The Apology [Defense] of the Augsburg Confession
Article
III: Of Love and the Fulfilling of the Law.
1] Here the adversaries urge against us: If thou wilt enter
into life, keep the commandments, Matt. 19, 17; likewise: The doers
of the Law shall be justified, Rom. 2, 13, and many other like things
concerning the Law and works. Before we reply to this, we must first declare
what
we believe concerning love and the fulfilling of the Law.
2] It is written in the prophet, Jer. 31, 33: I will put My
Law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts. And in Rom.
3, 31, Paul says: Do we, then, make void the Law through faith? God
forbid! Yea, we establish the Law. And Christ says, Matt. 19, 17: If
thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments. Likewise, 1 Cor.
13, 3: If I have not charity, it profiteth me nothing. 3]
These and similar sentences testify that the Law ought to be begun in us,
and be kept by us more and more [that we are to keep the Law when we have
been justified by faith, and thus increase more and more in the Spirit].
Moreover, we speak not of ceremonies, but of that Law which gives commandment
concerning the movements of the heart, namely, the Decalog. 4] Because,
indeed, faith brings the Holy Ghost, and produces in hearts a new life,
it is necessary that it should produce spiritual movements in hearts. And
what these movements are, the prophet, Jer. 31, 33 shows, when he says:
I will put My Law into their inward parts, and write it in their hearts.
Therefore, when we have been justified by faith and regenerated, we begin
to fear and love God, to pray to Him, to expect from Him aid, to give thanks
and praise Him, and to obey Him in afflictions. We begin also to love our
neighbors, because our hearts have spiritual and holy movements [there
is now, through the Spirit of Christ a new heart, mind, and spirit within].
5] These things cannot occur until we have been justified by
faith, and, regenerated, we receive the Holy Ghost: first, because the
Law cannot 6] be kept without [the knowledge of] Christ; and likewise
the Law cannot be kept without the Holy Ghost. But the Holy Ghost is received
by faith, according to the declaration of Paul, Gal. 3, 14: That we
might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith. 7] Then,
too, how can the human heart love God while it knows that He is terribly
angry, and is oppressing us with temporal and perpetual calamities? But
the Law always accuses us always, shows that God is angry. [Therefore,
what the scholastics say of the love of God is a dream.] 8] God
therefore is not loved until we apprehend mercy by faith. Not until then
does He become a lovable object.
9] Although, therefore, civil works, i.e., the outward
works of the Law, can be done, in a measure, without Christ and without
the Holy Ghost [from our inborn light], nevertheless it appears from what
we have said that those things which belong peculiarly to the divine Law,
i.e.,
the affections of the heart towards God, which are commanded in the first
table, cannot be rendered without the Holy Ghost. 10] But our adversaries
are fine theologians; they regard the second table and political works;
for the first table [in which is contained the highest theology, on which
all depends] they care nothing, as though it were of no matter: or certainly
they require only outward observances. They in no way consider the Law
that is eternal, and placed far above the sense and intellect of all creatures
[which concerns the very Deity, and the honor of the eternal Majesty],
Deut. 6, 5: Thou shalt love the Lord, thy God, with all thine heart.
[This they treat as such a paltry small matter as if it did not belong
to theology.]
11] But Christ was given for this purpose, namely, that for His
sake there might be bestowed on us the remission of sins, and the Holy
Ghost to bring forth in us new and eternal life, and eternal righteousness
[to manifest Christ in our hearts, as it is written John 16, 15: He
shall take of the things of Mine, and show them unto you. Likewise,
He works also other gifts, love, thanksgiving charity, patience, etc.].
Wherefore the Law cannot be truly kept unless the Holy Ghost be received
through faith. Accordingly, Paul says that the Law is established by
faith, and not made void; because the Law can only then be thus kept
when the Holy Ghost is given. 12] And Paul teaches 2 Cor. 3, 15
sq., the veil that covered the face of Moses cannot be removed except
by faith in Christ, by which the Holy Ghost is received. For he speaks
thus: But even unto this day, when Moses is read, the veil is upon their
heart. Nevertheless, when it shall turn to the Lord, the veil shall be
taken away. Now the Lord is that Spirit, and where the Spirit of
the Lord is, there is liberty. 13] Paul understands by the veil
the human opinion concerning the entire Law, the Decalog and the ceremonies,
namely, that hypocrites think that external and civil works satisfy the
Law of God, and that sacrifices and observances justify before God ex
opere operato. 14] But then this veil is removed from us, i.e.,
we are freed from this error when God shows to our hearts our uncleanness
and the heinousness of sin. Then, for the first time, we see that we are
far from fulfilling the Law. Then we learn to know how flesh, in security
and indifference, does not fear God, and is not fully certain that we are
regarded by God, but imagines that men are born and die by chance. Then
we experience that we do not believe that God forgives and hears us. But
when, on hearing the Gospel and the remission of sins, we are consoled
by faith, we receive the Holy Ghost so that now we are able to think aright
concerning God, and to fear and believe God, etc. From these facts it is
apparent that the Law cannot be kept without Christ and the Holy Ghost.
15] We, therefore, profess that it is necessary that the Law
be begun in us, and that it be observed continually more and more. And
at the same time we comprehend both spiritual movements and external good
works [the good heart within and works without].
Therefore the adversaries
falsely charge against us that our theologians do not teach good works
while they not only require these, but also show how they can be done
[that the heart must enter into these works, lest they be mere, lifeless,
cold works of hypocrites]. 16] The result convicts hypocrites, who
by their own powers endeavor to fulfil the Law, that they cannot accomplish
17]
what they attempt. [For are they free from hatred, envy, strife, anger,
wrath, avarice, adultery, etc.? Why, these vices were nowhere greater than
in the cloisters and sacred institutes.] For human nature is far too weak
to be able by its own powers to resist the devil, who holds as captives
all who have not been freed through faith. 18] There is need of
the power of Christ against the devil, namely, that, inasmuch as we know
that for Christ's sake we are heard, and have the promise, we may pray
for the governance and defense of the Holy Ghost, that we may neither be
deceived and err, nor be impelled to undertake anything contrary to God's
will. [Otherwise we should, every hour, fall into error and abominable
vices.] Just as Ps. 68, 18 teaches: Thou hast led captivity captive;
Thou hast received gifts for man. For Christ has overcome the devil,
and has given to us the promise and the Holy Ghost, in order that, by divine
aid, we ourselves also may overcome. And 1 John 3, 8: For this purpose
the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil.
19]
Again, we teach not only how the Law can be observed, but also how God
is pleased if anything be done, namely, not because we render satisfaction
to the Law, but because we are in Christ, as we shall say after a little.
It is, therefore, manifest that we require good works. 20] Yea,
we add also this, that it is impossible for love to God, even though it
be small, to be sundered from faith, because through Christ we come to
the Father, and the remission of sins having been received, we now are
truly certain that we have a God, i.e., that God cares for us; we
call upon Him, we give Him thanks, we fear Him, we love Him as 1 John 4,
19 teaches:
We love Him, because He first loved us, namely,
because He gave His Son for us, and forgave us our sins. Thus he indicates
that faith precedes and love follows. 21] Likewise the faith of
which we speak exists in repentance, i.e., it is conceived in the
terrors of conscience, which feels the wrath of God against our sins, and
seeks the remission of sins, and to be freed from sin. And in such terrors
and other afflictions this faith ought to grow and be strengthened. Wherefore
22]
it cannot exist in those who live according to the flesh who are delighted
by their own lusts and obey them. Accordingly, Paul says, Rom. 8, 1:
There
is, therefore, now no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus, who
walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. So, too 8, 12. 13:
We
are debtors, not to the flesh, to live after the flesh. For if ye live
after the flesh, ye shall die; but if ye, through the Spirit, do mortify
the deeds of the body, ye shall live. 23] Wherefore, the faith
which receives remission of sins in a heart terrified and fleeing from
sin does not remain in those who obey their desires, neither does it coexist
with mortal sin.
24] From these effects of faith the adversaries select one, namely,
love, and teach that love justifies. Thus it is clearly apparent that they
teach only the Law. They do not teach that remission of sins through faith
is first received. They do not teach of Christ as Mediator, that for Christ's
sake we have a gracious God, but because of our love. And yet, what the
nature of this love is they do not say, neither 25] can they say.
They proclaim that they fulfil the Law, although this glory belongs properly
to Christ; and they set against the judgment of God confidence in their
own works; for they say that they merit de condigno (according to
righteousness) grace and eternal life. This confidence is absolutely impious
and vain. For in this life we cannot satisfy the Law, because carnal nature
does not cease to bring forth wicked dispositions [evil inclination and
desire], even though the Spirit in us resists them.
26] But some one may ask: Since we also confess that love is
a work of the Holy Ghost, and since it is righteousness, because it is
the fulfilling of the Law, why do we not teach that it justifies? To this
we must reply: In the first place, it is certain that we receive remission
of sins, neither through our love, nor for the sake of our love, but for
Christ's sake, by faith alone. 27] Faith alone, which looks upon
the promise, and knows that for this reason it must be regarded as certain
that God forgives, because Christ has not died in vain, etc., overcomes
the terrors of sin and death. 28] If any one doubts whether sins
are remitted him, he dishonors Christ, since he judges that his sin is
greater or more efficacious than the death and promise of Christ; although
Paul says, Rom. 5, 20: Where sin abounded, grace did much more abound,
i.e., that mercy is 29] more comprehensive [more powerful, richer,
and stronger] than sin. If any one thinks that he obtains the remission
of sins because he loves, he dishonors Christ and will discover in God's
judgment that this confidence in his own righteousness is wicked and vain.
Therefore it is necessary that faith [alone] reconciles and 30]
justifies. And as we do not receive remission of sins through other virtues
of the Law, or on account of these, namely, on account of patience, chastity,
obedience towards magistrates, etc., and nevertheless these virtues ought
to follow, so, too, we do not receive remission of sins because of love
to God, although it is necessary that this should follow. 31] Besides,
the custom of speech is well known that by the same word we sometimes comprehend
by synecdoche the cause and effects. Thus in Luke 7, 47 Christ says: Her
sins, which are many, are forgiven, for she loved much . For Christ
interprets Himself [this very passage] when He adds: Thy faith hath
saved thee. Christ, therefore, did not mean that the woman, by that
work of love, had merited the remission of sins. For that is the reason
He says: Thy faith hath saved thee. 32] But faith is that
which freely apprehends God's mercy on account of God's Word [which relies
upon God's mercy and Word, and not upon one's own work]. If any one denies
that this is faith [if any one imagines that he can rely at the same time
upon God and his own works], he does not understand at all 33] what
faith is. [For the terrified conscience is not satisfied with its own works,
but must cry after mercy, and is comforted and encouraged alone by God's
Word.] And the narrative itself shows in this passage what that is which
He calls love. The woman came with the opinion concerning Christ that with
Him the remission of sins should be sought. This worship is the highest
worship of Christ. Nothing greater could she ascribe to Christ. To seek
from Him the remission of sins was truly to acknowledge the Messiah. Now,
thus to think of Christ, thus to worship Him, thus to embrace Him, is truly
to believe. Christ, moreover, employed the word "love" not towards the
woman, but against the Pharisee, because He contrasted the entire worship
of the Pharisee with the entire worship of the woman. He reproved the Pharisee
because he did not acknowledge that He was the Messiah, although he rendered
Him the outward offices due to a guest and a great and holy man. He points
to the woman and praises her worship, ointment, tears, etc., all of which
were signs of faith and a confession, namely, that with Christ she sought
the remission of sins. It is indeed a great example, which, not without
reason, moved Christ to reprove the Pharisee, who was a wise and honorable
man, but not a believer. He charges him with impiety, and admonishes him
by the example of the woman, showing thereby that it is disgraceful to
him, that, while an unlearned woman believes God, he, a doctor of the Law,
does not believe, does not acknowledge the Messiah, and does not seek from
Him remission of sins and salvation.
34] Thus, therefore, He praises
the entire worship [faith with its fruits, but towards the Pharisee He
names only the fruits which prove to men that there is faith in the heart],
as it often occurs in the Scriptures that by one word we embrace many things;
as below we shall speak at greater length in regard to similar passages,
such as Luke 11, 41: Give alms of such things as ye have; and, behold,
all things are clean unto you. He requires not only alms, but also
the righteousness of faith. Thus He here says: Her sins, which are many,
are forgiven, for she loved much, i.e., because she has truly worshiped
Me with faith and the exercises and signs of faith. He comprehends the
entire worship. Meanwhile He teaches this, that the remission of sins is
properly received by faith, although love, confession, and other good fruits
ought to follow. Wherefore He does not mean this, that these fruits are
the price, or are the propitiation, because of which the remission of sins,
which reconciles us to God, is given. 35] We are disputing concerning
a great subject, concerning the honor of Christ, and whence good minds
may seek for sure and firm consolation, whether confidence is to be placed
36]
in Christ or in our works. Now, if it is to be placed in our works, the
honor of Mediator and Propitiator will be withdrawn from Christ. And yet
we shall find, in God's judgment, that this confidence is vain, and that
consciences rush thence into despair. But if the remission of sins and
reconciliation do not occur freely for Christ's sake, but for the sake
of our love, no one will have remission of sins, unless when he has fulfilled
the entire Law, because the Law does not justify as long as it can accuse
us. 37] Therefore it is manifest that, since justification is reconciliation
for Christ's sake, we are justified by faith, because it is very certain
that by faith alone the remission of sins is received.
38] Now, therefore, let us reply to the objection which we have
above stated: [Why does love not justify anybody before God?] The adversaries
are right in thinking that love is the fulfilling of the Law, and obedience
to the Law is certainly righteousness. [Therefore it would be true that
love justifies us if we would keep the Law. But who in truth can say or
boast that he keeps the Law, and loves God as the Law has commanded? We
have shown above that God has made the promise of grace, because we cannot
observe the Law. Therefore Paul says everywhere that we cannot be justified
before God by the Law.] But they make a mistake in this that they think
that we are justified by the Law. [The adversaries have to fail at this
point, and miss the main issue, for in this business they only behold the
Law. For all men's reason and wisdom cannot but hold that we must become
pious by the Law, and that a person externally observing the Law is holy
and pious. But the Gospel faces us about, directs us away from the Law
to the divine promises, and teaches that we are not justified, etc.] Since,
however, we are not justified by the Law [because no person can keep it],
but receive remission of sins and reconciliation by faith for Christ's
sake, and not for the sake of love or the fulfilling of the Law, it follows
necessarily that we are justified by faith in Christ. [For before we fulfil
one tittle of the Law, there must be faith in Christ by which we are reconciled
to God and first obtain the remission of sin. Good God, how dare people
call themselves Christians or say that they once at least looked into or
read the books of the Gospel when they still deny that we obtain remission
of sins by faith in Christ? Why, to a Christian it is shocking merely to
hear such a statement.]
39] Again, [in the second place,] this fulfilling of the Law,
or obedience towards the Law, is indeed righteousness, when it is complete;
but in us it is small and impure. [For, although they have received the
first-fruits of the Spirit, and the new, yea, the eternal life has begun
in them, there still remains a remnant of sin and evil lust, and the Law
still finds much of which it must accuse us.] Accordingly, it is not pleasing
for its own sake, and is not accepted for its own sake. 40] But
although from those things which have been said above it is evident that
justification signifies not the beginning of the renewal, but the reconciliation
by which also we afterwards are accepted, nevertheless it can now be seen
much more clearly that the inchoate fulfilling of the Law does not justify,
because it is accepted only on account of faith. [Trusting in our own fulfilment
of the Law is sheer idolatry and blaspheming Christ, and in the end it
collapses and causes our consciences to despair. Therefore, this foundation
shall stand forever, namely, that for Christ's sake we are accepted with
God, and justified by faith, not on account of our love and works. This
we shall make so plain and certain that anybody may grasp it. As long as
the heart is not at peace with God, it cannot be righteous; for it flees
from the wrath of God, despairs, and would have God not to judge it. Therefore
the heart cannot be righteous and accepted with God while it is not at
peace with God. Now, faith alone makes the heart to be content, and obtains
peace and life, Rom. 5, 1, because it confidently and frankly relies on
the promise of God for Christ's sake. But our works do not make the heart
content, for we always find that they are not pure. Therefore it must follow
that we are accepted with God, and justified by faith alone, when in our
hearts we conclude that God desires to be gracious to us, not on account
of our works and fulfilment of the Law, but from pure grace, for Christ's
sake. What can our opponents bring forward against this argument? What
can they invent and devise against the plain truth? For this is quite certain,
and experience teaches forcibly enough, that when we truly feel the judgment
and wrath of God, or become afflicted, our works and worship cannot set
the heart at rest. Scripture indicates this often enough as in Ps. 143,
2: Enter not into judgment with Thy servant; for in Thy sight shall
no man living be justified. Here he clearly shows that all the saints,
all the pious children of God, who have the Holy Ghost, if God would not
by grace forgive them their sin, still have remnants of sin in the flesh.
For when David in another place, Ps. 7, 8, says: Judge me O Lord, according
to my righteousness, he refers to his cause, and not to his righteousness,
and asks God to protect his cause and word, for he says: Judge, O Lord,
my cause. Again, in Ps. 130, 3 he clearly states that no person, not
even the greatest saints, can bear God's judgment, if He were to observe
our iniquity, as he says: If Thou, Lord, shouldest mark iniquity, O
Lord, who shall stand? And thus says Job, 9, 28: I was afraid of
all my works (Engl. vers.,
sorrows). Likewise 9, 30: If I
wash myself with snow-water, and make my hands never so clean, yet shalt
Thou plunge me in the ditch. And Prov. 20, 9: Who can say, I have
made my heart clean? And 1 John 1, 8: If we say that we have no
sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us. And in the Lord's
Prayer the saints ask for the forgiveness of sins. Therefore even the saints
have guilt and sins. Again, in Num. 14, 18: The innocent will not be
innocent. And Zechariah, 2, 13, says: Be silent O all flesh, before
the Lord. And Isaiah 40, 6 sqq.: All flesh is grass, i.e., flesh
and righteousness of the flesh cannot endure the judgment of God. And Jonah
says, 2, 8: They that observe Iying vanities forsake their own mercy.
Therefore, pure mercy preserves us; our own works, merits, endeavors, cannot
preserve us. These and similar declarations in the Scriptures testify that
our works are unclean, and that we need mercy. Wherefore works do not render
consciences pacified, but only mercy apprehended by faith does.] Nor must
we trust that we are accounted righteous before God by our own perfection
and fulfilling of the Law, but rather for Christ's sake.
41] First [in the third place], because Christ does not cease
to be Mediator after we have been renewed. They err who imagine that He
has merited only a first grace, and that afterwards we please God
and merit eternal life by our fulfilling of the Law. 42] Christ
remains Mediator, and we ought always to be confident that for His sake
we have a reconciled God even although we are unworthy. As Paul clearly
teaches when he says [By whom also we have access to God, Rom. 5,
2. For our best works, even after the grace of the Gospel has been received,
as I stated, are still weak and not at all pure. For sin and Adam's fall
are not such a trifling thing as reason holds or imagines; it exceeds the
reason and thought of all men to understand what a horrible wrath of God
has been handed on to us by that disobedience. There occurred a shocking
corruption of the entire human nature, which no work of man, but only God
Himself, can restore], 1 Cor. 4, 4: I know nothing by myself, yet am
I not hereby justified, but he knows that by faith he is accounted
righteous for Christ's sake, according to the passage: Blessed are they
whose iniquities are forgiven, Ps. 32, 1; Rom. 4, 7. [Therefore we
need grace, and the gracious goodness of God, and the forgiveness of sin,
although we have done many good works.] But this remission is always received
by faith. Likewise, the imputation of the righteousness of the Gospel is
from the promise; therefore it is always received by faith, and it always
must be regarded certain that by faith we are, 43] for Christ's
sake, accounted righteous. If the regenerate ought afterwards to think
that they will be accepted on account of the fulfilling of the Law, when
would conscience be certain that it pleased God, since we never satisfy
the Law? 44] Accordingly, we must always recur to the promise; by
this our infirmity must be sustained, and we must regard it as certain
that we are accounted righteous for the sake of Christ, who is ever
at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us, Rom.
8, 34. If any one think that he is righteous and accepted on account of
his own fulfilment of the Law, and not on account of Christ's promise,
he dishonors this High Priest. Neither can it be understood how one could
imagine that man is righteous before God when Christ is excluded as Propitiator
and Mediator.
45] Again [in the fourth place], what need is there of a long
discussion? [If we were to think that, after we have come to the Gospel
and are born again, we were to merit by our works that God be gracious
to us, not by faith, conscience would never find rest, but would be driven
to despair. For the Law unceasingly accuses us, since we never can satisfy
the Law.] All Scripture, all the Church cries out that the Law cannot be
satisfied. Therefore this inchoate fulfilment of the Law does not please
on its own account, but on account 46] of faith in Christ. Otherwise
the Law always accuses us. For who loves or fears God sufficiently? Who
with sufficient patience bears the afflictions imposed by God? Who does
not frequently doubt whether human affairs are ruled by God's counsel or
by chance? Who does not frequently doubt whether he be heard by God? Who
is not frequently enraged because the wicked enjoy a better lot than the
pious, because the pious are oppressed by the wicked? Who does satisfaction
to his own calling? Who loves his neighbor as himself? Who is not tempted
47]
by lust? Accordingly, Paul says, Rom. 7, 19:
The good that I would I
do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do. Likewise 7, 25:
With
the mind I myself serve the Law of God, but with the flesh, the law of
sin. Here he openly declares that he serves the law of sin. And David
says, Ps. 143, 2: Enter not into judgment with Thy servant; for in Thy
sight shall no man living be justified. Here even a servant of God
prays for the averting of judgment. Likewise Ps. 32, 2: Blessed is the
man unto whom the Lord imputeth not iniquity. Therefore, in this our
infirmity there is always present sin, which could be imputed, and of which
he says a little while after, 32, 6: For this shall every one that is
godly pray unto Thee. Here he shows that even saints ought to seek
remission 48] of sins. More than blind are those who do not perceive
that wicked desires in the flesh are sins, of which Paul, Gal. 5, 17, says:
The
flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh.
49]
The flesh distrusts God, trusts in present things, seeks human aid in calamities,
even contrary to God's will, flees from afflictions, which it ought to
bear because of God's commands, doubts concerning God's mercy, etc. The
Holy Ghost in our hearts contends with such dispositions [with Adam's sin]
in order to suppress and mortify them [this poison of the old Adam, this
desperately wicked disposition], 50] and to produce new spiritual
movements. But concerning this topic we will collect more testimonies below,
although they are everywhere obvious not only in the Scriptures, but also
in the holy Fathers.
51] Well does Augustine say: All the commandments of God are
fulfilled when whatever is not done, is forgiven. Therefore he requires
faith even in good works [which the Holy Spirit produces in us], in order
that we may believe that for Christ's sake we please God, and that even
the works are not of 52] themselves worthy and pleasing. And Jerome,
against the Pelagians, says: Then, therefore, we are righteous when
we confess that we are sinners, and that our righteousness consists not
in our own merit, but in God's mercy. 53] Therefore, in this
inchoate fulfilment of the Law, faith ought to be present, which is certain
that for Christ's sake we have a reconciled God. For mercy cannot be apprehended
unless by faith, as has been repeatedly said above. [Therefore those who
teach that we are not accepted by faith for Christ's sake, but for the
sake of our own works, lead consciences into despair.] 54] Wherefore,
when Paul says, Rom. 3, 31: We establish the Law through faith,
by this we ought to understand, not only that those regenerated by faith
receive the Holy Ghost, and have movements agreeing with God's Law, but
it is by far of the greatest importance that we add also this, that we
ought to perceive that we are far distant from the perfection of the Law.
55]
Wherefore we cannot conclude that we are accounted righteous before God
because of our fulfilling of the Law, but in order that the conscience
may become tranquil, justification must be sought elsewhere. For we are
not righteous before God as long as we flee from God's judgment, and are
angry with God. 56] Therefore we must conclude that, being reconciled
by faith, we are accounted righteous for Christ's sake, not for the sake
of the Law or our works, but that this inchoate fulfilling of the Law pleases
on account of faith, and that, on account of faith, there is no imputation
of the imperfection of the fulfilling of the Law, even though the sight
of our impurity terrifies us. Now, if justification is to be sought elsewhere,
our love 57] and works do not therefore justify. Far above our purity,
yea, far above the Law itself, ought to be placed the death and satisfaction
of Christ, presented to us that we might be sure that because of this satisfaction,
and not because of our fulfilling of the Law, we have a gracious God.
58] Paul teaches this in Gal. 3, 13, when he says: Christ
hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law, being made a curse for us,
i.e., the Law condemns all men, but Christ, because without sin He
has borne the punishment of sin, and been made a victim for us, has removed
that right of the Law to accuse and condemn those who believe in Him, because
He Himself is the propitiation for them for whose sake we are now accounted
righteous. But since they are accounted righteous, the Law cannot accuse
or condemn them, even though they have not actually satisfied the Law.
To the same purport he writes to the Colossians 2, 10: Ye are complete
in Him, as though he were to say: Although ye are still far from the
perfection of the Law, yet the remnants of sin do not condemn you, because
for Christ's sake we have a sure and firm reconciliation, if you believe,
even though sin inhere in your flesh.
59] The promise ought always to be in sight that God, because
of His promise, wishes for Christ's sake, and not because of the Law or
our works, to be gracious and to justify. In this promise timid consciences
ought to seek reconciliation and justification; by this promise they ought
to sustain themselves and be confident that for Christ's sake, because
of His promise, they have a gracious God. Thus works can never render a
conscience pacified, 60] but only the promise can. If, therefore,
justification and peace of conscience must be sought elsewhere than in
love and works, love and works do not justify, although they are virtues
and pertain to the righteousness of the Law, in so far as they are a fulfilling
of the Law. So far also this obedience of the Law justifies by the righteousness
of the Law. But this imperfect righteousness of the Law is not accepted
by God, unless on account of faith. Accordingly it does not justify, i.e.,
it neither reconciles, nor regenerates, nor by itself renders us accepted
before God.
61] From this it is evident that we are justified before God
by faith alone [i.e., it obtains the remission of sins and grace
for Christ's sake, and regenerates us. Likewise, it is quite clear that
by faith alone the Holy Ghost is received, again, that our works and this
inchoate fulfilling of the Law do not by themselves please God. Now, even
if I abound in good works like Paul or Peter, I must seek my righteousness
elsewhere, namely, in the promise of the grace of Christ; again, if only
faith calms the conscience, it must, indeed, be certain that only faith
justifies before God. For, if we wish to teach correctly, we must adhere
to this, that we are accepted with God, not on account of the Law, not
on account of works, but for Christ's sake. For the honor, due Christ,
must not be given to the Law or our miserable works.] because by faith
alone we receive remission of sins and reconciliation, because reconciliation
or justification is a matter promised for Christ's sake, and not for the
sake of the Law. Therefore it is received by faith alone, although, when
the Holy Ghost is given, the fulfilling of the Law follows.
Reply to the Arguments of the Adversaries.
62] Now, when the grounds of this case have been understood,
namely, the distinction between the Law and the promises, or the Gospel,
it will be easy to resolve the objections of the adversaries. For they
cite passages concerning the Law and works, and omit passages concerning
the promises. 63] But a reply can once for all be made to all opinions
concerning the Law, namely, that the Law cannot be observed without Christ,
and that if civil works are wrought without Christ, they do not please
God. [God is not pleased with the person.] Wherefore, when works are commended,
it is necessary to add that faith is required, that they are commended
on account of faith, that they are the fruits and testimonies of faith.
[This our doctrine is, indeed, plain; it need not fear the light, and may
be held against the Holy Scriptures. We have also clearly and correctly
presented it here, if any will receive instruction and not knowingly deny
the truth. For rightly to understand the benefit of Christ and the great
treasure of the Gospel (which Paul extols so greatly), we must separate,
on the one hand, the promise of God and the grace that is offered, and,
on the other hand, the Law, as far as the heavens are from the earth. In
shaky matters many explanations are needed, but in a good matter one or
two thoroughgoing explanations dissolve all objections which men think
they can raise.] 64] Ambiguous and dangerous cases produce many
and various solutions. For the judgment of the ancient poet is true:
"An unjust cause, being in itself sick, requires skilfully
applied remedies."
But in just and sure cases one or two explanations derived from the
sources correct all things that seem to offend. This occurs also in this
case of ours. For the rule which I have just recited, explains all the
passages that are cited concerning the Law 65] and works [namely,
that without Christ the Law cannot be truly observed, and although external
works may be performed, still the person doing them does not please God
outside of Christ]. For we acknowledge that Scripture teaches in some places
the Law, and in other places the Gospel, or the gratuitous promise of the
remission of sins for Christ's sake. But our adversaries absolutely abolish
the free promise when they deny that faith justifies, and teach that for
the sake of love and of our works we receive remission of sins and 66]
reconciliation. If the remission of sins depends upon the condition of
our works, it is altogether uncertain. [For we can never be certain whether
we do enough works, or whether our works are sufficiently holy and pure.
Thus, too, the forgiveness of sins is made uncertain, and the promise of
God perishes, as Paul says, Rom. 4, 14: The promise is made of none
effect, and everything is rendered uncertain.] Therefore the promise
will be abolished. 67] Hence we refer godly minds to the consideration
of the promises, and we teach concerning the free remission of sins and
concerning reconciliation, which occurs through faith in Christ. Afterwards
we add also the doctrine of the Law. [Not that by the Law we merit the
remission of sins, or that for the sake of the Law we are accepted with
God, but because God requires good works.] And it is necessary to divide
these things aright, as Paul says, 2 Tim. 2, 15. We must see what Scripture
ascribes to the Law and what to the promises. For it praises works in such
a way as not to remove the free promise [as to place the promise of God
and the true treasure, Christ, a thousand leagues above it].
68] For good works are to be done on account of God's command,
likewise for the exercise of faith [as Paul says, Eph. 2, 10: We are
His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works], and on account
of confession and giving of thanks. For these reasons good works ought
necessarily to be done, which, although they are done in the flesh not
as yet entirely renewed, that retards the movements of the Holy Ghost,
and imparts some of its uncleanness, yet, on account of Christ, are holy,
divine works, sacrifices, and acts pertaining to the government of Christ,
who thus displays His kingdom before this world. For in these He sanctifies
hearts and represses the devil, and, in order to retain the Gospel among
men, openly opposes to the kingdom of the devil the confession of saints,
and, in our weakness, declares His power. 69] The dangers, labors,
and sermons of the Apostle Paul, of Athanasius, Augustine, and the like,
who taught the churches, are holy works, are true sacrifices acceptable
to God, are contests of Christ 70] through which He repressed the
devil, and drove him from those who believed. David's labors, in waging
wars and in his home government, are holy works, are true sacrifices, are
contests of God, defending the people who had the Word of God against 71]
the devil, in order that the knowledge of God might not be entirely extinguished
on earth. We think thus also concerning every good work in the humblest
callings and in private affairs. Through these works Christ celebrates
His victory over the devil, just as the distribution of alms by the Corinthians,
1 Cor. 16, 1, was a holy work, and a sacrifice and contest of Christ against
the devil, who labors that nothing may be done 72] for the praise
of God. To disparage such works, the confession of doctrine, affliction,
works of love, mortifications of the flesh, would be indeed to disparage
the outward government of Christ's kingdom among men. 73] Here also
we add something concerning rewards and merits. We teach that rewards have
been offered and promised to the works of believers. We teach that good
works are meritorious, not for the remission of sins, for grace or justification
(for these we obtain only by faith), but for other rewards, bodily and
spiritual, in this life and after this life, because Paul 74] says,
1 Cor. 3, 8: Every man shall receive his own reward, according to his
own labor. There will, therefore be different rewards according to
different labors. But the remission of sins is alike and equal to all,
just as Christ is one, and is offered freely to all who believe that for
Christ's sake their sins are remitted. Therefore the remission of sins
and justification are received only by faith, and not on account of any
works, as is evident in the terrors of conscience, because none of our
works can be opposed to God's wrath, as Paul clearly says, Rom. 5, 1: Being
justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ,
by whom also we have access by faith, etc. 75] But because faith
makes sons of God, it also makes coheirs with Christ. Therefore, because
by our works we do not merit justification, through which we are made sons
of God, and coheirs with Christ, we do not by our works merit eternal life;
for faith obtains this, because faith justifies us and has a reconciled
God. But eternal life is due the justified, according to the passage Rom.
8, 30: Whom He justified, them He also glorified. 76] Paul,
Eph. 6, 2, commends to us the commandment concerning honoring parents,
by mention of the reward which is added to that commandment, where he does
not mean that obedience to parents justifies 77] us before God,
but that, when it occurs in those who have been justified, it merits other
great rewards. Yet God exercises His saints variously, and often defers
the rewards of the righteousness of works in order that they may learn
not to trust in their own righteousness, and may learn to seek the will
of God rather than the rewards; as appears in Job, in Christ, and other
saints. And of this, many psalms teach us, which console us against the
happiness of the wicked, as Ps. 37, 1: Neither be thou envious.
And Christ says, Matt. 5, 10: Blessed are they 78] which
are persecuted for righteousness' sake; for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
By these 79] praises of good works, believers are undoubtedly moved
to do good works. Meanwhile, the doctrine of repentance is also proclaimed
against the godless, whose works are wicked; and the wrath of God is displayed,
80]
which He has threatened all who do not repent. We therefore praise and
require good works, and show many reasons why they ought to be done.
Thus of works Paul also teaches when he says, Rom. 4, 9 sq., that Abraham
received circumcision, not in order that by this work he might be justified;
for by faith he had already attained it that he was accounted righteous.
But circumcision was added in order that he might have in his body a written
sign, admonished by which he might exercise faith, and by which also he
might confess his faith before others, and, by his testimony, might invite
others to believe. 81] By faith Abel offered unto God a more
excellent sacrifice, Heb. 11, 4. Because, therefore, he was just by
faith, the sacrifice which he made was pleasing to God; not that by this
work he merited the remission of sins and grace, but that he exercised
his faith and showed it to others, in order to invite them to believe.
82] Although in this way good works ought to follow faith, men
who cannot believe and be sure that for Christ's sake they are freely forgiven,
and that freely for Christ's sake they have a reconciled God, employ works
far otherwise. When they see the works of saints, they judge in a human
manner that saints have merited the remission of sins and grace through
these works. Accordingly, they imitate them, and think that through similar
works they merit the remission of sins and grace; they think that through
these works they appease the wrath of God, and attain that for the sake
of these works they are accounted righteous. 83] This godless opinion
concerning works we condemn. In the first place, because it obscures the
glory of Christ when men offer to God these works as a price and propitiation.
This honor, due to Christ alone, is ascribed to our works. Secondly, they
nevertheless do not find, in these works, peace of conscience, but in true
terrors, heaping up works upon works, they at length despair because they
find no work sufficiently pure [sufficiently important and precious to
propitiate God, to obtain with certainty eternal life, in a word, to tranquilize
and pacify the conscience]. The Law always accuses, and produces wrath.
Thirdly, such persons never attain the knowledge of God [nor of His will];
for, as in anger they flee from God, who judges and afflicts them, they
never believe that they are heard. 84] But faith manifests the presence
of God, since it is certain that God freely forgives and hears us.
85] Moreover, this godless opinion concerning works always has
existed in the world [sticks to the world quite tightly]. The heathen had
sacrifices, derived from the fathers. They imitated their works. Their
faith they did not retain, but thought that the works were a propitiation
and price on account of which God would be reconciled to them. 86]
The people in the Law [the Israelites] imitated sacrifices with the opinion
that by means of these works they would appease God, so to say, ex opere
operato. We see here how earnestly the prophets rebuke the people:
Ps. 50, 8: I will not reprove thee for thy sacrifices, and Jer.
7, 22: I spake not unto your fathers concerning burnt offerings.
Such passages condemn not works, which God certainly had commanded as outward
exercises in this government, but they condemn the godless opinion according
to which they thought that by these works they appeased the wrath of God,
and 87] thus cast away faith. And because no works pacify the conscience,
new works, in addition to God's commands, were from time to time devised
[the hypocrites nevertheless used to invent one work after another, one
sacrifice after another, by a blind guess and in reckless wantonness, and
all this without the word and command of God, with wicked conscience as
we have seen in the Papacy]. The people of Israel had seen the prophets
sacrificing on high places [and in groves]. Besides, the examples of the
saints very greatly move the minds of those, hoping by similar works to
obtain grace just as these saints obtained it. [But the saints believed.]
Wherefore the people began, with remarkable zeal, to imitate this work,
in order that by such a work [they might appease the wrath of God] they
might merit remission of sins, grace, and righteousness. But the prophets
had been sacrificing on high places, not that by these works they might
merit the remission of sins and grace, but because on these places they
taught, and, accordingly, presented there a testimony of their faith. 88]
The people had heard that Abraham had sacrificed his son. Wherefore they
also, in order to appease God by a most cruel and difficult work, put to
death their sons. But Abraham did not sacrifice his son with the opinion
that this work was a price and propitiatory work for the sake of which
he was accounted righteous. 89] Thus in the Church the Lord's Supper
was instituted that by remembrance of the promises of Christ, of which
we are admonished in this sign, faith might be strengthened in us, and
we might publicly confess our faith, and proclaim the benefits of Christ,
as Paul says, 1 Cor. 11, 26: As often as ye eat this bread and drink
this cup, ye do show the Lord's death, etc. But our adversaries contend
that the mass is a work that justifies us ex opere operato, and
removes the guilt and liability to punishment in those for whom it is celebrated;
for thus writes Gabriel.
90] Anthony, Bernard, Dominicus, Franciscus, and other holy Fathers
selected a certain kind of life either for the sake of study [of more readily
reading the Holy Scriptures] or other useful exercises. In the mean time
they believed that by faith they were accounted righteous for Christ's
sake, and that God was gracious to them, not on account of those exercises
of their own. But the multitude since then has imitated not the faith of
the Fathers, but their example without faith, in order that by such works
they might merit the remission of sins, grace, and righteousness; they
did not believe that they received these freely on account of Christ as
Propitiator. [Thus the human mind always exalts works too highly, and puts
them in the wrong place. And this error the Gospel reproves, which teaches
that men are accounted righteous not for the sake of the Law, but for the
sake of Christ alone. Christ, however, is apprehended by faith alone; wherefore
we are accounted righteous by faith alone for Christ's sake.] Thus the
world judges of all works 91] that they are a propitiation by which
God is appeased; that they are a price because of which we are accounted
righteous. It does not believe that Christ is Propitiator; it does not
believe that by faith we freely attain that we are accounted righteous
for Christ's sake. And, nevertheless, since works cannot pacify the conscience,
others are continually chosen, new rites are performed, new vows made,
and new orders of monks formed beyond the command of God, in order that
92]
some great work may be sought which may be set against the wrath and judgment
of God. Contrary to Scripture, the adversaries uphold these godless opinions
concerning works. But to ascribe to our works these things, namely, that
they are a propitiation, that they merit the remission of sins and grace,
that for the sake of these and not by faith, for the sake of Christ as
Propitiator we are accounted righteous before God, what else is this than
to deny Christ the honor of Mediator and 93] Propitiator? Although,
therefore, we, believe and teach that good works must necessarily be done
(for the inchoate fulfilling of the Law ought to follow faith),
nevertheless we give to Christ His own honor. We believe and teach that
by faith, for Christ's sake, we are accounted righteous before God, that
we are not accounted righteous because of works without Christ as Mediator,
that by works we do not merit the remission of sins, grace, and righteousness,
that we cannot set our works against the wrath and justice of God, that
works cannot overcome the terrors of sin, but that the terrors of sin are
overcome by faith alone, 94] that only Christ the Mediator is to
be presented by faith against the wrath and judgment of God. If any one
think differently, he does not give Christ due honor, who has been set
forth that He might be a Propitiator, that through Him
95] we might
have access to the Father. We are speaking now of the righteousness through
which we treat with 96] God, not with men, but by which we apprehend
grace and peace of conscience. Conscience however, cannot be pacified before
God, unless by faith alone, which is certain that God for Christ's sake
is reconciled to us, according to Rom. 5, 1: Being justified by faith,
we have peace, because justification is only a matter freely promised
for Christ's sake, and therefore is always received before God by faith
alone.
97] Now, then, we will reply to those passages which the adversaries
cite, in order to prove that we are justified by love and works. From 1
Cor. 13, 2 they cite: Though I have all faith, etc., and have
not charity, I am nothing. And here they triumph greatly. Paul testifies
to the entire Church, they say, that faith alone does not justify. 98]
But a reply is easy after we have shown above what we hold concerning love
and works. This passage of Paul requires love. We also require this. For
we have said above that renewal and the inchoate fulfilling of the Law
must exist in us, according to Jer. 31, 33: I will put My Law in their
inward parts, and write it in their hearts. If any one should cast
away love, even though he have great faith, yet he does not retain it,
99]
for he does not retain the Holy Ghost [he becomes cold and is now again
fleshly, without Spirit and faith; for the Holy Ghost is not where Christian
love and other fruits of the Spirit are not]. Nor indeed does Paul in this
passage treat of the mode of justification, but he writes to those who,
after they had been justified, should be urged to bring forth good fruits
lest they might lose the Holy Ghost. 100] The adversaries furthermore,
treat the matter preposterously: they cite this one passage, in which Paul
teaches concerning fruits, they omit very many other passages, in which
in a regular order he discusses the mode of justification. Besides, they
always add a correction to the other passages, which treat of faith, namely,
that they ought to be understood as applying to fides formata. Here
they add no correction that there is also need of the faith that holds
that we are accounted righteous for the sake of Christ as Propitiator.
Thus the adversaries exclude Christ from justification and teach only a
righteousness of the Law. But let us return to Paul. 101] No one
can infer anything more from this text than that love is necessary. This
we confess. So also not to commit theft is necessary. But the reasoning
will not be correct if some one would desire to frame thence an argument
such as this: "Not to commit theft is necessary. Therefore, not to commit
theft justifies." Because justification is not the approval of a certain
work, but of the entire person. Hence this passage from Paul does not harm
us; only the adversaries must not in imagination add to it whatever they
please. For he does not say that love justifies, but: ["And if I have not
love"] "I am nothing," namely, that faith, however great it may have been,
is extinguished. He does not say that love overcomes the terrors of sin
and of death, that we can set our love against the wrath and judgment of
God, that our love satisfies God's Law, that without Christ as Propitiator
we have access, by our love, to God, that by our love we receive the promised
remission of sins. Paul says nothing of this. He does not, therefore, think
that love justifies, because we are justified only when we apprehend Christ
as Propitiator, and believe that for Christ's sake God is reconciled to
us. Neither is justification even to be dreamed of with the omission of
Christ as Propitiator. 102] If there be no need of Christ, if by
our love we can overcome death, if by our love, without Christ as Propitiator,
we have access to God, then let our adversaries remove the promise concerning
Christ, then let them abolish the Gospel [which teaches that we have access
to God through Christ as Propitiator, and that we are accepted not for
the sake of our fulfilling of the Law, but for Christ's sake].
103]
The adversaries corrupt very many passages, because they bring to them
their own opinions, and do not derive the meaning from the passages themselves.
For what difficulty is there in this passage if we remove the interpretation
which the adversaries, who do not understand what justification is or how
it occurs [what faith is, what Christ is, or how a man is justified before
God], out of their own mind attach to it? The Corinthians, being justified
before, had received many excellent gifts. In the beginning they glowed
with zeal, just as is generally the case. Then dissensions [factions and
sects] began to arise among them, as Paul indicates; they began to dislike
good teachers. Accordingly, Paul reproves them, recalling them [to unity
and] to offices of love. Although these are necessary, yet it would be
foolish to imagine that works of the Second Table, through which we have
to do with man and not properly with God, justify us. But in justification
we have to treat with God; His wrath must be appeased and conscience must
be pacified with respect to God. None of these occur through the works
of the Second Table [by love, but only by faith, which apprehends Christ
and the promise of God. However, it is true that losing love involves losing
the Spirit and faith. And thus Paul says: If I have not love, I am nothing.
But, he does not add the affirmative statement, that love justifies in
the sight of God].
104] But they object that love is preferred to faith and hope.
For Paul says, 1 Cor. 13, 13:
The greatest of these is charity.
Now, it is reasonable that the greatest and chief virtue should justify,
105]
although Paul, in this passage, properly speaks of love towards one's neighbor,
and indicates that love is the greatest, because it has most fruits. Faith
and hope have to do only with God; but love has infinite offices externally
towards men. [Love goes forth upon earth among the people, and does much
good, by consoling, teaching, instructing, helping, counseling privately
and publicly.] Nevertheless, let us, indeed, grant to the adversaries that
love towards God and our neighbor is the greatest virtue, because the chief
commandment is this: Thou shalt love the Lord, thy God, Matt. 22,
37. But how will they infer thence that love justifies? 106] The
greatest virtue, they say, justifies. By no means. [It would be true if
we had a gracious God because of our virtue. Now, it was proven above that
we are accepted and justified for Christ's sake, not because of our virtue;
for our virtue is impure.] For just as even the greatest or first Law does
not justify, so also the greatest virtue of the Law does not justify. [For
as the Law and virtue is higher, and our ability to do the same proportionately
lower, we are not righteous because of love.] But that virtue justifies
which apprehends Christ, which communicates to us Christ's merits, by which
we receive grace and peace from God. But this virtue is faith. For as it
has been often said, faith is not only knowledge, but much rather willing
to receive or apprehend those things which are offered in the promise concerning
Christ. 107] Moreover this obedience towards God, namely, to wish
to receive the offered promise, is no less a divine service, latreiva,
than is love. God wishes us to believe Him, and to receive from Him blessings,
and this He declares to be true divine service.
108] But the adversaries ascribe justification to love because
they everywhere teach and require the righteousness of the Law. For we
cannot deny that love is the highest work of the Law. And human wisdom
gazes at the Law, and seeks in it justification. Accordingly, also the
scholastic doctors, great and talented men, proclaim this as the highest
work of the Law, and ascribe to this work justification. But deceived by
human wisdom, they did not look upon the uncovered, but upon the veiled
face of Moses, just as the Pharisees, philosophers, Mahometans. 109]
But we preach the foolishness of the Gospel, in which another righteousness
is revealed namely, that for the sake of Christ, as Propitiator, we are
accounted righteous, when we believe that for Christ's sake God has been
reconciled to us. Neither are we ignorant how far distant this doctrine
is from the judgment of reason and of the Law. Nor are we ignorant that
the doctrine of the Law concerning love makes a much greater show; for
it is wisdom. But we are not ashamed of the foolishness of the Gospel.
For the sake of Christ's glory we defend this, and beseech Christ, by His
Holy Ghost, to aid us that we may be able to make this clear and manifest.
110] The adversaries, in the Confutation, have also cited against
us Col. 3, 14: Charity, which is the bond of perfectness. From this
they infer that love justifies because it renders men perfect. Although
a reply concerning perfection could here be made in many ways, yet we will
simply recite the meaning of Paul. It is certain that Paul spoke of love
towards one's neighbor. Neither must we indeed think that Paul would ascribe
either justification or perfection to the works of the Second Table, rather
than to those of the First. And if love render men perfect, there will
then be no need of Christ as Propitiator, [However, Paul teaches in all
places that we are accepted on account of Christ and not on account of
our love, or our works, or of the Law; for no saint (as was stated before)
perfectly fulfils the Law. Therefore since he in all places writes and
teaches that in this life there is no perfection in our works, it is not
to be thought that he speaks here of personal perfection.] for faith apprehends
Christ only as Propitiator. This, however, is far distant from the meaning
of Paul, who never suffers 111] Christ to be excluded as Propitiator.
Therefore he speaks not of personal perfection, but of the integrity common
to the Church [concerning the unity of the Church, and the word which they
interpret as perfection means nothing else than to be not rent]. For on
this account he says that love is a bond or connection, to signify that
he speaks of the binding and joining together with each other, of the many
members of the Church. For just as in all families and in all states concord
should be nourished by mutual offices, and tranquillity cannot be retained
unless men overlook and forgive certain mistakes among themselves; so Paul
commands that there should be love in the Church in order that it may preserve
concord, bear with the harsher manners of brethren as there is need, overlook
certain less serious mistakes, lest the Church fly apart into various schisms,
and enmities and factions and heresies arise from the schisms.
112] For concord must necessarily be rent asunder whenever either
the bishops impose, [without cause] upon the people heavier burdens, or
have no respect to weakness in the people. And dissensions arise when the,
people judge too severely [quickly censur, and criticize] concerning. the
conduct [wall and life] of teachers [bishops or preachers] or despise the
teachers because of certain less serious faults; for then both another
kind of doctrine and other teachers are sought after. 113] On the
other hand, perfection, i. e the integrity of the Church, is preserved,
when the strong bear with the weak, when the people take in good part some
faults in the conduct of their teachers [have patience also with their
preachers], when the bishops make some allowances for the weakness of the
people [know how to exercise forbearance to the people, according to circumstances,
with respect to all kinds of weaknesses and faults]. 114] Of these
precepts of equity the books of all the wise are full, namely, that in
every-day life we should make many allowances mutually for the sake of
common tranquillity. And of this Paul frequently teaches both here and
elsewhere. Wherefore the adversaries argue indiscreetly from. the term
"perfection" that love justifies, while Paul speaks of common integrity
and tranquillity. And thus Ambrose interprets this passage: Just as
a building is said to be perfect or entire when all its parts are fitly
joined together with one another. 115] Moreover, it is disgraceful
for the adversaries to preach so much concerning love while they nowhere
exhibit it. What are they now doing? They are rending asunder churches,
they are writing laws in blood, and are proposing to the most clement prince,
the Emperor, that these should be promulgated; they are slaughtering priests
and other good men, if any one have [even] slightly intimated that he does
not entirely approve some manifest abuse. [They wish all dead who say a
single word against their godless doctrine.] These things are not consistent
with those declamations of love, which if the adversaries would follow,
the churches would be tranquil and the state have peace. For these tumults
would be quieted if the adversaries would not insist with too much bitterness
[from sheer vengeful spite and pharisaical envy, against the truth which
they have perceived] upon certain traditions, useless for godliness, most
of which not even those very persons observe who most earnestly defend
them. But they easily forgive themselves, and yet do not likewise forgive
others according to the passage in the poet: I forgive myself, Maevius
said. 116] But this is very far distant from those encomiums
of love which they here recite from Paul, nor do they understand the word
any more than the walls which give it back. 117] From Peter they
cite also this sentence, 1 Pet. 4, 8: Charity shall cover the multitude
of sins. It is evident that also Peter speaks of love towards one's
neighbor, because he joins this passage to the precept by which he commands
that they should love one another. Neither could it have come into the
mind of any apostle that our love overcomes sin and death; that love is
the propitiation on account of which to the exclusion of Christ as Mediator,
God is reconciled; that love is righteousness without Christ as Mediator.
For this love, if there would be any, would be a righteousness of the Law,
and not of the Gospel, which promises to us reconciliation and righteousness
if we believe that, for the sake of Christ as Propitiator, the Father has
been reconciled, and that the merits of Christ are bestowed upon us. 118]
Peter, accordingly, urges us, a little before, to come to Christ that we
may be built upon Christ. And he adds, 1 Pet. 2, 4-6: He that believeth
on Him shall not be confounded. When God judges and convicts us, our
love does not free us from confusion [from our works and lives, we truly
suffer shame]. But faith in Christ liberates us in these fears, because
we know that for Christ's sake we are forgiven.
119] Besides, this sentence concerning love is derived from Prov.
10, 12, where the antithesis clearly shows how it ought to be understood:
Hatred
stirreth up strifes; but love covereth all sins. 120] It teaches
precisely the same thing as that passage of Paul taken from Colossians,
that if any dissensions would occur they should be moderated and settled
by our equitable and lenient conduct. Dissensions, it says, increase by
means of hatred, as we often see that from the most trifling offenses tragedies
arise [from the smallest sparks a great conflagration arises]. Certain
trifling offenses occurred between Caius Caesar and Pompey, in which, if
the one had yielded a very little to the other, civil war would not have
arisen. But while each indulged his own hatred, from a matter of no account
the greatest commotions arose. 121] And many heresies have arisen
in the Church only from the hatred of the teachers. Therefore it does not
refer to a person's own faults, but to the faults of others, when it says:
Charity
covereth sins, namely, those of others, and that, too, among men, i.e.,
even though these offenses occur, yet love overlooks them, forgives, yields,
and does not carry all things to the extremity of justice. Peter, therefore,
does not mean that love merits in God's sight the remission of sins, that
it is a propitiation to the exclusion of Christ as Mediator, that it regenerates
and justifies, but that it is not morose, harsh, intractable towards men,
that it overlooks some mistakes of its friends, that it takes in good part
even the harsher manners of others, just as the well-known maxim enjoins:
Know,
but do not hate, the manners of a friend.
122] Nor was it without
design that the apostle taught so frequently concerning this office what
the philosophers call ejpieivkeian, leniency.
For this virtue is necessary for retaining public harmony [in the Church
and the civil government], which cannot last unless pastors and Churches
mutually overlook and pardon many things [if they want to be extremely
particular about every defect, and do not allow many things to flow by
without noticing them].
123] From James 2, 24 they cite: Ye see, then, how by works
a man is justified, and not by faith alone. Nor is any other passage
supposed to be more contrary to our belief. But the reply is easy and plain.
If the adversaries do not attach their own opinions concerning the merits
of works, the words of James have in them nothing that is of disadvantage.
But wherever there is mention of works, the adversaries add falsely their
own godless opinions, that by means of good works we merit the remission
of sins; that good works are a propitiation and price on account of which
God is reconciled to us; that good works overcome the terrors of sin and
of death, that good works are accepted in God's sight on account of their
goodness; and that they do not need mercy and Christ as Propitiator. None
of all these things came into the mind of James, which the adversaries
nevertheless, defend under the pretext of this passage of James.
124] In the first place, then, we must ponder, this, namely,
that the passage is more against the adversaries than against us. For the
adversaries teach that man is justified by love and works. Of faith, by
which we apprehend Christ as Propitiator, they say nothing. Yea, they condemn
this faith, nor do they condemn it only in sentences and writings, but
also by the sword and capital punishments they endeavor to exterminate
it in the Church. How much better does James teach, who does not omit faith,
or present love in preference to faith, but retains faith, so that in justification
Christ may not be excluded as Propitiator! Just as Paul also, when he treats
of the sum of the Christian life, includes faith and love, 1 Tim. 1, 5:
The
end of the commandment is charity out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience,
and of faith unfeigned.
125] Secondly, the subject itself declares that here such works
are spoken of as follow faith, and show that faith is not dead, but living
and efficacious in the heart. James, therefore, did not believe that by
good works we merit the remission of sins and grace. For he speaks of the
works of those who have been justified, who have already been reconciled
and accepted, and have obtained remission of sins. Wherefore the adversaries
err when they infer that James teaches that we merit remission of sins
and grace by good works, and that by our works we have access to God, without
Christ as Propitiator.
126] Thirdly, James has spoken shortly before concerning regeneration,
namely, that it occurs through the Gospel. For thus he says James 1, 18:
Of
His own will begat He us with the Word of Truth, that we should be a kind
of first-fruits of His creatures. When he says that we have been born
again by the Gospel, he teaches that we have been born again and justified
by faith. For the promise concerning Christ is apprehended only by faith,
when we set it against the terrors of sin and of death. James does not,
therefore, think that we are born again by our works.
127] From these things it is clear that James does not contradict
us, who, when censuring idle and secure minds, that imagine that they have
faith, although they do not have it, made a distinction between dead and
living faith. 128] He says that that is dead which does not bring
forth good works [and fruits of the Spirit obedience, patience, chastity,
love]; he says that that is living which brings forth good works. Furthermore,
we have frequently already shown what we term faith. For we do not speak
of idle knowledge [that merely the history concerning Christ should be
known], such as devils have, but of faith which resists the terrors of
conscience, and cheers and consoles terrified hearts [the new light and
power which the Holy Ghost works in the heart, through which we overcome
the terrors of death, of sin, etc.].
129] Such faith is neither
an easy matter, as the adversaries dream [as they say: Believe, believe,
how easy it is to believe! etc.], nor a human power [thought which I can
form for myself], but a divine power, by which we are quickened, and by
which we overcome the devil and death. Just as Paul says to the Colossians,
2, 12 that faith is efficacious through the power of God, and overcomes
death: Wherein also ye are risen with Him through the faith of the operation
of
God. Since this faith is a new life, it necessarily produces new movements
and works. [Because it is a new light and life in the heart, whereby we
obtain another mind and spirit, it is living, productive, and rich in good
works.] Accordingly, James is right in denying that we are justified by
such a faith as is 130] without works. But when he says that we
are justified by faith and works, he certainly does not say that we are
born again by works. Neither does he say this, that partly Christ is our
Propitiator, and partly our works are our propitiation. Nor does he describe
the mode of justification, but only of what nature the just are, after
they have been already justified and regenerated. [For he is speaking of
works which should follow faith. There it is well said: He who has faith
and good works is righteous, not indeed, on account of the works, but for
Christ's sake, through faith. And as a good tree should bring forth good
fruit, and yet the fruit does not make the tree good, so good works must
follow the new birth, although they do not make man accepted before God;
but as the tree must first be good, so also must man be first accepted
before God by faith for Christ's sake. The works are too insignificant
to render God gracious to us for their sake, if He were not gracious to
us for Christ's sake. Therefore James does not contradict St. Paul, and
does not say that by our works we merit, etc.] 131] And here to
be justified does not mean that a righteous man is made from a wicked man,
but to be pronounced righteous in a forensic sense, as also in the passage
Rom. 2, 13: The doers of the Law shall be justified. As, therefore,
these words: The doers of the Law shall be justified, contain nothing
contrary to our doctrine, so, too, we believe concerning the words of James:
By works a man is justified, and not by faith alone, because men
having faith and good works are certainly pronounced righteous. For, as
we have said, the good works of saints are righteous, and please on account
of faith. For James commends only such works as faith produces, as he testifies
when he says of Abraham, 2, 22: Faith wrought with his works. In
this sense it is said: The doers of the Law are justified, i.e.,
they are pronounced righteous who from the heart believe God, and afterwards
have good fruits, which please Him on account of faith, and, accordingly,
are the fulfilment of the Law. 132] These things, simply spoken,
contain nothing erroneous, but they are distorted by the adversaries, who
attach to them godless opinions out of their mind. For it does not follow
hence that works merit the remission of sins that works regenerate hearts;
that works are a propitiation; that works please without Christ as Propitiator;
that works do not need Christ as Propitiator. James says nothing of these
things, which, nevertheless, the adversaries shamelessly infer from the
words of James.
133] Certain other passages concerning works are also cited against
us. Luke 6, 37: Forgive, and ye shall be forgiven. Is. 58, 7 [9]:
Is
it not to deal thy bread to the hungry? ... Then shalt thou call,
and the Lord will answer. Dan. 4, 24 [27]: Break off thy sins, by
showing mercy to the poor. Matt. 5, 3: Blessed are the poor in spirit;
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven;
134] and 5, 7:
Blessed
are the merciful; for they shall obtain mercy. Even these passages
would contain nothing contrary to us if the adversaries would not falsely
attach something to them. For they contain two things: The one is a preaching
either of the Law or of repentance, which not only convicts those doing
wrong, but also enjoins them to do what is right; the other is a promise
which is added. But it is not added that sins are remitted without faith,
or that works themselves are a propitiation. 135] Moreover, in the
preaching of the Law these two things ought always to be understood namely:
First, that the Law cannot be observed unless we have been regenerated
by faith in Christ, just as Christ says, John 15, 5: Without Me ye can
do nothing. Secondly, and though some external works can certainly
be done, this general judgment: Without faith it is impossible to please
God, which interprets the whole Law, must be retained; and the Gospel
must be retained, that through Christ we have access to the Father,
136]
Heb. 10, 19; Rom. 5, 2. For it is evident that we are not justified by
the Law. Otherwise, why would there be need of Christ or the Gospel, if
the preaching of the Law alone would be sufficient? Thus in the preaching
of repentance, the preaching of the Law, or the Word convicting of sin,
is not sufficient, because the Law works wrath, and only accuses, only
terrifies consciences, because consciences never are at rest, unless they
hear the voice of God in which the remission of sins is clearly promised.
Accordingly, the Gospel must be added, that for Christ's sake sins are
remitted, and that we obtain remission of sins by faith in Christ. If the
adversaries exclude the Gospel of Christ from the preaching of repentance,
they are judged aright to be blasphemers against Christ.
137] Therefore, when Isaiah, 1, 16-18, preaches repentance: Cease
to do evil; learn to do well; seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge
the fatherless, plead for the widow.
Come now and let us reason
together, saith the Lord; though your sins be as scarlet they shall
be white as snow, the prophet thus both exhorts to repentance, and
adds the promise. But it would be foolish to consider in such a sentence
only the words: Relieve the oppressed; judge the fatherless. For
he says in the beginning: Cease to do evil, where he censures impiety
of heart and requires faith. Neither does the prophet say that through
the works: Relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, they can
merit the remission of sins ex opere operato, but he commands such
works as are necessary in the new life. Yet, in the mean time, he means
that remission of sins is received by faith, and accordingly the promise
is added. 138] Thus we must understand all similar passages. Christ
preaches repentance when He says: Forgive, and He adds the promise:
And
ye shall be forgiven, Luke 6, 37. Nor, indeed does He say this, namely,
that, when we forgive, by this work of ours we merit the remission of sins
ex
opere operato, as they term it, but He requires a new life, which certainly
is necessary. Yet, in the mean time, He means that remission of sins is
received by faith. Thus, when Isaiah says, 58, 7:
Deal thy bread to
the hungry, he requires a new life. Nor does the prophet speak of this
work alone, but, as the text indicates, of the entire repentance;
139]
yet, in the mean time, he intends that remission of sins is received by
faith. For the position is sure, and none of the gates of hell can overthrow
it, that in the preaching of repentance the preaching of the Law is not
sufflcient, because the Law works wrath and always accuses. But the preaching
of the Gospel should be added, namely, that in this way remission of sins
is granted us, if we believe that sins are remitted us for Christ's sake.
Otherwise, why would there be need of the Gospel, why would there be need
of Christ? This belief ought always to be in view, in order that it may
be opposed to those who, Christ being cast aside and the Gospel being blotted
out, wickedly distort the Scriptures to the human opinions, that by our
works we purchase remission of sins.
140] Thus also in the sermon of Daniel, 4, 24 faith is required.
[The words of the prophet, which were full of faith and spirit, we must
not regard as heathenish as those of Aristotle, or any other heathen. Aristotle
also admonished Alexander that he should not use his power for his own
wantonness, but for the improvement of countries and men. This was written
correctly and well; concerning the office of king nothing better can be
preached or written. But Daniel is speaking to his king, not only concerning
his office as king, but concerning repentance, the forgiveness of sins,
reconciliation to God, and concerning sublime, great, spiritual subjects,
which far transcend human thoughts and works.] For Daniel did not mean
that the king should only bestow alms [which even a hypocrite can do],
but embraces repentance when he says: Break off [Redeem,
Vulg.] thy iniquities by showing mercy to the poor, i.e., break
off thy sins by a change of heart and works. But here also faith is required.
And Daniel proclaims to him many things concerning the worship of the only
God, the God of Israel, and converts the king not only to bestow alms,
but much more to faith. For we have the excellent confession of the king
concerning the God of Israel: There is no other God that can deliver
after this sort, Dan. 3, 29. Therefore, in the sermon of Daniel there
are two parts. The one part is that which gives commandment concerning
the new life and the works of the new life. The other part is, that Daniel
promises to the king the remission of sins. [Now, where there is a promise,
faith is required. For the promise cannot be received in any other way
than by the heart's relying on such word of God, and not regarding its
own worthiness or unworthiness. Accordingly, Daniel also demands faith;
for thus the promise reads: There will be healing for thy offenses.]
And this promise of the remission of sins is not a preaching of the Law,
but a truly prophetical and evangelical voice, of which Daniel certainly
meant that it should be received in faith. 141] For Daniel knew
that the remission of sins in Christ was promised not only to the Israelites,
but also to all nations. Otherwise he could not have promised to the king
the remission of sins. For it is not in the power of man, especially amid
the terrors of sin, to assert, without a sure word of God concerning God's
will, that He ceases to be angry. And the words of Daniel speak in his
own language still more clearly of repentance, and still more clearly bring
out the promise: Redeem thy sins by righteousness and thy iniquities
by favors toward the poor. These words teach concerning the whole of
repentance. [It is as much as to say: Amend your life! And it is true,
when we amend our lives, we become rid of sin.] For they direct him to
become righteous, then to do good works, to defend the miserable against
injustice, as was the duty of a king. 142] But righteousness is
faith in the heart. Moreover, sins are redeemed by repentance, i.e.,
the obligation or guilt is removed, because God forgives those who repent,
as it is written in Ezek. 18, 21. 22. Nor are we to infer from this that
He forgives on account of works that follow, on account of alms; but on
account of His promise He forgives those who apprehend His promise. Neither
do any apprehend His promise, except those who truly believe, and by faith
overcome sin and death. These, being regenerated, ought to bring forth
fruits worthy of repentance, just as John says, Matt. 3, 8. The promise,
therefore, was added: So, there will be healing for thy offenses,
Dan. 4, 24. [Daniel does not only demand works, but says: Redeem thy
sins by righteousness. Now, everybody knows that in Scripture righteousness
does not mean only external works, but embraces faith, as Paul says: Iustus
est fide vivet, The just shall live by his faith, Heb. 10, 38. Hence,
Daniel first demands faith when he mentions righteousness and says: Redeem
thy sins by righteousness, that is, by faith toward God, by which thou
art made righteous. In addition to this, do good works, administer your
office, do not be a tyrant, but see that your government be profitable
to your country and people, preserve peace, and protect the poor against
unjust force. These are princely alms.] 143] Jerome here added a
particle expressing doubt, that is beside the matter, and in his commentaries
contends much more unwisely that the remission of sins is uncertain. But
let us remember that the Gospel gives a sure promise of the remission of
sins. And to deny that there must be a sure promise of the remission of
sins would completely abolish the Gospel. Let us therefore dismiss Jerome
concerning this passage. Although the promise is displayed even in the
word redeem. For it signifies that the remission of sins is possible,
that sins can be redeemed, i.e., that their obligation or guilt
can be removed, or the wrath of God appeased. But our adversaries, overlooking
the promises, everywhere, consider only the precepts, and attach falsely
the human opinion that remission occurs on account of works, although the
text does not say this, but much rather requires faith. For wherever a
promise is, there faith is required. For a promise cannot be received unless
by faith. [The same answer must also be given in reference to the passage
from the Gospel: Forgive, and you will be forgiven. For this is
just such a doctrine of repentance. The first part in this passage demands
amendment of life and good works, the other part adds the promise. Nor
are we to infer from this that our forgiving merits for us ex opere
operato remission of sin. For that is not what Christ says, but as
in other sacraments Christ has attached the promise to an external sign,
so He attaches the promise of the forgiveness of sin in this place to external
good works. And as in the Lord's Supper we do not obtain forgiveness of
sin without faith, ex opere operato, so neither in this action,
when we forgive. For, our forgiving is not a good work, except it is performed
by a person whose sins have been previously forgiven by God in Christ.
If, therefore, our forgiving is to please God, it must follow after the
forgiveness which God extends to us. For, as a rule, Christ combines these
two, the Law and the Gospel, both faith and good works, in order to indicate
that, where good works do not follow, there is no faith either, that we
may have external marks, which remind us of the Gospel and the forgiveness
of sin, for our comfort, and that thus our faith may be exercised in many
ways. In this manner we are to understand such passages, otherwise they
would directly contradict the entire Gospel, and our beggarly works would
be put in the place of Christ, who alone is to be the propitiation, which
no man is by any means to despise. Again, if these passages were to be
understood as relating to works, the remission of sins would be quite uncertain;
for it would rest on a poor foundation, on our miserable works.]
144] But works become conspicuous among men. Human reason naturally
admires these, and because it sees only works, and does not understand
or consider faith, it dreams accordingly that these works merit remission
of sins and justify. This opinion of the Law inheres by nature in men's
minds; 145] neither can it be expelled, unless when we are divinely
taught. But the mind must be recalled from such carnal opinions to the
Word of God. We see that the Gospel and the promise concerning Christ have
been laid before us. When, therefore, the Law is preached, when works are
enjoined, we should not spurn the promise concerning Christ. But the latter
must first be apprehended, in order that we may be able to produce good
works, and our works may please God, as Christ says, John 15, 5: Without
Me ye can do nothing. Therefore, if Daniel would have used such words
as these: "Redeem your sins by repentance," the adversaries would take
no notice of this passage. Now, since he has actually expressed this thought
in apparently other words, the adversaries distort his words to the injury
of the doctrine of grace and faith, although Daniel meant most especially
to include faith. Thus, therefore, we reply to the words of Daniel, that,
inasmuch as he is preaching repentance, he is teaching not only of works,
but also of faith, as the narrative itself in the context testifies. Secondly,
because Daniel clearly presents the promise, he necessarily requires faith
which believes that sins are freely remitted by God. AIthough, therefore,
in repentance he mentions works, yet Daniel does not say that by these
works we merit remission of sins. For Daniel speaks not only of the remission
of the punishment; because remission of the punishment is sought for in
vain, unless the heart first receive the remission of guilt. Besides, if
the adversaries understand Daniel as speaking only of the remission of
punishment, this passage will prove nothing against us, because it will
thus be necessary for even them to confess that the remission of sin and
free justification precede. Afterwards even we concede that the punishments
by which we are chastised, are mitigated by our prayers and good works,
and finally by our entire repentance, according to 1 Cor. 11, 31: For
if we would judge ourselves, we should not be judged. And Jer. 15,
19: If thou return, then will I bring thee again. And Zech. 1, 3:
Turn
ye unto Me, and I will turn unto you. And Ps. 50, 15: Call upon
Me in the day of trouble.
148] Let us, therefore, in all our encomiums upon works and in
the preaching of the Law retain this rule: that the Law is not observed
without Christ. As He Himself has said: Without Me ye can do nothing.
Likewise that: Without faith it is impossible to please God, Heb.
11, 6. For it is very certain that the doctrine of the Law is not intended
to remove the Gospel, and to remove Christ as Propitiator. And let the
Pharisees, our adversaries, be cursed, who so interpret the Law as to ascribe
the glory of Christ to works, namely, that they are a propitiation, that
they merit the remission of sins. It follows, therefore, that works are
always thus praised, namely, that they are pleasing on account of faith,
as works do not please without Christ as Propitiator. By Him we have
access to God, Rom. 5, 2, not by works, without Christ as Mediator.
149]
Therefore, when it is said, Matt. 19, 17: If thou wilt enter into life,
keep the commandments, we must believe that without Christ the commandments
are not kept, and without Him cannot please. Thus in the Decalog itself,
in the First Commandment, Ex. 20, 6: Showing mercy unto thousands of
them that love Me and keep My commandments, the most liberal promise
of the Law is added. But this Law is not observed without Christ. For it
always accuses the conscience which does not satisfy the Law, and therefore
in terror, flies from the judgment and punishment of the Law. Because the
Law worketh wrath, Rom. 4, 15. Man observes the Law however, when he hears
that for Christ's sake God is reconciled to us, even though we cannot satisfy
the Law. When, by this faith Christ is apprehended as Mediator, the heart
finds rest, and begins to love God and observe the Law, and knows that
now, because of Christ as Mediator, it is pleasing to God, even though
the inchoate fulfilling of the Law 150] be far from perfection and
be very impure. Thus we must judge also concerning the preaching of repentance.
For although in the doctrine of repentance the scholastics have said nothing
at all concerning faith, yet we think that none of our adversaries is so
mad as to deny that absolution is a voice of the Gospel. And absolution
ought to be received by faith, in order that it may cheer the terrified
conscience.
151] Therefore the doctrine of repentance, because it not only
commands new works, but also promises the remission of sins, necessarily
requires faith. For the remission of sins is not received unless by faith.
Therefore, in those passages that refer to repentance, we should always
understand that not only works, but also faith is required, as in Matt.
6, 14: For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father
will also forgive you. Here a work is required, and the promise of
the remission of sins is added, which does not occur on account of the
work, but through faith, on account of Christ. 152] Just as Scripture
testifies in many passages: Acts 10, 43: To Him give all the prophets
witness that through His name, whosoever believeth in Him, shall receive
remission of sins; and 1 John 2, 12: Your sins are forgiven you
for His name's sake; Eph. 1, 7: In whom 153] we have
redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins. Although what
need is there to recite testimonies? This is the very voice peculiar to
the Gospel, namely, that for Christ's sake, and not for the sake of our
works, we obtain by faith remission of sins. Our adversaries endeavor to
suppress this voice of the Gospel by means of distorted passages which
contain the doctrine of the Law, or of works. For it is true that in the
doctrine of repentance works are required, because certainly a new life
is required. But here the adversaries wrongly add that by such works we
merit the remission of sins, or justification. 154] And yet Christ
often connects the promise of the remission of sins to good works, not
because He means that good works are a propitiation, for they follow reconciliation;
but for two reasons. One is, because good fruits must necessarily follow.
Therefore He reminds us that, if good fruits do not follow, the repentance
is hypocritical and feigned. The other reason is, because we have need
of external signs of so great a promise, because 155] a conscience
full of fear has need of manifold consolation. As, therefore, Baptism and
the Lord's Supper are signs that continually admonish, cheer, and encourage
desponding minds to believe the more firmly that their sins are forgiven,
so the same promise is written and portrayed in good works, in order that
these works may admonish us to believe the more firmly. And those who produce
no good works do not excite themselves to believe, but despise these promises.
The godly on the other hand, embrace them, and rejoice that they have the
signs and testimonies of so great a promise. Accordingly, they exercise
themselves in these signs and testimonies. Just as, therefore, the Lord's
Supper does not justify us ex opere operato, without faith, so alms
do not justify us without faith, ex opere operato.
156] So also the address of Tobias, 4, 11, ought to be received:
Alms
free from every sin and from death. We will not say that this is hyperbole,
although it ought thus to be received, so as not to detract from the praise
of Christ, whose prerogative it is to free from sin and death. But we must
come back to the rule that without Christ the doctrine of the Law 157]
is of no profit. Therefore those alms please God which follow reconciliation
or justification, and not those which precede. Therefore they free from
sin and death, not ex opere operato, but, as we have said above
concerning repentance, that we ought to embrace faith and its fruits, so
here we must say concerning alms that this entire newness of life saves
[that they please God because they occur in believers]. Alms also are the
exercises of faith, which receives the remission of sins and overcomes
death, while it exercises itself more and more, and in these exercises
receives strength. We grant also this, that alms merit many favors from
God [but they cannot overcome death, hell, the devil, sins, and give the
conscience peace (for this must occur alone through faith in Christ)],
mitigate punishments, and that they merit our defense in the dangers of
sins and of death, as we have said a little before concerning the entire
repentance. [This is the simple meaning, which agrees also with other passages
of Scripture. For wherever in the Scriptures good works are praised, we
must always understand them according to the rule of Paul, that the Law
and works must not be elevated above Christ, but that Christ and faith
are as far above all works as the heavens are above the earth.]
158]
And the address of Tobias, regarded as a whole, shows that faith is required
before alms, 4, 5: Be mindful of the Lord, thy God, all thy days.
And afterwards, 4, 19: Bless the Lord, thy God, always, and desire of
Him that thy ways be directed. This, however, belongs properly to that
faith of which we speak, which believes that God is reconciled to it because
of His mercy, and which wishes to be justified sanctified, and governed
by God. 159] But our adversaries, charming men, pick out mutilated
sentences, in order to deceive those who are unskilled. Afterwards they
attach something from their own opinions. Therefore, entire passages are
to be required, because, according to the common precept, it is unbecoming,
before the entire Law is thoroughly examined, to judge or reply when any
single clause of it is presented. And passages, when produced in their
entirety, very frequently bring the interpretation with them.
160] Luke 11, 41 is also cited in a mutilated form, namely: Give
alms of such things as ye have; and, behold, all things are clean unto
you. The adversaries are very stupid [are deaf, and have callous ears;
therefore, we must so often etc.]. For time and again we have said that
to the preaching of the Law there should be added the Gospel concerning
Christ, because of whom good works are pleasing, but they everywhere teach
(without shame] that, Christ being excluded, 161] justification
is merited by the works of the Law. When this passage is produced unmutilated,
it will show that faith is required. Christ rebukes the Pharisees who think
that they are cleansed before God, i.e., that they are justified
by frequent ablutions [by all sorts of baptismata carnis, that is,
by all sorts of baths, washings, and cleansings of the body, of vessels,
of garments]. Just as some Pope or other says of the water sprinkled with
salt that it sanctifies and cleanses the people; and the gloss says
that it cleanses from venial sins. Such also were the opinions of
the Pharisees which Christ reproved, and to this feigned cleansing He opposes
a double cleanness, the one internal, the other external. He bids them
be cleansed inwardly [(which occurs only through faith)], and adds concerning
the outward cleanness: Give alms of such things as ye have; and, behold,
all things are clean unto you.
162] The adversaries do not apply
aright the universal particle all things; for Christ adds this conclusion
to both members: "All things will be clean unto you, if you will be clean
within, and will outwardly give alms." For He indicates that outward cleanness
is to be referred to works commanded by God, and not to human traditions,
such as the ablutions were at that time, and the daily sprinkling of water,
the vesture of monks, the distinctions of food, and similar acts of ostentation
are now. But the adversaries distort the meaning by sophistically transferring
the universal particle to only one part: 163] "All things will be
clean to those having given alms." (As if any one would infer: Andrew is
present; therefore all the apostles are present. Wherefore in the antecedent
both members ought to be joined: Believe and give alms. For to this the
entire mission, the entire office of Christ points; to this end He is come
that we should believe in Him. Now, if both parts are combined, believing
and giving alms, it follows rightly that all things are clean: the heart
by faith, the external conversation by good works. Thus we must combine
the entire sermon, and not invert the parts, and interpret the text to
mean that the heart is cleansed from sin by alms. Moreover, there are some
who think that these words were spoken by Christ against the Pharisees
ironically, as if He meant to say: Aye, my dear lords, rob and steal, and
then go and give alms, and you will be promptly cleansed, so that Christ
would in a somewhat sarcastic and mocking way puncture their pharisaical
hypocrisy. For, although they abounded in unbelief, avarice, and every
evil work, they still observed their purifications, gave alms, and believed
that they were quite pure, lovely saints. This interpretation is not contrary
to the text.] Yet Peter says, Acts 15, 9, that
hearts are purified by
faith. And when this entire passage is examined, it presents a meaning
harmonizing with the rest of Scripture, that, if the hearts are cleansed,
and then outwardly alms are added, i.e., all the works of love,
they are thus entirely clean, i.e., not only within, but also without.
And why is not the entire discourse added to it? There are many parts of
the reproof, some of which give commandment concerning faith, and others
concerning works. Nor is it the part of a candid reader to pick out the
commands concerning works, while the passages concerning faith are omitted.
164] Lastly, readers are to be admonished of this, namely, that
the adversaries give the worst advice to godly consciences when they teach
that by works the remission of sing is merited, because conscience, in
acquiring remission through works, cannot be confident that the work will
satisfy God. Accordingly, it is always tormented, and continually devises
other works and other acts of worship, until it altogether despairs. This
course is described by Paul, Rom. 4, 5, where he proves that the promise
of righteousness is not obtained because of our works, because we could
never affirm that we had a reconciled God. For the Law always accuses.
Thus the promise would be in vain and uncertain. He accordingly concludes
that this promise of the remission of sins and of righteousness is received
by faith, not on account of works. This is the true, simple, and genuine
meaning of Paul, in which the greatest consolation is offered godly consciences,
and the glory of Christ is shown forth, who certainly was given to us for
this purpose, namely, that through Him we might have grace, righteousness,
and peace.
165] Thus far we have reviewed the principal passages which the
adversaries cite against us, in order to show that faith does not justify,
and that we merit, by our works, remission of sins and grace. But we hope
that we have shown clearly enough to godly consciences that these passages
are not opposed to our doctrine; that the adversaries wickedly distort
the Scriptures to their opinions; that the most of the passages which they
cite have been garbled; that, while omitting the clearest passages concerning
faith, they only select from the Scriptures passages concerning works,
and even these they distort; that everywhere they add certain human opinions
to that which the words of Scripture say; that they teach the Law in such
a manner as to suppress the Gospel concerning Christ. 166] For the
entire doctrine of the adversaries is, in part, derived from human reason,
and is, in part, a doctrine of the Law, not of the Gospel. For they teach
two modes of justification, of which the one has been derived from reason
and the other from the Law, not from the Gospel, or the promise concerning
Christ.
167] The former mode of justification with them is, that they
teach that by good works men merit grace both de congruo and de
condigno. This mode is a doctrine of reason, because reason, not seeing
the uncleanness of the heart, thinks that it pleases God if it perform
good works, and for this reason other works and other acts of worship are
constantly devised, by men in great peril, against the terrors of conscience.
The heathen and the Israelites slew human victims, and undertook many other
most painful works in order to appease God's wrath. Afterwards, orders
of monks were devised, and these vied with each other in the severity of
their observances against the terrors of conscience and God's wrath. And
this mode of justification, because it is according to reason, and is altogether
occupied with outward works, can be understood, and to a certain extent
be rendered. And to this the canonists have distorted the misunderstood
Church ordinances, which were enacted by the Fathers for a far different
purpose, namely, not that by these works we should seek after righteousness,
but that, for the sake of mutual tranquillity among men, there might be
a certain order in the Church. In this manner they also distorted the Sacraments,
and most especially the Mass, through which they seek ex opere operato
righteousness, grace, and salvation.
168] Another mode of justification is handed down by the scholastic
theologians when they teach that we are righteous through a habit infused
by God, which is love, and that, aided by this habit, we observe the Law
of God outwardly and inwardly, and that this fulfilling of the Law is worthy
of grace and of eternal life. This doctrine is plainly the doctrine of
the Law. For that is true which the Law says: Thou shalt love the Lord,
thy God, etc., Deut. 6, 5. Thou shalt love thy neighbor, Lev.
19, 18. Love is, therefore, the fulfilling of the Law.
169] But it is easy for a Christian to judge concerning both
modes, because both modes exclude Christ, and are therefore to be rejected.
In the former, which teaches that our works are a propitiation for sin,
the impiety is manifest. The latter mode contains much that is injurious.
It does not teach that, when we are born again, we avail ourselves of Christ.
It does not teach that justification is the remission of sins. It does
not teach that we attain the remission of sins before we love, but falsely
represents that we rouse in ourselves the act of love, through which we
merit remission of sins. Nor does it teach that by faith in Christ we overcome
the terrors of sin and death. It falsely represents that, by their own
fulfilling of the Law, without Christ as Propitiator, men come to God.
Finally, it represents that this very fulfilling of the Law, without Christ
as Propitiator, is righteousness worthy of grace and eternal life, while
nevertheless scarcely a weak and feeble fulfilling of the Law occurs even
in saints.
170] But if any one will only reflect upon it that the Gospel
has not been given in vain to the world, and that Christ has not been promised,
set forth, has not been born, has not suffered, has not risen again in
vain, he will most readily understand that we are justified not from reason
or from the Law. In regard to justification, we therefore are compelled
to dissent from the adversaries. For the Gospel shows another mode; the
Gospel compels us to avail ourselves of Christ in justification; it teaches
that through Him we have access to God by faith; it teaches that we ought
to set Him as Mediator and Propitiator against God's wrath; it teaches
that by faith in Christ the remission of sins and reconciliation are received,
171]
and the terrors of sin and of death overcome. Thus Paul also says that
righteousness
is not of the Law, but of the promise, in which the Father has promised
that He wishes to forgive, that for Christ's sake He wishes to be reconciled.
This promise, however, is received by faith alone, as Paul testifies, Rom.
4, 13. This faith alone receives remission of sins, justifies, and regenerates.
Then love and other good fruits follow. Thus, therefore, we teach that
man is justified, as we have above said, when conscience, terrified by
the preaching of repentance, is cheered and believes that for Christ's
sake it has a reconciled God. This faith is counted for righteousness
before God, Rom. 4, 3. 5. 172] And when in this manner the heart
is cheered and quickened by faith, it receives the Holy Ghost, who renews
us, so that we are able to observe the Law; so that we are able to love
God and the Word of God, and to be submissive to God in afflictions; so
that we are able to be chaste, to love our neighbor, etc. Even though these
works are as yet far distant from the perfection of the Law, yet they please
on account of faith, by which we are accounted righteous, because we believe
that for Christ's sake we have a reconciled God.
173] These things
are plain and in harmony with the Gospel, and can be understood by persons
of sound mind. And from this foundation it can easily be decided why we
ascribe justification to faith, and not to love; although love follows
faith, because love is the fulfilling of the Law. But Paul teaches that
we are justified not from the Law, but from the promise which is received
only by faith. For we neither come to God without Christ as Mediator, nor
receive remission of sins for the sake of our love, but for the sake of
Christ.
174] Likewise we are not able to love God while He is angry,
and the Law always accuses us, always manifests to us an angry God. Therefore,
by faith we must first apprehend the promise that for Christ's sake the
Father is reconciled and forgives. 175] Afterwards we begin to observe
the Law. Our eyes are to be cast far away from human reason, far away from
Moses upon Christ, and we are to believe that Christ is given us, in order
that for His sake we may be accounted righteous. In the flesh we never
satisfy the Law. Thus, therefore, we are accounted righteous, not on account
of 176] the Law, but on account of Christ, because His merits are
granted us, if we believe on Him. If any one, therefore, has considered
these foundations, that we are not justified by the Law, because human
nature cannot observe the Law of God and cannot love God, but that we are
justified from the promise, in which, for Christ's sake, reconciliation,
righteousness, and eternal life have been promised, he will easily understand
that justification must necessarily be ascribed to faith, if he only will
reflect upon the fact that it is not in vain that Christ has been promised
and set forth, that He has been born and has suffered and been raised again;
if he will reflect upon the fact that the promise of grace in Christ is
not in vain, that it was made immediately from the beginning of the world,
apart from and beyond the Law; if he will reflect upon the fact that the
promise should be received by faith, as 1 John 5, 10 sq. says:
He that
believeth not God hath made Him a liar, because he believeth not the record
that God gave of His Son. And this is the record that God hath given
to us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. He that hath the Son hath
life, and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life. And Christ says,
John 8, 36: If the Son, therefore, shall make you free, ye shall be
free indeed. And Paul, Rom. 5, 2: By whom also we have access to
God; and he adds: by faith. By faith in Christ, therefore, the
promise of remission of sins and of righteousness is received. Neither
are we justified before God by reason or by the Law.
177] These things are so plain and so manifest that we wonder
that the madness of the adversaries is so great as to call them into doubt.
The proof is manifest that, since we are justified before God not from
the Law, but from the promise, it is necessary to ascribe justification
to faith. What can be opposed to 178] this proof, unless some one
wish to abolish the entire Gospel and the entire Christ? The glory of Christ
becomes more brilliant when we teach that we avail ourselves of Him as
Mediator and Propitiator. Godly consciences see that in this doctrine the
most abundant consolation is offered to them, namely, that they ought to
believe and most firmly assert that they have a reconciled Father for Christ's
sake, and not for the sake of our righteousness, and 179] that,
nevertheless, Christ aids us, so that we are able to observe also the Law.
Of such great blessings as these the adversaries deprive the Church when
they condemn, and endeavor to efface, the doctrine concerning the righteousness
of faith. Therefore let all well-disposed minds beware of consenting to
the godless counsels of the adversaries. In the doctrine of the adversaries
concerning justification no mention is made of Christ, and how we ought
to set Him against the wrath of God, as though, indeed, we were able to
overcome the wrath of God by love, or to love an angry God. 180]
In regard to these things, consciences are left in uncertainty. For if
they are to think that they have a reconciled God for the reason that they
love, and that they observe the Law, they must needs always doubt whether
they have a reconciled God, because they either do not feel this love,
as the adversaries acknowledge, or they certainly feel that it is very
small; and much more frequently do they feel that they are angry at the
judgment of God, who oppresses human nature with many terrible evils, with
troubles of this life, the terrors of eternal wrath, etc. When, therefore,
will conscience be at rest, when will it be pacified? When, in this doubt
and in these terrors, will it love God? What else is the doctrine of the
Law than a doctrine of despair? 181] And let any one of our adversaries
come forward who can teach us concerning this love, how he himself loves
God. They do not at all understand what they say; they only echo, just
like the walls of a house, the little word "love," without understanding
it. So confused and obscure is their doctrine: it not only transfers the
glory of Christ to human works, but also leads consciences either to presumption
or to despair. 182] But ours, we hope, is readily understood by
pious minds, and brings godly and salutary consolation to terrified consciences.
For as the adversaries quibble that also many wicked men and devils believe,
we have frequently already said that we speak of faith in Christ, i.e.,
of faith in the remission of sins, of faith which truly and heartily assents
to the promise of grace. This is not brought about without a great struggle
in human hearts. And men of sound mind can easily judge that the faith
which believes that we are cared for by God, and that we are forgiven and
heard by Him, is a matter above nature. For of its own accord the human
mind makes no such decision concerning God. Therefore this faith of which
we speak is neither in the wicked nor in devils.
183] Furthermore, if any sophist cavils that righteousness is
in the will, and therefore it cannot be ascribed to faith, which is in
the intellect, the reply is easy, because in the schools even such persons
acknowledge that the will commands the intellect to assent to the Word
of God. We say also quite clearly: Just as the terrors of sin and death
are not only thoughts of the intellect, but also horrible movements of
the will fleeing God's judgment, so faith is not only knowledge in the
intellect, but also confidence in the will, i.e., it is to wish
and to receive that which is offered in the promise, namely, reconciliation
and remission of sins. 184] Scripture thus uses the term "faith,"
as the following sentence of Paul testifies, Rom. 5, 1:
Being justified
by faith, we have peace with God. Moreover, in this passage, to justify
signifies, according to forensic usage, to acquit a guilty one and declare
him righteous, but on account of the righteousness of another, 185]
namely, of Christ, which righteousness of another is communicated to us
by faith. Therefore, since in this passage our righteousness is the imputation
of the righteousness of another, we must here speak concerning righteousness
otherwise than when in philosophy or in a civil court we seek after the
righteousness of one's own work, which certainly is in the will. Paul accordingly
says, 1 Cor. 1, 30: Of Him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made
unto us wisdom, and Righteousness, and Sanctification, and Redemption.
And 2 Cor. 5, 21: 186] He hath made Him to be sin for us who
knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in Him.
But because the righteousness of Christ is given us by faith, faith is
for this reason righteousness in us imputatively, i.e., it is that
by which we are made acceptable to God on account of the imputation and
ordinance of God, as Paul says, 187] Rom. 4, 3. 5: Faith is reckoned
for righteousness. Although on account of certain captious persons
we must say technically: Faith is truly righteousness, because it is obedience
to the Gospel. For it is evident that obedience to the command of a superior
is truly a species of distributive justice. And this obedience to the Gospel
is reckoned for righteousness, so that, only on account of this, because
by this we apprehend Christ as Propitiator, good works, or obedience to
the Law, are pleasing. For we do not satisfy the Law, but for Christ's
sake this is forgiven us, as Paul says, Rom. 8, 1: There is therefore
now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus. This faith gives
God the honor, gives God 188] that which is His own, in this, that,
by receiving the promises, it obeys Him. Just as Paul also says, Rom. 4,
20: He staggered not at the promise of God through unbelief, but was
strong in faith, giving glory to God. 189] Thus the worship
and divine service of the Gospel is to receive from God gifts; on the contrary,
the worship of the Law is to offer and present our gifts to God. We can,
however, offer nothing to God unless we have first been reconciled and
born again. This passage, too, brings the greatest consolation, as the
chief worship of t>
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sion of sins, grace, and righteousness. Of this worship Christ says, John
6, 40: This is the will of Him that sent Me, that every one which seeth
the Son, and believeth on Him, may have everlasting life. And the Father
says, Matt. 17, 5:
This is My beloved Son, 190] in whom
I am well pleased, hear ye Him. The adversaries speak of obedience
to the Law; they do not speak of obedience to the Gospel; and yet we cannot
obey the Law, unless, through the Gospel, we have been born again, since
we cannot love God, unless the remission of sins has been received. 191]
For as long as we feel that He is angry with us, human nature flees from
His wrath and judgment. If any one should make a cavil such as this: If
that be faith which wishes those things that are offered in the promise,
the habits of faith and hope seem to be confounded, because hope is that
which expects promised things,to this we reply that these dispositions
cannot in reality be severed, in the manner that they are divided by idle
speculations in the schools. For also in the Epistle to the Hebrews faith
is defined as
the substance (exspectatio) of things hoped
for, Heb. 11, 1. Yet if any one wish a distinction to be made, we say
that the object of hope is properly a future event, but that faith is concerned
with future and present things, and receives in the present the remission
of sins offered in the promise.
192] From these statements we hope that it can be sufficiently
understood, both what faith is, and that we are compelled to hold that
by faith we are justified, reconciled, and regenerated, if, indeed, we
wish to teach the righteousness of the Gospel, and not the righteousness
of the Law. For those who teach that we are justified by love teach the
righteousness of the Law, 193] and do not teach us in justification
to avail ourselves of Christ as Mediator. These things also are manifest,
namely, that not by love, but by faith, we overcome the terrors of sin
and death, that we cannot oppose our love and fulfilling of the Law to
the wrath of God, because Paul says, Rom. 5, 2: By Christ we have access
to God by faith. We urge this sentence so frequently for the sake of
perspicuity. For it shows most clearly the state of our whole case, and,
when carefully considered, can teach abundantly concerning the whole matter,
and can console well-disposed minds. Accordingly, it is of advantage to
have it at hand and in sight, not only that we may be able to oppose it
to the doctrine of our adversaries, who teach that we come to God not by
faith, but by love and merits, without Christ as Mediator; and also, at
the same time that, 194] when in fear, we may cheer ourselves and
exercise faith. This is also manifest, that without the aid of Christ we
cannot observe the Law, as He Himself says, John 15, 5:
Without Me ye
can do nothing. Accordingly, before we observe the Law, our hearts
must be born again by faith. [From the explanations which we have made
it can easily be inferred what answer must be given to similar quotations.
For the rule so interprets all passages that treat of good works that outside
of Christ they are to be worthless before God, and that the heart must
first have Christ, and believe that it is accepted with God for Christ's
sake, not because of its own works. The adversaries also bring forward
some arguments of the schools, which are easily answered, if you know what
faith is. Tried Christians speak of faith quite differently from the sophists,
for we have shown before that to believe means to rely on the mercy of
God, that He desires to be gracious for Christ's sake, without our merits.
That is what it means to believe the article of the forgiveness of sin.
To believe this does not mean to know the history only, which the devils
also know. Therefore we can easily meet the argument of the schools when
they say that the devils also believe, therefore faith does not justify.
Aye, the devils know the history, but they do not believe the forgiveness
of sin. Again, they say: To be righteous is to be obedient. Now, to perform
works is certainly obedience; therefore works must justify. We should answer
this as follows: To be righteous is a kind of obedience which God accepts
as such. Now, God is not willing to accept our obedience in works as righteousness;
for it is not an obedience of the heart, because none truly keep the Law.
For this reason He has ordained that there shou |