The Apology [Defense] of the Augsburg Confession
Article
XXI (IX): Of the Invocation of Saints.
1] The Twenty-first Article they absolutely condemn, because
we do not require the invocation of saints. Nor on any topic do they speak
more eloquently and with more prolixity. Nevertheless they do not effect
anything else than that the saints should be honored; likewise, that the
saints who live pray for others; as though, indeed, the invocation of dead
saints were on that account necessary. 2] They cite Cyprian, because
he asked Cornelius while yet alive to pray for his brothers when departing.
By this example they prove the invocation of the dead. They quote also
Jerome against Vigilantius. "On this field" [in this matter], they say,
"eleven hundred years ago, Jerome overcame Vigilantius." Thus the adversaries
triumph, as though the war were already ended. Nor do those asses see that
in Jerome, against Vigilantius, there is not a syllable concerning invocation.
He speaks concerning honors for the saints, not concerning invocation.
3]
Neither have the rest of the ancient writers before Gregory made mention
of invocation. Certainly this invocation, with these opinions which the
adversaries now teach concerning the application of merits, has not the
testimonies of the ancient writers.
4] Our Confession approves honors to the saints. For here a threefold
honor is to be approved. The first is thanksgiving. For we ought to give
thanks to God because He has shown examples of mercy; because He has shown
that He wishes to save men; because He has given teachers or other gifts
to the Church. And these gifts, as they are the greatest, should be amplified,
and the saints themselves should be praised, who have faithfully used these
gifts, just as Christ praises faithful businessmen, 5] Matt. 25,
21. 23. The second service is the strengthening of our faith; when we see
the denial forgiven Peter, we also are encouraged to believe the more that
grace6]truly
superabounds over sin, Rom. 5, 20. The third honor is the imitation,
first, of faith, then of the other virtues, which every one should imitate
according to his calling. 7] These true honors the adversaries do
not require. They dispute only concerning invocation, which, even though
it would have no danger, nevertheless is not necessary.
8] Besides, we also grant that the angels pray for us. For there
is a testimony in Zech. 1, 12, where an angel prays: O Lord of hosts,
how
long wilt Thou not have mercy on 9]Jerusalem? Although
concerning the saints we concede that, just as, when alive, they pray for
the Church universal in general, so in heaven they pray for the Church
in general, albeit no testimony concerning the praying of the dead is extant
in the Scriptures, except the dream taken from the Second Book of Maccabees,
15, 14.
Moreover, even supposing that the saints pray for the Church ever so
much, 10] yet it does not follow that they are to be invoked; although
our Confession affirms only this, that Scripture does not teach the invocation
of the saints, or that we are to ask the saints for aid. But since neither
a command, nor a promise, nor an example can be produced from the Scriptures
concerning the invocation of saints, it follows that conscience can have
nothing concerning this invocation that is certain. And since prayer ought
to be made from faith, how do we know that God approves this invocation?
Whence do we know without the testimony of Scripture that the saints perceive
the prayers of each one? 11] Some plainly ascribe divinity to the
saints, namely, that they discern the silent thoughts of the minds in us.
They dispute concerning morning and evening knowledge, perhaps because
they doubt whether they hear us in the morning or the evening. They invent
these things, not in order to treat the saints with honor, but to defend
lucrative services. 12] Nothing can be produced by the adversaries
against this reasoning, that, since invocation does not have a testimony
from God's Word, it cannot be affirmed that the saints understand our invocation,
or, even if they understand it, that God approves it. Therefore 13]
the adversaries ought not to force us to an uncertain matter, because a
prayer without faith is not prayer. For when they cite the example of the
Church, it is evident that this is a new custom in the Church; for although
the old prayers make mention of the saints, yet they do not invoke the
saints. Although also this new invocation in the Church is dissimilar to
the invocation of individuals.
14] Again, the adversaries not only require invocation in the
worship of the saints, but also apply the merits of the saints to others,
and make of the saints not only intercessors, but also propitiators. This
is in no way to be endured. For here the honor belonging only to Christ
is altogether transferred to the saints. For they make them mediators and
propitiators, and although they make a distinction between mediators of
intercession
and mediators [the Mediator] of redemption, yet they plainly make
of the saints mediators of redemption. 15] But even that they are
mediators of intercession they declare without the testimony of Scripture,
which, be it said ever so reverently, nevertheless obscures Christ's office,
and transfers the confidence of mercy due Christ to the saints. For men
imagine that Christ is more severe and the saints more easily appeased,
and they trust rather to the mercy of the saints than to the mercy of Christ,
and fleeing from Christ [as from a tyrant], they seek the saints. Thus
they actually make of them mediators of redemption.
16] Therefore we shall show that they truly make of the saints,
not only intercessors, but propitiators, i.e., mediators of redemption.
Here we do not as yet recite the abuses of the common people [how manifest
idolatry is practised at pilgrimages]. We are still speaking of the opinions
of the Doctors. As regards the rest, even the inexperienced [common people]
can judge.
17] In a propitiator these two things concur. In the first place,
there ought to be a word of God from which we may certainly know that God
wishes to pity, and hearken to, those calling upon Him through this propitiator.
There is such a promise concerning Christ, John 16, 23: Whatsoever ye
shall ask the Father in My name, He will give it you. Concerning
the saints there is no such promise. Therefore consciences cannot be firmly
confident that by the invocation of saints we are heard. This invocation,
therefore, 18] is not made from faith. Then we have also the command
to call upon Christ, according to Matt. 11, 28: Come unto Me,
all
ye that labor, etc., which certainly is said also to us. And Isaiah
says, 11, 10: In that day there shall be a root of Jesse, which
shall stand for an ensign to the people; to it shall the Gentiles seek.
And Ps. 45, 12: Even the rich among the people shall entreat Thy favor.
And Ps. 72, 11. 15: Yea, all kings shall fall down before Him.
And shortly after: Prayer also shall be made for Him continually.
And in John 5, 23 Christ says: That all men should honor the Son even
as they honor the Father. And Paul, 2 Thess. 2, 16. 17, says, praying:
Now
our Lord Jesus Christ Himself, and God, even our Father,
... comfort your hearts and stablish you. (All these passages refer
to Christ.] But concerning the invocation of saints, what commandment,
what example can the adversaries produce from the Scriptures? 19]
The second matter in a propitiator is, that his merits have been presented
as those which make satisfaction for others, which are bestowed by divine
imputation on others, in order that through these, just as by their own
merits, they may be accounted righteous. As when any friend pays a debt
for a friend, the debtor is freed by the merit of another, as though it
were by his own. Thus the merits of Christ are bestowed upon us, in order
that, when we believe in Him, we may be accounted righteous by our confidence
in Christ's merits as though we had merits of our own.
20] And from both, namely, from the promise and the bestowment
of merits, confidence in mercy arises [upon both parts must a Christian
prayer be founded]. Such confidence in the divine promise, and likewise
in the merits of Christ, ought to be brought forward when we pray. For
we ought to be truly confident, both that for Christ's sake we are heard,
and that by His merits we have a reconciled Father.
21] Here the adversaries first bid us invoke the saints, although
they have neither God's promise, nor a command, nor an example from Scripture.
And yet they cause greater confidence in the mercy of the saints to be
conceived than in that of Christ, although Christ bade us come to Him 22]
and not to the saints. Secondly, they apply the merits of the saints, just
as the merits of Christ, to others; they bid us trust in the merits of
the saints as though we were accounted righteous on account of the merits
of the saints, in like manner as we are accounted righteous by the merits
of Christ. Here we fabricate nothing. 23] In indulgences they say
that they apply the merits of the saints [as satisfactions for our sins].
And Gabriel, the interpreter of the canon of the Mass, confidently declares:
According
to the order instituted by God, we should betake ourselves to the
aid of the saints, in order that we may be saved by their merits
and vows. These are the words of Gabriel. And nevertheless, in the
books and sermons of the adversaries still more absurd things are read
here and there. What is it to make propitiators if this is not? They are
altogether made equal to Christ if we must trust that we are saved by their
merits.
24] But where has this arrangement, to which he refers when he
says that we ought to resort to the aid of the saints, been instituted
by God? Let him produce an example or command from the Scriptures. Perhaps
they derive this arrangement from the courts of kings, where friends must
be employed as intercessors. But if a king has appointed a certain intercessor,
he will not desire that cases be brought to him through others. Thus, since
Christ has been appointed Intercessor and High Priest, why do we seek others?
[What can the adversaries say in reply to this?]
25] Here and there this form of absolution is used: The passion
of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the merits of the most blessed Virgin
Mary and of all the saints, be to thee for the remission of sins.
Here the absolution is pronounced on the supposition that we are reconciled
and accounted righteous not only by the merits of Christ, but also by the
merits of the other saints.
26] Some of us have seen a doctor of
theology dying, for consoling whom a certain theologian, a monk, was employed.
He pressed on the dying man nothing but this prayer:
Mother of grace,
protect
us from the enemy; receive us in the hour of death
27] Granting that the blessed Mary prays for the Church, does
she receive souls in death, does she conquer death [the great power of
Satan], does she quicken? What does Christ do if the blessed Mary does
these things? Although she is most worthy of the most ample honors, nevertheless
she does not wish to be made equal to Christ, but rather wishes us to consider
and follow her example [the example of her faith and her humility]. 28]
But the subject itself declares that in public opinion the blessed Virgin
has succeeded altogether to the place of Christ. Men have invoked her,
have trusted in her mercy through her have desired to appease Christ, as
though He were not a Propitiator, but, only a dreadful judge and avenger.
29]
We believe, however, that we must not trust that the merits of the saints
are applied to us, that on account of these God is reconcile d to us, or
accounts us just, or saves us. For we obtain remission of sins only by
the merits of Christ, when we believe in Him. Of the other saints it has
been said, 1 Cor. 3, 8: Every man shall receive his own reward according
to his own labor, i.e., they cannot mutually bestow their own
merits, the one upon the other, as the monks sell the merits of their orders.
30]
Even Hilary says of the foolish virgins: And as the foolish virgins
could not go forth with their lamps extinguished,
they besought
those who were prudent to lend them oil; to whom they replied that they
could not give it because peradventure there might not be enough for all;
i.e., no one can be aided by the works and merits of another,
because
it is necessary for every one to buy oil for his own lamp. [Here he
points out that none of us can aid another by other people's works or merits.]
31] Since, therefore, the adversaries teach us to place confidence
in the invocation of saints, although they have neither the Word of God
nor the example of Scripture [of the Old or of the New Testament]; since
they apply the merits of the saints on behalf of others not otherwise than
they apply the merits of Christ, and transfer the honor belonging only
to Christ to the saints, we can receive neither their opinions concerning
the worship of the saints, nor the practise of invocation. For we know
that confidence is to be placed in the intercession of Christ, because
this alone has God's promise. We know that the merits of Christ alone are
a propitiation for us. On account of the merits of Christ we are accounted
righteous when we believe in Him, as the text says, Rom. 9, 33 (cf. 1 Pet.
2, 6 and Is. 28, 16): Whosoever believeth on Him shall not be confounded.
Neither are we to trust that we are accounted righteous by the merits of
the blessed Virgin or of the other saints.
32] With the learned this error also prevails, namely, that to
each saint a particular administration has been committed, that Anna bestows
riches [protects from poverty], Sebastian keeps off pestilence, Valentine
heals epilepsy, George protects horsemen. These opinions have clearly sprung
from heathen examples. For thus, among the Romans, Juno was thought to
enrich, Febris to keep off fever, Castor and Pollux to protect horsemen,
etc. 33] Even though we should imagine that the invocation of saints
were taught with the greatest prudence, yet since the example is most dangerous,
why is it necessary to defend it when it has no command or testimony from
God's Word? Aye, it has not even the testimony of the ancient writers.
34]
First because, as I have said above, when other mediators are sought in
addition to Christ, and confidence is put in others, the entire knowledge
of Christ is suppressed. The subject shows this. In the beginning, mention
of the saints seems to have been admitted with a design that is endurable,
as in the ancient prayers. Afterwards invocation followed, and abuses that
are prodigious and more than heathenish followed invocation. From invocation
the next step was to images; these also were worshiped, and a virtue was
supposed to exist in these, just as magicians imagine that a virtue exists
in images of the heavenly bodies carved at a particular time. In a certain
monastery we [some of us] have seen a statue of the blessed Virgin, which
moved automatically by a trick [within by a string], so as to seem either
to turn away from [those who did not make a large offering] or nod to those
making request.
35] Still the fabulous stories concerning the saints, which are
publicly taught with great authority, surpass the marvelous tales of the
statues and pictures. Barbara, amidst her torments, asks for the reward
that no one who would invoke her should die without the Eucharist. Another,
standing on one foot, recited daily the whole psaltery. Some wise man painted
[for children] Christophorus [which in German means Bearer of Christ],
in order by the allegory to signify that there ought to be great strength
of mind in those who would bear Christ, i.e., who would teach or
confess the Gospel, because it is necessary to undergo the greatest dangers
[for they must wade by night through the great sea, i.e., endure
all kinds of temptations and dangers]. Then the foolish monks taught among
the people that they ought to invoke Christophorus, as though such a Polyphemus
(such a giant who bore Christ through the sea] had once existed. And although
36]
the saints performed very great deeds, either useful to the state or affording
private examples, the remembrance of which would conduce much both toward
strengthening faith and toward following their example in the administration
of affairs, no one has searched for these from true narratives. [Although
God Almighty through His saints, as a peculiar people, has wrought many
great things in both realms, in the Church and in worldly transactions;
although there are many great examples in the lives of the saints which
would be very profitable to princes and lords, to true pastors and guardians
of souls, for the government both of the world and of the Church, especially
for strengthening faith in God, yet they have passed these by, and preached
the most insignificant matters concerning the saints, concerning their
hard beds, their hair shirts, etc., which, for the greater part, are falsehoods.]
Yet indeed it is of advantage to hear how holy men administered governments
[as in the Holy Scriptures it is narrated of the kings of Israel and Judah],
what calamities, what dangers they underwent, how holy men were of aid
to kings in great dangers, how they taught the Gospel, what encounters
they had with heretics. Examples of mercy are also of service, as when
we see the denial forgiven Peter, when we see Cyprian forgiven for having
been a magician, when we see Augustine, having experienced the power of
faith in sickness, steadily affirming that God truly hears the prayers
of believers. It was profitable that such examples as these, which contain
admonitions for either faith or fear or the administration of the state,
be recited. 37] But certain triflers, endowed with no knowledge
either of faith or for governing states, have invented stories in imitation
of poems, in which there are nothing but superstitious examples concerning
certain prayers, certain fastings, and certain additions of service for
bringing in gain [where there are nothing but examples as to how the saints
wore hair shirts, how they prayed at the seven canonical hours, how they
lived upon bread and water]. Such are the miracles that have been invented
concerning rosaries and similar ceremonies. Nor is there need here to recite
examples. For the legends, as they call them, and the mirrors of examples,
and the rosaries, in which there are very many things not unlike the true
narratives of Lucian, are extant.
38] The bishops, theologians, and monks applaud these monstrous
and wicked stories [this abomination set up against Christ, this blasphemy,
these scandalous, shameless lies, these lying preachers; and they have
permitted them so long, to the great injury of consciences, that it is
terrible to think of it] because they aid them to their daily bread. They
do not tolerate us, who, in order that the honor and office of Christ may
be more conspicuous, do not require the invocation of saints, and censure
the abuses in the worship, of saints. 39] And although [even their
own theologians], all good men everywhere [a long time before Dr. Luther
began to write] in the correction of these abuses, greatly longed for either
the authority of the bishops or the diligence of the preachers, nevertheless
our adversaries in the Confutation altogether pass, over vices that are
even manifest, as though they wish, by the reception of the Confutation,
to compel us to approve even the most notorious abuses.
40] Thus the Confutation has been deceitfully written, not only
on this topic, but almost everywhere. [They pretend that they are as pure
as gold, that they have never muddled the water.] There is no passage in
which they make a distinction between the manifest abuses and their dogmas.
And nevertheless, if there are any of sounder mind among them, they confess
that many false opinions inhere in the doctrine of the scholastics and
canonists, and, besides, that in such ignorance and negligence of the pastors
many abuses crept into the Church. 41] For Luther was not (the only
one nor] the first to complain of [innumerable] public abuses. Many learned
and excellent men long before these times deplored the abuses of the Mass,
confidence in monastic, observances, services to the saints intended to
yield a revenue, the confusion of the doctrine concerning repentance [concerning
Christ], which ought to be as clear and plain in the Church as possible
[without which there cannot be nor remain a Christian Church]. We ourselves
have heard that excellent theologians desire moderation in the scholastic
doctrine, which contains much more for philosophical quarrels than for
piety. And nevertheless, among these the older ones are generally nearer
Scripture than are the more recent. Thus their theology degenerated more
and more. Neither had many good men, who from the very first began to be
friendly to Luther, any other reason than that they saw that he was freeing
the minds of men from these labyrinths of most confused and infinite discussions
which exist among the scholastic theologians and canonists, and was teaching
things profit able for godliness.
42] The adversaries, therefore, have not acted candidly in passing
over the abuses when they wished us to assent to the Confutation. And if
they wished to care for the interests of the Church [and of afflicted consciences,
and not rather to maintain their pomp and avarice], especially on that
topic, at this occasion, they ought to exhort our most excellent Emperor
to take measures for the correction of abuses [which furnish grounds for
derision among the Turks, the Jews, and all unbelievers], as we observe
plainly enough that he is most desirous of healing and well-establishing
the Church. But the adversaries do not act so as to aid the most honorable
and most holy will of the Emperor, but so as in every way to crush (the
truth and] us. 43] Many signs show that they have little anxiety
concerning the state of the Church. [They lose little sleep from concern
that Christian doctrine and the pure Gospel be preached.] They take no
pains that there should be among the people a summary of the dogmas of
the Church. [The office of the ministry they permit to be quite desolate.)
They defend manifest abuses [they continue every day to shed innocent blood]
by new and unusual cruelty. They allow no suitable teachers in the churches.
Good men can easily judge whither these things tend. But in this way they
have no regard to the interest either of their own authority or of the
Church. For after the good teachers have been killed and sound doctrine
suppressed, fanatical spirits will rise up, whom the adversaries will not
be able to restrain, who both will disturb the Church with godless dogmas,
and will overthrow the entire ecclesiastical government, which we are very
greatly desirous of maintaining.
44] Therefore, most excellent Emperor Charles, for the sake of
the glory of Christ, which we have no doubt that you desire to praise and
magnify, we beseech you not to assent to the violent counsels of our adversaries,
but to seek other honorable ways of so establishing harmony that godly
consciences are not burdened, that no cruelty is exercised against innocent
men, as we have hitherto seen, and that sound doctrine is not suppressed
in the Church. To God most of all you owe the duty [as far as this is possible
to man] to maintain sound doctrine and hand it down to posterity, and to
defend those who teach what is right. For God demands this when He honors
kings with His own name and calls them gods, saying, Ps. 82, 6: I have
said, Ye are gods, namely, that they should attend to the preservation
and propagation of divine things, i.e., the Gospel of Christ, on
the earth, and, as the vicars of God, should defend the life and safety
of the innocent [true Christian teachers and preachers].
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