|
Epitome
of the Formula of Concord
of the
Articles
in Controversy
among the Theologians
of the Augsburg Confession,
Set Forth and Reconciled in a Christian Way,
according to the Direction of God's Word,
in the Following Recapitulation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Summary,
Rule and Norm
Original Sin
Free Will
The Righteousness
of Faith
Good Works
Law and Gospel
Third Use of the Law
The Lord's Supper
The Person of Christ
Christ's Descent to Hell
Adiaphora
Election
Other Sects
Anabaptists
Schwenkfeldians
New Arians
Anti-Trinitarians
Comprehensive
Summary, Rule and Norm
According to which all dogmas should be judged,
and the erroneous teachings [controversies]that have
occurred should be decided and explained in a Christian way.
1] 1. We believe, teach, and confess that the sole rule and standard
according to which all dogmas together with [all] teachers should be estimated
and judged are the prophetic and apostolic Scriptures of the Old and of
the New Testament alone, as it is written Ps. 119, 105: Thy Word is a lamp
unto my feet and a light unto my path. And St. Paul: Though an angel from
heaven preach any other gospel unto you, let him be accursed, Gal. 1, 8.
2] Other writings, however, of ancient or modern teachers, whatever
name they bear, must not be regarded as equal to the Holy Scriptures, but
all of them together be subjected to them, and should not be received otherwise
or further than as witnesses, [which are to show] in what manner after
the time of the apostles, and at what places, this [pure] doctrine of the
prophets and apostles was preserved.
3] 2. And because directly after the times of the apostles, and
even while they were still living, false teachers and heretics arose, and
symbols, i. e., brief, succinct [categorical] confessions, were composed
against them in the early Church, which were regarded as the unanimous,
universal Christian faith and confession of the orthodox and true Church,
namely, the Apostles' Creed, the Nicene Creed, and the Athanasian Creed,
we pledge ourselves to them, and hereby reject all heresies and dogmas
which, contrary to them, have been introduced into the Church of God.
4] 3. As to the schisms in matters of faith, however, which have
occurred in our time, we regard as the unanimous consensus and declaration
of our Christian faith and confession, especially against the Papacy and
its false worship, idolatry, superstition, and against other sects, as
the symbol of our time, the First, Unaltered Augsburg Confession, delivered
to the Emperor Charles V at Augsburg in the year 1530, in the great Diet,
together with its Apology, and the Articles composed at Smalcald in the
year 1537, and subscribed at that time by the chief theologians.
5] And because such matters concern also the laity and the salvation
of their souls, we also confess the Small and Large Catechisms of Dr. Luther,
as they are included in Luther's works, as the Bible of the laity, wherein
everything is comprised which is treated at greater length in Holy Scripture,
and is necessary for a Christian man to know for his salvation.
6] To this direction, as above announced, all doctrines are to
be conformed, and what is, contrary thereto is to be rejected and condemned,
as opposed to the unanimous declaration of our faith.
7] In this way the distinction between the Holy Scriptures of
the Old and of the New Testament and all other writings is preserved, and
the Holy Scriptures alone remain the only judge, rule, and standard, according
to which, as the only test-stone, all dogmas shall and must be discerned
and judged, as to whether they are good or evil, right or wrong.
8] But the other symbols and writings cited are not judges, as
are the Holy Scriptures, but only a testimony and declaration of the faith,
as to how at any time the Holy Scriptures have been understood and explained
in the articles in controversy in the Church of God by those then living,
and how the opposite dogma was rejected and condemned [by what arguments
the dogmas conflicting with the Holy Scripture were rejected and condemned].
I. Original Sin.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
The Principal Question in This Controversy.
1] Whether original sin is properly and without any distinction
man's corrupt nature, substance, and essence, or at any rate the principal
and best part of his essence [substance], namely, the rational soul itself
in its highest state and powers; or whether, even after the Fall, there
is a distinction between man's substance, nature, essence, body, soul,
and original sin, so that the nature (itself] is one thing, and original
sin, which inheres in the corrupt nature and corrupts the nature, another.
Affirmative Theses.
The Pure Doctrine, Faith, and Confession
according to the Aforesaid Standard and Summary Declaration.
2] 1. We believe, teach, and confess that there is a distinction
between man's nature, not only as he was originally created by God pure
and holy and without sin, but also as we have it [that nature] now after
the Fall, namely, between the nature [itself], which even after the Fall
is and remains a creature of God, and original sin, and that this distinction
is as great as the distinction between a work of God and a work of the
devil.
3] 2. We believe, teach, and confess also that this distinction
should be maintained with the greatest care, because this doctrine, that
no distinction is to be made between our corrupt human nature and original
sin, conflicts with the chief articles of our Christian faith concerning
creation, redemption, sanctification, and the resurrection of our body,
and cannot coexist therewith.
4] For God created not only the body and soul of Adam and Eve
before the Fall, but also our bodies and souls after the Fall, notwithstanding
that they are corrupt, which God also still acknowledges as His work, as
it is written Job 10, 8: Thine hands have made me and fashioned me together
round about. Deut. 32, 18; Is. 45, 9ff; 54, 5; 64, 8; Acts 17, 28; Job
10, 8; Ps. 100, 3; 139, 14; Eccl. 12, 1.
5] Moreover, the Son of God has assumed this human nature, however,
without sin, and therefore not a foreign, but our own flesh, into the unity
of His person, and according to it is become our true Brother. Heb. 2,
14: Forasmuch, then, as the children were partakers of flesh and blood,
He also Himself likewise took part of the same. Again, 16; 4, 15: He took
not on Him the nature of angels, but He took on Him the seed of Abraham.
Wherefore in all things it behooved Him to be made like unto His brethren,
yet without sin. 6] In like manner Christ has also redeemed it as
His work, sanctifies it as His work, raises it from the dead, and gloriously
adorns it as His work. But original sin He has not created, assumed, redeemed,
sanctified; nor will He raise it, will neither adorn nor save it in the
elect, but in the (blessed] resurrection it will be entirely destroyed.
7] Hence the distinction between the corrupt nature and the corruption
which infects the nature and by which the nature became corrupt, can easily
be discerned.
8] 3. But, on the other hand, we believe, teach, and confess
that original sin is not a slight, but so deep a corruption of human nature
that nothing healthy or uncorrupt has remained in man's body or soul, in
his inner or outward powers, but, as the Church sings:
Through Adam's fall is all corrupt,
Nature and essence human.
9] This damage is unspeakable, and cannot be discerned by reason,
but only from God's Word. 10] And [we affirm] that no one but God
alone can separate from one another the nature and this corruption of the
nature, which will fully come to pass through death, in the [blessed] resurrection,
where our nature which we now bear will rise and live eternally without
original sin and separated and sundered from it, as it is written Job 19,
26: I shall be compassed again with this my skin, and in my flesh shall
I see God, whom I shall see for myself, and mine eyes shall behold.
Negative Theses.
Rejection of the False Opposite Dogmas.
11] 1. Therefore we reject and condemn the teaching that original
sin is only a reatus or debt on account of what has been committed by another
[diverted to us] without any corruption of our nature.
12] 2. Also, that evil lusts are not sin, but con-created, essential
properties of the nature, or, as though the above-mentioned defect and
damage were not truly sin, because of which man without Christ [not ingrafted
into Christ] would be a child of wrath.
13] 3. We likewise reject the Pelagian error, by which it is
alleged that man's nature even after the Fall is incorrupt, and especially
with respect to spiritual things has remained entirely good and pure in
naturalibus, i. e., in its natural powers.
14] 4. Also, that original sin is only a slight, insignificant
spot on the outside, dashed upon the nature, or a blemish that has been
blown upon it, beneath which [nevertheless] the nature has retained its
good powers even in spiritual things.
15] 5. Also, that original sin is only an external impediment
to the good spiritual powers, and not a despoliation or want of the same,
as when a magnet is smeared with garlic-juice, its natural power is not
thereby removed, but only impeded; or that this stain can be easily wiped
away like a spot from the face or pigment from the wall.
16] 6. Also, that in man the human nature and essence are not
entirely corrupt, but that man still has something good in him, even in
spiritual things, namely, capacity, skill, aptness, or ability in spiritual
things to begin, to work, or to help working for something [good].
17] 7. On the other hand, we also reject the false dogma of the
Manicheans, when it is taught that original sin, as something essential
and self-subsisting, has been infused by Satan into the nature, and intermingled
with it, as poison and wine are mixed.
18] 8. Also, that not the natural man, but something else and
extraneous to man, sins, on account of which not the nature, but only original
sin in the nature, is accused.
19] 9. We reject and condemn also as a Manichean error the doctrine
that original sin is properly and without any distinction the substance,
nature, and essence itself of the corrupt man, so that a distinction between
the corrupt nature, as such, after the Fall and original sin should not
even be conceived of, nor that they could be distinguished from one another
[even] in thought.
20] 10. Now, this original sin is called by Dr. Luther nature-sin,
person-sin, essential sin, not because the nature, person, or essence of
man is, without any distinction, itself original sin, but in order to indicate
by such words the distinction between original sin, which inheres in human
nature, and other sins, which are called actual sins.
21] 11. For original sin is not a sin which is committed, but
it inheres in the nature, substance, and essence of man, so that, though
no wicked thought ever should arise in the heart of corrupt man, no idle
word were spoken, no wicked deed were done, yet the nature is nevertheless
corrupted through original sin, which is born in us by reason of the sinful
seed, and is a fountainhead of all other actual sins, as wicked thoughts,
words, and works, as it is written Matt. 15, 19: Out of the heart proceed
evil thoughts. Also Gen. 6, 5; 8, 21: The imagination of man's heart is
evil from his youth.
22] 12. Thus there is also to be noted well the diverse signification
of the word nature, whereby the Manicheans cover their error and lead astray
many simple men. For sometimes it means the essence [the very substance]
of man, as when it is said: God created human nature. But at other times
it means the disposition and the vicious quality [disposition, condition,
defect, or vice] of a thing, which inheres in the nature or essence, as
when it is said: The nature of the serpent is to bite, and the nature and
disposition of man is to sin, and is sin; here the word nature does not
mean the substance of man, but something that inheres in the nature or
substance.
23] 13. But as to the Latin terms substantia and accidens, because
they are not words of Holy Scripture, and besides unknown to the ordinary
man, they should not be used in sermons before. ordinary, uninstructed
people, but simple people should be spared them.
24] But in the schools, among the learned, these words are rightly
retained in disputations concerning original sin, because they are well
known and used without any misunderstanding, to distinguish exactly between
the essence of a thing and what attaches to it in an accidental way.
25] For the distinction between God's work and that of the devil
is thereby designated in the clearest way, because the devil can create
no substance, but can only, in an accidental way, by the providence of
God [God permitting], corrupt the substance created by God.
II. Free Will.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
The Principal Question in This Controversy.
1] Since the will of man is found in four unlike states, namely:
1. before the Fall; 2. since the Fall; 3. after regeneration; 4. after
the resurrection of the body, the chief question is only concerning the
will and ability of man in the second state, namely, what powers in spiritual
things he has of himself after the fall of our first parents and before
regeneration, and whether he is able by his own powers, prior to and before
his regeneration by God's Spirit, to dispose and prepare himself for God's
grace, and to accept [and apprehend], or not, the grace offered through
the Holy Ghost in the Word and holy [divinely instituted] Sacraments.
Affirmative Theses.
The Pure Doctrine concerning This Article, according to God's Word.
2] 1. Concerning this subject, our doctrine, faith, and confession
is, that in spiritual things the understanding and reason of man are [altogether]
blind, and by their own powers understand nothing, as it is written 1 Cor.
2, 14: The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, for
they are foolishness to him; neither can he know them when he is examined
concerning spiritual things.
3] 2. Likewise we believe, teach, and confess that the unregenerate
will of man is not only turned away from God, but also has become an enemy
of God, so that it only has an inclination and desire for that which is
evil and contrary to God, as it is written Gen. 8, 21: The imagination
of man's heart is evil from his youth. Also Rom. 8, 7: The carnal mind
is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the Law of God, neither,
indeed, can be. Yea, as little as a dead body can quicken itself to bodily,
earthly life, so little can man, who by sin is spiritually dead, raise
himself to spiritual life, as it is written Eph. 2, 5: Even when we were
dead in sins, He hath quickened us together with Christ; 2 Cor. 3, 5: Not
that we are sufficient of ourselves to think anything good as of ourselves,
but that we are sufficient is of God.
4] 3. God the Holy Ghost, however, does not effect conversion
without means, but uses for this purpose the preaching and hearing of God's
Word, as it is written Rom. 1, 16: The Gospel is the power of God 5]
unto salvation to every one that believeth. Also Rom. 10, 17: Faith cometh
by hearing of the Word of God. And it is God's will that His Word should
be heard, and that man's ears should not be closed. Ps. 95, 8. With this
Word the Holy Ghost is present, and opens hearts, so that they, as Lydia
in Acts 16, 14, are attentive to it, and are thus converted alone through
the grace and power of the Holy Ghost, whose 6] work alone the conversion
of man is. For without His grace, and if He do not grant the increase,
our willing and running, our planting, sowing, and watering, all are nothing,
as Christ says John 15, 5: Without Me ye can do nothing. With these brief
words He denies to the free will its powers, and ascribes everything to
God's grace, in order that no one may boast before God. 1 Cor. 1, 29; 2
Cor. 12, 5; Jer. 9, 23.
Negative Theses.
Contrary False Doctrine.
7] Accordingly, we reject and condemn all the following errors
as contrary to the standard of God's Word:
8] 1. The delirium [insane dogma] of philosophers who are called
Stoics, as also of the Manicheans, who taught that everything that happens
must so happen, and cannot happen otherwise, and that everything that man
does, even in outward things, he does by compulsion, and that he is coerced
to evil works and deeds, as inchastity, robbery, murder, theft, and the
like.
9] 2. We reject also the error of the gross Pelagians, who taught
that man by his own powers, without the grace of the Holy Ghost, can turn
himself to God, believe the Gospel, be obedient from the heart to God's
Law, and thus merit the forgiveness of sins and eternal life.
10] 3. We reject also the error of the Semi-Pelagians, who teach
that man by his own powers can make a beginning of his conversion, but
without the grace of the Holy Ghost cannot complete it.
11] 4. Also, when it is taught that, although man by his free
will before regeneration is too weak to make a beginning, and by his own
powers to turn himself to God, and from the heart to be obedient to God,
yet, if the Holy Ghost by the preaching of the Word has made a beginning,
and therein offered His grace, then the will of man from its own natural
powers can add something, though little and feebly, to this end, can help
and cooperate, qualify and prepare itself for grace, and embrace and accept
it, and believe the Gospel.
12] 5. Also, that man, after he has been born again, can perfectly
observe and completely fulfil God's Law, and that this fulfilling is our
righteousness before God, by which we merit eternal life.
13] 6. Also, we reject and condemn the error of the Enthusiasts,
who imagine that God without means, without the hearing of God's Word,
also without the use of the holy Sacraments, draws men to Himself, and
enlightens, justifies, and saves them. (Enthusiasts we call those who expect
the heavenly illumination of the Spirit [celestial revelations] without
the preaching of God's Word.)
14] 7. Also, that in conversion and regeneration God entirely
exterminates the substance and essence of the old Adam, and especially
the rational soul, and in conversion and regeneration creates a new essence
of the soul out of nothing.
15] 8. Also, when the following expressions are employed without
explanation, namely, that the will of man before, in, and after conversion
resists the Holy Ghost, and that the Holy Ghost is given to those who resist
Him intentionally and persistently; for, as Augustine says, in conversion
God makes willing persons out of the unwilling and dwells in the willing.
16] As to the expressions of ancient and modern teachers of the
Church, when it is said: Deus trahit, sed volentem trahit, i. e., God draws,
but He draws the willing; likewise, Hominis voluntas in conversione non
est otiosa, sed agit aliquid, i. e., In conversion the will of man is not
idle, but also effects something, we maintain that, inasmuch as these expressions
have been introduced for confirming [the false opinion concerning] the
powers of the natural free will in man's conversion, against the doctrine
of God's grace, they do not conform to the form of sound doctrine, and
therefore, when we speak of conversion to God, justly ought to be avoided.
17] But, on the other hand, it is correctly said that in conversion
God, through the drawing of the Holy Ghost, makes out of stubborn and unwilling
men willing ones, and that after such conversion in the daily exercise
of repentance the regenerate will of man is not idle, but also cooperates
in all the works of the Holy Ghost, which He performs through us.
18] 9. Also what Dr. Luther has written, namely, that man's will
in his conversion is pure passive, that is, that it does nothing whatever,
is to be understood respectu divinae gratiae in accendendis novis motibus,
that is, when God's Spirit, through the Word heard or the use of the holy
Sacraments, lays hold upon man's will, and works [in man] the new birth
and conversion. For when [after] the Holy Ghost has wrought and accomplished
this, and man's will has been changed and renewed by His divine power and
working alone, then the new will of man is an instrument and organ of God
the Holy Ghost, so that he not only accepts grace, but also cooperates
with the Holy Ghost in the works which follow.
19] Therefore, before the conversion of man there are only two
efficient causes, namely, the Holy Ghost and the Word of God, as the instrument
of the Holy Ghost, by which He works conversion. This Word man is [indeed]
to hear; however, it is not by his own powers, but only through the grace
and working of the Holy Ghost that he can yield faith to it and accept
it.
III.
The Righteousness of Faith Before God.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
The Principal Question In This Controversy.
1] Since it is unanimously confessed in our churches, in accordance
with God's Word and the sense of the Augsburg Confession, that we poor
sinners are justified before God and saved alone by faith in Christ, and
thus Christ alone is our Righteousness, who is true God and man, because
in Him the divine and human natures are personally united with one another,
Jer. 23, 6; 1 Cor. 1, 30; 2 Cor. 5, 21, the question has arisen: According
to which nature is Christ our Righteousness? and thus two contrary errors
have arisen in some churches.
2] For the one side has held that Christ according to His divinity
alone is our Righteousness, if He dwell in us by faith; contrasted with
this divinity, dwelling in us by faith, the sins of all men must be regarded
as a drop of water compared to the great ocean. Others, on the contrary,
have held that Christ is our Righteousness before God according to the
human nature alone.
Affirmative Theses.
Pure Doctrine of the Christian Churches against Both Errors Just
Mentioned.
3] 1. Against both the errors just recounted, we unanimously
believe, teach, and confess that Christ is our Righteousness neither according
to the divine nature alone nor according to the human nature alone, but
that it is the entire Christ according to both natures, in His obedience
alone, which as God and man He rendered to the Father even unto death,
and thereby merited for us the forgiveness of sins and eternal life, as
it is written: As by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so
by the obedience of One shall many be made righteous, Rom. 5, 19.
4] 2. Accordingly, we believe, teach, and confess that our righteousness
before God is (this very thing], that God forgives us our sins out of pure
grace, without any work, merit, or worthiness of ours preceding, present,
or following, that He presents and imputes to us the righteousness of Christ's
obedience, on account of which righteousness we are received into grace
by God, and regarded as righteous.
5] 3. We believe, teach, and confess that faith alone is the
means and instrument whereby we lay hold of Christ, and thus in Christ
of that righteousness which avails before God, for whose sake this faith
is imputed to us for righteousness, Rom. 4, 5.
6] 4. We believe, teach, and confess that this faith is not a
bare knowledge of the history of Christ, but such a gift of God by which
we come to the right knowledge of Christ as our Redeemer in the Word of
the Gospel, and trust in Him that for the sake of His obedience alone we
have, by grace, the forgiveness of sins, are regarded as holy and righteous
before God the Father, and eternally saved.
7] 5. We believe, teach, and confess that according to the usage
of Holy Scripture the word justify means in this article, to absolve, that
is, to declare free from sins. Prov. 17, 15: He that justifieth the wicked,
and he that condemneth the righteous, even they both are abomination to
the Lord. Also Rom. 8, 33: Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's
elect? It is God that justifieth.
8] And when, in place of this, the words regeneratio and vivificatio,
that is, regeneration and vivification, are employed, as in the Apology,
this is done in the same sense. By these terms, in other places, the renewal
of man is understood, and distinguished from justification by faith.
9] 6. We believe, teach, and confess also that notwithstanding
the fact that many weaknesses and defects cling to the true believers and
truly regenerate, even to the grave, still they must not on that account
doubt either their righteousness which has been imputed to them by faith,
or the salvation of their souls, but must regard it as certain that for
Christ's sake, according to the promise and [immovable] Word of the holy
Gospel, they have a gracious God.
10] 7. We believe, teach, and confess that for the preservation
of the pure doctrine concerning the righteousness of faith before God it
is necessary to urge with special diligence the particulae exclusivae,
that is, the exclusive particles, i. e., the following words of the holy
Apostle Paul, by which the merit of Christ is entirely separated from our
works, and the honor given to Christ alone, when the holy Apostle Paul
writes: Of grace, without merit, without Law, without works, not of works.
All these words together mean as much as that we are justified and saved
alone by faith in Christ. Eph. 2, 8; Rom. 1, 17; 3, 24; 4, 3ff.; Gal. 3,
11; Heb. 11.
11] 8. We believe, teach, and confess that, although the contrition
that precedes, and the good works that follow, do not belong to the article
of justification before God, yet one is not to imagine a faith of such
a kind as can exist and abide with, and alongside of, a wicked intention
to sin and to act against the conscience. But after man has been justified
by faith, then a true living faith worketh by love, Gal. 5, 6, so that
thus good works always follow justifying faith, and are surely found with
it, if it be true and living; for it never is alone, but always has with
it love and hope.
Antitheses: Contrary Doctrines Rejected.
12] Therefore we reject and condemn all the following errors:
13] 1. That Christ is our Righteousness according to His divine
nature alone.
14] 2. That Christ is our Righteousness according to His human
nature alone.
15] 3. That in the sayings of the prophets and apostles where
the righteousness of faith is spoken of the words justify and to be justified
are not to signify declaring or being declared free from sins, and obtaining
the forgiveness of sins, but actually being made righteous before God,
because of love infused by the Holy Ghost, virtues, and the works following
them.
16] 4. That faith looks not only to the obedience of Christ,
but to His divine nature, as it dwells and works in us, and that by this
indwelling our sins are covered.
17] 5. That faith is such a trust in the obedience of Christ
as can exist and remain in a man even when he has no genuine repentance,
in whom also no love follows, but who persists in sins against his conscience.
18] 6. That not God Himself, but only the gifts of God, dwell
in believers.
19] 7. That faith saves on this account, because by faith the
renewal, which consists in love to God and one's neighbor, is begun in
us.
20] 8. That faith has the first place in justification, nevertheless
also renewal and love belong to our righteousness before God in such a
manner that they [renewal and love] are indeed not the chief cause of our
righteousness, but that nevertheless our righteousness before God is not
entire or perfect without this love and renewal.
21] 9. That believers are justified before God and saved jointly
by the imputed righteousness of Christ and by the new obedience begun in
them, or in part by the imputation of Christ's righteousness, but in part
also by the new obedience begun in them.
22] 10. That the promise of grace is made our own by faith in
the heart, and by the confession which is made with the mouth, and by other
virtues.
23] 11. That faith does not justify without good works; so that
good works are necessarily required for righteousness, and without their
presence man cannot be justified.
IV. Good Works.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
The Principal Question In the Controversy concerning Good Works.
1] Concerning the doctrine of good works two divisions have arisen
in some churches:
2] 1. First, some theologians have become divided because of
the following expressions, where the one side wrote: Good works are necessary
for salvation. It is impossible to be saved without good works. Also: No
one has ever been saved without good works. But the other side, on the
contrary, wrote: Good works are injurious to salvation.
3] 2. Afterwards a schism arose also between some theologians
with respect to the two words necessary and free, since the one side contended
that the word necessary should not be employed concerning the new obedience,
which, they say, does not flow from necessity and coercion, but from a
voluntary spirit. The other side insisted on the word necessary, because,
they say, this obedience is not at our option, but regenerate men are obliged
to render this obedience.
4] From this disputation concerning the terms a controversy afterwards
occurred concerning the subject itself; for the one side contended that
among Christians the Law should not be urged at all, but men should be
exhorted to good works from the Holy Gospel alone; the other side contradicted
this.
Affirmtive Theses.
Pure Doctrine of the Christian Churches concerning This Controversy.
5] For the thorough statement and decision of this controversy
our doctrine, faith, and confession is:
6] 1. That good works certainly and without doubt follow true
faith, if it is not a dead, but a living faith, as fruits of a good tree.
7] 2. We believe, teach, and confess also that good works should
be entirely excluded, just as well in the question concerning salvation
as in the article of justification before God, as the apostle testifies
with clear words, when he writes as follows: Even as David also describeth
the blessedness of the man unto whom God imputeth righteousness without
works, saying, Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin,
Rom. 4, 6ff And again: By grace are ye saved through faith; and that not
of yourselves, it is the gift of God; not of works, lest any man should
boast, Eph. 2, 8. 9.
8] 3. We believe, teach, and confess also that all men, but those
especially who are born again and renewed by the Holy Ghost, are bound
to do good works.
9] 4. In this sense the words necessary, shall, and must are
employed correctly and in a Christian manner also with respect to the regenerate,
and in no way are contrary to the form of sound words and speech.
10] 5. Nevertheless, by the words mentioned, necessitas, necessarium,
necessity and necessary, if they be employed concerning the regenerate,
not coercion, but only due obedience is to be understood, which the truly
believing, so far as they are regenerate, render not from coercion or the
driving of the Law, but from a voluntary spirit; because they are no more
under the Law, but under grace, Rom. 6, 14; 7, 6; 8, 14.
11] 6. Accordingly, we also believe, teach, and confess that
when it is said: The regenerate do good works from a free spirit, this
is not to be understood as though it is at the option of the regenerate
man to do or to forbear doing good when he wishes, and that he can nevertheless
retain faith if he intentionally perseveres in sins.
12] 7. Yet this is not to be understood otherwise than as the
Lord Christ and His apostles themselves declare, namely, regarding the
liberated spirit, that it does not do this from fear of punishment, like
a servant, but from love of righteousness, like children, Rom. 8, 15.
13] 8. Although this voluntariness [liberty of spirit] in the
elect children of God is not perfect, but burdened with great weakness,
as St. Paul complains concerning himself, Rom. 7, 14-25; Gal. 5, 17;
14] 9. Nevertheless, for the sake of the Lord Christ, the Lord
does not impute this weakness to His elect, as it is written: There is
therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, Rom. 8,
1.
15] 10. We believe, teach, and confess also that not works maintain
faith and salvation in us, but the Spirit of God alone, through faith,
of whose presence and indwelling good works are evidences.
Negative Theses.
False Contrary Doctrine.
16] 1. Accordingly, we reject and condemn the following modes
of speaking: when it is taught and written that good works are necessary
to salvation; also, that no one ever has been saved without good works;
also, that it is impossible to be saved without good works.
17] 2. We reject and condemn as offensive and detrimental to
Christian discipline the bare expression, when it is said: Good works are
injurious to salvation.
18] For especially in these last times it is no less needful
to admonish men to Christian discipline [to the way of living aright and
godly] and good works, and remind them how necessary it is that they exercise
themselves in good works as a declaration of their faith and gratitude
to God, than that the works be not mingled in the article of justification;
because men may be damned by an Epicurean delusion concerning faith, as
well as by papistic and Pharisaic confidence in their own works and merits.
19] 3. We also reject and condemn the dogma that faith and the
indwelling of the Holy Ghost are not lost by wilful sin, but that the saints
and elect retain the Holy Ghost even though they fall into adultery and
other sins and persist therein.
V. Law and Gospel
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
The Principal Question In This Controversy.
1] Whether the preaching of the Holy Gospel is properly not only
a preaching of grace, which announces the forgiveness of sins, but also
a preaching of repentance and reproof, rebuking unbelief, which, they say,
is rebuked not in the Law, but alone through the Gospel.
Affirmative Theses.
Pure Doctrine of God's Word.
2] 1. We believe, teach, and confess that the distinction between
the Law and the Gospel is to be maintained in the Church with great diligence
as an especially brilliant light, by which, according to the admonition
of St. Paul, the Word of God is rightly divided.
3] 2. We believe, teach, and confess that the Law is properly
a divine doctrine, which teaches what is right and pleasing to God, and
reproves everything that is sin and contrary to God's will.
4] 3. For this reason, then, everything that reproves sin is,
and belongs to, the preaching of the Law.
5] 4. But the Gospel is properly such a doctrine as teaches what
man who has not observed the Law, and therefore is condemned by it, is
to believe, namely, that Christ has expiated and made satisfaction for
all sins, and has obtained and acquired for him, without any merit of his
[no merit of the sinner intervening], forgiveness of sins, righteousness
that avails before God, and eternal life.
6] 5. But since the term Gospel is not used in one and the same
sense in the Holy Scriptures, on account of which this dissension originally
arose, we believe, teach, and confess that if by the term Gospel is understood
the entire doctrine of Christ which He proposed in His ministry, as also
did His apostles (in which sense it is employed, Mark 1, 15; Acts 20, 21),
it is correctly said and written that the Gospel is a preaching of repentance
and of the forgiveness of sins.
7] 6. But if the Law and the Gospel, likewise also Moses himself
[as] a teacher of the Law and Christ as a preacher of the Gospel are contrasted
with one another, we believe, teach, and confess that the Gospel is not
a preaching of repentance or reproof, but properly nothing else than a
preaching of consolation, and a joyful message which does not reprove or
terrify, but comforts consciences against the terrors of the Law, points
alone to the merit of Christ, and raises them up again by the lovely preaching
of the grace and favor of God, obtained through Christ's merit.
8] 7. As to the revelation of sin, because the veil of Moses
hangs before the eyes of all men as long as they hear the bare preaching
of the Law, and nothing concerning Christ, and therefore do not learn from
the Law to perceive their sins aright, but either become presumptuous hypocrites
[who swell with the opinion of their own righteousness] as the Pharisees,
or despair like Judas, Christ takes the Law into His hands, and explains
it spiritually, Matt. 5, 21ff ; Rom. 7, 14. And thus the wrath of God is
revealed from heaven against all sinners [Rom. 1, 18], how great it is;
by this means they are directed [sent back] to the Law, and then first
learn from it to know aright their sinsa knowledge which Moses never
could have forced out of them.
9] Accordingly, although the preaching of the suffering and death
of Christ, the Son of God, is an earnest and terrible proclamation and
declaration of God's wrath, whereby men are first led into the Law aright,
after the veil of Moses has been removed from them, so that they first
know aright how great things God in His Law requires of us, none of which
we can observe, and therefore are to seek all our righteousness in Christ:
10] 8. Yet as long as all this (namely, Christ's suffering and
death) proclaims God's wrath and terrifies man, it is still not properly
the preaching of the Gospel, but the preaching of Moses and the Law, and
therefore a foreign work of Christ, by which He arrives at His proper office,
that is, to preach grace, console, and quicken, which is properly the preaching
of the Gospel.
Negative Theses.
Contrary Doctrine which is Rejected.
11] Accordingly we reject and regard as incorrect and injurious
the dogma that the Gospel is properly a preaching of repentance or reproof,
and not alone a preaching of grace; for thereby the Gospel is again converted
into a doctrine of the Law, the merit of Christ and Holy Scripture are
obscured, Christians robbed of true consolation, and the door is opened
again to [the errors and superstitions of] the Papacy.
VI. The
Third Use of the Law.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
The Principal Question In This Controversy.
1] Since the Law was given to men for three reasons: first, that
thereby outward discipline might be maintained against wild, disobedient
men [and that wild and intractable men might be restrained, as though by
certain bars]; secondly, that men thereby may be led to the knowledge of
their sins; thirdly, that after they are regenerate and [much of] the flesh
notwithstanding cleaves to them, they might on this account have a fixed
rule according to which they are to regulate and direct their whole life,
a dissension has occurred between some few theologians concerning the third
use of the Law, namely, whether it is to be urged or not upon regenerate
Christians. The one side has said, Yea; the other, Nay.
Affirmative Theses.
The True Christian Doctrine concerning This Controversy.
2] 1. We believe, teach, and confess that, although men truly
believing [in Christ] and truly converted to God have been freed and exempted
from the curse and coercion of the Law, they nevertheless are not on this
account without Law, but have been redeemed by the Son of God in order
that they should exercise themselves in it day and night [that they should
meditate upon God's Law day and night, and constantly exercise themselves
in its observance, Ps. 1, 2], Ps. 119. For even our first parents before
the Fall did not live without Law, who had the Law of God written also
into their hearts, because they were created in the image of God, Gen.
1, 26f.; 2, 16ff; 3, 3.
3] 2. We believe, teach, and confess that the preaching of the
Law is to be urged with diligence, not only upon the unbelieving and impenitent,
but also upon true believers, who are truly converted, regenerate, and
justified by faith.
4] 3. For although they are regenerate and renewed in the spirit
of their mind, yet in the present life this regeneration and renewal is
not complete, but only begun, and believers are, by the spirit of their
mind, in a constant struggle against the flesh, that is, against the corrupt
nature and disposition which cleaves to us unto death. On account of this
old Adam, which still inheres in the understanding, the will, and all the
powers of man, it is needful that the Law of the Lord always shine before
them, in order that they may not from human devotion institute wanton and
self-elected cults [that they may frame nothing in a matter of religion
from the desire of private devotion, and may not choose divine services
not instituted by God's Word]; likewise, that the old Adam also may not
employ his own will, but may be subdued against his will, not only by the
admonition and threatening of the Law, but also by punishments and blows,
so that he may follow and surrender himself captive to the Spirit, 1 Cor.
9, 27; Rom. 6, 12, Gal. 6, 14; Ps. 119, 1ff ; Heb. 13, 21 (Heb. 12, 1).
5] 4. Now, as regards the distinction between the works of the
Law and the fruits of the Spirit, we believe, teach, and confess that the
works which are done according to the Law are and are called works of the
Law as long as they are only extorted from man by urging the punishment
and threatening of God's wrath.
6] 5. Fruits of the Spirit, however, are the works which the
Spirit of God who dwells in believers works through the regenerate, and
which are done by believers so far as they are regenerate [spontaneously
and freely], as though they knew of no command, threat, or reward; for
in this manner the children of God live in the Law and walk according to
the Law of God, which [mode of living] St. Paul in his epistles calls the
Law of Christ and the Law of the mind, Rom. 7, 25; 8, 7; Rom. 8, 2; Gal.
6, 2.
7] 6. Thus the Law is and remains both to the penitent and impenitent,
both to regenerate and unregenerate men, one [and the same] Law, namely,
the immutable will of God; and the difference, so far as concerns obedience,
is alone in man, inasmuch as one who is not yet regenerate does for the
Law out of constraint and unwillingly what it requires of him (as also
the regenerate do according to the flesh); but the believer, so far as
he is regenerate, does without constraint and with a willing spirit that
which no threatenings [however severe] of the Law could ever extort from
him.
Negative Theses.
False Contrary Doctrine.
8] Accordingly, we reject as a dogma and error injurious to,
and conflicting with, Christian discipline and true godliness the teaching
that the Law in the above-mentioned way and degree is not to be urged upon
Christians and true believers, but only upon unbelievers, non-Christians,
and the impenitent.
VII. The Lord's
Supper.
1] Although the Zwinglian teachers are not to be reckoned among
the theologians who affiliate with [acknowledge and profess] the Augsburg
Confession, as they separated from them at the very time when this Confession
was presented, nevertheless, since they are intruding themselves (into
their assembly], and are attempting, under the name of this Christian Confession,
to spread their error, we intend also to make a needful statement [we have
judged that the Church of Christ should be instructed also] concerning
this controversy.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
Chief Controversy between Our Doctrine and That of the Sacramentarians
regarding This Article.
2] Whether in the Holy Supper the true body and blood of our
Lord Jesus Christ are truly and essentially present, are distributed with
the bread and wine, and received with the mouth by all those who use this
Sacrament, whether they be worthy or unworthy, godly or ungodly, believing
or unbelieving; by the believing for consolation and life, by the unbelieving
for judgment? The Sacramentarians say, No; we say, Yes.
3] For the explanation of this controversy it is to be noted
in the beginning that there are two kinds of Sacramentarians. Some are
gross Sacramentarians, who declare in plain (deutschen), clear words as
they believe in their hearts, that in the Holy Supper nothing but bread
and wine is present, and distributed and received with the mouth. 4]
Others, however, are subtle Sacramentarians, and the most injurious of
all, who partly speak very speciously in our own words, and pretend that
they also believe a true presence of the true, essential, living body and
blood of Christ in the Holy Supper, however, that 5] this occurs
spiritually through faith. Nevertheless they retain under these specious
words precisely the former gross opinion, namely, that in the Holy Supper
nothing is present and received with the mouth except bread and wine. For
with them the word spiritually means nothing else than the Spirit of Christ
or the power of the absent body of Christ and His merit, which is present;
but the body of Christ is in no mode or way present, except only above
in the highest heaven, to which we should elevate ourselves into heaven
by the thoughts of our faith, and there, not at all, however, in the bread
and wine of the Holy Supper, should seek this body and blood [of Christ].
Affirmative Theses.
Confession of the Pure Doctrine concerning the Holy Supper against
the Sacramentarians.
6] 1. We believe, teach, and confess that in the Holy Supper
the body and blood of Christ are truly and essentially present, and are
truly distributed and received with the bread and wine.
7] 2. We believe, teach, and confess that the words of the testament
of Christ are not to be understood otherwise than as they read, according
to the letter, so that the bread does not signify the absent body and the
wine the absent blood of Christ, but that, on account of the sacramental
union, they [the bread and wine] are truly the body and blood of Christ.
8] 3. Now, as to the consecration, we believe, teach, and confess
that no work of man or recitation of the minister [of the church] produces
this presence of the body and blood of Christ in the Holy Supper, but that
this is to be ascribed only and alone to the almighty power of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
9] 4. But at the same time we also believe, teach, and confess
unanimously that in the use of the Holy Supper the words of the institution
of Christ should in no way be omitted, but should be publicly recited,
as it is written 1 Cor. 10, 16: The cup of blessing which we bless, etc.
This blessing occurs through the recitation of the words of Christ.
10] 5. The grounds, however, on which we stand against the Sacramentarians
in this matter are those which Dr. Luther has laid down in his Large Confession
concerning the Lord's Supper.
The first is this article 11] of our Christian faith: Jesus Christ
is true, essential, natural, perfect God and man in one person, undivided
and inseparable.
12] The second: That God's right hand is everywhere; at which
Christ is placed in deed and in truth according to His human nature, [and
therefore] being present, rules, and has in His hands and beneath His feet
everything that is in heaven and on earth [as Scripture says, Eph. 1, 22],
where no man else, nor angel, but only the Son of Mary is placed; hence
He can do this [those things which we have said].
13] The third: That God's Word is not false, and does not deceive.
14] The fourth: That God has and knows of various modes of being
in any place, and not only the one [is not bound to the one] which philosophers
call localis (local) for circumscribed].
15] 6. We believe, teach, and confess that the body and blood
of Christ are received with the bread and wine, not only spiritually by
faith, but also orally; yet not in a Capernaitic, but in a supernatural,
heavenly mode, because of the sacramental union; as the words of Christ
clearly show, when Christ gives direction to take, eat, and drink, as was
also done by the apostles; for it is written Mark 14, 23: And they all
drank of it. St. Paul likewise says, 1 Cor. 10, 16: The bread which we
break, is it not the communion of the body of Christ? that is: He who eats
this bread eats the body of Christ, which also the chief ancient teachers
of the Church, Chrysostom, Cyprian, Leo I, Gregory, Ambrose, Augustine,
unanimously testify.
16] 7. We believe, teach, and confess that not only the true
believers [in Christ] and the worthy, but also the unworthy and unbelievers,
receive the true body and blood of Christ; however, not for life and consolation,
but for judgment and condemnation, if they are not converted and do not
repent, 1 Cor. 11, 27. 29.
17] For although they thrust Christ from themselves as a Savior,
yet they must admit Him even against their will as a strict Judge, who
is just as present also to exercise and render judgment upon impenitent
guests as He is present to work life and consolation in the hearts of the
true believers and worthy guests.
18] 8. We believe, teach, and confess also that there is only
one kind of unworthy guests, namely, those who do not believe, concerning
whom it is written John 3, 18: He that believeth not is condemned already.
And this judgment becomes greater and more grievous, being aggravated,
by the unworthy use of the Holy Supper, 1 Cor. 11, 29.
19] 9. We believe, teach, and confess that no true believer,
as long as he retains living faith, however weak he may be, receives the
Holy Supper to his judgment, which was instituted especially for Christians
weak in faith, yet penitent, for the consolation and strengthening of their
weak faith [Matt. 9, 12; 11, 5. 28].
20] 10. We believe, teach, and confess that all the worthiness
of the guests of this heavenly feast is and consists in the most holy obedience
and perfect merit of Christ alone, which we appropriate to ourselves by
true faith, and whereof [of the application of this merit] we are assured
by the Sacrament, and not at all in [but in nowise does this worthiness
depend upon] our virtues or inward and outward preparations.
Negative Theses.
Contrary, Condemned Doctrines of the Sacramentarians.
21] On the other hand, we unanimously reject and condemn all
the following erroneous articles, which are opposed and contrary to the
doctrine presented above, the simple faith, and the [pure] confession concerning
the Lord's Supper;
22] 1. The papistic transubstantiation, when it is taught in
the Papacy that in the Holy Supper the bread and wine lose their substance
and natural essence, and are thus annihilated; that they are changed into
the body of Christ, and the outward form alone remains.
23] 2. The papistic sacrifice of the Mass for the sins of the
living and the dead.
24] 3. That [the sacrilege whereby] to laymen one form only of
the Sacrament is given, and, contrary to the plain words of the testament
of Christ, the cup is withheld from them, and they are [thus] deprived
of His blood.
25] 4. When it is taught that the words of the testament of Christ
must not be understood or believed simply as they read, but that they are
obscure expressions, whose meaning must be sought first in other passages
of Scripture.
26] 5. That in the Holy Supper the body of Christ is not received
orally with the bread; but that with the mouth only bread and wine are
received, the body of Christ, however, only spiritually by faith.
27] 6. That the bread and wine in the Holy Supper are nothing
more than [symbols or] tokens by which Christians recognize one another.
28] 7. That the bread and wine are only figures, similitudes,
and representations of the far absent body and blood of Christ.
29] 8. That the bread and wine are no more than a memorial, seal,
and pledge, through which we are assured that when faith elevates itself
to heaven, it there becomes partaker of the body and blood of Christ as
truly as we eat bread and drink wine in the Supper.
30] 9. That the assurance and confirmation of our faith [concerning
salvation] in the Holy Supper occur through the external signs of bread
and wine alone, and not through the true, [verily] present body and blood
of Christ.
31] 10. That in the Holy Supper only the power, efficacy, and
merit of the absent body and blood of Christ are distributed.
32] 11. That the body of Christ is so enclosed in heaven that
it can in no way be at once and at one time in many or all places upon
earth where His Holy Supper is celebrated.
33] 12. That Christ has not promised, neither could have effected,
the essential presence of His body and blood in the Holy Supper, because
the nature and property of His assumed human nature cannot suffer nor permit
it.
34] 13. That God, according to [even by] all His omnipotence
(which is dreadful to hear), is not able to cause His body to be essentially
present in more than one place at one time.
35] 14. That not the omnipotent words of Christ's testament,
but faith, produces and makes [is the cause of] the presence of the body
and blood of Christ in the Holy Supper.
36] 15. That believers must not seek the body [and blood] of
Christ in the bread and wine of the Holy Supper, but raise their eyes from
the bread to heaven and there seek the body of Christ.
37] 16. That unbelieving, impenitent Christians do not receive
the true body and blood of Christ in the Holy Supper, but only bread and
wine.
38] 17. That the worthiness of the guests at this heavenly meal
consists not alone in true faith in Christ, but also in the external preparation
of men.
39] 18. That even the true believers, who have and retain a true,
living, pure faith in Christ, can receive this Sacrament to their judgment,
because they are still imperfect in their outward life.
40] 19. That the external visible elements of the bread and wine
should be adored in the Holy Sacrament.
41] 20. Likewise, we consign also to the just judgment of God
all presumptuous, frivolous, blasphemous questions (which decency forbids
to mention) and [other] expressions, which most blasphemously and with
great offense [to the Church] are proposed by the Sacramentarians in a
gross, carnal, Capernaitic way concerning the supernatural, heavenly mysteries
of this Sacrament.
42] 21. Hence we hereby utterly [reject and] condemn the Capernaitic
eating of the body of Christ, as though [we taught that] His flesh were
rent with the teeth, and digested like other food, which the Sacramentarians,
against the testimony of their conscience, after all our frequent protests,
wilfully force upon us, and in this way make our doctrine odious to their
hearers; and on the other hand, we maintain and believe, according to the
simple words of the testament of Christ, the true, yet supernatural eating
of the body of Christ, as also the drinking of His blood, which human senses
and reason do not comprehend, but as in all other articles of faith our
reason is brought into captivity to the obedience of Christ, and this mystery
is not apprehended otherwise than by faith alone, and revealed in the Word
alone.
VIII. The
Person of Christ.
1] From the controversy concerning the Holy Supper a disagreement
has arisen between the pure theologians of the Augsburg Confession and
the Calvinists, who also have confused some other theologians, concerning
the person of Christ and the two natures in Christ and their properties.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
Chief Controversy In This Dissension.
2] The chief question, however, has been whether, because of
the personal union, the divine and human natures, as also their properties,
have realiter, that is, in deed and truth, a communion with one another
in the person of Christ, and how far this communion extends.
3] The Sacramentarians have asserted that the divine and human
natures in Christ are united personally in such a way that neither has
realiter, that is, in deed and truth, in common with the other that which
is peculiar to either nature, but that they have in common nothing more
than the name alone. For unio, they plainly say, facit communia nomina,
i. e., the personal union makes nothing more than the names common, namely,
that God is called man, and man God, yet in such a way that God has nothing
realiter, that is, in deed and truth, in common with humanity, and humanity
nothing in common with divinity, its majesty and properties. Dr. Luther,
and those who held with him, have contended for the contrary against the
Sacramentarians.
Affirmative Theses.
Pure Doctrine of the Christian Church concerning the Person of Christ.
4] To explain this controversy, and settle it according to the
guidance [analogy] of our Christian faith, our doctrine, faith, and confession
is as follows:
5] 1. That the divine and human natures in Christ are personally
united, so that there are not two Christs, one the Son of God, the other
the Son of man, but that one and the same is the Son of God and Son of
man, Luke 1, 35; Rom. 9, 5.
6] 2. We believe, teach, and confess that the divine and human
natures are not mingled into one substance, nor the one changed into the
other, but that each retains its own essential properties, which [can]
never become the properties of the other nature.
7] 3. The properties of the divine nature are: to be almighty,
eternal, infinite, and to be, according to the property of its nature and
its natural essence, of itself, everywhere present, to know everything,
etc.; which never become properties of the human nature.
8] 4. The properties of the human nature are: to be a corporeal
creature, to be flesh and blood, to be finite and circumscribed, to suffer,
to die, to ascend and descend, to move from one place to another, to suffer
hunger, thirst, cold, heat, and the like; which never become properties
of the divine nature.
9] 5. As the two natures are united personally, i. e., in one
person, we believe, teach, and confess that this union is not such a copulation
and connection that neither nature has anything in common with the other
personally, i.e . because of the personal union, as when two boards are
glued together, where neither gives anything to the other or takes anything
from the other. But here is the highest communion, which God truly has
with the [assumed] man, from which personal union, and the highest and
ineffable communion resulting therefrom, there flows everything human that
is said and believed concerning God, and everything divine that is said
and believed concerning the man Christ; as the ancient teachers of the
Church explained this union and communion of the natures by the illustration
of iron glowing with fire, and also by the union of body and soul in man.
10] 6. Hence we believe, teach, and confess that God is man and
man is God, which could not be if the divine and human natures had in deed
and truth absolutely no communion with one another.
11] For how could the man, the son of Mary, in truth be called
or be God, or the Son of God the Most High, if His humanity were not personally
united with the Son of God, and He thus had realiter, that is, in deed
and truth, nothing in common with Him except only the name of God?
12] 7. Hence we believe, teach, and confess that Mary conceived
and bore not a mere man and no more, but the true Son of God; therefore
she also is rightly called and truly is the mother of God.
13] 8. Hence we also believe, teach, and confess that it was
not a mere man who suffered, died, was buried, descended to hell, arose
from the dead, ascended into heaven, and was raised to the majesty and
almighty power of God for us, but a man whose human nature has such a profound
[close], ineffable union and communion with the Son of God that it is [has
become] one person with Him.
14] 9. Therefore the Son of God truly suffered for us, however,
according to the property of the human nature which He assumed into the
unity of His divine person and made His own, so that He might be able to
suffer and be our High Priest for our reconciliation with God, as it is
written 1 Cor. 2, 8: They have crucfied the Lord of glory. And Acts 20,
28: We are purchased with God's blood.
15] 10. Hence we believe, teach, and confess that the Son of
Man is realiter, that is, in deed and truth, exalted according to His human
nature to the right hand of the almighty majesty and power of God, because
He [that man] was assumed into God when He was conceived of the Holy Ghost
in His mother's womb, and His human nature was personally united with the
Son of the Highest.
16] 11. This majesty He [Christ] always had according to the
personal union, and yet He abstained from it in the state of His humiliation,
and on this account truly increased in all wisdom and favor with God and
men; therefore He exercised this majesty, not always, but when [as often
as] it pleased Him, until after His resurrection He entirely laid aside
the form of a servant, but not the [human] nature, and was established
in the full use, manifestation, and declaration of the divine majesty,
and thus entered into His glory, Phil. 2, 6ff , so that now not only as
God, but also as man He knows all things, can do all things, is present
with all creatures, and has under His feet and in His hands everything
that is in heaven and on earth and under the earth, as He Himself testifies
Matt. 28, 18; John 13, 3: All power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth.
And St. Paul says Eph. 4, 10: He ascended up far above all heavens, that
He might fill all things. And this His power, He, being present, can exercise
everywhere, and to Him everything is possible and everything is known.
17] 12. Hence He also is able and it is very easy for Him to
impart, as one who is present, His true body and blood in the Holy Supper,
not according to the mode or property of the human nature, but according
to the mode and property of the right hand of God, as Dr. Luther says in
accordance with our Christian faith for children, which presence (of Christ
in the Holy Supper] is not [physical or] earthly, nor Capernaitic; nevertheless
it is true and substantial, as the words of His testament read: This is,
is, is My body, etc.
18] By this our doctrine, faith, and confession the person of
Christ is not divided, as it was by Nestorius, who denied the communicatio
idiomatum, that is, the true communion of the properties of both natures
in Christ, and thus divided the person, as Luther has explained in his
book Concerning Councils. Neither are the natures together with their properties
confounded with one another [or mingled] into one essence (as Eutyches
erred); nor is the human nature in the person of Christ denied or annihilated;
nor is either nature changed into the other; but Christ is and remains
to all eternity God and man in one undivided person, which, next to the
Holy Trinity, is, as the Apostle testifies, 1 Tim. 3, 16, the highest mystery,
upon which our only consolation, life, and salvation depends.
Negative Theses.
Contrary False Doctrine concerning the Person of Christ.
19] Accordingly, we reject and condemn as contrary to God's Word
and our simple [pure] Christian faith all the following erroneous articles,
when it is taught:
20] 1. That God and man in Christ are not one person, but that
the Son of God is one, and the Son of Man another, as Nestorius raved.
21] 2. That the divine and human natures have been mingled with
one another into one essence, and the human nature has been changed into
the Deity, as Eutyches fanatically asserted.
22] 3. That Christ is not true, natural, and eternal God, as
Arius held [blasphemed].
23] 4. That Christ did not have a true human nature [consisting]
of body and soul, as Marcion imagined.
24] 5. Quod unio personalis faciat tantum communia nomina, that
is, that the personal union renders only the names and titles common.
25] 6. That it is only phrasis et modus loquendi, that is, a
phrase and mode of speaking, when it is said: God is man, man is God; since
Divinity, as they say, has realiter, that is, in deed [and truth], nothing
in common with the humanity, nor the humanity with the Deity.
26] 7. That there is merely communicatio [idiomatum] verbalis
[without reality], that is, that it is nothing but words when it is said
the Son of God died for the sins of the world; the Son of Man has become
almighty.
27] 8. That the human nature in Christ has become an infinite
essence in the same manner as the Divinity, and that it is everywhere present
in the same manner as the divine nature because of this essential power
and property, communicated to, and poured out into, the human nature and
separated from God.
28] 9. That the human nature has become equal to and like the
divine nature in its substance and essence, or in its essential properties.
29] 10. That the human nature of Christ is locally extended to
all places of heaven and earth, which should not be ascribed even to the
divine nature.
30] 11. That because of the property of the human nature it is
impossible for Christ to be able to be at the same time in more than one
place, much less everywhere, with His body.
31] 12. That only the mere humanity has suffered for us and redeemed
us, and that the Son of God in the suffering had actually no communion
with the humanity, as though it did not concern Him.
32] 13. That Christ is present with us on earth in the Word,
the Sacraments, and in all our troubles, only according to His divinity,
and that this presence does not at all pertain to His human nature, according
to which also, as they say, He, after having redeemed us by His suffering
and death, has nothing to do with us any longer upon earth.
33] 14. That the Son of God who assumed the human nature, after
He has laid aside the form of a servant, does not perform all the works
of His omnipotence in, through, and with His human nature, but only some,
and only in the place where His human nature is locally.
34] 15. That according to His human nature He is not at all capable
of omnipotence and other attributes of the divine nature, against the express
declaration of Christ, Matt. 28, 18: All power is given unto He in heaven
and in earth, and of St. Paul, Col. 2, 9: In Him dwelleth all the fulness
of the Godhead bodily.
35] 16. That to Him [to Christ according to His humanity] greater
power is given in heaven and upon earth, namely, greater and more than
to all angels and other creatures, but that He has no communion with the
omnipotence of God, nor that this has been given Him. Hence they devise
mediam potentiam, that is, a power between the almighty power of God and
the power of other creatures given to Christ according to His humanity
by the exaltation, such as would be less than God's almighty power and
greater than that of other creatures.
36] 17. That Christ according to His human mind has a certain
limit as to how much He is to know, and that He knows no more than is becoming
and needful for Him to know for [the execution of] His office as Judge.
37] 18. That Christ does not yet have a perfect knowledge of
God and all His works; of whom nevertheless it is written Col. 2, 3: In
whom are hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.
38] 19. That it is impossible for Christ according to His human
mind to know what has been from eternity, what at present is occurring
everywhere, and what will be in eternity.
39] 20. When it is taught, and the passage Matt. 28, 18: All
power is given unto Me, etc., is thus interpreted and blasphemously perverted,
namely, that all power in heaven and on earth was restored, that is, delivered
again to Christ according to the divine nature, at the resurrection and
His ascension to heaven, as though He had also according to His divinity
laid this aside and abandoned it in His state of humiliation. By this doctrine
not only the words of the testament of Christ are perverted, but also the
way is prepared for the accursed Arian heresy, so that finally the eternal
deity of Christ is denied, and thus Christ, and with Him our salvation,
are entirely lost if this false doctrine were not firmly contradicted from
the immovable foundation of the divine Word and our simple Christian [catholic]
faith.
IX.
The Descent of Christ Into Hell.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
Chief Controversy concerning This Article.
1] It has also been disputed among some theologians who have
subscribed to the Augsburg Confession concerning this article: When and
in what manner the Lord Christ, according to our simple Christian faith,
descended to hell: whether this was done before or after His death; also,
whether it occurred according to the soul alone, or according to the divinity
alone, or with body and soul, spiritually or bodily; also, whether this
article belongs to the passion or to the glorious victory and triumph of
Christ.
2] But since this article, as also the preceding, cannot be comprehended
by the senses or by our reason, but must be grasped by faith alone, it
is our unanimous opinion that there should be no disputation concerning
it, but that it should be believed 3] and taught only in the simplest
manner; according as Dr. Luther, of blessed memory, in his sermon at Torgau
in the year 1533 has explained this article in an altogether Christian
manner, separated from it all useless, unnecessary questions, and admonished
all godly Christians to Christian simplicity of faith.
4] For it is sufficient that we know that Christ descended into
hell, destroyed hell for all believers, and delivered them from the power
of death and of the devil, from eternal condemnation and the jaws of hell.
But how this occurred we should [not curiously investigate, but] reserve
until the other world, where not only this point [mystery], but also still
others will be revealed, which we here simply believe, and cannot comprehend
with our blind reason.
X. Church Rites
Which are [Commonly] Called Adiaphora or Matters of Indifference.
1] Concerning ceremonies or church rites which are neither commanded
nor forbidden in God's Word, but have been introduced into the Church for
the sake of good order and propriety, a dissension has also occurred among
the theologians of the Augsburg Confession.
STATUS CONTROVERSIAE.
Chief Controversy concerning This Article.
2] The chief question, however, has been, whether, in time of
persecution and in case of confession, even if the enemies of the Gospel
have not reached an agreement with us in doctrine, some abrogated ceremonies,
which in themselves are matters of indifference and are neither commanded
nor forbidden by God, may nevertheless, upon the pressure and demand of
the adversaries, be reestablished without violence to conscience, and we
may thus [rightly] have conformity with them in such ceremonies and adiaphora.
To this the one side has said Yea, the other, Nay.
Affirmative Theses.
The Correct and True Doctrine and Confession concerning This Article.
3] 1. For settling also this controversy we unanimously believe,
teach, and confess that the ceremonies or church rites which are neither
commanded nor forbidden in God's Word, but have been instituted alone for
the sake of propriety and good order, are in and of themselves no divine
worship, nor even a part of it. Matt. 15, 9:In vain they do worship Me,
teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.
4] 2. We believe, teach, and confess that the congregation of
God of every place and every time has the power, according to its circumstances,
to change such ceremonies in such manner as may be most useful and edifying
to the congregation of God.
5] 3. Nevertheless, that herein all frivolity and offense should
be avoided, and special care should be taken to exercise forbearance towards
the weak in faith. 1 Cor. 8, 9; Rom. 14, 13.
6] 4. We believe, teach, and confess that in time of persecution,
when a plain [and steadfast] confession is required of us, we should not
yield to the enemies in regard to such adiaphora, as the apostle has written
Gal. 5, 1: Stand fast, therefore, in the liberty wherewith Christ hath
made us free, and be not entangled again in the yoke of bondage. Also 2
Cor. 6, 14: Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers, etc. For
what concord hath light with darkness? Also Gal. 2, 5: To whom we gave
place, no, not for an hour, that the truth of the Gospel might remain with
you. For in such a case it is no longer a question concerning adiaphora,
but concerning the truth of the Gospel, concerning [preserving] Christian
liberty, and concerning sanctioning open idolatry, as also concerning the
prevention of offense to the weak in the faith [how care should be taken
lest idolatry be openly sanctioned and the weak in faith be offended];
in which we have nothing to concede, but should plainly confess and suffer
on that account what God sends, and what He allows the enemies of His Word
to inflict upon us.
7] 5. We believe, teach, and confess also that no Church should
condemn another because one has less or more external ceremonies not commanded
by God than the other, if otherwise there is agreement among them in doctrine
and all its articles, as also in the right use of the holy Sacraments,
according to the well-known saying: Dissonantia ieiunii non dissolvit consonantiam
fidei, Disagreement in fasting does not destroy agreement in faith.
Negative Theses.
False Doctrine concerning This Article.
8] Accordingly, we reject and condemn as wrong and contrary to
God's Word when it is taught:
9] 1. That human ordinances and institutions in the church should
be regarded as in themselves a divine worship or part of it.
10] 2. When such ceremonies, ordinances, and institutions are
violently forced upon the congregation of God as necessary, contrary to
its Christian liberty which it has in external things.
11] 3. Also, that in time of persecution and public confession
[when a clear confession is required] we may yield to the enemies of the
Gospel in such adiaphora and ceremonies, or may come to an agreement with
them (which causes injury to the truth).
12] 4. Also, when these external ceremonies and adiaphora are
abrogated in such a manner as though it were not free to the congregation
of God to employ one or more [this or that] in Christian liberty, according
to its circumstances, as may be most useful at any time to the Church [for
edification].
XI. Election.
1] Concerning this article no public dissension has occurred
among the theologians of the Augsburg Confession. But since it is a consolatory
article, if treated properly, and lest offensive disputations concerning
the same be instituted in the future, it is also explained in this writing.
Affirmative Theses.
The Pure and True Doctrine concerning This Article.
2] 1. To begin with [First of all], the distinction between praescientia
et praedestinatio, that is, between God's foreknowledge and His eternal
election, ought to be accurately observed.
3] 2. For the foreknowledge of God is nothing else than that
God knows all things before they happen, as it is written Dan. 2, 28: There
is a God in heaven that revealeth secrets and maketh known to the king
Nebuchadnezzar what shall be in the latter days.
4] 3. This foreknowledge extends alike over the godly and the
wicked, but it is not the cause of evil, neither of sin, namely, of doing
what is wrong (which originally arises from the devil and the wicked, perverse
will of man), nor of their ruin [that men perish], for which they themselves
are responsible [which they must ascribe to themselves]; but it only regulates
it, and fixes a limit to it [how far it should progress and] how long it
should last, and all this to the end that it should serve His elect for
their salvation, notwithstanding that it is evil in itself.
5] 4. The predestination or eternal election of God, however,
extends only over the godly, beloved children of God, being a cause of
their salvation, which He also provides, as well as disposes what belongs
thereto. Upon this [predestination of God] our salvation is founded so
firmly that the gates of hell cannot overcome it. John 10, 28; Matt. 16,
18.
6] 5. This [predestination of God] is not to be investigated
in the secret counsel of God, but to be sought in the Word of God, where
it is also revealed.
7] 6. But the Word of God leads us to Christ, who is the Book
of Life, in whom all are written and elected that are to be saved in eternity,
as it is written Eph. 1, 4: He hath chosen us in Him [Christ] before the
foundation of the world.
8] 7. This Christ calls to Himself all sinners and promises them
rest, and He is in earnest [seriously wills] that all men should come to
Him and suffer themselves to be helped, to whom He offers Himself in His
Word, and wishes them to hear it and not to stop their ears or [neglect
and] despise the Word. Moreover, He promises the power and working of the
Holy Ghost, and divine assistance for perseverance and eternal salvation
[that we may remain steadfast in the faith and attain eternal salvation].
9] 8. Therefore we should judge concerning this our election
to eternal life neither from reason nor from the Law of God, which lead
us either into a reckless, dissolute, Epicurean life or into despair, and
excite pernicious thoughts in the hearts of men, for they cannot, as long
as they follow their reason, successfully refrain from thinking: If God
has elected me to salvation, I cannot be condemned, no matter what I do;
and again: If I am not elected to eternal life, it is of no avail what
good I do; it is all [all my efforts are] in vain anyway.
10] 9. But it [the true judgment concerning predestination] must
be learned alone from the holy Gospel concerning Christ, in which it is
clearly testified that God hath concluded them all in unbelief, that He
might have mercy upon all, and that He is not willing that any should perish,
but that all should come to repentance and believe in the Lord Christ.
Rom. 11, 32; Ezek. 18, 23; 33, 11; 2 Pet. 3, 9; 1 John 2, 2.
11] 10. Whoever, now, is thus concerned about the revealed will
of God, and proceeds according to the order which St. Paul has observed
in the Epistle to the Romans, who first directs men to repentance, to knowledge
of sins, to faith in Christ, to divine obedience, before he speaks of the
mystery of the eternal election of God, to him this doctrine [concerning
God's predestination] is useful and consolatory.
12] 11. However, that many are called and few chosen, Matt. 22,
14, does not mean that God is not willing to save everybody; but the reason
is that they either do not at all hear God's Word, but wilfully despise
it, stop their ears and harden their hearts, and in this manner foreclose
the ordinary way to the Holy Ghost, so that He cannot perform His work
in them, or, when they have heard it, make light of it again and do not
heed it, for which [that they perish] not God or His election, but their
wickedness, is responsible. [2 Pet. 2, 1ff ; Luke 11, 49. 52; Heb. 12,
25f.]
13] 12. Thus far a Christian should occupy himself [in meditation]
with the article concerning the eternal election of God, as it has been
revealed in God's Word, which presents to us Christ as the Book of Life,
which He opens and reveals to us by the preaching of the holy Gospel, as
it is written Rom. 8, 30: Whom He did predestinate, them He also called.
In Him we are to seek the eternal election of the Father, who has determined
in His eternal divine counsel that He would save no one except those who
know His Son Christ and truly believe on Him. Other thoughts are to be
[entirely] banished [from the minds of the godly], as they proceed not
from God, but from the suggestion of the Evil Foe, whereby he attempts
to weaken or entirely to remove from us the glorious consolation which
we have in this salutary doctrine, namely, that we know [assuredly] that
out of pure grace, without any merit of our own, we have been elected in
Christ to eternal life, and that no one can pluck us out of His hand; as
He has not only promised this gracious election with mere words, but has
also certified it with an oath and sealed it with the holy Sacraments,
which we can [ought to] call to mind in our most severe temptations, and
take comfort in them, and therewith quench the fiery darts of the devil.
14] 13. Besides, we should use the greatest diligence to live
according to the will of God, and, as St. Peter admonishes, 2 Pet. 1, 10,
make our calling sure, and especially adhere to [not recede a finger's
breadth from] the revealed Word: that can and will not fail us.
15] 14. By this brief explanation of the eternal election of
God His glory is entirely and fully given to God, that out of pure mercy
alone, without all merit of ours, He saves us according to the purpose
of His will; besides, also, no cause is given any one for despondency or
a vulgar, wild life [no opportunity is afforded either for those more severe
agitations of mind and faintheartedness or for Epicureanism].
Negative Theses
False Doctrine concerning This Article.
16] Accordingly, we believe and hold: When any teach the doctrine
concerning the gracious election of God to eternal life in such a manner
that troubled Christians cannot comfort themselves therewith, but are thereby
led to despondency or despair, or the impenitent are strengthened in their
wantonness, that such doctrine is treated [wickedly and erroneously] not
according to the Word and will of God, but according to reason and the
instigation of the cursed Satan. For, as the apostle testifies, Rom. 15,
4, whatsoever things were written aforetime were written for our learning,
that we, through patience and comfort of the Scriptures, might have hope.
Therefore we reject the following errors:
17] 1. As when it is taught that God is unwilling that all men
repent and believe the Gospel.
18] 2. Also, that when God calls us to Himself, He is not in
earnest that all men should come to Him.
19] 3. Also, that God is unwilling that every one should be saved,
but that some, without regard to their sins, from the mere counsel, purpose,
and will of God, are ordained to condemnation so that they cannot be saved.
20] 4. Also, that not only the mercy of God and the most holy
merit of Christ, but also in us there is a cause of God's election, on
account of which God has elected us to everlasting life.
21] All these are blasphemous and dreadful erroneous doctrines,
whereby all the comfort which they have in the holy Gospel and the use
of the holy Sacraments is taken from Christians, and therefore should not
be tolerated in the Church of God.
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22] This is the brief and simple explanation of the controverted
articles, which for a time have been debated and taught controversially
among the theologians of the Augsburg Confession. Hence every simple Christian,
according to the guidance of God's Word and his simple Catechism, can perceive
what is right or wrong, since not only the pure doctrine has been stated,
but also the erroneous contrary doctrine has been repudiated and rejected,
and thus the offensive divisions that have occurred are thoroughly settled
[and decided].
23] May Almighty God and the Father of our Lord Jesus grant the
grace of His Holy Ghost that we all may be one in Him, and constantly abide
in this Christian unity, which is well pleasing to Him! Amen.
(XII.)
Other Heresies and Sects
Which Never Embraced the Augsburg Confession.
1] In order that such [heresies and sects] may not silently be
ascribed to us, because, in the preceding explanation, we have made no
mention of them, we intend at the end [of this writing] simply to enumerate
the mere articles wherein they [the heretics of our time] err and teach
contrary to our Christian faith and confession to which we have often referred.
Erroneous Articles
of the Anabaptists.
2] The Anabaptists are divided among themselves into many factions,
as one contends for more, another for less errors; however, they all in
common propound [profess] such doctrine as is to be tolerated or allowed
neither in the Church, nor in the commonwealth and secular government,
nor in domestic life.
Articles that Cannot be Tolerated in the Church.
3] 1. That Christ did not assume His body and blood from the
Virgin Mary, but brought them with Him from heaven.
4] 2. That Christ is not true God, but only [is superior to other
saints, because He] has more gifts of the Holy Ghost than any other holy
man.
5] 3. That our righteousness before God consists not in the sole
merit of Christ alone, but in renewal, and hence in our own godliness [uprightness]
in which we walk. This is based in great part upon one's own special, self-chosen
[and humanly devised] spirituality [holiness], and in fact is nothing else
than a new sort of monkery.
6] 4. That children who are not baptized are not sinners before
God, but righteous and innocent, who in their innocency, because they have
not yet attained their reason [the use of reason], are saved without Baptism
(which, according to their assertion, they do not need). Therefore they
reject the entire doctrine concerning original sin and what belongs to
it.
7] 5. That children are not to be baptized until they have attained
their reason [the use of reason], and can themselves confess their faith.
8] 6. That the children of Christians, because they have been
born of Christian and believing parents, are holy and children of God even
without and before Baptism; and for this reason they neither attach much
importance to the baptism of children nor encourage it, contrary to the
express words of God's promise which pertains only to those who keep His
covenant and do not despise it. Gen. 17, 7ff
9] 7. That that is no true Christian congregation [church] in
which sinners are still found.
10] 8. That no sermon is to be heard nor attended in those churches
in which formerly papal masses have been celebrated and said.
11] 9. That one [a godly man] must not have anything to do with
the ministers of the Church who preach the Gospel according to the Augsburg
Confession, and rebuke the sermons and errors of the Anabaptists; also
that he is neither to serve nor in any way to labor for them, but to flee
from and shun them as perverters of God's Word.
Articles that Cannot be Tolerated in the Government.
12] 1. That under the New Testament the magistracy is not an
estate pleasing to God.
13] 2. That a Christian cannot with a good, inviolate conscience
hold or discharge the office of magistrate.
14] 3. That a Christian cannot without injury to conscience use
the office of the magistracy against the wicked in matters as they occur
[matters so requiring], nor that subjects may invoke for their protection
and defense the power which the magistrates possess and have received from
God.
15] 4. That a Christian cannot with a good conscience take an
oath, nor with an oath do homage [promise fidelity] to the hereditary prince
of his country or sovereign.
16] 5. That under the New Testament magistrates cannot, without
injury to conscience, inflict capital punishment upon malefactors.
Articles that Cannot be Tolerated in Domestic Life.
17] 1. That a Christian cannot with a good conscience hold or
possess property, but is in duty bound to devote it to the common treasury.
18] 2. That a Christian cannot with a good conscience be an innkeeper,
merchant, or cutler [maker of arms].
19] 3. That the married may be divorced on account of [diverse]
faith, and the one may abandon the other and be married to another person
who is of his faith.
Erroneous
Articles of the Schwenkfeldians.
20] 1. That all those have no true knowledge of Christ as reigning
King of heaven who regard Christ according to the flesh as a creature.
21] 2. That the flesh of Christ by His exaltation has assumed
all divine properties in such a manner that Christ as man is in might,
power, majesty, and glory altogether, as regards degree and position of
essence equal to the Father and to the Word, so that now there is only
one essence, property, will, and glory of both natures in Christ, and that
the flesh of Christ belongs to the essence of the Holy Trinity.
22] 3. That the ministry of the Church [ministry of the Word],
the Word preached and heard, is not a means whereby God the Holy Ghost
teaches men, and works in them the saving knowledge of Christ, conversion,
repentance, faith, and new obedience.
23] 4. That the water of Baptism is not a means whereby God the
Lord seals the adoption of sons and works regeneration.
24] 5. That bread and wine in the Holy Supper are not means through
and by which Christ distributes His body and blood.
25] 6. That a Christian who is truly regenerated by God's Spirit
can perfectly observe and fulfil the Law of God in this life.
26] 7. That it is not a true Christian congregation [church]
in which no public excommunication [some formal mode of excommunication]
or no regular process of the ban [as it is commonly called] is observed.
27] 8. That the minister of the church who is not on his part
truly renewed, regenerate, righteous, and godly cannot teach other men
with profit or distribute genuine, true Sacraments.
Error of the New Arians.
28] That Christ is not true, essential, natural God, of one eternal,
divine essence with God the Father and the Holy Ghost, but is only adorned
with divine majesty inferior to and alongside of God the Father [is so
adorned with divine majesty, with the Father, that He is inferior to the
Father].
Error of the Anti-Trinitarians.
29] This is an entirely new sect, not heard of before in Christendom,
[composed of those] who believe, teach, and confess that there is not one
only, eternal, divine essence of the Father Son, and Holy Ghost, but as
God the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are three distinct persons, so each
person has its essence distinct and separate from the other persons of
the Godhead; and that nevertheless they are either [some think] all three
of equal power, wisdom, majesty, and glory, just as otherwise three men
are distinct and separate from one another in their essence, or [others
think that these three persons and essences are] unequal with one another
in essence and properties, so that the Father alone is properly and truly
God.
30] These and similar articles, one and all, with whatever other
errors depend upon and follow from them, we reject and condemn as wrong,
false, heretical, contrary to the Word of God, the three Creeds, the Augsburg
Confession and Apology, the Smalcald Articles, and Luther's Catechisms,
against which all godly Christians of both high and low station are to
be on their guard as they love the welfare and salvation of their souls.
31] That this is the doctrine, faith, and confession of us all,
for which we will answer at the last day before the just Judge, our Lord
Jesus Christ, and will neither secretly nor publicly speak or write anything
against it, but that we intend by the grace of God to persevere therein,
we have after mature deliberation testified, in the true fear of God and
invocation of His name, by signing with our own hands [this Epitome].
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