingly persecuted and plagued.
In like manner the schools and universities began to fall
again, and the pure doctrine of God's Word to be by them not much regarded,
school divinity being held again in great repute, and many new phrases and
other eloquent arts coming into the church, gave occasion to falsities and
errors.
Thereupon the politicians, the lawyers, and courtiers
essayed to rule the church and pulpits, to put in and put out ministers and
church wardens, to try causes of religion, according to their own fancies, as
in temporal affairs; so that we see the falsifying of the doctrine, the
devastation of the well-disciplined orders of the church in Germany, and the
captivity and tyranny of the pope again nigh the door - a result that Luther,
in his lifetime, often foretold.
Let us, therefore, make good use of Luther's light, and
seriously exercise ourselves in the doctrine of God's Word, as Christ
commanded: "Walk in the light while ye have the light, that ye may be
children of the light." The holy Psalmist prayed: "That the divine
Word may be a lantern to his feet and a light to his paths," that thereby
he might direct his ways, and be preserved from darkness and stumbling. And St
Peter charges us: "That we should take good heed to God's word, as unto a
light that shineth in darkness."
God Almighty, the Father of our loving Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ, grant his holy spirit, that Christian kings and princes, cities
and towns, may acknowledge these unspeakable benefits of the revealing again of
the gospel, and the deliverance out of the Egyptian bondage the kingdom of
antichrist; and be heartily thankful to God for the same, and live thereafter
in holiness, and not drive away God's Word by condemning thereof, and through
sinful and wicked actions bereave ourselves and our posterity of the glorious
liberty of the gospel, nor plunge ourselves into the distress and miserable
captivity of popish tyranny, under which our forefathers and predecessors
suffered; but that this treasure and Depositum of God's Word may remain
in Germany, and that this begun work may be sent forward, and preceed to God's
glory, honor, and praise, and to the preservation and salvation of the
Christian church, throughout all the world. God of his infinite mercy grant
this for Jesus Christ's sake. Amen. John Aurifaber, D.D. Anno 1569.
I.
That the Bible is God's Word
and book I prove thus: All things that have been, and are, in the world, and
the manner of their being, are described in the first book of Moses on the
creation; even as God made and shaped the world, so does it stand to this day.
Infinite potentates have raged against this book, and sought to destroy and
uproot it - king Alexander the Great, the princes of Egypt and of Babylon, the
monarchs of Persia, of Greece, and of Rome, the emperors Julius and Augustus -
but they nothing prevailed; they are all gone and vanished, while the book
remains, and will remain for ever and ever, perfect and entire, as it was
declared at first. Who has thus helped it - who has thus protected it against
such mighty forces? No one, surely, but God himself, who is the master of all
things. And `tis no small miracle how God has so long preserved and protected
this book; for the devil and the world are sore foes to it. I believe that the
devil has destroyed many good books of the church, as, aforetime, he killed and
crushed many holy persons, the memory of whom has now passed away; but the
Bible he was fain to leave subsisting. In like manner have baptism, the
sacrament of the altar, of the true body and blood of Christ, and the office of
preaching remained unto us, despite the infinitude of tyrants and heretic
persecutors. God, with singular strength, has upheld these things; let us,
then, baptize, administer the sacrament, and preach, fearless of impediment.
Homer, Virgil, and other noble, fine, and profitable writers, have left us
books of great antiquity, but they are naught to the Bible. While the Romish
church stood, the Bible was never given to the people in such a shape that they
could clearly, understandingly, surely, and easily read it, as they now can in
the German translation, which, thank God, we have prepared here at Wittenberg.
II.
The Holy Scriptures are full
of divine gifts and virtues. The books of the heathen taught nothing of faith,
hope, or charity; they present no idea of these things; they contemplate only
the present, and that which man, with the use of his material reason, can grasp
and comprehend. Look not therein for aught of hope or trust in God. But see how
the Psalms and the Book of Job treat of faith, hope, resignation, and prayer;
in a word, the Holy Scripture is the highest and best of books, abounding in
comfort under all afflictions and trials. It teaches us to see, to feel, to
grasp, and to comprehend faith, hope, and charity, far otherwise than mere
human reason can; and when evil oppresses us, it teaches how these virtues
throw light upon the darkness, and how, after this poor miserable existence of
ours on earth, there is another and an eternal life.
III.
St Jerome, after he had
revised and corrected the Septuagint, translated the Bible from Hebrew into
Latin; His version is still used in our church. Truly, for one man, this was
work enough and to spare. Nulla enim privata persona tantum efficere potuisset.
`Twould have been quite as well had he called to his aid one or two learned
men, for the Holy Ghost would then have more powerfully manifested itself unto
him, according to the words of Christ: "Where two or three are gathered
together in my name, there am I in the midst of them." Interpreters and
translators should not work alone; for good et propria verba do not
always occur to one mind.
IV.
We ought not to criticize,
explain, or judge the Scriptures by our mere reason, but diligently, with
prayer, meditate thereon, and seek their meaning. The devil and temptations
also afford us occasion to learn and understand the Scriptures, by experience
and practice. Without these we should never understand them, however diligently
we read and listened to them. The Holy Ghost must here be our only master and
tutor; and let youth have no shame to learn of that preceptor. When I find
myself assailed by temptation, I forthwith lay hold of some text of the Bible,
which Jesus extends to me; as this: that he died for me, whence I derive
infinite comfort.
V.
He who has made himself master
of the principles and text of the word runs little risk of committing errors. A
theologian should be thoroughly in possession of the basis and source of faith
- that is to say, the Holy Scriptures. Armed with this knowledge it was that I
confounded and silenced all my adversaries; for they seek not to fathom and
understand the Scriptures; they run them over negligently and drowsily; they
speak, they write, they teach, according to the suggestion of their heedless
imaginations. My counsel is, that we draw water from the true source and
fountain, that is, that we diligently search the Scriptures. He who wholly
possesses the text of the Bible, is a consummate divine. One single verse, one sentence
of the text, is of far more instruction than a whole host of glosses and
commentaries, which are neither strongly penetrating nor armor of proof. As,
when I have that text before me of St Paul: "All the creatures of God are
good, if they be received with thanksgiving," this text shows, that what
God has made is good. Now eating, drinking, marrying, etc., are of God's
making, therefore they are good. Yet the glosses of the primitive fathers are
against this text: for Bernard, Basil, Jerome, and others, have written to far
other purpose. But I prefer the text to them all, though, in popedom, the
glosses were deemed of higher value than the bright and clear text.
VI.
Let us not lose the Bible, but
with diligence, in fear and invocation of God, read and preach it. While that
remains and flourishes, all prospers with the state; `tis head and empress of
all arts and faculties. Let but divinity fall, and I would not give a straw for
the rest.
VII.
The school divines, with their
speculations in holy writ, deal in pure vanities, in mere imaginings derived
from human reason. Bonaventura, who is full of them, made me almost deaf. I
sought to learn in his book, how God and my soul had become reconciled, but got
no information from him. They talk much of the union of the will and the
understanding, but `tis all idle fantasy. The right, practical divinity is
this: Believe in Christ, and do thy duty in that state of life to which God has
called thee. In like manner, the Mystical divinity of Dionysius is a
mere fable and lie. With Plato he chatters: Omnia sunt non ens, et omnia
sunt ens - (all is something, and all is nothing) - and so leaves things
hanging.
VIII.
Dr. Jonas Justus remarked at
Luther's table: There is in the Holy Scripture a wisdom so profound, that no man
may thoroughly study it or comprehend it. "Ay," said Luther, "we
must ever remain scholars here; we cannot sound the depth of one single verse
in Scripture; we get hold but of the A, B, C, and that imperfectly. Who can so
exalt himself as to comprehend this one line of St Peter: `Rejoice, inasmuch as
ye are partakers of Christ's sufferings.' Here St Peter would have us rejoice
in our deepest misery and trouble, like as a child kisses the rod.
IX.
The Holy Scriptures surpass in
efficaciousness all the arts and all the sciences of the philosophers and
jurists; these, though good and necessary to life here below, are vain and of
no effect as to what concerns the life eternal. The Bible should be regarded
with wholly different eyes from those with which we view other productions. He
who wholly renounces himself, and relies not on mere human reason, will make
good progress in the Scriptures; but the world comprehends them not, from
ignorance of that mortification which is the gift of God's Word. Can he who understands
not God's Word, understand God's works? This is manifest in Adam; he called his
first-born son, Cain - that is, possessor, houselord; this son, Adam and Eve
thought, would be the man of God, the blessed seed that would crush the
serpent's head. Afterwards, when Eve was with child again, they hoped to have a
daughter, that their beloved son, Cain, might have a wife; but Eve bearing
again a son, called him Abel - that is, vanity and nothingness; as much as to
say, my hope is gone, and I am deceived. This was an image of the world and of
God's church, showing how things have ever gone. The ungodly Cain was a great
lord in the world, while Abel, that upright and pious man, was an outcast,
subject and oppressed. But before God, the case was quite contrary: Cain was
rejected of God, Abel accepted and received as God's beloved child. The like is
daily seen here on earth, therefore let us not heed its doings. Ishmael's was
also a fair name - hearer of God - while Isaac's was naught. Esau's name
means actor, the man that shall do the work - Jacob's was naught. The
name Absalom, signifies father of peace. Such fair and glorious colors
do the ungodly ever bear in this world, while in truth and deed they are
condemners, scoffers, and rebels to the Word of God. But by that Word, we, God
be praised, are able to discern and know all such; therefore let us hold the
Bible in precious esteem, and diligently read it.
To world wisdom, there seems
no lighter or more easy art than divinity, and the understanding of God's Word,
so that the children of the world will be reputed fully versed in the
Scriptures and catechism, but they shoot far from the mark. I would give all my
fingers, save three to write with, could I find divinity so easy and light as
they take it to be. The reason why men deem it so is, that they become soon
wearied, and think they know enough of it. So we found it in the world, and so
we must leave it; but in fine videbitur, cujus toni.
X.
I have many times essayed
thoroughly to investigate the ten commandments, but at the very outset, "I
am the Lord thy God," I stuck fast; that very one word, I, put me to the non-plus.
He that has but one word of God before him, and out of that word cannot make a
sermon, can never be a preacher. I am well content that I know, however little,
of what God's Word is, and take good heed not to murmur at my small knowledge.
XI.
I have grounded my preaching
upon the literal word; he that pleases may follow me; he that will not may
stay. I call upon St Peter, St Paul, Moses, and all the Saints, to say whether
they ever fundamentally comprehended one single word of God, without studying
it over and over and over again. The Psalm says; His understanding is
infinite. The saints, indeed, know God's Word, and can discourse of it, but
the practice is another matter; therein we shall ever remain scholars.
The school theologians have a
fine similitude hereupon, that it is as with a sphere or globe, which, lying on
a table, touches it only with one point, yet it is the whole table which supports
the globe. Though I am an old doctor of divinity, to this day I have not got
beyond the children's learning - the Ten Commandments, the Belief, and the
Lord's Prayer; and these I understand not so well as I should, though I study
them daily, praying, with my son John and my daughter Magdalene. If I
thoroughly appreciated these first words of the Lord's Prayer, Our Father,
which art in Heaven, and really believed that God, who made heaven and
earth, and all creatures, and has all things in his hand, was my Father, then
should I certainly conclude with myself, that I also am a lord of heaven and
earth, that Christ is my brother, Gabriel my servant, Raphael my coachman, and
all the angels my attendants at need, given unto me by my heavenly Father, to
keep me in the path, that unawares I knock not my foot against a stone. But
that our faith may be exercised and confirmed, our heavenly Father suffers us
to be cast into dungeons, or plunged in water. So we may see how finely we
understand these words, and how belief shakes, and how great our weakness is,
so that we begin to think - Ah, who knows how far that is true which is set
forth in the scriptures?
XII.
No greater mischief can happen
to a Christian people, than to have God's Word taken from them, or falsified,
so that they no longer have it pure and clear. God grant we and our descendants
be not witnesses of such a calamity.
XIII.
When we have God's Word pure
and clear, then we think ourselves all right; we become negligent, and repose
in a vain security; we no longer pay due heed, thinking it will always so
remain; we do not watch and pray against the devil, who is ready to tear the
Divine Word out of our hearts. It is with us as with travelers, who, so long as
they are on the highway, are tranquil and heedless, but if they go astray into
the woods or cross paths, uneasily seek which way to take, this or that.
XIV.
The great men and the doctors
understand not the word of God, but it is revealed to the humble and to children,
as it testified by the Saviour in the Gospel according to St Matthew, xi. 25:
"O Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because thou hast hid these things
from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes." Gregory
says, well and rightly, that the Holy Scripture is a stream of running water,
where alike the elephant may swim, and the lamb walk without losing its feet.
XV.
The great unthankfulness,
contempt of God's Word, and willfulness of the world, make me fear that the
divine light will soon cease to shine on man, for God's Word has ever had its
certain course.
In the time of kings of Judah,
Baal obscured the brightness of God's Word, and it became hard labor to destroy
his empire over the hearts of men. Even in the time of the apostles, there were
heresies, errors, and evil doctrines spread abroad by false brethren. Next came
Arius, and the Word of God was hidden behind dark clouds, but the holy fathers,
Ambrose, Hilary, Augustine, Athanasius, and others, dispersed the obscurity.
Greece and many other countries have heard the Word of God, but have since
abandoned it, and it is to be feared even now it may quit Germany, and go into
other lands. I hope the last day will not be long delayed. The darkness grows
thicker around us, and godly servants of the Most High become rarer and more
rare. Impiety and licentiousness are rampant throughout the world, and live
like pigs, like wild beasts, devoid of all reason. But a voice will soon be
heard thundering forth: Behold, the bridegroom cometh. God will not be
able to bear this wicked world much longer, but will come, with the dreadful
day, and chastise the scorners of his word.
XVI.
Kings, princes, lords, any one
will needs understand the gospel far better than I, Martin Luther, ay, or even
than St Paul; for they deem themselves wise and full of policy. But herein they
scorn and condemn, not us, poor preachers and ministers, but the Lord and
Governor of all preachers and ministers, who has sent us to preach and teach,
and who will scorn and condemn them in such sort, that they shall smart again;
even He that says: "Whoso heareth you, heareth me; and whoso toucheth you,
toucheth the apple of mine eye." The great ones would govern, but they
know not how.
XVII.
Dr. Justus Jonas told Dr.
Martin Luther of a noble and powerful Misnian, who above all things occupied
himself in amassing gold and silver, and was so buried in darkness, that he
gave no heed to the five books of Moses, and had even said to Dr. John
Frederic, who was discoursing with him upon the Gospel: "Sir, the Gospel
pays no interest." "Have you no grains?" interposed Luther; and
then told this fable: - "A lion making a great feast, invited all the
beasts, and with them some swine. When all manner of dainties were set before
the guests, the swine asked: `Have you no grains?'" "Even so,"
continued the doctor, "even so, in these days, it is with our epicureans:
we preachers set before them, in our churches, the most dainty and costly
dishes, as everlasting salvation, the remission of sins, and God's grace; but
they, like swine, turn up their snouts, and ask for guilders: offer a cow
nutmeg, and she will reject for old hay. This reminds me of the answer of
certain parishioners to their minister, Ambrose R. He had been earnestly
exhorting them to come and listen to the Word of God: `Well,' said they, `if
you will tap a good barrel of beer for us, we'll come with all our hearts and
hear you.' The gospel at Wittenberg is like unto the rain which, falling upon a
river, produces little effect; but descending upon a dry, thirsty soil, renders
it fertile."
XVIII.
Some one asked Luther for his
psalter, which was old and ragged, promising to give him a new one in exchange;
but the doctor refused, because he was used to his own old copy, adding:
"A local memory is very useful, and I have weakened mine in translating
the Bible."
XIX.
Our case will go on, so long
as its living advocates, Melancthon, and other pious and learned persons, who
apply themselves zealously to the work, shall be alive; but after their death,
`twill be a sad falling off. We have an example before us, in Judges ii. 10:
"And also all that generation were gathered unto their fathers; and there
arose another generation after them, which knew not the Lord, nor yet the works
which he had done for Israel." So, after the death of the apostles, there
were fearful fallings off; nay, even while they yet lived, as St Paul
complains, there was falling off among the Galatians, the Corinthians, and in
Asia. We shall be occasioned much suffering and loss by the Sacramentarians,
the Anabaptists, the Antinomians, and other sectaries.
XX.
Oh! how great and glorious a
thing it is to have before one the Word of God! With that we may at all times
feel joyous and secure; we need never be in want of consolation, for we see
before us, in all its brightness, the pure and right way. He who loses sight of
the Word of God, falls into despair; the voice of heaven no longer sustains
him; he follows only the disorderly tendency of his heart, and of world vanity,
which lead him on to his destruction.
XXI.
Christ, in Matthew, v., vi.,
vii., teaches briefly these points: first, as to the eight happinesses or
blessings, how every Christian ought particularly to live as it concerns
himself; secondly, of the office of teaching, what and how a man ought to teach
in the church, how to season with salt and enlighten, reprove, and comfort, and
exercise the faith; thirdly, he confutes and opposes the false expounding of
the law; fourthly, he condemns the wicked hypocritical kind of living; fifthly,
he teaches what are upright and good works; sixthly, he warns men of false
doctrine; seventhly, he clears and solves what might be found doubtful and
confused; eightly, he condemns the hypocrites and false saints, who abuse the
precious word of grace.
XXII.
St Luke describes Christ's
passion better than the rest; John is more complete as to Christ's works; he
describes the audience, and how the cause was handled, and how they proceeded
before the seat of judgment, and how Christ was questioned, and for what cause
he was slain.
When Pilate asked him:
"Art thou the king of the Jews?" "Yea," said Christ,
"I am; but not such a king as the emperor is, for then my servants and
armies would fight and strive to deliver and defend me; but I am a king sent to
preach the gospel, and give record of the truth which I must speak."
"What!" said Pilate, "art thou such a king, and hast thou a
kingdom that consists in word and truth?" then surely thou canst be no
prejudice to me." Doubtless, Pilate took our Saviour Christ to be a
simple, honest, ignorant man, one perchance come out of a wilderness, a simple,
honest fellow, a hermit, who knew or understood nothing of the world, or of
government.
XXIII.
In the writings of St Paul and
St John is a surpassing certainty, knowledge, and plerophoria. They
write as if all they narrate had been already done before their eyes.
Christ rightly says of St
Paul, he shall be a chosen instrument and vessel unto me; therefore he was made
a doctor, and therefore he spake so certainly of the cause. Whoso reads Paul
may, with a safe conscience, build upon his words; for my part, I never read
more serious writings.
St John, in his gospel,
describes Christ, that he is a true and natural man, a priori, from
former time: "In the beginning was the word;" and "Whoso
honoreth me, the same honoreth also the Father." But Paul describes
Christ, a posteriori et effectu from that which follows, and according
to the actions or works, as, "They tempted Christ in the wilderness;"
"Take heed, therefore, to yourselves." etc.
XXIV.
The book of Solomon's Proverbs
is a fine book, which rulers and governors should diligently read, for it
contains lessons touching God's anger, wherein governors and rulers should
exercise themselves.
The author of the book of Ecclesiasticus
preaches the law well, but he is no prophet. It is not the work of Solomon, any
more than is the book of Solomon's Proverbs. They are both collections made by
other people.
The third book of Esdras I throw
into the Elbe; there are, in the fourth, pretty knacks enough; as, "The
wine is strong, the king is stronger, women strongest of all; but the truth is
stronger than all these."
The book of Judith is not a
history. It accords not with geography. I believe it is a poem, like the
legends of the saints, composed by some good man, to the end he might show how
Judith, a personification of the Jews, as God-fearing people, by whom God is
known and confessed, overcame and vanquished Holofernes - that is, all the
kingdoms of the world. `Tis a figurative work, like that of Homer about Troy,
and that of Virgil about Aeneas, wherein is shown how a great prince ought to
be adorned with surpassing valor, like a brave champion, with wisdom and
understanding, great courage and alacrity, fortune, honor, and justice. It is a
tragedy, setting forth what the end of tyrants is. I take the book of Tobit to
be a comedy concerning women, an example for house-government. I am so great an
enemy to the second book of the Maccabees, and to Esther, that I wish they had
not come to us at all, for they have too many heathen unnaturalities. The Jews
much more esteemed the book of Esther than any of the prophets; though they
were forbidden to read it before they had attained the age of thirty, by reason
of the mystic matters it contains. They utterly condemn Daniel and Isaiah,
those two holy and glorious prophets, of whom the former, in the clearest
manner, preaches Christ, while the other describes and portrays the kingdom of
Christ, and the monarchies and empires of the world preceeding it. Jeremiah
comes but after them.
The discourses of the prophets
were none of them regularly committed to writing at the time; their disciples
and hearers collected them subsequently, one, one piece, another, another, and
thus was the complete collection formed.
When Doctor Justus Jonas had
translated the book of Tobit, he attended Luther therewith, and said:
"Many ridiculous things are contained in this book, especially about the
three nights, and the liver of the broiled fish, wherewith the devil was scared
and driven away." Whereupon Luther said: "'Tis a Jewish conceit; the
devil, a fierce and powerful enemy, will not be hunted away in such sort, for
he has the spear of Goliah; but God gives him such weapons, that, when he is
overcome by the godly, it may be the greater terror and vexation unto him.
Daniel and Isaiah are most excellent prophets. I am Isaiah - be it spoken with
humility - to the advancement of God's honor, whose work alone it is, and to spite
the devil. Philip Melancthon is Jeremiah; that prophet stood always in fear;
even so it is with Melancthon."
XXV.
In the book of the Judges, the
valiant champions and deliverers are described, who were sent by God, believing
and trusting wholly in him, according to the first commandment: they committed
themselves, their actions, and enterprises to God, and gave him thanks: they
relied only upon the God of heaven and said: Lord God, thou hast done these
things, and not we; to thee only be the glory. The book of the Kings is
excellent - a hundred times better than the Chronicles, which constantly pass
over the most important facts, without any details whatever.
The book of Job is admirable;
it is not written only touching himself, but also for the comfort and
consolation of all sorrowful, troubled and perplexed hearts who resist the
devil. When he conceived that God began to be angry with him, he became
impatient, and was much offended; it vexed and grieved him that the ungodly
prospered so well. Therefore it should be a comfort to poor Christians that are
persecuted and forced to suffer, that in the life to come, God will give unto
them exceeding great and glorious benefits, and everlasting wealth and honor.
XXVI.
We need not wonder that Moses
so briefly described the history of the ancient patriarchs, when we see that
the Evangelists, in the shortest measure, describe the sermons in the New
Testament, running briefly through them, and giving but a touch of the
preachings of John the Baptist, which, doubtless, were the most beautiful.
XXVII.
Saint John the Evangelist
speaks majestically, yet with very plain and simple words; as where he says:
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him,
and without him was not anything made that was made. In him was life, and the
life was the light of men. And the light shineth in darkness, and the darkness
comprehended it not."
See how he describes God the
Creator, and also his creatures, in plain, clear language, as with a sunbeam.
If one of our philosophers or high learned men had described them, what
wonderful swelling and high-trotting words would he have paraded, de ente et
es senti, so that no man could have understood what he meant. `Tis a great
lesson, how mighty divine truth is, which presses through, though she be hemmed
in ever so closely; the more she is read, the more she moves and takes
possession of the heart.
XXVIII.
The Psalms of David are of
various kinds - didactic, prophetic, eucharistic, catechetic. Among the
prophetic, we should particularly distinguish the 110th, Dixit Dominus;
and among the didactic, the Miserere Mei, De profundis, and Domine,
exaudi orationem. The 110th is very fine. It describes the kingdom and
priesthood of Jesus Christ, and declares him to be the King of all things, and
the intercessor for all men; to whom all things have been remitted by his
Father, and who has compassion on us all. `Tis a noble Psalm; if I were well, I
would endeavor to make a commentary on it.
XXIX.
Dr. Luther was asked whether
the history of the rich man and Lazarus was a parable or a natural fact? He
replied: The earlier part of the story is evidently historical; the persons, the
circumstances, the existence of the five brothers, all this is given in detail.
The reference to Abraham is allegorical, and highly worthy of observation. We
learn from it that there are abodes unknown to us, where the souls of men are;
secrets into which we must not inquire. No mention is made of Lazarus' grave;
whence we may judge, that in God's eyes, the soul occupies far more place than
the body. Abraham's bosom is the promise and assurance of salvation, and the
expectation of Jesus Christ; not heaven itself, but the expectation of heaven.
XXX.
Before the Gospel came among
us, men used to undergo endless labor and cost, and make dangerous journeys to
St James of Compostella, and where not, in order to seek the favor of God. But
now that God, in his Word, brings his favor unto us gratis, confirming it with
his sacraments, saying, Unless ye believe, ye shall surely perish, we
will have none of it.
XXXI.
I have lived to see the
greatest plague on earth - the condemning of God's Word, a fearful thing, surpassing
all other plagues in the world; for thereupon most surely follow all manner of
punishment, eternal and corporal. Did I desire for a man all bitter plagues and
curses, I would wish him the condemning of God's Word,for he would then have
them all at once come upon him, both inward and outward misfortunes. The
condemning of God's Word is the forerunner of God's punishments; as the
examples witness in the times of Lot, of Noah, and of our Saviour.
XXXII.
Whoso acknowledges that the
writings of the Evangelists are God's Word, with him we are willing to dispute;
but whoso denies this, with him we will not exchange a word; we may not
converse with those who reject the first principles.
XXXIII.
In all sciences, the ablest
professors are they who have thoroughly mastered the texts. A man, to be a good
jurisconsult, should have every text of the law at his fingers' ends; but in
our time, the attention is applied rather to glosses and commentaries. When I
was young, I read the Bible over and over and over again, and was so perfectly
acquainted with it, that I could, in an instant, have pointed to any verse that
might have been mentioned. I then read the commentators, but I soon threw them
aside, for I found therein many things my conscience could not approve, as being
contrary to the sacred text. `Tis always better to see with one's own eyes than
with those of other people.
XXXIV.
The words of the Hebrew tongue
have a peculiar energy. It is impossible to convey so much so briefly in any
other language. To render them intelligibly, we must not attempt to give word
for word, but only aim at the sense and idea. In translating Moses, I made it
my effort to avoid Hebraism; `twis an arduous business. The wise ones, who
affect greater knowledge than myself on the subject, take me to task for a word
here and there. Did they attempt the labor I have accomplished, I would find a
thousand blunders in them for my one.
XXXV.
Bullinger said to me, he was
earnest against the sectaries, as condemners of God's Word, and also against
those who dwelt too much on the literal Word, who, he said, sinned against God
and his almighty power, as the Jews did in naming the ark, God. But he who
holds a mean between both, apprehends the right use of the sacraments. To which
I answered: "By this error, you separate the Word from the spirit; those
who preach and teach the Word, from God who commands baptism. You hold that the
Holy Ghost is given and works without the Word, which Word, you say, is an
eternal sign and mark to find the spirit that already possesses the heart; so
that, according to you, if the Word find not the spirit, but an ungodly person,
then it is not God's Word; thus defining and fixing the Word, not according to
God, who speaks it, but according as people entertain and receive it. You grant
that to be God's Word, which purifies and brings peace and life; but when it
works not in the ungodly, it is not God's Word. You teach that the outward Word
is as an object or picture, signifying and representing something; you measure
its use only according to the matter, as a human creature speaks for himself;
you will not grant that God's Word is an instrument through which the Holy
Ghost works and accomplishes his work, and prepares a beginning to
righteousness or justification.
"A true Christian must
hold for certain that the Word which is delivered and preached to the wicked,
the dissemblers, and the ungodly, is as much God's Word, as that which is
preached to godly, upright Christians, and that the true Christian church is
among sinners, where good and bad are mingled together. And that the Word,
whether it produce fruit or no, is, nevertheless, God's strength, which saves
all that believe therein. Clearly, it will also judge the ungodly, (St John,
c.v.) otherwise, these might plead a good excuse before God, that they ought
not to be condemned, since they had not had God's Word, and consequently could
not have received it. But I teach that the preacher's words, absolution, and
sacraments, are not his words or works, but God's, cleansing, absolving,
binding, etc.; we are but the instruments or assistants, by whom God works. You
say, it is the man that preaches, reproves, absolves, comforts, etc., though it
is God that cleanses the hearts and forgives; but I say, God himself preaches,
threatens, reproves, affrights, comforts, absolves, administers the sacraments,
etc. As our Saviour Christ says: "Whoso heareth you, heareth me; and what
ye loose on earth, shall be loosed in heaven,' etc. And again: `It is not you
that speak, but the Spirit of your Father which speaketh in you.'
"I am sure and certain,
when I go up to the pulpit to preach or read, that it is not my Word I speak,
but that my tongue is the pen of a ready writer, as the Psalmist has it. God
speaks in the prophets and men of God, as St Peter in his epistle says: `The
holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost.' Therefore we must
not separate or part God and man, according to our natural reason and
understanding. In like manner, every hearer must say: I hear not St Paul, St
Peter, or a man speak, but God himself.
"If I were addicted to
God's Word at all times alike, and always had such love and desire thereunto as
sometimes I have, then should I account myself the most blessed man on earth.
But the loving apostle, St Paul, failed also herein, as he complains, with
sighs, saying: `I see another law in my members warring against the law in my
mind.' Should the Word be false, because it bears not always fruit? The search
after the Word has been, from the beginning of the world, the source of great
danger; few people can hit it, unless God, through his Holy Spirit, teach it
them in their hearts."
Bullinger, having attentively
listened to this discourse, knelt down and uttered these words, "O, happy
hour that brought me to hear this man of God, the chosen vessel of the Lord,
declaring his truth! I abjure and utterly renounce my former errors, thus
beaten down by God's infallible Word." He then arose and threw his arms
around Luther's neck, both shedding joyful tears.
XXXVI.
Forsheim said that the first
of the five books of Moses was not written by Moses himself. Dr. Luther
replied: What matters it, even though Moses did not write it? It is,
nevertheless, Moses's book, wherein is exactly related the creation of the
world. Such futile objections as these should not be listened to.
XXXVII.
In cases of religion and that
concern God's Word, we must be sure and certain, without wavering, so that in
time of trial and temptation their acknowledgment may be distinct, and we may
not afterwards say, Non putarem; a course which in temporal matters
often involves much danger, but in divinity is doubly mischievous. Thus the
canonists, the popish dissemblers, and other heretics, are right chimeras; in
the face resembling a fair virgin, the body being like a lion, and the tail
like a snake. Even so it is with their doctrine; it glitters, and has a fair
aspect, and what they teach is agreeable to mortal wisdom and appreciation, and
acquires repute. Afterwards, lion-like, it breaks through by force, for all
false teachers commonly make use of the secular arm; but in the end, it shows
itself a slippery doctrine, having, like a snake, a smooth skin, sliding
through the hand.
Once sure that the doctrine we
teach is God's Word, once certain of this, we may build thereupon, and know
that this cause shall and must remain; the devil shall not be able to overthrow
it, much less the world be able to uproot it, how fiercely soever it rage. I,
God be praised, surely know that the doctrine I teach is God's Word, and have
now hunted from my heart all other doctrines and faiths, of what name soever,
that do not concur with God's Word. Thus have I overcome the heavy temptations
that sometimes tormented me, thus: Art thou, asked the devilish thought within,
the only man that has God's Word, pure and clear, all others failing therein?
For thus does Satan vex and assault us, under the name and title of God's
church; what, says he, that doctrine which the Christian church has so many
years held, and established as right, wilt thou presume to reject and overthrow
it with thy new doctrine, as though it were false and erroneous, thereby
producing trouble, alteration, and confusion, both in spiritual and temporal
government?
I find this argument of the
devil in all the prophets, whom the rulers, both in church and state, have ever
upbraided, saying: We are God's people, placed and ordained by God in an
established government; what we settle and acknowledge as right, that must and
shall be observed. What fools are ye that presume to teach us, the best and
largest part, there being of you but a handful? Truly, in this case, we must
not only be well armed with God's Word, and versed therein, but must have also
certainty of the doctrine, or we shall not endure the combat. A man must be
able to affirm, I know for certain, that what I teach is the only Word of the
high Majesty of God in heaven, his final conclusion and everlasting,
unchangeable truth, and whatsoever concurs and agrees not with this doctrine,
is altogether false, and spun by the devil. I have before me God's Word which
cannot fail, nor can the gates of hell prevail against it; thereby will I
remain, though the whole world be against me. And withal, I have this comfort,
that God says: I will give thee people and hearers that shall receive it; cast
thy care upon me; I will defend thee, only remain thou stout and steadfast by
my Word.
We must not regard what or how
the world esteems us, so we have the Word pure, and are certain of our
doctrine. Hence Christ, in John viii. "Which of you convinceth me of
sin:?" All the apostles were most certain of their doctrine; and St Paul,
in special manner, insists on the Plerophoria, where he says to Timothy:
"It is a dear and precious word, that Jesus Christ is come into the world
to save sinners." The faith toward God in Christ must be sure and
steadfast, that it may solace and make glad the conscience, and put it to rest.
When a man has this certainty, he has overcome the serpent; but if he be
doubtful of the doctrine, it is for him very dangerous to dispute with the
devil.
XXXVIII.
A fiery shield is God's Word;
of more substance and purer than gold, which, tried in the fire, loses naught
of its substance, but resists and overcomes all the fury of the fiery heat;
even so, he that believes God's Word overcomes all, and remains secure
everlastingly, against all misfortunes; for this shield fears nothing, neither
hell nor the devil.
XXXIX.
I never thought the world had
been so wicked, when the Gospel began, as now I see it is; I rather hoped that
every one would have leaped for joy to have found himself freed from the filth
of the pope, from his lamentable molestations of poor troubled consciences, and
that through Christ they would by faith obtain the celestial treasure they
sought after before with such vast cost and labor, though in vain. And
especially I thought the bishops and universities would with joy of heart have
received the true doctrines, but I have been lamentably deceived. Moses and
Jeremiah, too, complained they had been deceived.
XL.
The thanks the world now gives
to the doctrine of the gospel, is the same it gave to Christ, namely, the
cross; `tis what we must expect. This year is the year of man's ingratitude:
the next will be the year of God's chastisement; for God must needs chastise,
though `tis against his nature: we will have it so.
XLI.
Ah, how impious and ungrateful
is the world, thus to condemn and persecute God's ineffable grace! And we - we
ourselves - who boast of the gospel, and know it to be God's Word, and
recognize it for such, yet hold it in no more esteem and respect than we do
Virgil or Terence. Truly, I am less afraid of the pope and his tyrants, than I
am of our own ingratitude towards the Word of God: `tis this will place the
pope in his saddle again. But, first, I hope the day of judgment will come.
XLII.
God has his measuring lines
and his canons, called the Ten Commandments; they are written in our flesh and
blood: the sum of them is this: "What thou wouldest have done to thyself,
the same do thou to another." God presses upon this point, saying:
"Such measure as thou metest, the same shall be measured to thee
again." With this measuring line has God marked the whole world. They that
live and do thereafter, well it is with them, for God richly rewards them in
this life.
XLIII.
Is it true that God speaks
himself with us in the Holy Scriptures? thou that doubtest this, must needs
think in thy heart that God is a liar, one that says a thing, and performs it
not; but thou mayest be sure when he opens his mouth, it is as much as three
worlds. God, with one sole word, moulded the whole world. In Psalm xxxiii. it
is said: "When he speaketh, it is done; when he commandeth, it standeth
fast."
XLIV.
We must make a great
difference between God's Word and the word of man. A man's word is a little
sound, that flies into the air, and soon vanishes; but the Word of God is
greater than heaven and earth, yea, greater than death and hell, for it forms
part of the power of God, and endures everlastingly; we should, therefore, diligently
study God's Word, and know and assuredly believe that God himself speaks unto
us. This was what David saw and believed, who said: "God spake in his
holiness, thereof I am glad." We should also be glad; but this gladness is
oftentimes mixed up with sorrow and pain, of which, again, David is an example,
who underwent manifold trials and tribulations in connection with the murder
and adultery he had committed. It was no honeymoon for him, when he was hunted
from one place to another, to the end he might after remain in God's fear. In
the second Psalm he says: "Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice with
trembling."
XLV.
The student of theology has
now far greater advantages than students ever before had; first, he has the Bible,
which I have translated from Hebrew into German, so clearly and distinctly,
that any one may readily comprehend it; next, he has Melancthon's Common-place
Book (Loci Communes), which he should read over and over again, until he
has it by heart. Once master of these two volumes, he may be regarded as a
theologian whom neither devil nor heretic can overcome; for he has all divinity
at his fingers' ends, and may read, understandingly, whatsoever else he
pleases. Afterwards, he may study Melancthon's Commentary on Romans, and mine
on Deuteronomy and on the Galatians, and practice eloquence.
We possess no work wherein the
whole body of theology, wherein religion, is more completely summed up, than in
Melancthon's Common-place Book; all the Fathers, all the compilers of
sentences, put together, are not to be compared with this book. `Tis, after the
Scriptures, the most perfect of works. Melancthon is a better logician than
myself; he argues better. My superiority lies rather in the rhetorical way. If
the printers would take my advice, they would print those of my books which set
forth doctrine, - as my commentaries on Deuteronomy, on Galatians, and the
sermons on the four books of St John. My other writings scarce serve better
purpose than to mark the progress of the revelation of the gospel.
XLVI.
Christ (Luke viii.) says,
"Unto you it is given to know the mysteries of the kingdom of God."
Here a man might ask, What mystery is that? If a mystery, why do you preach it?
Whereunto I answer: A mystery is a thing hidden and secret; the mysteries of
the kingdom of God are such things as lie hidden in the kingdom of God; but he
that knows Christ aright, knows what God's kingdom is, and what therein is to
be found. They are mysteries, because secret and hidden from human sense and
reason, when the Holy Ghost does not reveal them; for though many hear of them,
they neither conceive nor understand them. There are now many among us who
preach of Christ, and hear much spoken of him, as that he gave himself to death
for us, but this lies only upon the tongue, and not in the heart; for they
neither believe it, nor are sensible of it; as St Paul says: "The natural
man perceiveth not the things of the Spirit of God."
Those on whom the Spirit of
God falls, not only hear and see it, but also receive it within their hearts
and believe, and therefore it is no mystery or secret to them.
XLVII.
`Twas a special gift of God
that speech was given to mankind; for through the Word, and not by force,
wisdom governs. Through the Word people are taught and comforted, and thereby
all sorrow is made light, especially in cases of the conscience. Therefore God
gave to his Church an eternal Word to hear, and the sacraments to use. But this
holy function of preaching the Word is, by Satan, fiercely resisted; he would
willingly have it utterly suppressed, for thereby his kingdom is destroyed.
Truly speech has wonderful
strength and power, that through a mere word, proceeding out of the mouth of a
poor human creature, the devil, that so proud and powerful spirit, should be
driven away, shamed and confounded.
The sectaries are so impudent,
that they dare to reject the word of the mouth; and to smooth their damnable
opinions, say: No external thing makes one to be saved; the word of the mouth
and the sacraments are external things: therefore they make us not to be saved.
But I answer: We must discriminate wholly between the external things of God
and the outward things of man. The external things of God are powerful and
saving; it is not so with the outward things of man.
XLVIII.
God alone, through his Word,
instructs the heart, so that it may come to the serious knowledge how wicked it
is, and corrupt and hostile to God. Afterwards God brings man to the knowledge
of God, and how he may be freed from sin, and how, after this miserable,
evanescent world, he may obtain life everlasting. Human reason, with all its
wisdom, can bring it no further than to instruct people how to live honestly
and decently in the world, how to keep house, build, etc., things learned from
philosophy and heathenish books. But how they should learn to know God and his
dear Son, Christ Jesus, and to be saved, this the Holy Ghost alone teaches
through God's Word; for philosophy understands naught of divine matters. I
don't say that men may not teach and learn philosophy; I approve thereof, so
that it be within reason and moderation. Let philosophy remain within her
bounds, as God has appointed, and let us make use of her as of a character in a
comedy; but to mix her up with divinity may not be endured; nor is it tolerable
to make faith an accidens or quality, happening by chance; for such
words are merely philosophical - used in schools and in temporal affairs, which
human sense and reason may comprehend. But faith is a thing in the heart,
having its being and substance by itself, given of God as his proper work, not
a corporal thing, that may be seen, felt, or touched.
XLIX.
We must know how to teach
God's Word aright, discerningly, for there are divers sorts of hearers; some
are struck with fear in the conscience, are perplexed, and awed by their sins,
and, in apprehension of God's anger, are penitent; these must be comforted with
the consolations of the gospel. Others are hardened, obstinate, stiff-necked,
rebel-hearted; these must be affrighted by the law, by examples of God's wrath:
as the fires of Elijah, the deluge, the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, the
downfall of Jerusalem. These hard heads need sound knocks.
L.
The gospel of the remission of
sins through faith in Christ, is received of few people; most men little regard
the sweet and comfortable tidings of the gospel; some hear it, but only even so
as they hear mass in popedom; the majority attend God's Word out of custom,
and, when they have done that, think all is well. The case is, the sick,
needing a physician, welcome him; but he that is well, cares not for him, as we
see by the Canaanitish woman in Matthew xv., who felt her own and her
daughter's necessities, and therefore ran after Christ, and in nowise would
suffer herself to be denied or sent away from him. In like manner, Moses was
fain to go before, and learn to feel sins, that so grace might taste the
sweeter. Therefore, it is but labor lost (how familiar and loving soever Christ
be figured unto us), except we first be humbled through the acknowledgment of
our sins, and so yearn after Christ, as the Magnificat says: "He
filled the hungry with good things, and the rich he hath sent empty away,"
words spoken for the comfort of all, and for instruction of miserable, poor, needful
sinners, and condemned people, to the end that in all their deepest sorrows and
necessities they may know with whom to take refuge and seek aid and
consolation.
But we must take fast hold on
God's Word, and believe all true which that says of God, though God and all his
creatures should seem unto us other than as the Word speaks, as we see the
Canaanitish woman did. The Word is sure, and fails not, though heaven and earth
must pass away. Yet, oh! how hard is this to natural sense and reason, that it
must strip itself naked, and abandon all it comprehends and feels, depending
only upon the bare Word. The Lord of his mercy help us with faith in our
necessities, and at our last end, when we strive with death.
LI.
Heaven and earth, all the
emperors, kings, and princes of the world, could not raise a fit dwelling-place
for God; yet, in a week human soul, that keeps his Word, he willingly resides.
Isaiah calls heaven the Lord's seat, and earth his footstool; he does not call
them his dwelling-place; when we seek after God, we shall find him with them
that keep his Word. Christ says: "If a man love me, he will keep my words,
and my father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with
him." Nothing could be simpler or clearer than these words of the Saviour,
and yet he confounds herewith all the wisdom of the worldly-wise. He sought to
speak non in sublimi sed humili genere. If I had to teach a child, I
would teach him in the same way.
LII.
Great is the strength of the
Divine Word. In the epistle to the Hebrews, it is called "a two-edged
sword." But we have neglected and condemned the pure and clear Word, and
have drunk not of the fresh and cool spring; we are gone from the clear
fountain to the foul puddle, and drunk its filthy water; that is, we have
sedulously read old writers and teachers, who went about with speculative
reasonings, like the monks and friars.
The words of our Saviour
Christ are exceeding powerful; they have hands and feet; they outdo the utmost
subtleties of the worldly-wise, as we see in the gospel, where Christ confounds
the wisdom of the Pharisees with plain and simple words, so that they knew not
which way to turn and wind themselves. It was a sharp syllogism of his:
"Give unto Caesar the things which are Caesar's;" wherewith he
neither commanded nor prohibited, but snared them in their own casuistry.
LIII.
Where God's Word is taught
pure and unfalsified, there is also poverty, as Christ says: "I am sent to
preach the Gospel to the poor." More than enough has been given to
unprofitable, lazy, ungodly people in monasteries and cells, who lead us into
danger of body and soul; but not one farthing is given, willingly, to a
Christian teacher. Superstition, idolatry, and hypocrisy, have ample wages, but
truth goes a begging.
LIV.
When God preaches his Word,
then presently follows the cross to godly Christians; as St Paul testifies:
"All that will live a godly life in Christ Jesus, must suffer
persecution." And our Saviour: "The disciple is not greater than the
master: have they persecuted me? they will persecute you also." the work
rightly expounds and declares the Word, as the prophet Isaiah: Grief and sorrow
teach how to mark the Word. No man understands the Scriptures, unless he be
acquainted with the cross.
LV.
In the time of Christ and the
apostles, God's Word was a word of doctrine, which was preached everywhere in
the world; afterwards in popedom it was a Word of reading, which they only
read, but understood not. In this our time, it is made a Word of strife, which
fights and strives; it will endure its enemies no longer, but remove them out
of the way.
LVI.
Like as in the world a child
is an heir only because it is born to inherit, even so, faith only makes such to
be God's children as are born of the Word, which is the womb wherein we are
conceived, born, and nourished, as the prophet Isaiah says. Now, as through
such a birth we become God's children, (wrought by God without our help or
doing,) even so, we are also heirs, and being heirs, are freed from sin, death,
and the devil, and shall inherit everlasting life.
LVII.
I admonish every pious
Christian that he take not offence at the plain, unvarnished manner of speech
of the Bible. Let him reflect that what may seem trivial and vulgar to him,
emanates from the high majesty, power, and wisdom of God. The Bible is the book
that makes fools of the wise of this world; it is only understood by the plain
and simple hearted. Esteem this book as the precious fountain that can never be
exhausted. In it thou findest the swaddling-clothes and the manger whither the
angels directed the poor, simple shepherds; they seem poor and mean, but dear
and precious is the treasure that lies therein.
LVIII.
The ungodly papists prefer the
authority of the church far above God's Word; a blasphemy abominable and not to
be endured; wherewith, void of all shame and piety, they spit in God's face.
Truly, God's patience is exceeding great, in that they be not destroyed; but so
it always has been.
LIX.
In times past, as in part of
our own, `twas dangerous work to study, when divinity and all good arts were
condemned, and fine, expert, and prompt wits were plagued with sophistry.
Aristotle, the heathen, was held in such repute and honor, that whoso
undervalued or contradicted him, was held, at Cologne, for an heretic; whereas
they themselves understood not Aristotle.
LX.
In the apostles' time, and in
our own, the gospel was and is preached more powerfully and spread further than
it was in the time of Christ; for Christ had not such repute, nor so many
hearers as the apostles had, and as now we have. Christ himself says to his
disciples; Ye shall do greater works than I; I am but a little grain of
mustard-seed; but ye shall be like the vine-tree, and as the arms and boughs
wherein the birds shall build their nests.
LXI.
All men now presume to
criticize the gospel. Almost every old doting fool or prating sophist must,
forsooth, be a doctor in divinity. All other arts and sciences have masters, of
whom people must learn, and rules and regulations which must be observed and
obeyed; the Holy Scripture only, God's Word, must be subject to each man's
pride and presumption; hence; so many sects, seducers, and offences.
LXII.
I did not learn my divinity at
once, but was constrained by my temptations to search deeper and deeper; for no
man, without trials and temptations, can attain a true understanding of the
Holy Scriptures. St Paul had a devil that beat him with fists, and with
temptations drove him diligently to study the Holy Scripture. I had hanging on
my neck the pope, the universities, all the deep-learned, and the devil; these
hunted me into the Bible, wherein I sedulously read, and thereby, God be
praised, at length attained a true understanding of it. Without such a devil,
we are but only speculators of divinity, and according to our vain reasoning,
dream that so and so it must be, as the monks and friars in monasteries do. The
Holy Scripture of itself is certain and true; God grant me grace to catch hold
of its just use.
LXIII.
All the works of God are
unsearchable and unspeakable, no human sense can find them out; faith only
takes hold of them without human power or aid. No mortal creature can
comprehend God in his majesty, and therefore did he come before us in the
simplest manner, and was made man, ay, sin, death, and weakness. In all things,
in the least creatures, and their members, God's almighty power and wonderful
works clearly shine. For what man, how powerful, wise, and holy soever, can
make out of one fig, a fig-tree, or another fig? or, out of one cherry-stone, a
cherry, or a cherry-tree? or what man can know how God creates and preserves
all things, and makes them grow.
Neither can we conceive how
the eye sees, or how intelligible words are spoken plainly, when only the
tongue moves and stirs in the mouth; all which are natural things, daily seen
and acted. How then should we be able to comprehend or understand the secret
counsels of God's majesty, or search them out with our human sense, reason, or
understanding. Should we then admire our own wisdom? I, for my part, admit
myself a fool, and yield myself captive.
LXIV.
In the beginning, God made
Adam out of a piece of clay, and Eve out of Adam's rib: he blessed them and
said: "Be fruitful and increase" - words that will stand and remain
powerful to the world's end. Though many people die daily, yet others are ever
being born, as David says in his Psalm: "Thou sufferest men to die and go
away like a shadow, and sayest, Come again ye children of men." These and
other things which he daily creates, the ungodly blind world see not, nor
acknowledge for God's wonders, but think all is done by chance or haphazard,
whereas, the godly, wheresoever they cast their eyes, beholding heaven and
earth, the air and water, see and acknowledge all for God's wonders; and, full
of astonishment and delight, laud the Creator, knowing that God is well pleased
therewith.
LXV.
For the blind children of the world
the articles of faith are too high. That three persons are one only God; that
the true Son of God was made man; that in Christ are two natures, divine and
human, etc., all this offends them, as fiction and fable. For just as unlikely
as it is to say, a man and a stone are one person, so it is unlikely to human
sense and reason that God was made man, or that divine and human natures,
united in Christ, are one person. St Paul showed his understanding of this
matter, though he took not hold of all, in Colossians: "In Christ dwelleth
all the fullness of the Godhead bodily." Also: "In him lies hid all
treasure of wisdom and knowledge."
LXVI.
If a man ask, Why God permits
that men be hardened, and fall into everlasting perdition? let him ask again:
Why God did not spare his only Son, but gave him for us all, to die the
ignominious death of the cross, a more certain sign of his love towards us poor
people, than of his wrath against us. Such questions cannot be better solved
and answered than by converse questions. True, the malicious devil deceived and
seduced Adam; but we ought to consider that, soon after the fall, Adam received
the promise of the woman's seed that should crush the serpent's head, and
should bless the people on earth. Therefore, we must acknowledge that the
goodness and mercy of the Father, who sent his Son to be our Saviour, is
immeasurably great towards the wicked ungovernable world. Let, therefore, his
good will be acceptable unto thee, oh, man, and speculate not with thy devilish
queries, thy whys and thy wherefores, touching God's words and works. For God,
who is creator of all creatures, and orders all things according to his
unsearchable will and wisdom, is not pleased with such questioning.
Why God sometimes, out of his
divine counsels, wonderfully wise, unsearchable to human reason and
understanding, has mercy on this man, and hardens that, it beseems not us to
inquire. We should know, undoubtingly, that he does nothing without certain
cause and counsel. Truly, if God were to give an account to every one of his
works and actions, he were but a poor, simple God.
Our Saviour said to Peter,
"What I do thou knowest not now, but thou shalt know hereafter."
Hereafter, then, we shall know how graciously our loving God and Father has
been affected unto us. In the meantime, though misfortune, misery, and trouble
be upon us, we must have this sure confidence in him, that he will not suffer
us to be destroyed either in body or soul, but will so deal with us, that all
things, be they good or evil, shall redound to our advantage.
LXVII.
When one asked, where God was
before heaven was created? St Augustine answered: He was in himself. When
another asked me the same question, I said: He was building hell for such idle,
presumptuous, fluttering and inquisitive spirits as you. After he had created
all things, he was everywhere, and yet he was nowhere, for I cannot take hold
of him without the Word. But he will be found there where he has engaged to be.
The Jews found him at Jerusalem by the throne of grace, (Exod.xxv.) We find him
in the Word and faith, in baptism and the sacraments; but in his majesty, he is
nowhere to be found.
It was a special grace when
God bound himself to a certain place where he would be found, namely, in that
place where the tabernacle was, towards which they prayed; as first, in Shilo
and Sichem, afterwards at Gibeon, and lastly at Jerusalem, in the temple.
The Greeks and heathens in
after times imitated this, and build temples for their idols in certain places,
as at Ephesus for Diana, at Delphos for Apollo, etc. For, where God build a
church there the devil would also build a chapel. They imitated the Jews also
in this, namely, that as the Most Holiest was dark, and had no light, even so
and after the same manner, did they make their shrines dark where the devil
made answer. Thus is the devil ever God's ape.
LXVIII.
God is upright,faithful, and
true, as he has shown, not only in his promises, through Christ, of forgiveness
of sins, and deliverance from everlasting death, but also, in that he has laid
before us, in the Scriptures, many gracious and comforting examples of great
and holy saints who of God were highly enlightened and favored, and who,
notwithstanding, fell into great and heavy sins.
Adam, by his disobedience,
hereditarily conveyed sin and death upon all his posterity. Aaron brought a
great sin upon Israel, insomuch that God would have destroyed her. David also
fell very heavily. Job and Jeremiah cursed the day in which they were born.
Jonas was sorely vexed because Nineveh was not destroyed. Peter denied, Paul
persecuted Christ.
These, and such like
innumerable examples, does Holy Writ relate to us; not that we should live
securely, and sin, relying upon the mercy of God, but that, when we feel his
anger, "which will surely follow upon the sins," we should not
despair, but remember these comfortable examples, and thence conclude, that, as
God was merciful unto them, so likewise he will be gracious unto us, out of his
mere goodness and mercy shown in Christ, and will not impute our sins unto us.
We may also see by such
examples of great holy men falling so grievously, what a wicked, crafty, and
envious spirit the devil is, a very prince and good of the world.
These high, divine people, who
committed such heavy sins, fell, through God's counsel and permission, to the
end they should not be proud or boast themselves of their gifts and qualities,
but should rather fear. For, when David had slain Uriah, had taken from him his
wife, and thereby given cause to God's enemies to blaspheme, he could not boast
he had governed well, or shown goodness; but he said: "I have sinned
against the Lord," and with tears prayed for mercy. Job also
acknowledgingly says: "I have spoken foolishly, and therefore do I accuse
myself, and repent."
LXIX.
When God contemplates some
great work, he begins it by the hand of some poor, weak, human creature, to
whom he afterwards gives aid, so that the enemies who seek to obstruct it, are
overcome. As when he delivered the children of Israel out of the long, wearisome,
and heavy captivity in Egypt, and led them into the land of promise, he called
Moses, to whom he afterwards gave his brother Aaron as an assistant. And though
Pharaoh at first set himself hard against them, and plagued the people worse
than before, yet he was forced in the end to let Israel go. And when he hunted
after them with all his host, the Lord drowned Pharaoh with all his power in
the Red Sea, and so delivered his people.
Again, in the time of Eli the
priest, when matters stood very evil in Israel, the Philistines pressing hard
upon them, and taking away the Ark of God into their land, and when Eli, in
great sorrow of heart, fell backwards from his chair and broke his neck, and it
seemed as if Israel were utterly undone, God raised up Samuel the prophet, and
through him restored Israel, and the Philistines were overthrown.
Afterwards, when Saul was sore
pressed by the Philistines, so that for anguish of heart he despaired and
thrust himself through, three of his sons and many people dying with him, every
man thought that now there was an end of Israel. But shortly after, when David
was chosen king over all Israel, then came the golden time. For David, the
chosen of God, not only saved Israel out of the enemies hands, but also forced
to obedience all kings and people that set themselves against him, and helped
the kingdom up again in such manner, that in his and Solomon's time it was in
full flourish, power, and glory.
Even so, when Judah was
carried captive to Babylon, then God selected the prophets Ezekiel, Haggai, and
Zachariah, who comforted men in their distress and captivity; making not only
promise of their return into the land of Judah, but also that Christ should
come in his due time.
Hence we may see that God
never forsakes his people, nor even the wicked; though, by reason of their
sins, he suffer them a long time to be severely punished and plagued. As also,
in this our time, he has graciously delivered us from the long, wearisome,
heavy, and horrible captivity of the wicked pope. God of his mercy grant we may
thankfully acknowledge this.
LXX.
God could be rich readily
enough, if he were more provident, and denied us the use of his creatures; let
him, for ever so short a while, keep back the sun, so that it shine not, or
lock up air, water, or fire, ah! how willingly would we give all our wealth to
have the use of these creatures again.
But seeing God so liberally
heaps his gifts upon us, we claim them as of right; let him deny them if he
dare. The unspeakable multitude of his benefits obscures the faith of
believers, and much more so, that of the ungodly.
LXXI.
When God wills to punish a
people or a kingdom, he takes away from it the good and godly teachers and
preachers, and bereaves it of wise, godly, and honest rulers and counsellors, and
of brave, upright and experienced soldiers, and of other good men. Then are the
common people secure and merry; they go on in all willfulness, they care no
longer for the truth and for the divine doctrine; nay, they despise it, and
fall into blindness; they have no fear or honesty; they give way to all manner
of shameful sins, whence arises a wild, dissolute, and devilish kind of living,
as that we now, alas! see and are too well cognizant of, and which cannot long
endure. I fear the axe is laid to the root of the tree, soon to cut it down.
God of his infinite mercy take us graciously away, that we may not be present
at such calamities.
LXXII.
God gives us sun and moon and
stars, fire and water, air and earth, all creatures, body and soul, all manner of
maintenance, fruits, grain, corn, wine, whatever is good for the preservation
and comfort of this temporal life; moreover he gives unto us his all-saving
Word, yea, himself.
Yet what gets he thereby?
Truly, nothing, but that he is wickedly blasphemed, and that his only Son is
condemned and crucified, his servants plagued, banished, persecuted, and slain.
Such a godly child is the world; woe be to it.
LXXIII.
God very wonderfully entrusts
his highest office to preachers that are themselves poor sinners who, while
teaching it, very weakly follow it. Thus goes it ever with God's power in our
weakness; for when he is weakest in us, then is he strongest.
LXXIV.
How should God deal with us?
Good days we cannot bear, evil we cannot endure. Gives he riches unto us? then
are we proud, so that no man can live by us in peace; nay, we will be carried
upon heads and shoulders, and will be adored as gods. Gives he poverty unto us?
then are we dismayed, impatient, and murmur against him. Therefore, nothing
were better for us, than forthwith to be covered over with the shovel.
LXXV.
"Since God," said
some one, "Knew that man would not continue in the state of innocence, why
did he create him at all?" Dr. Luther laughed, and replied: The Lord,
all-powerful and magnificent, saw that he should need in his house, sewers and
cesspools; be assured he knows quite well what he is about. Let us keep clear
of these abstract questions, and consider the will of God such as it has been
revealed unto us.
LXXVI.
Dr. Henning asked: "Is
reason to hold no authority at all with Christians, since it is to be set aside
in matters of faith?" The Doctor replied: Before faith and the knowledge
of God, reason is mere darkness; but in the hands of those who believe, `tis an
excellent instrument. All facilities and gifts are pernicious, exercised by the
impious; but most salutary when possessed by godly persons.
LXXVII.
God deals strangely with his
saints, contrary to all human wisdom and understanding, to the end, that those
who fear God and are good Christians, may learn to depend on invisible things,
and through mortification may be made alive again; for God's Word is a light
that shines in a dark place, as all examples of faith show. Esau was accursed,
yet it went well with him; he was lord in the land, and priest in the church;
but Jacob had to fly, and dwell in poverty, in another country.
God deals with godly
Christians much as with the ungodly, yea, and sometimes far worse. He deals
with them even as a house-father with a son and a servant; he whips and beats
the son much more and oftener than the servant, yet, nevertheless, he gathers
for the son a treasure to inherit, while a stubborn and a disobedient servant
he beats not with the rod, but thrusts out of doors, and gives him nothing of
the inheritance.
LXXVIII.
God is a good and gracious
Lord; he will be held for God only and alone, according to the first
commandment: "Thou shalt have none other Gods but me." He desires
nothing of us, no taxes, subsidies, money, or goods; he only requires that he
may be our God and Father, and therefore he bestows upon us, richly, with an
overflowing cup, all manner of spiritual and temporal gifts; but we look not so
much as once towards him, nor will have him to be our God.
LXXIX.
God is not an angry God; if he
were so, we were all utterly lost and undone. God does not willingly strike
mankind, except, as a just God, he be constrained thereunto; but, having no
pleasure in unrighteousness and ungodliness, he must therefore suffer the
punishment to go on. As I sometimes look through the fingers, when the tutor
whips my son John, so it is with God; when we are unthankful and disobedient to
his Word, and commandments, he suffers us, through the devil, to be soundly
lashed with pestilence, famine, and such like whips; not that he is our enemy,
and to destroy us, but that through such scourgings, he may call us to
repentance and amendment, and so allure us to seek him, run to him, and call
upon him for help. Of this we have a fine example in the book of Judges, where
the angel, in God's person, speaks thus: "I have stricken you so often,
and ye are nothing the better for it;" and the people of Israel said:
"Save thou us but now; we have sinned and done amiss: punish thou us, O
Lord and do with us what thou wilt, only save us now," etc. Whereupon he
struck not all the people to death. In like manner did David, when he had
sinned (in causing the people to be numbered, for which God punished the people
with pestilence, so that 70,000 died), humble himself, saying: "Beloved, Lord,
I have sinned, I have done this misdeed, and have deserved this punishment:
What have these sheep done? Let thy hand be upon me, and upon my father's
house," etc. Then the Lord "repented him of the evil, and said to the
angel that destroyed the people, It is enough, stay thy hand."
He that can humble himself
earnestly before God in Christ, has already won; otherwise, the Lord God would
lose his deity, whose own work it is, that he have mercy on the poor and
sorrowful, and spare them that humble themselves before him. Were it not so, no
human creature would come unto him, or call upon him; no man would be heard, no
man saved, nor thank him: "For in hell no man praiseth thee," says
the Psalm. The devil can affright, murder, and steal; but God revives and comforts.
This little word, God, is, in
the Scripture, a word with manifold significations, and is oftentimes
understood of a thing after the nature of its operation and essence: as the
devil is called a god; namely, a god of sin, of death, of despair, and
damnation.
We must make due difference
between this god and the upright and true God, who is a God of life, comfort,
salvation, justification, and all goodness; for there are many words that bear
no certain meanings, and equivocation is always the mother of error.
LXXX.
The wicked and ungodly enjoy
the most part of God's creatures; the tyrants have the greatest power, lands,
and people; the usurers the money; the farmers eggs, butter, corn, barley,
oats, apples, pears, etc.; while godly Christians must suffer, be persecuted,
sit in dungeons, where they can see neither sun nor moon, be thrust out into
poverty, be banished, plagued, etc. But things will be better one day; they
cannot always remain as now; let us have patience, and steadfastly remain by
the pure doctrine, and not fall away from it, notwithstanding all this misery.
LXXXI.
Our Lord God and the devil
have two modes of policy which agree not together, but are quite opposite the
one to the other. God at the first affrights, and afterwards lifts up and
comforts again; so that the flesh and the old man should be killed, and the
spirit, or new man, live. Whereas the devil makes, at first, people secure and
bold, that they, void of all fear, may commit sin and wickedness, and not only
remain in sin, but take delight and pleasure therein, and think they have done
all well; but at last, when Mr. Stretch-leg comes, then he affrights and scares
them without measure, so that they either die of great grief, or else, in the
end, are left without all comfort, and despair of God's grace and mercy.
LXXXII.
God only, and not wealth,
maintains the world; riches merely make people proud and lazy. At Venice, where
the richest people are, a horrible dearth fell among them in our time, so that
they were driven to call upon the Turks for help, who sent twenty-four galleys
laden with corn; - all of which, well nigh in port, sunk before their eyes.
Great wealth and money cannot still hunger, but rather occasion more dearth;
for where rich people are, there things are always dear. Moreover, money makes
no man right merry, but much rather pensive and full of sorrow; for riches,
says Christ, are thorns that prick people. Yet is the world so mad that it sets
therein all its joys and felicity.
LXXXIII.
There is no greater anger than
when God is silent, and talks not with us, but suffers us to go on in our
sinful works, and to do all things according to our own passions and pleasure;
as it has been with the Jews for the last fifteen hundred years.
Ah, God, punish, we pray thee,
with pestilence and famine, and with what evil and sickness may be else on
earth; but be not silent, Lord, towards us. God said to the Jews: "I have
stretched forth my hand, and have cried, come hither and hear," etc. "But
ye said, We will not hear."
Even so likewise do we now; we
are weary of God's Word; we will not have upright, good, and godly preachers
and teachers that threaten us, and bring God's Word pure and unfalsified before
us, and condemn false doctrine, and truly warn us. No, such cannot we endure;
we will not hear them, nay, we persecute and banish them; Therefore will God
also punish us. Thus it goes with wicked and lost children, that will not
hearken to their parents, nor be obedient unto them; they will afterwards be
rejected of them again.
LXXXIV.
Nothing displeases Almighty
God more than when we defend and clock our sins, and will not acknowledge that
we have done wrong as did Saul; for the sins that be not acknowledged, are
against the first table of the Ten Commandments. Saul sinned against the first
table, David against the second. Those are sinners against the second table,
that look on the sermon of Repentance, suffer themselves to be threatened and
reproved, acknowledge their sins, and better themselves. Those that sin against
the first table, as idolaters, unbelievers, condemners, and blasphemers of God,
falsifiers of God's Word, etc., attribute to themselves wisdom and power; they
will be wise and mighty, both which qualities God reserves to himself as peculiarly
his own.
LXXXV.
`Tis inexpressible how ungodly
and wicked the world is. We may easily perceive it from this, that God has not
only suffered punishments to increase, but also has appointed so many
executioners and hangmen to punish his subjects; as evil spirits, tyrants,
disobedient children, knaves, and wicked women, wild beasts, vermin, sickness,
etc.; yet all this can make us neither bend nor bow.
Better it were that God should
be angry with us, than that we be angry with God, for he can soon be at an
union with us again, because he is merciful; but when we are angry with him,
then the case is not to be helped.
LXXXVI.
God could be exceedingly rich
in temporal wealth, if he so pleased, but he will not. If he would but come to
the pope, the emperor, a king, a prince, a bishop, a rich merchant, a citizen,
a farmer, and say: Unless you give me a hundred thousand crowns, you shall die
on the spot; every one would say: I will give it, with all my heart, if I may
but live. But now we are such unthankful slovens, that we give him not so much
as a Deo gratias, though we receive of him, to rich overflowing, such
great benefits, merely out of his goodness and mercy. Is not this a shame? Yet,
notwithstanding such unthankfulness, our Lord God and merciful Father suffers
not himself to be scared away, but continually shows us all manner of goodness.
If in his gifts and benefits he were more sparing and close-handed, we should
learn to be thankful. If he caused every human creature to be born with but one
leg or foot, and seven years afterwards gave him the other; or in the
fourteenth year gave one hand, and afterwards, in the twentieth year, the
other, then we should better acknowledge God's gifts and benefits, and value
them at a higher rate, and be thankful. He has given unto us a whole sea-full
of his Word, all manner of languages, and liberal arts. We buy at this time,
cheaply, all manner of good books. He gives us learned people, that teach well
and regularly, so that a youth, if he be not altogether a dunce, may learn more
in one year now, than formerly in many years. Arts are now so cheap, that
almost they go about begging for bread; woe be to us that we are so lazy,
improvident, negligent, and unthankful.
LXXXVII.
We are nothing worth with all
our gifts and qualities, how great soever they be, unless God continually hold
his hand over us: if he forsake us, then are our wisdom, art, sense, and
understanding futile. If he do not constantly aid us, then our highest
knowledge and experience in divinity, or what else we attain unto, will nothing
serve; for when the hour of temptation and trial comes, we shall be dispatched
in a moment, the devil, thought his craft and subtility, tearing away from us
even those texts in Holy Scripture wherewith we should comfort ourselves, and
setting before our eyes, instead, only sentences of fearful threatening.
Wherefore, let no man proudly
boast and brag of his own righteousness, wisdom, or other gifts and qualities,
but humble himself and pray with the holy apostles, and say: "Ah, Lord!
strengthen and increase the faith in us!
LXXXVIII.
The greater God's gifts and
works, the less are they regarded. The highest and most precious treasure we
receive of God is, that we can speak, hear, see, etc.; but how few acknowledge
these as God's special gifts, much less give God thanks for them. The world
highly esteems riches, honor, power, and other things of less value, which soon
vanish away, but a blind man, if in his right wits, would willingly exchange
all these for sight. The reason why the corporal gifts of God are so much
undervalued is, that they are so common, that God bestows them also upon brute
beasts, which as well as we, and better, hear and see. Nay, when Christ made
the blind to see, drove out devils, raised the dead, etc., he was upbraided by
the ungodly hypocrites, who gave themselves out for God's people, and was told
that he was a Samaritan, and had a devil. Ah! the world is the devil's, whether
it goes or stands still; how, then, can men acknowledge God's gifts and
benefits? It is with us as with young children, who regard not so much their
daily bread, as an apple, a pear, or other toys. Look at the cattle going into
the fields to pasture, and behold in them our preachers, our milk-bearers,
butter-bearers, cheese and wool bearers, which daily preach unto us faith in
God, and that we should trust in him, as in our loving Father, who cares for
us, and will maintain and nourish us.
LXXXIX.
No man can estimate the great
charge God is at only in maintaining birds and such creatures, comparatively
nothing worth. I am persuaded that it costs him, yearly, more to maintain only
the sparrows, than the revenue of the French king amounts to. What then, shall
we say of all the rest of his creatures?
XC.
God delights in our
temptations, and yet hates them; he delights in them when they drive us to
prayer; he hates them when they drive us to despair. The Psalm says: "An
humble and contrite heart is an acceptable sacrifice to God," etc.
Therefore, when it goes well with you, sing and praise God with a hymn: goes it
evil, that is, does temptation come, then pray: "For the Lord has pleasure
in those that fear him;" and that which follows is better: "and in
them that hope in his goodness," for God helps the lowly and humble, seeing
he says: "Thinkest thou my hand is shortened that I cannot help?" He
that feels himself weak in faith, let him always have a desire to be strong
therein, for that is a nourishment which God relishes in us.
XCI.
God, in this world, has scarce
the tenth part of the people; the smallest number only will be saved. The world
is exceeding ungodly and wicked; who would believe our people should be so
unthankful toward the gospel?
XCII.
`Tis wonderful how God has put
such excellent physic in mere muck; we know by experience that swine's dung
stints the blood; horse's serves for the pleurisy; man's heals wounds and black
blotches; asses' is used for the bloody flux, and cow's with preserved roses,
for epilepsy, or for convulsions of children.
XCIII.
God seems as though he had
dealt inconsiderately in commanding the world to be governed by the Word of
Truth, especially since he has clothed and hooded it with a poor, weak, and
condemned Word of the Cross. For, the world will not have the truth, but lies:
neither willingly do they aught that is upright and good, unless compelled
thereto by main force. The world has a loathing of the cross, and will rather
follow the pleasures of the devil, and have pleasant days, than carry the cross
of our blessed Saviour Christ Jesus. He that best governs the world, as most
worthy of it, is Satan, by his lieutenant the pope; he can please the world
well, and knows how to make it give ear unto him; for his kingdom has a mighty
show and repute, which is acceptable to the world, and befits it. Like unto like.
XCIV.
Pythagoras, the heathen
philosopher, said, that the motion of the stars creates a very sweet harmony
and celestial concord; but that people, through continual custom, have become cloyed
therewith. Even so it is with us, we have surpassing fair creatures to our use,
but by reason they are too common, we regard them not.
XCV.
Scarcely a small proportion of
the earth bears corn, and yet we are all maintained and nourished. I verily believe
that there grow not as many sheaves of corn as there people in the world, and
yet we are all fed; yea, and there remains a good surplus of corn at the year's
end. This is a wonderful thing, which should make us see and perceive God's
blessing.
XCVI.
The apparent cause why God
passed so sharp a sentence upon Adam, was, that he had eaten of the forbidden
tree, and was disobedient unto God, wherefore, for his sake, the earth was
cursed, and mankind made subject to all manner of miseries, fears, wants, sicknesses,
plagues, and death. The reason of the worldly-wise, regarding only the biting
of the apple, holds that for so slight and trivial a thing it was too cruel and
hard a proceeding upon poor Adam, and takes snuff in the nose, and says, or at
least thinks: O, is it then so heinous a matter and sin for one to eat an
apple? As people say of many sins that God expressly in his Word has forbidden,
such as drunkenness, etc.: What harm for one to be merry, and take a cup with
good fellows? - concluding, according to their blindness, that God is too sharp
and exacting.
Again, these worldlings are
offended that Christ, as they think, rejects, good, honest, and holy people;
that he will not know them, is harsh to them, sends them away from him, and
calls them malefactors, though some in his name have prophesied, cast out
devils, done miracles, etc., while, on the other hand, he receives public
sinners, as strumpets, knaves, publicans, murderers, whom, if they hear his
Word, and believe in him, he forgives, be their sins ever so great and many,
yea, makes them righteous and holy, God's children, and heirs of everlasting
life and salvation, out of mere grace and mercy, without any deserts, good
works, and worthiness of theirs. This they conceive to be altogether unjust.
Who can be here an arbitrator,
the two things being as contrary to each other as fire and water. Herein man's
wisdom, his sense, reason, understanding, is made a fool. The Scripture says:
"Except ye be converted, and become like little children, ye shall not
enter into the kingdom of God." They who would investigate these things
with human wit and wisdom, give themselves much futile labor and disquiet; they
will never learn how God is inclined towards them. In those, also, who so
vainly trouble themselves, whether they be predestinated or fore-chosen, there
goes up a fire in the heart, which they cannot quench; so that their
consciences are never at peace, but in the end they must despair. He,
therefore, that will shun this enduring evil must hold fast the Word, where he
will find that our gracious God has laid a sure and strong foundation, on which
we may with certainty take footing - namely, Jesus Christ our Lord, through
whom only we must enter into the kingdom of heaven; for he, and no other,
"is the way, the truth, and the life."
We can understand the heavy
temptations of that everlasting predestination, which terrifies many people,
nowhere better than from the wounds of our Saviour, Christ Jesus, of whom the
Father commanded, saying: "Him shall ye hear." But the wise of the
world, the mighty, the high-learned, and the great, by no means heed these
things, so that God remains unknown to them, notwithstanding they have much
learning, and dispute and talk much of God; for it is a short conclusion.
Without Christ, God will not be found, known, or comprehended.
If now thou wilt know, why so
few are saved, and so infinitely many damned, this is the cause: the world will
not hear Christ; they care nothing for him, yea, condemn that which the Father
testifies of him: "This is my well-beloved Son, in whom I am well
pleased."
Whereas all people that seek
and labor to come to God, through any other means than only through Christ (as
Jews, Turks, Papists, false saints, heretics, etc.), walk in horrible darkness
and error; and it helps them nothing that they lead an honest, sober kind of
life, affect great devotion, suffer much, love and honor God, as they boast,
etc. For seeing they will not hear Christ, or believe in him (without whom no
man knows God, no man obtains forgiveness of sins, no man comes to the Father),
they remain always in doubt and unbelief, know not how they stand with God, and
so at last must die, and be lost in their sins. For, "He that honoreth not
the Son, honoreth not the Father," (1 John ii.), "He that believeth
not the Son, shall not see life, but the wrath of God remains upon him,"
(John iii.)
XCVII.
It is often asked: Why
desperate wretches have such good days, and live a long time in jollity and
pleasure, to their heart's desire, with health of body, fine children, etc.,
while God allows the godly to remain in calamity, danger, anguish and want all
their lives; yea, and some to die also in misery, as St John the Baptist did,
who was the greatest saint on earth, to say nothing of our only Saviour Jesus
Christ.
The prophets have all written
much hereof, and shown how the godly should overcome such doubts, and comfort
themselves against them. Jeremiah says, "Why goeth it so well with the
ungodly, and wherefore are all they happy that deal very treacherously?"
But further on, "Thou sufferest them to go at liberty like sheep that are
to be slain, and thou preparest them for the day of slaughter." Read also
Psalms xxxvii., xlix., lxxiii.
God is not therefore angry
with his children, though he scourge and punish them; but he is angry with the
ungodly that do not acknowledge Christ to be the Son of God, and the Saviour of
the world, but blaspheme and condemn the Word; such are to expect no grace and
help of him. And, indeed, he does not himself scourge and beat his small and
poor flock that depend on Christ; but suffers them to be chastened and beaten,
when they become ever secure and unthankful unto him for his unspeakable graces
and benefits shown unto them in Christ, and are disobedient to his Word; then
permits he that the devil bruise our heels, and send pestilence and other
plagues unto us; and that tyrants persecute us, and this for our good, that
thereby we may be moved, and in a manner forced to turn ourselves unto him, to
call upon him, to seek help and comfort from him, through Christ.
XCVIII.
"God is a God of the
living, and not of the dead." This text shows the resurrection; for if
there were no hope of the resurrection, or of another and better world, after
this short and miserable life, wherefore should God offer himself to be our
God, and say he will give us all that is necessary and healthful for us, and,
in the end, deliver us out of all trouble, both temporal and spiritual? To what
purpose should we hear his Word, and believe in him? What were we the better
when we cry and sigh to him in our anguish and need, that we wait with patience
upon his comfort and salvation, upon his grace and benefits, shown in Christ?
Why praise and thank him for them? Why be daily in danger, and suffer ourselves
to be persecuted and slain for the sake of Christ's Word?
Forasmuch as the everlasting,
merciful God, through his Word and Sacraments, talks, and deals with us, all
other creatures excluded, not of temporal things which pertain to this
vanishing life, and which in the beginning he provided richly for us, but as to
where we shall go when we depart hence, and gives unto us his Son for a
Saviour, delivering us from sin and death, and purchasing for us everlasting
righteousness, life, and salvation, therefore it is most certain, that we do
not die away like the beasts that have no understanding; but so many of us as
sleep in Christ, shall through him be raised again to life everlasting at the
last day, and the ungodly to everlasting destruction. (John, v., Dan. xii.)
XCIX.
The most acceptable service we
can do and show unto God, and which alone he desires of us, is, that he be
praised of us; but he is not praised, unless he be first loved; he is not
loved, unless he be first bountiful and does well; he does well when he is
gracious; gracious he is when he forgives sins. Now who are those that love
him? They are that small flock of the faithful, who acknowledge such graces,
and know that through Christ they have forgiveness of their sins. But the
children of this world do not trouble themselves herewith; they serve their
idol, that wicked and cursed Mammon: in the end he will reward them.
C.
Our loving Lord God wills that
we eat, drink, and be merry, making use of his creatures, for therefore he
created them. He will not that we complain, as if he had not given sufficient,
or that he could not maintain our poor carcasses; he asks only that we
acknowledge him for our God, and thank him for his gifts.
CI.
He that has not God, let him
have else what he will, is more miserable than Lazarus, who lay at the rich
man's gate, and was starved to death. It will go with such, as it went with the
glutton, that they must everlastingly hunger and want, and shall not have in
their power so much as one drop of water.
CII.
Of Abraham came Isaac and
Ishmael; of the patriarchs and holy fathers, came the Jews that crucified
Christ; of the apostles came Jusas the traitor; of the city Alexandria (where a
fair, illustrious, and famous school was, and whence proceeded many upright and
godly learned men) came Arius and Origen; of the Roman church, that yielded
many holy martyrs, came the blasphemous Antichrist, the pope of Rome; of the
holy men in Arabia, came Mohammed; of Constantinople, where many excellent
emperors were, comes the Turk; of married women come adulteresses; of virgins,
strumpets; of brethren, sons, and friends, come the cruelest enemies; of angels
come devils; of kings come tyrants; of the gospel and godly truth come horrible
lies; of the true church come heretics; of Luther come fanatics, rebels, and
enthusiasts. What wonder is it then that evil is among us, comes from us, and
goes out of us; they must, indeed, be very evil things that cannot stay by such
goodness; and they must also be very good, that can endure such evil things.
CIII.
Though by reason of original
sin many wild beasts hurt mankind, as lions, wolves, bears, snakes, adders,
etc., yet the merciful God has in such manner mitigated our well-deserved
punishments, that there are many more beasts that serve us for our good and
profit, than of those which do us hurt: many more sheep than wolves, oxen than
lions, cows than bears, deer than foxes, lobsters than scorpions, ducks, geese,
and hens, than ravens and kites, etc.: in all creatures more good than evil,
more benefits than hurts and hindrances.
CIV.
God will have his servants to
be repenting sinners, standing in fear of his anger, of the devil, death and
hell, and believing in Christ. David says, "The Lord is nigh unto them that
are of a broken heart, and helpeth them that be of an humble spirit." And
Isaiah "Where shall my Spirit rest, and where shall I dwell? By them that
are of humble spirit, and that stand in fear of my Word." So with the poor
sinner on the cross. So with St Peter, when he had denied Christ; with Mary
Magdalene; with Paul the persecutor, etc. All these were sorrowful for their
sins, and such shall have forgiveness of their sins, and be God's servants.
The great prelates, the puffed
up saints, the rich usurers, the ox drovers that seek unconscionable gain,
etc., these are not God's servants, neither were it good they should be; for
then no poor people could have access to God for them; neither were it for
God's honor that such should be his servants, for they would ascribe the honor
and praise to themselves.
In the Old Testament, all the
first-born were consecrated to God, both of mankind and of beasts. The
first-born son had an advantage over his brethren; he was their Lord, as the
chief in offerings and riches, that is, in spiritual and temporal government;
for he had a right to the priesthood and dominion, etc. But there are many
examples in Holy Scriptures, where God rejected the first-born, and chose the
younger brethren, as Cain, Ishmael, Esau, Reuben, etc., who were first-born;
from them God took their right, and gave it to their younger brethren, as to
Abel, Isaac, Jacob, Judah, David, etc. And for this cause: That they were
haughty, proud, and presuming on their first-birth, and despised their brethren,
that were more goodly and godly than they; this God could not endure, and
therefore they were bereaved of their honors, so that they could not boast
themselves of their prior birth, although they were highly esteemed in the
world, and were possessed of lands and people.
CV.
The Scriptures show two manner
of sacrifices acceptable to God. The first is called a sacrifice of thanks or
praise, and is when we teach and preach God's Word purely, when we hear and
receive it with faith, when we acknowledge it, and do everything that tends to
the spreading of it abroad, and thank God from our hearts for the unspeakable
benefits which through it are laid before us, and bestowed upon us in Christ,
when we praise and glorify him, etc. "Offer unto God thanksgiving."
"He that offereth thanks praiseth me." "Thank the Lord, for he
is gracious, because his mercy endureth for ever." "Praise the Lord,
O my soul, and all that is within me praise his holy name. Praise the Lord, O
my soul, and forget not all his benefits." - Psalms.
Secondly, when a sorrowful and
troubled heart in all manner of temptations has his refuge in God, calls upon
him in a true and upright faith, seeks help of him, and waits patiently upon
him. Hereof the Psalms, "In my trouble I called upon the Lord, and he
heard me at large." "The Lord is nigh unto them that are of a
contrite heart, and will save such as be of an humble spirit." "The
sacrifice of God is a troubled spirit; a broken and contrite heart, O God,
shalt thou not despise." And again: "Call upon me in the time of
need, so will I deliver thee, and thou shalt praise me."
CVI.
If Adam had remained in his
innocence, and had not transgressed God's command, yet had begotten children,
he should not have lived and remained continually in that state in Paradise,
but would have been taken into the everlasting glory of heaven, not through
death, but through being translated into another life.
CVII.
God scorns and mocks the
devil, in setting under his very nose a poor, weak, human creature, mere dust
and ashes, yet endowed with the first-fruits of the Spirit, against whom the
devil can do nothing, though he is so proud, subtile, and powerful a spirit. We
read in histories that a powerful king of Persia, besieging the city of Edessa,
the bishop, seeing that all human aid was ineffectual, and that the city could
not of itself hold out, ascending to the ramparts and prayed to God, making, at
the same time, the sign of the cross, whereupon there was a wonderful host sent
from God of great flies and gnats, which filled the horses eyes, and dispersed
the whole army. Even so God takes pleasure to triumph and overcome, not through
power, but by weakness.
CVIII.
False teachers and sectaries
are punishments for evil times, God's greatest anger and displeasure; while
godly teachers are glorious witnesses, God's graces and mercies. Hence St Paul
names apostles, evangelists, prophets, shepherds, teachers, etc., gifts and
presents of our Saviour Christ, sitting at the right hand of the Father. And
the prophet Micah compares teachers of the gospel to a fruitful rain.
CIX.
Melancthon asked Luther if
this word, hardened, "hardeneth whom he will," were to be understood
directly as it sounded, or in a figurative sense? Luther answered: We must
understand it specially and not operatively: for God works no evil. Through his
almighty power he works all in all; and as he finds a man, so he works in him,
as he did in Pharaoh, who was evil by nature, which was not God's, but his own
fault; he continually went on in his wickedness, doing evil; he was hardened,
because God with his spirit and grace hindered not his ungodly proceedings, but
suffered him to go on, and to have his way. Why God did not hinder or restrain
him, we ought not to inquire.
CX.
God styles himself, in all the
Holy Scriptures, a God of life, of peace, of comfort, and joy, for the sake of
Christ. I hate myself, that I cannot believe it so constantly and surely as I
should; but no human creature can rightly know how mercifully God is inclined
toward those that steadfastly believe in Christ.
CXI.
The second Psalm is one of the
best Psalms. I love that Psalm with my heart. It strikes and flashes valiantly
amongst kings, princes, counsellors, judges, etc. If what this Psalm says be
true, then are the allegations and aims of the papists stark lies and folly. If
I were as our Lord God, and had committed the government to my son, as he to
his Son, and these vile people were as disobedient as they now be, I would
knock the world in pieces.
CXII.
If a man serve not God only,
then surely he serves the devil; because no man can serve God, unless he have
his Word and command. Therefore, if his Word and command be not in thy heart,
thou servest not God, but thine own will; for that is upright serving of God,
when a man does that which in his Word God has commanded to be done, every one
in his vocation, not that which he thinks good of his own judgment.
CXIII.
It troubles the hearts of
people not a little, that God seems as though he were mutable or fickle-minded;
for he gave to Adam the promises and ceremonies, which afterwards he altered
with the rainbow and the ark of Noah. He gave to Abraham the circumcision, to
Moses he gave miraculous signs, to his people, the law. But to Christ, and
through Christ, he gave the Gospel; which amounts to the abolition of all the
former. Hence the Turks take advantage of these proceedings of God, saying: The
laws of the Christians may be established, and endure for a time, but at last
they will be altered.
CXIV.
I was once sharply reprimanded
by a popish priest, because, with such passion and vehemence, I reproved the
people. I answered him: Our Lord God must first send a sharp, pouring shower,
with thunder and lightning, and afterwards cause it mildly to rain, as then it
wets finely through. I can easily cut a willow or a hazel wand with my trencher
knife, but for a hard oak, a man must use the axe; and little enough, to fell
and cleave it.
CXV.
Plato, the heathen, said of
God: God is nothing and yet everything; him followed Eck and the sophists, who
understood nothing thereof, as their words show. But we must understand and
spake of it in this manner: God is incomprehendible and invisible; that,
therefore, which may be seen and comprehended, is not God. And thus, in another
manner, God is visible and invisible: visible in his Word and works; and where
his Word and works are not, there a man should not desire to have him; or he
will, instead of God, take hold of the devil. Let us not flutter too high, but
remain by the manger and the swaddling clothes of Christ, "in whom
dwelleth all the fullness of the Godhead bodily." There a man cannot fail
of God, but finds him most certainly. Human comfort and divine comfort are of
different natures: human comfort consists in external, visible help, which a
man may see, hold, and feel; divine comfort only in words and promises, where
there is neither seeing, hearing, nor feeling.
CXVI.
When we see no way or means,
by advice or aid, through which we may be helped in our miseries, we at once conclude,
according to our human reason: now our condition is desperate; but when we
believe trustingly in God, our deliverance begins. The physician says: Where
philosophy ends, physic begins; so we say: Where human help is at an end, God's
help begins, or faith in God's Word. Trials and temptations appear before
deliverance, after deliverance comes joy. To be suppressed and troubled, is to
arise, to grow and to increase.
CXVII.
The devil, too, has his
amusement and pleasure, which consists in suppressing God's work, and
tormenting those that love God's Word, and hold fast thereby; so the true
Christians, being God's kingdom, must be tormented and oppressed.
A true Christian must have
evil days, and suffer much; our Adam's flesh and blood must have good and easy
days, and suffer nothing. How may these agree together? Our flesh is given over
to death and hell: if our flesh is to be delivered from death, hell and the
devil, it must keep and hold to God's commandments - i.e., must believe in
Christ Jesus, that he is the Son of God and our Redeemer, and must cleave fast
to his Word, believing that he will not suffer us to be plagued everlastingly,
but will deliver and remove us out of this life into life eternal; giving us at
the same time, patience under the cross, and to bear with the weakness of
another, who is also under the cross, and holds with Christ.
Therefore, he that will boast
himself to be Christ's disciple, a true Christian, and saved, must not expect
good days; but all his faith, hope, and love must be directed to God, and to
his neighbor, that so his whole life be nothing else than the cross,
persecution, adversity, and tribulation.
CXVIII.
What is it we poor wretched
people aim at? We who cannot, as yet, comprehend with our faith the merest
sparks of God's promises, the bare glimmering of his commandments and works, -
both of which, notwithstanding he himself has confirmed with words and
miracles, - weak, impure, corrupt as we are, - presumptuously seek to
understand the incomprehensible light of God's wonders.
We must know that he dwells in
a light to which human creatures cannot come, and yet we go on, and essay to
reach it. We know it. We know that his judgments are incomprehensive, and his
ways past finding out, (Rom. xi.,) yet we undertake to find them out. We look,
with blind eyes like a mole, on the majesty of God, and after that light which
is shown neither in words nor miracles, but is only signified; out of curiosity
and willfulness we would behold the highest and greatest light of the celestial
sun ere we see the morning star. Let the morning star, as St Peter says, go
first up in our hearts, and we shall then see the sun in his noon-tide
splendor.
True, we must teach, as we
may, of God's incomprehensible and unsearchable will; but to aim at its perfect
comprehension is dangerous work, wherein we stumble, fall, and break our necks.
I bridle myself with these words of our Saviour Christ to St peter:
"Follow thou me: what is it to thee?" etc., for Peter busied himself
also about God's works; namely, how he would do with another, how he would do
with John? And as he answered Philip, that said, "Show us the Father"
- "What," said Christ; "believest thou not that the Father is in
me, and I in the Father? He that seeth me, seeth the Father also," etc.
For Philip would also willingly have seen the majesty and fellowship of the
Father. Solomon, the wise king, says: "What is too high for thee,
thereafter inquire thou not." And even did we know all the secret
judgments of God, what good and profit would it bring unto us, more than God's
promises and commandments?
Let us abstain from such
cogitations, seeing we know for certain that they are incomprehensible. Let us
not permit ourselves to be so plagued by the devil with that which is
impossible. A man might as well busy himself how the kingdom of the earth shall
endure upon the waters, and go not down beneath them. Above all things, let us
exercise the faith of God's promises, and the works of his commandments; when
we have done this, we may well consider whether it is expedient to trouble
oneself about impossible things, though it is a very difficult thing to expel
such thoughts, so fiercely drives the devil. A man must as vehemently strive
against such cogitations as against unbelief, despair, heresies, and such like
temptations. For most of us are deceived herewith, not believing they proceed
from the devil, who yet himself fell through those very cogitations, assuming
to be equal with the Most Highest, and to know all that God knows, and scorning
to know what he ought to know, and what was needful for him.
CXIX.
High mysteries in the
Scriptures being hard to be understood, confound unlearned and light spirits so
as to produce many errors and heresies, to their own and others condemnation.
`Twis therefore Moses described the creation so briefly, whereas he spends a
whole chapter in narrating the purchase of the field and cave over against
Hebron, that Abraham bought of Ephron the Hittite, for a sepulchre to bury Sara
in. He describes, likewise, through many chapters, divers sorts of sacrifices,
and other customs and ceremonies, for he well knew that such like produce no
heresies. Many things were written and described ere Moses was born. Doubtless,
Adam briefly noted the history of the creation, of his fall, of the promised
seed, etc. The other patriarchs afterwards, no doubt, each set down what was
done in his time, especially Noah. Afterwards Moses, as I conceive, took and
brought all into a right method and order, diminishing therefrom, and adding
thereunto, such things as God commanded: as, especially, touching the seed that
should crush the serpent's head, the history of the creation, etc.; all which,
doubtless, he had out of the sermons of the patriarchs, that always one
inherited from another. For I verily believe, that the sermon of the woman's
seed promised to Adam and Eve, after which they had so hearty a longing and
yearning, was preached more powerfully before the deluge, than now in these
dangerous times the sermons of Christ are preached with us.
CXX.
I would give a world to have
the acts and legends of the patriarchs who lived before the deluge; for therein
a man might see how they lived, preached, and what they suffered. But it
pleased our Lord God to overwhelm all their acts and legends in the deluge,
because he knew that those which should come after, would not regard, much less
understand them; therefore God would keep and preserve them until they met
again together in the life to come. But then, I am sure, the loving patriarchs
who lived after the deluge, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, etc.; the prophets, the
apostles, their posterity, and other holy people, whom in this life the devil
would not leave untempted, will yield unto the patriarchs, that lived before
the deluge, and give to them pre-eminence in divine and spiritual honor,
saying: Ye loving and most venerable patriarchs! I preached but a few years,
spreading God's Word abroad, and therefore suffered the cross; but what is that
in comparison with the great, tedious, intolerable labor and pains, anguish,
torments, and plagues, which ye, holy fathers, endured before the deluge, some
of you, seven hundred, some eight hundred years, some longer, of the devil and
the wicked world.
CXXI.
As lately I lay very sick, so
sick that I thought I should have left this world, many cogitations and musings
had I in my weakness. Ah! thought I, what may eternity be? What joys may it
have? However, I know for certain, that this eternity is ours; through Christ
it is given and prepared for us, if we can but believe. There it shall be
opened and revealed; here we shall not know when a second creation of the world
will be, seeing we understand not the first. If I had been with God almighty
before he created the world, I could not have advised him how out of nothing to
make this globe, the firmament, and that glorious sun, which in its swift
course gives light to the whole earth; how, in such manner, to create man and
woman, etc., all which he did for us, without our counsel. Therefore ought we
justly to give him the honor, and leave to his divine power and goodness the
new creation of the life to come, and not presume to speculate thereon.
CXXII.
I hold that the name Paradise
applies to the whole world. Moses describes more particularly what fell within
Adam's sight before his fall, - a sweet and pleasant place, water by four
rivers. After he had sinned, he directed his steps towards Syria, and the earth
lost its fertility. Samaria and Judaea were once fruitful lands, worthy to be
Paradise, but they are now arid sands, for God has cursed them.
Even so, in our time, has God
cursed fruitful lands, and caused them to be barren and unfruitful by reason of
our sins; for where God gives not his blessing, there grows nothing that is
good and profitable, but where he blesses, there all things grow plentifully,
and are fruitful.
CXXIII.
Dr. Jonas, inviting Luther to
dinner, caused a bunch of ripe cherries to be hung over the table where they
dined, in remembrance of the creation, and as a suggestion to his guests to
praise God for creating such fruits. But Luther said: Why not rather remember
this in one's children, that are the fruit of one's body? For these are far
more excelling creatures of God than all the fruits of trees. In them we see
God's power, wisdom and art, who made them all out of nothing, gave them life
and limbs, exquisitely constructed, and will maintain and preserve them. Yet
how little do we regard this. When people have children, all the effect is to
make them grasping - raking together all they an to leave behind them. They do
not know, that before a child comes into the world, it has its lot assigned
already, and that it is ordained and determined what and how much it shall
have. In the married state we find that the conception of children depends not
on our will and pleasure; we never know whether we will be fruitful or no, or
whether God will give us a son or a daughter. All this goes on without our
counsel. My father and mother did not imagine they should have brought a
spiritual overseer into the world. `Tis God's work only, and this we cannot
enter into. I believe that, in the life to come, we shall have nothing to do,
but to meditate on and marvel at our Creator and his creatures.
CXXIV.
A comet is a star that runs,
not being fixed like a planet, but a bastard among planets. It is a haughty and
proud star, engrossing the whole element, and carrying itself as if it were
there alone. `Tis of the nature of heretics who also will be singular and
alone, bragging and boasting above others and thinking they are the only people
endued with understanding.
CXXV.
Whereto serve or profit such
superfluity, such show, such ostentation, such extraordinary luxurious kind of
life as is now come upon us. If Adam were to return to earth, and see our mode
of living, our food, drink and dress, how would he marvel. He would say:
Surely, this is not the world I was in; it was, doubtless, another Adam than I,
who appeared among men heretofore. For Adam drank water, ate fruit from the
trees, and if he had any house at all, `twas a hut, supported by four wooden
forks; he had no knife, or iron; and he wore simply a coat of s kin. Now we
spend immense sums in eating and drinking; now we raise sumptuous palaces, and
decorate them with a luxury beyond all comparison. The ancient Israelites lived
in great moderation and quiet; Boaz says: "Dip thy bread in vinegar, and
refresh thyself therewith." Judaea was full of people, as we read in the
book of Joshua; and a great multitude of people gives a lesson to live
sparingly.
CXXVI.
Adam, our father, was,
doubtless, a most miserable, plagued man. `Twas a mighty solitariness for him
to be alone in so wide and vast a world; but when he, with Eve, his only
companion and loving consort, obtained Cain their son, then there was great
joy; and so, when Abel was born: but soon after followed great trouble, misery,
and sorrow of heart, when one brother slew another, and Adam thereby lost one
son, and the other was banished and proscribed from his sight. This surely was
a great cross and sorrow, so that the murder caused him more grief than his own
fall; but he, with his loving Eve, were reduced again to a solitary kind of
life. Afterwards, when he was one hundred and thirty years old, he had Seth.
Miserable and lamentable was his fall, for during nine hundred years he saw
God's anger in the death of every human creature. Ah! no human creature can
conceive his perplexities: our sufferings, in comparison with his, are
altogether children's toys; but he was afterwards comforted and refreshed again
with the promise, through faith, of the woman's seed.
CXXVII.
All wild beasts are beasts of
the law, for they live in fear and quaking; they have all swarthy and black
flesh, by reason of their fear, but tame beasts have white flesh, for they are
beasts of grace; they live securely with mankind.
CXXVIII.
After Adam had lost the
righteousness in which God had created him, he was, without doubt, much decayed
in bodily strength, by reason of his anguish and sorrow of heart. I believe
that before the fall he could have seen objects a hundred miles off better than
we can see them at half a mile, and so in proportion with all the other senses.
No doubt, after the fall, he said: "Ah, God! what has befallen me? I am
both blind and deaf." It was a horrible fall; for, before, all creatures
were obedient unto him, so that he could play even with the serpent.
CXXIX.
Twenty years is but a short
time, yet in that short time the world were empty, if there was no marrying and
production of children. God assembles unto himself a Christian Church out of
little children. For I believe, when a little child dies of one years old, that
always one, yea, two thousand die with it, of that age or younger; but when I,
Luther, die, that am sixty-three, I believe that not three-score, or one
hundred at the most, will die with me of that age, or older; for people now
grow not old; not many people live to my years. Mankind is nothing else but a
sheep-shambles, where we are slain and slaughtered by the devil. How many sorts
of deaths are in our bodies? Nothing is therein but death.
CXXX.
It is in the father's power to
disinherit a disobedient child; God commanded, by Moses, that disobedient
children should be stoned to death, so that a father may clearly disinherit a
son, yet with this proviso, that, upon bettering and amendment, he reinstate
him.
CXXXI.
What need had our early
ancestors of other food than fruits and herbs, seeing these tasted so well and
gave such strength? The pomegranates and oranges, without doubt yielded such a
sweet and pleasant smell, that one might have been satisfied with the scent
thereof; and I am sure Adam, before his fall, never wanted to eat a partridge;
but the deluge spoiled all. It follows not, that because God created all
things, we must eat of all things. Fruits were created chiefly as food for
people and for beasts; the latter were created to the end we should laud and
praise God. Whereunto serve the stars, but only to praise their Creator?
Whereunto serve the raven and crows, but to call upon the Lord who nourishes
them.
CXXXII.
There's no doubt that all
created things have degenerated by reason of original sin. The serpent was at
first a lofty, noble animal, eating without fear from Eve's hand, but after it
was cursed, it lost its feet, and was fain to crawl and eat on the ground. It
was precisely because the serpent, at that time, was the most beautiful of
creatures, that Satan selected it for his work, for the devil likes beauty,
knowing that beauty attracts men unto evil. A fool serves not as a provocative
to heresy, nor a deformed maid-servant to libertinism, nor water to
drunkenness, nor rags to vanity. Consider the bodies of children, how much
sweeter and purer and more beautiful they are than those of grown persons; `tis
because childhood approaches nearer to the state of innocence wherein Adam
lived before his fall. In our sad condition, our only consolation is the
expectation of another life. Here below all is incomprehensible.
CXXXIII.
Dr. Luther, holding a rose in
his hand, said: `Tis a magnificent work of God: could a man make but one such
rose as this, he would be thought worthy of all honor, but the gifts of God
lose their value in our eyes, from their very infinity. How wonderful is the
resemblance between children and their parents. A man shall have a half-dozen
sons, all like him as so many peas are like another, and these sons again their
sons, with equal exactness of resemblance, and so it goes on. The heathen
noticed these likenesses. Dido says to Aeneas:
"Si mihi parvulus Aeneas
luderet in aula, Qui te tantum ore referret."
`Twas a form of malediction
among the Greeks, for a man to wish that his enemy's son might be unlike him in
face.
CXXXIV.
`Tis wonderful how completely
the earth is fertilized by currents of water running in all directions and
constantly replenished by snow, rain, and dew.
CXXXV.
He that is now a prince, wants
to be a king or an emperor. A man in love with a girl is ever casting about how
he may come to marry her, and in his eyes there is none fairer than she; when
he has got her, he is soon weary of her, and thinks another more fair, whom
easily he might have had. The poor man thinks, had I but twenty pounds I should
be rich enough; but when he has got that, he would have more. The heart is
inconsistent in all things, as the heathen says: Virtutem praesentem odimus,
sublatam ex oculis quaerimus invidi.
CXXXVI.
One knife cuts better than
another; so, likewise, one that has learned languages and arts can better and
more distinctly teach than another. But in that many of them, as Erasmus and
others, are well versed in languages and arts, and yet err with great hurt,
`tis as with the greater sort of weapons, which are made to kill: we must distinguish
the thing from the abuse.
CXXXVII.
The wickedness of the enemies
of the Word is not human, but altogether devilish. A human creature is wicked
according to the manner and nature of mankind, and according as he is spoiled
through original sin; but when he is possessed and driven of the devil, then
begins the most bitter and cruel combat between him and the woman's seed.
CXXXVIII.
The world will neither hold
God for God, nor the devil for the devil. And if a man were left to himself, to
do after his own kind and nature, he would willingly throw our Lord God out at
the window; for the world regards God nothing at all, as the Psalm says: The
wicked man saith in his heart, there is no God.
CXXXIX.
The god of the world is
riches, pleasure, and pride, wherewith it abuses all the creatures and gifts of
God.
CXL.
We have the nature and manner
of all wild beasts in eating. The wolves eat sheep; we also. The foxes eat
hens, geese, etc.; we also. The hawks and kites eat fowl and birds; we also.
Pikes eat other fish; we also. With oxen, horse, and kine, we also eat salads,
grass, etc.
CXLL.
I much wonder how the heathen
could write such fair and excellent things about death, seeing it is so grisly
and fearful! But when I remember the nature of the world, then I wonder nothing
at all; for they saw great evil and wickedness flourishing among them, and in
their rulers, which sorely grieved them, and they had nothing else to threaten
and terrify their rulers with, but death.
Now, if the heathen so little
regarded death, nay, so highly and honorable esteemed it, how much more so
ought we Christians? For they, poor people, knew less than nothing of the life
eternal, while we know and are instructed in it; yet, when we only speak of
death, we are all affrighted.
The cause hereof is our sins;
we live worse than the heathen, and therefore cannot justly complain, for the
greater our sins, the more fearful is death. See those who have rejected God's
Word: when they are at the point of death, and are put in mind of the day of judgment,
how fearfully do they tremble and shake.
CXLII.
Here, today, have I been
pestered with the knaverises and lies of a baker, brought before me for using
false weights, though such matters concern the magistrate rather than the
divine. Yet if no one were to check the thefts of these bakers, we should have
a fine state of things.
CXLIII.
There is not a more dangerous
evil than a flattering, dissembling counsellor. While he talks, his advice has
hands, and feet, but when it should be put in practice, it stands like a mule,
which will not be spurred forward.
CXLIV.
There are three sorts of
people: the first, the common sort, who live secure without remorse of
conscience, acknowledging not their corrupt manners and natures, insensible of
God's wrath, against their sins, and careless thereof. The second, those who
through the law are scared, feel God's anger, and strive and wrestle with
despair. The third, those that acknowledge their sins and God's merited wrath,
feel themselves conceived and born in sin, and therefore deserving of
perdition, but, notwithstanding, attentively hearken to the gospel, and believe
that God, out of grace, for the sake of Jesus Christ, forgives sins, and so are
justified before God, and afterwards show the fruits of their faith by all
manner of good works.
CXLC.
That matrimony is matrimony,
that the hand is a hand, that goods are goods, people well understand; but to
believe that matrimony is God's creation and ordinance, that the hands, that the
goods, as food and raiment, and other creatures we use, are given and presented
unto us of God, `tis God's special work and grace when men believe it.
CXLVI.
The heart of a human creature
is like quicksilver, now here, now there; this day so, to-morrow otherwise.
Therefore vanity is a poor miserable thing, as Ecclesiasticus says. A man
desires and longs after things that are uncertain and of doubtful result, but
condemns that which is certain, done, and accomplished. Therefore what God
gives us we will not have; for which cause Christ would not govern on earth,
but gave it over to the devil, saying, "Rule thou." God is of another
nature, manner, and mind. I, he says, am God, and therefore change not; I hold
fast and keep sure my promises and threatenings.
CXLVII.
He must be of a high and great
spirit that undertakes to serve the people in body and soul, for he must suffer
the utmost danger and unthankfulness. Therefore Christ said to Peter, Simon,
etc., "Lovest thou me?" repeating it three times together. Then he
said: "Feed my sheep:" as if he would say, "Wilt thou be an
upright minister, and a shepherd? then love must only do it, thy love to me;
for how else could ye endure unthankfulness, and spend wealth and health,
meeting only with persecution and ingratitude?"
CXLVIII.
The highest wisdom of the
world is to busy itself with temporal, earthly, and ephemeral things; and when
these go ill, it says, Who would have thought it? But faith is a certain and
sure expectation of that which a man hopes for, making no doubt of that which
yet he sees not. A true Christian does not say: I had not thought it, but is
most certain that the beloved cross is near at hand; and thus is not afraid
when it goes ill with him, and he is tormented. But the world, and those who live
secure in it, cannot bear misfortune; they go on continually dancing in
pleasure and delight, like the rich glutton in the gospel. He could not spare
the scraps to poor Lazarus; but Lazarus belongs to Christ, and will take his
part with him.
CXLIX.
The world seems to me like a
decayed house, David and the prophets being the spars, and Christ the main
pillar in the midst, that supports all.
CL.
As all people feel they must
die, each seeks immortality here on earth, that he may be had in everlasting
remembrance. Some great princes and kings seek it by raising great columns of
stone, and high pyramids, great churches, costly and glorious palaces, castles,
etc. Soldiers hunt after praise and honor, by obtaining famous victories. The
learned seek an everlasting name by writing books. With these, and such like
things, people think to be immortal. But as to the true, everlasting, and
incorruptible honor and eternity of God, no man thinks or looks after it. Ah!
we are poor, silly, miserable people!
CLI.
To live openly among the
people is best; Christ so lived and walked, openly and publicly, here on earth,
amongst the people, and told his disciples to do the like. `Tis in cells and
corners that the wicked wretches, the monks and nuns, lead shameful lives. But
openly, and among people, a man must live decently and honestly.
CLII.
To comfort a sorrowful
conscience is much better than to posses many kingdoms; yet the world regards
it not; nay, condemns it, calling us rebels, disturbers of the peace, and
blasphemers of God, turning and altering religion. They will be their own
prophets, and prophesy to themselves; but this is to us a great grief of heart.
The Jews said of Christ: If we suffer him to go on in this manner, the Romans
will come and take from us land and people. After they had slain Christ, did
the Romans come or not? Yes, they came, and slew a hundred thousand of them,
and destroyed their city. Even so the condemners and enemies of the Word will
disturb the peace, and turn Germany upside down. We bring evil upon ourselves,
for we willfully oppose the truth.
CLIII.
If Moses had continued to work
his miracles in Egypt but two or three years, the people would have become
accustomed thereto, and heedless, as we who are accustomed to the sun and moon,
hold them in no esteem.
CLIV.
Abraham was held in no honor
among the Canaanites, for all the wells he had dug the neighbors filled up, or
took away by force, and said to him: "Wilt thou not suffer it? then pack
thee hence and be gone, for thou art with us a stranger and a new comer."
In like manner Isaac was despised. The faith possessed by the beloved
patriarchs, I am not able sufficiently to admire. How firmly and constantly did
they believe that God was gracious unto them, though they suffered such
exceeding trouble and adversity.
CLV.
If the great pains and labor I
take sprang not from the love, and for the sake of him that died for me, the
world could not give me money enough to write only one book, or to translate
the Bible. I desire not to be rewarded and paid of the world for my books; the
world is too poor to give me satisfaction; I have not asked the value of one
penny of my master the Prince Elector of Saxony, since I have been here. The
world is nothing but a reversed Decalogue, or the ten commandments backwards, a
mask and picture of the devil, all condemners of God, all blasphemers, all
disobedient; harlotry, pride, theft, murder, etc., are not almost ripe for the
slaughter.
CLVI.
Dr. Luther's wife complaining
to him of the indocilitry and untrustworthiness of servants, he said: A
faithful and good servant is a real God-send, but, truly, `tis a rare bird in
the land. We find every one complaining of the idleness and profigacy of this
class of people; we must govern them, Turkish fashion, so much work, so much
victuals, as Pharaoh dealt with the Israelites in Egypt.
CLVII.
The philosophers, and learned
among the heathen, had innumerable speculations as to God, the soul, and the
life everlasting, all uncertain and doubtful, they being without God's Word;
while to us God has given his most sweet and saving Word, pure and incorrupt;
yet we condemn it. It is naught, says the buyer. When we have a thing, how good
soever, we are soon weary of it, and regard it not. The world remains the
world, which neither loves nor endures righteousness, but it is ruled by a
certain few, even as a little boy of twelve years old, rules, governs, and
keeps a hundred great and strong oxen upon a pasture.
CLVIII.
Whoso rules on his money prospers
not. The richest monarchs have had ill fortune, have been destroyed and slain
in the wars; while men with but small store of money have had great fortune and
victory; as the emperor Maximilian overcame the Venetians, and continued
warring ten years with them, though they were exceedingly rich and powerful.
Therefore we ought not to trust in money or wealth, or depend thereon. I hear
that the prince elector, George, begins to be covetous, which is a sign of his
death very shortly. When I saw Dr. Gode begin to tell his puddings hanging in
the chimney, I told him he would not live long, and so it fell out; and when I
begin to trouble myself about brewing, malting, cooking, etc., then shall I
soon die.
CLIX.
We should always be ready when
God knocks, prepared to take our leave of this world like Christians. For even
as the small beast kills the stag, leaping upon his head, and sitting between
his horns, and eating out his brains, or catches him fast by the throat, and
gnaws it asunder, even so the devil, when he possesses a human creature, is not
soon or easily pulled from him, but leads him into despair, and hurts him both
in soul and body; as St Peter says "He goeth about like a roaring
lion."
CLX.
Before Noah's flood the world
was highly learned, by reason men lived a long time, and so attained great
experience and wisdom; now, ere we begin rightly to come to the true knowledge
of a thing, we lie down and die. God will not have that we should attain a
higher knowledge of things.
CLXI.
Mammon has two properties; it
makes us secure, first, when it goes well with us, and then we live without
fear of God at all; secondly, when it goes ill with us, then we tempt God, fly
from him, and seek after another God.
CLXII.
I saw a dog, at Lintz in
Austria, that was taught to go with a hand-basket to the butchers shambles for
meat; when other dogs came about him, and sought to take the meat out of the
basket, he set it down, and fought lustily with them; but when he saw they were
too strong for him, he himself would snatch out the first piece of meat, lest
he should lose all. Even so does now our emperor Charles; who, after having
long protected spiritual benefices, seeing that every prince takes possession
of monasteries, himself takes possession of bishoprics, as just now he has
seized upon those of Utrecht and Liege.
CLXIII.
A covetous farmer, well known
at Erfurt, carried his corn to sell there in the market, but selling it at too
dear a rate, no man would buy of him, or give him his price. He being thereby moved
to anger, said: "I will not sell it cheaper, but rather carry it home
again, and give it to the mice." When he had come home with it, an
infinity of mice and rats flocked into his house, and devoured up all his corn.
And, next day, going out to see his grounds, which were newly sown, he found
that all the seed was eaten up, while no hurt at all was done to the grounds of
his neighbors. This certainly was a just punishment from God, a merited token
of his wrath.
Three rich farmers have
lately, God be praised, hanged themselves: these wretches that rob the whole
country, deserve such punishments; for the dearth at this time is a willful
dearth. God has given enough, but the devil has possessed such wicked
cormorants to withhold it. They are thieves and murderers of their poor
neighbors. Christ will say unto them at the last day: "I was hungry, and
ye have not fed me." Do not think, thou that sellest thy corn so dear,
that thou shalt escape punishment, for thou art an occasion of the deaths and
famishing of the poor; the devil will fetch thee away. They that fear God and
trust in him, pray for their daily bread, and against such robbers as thou,
that either thou mayest be put to shame, or be reformed.
CLXIV.
A man that depends on the
riches and honors of this world, forgetting God and the welfare of his soul, is
like a little child that holds a fair apple in the hand, of agreeable exterior,
promising goodness, but within `tis rotten and full of worms.
CLXV.
Where great wealth is, there
are also all manner of sins; for through wealth comes pride, through pride
dissension, through dissension, wars, poverty; through poverty, great distress
and misery. Therefore, they that are rich, must yield a strict and great
account; for to whom much is given, of him much will be required.
CLXVI.
Riches, understanding, beauty,
are fair gifts of God, but we abuse them shamefully. Yet worldly wisdom and wit
are evils, when the cause engaged in is evil, for no man will yield his own
particular conceit; every one will be right. Much better is it that one be of a
fair and comely complexion in the face, for the hard lesson, sickness, may come
and take that away; but the self-conceited mind is not so soon brought to
reason.
CLXVII.
Wealth is the smallest thing
on earth, the least gift that God has bestowed on mankind. What is it in
comparison with God's Word - what, in comparison with corporal gifts, as
beauty, health, etc.? - nay, what is it to the gifts of the mind, as
understanding, wisdom, etc.? Yet are men so eager after it, that no labor,
pains, or risk is regarded in the acquisition of riches. Wealth has in it
neither material, format, efficient, nor final cause, nor anything else that is
good; therefore our Lord God commonly gives riches to those from whom he
withholds spiritual good.
CLXVIII.
St John says: "He that
hath this world's goods, and seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his
bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him?" And
Christ: "He that desireth of thee, give to him" - that is, to him that
needs and is in want; not to idle, lazy, wasteful fellows, who are commonly the
greatest beggers, and who, though we give them much and often are nothing
helped thereby. Yet when one is truly poor, to him I will give with all my
heart, according to my ability. And no man should forget the Scripture:
"He that hath two coats, let him part with one;" meaning all manner
of apparel that one has need of, according to his state and calling, as well
for credit as for necessary. As also, by "the daily bread," is
understood all maintenance necessary for the body.
CLXIX.
Lendest thou aught? so gettest
thou it not again. Even if it be restored, it is not so soon as it ought to be
restored, nor so well and good, and thou losest a friend thereby.
CLXX.
Before I translated the New
Testament out of the Greek, all longed after it; when it was done, their
longing lasted scarce four weeks. Then they desired the Books of Moses; when I
had translated these, they had enough thereof in a short time. After that, they
would have the Psalms; of these they were soon weary, and desired other books.
So will it be with the Book of Ecclesiasticus, which they now long for, and
about which I have taken great pains. All is acceptable until our giddy brains
be satisfied; afterwards we let things lie, and seek after new.
CLXXI.
Idolatry is all manner of
seeming holiness and worshipping, let these counterfeit spiritualities shine
outwardly as glorious and fair as they may; in a word, all manner of devotion in
those that we would serve God without Christ the Mediator, his Word and
command. In popedom it was held a work of the greatest sanctity for the monks
to sit in their cells and meditate of God, and of his wonderful works; to be
kindled with zeal, kneeling on their knees, praying, and having their imaginary
contemplations of celestial objects, with such supposed devotion, that they
wept for joy. In these their conceits, they banished all desires and thoughts
of women, and what else is temporal and evanescent. They seemed to meditate
only of God, and of his wonderful works. Yet all these seeming holy actions of
devotion, which the wit and wisdom of man holds to be angelical sanctity, are
nothing else but works of the flesh. All manner of religion, where people serve
God without his Word and command, is simply idolatry, and the more holy and
spiritual such a religion seems, the more hurtful and venomous it is; for it
leads people away from the faith of Christ, and makes them rely and depend upon
their own strength, works, and righteousness. In like manner, all kinds of
orders of monks, fasts, prayers, hairy shirts, the austerities of the
Capuchins, who in popedome are held to be the most holy of all, are mere works
of the flesh; for the monks hold they are holy, and shall be saved, not through
Christ, whom they view as a severe and angry judge, but through the rules of
their order.
No man can make the papists
believe that the private mass is the greatest blaspheming of God, and the
highest idolatry upon earth, an abomination the like to which has never been in
Christendom since the time of the apostles; for they are blinded and hardened
therein, so that their understanding and knowledge of God, and of all divine
matters, is perverted and erroneous. They hold that to be the most upright and
greatest service of God, which, in truth, is the greatest and most abominable
idolatry. And again, they hold that for idolatry which, in truth, is the
upright and most acceptable service of God, the acknowledging Christ, and believing
in him. But we that truly believe in Christ, and are of his mind, we, God be
praised, know and judge all things; but are judged of no human creature.
CLXXII.
Dr. Carlstad asked me: Should
a man, out of good intention, erect a pious work without God's Word or command,
does he herein serve a true or a strange God? Luther answered: A man honors God
and calls upon him, to the end he may expect comfort, help, and all good from
him. Now, if this same honor and calling upon God be done according to God's Word
- that is, when a man expects from him all graces for the sake of his promises
made unto us in Christ, then he honors the true, living, and everlasting God.
But if a man take in hand a work or a service, out of his own devotion, as he
thinks good, thereby to appease God's anger, or to obtain forgiveness of sins,
everlasting life, and salvation, as is the manner of all hypocrites and seeming
holy workers, then, I say flatly, he honors and worships an idol in heart; and
it helps him nothing at all, that he thinks he does it to the honor of the true
God; for that which is not faith in sin.
CLXXIII.
Hypocrites and idolators are
of the same quality with singers, who will scarce sing when asked to do so,
but, when not desired, begin, and never leave off. Even so with the false
workers of holiness; when God orders them to obey his commands, which are to
love one's neighbor, to help him with advice, with lending, giving,
admonishing, comforting, etc., no man can bring them to this; but, on the
contrary, they stick to that which they themselves make choice of, pretending
that this is the best way to honor and serve God - a great delusion of theirs.
They plague and torment their bodies with fasting, praying, singing, reading,
hard lying, etc.; they affect great humility and holiness, and do all things
with vast zeal, fervency, and incessant devotion. But such as the service and
work is, such will also, the reward be, as Christ himself says: "In vain
do they worship me, teaching for doctrine the commandments of men."
CLXXIV.
The idolatry of Moloch had, I
apprehend, a great show, as though it were a worship more acceptable and
pleasing to God than the common service commanded by Moses; hence many people
who, in outward show, were of devout holiness, when they intended to perform an
acceptable service and honor to God, as they imagined, offered up and
sacrificed their sons and daughters, thinking, no doubt, that herein they were
following the example of Abraham, and doing an act very acceptable and pleasing
to God.
Against this idolatry God's
prophets preached with burning zeal, calling it, not offerings to God, but to
idols and devils, as the 106th Psalm shows, and Jeremiah, chap. vii. and xxii.
But they held the prophets to be impostors and accursed heretics.
This worshipping of idols was
very frequent in popedom, in my time and still, though in another manner; the
papists in popedom being esteemed holy people that give one or more of their
children to the monasteries, to become either monks or nuns, that so they may
serve God, s they say, day and night. Hence the proverb: Bless the mother of
the child that is made a spiritual person! True, these sons and daughters in
popedom are not burned and offered to idols corporally, as were the Jewish
children, yet, which is far worse, they are thrust into the throat of the devil
spiritually, who, through his disciples, the pope and the shaven crew,
lamentably murders their souls with false doctrines.
The Holy Scripture often
mentions Moloch, as does Lyra; and the commentaries of the Jews say, it was an
idol made of copper and brass, like a man holding his hands before him, wherein
they put fiery coals. When the image was made very hot, a father approached,
and offering to the idol, took his child, and thrust it into the glittering hands
of the idol, whereby the child was consumed and burned to death. Meantime, they
made a loud noise with timbrels, and cymbals, and horns, to the end the parents
should not hear the pitiful crying of the child. The prophets write, that Ahab
offered his son in this manner.
CLXXV.
The calves of Jeroboam still
remain in the world, and will remain to the last day; not that any man now
makes calves like Jeroboam's, but upon whatsoever a man depends or trusts - God
set aside - this is the calves of Jeroboam, that is, other and strange gods,
honored and worshipped instead of the only, true, living, and eternal God, who
only can and will help and comfort in all need. In like manner also, all such
as rely and depend upon their art, wisdom, strength, sanctity, riches, honor,
power, or anything else, under what title or name soever, on which the world
builds, make and worship the calves of Jeraboam. For they trust in and depend
on vanishing creatures, which is worshipping of idols and idolatry. We easily
fall into idolatry, for we are inclined thereunto by nature, and coming to us
by inheritance, it seems pleasant.
CLXXVI.
St Paul shows in these words:
"When ye knew not God, ye did service," etc., that is, when as yet ye
knew not God or what God's will was towards you, ye served those who by nature
were no gods; ye served the dreams and thoughts of our hearts, wherewith,
against God's Word, ye feigned to yourselves a God that suffered himself to be
conciliated with such works and worshippings as your devotion and good intention
made choice of. For all idolatry in the world arises from this, that people by
nature have had the common knowledge, that there is a God, without which
idolatry would remain unpracticed. With this knowledge engrafted in mankind,
they have, without God's Word, fancied all manner of ungodly opinions of God,
and held and esteemed these for divine truths, imagining a God otherwise than,
by nature, he is.
CLXXVII.
He that goes from the gospel
to the law, thinking to be saved by good works, falls as uneasily, as he who
falls from the true service of God to idolatry; for, without Christ, all is
idolatry and fictitious imaginings of God, whether of the Turkish Koran, of the
pope,s decrees, or Moses law; if a man think thereby to be justified and saved
before God, he is undone.
When a man will serve God, he
must not look upon that which he does; not upon the work, but how it ought to
be done, and whether God has commanded it or no; seeing, as Samuel says, that
"God has more pleasure in obedience, than in burnt sacrifices."
Whoso hearkens not to God's
voice, is an idolater, though he performs the highest and most heavy service of
God. `Tis the very nature of idolatry not to make choice of that which is esteemed
easy and light, but of that which is great and heavy, as we see in the friars
and monks, who have been constantly devising new worshippings of God; but,
forasmuch that God in his Word has not commanded these, they are idolatry, and
blasphemy. All these sins, they who are in the function of preaching ought
undauntedly and freely to reprove, not regarding men's high dignities and
powers. For the prophets, as we see in Hosea, reproved and threatened not only
the house of Israel in general, but also, in particular, the priests, ay, the
king himself, and the whole court. They cared not for the great danger that
might follow from the magistrate being so openly assailed, or that themselves
thereby should fall into displeasure or contempt, and their preaching be
esteemed rebellious. They were impelled by the far greater danger, lest by such
examples of the higher powers, the subjects also should be seduced into sin.
CLXXVIII.
The papists took the
invocation of saints from the heathen, who divided God into numberless images
and idols, and ordained to each its particular office and work.
These the papists, void of all
shame and Christianity, imitated, thereby denying God's almighty power; every
man, out of God's Word, spinning to himself a particular opinion, according to
his own fancy; as one of their priests, celebrating mass, when about to
consecrate many oblations at the altar at once, thought it would not be
congruously spoken, or according to grammar rules, to say, "This is my
body," so said, "These are my bodies;" and afterwards highly
extolled his device, saying: "If I had not been so good a grammarian, I
had brought in a heresy, and consecrated but one oblation."
Such like fellows does the
world produce; grammarians, logicians, rhetoricians, and philosophers, all
falsifying the Holy Writ, and sophisticating it with their arts, whereas God
ordered and appointed it. Divinity should be empress, and philosophy and other
arts merely her servants, not to govern and master her, as Servetus, Campanus,
and other seducers would do. God preserves his church, which by him is carried
as a child in the mother's womb, and defends her from such philosophical
divinity.
The invocation of saints is a
most abominable blindness and heresy; yet the papists will not give it up. The
pope's greatest profit arises from the dead; for the calling on dead saints
brings him infinite sums of money and riches, far more than he gets from the
living. But thus goes the world; superstition, unbelief, false doctrine,
idolatry, obtain more credit and profit than the upright, true, and pure
religion.
CLXXIX.
God and God's worship are
relatives; the one cannot be without the other; for God must always be the God
of some people or nation, and is always in predicamento relationis. God
will have some to call upon him and honor him; for, to have a God and to honor
him, go together. Therefore, whoso brings in a divine worship of his own
selection, without God's command, is an adulterer, like a married woman who
consents to another man, seeking another and not the upright true God, and it
avails him nothing that he thinks he does God service herein.
CLXXX.
In all creatures are a
declaration and a signification of the Holy Trinity. First the substance
signifies the almighty power of God the Father. Secondly, the form and shape
declare the wisdom of God the Son; and, thirdly, the power and strength is a
sign of the Holy Ghost. So that God is present in all creatures.
CLXXXI.
In the gospel of St John,
chap. iii., is plainly and directly shown the difference of the persons, in the
highest and greatest work that God accomplished for us poor human creatures, in
justifying and saving us; for there it is plainly written of the Father, that
he loved the world, and gave to the world his only begotten Son. These are two
several persons - Father, and Son. The Father loves the world; and gives unto
it his Son. The Son suffers himself to be given to the world, and "to be
lifted up on the cross, as the serpent was lifted up in the wilderness, that
whosoever believed in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life." To
this work comes afterwards the third person, the Holy Ghost, who kindles faith
in the heart through the Word, and so regenerates us, and makes us the children
of God.
This article, though it be
taught most clearly in the New Testament, yet has been always assaulted and
opposed in the highest measure, so that the holy evangelist, St John, for the
confirmation of this article, was constrained to write his gospel. Then came
presently that heretic, Cerinthus, teaching out of Moses, that there was but
one God, and concluding thence that Christ could not be God, or God man.
But let me stick to God's Word
in the Holy Scripture, namely, that Christ is true God with God the Father, and
that the Holy Ghost is true God, and yet there are not three Gods, nor three
substances as three men, three angels, three sons, three windows, etc. No: God
is not separated or divided in such manner in his substance, but there is only
and alone one divine essence, and no more.
Therefore, although there be
three persons, God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, yet
notwithstanding, we must not divide nor separate the substance, for there is
but only one God in one only undivided substance, as St Paul clearly speaks of
Christ, Coloss.i., that he is the express image of the invisible God, the first
born of all creatures; for through him all things are created that are in
heaven and on earth, visible, etc., and all is through and in him created, and
he is before all, and all things consist in him.
Now what the third person is,
the holy evangelist, St John, teaches, chap. xv., where he says: "But when
the Comforter is come, which I will send unto you from the Father, the Spirit
of truth which proceeds from the Father, he shall testify of me." Here
Christ speaks not only of the office and work of the Holy Ghost, but also of
his substance and faith; he goes out or proceeds from the Father, that is, his
going out, or his proceeding, is without all beginning, and everlasting. Therefore
the holy prophet Joel gives him the name, and calls him, "the Spirit of
the Lord."
Now, although this article
seem strange or foolish, what matters it? `tis not the question whether it be
so or no, but whether it be grounded on God's Word or no. If it be God's Word,
as most surely it is, then let us make no doubt thereof; He will not lie;
therefore, let us keep close to God's Word, and not dispute how Father, Son,
and Holy Ghost can be one God; for we, as poor wretches, cannot know how it is
that we laugh; or how with our eyes, we can see a high mountain ten miles off;
or how it is, that when we sleep, in body we are dead, and yet live. This small
knowledge we cannot attain unto; no, though we took to our help the advice and
art of all the wise in the world, we are not able to know the least things
which concern ourselves; and yet we would climb up with our human wit and
wisdom, and presume to comprehend what God is in his incomprehensible majesty.
CLXXXII.
The chief lesson and study in divinity
is, that we learn well and rightly to know Christ, who is therein very
graciously pictured forth unto us. We take pains to conciliate the good will
and friendship of men, that so they may show us a favorable countenance; how
much the more ought we to conciliate our Lord Jesus, that so he may be gracious
unto us. St Peter says: "Grow up in the knowledge of Jesus Christ,"
of that compassionate Lord and Master, whom all should learn to know him only
out of the Scriptures, where he says: "Search the Scriptures, for they do
testify of me." St John says: "In the beginning was the Word, and the
Word was with God, and the Word was God," etc. The apostle Thomas also
calls Christ, God; were he says: "My Lord and my God." In like manner
St Paul, Rom. ix., speaks of Christ, that he is God; where he says: "Who
is God over all, blessed forever, Amen." And Coloss. ii., "In Christ
dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily;" that is, substantially.
Christ must needs be true God, seeing he, through himself, fulfilled and
overcame the law; for most certain it is, that no one else could have
vanquished the law, angel or human creature, but Christ only, so that it cannot
hurt those that believe in him; therefore, most certainly he is the Son of God,
and natural God. Now if we comprehend Christ in this manner, as the Holy
Scripture displays him before us, then certain it is, that we can neither err
nor be put to confusion; and may then easily judge what is right to be held of
all manner of divine qualities, religions, and worship, that are used and
practiced in the universal world. Were this picturing of Christ removed out of
our sight, or darkened in us, undeniably there must needs follow utter
disorder. For human and natural religion, wisdom, and understanding, cannot
judge aright or truly the laws of God; therein has been and still is exhausted
the art of all philosophers, all the learned and worldly-wise among the
children of men. For the law rules and governs mankind; therefore the law
judges mankind, and not mankind the law.
If Christ be not God, then
neither the Father nor the Holy Ghost is God; for our article of faith speaks
thus: "Christ is God, with the Father and the Holy Ghost." Many there
are who talk much of the Godhead of Christ, as the pope, and others; but they
discourse thereof as a blind man speaks of colors. Therefore, when I hear
Christ speak, and say: "Come to me, all ye that are weary and heavy laden,
and I will give you rest," then do I believe steadfastly that the whole
Godhead speaks in an undivided and unseparated substance. Wherefore he that
preaches a God to me that died not for me the death on the cross, that God will
I not receive.
He that has this article, has
the chief and principal article of faith, though to the world it seems
unmeaning and ridiculous. Christ says: The Comforter which I will send, shall
not depart from you, but will remain with you, and will make you able to endure
all manner of tribulations and evil. When Christ says: I will pray to the
Father, then he speaks as a human creature, or as very man; but when he says: I
will do this, or that, as before he said, I will send the Comforter, then he
speaks as very God. In this manner do I learn my article, "That Christ is
both God and man."
I, out of my own experience,
am able to witness, that Jesus Christ is true God; I know full well and have
found what the name of Jesus had done for me. I have often been so near death,
that I thought verily now must I die, because I teach his Word to the wicked
world, and acknowledge him; but always he mercifully put life into me,
refreshed and comforted me. Therefore, let us use diligence only to keep him,
and then all is safe, although the devil were ever so wicked and crafty, and
the world ever so evil and false. Let whatsoever will or can befall me, I will
surely cleave by my sweet Saviour Christ Jesus, for in him am I baptized; I can
neither do nor know anything but only what he has taught me.
The Holy Scriptures,
especially St Paul, everywhere ascribe unto Christ that which he gives to the
Father, namely, the divine almighty power; so that he can give grace, and peace
of conscience, forgiveness of sins, life, victory over sin, and death, and the
devil. Now, unless St Paul would rob God of his honor, and give it to another
that is not God, he dared not ascribe such properties and attributes to Christ,
if he were not true God; and God himself says, Isa. xlii., "I will not
give my glory to another." And, indeed, no man can give that to another
which he has not himself; but, seeing Christ gives grace and peace, the Holy
Ghost also, and redeems from the power of the devil, sin and death, so is it
most sure that he has an endless, immeasurable, almighty power, equal with the
father.
Christ brings also peace, but
not as the apostles brought it, through preaching; he gives it as a Creator, as
his own proper creature. The Father creates and gives life, grace, and peace;
and even so gives the Son the same gifts. Now, to give grace, peace,
everlasting life, forgiveness of sins, to justify, to save, to deliver from
death and hell, surely these are not the works of any creature, but of the sole
majesty of God, things which the angels themselves can neither create nor give.
Therefore, such works pertain to the high majesty, honor, and glory of God, who
is the only and true Creator of all things. We must think of no other God than
Christ; that God which speaks not out of Christ's mouth, is not God. God, in
the Old Testament, bound himself to the throne of grace; there was the place
where he would hear, so long as the policy and government of Moses stood and
flourished. In like manner, he will still hear no man or human creature, but
only through Christ. As number of the Jews ran to and fro burning incense, and
offerings here and there, and seeking God in various places, not regarding the
tabernacle, so it goes now; we seek God everywhere; but not seeking him in
Christ, we find him nowhere.
CLXXXIII.
The feast we call Annunciatio
Mariae, when the angel came to Mary, and brought her the message from God,
that she should conceive his Son, may be fitly called the "Feast of
Christ's Humanity," for then began our deliverance. The mystery of the
humanity of Christ, that he sunk himself into our flesh, is beyond all human
understanding.
CLXXXIV.
Christ lived three and thirty
years, and went up thrice every year to Jerusalem, making ninety-nine times he
went thither. If the pope could show that Christ had been but once at Rome,
what a bragging and boasting would he make! yet Jerusalem was destroyed to the
ground.
CLXXXV.
St Paul teaches, that Christ
was born, to the end he might restore and bring everything to the state in
which it was created at the beginning of the world; that is, to bring us to the
knowledge of ourselves and our Creator, that we might learn to know who and what
we have been, and who and what we now are; namely, that we were created after
God's likeness, and afterwards, according to the likeness of man; that we were
the devil's wizard through sin, utterly lost and destroyed; and that now we may
be delivered from sin again, and become pure, justified, and saved.
CLXXXVI.
On the day of the conception
of our Saviour Christ, we that are preachers ought diligently to lay before the
people, and thoroughly imprint in their hearts, the history of this feast,
which is given by St Luke in plain and simple language. And we should joy and
delight in these blessed things, more than in all the treasure on earth,
disputing not how it came to pass, that he, who fills heaven and earth, and
whom neither heaven nor earth is able to comprehend, was enclosed in the pure
body of his mother. Such disputations impede our joys, and give us occasion to
doubt.
Bernard occupies a whole
sermon upon this feast, in laud of the Virgin Mary, forgetting the great author
of comfort, that this day God was made man. True, we cannot but extol and
praise Mary, who was so highly favored of the Lord, but when the Creator
himself comes, who delivers us from the devil's power, etc., him, neither we
nor angels can sufficiently honor, praise, worship, and adore.
The Turk himself, who believes
there is only once God, who has created all things, permits Christ to remain a
prophet, though he denies that he is the only begotten, true, and natural Son
of God.
But I, God be praised, have
learned out of the Holy Scripture, and by experience in my trials, temptations,
and fierce combats against the devil, that this article of Christ's humanity is
most sure and certain; for nothing has more or better helped me in high
spiritual temptations, than my comfort in this, that Christ, the true
everlasting Son of God, is our flesh and bone, as St Paul says to the
Ephesians, chap. v. "We are members of his body, of his flesh and bone; he
sitteth at the right hand of God, and maketh intercession for us." When I
take hold on this shield of faith, then I soon drive away that wicked one, with
all his fiery darts.
God, from the beginning, has
held fast to this article, and powerfully defended the same against all
heretics, the pope, and the Turk; and afterwards confirmed it with many
miraculous signs, so that all who have opposed the same at last have been
brought to confusion.
CLXXXVII.
All the wisdom of the world is
childish foolishness in comparison with the acknowledgment of Christ. For what
is more wonderful than the unspeakable mystery, that the Son of God, the image
of the eternal Father, took upon him the nature of man. Doubtless, he helped
his supposed father, Joseph, to build houses; for Joseph was a carpenter. What
will they of Nazareth think at the day of judgment, when they shall see Christ
sitting in his divine majesty; surely they will be astonished, and say:
"Lord, thou helpest build my house, how comest thou now to this high
honor?"
When Jesus was born,
doubtless, he cried and wept like other children, and his mother tended him as
other mothers tend their children. As he grew up, he was submissive to his
parents, and waited on them, and carried his supposed father's dinner to him,
and when he came back, Mary, no doubt, often said: "My dear little Jesus,
where hast thou been?" He that takes not offence at the simple, lowly, and
mean course of the life of Christ, is endued with high divine art and wisdom;
yea, has a special gift of God in the Holy Ghost. Let us ever bear in mind,
that our blessed Saviour thus humbled and abased himself, yielding even to the
contumelious death of the cross, for the comfort of us poor, miserable and
damned creatures.
CLXXXVIII.
If the emperor should wash a
begger's feet, as the French king used to do on Maunday, Thursday, and the
emperor Charles yearly, how would such humility be extolled and praised! But
though the Son of God, Lord of all emperors, kings, princes, in the deepest
measure humbled himself, even to the death of the cross, yet no man wonders
thereat, except only the small heap of the faithful who acknowledge and worship
self, indeed, enough, when he was held to be the man most despised, plagued,
and smitten of God, (Isaiah liii.,) and for our sakes underwent and suffered
shame.
CLXXXIX.
We cannot vex the devil more
than by teaching, preaching, singing and talking of Jesus. Therefore I like it
well, when with sounding voice we sing in the church: Et homo factus est; et
verbum caro factum est. The devil cannot endure these words, and flies
away, for he well feels what is contained therein. Oh, how happy a thing were
it, did we find as much joy in these words as the devil is affrighted at them.
But the world condemns God's words and works, because they are delivered to
them in a plain and simple manner. Well, the good and godly are not offended
therewith, for they have regard to the everlasting celestial treasure and
wealth which therein lies hid, and which is so precious and glorious, that the
angels delight in beholding it. Some there are who take offence, that now, and
then in the pulpits we say: Christ was a carpenter's son, and as a blasphemer
and rebel, he was put on the cross, and hanged between two malefactors.
But seeing we preach
continually of this article, and in our children's creed, say: That our Saviour
Christ suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried, etc.,
for our sins, why, then, should be not say Christ was a carpenter's son?
especially seeing that he is clearly so named in the gospel, when the people
wondered at his doctrine and wisdom, and said: "How cometh this to pass?
Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary?" (Mark, vi.)
CXC.
Christ, our High-priest, is
ascended into heaven, and sits on the right hand of God the Father, where, without
ceasing, he makes intercession for us, (see Romans viii.), where St Paul, with
very excellent, glorious words, pictures Christ to us; as in his death, he is a
sacrifice offered up for sins; in his resurrection, a conqueror; in his
ascension, a king; in making mediation and intercession, a high-priest. For, in
the law of Moses, the high-priest only went into the Most Holiest to pray for
the people.
Christ will remain a priest
and king, though he was never consecrated by any papist bishop or greased by
any of those shavelings; but he was ordained, and consecrated by God himself,
and by him anointed, where he says: "Thou art a priest forever." Here
the word Thou is bigger than the stone in the Revelations of John, which
was longer than three hundred leagues. And the second psalm says: "I have
set my King upon my holy hill of Zion." Therefore he will sure remain
sitting, and all that believe in him."
God says: "Thou art a
priest for ever, after the order of Melchizedek." Therefore let us depend
on this priest, for he is faithful and true, given unto us of God, and loving
us more than his own life, as he showed by his bitter passion and death. Ah!
how happy and blessed were the man that could believe this from his heart.
"The Lord sware and will
not repent, thou art a priest." This is the most glorious sentence in the
whole psalms, where God declares unto us, that this Christ shall be our bishop
and high-priest, who, without ceasing, shall make intercession for those that
are his, and none other besides him. It shall be neither Caiaphas, nor Annas,
Peter, Paul, nor the pope, but Christ, only Christ; therefore let us take our
refuge in him. The epistle to the Hebrews makes good use of this verse.
It is, indeed, a great and a
glorious comfort (which every good and godly Christian would not miss, or be
without, for all the honor and wealth in the world) that we know and believe
that Christ, our high-priest, sits on the right hand of God, praying and
mediating for us without ceasing - the true pastor and bishop of our souls,
which the devil cannot tear our of his hands.
But then what a crafty and
mighty spirit the devil must be, who can affright, and with his fiery darts
draw the hearts of good and godly people from this excelling comfort, and make
them entertain other cogitations of Christ; that he is not their high-priest,
but complains of them to God; that he is not the bishop of their souls, but a
stern and an angry judge. The Lord said to Christ: "Rule in the midst of
thine enemies." On the other hand, the devil claims to be prince and God
of the world. He is, therefore, the sworn enemy of Jesus Christ and of his
Word, and of those who follow that Word, sincerely and without guile. `Tis
impossible for Jesus Christ and the devil ever to remain under the same roof.
The one must yield to the other - the devil to Christ. The Jews and the
Apostles were for awhile under the same roof, and the Jews plagued and
persecuted the Apostles and their followers, but after awhile were themselves
thrust out by the Romans. As little can the Lutherans and the papists hold
together. One party must yield, and by the blessing and aid of God, this will
be the papists.
CXCI.
Sheb Linini; that is,
"Sit thou on my right hand." This Sheb limini has many and
great enemies, whom we poor, small heap must endure; but `tis no matter; many
of us must suffer and be slain by their fury and rage, yet let us not be
dismayed, but, with a divine resolution and courage, wage and venture
ourselves, our bodies and souls, upon this his word and promise: "I live,
and ye shall also live; and where I am, there shall ye be also."
Christ bears himself as though
he took not the part of us his poor, troubled, persecuted members. For the
world rewards God's best and truest servants very ill; persecuting, condemning,
and killing them as heretics and malefactors, while Christ holds his peace and
suffers it to be done, so that sometimes I have this thought: I know not where
I am; whether I preach right or no. This was also the temptation and trial of
St Paul, touching which he, however, spake not much, neither could, as I think;
for who can tell what those words import: "I die daily."
The Scripture, in many places,
calls Christ our priest, bridegroom, love's delight, etc., and us who believe
in him, his bride, virgin, daughter, etc.; this is a fair, sweet, loving
picture, which we always should have before our eyes. For, first, he has
manifested his office of priesthood in this, that he has preached, made know,
and revealed his Father's will unto us. Secondly, he has also prayed, and will
pray for us true Christians so long as the world endures. Thirdly, he has
offered up his body for our sins upon the cross. He is our bridegroom, and we
are his bride. What he, the loving Saviour Christ has - yea himself, is ours;
for we are members of his body, of his flesh and bone, as St Paul says. And
again, what we have, the same is also his; but the exchange is exceeding
unequal; for he has everlasting innocence, righteousness, life, and salvation,
which he gives to be our own, while what we have is sin, death, damnation, and
hell; these we give unto him, for he has taken our sins upon him, has delivered
us from the power of the devil, and crushed his head, taken him prisoner, and
cast him down to hell; so that now we may, with St Paul, undauntedly say:
"Death, where is thy sting?" Yet, though our loving Saviour has
solemnized this spiritual wedding with us, and endued us with his eternal,
celestial treasure, and sworn to be our everlasting priest, ye the majority, in
the devil's name, run away from him, and worship strange idols, as the Jews
did, and as they in popedom do.
CXCII.
"There is but one
God," says St Paul, "and one mediator between God and man; namely,
the man Jesus Christ, who gave himself a ransom for all." Therefore, let no
man think to draw near unto God, or obtain grace of him, without this mediator,
high-priest, and advocate.
It follows that we cannot
through our good works, honestly of life, virtues, deserts, sanctity, or
through the works of the law, appease God's wrath, or obtain forgiveness of
sins; and that all deserts of saints are quite rejected and condemned, so that
through them no human creature can be justified before God. Moreover, we see
how fierce God's anger is against sins, seeing that by none other sacrifice or
offering could they be appeased and stilled, but by the precious blood of the
Son of God.
CXCIII.
All heretics have set
themselves against Christ. Manicheus opposed Christ's humanity, for he alleged,
Christ was a spirit; "Even," says he, "as the sun shines through
a painted glass, and the sunbeams go through on the other side, and yet the sun
takes nothing away from the substance of the glass, even so Christ took nothing
from the substance and nature of Mary." Arius assaulted the Godhead of Christ.
Nestorius held there were two persons. Eutychius taught there was but one
person; "for," said he, "the person of the Deity was swallowed
up." Helvidius affirmed, the mother of Christ was not a virgin, so that,
according to his wicked allegation, Christ was born in original sin. Macedonius
opposed only the article of the Holy Ghost, but he soon fell, and was
confounded. If this article of Christ remain, then all blasphemous spirits must
vanish and be overthrown. The Turks and Jews acknowledge God the Father; it is
the Son they shoot at. About this article much blood has been shed. I verily
believe that at Rome more than twenty hundred thousands of martyrs have been
put to death. It began with the beginning of the world - with Cain and Abel,
Ishmael and Isaac, Esau and Jacob, and I am persuaded that `twis about it the
devil was cast from heaven down to hell; he was a fair creature of God, and,
doubtless, strove to be the Son.
Next, after the Holy
Scripture, we have no stronger argument for the confirmation of that article,
than the sweet and loving cross. For all kingdoms, all the powerful, have
striven against Christ and this article, but they could not prevail.
CXCIV.
At Rome was a Church called
Pantheon, where were collected effigies of all the gods they were able to bring
together out of the whole world. All these could well accord one with another,
for the devil therewith jeered the world, laughing in his fist; but when Christ
came, him they could not endure, but all the devils, idols, and heretics grew
stark mad and full of rage; for he, the right and true God and man, threw them
altogether on a heap. The pope also sets himself powerfully against Christ, but
he must likewise be put to confusion and destroyed.
CXCV.
The history of the
resurrection of Christ, teaching that which human wit and wisdom of itself
cannot believe, that "Christ is risen from the dead," was declared to
the weaker and sillier creatures, women, and such as were perplexed and
troubled.
Silly, indeed, before God, and
before the world: first, before God, in that they "sought the living among
the dead;" second, before the world, for they forgot the "great stone
which lay at the mouth of the sepulchre," and prepared spices to anoint
Christ, which was all in vain. But spiritually is hereby signified this: if the
"great stone," namely, the law and human traditions, whereby the
consciences are bound and snared, be not rolled away from the heart, then we
cannot find Christ, or believe that he is risen from the dead. For through him
we are delivered from the power of sin and death, Rom. viii., so that the
hand-writing of the conscience can hurt us no more.
CXCVI.
Is it not a wonder beyond all
wonders, that the Son of God, whom all angels and the heavenly hosts worship,
and at whose presence the whole earth quakes and trembles, should have stood
among those wicked wretches, and suffered himself to be so lamentably
tormented, scorned, derided, and condemned? They spat in his face, struck him
in the mouth with a reed, and said: O, he is a king, he must have a crown and a
sceptre. The sweet blessed Saviour complains not in vain in the Psalm, Diminuerunt
omnia ossa mea: now, it he suffered so much from the rage of men, what must
he have felt when God's wrath was poured out upon him without measure? as St
Mark says: "He began to be sore amazed, and very heavy, and saith unto his
disciples, My soul is exceeding sorrowful unto death:" and St Luke says:
"And being in an agony, he prayed more earnestly, and his sweat was as it
were great drops of blood falling down to the ground." Ah! our suffering
is not worthy the name of suffering. When I consider my crosses, tribulations,
and temptations, I shame myself almost to death, thinking what are they in
comparison of the sufferings of my blessed Saviour Christ Jesus. And yet we
must be conformable to the express image of the Son of God. And what if we were
conformable to the same, yet were it nothing. He is the Son of God, we are poor
creatures; though we should suffer everlasting death, yet were they of no
value.
CXCVII.
The wrath is fierce and
devouring which the devil has against the Son of God, and against mankind. I
beheld once a wolf tearing sheep. When the wolf comes into a sheep-fold, he
eats not any until he has killed all, and then he begins to eat, thinking to
devour all. Even so it is also with the devil; I have now, thinks he, taken
hold on Christ, and in time I will also snap his disciples. But the devil's
folly is that he sees not he has to do with the Son of God; he knows not that
in the end it will be his bane. It will come to that pass, that the devil must
be afraid of a child in the cradle; for when he but hears the name Jesus,
uttered in true faith, then he cannot stay. The devil would rather run through
the fire, than stay where Christ is; therefore, it is justly said: The seed of
the woman shall crush the serpent's head, that he can neither abide to hear or
see Christ Jesus. I often delight myself with that similitude in Job, of an
angel-hook a little worm; then comes the fish and snatches at the worm, and
gets therewith the hook in his jaws, and the fisher pulls him out of the water.
Even so has our Lord God dealt with the devil; God has cast into the world his
only Son, as the angle, and upon the hook has put Christ's humanity, as the
worm; then comes the devil and snaps at the (man) Christ, and devours him, and
therewith he bites the iron hook, that is, the godhead of Christ, which chokes
him, and all his power thereby is thrown to the ground. This is called sapientia
divina, divine wisdom.
CXCVIII.
The conversation of Christ
with his disciples, when he took his leave of them at his last supper, was most
sweet, loving, and friendly, talking with them lovingly, as a father with his
children, when he must depart from them. He took their weakness in good part,
and bore with them, though now and then their discourse was very full of
simplicity; as when Philip said: "Show us the Father," etc. And
Thomas: "We know not the way," etc. And Peter: "I will go with
thee into death." Each freely showing the thoughts of his heart. Never,
since the world began, was a more precious, sweet, and amiable conversation.
CXCIX.
Christ had neither money, nor
riches, nor earthly kingdom, for he gave the same to kings and princes. But he reserved
one thing peculiarly to himself, which no human creature or angel could do -
namely, to conquer sin and death, the devil and hell, and in the midst of death
to deliver and save those that through his Word believe in him.
CC.
The sweating of blood and
other high spiritual sufferings that Christ endured in the garden, no human
creature can know or imagine; if one of us should but begin to feel the least
of those sufferings, he must die instantly. There are many who die of grief of
mind; for sorrow of heart is death itself. If a man should feel such anguish
and pain as Christ had, it were impossible for the soul to remain in the body
and endure it - body and soul must part asunder. In Christ only it was
possible, and from him issued bloody sweat.
CCI.
Nothing is more sure than
this: he that does not take hold on Christ by faith, and comfort himself
herein, that Christ is made a curse for him, remains under the curse. The more
we labor by works to obtain grace, the less we know how to take hold on Christ;
for where he is not known and comprehended by faith, there is not to be
expected either advice, help, or comfort, though we torment ourselves to death.
CCII.
All the prophets well forsaw
in the Spirit, that Christ, by imputation, would become the greatest sinner
upon the face of the earth, and a sacrifice for the sins of the whole world;
would be no more considered an innocent person and without sin, or the Son of
God in glory, but a notorious sinner, and so be for awhile forsaken (Psal.
viii.), and have lying upon his neck the sins of all mankind; the sins of St
Paul who was a blasphemer of God, and a persecutor of his church; St Peter's
sins that denied Christ; David's sins, who was an adulterer and a murderer,
through whom the name of the Lord among the heathen was blasphemed.
Therefore the law, which Moses
gave to be executed upon all malefactors and murderers in general, took hold on
Christ, finding him with and among sinners and murderers, though in his own
person innocent.
This manner of picturing Christ
to us, the sophists, robbers of God, obscure and falsify; for they will not
that Christ was made a curse for us, to the end he might deliver us from the
curse of the law, nor that he has anything to do with sin and poor sinners;
though for their sakes alone was he made man and died, but they set before us
merely Christ's examples, which they say we ought to imitate and follow; and
thus they not only steal from Christ his proper name and title, but also make
of him a severe and angry judge, a fearful and horrible tyrant, full of wrath
against poor sinners, and bent on condemning them.
CCIII.
The riding of our blessed
Saviour into Jerusalem was a poor, mean kind of procession enough, where was
seen Christ, king of heaven and earth, sitting upon a strange ass, his saddle
being the clothes of his disciples. This mean equipage, for so powerful a
potentate, was, as the prophecy of the prophet Zechariah showed, to the end the
Scripture might be fulfilled. Yet `twis an exceeding stately and glorious thing
as extolled through the prophecies, though outwardly to the world it seemed
poor and mean.
I hold that Christ himself did
not mention this prophecy, but that rather the apostles and evangelists used it
for a witness. Christ, meantime, preached and wept, but the people honored him
with olive branches and palms, which are signs of peace and victory. Such
ceremonies did the heathen receive of the Jews, and not the Jews of the
heathen, as some pretend, for the nation of the Jews and Jerusalem was much
older than the Greeks and Romans. The Greeks had their beginning about the time
of the Babylonish captivity, but Jerusalem was long before the time of the
Persians and Assyrians, and therefore much before the Greeks and Romans, so
that the heathen receive many ceremonies from the Jews, as the elder nation.
CCIV.
The Jews crucified Christ with
words, but the Gentiles have crucified him with works and deeds. His sufferings
were prophetical of our wickedness, for Christ suffers still to this day in our
church much more than in the synague of the Jews; far greater blaspheming of
God, contempt, and tyranny, is now among us than heretofore among the Jews. In
Italy, when mention is made of the aeticle of faith and of the last day of
judgment, then says the pope with his greases crew: O! dost thou believe that?
Pluck thou up a good heart, and be merry; let such cogitations alone. These and
the like blasphemies are so common in all Italy, that, without fear of
punishment, they openly proclaim them everywhere.
CCVI.
My opinion is, that Christ
descended into hell, to the end he might lay the devil in chains, in order to
bring him to the judgment of the great day, as in the 16th Psalm, and Acts ii.
Disputatious spirits allege, that the word Infernus, Hell, must be taken
and understood to be the grave, as in the first book of Moses, but yet here is
written not only the Hebrew word Nabot - that is pit, but Scola -
that is, Gehenna, Hell; for the ancients mande four different hells.
CCVII.
The resurrection of our Saviour
Christ, in the preaching of the gospel, raises earthquakes in the world now, as
when Christ arose out of the sepulchre bodily. To this day the world is moved,
and great tumults arise, when we preach and confess the righteousness and
holiness of Christ, and that through it only are we justified and saved. But
such earthquakes and tumults are wholesome for us, yea, comfortable, pleasant,
and delightful to such as live in God's fear, and are true Christians; more to
be desired than peace, rest, and quietness, with an evil conscience through
sinning against God.
The Jews flattered themselves
that the kingdom of Christ would have been a temporal kingdom, and the apostles
themselves were of this opinion, as is noted, John xiv.: "Lord, how is it
that thou wilt manifest thyself to us, and not to the world?" As much as
to say: We thought the whole world should behold thy glorious state; that thou
shouldest be emperor, we twelve kings, among whom the kingdoms should be
divided, and to each of us, for disciples, six princes, or dukes, etc., making
the number of them seventy-two. In this manner had the loving apostles shared
and divided the kingdoms among themselves, according to the Platonic meaning -
that is, according to the wit and wisdom of human understanding. But Christ
describes his kingdom far otherwise: "He that loveth me, will keep my
word, and my father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our
abode with him," etc.
CCVIII.
The communion or fellowship of
our blessed Saviour Christ, was doubtless most loving and familiar; for he who
thought it no dishonor, being equal with God, to be made man like unto us, yet
without sin, served and waited upon his disciples as they sat at table, as my
servant waits on me; the good disciples, plain, simple people, were at length
so accustomed to it, that they were even content to let him wait. In such wise
did Christ fulfill his office; as is written: "He is come to minister, and
not to be ministered unto." Ah, `tis a high example, that he so deeply humbled
himself and suffered, who created the whole world, heaven and earth, and all
that is therein, and who, with one finger, could have turned it upside down and
destroyed it.
CCIX.
How wonderfully does Christ
rule and govern his kingdom, so concealing himself that his presence is not
seen, yet putting to shame emperors, kings, popes, and all such as think
themselves wise, just, and powerful. But hereunto belongs a Plerophoria
- that is, we are sure and certain of it.
Jesus Christ is the only
beginning and end of all my divine cogitations, day and night, yet I find and
freely confess that I have attained but only a small and weak beginning of the
height, depth, and breadth of this immeasurable, incomprehensible, and endless
wisdom, and have scarce got and brought to light a few fragments out of this
most deep and precious profundity.
CCX.
Christ's own proper work and
office is to combat the law, sin and death, for the whole world; taking them
all upon himself, and bearing them, and after he has laden himself therewith, then
only to get the victory, and utterly overcome and destroy them, and so release
the desolate from the law and all evil. That Christ expounds the law, and works
miracles, these are but small benefits, in comparison of the true good, for
which he chiefly came. For the prophets, and especially the apostles, wrought
and did as great miracles as Christ himself.
CCXI.
That our Saviour, Christ, is
come, nothing avails hypocrites, who live confident, not fearing God, nor condemners
nor reprobates, who think there is no grace or comfort to be expected, and who
by the law are affrighted. But he comes to the profit and comfort of those whom
for a time the law has plagued and affrighted; these despair not in their
trials and affrights, but with comfortable confidence step to Christ, the
throne of grace, who delivers them.
CCXII.
Is it not a shame that we are
always afraid of Christ, whereas there was never in heaven or earth a more
loving, familiar, or milder man, in words, works, and demeanor, especially
towards poor, sorrowful, and tormented consciences? Hence the prophet Jeremiah
prays, saying: "O Lord, grant that we be not afraid of thee."
CCXIII.
It is written in Psalm li.:
"Behold, thou requirest truth in the inward parts, and shalt make me to
understand wisdom secretly." This is that mystery which is hidden from the
world, and will remain hidden; it is the truth that lies in the inward parts,
and the secret wisdom; not the wisdom of the lawyers, of the physicians, philosophers,
and of the crafty ones of the world; no; but thy wisdom. O Lord! which thou
hast made me to understand. This is that golden art which Sadoleto had not,
though he wrote much of this Psalm.
CCXIV.
The preaching of the apostles
went forth, and powerfully sounded through the whole world, after Christ's
resurrection, when he had sent the Holy Ghost. This master, the Holy Ghost,
worked through the apostles, and showed the doctrine of Christ clearly, so that
their preaching produced more fruit than when Christ preached, as he himself
before had declared, saying: "He that believeth in me, shall do also the
works that I do, and shall do greater than these."
Christ, by force would not
break through with his preaching, as he might have done, for he preached so powerfully
that the people were astonished at his doctrine, but proceeded softly and
mildly in regard to the fathers, to whom he was promised, and of those that
much esteemed them, to the end he might take away and abolish the ceremonial
law, together with its service and worship.
CCXV.
Christ preached without wages,
yet the godly women, whom he had cleansed and made whole, and delivered from
wicked spirits and diseases, ministered unto him of that which they had, (Luke
viii.) They gave him supply, and he also took and received that which others
freely and willingly gave him, (John xix.)
When he sent the apostles
forth to preach, he said: Freely ye have received, therefore freely give, etc.,
wherein he forbids them not to take something for their pains and work, but
that they should not take care and sorrow for food and rainment, etc., for
whithersoever they went, they should find some people that would not see them
want.
CCXVI.
The prophecies that the Son of
God should take human nature upon him, are given so obscurely, that I think the
devil knew not that Christ should be conceived b the Holy Ghost, and born of
the Virgin Mary.
Hence, when he tempted Christ
in the wilderness, he said to him: "If thou art the Son of God?" He
calls him the Son of God, not that he held him so to be by descent and nature,
but according to the manner of the Scripture, which names human creatures the
children of God: "Ye are all the children of the Most highest," etc.
It was not desired that these prophecies of Christ's passion, resurrection, and
kingdom, should be revealed before the time of his coming, save only to his
prophet's and other high enlightened people; it was reserved for the coming of
Christ, the right and only doctor that should open the understanding.
CCXVII.
The reason why Peter and the
other apostles did not expressly call Christ the Son of God, was that they
would not give occasion to the godly Jews, who as yet were weak in faith, to
shun and persecute their preaching, by appearing to declare a new God, and to
reject the God of their fathers. Yet they mention, with express words, the
office of Christ and his works; that he is a prince of life; that he raises
from the dead, justifies and forgives sins, hears prayers, enlightens and
comforts hearts, etc., wherewith they clearly and sufficiently show and
acknowledge that he is the true God; for no creature can perform such works but
God only.
CCXVIII.
The devil assaults the
Christian world with highest power and subtlety, vexing true Christians through
tyrants, heretics, and false brethren, and instigating the whole world against
them.
On the contrary, Christ
resists the devil and his kingdom, with a few simple and condemned people, as
they seem in the world, weak, and foolish, and yet he gets the victory.
Now, it were a very unequal
war for one poor sheep to encounter a hundred wolves, as it befell the
apostles, when Christ sent them out into the world, when one after another was
made away with and slain. Against wolves we should rather send out lions, or
more fierce and horrible beasts. But Christ has pleasure therein, to show his
highest wisdom and power in our greatest weakness and foolishness, as the world
conceives, and so proceeds that all shall eat their own bane, and go to the
devil, who set themselves against his servants and disciples.
For he alone, the Lord of
Hosts, does wonders; he preserves his sheep in the midst of wolves, and himself
so afflicts them, that we plainly see our faith consists not in the power of
human wisdom, but in the power of God, for although Christ permit one of his
sheep to be devoured, yet he sends ten or more others in his place.
CCXIX.
Many say that Christ having by
force driven the buyers and sellers out of the temple, we also may use force
against the popish bishops and enemies of God's Word, as Munzer and other
seducers. But Christ did many things which we neither may nor can do after him.
He walked upon the water, he fasted forty days and forty nights, he raised
Lazarus from death, after he had lain four days in the grave, etc.; such and
the like we must leave undone. Much less will Christ consent that we by force
assail the enemies of the truth; he commands the contrary: "Love your
enemies, pray for them that vex and persecute you;" "Be merciful, as
your Father is merciful;" "Take my yoke upon you and learn of me, for
I am meek and humble in heart;" "He that will follow me, let him deny
himself, take up his cross, and follow me."
CCXX.
`Tis a great wonder how the
name of Christ has remained in popedom, where, for hundreds of years, nothing
was delivered to the people but the pope's laws and decrees, that is, doctrines
and commandments of men, so that it had been no marvel if the name of Christ
and his Word had been forgotten.
But God wonderfully preserved
his gospel in the church, which now from the pulpits is taught to the people,
word by word. In like manner, it is a special great work of God, that the
Creed, the Lord's Prayer, Baptism, and the Lord's Supper, have remained and
cleaved to the hearts of those who were ordained to receive them in the midst
of popedom.
God has also often awakened
pious learned men, who revealed his Word, and gave them courage openly to
reprove the false doctrines and abuses that were crept into the church, as John
Huss, and others.
CCXXI.
The kingdom of Christ is a
kingdom of grace, mercy, and of all comfort: Psalm cxvii: "His grace and
truth is ever more and more towards us." The kingdom of Antichrist, the
pope, is a kingdom of lies and destruction; Psalm x.: "His mouth is full
of cursing, fraud, and deceit; under his tongue is ungodliness and
vanity." The kingdom of Mohammed is a kingdom of revenge, of wrath, and
desolation, Ezek. xxxviii.
CCXXII.
The weak in faith also belong
to the kingdom Christ; otherwise the Lord would not have said to Peter,
"Strengthen thy brethren," Luke xxii.: and Rom. xiv.: "Receive
the weak in faith;" also 1 Thess. v." "Comfort the
feeble-minded, support the weak." If the weak in faith did not belong to
Christ, where, then, would the apostles have been whom the Lord oftentimes, as
after his resurrection, Mark xvi., reproved because of their unbelief?
CCXXIII.
A cup of water, if a man have
no better, is good to quench the thirst. A morsel of bread stills the hunger,
and he that needs it seeks it earnestly. Christ is the best, surest, and only
physic against the most fearful enemy of mankind, the devil; but men believe it
not with their hearts. If they want a physician, living a hundred miles off,
who, they think, can drive away temporal death, oh, how diligently is he sent
for - no money or cost is spared! But the small and little heap only stick fast
to the true physician, and by his art learn that which the holy Simeon well
knew by reason of which he joyfully sang: "Lord, now lettest thou thy
servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen thy salvation!" Whence
came his great joy? Because that with spiritual and corporal eyes he say the
Saviour of the world, the true physician against sin and death. `Tis a great
pain to behold how desirous a thirsty man is of drink, or a hungry man of foot,
though a cup of water or a morsel of bread can still hunger and thirst no
longer than two or three hours, while no man, or very few, desires or longs
after the most precious of all physicians, though he lovingly calls us to come
unto him, saying, "He that is athirst, let him come to me and drink,"
John vii.
CCXXIV.
Even as Christ is now
invisible and unknown to the world, so are we Christians also invisible and
unknown therein. "Your life," says St Paul, Coloss. iii., "is
hid with Christ in God." Therefore the world knows us not, much less does
it see Christ in us. But we and the world are easily parted; they care nothing
for us, and we nothing for them; through Christ the world is crucified unto us,
and we to the world. Let them go with their wealth, and leave us to our minds
and manners.
When we have our sweet and
loving Saviour Christ, we are rich and happy more than enough; we care nothing
for their state, honor, and wealth. But we often lose our Saviour Christ, and
little think that he is in us, and we in him; that he is ours, and we are his.
Yet although he hide from us, as we think, in the time of need, for a moment,
yet are we comforted in his promise, where he says, "I am daily with you
to the world's end;" this is our richest treasure.
CCXXV.
Christ desires nothing more of
us than that we speak of him. But thou wilt say: If I speak or preach of him,
then the Word freezes upon my lips. O, regard not that, but hear what Christ
says: "Ask, and it shall be given unto you," etc.; and "I am
with him in trouble," "I will deliver him, and bring him to
honor," etc. Also: "Call upon me in the time of trouble, so will I
hear thee, and thou shalt praise me," etc., Psalm 1. How could we perform
a more easy service of God, without all labor or charge? There is no work on
earth easier than the true service of God: he loads us with no heavy burdens,
but only asks that we believe in him and preach of him. True, thou mayest be
sure thou shalt be persecuted for this, but our sweet Saviour gives us a
comfortable promise: "I will be with you in the time of trouble, and will
help you out," etc., Luke xii. 7. I make no such promise to my servant
when I set him to work, either to plough or to cart, as Christ to me, that he
will help me in my need. We only fail in belief: if I had faith according as
the Scripture requires of me, I alone would drive the Turk out of
Constantinople, and the pope out of Rome; but it comes far short; I must rest
satisfied with that which Christ spake to St Paul: "My grace is sufficient
for thee, for my power is strong in weakness."
CCXXVI.
From these words, John xiii.,
which Christ spake to Peter: "If I wash thee not, thou hast no part in
me," it is not to be understood that Christ, at the same time, baptized
his disciples; for in John iv., it is clearly expressed that he himself
baptized none, but that his disciples, at his command, baptized each other.
Neither did the Lord speak these words only of water washing, but of spiritual
washing, through which he, and none other, washes and cleanses Peter, the other
disciples and all true believers, from their sins, and justifies and saves
them; as if he would say: I am the true bather, therefore if I wash thee not,
Peter, thou remainest unclean, and dead in thy sins.
The reason that Christ washed
not his own, but his disciples feet, whereas the high-priests in the law washed
not others but his own, was this: the high-priest in the law was unclean, and a
sinner like other men, therefore he washed his own feet, and offered not only for
the sins of the people, but also for his own. But our everlasting High-priest
is holy, innocent, unstained, and separate from sin; therefore it was needless
for him to wash his feet, but he washed and cleansed us, through his blood,
from all our sins.
Moreover, by this his washing
of feet he would show, that his new kingdom which he would establish should be
no temporal and outward kingdom, where respect of persons was to be held, as in
Moses kingdom, one higher and greater than the other, but where one should
serve another in humility, as he says: "He that is greatest among you, let
him be your servant;" which he himself showed by this example, as he says,
John xiii.: "If I your Lord and Master have washed your feet, then ought
ye to wash one another's feet.
CCXXVII.
So long as Jupiter, Mars,
Apollo, Saturn, Juno, Diana, Passas, and Venus ruled among the heathen - that
is, were held and worshipped for gods, the Jews having also very many idols
which they served, - it was necessary that first Christ, and after him the
apostles, should do many miracles, corporal and spiritual, both among the Jews
and Gentiles, to confirm this doctrine of faith in Christ, and to take away and
root out all worshipping in idols. The visible and bodily wonders flourished
until the doctrine of the gospel was planted and received, and baptism and the
Lord's Supper established. But the spiritual miracles, which our Saviour Christ
holds for miracles indeed, are daily wrought, and will remain to the world's
end, as that of the centurion in Matt. viii., and that of the Canaanitish
woman.
CCXXVIII.
The greatest wonder ever on
earth is, that the Son of God die! the shameful death of the cross. It is
astonishing, that the Father should say to his only Son, who by nature is God:
Go, let them hang thee on the gallows. The love of the everlasting Father was
immeasurably greater towards his only begotten Son than the love of Abraham
towards Isaac; for the Father testifies from heaven: "This is my beloved
Son, in whom I am well pleased;" yet he was cast away so lamentably, like
a worm, a scorn of men, and outcast of the people.
At this the blind
understanding of man stumbles, saying, Is this the only begotten Son of the
everlasting Father - how, then, deals he so unmercifully with him? he showed himself
more kind to Caiaphas, Herod, and Pilate, than towards his only begotten Son.
But to us true Christians, it is the greatest comfort; for we therein recognize
that the merciful Lord God and Father so loved the poor condemned world, that
he spared not his only begotten Son, but gave him up for us all, that whosoever
believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.
They who are tormented with
high spiritual temptations, which every one is not able to endure, should have
this example before their eyes, when they are in sorrow and heaviness of
spirit, fearing God's wrath, the day of judgment, and everlasting death, and
such like fiery darts of the devil. Let them comfort themselves, that although
they often feel such intolerable sufferings, yet are they never the more
rejected of God, but are of him better beloved, seeing he makes them like unto
his only begotten Son; and let them believe that as they suffer with him, so
will he also deliver them out of their sufferings. For such as will live godly
in Christ Jesus, must suffer persecution; yet one more than another, according
to every one's strength or weakness in faith: "For God is true, who will
not suffer us to be tempted above that we are able to bear."
CCXXIX.
It was a wonderful thing when
our Saviour Christ ascended up into heaven, in full view of his disciples.
Some, no doubt, thought in themselves: We did eat and drink with him, and now
he is taken from us, and carried up into heaven; are all these things right?
Such reasonings, doubtless, some of them had, for they were not all alike
strong in faith, as St Matthew writes: When the eleven saw the Lord, they
worshipped, but some doubted. And during those forty days, from the
resurrection until the ascension, the Lord taught them by manifold arguments,
and instructed them in all necessary things; he strengthened their faith, and
put them in mind of what he had told them before, to the end they should in
nowise doubt of his person.
Yet his words made little
impression, for when the Lord appeared in the midst of them, on Easter-day, at
evening, and said: "Peace be with you," they were perplexed and
affrighted, supposing they saw a spirit; nor would Thomas believe that the
other disciples had seen the Lord, until he saw the print of the nails in his
hands. And though for the space of forty days he had communed with them
concerning the kingdom of God, and was even ready to ascend, yet,
notwithstanding, they asked him, Lord! wilt thou at this time restore again the
kingdom to Israel?"
But after this, on Whitsunday,
when they had received the Holy Ghost, then they were of another mind; they
then stood no more in fear of the Jews, but rose up boldly, and with great
joyfulness preached Christ to the people. And Peter said to the lame man:
Silver and gold have I none, but what I have, that give I thee; in the name of
Jesus Christ of Nazareth, rise up and walk. Yet notwithstanding all this, the
Lord was fain to show unto him, through a vision, that the Gentiles should be
partakers of the promise of life, although, before his ascension, he had heard
this command from the Lord himself: "Go ye into all the world, and preach
the gospel to every creature." And "Teach all nations."
The apostles themselves did
not know every thing, even after they had received the Holy Ghost; yea, and
sometimes they were weak in faith. When all Asia turned from St Paul, and some
of his own disciples had departed from him, and many false spirits that were in
high esteem set themselves against him, then with sorrow of heart he said:
"I was with you in weakness, fear, and in much trembling." And
"We were troubled on every side; without were fightings, and within were
fears." Hereby it is evident that he was fain to comfort him, saying:
"My grace is sufficient for thee, for my power is strong in
weakness."
This is to me, and to all true
Christians, a comfortable doctrine; for I persuade myself also that I have
faith, though it is but so so, and might well be better; yet I teach the faith to
others, and know, that my teaching is right. Sometimes I commune thus with
myself: Thou preachest indeed God's Word; this office is committed to thee, and
thou art called thereunto without thy seeking, which is not fruitless, for many
thereby are reformed; but when I consider and behold my own weakness, that I
eat, drink, sometimes am merry, yea, also, now and then am overtaken, being off
my guard, then I begin to doubt and say: Ah! that we could but only believe.
Therefore, confident
professors are troublesome and dangerous people; who, when they have but only
looked on the outside of the Bible, or heard a few sermons, presently think
they have the Holy Ghost, and understand and know all. But good and godly
hearts are of another mind, and pray daily: "Lord, strengthen our
faith."
CCXXX.
When Jesus Christ utters a
word, he opens his mouth so wide that it embraces all heaven and earth, even
though that word be but in a whisper. The word of the emperor is powerful, but
that of Jesus Christ governs the whole universe.
CCXXXI.
I expect more goodness from
Kate my wife, from Philip Melancthon, and from other friends, than from my
sweet and blessed Saviour Christ Jesus; and yet I know for certain, that
neither she nor any other person on earth, will or can suffer that for me which
he has suffered; why then should I be afraid of him? This, my foolish weakness,
grieves me very much. We plainly see in the gospel, how mild and gentle he
showed himself towards his disciples; how kindly he passed over their weakness,
their presumption, yea, their foolishness. He checked their unbelief, and in
all gentleness admonished them. Moreover, the Scripture, which is most sure,
says: "Well are all they that put their trust in him." Fie on our
unbelieving hearts, that we should be afraid of this man, who is more loving,
friendly, gentle, and compassionate towards us than are our kindred, our
brethren and sisters; yea, than parents themselves are towards their own
children.
He that has such temptations,
let him be assured, it is not Christ, but the envious devil that affrights,
wounds, and would destroy him; for Christ comforts, heals, and revives.
Oh! his grace and goodness
towards us is so immeasurably great, that without great assaults and trials it
cannot be understood. If the tyrants and false brethren had not set themselves
so fiercely against me, my writings and proceedings, then should I have vaunted
myself too much of my poor gifts and qualities; nor should I with such fervency
of heart have directed my prayers to God for his divine assistance; I should
not have ascribed all to God's grace, but to my own dexterity and power, and so
should have flown to the devil. But to the end this might be prevented, my
gracious Lord and Saviour Christ caused me to be chastised; he ordained that
the devil should plague and torment me with his fiery darts, inwardly and
outwardly, through tyrants, as the pope and other heretics, and all this he
suffered to be done for my good. "It is good for me that I have been in
trouble, that I may learn thy statutes."
CCXXXII.
I know nothing of Jesus Christ
but only his name; I have not heard or seen him corporally, yet I have, God be
praised, learned so much out of the Scriptures, that I am well and thoroughly
satisfied; therefore I desire neither to see nor to hear him in the body. When
left and forsaken of all men, in my highest weakness, in trembling, and in fear
of death, when persecuted of the wicked world, then I felt most deeply the
divine power which this name, Christ Jesus, communicated unto me.
CCXXXIII.
It is no wonder that Satan is
an enemy to Christ, his people and kingdom, and sets himself against him and
his word, with all his power and cunning. `Tis an old hate and grudge between
them, which began in Paradise: for they are, by nature and kind, of contrary
minds and dispositions. The devil smells Christ many hundred miles off; he
hears at Constantinople and at Rome, what we at Wittenberg teach and preach
against his kingdom; he feels also what hurt and damage he sustains thereby;
there rages and swells he so horribly.
But what is more to be
wondered at is, that we, who are of one kind and nature, and, through, the bond
of love, knit so fast together that each ought to love the other as himself,
should have, at times, such envy, hate, wrath, discord and revenge, that one is
ready to kill the other. For who is nearer allied to a man, than his wife; to
the son, than his father; to the daughter, than her mother; to the brother,
than his sister, etc.? yet, it is most commonly found, that discord and strife
are among them.
CCXXXIV.
It is impossible that the
gospel and the law should dwell together in one heart, for the necessity either
Christ must yield and give place to the law, or the law to Christ. St Paul
says: "They which will be justified through the law, are fallen from
grace." Therefore, when thou art of this mind, that Christ and the
confidence of the law may dwell together in thy heart, then thou mayest know
for certain that it is not Christ, but the devil that dwells in thee, who under
the mask and form of Christ terrifies thee. He will have, that thou make
thyself righteous through the law, and through thy own good works; for the true
Christ calls thee not to an account for thy sins, nor commands thee to trust in
thy good works, but says: "Come unto me all ye that be weary and heavy
laden, and I will give you rest," etc.
CCXXXV.
I have set Christ and the pope
together by the ears, so trouble myself no further; though I get between the
door and the hinges and be squeezed, it is no matter; Christ will go through
with it.
CCXXXVI.
Christ once appeared visible
here on earth, and showed his glory, and according to the divine purpose of God
finished the work of redemption and the deliverance of mankind. I do not desire
he should come once more in the same manner, neither would I he should send an
angel unto me. Nay, though an angel should come and appear before mine eyes
from heaven, yet it would not add to my belief; for I have of my Saviour Christ
Jesus bond and seal; I have his Word, Spirit, and sacrament; thereon I depend,
and desire no new revelations. And the more steadfastly to confirm me in this
resolution, to hold solely by God's Word, and not to give credit to any visions
or revelations, I shall relate the following circumstance: - On Good Friday
last, I being in my chamber in fervent prayer, contemplating with myself, how
Christ my Saviour on the cross suffered and died for our sins, there suddenly
appeared upon the wall a bright vision of our Saviour Christ, with the five
wounds, steadfastly looking upon me, as if it had been Christ himself
corporally. At first sight, I thought it had been some celestial revelation,
but I reflected that it must needs be an illusion and juggling of the devil,
for Christ appeared to us in his Word, and in a meaner and more humble form;
therefore I spake to the vision thus: Avoid thee, confounded devil: I know no
other Christ than he who was crucified, and who in his Word is pictured and
presented unto me. Whereupon the image vanished, clearly showing of whom it came.
CCXXXVII.
Alas! what is our wit and
wisdom? before we understand anything as we ought, we lie down and die, so that
the devil has a good chance with us. When one is thirty years old, he has still
Stultitias carnales; yea, also, Stultitias spirituales; and yet
`tis much to be admired at, how in such our imbecility and weakness, we achieve
and accomplish much and great matters, but `tis God does it. God gave to
Alexander the Great wisdom and good success; yet he calls him, in the prophet
Jeremiah, a youth, where he says, a young boy shall perform it; he shall come
and turn the city Tyre upside down. Yet Alexander could not leave off his
foolishness, for often he swilled himself drunk, and in his drunkenness stabbed
his best and worthiest friends, and afterwards drank himself to death at
Babylon. Solomon was not above twenty when he was made king, but he was well
instructed by Nathan, and desired wisdom, which was pleasing to God, as the
text says. But now, chests full of money are desired. O! say we now, if I had
but money, then I would do so and so.
CCXXXVIII.
Christ said to the heathen
woman: I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel; yet
afterwards he helped both her and her daughter; therefore a man might say:
Christ here contradicted himself. I reply: True, Christ was not sent to the
Gentiles, but when the Gentiles came unto him, he would not reject or put them
from him. In person he was sent only to the Jews, and therefore he preached in
the land of the Jews. But through the apostles his doctrine went into the whole
world. And St Paul names the Lord Christ, ministrum circumcisionis, by
reason of the promise which God gave to the fathers. The Jews themselves boast
of God's justness in performing what he promised, but we Gentiles boast of God's
mercy; God has not forgotten us Gentiles. Indeed, God spake not with us,
neither had we king or prophet with whom God spake; but St Paul, in another
place, says: It was necessary that the Word should first be preached to you,
but seeing you will not receive it, lo! we turn to the Gentiles. At this the
Jews are much offended to this day; they flatter themselves: Messiah is only
and alone for them and theirs. Indeed, it is a glorious name and title that
Moses gives them: Thou art an holy nation: but David, in his Psalm, afterwards
promises Christ to the Gentiles: "Praise the Lord all ye nations."
CCXXXIX.
We should consider the
histories of Christ three manner of ways; first, as a history of acts or
legends; secondly, as a gift or a present; thirdly, as an example, which we
should believe and follow.
CCXL.
Christ, our blessed Saviour,
forbore to preach and teach until the thirtieth year of his age, neither would
he openly be heard; no, though he beheld and heard so many impieties,
abominable idolatries, heresies, blasphemings of God, etc. It was a wonderful
thing he could abstain, and with patience endure them, until the time came that
he was to appear in his office of preaching.
·
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CCXLI.
The Holy Ghost has two
offices: first, he is a Spirit of grace, that makes God gracious unto us, and receive
us as his acceptable children, for Christ's sake. Secondly, he is a Spirit of
prayer, that prays for us, and for the whole world, to the end that all evil
may be turned from us, and that all good may happen to us. The spirit of grace
teaches people; the spirit of prayer prays. It is a wonder how one thing is
accomplished various ways. It is one thing to have the Holy Spirit as a spirit
of prophecy, and another to have the revealing of the same; for many have had
the Holy Spirit before the birth of Christ, and yet he was not revealed unto
them. We do not separate the Holy Ghost from faith; neither do we teach that he
is against faith; for he is the certainty itself in the world, that makes us
sure and certain of the Word; so that, without all wavering or doubting, we
certainly believe that it is even so and no otherwise than as God's Word says
and is delivered unto us. But the Holy Ghost is given to none without the Word.
Mohammed, the pope, papists,
Antinomians, and other sectaries, have no certainty at all, neither can they be
sure of these things; for they depend not on God's Word, but on their own
righteousness. And when they have done many and great works, yet they always
stand in doubt, and say: Who knows whether this which we have done be pleasing
to God or no; or, whether we have done works enough or no? They must
continually think with themselves, We are still unworthy.
But a true and godly
Christian, between these two doubts, is sure and certain, and says: I nothing
regard these doubtings; I neither look upon my holiness, nor upon my
unworthiness, but I believe in Jesus Christ, who is both holy and worthy; and
whether I be holy or unholy, yet I am sure and certain, that Christ gives
himself, with all his holiness, worthiness, and what he is and has, to be mine
own. For my part, I am a poor sinner, and that I am sure of out of God's Word.
Therefore, the Holy Ghost only and alone is able to say: Jesus Christ is the
Lord; the Holy Ghost teaches, preaches, and declares Christ.
The Holy Ghost goes first and
before in what pertains to teaching; but in what concerns hearing, the Word
goes first and before, and then the Holy Ghost follows after. For we must first
hear the Word, and then afterwards the Holy Ghost works in our hearts; he works
in the hearts of whom he will, and how he will, but never without the Word.
CCXLII.
The Holy Ghost began his
office and his work openly on Whitsunday; for he gave to the apostles and
disciples of Christ, a true and certain comfort in their hearts, and a secure
and joyful courage, insomuch that they regarded not whether the world and the
devil were merry or sad, friends or enemies, angry or pleased. They went in all
security up and down the streets of the city, and doubtless they had these, or
the like thoughts: We regard neither Annas or Caiaphas, Pilate nor Herod; they
are nothing worth, we all in all; they are our subjects and servants, we their
lords and rulers.
So went the loving apostles
on, in all courage, without seeking leave or license.
They asked not whether they
should preach or no, or whether the priests and people would allow it. O, no!
They went on boldly, they opened their mouths freely, and reproved all the
people, rulers and subjects, as murderers, wicked wretches, and traitors, who
had slain the Prince of Life.
And this spirit, so needful
and necessary at that time for the apostles and disciples, is now needful for
us: for our adversaries accuse us, like as were the apostles, as rebels and
disturbers of the peace of the Church. Whatsoever evil happens, that, say they,
have we done or caused. In popedom, say they, it was not so evil as it is since
this doctrine came in; now we have all manner of mischiefs, dearth, wars, and
the Turks. Of this they lay all the fault to our preaching, and, if they could,
would charge us with being the cause of the devil's falling from heaven; yea,
would say we had crucified and slain Christ also.
Therefore the Whitsuntide
sermons of the Holy Ghost are very needful for us, that thereby we may be
comforted, and with boldness condemn and slight such blaspheming, and that the
Holy Ghost may put boldness and courage into our hearts, that we may stoutly
thrust ourselves forward, let who will be offended, and let who will reproach
us, and, that although, sects and heresies arise, we may not regard them. Such
a courage there must be that cares for nothing, but boldly and freely
acknowledges and preaches Christ, who of wicked hands was crucified and slain.
The preached gospel is
offensive in all places of the world, rejected and condemned.
If the gospel did not offend
and anger citizen or countryman, prince or bishop, then it would be a fine and
acceptable preaching, and might well be tolerated, and people would willingly
hear and receive it. But seeing it is a kind of preaching which makes people
angry, especially the great and powerful, and deep-learned ones of the world,
great courage is necessary, and the Holy Ghost, to those that intend to preach
it.
It was, indeed, undaunted
courage in the poor fishers, the apostles, to stand up and preach so that the
whole council at Jerusalem were offended, to bring upon themselves the wrath of
the whole government, spiritual and temporal - yea, of the Roman emperor
himself. Truly this could not have been done without the Holy Ghost. `Twas a
great wonder that the high-priest, and Pontius Pilate, did not cause these
preachers that hour to be put to death, what they said smacking so much of
rebellion against the spiritual and temporal government; yet both high-priest
and Pilate were struck with fear to the end that God might show his power in
the apostle's weakness.
Thus it is with the church of
Christ: it goes on in apparent weakness; and yet in its weakness, there is such
mighty strength and power, that all the worldlywise and powerful must stand
amazed therat and fear.
CCXLIII.
It is testified by Holy
Scripture, and the Nicene creed out of Holy Scripture teaches that the Holy
Ghost is he who makes alive, and, together with the Father and the Son, is worshipped
and glorified.
Therefore the Holy Ghost, of
necessity, must be true and everlasting God with the Father and the Son, in one
only essence. For if he were not true and everlasting God, then could not be
attributed and given unto him the divine power and honor that he makes alive,
and together with the Father and the Son is worshipped and glorified; on this
point the Fathers powerfully set themselves against the heretics, upon the
strength of the Holy Scripture.
The Holy Ghost is not such a
comforter as the world is, where neither truth nor constancy is, but he is a
true, an everlasting, and a constant comforter, without deceit and lies; he is
one whom no man can deceive. He is called a witness, because he bears witness
only of Christ and of none other; without his testimony concerning Christ,
there is no true or firm comfort. Therefore all rests on this, that we take
sure hold of the text, and say: I believe in Jesus Christ, who died for me; and
I know that the Holy Ghost, who is called, and is a witness and a comforter,
preaches and witnesses in Christendom of none, but only of Christ, therewith to
strengthen and comfort all sad and sorrowful hearts. Thereon will I also
remain, depending upon none other for comfort. Our blessed Saviour Christ
himself preaches that the Holy Ghost is everlasting and Almighty God. Otherwise
he would not have directed his commission thus: Go, and teach all nations, and
baptize them in the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and
teach them to keep and observe all things whatsoever I have commanded of you.
It must needs follow, that the Holy Ghost is true, eternal God, equal in power
and might with the Father, and the Son, without all end. Likewise Christ says:
"And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another comforter, that
he may abide with you for ever; even the Spirit of Truth, whom the world cannot
receive, because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him." Mark well this
sentence, for herein we find the difference of the three persons distinctly held
out unto us: "I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another
comforter." Here we have two persons - Christ the Son that prays, and the
Father that is prayed unto. Now, if the Father shall give such a comforter,
then the Father himself cannot be that comforter; neither can Christ, that
prays, be the same; so that very significantly the three persons are here
plainly pictured and portrayed unto us. For even as the Father and the Son are
two distinct and sundry persons, so the third person of the Holy Ghost is
another distinct person, and yet notwithstanding there is but one only
everlasting God.
Now, what the same third
person is, Christ teaches (John, xv.): "But when the Comforter is come,
whom I will send unto you from the Father, even the Spirit of Truth, which
proceedeth from the Father, he shall testify of me."
In this place, Christ speaks
not only of the office and work of the Holy Ghost, but also of his essence and
substance, and says: "He proceedeth from the Father;" that is, his
proceeding is without beginning, and is everlasting. Therefore the holy
prophets attribute and give unto him this title and call him "The Spirit
of the Lord."
CCXLIV.
None of the Fathers of the
Church made mention of original sin until Augustine came, who made a difference
between original and actual sin; namely, that original sin is to covet, lust,
and desire, which is the root and cause of actual sin; such lust and desire in
the faithful, God forgives, imputing it not unto them, for the sake of Christ,
seeing they resist it by the assistance of the Holy Ghost. As St Paul, Rom.
viii. The papists and other sinners oppose the known truth. St Paul says:
"A man that is an heretic after the first and second admonition,
rejects," knowing that such an one sins, being condemned of himself. And
Christ says: "Let them alone, they are blind leaders of the blind."
If one err through ignorance, he will be instructed; but if he be hardened, and
will not yield to the truth, like Pharaoh, who would not acknowledge his sins,
or humble himself before God, and therefore was destroyed in the Red Sea, even
so will he be destroyed. We are all sinner by nature - conceived and born in
sin; sin has poisoned us through and through; we have from Adam a will, which
continually sets itself against God, unless by the Holy Ghost it be renewed and
changed. Of this neither the philosophers nor the lawyers know anything;
therefore they are justly excluded from the circuit of divinity, not grounding
their doctrine upon God's Word.
CCXLV.
Sins against the Holy Ghost
are, first, presumption; second, despair; third, opposition to and condemnation
of the known truth; fourth, not to wish well, but to grudge one's brother or
neighbor the grace of God; fifth, to be hardened; sixth, to be impenitent.
CCXLVI.
The greatest sins committed
against God, are the violations of the first table of the law. No man
understands or feels these sins, but he that has the Holy Ghost and the grace
of God. Therefore people feeling secure, though they draw God's wrath upon them,
yet flatter themselves they still remain in God's favor. Yea, they corrupt the
Word of God, and condemn it; yet think they do that which is pleasing and a
special service to God. As for example: Paul held the law of God to be the
highest and most precious treasure on earth, as we do the gospel. He would
venture life and blood to maintain it; and he thought he wanted neither
understanding, wisdom, nor power. But before he could rightly look about him,
and while he thought his cause most sure, then he heard another lesson, he got
another manner of commission, and it was told him plainly, that all his works,
actions, diligence and zeal, were quite against God. Yet his doings carried a
fair favor with the learned and seeming holy people, who said, Paul dealt
herein uprightly, and performed divine and holy works, in showing such zeal for
God's honor and for the law.
But God struck him on the ear,
that he fell to the ground, and heard, Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me? As
if he should say, Saul, even with that wherein thou thinkest to do me service,
thou dost nothing but persecute me, as my greatest enemy. It is true, thou
boastest that thou hast my word, that thou understandest the law, and wilt
earnestly defend and maintain it; thou receivest testimony and authority from
the elders and scribes, and in such they conceit and blind zeal thou
proceedest. But know, that in my law I have commanded, that whoso taketh my
name in vain shall die. Thou, Saul, takest my name in vain; therefore thou art
justly punished. Whereupon he said: Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? Mark,
this man was a master in the law of Moses, and yet he asked what he should do.
CCXLVII.
We have within us many sins
against our Lord God, and which justly displease him: such as anger, impatience,
covetousness, greediness, incontinence, hatred, malice, etc. These are great
sins, which everywhere in the world go on with power, and get the upper hand.
Yet these are nothing in comparison of condemning of God's Word; yea, all these
would remain uncommitted, if we did but love and reverence that. But, alas! the
whole world is drowned in this sin. No man cares a flip for the gospel, all
snarl at and persecute it, holding it as no sin. I behold with wonder in the
church, that among the hearers, one looks this way, another that; and that
among so great a multitude, few come to hear the sermon. This sin is so common,
that people will not confess it to be like other sins; every one deems it a
slight thing to hear a discourse without attention, and not diligently to mark,
learn and inwardly digest it. It is not so about other sins; as murder,
adultery, thieving, etc. For, after these sins, in due time follow grief,
sorrow of heart, and remorse. But not to hear God's Word with diligence, yea,
to condemn, to persecute it, of this man makes no account. Yet it is a sin so
fearful, that for the committing it both land and people must be destroyed, as
it went with Jerusalem, with Rome, Greece, and other kingdoms.
CCXLVIII.
Christ well knew how to
discriminate sins; we see in the gospel how harsh he was towards the Pharisees,
by reason of their great hatred and envy against him and his Word, while, on
the contrary, how mild and friendly he was towards the woman who was a sinner.
That same envy will needs rob Christ of his Word, for he is a bitter enemy unto
it, and in the end will crucify it. But the woman, as the greatest sinner,
takes hold on the Word, hears Christ, and believes that he is the only Saviour
of the world; she washes his feet, and anoints him with a costly water.
CCXLIX.
Let us not think ourselves
more just than was the poor sinner and murderer on the cross. I believe if the
apostles had not fallen, they would not have believed in the remission of sins.
Therefore, when the devil upbraids me, touching my sins, then I say; Good St
Peter, although I am a great sinner, yet I have not denied Christ my Saviour,
as you did. In such instances the forgiveness of sins remains confirmed. And
although the apostles were sinners, yet our Saviour Christ always excused them,
as when they plucked the ears of corn; but, on the contrary, he jeered the
Pharisees touching the paying of tribute, and commonly showed his
disapprobation of them; but the disciples he always comforted, as Peter, where
he says: "Fear not, thou shalt henceforth catch men."
CCL.
No sinner can escape his
punishment, unless he be sorry for his sins. For though one go scot free for
awhile, yet at last he will be snapped, as the Psalm says: "God indeed is
still judge on earth."
Our Lord God suffers the
ungodly to be surprised and taken captive in very slight and small things, when
they think not of it, when they are most secure, and live in delight and
pleasure, leaping for joy. In such manner was the pope surprised by me, about
his indulgences and pardons, comparatively a slight matter.
CCLI.
A magistrate, a father or
mother, a master or dame, tradesmen and others, must now and then look through
the fingers at their citizens, children, and servants, if their faults and
offences be not too gross and frequent; for where we will have summum jus,
there follows often summa injuria, so that all must go to wreck. Neither
do they which are in office always hit it aright, but err and sin themselves,
and must therefore desire the forgiveness of sins.
God forgives sins merely out
of grace for Christ's sake; but we must not abuse the grace of God. God has
given signs and tokens enough, that our sins shall be forgiven; namely, the
preaching of the gospel, baptism, the Lord's Supper, and the Holy Ghost in our
hearts.
Now it is also needful we
testify in our works that we have received the forgiveness of sins, by each
forgiving the faults of his brother. There is no comparison between God's
remitting of sins and ours. For what are one hundred pence, in comparison with
ten thousand pounds? as Christ says, naught. And although we deserve nothing by
our forgiving, yet we must forgive that thereby we may prove and give testimony
that we from God have received forgiveness of our sins.
The forgiveness of sins is
declared only in God's Word, and there we must seek it; for it is grounded on
God's promises. God forgives thee thy sins, not because thou feelest them and
art sorry, for this sin itself produces, without deserving, but he forgives thy
sins because he is merciful, and because he has promised to forgive for
Christ's sake.
CCLII.
When God said to Cain, through
Adam: "If thou do well shalt thou not be accepted? And if thou dost not
well sin lieth at the door," he shows the appearance of sinners, and
speaks with Cain as with the most hypocritical and poisonous Capuchin; `twas as
if Adam had said: Thou hast heard how it went with me in Paradise; I also would
willingly have hid my offence with fig leaves, lurking behind a tree, but know,
good fellow, our Lord God will not be so deceived; the fig leaves would not
serve the turn.
Ah! it was, doubtless, to
Adam, a heart-breaking and painful task, when he was compelled to banish and
proscribe his first born and only son, to hunt him out of his house, and to
say: Depart from me, and come no more in my sight; I still feel what I have
already lost in Paradise, I will lose no more for thy sake; I will now, with
more diligence, take heed to my God's commands. And no doubt Adam afterwards
preached with redoubled diligence.
CCLIII.
These two sins, hatred and
pride, deck and trim themselves out, as the devil clothed himself, in the
Godhead. Hatred will be godlike; pride will be truth. These two are right
deadly sins: hatred is killing; pride is lying.
CCLIV.
It can be hurtful to none to
acknowledge and confess his sins. Hast thou done this or that sin? - what then?
We freely, in God's name, acknowledge the same, and deny it not, but from our
hearts say: O Lord God! I have done this sin.
Although thou hast not
committed this or that sin, yet, nevertheless, thou art an ungodly creature;
and if thou hast not done that sin which another has done, so has he not
committed that sin which thou hast done; therefore cry quits one with another.
`Tis as the man said, that had young wolves to sell; he was asked which of them
was the best? He answered: If one be good, then they are all good; they are all
like one another. If thou hast been a murderer, an adulterer, a drunkard, etc.,
so have I been a blasphemer of God, who for the space of fifteen years was a
friar, and blasphemed God with celebrating that abominable idol, the mass. It
had been better for me I had been a partaker of other great wickednesses
instead; but what is done cannot be undone; he that has stolen, let him
henceforward steal no more.
CCLV.
The sins of common, untutored
people are nothing in comparison with the sins committed by great and high
persons, that are in spiritual and temporal offices.
What are the sins done by a
poor wretch, that according to law and justice is hanged, or the offences of a
poor strumpet, compared with the sins of a false teacher, who daily makes away
with many poor people, and kills them both body and soul? The sins committed
against the first table of God's ten commandments, are not so much regarded by
the world, as those committed against the second table.
CCLVI.
Original sin, after
regeneration, is like a wound that begins to heal; though it be a wound, yet it
is in course of healing, though it still runs and is sore.
So original sin remains in Christians
until they die, yet itself is mortified and continually dying. Its head is
crushed in pieces, so that it cannot condemn us.
CCLVII.
All natural inclinations are
either without God or against him; therefore none are good. I prove it thus:
All affections, desires, and inclinations of mankind are evil, wicked, and
spoiled, as the Scripture says.
Experience testifies this; for
no man is so virtuous as to marry a wife, only thereby to have children, to
love and to bring them up in the fear of God.
No hero undertakes great
enterprises for the common good, but out of ambition, for which he is justly
condemned: hence it must needs follow, that such original, natural desires and
inclinations are wicked. But God bears with them and lets them pass, in those that
believe in Christ.
CCLVIII.
Schenck proceeds in a most
monstrous manner, haranguing, without the least discernment, on the subject of
sin. I, myself, have heard him say, in the pulpit at Eisenach, without any
qualification whatever, "Sin, sin is nothing; God will receive sinners; He
himself tells us they shall enter the kingdom of heaven." Schenck makes no
distinction between sins committed, sins committing, and sins to be committed,
so that when the common people hear him say, "Sin, for God will receive
sinners;" they very readily repeat, "Well, we'll sin then." `Tis
a most erroneous doctrine. What is announced as to God's receiving sinners,
applies to sinners who have repented; there is all the difference in the world
between agnitum peccatum, attended by repentance, and velle peccare,
which is an inspiration of the devil.
CCLIX.
The very name, Free-will, was
odious to all the Fathers. I, for my part, admit that God gave to mankind a
free will, but the question is, whether this same freedom be in our power and
strength, or no? We may very fitly call it a subverted, perverse, fickle, and
wavering will, for it is only God that works in us, and we must suffer and be
subject to his pleasure. Even as a potter out of his clay makes a pot or vessel,
s he wills, so it is for our free will, to suffer and not to work. It stands
not in our strength; for we are not able to do anything that is good in divine
matters.
CCLX.
I have often been resolved to
live uprightly, and to lead a true godly life, and to set everything aside that
would hinder this, but it was far from being put in execution; even as it was
with Peter, when he swore he would lay down his life for Christ.
I will not lie or dissemble
before my God, but will freely confess, I am not able to effect that good which
I intend, but await the happy hour when God shall be pleased to meet me with
his grace.
The will of mankind is either
presumptuous or despairing. No human creature can satisfy the law. For the law
of God discourses with me, as it were, after this manner: Here is a great, a
high, and a steep mountain, and thou must go over it; whereupon my flesh and
free-will say, I will go over it; but my conscience says, Thou canst not go
over it; then comes despair, and says, If I cannot, then I must forbear. In
this sort does the law work in mankind either presumption or despair; yet the
law must be preached and taught, for if we preach not the law, then people grow
rude and confident, whereas if we preach it, we make them afraid.
CCLXI.
Saint Augustine writes, that
free-will, without God's grace and the Holy Ghost, can do nothing but sin;
which sentence sorely troubles the school-divines. They say, Augustine spoke hyperbolice,
and too much; for they understand that part of the Scripture to be spoken only
of those people who lived before the deluge, which says: "And God saw that
the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the
thoughts of his heart was only evil continually," etc.; whereas he speaks
in a general way, which these poor school-divines do not see any more than what
the Holy Ghost says, soon after the deluge, in almost the same words: "And
the Lord said in his heart, I will not again curse the ground any more for
man's sake, for the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth."
Hence, we conclude in general,
that man, without the Holy Ghost and God's grace, can do nothing but sin; he
proceeds therein without intermission, and from one sin falls into another.
Now, if man will not suffer wholesome doctrine, but condemns the all-saving
Word, and resists the Holy Ghost, then through the effects and strength of his
free-will he becomes God's enemy; he blasphemes the Holy Ghost, and follows the
lusts and desires of his own heart, as examples in all times clearly show.
But we must diligently weigh
the words which the Holy Ghost speaks through Moses: "Every imagination of
the thoughts of his heart is evil continually:" so that when a man is able
to conceive with his thoughts, with his understanding and free-will, by highest
diligence, is evil, and not once or twice, but evil continually; without the
Holy Ghost, man's reason, will, and understanding, are without the knowledge of
God; and to be without the knowledge of God, is nothing else than to be
ungodly, to walk in darkness, and to hold that for best which is direct worst.
I speak only of that which is
good in divine things, and according to the holy Scripture; for we must make a
difference between that which is temporal, and that which is spiritual, between
politics and divinity; for God also allows of the government of the ungodly,
and rewards their virtues, yet only so far as belongs to this temporal life;
for man's will and understanding conceive that to be good which is external and
temporal - nay, take it to be, not only good, but the chief good.
But when we divines speak of
free-will, we ask what man's free-will is able to accomplish in divine and
spiritual matters, not in outward and temporal affairs; and we conclude that
man, without the Holy Ghost, is altogether wicked before God, although he were
decked up and trimmed with all the virtues of the heathen, and had all their
works.
For, indeed, there are fair
and glorious examples in heathendom, of many virtues, where men were temperate,
chaste, bountiful; loved their country, parents, wives, and children; were men
of courage, and behaved themselves magnanimously and generously.
But the ideas of mankind
concerning God, the true worship of God, and God's will, are altogether stark
blindness and darkness. For the light of human wisdom, reason, and
understanding, which alone is given to man, comprehends only what is good and
profitable outwardly. And although we see that the heathen philosophers now and
then discoursed touching God and his wisdom very pertinently, so that some have
made prophets of Socrates, of Xenophon, of Plato, etc., yet, because they knew
not that God sent his Son Christ to save sinners, such fair, glorious, and
wise-seeming speeches and disputations are nothing but mere blindness and
ignorance.
CCLXII.
Ah, Lord God! why should be
boast of our free-will, as if it were able to do anything ever so small, in
divine and spiritual matters? when we consider what horrible miseries the devil
has brought upon us through sin, we might shame ourselves to death.
For, first, free-will led us
into original sin, and brought death upon us: afterwards, upon sin followed not
only death, but all manner of mischiefs, as we daily find in the world, murder,
lying, deceiving, stealing, and other evils, so that no man is safe the
twinkling of an eye, in body or goods, but always stands in danger.
And, besides these evils, is
afflicted with yet a greater, as is noted in the gospel - namely, that he is
possessed of the devil, who makes him mad and raging.
We know not rightly what we
become after the fall of our first parents; what from our mothers we have
brought with us. For we have altogether, a confounded, corrupt, and poisoned
nature, both in body and soul; throughout the whole of man is nothing that is
good.
This is my absolute opinion:
he that will maintain that man's free-will is able to do or work anything in
spiritual cases be they never so small, denies Christ. This I have maintained
in my writings, especially in those against Erasmus, one of the learnedest men
in the whole world, and thereby will I remain, for I know it to be the truth,
though all the world should be against it; yea, the decree of Divine Majesty
must stand fast against the gates of hell.
I confess that mankind has a
free-will, but it is to milk kine, to build houses, etc., and no further; for
so long as a man is at ease and in safety, and is in no want, so long he things
he has a free-will, which is able to do something; but when want and need
appear, so that there is neither meat, drink, nor money, where is then
free-will? It is utterly lost, and cannot stand when it comes to the pinch.
Faith only stands fast and sure, and seeks Christ. Therefore faith is far
another thing than free-will: nay, free-will is nothing at all, but faith is
all in all. Art thou bold and stout, and canst thou carry it lustily with thy
free-will when plague, wars, and times of dearth and famine are at hand? No: in
time of plague, thou knowest not what to do for fear; thou wishest thyself a
hundred miles off. In time of dearth thou thinkest: Where shall I find to eat;
Thy will cannot so much as give thy heart the smallest comfort in these times
of need, but the longer thou strivest, the more it makes thy heart faint and
feeble, insomuch that it is affrighted even at the rushing and shaking of a
leaf. These are the valiant acts our free-will can achieve.
CCLXIII.
Some few divines allege, that
the Holy Ghost works not in those that resist him, but only in such as are
willing and give consent thereto, whence it would appear that free-will is only
a cause and helper of faith, and that consequently faith alone justifies not,
and that the Holy Ghost does not alone work through the Word, but that our will
does something therein.
But I say it is not so; the
will of mankind works nothing at all in his conversion and justification; Non
est efficiens causa justificationis sed marerialis tantum. It is the matter
on which the Holy Ghost works (as a potter makes a pot out of clay), equally in
those that resist and are averse, as in St Paul. But after the Holy Ghost has
wrought in the wills of such resistants, then he also manages that the will be
consenting thereunto.
They say and allege further,
That the example of St Paul's conversion is a particular and special work of God,
and therefore cannot be brought in for a general rule. I answer: even like as
St Paul was converted, just so are all others converted; for we all resist God,
but the Holy Ghost draws the will of mankind, when he pleases, through
preaching.
Even as no man may lawfully
have children, except in a state of matrimony, though many married people have
no children, so the Holy Ghost works not always through the Word but when it
pleases him, so that free-will does nothing inwardly in our conversion and
justification before God, neither does it work with our strength - no, not in
the least, unless we be prepared and made fit by the Holy Ghost.
The sentences in Holy
Scripture touching predestination, as, "No man can come to me except the
Father draweth him," seem to terrify and affright us; yet they but show
that we can do nothing of our own strength and will that is good before God,
and put the godly also in mind to pray. When people do this, they may conclude
they are predestinated.
Ah! why should we boast that
our free-will can do aught in man's conversion? We see the reverse in those
poor people, who are corporally possessed of the devil, how he rends, and
tears, and spitefully deals with them, and with what difficulty he is driven
out. Truly, the Holy Ghost alone must drive him out, as Christ says: "If
I, with the finger of God, do drive out devils, then no doubt the kingdom of
God is come upon you." As much as to say, If the kingdom of God shall come
upon you, then the devil must first be driven out, for his kingdom is opposed
to God's kingdom, as ye yourselves confess. Now the devil will not be driven
out through God's finger, then the kingdom of the devil subsists there; and
where the devil's kingdom is, there is not God's kingdom.
And again, so long as the Holy
Ghost comes not into us, we are not only unable to do anything good, but we
are, so long, in the kingdom of the devil, and do what is pleasing unto him.
What could St Paul have done
to be freed from the devil, though all the people on earth had been present to
help him? Truly, nothing at all; he was forced to do and suffer that which the
devil, his lord and master, pleased, until our blessed Saviour Christ came,
with divine power.
Now, if he could not be quit
of the devil, corporally from his body, how should he be quit of him
spiritually from his soul, through his own will, strength, and power? For the
soul was the cause why the body was possessed, which also was a punishment for
sin. It is a matter more difficult to be delivered from sin than from the punishment;
the soul is always heavier possessed than the body; the devil leaves to the
body its natural strength and activity; but the soul he bereaves of
understanding, reason, and power, as we see in possessed people.
Let us mark how Christ
pictures forth the devil. He names him a strong giant that keeps a castle; that
is, the devil has not only the world in possession, as his own kingdom, but he
fortifies it in such a way that no human creature can take it from him, and he
keeps it also in such subordination that he does even what he wills to have
done. Now, as much as a castle is able to defend itself against the tyrant
which is therein, even so much is free-will and human strength able to defend
itself against the devil; that is, no way able at all. And even as the castle
must first be overcome by a stronger giant, to be won from the tyrant, even so
mankind must be delivered and regained from the devil through Christ. Hereby,
we see plainly that our doings and righteousness can help nothing towards our deliverance,
but only by God's grace and power.
O! how excellent and
comfortable a gospel is that, in which our Saviour Christ shows what a loving
heart he bears towards us poor sinners, who are able to do nothing at all for
ourselves to our salvation.
For as a silly sheep cannot
take heed to itself, that it err not, nor go astray, unless the shepherd always
leads it; yea, and when it has erred, gone astray, and is lost, cannot find the
right way, nor come to the shepherd, but the shepherd must go after it, and
seek until he find it, and when he has found it, must carry it, to the end it
be not scared from him again, go astray, or be torn by the wolf: so neither can
we help ourselves, nor attain a peaceful conscience, nor outrun the devil,
death and hell, unless Christ himself seek and call us through his Word; and
when we are come unto him, and posses the true faith, yet we of ourselves are
not able to keep ourselves therein, nor to stand, unless he always holds us up
through the Word and spirit, seeing that the devil everywhere lies lurking for
us, like a roaring lion, seeking to devour us.
I fain would know how he who
knows nothing of God, should know how to govern himself; how he, who is
conceived and born in sin, as we all are, and is by nature a child of wrath,
and God's enemy, should know how to find the right way and to remain therein,
when, as Isaiah says: "We can do nothing else but go astray." How is
it possible we should defend ourselves against the devil, who is a Prince of
this world, and we his prisoners, when, with all our strength, we are not able
so much as to hinder a leaf or a fly from doing us hurt? I say, how may we poor
miserable wretches presume to boast of comfort, help, and counsel against God's
judgment, his wrath and everlasting death, when we cannot tell which way to
seek help, or comfort, or counsel, no, not in the least of our corporal
necessities, as daily experience teaches us, either for ourselves or others?
Therefore, thou mayest boldly
conclude, that as little as a sheep can help itself, but must needs wait for
all assistance from the shepherd, so little, yea, much less, can a human
creature find comfort, help, and advice of himself, in cases pertaining to
salvation, but must expect and wait for these only from God, his shepherd, who
is a thousand times more willing to do every good thing for his sheep than any
temporal shepherd for his.
Now, seeing that human nature,
through original sin, is wholly spoiled and perverted, outwardly and inwardly,
in body and soul, where is then free-will and human strength? Where human
traditions, and the preachers of works, who teach that we must make use of our
own abilities, and by our own works obtain God's grace, and so, as they say, be
children of salvation? O! foolish, false doctrine! - for we are altogether
unprepared with our abilities, with our strength and works, when it comes to
the combat, to stand or hold out. How can that man be reconciled to God, whom
he cannot endure to hear, but flies from to a human creature, expecting more
love and favor from one that is a sinner, than he does from God. Is not this a
fine free-will for reconciliation and atonement?
The children of Israel on
Mount Sinai, when God gave them the Ten commandments, showed plainly that human
nature and free-will can do nothing, or subsist before God; for they feared
that God would suddenly strike among them, holding him merely for a devil, a
hangman, and a tormentor, who did nothing but fret and fume.
CCLXIV.
I believe the words of the apostles
creed to be the work of the Holy Ghost; the Holy Spirit alone could have
enunciated things so grand, in terms so precise, so expressive, so powerful. No
human creature could have done it, nor all the human creatures of ten thousand
worlds. This creed, then, should be the constant object of our most serious
attention. For myself, I cannot too highly admire or venerate it.
CCLXV.
The catechism must govern the
church, and remain lord and ruler; that is, the ten commandments, the creed,
the Lord's Prayer, the sacraments, etc. And although there may be many that set
themselves against it, yet it shall stand fast, and keep the pre-eminence,
through him of whom it is written, "Thou art a priest for ever:" for
he will be a priest, and will also have priests, despite the devil and all his
instruments on earth.
CCLXVI.
Sermons very little edify
children, who learn little thereby; it is more needful they be taught and well
instructed in schools, and at home, and that they be heard and examined what
they have learned; this way profits much; `tis very wearisome, but very
necessary. The papists avoid such pains, so that their children are neglected
and forsaken.
CCLXVII.
In the catechism, we have a
very exact, direct, and short way to the whole Christian religion. For God
himself gave the ten commandments, Christ himself penned and taught the Lord's
Prayer, the Holy Ghost brought together the articles of faith. These three
pieces are set down so excellently, that never could any thing have been
better; but they are slighted and condemned by us as things of small value,
because the little children daily say them.
The catechism is the most
complete and best doctrine, and therefore should continually be preached; all
public sermons should be grounded and built thereupon. I could wish we preached
it daily, and distinctly read it out of the book. But our preachers and hearers
have it at their fingers ends; they have already swallowed it all up; they are
ashamed of this slight and simple doctrine, as they hold it, and will be
thought of higher learning. The parishioners say: Our preachers fiddle always
one tune; they preach nothing but the catechism, the ten commandments, the
creed, the Lord's prayer, baptism, and the Lord's supper; all which we know
well enough already; but the catechism, I insist, is the right Bible of the
laity, wherein is contained the whole sum of Christian doctrine necessary to be
known by every Christian for salvation.
First, there are the ten
commandments of God, Doctrina Doctrinarum, the doctrine of all
doctrines, by which God's will is known, what God will have of us, and what is
wanting in us. Secondly, there is the confession of faith in God and in our
Lord Jesus Christ; Historia Historiarum, the history of histories, or
highest history, wherein are delivered unto us the wonderful works of the
divine Majesty from the beginning to all eternity; how we and all creatures are
created by God; how we are delivered by the Son of God through his humanity,
his passion, death, and resurrection; and also how we are renewed and collected
together, the one people of God, and have remission of sins and everlasting
life.
Thirdly, there is the Lord's
prayer, Oratio Orationum, the prayer above all prayers, a prayer which
the most high Master taught us, wherein are comprehended all spiritual and
temporal blessings, and the strongest comforts in all trials, temptations, and
troubles, even in the hour of death.
Fourthly, there are the
blessed sacraments, Cerimoniae Cerimoniarum, the highest ceremonies,
which God himself has instituted and ordained, and therein assured us of his
grace. We should esteem and love the catechism, for therein is the ancient,
pure, divine doctrine of the Christian church. And whatsoever is contrary
thereunto is new and false doctrine, though it have ever so glorious a show and
lustre, and we must take good heed how we meddle therewith. In all my youth I
never heard any preaching, either of the ten commandments, or of the Lord's
prayer.
Future heresies will darken
this light, but now we have the catechism, God be praised, purer in the
pulpits, than has been for the last thousand years. So much could not be
collected out of all the books of the Fathers, as, by God's grace, is now
taught out of the little catechism. I only read in the Bible at Erfurt, in the
monastery; and God then wonderfully wrought, contrary to all human expectation,
so that I was constrained to depart from Erfurt, and was called to Wittenberg,
where, under God, I gave the devil, the pope of Rome, such a blow, as no
emperor, king, or potentate, could have given him; yet it was not I, but God by
me, his poor, weak, and unworthy instrument.
The Decalogue - that is, the
ten commandments of God, are a looking-glass and brief sum of all virtues and
doctrines, both how we ought to behave towards God and also our neighbour; that
is, towards all mankind.
There never was at any time
written a more excellent, complete, or compendious book of virtues.
CCLXIX.
God says: "I, the Lord
thy God, am a jealous God." Now, God is jealous two manner of ways; first,
God is angry as one that is jealous of them that fall from him, and become
false and treacherous, that prefer the creature before the Creator; that build
upon the favors of the great; that depend upon their friends, upon their own
power - riches, arts, wisdom, etc.; that forsake the righteousness of faith,
and condemn it, and will be justified and saved by and through their own good
works. God is also vehemently angry with those that boast and brag of their
power and strength; as we see in Sennacherib, king of Assyria, who boasted of
his great power, and thought utterly to destroy Jerusalem. Likewise in king
Saul, who also thought to defend and keep the kingdom through his strength and
power, and to pass it on to his children when he had suppressed David and
rooted him out.
Secondly, God is jealous for
them that love him and highly esteem his Word; such God loves again, defends,
and keeps as the apple of his eye, and resists their adversaries, beating them
back, that they are not able to perform what they intended. Therefore, this
word jealous comprehends both hatred and love, revenge and protection; for
which cause it requires both fear and faith; fear, that we provoke not God to
anger, or work his displeasure; faith, that in trouble we believe he will help,
nourish, and defend us in this life, and will pardon and forgive us our sins,
and for Christ's sake preserve us to life everlasting. For faith must rule and
govern, in and over all things, both spiritual and temporal; the heart must
believe most certainly that God looks upon us, loves, helps, and will not
forsake us, as the Psalm says: "Call upon me in the time of trouble, so
will I deliver thee, and thou shalt praise me," etc. Also "The Lord
is nigh unto all those that call upon him; yea, all that call upon him
faithfully." And, "He that calleth upon the name of the Lord shall be
saved."
Further, the Lord says:
"And will visit the sins of the fathers upon the children, unto the third
and fourth generation," etc. This is a terrible word of threatening, which
justly affrights our hearts, and stirs up fears in us. It is quite contrary to
our reason, for we conceive it to be a very unjust proceeding, that the
children and posterity should be punished for their fathers and forefathers
offences. But forasmuch as God has so decreed, and is pleased so to proceed,
therefore our duty is to know and acknowledge that he is a just God, and that
he wrongs none. Seeing that these fearful threatenings are contrary to our
understanding, therefore flesh and blood regard them not, but cast them in the
wind, as though they signified no more than the hissing of a goose. But we that
are true Christians believe the same to be certain, when the Holy Ghost touches
our hearts, and that this proceeding is just and right, and thereby we stand in
the fear of God. Here again we may see what man's free-will can do, in that it
understands and fears nothing. If we did but feel and know how earnest a
threatening this is, we should for fear instantly fall down dead; and we have
examples, as where God said: that for the sins of Manasseh he will cast the
people into miserable captivity.
But some may argue: Then I see
well that the posterity have no hope of grace when their parents sin. I answer:
Those that repent, from them is the law taken away and abolished, so that their
parents sins do not hurt them; as the prophet Ezekiel says: "The son shall
not bear the iniquity of the father;" yet God permits the external and
corporal punishment to go on, yea, sometimes over the penitent children also
for examples, to the end that others may fly from sin and lead a godly life.
"But he will do good and
be merciful unto thousands," etc. This is a great, a glorious, and
comfortable promise, far surpassing all human reason and understanding, that, for
the sake of one godly person, so many should be partakers of undeserved
blessings and mercies. For we find many examples, that a multitude of people
have enjoyed mercies and benefits for the sake of one godly man; as for
Abraham's sake, many people were preserved and blessed, and also for Isaac's
sake; and for the sake of Naaman the whole kingdom of Assyria was blessed of
God.
To love God is, that we
certainly hold and believe that God is gracious unto us, that he helps,
assists, and does us good. Therefore, love proceeds from faith, and God
requires faith, to believe that he promises all good unto us.
CCLXX.
The first commandment will
stand and remain, that God is our God; this will not be accomplished in the
present, but in the life everlasting. All the other commandments will cease and
end; for, in the life to come, the world will cease and end together with all
external worship of God, all world policy and government; only God and the
first commandment will remain everlastingly, both here and there.
We ought well to mark with
what great diligence and ability Moses handles the first commandment, and
explains it. He was doubtless an excellent doctor. David afterwards was a gate
or a door out of Moses. For he had well studied in Moses, and so he became a fine
poet and orator; the Psalms are altogether syllogisms, or concluding
sentences out of the first commandment. Major, the first, is God's Word
itself; Minor, the second, faith. The conclusion is the act, work, and
execution, so that it is done as we believe. As, Major: Misericors Deus,
respicit miseros: Minor: Ego sum miser; Conclusio; Ergo Deus me queoque
respicit.
When we believe the first
commandment, and so please God, then all our actions are pleasing unto him. If
thou hearest his Word, if thou prayest, mortifiest thyself, then says God unto
thee: I am well pleased with what thou doest. Moreover, when we observe the
first commandment, then that placet goes through all the other
commandments and works. Art thou a Christian? wilt thou marry a wife? wilt thou
buy and sell? wilt thou labor in the works of thy vocation? wilt thou punish
and condemn wicked and ungodly wretches? wilt thou eat, drink, sleep? etc. God
says continually: Placet.
But if thou keepest not the
first commandment, then says God to all thy works and actions, Non placent,
they please me not. Christ takes the first commandment upon himself, where he
says: "He that honoreth me, honoreth the Father; he that honoreth not the
Son, honoreth not the Father."
CCLXXI.
We must reject those who so
highly boast of Moses laws, as to temporal affairs, for we have our written
imperial and country laws, under which we live, and unto which we are sworn.
Neither Naaman the Assyrian, nor Job, nor Joseph, nor Daniel, nor many other
good and godly Jews, observed Moses laws out of their country, but those of the
Gentiles among whom they lived. Moses law bound and obliged only the Jews in
that place which God mad choice of. Now they are free. If we should keep and
observe the laws and rites of Moses, we must also be circumcised, and keep the
mosaical ceremonies; for there is no difference; he that holds one to be
necessary, must hold the rest so too. Therefore let us leave Moses to his laws,
excepting only the Moralia, which God has planted in nature, as the ten
commandments, which concern God's true worshipping and service, and a civil
life.
CCLXXII.
The particular and only office
of the law is, as St Paul teaches, that transgressions thereby should be
acknowledged; for it was added, because of transgressions, till seed should
come, to whom the promise was made. These are the express and plain words of St
Paul; therefore we trouble not ourselves with what the papists allege to the
contrary, and spin out of human reason, extolling the maintainers and seeming
observers of Moses law.
CCLXXIII.
God gives to the emperor the
sword, the emperor delivers it to the judge, and causes thieves, murderers,
etc., to be punished and executed. Afterwards, when God pleases, he takes the
sword from the emperor again; even so does God touching the law; he leaves it
to the devil, and permits him therewith to affright sinners.
CCLXXIV.
The law is used in two ways;
first, for this worldly life, because God has ordained all temporal laws and
statutes to prevent and hinder sin. But here some one may object: If the law
hinder sin, then also it justifies. I answer: Oh! no, this does not follow;
that I do not murder, commit adultery, steal, etc., is not because I love
virtue and righteousness, but because I fear the hangman, who threatens me with
the gallows, sword, etc. It is the hangman that hinders me from sinning, as
chains, ropes, and strong bands hinder bears, lions, and other wild beasts from
tearing and rending in pieces all that come in their way.
Hence we may understand, That
the same can be no righteousness that is performed out of fear of the curse,
but sin and unrighteousness; for the law binds mankind, who by nature are prone
to wickedness, that they do not sin, as willingly they would.
Therefore this is the first
point concerning the law, that it must be used to deter the ungodly from their
wicked and mischievous intentions. For the devil, who is an abbot and prince of
this world, allures people to work all manner of sin and wickedness; wherefore
God has ordained magistrates, elders, schoolmasters, laws and statutes, to the
end, if they can do no more, that at least they may bind the claws of the
devil, and hinder him from raging and swelling so powerfully in those who are
his, according to his will and pleasure.
Secondly, we use the law
spiritually, as thus: To make transgressions seem greater, as St Paul says, or
to reveal and discover to people their sins, blindness, and ungodly doings,
wherein they were conceived and born; namely, that they are ignorant of God,
and are his enemies, and therefore have justly deserved death, hell, God's
judgments, his everlasting wrath and indignation. But the hypocritical sophists
in universities know nothing thereof, neither do those who are of opinion that
they are justified by the law and their own works.
But to the end that God might
put to silence, smother, suppress and beat down to the ground these mischievous
and furious beats, he has appointed and ordained a particular Hercules with a
club, powerfully to lay hold on such beasts, take them captive, strike them
down, and so dispatch them out of the way; that is, he gave the law upon the
hill of Sinai, with such fearful thundering and lightning, that all people
thereat were amazed and affrighted.
It is exceeding necessary for
us to know this use of the law. For he that is not an open and a public
murderer, an adulterer, or a thief, holds himself to be an upright and godly
man; as did the Pharisee, so blinded and possessed spiritually of the devil, that
he could neither see nor feel his sins, nor his miserable case, but exalted
himself touching his good works and deserts. Such hypocrites and haughty saints
can God by no better means humble and soften, than by and through the law; for
that is the right club or hammer, the thunderclap from heaven, the axe of God's
wrath, that strikes through, beats down, and batters such stock-blind, hardened
hypocrites. For this cause, it is no small matter that we should rightly
understand what the law is, whereto it serves, and what is its proper work and
office. We do not reject the law and the works thereof, but on the contrary,
confirm them, and teach that we ought to do good works, and that the law is
very good and profitable, if we merely give it its right, and keep it to its
own proper work and office.
The law opens not nor makes
visible God's grace and mercy, or the righteousness whereby we obtain
everlasting life and salvation; but our sins, our weakness, death, God's wrath
and judgment.
The light of the gospel is a
far different manner of light, enlightening affrighted, broken, sorrowful, and
contrite hearts, and reviving, comforting, and refreshing them. For it declares
that God is merciful to unworthy, condemned sinners, for the sake of Christ,
and that a blessing thereby is presented unto them who believe; that is, grace,
remission of sins, righteousness, and everlasting life.
When in this way we
distinguish the law and the gospel, then we attribute and give to each its
right work and office. Therefore, I pray and admonish all lovers of godliness
and pure religion, especially those who in time are to be teachers of others,
that with highest diligence they study this matter, which I much fear, after
our time, will be darkened again, if not altogether extinguished.
CCLXXV.
Never was a bolder, harsher
sermon preached in the world than that wherein St Paul abolished Moses and his
law, as insufficient for a sinner's salvation.
Hence the continual dissension
and strife which this apostle had with the Jews. And if Moses had not cashiered
and put himself out of his office, with these words: "The Lord thy God
will raise up unto thee another prophet out of thy brethren, him shalt thou
here;" who then would or could have believed the gospel, and forsaken
Moses?
Hence the vehement accusation
brought by the worthy Jews, who suborned certain men to accuse the beloved
Stephen, saying: "We have heard him speak blasphemous words against Moses
and against God." Likewise, "This man ceaseth not to speak
blasphemous words against the holy place and the law," etc. For to preach
and teach that the observing of the law was not necessary to salvation, was to
the Jews as horrible, as though one should stand up and preach among us
Christians: Christ is not the Lamb of God, that taketh away the sins of the
world. St Paul could have been content they had kept and observed the law, had
they not asserted it was necessary to salvation. But the Jews would no more
endure this, than the papists, with their fopperies, will now endure that we
hold and observe the ceremonies, so that every one shall be at liberty either
to observe or not observe them, according as occasion serves, and that the
conscience therein may not be bound or ensnared, and that God's Word freely be
preached and taught. But Jews and papists are ungodly wretches; they are two
stockings made of one piece of cloth.
CCLXXVI.
Moses with his law is most
terrible; there never was any equal to him in perplexing, affrighting,
tyrannizing, threatening, preaching, and thundering; for he lays sharp hold on
the conscience, and fearfully works it, but all by God's express command. When
we are affrighted, feeling our sins, God's wrath and judgments, most certainly,
in the law is no justification; therein is nothing celestial and divine, but
`tis altogether of the world, which world is the kingdom of the devil.
Therefore it is clear and apparent that the law can do nothing that is
vivifying, saving, celestial, or divine; what it does is altogether temporal;
that is, it gives us to know what evil is in the world, outwardly and inwardly.
But, besides this, the Holy Ghost must come over the law, and speak thus in thy
heart; God will not have thee affright thyself to death, only that through the
law thou shouldest know thy misery, and yet not despair, but believe in Christ,
who is the end of the law for righteousness.
CCLXXII.
St Paul now and then speaks
scornfully of the law, but he means not that we should condemn the law; he
would rather we should esteem and hold it precious. But where he teaches how we
become justified before God, it was necessary for him so to speak; for it is
far another thing when we talk how we may be justified before God, than when we
talk about the law. When we have in hand the righteousness that justifies
before God, we cannot too much disdain or undervalue the law.
The conscience must have
regard to nothing but Christ; wherefore we must with all diligence, endeavor to
remove Moses with his law far from us out of sight, when we intend to stand
justified before God.
CCLXXVIII.
It is impossible for thy human
strength, whosoever thou art, without God's assistance, when Moses sets upon
thee with his law, accuses and threatens thee with God's wrath, and death, to
possess such peace as if no law or sin had ever been.
When thou feelest the terror
of the law, thou mayest say thus: Madam Law! I have no time to hear you speak;
your language is very rough and unfriendly; I would have you know that your
reign is over, therefore I am now free, I will endure your bondage no longer.
When we thus address the law, we shall find the difference between the law of
grace and the law of thundering Moses; and how great a divine and celestial
gift it is to hope against hope, when there seems nothing to hope for; and how
true the speech of St Paul is, where he says: "Through faith in Christ we
are justified, and not through the works of the law." When, indeed,
justification is not the matter in hand, we ought highly to esteem the law,
extol it, and with St Paul, call it good, true, spiritual, and divine, as in
truth it is.
God will keep his Word through
the writing pen upon earth; the divines are the heads or quills of the pens,
the lawyers the stumps. If the world will not keep the heads and quills, that
is, if they will not hear the divines, they must keep the stumps, that is, they
must hear the lawyers, who will teach them manners.
CCLXXIX.
I will have none of Moses with
his law, for he is an enemy to my Lord and Saviour Christ. If Moses will go to
law with me, I will give him his dispatch, and say: Here stands Christ.
At the day of judgment Moses
will doubtless look upon me, and say: Thou didst understand me rightly, and
didst well distinguish between me and the law of faith; therefore we are now
friends.
We must reject the law when it
seeks to affright the conscience, and when we feel God's anger against our
sins, then we must eat, drink, and be cheerful, to spite the devil. But human
wisdom is more inclined to understand the law of Moses, than the law of the
Gospel. Old Adam will not out.
Together with the law, Satan
torments the conscience by picturing Christ before our eyes, as an angry and
stern judge, saying: God is an enemy to sinners, for he is a just God; thou art
a sinner, therefore God is thy enemy. Hereat is the conscience dejected, beaten
down, and taken captive. Now he that can make a true difference in this case,
will say: Devil! thou art deceived, it is not so as thou pretendest; for God is
not an enemy to all sinners, but only to the ungodly and impenitent sinners and
persecutors of his Word. For even as sin is two-fold, even so is righteousness
two-fold.
CCLXXX.
Two learned men came to me,
and asked whether the law of God revealed sin to people without the particular
motion of the Holy Ghost? the one affirming that it was so, the other denying it.
The first would prove his opinion out of St Paul, where he says: "By the
law is the knowledge of sin;" but the other alleged, that this was the
work and office of the Holy Ghost through the law; for many heard the preaching
of the law, and yet did not acknowledge their sins.
I answered them: Ye are both
in the right if ye well understood one another; your difference consists only
in words; for the law must be understood two manner of ways; first, as a law
described and heard; when it reveals not the strength or the sting of sin, it
goes in at one ear and out at the other; it neither touches nor strikes the
heart at all.
Secondly, when the law is
taught, and the Holy Ghost comes thereunto, touches the heart, and gives
strength to the Word, and the heart confesses sin, feels God's wrath, and says:
Ah! this concerns me; I have sinned against God, and have offended. Then the
law has well and rightly finished its work and office.
After these came a third, and
said: `tis one matter to be simply a law, and another to be God's law; for the
law of God must always have its operation and strength, which the law of man
has not. To him I made this answer:
The law must be distinguished,
understood, and divided three-fold: first, a written law, second, a verbal, third,
a spiritual law. The written law, which is written in the book, is like a
block, which, without motion, remains lying; that law does nothing except we
read therein. The verbal law reveals and shows sin; yea, in the ungodly; for
when adulterers hear the seventh commandment, "Thou shalt not commit
adultery," then they understand that this reproves them; but they either
condemn it, or else they persecute those by whom they are reproved. But the
spiritual law cannot be without the motion of the Holy Ghost, which touches the
heart, and moves it, so that a man not only ceases to persecute, but has sorrow
for sins committed, and desires to be better.
The same person urged: St Paul
says, that the word works in the hearers; I answered: the word which in that place
St Paul speaks of, must be understood of the gospel; for even that Word,
whether written or verbal, taught or preached, does nothing without the Holy
Ghost, which must kindle it in their hearts, reviving and strengthening them.
CCLXXXI.
Every law or commandment
contains two profitable points: first, a promise; second, a threatening; for
every law is, or should be, good, upright, and holy, Rom. vii. It commands that
which is good, and forbids that which is evil: it rewards and defends the good
and godly, but punishes and resists the wicked; as St Paul says: "Rulers
are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid
of the power? do that which is good." And St Peter: "For the
punishment of evil-doers, and for the praise of them that do well." And
the imperial laws teach the same. Now, seeing there are promises and
threatenings in temporal laws, how much more so are they fitting in God's laws,
which require faith. The emperor's laws, indeed, require faith, true or
feigned; for those who do not fear or believe that the emperor will punish or
protect, observe not his laws, as we see, but those observe them that fear and
believe, whether from the heart or not. Now, where in Scripture there is a
promise without the law, there faith only is necessary: as, when Abraham was
promised that his seed should multiply as the stars of heaven; he was not
commanded at that time to accomplish any work, but he heard of a work which God
would accomplish, and which he himself was not able to do. Thus is Christ
promised unto us, and is described to have done a work which we cannot do;
therefore in this case, faith is needful for us, because by works we cannot
take hold thereof.
CCLXXXII.
The law, with its
righteousness, is like a cloud without rain, which promises rain but gives
none; even so does the law promise salvation, but gives it not, for the law was
not assigned to that end, as St Paul says, Gal. iii.
CCLXXXIII.
The Gospel preaches nothing of
the merit of works; he that says the Gospel requires works for salvation, I
say, flat and plain, is a liar.
Nothing that is properly good
proceeds out of the works of the law, unless grace be present; for what we are
forced to do, goes not from the heart, nor is acceptable. The people under
Mosts were always in a murmuring state, would fain have stoned him, and were
rather his enemies than his friends.
CCLXXXIV.
He that will dispute with the
devil out of the law, will be beaten and taken captive; but he that disputes
with him out of the Gospel, conquers him. The devil has the written bond
against us; therefore, let no man presume to dispute with him of the law or
sin. When the devil says to me: behold, much evil proceeds from thy doctrine,
then I say to him: much good and profit come also from it. O! replies the
devil, that is nothing to the purpose. The devil is an artful orator; he can
make out of a mote a beam, and falsify that which is good; he was never in all
his life so angry and vexed as he is now; I feel him well.
It baptism, if the sacrament,
if the Gospel be false, and if Christ be not in heaven and governs not, then
indeed I am in the wrong; but if these are of God's instituting and ordaining,
and if Christ is in heaven and rules, then I am sure that the cause I have in
hand is good; for what I teach and do openly in the church is altogether of the
Gospel, of baptism, of the Lord's supper, of prayer, etc. Christ and his Gospel
are here present; therein I must and will continue.
CCLXXXV.
If we diligently mark the
world, we shall find that it is governed merely by its conceited opinions;
sophistry, hypocrisy, and tyranny rule it; the upright, pure and clear divine
Word must be their handmaid, and by them controlled. Therefore, let us beware
of sophistry, which consists not only in a double tongue, in twisting words,
which may be construed any way, but also blossoms and flourishes in all arts
and vocations, and will likewise have room and place in religion, where it has
usurped a fine, fictitious color.
Nothing is more pernicious
than sophistry; we are by nature prone to believe lies rather than truth. Few
people know what an evil sophistry is; Plato, the heathen writer, made thereof
a wonderful definition. For my part, I compare it with a lie, which, like a
snowball, the more it is rolled the greater it becomes.
Therefore, I approve not of
such as pervert everything, undervaluing and finding fault with other men's
opinions, though they be good and sound. I like not brains that can dispute on
both sides, and yet conclude nothing certain. Such sophistications are mere
crafty and subtle inventions and contrivances, to cozen and deceive people.
But I love an honest and well
affected mind, that seeks after truth simply and plainly, and goes not about
with fantasies and cheating tricks.
CCLXXXVI.
St Paul says: "What the
law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God sending his own
Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin condemned sin in flesh; that
the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us," etc. That is,
Christ is the sum of all; he is the right, the pure meaning and contents of the
law. Whoso has Christ, has rightly fulfilled the law. But to take away the law
altogether, which sticks in nature, and is written in our hearts and born in
us, is a thing impossible and against God. And whereas the law of nature is
somewhat darker, and speaks only of works, therefore, Moses and the Holy Ghost
more clearly declare and expound it, by naming those works which God will have
us to do, and to leave undone. Hence Christ also says: "I am not come to
destroy the law." Worldly people would willingly give him royal
entertainment who could bring this to pass, and make out that Moses, through
Christ, is quite taken away. O, then we should quickly see what a fine kind of
life there would be in the world! But God forbid, and keep us from such errors,
and suffer us not to live to see the same.
CCLXXXVII.
We must preach the law for the
sake of evil and wicked, but for the most part it lights upon the good and
godly, who, although they need it not, except so far as may concern the old
Adam, flesh and blood, yet accept it. The preaching of the Gospel we must have
for the sake of the good and godly, yet it falls among the wicked and ungodly,
who take it to themselves, whereas it profits them not; for they abuse it, and
are thereby made confident. It is even as when it rains in the water or on a
desert wilderness, and meantime, the good pastures and grounds are parched and
dried up. The ungodly out of the gospel suck only a carnal freedom, and become
worse thereby; therefore, not the Gospel, but the law belongs to them. Even as
when my little son John offends, if then I should not whip him, but call him to
the table to me, and give him sugar plums, thereby I should make him worse,
yea, quite spoil him.
The Gospel is like a fresh,
mild, and cool air in the extreme heat of summer, a solace and comfort in the
anguish of conscience. But as this heat proceeds from the rays of the sun, so
likewise the terrifying of the conscience must proceed from the preaching of
the law, to the end we may know that we have offended against the laws of God.
Now, when the mind is
refreshed and quickened again by the cool air of the Gospel, then we must not
be idle, lie down and sleep. That is, when our consciences are settled in
peace, quieted and comforted through God's Spirit, we must prove our faith by
such good works as God has commanded. But so long as we live in this vale of
misery, we shall be plagued and vexed with flies, with beetles, and vermin,
that is, with the devil, the world, and our own flesh; yet we must press
through, and not suffer ourselves to recoil.
CCLXXXVIII.
In what darkness, unbelief,
traditions, and ordinances of men have we lived, and in how many conflicts of
the conscience we have been ensnared, confounded, and captivated under popedom,
is testified by the books of the papists, and by many people now living. From
all which snares and horrors we are now delivered and freed by Jesus Christ and
his Gospel, and are called to the true righteousness of faith; insomuch that
with good and peaceable consciences we now believe in God the Father, we trust
in him, and have just cause to boast that we have sure and certain remission of
our sins through the death of Christ Jesus, dearly bought and purchased. Who
can sufficiently extol these treasures of the conscience, which everywhere are
spread abroad, offered and presented merely by grace? We are now conquerors of
sin, of the law, of death, and of the devil; freed and delivered from all human
traditions. If we would but consider the tyranny of auricular confession, one
of the least things we have escaped from, we could not show ourselves
sufficiently thankful to God for loosing us out of that one snare. When popedom
stood and flourished among us, then every king would willingly have given ten
hundred thousand guilders, a prince one hundred thousand, a nobleman one
thousand, a gentleman one hundred, a citizen or countryman twenty or ten, to
have been freed from that tyranny. But now seeing that such freedom is obtained
for nothing, by grace, it is not much regarded, neither give we thanks to God
for it.
CCLXXXIX.
The Old Testament is chiefly a
law-book, teaching what we should do or not do, and showing examples and acts
how such laws are observed and transgressed. But besides the law, there are
certain promises and sentences of grace, whereby the holy patriarchs and
prophets were preserved then, as we are now. But the New Testament is a book
wherein is written the gospel of God's promises, and the acts of those that
believed, and those that believed not. And it is an open and public preaching
and declaration of Christ, as set down in the sentences of the Old Testament,
and accomplished by him. And like as the proper and chief doctrine of the New
Testament is grace and peace, through the forgiveness of sins declared in
Christ, so the proper and chief doctrine of the Old Testament is, through the
law, to discover sin, and to require good works and obedience.
We must take good heed that we
make not a Moses out of Christ, nor out of Christ as Moses, as often has been
done. But where Christ and his apostles, in the Gospel, give out commands and
doctrines expounding the law, these are as important as the other works and
benefits of Christ. Yet to only know Gospel precepts, is not to know the
Gospel; but when the voice sounds which says, Christ is thine own, with life
and works, with death and resurrection, with all what he is, and all he has, by
this we see that he forces not, but teaches amicably, saying: "Bless are
the poor," etc., "Come to me all ye that are weary and heavy
laden," etc. and the apostles use the words: "I admonish,"
"I exhort," "I pray," etc.; so that we see in every place
that the Gospel is not a law-book, but a mild preaching of Christ's merits,
given to be our own, if we believe.
Hence it follows that no law
is given to the faithful whereby they become justified before God, as St. Paul
says, because they are already justified and saved by faith; but they show and
prove their faith by their works, they confess and teach the gospel before
people freely and undauntedly, and thereupon venture their lives; and
whatsoever they take in hand, they direct to the good and profit of their
neighbor, and so follow Christ's example. For, where works and love do not
break through and appear, there faith is not.
We must make a clear
distinction; we must place the Gospel in heaven, and leave the law on earth; we
must receive of the Gospel a heavenly and a divine righteousness; while we
value the law as an earthly and human righteousness, and thus directly and
diligently separate the righteousness of the gospel from the righteousness of
the law, even as God has separated and distinguished heaven from earth, light
from darkness, day from night, etc., so that the righteousness of the Gospel be
the light and the day, but the righteousness of the law, darkness and night.
Therefore all Christians should learn rightly to discern the law and grace in
their hearts, and know how to keep one from the other, in deed and in truth,
not merely in words, as the pope and other heretics do, who mingle them
together, and, as it were, make thereout a cake not fit to eat.
CCXC.
Augustine pictured the
strength, office, and operation of the law, by a very fit similitude, to show,
that it discovers our sins, and God's wrath against sin, and places them in our
sight. "The law," says he, "is not in fault, but our evil and
wicked nature; even as a heap of lime is still and quiet, until water be poured
thereon, but then it begins to smoke and burn, not from the fault of the water,
but from the nature and kind of the lime, which will not endure water; whereas,
if oil, instead, be poured upon it, then it lies still, and burns not; even so
it is with the law and the Gospel."
CCXCI.
On this matter of the
righteousness of the law, St Paul thoroughly bestirred himself against God's
professing people, as in Rom. ix., x., xi., he strives with powerful,
well-based arguments; it produced him much sorrow of heart.
The Jews argument was this:
Paul kept the law at Jerusalem, therefore, said they, we must also keep it.
Answer: True, Paul for a certain time kept the law, by reason of the weak, to
win them; but, in this our time, it is not so, and agrees not in any way
therewith; as the ancient father well said: Distinguish times, and we may
easily reconcile the Scriptures together.
CCXCII.
It is impossible for a papist
to understand this article: "I believe the forgiveness of sins." For
the papists are drowned in their opinions, as I also was when among them, of
the cleaving to or inherent righteousness. The Scripture names the faithful,
saints and people of God. It is a sin and shame that we should forget this
glorious and comfortable name and title. But the papists are such direct
sinners, that they will not be reckoned sinners; and again, they will neither
be holy nor held so to be. And in this sort it goes on with them untoward and
crosswise, so that they neither believe the Gospel which comforts, nor the law
which punishes.
But here one may say: the sins
which we daily commit, offend and anger God; how then can we be holy? Answer: A
mother's love to her child is much stronger than the distaste of the scurf upon
the child's head. Even so, God's love towards us is far stronger than our
uncleanness. Therefore, though we be sinners, yet we lose not thereby our
childhood, neither do we fall from grace by reason of our sins.
Another may say; we sin
without ceasing, and where sin is, there the Holy Spirit is not; therefore we
are not holy, because the Holy Spirit is not in us, which makes holy. Answer:
The text says plainly; "The Holy Ghost shall glorify me." Now where
Christ is, there is the Holy Spirit. Now Christ is in the faithful, although
they have and feel, and confess sins, and with sorrow of heart complain
thereof, therefore sins do not separate Christ from those that believe.
The God of the Turks helps no
longer or further, as they think, than as they are godly people; in like manner
also the God of the papists. So when Turk and papist begin to feel their sins
and unworthiness, as in time of trial and temptation, or in death, then they
tremble and despair.
But a true Christian says:
"I believe in Jesus Christ my Lord and Saviour," who gave himself for
my sins, and is at God's right hand, and intercedes for me; fall I into sin,
as, alas! oftentimes I do, I am sorry for it; I rise again, and am an enemy
unto sin. So that we plainly see, the true Christian faith is far different
from the faith and religion of the pope and Turk. But human strength and nature
are not able to accomplish this true Christian faith without the Holy Spirit.
It can do no more than take refuge in its own deserts.
But he that can say: "I
am a child of God through Christ, who is my righteousness," and despairs
not, though he be deficient in good works, which always fail us, he believes
rightly. But grace is so great that it amazes a human creature, and is very
difficult to be believed. Insomuch that faith gives the honor to God, that he
can and will perform what he promised, namely, to make sinners righteous, Rom.
iv., though `tis an exceeding hard matter to believe that God is merciful unto
us for the sake of Christ. O! man's heart is too strait and narrow to entertain
or take hold of this.
CCXCIII.
All men, indeed, are not alike
strong, so that in some many faults, weaknesses, and offences, are found; but
these do not hinder them of sanctification, if they sin not of evil purposes
and premeditation, but only out of weakness. For a Christian, indeed, feels the
lusts of the flesh, but he resists them, and they have not dominion over him;
and although, now and then, he stumbles and falls into sin, yet it is forgiven
him, whom he raises again, and holds on to Christ, who will not "That the
lost sheep be hunted away, but he sought after."
CCXCIV.
Why do Christians make use of
their natural wisdom and understanding, seeing it must be set aside in matters
of faith, as not only not understanding them, but also as striving against
them?
Answer: The natural wisdom of a
human creature in matters of faith, until he be regenerate and born anew, is
altogether darkness, knowing nothing in divine cases. But in a faithful person,
regenerate and enlightened by the Holy Spirit, through the Word, it is a fair
and glorious instrument, and work of God: for even as all God's gifts, natural
instruments, and expert faculties, are hurtful to the ungodly, even so are they
wholesome and saving to the good and godly.
The understanding, through
faith, receives life from faith; that which was dead, is made alive again; like
as our bodies, in light day, when it is clear and bright, and better disposed,
rise, move, walk, etc., more readily and safely than they do in the dark night,
so it is with human reason, which strives not against faith, when enlightened,
but rather furthers and advances it.
So the tongue, which before
blasphemed God, now lauds, extols, and praises God and his grace, as my tongue,
now it is enlightened, is now another manner of tongue than it was in popedome;
a regeneration done by the Holy Ghost through the Word.
A sanctified and upright
Christian says: My wife, my children, my art, my wisdom, my money and wealth,
help and avail me nothing in heaven; yet I cast them not away nor reject them
when God bestows such benefits upon me, but part and separate the substance
from the vanity and foolery which cleave thereunto. Gold is and remains gold as
well when a strumpet carries it about her, as when `tis with an honest, good,
and godly woman. The body of a strumpet is even as well God's creature, as the
body of an honest matron. In this manner ought we to part and separate vanity
and folly from the thing and substance, or from the creature given and God who
created it.
CCXCV.
Upright and faithful
Christians ever think they are not faithful, nor believe as they ought; and
therefore they constantly strive, wrestle, and are diligent to keep and to
increase faith, as good workmen always see that something is wanting in their
workmanship. But the botchers think that nothing is wanting in what they do,
but that everything is well and complete. Like as the Jews conceive they have
the ten commandments at their fingers end, whereas, in truth, they neither
learn nor regard them.
CCXCVI.
Truly it is held for
presumption in a human creature that he dare boast of his own proper
righteousness of faith; `tis a hard matter for a man to say: I am the child of
God, and am comforted and solaced through the immeasurable grace and mercy of
my heavenly Father. To do this from the heart, is not in every man's power.
Therefore no man is able to teach pure and aright touching faith, nor to reject
the righteousness of works, without sound practice and experience. St Paul was
well exercised in this art; he speaks more vilely of the law than any arch
heretic can speak of the sacrament of the altar, of baptism, or than the Jews
have spoken thereof; for he names the law, the ministration of death, the
ministration of sin, and the ministration of condemnation; yea, he holds all
the works of the law, and what the law requires, without Christ, dangerous and
hurtful, which Mosts, if he had then lived, would doubtless have taken very ill
at Paul's hands. It was, according to human reason, spoken too scornfully.
CCXCVII.
Faith and hope are variously
distinguishable. And, first, in regard of the subject, wherein everything
subsists: faith consists in a person's understanding, hope in the will; these
two cannot be separated; they are like the two cherubim over the mercy seat.
Secondly, in regard of the
office; faith indites, distinguishes, and teaches, and is the knowledge and
acknowledgment; hope admonishes, awakens, hears, expects, and suffers.
Thirdly, in regard to the
object: faith looks to the word or promise, which is truth; but hope to that
which the Word promises, which is the good or benefit.
Fourthly, in regard of order
in degree: faith is first, and before all adversities and troubles, and is the
beginning of life. Heb. xi. But hope follows after, and springs up in trouble.
Rom. v.
Fifthly, by reason of the
contrariety: faith fights against errors and heresies; it proves and judges
spirits and doctrines. But hope strives against troubles and vexations, and
among the evil it expects good.
Faith in divinity, is the
wisdom and providence, and belongs to the doctrine. But hope is the courage and
joyfulness in divinity, and pertains to admonition. Faith is the dialectica,
for it is altogether prudence and wisdom; hope is the rhetorica, an
elevation of the heart and mind. As wisdom without courage is futile, even so
faith without hope is nothing worth; for hope endures and overcomes misfortune
and evil. And as a joyous valor without understanding is but rashness, so hope
without faith is spiritual presumption. Faith is the key to the sacred
Scriptures, the right Cabata or exposition, which one receives of
tradition, as the prophets left this doctrine to their disciples. `Tis said St
Peter wept whenever he thought of the gentleness with which Jesus taught. Faith
is given from one to another, and remains continually in one school. Faith is
not a quality, as the schoolmen say, but a gift of God.
CCXCVIII.
Everything that is done in the
world is done by hope. No husbandman would sow one grain of corn, if he hoped
not it would grow up and become seed; no bachelor would marry a wife, if he
hope not to have children; no merchant or tradesman would set himself to work,
if he did not hope to reap benefit thereby, etc. How much more, then, does hope
urge us on to everlasting life and salvation?
CCXCIX.
Faith's substance is our will;
its manner is that we take hold on Christ by divine instinct; its final cause
and fruit, that it purifies the heart, makes us children of God, and brings
with it the remission of sins.
CCC.
Adam received the promise of
the woman's seed ere he had done any work or sacrifice, to the end God's truth
might stand fast - namely, that we are justified before God altogether without
works, and obtain forgiveness of sins merely by grace. Whoso is able to believe
this well and steadfastly, is a doctor above all the doctors in the world.
CCCI.
Faith is not only necessary,
that thereby the ungodly may become justified and saved before God, and their
hearts be settled in peace, but it is necessary in every other respect. St Paul
says: "Now that we are justified by faith, we have peace with God through
our Lord Jesus Christ."
CCCII.
Joseph of Arimathea had a
faith in Christ, like as the apostles had; he thought Christ would have been a
worldly and temporal potentate; therefore he took care of him as a good friend,
and buried him honorably. He believed not that Christ should raise again from
death, and become a spiritual and everlasting king.
CCCIII.
When Abraham shall rise again
at the last day, then he will chide us for our unbelief, and will say: I had
not the hundredth part of the promises which ye have, and yet I believed. That
example of Abraham exceeds all human natural reason, who, overcoming the
paternal love he bore towards his only son, Isaac, was all obedient to God, and
against the law of nature, would have sacrificed that son. What, for the space
of three days, he felt in his breast, how his heart yearned and panted, what
hesitations and trials he had, cannot be expressed.
CCCIV.
All heretics have continually failed
in this one point, that they do not rightly understand or know the article of
justification. If we had not this article certain and clear, it were impossible
we could criticize the pope's false doctrine of indulgences and other
abominable errors, much less be able to overcome greater spiritual errors and
vexations. If we only permit Christ to be our Saviour, then we have won, for he
is the only girdle which clasps the whole body together, as St Paul excellently
teaches. If we look to the spiritual birth and substance of a true Christian,
we shall soon extinguish all deserts of good works; for they serve us to no
use, neither to purchase sanctification, nor to deliver us from sin, death,
devil or hell.
Little children are saved only
by faith, without any good works; therefore faith alone justifies. If God's
power be able to effect that in one, then he is also able to accomplish it in
all; for the power of the child effects it not, but the power of faith; neither
is it done through the child's weakness or disability; for then that weakness
would be merit of itself, or equivalent to merit. It is a mischievous thing
that we miserable, sinful wretches will upbraid God, and hit him in the teeth
with our works, and think thereby to be justified before him; but God will not
allow it.
CCCV.
This article, how we are
saved, is the chief of the whole Christian doctrine, to which all divine
disputations must be directed. All the prophets were chiefly engaged upon it,
and sometimes much perplexed about it. For when this article is kept fast and
sure by a constant faith, then all other articles draw on softly after, as that
of the Holy Trinity, etc. God has declared no article so plainly and openly as
this, that we are saved only by Christ; though he speaks much of the Holy
Trinity, yet he dwells continually upon this article of the salvation of our
souls; other articles are of great weight, but this surpasses all.
CCCVI.
A capuchin says: wear a grey
coat and a hood, a rope round thy body, and sandals on thy feet. A cordelier
says: put on a black hood; an ordinary papist says: do this or that work, hear
mass, pray, fast, give alms, etc. But a true Christian says: I am justified and
saved only by faith in Christ, without any works or merits of my own; compare
these together, and judge which is the true righteousness.
CCCVII.
Christ says: "The spirit
is willing, but the flesh is weak;" St Paul also says: the spirit
willingly would give itself wholly unto God, would trust in him, and be
obedient; but natural reason and understanding, flesh and blood, resist and
will not go forward. Therefore our Lord God must needs have patience and bear
with us. God will not put out the glimmering flax; the faithful have as yet but
only the first fruits of the spirit; they have not the fulfilling, but the
tenth.
CCCVIII.
I well understand that St Paul
was also weak in faith, whence he boasted and said, "I am a servant of
God, and an apostle of Jesus Christ." An angel stood by him at sea, and
comforted him, and when he came to Rome, he was comforted as he saw the
brethren come out to meet him. Hereby we see what the communion and company
does of such as fear God. The Lord commanded the disciples to remain together
in one place, before they received the Holy Ghost, and to comfort one another;
for Christ well knew that adversaries would assault them.
CCCIX.
A Christian must be well
armed, grounded, and furnished with sentences out of God's Word, that so he may
stand and defend religion and himself against the devil, in case he should be
asked to embrace another doctrine.
CCCX.
When at the last day we shall
live again, we shall blush for shame, and say to ourselves: "fie on thee,
in that thou hast not been more courageous, bold, and strong to believe in
Christ, and to endure all manner of adversities, crosses, and persecutions,
seeing his glory is so great. If I were now in the world, I would not stick to
suffer ten thousand times more."
CCXI.
Although a man knew, and could
do as much as the angels in heaven, yet all this would not make him a Christian,
unless he knew Christ and believed in him. God says: "Let not the wise man
glory in his wisdom, neither let the mighty man glory in his might; let not the
rich man glory in his riches; but let him that glorieth, glory in this, that he
understandeth and knoweth me, that I am the Lord, which doth exercise
lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness," etc.
CCCXII.
The article of our
justification before God is as with a son who is born heir to all his father's
goods, and comes not thereunto by deserts, but naturally, or ordinary course.
But yet, meantime, his father admonishes him to do such and such things, and
promises him gifts to make him the more willing. As when he says to him: if
thou wilt be good, be obedient, study diligently, then I will buy thee a fine
coat; or, come hither to me, and I will give thee an apple. In such sort does
he teach his son industry; though the whole inheritance belongs unto him of
course, yet will he make him, by promises, pliable and willing to do what he
would have done.
Even so God deals with us; he
is loving unto us with friendly and sweet words, promises us spiritual and
temporal blessings, though everlasting life is presented unto thee who believe
in Christ, by mere grace and mercy, gratis, without any merits, works, or worthynesses.
And this ought we to teach in
the church and in the assembly of God, that God will have upright and good
works, which he has commanded, not such as we ourselves take in hand, of our
own choice and devotion, or well meaning, as the friars and priests teach in
popedom, for such works are not pleasing to God, as Christ says: "In vain
do they worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men," etc.
We must teach of good works, yet always so that the article of justification remain
pure and unfalseified. For Christ neither can nor will endure any beside
himself; he will have the bride alone; he is full of jealousy.
Should we teach: if thou
believest, thou shalt be saved, whatsoever thou doest; that were stark naught;
for faith is either false or feigned, or, though it be upright, yet is
eclipsed, when people wittingly and willfully sin against God's command. And
the Holy Spirit, which is given to the faithful, departs by reason of evil
works done against the conscience, as the example of David sufficiently
testifies.
CCCXIII.
As to ceremonies and
ordinances, the kingdom of love must have precedence and government, and not
tyranny. It must be a willing, not a halter love; it must altogether be
directed and construed for the good and profit of the neighbor; and the greater
he that governs, the more he ought to serve according to love.
CCCXIV.
The love towards our neighbor
must be like the pure and chaste love between bride and bridegroom, where all
faults are connived at and borne with, and only the virtues regarded.
CCCXV.
Believest thou? then thou wilt
speak boldly. Speakest thou boldly? then thou must suffer. Sufferest thou? then
thou shalt be comforted. For faith, the confession thereof, and the cross,
follow one upon another.
Give and it shall be given
unto you: this is a fine maxim, and makes people poor and rich; it is that
which maintains my house. I would not boast, but I well know what I give away
in the year. If my gracious lord and master, the prince elector, should give a
gentleman two thousand florins, this should hardly answer to the cost of my
housekeeping for one year; and yet I have but three hundred florins a year, but
God blesses these and makes them suffice.
There is in Austria a
monastery, which, in former times, was very rich, and remained rich so long as
it was charitable to the poor; but when it ceased to give, then it became
indigent, and is so to this day. Not long since, a poor man went there and
solicited alms, which was denied him; he demanded the cause why they refused to
give for God's sake? The porter of the monastery answered: We are become poor;
whereupon the mendicant said: The cause of your poverty is this: ye had
formerly in this monastery two brethren, the one named Date (give), and
the other Dabitur (it shall be given you). The former ye thrust out; the
other went away of himself.
We are bound to help one's
neighbor three manner of ways - with giving, lending, and selling. But no man
gives; every one scrapes and claws all to himself; each would willingly steal,
but give nothing, and lend but upon usury. No man sells unless he can
over-reach his neighbor; therefore is Dabitur gone, and our Lord God
will bless us no more so richly. Beloved, he that desires to have anything,
must also give: a liberal hand was never in want, or empty.
CCCXVII.
Desert is a work nowhere to be
found, for Christ gives a reward by reason of the promise. If the prince
elector should say to me: Come to the court, and I will give thee one hundred
florins, I perform a work in going to the court, yet I receive not the gift by
reason of my work in going thither, but by reason of the promise the prince
made me.
CCCXVIII.
I marvel at the madness and
bitterness of Wetzell, in undertaking to write so much against the Protestants,
assailing us without rhyme or reason, and, as we say, getting a case out of
hedge; as where he rages against this principle of ours, that the works and
acts of a farmer, husbandman, or any other good and godly Christian, if done in
faith, are far more precious in the sight of God, than all the works of monks,
friars, nuns, etc. This poor, ignorant fellow gets very angry against us,
regarding not the works which God has commanded and imposed upon each man in
his vocation, state and calling. He heeds only superstitious practices, devised
for show and effect, which God neither commands nor approves of.
St Paul, in his epistles,
wrote of good works and virtues more energetically and truthfully than all the
philosophers; for he extols highly the works of godly Christians, in their
respective vocations and callings. Let Wetzell know that David's wars and
battles were more pleasing to God than the fastings and prayings even of the
holiest of the old monks, setting aside altogether the works of the monks of
our time, which are simply ridiculous.
CCCXIX.
I never work better than when
I am inspired by anger; when I am angry, I can write, pray, and preach well,
for then my whole temperament is quickened, my understanding sharpened, and all
mundane vexations and temptations depart.
CCCXX.
Dr. Justus Jonas asked me if
the thoughts and words of the prophet Jeremiah were Christianlike, when he
cursed the day of his birth. I said: We must now and then wake up our Lord God
with such words. Jeremiah had cause to murmur in this way. Did not our Saviour
Christ say: "O faithless and perverse generation! How long shall I be with
you, and suffer you?" Moses also took God in hand, where he said:
"Wherefore hast thou afflicted thy servant? Have I conceived all this
people? Have I begotten them?"
CCCXXI.
A man must needs be plunged in
bitter affliction when in his heart he means good, and yet is not regarded. I
can never get rid of these cogitations, wishing I had never begun this business
with the pope. So, too, I desire myself rather dead than to hear or see God's
Word and his servants condemned; but `tis the frailty of our nature to be thus
discouraged.
They who condemn the movement
of anger against antagonists, are theologians who deal in mere speculations;
they play with words, and occupy themselves with subtleties, but when they are
aroused, and take a real interest in the matter, they are touched sensibly.
CCCXXII.
"In quietness and in
confidence shall be your strength." This sentence I expounded thus: If
thou intendest to vanquish the greatest, the most abominable and wickedest
enemy, who is able to do thee mischief both in body and soul, and against whom
thou preparest all sorts of weapons, but canst not overcome; then know that
there is a sweet and loving physical herb to serve thee, named Patienta.
Thou wilt say: how may I
attain this physic? Take unto thee faith, which says: no creature can do me
mischief without the will of God. In case thou receivest hurt and mischief by
thine enemy, this is done by the sweet and gracious will of God, in such sort
that the enemy hurts himself a thousand times more than he does thee. Hence
flows unto us, a Christian, the love which says: I will, instead of the evil
which mine enemy does unto me, do him all the good I can; I will heap coals of
fire upon his head. This is the Christian armor and weapon, wherewith to beat
and overcome those enemies that seem to be like huge mountains. In a word, love
teaches to suffer and endure all things.
CCCXXIII.
A certain honest and
God-fearing man at Wittenberg, told me, that though he lived peaceably with
every one, hurt no man, was ever quiet, yet many people were enemies unto him.
I comforted him in this manner: Arm thyself with patience, and be not angry
though they hate thee; what offence, I pray, do we give the devil? What ails
him to be so great an enemy unto us? only because he has not that which God
has; I know no other cause of his vehement hatred towards us. If God give thee
to eat, eat; if he cause thee to fast, be resigned thereto; gives he the
honors? take them; hurt or shame? endure it; casts he thee into prison? murmur
not; will he make thee a king? obey him; casts he thee down again? heed it not.
CCCXXIV.
Patience is the most excellent
of the virtues, and, in Sacred Writ, highly praised and recommended by the Holy
Ghost. The learned heathen philosophers applaud it, but they do not know its
genuine basis, being without the assistance of God. Epictetus, the wise and
judicious Greek, said very well: "Suffer and abstain."
CCCXXV.
It was the custom of old, in
burying the dead, to lay their heads towards the sun-rising, by reason of a
spiritual mystery and signification therein manifested; but this was not an
enforced law. So all laws and ceremonies should be free in the church, and not
be done on compulsion, being things which neither justify nor condemn in the
sight of God, but are observed merely for the sake of orderly discipline.
CCCXXVI.
The righteousness of works and
hypocrisy are the most mischievous diseases born in us, and not easily
expelled, especially when they are confirmed and settled upon us by use and
practice; for all mankind will have dealings with Almighty God, and dispute
with him, according to their human natural understanding, and will make
satisfaction to God for their sins, with their own strength and self-chosen
works. For my part, I have so often deceived our Lord God by promising to be
upright and good, that I will promise no more, but will only pray for a happy
hour, when it shall please God to make me good.
CCCXXVII.
A popish priest once once
argued with me in this manner: Evil works are damned, therefore good works
justify. I answered: This your argument is nothing worth; it concludes not ratione
contrariorum; the things are not in connection; evil works are evil in complete
measure, because they proceed from a heart that is altogether spoiled and evil;
but good works, yea, even in an upright Christian, are incompletely good; for
they proceed out of a weak obedience but little recovered and restored. Whoso
can say from his heart, I am a sinner, but God is righteous; and who, at the
point of death, from his heart can say; Lord Jesus Christ, I commit my spirit
into thy hands, may assure himself of true righteousness, and that he is not of
the number of those that blaspheme God, in relying upon their own works and
righteousness.
CCCXXVIII.
None can believe how powerful
prayer is, and what it is able to effect, but those who have learned it by
experience. It is a great matter when in extreme need, to take hold on prayer.
I know, whenever I have earnestly prayed, I have been amply heard, and have
obtained more than I prayed for; God, indeed, sometimes delayed, but at last he
came.
Ecclesiasticus says: "The
prayer of a good and godly Christian availeth more to health, than the
physician's physic."
O how great a thing, how
marvellous, a godly Christian's prayer is! how powerful with God; that a poor
human creature should speak with God's high Majesty in heaven, and not be
affrighted, but, on the contrary, know that God smiles upon him for Christ's
sake, his dearly beloved Son. The heart and conscience, in this act of praying,
must not fly and recoil backwards by reason of our sins and unworthiness, or
stand in doubt, or be scared away. We must not do as the Bavarian did, who,
with great devotion, called upon St Leonard, an idol set up in a church in
Bavaria, behind which idol stood one who answered the Bavarian, and said: Fie
on thee, Bavarian; and in that sort often repulsed and would not hear him, till
at last, the Bavarian went away, and said: Fie on thee, Leonard.
When we pray, we must not let
it come to: Fie upon thee; but certainly hold and believe, that we are already
heard in that for which we pray, with faith in Christ. Therefore the ancients
ably defined prayer an Accensus mentis ad Deum, a climbing up of the
heart unto God.
CCCXXIX.
Our Saviour Christ as
excellency as briefly comprehends in the Lord's prayer all things needful and
necessary. Except under troubles, trials, and vexations, prayer cannot rightly
be made. God says: "Call on me in the time of trouble;" without
trouble it is only a bald prattling, and not from the heart; `tis a common
saying: "Need teaches to pray." And though the papists say that God
well understands all the words of those that pray, yet St Bernard is far of
another opinion, who says: God hears not the words of one that prays, unless he
that prays first hears them himself. The pope is a mere tormentor of the
conscience. The assemblies of his greased crew, in prayer, were altogether like
the croaking of frogs, which edified nothing at all; mere sophistry and deceit,
fruitless and unprofitable. Prayer is a strong wall and fortress of the church;
it is a godly Christian's weapon, which no man knows or finds, but only he who
has the spirit of grace and of prayer.
The three first petitions in
our Lord's prayer comprehend such great and celestial things, that no heart is
able to search them out. The fourth contains the whole policy and economy of
temporal and house government, and all things necessary for this life. The
fifth fights against our own evil consciences, and against original and actual
sins, which trouble them. Truly that prayer was penned by wisdom itself; none
but God could have done it.
CCCXXX.
Prayer in popedom is mere
tongue-threshing; not prayer, but a work of obedience. Thence a confused sea of
Horae Canonicae, the howling and babbling in cells and monasteries,
where they read and sing the psalms and collects, without any spiritual
devotion, understanding neither the words, sentences, nor meaning.
How I tormented myself with
those Horae Canonicae before the Gospel came, which by reason of much
business I often intermitted, I cannot express. On the Saturdays, I used to
lock myself up in my cell, and accomplish what the whole week I had neglected.
But at last I was troubled with so many affairs, that I was fain often to omit
also my Saturday's devotions. At length, when I saw that Amsdorf and others
derided such devotion, then I quite left it off.
From this great torment we are
now delivered by the Gospel. Though I had done no more but only freed people
from that torment, they might well give me thanks for it.
CCCXXXI.
We cannot pray without faith
in Christ, the Mediator. Turks, Jews, and papists may repeat the words of
prayer, but they cannot pray. And although the Apostles were taught this Lord's
prayer by Christ, and prayed often, yet they prayed not as they should have
prayed; for Christ says: "Hitherto ye have not prayed in my name;"
whereas, doubtless, they had prayed much, speaking the words. But when the Holy
Ghost came, then they prayed aright in the name of Christ. If praying and
reading of prayer be but only a bare work, as the papists hold, then the
righteousness of the law is nothing worth. The upright prayer of the godly
Christian is a strong hedge, as God himself says: "And I sought for a man
among them that should make up the hedge, and stand in the gap before me for
the land, that I should not destroy it, but I found none."
CCCXXXII.
When Moses, with the children
of Israel, came to the Red Sea, then he cried with trembling and quaking; yet
he opened not his mouth, neither was his voice heard on earth by the people;
doubtless he cried and sighed in his heart, and said: Ah, Lord God! what course
shall I now take? Which way shall I now turn myself? How am I come to this
strait? No help or counsel can save us; before us is the sea; behind us are our
enemies the Egyptians; on both sides high and huge mountains; I am the cause
that all this people shall now be destroyed. Then answered God, and said:
"Wherefore criest thou unto me?" as if God should say: What an alarm
dost thou make, that the whole heavens ring! Human reason is not able to search
this passage out. The way through the Red Sea is full as broad and wide, if not
wider, than Wittenberg lies from Coburg, that so, doubtless, the people were
constrained in the night season to rest and to eat therein; for six hundred
thousand men, besides women and children, would require a good time to pass
through, though they went one hundred and fifty abreast.
CCCXXXIII.
It is impossible that God
should not hear the prayers which with faith are made in Christ, though he give
not according to the measure, manner, and time we dictate, for he will not be tied.
In such sort dealt God with the mother of St Augustine; she prayed to God that
her son might be converted, but as yet it would not be; then she ran to the
learned, entreating them to persuade and advise him thereunto. She propounded
unto him a marriage with a Christian virgin, that thereby he might be drawn and
brought to the Christian faith, but all would not do as yet. But when our Lord
God came thereto, he cam to purpose, and made of him such an Augustine, that he
became a great light to the church. St James says: "Pray one for another,
for the prayer of the righteous availeth much." Prayer is a powerful
thing, for God has bound and tied himself thereunto.
CCCXXXIV.
Christ gave the Lord's prayer,
according to the ideas of the Jews - that is, he directed it only to the
Father, whereas they that pray, should pray as though they were to be heard for
the Son's sake. This was because Christ would not be praised before his death.
CCCXXXV.
Justice Jonas asked Luther if
these sentences in Scripture did not contradict each other; where God says to
Abraham: "If I find ten in Sodom, I will not destroy it;" and where
Ezekiel says: "Though these three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it,
yet would I not hear," etc.; and where Jeremiah says: "Therefore pray
not thou for this people." Luther answered; No, they are not against one
another; for in Ezekiel it was forbidden them to pray, but it was not so with
Abraham. Therefore we must have regard to the Word; when God says: thou shalt
not pray, then we may well cease.
CCCXXXVI.
When governors and rulers are
enemies to God's Word, then our duty is to depart, to sell and forsake all we
have; to fly from one place to another, as Christ commands. We must make for
ourselves no tumults, by reason of the Gospel, but suffer all things.
CCCXXXVII.
Upright Christians pray
without ceasing; though they pray not always with their mouths, yet their
hearts pray continually, sleeping and waking; for the sigh of a true Christian
is a prayer. As the Psalm saith: "Because of the deep sighing of the poor,
I will up, saith the Lord," etc. In like manner a true Christian always
carried the cross, though he feel it not always.
CCCXXXVIII.
The Lord's prayer binds the
people together, and knits them one to another, so that one prays for another,
and together one with another; and it is so strong and powerful that it even
drives away the fear of death.
CCCXXXIX.
Prayer preserves the church,
and hitherto has done the best for the church; therefore, we must continually
pray. Hence Christ says: "Ask, and ye shall have; seek, and ye shall find;
knock, and it shall be opened unto you."
First, when we are in trouble,
he will have us to pray; for God often, as it were, hides himself, and will not
hear; yea, will not suffer himself to be found. Then we must seek him; that is,
we must continue in prayer. When we seek him, he often locks himself up, as it
were, in a private chamber; if we intend to come in unto him, then we must
knock, and when we have knocked once or twice, then he begins a little to hear.
At last, when we make much knocking, then he opens, and says: What will ye
have? Lord, say we, we would have this or that; then, say he, Take it unto you.
In such sort must we persist in praying, and waken God up.
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CCCXL.
The ancient teachers ordained
three sorts of baptizing; of water, of the Spirit, and of blood; these were observed
in the church. The catechumens were baptized in water; others, that could not
get such water-bathing, and nevertheless believed, were saved in and through
the Holy Spirit, as Cornelius was saved, before he was baptized. The third sort
were baptized in blood, that is, in martyrdom.
CCCXLI.
Heaven is given unto me
freely, for nothing. I have assurance hereof confirmed unto me by sealed
covenants, that is, I am baptized, and frequent the sacrament of the Lord's
Supper. Therefore I keep the bond safe and sure, lest the devil tear it in
pieces; that is, I live and remain in God's fear and pray daily unto him. God
could not have given me better security of my salvation, and of the gospel,
than by the death and passion of his only Son: when I believe that he overcame
death, and died for me, and therewith behold the promise of the Father, then I
have the bond complete. And when I have the seal of baptism and the Lord's
Supper prefixed thereto, then I am well provided for.
I was asked: when there is
uncertainty, whether a person has been baptized, or not, may he be baptized
under a condition, as thus: If thou be not baptized, then I baptize thee? I
answered: The church must exclude such baptizing, and not endure it, though
there be a doubt of the previous baptizing of any person, yet he shall receive
baptism, pure and simple without any condition.
CCCXLIII.
The papists, in private
confession, only regard the work. There was such a running to confession, they
were never satisfied; if one had forgotten to confess any thing, however
trivial, which afterwards came to his remembrance, off he must be back to his
confessor, and confess again. I knew a doctor in law who was so bent upon
confessing, that, before he could receive the sacrament, he went three times to
his confessor. In my time, while in popedom, we made our confessors weary, and
they again perplexed us with their conditional absolutions; for they absolved
in this manner: "I absolve and loosen thee, by reason of the merits of our
Lord Jesus Christ, of the sorrow of thy heart, of thy mouth's confession, and
of the satisfaction of thy works," etc. These conditions, and what
pertained thereunto, were the cause of great mischief. All this we did out of
fear, that thereby we might be justified and saved before God; we were s o
troubled and overburdened with traditions of men, that Gerson was constrained
to slacken the bridle of the conscience and ease it; he was the first who began
to break out of this prison, for he wrote, that it was no mortal sin to neglect
the ordinances and commandments of the church, or to act contrary to them,
unless it were done out of contempt, willfully, or from a stubborn mind. These
words, although they were but weak and few, yet they raised up and comforted
many consciences.
Against such bondage and
slavery I wrote a book on Christian liberty, showing that such strict laws and
ordinances of human inventions ought not to be observed. There are now,
however, certain gross, ignorant, and inexperienced fellows, who never felt
such captivity, that presumptuously undertake utterly to condemn and reject all
laws and ordinances.
CCCXLIV.
If a woman that had murdered
her child were absolved by me, and the crime were afterwards discovered
publicly, and I were examined before the judge, I might not give witness in the
matter - we must make a difference between the church and temporal government.
She confessed not to me as to a man, but to Christ, and if Christ keep silence
thereupon, it is my duty to keep silence also, and to say: I know nothing of the
matter thereof: if Christ heard it, then may he speak of it; though, meantime,
I would privately say to the woman: Thou wretch, do so no more. For, while I am
not the man to speak before the seat of justice, in temporal causes, in matters
touching the conscience, I ought to affright sinners with God's wrath against
sin, through the law. Such as acknowledge and confess their sins, I must lift
up and comfort again, by the preaching of the Gospel. We will not be drawn to
their seats of justice, and markets of hatred and dissension. We have hitherto
protected and maintained the jurisdiction and rights of the church, and still
will do so, yielding not in the least to the temporal jurisdiction in causes
belonging to doctrine and consciences. Let them mind their charge, wherewith
they will find enough to do, and leave ours to us, as Christ has commanded.
CCCXLV.
Auricular confession was
instituted only that people might give an account of their faith, and from
their hearts confess an earnest desire to receive the holy sacrament. We force
no man thereunto.
CCCXLVI.
Christ gave the keys to the
church for her comfort, and commanded her servants to deal therewith according
to his direction, to bind the impenitent, and to absolve them that, repenting,
acknowledge and confess their sins, are heartily sorry for them, and believe
that God forgives them for Christ's sake.
CCCXLVII.
It was asked, did the Hussites
well in administering the sacrament to young children, on the allegation that
the graces of God apply equally to all human creatures? Dr. Luther replied:
they were undoubtedly wrong, since young children need not the communion for
their salvation; but still the innovation could not be regarded as a sin of the
Hussites, since St Cyprian, long ago, set them the example.
CCCXLVIII.
Does he to whom the sacrament
is administered by a heretic, really receive the sacrament? Yes, replied Dr.
Luther: if he be ignorant that the person administering is a heretic. The
sacramentarians reject the body of Christ: the anabaptists baptism, and
therefore they cannot efficiently baptize; yet if a person apply to a
sacramentarian, not knowing him as such, and receive from him the sacrament,
himself believing it to be the veritable body of Christ, it is the veritable
body of Christ that he actually receives.
CCCXLIX.
The anabaptists cavil as to
how the salvation of man is to be effected by water. The simple answer is, that
all things are possible to him who believes in God Almighty. If, indeed, a
baker were to say to me: "This bread is a body, and this wine is
blood," I should laugh at him incredulously. But when Jesus Christ, the
Almighty God, taking in his hand bread and wine, tells me: "This is my
body and my blood," then we must believe, for it is God who speaks - God
who with a word created all things.
CCCL.
It was asked whether, in a
case of necessity, the father of a family might administer the Lord's supper to
his children or servants. Dr. Luther replied, "By no means, for he is not
called thereto, and they who are not called, may not preach, much less
administer the sacrament. `Twould lead to infinite disorder, for many people
would then wholly dispense with the ministers of the church."
CCCLI.
When Jesus Christ directed his
apostles to go and instruct and baptize all nations, he meant not that children
should be excluded: the apostles were to baptize all the Gentiles, young or
old, great or small. The baptism of children is distinctly enjoined in Mark x.
14: "The kingdom of God is of little children." We must not loot at
this text with the eyes of a calf, or of a cow vaguely gaping at a new gate,
but do with it as at court we do with the prince's letters, read it and weigh
it, and read it and weigh it again and again, with our most earnest attention.
CCCLII.
The papists say that `twas
Pope Melchiades baptized the emperor Constantine, but this is fiction. The
emperor Constantine was baptized at Nicomedia, by Eusebius, bishop of that
town, in the sixty-fifth year of his life, and the thirty-third of his reign.
CCCLIII.
The anabaptists pretend that
children, not as yet having reason, ought not to receive baptism. I answer:
That reason in no way contributes to faith. Nay, in that children are destitute
of reason, they are all the more fit and proper recipients of baptism. For
reason is the greatest enemy that faith has: it never comes to the aid of
spiritual things, but - more frequently than not - struggles against the Divine
Word, treating with contempt all that emanates from God. If God can communicate
the Holy Ghost to grown persons, he can, a fortiori, communicate it to
young children. Faith comes of the Word of God, when this is heard; little
children hear that Word when they receive baptism, and therewith they receive
also faith.
CCCLIV.
Some one sent to know whether
it was permissible to use warm water in baptism? The Doctor replied: "Tell
the blockhead that water, warm or cold, is water."
CCCLV.
In 1541, Doctor Menius asked
Doctor Luther, in what manner a Jew should be baptized? The Doctor replied: You
must fill a large tub with water, and, having divested the Jew of his clothes,
cover him with a while garment. He must then sit down in the tub, and you must
baptize him quite under the water. The ancients, when they were baptized, were
attired in white, whence the first Sunday after Easter, which was peculiarly
consecrated to this ceremony, was called dominica in albis. This garb
was rendered the more suitable, from the circumstance that it was, as now, the
custom to bury people in a white shroud; and baptism, you know, is an emblem of
our death. I have no doubt that when Jesus was baptized in the river Jordon, he
was attired in a white robe. If a Jew, not converted at heart, were to ask
baptism at my hands, I would take him on to the bridge, tie a stone round his
neck, and hurl him into the river; for these wretches are wont to make a jest
of our religion. Yet, after all, water and the Divine Word being the essence of
baptism, a Jew, or any other, would be none the less validly baptized, that his
own feelings and intentions were not the result of faith.
CCCLVI.
The blindness of the papists
is great and mischievous; for they will neither believe the Gospel nor yield
thereunto, but boast of the church and say: She has power to alter and to do
what she pleases; for, say they, Christ gave his body to his disciples in the
evening after supper; but we receive it fasting, therefore we may, according to
the church's ordinance, detain the cup from the laity. The ignorant wretches
are not able to distinguish between the cup, which pertains to the substance of
the sacrament, and fasting, which is an accidental, carnal thing, of no weight
at all. The one has God's express word and command, the other consists in our
will and choice. We urge the one, because God has commanded it; the other we
leave to the election of the will, though we better like it to be received
fasting, out of honor and reverence.
CCCLVII.
It is a wonder how Satan
brought into the church, and ordained, but one kind of the sacrament to be
received. I cannot call to mind that ever I read how, whence, or for what cause
it was so altered. It was first so ordained in the council of Constance, where
nothing, however, is pleaded but only the custom.
CCCLVIII.
The papists highly boast of
their power and authority, which they would willingly confirm with this
argument: the apostles altered baptism; therefore, say they, the bishops have
power to alter the sacrament of the Lord's supper. I answer: admit that the
apostles altered something; yet there is a great difference between an apostle
and a bishop; an apostle was called immediately by God with gifts of the Holy
Ghost; but a bishop is a person selected by man, to preach God's words, and
ordain servants of the church in certain places. So, though the apostles had
this power and authority, yet the bishops have not. Although Elijah slew Baal's
priests and the false prophets, it is not permitted that every priest shall do
the like. Hence St Paul makes this difference: "Some hath he given to be
apostles, some teachers, some to be pastors and ministers," etc. Among the
apostles was no supremacy or ruling; none was greater or higher in office than
another; they were all equal, the one with the other. The definition as to the
supremacy and rule of St Peter above other bishops is false; it reaches further
than they define it; they conclude thus: the pope's power and authority is the
highest; he may ordain servants, alter kingdoms and governments, depose some
emperors and kings and enthrone others. But we are in nowise to allow of such
definitions; for every definition must be direct and proper, set down plain and
clear; so that neither more nor less may in the definition be contained, than
that which is described and defined.
CCCLXIX.
They that as yet are not well
informed, but stand in doubt, touching the institution of the sacrament, may
receive it under one kind; but those that are certain thereof, and yet receive
it under one kind, act wrongfully and against their consciences.
CCCLX.
What signifies it to dispute
and wrangle about the abominable idolatry of elevating the sacrament on high to
show it to the people, which has no approbation of the Fathers, and was introduced
only to confirm the errors touching the worship thereof, as though bread and
wine lost their substance, and retained only the form, smell, taste. This the
papists call transsubstantiation, and darken the right use of the sacrament;
whereas, even in popedom, at Milan, from Ambrose's time to the present day,
they never held or observed in the mass either canon or elevation, or the Dominus
vobiscum.
CCCLXI.
The elevation of the sacrament
was taken out of the Old Testament; the Jews observed two forms, the one called
Thruma, the other Trumpha; Thruma was when they took an offering
out of a basket, and lifted it up above them (like as they now lift up the
oblate), and showed the same to our Lord God, after which they either burned or
ate it: Trumpha, was an offering which they lifted not up above them,
but showed it towards the four corners of the world, as the papists, in the
mass, make crosses and other apish toys, towards the four corners of the world.
When I first began to
celebrate mass in popedom, and to make such crossings with marvellous twistings
of the fingers, and could not rightly hit the way, I said: "Mary, God's
mother, how am I plagued with the mass, and especially with the
crossings." Ah, Lord God! we were in those times poor plagued people, and
yet it was nothing but mere idolatry. They terrified some in such sort with the
words of consecration, especially good and godly men who meant seriously, that
they trembled and quaked at the pronouncing of these words: Hoc est corpus
meum, for they were to pronounce them, sine ulla hesitatione; he
that stammered, or left out but one word, committed a great sin. Moreover, the
words were to be spoken, without any abstraction of thought, in such a way,
that only he must hear them that spake them, and none of the people standing
by. Such an honest friar was I fifteen years together; the Lord of his mercy
forgive me. The elevation is utterly to be rejected by reason of the adoring
thereof. Some churches, seeing we have put down the elevation, have followed us
therein, which gives me great satisfaction.
CCCLXII.
The operative cause of the
sacrament is the Word and institution of Christ, who ordained it. The substance
is bread and wine, prefiguring the true body and blood of Christ, which is
spiritually received by faith. The final cause of instituting the same, is the
benefit and the fruit, the strengthening of our faith, not doubting that
Christ's body and blood were given and shed for us, and that our sins by
Christ's death certainly are forgiven.
CCCLXIII.
Question was made touching the
words "given for you," whether they were to be understood of the
present administering, when the sacrament is distributed, or of when it was
offered and accomplished on the cross? I said: I like it best when they are
understood of the present administering, although they may be understood as
fulfilled on the cross; it matter not that Christ says: "Which is given
for you," instead of: "which shall be given for you:" for Christ
is Hodie et Heri, to-day and yesterday. I am, says Christ, he that doeth
it. Therefore, I approve that Datur be understood in such manner, that
it show the use of the work. It was likewise asked, whether honor and reverence
were to be shown to the sacrament? I said: When I am at the altar, and receive
the sacrament, I bow my knees in honor thereof; but in bed I receive it lying.
They that do not hold the
sacrament as Christ instituted it, have no sacrament. All papists do not,
therefore they have no sacrament; for they receive not the sacrament, but offer
it. Moreover, they administer but one kind, contrary to Christ's work and
ordinance, and not man's. The papists err in attributing to the sacrament, that
it justifies, ex opere operato, when the work is fulfilled.
CCCLXV.
These words, "Drink ye
all of it," concern, say the papists, only the priests. Then these words
must also concern only the priests, where Christ says: "Ye are clean, but
not all," that is, all the priests.
CCCLXVI.
The true church is an assembly
or congregation depending on that which does not appear, nor may be
comprehended in the mind, namely, God's Word; what that says, they believe
without addition, giving God the honor.
CCCLXII.
We tell our Lord God plainly,
that if he will have his church, he must maintain and defend it; for we can
neither uphold nor protect it; if we could, indeed, we should become the
proudest asses under heaven. But God says: I say it, I do it; it is God only
that speaks and does what he pleases; he does nothing according to the fancies
of the ungodly, or which they hold for upright and good.
CCCLXVIII.
The great and worldly-wise
people take offence at the poor and mean form of our church, which is subject
to many infirmities, transgressions, and sects, wherewith she is plagued; for
they say the church should be altogether pure, holy, blameless, God's dove,
etc. And the church, in the eyes and sight of God, has such an esteem; but in
the eyes and sight of the world, she is like unto her bridegroom, Christ Jesus,
torn, spit on, derided, and crucified.
The similitude of the upright
and true church and of Christ, is a poor silly sheep; but the similitude of the
false and hypocritical church, is a serpent, an adder.
CCCLXIX.
Where God's word is purely taught,
there is also the upright and true church; for the true church is supported by
the Holy Ghost, not by succession of inheritance. It does not follow, though St
Peter had been bishop at Rome, and at the same time Christian communion had
been at Rome, that, therefore, the pope and the Romish church are true; for if
that should be of value or conclusive, then they must needs confess that
Caiaphas, Annas, and the Sadducees were also the true church; for they boasted
that they were descended from Aaron.
CCCLXX.
It is impossible for the
Christian and true church to subsist without the shedding of blood, for her
adversary, the devil, is a liar and a murderer. The church grows and increases
through blood; she is sprinkled with blood; she is spoiled and bereaved of her
blood; when human creatures will reform the church, then it costs blood.
CCCLXXI.
The form and aspect of the
world is like a paradise; but the true Christian church, in the eye of the
world, is foul, deformed, and offensive; yet, nevertheless, in the sight of
God, she is precious, beloved, and highly esteemed. Aaron, the high priest,
appeared gloriously in the temple, with his ornaments and rich attire, with
odoriferous and sweet-smelling perfumes; but Christ appeared most mean and
lowly.
Wherefore I am not troubled
that the world esteems the church so meanly; what care I that the usurers, the
nobility, gentry, citizens, country-people, covetous men, and drunkards,
condemn and esteem me as dirt? In due time, I will esteem them as little. We
must not suffer ourselves to be deceived or troubled as to what the world
thinks of us. To please the good is our virtue.
CCCLXXII.
The church is misery on earth,
first, that we may keep in mind we are banished servants, and exiled out of
Paradise for Adam's sake. Secondly, that we may always remember the misery of
the Son of God, who, for our sake, was made man, walked in this vale of misery,
suffered for us, died, and rose again from the dead, and so brought us again to
our paternal home, whence we were driven. Thirdly, that we may remember our
habitation is not of this world, but that we are here only as strangers and
pilgrims; and that there is another and everlasting life prepared for us.
CCCLXXIII.
The very name, the church, is
the highest argument and proof of all hypocrites. The pharisees, the scribes,
yea, the whole senate of Jerusalem, cried out against Stephen, and said:
"This man ceaseth not to speak blasphemous words against this holy place
and the law." Cain, Ishmael, Saul, the Turks, and Jews, bore and do bear
the name and title of the church. But Moses finely solves this agreement:
"They have moved me to jealousy with that which is not God, they have
provoked me to anger with their vanities; and I will move them to jealousy with
those which are not a people: I will provoke them to anger with a foolish
nation." Here was quid pro quo; as if God should say: "Could
ye find in your hearts to forsake me? so can I again forsake you;" for God
and nation, the Word and the church, are correlativea;" the one
cannot be without the other.
CCCLXXIV.
The amaranth is a flower that
grows in August; it is more a stalk than a flower, is easily broken off, and
grows in joyful and pleasant sort; when all other flowers are gone and decayed,
then this, being sprinkled with water, becomes fair and green again; so that in
winter they used to make garlands thereof. It is called amaranth from this,
that it neither withers nor decays.
I know nothing more like unto
the church than this flower, amaranth. For although the church bathes her
garment in the blood of the Lamb, and is colored over with red, yet she is more
fair, comely, and beautiful than any state and assembly upon the face of the
earth. She alone is embraced and beloved of the Son of God, as his sweet and
amiable spouse, in whom only he takes joy and delight, and whereupon his heart
alone depends; he utterly rejects and loathes others, that condemn or falsify
his gospel.
Moreover, the church willingly
suffers herself to be plucked and broken off, that is, she is loving, patient,
and obedient to Christ her bridegroom in the cross; she grows and increases
again, fair, joyful, and pleasant, that is, she gains the greatest fruit and
profit thereby; she learns to know God aright, to call upon him freely and
undauntedly, to confess his word and doctrine, and produces many fair and
glorious virtues.
At last, the body and stalk
remain whole and sound, and cannot be rooted out, although raging and swelling
be made against some of the members, and these be torn away. For like as the amaranth
never withers or decays, even so, the church can never be destroyed or rooted
out. But what is most wonderful, the amaranth has this quality, that when it is
sprinkled with water, and dipped therein, it becomes fresh and green again, as
if it were raised and wakened from the dead. Even so likewise the church will
by God be raised and wakened out of the grace, and become living again; will
everlastingly praise, extol, and laud the Father of our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ, his Son and our Redeemer, together with the Holy Ghost. For though
temporal empires, kingdoms, and principalities have their changings, and like
flowers soon fall and fade away, this kingdom, which is so deep-rooted, by no
power can be destroyed or wasted, but remains eternally.
CCCLXXV.
An olive tree will live and
bear fruit two hundred years; `tis an image of the church; oil symbolizes the
gentle love of the Gospel, as wine emblems the doctrine of the law. There is
such a natural unity and affinity between the vine and the olive tree, that
when the branch of a vine is grafted upon an olive tree, it bears both grapes
and olives. In like manner, when the church, which is God's Word, is planted in
people's hearts, then it teaches both the law and the Gospel, using both
doctrines, and from both winning fruit. The chestnut tree, in that it produces
all the better fruit when it is soundly beaten, shadows forth man submissive to
the law, whose actions are not agreeable to God, until he has been tried by
tribulation. The lemon tree, with its fruit, figures Christ; the lemon tree has
the property of bearing fruit at all seasons; when its fruits are ripe, they
drop off, and are succeeded by a fresh growth; and this fruit is a sure remedy
against poison. Jesus Christ, when his ministers and champions depart from
earth, replaces them by others; his produce is ever growing, and it is a sure
remedy against the poison of the devil.
CCCLXXVI.
I much marvel that the pope
extols his church at Rome as the chief, whereas the church at Jerusalem is the
mother; for there the doctrine was first revealed, and set forth by Christ, the
son of God himself, and by his apostles. Next was the church at Antioch, whence
the Christians have their name. Thirdly, was the church at Alexandria; and
still before the Romish were the churches of the Galatians, of the Corinthians,
Ephesians, of the Philippians, etc. Is it so great a matter that St Peter was
at Rome? which, however, has never yet been, nor ever will be proved, whereas
our blessed Saviour Christ himself, was at Jerusalem, where all the articles of
our Christian faith were made; where St James received his orders, and was
bishop, and where the pillars of the church had their seat.
CCCLXXVII.
The papists rely upon this:
the church cannot err; we are the church, ergo, we cannot err. To the major,
I make this answer: true, the church cannot err in doctrine, but in works and
actions she may easily err, yea, and often does err; and therefore she prays:
"Forgive us our trespasses," etc. The minor I utterly deny.
Therefore when they argue and say: What the church teaches uprightly and pure,
is true, this we admit; but when they argue and say: what the church does is
upright and true, this we deny.
CCCLXXVIII.
Many boast of their title to
the church, whereas they know not the true church; the holy prophets much
opposed the false church. The prophet Isaiah, in the beginning of his first
chapter, describes two sorts of churches. The upright and true church is a very
small heap and number, of little or no esteem, and lying under the cross. But
the false church is pompous, boasting, and presuming; she flourishes, and is
held in high repute, like Sodom, of which St Paul complains, Romans viii. and
ix. The true church consists in God's election and calling; she is powerful and
strong in weakness.
CCCLXXIX.
One of the juggling of the
sophists, wherewith the ungodly wretches deceive simple people, is this: a
kingdom, say they, which is plagued and tormented, is a temporal kingdom. The
Christian church is plagued and tormented: ergo, Christ's kingdom is a
temporal kingdom. But I answer them: No, not so; the kingdom of Christ is not
plagued, but our bodies, by reason of our sins, are plagued and tormented. As
St Paul says: "We must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom of
God." He says not that the kingdom of God suffers externally. It is
equally false when they say, God is love, God justifies, therefore love
justifies.
Such, and the like fallacies,
may sometimes puzzle even understanding minds, well exercised and practiced; therefore
we must take time to answer them, for every one cannot so suddenly detect them.
CCCLXXX.
The ungodly have great power,
riches, and respect; on the contrary, we, the true and upright Christians, have
but only one poor, silly, and condemned Christ. Temporal things, money, wealth,
reputation, and power they have already; they care nothing for Christ. We say
to them: Ye are great lords on earth, we, lords in heaven; ye have the power
and riches on earth, we, heavenly treasure, namely, God's Word and command; we
have baptism, and the sacraments of the Lord's Supper, which is an office
celestial. If any man among us, with the name of a Christian, will exercise
unjust power, insolence, and wickedness, willfully, then we excommunicate such
a person, so that he shall not be present at the baptizing of children, nor
shall be partaker of the holy communion, nor have conversation with other
Christians. But if he abandon and forsake the name of a Christian, and give up
his profession, then we are willing with patience to suffer his tyranny,
insolence, and usurped power; we are content to let him go like the heathen, or
Jews, or Turks, and so commit our cause to God.
CCCLXXXI.
Our dealing and proceeding
against the pope is altogether excommunication, which is simply the public
declaration that a person is disobedient to Christ's Word. Now we affirm in
public, that the pope and his retinue believe not; therefore we conclude that
he shall not be saved, but be damned. What is this, but to excommunicate him?
Briefly, to put Christ's Word in execution, and to accomplish and execute his
command, this is excommunication.
CCCLXXXII.
I will proceed with
excommunication after this manner first, when, I myself have admonished an obstinate
sinner then I will send unto him two persons, as two chaplains, or two of the
aldermen of the town, two church wardens, or two honest men of the assembly; if
then he will not be reformed, but still runs on in stubbornness, and persist in
his sinful life, I will declare him openly to the church in this manner: Loving
friends, I declare unto you, that N. N. has been admonished, first by myself in
private; afterwards also by two chaplains; thirdly, by two aldermen, or two
church wardens, as it may be, yet he will not desist from his sinful kind of
life; wherefore, I earnestly desire you to assist, and advise you to kneel down
with me, and let us pray against him, and deliver him over to the devil, etc.
Hereby we should doubtless
prevail so far, that people would not live in such public sin and shame; for
this would be a strict excommunication, not like the pope's money-bulls,
profitable to the church. When the person were reformed and converted, we might
receive him into the church again.
CCCLXXXIII.
Christ will have that a sinner
be first warned and admonished, not only once or twice by private and single
persons not in office, but also by them that are in office of public preaching,
before the severe sentence of excommunication be published and declared. But
while the ministry of the Word calls to the Lord's Supper all such of the
faithful as repent of their sins, and admits them to the bosom of Christ's
church, it must justly reject the hardened impenitent, and abandon them to the
judgments of God, excluding them here from the society of the faithful, and,
should they die in their sins, from Christian burial.
CCCLXXXIV.
Nothing would more hinder
excommunication than for men to do what pertains to a Christian. Thou hast a
neighbor whose life and conversation is well known unto thee, but unknown to
thy preacher or minister: When thou seest this neighbor growing rich by
unlawful dealing, living lasciviously, in adultery, etc.; that he governs his
house and family negligently, etc.; then thou oughtest, Christian-like to warn
and earnestly admonish him to desist from his sinful courses, to have a care of
his salvation, and to abstain from giving offence. Oh, how holy a work wouldst
then thou perform, didst thou in this way win thy neighbor! But I pray, who does
this? for, first, truth is a hateful thing; he that, in these times, speaks the
truth, procures hatred. Therefore, thou wilt rather keep thy neighbor's
friendship and good will, especially when he is rich and powerful, by holding
thy peace and keeping silence, and conniving, than incur his displeasure and
make him thy adversary.
Again, we have less
excommunication now, forasmuch as in some sort we are all subject to
blaspheming alike, and therewith are stained; so that we are afraid to pull out
the mote we see in our neighbor's eye, lest we be hit in the teeth with the
beam that appears in our own.
But the chief cause why
excommunication is fallen, is that the number of upright and true Christians in
every place is very small; for, if from our hearts we loved and practiced true
and upright godliness and God's Word, as we all ought, then we should regard
the command of Christ our blessed Saviour for above all the wealth, welfare, or
favor for this temporal life. For this command of Christ, touching the admonishing
and warning a sinning brother, is even as necessary as this: "Thou shalt
do no murder, thou shalt not commit adultery, not steal," etc., seeing
that when, either out of fear or for some other worldly respect, thou omittest
this admonition, there depends thereon, not thy neighbor's body and goods, but
the salvation of his soul.
CCCLXXXV.
Take heed, I say, that in any
case thou condemn not the communication of the true church; a contempt
certainly involving the displeasure of God; for Christ says: "Verily I say
unto you, what ye bind on earth, shall be also bound in heaven," etc. The
pope, however, in his tyranny, abuses the power of excommunication. If a poor
man, at a certain appointed day, cannot make payment of the taxation the pope
imposes upon him, he is excommunicated; and in the same way he thunders his
bulls and his excommunications against us, because we avow the all-saving
doctrine of the Gospel; yet our Saviour Christ comforts us, saying: "Happy
are ye when men revile and persecute you for my sake, and speak all manner of
evil against you," etc. And again; "They will excommunicate you or
put you out of the synagogue."
Most assuredly the pope's bull
is not Christ's excommunication, by reason it is not done or taken in hand
according to Christ's institution; it is of no value in heaven, but to him, who
thus abuses it against Christ's command, it brings most sure and certain
destruction, for it is a sin wherewith God's name is blasphemed.
CCCLXXXVI.
Like as this external and
visible excommunication is used against those only that live in public sins,
even so the hidden and invisible excommunication, which is not of men, or done
by men visibly, but is of God himself, and done by him only, often excludes
from the kingdom of Christ, invisibly, persons whom we take to be fair,
upright, good, and honest Christians. For God judges not according to outward
works or kind of life, as men do, but views the heart; he judges hypocrites
whom the church can neither judge nor punish; the church judges not what is
hidden and invisible.
All are not stained so grossly
with open offences, that we can tax them in public, as were fitting, with any
one particular sin and transgression. For although many covetous persons,
adulterers, etc., are among us, yet they proceed so craftily, and in such sort
act their sins, that we can not detect them. Yet although such be with us in
the church, among the Christian assembly, hear sermons and God's Word, and,
with upright and godly Christians, receive the holy sacrament, yet, de facto,
they are excommunicated by God, by reason they live in sin against their own
consciences, and amend not their lives. Such sinners may deceive men, but they
cannot deceive God; he at the day of judgment will cause his angels to gather
all offenders together, and will cast them into unquenchable fire.
CCCLXXXVII.
Christ says: "Receive ye
the Holy Ghost, whosesoever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and
whosesoever sins ye retain, they are retained." And "If thy brother shall
trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee, and him alone;
if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. But if he will not hear
thee, then take with thee one or two more," etc.; and "If he shall
neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church. But if he neglect to hear the
church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man, and a publican." And St
Paul: "If any man that is called a brother be a fornicator, or covetous,
or an idolder, or a railer, or a drunkard, or an extortioner, with such an one,
eat not, etc.; put away from you that wicked person." Also: "If there
come any to you, and bring not this doctrine, receive him not unto your house,
neither bid him God speed; for he that biddeth him God speed, is partaker of his
evil deeds."
These, and such like
sentences, are the unchangeable will, decrees, and ordinances of the high
Majesty of God; we have no power to alter or omit them, much less to abolish
them; but on the contrary, have earnest command, with true diligence to hold thereunto,
disregarding the power or reputation of any person whatsoever. And although
excommunication in popedom has been and is shamefully abused, and made a mere
torment, yet we must not suffer it to fall, but make a right use of it, as
Christ has commanded, to the raising of the church, not to exercise tyranny, as
the pope has done.
CCCLXXXVIII.
Some there are that rail at
the servants of God, and say: What though the Word and sacraments be upright
and the truth, as indeed they be, when God speaks of them; `tis not therefore
God's Word when a man talks thereof.
CCCLXXXIX.
Divinity consists in use and
practice, not in speculation and meditation. Every one that deals in
speculations, either in household affairs or temporal government, without
practice, is lost and nothing worth. When a tradesman makes his account, how
much profit he shall reap in the year, but puts nothing in practice, he trades
in vain speculations, and finds afterwards that his reckoning comes far too
short. And thus it goes also with speculating divines, as is seen to this day,
and as I know by experience.
CCCXC.
No man should undertake
anything, except he be called thereunto. Calling is two-fold; either divine,
which is done by the highest power, which is of faith; or else it is calling of
love, which is done by one's equal, as when one is desired by one's friend to
preach a sermon. Both vocations are necessary to secure the conscience.
Young people must be brought
up to learn the Holy Scriptures; when such of them as know they are designed
for the ministry present themselves and offer their service, upon a parish
falling void, they do not intrude themselves, but are as a maid who, being
arrived at woman's estate, when one makes suit to marry her, may do it, with a
good and safe conscience towards God and the world. To thrust out another is to
intrude; but when in the church a place is void, and thou sayest: I will
willingly supply it, if ye please to make use of me; then thou art received, it
is a true vocation and calling. Such was the manner of Isaiah, who said:
"Here I am; send me." He came of himself when he heard they stood in
need of a preacher; and so it ought to be; we must look whether people have
need of us or no, and then whether we be desired or called.
CCCXCII.
To the poor is the Gospel
declared, for the rich regard it not. If the pope maintained us not with that
he has got, though much against his will, we might even starve for want of
food. The pope has swallowed stolen goods, and must spew them all up again, as
Job says: he must give them to those, to whom he wishes evil. Scarce the
fiftieth part is applied to the profit of the church; the rest he throws away;
we obtain but the fragments under the table. But we are assured of better wages
after this life; and, truly, if our hope were not fixed there, we were of all
people the most miserable.
CCCXCIII.
I would not have preachers
torment their hearers, and detain them with long and tedious preaching, for the
delight of hearing vanishes therewith, and the preachers hurt themselves.
CCCXCIV.
One asked me: Which is greater
and better - to strive against adversaries, or to admonish and lift up the
weak? I answered: Both are very good and necessary; but the latter is somewhat
preferable; the weak, by striving against the adversaries, are also edified and
bettered - both are God's gifts. He that teaches, attend his teaching; he that
admonishes, attend his admonishing.
CCCXCV.
Dr. Forsteim asked Luther
whence the art proceeded of speaking so powerfully, that both God-fearing and
ungodly people were moved? He answered: it proceeds from the first commandment
of God: "I am the Lord thy God;" i.e. against the ungodly I am a
strong and jealous God, towards the good and godly a merciful God; I do well
and show mercy to them, etc. For he will have us preach hell-fire to the proud
and haughty, and paradise to the godly, reprove the wicked, and comfort the
good, etc. The instruments and work-tools of God are different, even as one
knife cuts better than another. The sermons of Dr. Cordatus and Dr. Cruciger
are taken more to heart than the preaching of many others.
CCCXCVI.
The world can well endure all
sorts of preachers except us, whom they will not hear; in former times they
were forced, under popedom, to hear the ungodly tyrants, and to carry those on
their shoulders that plagued them in body and soul, in wealth and honor. But
us, who by God's command reprove them, they will not hear; therefore the world
must go to rack. We must vanish by reason of poverty, but the papists, by
reason of punishment; their goods are not of proof, and are rejected of God.
CCCXCVII.
A good preacher should have
these properties and virtues: first, to teach systematically; secondly, he should
have a ready with; thirdly, he should be eloquent; fourthly, he should have a
good voice; fifthly, a good memory; sixthly, he should know when to make an
end; seventhly, he should be sure of his doctrine; eightly, he should venture
and engage body and blood, wealth and honor, in the Word; ninthly, he should
suffer himself to be mocked and jeered of every one.
CCCXCVIII.
The defects in a preacher are
soon spied; let a preacher be endued with ten virtues, and but one fault, yet
this one will eclipse and darken all his virtues and gifts, so evil is the
world in these times. Dr. Justus Jonas has all the good virtues and qualities a
man may have; yet merely because he hums and spits, the people cannot bear that
good and honest man.
CCCXCIX.
Luther's wife said to him:
Sir, I heard your cousin, John Palmer, preach this afternoon in the parish
church, whom I understood better than Dr. Palmer, though the Doctor is held to
be a very excellent preacher. Luther answered: John Palmer preaches as ye women
use to talk; for what comes into your minds, ye speak. A preacher ought to
remain by the text, and deliver that which he has before him, to the end people
may well understand it. But a preacher that will speak every thing that comes
in his mind, is like a maid that goes to market, and meeting another maid,
makes a stand, and they hold together a goods-market.
CCCC.
An upright shepherd and
minister must improve his flock by edification, and also resist and defend it;
otherwise, if resisting he absent, the wolf devours the sheep, and the rather,
where they be fat and well fed. Therefore St Paul presses it home upon Titus,
that a bishop by sound doctrine should be able both to exhort and to convince
gainsayers; that is, to resist false doctrine. A preacher must be both soldier
and shepherd. He must nourish, defend, and teach; he must have teeth in his
mouth, and be able to bite and to fight.
There are many talking
preachers, but there is nothing in them save only words; they can talk much,
but teach nothing uprightly. The world has always had such Thrasos, such
boasting throat-criers.
CCCCI.
I know of no greater gift than
that we have, namely, harmony in doctrine, so that throughout the
principalities and imperial cities of Germany, they teach in conformity with
us. Though I had the gifts to raise the dead, what were it, if all other
preachers taught against me? I would not exchange this concord for the Turkish
empire.
CCCCII.
God often lays upon the necks
of haughty divines all manner of crosses and plagues to humble them; and
therein they are well and rightly served; for they will have honor, whereas
this only belongs to our Lord God. When we are found true in our vocations and
calling, then we have reaped honor sufficient, though not in this life, yet in
that to come; there we shall be crowned with the unchangeable crown of honor,
"which is laid up for us." Here on earth we must seek for no honor,
for it is written: Woe unto you when men shall bless you. We belong not to this
life, but to another far better. The world loves that which is its own; we must
content ourselves with that which it bestows upon us, scoffing, flouting, and
contempt. I am sometimes glad that my scholars and friends are pleased to give
me such wages; I desire neither honor nor crown here on earth, but I will have
compensation from God, the just judge in heaven.
From the year of our Lord
1518, to the present time, every Maunday Thursday, at Rome, I have been by the
pope excommunicated and cast into hell; yet I still live. For every year, on
Maunday Thursday, all heretics are excommunicated at Rome, among whom I am
always put first and chief. This do they on that blessed, sanctified day,
whereas they ought rather to render thanks to God for the great benefit of his
holy supper, and for his bitter death and passion. This is the honor and crown
we must expect and have in this world. God sometimes can endure honor in
lawyers and physicians; but in divines he will no way suffer it; for a boasting
and an ambitious preacher soon condemns Christ, who with his blood has redeemed
poor sinners.
CCCCIII.
A preacher should needs know
how to make a right difference between sinners, between the impenitent and
confident, and the sorrowful and penitent; otherwise the whole Scripture is
locked up. When Amsdorf began to preach before the princes at Schmalcalden,
with great earnestness he said: The gospel belongs to the poor and sorrowful,
and not to you princes, great persons and courtiers that live in continual joy
and delight, in secureness, void of all tribulation.
CCCCIV.
A continual hatred is between
the clergy and laity, and not without cause; for the unbridled people,
citizens, gentry, nobility, yea, and great princes also, refuse to be reproved.
But the office of a preacher is to reprove such sinners as lie in open sin, and
offend against both the first and second table of God's commandments; yet
reproof is grievous for them to hear, wherefore they look upon the preachers
with sharp eyes
CCCCV.
To speak deliberately and
slowly best becomes a preacher; for thereby he may the more effectually and
impressively deliver his sermon. Seneca writes of Cicero, that he spake
deliberately from the heart.
CCCCVI.
God in the Old Testament made
the priests rich; Annas and Caiaphas had great revenues. But the ministers of
the Word, in which is offered everlasting life and salvation by grace, are
suffered to die of hunger and poverty, yea, are driven and hunted away.
CCCCVII.
We ought to direct ourselves
in preaching according to the condition of the hearers, but most preachers
commonly fail herein; they preach that which little edifies the poor simple
people. To preach plain and simply is a great art: Christ himself talks of
tilling ground, of mustard-seed, etc.; he used altogether homely and simple
similitudes.
CCCCVIII.
When a man first comes into
the pulpit, he is much perplexed to see so many heads before him. When I stand
there I look upon none, but imagine they are all blocks that are before me.
CCCCIX.
I would not have preachers in their
sermons use Hebrew, Greek, or foreign languages, for in the church we ought to
speak as we use to do at home, the plain mother tongue, which every one is
acquainted with. It may be allowed in courtiers, lawyers, advocates, etc., to
use quaint, curious words. Doctor Staupitz is a very learned man, yet he is a
very irksome preacher; and the people had rather hear a plain brother preach,
that delivers his words simply to their understanding, than he. In churches no
praising or extolling should be sought after. St Paul never used such high and
stately words, as Demosthenes and Cicero did, but he spake, properly and
plainly, words which signified and showed high and stately matters, and he did
well.
CCCCX.
If I should write of the heavy
burthen of a godly preacher, which he must carry and endure, as I know by mine
own experience, I should scare every man from the office of preaching. But I
assure myself that Christ at the last day will speak friendly unto me, though
he speaks very unkindly now. I bear upon me the malice of the whole world, the
hatred of the emperor, of the pope, and of all their retinue. Well, on in God's
name; seeing I am come into the lists, I will fight it out. I know my quarrel
and cause are upright and just.
CCCCXI.
It is a great thing to be an
upright minister and preacher; if our Lord God himself drove it not forward,
there would but little good ensue. Preachers must be endued with a great
spirit, to serve people in body and soul, in wealth and honor, and yet,
nevertheless, suffer and endure the greatest danger and unthankfulness. Hence
Christ said to Peter thrice: "Peter, lovest thou me?" Afterwards he
said: "Feed my sheep;" as if to say: Peter, if thou wilt be an
upright shepherd, and careful of souls, then thou must love me; otherwise, it
is impossible for thee to be an upright and a careful shepherd; thy love to me
must do the deed.
CCCCXII.
Our manner of life is as evil
as is that of the papists. Wickliffe and Huss assailed the immoral conduct of
papists; but I chiefly oppose and resist their doctrine; I affirm roundly and
plainly, that they preach not the truth. To this am I called; I take the goose
by the neck, and set the knife to its throat. When I can show that the papists
doctrine is false, which I have shown, then I can easily prove that their
manner of life is evil. For when the word remains pure, the manner of life,
though something therein be amiss, will be pure also. The pope has taken away
the pure word and doctrine, and brought in another word and doctrine, which he
has hanged upon the church. I shook all popedom with this one point, that I
teach uprightly, and mix up nothing else. We must press the doctrine onwards,
for that breaks the neck of the pope. Therefore the prophet Daniel rightly
pictured the pope, that he would be a king that would do according to his own
will, that is, would regard neither spirituality nor temporality, but say
roundly: Thus and thus will I have it. For the pope derives his institution
neither from divine nor from human right; but is a self-chosen human creature
and intruder. Therefore the pope must needs confess, that he governs neither by
divine nor human command. Daniel calls him a god, Maosim; he had almost
spoken it plainly out, and said Mass, which word is written, Deut. xxvi.
St Paul read Daniel thoroughly, and uses nearly his words, where he says: The
son of perdition will exalt himself above all that is called God, or that is
worshipped, etc., 2 Thes. ii.
CCCCXIII.
The humility of hypocrites is,
of all pride, the greatest and most haughty, as that of the Pharisee who
humbled himself, and gave God thanks, but soon spoiled all again, when he said:
"I am not like others, etc., nor as this publican." There are people
who flatter themselves, and think they only are wise; they condemn and deride the
opinions of all others; they will allow of nothing but only what pleases them.
CCCCXIV.
Ambition is the rankest poison
to the church, when it possesses preachers. It is a consuming fire. The Holy
Scripture is given to destroy the desires of the flesh; therefore we must not
therein seek after temporal honor. I much marvel for what cause people are
proud and haughty; we are born in sin, and every moment in danger of death. Are
we proud of our scabs and scalds? we, who are altogether an unclean thing.
CCCCXV.
Honor might be sought for in
Homer, Virgil, and in Terence, and not in the Holy Scripture; for Christ says:
"Hallowed by thy name - not ours, but thine be the glory." Christ
charges us to preach God's Word. We preachers should of the world be held and esteemed
as injusti stulti, to the end God be justus, sapiens, et misericors;
that is his title, which he will leave to none other. When we leave to God his
name, his kingdom, and will, then will he also give unto us our daily bread,
remit our sins, and deliver us from the devil and all evil. Only his honor he
will have to himself.
CCCCXVI.
It were but reasonable I
should in my old age have some rest and peace, but now those that should be
with and for me, fall upon me. I have plague enough with my adversaries,
therefore my brethren should not vex me. But who is able to resist? They are
fresh, lusty, young people, and have lived in idleness; I am now aged, and have
had much labor and pains. Nothing causes Osiander's pride more than his idle
life; for he preaches but twice a week, yet has a yearly stipend of four
hundred gilders.
CCCCXVII.
God in wonderful wise led us
out of the darkness of the sophists, and cast me into the game, now more than
twenty years since. It went weakly forward at the first, when Ibegan to write
against the gross errors of indulgences. At that time Doctor Jerome withstood
me, and said: What will you do, they will not endure it? but, said I, what if
they must endure it?
Soon after him came Sylvester
Prierio into the list; he thundered and lightened against me with his
syllogisms, saying: Whosoever makes doubt of any one sentence or act of the
Romish church, is a heretic: Martin Luther doubts thereof; ergo, he is a
heretic. Then it went on, for the pope makes a three-fold distinction of the
church. First a substantial, i.e. the body of the church. Secondly, a
significant church, i.e., the cardinals. Thirdly, an operative and powerful
church; i.e., the pope himself. No mention is made of a council, for the pope
will be the powerful church above the Holy Scripture and councils.
CCCCXVIII.
Our auditors, for the most
part, are epicurean; they measure our preaching as they think good, and will
have easy days.
The Pharisees and Sadducees
were Christ's enemies, yet they heard him willingly; the Pharisees, to the end
they might lay hold on him; the Sadducees, that they might flout and deride
him. The Pharisees are our friars; the Sadducees, our gentry, citizens, and
country folk; our gentlemen give us the hearing, and believe us, yet will do
what seems good to them; that is, they remain epicureans.
CCCCXIX.
A preacher should be a
logician and a rhetorician, that is, he must be able to teach, and to admonish;
when he preaches touching an article, he must, first, distinguish it. Secondly,
he must define, describe, and show what it is. Thirdly, he must produce
sentences out of the Scriptures, therewith to prove and strengthen it.
Fourthly, he must, with examples, explain and declare it. Fifthly, he must
adorn it with similitudes; and, lastly, he must admonish and rouse up the lazy,
earnestly reprove all the disobedient, all false doctrine, and the authors
thereof; yet, not out of malice and envy, but only to God's honor, and the
profit and saving health of the people.
CCCCXX.
"Their priests do teach
for hire." Some there be who abuse this sentence, wresting it against good
and godly teachers and preachers, as if it were not right for them to take the
wages ordained for the ministers of the church, on which they must live. They
produce the sentence where Christ says: "Freely ye have received, freely
give." They allege also the example of St Paul, who maintained himself by
work of his hands, to the end that he might not be burthensome to the church.
These accusations proceed out
of hatred to the function of preaching, to which Satan is a deadly enemy. These
ungodly people, by filling the ears of the simple with such speeches, not only
occasion the preachers to be condemned, but also the function of preaching to
be suspected; whereas they ought, with all diligence, to endeavor that the
ministers, for the Word's sake, might again be restored to their honest
dignity.
It is true, as Christ says:
"Freely ye have received, freely give;" for he will have the chief
end of preaching to be directed to God's honor only, and the people's
salvation; but it follows not that it is against God for the church to maintain
her ministers, who truly serve her in the Word, though it were against God and
all Christianity, if the ministers of the church should omit the final cause, for
which the office of preaching is instituted, and should look and have regard
only to their wages, or aim at lucre and gain, and not uprightly, purely, and
truly proceed in the office of teaching.
Like as the ministers of the church,
by God's command, are in duty bound to seek and promote God's honor, and the
saving health and salvation of the people, with true and upright doctrine, even
so the church and congregation have command from God to maintain their
ministers, and honorable nourish and cherish them; for Christ says: "Every
laborer is worthy of his hire." Now if he be worthy, then no man ought to
cast it in his teeth that he takes wages. St Paul more clearly expresses
himself: "The Lord hath also commanded, that they which preach the gospel,
should live of the gospel." He puts on the office of the law, and says:
"Do ye not know, that they which do minister about holy things, live of
the things of the temple? And they which wait at the altar, are partakers with the
altar." Moreover he makes use of a very fine similitude, saying: "Who
goeth a warfare at any time at his own charges? Who planteth a vineyard and
eateth not of the fruit thereof?" But especially mark the comparison which
he gives in his epistle to the Corinthians: "If we have sown unto you
spiritual things, is it a great matter if we shall reap your carnal
things?" Indeed, every Christian, but especially the officers of the
church, ministers, and preachers, should so carry themselves that they fall not
into suspicion of being greedy and covetous: yet they must not so conceive it,
as if it were wrong to receive of the church and assembly, that which is
needful for the maintenance of the body.
Therefore no man should take
umbrage that godly rulers provide for the churches, by honestly maintaining her
true ministers; nay, we should bewail that the majority of princes and rulers
neglect the true and pure religion, and provide not for our children and
posterity, so that, through such meanness, there will be either none, or most
unlearned ministers.
CCCCXXI.
Scripture requires humble
hearts, that hold God's Word in honor, love, and worth, and that pray
continually: "Lord, teach me thy ways and statutes." But the Holy
Ghost resists the proud, and will not dwell with them. And although some for a
time diligently study in Holy Scripture, and teach and preach Christ uprightly,
yet, as soon as they become proud, God excludes them out of the church.
Therefore, every proud spirit is a heretic, not in act and deed, yet before
God.
But it is a hard matter for
one who has some particular gift and quality above another, not to be haughty,
proud, and presumptuous, and not to condemn others; therefore God suffers them
that have great gifts to fall many times into heavy tribulations, to the end
that they may learn, when God draws away his hand, that then they are of no
value. St Paul was constrained to bear on his body the sting or thorn of the
flesh, to prevent him from haughtiness. And if Philip Melancthon were not now
and then plagued in such sort as he is, he would have strange conceits.
CCCCXXII.
I learn by preaching to know
what the world, the flesh, the malice and wickedness of the devil is, all which
could not be known before the Gospel was revealed and preached, for up to that
time I thought there were no sins but incontinence and lechery.
CCCCXXII.
At court these rules ought to
be observed: we must cry aloud, and accuse; for neither the Gospel nor modesty
belong to the court; we must be harsh, and set our faces as flints; we must, instead
of Christ, who is mild and friendly, place Moses with his horns in the court.
Therefore I advise my chaplains and ministers to complain at court of their
wants, miseries, poverty, and necessities; for I myself preached concerning the
same before the prince elector, who is both good and godly, but his courtiers
do what they please. Philip Melancthon and Justus Jonas were lately called in
question at court, for the world's sake; but they made this answer: Luther is
old enough, and knows how and what to preach.
CCCCXXIV.
Cursed are all preachers that
in the church aim at high and hard things, and, neglecting the saving health of
the poor unlearned people, seek their own honor and praise, and therewith to
please one or two ambitious persons.
When I preach, I sink myself
deep down. I regard neither doctors nor magistrates, of whom are here in this
church above forty; but I have an eye to the multitude of young people,
children, and servants, of whom are more than two thousand. I preach to those,
directing myself to them that have need thereof. Will not the rest hear me? The
door stands open unto them; they may begone. I see that the ambition of
preachers grows and increases; this will do the utmost mischief in the church,
and produce great disquietness and discord; for they will needs teach high
things touching matters of state, thereby aiming at praise and honor; they will
please the worldly wise, and meantime neglect the simple and common multitude.
An upright, godly, and true
preacher should direct his preaching to the poor, simple sort of people, like a
mother that stills her child, dawdles and plays with it, presenting it with
milk from her own breast, and needing neither malmsey nor muscadine for it. In
such sort should also preachers carry themselves, teaching and preaching
plainly, that the simple and unlearned may conceive and comprehend, and retain
what they say. When they come to me, to Melancthon, to Dr. Palmer, etc., let
them show their cunning, how learned they be; they shall well put to their trumps.
But to sprinkle out Hebrew, Greek, and Latin, in their public sermons, savors
merely of show, according with neither time nor place.
CCCCXXV.
In the Psalm it is said: Their
voice went out into the whole world. But St Paul to the Romans gives it thus: "Their
sound went out into all the earth," which is all one. Many sentences are
in the Bible, wherein St Paul observed the translation of the Seventy
Interpreters, for he condemned them not; and whereas he was preacher to the
Greeks, therefore he was constrained to preach as they understood.
In such sort did he use that
sentence, 1 Cor. xv.: "Death is swallowed up in victory," whereas in
the Hebrew, it is "in the end;" ye `tis all one. St Paul was very
rich and flowing in words; one of his words contains three of Cicero's
orations, or the whole of Isaiah and Jeremiah. O! he was an excellent preacher;
he is not in vain named vas electum. Our Lord God said: I will give a
preacher to the world that shall be precious. There was never any that
understood the Old Testament so well as St Paul, except John the Baptist, and
John the Divine. St Peter excels also. St Matthew and the rest well describe
the histories, which are very necessary; but as to the things and words of the
Old Testament, they never mention what is couched therein.
St Paul translated much out of
Hebrew into Greek, which none besides were able to do; in handling one chapter,
he often expounds four, five, or six. Oh, he dearly loved Moses and Isaiah, for
they, together with king David, were the chief prophets. The words and things
of St Paul are taken out of Moses and the Prophets.
Young divines ought to study
Hebrew, to the end that they may be able to compare Greek and Hebrew words
together, and discern their properties, nature and strength.
DXXXIX.
David's fall was very
offensive, for the holy man fell into adultery, murder, and despising of God.
He was afterwards visited and punished by God in such sort, that the whole nation
forsook him. His counsellors - yea, his best beloved son, conspired and made a
league against him, who before had such high fortune, and was held in such
esteem. On account of these offences, the ungodly, doubtless, boasted, and
said: "Where is the king now? where is now his God? what has become of his
good fortune and prosperity?" For no doubt there were many kings more
powerful than David; as the king of the Moabites, whom Isaiah calls a
three-yeared cow; that is, strong, powerful, and fat.
It has always been so in the
world - that it has gone evil with the godly, and well with the ungodly; of
this complaint is made in many Psalms. We see at this day, that the popish
bishops and ungodly princes live in great honor, wealth, and power, while good
and God-fearing people are in poverty, disgrace, and trouble.
The Greek tragedies are not to
be compared to the history of David.
DXL.
All kings, princes, rulers,
and ministers, sin of necessity, and therefore have special need of the
remission of sins. I am persuaded that Ahab was saved, inasmuch as God said to
the prophets: "Seest thou not how Ahab boweth himself before sin?"
For to whom God affords speech, that is, his word and promise, with him it
stands well. Therefore, doubtless, he was saved, notwithstanding the Scriptures
witness against him, even to his death. He believed the promise of the Messiah,
and so at his death got hold of the forgiveness of sins. In like manner I am
persuaded also of all those of whom the Scripture says: "And he slept with
is fathers," that they are all in heaven. For this word, slept, shows some
good in the Scriptures. But of whom it is written: They were made away and
slain by the enemies, or were devoured and torn in pieces by wild beasts, I am
persuaded they are lost and damned.
DXLI.
Although God charged David to
build the temple, he could not perform it, because he had shed much blood, and
had carried the sword; not that he did wrong therein, but that he could not be
the figure or type of Christ, who must have a peaceable kingdom, without
shedding of blood. But Solomon was to accomplish it, who is called peaceable,
through which Christ's kingdom was signified.
DXLII.
It is with us, as it was in
the time of Judas Maccabaeus, who defended his people, and yet was not able to
suppress the enemies who possessed the government; while his own people were
unthankful, and wrought him great mischief; these two oppressions make one
weary.
The legends of the patriarchs
far excelled the holiness of all the saints; for they went on in simple
obedience towards God, in the works of their vocation. They performed such
things as came to their hand, according to God's command, without respect;
therefore, Sara, Abraham's wife, excels all other women.
DXLIII.
Philip Melancthon demanded of
Luther: How it was, that though David was instituted and ordained a king
immediately of God, yet he had many tribulations and plagues, as his psalms
show? Luther said: David was not acquainted with many good days: he was plagued
by the ungodly and false teachers, he saw that his people banded against him,
he endured and suffered many insurrections and tumults, which taught him his
lesson to pray. When he was without tribulation, he grew giddy-headed and
secure, as we see in his adultery, and his murder of Uriah.
Ah, Lord God! how is it thou
sufferest such great people to fall? This David had six wives, who doubtless
were wise and understanding women; as was the wise Abigail; if they were all
such, he was furnished with surpassing wives. Moreover, he had ten concubines;
yet, notwithstanding, he was an adulterer.
DXLIV.
Job had many tribulations; he
was also plagued of his friends, who fiercely assaulted him. The text says,
that his friends fell upon him, and were full of wrath against him; they
tormented him thoroughly, but he held his peace, suffered them to talk their
talk, as if he should say, you know not what you prate about. Job is an example
of God's goodness and mercy; for how upright and holy soever he was, yet he
sorely fell into temptation; but he was not forsaken, he was again delivered
and redeemed through God's grace and mercy.
DXLV.
Melancthon discoursing with
Luther touching the prophets, who continually boast thus: "Thus saith the
Lord," asked whether God in person spoke with them or no. Luther replied:
They were very holy, spiritual people, who seriously contemplated upon holy and
divine things; Therefore God spake with them in their consciences, which the
prophets held as sure and certain revelations.
We read in the books of the
Jews that Isaiah was slain by king Ahaz, because he said: "I saw the Lord
sitting upon a throne," etc. Doubtless, Ahaz said unto him: Thou wretch!
how darest thou presume to say, "Thou hast seen the Lord?" whereas
God said to Moses, "Shall a man see me, and live?" Thou art an insane
heretic; thou blasphemest God; thou art worthy of death; take him away. And
many think it quite just that Isaiah was slain for this, not enduring that any
man should say he had done or seen greater things than Moses.
DXLVI.
The history of Elijah is awful,
and almost incredible. It was a fierce anger indeed, that so holy a man should
pray it might not rain; but he saw that the teachers were slain, and that good
and God-fearing people were hunted down, and persecuted. Therefore he prayed
against those upon whom, with words and preaching, he could not prevail.
DXLVII.
The majesty of the prophet
Jonah is surpassing. He has but four chapters, and yet he moved therewith the
whole kingdom, so that in his weakness, he was justly a figure and a sign of the
Lord Christ. Indeed, it is surprising, that Christ should recur to this but in
four words. Moses likewise, in few words describes the creation, the history of
Abraham, and other great mysteries; but he spends much time in describing the
tent, the external sacrifices, the kidneys and so on; the reason is, he saw
that the world greatly esteemed outward things, which they beheld with their
carnal eyes, but that which was spiritual, they soon forgot.
The history of the prophet
Jonah is almost incredible, sounding more strange than any poet's fable; if it
were not in the Bible, I should take it for a lie; for consider, how for the
space of three days he was in the great belly of the whale, whereas in three
hours he might have been digested and changed into the nature, flesh and blood
of that monster; may not this be said, to live in the midst of death? In
comparison to this miracle, the wonderful passage through the Red Sea was
nothing.
But what appears more strange
is, that after he was delivered, he began to be angry, and to expostulate with
the gracious God, touching a small matter not worth a straw. It is a great
mystery. I am ashamed of my exposition upon this prophet, in that I so weakly
touch the main point of this wonderful miracle.
DXLVIII.
The harsh and sharp words of
the prophets go to the heart, yet when they say: "Jerusalem shall fall and
be destroyed," the Jews held such preaching merely heretical, and would
not endure it.
Even so say I: the Romish
church shall fail, and be destroyed; but the papists will neither believe nor
endure it; it is impossible, say they, for it is written in the article:
"I believe in the holy Christian church." Many kings are destroyed
before Jerusalem, as Sennacherib, etc.; when the prophet Jeremiah said: "Jerusalem
shall be destroyed," which he spake through the Holy Ghost, so it fell
out.
If the pope should bring
against me only one such argument as the Jews had against Jeremiah and other
prophets, it were not possible for me to subsist. But the pope disputes with
me, not according to justice and equity, but with the sword and his power. He
uses no written law, but club law. If I had no other argument against the pope
than de facto, I would instantly hang myself, but my dispute is just.
DXLIX.
An upright Christian is like
unto Jonah, who was cast into the sea, that is, into hell. He beheld the mouth
of the monster gaping to devour him, and lay three days in its dark belly,
without consuming. This history should be unto us one of the greatest comforts,
and a manifest sign of the resurrection from the dead.
In such sort does God humble
those that are his. But afterwards, Jonah went too far; he presumed to command
God Almighty, and became a great man-slayer and a murderer, for he desired that
a great city and many people should be utterly destroyed, though God chose to
spare them. This was a strange saint.
DL.
To translate the prophets well
from the Hebrew tongue, is a precious, great, and glorious work; no man before
me well attained thereunto, and to me it is a hard task; let me be once clear
from it, it shall rest.
DLI.
It is easy to be conceived,
that David dealt uprightly, and repentingly, in not rejecting Bathsheba,
Uriah's wife, but marrying her. Forasmuch as he had shamed her, it was fitting
for him to restore her to honor. God was also pleased with that conjunction;
yet, for a punishment of the adultry, God caused the son, begotten in it, soon
to die.
DLII.
No man, since the apostles
time, has rightly understood the legend of Abraham. The apostles themselves did
not sufficiently extol or explain Abraham's faith, according to its worth and
greatness. I much marvel that Moses so slightly remembers him.
DLIII.
Job at one time lost ten
children, and all his cattle; he was punished in body and in goods, yet it was
nothing in comparison of David's troubles, for though David had the promise
which could neither fail nor deceive - namely, where God says: "Thou shalt
be king," God thoroughly powdered and peppered his kingdom for his tooth;
no miserable man ever surpassed David.
DLIV.
Adam had more children than
the three that are mentioned in the Bible. The reason why particular mention is
made of Seth, is the genealogy of our Lord Christ, who was descended from that
patriarch. Adam, doubtless, had many sons and daughters, full two hundred, I am
persuaded, for he lived to a great, great age, nine hundred and thirty years.
It is likely that Cain was born thirty years after the fall of his parents, as
they were then comforted again. I believe they were often comforted by the
angels, otherwise it had been impossible for them to enjoy each other's
society, by reason they were filled with great sorrows and fears. At the last
day, it will be known that Eve exceeded all women in sorrow and misery. Never
came into the world a more miserable woman than Eve; she saw that for her sake
we were all to die. Some affirm that Cain was conceived before the promise of
the seed that should crush the serpent's head. But I am persuaded that the
promise was made not half a day after the fall; for they entered into the
garden about noon, and having appetites to eat, she took the apple; then, about
two of the clock, according to our account, was the fall.
DLV.
The reason that Abraham gave
to Agar, his concubine, and Ishmael, his son, only one flagon of wine, was that
she might know she had no right to demand anything of the inheritance, but that
what was given her proceeded out of good will, not of any obligation or reason
of law, yet that, nevertheless, she might repair again to Abraham, and fetch
more.
The text in Genesis say:
"Isaac and Ishmeal buried Abraham;" hence it appears that Ishmael was
not always with is father but was nurtured out of the father's goodness and
bounty, which was done to this end, that Abraham, intending to lead Christ
through the right line, therefore Ishmale was separated like Esau.
DLVI.
I hold that Jacob was a poor
perplexed man; I would willingly, if I could, frame a Laban out of the rich
glutton in the gospel of Luke, and a Jacob out of Lazarus who lay before the
gate. I am glad that Rachael sat upon the idols, thereby to spite her father
Laban.
DLVII.
Neither Cicero, nor Virgil,
nor Demosthenes, are to be compared with David, in point of eloquence, as we
see in the 119th Psalm, which he divides into two and twenty parts, each composed
of eight verses, and yet all having but one thought - thy law is good. He had
great gifts, and was highly favored of God. I hold that God suffered him to
fall so horribly, lest he should become too haughty and proud.
DLVIII.
Some are of opinion that David
acted not well in that, upon his death-bed, he commanded Solomon his son to
punish Shimei, who had cursed and thrown dirt at him, in his flight before
Absalom. But I say he did well, for the office of a magistrate is to punish the
guilty, and wicked malefactors. He had made a vow, indeed, not to punish him,
but that was to hold only so long as he lived.
In so strange and confused a
government, where no man knew who was cook or who butler, as we used to say,
David was often constrained to look through the fingers at many abuses and
wrongs. But afterwards, when in Solomon's time, there was peace, then through
Solomon he punished. In tumultuous governments, a ruler dares not preceed as in
time of peace, yet, at last, it is fitting that evil be punished; and as David
says: Maledixit mihi maledictionem malam.
DLIX.
Hezekiah was a very good and
pious king, full of faith, yet he fell. God cannot endure that a human creature
should trust and depend upon his own works. No man can enter into heaven,
without the remission of sins.
DLX.
Elisha dealt uprightly, in
permitting the children to be torn in pieces by two bears, for calling him
baldpate, since they mocked not him, but his God. And so as to the jeering and
mocking of Elijah: "Thou man of God," etc., `twas just that fire came
down from heaven and devoured the mockers.
DLXI.
Many strange things, according
to human sense and reason, are written in the books of the kings; they seem to
be slight and simple books, but in the spirit they are of great weight. David
endured much; Saul persecuted and plagued him ten whole years; yet David
remained constant in faith, and believed that the kingdom pertained unto him. I
should have gone my way, and said: Lord! thou hast deceived me; wilt thou make me
a king, and sufferest me in this sort to be tormented, persecuted, and plagued?
But David was like a strong wall. He was also a good and a godly man; he
refused to lay hands on the king when he had fit opportunity; for he had God's
Word, and that made him remain so steadfast; he was sure that God's Word and
promise never would or could fail him.
Surely Jonathan was an honest
man, whom David loved entirely; he marked well that the kingdom belonged to
David, therefore he entreated David not to root out him and his. Jonathan also
wrought wonders, when he, alone with his armor-bearer, went over the mountain,
and slew and destroyed the Philistines; for, doubtless, he said in himself, the
Lord that overcomes with many, is able also to overcome with few. His death was
a great grief to David. So it often happens, that the good are punished for the
sake of the wicked and ungodly. The Son of God himself was not spared.
DLXII.
The reason why the papists
boast more of St Peter than of St Paul is this: St Paul had the sword, St Peter
the keys, and they esteem more of the keys, to open the coffers, to filch and
steal, and to fill their thievish purse, than of the sword. That Caiaphas,
Pilate, and St Peter came to Rome, and appeared before the emperor, is mere
fable; the histories touching that point do not accord. Christ died in the
reign of Tiberius Caesar, who governed five years after his death. All
histories unanimously agree, that St Peter and St Paul died under the emperor Nero,
whose last year was the five and twentieth year after the death of Christ. But
St Peter was eighteen years at Jerusalem after Christ's death, as the Epistle
to the Galatians witnesses; and after that, he was seven years at Antioch.
Then, as they fable, he ruled afterwards five and twenty years at Rome. No pope
among them all yet ruled five and twenty years; and, according to this
reckoning, St Peter was not crucified under Nero. St Luke writes, that St Paul
was two whole years at liberty in Rome, and went abroad; he mentions nothing at
all of St Peter. It is a thing not to be believed that St Peter ever was at
Rome.
DLXIV.
Saint John the Evangelist
wrote, at first, touching the true nature of faith - that our salvation depends
only upon Christ the Son of God and Mary, who purchased it with his bitter
passion and death, and through the Word is received into the heart by faith,
out of his mere mercy and grace. At last he was constrained to write in his
epistle also of works, by reason of the wickedness of those that, void of all
shame, abused the Gospel through indulging the flesh.
DLXV.
An angel is a spiritual
creature created by God without a body, for the service of Christendom and of
the church.
DLXVI.
The acknowledgment of angels is
needful in the church. Therefore godly preachers should teach them logically.
First, they should show what angels are, namely, spiritual creatures without
bodies. Secondly, what manner of spirits they are, namely, good spirits and not
evil; and here evil spirits must also be spoken of, not created evil by God,
but made so by their rebellion against God, and their consequent fall; this
hatred began in Paradise, and will continue and remain against Christ and his
church to the world's end. Thirdly, they must speak touching their function,
which, as the epistle to the Hebrews (chap. i. v. 14) shows, is to present a
mirror of humility to godly Christians, in that such pure and perfect creatures
as the angels do minister unto us, poor and wretched people, in household and
temporal policy, and in religion. They are our true and trusty servants,
performing offices and works that one poor miserable mendicant would be ashamed
to do for another. In this sort ought we to teach with care, method, and
attention, touching the sweet and loving angels. Whoso speaks of them not in
the order prescribed by logic, may speak of many irrelevant things, but little
or nothing to edification.
DLXVII.
The angels are near to us, to
those creatures whom by God's command they are to preserve, to the end we
receive no hurt of the devil, though, withal, they behold God's face, and stand
before him. Therefore when the devil intends to hurt us, then the loving holy
angels resist and drive him away; for the angels have long arms, and although
they stand before the face and in the presence of God and his son Christ, yet
they are hard by and about us in those affairs, which by God we are commanded
to take in hand. The devil is also near and about us, incessantly tracking our
steps, in order to deprive us of our lives, our saving health, and salvation.
But the holy angels defend us from him, insomuch that he is not able to work us
such mischief as willingly he would.
DLXVIII.
It were not good for us to
know how earnestly the holy angels strive for us against the devil, or how hard
a combat it is. If we could see for how many angels one devil makes work, we
should be in despair. Therefore the Holy Scriptures refers to them in few
words: "He hath given his angels charge over thee," etc. Also,
"The angel of the Lord encampeth round about those that fear him,"
etc. Now, whosoever thou art, that fearest the Lord, be of good courage, take
thou no care, neither be faint-hearted, nor make any doubt of the angels
watching and protection; for most certainly they are about thee, and carry thee
upon their hands. How or in what manner it is done, take thou no heed. God says
it, therefore it is most sure and certain.
DLXIX.
I believe that the angels are
all up in arms, are putting on their harness, and girding their swords about
them. For the last judgment draws nigh, and the angels prepare themselves for
the combat, and to strike down Turk and pope into the bottomless pit.
DLXX.
The greatest punishment God
can afflict on the wicked, is when the church, to chastise them, delivers them
over to Satan, who, with God's permission, kills them, or makes them undergo
great calamities. Many devils are in woods, in waters, in wildernesses, and in
dark pooly places, ready to hurt and prejudice people; some are also in the
thick black clouds, which cause hail, lightnings, and thunderings, and poison
the air, the pastures and grounds. When these things happen, then the
philosophers and physicians say, it is natural, ascribing it to the planets, and
showing I know not what reasons for such misfortunes and plagues as ensue.
DLXXI.
Whoso would see the true
picture, shape, or image of the devil, and know how he is qualified and
disposed, let him mark well all the commandments of God, one after another, and
then let him place before his eyes an offensive, shameless, lying, despairing,
ungodly, insolent, and blasphemous man or woman, whose mind and conceptions are
directed in every way against God, and who takes delight in doing people hurt
and mischief; there thou seest the right devil, carnal and corporal. First, in
such a person there is no fear, no love, no faith or confidence in God, but
altogether contempt, hatred, unbelief, despair, and blaspheming of God. There
thou seest the devil's head, directly opposing the first commandment. Secondly,
a believing Christian takes God's name not in vain, but spreads abroad God's
Word, calls upon him from his heart, thanks Him for his benefits, confesses
Him. But this picture and child of the devil does quite the contrary; he holds
God's Word for a fable, fearfully abuses God's name, blasphemes God, and withal
swears and rages abominably, calls upon the evil one and yields unto him. There
thou seest the mouth and the tongue of the devil, directed against the second commandment.
Thirdly, a true Christian esteems worthily of the office of preaching; he hears
and learns God's Word with true earnestness and diligence, according to
Christ's institution and command, not only to the amendment and comfort of
himself, but also for good example to others; he honors and defends good and
godly servants of the Word, permits them not to suffer want, etc. But this
image and child of the devil regards no preaching, hears not God's Word, or
very negligently, speaks evil thereof, perverts it, and makes scoff thereat;
yea, hates the servants thereof, who, for ought he cares, may famish for want
of food. There thou seest the ears of the devil, his throat and neck of steel,
directly against the third commandment. Further, desirest thou to know how the
body of the devil is shaped and fashioned, then hearken to the following
commandments of the second table, and take good heed thereunto. For first, a
good Christian honors his parents, and hearkens unto them, to the magistrates,
and to the shepherds of souls, according as God has commanded. But this child
of the devil hearkens not to his parents, serves and helps them not; nay,
dishonors, condemns, and vexes them, forsakes them in their need, is ashamed of
them when they are poor, and scorns them in their old age; he is disobedient to
magistrates, and shows unto them no reverence, but speaks evil of them; he
regards no admonition, reproof, civility, or honesty. There thou seest the
breast of the devil. Secondly, an upright and true Christian envies not his
neighbor, he bears no ill-will towards him, he desires not to be revenged of
him, though he have cause, yea, he condoles with his neighbor, when hurt and
grief assault him, helps, and to his power defends him against those who seek
his life. But this child of the devil, although he cannot hurt his neighbor in
body and life, or murder him with his fist, yet he hates and envies him, he is
angry with him, and is his enemy in his heart, wishes his death, and when it
goes evil with him, is glad and laughs in his sleeve, etc. There thou seest the
devil's wrathful and murdering heart. Thirdly, a God-fearing Christian lives
modestly and honestly, shuns all manner of wrongful dealing, stands in fear of
God's wrath and everlasting punishment. But the child of the devil does quite
the contrary, is void of all shame and chastity, in words, behavior, and act.
There thou seest the belly of the devil. Fourthly, a godly Christian lives by
his labor, by his trade, with a good conscience; he deceives no man of that
which is his; nay, lends, helps, and gives to the needy according to his
ability. But this devilish child helps none, no, not in the least, but he
trades in usury, covets, robs, and steals as he may, by power and deceit; he
takes all manner of advantage to cheat and cozen his neighbor, by false wares,
measures, weights, etc. There thou seest the hands, and sharp-pointed claws of
the devil. Fifthly, a godly creature speaks evil of no man, belies not his
neighbor, nor bears false witness against him; yea, though he knows his
neighbor faulty, yet out of love he covers his infirmities and sins, except by
the magistrate he be called to confess this truth. But this child of the devil
does quite the contrary; he slanders and backbites, betrays, and falsely accuses
his neighbor, and perverts that which he has rightly spoken. There thou seest
the devil's evil and wicked will. Sixth, and lastly, a true Christian covets
not his neighbor's house, inheritance, or wealth, misleads not his wife or his
daughter, entices not away his servants, covets nothing that is his; yea,
according to his power, he helps to keep and preserve that which belongs to
him. But this child of the devil imagines, endeavors, and, day and night, seeks
opportunity to defraud his neighbor of his house, his grounds, lands, and
people, to draw and entice his wife away unto himself, to flatter away his
servants, to instigate his neighbor's tenants against him, to get his cattle
from him, etc. There thou seest the devil's lust. Through lies, under the color
of the truth, he seduces and deceives godly people, like as he did Adam and Eve
in Paradise; therefore the more holy the people be, the greater is the danger
they stand in. For this cause, we ought to beware of the devil, and to take our
refuge in Christ, who crushed his head, and delivered us from his lies.
DLXXII.
Dr. Luther was asked, whether
the Samuel who appeared to king Saul, upon the invocation of the pythoness, as
is related in the first Book of Kings, was really the prophet Samuel. The
doctor answered: "No, `twas a spectre, an evil spirit, assuming his form.
What proves this is, that God, by the laws of Moses, had forbidden man to
question the dead; consequently, it must have been a demon which presented
itself under the form of the man of God. In like manner, abbot of Spanheim, a
sorcerer, exhibited to the emperor Maximilian all the emperors his
predecessors, and all the most celebrated heroes of past times, who defiled
before him each in the costume of his time. Among them were Alexander the Great
and Julius Caesar. There was also the emperor's betrothed, whom Charles of
France stole from him. But these apparitions were all the work of the
demon."
DLXXIII.
No malady comes upon us from
God, who is good, and wishes us well; they all emanate from the devil, who is
the cause and author of plagues, fevers, etc. When he is at work with
jurisconsults, he engenders all sorts of dissensions and machinations, turning
justice into injustice. Approaches he great lords, princes, kings; he gives
birth to wars and massacres. Gains he access to divines, which seduce and ruin
men's souls. God alone can check so many calamities.
DLXXIV.
The devil vexes and harasses
the workmen in the mines. He makes them think they have found fine new veins of
silver, which, when they have labored and labored, turn out to be more
illusions. Even in open day, on the surface of the earth, he causes people to
think they see a treasure before them, which vanishes when they would pick it
up. At times, treasure is really found, but this is by the special grace of
God. I never had any success in the mines, but such was God's will, and I am
content.
DLXXV.
The emperor Frederick, father
of Maximilian, invited a necromancer to dine with him, and, by his knowledge of
magic, turned his guest's hands into griffins claws. He then wanted him to eat,
but the man, ashamed, hid his claws under the table.
He took his revenge, however,
for the jest played upon him. He caused it to seem that a loud altercation was
going on in the court yard, and when the emperor put his head out of a window
to see what was the matter, he, by his art, clapped on him a pair of huge
stag's horns, so that the emperor could not get his head into the room again
until he had cured the necromancer of his disfigurement. I am delighted, said
Luther, when one devil plagues another. They are not all, however, of equal
power.
DLXXVI.
There was at Nieuburg a
magician named Wildferer, who, one day, swallowed a countryman, with his horse
and cart. A few hours afterwards, man, horse, and cart, were all found in a
slough, some miles off. I have heard, too, of a seeming monk, who asked a
wagoner, that was taking some hay to market, how much he would charge to let
him eat his fill of hay? The man said, a kreutzer, whereupon the monk set to
work, and had nearly devoured the whole load, when the wagoner drove him off.
DLXXVII.
August 25, 1538, the
conversation fell upon witches who spoil milk, eggs, and butter in farm yards.
Dr. Luther said: "I should have no compassion on these witches; I would
burn all of them. We read in the old law, that the priests threw the first
stone at such malefactors, `Tis said this stolen butter turns rancid, and falls
to the ground when any one goes to eat it. He who attempts to counteract and
chastise these witches, is himself corporally plagued and tormented by their
master, the devil. Sundry schoolmasters and ministers have often experienced
this. Our ordinary sins offend and anger God. What, then, must be his wrath
against witchcraft, which we may justly designate high treason against divine
majesty, a revolt against the infinite power of God. The jurisconsults who have
so learnedly and pertinently treated of rebellion, affirm that the subject who
rebels against his sovereign, is worthy of death. Does not witchcraft, then,
merit death, which is a revolt of the creature against the Creator, a denial to
God of the authority it accords to the demon?"
DLXXVIII.
Dr. Luther discoursed at
length concerning witchcraft and charms. He said, that his mother had had to
undergo infinite annoyance from one of her neighbors, who was a witch, and whom
she was fain to conciliate with all sorts of attentions; for this witch could
throw a charm upon children, which made them cry themselves to death. A pastor having
punished her for some knavery, she cast a spell upon him by means of some earth
upon which he had walked, and which she bewitched. The poor man hereupon fell
sick of a malady which no remedy could remove, and shortly after died.
DLXXIX.
It was asked: Can good
Christians and God fearing people also undergo witchcraft? Luther replied: Yes;
for our bodies are always exposed to the attacks of Satan. The maladies I
suffer are not natural, but devil's spells.
DLXXX.
When I was young, some one
told me this story: Satan had, in vain, set all his craft and subtlety at work
to separate a married pair that lived together in perfect harmony and love. At
last, having concealed a razor under each of their pillows, he visited the
husband, disguised as an old woman, and told him that his wife had formed the
project of killing him; he next told the same thing to the wife. The husband,
finding the razor under his wife's pillow, became furious with anger at her
supposed wickedness, and cut her throat. So powerful is Satan in his malice.
DLXXXI.
Luther, taking up a
caterpillar, said: `Tis an emblem of the devil in its crawling walk, and bears
his colors in its changing hue.
DLXXXII.
Dr. Luther said he had heard
from the elector of Saxony, John Frederick, that a powerful family in Germany
was descended from the devil, the founder having been born of a succubus. He
added this story: A gentleman had a young and beautiful wife, who, dying, was
buried. Shortly afterwards, this gentleman and one of his servants sleeping in
the same chamber, the wife, who was dead, came at night, bent over the bed of
the gentleman, as though she were conversing with him, and, after a while, went
away again. The servant, having twice observed this circumstance, asked his
master whether he knew that, every night, a woman, clothed in white, stood by
his bedside. The master replied, that he had slept soundly, and had observed
nothing of the sort. The next night, he took care to remain awake. The woman
came, and he asked her who she was, and what she wanted. She answered, that she
was his wife. He returned: my wife is dead and buried. She answered, she had
died by reason of his sins, but that if he would receive her again, she would
return to him in life. He said, if it were possible, he should be well content.
She told him he must undertake not to swear, as he was wont to do; for that if
he ever did so, she should once more die, and permanently quit him. He promised
this, and the dead woman, returning to seeming life, dwelt with him, ate,
drank, and slept with him, and had children by him. One day that he had guests,
his wife went to fetch some cakes from an adjoining apartment, and remained a
long time absent. The gentleman grew impatient, and broke out into his old
oaths. The wife not returning, the gentleman, with his friends, went to seek
her, but she had disappeared; only the clothes she had worn lay on the floor.
She was never again seen.
DLXXXIII.
The devil seduces us at first
by all the allurements of sin, in order thereafter to plunge us into despair;
he pampers up the flesh, that he may, by and bye, prostrate the spirit. We feel
no pain in the act of sin, but the soul after it is sad, and the conscience
disturbed.
DLXXXIV.
He who will have, for his
master and king, Jesus Christ, the son of the Virgin, who took upon himself our
flesh and our blood, will have the devil for his enemy.
DLXXXV.
It is very certain that, as to
all persons who have hanged themselves, or killed themselves in any other way,
`tis the devil who has put the cord round their necks, or the knife to their
throats.
DLXXXVI.
A man had a habit, whenever he
fell, of saying: "Devil take me." He was advised to discontinue this
evil custom, lest some day the devil should take him at his word. He promised
to vent his impatience by some other phrase; but, one day, having stumbled, he
called upon the devil, in the way I have mentioned, and was killed upon the
spot, falling on a sharp pointed piece of wood.
DLXXXVII.
A pastor, near Torgau, came to
Luther, and complained that the devil tormented him without intermission. The
Doctor replied: He plagues and harasses me too, but I resist him with the arms
of faith. I know of one person at Magdeburg, who put Satan to the rout, by
spitting at him; but this example is not to be lightly followed; for the devil
is a presumptuous spirit, and not disposed to yield. We run great risk when,
with him, we attempt more than we can do. One man, who relied implicitly on his
baptism, when the devil presented himself to him, his head furnished with
horns, tore off one of the horns; but another man, of less faith, who attempted
the same thing, was killed by the devil.
DLXXXVIII.
Henning, the Bohemian, asked Dr.
Luther, why the devil bore so furious a hatred to the human race? The Doctor
replied: "That ought not to surprise you; see what a hate prince George
bears me, so that, day and night, he is ever meditating how he shall injure me.
Nothing would delight him more, than to see me undergo a thousand tortures. If
such be the hatred of man, what must the hatred of the devil be?"
DLXXXIX.
The devil cannot but be our
enemy, since we are against him with God's Word, wherewith we destroy his
kingdom. He is a prince and god of the world, and has a greater power than all
the kings, potentates, and princes upon earth; wherefore he would be revenged
of us, and assaults us without ceasing, as we both see and feel. We have
against the devil, a great advantage; powerful, wicked, and cunning as he is,
he cannot hurt us, since `tis not against him we have sinned, but against God.
Therefore we have nothing to do with that arch-enemy; but we confess, and say:
"Against thee, Lord, have we sinned," etc. We know, through God's grace,
that we have a gracious God, and a merciful Father in heaven, whose wrath
against us, Christ Jesus, our only Lord and Saviour, has appeased with his
precious blood. Now, forasmuch as through Christ we have remission of sins and
peace with God, so must the envious devil be content to let us alone, in peace,
so that henceforward he can neither upbraid nor hit us in the teeth concerning
our sins against God's laws, for Christ has cancelled and torn in pieces the
handwriting of our consciences, which was a witness against us, and nailed the
same to his cross; to God be everlasting honor, praise, and glory in Christ
Jesus, for the same. Amen.
DXC.
The devil knows the thoughts
of the ungodly, for he inspires them therewith. He sees and rules the hearts of
all such people as are not kept safe and preserved by God's Word; yea, holds
them captive in his snares, so that they must think, do, and speak according to
his will. And St Paul says: "The god of this world blindeth the minds of
them that believe not, lest the light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is
the image of God, should shine unto them," etc. And Christ gives a reason
how it comes to pass, that many hear the Word, yet neither understand nor keep
the same, where he says: "The devil cometh, and taketh the Word out of
their hearts, lest they should believe, and be saved." Therefore it is no
marvel that the devil, through his prophets, declares what shall happen and
come to pass.
DXCI.
The Scripture clearly shows
that the devil gives unto mankind evil thoughts, and suggests evil projects to
the ungodly; as of Judas is written that the devil put it into his heart to
betray Christ. And he not only instigated Cain to hate his brother Abel, but,
moreover, to murder him. But the devil knows not the thoughts of the righteous,
until they utter them. He knew not the thoughts of Christ's heart, nor knows he
the thoughts of the godly, in whose heart Christ dwells. `Tis a powerful,
crafty, and subtle spirit. Christ names him the Prince of the World; he goes
about shooting all thoughts, his fiery darts, into the hearts even of the
godly, as discord, hatred to God, despair, blaspheming, etc. St Paul well
understood all these assaults, and bitterly complains of them.
DXCII.
The apostle gives this title
to the devil: "That he hath the power of death." And Christ calls him
a murderer. He is so skilled, that he is able to cause death even with the leaf
of a tree; he has more boxes and pots full of poisons, wherewith he destroys
men, than all the apothecaries in the world have of healing medicine; if one
poison will not dispatch, another will. In a word, the power of the devil is
greater than we can imagine; `tis only God's finger can resist him.
DXCIII.
I maintain that Satan produces
all the maladies which afflict mankind, for he is the prince of death. St Peter
speaks of Christ as healing all that are oppressed of the devil. He not only
cured those who were possessed, but he restored sight to the blind, hearing to
the deaf, speech to the dumb, strength to the paralytic; therefore I think all
grave infirmities are blows and strokes of the devil, which he employs as an
assassin uses the sword or other weapon. So God employs natural means to
maintain the health and life of man, such as sleep, meat, drink, etc. The devil
has other means of injury; he poisons the air, etc.
A physician repairs the work
of God when damaged corporally; we, divines, spiritually; we mend the soul that
the devil has spoiled. The devil gives poison to kill men; a physician gives
theriacum, or some other drug, to save them; so the creature, through
creatures, helping creatures. Physic has not its descent and origin out of
books; God revealed it; or, as Syrach says: "It cometh from the Most
Highest; the Lord hath created medicines out of the earth." Therefore we
may justly use corporal physic, as God's creature. Our burgomaster here at
Wittenberg lately asked me, if it were against God's will to use physic? for,
said he, Doctor Carlstad has preached, that whoso falls sick, shall use no
physic, but commit his case to God, praying that His will be done. I asked him:
Did he eat when he was hungry? He answered, yes. Then, said I, even so you may
use physic, which is God's creature, as well as meat and drink, or whatever
else we use for the preservation of life.
DXCIV.
Satan plagues and torments
people all manner of ways. Some he affrights in their sleep, with heavy dreams
and visions, so that the whole body sweats in anguish of heart. Some he leads,
sleeping, out of their beds and chambers, up into high dangerous places, so
that if, by the loving angels who are about them, they were not preserved, he
would throw them down and cause their death. The superstitious papists say,
that these sleep-walkers are persons who have never been baptized; or if they
have been, that the priest was drunk when he administered the sacrament.
DXCV.
No creature can prevail
against the devil, but only Christ, and he made trial of his art even upon him,
as when he said unto him; "If thou wilt fall down and worship me, I will
give thee all the kingdoms of the whole world."
No man can rightly comprehend
this temptation; I would willingly die, on condition I could fundamentally
preach thereof. Doubtless, the devil moved Christ much when he said: "All
this is mine, and I give it to whom I will;" for they are words of Divine
Majesty, and belong only to God. True, the devil gives, but let us make a
strong distinction between the real giver, who gives all that we have and are,
and the dissembling murderer, who gives to those that serve and worship him for
a short time, yet so that they must everlastingly perish. Christ contradicts
him not, that he is a lord and a prince of the world; but he will not therefore
worship him, but says: Avoid Satan. Even so ought we to do. He must be, indeed,
a most wicked, poisoned, and thirsty spirit, that he durst presume to tempt the
Son of God to fall down and worship him. The arch villain, doubtless, in the
twinkling of an eye, laid before the Lord a delusion of all the kingdoms of the
world, and their glory, as Luke writes, thereby to move and allure him to the
end he should think: such honor might one receive, and yet nevertheless be the
child of God.
DXCVI.
When that envious, poisoned
spirit, the devil, plagues and torments us, as is his custom, by reason of our
sins, intending thereby to lead us into despair, we must meet him in this
manner: "thou deceitful and wicked spirit! how darest thou presume to
persuade me to such things? Knowest thou not that Christ Jesus, my Lord and
Saviour, who crushed thy head, has forbidden me to believe thee, yea, even when
thou speakest the truth, in that he names thee a murderer, a liar, and the
father, of lies? I do not admit to thee, that I, as thy captive shall be
condemned to everlasting death and hellish torments, by reason of my sins, as
thou falsely suggestest; but thou, thyself, on the contrary, long since, by
Christ my Lord and Saviour, wert stripped, judged, and with everlasting bonds
and chains of darkness, art bound, cast down, and delivered to hell, reserved
to the judgment of the great day, and finally, with all the ungodly, shalt be
thrown into the bottomless pit of hell. Further, I demand of thee, by what
authority thou presumest to exercise such power and right against me? whereas
thou hast given me neither life, wife, nor child; no, not the least thing that
I have; neither art thou my lord, much less the creator of my body and soul;
neither hast thou made the members wherewith I have sinned. How, then, thou
wicked and false spirit, art thou so insolent as to domineer over that which is
mine, as if thou wert God himself?"
DXCVII.
The people who in popedom are
possessed of the devil, get not rid of him by such arts, words, or gestures as
their charmers use; the devil suffers not himself to be driven out with mere
phrases, as: "Come out, thou unclean spirit," for these charmers mean
it not earnestly. The power of God must effect it.
The devil may be driven out,
either by the prayers of the whole church, when all Christians join their
supplications together in a prayer so powerful, that it pierces the clouds, -
or the person that would drive out the wicked enemy by himself, must be of
highly enlightened mind, and of strong and steadfast courage, certain of his
cause; as Elijah, Elisha, Peter, Paul, etc.
DXCVIII.
The cause that so many poor
people in the time of Christ were possessed, was, that the true doctrine was
almost sunk and quenched by the people of Israel, a few excepted, - as
Zacharias, Elizabeth, Simeon, Anna, etc. And I believe if the Pharisees had
continued to rule, and that Christ had not come, Judaism would have been turned
into Paganism, - as, before the shining of the gospel, was seen in popedom,
where the people understood as little of Christ and his Word, as the Turks and
heathens.
DXCIX.
The devil well knew the
Scripture, where it is said: "Behold, a virgin shall conceive and bear a
child." Also: "Unto us a child is born." But because Christ has
carried himself humbly and lowly, went about with public sinners, and by reason
thereof was held in no esteem, - therefore the devil looked another way over
Christ, and knew him not; for the devil looks a-squint upwards, after that
which is high and pompous, not downwards, nor on that which is humble and
lowly. But the everlasting merciful God does quite the contrary; he beholds
that which is lowly, as the 113th Psalm shows: "Our God hath his dwelling
on high, and yet humbleth to behold what is in heaven and on earth." And
Isaiah: "I will look to him that is poor, and of a contrite spirit, and
trembleth at my word." God cares not for that which is high; yea, it is an
abomination before him. St Luke says: "That which is highly esteemed among
men, is abomination in the sight of God." Therefore he that intends to
climb high, let him beware of the devil, lest he throw him down; for the nature
and manner of the devil is, first to hoist up into heaven, and afterwards to
cast down into hell.
DC.
In cases of melancholy and
sickness, I conclude it is merely the work of the devil. For God makes us not melancholy,
nor affrights nor kills us, for he is a God of the living. Hence the Scripture:
"Rejoice, and be of good comfort." God's Word and prayer is physic
against spiritual tribulations.
DCI.
I would rather die through the
devil than through the emperor or pope; for then I should die through a great
and mighty prince of the world. But if he eat a bit of me `twill be his bane;
he shall spew me out again; and, at the day of judgment, I in requital will
devour him.
DCII.
The devil needs not to tell me
I am not good or upright; neither would I wish to be so, that is, to be without
feeling of my sins, or to think I need no remission of them; for, if that were
the case, all the treasure of Christ were lost on me, seeing he says himself:
"He came not for the sake of the just, but to call sinners to
repentance."
DCIII.
I hold that a devil, once
overcome with God's Word and Spirit, must be gone, and dare not return again
with the same temptation; Christ says: "Avoid Satan." And in another
place: "Come out, thou unclean spirit." Then say the devils:
"Suffer us to enter into the herd of swine." Origen says: "I
believe that the saints strangle and slay many devils in combating" - that
is, break their power.
DCIV.
Witchcraft is the devil's own
proper work, wherewith, when God permits, he not only hurts people, but often
makes away with them; for in this world we are as guests and strangers, body
and soul cast under the devil; he is god of this world, and all things are
under his power, whereby we are preserved in temporal life, - as meat, drink,
air, etc.
The devil is so crafty a
spirit, that he can ape and deceive our senses. He can cause one to think he
sees something, which he sees not, that he hears thunder, or a trumpet, which
he hears not. Like as the soldiers of Julius Caesar thought they heard the
sound of a trumpet, as Suetonius writes, and yet there was no such thing. Oh,
Satan is a master in aping and deceiving people, and every human sense.
And especially, is he artful
when he deceives people spiritually, bewitching and deceiving the hearts and
consciences, in such sort that they hold and receive erroneous and ungodly
doctrine and opinion, for the upright and divine truth.
We see at this day how easy a
matter it is for him so to do, by the sectaries and seducers; for he has so
bewitched and deceived their hearts, that they hold that for the clear truth,
which is altogether lies, errors, and abominable darkness. They hold themselves
wise and learned in divine matters; other people they regard as geese, which neither
see nor understand anything.
The poisonous serpent takes
such delight in doing mischief, that he not only deceives secure and proud
spirits with his delusions, but also undertakes, through his deceptions, to
bring into error those who are well instructed and grounded in God's Word. He
vexes me often so powerfully, and assaults me so fiercely with heavy and
melancholy thoughts, that I forget my loving Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus, or
at least behold him far otherwise than he is to be beheld. There is none of us
so free, but that often he is thus deceived and bewitched with false opinions.
Therefore we should learn how to know this conjuror, to the end he may not come
behind us, being sleepy and secure, and so delude us with his witchcraft. And
truly, if he find us not sober and watching, and not armed with spiritual
weapons, that is, with God's Word and with faith, then most surely he will
overcome us.
DCVI.
When I could not be rid of the
devil with sentences out of the Holy Scripture, I made him often fly with
jerring words; sometimes I said unto him: Saint Satan! if Christ's blood, which
was shed for my sins, be not sufficient, then I desire that thou wouldest pray
to God for me. When he finds me idle, with nothing in hand, he is very busy,
and before I am aware, he wrings from me a bitter sweat; but when I offer him
the pointed spear, God's Word, he flies; yet, before he goes, makes a grievous
hurricane. When I began to write against the pope, and the Gospel was going on,
the devil set himself strongly to work, rumbling and raging about, for he would
willingly have preserved purgatory at Magdeburg. There was a citizen, whose
child died, for whom he refused to have vigils and masses sung. The devil
played his freaks, came every night, about twelve o'clock, into the chamber
where the boy died, and made a whining like a young child. The good citizen
being therewith full of sorrow, knew not what course to take. The popish
priests said: O, now you see how it goes when vigils are not solemnized.
Whereupon the citizen sent to me, desiring my advice, (for the sermon I had
lately preached on this text: "They have Moses and the prophets," had
been printed, and been read by him); and I wrote to him from Wittenberg, and
advised him not to suffer any vigils at all to be held, for he might be fully
assured that these were merely pranks of the devil; whereupon, the children and
servants in the house jeered the devil, and said: What doest thou, Satan?
Avoid, thou cursed spirit, get thee gone to the place, where thou oughtest to
be, to the pit of hell. When the devil marked their contempt, he left off his
game, and came there no more. He is a proud spirit, and cannot endure scorn.
DCVII.
Though Satan ceases not to
plague the Christians, and to shoot at us his fiery darts, `tis very good and
profitable for us, for thereby he makes us the more sure of the word and
doctrine, so that faith increases, and is stronger in us. We are often shaken,
and, indeed, now and then the devil drives out of us a sour and bitter sweat,
but he cannot bring us to despair; for Christ always has kept the field, and
through us will keep it still. Through hope, in all manner of trials and
temptations, we hold ourselves on Christ.
DCVIII.
`Tis a fearful thing when
Satan torments the sorrowful conscience with melancholy; then the wicked
villain, masterlike, disguises himself in the person of Christ, so that it is
impossible for a poor creature, whose conscience is troubled, to discover the
knavery. Hence many of those, that neither know nor understand the same, run
headlong into despair, and make away with themselves; for they are blinded and
deceived so powerfully by him, that they are fully persuaded it is not the
devil, but Christ himself, that thus vexes and torments them.
I am a doctor of Holy Scripture,
and for many years have preached Christ; yet, to this day, I am not able to put
Satan off, or to drive him away from me, as I would; neither am I able so to
comprehend Christ and to take hold on him, as in Holy Scripture he is placed
before me; but the devil continually seeks how to put another Christ into my
mind. Yet, nevertheless, we ought to render humble thanks to Almighty God, who
has hitherto preserved us by his holy Word, through faith and by prayer, so
that we know how to walk before him in humility and fear, and not to depend or
presume on our own wisdom, righteousness, strength, and power, but to cheer and
comfort ourselves in Christ, who is always more than sufficiently strong and
powerful; and, although we be weak and faint, yet we continually vanquish and
overcome through his power and strength in us poor, weak, and feeble creatures.
For this may his holy name be blessed and magnified for evermore. Amen.
DCIX.
The devil has two occupations,
to which he applies himself incessantly, and which are the foundation stones of
his kingdom - lying and murder. God says: "Thou shalt do no murder."
"Thou shalt have none other gods but me." Against these two
commandments, the devil, with all his force, fights without intermission.
He now plays no more with
people, as heretofore, by means of rumbling spirits, for he sees that the
condition of the time is far otherwise than what it was twenty years past. He
now begins at the right end, and uses great diligence. The rumbling spirits are
mute among us; but the spirits of sedition increase above measure, and get the
upper hand. God resist them.
DCX.
The power the devil exercises
is not by God commanded, but God resists him not, suffering him to make
tumults, yet no longer or further than he wills, for God has set him a mark,
beyond which he neither can nor dare step.
When God said, concerning Job,
to Satan: "Behold, he is in thy hands, yet spare his life," this
power was by God permitted, as if God should say: I will so far permit and give
you leave, but touch not his life.
DCXI.
It is almost incredible how
God enables us, weak flesh and blood, to enter combat with the devil, and to
beat and overcome so powerful a spirit as he, and with no other weapon only his
Word, which by faith we take hold on. This must needs grieve and vex that great
and powerful enemy.
DCXII.
The devil is like a fowler; of
the birds he catches, he wrings most of their necks, but keeps a few alive, to
allure other birds to his snare, by singing the song he will have in a cage. I
hope he will not get me into his cage.
DCXIII.
Let not man flatter himself
that the devil is in hell, far from the ungodly, as the archbishop of Mayence
thinks; the devil dwells in his hard heart, and impels him according to his
will and pleasure. For if the devil had no power but to plague us in body and
goods, and vexed and tormented us only with the cares and troubles of this
life, he were no devil to make account of. But he has learned a higher art; he
takes away and falsifies the article of justification privitive et positive,
and either tears the same quite out of our hearts, as in popedom, or defiles it
through sects and heresies, which hang thereon a gloss about works, or what
not, leaving the husks of the nuts to the hearers, but the kernels are gone.
DCXIV.
The devil has two manner of
shapes or forms, wherein he disguises himself; he either appears in the shape
of a serpent, to affright and kill, or else in the form of a silly sheep, to
lie and deceive; these are his two court colors. The devil is a foolish spirit,
for he gives means and occasions for Christ to defend himself, in that he
plagues the poor and weak Christians; for thereby he confirms the authority of
Christ and his apostles; as when they make the sick whole and sound, the devil
had rather he had left them at peace and quiet, but his wicked desire to do
mischief drives him forward, to the end he may be brought to confusion.
DCXV.
Our songs and Psalms sorely
vex and grieve the devil, whereas our passions and impatiences, our
complainings and cryings, our "alas!" or "woe is me!"
please him well, so that he laughs in his fist. He takes delight in tormenting
us, especially when we confess, praise, preach, and laud Christ. For seeing the
devil is a prince of this world, and our utter enemy, we must be content to let
him pass through his country he will needs have imposts and customs of us, and
strike our bodies with manifold plagues.
DCXVI.
God gives to the devil and to
witches power over human creatures in two ways; first, over the ungodly, when
he will punish them by reason of their sins; secondly, over the just and godly,
when he intends to try whether they will be constant in the faith, and remain
in his obedience. Without God's will and our own consent, the devil cannot hurt
us; for God says: "Whoso touches you, toucheth the apple of mine
eye." And Christ: "There cannot fall an hair from your head, without
your heavenly Father's notice."
DCXVII.
The devil's power is not so
well seen in the fall of carnal people, and of the wise of this world, who live
like senseless creatures and heathen, as in the fall of the saints who were
endued with the Holy Ghost; as Adam, David, Solomon, Peter, etc., who committed
great sins, and fell by God's will, to the end they should not proudly exalt
themselves by reason of God's gifts.
DCXVIII.
By good experience, I know the
devil's craft and subtilty, that he not only blows the law into us, to terrify
and affright us, and out of mole-hills to make mountains, - that is, to make a
very hell of what is but a small and little sin, which as a wondrous juggler he
can perform artfully; but also, can sometimes make such to be great and heavy
sins which are no sins; for he brings one threatening sentence or other out of
the Holy Scriptures, and before we are aware, gives so hard a blow to our
hearts, in a moment, that we lose all light and sight, and take him to be the
true Christ, whereas it is only the envious devil.
DCXIX.
When tribulations approach,
excommunicate them in the name of Christ Jesus, and say: God has forbidden me
to receive that coin, because it is minted by the devil; we reject it as
prohibited.
When heavy temptations come
upon thee, expel them by what means thou best mayest; talk with good friends,
of such things as thou takest delight in.
DCXX.
When I write against the pope,
I am not melancholy, for then I labor with the brains and understanding, then I
write with joy of heart; so that not long since Dr. Reisenpusch said to me: I
much marvel you can be so merry; if the case were mine, it would go near to
kill me. Whereupon I answered: Not the pope or all his shaven retinue can make
me sad; for I know that they are Christ's enemies; therefore I fight against
him with joyful courage.
DCXXI.
The devil gives heaven to people
before they sin, but after they sin, brings their consciences into despair.
Christ deals quite contrary, for he gives heaven after sins committed, and
makes consciences joyful.
Last night as I waked out of
my sleep, the devil came and said: God is far from thee, and hears not thy
prayers. Whereupon I said: Very well, I will call and cry the louder. I will
place before my sight the world's unthankfulness, and the ungodly doings of
kings, potentates and princes; I will also think upon the raging heretics; all
these will inflame my praying.
DCXXII.
The hound of hell, in Greek,
is called Cerberus; in Hebrew, Scorphur: he has three throats - sin, the law,
and death.
DCXXIII.
In Job are two chapters (xl. and
xli.) concerning Behemoth the whale, before whom no man is in safety.
"Wilt thou (saith the text) draw leviathan out with a hook? Will he make
many supplications unto thee? Will he speak soft words unto thee?" These
are images and figures whereby the devil is signified.
DCXXIV.
At Mohlburg, in Thuringia, not
far from Erfurt, there was a musician, who gained his living by playing at
merry makings. This man came to the minister of his parish, and complained that
he was every day assailed by the devil, who threatened to carry him off,
because he had played at an unlawful marriage. The minister consoled him,
prayed for him, recited to him numerous passages of Scripture, directed against
the devil; and, with some other pious men, watched over the unfortunate man,
day and night, fastening the doors and windows, so that he might not be carried
off. At length the musician said: "I feel that Satan cannot harm my soul,
but he will assuredly remove my body;" and that very night, at eight
o'clock, though the watch was doubled, the devil came in the shape of a furious
wind, broke the windows, and carried off the musician, whose body was found
next morning, stiff and black, stuck on a nut tree. `Tis a most sure and
certain story, added Luther.
DCXXV.
We cannot expel demons with
certain ceremonies and words, as Jesus Christ, the prophets, and the apostles
did. All we can do is, in the name of Jesus Christ, to pray the Lord God, of
his infinite mercy, to deliver the possessed persons. And if our prayer is
offered up in full faith, we are assured by Christ himself (St John xvi.23)
that it will be efficacious, and overcome all the devil's resistance. I might
mention many instances of this. But we cannot of ourselves expel the evil
spirits, nor must we even attempt it.
DCXXXVI.
Men are possessed by the devil
in two ways; corporally and spiritually. Those whom he possesses corporally, as
mad people, he has permission from God to vex and agitate, but he has no power
over their souls. The impious, who persecute the divine doctrine, and treat the
truth as a lie, and who, unhappily, are very numerous in our time, these the
devil possesses spiritually. They cannot be delivered, but remain, horrible to
relate, his prisoners, as in the time of Jesus Christ were Annas, Caiaphas, and
all the other impious Jews whom Jesus himself could not deliver, and as
nowadays, are the pope, his cardinals, bishops, tyrants, and partisans.
DCXXVII.
When Satan says in thy heart:
"God will not pardon thy sins, nor be gracious unto thee," I pray,
how wilt thou then, as a poor sinner, raise up and comfort thyself, especially
when other signs of God's wrath beat upon thee, as sickness, poverty, etc. And
when thy heart begins to preach and say: behold, here thou liest in sickness;
thou art poor and forsaken of every one; why, thou must turn thyself to the
other side, and say: Well, let it outwardly seem as it will, yea, though mine
own heart felt infinitely more sorrow, yet I know for certain, that I am united
and made one with my Lord and Saviour Christ; I have his word to assure me of
the same, which can neither fail nor deceive me, for God is true, and performs
what he promises.
DCXXVIII.
The devil often casts this
into my breast: How if thy doctrine be false and erroneous, wherewith the pope,
the mass, friars and nuns are thus dejected and startled? at which the s our
sweat has drizzled from me. But at last, when I saw he would not leave, I gave
him this answer: Avoid, Satan; address thyself to my God, and talk with him
about it, for the doctrine is not mine, but his; he has commanded me to hearken
unto this Christ.
DCXXIX.
Whoso, without the word of
grace and prayer, disputes with the devil touching sin and the law, will lose;
therefore let him leave off betimes. For the devil is armed against us with
Goliah's sword, with his spear and weapons; that is he has on his side to
assist him, the testimony of our own consciences, which witness against us in
that we have transgressed all God's commandments; therefore the devil has a very
great advantage against us. The devil often assaults me, by objecting, that out
of my doctrine great offences and much evil have proceeded, and with this he
many a time vehemently perplexes me. And although I make him this answer: That
much good is also raised thereby, which by God's grace is true, yet he is so
nimble a spirit, and so crafty a rhetorician, that, master-like, he can pervert
this into sin. He was never so fierce and full of rage as he is now. I feel him
well.
But when I remember myself,
and take hold on the Gospel, and meet him therewith, then I overcome him and
confute all his arguments; yet for a time I often fail. He says: The law is
also God's Word; why, then, is the Gospel always objected against me? I say:
True: the law is also God's Word; but it is as far different from the Gospel,
as heaven from earth; for in the Gospel, God offers unto us his grace; he will
be our God merely out of love, and he presents unto us his only begotten Son,
who delivers us from sin and death, and has purchased for us everlasting
righteousness and life; thereon do I hold, and will not make God a liar. God
indeed has also given the law, but in every respect for another use and
purpose.
What I teach and preach, I
teach openly, by clear daylight, not in a corner. I direct the same by the
Gospel, by baptism, and by the Lord's prayer. Here Christ stands, him I cannot
deny; upon the Gospel do I ground my cause, etc. Yet the devil, with his crafty
disputing, brings it so near unto me, that the sweat of anguish drops from me.
Thus was St Paul constrained
to defend himself at Philippi, when both Jews and Gentiles hit him in the
teeth, saying: That he troubled their city." And, at Thesalonica, saying:
"These are they who turn the world upside down; they do contrary to the
decrees of Caesar. And at Caesarea, saying: "This is a pestilent fellow,
that hath moved sedition among all the Jews throughout the world." So the
devil stirred up the Jews against Christ, accusing him of rebellion, that he
forbad to pay tribute unto Caesar, and that he blasphemed, in calling himself
the Son of God. So I say to Satan: Like as thou camest to confusion by Christ
and St Paul, even so, Mr. Devil, shall it go with thee if thou meddlest with
me.
DCXXX.
All heaviness of mind and
melancholy come of the devil; especially these thoughts, that God is not
gracious unto him: that God will have no mercy upon him, etc. Whosoever thou
art, possessed with such heavy thoughts, know for certain, that they are a work
of the devil. God sent his Son into the world, not to affright, but to comfort.
Therefore be of good courage,
and think, that henceforward thou art not the child of a human creature, but of
God, through faith in Christ, in whose name thou art baptized; therefore the
spear of death cannot enter into thee; he has no right unto thee, much less can
he hurt or prejudice thee, for he is everlastingly swallowed up through Christ.
DCXXXI.
It is better for a Christian
to be sorrowful than secure, as the people of this world are. Well is it for him
that stands always in fear, yet knows he has in heaven a gracious God, for
Christ's sake; as the Psalm says: "The Lord's delight is in them that fear
him, and put their trust in his mercy."
There are two sorts of
tribulations; one, of the spirit; another, of the flesh. Satan torments the
conscience with lies, perverting that which is done uprightly, and according to
God's Word; but the body or flesh, he plagues in another kind.
No man ought to lay across
upon himself, or to adopt tribulation, as is done in Popedom; but if a cross or
tribulation come upon him, then let him suffer it patiently, and know that it
is good and profitable to him.
DCXXXII.
Luther being informed of one
that was fiercely tempted and plagued in his conscience, because he found not in
himself a complete righteousness, that he was not so righteous as God in the
law required, and that, in praying, he always felt blaspheming against Christ,
said: It is a good sign; for blaspheming of God is two-fold; one active, or
operative, when one willfully seeks occasion to blaspheme God; the other a
constrained blaspheming of God, passive, when the devil, against our wills,
possesses us with evil cogitations, which we desire to resist. With such, God
will have us to be exercised, to the end we may not lie snoring in laziness,
but strive and pray against them. By this means, such things, in time, will
vanish away and cease, especially at our last end; for then the Holy Ghost is
present with his Christians, stands by them, drives away the devil, and makes a
sweet, quiet, and peaceable conscience. Wherefore, for his spiritual disease,
let him take this my physic; that he trouble not himself about anything, but be
of good comfort, trust in God, and hold on to the Word - the devil, of his own
accord, will soon cease from stirring up such temptation.
Concerning this tribulation,
that he finds not a full and complete righteousness in himself, let him know,
that no human creature finds it in this life; it is altogether angelical, which
shall fall unto us in the life to come. Here we must content ourselves with
Christ's righteousness, which he fully merited for us, with his innocent and
spotless life.
DCXXXIII.
Christ said to the adulteress:
"Neither do I condemn thee, go, and sin no more." To the murderer, he
said: "This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise." But to the
Scribes and Pharisees, who set themselves against the righteousness of the
gospel, Christ said: "Woe be unto you."
When one out of weakness
denies God's Word, as many at this time do, under Prince George, it is no sin
against the Holy Ghost. Peter sinned in denying Christ, but not against the
Holy Ghost. On the contrary, Judas persisted in sinning; he repented not
aright, but remained hardened.
DCXXXIV.
It is impossible for a human
heart, without crosses and tribulations, to think upon God.
DCXXXV.
Not all can bear tribulations
alike; some are better able to bear a blow of the devil; as we three, Philip
Melancthon, John Calvin, and myself.
DCXXXVI.
David, doubtless, had worse devils
than we, for without great tribulations, he could not have had so great and
glorious revelations. David made psalms: we also will make psalms, and sing as
well as we can, to the honor of our Lord God, and to spite and mock the devil
and his spouse.
DCXXXVII.
When David sang his song:
"O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom, would God I had died for thee,
O Absalom, my son, my son," etc. Ah! how sorrowful and perplexed a man was
he. The very words denote that his grief of heart was excessive.
The good and holy king had
vehement tribulations and crosses, which altogether eclipsed and darkened the
promises made by God unto him. They were fearful and horrible examples. To hold
fast and sure to the Word, in time of such trials and vexations, as David did,
Oh! this is of inestimable value.
DCXXXVIII.
The upright and true Christian
church has to strive not only with flesh and blood, but with spiritual
wickedness in high places. The spiritual combat is most heavy and dangerous;
flesh and blood take away but only body, wife and children, house, land, and
what is temporal; but the spiritual evil takes away the soul, everlasting life
and salvation.
DCXXXIX.
The Lord our God is a God of
humble and perplexed hearts, who are in need, tribulation, and danger. If we were
strong, we should be proud and haughty. God shows his anger in our weakness; he
will not quench the glimmering flax, neither will he break in pieces the
bruised reed.
DCXL.
Faith's tribulation is the
greatest and sharpest torment, for faith must overcome all other tribulations;
so that if faith be foiled, all other tribulations must needs fall upon human
creatures; but if faith hold up her head, and be sound and in health, all other
tribulations and vexations must grow sick, weak, and decrease. This tribulation
of faith was that thorn which St Paul felt, and which pierced through flesh and
spirit, through soul and body. Such tribulations was David possessed with, when
he made this psalm: "Lord, rebuke me not in thy anger." No doubt he
would rather have been slain with a sword, than have suffered such wrath and
indignation from God.
DCXLI.
Heavy thoughts bring on
physical maladies; when the soul is oppressed, so is the body. Augustine said
well: Anima plus est ubi amat, quam ubi animat. When cares, heavy cogitations,
sorrow, and passions superabound, they weaken the body, which, without the
soul, is dead, or like a horse without a driver. But when the heart is at rest,
and quiet, then it takes care of the body, and gives it what pertains
thereunto. Therefore we ought to abandon and resist anxious thoughts, by all
possible means.
DCXLII.
The life of no human creature
is without discontent; every one has his tribulations, and many a one, rather than
be without them, will procure disquietness to himself. No man is content with
that which God gives him.
DCXLIII.
Ah! how willingly would I now
die, for I am faint and overwrought, and at this time I have a joyful and
peaceable heart and conscience. I know full well, so soon as I shall be again
in health, I neither shall have peace nor rest, but sorrow, weariness, and
tribulations. But even that great man, St Paul, could not be exempt from
tribulations.
DCXLIV.
When spiritual tribulations
approach, we say: cursed be the day wherein I was born; and we begin to sweat.
In such tribulations was our blessed Saviour Christ, in the garden, when he
said: "Father, let this cup pass from me." Here the will was against
the will, yet he turned himself presently according to his Father's will, and
was comforted by an angel. Christ, who in our flesh was plagued and tempted, is
the best mediator and advocate with God, in our tribulation. He is president,
when we are only respondents, if we will but suffer him to meditate. Seems it
God is angry with us when we are in tribulation and temptation; yet when we
repent and believe, we shall find, that under such anger God's grace and
goodness towards us lie hid. Therefore, let us patiently attend God's leisure,
and constantly remain in hope.
DCXLV.
On the 8th of August, 1529,
Luther, with his wife, lay sick of a fever. Overwhelmed with dysentery,
sciatica, and a dozen other maladies, he said: God has touched me sorely, and I
have been impatient: but God knows better than we whereto it serves. Our Lord
God is like a printer, who sets the letters backwards, so that here we must so
read them; when we are printed off, yonder, in the life to come, we shall read
all clear and straightforward. Meantime we must have patience.
Tribulation is a right school
and exercise of flesh and blood. The Psalms, almost in every verse, speak of
nothing but tribulations, perplexities, sorrows, and troubles; they are a book
of tribulations.
DCXLVI.
Christ received the thief on
the cross, and Paul, after so many blasphemings and prosecutions. We, then,
have no cause at all to doubt. And, indeed, we must all in that way attain to
salvation. Yet, though we have no cause to fear God's wrath, for old Adam's
sake we must stand in fear; for we cannot take such hold on the grace and mercy
of God as we ought. He had but only the first six words in the creed: "I
believe in God the Father," yet these were far above his natural wisdom,
reason, and understanding.
DCXLVII.
The devil plagues and torments
us in the place where we are most tender and weak. In Paradise, he fell not
upon Adam, but upon Eve. It commonly rains where it was wet enough before.
When one is possessed with
doubt, that though he call upon the Lord he cannot be heard, and that God has
turned his heart from him, and is angry, cogitations which we suffer, which are
forced upon us, he must against them arm himself with God's Word, promising to
hear him. As to the when and how God will hear him, this is stark naught;
place, time, and person are accidental things; the substance and essence is the
promise.
DCXLVIII.
I have often need, in my
tribulations, to talk even with a child, in order to expel such thoughts as the
devil possesses me with; and this teaches me not to boast, as if of myself I
were able to help myself, and to subsist without the strength of Christ. I need
one, at times, to help me, who, in his whole body, has not so much divinity as
I have in one finger.
DCXLIX.
In this life are many
different degrees of tribulations, as there are different persons. Had another
had the tribulations which I have suffered, he would long since have died;
while I could not have endured the buffetings which St Paul did, nor St Paul
the tribulations which Christ suffered. The greatest and heaviest grief is,
when one dies in the twinkling of an eye. But hereof we ought not to dispute,
but to refer the same to God's judgment.
DCL.
When I am assailed with heavy
tribulations, I rush out among my pigs, rather than remain alone by myself. The
human heart is like a millstone in a mill; when you put wheat under it, it
turns and grinds and bruises the wheat to flour; if you put no wheat, it still
grinds on, but then `tis itself it grinds and wears away. So the human heart,
unless it be occupied with some employment, leaves space for the devil, who
wriggles himself in, and brings with him a whole host of evil thoughts,
temptations, and tribulations, which grind out the heart.
DCLI.
No papist among them will
throw himself into the flames for his doctrine, whereas our people readily
encounter fire and death, following therein the example of the holy martyrs, St
Agnes, St Agatha, St Vincent, St Lawrence, etc. We are sheep for the slaughter.
Only the other day, they burned, at Paris, two nobles and two magistrates,
victims in the cause of the Gospel, the king himself (Francis I.) setting fire
to the faggots.
DCLII.
My tribulations are more
necessary for me than meat and drink; and all they feel them ought to accustom
themselves thereunto, and learn to bear them.
If Satan had not so plagued
and exercised me, I should not have been so great an enemy unto him, or have
been able to do him such hurt. Tribulations keep us from pride, and therewith
increase the acknowledgment of Christ and of God's gifts and benefits. For,
from the time I began to be in tribulation, God have me the victory of
overcoming that confounded, cursed, and blasphemous life wherein I lived in
popedom. God did the business in such a way, that neither the emperor nor the
pope was able to suppress me, but the devil must come and set upon me, to the
end God's strength may be known in my weakness.
DCLIII.
Our tribulations and doubts,
wherewith the devil plagues us, can be driven away by no better means than by
condemning him; as when one condemns a fierce cur, in passing quietly by him,
the dog then not only desists from biting, but also from barking; but when one
enrages him by timorously throwing something at him, then he falls upon and
bites him. Even so, when the devil sees that we fear him, he ceases not to
torment and plague us.
DCLIV.
A woman at Eisenach lay very
sick, having endured horrible paroxysms, which no physician was able to cure,
for it was directly a work of the devil. She had had swoonings, and four paroxysms,
each lasting three or four hours. Her hands and feet bent in the form of a
horn; she was chill and cold; her tongue rough and dry; her body much swollen.
She seeing Luther, who came to visit her, was much rejoiced thereat, raised
herself up, and said: Ah! my loving father in Christ, I have a heavy burden
upon me, pray to God for me; and so fell down in her bed again. Whereupon
Luther sighed, and said: "God rebuke thee, Satan, and command thee that
thou suffer this, his divine creature to be at peace." Then turning
himself towards the standers by, he said: "She is plagued of the devil in
the body, but the soul is safe, and shall be preserved; therefore let us give
thanks to God, and pray for her;" and so they all prayed aloud the Lord's
prayer. After which, Luther concluded with these words: "Lord God heavenly
Father! who hast commanded us to pray for the sick, we beseech thee, through
Jesus Christ, the only beloved Son, that thou wouldst deliver this thy servant
from her sickness, and from the hands of the devil. Spare, O Lord, her soul,
which, together with her body, thou hast purchased and redeemed from the power
of sin, of death, and of the devil." Whereupon the sick woman said:
"Amen." The night following she took rest, and the next day was graciously
delivered from her disease and sickness.
DCLV.
A letter, written by Luther to
Doctor Benedict Paul, whose son had lately been killed by a fall from the top
of a house: - "Although it be nowhere forbidden in Holy Scripture to mourn
and grieve for the death of a godly child or friend - nay, we have many
examples of the godly, who have bewailed the death of their children and
friends - yet there ought to be a measure in sorrowing and mourning. Therefore,
loving doctor, while you do well to mourn and lament the death of your son, let
not your grief exceed the measure of a Christian, in refusing to be comforted.
I would have you, first, consider that `twas God gave that son unto you, and
took him from you again; secondly, I would wish you to follow the example of
that just and godly man, Job, who, when he had lost all his children, all his
wealth and substance, said: "Have we received good at the hand of the
Lord, and shall we not receive evil? The hand of the Lord hath taken away,
blessed be the name of the Lord," etc. He rightly considered that both
good and evil come of the Lord; even so do you likewise; then you shall see
that you have much greater gifts and benefits left of God to you than the evil
you now feel. But you look now only upon the evil that your son is dead; and,
meantime, you forget the glorious treasure God has given you, in the true
knowledge of his Word, a good and peaceable conscience, which alone should
overweigh all evil which may happen unto you; why, then, do you plague and
torment yourself with the death of your son? But, admit the loss a great and
heavy one, `tis no new thing; you are not alone therein, but have companions
who have had like misfortunes. - Abraham had much more sorrow of heart,
concerning his son, while he was yet living, than if he had been dead. How
think ye was it within his heart, when, with his naked word, he was to strike
off the head of his son? How was it also, think you, with Jacob, when he was
informed that his loved son Joseph was torn in pieces by wild beasts? Or what
father was ever perplexed and troubled in heart like David, when by his son
Absalom he was persecuted and driven out of his kingdom, and when that son, in
a state of rebellion, was slain and damned? Doubtless, David's heart at that
time, with great grief, might have melted. Therefore, when you rightly behold
and consider these and like examples of such high, enlightened people, you
ought to feel that this your sorrow of heart is nothing comparable with theirs.
Therefore know, loving brother, that God's mercy is greater than our
tribulations. You have, indeed, cause to mourn, as you think, but it is nothing
else than sugar mingled with vinegar; your son is very well provided for; he
lives now with Christ; oh! would to God that I, too, had finished my course; I
would not wish myself here again. Your suffering is only a corporal cross. You
are a good logician, and teach others that art; make use thereof yourself now;
put it in practice; define, divide, conclude, distinguish that which is
spiritual, and separate it from that which is corporal."
DCLVI.
When Satan will not leave off
tempting thee, then bear with patience, hold on, hand and foot, nor faint, as
if there would be no end thereof, but stand courageously, and attend God's
leisure, knowing that what the devil cannot accomplish by his sudden and
powerful assaults, he thinks to gain by craft, by perservering to vex and tempt
thee, thereby to make thee faint and weary, as in the Psalm is noted:
"Many a time have they afflicted me from my youth up; yet they have not
prevailed against me," etc. But be fully assured, that in this sport with
the devil, God, with all his holy angels, takes delight and joy; and assure
thyself, also, that the end thereof will be blessed and happy, which thou shalt
certainly find to thy everlasting comfort.
DCLVII.
Concerning predestination, it
is best to begin below, at Christ, as then we both hear and find the Father;
for all those that have begun at the top have broken their necks. I have been
thoroughly plagued and tormented with such cogitations of predestination; I
would needs know how God intended to deal with me, etc. But at last, God be
praised! I clean left them; I took hold again on God's revealed Word; higher I
was not able to bring it, for a human creature can never search out the
celestial will of God; this God hides, for the sake of the devil, to the end
the crafty spirit may be deceived and put to confusion. The revealed will of
God the devil has learned from us, but God reserves his secret will to himself.
It is sufficient for us to learn and know Christ in his humanity, in which the
Father has revealed himself.
DCLVIII.
Christ, on the tenth day, came
again into Jerusalem, and on the fourteenth day he was killed. His cogitations
and tribulations then were concerning the sins of the whole world, concerning
God's wrath and death, of which all ought to stand in fear. But before he was
thus personally made sin for us, he was a man of sorrows, and acquainted with
grief; his tribulations were concerning his labor and pains, which he knew
would be spent in vain upon his own nation, the Jews, and over which he wept
bitterly, because they knew not the time of their visitation.
DCLIX.
More and greater sins are
committed when people are alone than when they are in society. When Eve, in
paradise, walked by herself, the devil deceived her. In solitary places are
committed murders, robberies, adulteries, etc.; for in solitude the devil has
place and occasion to mislead people. But whosoever is in honest company is
ashamed to sin, or at least has no opportunity for it; and, moreover, our
Saviour Christ promised: "Where two or three be gathered together in my
name, there will I be in the midst of them."
When king David was idle and
alone, and went not out to the wars, then he fell into adultry and murder. I
myself have found that I never fell into more sin than when I was alone. God
has created mankind for fellowship, and not for solitariness, which is clearly
proved by this strong argument: God, in the creation of the world, created man
and woman, to the end that the man in the woman should have a fellow.
DCLX.
We find in no history any
human creature oppressed with such sorrow as to sweat blood, therefore this
history of Christ is wonderful; no man can understand or conceive what his
bloody sweat is. And it is more wonderful, that the Lord of grace and of wrath,
of life and of death, should be so weak, and made so sorrowful, as to be
constrained to seek for solace and comfort of poor and miserable sinners, and
to say: Ah, loving disciples! sleep not, wake yet a little, and talk one with
another, that at least I may hear some people are about me. Here the Psalm was
rightly applied, which says: "Thou hast made him a little lower than the
angels," etc. Ah, Saviour Christ Jesus, through the immeasurable heavy
burden which lay on his innocent back; namely, the sins of the universal world,
against which, doubtless, he prayed: "O Lord, rebuke me not in thine anger
neither chasten me in thy hot displeasure."
DCLXI.
Such fellows as Tetzel,
Cochlaeus, Lemnius, I nothing regard. We should have no dealing with such
backbiters and slanderers, they are most detestable; they appear not openly in
the field, nor come right in our sight, but, in their poisoned hatred, scorn everything
we do. They boast highly of the Fathers; let them; we have one Father, which is
in heaven who is above all fathers; their piece and patchwork is of no weight.
They write under the inspiration of a corrupt and vicious heart, and we all
know that their works are mere impudent lies. The article of the Holy Trinity
is nowhere written expressly in Holy Scripture, yet it is believed; therefore,
they say, we ought also to believe traditions and ordinances of men without
God's Word.
DCLXII.
This Wetzell they have
preferred at Leipzig, is a mischievous fellow. He was condemned to die, and
would have been executed, but was saved at my intercession, and honorable
entertained; now he requites me by his insolences. However, `tis a wretch that
has condemned himself; he is not worthy to be answered; he will have a judge.
The papists will gain nothing by their railing. When they blaspheme, we should
pray, and be silent, and not carry wood to the fire.
I am glad this fellow is at Leipzig;
he is there like a mouse taken in a trap, for he is full of evil opinions; when
they break out, he will get his payment. He got much poison from Campanus, who
wrote a blasphemous book under this title: Against all that were and are in the
world since the apostle's time. He has lost the general praise. He is reserved
in his preachings; and cold, colder than ice. He dares not break out and say
what he has in his heart; he goes like a shackled hare; he fears his hearers;
his mouth is shut, his words captive, as in a dungeon. The words of an eloquent
man should move others, and pierce the heart. But they that teach nothing
uprightly or purely, are but half-learned; dunce-like, bold and presumptuous:
as Carlstad is with his Touto, out of which he made Autos.
DCLXIII.
The emperor Sigismund was, as
it were, made captive by the papists. They made him do what they pleased; to
wear a deacon's coat, and at Christmas, to read the Gospel to the pope; so that
every emperor is now said to be a deacon of the Romish Church, the pope's
mass-servant. The emperor, after he performed this ceremony, had never any
success against the Turks or in Germany. The kingdom of Bohemia is fallen,
which before was a very fair kingdom.
DCLXIV.
Latomus was the best among all
my adversaries: his point was this: "What is received of the church, ought
not to be rejected." As the Jews said: "We are God's people;" so
the papists cry: "The church cannot err." This was the argument
against which the prophets and apostles fought; Moses says: "They moved me
to jealousy with that which was not God, and I will provoke them to anger with
a foolish nation." And St Paul: "That he is a Jew which is one
inwardly;" and Isaiah: "In him shall the Gentiles trust."
"It is impossible,"
say they, "that God should forsake his church, for he declares, `I am with
you always, unto the end of the world,'" The question is, to whom do these
words: with you, refer? which is the true church whereof Christ spake? The
perplexed, broken and contrite in heart, or the Romish curtexans and knaves?
DCLXV.
Philip Melancthon showing
Luther a letter from Augsburg, wherein he was informed, that a very learned
divine, a papist, in that city, was converted, and had received the Gospel.
Luther said: I like those best that do not fall off suddenly, but ponder the
case with considerable discretion, compare together the writings and arguments
of both parties, and lay them on the gold balance, and in God's fear search
after the upright truth; out of such, fit people are made, able to stand in
controversy. Such a man was St Paul, who at first was a strict Pharisee and man
of works, who stiffly and earnestly held over and defended the law; but
afterwards preached Christ in the best and purest manner against the whole
nation of the Jews.
DCLXVI.
That impious knave, Martin
Cellarius, thought to flatter me by saying: "Thy calling is superior to
that of the apostles;" but I at once checked him, replying sharply:
"By no means; I am in no degree comparable to the apostles." He sent
me four treatises he had written about Moses temple and the allegories it
involved; but I returned them at once, for they were full of the most arrogant
self-glorification.
DCLXVII.
Erasmus of Rotterdam is the
vilest miscreant that ever disgraced the earth. He made several attempts to
draw me into his snares, and I should have been in danger, but that God lent me
special aid. In 1525, he sent one of his doctors, with 200 Hungarian ducats, as
a present to my wife; but I refused to accept them, and enjoined my wife to
meddle not in these matters. He is a very Caiaphas.
"Qui Satanam non odit,
amet tua carmina Erasme,
Atque idem jungat furias et
mulgeat orcum."
DCLXVIII.
Erasmus is very pitiful with
his prefaces, though he tries to smooth them over; he appears to see no
difference between Jesus Christ our Saviour, and the wise pagan legislator
Solon. He sneers at St Paul and St John; and ventures to say, that the Epistle
to the Romans, what ever it might have been at a former period, is not
applicable to the present state of things. Shame upon thee, accursed wretch!
`Tis a mere Momus, making his mows and mocks at everything and everybody, at
God and man, at papist and protestant, but all the while using such shuffling
and double-meaning terms, that no one can lay hold of him to any effectual
purpose. Whenever I pray, I pray for a curse upon Erasmus.
DCLXIX.
Carlstadt opposed me merely
out of ambition, for he flattered himself that on earth was not a more learned
man than he. And although in his writings he imitated me, yet he played strange
tricks with my manner. He wanted to be the great man, and truly I would
willingly have left the honor to him, so far as it had not been against God.
For, I praise my God, I was never so presumptuous as to think myself wiser than
another man. When at first I wrote against indulgences, I designed simply to
have opposed them, thinking that, afterwards, others would come and accomplish
what I had begun.
DCLXX.
We ought utterly to condemn
and reject Campanus, and not to esteem him worthy of an answer, for thereby he
becomes more audacious and insolent. Let us despise him, so will he soonest be
smothered and suppressed.
DCLXXI.
Luther being informed that the
preaching of James Schenck was everywhere extolled, said: O! how acceptable to
me would this report be, if with his preaching he brought not in such
sweet-mouthed, smooth, and stately words, of which St Paul complains to the
Romans, whereby hearers are deceived. They are like the wind Cecias,
which blows so mild and still, so soft and warm, that the blossoms of trees,
and other herbs and flowers, are enticed to spring forth to their destruction.
Even so the devil, when he preaches Christ in his ministers, intends to destroy
Christ; and although he speak the truth, yet even therewith he lies. An honest man
may well go up the stairs when a knave lies hid behind them; for the devil can
well endure that Christ sit upon the tongue, meantime he himself lies hid under
it, so that the people are tickled and inflamed with what they hear; but such
smooth tattling last not long; for Satan, through his gospel, will pervert the
Gospel, because presumptuous and secure spirits acknowledge not their sins. And
where there is no tinder to make it catch, there Christ has no room or place
wherein he may work; for he is come only to them that are of perplexed, broken
hearts and spirits. But these condemners of the law are haughty and proud
spirits, just as the people in Popedom, under the tradition of the law, were
far from observing the law, that being altogether strange to them. Therefore
the preaching of the law is a preparation for the Gospel, and gives matter for
Christ to work upon, who is the only work-master of faith.
DCLXXII.
On the 15th of April, 1539,
certain positions, printed at Leipzig, were sent to Luther, wherein John Hammer
subtly maintained that the law concerned the Christians nothing at all; he also
divided repentance into three parts, and said: The Jews had one kind of
repentance, the Gentiles another king, and the Christians a third. Whereupon
Luther said: Who could have ever thought such extravagant spirits should come?
`Tis an utter and mischievous error, to distinguish repentance according to
persons, whereas there is only one kind of repentance given to all mankind,
seeing that all, one as well as another, have angered and offended one only
God, whether Jews, Gentiles, or Christians. `Tis as gross, abominable, and
manifest error, as it were to say that man have another kind of repentance than
women have; princes than subjects; masters than servants; rich than poor -
making God to be a respecter of persons: as though the prophets had not taught
uprightly of repentance, and as though the repentance of the Ninevites was not
upright and true; whence, at last would follow, that if we preached not
repentance out of law, Christ was not under the law, whereas he was, for our
sakes under the curse of the law.
DCLXXIII.
On the 13th of September,
1538, a warm disputation was held, nearly five hours long, in which Luther
powerfully inveighed against innovators, telling them that they would destroy
the Gospel, and abolish the law, and would bring to evil those minds which were
too secure. He said he would resist them to his last breath, did it cost him
his life. In the evening, he discoursed of the heresy of Arius; when that
innovator began to preach his doctrine, Peter, patriarch of Alexandria,
denounced it as erroneous, and against Christ's honor, seeing that he who
denies the divinity of Christ, certainly deprives him of his honor. Arius began
be denying that Christ was God, affirming that he was only a creature, though a
perfect creature. But when the godly bishops resisted him, he said, secondly,
that Christ, the most perfect of creatures, yea, above the angels, had made all
other creatures. Thirdly, he alleged that Christ was God, emanating from God,
as light from light; and he taught so subtly, that many people joined him, and
shared his opinions. The pious bishop of Milan, Auxentius, against whom Hilary
wrote an epistle, fell into his errors.
Arius finished by saying, that
Christ was not born of the Father, equal God, but was of one substance with the
Father, and would not give up this assertion as to his creation. Then began the
strife about the word Homousion, which was inserted in the Athanasian
creed, but which is nowhere written in the Holy Scripture, that he was born of
the Father, yet it was pertinent, and in respect to his human nature rightly
spoken.
The heresies of Arius
continued very long, above three hundred years. There were in highest flourish under
Constantine; under Domitian they tyrannized; under Jovian, Valentinian, and
Gratian, they somewhat decreased. They lasted the time of seven emperors, until
the Goths came. The great Turk, to this day, is an Arian. We thus see that
there is no heresy, no error, no idolatry, however gross, which does not obtain
partisans and supporters. `Tis manifest, in the present day, at Rome, where the
pope is honored as a God.
DCLXXIV.
Philip Melancthon has a good
conscience, and therefore takes matters to heart. Christ well and thoroughly
exercised our forefathers; he who belongs to Christ must feel the serpent's
sting in the heel. No doubt the mother of our Lord was a poor maid, for she was
betrothed to a carpenter, also poor.
Let us then be merry and
contented in poverty and trouble, and remember that we have a rich Master, who
will not leave us without help and comfort; in so doing, we shall have peaceful
consciences, let it go with us as God please. The ungodly want this peace in
their hearts; as Isaiah says: "They are as the waves of the sea; neither
have the covetous usurers any peace of conscience."
DCLXXV.
Erasmus was poisoned at Rome
and at Venice with epicurean doctrines. He extols the Arians more highly than
the Papists; he ventured to say that Christ is named God but once in St John,
where Thomas says: "My Lord and my God." His chief doctrine is, we
must carry ourselves according to the time, or, as the proverb goes, hang the
clock according to the wind; he only looked to himself, to have good and easy
days, and so died like an epicurean, without any one comfort of God.
DCLXXVI.
This do I leave behind me as
my will and testament, whereunto I make you witnesses. I hold Erasmus of
Rotterdam to be Christ's most bitter enemy. In his catechism, of all his writings
that which I can least endure, he teaches nothing decided; not one word says:
Do this, or do not this; he only therein throws error and despair into youthful
consciences. He wrote a book against me, called Hyperaspites, wherein he
proposed to defend his work on free-will, against which I wrote my De servo
Arbitrio, which has never yet been confuted, nor will it ever be by
Erasmus, for I am certain that what I wrote on the matter is the unchangeable
truth of God. If God live in heaven, Erasmus will one day know and feel what he
has done.
Erasmus is the enemy to true
religion, the open adversary of Christ, the complete and faithful picture and
image of Epicurus and of Lucian.
DCLXXVII.
I care not at all for an open
enemy of the church, such as the papists with their power and persecutions; I
regard them not, for by them the true church cannot receive hurt, nor can they
hinder God's Word; nay, the church, through their raging and persecution,
rather increases. But it is the inward evil of false brethren that will do
mischief to the church. Judas betrayed Christ; the false apostles confused and
falsified the Gospel. Such are the real fellows through whom the devil rages
and spoils the church.
DCLXXVIII.
I know not well how to render
the word hypocrita. Mere hypocrite, as we commonly accept it, is too
mild and soft a name for a false brother; it should convey almost as much as sycophanta,
a wicked villain, who for his own private gain does mischief to others. Such
hypocrites were the servants of king Saul, who, for the sake of their bellies,
spake against righteous David, backbiting him in the king's presence, whereby
the land was stained. Hypocrita is not only a hypocrite or a flatterer
that pretends love towards one, and speaks that which tickles the ears, but one
that produces mischief under color of holiness, as the examples in the
twenty-third of Matthew clearly show. St Jerome says: Feigned holiness is a
double evil.
DCLXXIX.
The greatest and fiercest
strife that Christians have, is with false brethren. If a false brother would
openly say: I am a Pilate, a Herod, an Annas, that is, if he would put off the
name of a believing Christian, and profess himself an open enemy to Christ,
then we would patiently endure all the evil he could work upon us. But that
such should bear the name of Christians, we cannot and will not endure; this
rule and government over the conscience, we divines take properly unto us, and
say: It is ours through the Word, we will not suffer ourselves to be bereaved
of it, by any means.
DCLXXX.
We have hooted away the friars
and priests, by the preaching of the Gospel, and now the false brethren plague
us. Truly, `tis a right sentence: "He came unto his own, and his own
received him not."
DCLXXXI.
I marvel that nothing is
written of the villany Judas did to Christ. I am persuaded he did it for the
most part with the tongue; for Christ, not in vain, complains of him in the
41st Psalm. Doubtless, he went to the high priests and elders, and spake
grievously against Christ, saying: I baptize also, but now I see, `tis
frivolous and nothing worth. Moreover, he was a thief; he thought to make great
gain in betraying Christ (as Wetzell and others think by our means to be made
great lords); he was a wicked, desperate villain, or Christ would have forgiven
him, as he forgave Peter. But Peter fell out of weakness; Judas out of
wickedness.
DCLXXXII.
Judas was as necessary among
the apostles as any three of them. For he confuted many arguments of the
heretics, who alleged that no man can baptize, but he that has the Holy Ghost.
What he did in his office was good and right, but when he played the thief, he
did wrong and sinned. Therefore we must separate and distinguish his person
from his office; for Christ commanded him not to steal, but to execute his office,
to preach, to baptize, etc. Judas likewise confuted what some object to us, who
say: There are among you protestants, many wicked wretches, false brethren, and
unchristian-like offenders. Herein comes Judas and says: I was also an apostle,
I behaved and carried myself, as an understanding worldly-wise companion and
politician, much better than the others, may fellow apostles; no man thought
that such mischief was hid in me. Judas at the Lord's supper, was directly the
pope, who also has got hold of the purse, is a covetous wretch, a thief, and
belly-god, who will also speak in praise of Christ: in truth, `tis a right
Iscariot.
DCLXXXIII.
When we read that Judas hanged
himself, that his belly burst in pieces, and that his bowels fell out, we may
take this as a sample how it will go with all Christ's enemies. The Jews ought
to have made a mirror of Judas, and have seen therein how they in like manner
should be destroyed. An allegory or mystery herein lies hid, for the belly
signifies the whole kingdom of the Jews, which shall fall away and be
destroyed, so that nothing thereof remain. When we read that the bowels fell
out, this shows that the posterity of the Jews, their whole generation, shall
be spoiled and go to the ground.
DCLXXXIV.
I may compare the state of a
Christian to a goose tied up over a wolf's pit to catch wolves. About the pit
stand many ravening wolves, that would willingly devour the goose, but she is
preserved alive, while they, leaping at her, fall into the pit, are taken and
destroyed. Even so, we that are Christians are preserved by the sweet loving
angels, so that the devils, those ravening wolves, the tyrants and persecutors,
cannot destroy us,
DCLXXXV.
We little know how good and
necessary it is for us to have adversaries, and for heretics to hold up their
heads against us. For if Cerinthus had not been, then St John the Evangelist
had not written his gospel; but when Cerinthus opposed the godhead in our Lord
Christ, John was constrained to write and say: In the beginning was the Word;
making the distinction of the three persons so clear, that nothing could be
clearer. So when I began to write against indulgences and against the pope, Dr.
Eck set upon me, and aroused me out of my drowsiness. I wish from my heart this
man might be turned the right way, and be converted; for that I would give one
of my fingers; but if he will remain where he is, I wish he were made pope, for
he has well deserved it; for hitherto he has had upon him the whole burthen of
popedom, in disputing and writing against me. Besides him, they have none that
dare fall upon me; he raised my first cogitations against the pope, and brought
me so far, or otherwise I never should have gone on.
DCLXXXVI.
A liar is far worse, and does
greater mischief, than a murderer on the highway; for a liar and false teacher
deceives people, seduces souls, and destroys them under the color of God's
Word; such a liar and murderer was Judas, like his father the devil. It was a
marvel how Judas should sit at the table with Christ, and not blush for shame,
when Christ said: "One of you shall betray me," etc. The other
disciples had not the least thought that Judas should betray Christ; each was
rather afraid of himself, thinking Christ meant him: for Christ trusted Judas
with the purse, and the whole management of the house-keeping, whence he was
held in great repute by the apostles.
DCLXXXVII.
A scorpion thinks when his
head lies hid under a leaf, that he cannot be seen; even so the hypocrites and
false saints think, when they have hoisted up one or two good works, that all
their sins therewith are covered and hid.
DCLXXXVIII.
False Christians that boast of
the Gospel, and yet bring no good fruits, are like the clouds without rain,
wherewith the whole element is overshadowed, gloomy and dark, and yet no rain
falls to fructify the ground; even so, many Christians affect great sanctity
and holiness, but they have neither faith nor love towards God, nor love towards
their neighbor.
DCLXXXIX.
Job says: "The life of a
human creature is a warfare upon earth." A human creature, especially a
Christian, must be a soldier, ever striving and fighting with the enemy. And St
Paul describes the armor of a Christian, Ephes. vi., thus: -
First - The girdle of truth;
that is, the confession of the pure doctrine of the Gospel, an upright, not a
hypocritical or feigned faith.
Secondly - The breast-plate of
righteousness, by which is not meant the righteousness of a good conscience, although
this be also needful: for it is written, "Enter not into judgment with thy
servant," etc.; and St Paul: "I know nothing of myself, yet I am not
thereby justified," but the righteousness of faith, and of the remission
of sins, which Paul means in that place, touching which Moses spake, Gen. xv.:
"Abraham believed God, and that was imputed unto him for
righteousness."
Thirdly - The shoes wherewith
the feet are shod; viz., the works of the vocation, whereby we ought to remain,
and not to go further, or to break out beyond the appointed mark.
Fourthly - The shield of
faith; similar to this is the fable of Perseus with the head of Gorgon, upon
which whoso looked died immediately; as Perseus held and threw Gorgon's head
before his enemies, and thereby got the victory, even so a Christian must
likewise hold and cast the Son of God, as Gorgon's head, before all the evil
instigations and crafts of the devil, and then most certainly he shall prevail
and get the victory.
Fifthly - The helmet of
salvation; that is the hope of everlasting life. The weapon wherewith a
Christian fights the enemy is: "The sword of the spirit," 1 Thess.
v., that is, God's Word and prayer; for as the lion is frightened at nothing
more than at the crowing of a cock, so the devil can be overcome and vanquished
with nothing else than with God's Word and prayer; of this Christ himself has
given us an example.
DCXC.
Our life is like the sailing
of a ship; as the mariners in the ship have before them a haven towards which
they direct their course, and where they will be secure from all danger, even
so the promise of everlasting life is made unto us, that we therein, as in a
safe haven, may rest calm and secure. But seeing our ship is weak, and the
winds and waves beat upon us, as though they would overwhelm us, therefore we
have need of a good and experienced pilot, who with his counsel and advice may
rule and govern the vessel, that it run not on a rock, or utterly sink and go
down. Such a pilot is our blessed Saviour Christ Jesus.
DCXCI.
Ingratitude is a very irksome
thing, which no human creature can tolerate; yet our Lord God can endure it. If
I had had to do with the Jews, patience would have failed me; I had never been
able so long to endure their stubbornness. The prophets were always poor,
condemned people; plagued and persecuted not only by outward and open, but also
by inward and secret enemies, for the most part of their own people. That which
the pope does against us is nothing to compare with that which Jeckel and
others do, to our sorrow of heart.
DCXCLL.
We ought diligently to be
aware of sophistry, which not only consists in doubtful and uncertain words,
that may be construed and turned as one pleases, but also, in each profession,
in all high arts, as in religion, covers and cloaks itself with the fair name
of Holy Scripture, alleging to be God's Word, and spoken from heaven. Those are
unworthy of praise who can pervert everything, screwing, condemning and
rejecting the meanings and opinions of others, and, like the philosopher Carneades,
disputing in utraque parte, and yet conclude nothing certain. These are
knavish tricks and sophistical inventions. But a fine understanding, honestly
disposed, that seeks after truth, and loves that which is plain and upright, is
worthy of all honor and praise.
DCXCIII.
Offences by Christians are far
more abominable than those by the heathen. The prophet Jeremiah says: "The
punishment of the iniquity of the daughter of my people, is greater than the
punishment of the sin of Sodom," etc. And Ezekiel: "Thou hast
justified Sodom with thine abomintions." And Christ: "It will be more
tolerable for Sodom at the day of judgment than with thee." But so it must
be; "He came unto his own, and his own received him not." Truly this
makes the godly altogether faint and out of heart, so that they rather desire
death, for, with sorrow of heart, we find that many of our people offend
others. We ought to diligently to pray to God against offences, to the end his
name may be hallowed. St Paul says: "Also of our own selves shall men
arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them."
Therefore the church has no external esteem or succession; it inherits not.
DCXCIV.
True, much offence proceeds
out of my doctrine; but I comfort myself, as St Paul did Titus; whereas this
doctrine is revealed for the sake of the faith of God's chosen, for whose sake
we also preach, we mean it earnestly. For the sake of others I would not drop
one word. I have cracked many hollow nuts, and yet I thought they had been
good, but they fouled my mouth, and filled it with dust; Carlstad and Erasmus
are mere hollow nuts, and foul the mouth.
DCXCV.
It has been asked: Is an
offence, committed in a moment of intoxication, therefore excusable? Most
assuredly not; on the contrary, drunkenness aggravates the fault. Hidden sins
unveil themselves when a man's self-possession goes from him; that which the
sober man keeps in his breast, the drunken man lets out at the lips. Astute
people, when they want to ascertain a man's true character, make him drunk.
This same drunkenness is a grievous vice among us Germans, and should be
heavily chastised by the temporal magistrate, since the fear of God will not
suffice to keep the brawling guzzlers in check.
DCXCVI.
A rich Jew, on his death bed,
ordered that his remains should be conveyed to Ratisbon. His friends, knowing
that even the corpse of a Jew could not travel without paying heavy toll,
devised the expedient of packing the carcass in a barrel of wine, which they
then forwarded in the ordinary way. The wagoners, not knowing what lay within,
tapped the barrel, and swilled away right joyously, till they found out they
had been drinking Jew's pickle! How it fared with them you may imagine.
DCXCVII.
A Christian's worshipping is not
the external, hypocritical mask that our spiritual friars wear, when they
chastise their bodies, torment and make themselves faint, with ostentatious
fasting, watching, singing, wearing hair shirts, scourging themselves, etc.
Such worshipping God desires not.
DCXCVIII.
`Tis a great blindness of
people's hearts that they cannot accept of the treasure of grace presented unto
them. Such people are we, that though we are baptized, have Christ, with all
his precious gifts, faith, the sacraments, his Word, all which we confess to be
holy, yet we can neither say nor think that we ourselves are holy; we deem it
too much to say, we are holy; whereas the name Christian is far more glorious
and greater than the name holy.
DCXCIX.
We can call consecrated robes,
dead men's bones, and such trumpery, holy, but not a Christian; the reason is,
we gaze upon the outward mask, we look after the seeming saint, who leads an
austere life. Hence that vain opinion in popedom, that they call the dead,
saints; an error strengthened by Zwinglius. Human wisdom gapes at holy workers,
thinking whoso does good works, is just and righteous before God.
DCC.
There's no better death than
St Stephen's, who said: "Lord, receive my spirit." We should lay
aside the register of our sins and deserts, and die in reliance only upon God's
mere grace and mercy.
DCCI.
We ought to retain the feast
of John the Baptist, with whom the New Testament began, for it is written:
"All the prophets and the law prophesied until John," etc. We should observe
it, too, for the sake of the fair song, which in popedom we read, but
understood not, of Zachariah, which, indeed, is a most excellent song, as is
shown in St Luke's preface, where he says: "And Zachariah was full of the
Holy Ghost," etc.
DCCII.
A householder instructs his
servants and family in this manner: Deal uprightly and honestly, be diligent in
that which I command you, and ye may then eat, drink, and clothe yourselves as
ye please. Even so, our Lord God regards not what we eat, drink, or how we
clothe ourselves; all such matters, being ceremonies or middle things, he
leaves freely to us, on the understanding, however, that we ground nothing
thereon as being necessary to salvation.
DCCIII.
`Twas a strange thing the
world should be offended at him who raised the dead, made the blind to see, and
the deaf to hear, etc. They who would deem such a man a devil, what kind of a
God would they have? But here it is. Christ would give to the world the kingdom
of heaven, but they will have the kingdom of the earth, and here they part; for
the highest wisdom and sanctity of the hypocrites sees nothing but temporal
honor, carnal will, mundane life, good days, money and wealth, all of which
must vanish and cease.
DCCIV.
The whole world takes offence
at the plainness of the second table of God's ten commandments, because human
sense and reason partly understand what is done contrary thereto. When God and
his Word is condemned, the world is silent and regards it not; but when a
monastery is taken, or flesh eaten on a Friday, or a friar marries, O, then the
world cries out: Here are abominable offences.
DCCV.
The obedience towards God is
the obedience of faith and good works; that is, he who believes in God, and
does what God has commanded, is obedient unto him; but the obedience toward the
devil is superstiton and evil works; that is, who trusts not in God, but is
unbelieving, and does evil, is obedient unto the devil.
DCCVI.
In the Old Testament are two
sorts of sacrifices; the first was called the early morning sacrifice; thereby
is shown that we first should offer unto Christ, not oxen or cattle, but
ourselves, acknowledging God's gifts, corporal and spiritual, temporal and
eternal, and giving him thanks for them. Secondly, the evening sacrifice;
whereby is signified that a Christian should offer a broken, humble and a
contrite heart, consider his necessities, and dangers, both corporal and
spiritual, and call upon God for help.
DCCVII.
God will, say some, that we
should serve him freely and willingly, whereas he that serves God out of fear
of punishment, of hell, or out of a hope and love of recompense, serves and
honors God not uprightly or truly. This argument is of the stoics, who reject
the affections of human nature. It is true we ought willingly to serve, love,
and fear God, as the chief good. But God can well endure that we love him for
his promise's sake, and pray unto him for corporal and spiritual benefits; he
therefore has commanded us to pray. So God can also endure that we fear him for
the punishment's sake, as the prophets remember. Indeed, it is somewhat, that a
human creature can acknowledge God's everlasting punishments and rewards. And
if one looks thereupon, as not being the chief end and cause, then it hurts him
not, especially if he has regard to God himself, as the final cause, who gives
everything for nothing, out of mere grace, without our deserts.
DCCVIII.
The word, to worship, means to
stoop and bow down the body with external gestures; to serve in the work. But
to worship God in spirit is the service and honor of the heart; it comprehends
faith and fear in God. The worshipping of God is two-fold, outward and inward -
that is, to acknowledge God's benefits, and to be thankful unto him.
DCCIX.
A certain prince of Germany,
well known to me, went to Compostella in Spain, where they pretend St James,
brother of the Evangelist St John, lies buried. This prince made his confession
to a Franciscan, an honest man, who asked him if he were a German? The prince
answered, yes. Then the friar said: "O, loving child, why seekest thou so
far away that which thou hast much better in Germany? I have seen and read the
writings of an Augustine friar, touching indulgences and the pardons of sin,
wherein he powerfully proves that the true remission of sins consists in the
merits and sufferings of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. O loving son,
remain thereby, and permit not thyself to be otherwise persuaded. I purpose
shortly, God willing, to leave this unchristian life, to repair into German,
and to join the Augustine friar.
DCCX.
Since the Gospel has been
preached, which is not above twenty years, such great wonders have been done as
were not in many hundred years before. No man ever thought such alterations
should happen; that so many monasteries would be made empty, that the private
mass should be abolished in Germany, despite heretics, sectaries, and tyrants.
Rome has twice been ravaged, and many great princes, who persecuted the Gospel,
have been thrown down to the ground and destroyed.
DCCXI.
Government is a sign of the
divine grace, of the mercy of God, who has no pleasure in murdering, killing,
and strangling. If God left all things to go which they would, as among the
Turks and other nations, without good government, we should quickly dispatch
one another out of this world.
DCCXII.
Parents keep their children
with greater diligence and care than rulers and governors keep their subjects.
Fathers and mothers are masters naturally and willingly; it is a self-grown
dominion; but rulers and magistrates have a compulsory mastery; they act by
force, with a prepared dominion; when father and mother can rule no more, the
public police must take the matter in hand. Rulers and magistrates must watch
over the sixth commandment.
DCCXIII.
The temporal magistrate is
even like a fish net, set before the fish in a pond or a lake, but God is the
plunger, who drives the fish into it. For when a thief, robber, adulterer,
murderer, is ripe, he hunts him into the net, that is, causes him to be taken
by the magistrate, and punished; for it is written: "God is judge upon
earth." Therefore repent, or thou must be punished.
DCCXIV.
Princes and rulers should
maintain the laws and statutes, or they will be condemned. They should, above
all, hold the Gospel in honor, and bear it ever in their hands, for it aids and
preserves them, and ennobles the state and office of magistracy, so that they
know where their vocation and calling is, and that with good and safe
conscience they may execute the works of their office. At Rome, the executioner
always craved pardon of the condemned malefactor, when he was to execute his
office, as though he were doing wrong, or sinning in executing the criminal;
whereas `tis his proper office, which God has set.
St Paul says: "He beareth
not the sword in vain;" he is God's minister, a revenger, to execute wrath
upon him that does evil. When the magistrate punishes, God himself punishes.
DCCXV.
It is impossible that where a
prince or potentate is ungodly, his counsellors should not be ungodly. As is
the master, such are also his servants. This follows necessarily and certainly.
Solomon says: "A master that hath pleasure in lying, his servants are
ungodly;" it never fails.
DCCXVI.
The magistracy is a necessary
state in the world, and to be held in honor; therefore we ought to pray for
magistrates, who may easily be corrupted and spoiled. Honores mutant mores,
numquam in meliores: Honors alter a man's manners, and seldom for the
better. The prince who governs without laws, according to his own brain, is a
monster, worse than a wild beast; but he who governs according to the
prescribed laws and rights, is like unto God, who is an erector and founder of
laws and rights.
DCCXVII.
Governors should be wise, of a
courageous spirit, and should know how to rule alone without their counsellors.
DCCXVIII.
Temporal government is
preserved not only by laws and rights, but by divine authority; `tis God
maintains governments, otherwise the greatest sins in the world would remain
unpunished. Our Lord God, in the law, shows what his will is, and how the evil
should be punished. And forasmuch as the law punishes not a potentate, prince,
or ruler, therefore our Lord God, one day, will call him to an account and
punish him. In this life, governors and rulers catch but only gnats and little
flies with their laws, but the wasps and great humble bees tear through, as
through a cobweb; that is, the small offences and offenders are punished, but
the abominable extortioners and oppressors who grind the faces of the poor, the
fatherless and widows, go scotfree, and are held in high honor.
DCCXIX.
To the business of government
appertain, not common, illiterate people, or servants, but champions;
understanding, wise, and courageous men, who are to be trusted, and who aim at
the common good and prosperity, not seeking their own gain and profit, or
following their own desires, pleasures, and delights; but how few governors and
rulers think hereon? They make a trade and traffic of government; they cannot
govern themselves: how, then, should they govern great territories and
multitudes of people. Solomon says: "A man that can rule and curb his
mind, is better than he that assaulteth and overcometh cities." etc..
I could well wish that Scipio,
that much-honored champion, were in heaven; he was able to govern and overcome
himself, and to curb his mind, the highest and most laudable victory.
Frederick, prince elector of Saxony, was another such prince; he could curb
himself, though by nature of an angry mood. In the song of Solomon, it is said:
"My vineyard which is mine, is before me;" that is, God has taken the
government to himself, to the end no man may brag and boast thereof. God will
be the king and ruler; he will be minister and pastor; he will be master in the
house; he alone will be governor; pastor, espiscopus, Caesar, rex, vir et
uxor errant, sed non Deus.
DCCXX.
Potentates and princes,
nowadays, when they take in hand an enterprise, do not pray before they begin,
but set to work calculating: three time three makes nine, twice seven are
fourteen - so and so will do so and so - in this manner will the business
surely take effect - but our Lord God says unto them: For whom, then, do ye
hold me? for a cypher? Do I sit here above in vain, and to no purpose? You
shall know, that I will twist your accounts about finely, and make the mall
false reckonings.
DCCXXI.
Pilate was a more honest and
just man than any papist prince of the empire. I could name many of these, who
are in no degree comparable with Pilate; for he kept strictly to the Roman
laws. He would not that the innocent should be executed and slain without
hearing, and he availed himself of all just means whereby to release Christ;
but when they threatened him with the emperor's disfavor, he was dazzled, and
forsook the imperial laws, thinking, it is but the loss of one man, who is both
poor and condemned; no man takes his part; what hurt can I receive by his
death? Better it is that one man die, than that the whole nation be against me.
Dr. Mathesius and Pomer
debated this question, why Pilate scourged Christ, and asked: What is truth?
The former argued that Pilate did i out of compassion; but the other, that it
was done out of tyranny and contempt. Whereupon Luther said: Pilate scourged Christ
out of compassion, to the end he might still thereby, the insatiable wrath and
raging of the Jews. And in that he said to Christ: What is truth: he meant: Why
wilt thou dispute concerning truth in these wicked times? Truth is here of no
value. Thou must think of some other plan; adopt some lawyer's quiddity, and
then, perchance, thou mayest be released.
DCCXXII.
Philip Melancthon and myself
have justly deserved at God's hands, as much riches in this world as any one cardinal
possesses; for we have done more in his business than a hundred cardinals. But
God says unto us: Be contented that ye have me. When we have him, then have we
also the purse; for although we had the purse and had not God, so had we
nothing.
God said to Ezekiel:
"Thou son of man, Nebuchadnezzar caused his army to serve a great service
against Tyre, yet he had no wages; what shall I give him? I will give the land
of Egypt to Nebuchadnezzar, that shall be his wages." So plays God with
great kingdoms, taking them from one, and giving them to another.
DCCXXIII.
At the imperial diet, at
Augsburg, certain princes there spoke in praise of the riches and advantages of
their respective principalities. The prince elector of Saxony said: He had, in
his country, store of silver mines, which brought him great revenues. The
prince elector palatine extolled his vineyards on the Rhine. When it became the
turn of Eberhard, prince of Wirtemberg, he said: "I am, indeed, but a poor
prince, and not to be compared with either of you; yet, nevertheless, I have
also in my country a rich and precious jewel; namely, that if at any time I
should ride astray in my country, and were left all alone in the fields, yet I
could safely and securely sleep in the bosom of any one of my subjects, who
all, for my service, are ready to venture body, goods, and blood." And,
indeed, his people esteemed him as a pater patrice. When the other two
princes heard this, they confessed that, in truth, his was the most rich and
precious jewel.
DCCXXIV.
I invited to dinner, at my
house at Wittenberg, prince Ernest of Luneburg, and prince William of
Mecklenburg, who much complained of the immeasurable swilling and drinking kind
of life at courts; and yet they will all be good Christians. I said: The potentates
and princes ought to look into this. Then prince Ernest said: Ah! sir, we that
are princes do even so ourselves, otherwise `twould have gone down long since;
confessing that the intemperance of princes caused the intemperance of the
people. And truly, when the abbot throws the dice, the whole convent will play.
The example of governors greatly influences the subjects.
DCXXV.
Some one asked, whether Sir
Thomas More was executed for the Gospel's sake or no? I answered: No, in no
wise; he was a cruel tyrant; he was the king's chief counsellor; a very learned
and wise man, doubtless, but he shed the blood of many innocent Christians that
confessed the Gospel; he tormented them with strange instruments, like a
hangman; first, he personally examined them under a green tree, and then
cruelly tortured them in prison. At last, he opposed the edict of the king and
kingdom. He was disobedient, and was punished.
DCCXXVI.
We have this advantage; no
council has condemned us for heretics; the laws of the empire define a heretic
to be one who obstinately maintains errors, which we have never done, but have
shown and produced witnesses out of God's Word, and the Holy Scriptures; we
willingly hear the opinions of others, but we will not endure the pope to be
judge; we make him a party.
DCCXXVII.
The emperor Maximilian in his
campaigns was very superstitious. In times of danger, he would make a vow to
offer up as sacrifice what first met him. One of his captains had taken captive
a very fair virgin of an ancient family in Germany, and of the protestant
religion, whom he loved exceedingly; but he was forced by the emperor to kill
her with his own hands. We Christians have a great advantage in war against our
enemies, that of faith in prayer, whereas the infidels know nothing of faith or
prayer.
DCCXXVIII.
Not long since king Ferdinand
came into a monastery where I was, and going over it was attracted by these
letters, written in large characters on a wall: "M.N.M.G.M.M.M.M"
After reflecting for some time on their meaning, he turned to his secretary,
and asked him what he thought they signified: the secretary replied: "No,
truly," said the king. "Well, then," returned the secretary, I
expound the letters thus: M.N. Mentitur Nausea (the archbishop of Vienna); M.G.
Mentitur Gallus (the court preacher); M.M.M.M. Mentiuntur Majores (the
Franciscans); Minores, (the Carmelites); Minotaurii (monks of the Alps); all
are liars." The king hit his lips, and passed on. `Twas a very ingenious
explanation of Mr. Secretary's.
DCCXXIX.
Princes, nowadays, have no
order in the administration of their household. Four imperial towns spend more
in luxuries and junkettings in one day, than Solomon spent, throughout all his
kingdom, in a month. They are poor creatures, these princes, well entitled to our
compassion.
DCCXXX.
God deals with great
potentates, kings, and princes, even as children with playing cards. While they
have good cards, they hold them in their hands; when they had bad, they get
weary of them, and throw them under the chair; just so does God with great
potentates; while they are governing well, he holds them for good; but so soon
as they exceed, and govern ill, he throws them down from their seat, and there
he lets them lie.
DCCXXXI.
The 10th of February, 1546, John,
Prince elector of Saxony said: A controversy were easily settled, if the
parties would exhibit some concord. Luther said: We would willingly have
concord, but no man seeks after the medium of concord, which is charity. We
seek riches, but no man seeks after the right means how to be rich, namely,
through God's blessing. We all desire to be saved, but the world refuses the
means how to be saved - the Mediator Christ.
In former times potentates and
princes referred their controversies to faithful people, and did not so readily
thrust them into the lawyer's hands. When people desire to be reconciled and to
come to an agreement, one party must yield, and give way to the other. If God
and mankind should be reconciled and agreed, God must give over his right and
justice, and must lay aside his wrath; and we, mankind, must also lay down our
own righteousness, for we also would needs be gods in Paradise; we thought
ourselves wise as God, through the serpent's seduction; then Christ was fain to
make an agreement between us; he interposed in the cause, and would be a
mediator between God and man; this Mediator for his pains got the portion of a
peace-maker, namely, the cross; he that parts two fighters, commonly gets the
hardest knocks for himself. Even so Christ suffered and presented us with his
passion and death; he died for our sakes. and for the sake of our justification
he arose again. Thus the generation of mankind became reconciled with God.
DCCXXXII.
When two goats meet upon a
narrow bridge over deep water, how do they behave? neither of them can turn
back again, neither can pass the other, because the bridge is too narrow; if
they should thrust one another, they might both fall into the water and be
drowned; nature, then, has taught them, that if the one lays himself down and
permits the other to go over him, both remain without hurt. Even so people
should rather endure to be trod upon, than to fall into debate and discord one
with another.
DCCXXXIII.
A Christian, for the sake of
his own person, neither curses nor revenges himself; but faith curses and
revenges itself. To understand this rightly, we must distinguish God and man,
the person and cause. In what concerns God and his cause, we must have no
patience, nor bless; as for example, when the ungodly persecute the Gospel,
this touches God and his cause, and then we are not to bless or to wish good
success, but rather to curse the persecutors and their proceedings. Such is
called faith's cursing, which, rather than it would suffer God's Word to be
suppressed and heresy maintained, would have all creatures go to wreck; for
through heresy we lose God himself, Numbers xvi. But individuals personally
ought not to revenge themselves, but to suffer all things, and according to
Christ's doctrine and the nature of love, to do good to their enemies.
DCCXXXIV.
When young children cry
lustily, they grow well and rapidly, for through crying, the members and veins
are stretched out, which have no other exercise.
DCCXXXV.
A question was put to Luther:
How these two sentences in Scripture might be reconciled together; first,
concerning the sick of the palsy, where Christ says: "Son be of good
cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee." Where Christ intimates that sin was the
cause of the palsy, and of every sickness. Second, touching him that was born
blind, where John says: "That neither he nor his parents had sinned."
Luther answered: In these words Christ testifies that the blind had not sinned,
and sin is not the cause of blindness, for only active sins, which one commits
personally, are the cause of sicknesses and plagues, not original sin;
therefore the sins which the sick of the palsy himself committed were the cause
of the palsy, whereas original sin was not the cause of the blindness of him
that was born blind, or all people must be born blind, or be sick of the palsy.
DCCXXXVI.
Experience has proved the toad
to be endowed with valuable qualities. If you run a stick through three toads,
and, after having dried them in the sun, apply them to any pestilent tumor,
they draw out all the poison, and the malady will disappear.
DCCXXXVII.
The cramp is the lightest
sickness, and I believe the falling sickness a piece of the cramp, the one in
the head, the other in the feet and legs; when the person feeling either moves
quickly, or runs, it vanishes.
DCCXXXVIII.
Sleep is a most useful and
most salutary operation of nature. Scarcely any minor annoyance angers me more
than the being suddenly awakened out of a pleasant slumber. I understand that in
Italy they torture poor people by depriving them of sleep. `Tis a torture that
cannot long be endured.
DCCXXXIX.
The physicians in sickness
consider only of what natural causes the malady preceeds, and this they cure, or
not, with their physic. But they see not that often the devil casts a sickness
upon one without any natural causes. A higher physic must be required to resist
the devil's diseases; namely, faith and prayer, which physic may be fetched out
of God's Word. The 31st Psalm is good thereunto, where David says: "Into
thine hand I commit my spirit." This passage I learned, in my sickness, to
correct; in the first translation, I applied it only to the hour of death; but
it should be said: My health, my happiness, my life, misfortune, sickness,
death, etc., stand all in thy hands. Experience testifies this; for when we
think, now we will be joyful and merry, easy and healthy, God soon sends what
makes us quite the contrary.
When I was ill at
Schmalcalden, the physicians made me take as much medicine as though I had been
a great bull. Alack for him that depends upon the aid of physic. I do not deny
that medicine is a gift of God, nor do I refuse to acknowledge science in the
skill of many physicians; but, take the best of them, how far are they from
perfection? A sound regimen produces excellent effects. When I feel indisposed,
by observing a strict diet and going to bed early, I generally manage to get
round again, that is, if I can keep my mind tolerably at rest. I have no
objection to the doctors acting upon certain theories, but, at the same time,
they must not expect us to be the slaves of their fancies. We find Avicenna and
Galen, living in other times and in other countries, prescribing wholly
different remedies for the same disorders. I won't pin my faith to any of them,
ancient or modern. On the other hand, nothing can well be more deplorable than
the proceeding of those fellows, ignorant as they are complaisant, who let
their patients follow exactly their own fancies; `tis these wretches who more
especially people the graveyards. Able, cautious, and experienced physicians,
are gifts of God. They are the ministers of nature, to whom human life is
confided; but a moment's negligence may ruin every thing. No physician should
take a single step, but in humility and the fear of God; they who are without
the fear of God are mere homicides. I expect that exercise and change of air do
more good than all their purgings and bleedings; but when we do employ medical
remedies, we should be careful to do so under the advice of a judicious
physician. See what happened to Peter Lupinus, who died from taking internally
a mixture designed for external application. I remember hearing of a great
lawsuit, arising out of a dose of appium being given instead of a dose of
opium.
`Tis a curious thing that
certain remedies, which, applied by princes and great lords, are efficacious
and curative, are wholly powerless when administered by a physician. I have
heard that the electors of Saxony, John and Frederick, have a water, which
cures diseases of the eye, when they themselves apply it, whether the disorder
arise from heat or from cold; but `tis quite useless when administered by a
physician. So in spiritual matters, a preacher has more unction, and produces
more effect upon the conscience than can a layman.
DCCXLI.
To die for the sake of
Christ's word, is esteemed precious and glorious before God. We are mortal, and
must die for the sake of our sins, but when we die for the sake of Christ and
his Word, and freely confess them, we die an honorable death; we are thereby
made altogether holy relics, and have sold our hides dear enough. But when we
Christians pray for peace and long life, `tis not for our sake, to whom death
is merely gain, but for the sake of the church, and of posterity. The fear of
death is merely death itself; he who abolishes that fear from the heart,
neither tastes nor feels death. A human creature lying asleep is very like one
that is dead; whence the ancients said, sleep is the brother of death. In like
manner, life and death are pictured to us in the day and night, and in the
change and alteration of the seasons.
The dream I had lately, will
be made true; `twas that I was dead, and stood by my grave, covered with rags.
Thus am I long since condemned to die, and yet I live.
DCCXLII.
"Whoso keepeth my saying,
shall never see death." Luther expounded this passage of St John thus: We
must die and suffer death, but whoso holds on God's Word, shall not feel death,
but depart as in a sleep, and concerning him it shall not be said: "I die,
but I am forced to sleep." On the other hand, whoso finds not himself
furnished with God's Word, must die in anguish; therefore, when thou comest to
die, make no dispute at all, but from thy heart say: I believe in Jesus Christ
the Son of God; I ask no more.
DCCXLIII.
One's thirty eighth year is an
evil and dangerous year, bringing many heavy and great sicknesses; naturally,
by reason perhaps, of the comets and conjunctions of Saturn and of Mars, but
spiritually, by reason of the innumerable sins of the people.
DCCXLIV.
Pliny, the heathen writer,
says, book xx. cap. 1: The best physic for a human creature is, soon to die;
Julius Caesar condemned death, and was careless of danger; he said: `Tis better
to die once than continually to be afraid of dying; this was well enough for a
heathen, yet we ought not to tempt God, but to use the means which he gives,
and then commit ourselves to his mercy.
It were a light and easy
matter for a Christian to overcome death, if he knew it was not God's wrath;
that quality makes death bitter to us. But a heathen dies securely; he neither
sees nor feels that it is God's wrath, but thinks it is merely the end of
nature. The epicurean says: `Tis but to endure one evil hour.
DCCXLV.
When I hear that a good and
godly man is dead, I am affrighted, and fear that God hates the world, and is
taking away the upright and good, to the end he may fall upon and punish the
wicked. Though I die, it makes no great matter; for I am in the pope's curse
and excommunication; I am his devil, therefore he hates and persecutes me. At
Coburg, I went about, and sought me out a place for my grave; I thought to have
beel laid in the chancel under the table, but now I am of another mind. I know
I have not long to live, for my head is like a knife, from which the steel is
wholly whetted away, and which is become mere iron; the iron will cut no more,
even so it is with my head. Now, loving Lord God, I hope my time is not for
hence; God help me, and give me a happy hour; I desire to live no longer.
DCCXLVI.
We read of St Vincent, that,
about to die, and seeing death at his feet, he said: Death! what wilt thou?
Thinkest thou to gain anything of a Christian? Knowest thou not that I am a
Christian? Even so should we learn to condemn, scorn, and deride death.
Likewise, it is written in the history of St Martin, that being near his death,
he saw the devil standing at his bed's feet, and boldly said: Why standest thou
there, thou horrible beast? thou hast nothing to do with me. These were right
words of faith. Such and the like ought we to cull out of the legends of the
saints, wholly omitting the fooleries that the papists have stuffed therein.
DCCXLVII.
Luther, at Wittenberg, seeing
a very melancholy man, said to him: Ah! human creature, what dost thou? Hast
thou nothing else in hand but to think of thy sins, on death, and damnation?
Turn thine eyes quickly away, and look hither to this man Christ, of whom it is
written; "He was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered, died, buried, descended into hell, the third day arose again from the
dead, and ascended up into heaven," etc. Dost think all this was done to
no end? Comfort thyself against death, and sin; be not afraid nor faint, for
thou hast no cause; Christ suffered death for thee, and prevailed for thy
comfort and defense, and for that cause he sits at the right hand of God, his
heavenly Father, to deliver thee.
DCCXLVIII.
So many members as we have, so
many deaths have we. Death peeps out at every limb. The devil, a causer and
lord of death, is our adversary, and hunts after our life; he has sworn our
death, and we have deserved it; but the devil will not gain much by strangling
the godly; he will crack a hollow nut. Let us die, that so the devil may be at
rest. I have deserved death twofold; first, in that I have sinned against God,
for which I am heartily sorry; secondly, I have deserved death at the devil's
hands, whose kingdom of lying and murdering, through God's assistance, grace,
and mercy, I have destroyed; therefore he justly wishes my death.
DCCXLIX.
"There shall arise false
prophets, insomuch that, if it were possible, they shall deceive the very
elect." This sentence was fulfilled, in the fathers; as in Jerome,
Augustine, Gregory, Bernard, and others; they were seduced into errors, but
remained not therein. St Bernard wrote many evil and ungodly things, especially
concerning the Virgin Mary; but when he was near his death, he said: "I
have lived wickedly. Thou, loving Lord Jesus Christ, hast a twofold right to
the kingdom of heaven; first, it is thine inheritance, for thou art the only
begotten Son of the Father; this affords me no comfort or hope of heaven. But,
secondly, thou hast purchased the same with thy suffering and death; thou hast
stilled the Father's wrath, hast unlocked heaven, and presented the same unto
me as thy purchased good; of this have I joy and comfort." Therefore he
died well and happy. Likewise when St Augustine was to die, he prayed the seven
penitential Psalms. When these fathers were in health, they thought not on this
doctrine; but when they were upon their death beds, they found in their hearts
what they were to trust to; they felt it high time to abandon human fopperies,
and to betake themselves only to Christ, and to rely upon his rich and precious
merits.
DCCL.
Almighty, everlasting God,
merciful heavenly Father - Father of our loving Lord Jesus Christ, I know
assuredly, that everything which thou hast said, thou wilt and canst perform,
for thou canst not lie; thy Word is upright and true. In the beginning, thou
didst promise unto me thy loving and only begotten Son Jesus Christ; the same
has come, and has delivered me from the devil, from death, hell, and sin. Out
of his gracious will he has presented unto me the sacraments, which I have used
in faith, and have depended on thy Word; wherefore I make no doubt at all, but
that I am well secured, and settled in peace; therefore if this be my hour, and
thy divine will, so am I willing to depart hence with joy.
DCCLI.
The school of faith is said to
go about with death. Death is swallowed up in victory. If death, then sin. If
death, then all diseases. If death, then all misery. If death, then all the
power of the devil. If death, then all the fury of the world.
But these things do not
appear, but rather the contrary; therefore there is need of faith; for an open
manifestation of things follow faith in due time, when the things, now
invisible, will be seen.
DCCLII.
When Adam lived, that is, when
he sinned, death devoured life; when Christ died, that is, was justified, then
life, which is Christ, swallowed up and devoured death; therefore God be
praised, that Christ died, and has got the victory.
DCCLIII.
On Easter Sunday, 1544, Luther
made an excellent sermon on the resurrection from the dead, out of the epistle
appointed for that day, handling this sentence: "Thou fool, that which
thou sowest is not quickened except it die." When Abraham intended to
sacrifice his son, he believed that God out of the ashes would raise him again,
and make him a father of children. The faith of Adam and of Eve preserved them,
because they trusted and believed in the promised seed. For to him that
believes everything is possible. The conception and birth of every human
creature, proceeding out of a drop of blood, is no less a miracle and
wonder-work of God, than that Adam was made out of a clod of earth, and Eve out
of a fleshy rib. The world is full of such works of wonder, but we are blind,
and cannot see them. The whole world is not able to create one member, no, not
so much as a small leaf. The manner of the resurrection consists in these
words: "Arise, come, stand up, appear, rejoice ye which dwell in the dust
of the earth." I shall arise again and shall speak with you; this finger
wherewith I point must come to me again; everything must come again; for it is
written: "God will create a new heaven and a new earth, wherein
righteousness shall dwell." It will be no arid waste, but a beautiful new
earth, where all the just will dwell together. There will be no carnivorous
beasts, or venomous creatures, for all such, like ourselves, will be relieved
from the curse of sin, and will be to us as friendly as they were to Adam in
Paradise. There will be little gods, with golden hair, shining like precious
stones. The foliage of the trees, and the verdure of the grass, will have the
brilliancy of emeralds; and we ourselves, delivered from our mundane subjection
to gross appetites and necessities, shall have the same form as here, but
infinitely more perfect. Our eyes will be radiant as the purest silver, and we
shall be exempt from all sickness and tribulation. We shall behold the glorious
Creator face to face; and then, what ineffable satisfaction will it be to find
our relations and friends among the just! If we were all one here, we should
have peace among ourselves, but God orders it otherwise, to the end we may
yearn and sigh after the future paternal home, and become weary of this troublesome
life. Now, if there be joy in the chosen, so must the highest sorrow and
despair be in the damned.
DCCLIV.
The 7th of August, 1538,
Luther discoursed concerning the life to come, and said: In my late sickness I lay
very weak, and committed myself to God, when many things fell into my mind,
concerning the everlasting life, what it is, what joys we there shall have, and
I was convinced that everything shall be revealed, which through Christ is
presented unto us, and is already ours, seeing we believe it. Here on earth we
cannot know what the creation of the new world shall be, for we are not able to
comprehend or understand the creation of this temporal world, or of its
creatures, which are visible and corporal. The joys that are everlasting are
beyond the comprehension of any human creature. As Isaiah says: "Ye
shall be everlastingly joyful in glorious joy." But how comes it that
we cannot believe God's Word, seeing that all things are accomplished which the
Scripture speaks touching the resurrection of the dead? This proves original
sin as the cause of it. The ungodly and damned at the last day shall be under
the ground, but in some measure shall behold the great joys and glory of the
chosen and saved, and thereby shall be so much the more pained and tormented.
Has our Lord God created this
evanescent and temporal kingdom, the sky, and earth, and all that is therein,
so fair; how much more fair and glorious will he, then, make yonder celestial
everlasting kingdom!
DCCLV.
When I lay sucking at my
mother's breast, I had no notion how I should afterwards eat, drink, or live.
Even so we on earth have no idea what the life to come will be.
DCCLVI.
I hold the gnashing of teeth
of the damned to be an external pain following upon an evil conscience, that
is, despair, when men see themselves abandoned by God.
DCCLVII.
I wish from my heart Zwinglius
could be saved, but I fear the contrary; for Christ has said that those who
deny him shall be damned. God's judgment is sure and certain, and we may safely
pronounce it against all the ungodly, unless God reserve unto himself a
peculiar privilege and dispensation. Even so, David from his heart wished that
his son Absalom might be saved, when he said: "Absalom my son, Absalom my
son;" yet he certainly believed that he was damned, and bewailed him, not
only that he died corporally, but was also lost everlastingly; for he knew that
he had died in rebellion, in incest, and that he had hunted his father out of
the kingdom.
DCCLVIII.
The Fathers made four sorts of
hell. 1. The forefront, wherein they say, the patriarch's were until Christ
descended into hell. 2. The feeling of pain, yet only temporal, as purgatory.
3. Where unbaptized children are, but feel no pain. 4. Where the damned are, which
feel everlasting pain. This is the right hell; the other three are only human
imaginings. In Popedom they sang an evil song: "Our sighs called upon
thee, our pitiful lamentations sought thee," etc. This was not
Christian-like, for the Gospel says: "They are in Abraham's bosom."
Isaiah: "They go into their chambers;" and Ecclesiasticus: "The
righteous is in the Lord's hand, let him die how he will, yea, although he be
overtaken by death." What hell is, we know not; only this we know, that
there is such a sure and certain place, as is written of the rich glutton, when
Abraham said unto him: "There is a great space between you and us."
DCCLVIX.
Ah! loving God, defer not thy
coming. I await impatiently the day when the spring shall return, when day and
night shall be of equal length, and when Aurora shall be clear and bright. One
day will come a thick black cloud out of which will issue three flashes of
lightning, and a clap of thunder will be heard, and in a moment, heaven and
earth will be covered with confusion. The Lord be praised, who has taught us to
sigh and yearn after that day. In Popedom they are all afraid thereof, as is
testified by their hymn, Dies irae dies illa. I hope that day is not far
off. Christ says: "At that time, ye shall scarcely find faith on the
earth." If we make an account, we shall find, that we have the Gospel now
only in a corner. Asia and Africa have it not, the Gospel is not preached in
Europe, in Greece, Italy, Hungary, Spain, France, England, or in Poland. And
this little corner where it is, Saxony, will not hinder the coming of the last
day of judgment. The predictions of the apocalypse are accomplished already, as
far as the white horse. The world cannot stand long, perhaps a hundred years at
the outside.
When the Turk begins to
decline, then the last day will be at hand, for then the testimony of the
Scripture must be verified. The loving Lord will come, as the Scripture says:
"For thus saith the Lord of Hosts, yet a little while and I will shake the
heavens and the earth, and the sea and the dry land: and I will shake all
nations, and the desire of all nations shall come." At the last there will
be great alteration and commotion; and already there are great commotions among
men. Never had the men of law so much occupation as now. There are vehement
dissensions in our families and discord in the church.
DCCLX.
About the time of Easter in
April, when they least of all feared rain, Pharaoh was swallowed up in the Red
Sea, and the nation of Israel delivered from Egypt. `Twas about the same time
the world was created; at the same time the year is changed, and at the same
time Christ rose again to renew the world. Perchance the last day will come
about the same time. I am of the opinion it will be about Easter, when the year
is finest and fairest, and early in the morning, at sunrise, as at the
destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. The elements will be gloomy with earthquakes
and thunderings about an hour or little longer, and the secure people will say:
"Pish, thou fool, hast thou never heard it thunder?"
The science of alchemy I like
well, and, indeed, `tis the philosophy of the ancients. I like it not only for
the profits it brings in melting metals, in decocting preparing, extracting,
and distilling herbs, roots; I like it also for the sake of the allegory and
secret signification, which is exceedingly fine, touching the resurrection of
the dead at the last day. For, as in a furnace the fire extracts and separates
from a substance the other portions, and carries upward the spirit, the life,
the sap, the strength, while the unclean matter, the dregs, remain at the
bottom, like a dead and worthless carcass; even so God, at the day of judgment,
will separate all things through fire, the righteous from the ungodly. The
Christians and righteous shall ascend upward into heaven, and there live
everlastingly, but the wicked and the ungodly, as the dross and filth, shall
remain in hell, and there be damned.
DCCLXII.
Allegories and spiritual
significations, when applied to faith, and that seldom are laudable; but when
they are drawn from the life and conversation, they are dangerous, and, when
men make too many of them pervert the doctrine of faith. Allegories are fine
ornaments, but not of proof. We are not lightly to make use of them, except the
principal cause be first sufficiently proved, with strong grounds and
arguments, as with St Paul in the fourth chapter to Galatians. The body is the
logic, but allegory the rhetoric; now rhetoric, which adorns and enlarges a
thing with words, is of no value without logic, which roundly and briefly
comprehends a matter. When with rhetoric men will make many words, without
ground, it is but a trimmed thing, a carved idol.
DCCLXIII.
An allegory is when a thing is
signified and understood otherwise than as the words express. Of all languages,
none is so rich in allegories as the Hebrew. The German tongue is full of
metaphors, as when we say: He hangs the clock according to the wind: -
Katherine von Borna is the morning star of Wittenbert, and so on. These are
metaphors, that is, figurative words. Allegories are, as when Christ commands
that one should wash another's feet, of baptizing, of the Sabbath, etc.
We must not hold and
understand allegories as they sound; as what Daniel says, concerning the beast
with ten horns; this we must understand to be spoken of the Roman empire. Even
so, circumcision in the New Testament is an allegory, but in the Old testament
it is no allegory. The New Testament frames allegories out of the Old, as it
makes two nations out of Abraham's sons.
DCCLXIV.
The legend of St George has a
fine spiritual signification, concerning temporal government and policy. The
virgin signifies the policy; she is vexed and persecuted by the dragon, the
devil, who goes about to devour her; now he plagues her with hunger and dearth,
then with pestilence, now with wars, till at length a good prince or potentate
comes, who helps and delivers her, and restores her again to her right.
DCCLXV.
To play with allegories in
Christian doctrine, is dangerous. The words, now and then, sound well and
smoothly, but they are to no purpose. They serve well for such preachers that
have not studied much, who know not rightly how to expound the histories and
texts, whose leather is too short, and will not stretch. These resort to
allegories, wherein nothing is taught certainly on which a man may build;
therefore, we should accustom ourselves to remain by the clear and pure text.
Philip Melancthon asked Luther what the allegory and hidden signification was,
that the eagle, during the time he broods and sits upon the eggs, hunts not
abroad; and that he keeps but one young thrusting any others out of the nest.
Likewise, why the ravens nourish not their young, but forsake them when they
are yet bare, and without feathers? Luther answered: "The eagle signifies
a monarch, who alone will have the government and suffer none besides himself
to be his equal. The ravens are the harsh and hard-hearted swine and
belly-gods, the papists."
DCCLXVI.
The allegory of a sophist is
always screwed; it crouches and bows itself like a snake, which is never
straight, whether she go, creep, or lie still; only when she is dead, she is
straight enough.
DCCLXVII.
When I was a monk, I was much
versed in spiritual significations and allegories. `Twas all art with me; but
afterwards, when through the epistle to the Romans, I had come a little to the
knowledge of Christ, I saw that all allegories wee vain, except those of
Christ. Before that time I turned everything into allegory, even the lowest
wants of our nature. But afterwards I reflected upon historical facts. I saw
how difficult a matter it was for Gideon to have fought the enemy, in the
manner shown by the Scripture; there was no allegory there or spiritual signification;
the Holy Ghost simply says, that Faith only, with three hundred men, beat so
great a multitude of enemies. St Jerome and Origen, God forgive them, were the
cause that allegories were held in such esteem. But Origen altogether is not
worth one word of Christ. Now I have shaken off all these follies, and my best
art is to deliver the Scripture in the simple sense; therein is life, strength,
and doctrine; all other methods are nothing but foolishness, let them shine how
they will. `Twas thus Munzer troped with the third chapter of John:
"Unless one be born again of water," and said: Water signifies
tribulation; but St Augustine gave us the true rule, that figures and
allegories prove nothing.
DCCLXVIII.
Few of the legends are pure;
the legends of the martyrs are least corrupted, who proved their faith by the
testimony of their blood. The legends of the hermits, who dwell in solitudes,
are abominable, full of lying miracles and fooleries, touching moderation,
chastity, and nurture. I hold in consideration the saints whose lives were not
marked by any particular circumstances, who, in fact, lived like other people,
and did not seek to make themselves noted.
DCCLXIX.
In the legend of the virgin
Tecla, who, as they say, was baptized by St Paul, `tis said: "she awakened
in him carnal desire." Ah! loving Paul, thou hadst another manner of thorn
in thy flesh than carnal. The friars, who live at their ease, and jollity,
dream, according to their licentious cogitations, that St Paul was plagued with
the same tribulations as themselves.
DCCLXX.
The legend of St Christopher
is no history, but a fiction composed by the Greeks, a wise, learned, and
imaginative people, in order to show what life that of a true Christian should
be. They figure him a great, tall and strong man, who bears the child Jesus
upon his shoulders, as the name Christopher indicates; but the child was heavy,
so that he who carries him is constrained to bend under the burden. He
traverses a raging and boisterous sea, the world, whose waves beat upon him,
namely, tyrants, and factions, and the devil, who would fain bereave him of
soul and life; but he supports himself by a great tree, as upon a staff; that
is, God's Word. On the other side of the sea stands an old man, with a lantern,
in which burns a candle; this means the writings of the prophets. Christopher
directs his steps thither, and arrives safely on shore, that is, at everlasting
life. At his side is a basket, containing fish and bread; this signifies that
God will here on earth nourish the bodies of his Christians, amid the
persecutions, crosses and misfortunes which they must endure, and will not
suffer them to die of hunger, as the world would have them. `Tis a fine
Christian poem, and so is the legend of St George; George, in the Greek, means
a builder, that builds edifices justly and with regularity, and who resists and
drives away the enemies that would assault and damage them.
DCCLXXI.
`Tis one of the devil's proper
plagues that we have no good legends of the saints, pure and true. Those we
have are stuffed so full of lies, that, without heavy labor, they cannot be
corrected. The legend of St Catherine is contrary to all the Roman history; for
Maxentius was drowned in the Tiber at Rome, and never came to Alexandria, but
Maximian had been there, as we read in Eusebius, and after the time of Jusius
Caesar there had been no king in Egypt. He that disturbed Christians with such
lies, was doubtless a desperate wretch, who surely has been plunged deep in
hell. Such monstrosities did we believe in popedom, but then we understood them
not. Give God thanks, ye that are freed and delivered from them and from still
more ungodly things.
DCCLXXII.
My advice is that the sees of the
protestant bishops be permitted to remain, for the profit and use of poor
students and schools; and when a bishop, dean, or provost, cannot, or will not
preach himself, then he shall, at his own charge, maintain other students and
scholars, and permit them to study and preach. But when potentates and princes
take spiritual livings to themselves, and will famish poor students and
scholars, then the parishes of necessity must be wasted, as is the case
already, for we can get neither ministers nor deacons. The pope, although he be
our mortal enemy, must maintain us, yet against his will, and for which he has
no thanks.
DCCLXXIII.
These times are evil, in that
the church is so spoiled and robbed by the princes and potentates; they give
nothing, but take and steal. In former times they gave liberally to her, now
they rob her. The church is more torn and tattered than a begger's cloak;
nothing is added to the stipends of the poor servants of the church. They who
bestow them to the right use are persecuted, it going with them as with St
Lawrence, who, against the emperor's command, divided the church livings among
the poor.
DCCLXXIV.
The benefices under popedom
are unworthy that Christian use should be made of them, for they are the wages
of strumpets, as the prophet says, and shall return to such again. The pope is
fooled, in that he suffers the emperor and other princes to take possession of
spiritual livings, he hopes thereby to preserve his authority and power. For
this reason he wrote to Henry of England, that he might take possession of
spiritual livings; provided he, the pope, were acknowledged, by the king, chief
bishop. For the pope thinks: I must now, in these times of trouble and danger,
court the beast; I must yield in some things. Ah! how I rejoice that I have
lived to see the pope humbled; he is now constrained to suffer his patrons, his
protectors, and defenders, to take possession of church livings to preserve his
power, but he stands like a tottering wall, about to be overthrown. How will it
be with the monasteries and churches that are fallen down and decayed? They
shall never be raised up again, and the prophecy will be fulfilled. Popedom has
been and will be a prey. Twelve years since, the pope suffered one prince to
take possession of divers bishoprics; afterwards, at the imperial diet at
Augsburg, the prince was compelled to restore them; now the pope gives him them
again: this prince and his retinue may well forsake the gospel, seeing the pope
yields so much to him. `Tis a very strange time, and of which we little thought
twenty years past, to see the pope, that grizzly idol, of whom all people stood
in fear, now permitting princes to condemn and scorn him, him whom the emperor
dared not, thirty years past, have touched with but one word.
DCCLXXV.
`Tis quite fitting a poor
student should have a spiritual living to maintain his study, so that he bind
not himself with ungodly and unchristianlike vows, nor consent to hold
communion with the errors of the papists. Ah, that we might have but the seventh
part of the treasure of the church, to maintain poor students in the church. I
am sorry our princes have such desire for bishoprics; I fear they will be their
bane, and that they will lose what is their own.
DCCLXXVI.
Cannons and firearms are cruel
and damnable machines. I believe them to have been the direct suggestion of the
devil. Against the flying ball no valor avails; the soldier is dead, ere he
sees the means of his destruction. If Adam had seen in a vision the horrible
instruments his children were to invent, he would have died of grief.
DCCLXXVII.
War is one of the greatest
plagues that can afflict humanity; it destroys religion, it destroys states, it
destroys families. Any scourge, in fact, is preferable to it. Famine and
pestilence become as nothing in comparison with it. Pestilence is the least
evil of the three, and `twas therefore David chose it, willing rather to fall
into the hands of God than into those of pitiless man.
DCCLXXVIII.
Some one asked, what was the
difference between Samson the strong man, and Julius Caesar, or any other
celebrated general, endowed at once with vigor of body and vigor of mind?
Luther answered: Samson's strength was an effect of the Holy Ghost animating
him, for the Holy Ghost enables those who serve God with obedience to
accomplish great things. The strength and the grandeur of soul of the heathen
was also an inspiration and work of God, but not of the kind which sanctifies.
I often reflect with admiration upon Samson; mere human strength could never
have done what he did.
DCCLXXIX.
How many fine actions of the
old time have remained unknown, for want of an historian to record them. The
Greeks and Romans alone possessed historians. Even of Livy, we have but a
portion left to us; the rest is lost, destroyed. Sabellicus proposed to imitate
and continue Livy, but he accomplished nothing.
Victories and good fortune,
and ability in war, are given by God, as we find in Hannibal, that famous
captain, who hunted the Romans thoroughly, driving them out of Africa, Sicily,
Spain, France, and almost out of Italy. I am persuaded he was a surpassing
valiant man; if he had but had a scribe to have written the history of his
wars, we should, doubtless have known many great and glorious actions of his.
DCCLXXX.
Great people and champions are
special gifts of God, whom he gives and preserves: they do their work, and
achieve great actions, not with vain imaginations, or cold and sleepy
cogitations, but by motion of God. Even so `twas with the prophets, St Paul,
and other excelling people, who accomplished their work by God's special grace.
The Book of Judges also shows how God wrought great matters through one single
person.
DCCLXXXI.
Every great champion is not
fitted to govern; he that is a soldier, looks only after victories, how he may
prevail, and keep the field; not after policy, how people and countries may be
well governed. Yet Scipio, Hannibal, Alexander, Julius and Augustus Caesars
looked also after government, and how good rule might be observed.
DCCLXXXII.
A valiant and brave soldier
seeks rather to preserve one citizen than to destroy a thousand enemies, as
Scipio the Roman said; therefore an upright soldier begins not a war lightly,
or without urgent cause. True soldiers and captains make not many words, but
when they speak, the deed is done.
DCCLXXXIII.
They who take to force, give a
great blow to the Gospel, and offend many people; they fish before the net,
etc. The prophet Isaiah and St Paul say: "I will grind him (antichrist) to
powder with the rod of my mouth, and will slay him with the spirit of my
lips." With such weapons we must beat the pope. Popedom can neither be
destroyed nor preserved by force; for it is built upon lies; it must therefore
be turned upside down and destroyed with the word of truth. It is said:
"Preach thou, I will give strength."
DCCLXXXIV.
The question whether without
offending God or our conscience, we may defend ourselves against the emperor,
if he should seek to subjugate us, is rather one for lawyers, than for divines.
If the emperor proceed to war upon us, he intends either to destroy our
preaching, and our religion, or to invade and confound public policy and
economy, that is to say, the temporal government and administration. In either
case, `tis no longer as emperor of the Romans, legally elected we are to regard
him but as a tyrant; `tis, therefore, futile to ask whether we may combat for
the upright, pure doctrine, and for religion; `tis for us a law and a duty to
combat for wife, for children, servants, and subjects; we are bound to defend
them against maleficent power.
If I live I will write an
admonition to all the states of the Christian world, concerning our forced
defense; and will show that every one is obliged to defend him and his against
wrongful power. First, the emperor is the head of body politic in the temporal
kingdom, of which body every subject and private person is a piece and member,
to whom the right of enforced defense appertains, as to a temporal and civil
person; for if he defend not himself, he is a slayer of his own body.
Secondly, the emperor is not
the only monarch or lord in Germany; but the princes electors are, together
with him, temporal members of the empire, each of whom is charged and bound to
take care of it; the duty of every prince is to further the good thereof, and
to resist such as would injure and prejudice it. This is especially the duty of
the leading head, the emperor. `Tis true, the princes electors, though of equal
power with the emperor, are not of equal dignity and prerogative; but they and
the other princes of the empire are bound to resist the emperor, in case he
should undertake anything tending to the detriment of the empire, or which is
against God and lawful right. Moreover if the emperor should preceed to depose
any one of the princes electors, then he deposes them all, which neither
should, nor can be committed.
Wherefore, before we formally
answer this question, whether the emperor may depose the princes electors, or
whether they may depose the emperor, we must first clearly thus distinguish: a
Christian is composed of two kinds of persons, namely, a believing or a
spiritual person, and a civil or temporal person. The believing or spiritual
person ought to endure and suffer all things, it neither eats, nor drinks, nor
engenders children, nor has share or part in temporal doings and matters. But
the temporal and civil person is subject to the temporal rights and laws, and
tied to obedience; it must maintain and defend itself, and what belongs to it,
as the laws command. For example, if, in my presence, some wretch should
attempt to do violence to my wife or my daughter, then I should lay aside my
spiritual person, and recur to the temporal; I should slay him on the spot, or
call for help. For, in the absence of the magistrates, and when they cannot be
had, the law of the nation is in force, and permits us to call upon our
neighbor for help; Christ and the Gospel do not abolish temporal rights and
ordinacnes, but confirm them.
The emperor is not an absolute
monarch, governing alone, and at his pleasure, but the princes electors are in
equal power with him; he has, therefore, neither power nor authority alone to
make laws and ordinacnes, much less has he power, right, or authority to draw
the sword for the subjugation of the subjects and members of the empire,
without the sanction of the law, or the knowledge and consent of the whole
empire. Therefore, the emperor Otho did wisely in ordaining seven princes
electors, who, with the emperor, should rule and govern the empire; but for
this, it would not so long have stood and endured.
Lastly, we should know that
when the emperor proposes to make war upon us, he does it not of and for
himself, but for the interest of the pope, to whom he is liegeman, and whose
tyranny and abominable idolatry he thus undertakes to maintain; for the pope
regards the Gospel not at all, and in raising war against the Gospel, by means
of the emperor, intends only to defend and preserve his authority, power, and
tyranny. We must not, then, remain silent and inactive. But here one may object
and say: Although David had been by God chosen king, and anointed by Samuel,
yet he would not resist the emperor, etc. Answer: David, at that time, had but
the promise of his kingdom; he had it not in possession; he was not yet settled
in his government. In our case, we arm not against Saul, but against Absalom,
against whom David made war, slaying the rebel by the hands of Joab.
I would willingly argue this
matter at length, whether we may resist the emperor or no? though the
jurisconsults, with their notions of temporal and natural rights, pronounce in
the affirmative, for us divines `tis a question of grave difficulty, having
regard to these passages: "Whosoever shall smite thee on thy right cheek,
turn to him the other also." And: "Servants, be subject to your
masters with all fear, not only to the good and gentle, but also the
froward." We must beware how we act against God's Word, lest, afterwards,
in our consciences, we be plagued and tormented. But still, we are certain of
one thing, that these times are not the times of the martyrs, when Diocletian
reigned and raged against the Christians; `tis now another kind of kingdom and
government. The emperor's authority and power, without the seven princes
electors, is of no value. The lawyers write: the emperor has parted with the
sword, and given it into our possession. He has over us but only gladium
petitorium, he must seek it of us, when he proposes to punish, for of right
he can do nothing alone. If his government were as that of Diocletian, we would
readily yield unto him and suffer.
I hope the emperor will not
make war upon us for the pope's sake; but should he play the part of an Arian,
and openly fight against God's Word, not as a Christian, but as a heathen, we are
not bound to submit and suffer. `Tis from the pope's side I take the sword, not
from the emperor's; and the pope, `tis evident, ought to be neither master nor
tyrant.
To sum up:--
First: the princes electors
are not slaves.
Secondly: the emperor rules upon
certain conditions.
Thirdly: He is sworn to the
empire, to the princes electors, and other princes.
Fourthly: He has by oath bound
himself unto them, to preserve the empire in its dignity, honor, royalty, and
jurisdiction, and to defend every person in that which justly and rightly
belongs to him; therefore, it is not to be tolerated that he should bring us
into servitude and slavery.
Fifthly: We are entitled to
the benefit of the laws.
Sixthly: He ought to yield to
Christian laws and rights.
Seventhly: our princes by oath
are bound to the empire, truly to maintain privileges and jurisdictions in
public and temporal cases, and not to permit any of these to be taken away.
Eightly: these cases are among
equals, where one is neither more nor higher than another; therefore, if the
emperor with tyranny deals with others; for thereby he lays aside the person of
a governor and loses his right over the subjects, by the nature of relatives;
for princes and subjects are equally bound the one to the other, and a prince
is clearly obliged to perform what he has sworn and promised, according to the
proverb: Faithful master, faithful man.
Ninthly: the laws are above a
prince and a tyrant; for the laws and ordinances are not wavering, but always
sure and constant, while a human creature is wavering and inconstant, for the
most part following his lusts and pleasures, if by the laws he be not
restrained.
If a robber on the highway
should fall upon me, truly I would be judge and prince myself, and would use my
sword, because nobody was with me able to defend me; and I should think I had
accomplished a good work; but if one fell upon me as a preacher for the
Gospel's sake, then with folded hands I would lift up mine eyes to heaven, and
say: "My Lord Christ! here I am; I have confessed and preached thee; is
now my time expired? so I commit my spirit into thy hands," and in that
way would I die.
DCCLXXXV.
Two doctors in the law came to
Luther at Wittenberg, whom he received and saluted in this manner: O ye canonists!
I would well endure you, if ye meddled only with imperial, and not with popish
laws. But ye maintain the pope and his canons. I would give one of my hands, on
condition, all papists and canonists were compelled to keep the pop's laws and
decrees; I would wish them no worse a devil. The bishop of Mayence cannot boast
that with a good conscience he has three bishoprics; but ye maintain it to be
lawful and right. Ye doctors who meddle with popish laws are nothing, for the
popish laws are nothing; therefore a doctor in the popish laws is nothing; he
is a chimera, a monster, a fable, nothing. A doctor in the imperial laws is
half lame, he has had a stroke on the one side; the pope's laws and decrees
altogether stink of ambition, of pride, of self profit, covetousness,
superstition, idolatry, tyranny, and such like blasphemies.
DCCLXXXVI.
Ye that are studying under
lawyers, follow not your preceptors in abuses or wrong cases, as if a man could
not be a lawyer unless he practiced such evil. God has not given laws to make
out of right wrong, and out of wrong right, as the unchristianlike lawyers do,
who study law only for the sake of gain and profit.
DCCLXXXVII.
Every lawyer is sorely vexed
at me because I preach so harshly against the craft; but I say I, as a
preacher, must reprove what is wrong and evil. If I reproved them, as Martin
Luther, they need not regard me, but forasmuch as I do it as a servant of
Christ, and speak by God's command, they ought to hearken unto me; for if they
repent not, they shall everlastingly be damned; but I, when I have declared
their sins, shall be excused. If I were not constrained to give an account for
their souls, I would leave them unreproved.
DCCLXXXVIII.
All they that serve the pope
are damned; for, next the devil, no worse creature is than the pope, with his
lying human traditions, aimed directly against Christ. The greatest part of the
lawyers, especially the canonists, are the pope's servants, and although they
will not have the name, yet they prove it in deed. They would willingly rule
the church, and trample upon her true and faithful servants; therefore are they
damned.
DCCLXXXIX.
A lawyer is wise according to
human wisdom, a divine according to God's wisdom.
DCCXC.
Ah! how bitter an enemy is the
devil to our church and school here at Wittenberg, which in particular he
opposes more than the rest, so that tyranny and heresy increase and get the
upper hand by force, in that all the members of the church are against one
another; yea, also we, which are a piece of the heart, vex and plague one
another among ourselves. I am verily persuaded that many wicked wretches and
spies are here, who watch over us with an evil eye, and are glad when discord
and offences arise among us; therefore we ought diligently to watch and pray;
it is high time - pray, pray. This school is a foundation and ground of pure
religion, therefore she ought justly to be preserved and maintained with
lectures and with stipends gainst the raging and swelling of Satan.
DCCXCI.
Whoso after my death shall
condemn the authority of this school here at Wittenberg, if it remain as it is
now, church and school, is a heretic and a perverted creature; for in this
school God first revealed and purified his Word. This school and city, both in
doctrine and manner of life, may justly be compared with all others; yet we are
not altogether complete, but still faulty in our kind of living. The highest
and chiefest divines in the whole empire hold and join with us - as Amsdorf,
Brentius, and Rhegius - all desiring our friendship, and saluting us with
loving and learned letters. A few years past, nothing was of any value but the
pope, till the church mourned, cried, and sighed, and awakened our Lord God in
heaven; as in the Psalm he says: "For the trouble of the needy and the
groans of the poor, I will now arise."
DCCXCII.
Our nobility exhaust people
with usury, insomuch that many poor people starve for want of food; the cry goes,
I would willingly take a wife, if I knew how to maintain her, so that a forced
celibacy will hence ensue. This is not good; such wicked courses will cause the
poor to cry and sigh, will rouse up God and the heavenly host. Wherefore i say:
Germany take heed. I often make an account, and as I come nearer and nearer to
forty years, I think with myself: now comes an alteration, for St Paul preached
not above forty years, nor St Augustine; always, after forty years pure
preaching of God's Word, it has ceased, and great calamities have ensued
thereupon.
DCCXCIII.
Dialectica speaks simply,straightforward, and plainly, as when I say:
Give me something to drink. But Rhetorica adorns the matter, saying:
Give me of the acceptable juice of the cellar, which finely froths and makes
people merry. Dialecta declares a thing distinctly and significantly, in
brief words. Rhetorica counsels and advises, persuades and dissuades;
she has her place and fountain head, whence a thing is taken; as, this is good,
honest, profitable, easy, necessary, etc. These two arts St Paul briefly
taught, where he says: "That he may be able by sound doctrine, both to
exhort and convince the gainsayers." (Tit. 1.). Therefore, when I would
teach a farmer concerning the tilling of his land, I define briefly and
plainly, his kind of life; his housekeeping, fruits, profits, and all that
belongs to the being of his life, Dialectice; but, if I would admonish
him according to Rhetorica, then I counsel and advise him, and praise
his kind of life, in this manner, as: that it is the most quiet, the richest,
securest, and most delightful kind of life, etc. Again, if I intend to chide or
find fault, then I must point out and blame his misconduct, evil impediments,
failings, gross ignorance, and such like defects which are in the state of
farmers. Philip Melancthon has illustrated and declared good arts; he teaches
them in such sort, that the arts teach not him, but he the arts; I bring my
arts into books, I take them not out of books. Dialectica is a profitable
and necessary art, which justly ought to be studied and learned; it shows how
we ought to speak orderly and uprightly, what we should acknowledge and judge
to be right or wrong; `tis not only necessary in schools, but also in
consistories, in courts of justice, and in churches; in churches most
especially.
DCCXCIV.
I always loved music; whoso
has skill in this art, is of a good temperament, fitted for all things. We must
teach music in schools; a schoolmaster ought to have skill in music, or I would
not regard him; neither should we ordain young men as preachers, unless they
have been well exercised in music.
DCCXCV.
Singing has nothing to do with
the affairs of this world, it is not for the law; singers are merry and free
from sorrows and cares.
DCCXCVI.
Music is one of the best arts;
the notes give life to the text; it expels melancholy, as we see in king Saul.
Kings and princes ought to maintain music, for great potentates and rulers
should protect good and liberal arts and laws; though private people have
desire thereunto and love it, yet their ability is not adequate. We read in the
Bible, that the good and godly kings maintained and paid singers. Music is the
best solace for a sad and sorrowful mind; by it the heart is refreshed and
settled again in peace.
DCCXCVII.
Astronomy is the most ancient
of all sciences, and has been the introducer of vast knowledge; it was
familiarly known to the Hebrews, for they diligently noted the course of the
heavens, as God said to Abraham: "Behold the heavens; canst thou number
the stars?" etc. Haven's motions are threefold; the first is, that the
whole firmament moves swiftly around, every moment thousands of leagues, which,
doubtless, is done by some angel. `Tis wonderful so great a vault should go
about in so short a time. If the sun and stars were composed of iron, steel,
silver, or gold, they must needs suddenly melt in so swift a course, for one
star is greater than the whole earth, and yet they are innumerable. The second
motion is, of the planets, which have their particular and proper motions. The
third is, a quaking or a trembling motion, lately discovered, but uncertain. I
like astronomy and mathematics, which rely upon demonstrations and sure proofs.
As to astrology, `tis nothing.
DCCXCVIII.
Astronomy deals with the
matter, and with what is general, not with manner of form. God himself will be
alone the Master and Creator, Lord and Governor, though he has ordained the
stars for signs. And so long as astronomy remains in her circle, whereunto God
has ordained her, so is she a fair gift of God; but when she will step out of
her bounds - that is, when she will prophecy and speak of future things, how it
will go with one, or what fortune or misfortune another shall have, then she is
not to be justified. Chiromancy we should utterly reject. In the stars is
neither strength nor operation; they are but signs, and have, therefore, just
cause to complain of the astrologers, who attribute unto them what they have
not. The astrologers commonly ascribe that to the stars, which they ought to
attribute to the planets, that announce only evil events, except that star
which appeared to the wise men in the east, and which showed that the
revelation of the Gospel was at the door.
In the year 1538, the Seigneur
Von Minckwitz made a public oration in honor of astrology, wherein he sought to
prove that the sentence in Jeremiah, chap. x: "Be not dismayed at the
signs of heaven," applied not to astrology, but to the images of the
Gentiles. Luther said hereupon: These passages may be quibbled with, but not
overthrown. Jeremiah speaks as Moses did of all the signs of heaven, earth, and
sea; the heathen were not so silly as to be afraid of the sun or moon, but they
feared and adored prodigies and miraculous signs. Astrology is no art; it has
no principle, no demonstration, whereupon we may take sure footing; `tis all
haphazard work; Philip Melancthon, against his will, admits unto me, that
though, as he says, the art is extant, there are none that understand it
rightly. They set forth, in their almanacs, that we shall have no snow in
summer time, nor thunder in winter; and this the country clowns know as well as
the astrologers. Philip Melancthon says: That such people as are born in ascendant
Libra, in the ascension of Liber towards the south, are unfortunate people.
Whereupon I said: The astrologers are silly creatures, to dream that their
crosses and mishaps proceed not from God, but from the stars; `tis hence, they
are not patient in their troubles and adversities. Astrology is uncertain; and
as the predicamenta are feigned words in Dialectica, even so
astronomy has feigned astrology; as the ancient and true divines knew nothing
of the fantasies and divinity of the school teachers, so the ancient
astronomers knew nothing of astrology. The nativities of Cicero and of others
were shown me. I said: I hold nothing thereof, nor attribute anything unto
them. I would gladly have the astrologers answer me this: Esau and Jacob were
born together, of one father and one mother, at one time, and under equal
planets, yet they were wholly of contrary natures, kinds, and minds. What is
done by God, ought not to be ascribed to the stars. The upright and true
Christian religion opposes and confutes all such fables. The way of casting
nativities is like the proceedings in popedom, whose outward ceremonies and
pompous ordinances are pleasing to human wit and wisdom, as the consecrated
water, torches, organs, cymbals, singing, ringing, but withal there's no certain
knowledge. An astrologer, or horoscope monger, is like one that sells dice, and
bawls: Behold, here I have dice that always come up twelve. If once or twice
their conjectures tell, they cannot sufficiently extol the art; but as to the
infinite cases where they fail, they are altogether silent. Astronomy, on the
contrary, I like; it pleases me by reason of her manifold benefits.
General prophecies and
declarations, which declare generally what in future shall happen accord not
upon individuals and particular things.
When at one time many are
slain together in a battle, no man can affirm they were all born under one
planet, yet they die altogether in one hour, yea, in one moment.
DCCXCIX.
God has appointed a certain
and sure end for all things, otherwise Babylon might have said: I will remain
and continue; and Rome: To me is the government and rule given without ceasing.
To Alexander and others were given empires and kingdoms, yet astrology taught
not that such great kingdoms were to be raised, nor how long they were to last.
Astrology is framed by the
devil, to the end people may be scared from entering into the state of
matrimony, and from every divine and human office and calling; for the
star-peepers presage nothing that is good out of the planets; they affright
people's consciences, in regard of misfortunes to come, which all stand in
God's hand, and through such mischievous and unprofitable cogitations vex and
torment the whole life.
Great wrong is done to God's
creatures by the star-expounders. God has created and placed the stars in the
firmament, to the end they might give light to the kingdoms of the earth, make
people glad and joyful in the Lord, and be good signs of years and seasons. But
the star-peepers feign that those creatures, of God created, darken and trouble
the earth, and are hurtful; whereas all creatures of God are good, and by God
created only for good, though mankind makes them evil, by abusing them.
Eclipses, indeed, are monsters, and like to strange and untimely births.
Lastly, to believe in the stars, or to trust thereon, or to be affrighted
thereat, is idolatry, and against the first commandment.
DCCC.
Luther advised all who
proposed to study, in what art soever, to read some sure and certain books over
and over again; for to read many sorts of books produces rather confusion than
any distinct result; just as those who dwell everywhere, and remain in no
place, dwell nowhere, and have no home. As we use not daily the community of
all our friends, but of a select few, even so we ought to accustom ourselves to
the best books, and to make them familiar unto us, so as to have them, as we
say, at our fingers end. A fine talented student fell into a frenzy; the cause
of his disease was, that he laid himself out too much upon books, and was in
love with a girl. Luther dealt very mildly and friendly with him, expecting
amendment, and said: Love is the cause of his sickness; study brought upon him
but little of his disorder. In the beginning of the Gospel it went so with
myself.
DCCCI.
Who could be so mad, in these
evil times, as to write history and the truth? The brains of the Greeks were
subtle and crafty; the Italians were ambitious and proud; the Germans rude and boisterous.
Livy described the acts of the Romans, not of the Carthaginians. Blandus and
Platina only flatter the popes.
DCCCII.
Anno 1536, Luther wrote upon
his tablets the following words: Res et verba Philippus; verba sine re
Erasmus; res sine verbis Lutherus: nec res, nec verba Carolostadius; that
is, what Philip Melancthon writes has hand and feet; the matter is good, and
the words are good; Erasmus Roterodamus writes many words, but to no purpose;
Luther has good matter, but the words are wanting: Carlstad has neither good
words nor good matter. Philip Melancthon coming in at the moment, read these
criticisms, and turning with a smile to Dr. Basil, said: Touching Erasmus and
Carlstad, `twas well said, but too much praise is accorded to me, while good words
ought to be reckoned among the other merits of Luther, for he speaks exceeding
well, and has substantial matter.
DCCCIII.
Luther, reproving Dr. Mayer,
for that he was fainthearted and depressed, by reason of his simple king of
preaching, in comparison with other divines, as he conceived, admonished him,
and said: Loving brother, when you preach regard not the doctors and learned
men, but regard the common people, to teach and instruct them clearly. In the
pulpit, we must feed the common people with milk, for each day a new church is
growing up, which stands in need of plain and simple instruction. Keep to the
catechism, the milk. High and subtle discourse, the strong wine, we will keep
for the strong-minded.
DCCCIV.
No theologian of our time
handles and expounds the Holy Scripture so well as Brentius, so much so that I
greatly admire his energy, and despair of equalling him. I verily believe none
among us can compare with him in the exposition of St John's gospel; though,
now and then, he dwells somewhat too much upon his own opinions, yet he keeps
to the true and just meaning, and does not set himself up against the plain
simplicity of God's Word.
DCCCV.
The discourse turning among
the great differences amongst the learned, Luther said: God has very finely
distributed his gifts, so that the learned serve the unlearned, and the
unlearned humble themselves before the learned, in what is needful for them. If
all people were equal, the world could not go on; nobody would serve another,
and there would be no peace. The peacock complained because he had not the
nightingale's voice. God, with apparent inequality, has instituted the greatest
equality; one man, who has greater gifts than another, is proud and haughty,
and seeks to rule and domineer over others, and condemns them. God finely
illustrates human society in the members of the body, and shows that one member
must assist the other, and that none can be without the other.
DCCCVI.
Aristotle is altogether an epicurean;
he holds that God heeds not human creatures, nor regards how we live,
permitting us to do at our pleasure. According to him, God rules the world as a
sleepy maid rocks a child. Cicero got much further. He collected together what
he found good in the books of all the Greek writers. `Tis a good argument, and
has often moved me much, where he proves there is a God, in that living
creatures, beasts, and mankind engender their own likeness. A cow always
produces a cow; a horse, a horse, etc. Therefore it follows that some being
exists which rules everything. In God we may acknowledge the unchangeable and
certain motions of the stars of heaven; the sun each day rises and sets in his
place; as certain as time, we have winter and summer, but as this is done
regularly, we neither admire nor regard it.
DCCCVII.
The Jews boast they are
Abraham's children; and, indeed, `twas a higher honor of them, when the rich
glutton in hell said, "Father Abraham," etc. But our Lord God can
well distinguish these children; for to such as the glutton he gives their
wages here in this life, but the rewards and wages for the others he reserves
until the life to come.
DCCCVIII.
The Jews are the most
miserable people on earth. They are plagued everywhere, and scattered about all
countries, having no certain resting place. They sit as on a wheelbarrow,
without a country, people, or government; yet they wait on with earnest
confidence; they cheer up themselves and say: It will soon be better with us.
Thus hardened are they; but let them know assuredly, that there is none other
Lord or God, but only he that already sits at the right hand of God the Father.
The Jews are not permitted to trade or to keep cattle, they are only usurers
and brokers; they eat nothing the Christians kill or touch; they drink no wine;
they have many superstitions; they wash the flesh most diligently, whereas they
cannot be cleansed through the flesh. They drink not milk, because God said:
"Thou shalt not boil the young kid in his mother's milk." Such
superstitions proceed out of God's anger. They that are without faith, have
laws without end, as we see in the papists and Turks; but they are rightly
served, for seeing they refused to have Christ and his Gospel, instead of
freedom they must have servitude.
If I were a Jew, the pope
should never persuade me to his doctrine; I would rather be ten times racked.
Popedom, with its abominations and profanities, has given to the Jews infinite
offence. I am persuaded if the Jews heard our preaching, and how we handle the
Old Testament, many of them might be won, but, through disputing, they have
become more and more stiff-necked, haughty, and presumptuous. Yet, if but a few
of the rabbis fell off, we might see them come to us, one after another, for
they are almost weary of waiting.
DCCCIX.
At Frankfort-on-the-Main there
are very many Jews; they have a whole street to themselves, of which every
house is filled with them. They are compelled to wear little yellow rings on
their coats, thereby to be known; they have no houses or grounds of their own,
only furniture; and, indeed, they can only lend money upon houses or grounds at
great hazard.
DCCCX.
I have studied the chief
passages of Scripture, that constitute the grounds upon which the Jews argue
against us; as where God said to Abraham: "I will make my covenant between
me and thee, and with thy seed after thee, in their generations, for an
everlasting covenant," etc. Here the Jews brag, as the papists do upon the
passage: "Thou art Peter." I would willingly bereave the Jews of this
bragging, by rejecting the law of Moses, so that they should not be able to
gainsay me. We have against them the prophet Jeremiah, where he says:
"Behold, the time cometh, saith the Lord, when I will make a new covenant
with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah, not as the covenant
which I made with their fathers," etc. "But this shall be the
covenant which I will make with the house of Israel; after this time, saith the
Lord, I will give my laws into their hearts, and will write it in their
minds," etc.
Here, surely the Jews must
yield, and say: the law of Moses continued but for awhile, therefore it must be
abolished. But the covenant of the circumcision, given before Moses time, and
made between God and Abraham, and his seed Isaac in his generation, they say,
must and shall be an everlasting covenant, which they will not suffer to be
taken from them.
And though Moses himself
rejects their circumcising of the flesh, and presses upon the circumcising of
the heart, yet, nevertheless, they boast of that everlasting covenant out of
God's Word; and when they admit that the circumcision justifies not, yet,
nevertheless, say they, it is an everlasting covenant, thinking it is a
covenant of works, therefore we must leave unto them their circumcision.
I, for my part, with all
God-fearing Christians, have this sure and strong comfort, that the
circumcision was to continue but for awhile, until Messiah came; when he came,
the commandment was at an end. Moses was wise; he kept himself within bounds,
for in all his four books after Genesis, he wrote nothing of physical
circumcision, but only of the circumcision of the heart. He dwells upon the
Sacrifices, the Sabbath, and showbread; but leaves this covenant of
circumcision quite out, making no mention thereof; as much as to say: "Tis
little to be regarded. If it had been of such importance and weight as the Jews
make it, he would doubtless have urged it accordingly. Again, in the Book of
Joshua, mention is made of the circumcising of the heart. The papists, however,
blind people, who know nothing at all of the Scriptures, are not able to
confute one argument of the Jews; theirs is truly a fearful blindness.
DCCCXI.
The verse in the 115th Psalm
is masterly: "He shall bless them that fear the Lord, both small and
great." Here the Holy Spirit is a fierce thunderclap against the proud,
boasting Jews and papists, who brag that they alone are God's people, and will
allow of none but of those that are of their church. But the Holy Ghost says:
The poor condemned people are also God's people, for God saved many of the
Gentiles without the law and circumcision, as without popedom.
The Jews see not that Abraham
was declared justified only through faith: Abraham believed God, and that was
imputed unto him for righteousness. God with circumcision confirmed his
covenant with this nation, but only for a certain time. True, the circumcision
of the Jews, before Christ's coming, had great majesty; but that they should
affirm that without it none are God's people, is utterly untenable. The Jews
themselves, in their circumcision, were rejected of God.
DCCCXII.
Christ drove the buyers and
sellers out of the Temple, not by any temporal authority, but by the
jurisdiction and power of the church, which authority every High Priest in the
Temple had. The glory of this Temple was great, that the whole world must
worship there. But God, out of special wisdom, caused this Temple to be
destroyed, to the end the Jews might be put to confusion, and no more brag and
boast thereof.
DCCCXIII.
There can be no doubt that of
old time many Jews took refuge in Italy and Germany, and settled there.
Cicero, the eloquent Gentile,
complains of the superstition of the Jews, and their multitude in Italy; we find
their footsteps throughout Germany. Here, in Saxony, many names of places speak
of them; Ziman, Damen, Resen, Sygretz, Schvitz, Pratha, Thablon. The Jews
inhabited Ratisbon a long time before the birth of Christ. At Cremona there are
but twenty-eight Christians. It was a mighty nation.
DCCCXIV.
The Jews read our books, and
thereout raise objections against us; `tis a nation that scorns and blasphemes
even as the lawyers, the papists, and adversaries do, taking out of our
writings the knowledge of our cause, and using the same as weapons against us.
But, God be praised, our cause has a sure, good and steadfast ground, namely,
God and His Word.
DCCCXV.
Two Jewish rabbis, named
Schamaria and Jacob, came to me at Wittenberg, desiring of me letters of safe conduct,
which I granted them, and they were well pleased; only they earnestly besought
me to omit thence the word Tola, that is, Jesus crucified; for they must
needs blaspheme the name Jesus. They said: `Tis most wonderful that so many
thousands of innocent people have been slaughtered, of whom no mention is made,
while Jesus, the crucified, must always be remembered.
DCCCXVI.
The Jews must be encountered
with strong arguments, as where Jeremiah speaks touching Christ: "Behold,
the days come, saith the Lord, that I will raise unto David a righteous branch,
and a king shall reign and prosper, and shall execute judgment and justice in
the earth; in his days Judah shall be saved, and Israel shall dwell safely, and
this is his name, whereby he shall be called, THE LORD OUR RIGHTEOUSNESS."
This argument the Jews are not able to solve; yet if they deny that this
sentence is spoken of Christ, they must show unto us another king, descended
from David, who should govern so long as the sun and moon endure, as the promises
of the prophets declare.
DCCCXVII.
Either God must be unjust, or
you, Jews, wicked and ungodly; for ye have been in misery and fearful exile, a
far longer time than ye were in the land of Canaan. Ye had not the Temple of
Solomon more than three hundred years, while ye have been hunted up and down
above fifteen hundred. At Babylon ye had more eminence than at Jerusalem, for
Daniel was a greater and more powerful prince at Babylon than either David or
Solomon at Jerusalem. The Babylonian captivity was unto you only a fatherly
rod, but this last punishment was your utter extermination. You have been,
above fifteen hundred years, a race rejected of God, without government,
without laws, without prophets, without temple. This argument ye cannot solve;
it strikes you to the ground like a thunderclap; ye can show no other reason
for your condition than your sins. The two rabbis, struck to the heart,
silenced, and convinced, forsook their errors, became converts, and the day
following, in the presence of the whole university at Wittenberg, were baptized
Christians.
The Jews hope that we shall
join them, because we teach and learn the Hebrew language, but their hope is
futile. `Tis they must accept of our religion, and of the crucified Christ, and
overcome all their objections, especially that of the alteration of the
Sabbath, which sorely annoys them, but `twas ordered by the apostles, in honor
of the Lord's resurrection.
DCCCXVIII.
There are sorcerers among the
Jews, who delight in tormenting Christians, for they hold us as dogs. Duke
Albert of Saxony well punished one of these wretches. A Jew offered to sell him
a talisman, covered with strange characters, which he said effectually
protected the wearer against any sword or dagger thrust. The duke replied:
"I will essay thy charm upon thyself, Jew," and putting the talisman
round the fellow's neck, he drew his sword and passed it through his body.
"Thou feelest, Jew!" said he, "how `twould have been with me,
had I purchased thy talisman?"
DCCCXIX.
The Jews having various
stories about a king of Bassan, whom they call Og; they say he had lifted a
great rock to throw at his enemies, but God had made a hole in the middle, so
that it slipped down upon the giant's neck, and he could never rid himself of
it. `Tis a fable, like the rest of the stories about him, but, perhaps, bears a
hidden moral, as the fables of Esop do, for the Jews had some very wise men
among them.
DCCCXX.
The destruction of Jerusalem
was a fearful thing; the fate of all other monarchies, of Sodom, of Pharaoh,
the captivity of Babylon, were as nothing in comparison; for this city had been
God's habitation, his garden and bed; as the Psalm says: "Here will I
dwell, for I have chosen her," etc. There was the law, the priesthood, the
temple, there had flourished David, Solomon, Isaiah, etc.; many prophets were
there interred, so that the Jews had just cause to boast of their privileges.
What are we poor miserable folk - what is Rome, compared with Jerusalem? But
the Jews are so hardened that they listen to nothing; though overcome by
testimonies, they yield not an inch. `Tis a pernicious race, oppressing all men
by their usury and rapine. If they give a prince or a magistrate a thousand
florins, they exhort twenty thousand from the subjects in payment. We must keep
on our guard against them. They think to render homage to God by injuring the
Christians, and yet we employ their physicians; `tis a tempting of God. They
have haughty prayers, wherein they praise and call upon God, as if they alone
were his people, cursing and condemning all other nations, relying on the 23d
Psalm: "The Lord is my shepherd, I shall lack nothing." As if that
psalm were written exclusively concerning them.
DCCCXXI.
`Tis a vain boasting the Jews
make of their privileges, after a lapse of above fifteen hundred years. During
the seventy years, when they were captives at Babylon, they were so confused
and mingled together, that even then they hardly knew out of what tribe each
was descended. How should it be now, when they have been so long hunted and
driven about by the Gentiles, whose soldiers spared neither their wives nor
their daughters, so that now they are, as it were, all bastards, none of them
knowing out of what tribe he is. In 1537, when I was at Frankfort, a great
rabbi said to me: My father had read very much, and waited for the coming of
the Messiah, but at last he fainted, and out of hope said: As our Messiah has
not come in fifteen hundred years, most certainly Christ Jesus must be he.
DCCCXXII.
The Jews above all other nations
had great privileges; they had the chief promises, the highest worship of God,
and a worship more pleasing to human nature than God's service of faith in the
New Testament. They agree better with the Turks than with the Christians; for
both Jews and Turks concur in this, that there is but only one God; they cannot
understand that three persons should be in one divine substance. They are also
agreed as to bathings and washings, circumcision, and other external
worshippings and ceremonies.
The Jews had excelling men
among them, as Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, David, Daniel, Samuel, Paul, etc.
Who can otherwise than grieve that so great and glorious a nation should so
lamentably be destroyed? The Latin church had no excelling men and teachers,
but Augustine; and the churches of the east none but Athanasius, and he was
nothing particular; therefore, we are twigs grafted into the right tree. The
prophets call the Jews, especially those of the line of Abraham, a fair switch,
out of which Christ himself came.
DCCCXXIII.
In the porch of a church at
Cologne there is a statue of a dean, who, in the one hand, holds a cat, and in
the other a mouse. This dean had been a Jew, but was baptized, and became a
Christian. He ordered this statue to be set up after his death, to show, that a
Jew and a Christian agree as little as a cat and a mouse. And truly, they hate
us Christians as they do death; it galls them to see us. If I were master of
the country, I would not allow them to practice usury.
DCCCXXIV.
The Jews knew well that
Messiah was to come, and that they were to hear him, but they would not be
persuaded that our Jesus was the Messiah. They thought that the Messiah would
leave all things as he found them; but when they saw that Christ took a course
contrary to their expectation, they crucified him: yet they boast of themselves
as being God's people.
DCCCXXV.
A Jew came to me at
Wittenberg, and said: He was desirous to be baptized, and made a Christian, but
that he would first go to Rome to see the chief head of Christendom. From this
intention, myself, Philip Melancthon, and other divines, labored to dissuade
him, fearing lest, when he witnessed the offences and knaveries at Rome, he
might be scared from Christendom. But the Jew went to Rome, and when he had
sufficiently seen the abominations acted there, he returned to us again,
desiring to be baptized, and said: Now I will willingly worship the God of the
Christians for he is a patient God. If he can endure such wickedness and
vallany as is done at Rome, he can suffer and endure all the vices and
knaveries of the world.
DCCXXVI.
The Turk is a crafty and
subtle enemy, who wars not only with great power and boldness, but also with
stratagem and deceit; he makes his enemies faint and weary, keeping them waking
with frequent skirmishes, seldom fighting a complete battle, unless he have
tolerable certainty of victory. Otherwise, when a battle is offered him, he
trots away, depending on his stratagems.
DCCCXXVII.
The power of the Turk is very
great; he keeps in his pay, all the year through, hundreds of thousands of
soldiers. He must have more than two millions of florins annual revenue. We are
far less strong in our bodies, and are divided out among different masters, all
opposed the one to the other, yet we might conquer these infidels with only the
Lord's prayer, if our own people did not spill so much blood in religious
quarrels, and in persecuting the truths contained in that prayer. God will punish
us as he punished Sodom and Gomorrah, but I would fain `twere by the hand of
some pious potentate, and not by that of the accursed Turk.
DCCCXXVIII.
They say the famine in the
Turkish camp, before Vienna, was so great that a loaf of bread fetched its weight
in gold, whereas Vienna and the archduke's army had all things in abundance.
This victory is evidently the work of God. The Turk had sworn to conquer
Germany within the year, and had unfurled a consecrated standard, but he was
put to the rout without accomplishing anything of importance.
DCCCXXIX.
On the last day of July, 1539,
came news that the king of Persia had invaded the states of the Turk, and that
the latter had been obliged to withdraw his forces from Wallachia. Dr. Luther
said: I greatly admire the power of the king of Persia, who can measure his
strength with an enemy so formidable as the Turk. Truly, these are two mighty
empires. Yet Germany could well withstand the Turks if she would keep up a
standing army of fifty thousand foot, and ten thousand horse, so that the
losses by a defeat might be at once repaired. The Romans triumphed over all
their enemies, by keeping constantly on foot forty-two legions of six thousand
men each, disciplined troops, practiced in war.
DCCCXXX.
News came from Torgau that the
Turks had led out into the great square at Constantinople twenty-three
Christian prisoners, who, on their refusing to apostatize, were beheaded. Dr.
Luther said: Their blood will cry up to heaven against the Turks, as that of
John Huss did against the papists. `Tis certain, tyranny and persecution will
not avail to stifle the Word of Jesus Christ. It flourishes and grows in blood.
Where one Christian is slaughtered, a host of others arise. `Tis not on our
walls or our arquebusses I rely for resisting the Turk, but upon the Pater
Noster. `Tis that will triumph. The Decalogue is not, of itself,
sufficient. I said to the engineers at Wittenberg: Why strengthen your walls -
they are trash; the walls with which a Christian should fortify himself are
made, not of stone and mortar, but of prayer and faith.
DCCCXXXI.
The Turks are the people of
the wrath of God. `Tis horrible to see their contempt of marriage. `Twas not so
with the Romans.
DCCCXXXII.
Let us repent, pray, and await
the Lord's will, for human defense and help is all too weak. Five years since,
the emperor was well able to resist the Turks, when he had levied a great army
of horse and foot, out of the whole empire, Italians and Germans. But then he
would not; therefore, meantime, many good people were butchered by the Turks.
Ah, loving God, what is this life, but death! there is nothing but death, from
the cradle unto old age. I fear all things go not right; the tyranny and pride
of the Spaniards, doubtless, will give us over to the Turks, and make us
subject to them. There is great treachery somewhere. I doubt the twenty
thousand men, and the costly pieces of double cannon are willfully betrayed to
the Turk. It is not usual to carry such great pieces of ordnance into the
field. The emperor Maximilian kept them safe at Vienna. It seems to me, as
though he had said to the Turk: take these pieces of ordnance as a present;
slay and destroy all that cannot escape. This expedition has an aspect of
treachery; for while our men slumber, the Turk constantly watches, attempting
all he can, both with open power and with secret practices.
If the Turk were to cause
proclamation to be made, that every man should be free from taxation and
tribute for the space of three years, the common people would joyfully yield to
him. But when he had got them into his claws, he would make use of his tyranny,
as his custom is, for he takes the third son from every man; he is always
father of the third child. Truly, it is a great tyranny, which chiefly concerns
the princes of the empire themselves. I ever held the emperor in suspicion, yet
he can deeply dissemble. I have almost despaired of him, since he opposed the
known truth, which he heard at the Diet at Augsburg. The verse in the second
Psalm holds ever good: "Why do the heathen so furiously rage together, and
why do the people imagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth stand up, and
the rulers take counsel together, against the Lord, and against his
anointed," etc. David complained thereof, Christ felt it, the apostles
lamented it; we feel it too. `Twas therefore St Paul said: "Not many wise
even after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are called." Let us
call upon God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ; let us pray, for it is high
time.
DCCCXXXIII.
The admirable great constancy
of John, prince elector of Saxony, is worthy of everlasting memory and praise;
who personally and steadfastly held over the pure doctrine of the Gospel at the
imperial diet at Augsburg, 1530. And, unhappily, Germany is a prey to discord
all this time. See how furious a hate the papists bear to the partisans of the
Gospel. They have put their faith in the emperor against us, but they will come
to confusion. A certain count had a great bonfire lighted in the night, when he
learned the arrival of the emperor in Germany; and a popish priest, near
Eisenach, said, he would bet all the cows he should have in the year, that
Martin Luther and his adherents would be hanged before Michaelmas. These
fellows thought it only needed for the emperor to march against the Lutherans,
and they cherished horrible projects; but they were finely disappointed.
The emperor of the Turks
maintains great pomp in his court. You have to traverse three vestibules before
you reach the apartment wherein he sits. In the first vestibule are twelve
chained lions; in the second, an equal number of panthers. He has under his
rule very rich and populous countries; even within the last ten years, the
number of his subjects has greatly increased.
The 21st of December, 1536,
George, marquis of Brandenburg came to Wittenberg, and announced that the Turks
had obtained a great victory over the Germans, whose fine army had been
betrayed and massacred; he said that many princes and brave captains had
perished, and that such Christians as remained prisoners, had been treated with
extreme cruelty, their noses being slit, and themselves used most scornfully.
Luther said: We, Germans, must consider hereupon that God's anger is at our
gates, that we should hasten to repentance while there is yet time; by degrees,
he subjugated the Saracens, who before were the lords of Syria, Asia, the Land
of Promise, Assyria, Greece, and a portion of Spain. These Solyman utterly
overthrew and well nigh annihilated. `Tis thus God plays with kingdoms, as in
Isaiah, it is threatened: "I the Lord am a strong God over kingdoms; whoso
sinneth I destroy." The Venetians made no resistance. They are effeminate
and pretend not to be warriors. `Tis wonderful what progress the Turk has made
in the last hundred years, yet that is nothing in comparison with the progress
the Roman empire made in fifty years, though, during twenty-three years of the
fifty, it had to maintain a terrible war with Hannibal. Such was its aggrandizement,
that Scipio declared it advisable that in the public prayers the petition for
extended domination should be omitted, it being his opinion that now they had
better see to the taking care of what they had got. Yet God overthrew this
mighty empire by the hands of barbarians.
DCCCXXXV.
The elector of Saxony wrote to
Dr. Luther that the Turks had gained a great victory. Cazianus, Ungnad,
Schlick, had all been brided by the enemy, and their names were now placarded
all over Vienna, as condemned traitors. These generals led the German army
close to the Turkish camp; a Christian who had made his escape from the
infidels, cane and warned them to be on their guard, but they treated his
counsel with contumely. When the enemy approached, these traitors took to flight,
with the cavalry, abandoning the infantry to slaughter. The Turks next feigned
a retreat, whereupon the Christian generals ordered the cavalry, eleven hundred
in number, to return to the charge, but the Turks surrounding them, cut them in
pieces also. Cazianus had received eighteen thousand ducats from the Turks
through a Jew, to betray the Christian army, and had promised to deliver the
king himself into the enemies hands. Luther, on hearing this news, said: Auri
sacra fames, quid non mortalia pectora cogis? This traitor must
everlastingly burn in hell. I would not betray a dog. I much fear it will go
ill with Ferdinand, who has allowed so great an army to be thrust into the
throat of the Turk, by the hands of a perjured Mameluke, who heretofore fell from
the Turk to the Christians, and now has fallen again from the Christians to the
Turk.
Our princes and rulers ought
to march in person against the enemy, and not have him thus encountered; the
Turk is not to be condemned. Truly, we Germans are jolly fellows; we eat, and
drink, and game at our ease, wholly heedless of the Turk. Germany has been a
fine and noble country, but `twill be said of her, as of Troy, fuit Llium.
Let us pray to God, that, amidst such calamities, he will preserve our
consciences. I dread lest the money and forces of Germany become exhausted, for
then, perforce, we must yield to the Turk. They reproach me with all this; me,
unhappy Martin Luther. They reproach me, too, with the revolt of the peasants,
and with the sacramentarian sects, as though I had been their author. Often
have I felt disposed to throw the keys before God's foot.
The Turks pretend, despite the
Holy Scriptures, that they are the chosen people of God, as descendants of
Ishmael. They say that Ishmael was the true son of the promise, for that when
Issac was about to be sacrificed, he fled from his father, and from the
slaughter knife, and, meanwhile, Ishmael came and truly offered himself to be
sacrificed, whence he became the child of the promise; as gross a lie as that
of the papists concerning one kind in the sacrament. The Turks make a boast of
being very religious, and treat all other nations as idolaters. They
slanderously accuse the Christians of worshipping three gods. They swear by one
only God, creator of heaven and earth, by his angels, by the four evangelists,
and by the eighty heaven-descended prophets, of whom Mohammed is the greatest.
They reject all images and pictures, and render homage to God alone. They pay
the most honorable testimony to Jesus Christ, saying that he was a prophet of
preeminent sanctity, born of the Virgin Mary, and an envoy from God, but that
Mohammed succeeded him, and that while Mohammed sits, in heaven, on the right
hand of the Father, Jesus Christ is seated on his left. The Turks have retained
many features of the law of Moses, but, inflated with the insolence of victory,
they have adopted a new worship; for the glory of warlike triumphs is, in the
opinion of the world, the greatest of all.
Luther complained of the
emperor Charles negligence, who, taken up with other wars, suffered the Turk to
capture one place after another. `Tis with the Turks as heretofore with the
Romans, every subject is a soldier, as long as he is able to bear arms, so they
have always a disciplined army ready for the field; whereas we gather together
ephemeral bodies of vagabonds, untried wretches, upon whom is no dependence. My
fear is, that the papists will unite with the Turks to exterminate us. Please
God, my anticipation come not true, but certain it is, that the desperate
creatures will do their best to deliver us over to the Turks.
DCCCXXXVI.
Luther wrote a letter to the
emperor's chief general in Hungary, admonishing him that he had against him
four powerful enemies; he had not only to do with flesh and blood, but with the
devil, with the Turk, with God's wrath, with our own sins; therefore he should
remember to humble himself and to call upon God to help.
Luther heard that the emperor
Charles had sent into Austria eighteen thousand Spaniards against the Turk.
Whereupon he sighed, and said: `Tis a sign of the last day when those cruel
nations, the Spaniards and Turks, are to be our masters: I would rather have
the Turks for enemies than the Spaniards for protectors; for, barbarous tyrants
as they are, most of the Spaniards are half Moors, half Jews, fellows who
believe nothing at all.
The great hope I have is, that
the Turkish empire will be brought to an end by intestine dissensions, as it
has been with all the kingdoms of the world, the Persian, the Chaldean, the
Alexandrian, the Roman: I hope the four brothers, the son of the great Turk,
will dispute the sovereignty among themselves. Whoso climbs high, is in danger
to fall; the best swimmer may be drowned. If it be the will of God, though the
Turk has climbed high, he may fall to pieces in a moment.
DCCCXXXVII.
The Turk will go to Rome, as
Daniel's prophecy announces, and then the last day will not be very distant.
Germany must be chastised by the Turks. I often reflect with sorrow, how
utterly Germany neglects all good counsel. Victory, however, depends not on
ourselves. There is a time for conquering the Turks, and a time for being
conquered. The king of France long exalted himself in his pride, but in the end
he was abased and made captive. The pope long despised God and man, but he too
is fallen. They say the pope lately celebrated the circumcision of four of his
sons, and invited the great khan, the king of Persia, and the chiefs of the
Venetians, to the ceremony. He is extremely venerated by his subjects. He gives
the people a passport, called vich, the bearer of which passes safely
throughout the Turkish dominions, and is freely lodged wherever he goes.
DCCCXXXVIII.
Our Lord God deals with
countries and cities, as I do with an old hedge-stick, when it displeases me; I
pluck it up and burn it, and stick another in its stead.
DCCCXXXIX.
Tacitus describes German very
well. He highly extols the Germans, by reason of their adherence to promises,
especially in the state of matrimony, in which particular they excelled all
other nations. In former times it stood well with Germany but now the people
are fallen from virtue, and become rude, proud, and insolent.
DCCCXL.
The best days were before the
deluge, when the people lived long, were moderate in eating and drinking,
beheld God's creature with diligence, celestial and terrestrial, without
wasting, warring, or debate; then a fresh, cool spring of water was more sweet,
acceptable, and better relished, than costly wines.
DCCCXLI.
Germany is like a brave and
gallant horse, highly fed, but without a good rider; as the horse runs here and
there, astray, unless he have a rider to rule him, so Germany is also a
powerful, rich, and brave country, but needs a good head and governor.
DCCCXLII.
This constant change in the
fashion of dress will produce also an alteration of government and manners; we
attend too much to these things. Emperor Charles frequently says: the Germans
learn of the Spaniards to steal, and the Spaniards learn of the Germans to
swill.
DCCCXLIII.
Venice is the richest of
cities. She has two kingdoms, Cyprus and Candia. Candia once was full of
robbers, for six hundred ruined merchants had fled thither. As the island is
very hilly, they were not able, by force, to get rid of these robbers, so the
Veneitans made proclamation that they would receive all the robbers again to
favor, upon condition that each should bring to them the head of a fellow
robber. By which means, one wretch being snapped by another, the island was cleared
of these vipers. `Twas a good and wise council. Venice respects neither decency
nor honor; she seeks only her own profit, is always neutral, hanging the cloak
according to the wind. Now they hold with the Turk, ere long they will be for
the emperor; what party has victory, has them.
DCCCXLIV.
Bembo, an exceeding learned
man, who had thoroughly investigated Rome, said: Rome is a filthly, stinking
puddle, full of the wickedest wretches in the world; and he wrote thus: "Vivere
qui sancte vultus, discedite Roma, Omnia hic ecce licent, non licet esse
probum."
DCCCXLV.
In the time of Leo X., there
were in an Augustine convent at Rome, two monks, who revolted at the horrible
wickedness of the papists, and, in their sermons, found fault with the pope. In
the night, two assassins were introduced into their cells, and next morning
they were found dead, their tongues cut out, and stuck on their backs. Whoso in
Rome is heard to speak against the pope, either gets a sound strappado or has
his throat cut; for the pope's name is Noti me tangere.
DCCCXLVI.
When I was at Rome, they
showed me, for a precious holy relic, the halter wherewith Judas hanged
himself. Let us bear this in mind, and consider in what ignorance our
forefathers were.
DCCCXLVII.
When they who have the office
of teaching, joy not therein, that is, have not regard to him that called and
sent them; it is, for them, an irksome work. Truly, I would not take the wealth
of the whole world, now to begin the work gainst the pope, which thus far I
have wrought, by reason of the exceeding heavy care and anguish wherewith I
have been burthened. Yet, when I look upon him that called me thereunto, I
would not for the world's wealth, but that I had begun it. It is much to be
lamented, that no man is content and satisfied with that which God gives him in
his vocation and calling. Other men's conditions please us more than our own;
as the heathen said: - "Fertilior seges est alienis semper in agris,
Vicinumque pecus grandius uber habet."
And another heathen: - Optat
ephippia bos piger, optat arare caballus." The more we have the more
we want. To serve God is for every one to remain in his vocation and calling,
be it ever so mean and simple.
DCCCXLVIII.
It is said, occasion has a
forelock, but is bald behind. Our Lord has taught this by the course of nature.
A farmer must sow his barley and oats about Easter; if he defer it to
Michaelmas, it were too late. When apples are ripe they must be plucked from
the tree, or they are spoiled. Procrastination is as bad as overhastiness.
There is my servant Wolf: when four or five birds fall upon the bird net, he
will not draw it, but says: O, I will stay until more come, then they all fly
away, and he gets none. Occasion is a great matter. Terence says well: I came
intime, which is the chief thing of all. Julius Caesar understood occasion;
Pompey and Hannibal did not. Boys at school understand it not, therefore they
must have fathers and masters, with the rod to hold them thereto, that they
neglect not time, and lose it. Many a young fellow has a school stipend for six
or seven years, during which he ought diligently to study; he has his tutors,
and other means, but he thinks: O, I have time enough yet. But I say: No,
fellow. What little Jack learns not, great John learns not. Occasion salutes
thee, and reaches out her forelock to thee, saying: "Here I am, take hold
of me;" thou thinkest she will come again. Then says she: Well, seeing
thou wilt not take hold of my top, take hold of my tail; and therewith flings
away.
Bonaventura was but a poor
sophist, yet he could say: He that neglects occasion is of it neglected, and
`tis a saying with us: Take hold of time, while `tis time, and now, while `tis
now. Our emperor Charles understood not occasion, when he took the French king
prisoner before Pavia, in 1525; nor afterwards, when he got into his hands pope
Clement, and had taken Rome in 1527; nor in 1529, when he almost got hold of
the great Turk before Vienna. `Twas monstrous negligence for a monarch to have
in his hands his three great enemies, and yet let them go.
DCCCXLIX.
Germany would be much richer
than she is, if such store of velvets and silks were not worn, nor so much
spice used, or so much beer drunk. But young fellows without their liquor have no
mirth at all; gaming makes not merry, nor lasciviousness, so they apply
themselves to drinking. At the princely jollification lately held at Torgau,
each man drank, at one draught, a whole bottle of wine; this they called a good
drink. Tacitus wrote, that by the ancient Germans it was held no shame at all
to drink and swill four and twenty hours together. A gentleman of the court
asked: How long ago it was since Tacitus wrote this? He was answered, about
fifteen hundred years. Whereupon the gentleman said: Forasmuch as drunkenness
has been so ancient a custom, and of such a long descent, let us not abolish
it.
THE END [1] The cause of the captain's commitment was his
pressing the Lord Treasurer for arrears of pay.
[2] The identity of antichrist with the pope had
already been asserted by John Huss, in his De Anatomia Antichristi.