The Annotated Luther: Word and Faith
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About this ebook
Volume 2 of The Annotated Luther series contains a number of the writings categorized under the theme word and faith. Luther was particularly focused on what the word “does” in order to create and sustain faith. Writings in the volume range from the large core documents Bondage of the Will, Against the Heavenly Prophets, The Smalcald Articles, and Large Catechism to Luther’s own Confession of Faith and treatments of Moses, the Gospels, and Two Kinds of Righteousness.
In the treatises in this volume, we hear Luther’s understanding of Scripture and theology as he continues his growth as teaching theologian, pastor, biblical exegete, and apologist for the faith.
Each volume in The Annotated Luther series contains new introductions, as well as annotations, illustrations, and notes, to help shed light on Luther's context and interpret his writings for today. The translations of Luther’s writings include updates of Luther’s Works, American Edition or entirely new translations of Luther’s German or Latin writings.
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The Annotated Luther - Kirsi Stjerna
THE ANNOTATED LUTHER
Volume 2
Word and Faith
VOLUME EDITOR
Kirsi I. Stjerna
GENERAL EDITORS
Hans J. Hillerbrand
Kirsi I. Stjerna
Timothy J. Wengert
Fortress Press
Minneapolis
THE ANNOTATED LUTHER, Volume 2
Word and Faith
Copyright © 2015 Fortress Press. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in critical articles and reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without prior written permission from the publisher. Visit http://www.augsburgfortress.org/copyrights/contact.asp or write to Permissions, Augsburg Fortress, Box 1209, Minneapolis, MN 55440.
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are from New Revised Standard Version Bible, copyright © 1989 by the Division of Education of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the United States of America.
Fortress Press Publication Staff: Scott Tunseth, Project Editor; Marissa Wold Uhrina, Production Manager; Laurie Ingram, Cover Design; Esther Diley, Permissions.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available
Print ISBN: 978-1-4514-6270-8
eISBN: 978-1-4514-6511-2
Contents
Series Introduction
Abbreviations
Maps
Introduction to Volume 2
KIRSI I. STJERNA
Sermon on Two Kinds of Righteousness, 1519
ELSE MARIE WIBERG PEDERSEN
A Brief Instruction on What to Look for and Expect in the Gospels, 1522
WANDA DEIFELT
Against the Heavenly Prophets in the Matter of Images and Sacraments, 1525
HANS J. HILLERBRAND
How Christians Should Regard Moses, 1525
BROOKS SCHRAMM
The Bondage of the Will, 1525
VOLKER LEPPIN
Confession of the Articles of Faith against the Enemy of the Gospel and All Kinds of Heresies, 1528
GORDEN JENSEN
The Large Catechism of Dr. Martin Luther, 1529
KIRSI I. STJERNA
The Smalcald Articles, 1538
KURT K. HENDEL
Image Credits
Index of Scriptural References
Index of Names
Index of Works by Martin Luther
Index of Subjects
Series Introduction
Engaging the Essential Luther
Even after five hundred years Martin Luther continues to engage and challenge each new generation of scholars and believers alike. With 2017 marking the five-hundredth anniversary of Luther’s 95 Theses, Luther’s theology and legacy are being explored around the world with new questions and methods and by diverse voices. His thought invites ongoing examination, his writings are a staple in classrooms and pulpits, and he speaks to an expanding assortment of conversation partners who use different languages and hale from different geographical and social contexts.
The six volumes of The Annotated Luther edition offer a flexible tool for the global reader of Luther, making many of his most important writings available in the lingua franca of our times as one way of facilitating interest in the Wittenberg reformer. They feature new introductions, annotations, revised translations, and textual notes, as well as visual enhancements (illustrations, art, photos, maps, and timelines). The Annotated Luther edition embodies Luther’s own cherished principles of communication. Theological writing, like preaching, needs to reflect human beings’ lived experience, benefits from up-to-date scholarship, and should be easily accessible to all. These volumes are designed to help teachers and students, pastors and laypersons, and other professionals in ministry understand the context in which the documents were written, recognize how the documents have shaped Protestant and Lutheran thinking, and interpret the meaning of these documents for faith and life today.
The Rationale for This Edition
For any reader of Luther, the sheer number of his works presents a challenge. Well over one hundred volumes comprise the scholarly edition of Luther’s works, the so-called Weimar Ausgabe (WA), a publishing enterprise begun in 1883 and only completed in the twenty-first century. From 1955 to 1986, fifty-five volumes came to make up Luther’s Works (American Edition) (LW), to which Concordia Publishing House, St. Louis, is adding still more. This English-language contribution to Luther studies, matched by similar translation projects for Erasmus of Rotterdam and John Calvin, provides a theological and historical gold mine for those interested in studying Luther’s thought. But even these volumes are not always easy to use and are hardly portable. Electronic forms have increased availability, but preserving Luther in book form and providing readers with manageable selections are also important goals.
Moreover, since the publication of the WA and the first fifty-five volumes of the LW, research on the Reformation in general and on Martin Luther in particular has broken new ground and evolved, as has knowledge regarding the languages in which Luther wrote. Up-to-date information from a variety of sources is brought together in The Annotated Luther, building on the work done by previous generations of scholars. The language and phrasing of the translations have also been updated to reflect modern English usage. While the WA and, in a derivative way, LW remain the central source for Luther scholarship, the present critical and annotated English translation facilitates research internationally and invites a new generation of readers for whom Latin and German might prove an unsurpassable obstacle to accessing Luther. The WA provides the basic Luther texts (with some exceptions); the LW provides the basis for almost all translations.
Defining the Essential Luther
Deciding which works to include in this collection was not easy. Criteria included giving attention to Luther’s initial key works; considering which publications had the most impact in his day and later; and taking account of Luther’s own favorites, texts addressing specific issues of continued importance for today, and Luther’s exegetical works. Taken as a whole, these works present the many sides of Luther, as reformer, pastor, biblical interpreter, and theologian. To serve today’s readers and by using categories similar to those found in volumes 31–47 of Luther’s works (published by Fortress Press), the volumes offer in the main a thematic rather than strictly chronological approach to Luther’s writings. The volumes in the series include:
Volume 1: The Roots of Reform (Timothy J. Wengert, editor)
Volume 2: Word and Faith (Kirsi I. Stjerna, editor)
Volume 3: Church and Sacraments (Paul W. Robinson, editor)
Volume 4: Pastoral Writings (Mary Jane Haemig, editor)
Volume 5: Christian Life in the World (Hans J. Hillerbrand, editor)
Volume 6: The Interpretation of Scripture (Euan K. Cameron, editor)
The History of the Project
In 2011 Fortress Press convened an advisory board to explore the promise and parameters of a new English edition of Luther’s essential works. Board members Denis Janz, Robert Kolb, Peter Matheson, Christine Helmer, and Kirsi Stjerna deliberated with Fortress Press publisher Will Bergkamp to develop a concept and identify contributors. After a review with scholars in the field, college and seminary professors, and pastors, it was concluded that a single-language edition was more desirable than dual-language volumes.
In August 2012, Hans Hillerbrand, Kirsi Stjerna, and Timothy Wengert were appointed as general editors of the series with Scott Tunseth from Fortress Press as the project editor. The general editors were tasked with determining the contents of the volumes and developing the working principles of the series. They also helped with the identification and recruitment of additional volume editors, who in turn worked with the general editors to identify volume contributors. Mastery of the languages and unique knowledge of the subject matter were key factors in identifying contributors. Most contributors are North American scholars and native English speakers, but The Annotated Luther includes among its contributors a circle of international scholars. Likewise, the series is offered for a global network of teachers and students in seminary, university, and college classes, as well as pastors, lay teachers, and adult students in congregations seeking background and depth in Lutheran theology, biblical interpretation, and Reformation history.
Editorial Principles
The volume editors and contributors have, with few exceptions, used the translations of LW as the basis of their work, retranslating from the WA for the sake of clarity and contemporary usage. Where the LW translations have been substantively altered, explanatory notes have often been provided. More importantly, contributors have provided marginal notes to help readers understand theological and historical references. Introductions have been expanded and sharpened to reflect the very latest historical and theological research. In citing the Bible, care has been taken to reflect the German and Latin texts commonly used in the sixteenth century rather than modern editions, which often employ textual sources that were unavailable to Luther and his contemporaries.
Finally, all pieces in The Annotated Luther have been revised in the light of modern principles of inclusive language. This is not always an easy task with a historical author, but an intentional effort has been made to revise language throughout, with creativity and editorial liberties, to allow Luther’s theology to speak free from unnecessary and unintended gender-exclusive language. This important principle provides an opportunity to translate accurately certain gender-neutral German and Latin expressions that Luther employed—for example, the Latin word homo and the German Mensch mean human being,
not simply males.
Using the words man and men to translate such terms would create an ambiguity not present in the original texts. The focus is on linguistic accuracy and Luther’s intent. Regarding creedal formulations and trinitarian language, Luther’s own expressions have been preserved, without entering the complex and important contemporary debates over language for God and the Trinity.
The 2017 anniversary of the publication of the 95 Theses is providing an opportunity to assess the substance of Luther’s role and influence in the Protestant Reformation. Revisiting Luther’s essential writings not only allows reassessment of Luther’s rationale and goals but also provides a new look at what Martin Luther was about and why new generations would still wish to engage him. We hope these six volumes offer a compelling invitation.
Hans J. Hillerbrand
Kirsi I. Stjerna
Timothy J. Wengert
General Editors
Abbreviations
MAPS
Introduction to Volume 2
KIRSI I. STJERNA
Martin Luther was an angst-driven theologian of the Bible with a pastoral heart and expansive horizons. He was immersed in the affairs of the world and cared deeply for the health of his church and the spiritual well-being of his fellow Christians. He was fundamentally enthralled with the Scriptures, the proper interpretation of which he sought and defended throughout his tumultuous career. He was shaped by deeply disturbing personal spiritual struggles that led to his understanding of the power of the word and justification by faith. His nearly obsessive sense of responsibility and his combative will, combined with his tireless engagement in a seemingly endless stream of ecclesial and theological issues, made the originally lonely religious rebel an international leader beyond Wittenberg where he lived and taught.a
Luther sought to define a particular Christian
way of living. The young monk’s relentless pursuit of the gracious God transformed him into a talented university teacher enthused with the uninhibited study of the Scriptures. With the help of St. Paul and his letters to the Romans and Galatians, and a reexamination of the book of Psalms, Luther found his ground of being in the gospel about Jesus Christ and the meaning of his life and death for humanity. Luther’s approach to life and theology became uncompromisingly Christocentric. He found himself challenging the central teachings and practices of his church and spearheading sweeping reforms throughout Europe.b Early on he lost control of the actions others had taken in response to his broadly published theology and ongoing proclamation from the pulpit.c Regardless of the many issues that required Luther’s attention, the persistent interest for him remained in the existential questions and theological convictions about God’s grace for the sinner.
Luther’s vast list of publications demonstrates the depth and breadth of his involvement in the affairs of the church and society in his day. The reformer’s works are peculiarly situational or audience-specific as his theological expositions were often prompted by a request or demanded by a situation. In the turmoil of an extraordinarily busy life, Luther made some efforts to offer his confession of faith in a single document. None of these succeeded in becoming an obvious summa of Luther’s theology fitting for all constituencies, even if some works have arisen as clear favorites.
WORD-CENTERED THEOLOGY OF FAITH
This volume presents works featuring some of Luther’s most original and consistent theological assertions. The texts representing different genres are from different stages of Luther’s career, spanning the period 1519–1538. Both his theological orientation and his modus of theological argumentation are visible. Studied together, the distinct pillars and idiosyncratic system
of Luther’s theology can be detected and appreciated.¹ That is, the works illustrate several clearly defined pieces in Luther’s theology and also prove that his formula
remains persistent: his starting and ending point is always how he understands the word about Christ, and his lens in interpreting his main source, the Scriptures, is always the meaning of Christ.
The title of the volume, Word and Faith, indicates the central nerves in Luther’s theology: his radical faith perspective, and his absolute reliance on the word. This volume is explicitly devoted to Luther’s theological voice and vision around the arguments he makes with his fundamental understanding of the saving word and justifying faith. It is through the working of the word that Luther explains the active presence of God in human life. His word-centered theology points to faith as the connector between divine and human realities. It is faith that makes one right with God, and the mechanisms of this relationship are revealed by the word. On the foundation of how and what the word works, one’s most proper approach in life is that of faith that holds God at the center. With his wide-ranging interpretation of the Scriptures, as the solus source, Luther targets the manifold presence and action of God’s word—in the world, in the church and its sacraments, and, most importantly, in all of human life’s aspects. These discoveries are, he readily admits, a matter of faith.
When explaining the effect of the word, Luther makes the persistent argument about the saving faith, offered as the new orientation in spiritual life. Luther extrapolates the meaning of faith that connects one with God and brings about forgiveness. Far from a theoretical matter of a right belief,
Luther strives to communicate the transformative impact of the word-induced renewal of the God-human relationship that hangs on faith gifted
by Christ and sustained by God’s own Spirit. Not only forgiven but transformed, and as if born again (or regenerated) with Christ, Christians so redeemed are called to a life of repentance and renewed love for one’s neighbor.
Justification, the key word for Luther, unfolds from two standpoints, both of which are essential. On the one side, the gift is received passively as an alien righteousness in the immediate God relationship (coram Deo); on the other, it is the way of life expressed externally as a human being’s own
proper righteousness in relation to other creatures (coram hominibus). For Luther these are not theoretical but reality-altering matters, for both individual and communal life. His challenge was, then, to translate this experience and vision through preaching, teaching, and writing in order to illumine and invite all to encounter the word for themselves.
LUTHER’S TEXTS IN THIS VOLUME
The works in this volume are introduced and annotated by an international group of scholars and feature Luther’s central theological principles and his unique theological arguments. One can embrace them as a teaching or a preaching tool, as a source for spiritual formation, and as a guide for ongoing scholarship.
Two Kinds of Righteousnessd from 1519 is a short early sermon that offers one of the most succinct explications of Luther’s doctrine of justification. Luther distinguishes between the two dimensions of righteousness: the alien righteousness as a gift from Christ and complete in the coram Deo reality, and proper righteousness as one’s own growing in the following of Christ coram hominibus. Using bridal imagery, Luther explains the nature and fruits of the intimate faith union between the justified sinner and the gracious God.
Another text that originated as a sermon, A Brief Instruction on What to Look for in the Gospelse from 1522, illustrates Luther’s major discovery about the ongoing paradox between law and gospel: Christ the crucified annihilates the condemning law. At the heart of the mystery of justification, says Luther, is the happy exchange
wherein Christ assumes human sin, while humans receive all that is Christ’s. Luther identifies the gospel message as the key to the interpretation of the entire Scriptures, including the Old Testament’s law.
A sermon from just a few years later returns to the topic that would continue to require Luther’s extended attention: law in the life of a Christian. In his How Christians Should Regard Mosesf from 1525, Luther delineates the distinction between law and gospel, making a case about Moses being dead for Christians whose hope rests in Christ only. At the same time, he defends the place of the Old Testament and its faith examples for Christians, whose reinterpretation of the texts takes place in light of the gospel, in order to stay clear from works righteousness
(Catholic tradition) or law-based religiosity—all of which Christ has made futile.
From the same period (1525) comes the feisty Against the Heavenly Prophets in the Matter of Images and Sacraments.g Andreas Bodenstein von Karlstadt and his followers, whom Luther dubbed the heavenly prophets,
had opposed Luther on the question of the actual implementation of reform and the meaning of the sacraments. Luther felt obligated to attack the spiritualists,
who were, in his opinion, a threat to the unity of the growing reform movement. Here Luther addresses the challenge in two parts: the first section deals with the topic of images, and the second with the sacrament of the altar. Offering also an incisive explanation of the relation of law and freedom, Luther accuses Karlstadt of having lapsed into works righteousness and argues vigorously for Christian freedom.
The title page of Instructions for the Visitors of Parish Pastors in Electoral Saxony. Luther urged Elector John Frederick I to institute a systematic church visitation of Saxony (see the introduction to the Large Catechism, p. 279). Melanchthon wrote most of the document, but Luther contributed some passages, including the preface.
One of the most famous works of Luther, and one he was not displeased with himself, is the Bondage of the Willh from 1525. The main argument in this verbose, milestone document is simple yet radical: human beings are not free to make right choices in relation to God. Even more so, human beings in their condition of bondage to sin are actually born enemies of God. Thus the depravity with sin is so deep that only God can rescue human beings from the abyss of self-induced damnation. Luther never compromised on this point, the reason being a christological argument: if human beings were able to save themselves, Christ would have died in vain, and that would be a terrible tragedy.
Luther’s Confession of Faith
i is part of a larger Confession Concerning Christ’s Supper from 1528, a text deemed and intended as a summa of Luther’s theology. Embracing the Apostles’ Creed, Luther gives a prototype for a good confession
at the time of death, along with an evangelical statement of central faith articles. Underscoring salvation out of God’s grace alone, Luther’s focal point is the working of the word that creates life and enables salvation.
The Large Catechism² from 1529 uses a pedagogical format to explicate the basics of faith. Luther proceeds in the Large Catechism with a deliberate and distinct theological rationale: the Ten Commandments express God’s expectations, the Creed proclaims God’s promise, the Lord’s Prayer translates law and gospel into a personal discourse with God, and the sacraments offer tangible expressions of God’s grace and signs to lean on in faith. Through all these pieces, Luther follows the tracks of the Holy Spirit as the overarching enabler.
The Smalcald Articles³ was deliberately written as a confession to unite. Its spirited tone makes it a battle call and a poignant reminder of Luther’s original reformation urgencies. The text gives an animated rationale for needed reforms in religious practice, from the Mass to calling on the saints, and offers a step-by-step summation of the central arguments in evangelical theology. A shift in theological orientation is argued on the basis of Luther’s discovery of the chief doctrine on which everything stands: Christ’s redeeming work. A matter of faith, one relies on the manifold work of the gospel that reaches people through preaching, sacraments, community, and mutual consolation of Christians.
This volume is offered as an invitation and a tool for a critical and compassionate study of Luther’s theology in new contexts, with diverse frameworks and languages, and with global conversation partners. While the historical-theological prospects for further study with each text are endless, equally manifold are the existential and spiritual questions at stake.j
Sermon on Two Kinds of Righteousness
1519
ELSE MARIE WIBERG PEDERSEN
This title-page woodcut for the German version of Luther’s sermon (in 1520 German: Predig) on the two kinds of righteousness features the title of the sermon within a richly ornamented frame. However, the adjective beautiful (in German: schön) has been added to the title of the sermon, and it states that its author, Martin Luther, is an Augustinian friar attached to (the University of) Wittenberg.
INTRODUCTION
Martin Luther wrote two Latin sermons on righteousness,a the Sermon on Two Kinds of Righteousness (Sermo de duplici iustitia), which he composed first, and the Sermon on Three Kinds of Righteousness (Sermo de triplici iustitia), which he published first.b It has been a matter of discussion whether Luther wrote the first text in late 1518 or early 1519, but it is most likely that the Sermon on Two Kinds of Righteousness was originally preached on Palm Sunday, 28 March 1518, and then published in both an unauthorized and an authorized version in 1519. Luther wrote about the sermon, along with another sermon on matrimony, in a letter to Johannes Lang (c. 1487–1548) on 13 April 1519; since it is based on Philippians 2:5–11, the pericope for Palm Sunday, it is assumed that it was preached in 1518. There is no doubt that the text is one of Luther’s early reformatory works composed in the aftermath of his 95 Theses in 1517 when he was forced to explain and justify his views, particularly in the disputations with Cardinal Cajetan¹ in 1518 and with Johann Eck² in 1519. The sermon was translated into German by Georg Spalatin³ in 1520, the year of some of Luther’s epoch-making publications, such as Address to the Christian Nobility, The Babylonian Captivity of the Church, and The Freedom of a Christian, where he unfolds many of the ideas developed in this sermon.⁴
Cardinal Cajetan, baptized Giacomo de Vio, is best known for his interview of Luther at Augsburg in 1518, but he was also a prolific theologian in his own right who authored more than 150 works and would produce an influential—and controversial—interpretation of Thomas Aquinas.
Portrait of Johann Eck (1486–1543), a theologian and defender of the Catholic faith who opposed Luther.
Portrait of Georg Spalatin by Lucas Cranach the Elder (1472–1553).
The sermon, admonishing in character, is theologically far more complicated than its brevity might suggest. It can be divided into two main parts, each representing one of the themes that became vital first in Luther’s reformation and later in the reception of Luther: the theme of righteousness and the theme of the two regimes. While the sermon as such takes its point of departure in Philippians 2:5f.: have this mind among yourselves, which you have in Christ Jesus,
c it is only in the first part that Luther deals with the two kinds of righteousness of a Christian: the primary, alien righteousness (iustitia aliena) and the secondary, proper righteousness (iustitia propria), based on the servant Christology of the Philippian hymn.⁵ In order to explain the operation of this double righteousness, Luther uses the famous bridal imagery that he further employs in The Freedom of a Christian: Christ as bridegroom and the church as bride are one flesh (Gen. 2:24) and one spirit (Eph. 5:29–32). As the bridegroom’s alien righteousness is given to the bride against her alien original sin, it prompts the bride’s proper righteousness to sanctify her through faith. Hence, the marriage is consummated as the righteousness that seeks the welfare of the others in the exclamatory exchange of bridegroom and bride: I am yours
(Song of Sol. 2:16).
My beloved is mine
(Song of Solomon 2:16).
The second part of the sermon demonstrates the earliest example of Luther’s idea of the two regimes. While differentiating between how justice works in the public and the private spheres (vel publici vel privati), Luther contrasts justice with injustice. On the basis of Romans 13:4, he states that in the public sphere, justice must be exercised through a worldly regime in the service of God and for the sake of order. Hence, his words on Christian righteousness and its servant form (forma servi) in the first part of the sermon do not apply to the public sphere or to those who act according to the law for the sake of themselves. They only apply to the private sphere and those who act according to the gospel for the sake of the other. The sermon’s message of benevolent righteousness and warning against mingling the justice of the two regimes thus stands in stark contrast to the double ban Luther received from both regimes when he was excommunicated by Pope Leo X (1475–1521) on 3 January 1521 and subsequently condemned as an outlaw by Emperor Karl V (1500–1558) on 25 May 1521.
SERMON ON TWO KINDS OF RIGHTEOUSNESS
⁶
"Brothers and sisters,⁷ have the same understanding between you as that of Christ Jesus, who, though in the form of God, did not regard it a robbery to be equal to God" [Phil. 2:5–6].
Christians have two kinds of righteousness,⁸ just as there are two kinds of sins in humans.
The first is alien and infused from outside of oneself.⁹ This is the righteousness by which Christ is righteous and by which he justifies others through faith,¹⁰ as it is written in 1 Cor. 1[:30]: Whom God made our wisdom, our righteousness and sanctification and redemption.
In John 11[:25–26], Christ himself states: I am the resurrection and the life; whoever believes in me … shall never die.
Later he adds in John 14[:6], I am the way, and the truth, and the life.
This righteousness, then, is given to human beingsd in baptism and whenever they are truly repentant. Therefore a human being can with confidence boast in Christ and say: Mine are Christ’s living, doing, and speaking, his suffering and dying, mine as much as if I had lived, done, spoken, suffered, and died as he did.
¹¹ Just as a bridegroom possesses all that is the bride’s and the bride all that is the bridegroom’s. For the two have everything in common. For they are one flesh [Gen. 2:24], just as Christ and the church are one spirit [Eph. 5:29–32].¹² Thus the blessed God and Father of mercies, according to Peter, has given us the greatest and most precious in Christ [2 Pet. 1:4]. Paul writes in 2 Cor. 1[:3]: Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies¹³ and God of all comfort, who has blessed us in Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places.
¹⁴
This grace and inexpressible blessing was once promised to Abraham in Gen. 12[:3]: And in your seed (that is, in Christ) shall all the nations of the earth be blessed.
¹⁵,e Isaiah 9[:6] says: For to us a child is born, to us a son is given.
To us,
it says, because he is entirely ours with all his benefits if we believe in him, as Rom. 8[:32] says: He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, will he not also give us all things with him?
Therefore everything which Christ has is ours, given us unworthy for free out of God’s sheer mercy, although we have rather deserved wrath and condemnation, and hell also. Even Christ himself, therefore, who says he came to do the most sacred will of his Father [John 6:38], became obedient to him; and whatever he did, he did it for us and desired it to be ours, saying, I am among you as one who serves
f [Luke 22:27]. And furthermore: This is my body, which is given for you
[Luke 22:19].g Isaiah 43[:24] says, You have burdened me with your sins, you have wearied me with your iniquities.
Thus, through faith in Christ, Christ’s righteousness becomes our righteousness and all that he has, rather, he himself, becomes ours. Therefore the Apostle calls it the righteousness of God
in Rom. 1[:17]: For in the gospel the righteousness of God is revealed …; as it is written, ‘The righteous lives from faith.’
¹⁶ Finally, in the same epistle, chapter 3[:28], such a faith is called the righteousness of God
: We hold that a human being is justified through faith.
This is an infinite righteousness,¹⁷ and one that swallows up all sins in a moment, for it is impossible that sin should exist in Christ. On the contrary, who trusts in Christ is attached to Christ, is one with Christ, having the same righteousness as he. Thus, it is impossible that sin should remain in that person. This righteousness is primary; it is the basis, the cause, the source of any own actual righteousness.¹⁸ For this is the righteousness given in place of the original righteousness lost in Adam. It accomplishes the same as that original righteousness would have accomplished; rather, it accomplishes more.
It is in this sense that we are to understand the prayer in Psalm 30:2 [Ps. 31:1]: In you, O LORD, do I seek refuge; let me never be put to shame; in your righteousness liberate me.
It does not say in my
but in your righteousness,
that is, in the righteousness of Christ my God which becomes ours through faith and by the grace and mercy of God. In many passages of the Psalter, faith is called the work of the LORD,
confession,
power of God,
mercy,
truth,
righteousness.
All these are names for faith in Christ, rather, for the righteousness which is in Christ. The Apostle therefore dares to say in Gal. 2[:20], I live, though not I, but truly Christ lives in me
; and in Eph. 3[:17]: "that Christ may resideh in your hearts through faith."
Therefore this alien righteousness, infused in us without our works by grace alone—while the Father, to be sure, inwardly draws us to Christ—is set opposite original sin, likewise alien without our works, inherited and caused by birth alone.¹⁹ Christ daily drives out the old Adam more and more in accordance with the extent to which faith and knowledge of Christ grow. For alien righteousness is not infused all at once, but it begins, makes progress, and is finally perfected²⁰ at the end through death.²¹
The second kind of righteousness is our proper righteousness, not because we alone work it, but because we work with that first and alien righteousness.²² This is that manner of life spent profitably in good works, in the first place, in mortifying the flesh and crucifying the self-centered desires, of which we read in Gal. 5[:24]: And those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.
In the second place, this righteousness consists in love of our neighbors, and in the third place, in humility and fear toward God. The Apostle is full of references to these, as is all the rest of Scripture. He briefly summarizes everything, however, in Titus 2[:12]: In this world let us live soberly (pertaining to crucifying our own flesh), righteously (pertaining to our neighbor), and piously (pertaining to God).
Jacobus Latomus (c. 1475–1544) was a distinguished member of the Faculty of Theology at the University of Leuven and an adviser to the Inquisition.
This righteousness is the product of the righteousness of the first type, actually its fruit and consequence, for we read in Gal. 5[:22]: But the fruit of the spirit [i.e., of a spiritual person, whose very existence depends on faith in Christ] is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.
For because the works mentioned are human works, it is obvious that in this passage a spiritual person is called spirit.
In John 3[:6] we read: That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.
This righteousness goes on to complete the first, for it persistently strives to extinguish the old Adam and to destroy the body of sin. Therefore it hates itself and loves its neighbor; it does not seek its own good, but that of another, and in this its whole way of living consists. For in that it hates itself and does not seek its own, it crucifies the flesh. Because it seeks the good of another, it works love. Thus in each sphere it does God’s will, living soberly with self, justly with neighbor, devoutly toward God.²³
This righteousness follows the example of Christ in this respect [1 Pet. 2:21] and is made to conform to his image (2 Cor. 3:18).²⁴ It is precisely this that Christ requires. Just as Christ in person did all things for us, not seeking his own good but ours only—and in this he was most obedient to God the Father—he desires that we would likewise set the same example for our neighbors.
We read in Rom. 6[:19] that this righteousness is set opposite our own actual sin: For just as you once yielded your members to impurity and to greater and greater iniquity, so now yield your members to righteousness for sanctification.
Therefore through the first righteousness arises the voice of the bridegroom who says to the soul, I am yours,
but through the second comes the voice of the bride who answers, I am yours.
Then the marriage is consummated;²⁵ it becomes strong and complete in accordance with the Song of Solomon [2:16]: My beloved is mine and I am his,
which means that my beloved is mine and I am his.²⁶ Then the soul no longer seeks to be righteous in and for itself, but it has Christ as its righteousness and therefore seeks only the welfare of others. Therefore the Lord of the Synagogue threatens through the Prophet, And I will make to cease from the cities of Judah and from the streets of Jerusalem the voice of mirth and the voice of gladness, the voice of the bridegroom and the voice of the bride
[Jer. 7:34].
This is what the theme proposed says: Have the same understanding between you, etc.; that is, have such a mind and affection towards each other such as you see that Christ is affected towards you. How? Though he was in the form of God, he did not regard it a robbery to be equal to God, but he emptied himself, accepting the form of a servant [Phil. 2:5–7].²⁷ The form of God here does not mean the substance of God because Christ never emptied himself of this. Neither can form of a servant be said to mean human substance.²⁸ But the form of God is wisdom, power, righteousness, goodness, and, furthermore, freedom. Thus, though Christ was a free, powerful, wise human being,i subject to none of the vices or sins to which all other human beings are subject²⁹—preeminent in such attributes that are particularly proper to the form of God—he was not arrogant in that form; he did not please himself (Rom. 15:3); nor did he disdain and despise those who were enslaved and subjected to various evils. He was not like the Pharisee who said, I thank you, God, that I am not like other people
[Luke 18:11], and who was delighted that others were wretched; at any rate he was unwilling that they should be like him. This is the type of robbery by which peoplej are arrogant about themselves—rather, they keep and do not give back what clearly is God’s (as they should), nor do they serve others with it that they may become like others. People of this kind wish to be like God, sufficient in themselves, pleasing themselves, glorifying in themselves, under obligation to no one, and so on.
Christ, however, did not understand it that way; he did not think this way, but relinquished that form to God the Father and emptied himself, unwilling to use his status against us, unwilling to be different from us. Rather, for our sakes he became as one of us and took the form of a servant, that is, he subjected himself to all evils. And although he was free, as the Apostle says of himself also [1 Cor. 9:19], he made himself the servant of all [Mark 9:35], acting in no other way than as if all the evils which were ours were his own. Accordingly, he took upon himself our sins and our punishments, and although it was for us that he was conquering those things, he acted as though he were conquering them for himself. Although he with respect to us could be our God and Lord, he did not want it so, but rather wanted to become our servant, as it is written in Rom. 15[:1, 3]: We ought not to please ourselves, as Christ did not please himself
; but, as it is written: the accusations of those who accused you fell on me’
[Ps. 69:9]. The quotation from the Psalmist has the same meaning as the citation from Paul.
It follows that this passage, which many have understood positively, ought thus to be understood negatively: That Christ did not understand himself as equal to God means that he did not want to be equal to God as those do who through pride rob it and (as St. Bernard says) say to God: "If you will not give me your glory,³⁰ I shall seize it for myself." The passage is not to be understood affirmatively as follows: he did not think himself equal to God, that is, the fact that he is equal to God, this he did not consider robbery. For this sentence cannot be properly understood since it speaks of Christ the human being. The Apostle means that the individual Christians shall become the servants of one another in accordance with the example of Christ. If they have wisdom, righteousness, or power, as if in the form of God, with which they can boast and excel others, they should not keep all this to themselves. They should surrender it to God and become altogether as if they did not possess it [2 Cor. 6:10], and become as one of those who have nothing.k As a result, any one personl who forgets and empties herself of God’s gifts, acts with her neighbor as if the neighbor’s weakness, sin, and foolishness were her very own in order that one does not boast or get puffed up, nor despise or triumph over one’s neighbor as if being God to one’s neighbor or equal to God. Since God’s prerogatives ought to be left to God alone, such a stupid pride becomes robbery.
Bernard of Clairvoux, monastic innovator and doctor of the Church.
It is in this way, then, that one takes the form of a servant, and that the command of the Apostle in Gal. 5[:13] is fulfilled: Through love be servants of one another.
And in Rom. 12[:4–5] and 1 Cor. 12[:12–27] he teaches, through the analogy of the members of the body, how the strong, honorable, healthy members do not triumph over those that are weak, less honorable, and sick as if they were their masters and gods; on the contrary, they serve them the more, forgetting their own honor, health, and power. For thus no member of the body serves itself; nor does it seek its own welfare but that of the other. And the weaker, the sicker, the less honorable a member is, the more the other members serve it. To use Paul’s words [1 Cor. 12:25]: that there may be no discord in the body, but that the members may have the same care for one another.
From this it is now evident how one must conduct oneself with one’s neighbor in each situation.
Oil painting by Lucas Cranach the Elder, 1525. Mary Magdalene was often portrayed with an oil jar as here. According to Mark 16 and Luke 24, Mary Magdalene was one of the women who brought spices to anoint Jesus’ dead body, and according to all the four gospels, she was the first witness to his resurrection. It was the medieval tradition of western Christianity since Pope Gregory I to conflate Mary Magdalene with the unnamed sinner anointing Jesus’ feet in Luke 7:36–50 and with Mary of Bethany who anoints Jesus’ feet in John 11:1–2.
If we do not freely desire to put off that form of God and take on the form of a servant, let us be compelled to do so against our will. In this regard, consider the story in Luke 7[:36–50], where Simon the leper, pretending to be in the form of God and perching on his own righteousness, arrogantly judged and despised Mary Magdalene, seeing in her the form of a servant. But see what happens to this judge, how Christ immediately stripped him of that form of righteousness and then clothed him with the form of sin by saying: You gave me no kiss; you did not anoint my head.
See, how many the sins that Simon did not see were! Nor did he think himself deformed by such a loathsome form that he had. His good works are not at all remembered. Christ ignores the form of God in which Simon was arrogantly pleasing himself; he does not recount that he was invited, dined, and honored by him. Simon the leper is now nothing but a sinner; he who seemed to himself so righteous sits deprived of the glory of the form of God, confused in the form of a servant, whether he wants it or not. On the other hand, Christ honors Mary with the form of God and, adding it to her, elevates her above Simon, saying: She has anointed my feet and kissed them. She has wet my feet with her tears and wiped them with her hair.
See how many were the merits which neither she nor Simon saw. Her faults are remembered no more. Christ ignored the form of servitude in her whom he has exalted with the form of sovereignty. Mary is nothing but righteous, elevated into the glory of the form of God, etc.³¹
In like manner, he will treat all of us whenever we, on the ground of our righteousness, wisdom, or power, are arrogant or angry with those who are unrighteous, foolish, or less powerful than we. For when we act thus—and this is the greatest perversion—righteousness works against righteousness, wisdom against wisdom, power against power. For you are powerful, not that you may make the weak weaker by oppression, but that you may make them powerful by raising them up and defending them. You are wise, not in order to laugh at the foolish and thereby make them more foolish, but that you may undertake to teach them as you yourself would wish to be taught. You are righteous so that you may vindicate and pardon the unrighteous,³² not that you may only condemn, disparage, judge, and punish. For this is Christ’s example for us, as he says: For the child of humanity did not come to condemn the world, but that the world might be saved through him
(John 3:17).³³ He further says in Luke 9[:55–56]: You do not know what manner of spirit you are of; for the child of humanity came not to destroy souls but to save them.
m But naturen violently rebels, greatly delighting in punishment, glorying in its own righteousness and in the shame of its neighbors’ unrighteousness. Therefore it pleads its own case, and it rejoices that this is better than its neighbor’s. But it opposes the case of its neighbor and wants it to appear mean. This perversity is wholly evil, contrary to love, which does not seek its own good, but that of another [1 Cor. 13:5; Phil. 2:4]. It ought to feel pain that the condition of its neighbor is not better than its own and wish that its neighbor’s condition were better than its own; and if its neighbor’s condition is the better, it ought to rejoice no less than it rejoices when its own is the better. For this is the law and the prophets
[Matt. 7:12].
But you say, Is it not permissible to chasten the evil? Is it not proper to punish sin? Who is not obliged to defend righteousness? To do otherwise would give occasion for lawlessness.
I answer: A single solution to this problem cannot be given. Therefore one must distinguish between humans. For people are either public or private individuals.³⁴
The things which have been said do not pertain at all to public individuals, that is, to those who have been placed in a responsible office by God. It is their necessary function to punish and judge the evil, to vindicate and defend the oppressed, because it is not they but God who does this. They are his servants in this very matter, as the Apostle shows at some length in Rom. 13[:4]: He does not bear the sword in vain, etc.
But this must be understood as pertaining to the cases of others, not to one’s own. For no person acts in God’s place for the sake of herself and her own things, but for the sake of others. If, however, someone has a case of her own, let her ask for someone else to be God’s representative, for in that case one is not a judge, but one of the parties. But on these matters others speak in other places, for it is too broad a subject to cover here.
Private individuals with their own cases are of three kinds. First, there are those who seek vengeance and judgment from the representatives of God, and there are quite a few of these nowadays. Paul tolerates that, but he does not approve of it when he says in 1 Cor. 6[:12], All things are lawful for me, but not all things are helpful.
Rather, he says in the same chapter, To have lawsuits at all with one another is a defeat for you
[1 Cor. 6:7]. But yet to avoid a greater evil he [Paul] tolerates this lesser one lest they should vindicate themselves and one should use force on the other, returning evil for evil, demanding their own advantages. Nevertheless, such persons will not enter the kingdom of heaven unless they have changed for the better by forsaking things that are merely lawful and pursuing those that are helpful. For that passion for one’s own advantage must be destroyed.
The second kind is those who do not desire vengeance. On the other hand, in accordance with the Gospel [Matt. 5:40], to those who would take their coats, they are prepared to give their capes as well, and they do not resist any evil. These are children of God, brothers and sisters of Christ, heirs of future good things [Rom. 8:16; Gal. 4:7].o In Scripture, therefore, they are called orphans,
minors,
widows,
and poor
because they do not avenge themselves. God wishes to be called their Father
and Judge
[Ps. 68:6]. Far from avenging themselves, if those in authority should wish to seek revenge in their behalf, they either do not desire it or seek it, or they only permit it. Or, if they are among the most advanced, they forbid and prevent it, prepared rather to lose their other possessions also.
Suppose you say: Such people are most rare, and who would be able to remain in this world if acting like this?
I answer: This is not a discovery of today, that few are saved and that the gate is narrow that leads to life and those who find it are few [Matt. 7:14]. But if none were doing this, how would Scripture, which proclaims the poor, the orphans, and the widows the people of Christ, stand? Thus, those of this second type feel more pain over the sin of their offenders than over the loss or offense to themselves. And they do this that they may recall those offenders from their sin rather than avenge the wrongs they themselves have suffered. Therefore they put off the form of their own righteousness and put on the form of those others, praying for their persecutors, blessing those who curse, doing good to evildoers, prepared to pay the penalty and make satisfaction for their very enemies that they may be saved [Matt. 5:44].³⁵ This is the gospel and the example of Christ [cf. Luke 23:34].
The third kind is those who in affect are like the second type just mentioned, but in effect are different. They are the ones who demand back their own property or seek vengeance to be meted out, not because they seek their own advantage, but through this vengeance and restoration of their own things they seek the betterment of the one who has been stealing from or offending them. They discern that the offender cannot be improved without punishment. These are called zealots
³⁶ and the Scriptures praise them. But no one ought to attempt this unless one is perfect and highly experienced in the second manner just mentioned; otherwise they could mistake wrath for zeal and be convicted of doing from anger and impatience what they assume is done from love of justice. For anger is like zeal, and impatience is like love of justice, thus they cannot be sufficiently distinguished except by the most spiritual. Christ exhibited such zeal (as narrated in John 2[:14–17] when he made a whip [1 Cor. 4:21] and cast out the sellers and buyers from the temple; and similarly Paul, when he said, Should I come to you with a twig,
etc. [1 Cor. 4:21]. FINISH
A Brief Instruction on
What to Look for and Expect in the Gospels
1522
WANDA DEIFELT
INTRODUCTION
While in exile at the Wartburg Castle, from 1521 to 1522, Luther began writing a series of sermons that became known as the Church Postil (Kirchenpostille) or Wartburg Postil.¹ The turbulence over the indulgence controversy and ecclesiastical excommunication had come to an end, leaving Luther’s Wittenberg supporters in uncertainty and unrest. It was time to focus on the solidification of the movement, and Luther busied himself.a Besides the sermons of the Church Postil, Luther also translated the New Testament into German during his hiding at Wartburg. These two enterprises go together: the accessibility of the New Testament in the vernacular enabled common people to read the Scriptures, while the homiletic material of the Postilb enabled preachers to announce the good news of the gospel from the pulpit.²
The Postil marks the beginning of Luther’s effort to have sermon guides for all the Gospel and Epistle lessons for the church year. The text A Brief Instruction functions both as an introduction to these sermons but also as a separate commentary on the nature of the gospel.³ In it Luther stresses the power of the word and its proper interpretation. Although there are many different books to be found in the Bible, there is only one gospel, which Luther summarizes as a story about Christ, God’s and David’s Son, who dies and was raised and is established as Lord.
Having just returned from the Diet of Worms in 1521, where he had been declared an outlaw, Luther had a renewed sense of urgency in proclaiming that the church needed to hear God’s message. In his assessment of his church’s teaching at the time, Christ had been made into a new Moses or, at best, as an example to be followed. It was necessary, therefore, to clarify that the gospel is not a literary genre but the evangelion, the message of good news proclaimed in Christ.⁴ The paradox of law and gospel is at the center of the argument Luther wishes to make.⁵ Christ is not a law-giving Moses, but a gift comprehensible solely through the lens of the cross. The overwhelming goodness of God can only be understood and experienced by preaching Christ as the one who is crucified. This happy exchange is the true and central argument of the gospel, the message on which the church is founded and in which Christians put their hope.
c
Before setting off for the Diet of Worms, Luther had written and sent to the printer a short explanation, in Latin, on the Epistles and Gospels for the four Sundays of Advent. In a letter to his Wittenberg colleague Philip Melanchthon (1497–1560), on 26 May 1521, Luther announced that he would publish a Postil in German.⁶ He asked his friends in Wittenberg to send him a copy of the Latin Advent Postil—perhaps with the intention of translating it from Latin into German—but they could not find his personal copy.d Apparently Luther had entrusted it to somebody and it got misplaced. While waiting for his Latin Advent Postil—and without his library—Luther began working on the homilies for the Christmas season. He decided that the Postil should be divided into four parts, one for each quarter of the church calendar.e The first sermon of the Wartburg Postil was completed in June of 1521 and the last one in February of the following year.
In a letter from 19 November 1521, Luther dedicates the sermons to his territorial ruler, Albert VII [Albrecht], Count of Mansfeld (1480–1560). By this time, Luther had finished twelve of the sermons (those from Christmas Day through Epiphany) and was planning to prepare four more for Advent. The dedicatory letter and the introduction were supposed to cover both parts.⁷ However, the portion about Advent was not concluded and the Christmas Postil ended up published first, even if Luther had planned that the homilies for the four Advent Sundays were to come first (following the church year).
The Christmas sermons, along with A Brief Instruction, were sent off in secret and published in March 1522, by Johann Grünenberg (d. c. 1525), in time for the Easter fair at Frankfurtam-Main. By 15 April 1522, the Advent sermons were also sent to the press.f Only in 1525 were the two parts published together, as originally intended. The Wartburg Postil encompasses these two sets of publications covering the Sundays of Advent and Christmas, known as Christmas Postil and Advent Postil.
A BRIEF INSTRUCTION⁸ ON WHAT TO LOOK FOR AND EXPECT IN THE GOSPELS
g
It is a common practice to number the gospels and to name them by books and say that there are four gospels. From this practice stems the fact that no one knows what St. Paul and St. Peter are saying in their epistles, and their teaching is regarded as an addition to the teaching of the gospels, in a vein similar to that of Jerome’s⁹ introduction.¹⁰ There is, besides, the still worse practice of regarding the gospels and epistles as law books that teach us what we are to do, and the works of Christ are pictured as nothing but examples to us.h Where these two erroneous notions remain in people’s hearts,i neither the gospels nor the epistles may be read in a profitable or Christian manner; they remain as pagan as ever.
One should thus realize that there is only one gospel,¹¹ but that it is described by many apostles. Every single epistle of Paul and of Peter, as well as the Acts of the Apostles by Luke, is a gospel, even though they do not record all the works and words of Christ, but one is shorter and includes less than another. There is not one of the four major gospels anyway that includes all the words and works of Christ; nor is this necessary. Gospel is and should be nothing else than a discourse or story about Christ,j just as happens among us when one writes a book about a king or a prince, telling what he did, said, and suffered in his day. Such a story can be told in various ways; one spins it out, and the other is brief. Thus the gospel is and should be nothing else than a chronicle, a story, a narrative about Christ, telling who he is, what he did, said, and suffered—a subject which one describes briefly, another more fully, one this way, another that way.
For at its briefest, the gospel is a discourse about Christ, that he is the Son of God and became a human beingk for us, that he died and was raised, that he has been established as a Lord over all things. This much St. Paul takes in hand and spins out in his epistles. He bypasses all the miracles and incidents [in Christ’s ministry] which are set forth in the four gospels, yet he includes the whole gospel adequately and abundantly. This may be seen clearly and well in his greeting