The Apology [Defense] of the Augsburg Confession
Article XVI: Of Political
Order.
53] The Sixteenth Article the adversaries receive without any
exception, in which we have confessed that it is lawful for the Christian
to bear civil office, sit in judgment, determine matters by the imperial
laws, and other laws in present force, appoint just punishments, engage
in just wars, act as a soldier, make legal contracts, hold property, take
an oath, when magistrates require it, contract marriage; finally, that
legitimate civil ordinances are good creatures of God and divine ordinances,
which a Christian can use with safety. 54] This entire topic concerning
the destruction between the kingdom of Christ and a political kingdom
has been explained to advantage [to the remarkably great consolation of
many consciences] in the literature of our writers, [namely] that the kingdom
of Christ is spiritual [inasmuch as Christ governs by the Word and by preaching],
to wit, beginning in the heart the knowledge of God, the fear of God and
faith, eternal righteousness, and eternal life; meanwhile it permits us
outwardly to use legitimate political ordinances of every nation in which
we live, just as it permits us to use medicine or 55] the art of
building, or food, drink, air. Neither does the Gospel bring new laws concerning
the civil state, but commands that we obey present laws, whether they have
been framed by heathen or by others, and that in this obedience we should
exercise love. For Carlstadt was insane in imposing upon us the judicial
laws of Moses. 56] Concerning these subjects, our theologians have
written more fully, because the monks diffused many pernicious opinions
in the Church. They called a community of property the polity of the Gospel;
they said that not to hold property, not to vindicate one's self at law
[not to have wife and child], were evangelical counsels. These opinions
greatly obscure the Gospel and the spiritual kingdom [so that it was not
understood at all what the Christian or spiritual kingdom of Christ is;
they concocted the secular kingdom with the spiritual, whence much trouble
and seditions, harmful teaching resulted], and are dangerous to the commonwealth.
57]
For the Gospel does not destroy the State or the family [buying, selling,
and other civil regulations], but much rather approves them, and bids us
obey them as a divine ordinance, not only on account of punishment, but
also on account of conscience.
58] Julian the Apostate, Celsus, and very many others made the
objection to Christians that the Gospel would rend asunder states, because
it prohibited legal redress, and taught certain other things not at all
suited to political association. And these questions wonderfully exercised
Origen, Nazianzen, and others, although, indeed, they can be most readily
explained, if we keep in mind the fact that the Gospel does not introduce
laws concerning the civil state, but is the remission of sins and the beginning
of a new life in the hearts of believers; besides, it not only approves
outward governments, but subjects us to them, Rom. 13, 1, just as we have
been necessarily placed under the laws of seasons, the changes of winter
and summer, as divine ordinances. [This is no obstacle to the spiritual
kingdom.] 59] The Gospel forbids private redress [in order that
no one should interfere with the office of the magistrate], and Christ
inculcates this so frequently with the design that the apostles should
not think that they ought to seize the governments from those who held
otherwise, just as the Jews dreamed concerning the kingdom of the Messiah,
but that they might know they ought to teach concerning the spiritual kingdom
that it does not change the civil state. Therefore private redress is prohibited
not by advice, but by a command, Matt. 5, 39; Rom. 12, 19. Public redress,
which is made through the office of the magistrate, is not advised against,
but is commanded, and is a work of God, according to Paul, Rom. 13, 1 sqq.
Now the different kinds of public redress are legal decisions, 60]
capital punishment, wars, military service. It is manifest how incorrectly
many writers have judged concerning these matters [some teachers have taught
such pernicious errors that nearly all princes, lords, knights, servants
regarded their proper estate as secular, ungodly, and damnable, etc. Nor
can it be fully expressed in words what an unspeakable peril and damage
has resulted from this to souls and consciences], because they were in
the error that the Gospel is an external, new, and monastic form of government,
and did not see that the Gospel brings eternal righteousness to hearts
[teaches how a person is redeemed, before God and in his conscience, from
sin, hell, and the devil], while it outwardly approves the civil state.
61] It is also a most vain delusion that it is Christian perfection
not to hold property. For Christian perfection consists not in the contempt
of civil ordinances, but in dispositions of the heart, in great fear of
God, in great faith, just as Abraham, David, Daniel, even in great wealth
and while exercising civil power, were no less 62] perfect than
any hermits. But the monks [especially the Barefoot monks] have spread
this outward hypocrisy before the eyes of men, so that it could not be
seen in what things true perfect ion exists. With what praises have they
brought forward this communion of property, as though it were 63]
evangelical! But these praises have the greatest danger, especially since
they differ much from the Scriptures. For Scripture does not command that
property be common, but the Law of the Decalog, when it says, Ex. 20, 15:
Thou shalt not steal, distinguishes rights of ownership, and commands each
one to hold what is his own. Wyclif manifestly was raging when he said
that priests were not allowed to hold property. 64] There are infinite
discussions concerning contracts, in reference to which good consciences
can never be satisfied unless they know the rule that it is lawful for
a Christian to make use of civil ordinances and laws. This rule protects
consciences when it teaches that contracts are lawful before God just to
the extent that the magistrates or laws approve them.
65] This entire topic concerning civil affairs has been so clearly
set forth by our theologians that very many good men occupied in the state
and in business have declared that they have been greatly benefited, who
before, troubled by the opinion of the monks, were in doubt as to whether
the Gospel allowed these civil offices and business. Accordingly, we have
recounted these things in order that those without also may understand
that by the kind of doctrine which we follow, the authority of magistrates
and the dignity of all civil ordinances are not undermined, but are all
the more strengthened [and that it is only this doctrine which gives true
instruction as to how eminently glorious an office, full of good Christian
works, the office of rulers is]. The importance of these matters was greatly
obscured previously by those silly monastic opinions, which far preferred
the hypocrisy of poverty and humility to the state and the family, although
these have God's command, while this Platonic communion [monasticism] has
not God's command.
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