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"Christ's Glorious Resurrection from the Dead the Actual
Absolution of the Entire Sinful World Here I would point out two things: 1.
That This Is Certain And True, and 2. That Therefore Every Man Who Wants To Be
Saved Must By Faith Accept This General Absolution As Applying Also To
Him,"
C. F. W. Walther,
The Word of His Grace, Sermon Selections, "Christ's
Resurrection--The World's Absolution" Lake Mills: Graphic Publishing
Company, 1978 J-5 p. 230. Mark 16:1-8.
"For God has already forgiven you your sins 1800 years ago
when He in Christ absolved all men by raising Him after He first had gone into
bitter death for them. Only one thing remains on your part so that you also
possess the gift. This one thing is--faith. And this brings me to the second part
of today's Easter message, in which I now would show you that every man who
wants to be saved must accept by faith the general absolution, pronounced 1800
years ago, as an absolution spoken individually to him."
C. F. W. Walther,
The Word of His Grace, Sermon Selections, "Christ's
Resurrection--The World's Absolution" Lake Mills: Graphic Publishing
Company, 1978 J-5 p. 233. Mark 16:1-8.
"Just as true doctrine is the greatest gift we can enjoy, so
false doctrine is the most baneful evil that can beset us. False doctrine is
sin, it is the invention of Satan, and it imperils and destroys salvation.
False doctrine is every teaching contrary to the Word of God. Scripture enjoins
upon us to proclaim only the truth."
W. A. Baepler, "Doctrine, True
and False," The Abiding Word, ed., Theodore Laetsch, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1946, II, p. 501.
"'Just git the spirit started,' said a Methodist to C. P.
Krauth, 'and then it works like smoke.' 'Very much like smoke, I guess,'
answered Krauth."
F. Bente, American Lutheranism, 2
vols., The United Lutheran Church, Gen Synod, Gen Council, Un Syn in the South,
St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1919, II, p. 77.
"He shows, moreover, that it is customary in Scripture to
call temptation and tribulation in this life a fire. As the furnace tests the
vessels of the potter, so also tribulation tests unjust people."
Martin Chemnitz, Examination of the
Council of Trent, trans., Fred Kramer, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1986, III, p. 254. 1 Corinthians 3:15.
"No false dogma has ever been spread in the church which was
not put forth with some plausible show, for sheep's clothing is the show of
false religion (says Chrysostom). Indeed, the weaker and more ruinous the cause
is, the more arguments it needs, sought everywhere and in every way possible,
as though to cover it over with paint or to swathe it with medicine. For Pindar
[famous Greek lyric poet, 518-438 B.C.] says, 'For a just cause three words are
sufficient.' Therefore the papalists have gathered very many and varied
arguments in order to establish purgatory."
Martin Chemnitz, Examination of the
Council of Trent, trans., Fred Kramer, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1986, III, p. 325.
"The Scholastics philosophize all too crassly about man doing
what is in him, about adequate merit (de merito congrui), about grace which
makes acceptable, about deserving merit (de merito condigni). And concerning
justification they dispute without the Scripture in no other way than as if
they were philosophizing in the school of Aristotle about natural
impulses."
Martin Chemnitz, Examination of the
Council of Trent, trans., Fred Kramer, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1971, I, p. 463.
"For the papalists understand the word 'justify' according to
the manner of the Latin composition as meaning 'to make righteous' through a
donated or infused quality of inherent righteousness, from which works of
righteousness proceed. The Lutherans, however, accept the word 'justify' in the
Hebrew manner of speaking; therefore they define justification as the
absolution from sins, or the remission of sins, through imputation of the
righteousness of Christ, through adoption and inheritance of eternal life, and
that only for the sake of Christ, who is apprehended by faith."
Martin Chemnitz, Examination of the
Council of Trent, trans., Fred Kramer, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1971, I, p. 467.
"And, in short, the meritum condigni is the Helen for which
the Tridentine chapter concerning the growth of justification contends. For
they imagine that the quality, or habit, of love is infused not that we may
possess salvation to life eternal through this first grace but that, assisted
by that grace, we may be able to merit eternal life for ourselves by our own
good works. For concerning the meritum condigni Gabriel speaks thus: 'The soul
shaped by grace worthily (de condigno) merits eternal life.'" [Kramer note
- Scholastics taught that the good works of the unregenerate had only meritum
congrui; the good works of the regenerate rewarded as meritum condigni, merit
worthy with being rewarded with eternal life.]
Martin Chemnitz, Examination of the
Council of Trent, trans., Fred Kramer, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1971, I, p. 541.
"How is a person justified before God? This occurs solely by
faith in the Son of God, Jesus Christ; that is, freely, not because of any
works or merits of one's own but only because of the one Mediator, Jesus
Christ, who became the sacrificial victim and propitiation on our behalf. By
this sacrifice, man obtained forgiveness of sins and became righteous; that is,
God-pleasing and acceptable. His righteousness was imputed to man for Christ's
sake, and man becomes an heir of eternal life when he believes with certainty
that God gives him these blessings for the sake of His Son."
David Chytraeus, A Summary of the
Christian Faith (1568), trans., Richard Dinda, Decatur: Repristination Press,
1994. p. 105.
"Scripture therefore uses these words, 'We are justified by
faith,' to teach both: 1) What the reason (or merit) for justification is, or
what the blessings of Christ are; to wit, that through and for the sake of
Christ alone we are granted forgiveness of sins, righteousness and eternal life;
and 2. How these should be applied or transferred to us; namely, by embracing
the promise and relying on Christ by faith alone."
David Chytraeus, A Summary of the
Christian Faith (1568), trans., Richard Dinda, Decatur: Repristination Press,
1994. p. 107.
"The good angels are spiritual beings, created in the
beginning after the image of God; that is, they are intelligent, truthful, just
and free. They are not part of another species or the souls of people; and they
are immortal, ordained by God to praise Him and to be servants of the Church
and protectors of the devout, Hebrews 1, Psalm 34, Psalm 103, and Psalm
104."
David Chytraeus, A Summary of the
Christian Faith (1568), trans., Richard Dinda, Decatur: Repristination Press,
1994. p. 47. Hebrews 1; Psalm 34; Psalm 103; Psalm 104
"It must be admitted that when our Lutheran Confessions speak
of justification they speak almost exclusively of that facet of justification
we usually call 'subjective' justification, which has also been called
'special' or 'personal' justification. But the Confessions also show us that
the basis for this justification is the justification that precedes
faith."
Rick Nicholas Curia, The
Significant History of the Doctrine of Objective or Universal Justification,
Alpine, California: California Pastoral Conference, WELS. January 24-25, 1983.
p. 13. Chap 5.
"Here the panel feels itself compelled to distinguish between
form and content. While the form of the Four Statements is inadequate, the
doctrine of objective justification it grapples with is Scriptural. The Four
Statements have served to show that there is a doctrinal difference between
Faith Congregation and the appellants."
Report of the WELS Review
Committee, Hartman, Pohlman Appeal, June 30, 1980. Rick Nicholas Curia, The
Significant History of the Doctrine of Objective or Universal Justification,
Alpine, California: California Pastoral Conference, WELS. January 24-25, 1983.
p. 133. Chap 5.
"The teaching of the Wisconsin Synod is this, that in and
with the universal reconciliation, which has occurred in Christ for the whole
world--even Judas; the world--even Judas--has been justified and has received
the forgiveness of sin. Therefore, according to Luther's clear words ("for
where there is forgiveness of sins, there is also life and salvation"),
(even Judas) has become a child of God and an heir of heaven." Quotation
from Gottfried Fritschel, "Zur Lehre von der Rechtfertigung,"
Theologische Monatshefte, vol 4, 1871, (1-24), p. 7.
Rick Nicholas Curia, The
Significant History of the Doctrine of Objective or Universal Justification,
Alpine, California: California Pastoral Conference, WELS. January 24-25, 1983.
p. 2. Does Curia mean Wisconsin or the Norwegian Synod? Chapter 5.
"The doctrine of salvation through the Means of Grace is
distinctive of Lutheranism. The Catholic churches have no use for means of
grace, for a Gospel and for Sacraments which offer salvation as a free gift.
And the Reformed churches, while they hold, in general, that salvation is by
grace, repudiate the Gospel and the Sacraments as the means of grace. It is
clear that matters of fundamental importance are involved. The chief article of
the Christian religion, justification by faith, stands and falls with the
article of the Means of Grace. Justification by faith means absolutely nothing
without the Means of Grace, whereby the righteousness gained by Christ is
bestowed and faith, which appropriates the gift, is created."
The. Engelder, W. Arndt, Th.
Graebner, F. E. Mayer, Popular Symbolics, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing
House, 1934, p. 4f.
"Wohl scheint auf den ersten Blick die ganze Differenz recht
unbedeutend; aber in Wahrheit gibt sich hier die gefaehrliche Richtung der
Pietisten zu erkennen, das Leben ueber die Lehre, die Heiligung ueber die
Rechtfertigung und die Froemmigkeit nicht als Folge, sondern als Bedingung der
Erleuchtung zu setzen also eine Art Synergismus und Pelagianismus einzufuehren.
(At first glance, the total difference seems absolutely paltry, but in truth
the dangerous direction of Pietism is made apparent: life over doctrine,
sanctification over justification, and piety not as a consequence but declared
as a stipulation of enlightenment, leading to a kind of synergism and
Pelagianism.)"
Adolf Hoenecke,
Evangelische-Lutherische Dogmatik, 4 vols., ed., Walter and Otto Hoenecke,
Milwaukee: Northwestern Publishing House, 1912, III, p. 253.
"But in extraordinary cases, does He not dispense with means?
Even there, means are employed; but in an extraordinary way. At Pentecost the
multitudes were converted through the Word, although this Word was given under
extraordinary conditions and circumstances, just as the multitudes in the
wilderness were sustained not without bread, but with bread furnished in an
extraordinary manner."
Henry Eyster Jacobs, A Summary of
the Christian Faith, Philadelphia: General Council Publication House, 1913, p.
266. USE FOR Catechism.
"Melanchthon, the Hamlet of the Reformation, shrinking from
action into contemplation, with a dangerous yearning for a peace which must
have been hollow and transient, had become more and more entangled in the
complications of a specious but miserable policy which he felt made him justly
suspected by those whose confidence in him had once been unlimited."
Charles P. Krauth, The Conservative
Reformation and Its Theology, Philadelphia: United Lutheran Publication House,
1913 (1871), p. 85.
"Just why the fact of our regeneration should prove such a
strong motive to us to give evidence of our faith in love is shown in the
description of regeneration, when the apostle states that this new birth in our
hearts is not the result of perishable, corruptible seed, as the growth of
earthly plants would be, but of an incorruptible imperishable seed, the Word of
God, the Gospel of the Savior Jesus Christ. This Word of God is in itself
living, full of life and of life-giving power. And it abides in eternity; even
after the form of the Word, in Scripture and in preaching, has passed away, the
content of the Gospel will remain in eternity."
Paul E. Kretzmann, Popular
Commentary of the New Testament, 2 vols., St. Louis: Concordia Publishing
House, J-214 II, p. 523. 1 Peter 1:23
"As this dawn breaks more and more it will supersede the lamp
of the prophetic Word just as fulfillment always supersedes prophecy. The
readers will repeat the experience of the apostles: the more they became
eyewitnesses of the majesty of Jesus, the more what they actually saw in Jesus
te of what the old prophets had foretold about Him (John 1:14). This will be
true to the greatest degree when the dawn of the eternal day actually
breaks...It is quite correct to say that the believers who are living near the
end of time will know what is taking place and will lift up their hearts in
joyous expectation just as Jesus says in Luke 21:28."
R. C. H. Lenski, Interpretation of
Peter, John, Jude, Columbus: The Wartburg Press, 1945, p. 295. 2 Peter
1:19
"The danger is that by use of the term 'subjective
justification' we may lose the objective divine act of God by which He declares
the individual sinner righteous ex pistews pistin in the instant faith
(embracing Christ) is wrought in him, leaving only the one divine declaration
regarding the whole world of sinners, calling this an actus simplex, the only
forensic act of God, and expanding this to mean that God declared every sinner
free from guilt when Christ was raised from the dead, so many millions even
before they were born, irrespective of faith, apart from and without
faith." This surely wipes out 'justification by faith alone.' Only his
faith is reckoned to him for righteousness."
R. C. H. Lenski, Interpretation of
Romans, Augsburg Publishing House: Minneapolis, 1963 p. 85. Romans 1:17
"The Gospel shows the Father's grace, Who sent His Son to
save our race, Proclaims how Jesus lived and died That man might thus be
justified. (2) It sets the Lamb before our eyes, Who made the atoning
sacrifice, And calls the souls with guilt opprest To come and find eternal rest.
(3) It brings the Savior's righteousness Our souls to robe in royal dress; From
all our guilt it brings release And gives the troubled conscience peace. (4) It
is the power of God to save From sin and Satan and the grace; It works the
faith, which firmly clings To all the treasures which it brings. (5) It bears
to all the tidings glad And bids their hearts no more be sad; The heavy laden
souls it cheers And banishes their guilty fears."
Matthias Loy, 1863, "The
Gospel Shows the Father's Grace" The Lutheran Hymnal, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1941, Hymn #297. John 3:16.
(Luther makes the following general comment on Romans 2:6-10):
"Patient continuance is so altogether necessary that no work can be good
in which patient continuance is lacking. The world is so utterly perverse and
Satan is so heinously wicked that he cannot allow any good work to be done, but
he must persecute it. However, in this very way God, in His wonderful wisdom,
proves what work is good and pleasing to Him. Here the rule holds: As long as
we do good and for our good do not encounter contradiction, hatred, and all
manner of disagreeable and disadvantageous things, so we must fear that our
good work as yet is not pleasing to God; for just so long it is not yet done with
patient continuance."
Martin Luther, Commentary on
Romans, trans. J. Theodore Mueller, Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 1976,
J-139 p. 55. Romans 2:6-10.
"Lastly, it is nothing else than the devil himself, because
above and against God he urges [and disseminates] his [papal] falsehoods
concerning masses, purgatory, the monastic life, one's own works and
[fictitious] divine worship (for this is the very Papacy [upon each of which
the Papacy is altogether founded and is standing]), and condemns, murders, and
tortures all Christians who do not exalt and honor these abominations [of the
Pope] above all things. Therefore, just as little as we can worship the devil
himself as Lord and God, we can endure this apostle, the Pope, or Antichrist,
in his rule as head or lord. For to lie and to kill, and to destroy body and
soul eternally, that is wherein his papal government really consists, as I have
very clearly shown in many books."
Smalcald Articles, Part II, Article
IV, The Papacy, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1921, p. 475. 2 Thessalonians 2:4.
"All this is the old devil and old serpent, who also
converted Adam and Eve into enthusiasts, and led them from the outward Word of
God to spiritualizing and self-conceit, and nevertheless he accomplished this
through other outward words. Just as also our enthusiasts [at the present day]
condemn the outward Word, and nevertheless they themselves are not silent, but
they fill the world with their pratings and writings, as though, indeed, the
Spirit could not come through the writings and spoken word of the apostles, but
[first] through their writings and words he must come. Why [then] do not they
also omit their own sermons and writings, until the Spirit Himself come to men,
without their writings and before them, as they boast that He has come into
them without the preaching of the Scriptures?"
Smalcald Articles, VIII.,
Confession, 3-5, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1921, p. 495.
"Likewise those fastidious spirits are to be reproved who, when they have heard a sermon or two, find it tedious and dull, thinking that they know all that well enough, and need no more instruction. For just that is the sin which has been hitherto reckoned among mortal sins, and is called akedia, i. e., torpor or satiety, a malignant, dangerous plague with which the devil bewitches and deceives the hearts of many, that he may surprise us and secretly withdraw God's Word from us." The Large Catechism, Preface, #99, The Third Commandment, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, 010 p. 609. Exodus 20:8-11.
"...God here directs and works wonderfully by making the
first last and the last first. And all is spoken to humble those who are great
that they should trust in nothing but the goodness and mercy of God. And on the
other hand that those who are nothing should not despair, but trust in the
goodness of God just as the others do."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John N. Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, II,
p. 106. Matthew 20:1-16.
"Let us see what they [first and last] mean before God, then
what they mean before men. Thus, those who are the first in the eyes of man,
that is, those who consider themselves, or let themselves be considered, as the
nearest to or the first before God, they are just the opposite before God, they
are the last in His eyes and the farthest from Him. On the other hand those who
are the last in the eyes of man, those who consider themselves, or let
themselves be considered, the farthest from God and the last before Him, they
also are just the opposite, in that they are the nearest and the first before
God."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John N. Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, II,
p. 109. Matthew 20:1-16;
"Faith receives the good works of Christ, love bestows good
works on our neighbor." In the first place, our faith is strengthened and
increased when Christ is held forth to us in his own natural works, namely,
that he associates only with the blind, the deaf, the lame, the lepers, the
dead and the poor; that is , in pure love and kindness toward all who are in
need and in misery, so that finally Christ is nothing else than consolation and
a refuge for all the distressed and troubled in conscience. Here is necessary
faith that trusts in the Gospel and relies upon it, never doubting that Christ
is just as he is presented to us in this Gospel, and does not think of Him
otherwise, nor let any one persuade us to believe otherwise."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, I, p. 109f. Matthew 11:2-10.
"In the third place, false teachers flay their disciples to
the bone, and cut them out of house and home, but even this is taken and
endured. Such, I opine, has been our experience under the Papacy. But true
preachers are even denied their bread. Yet this all perfectly squares with
justice! For, since men fail to give unto those from whom they receive the Word
of God, and permit the latter to serve them at their own expense, it is but
fair they should give the more unto preachers of lies, whose instruction
redounds to their injury. What is withheld from Christ must be given in tenfold
proportion to the devil. They who refuse to give the servant of truth a single
thread, must be oppressed by liars."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, 004 VII, p. 111f. 2 Corinthians 11:19-33; 12:1-9.
"Fifth, these deceitful
teachers, not satisfied with having acquired our property, must exalt
themselves above us and lord it over us...We bow our knees before them, worship
them and kiss their feet. And we suffer it all, yes, with fearful reverence
regard it as just and right. And it is just and right, for why did we not honor
the Gospel by accepting and preserving it?" Martin Luther, Sermons of
Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book
House, 1983, 006 VII, p. 112. 2 Corinthians 11:19-33; 12:1-9.
"Sixth, our false apostles justly reward us by smiting us in
the face. That is, they consider us inferior to dogs; they abuse us, and treat
us as foot-rags."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther,
8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, 007
VII, p. 112. 2 Corinthians 11:19-33; 12:1-9.
"The first class of disciples are those who hear the Word but
neither understand nor esteem it. And these are not the mean people of the
world, but the greatest, wisest and the most saintly, in short they are the
greatest part of mankind; for Christ does not speak here of those who persecute
the Word nor of those who fail to give their ear to it, but of those who hear it
and are students of it, who also wish to be called true Christian and to live
in Christian fellowship with Christians and are partakers of baptism and the
Lord's Supper. But they are of a carnal heart, and remain so, failing to
appropriate the Word of God to themselves, it goes in one ear and out the
other, just like the seed along the wayside did not fall into the earth, but
remained lying on the ground..."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983
J-209 II, p. 114. Luke 8:4-15 (par. Mark 4: Matthew 13:)
"Therefore the Holy Spirit rightly and justly convicts, as
sinful and condemned, all who have not faith in Christ. For where this is
wanting, other sins in abundance must follow: God is despised and hated, and
the entire first table is treated with disobedience."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, III, p. 141. John 16:5-15.
"But when one inquires of reason for counsel it soon says: It
is not possible. Yes, you must wait a long time until roasted ducks fly into
your mouth, for reason sees nothing, grasps nothing, and nothing is present.
Just so the apostles do also here who thought: Yes, who will provide food for
so many, no one is able to do that; but had they seen a great pile of money and
in addition tables laden with bread and meat, they would soon have discovered
good counsel and been able to give good consolation; that would have gone to
their thinking very reasonably."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House 1983,
IV, p. 206. Mark 8:1-9
"Just so it is also at present: Where true pastors and
preachers are so poorly supoorted that no one donates anything to them, and
moreover what they have is snatched out of their mouths by a shameless and
unthankful world, by princes, noblemen, townsmen and famers, so that they with
their poor wives and children must suffer need, and when they die leave behind
them pitiable, rejected widows and orphans. By this very many good-hearted and
very clever people are more and more discouraged from becoming pastors and
preachers."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, IV, p. 214. Mark 8:1-9.
"For God is a jealous God and cannot suffer us to love
anything above Himself. But to love anything beneath Himself, He of course
allows. Just as a husband can easily allow his wife to love the maid servants,
the house and house utensils, cattle and other things; but to love with the
love she should have for him, he will not suffer her to love anyone besides
himself; yea, he desires her to forsake all things for his sake; and so again
the wife also requires the same from her husband."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, V, p. 24. Luke 10:23-37
"But there is not a man on earth who thus fulfils the law;
yea, we all do just the opposite. Thus this law here makes us all sinners so
that not the least letter of this commandment is fulfilled, even by the most
holy persons in the world. For no one clings so firmly to God with all the
heart, that he could forsake all things for God's sake. We have, God be
praised, become so competent that we can almost not suffer the least word, yea,
we will not let go of a nickel for the sake of God." Martin Luther,
Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker, Grand Rapids:
Baker Book House, 1983, V, p. 25. Luke 10:23-37
"Therefore the Holy Spirit must come to our rescue, not only
to preach the Word to us, but also to enlarge and impel us from within, yea,
even to employ the devil, the world and all kinds of afflictions and
persecutions to this end. Just as a pig's bladder must be rubbed with salt and
thoroughly worked to distend it, so this old hide of ours must be well salted
and plagued until we call for help and cry aloud, and so stretch and expand
ourselves, both through internal and through external suffering,that we may
finally succeed and attain this heart and cheer, joy and consolation, from
Christ's resurrection."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, II, p. 253. Mark 16:1-8.
"Again, with truly pious hearts, which in many respects are
timid and tender, his [Satan's] practice is just the opposite. He tortures them
with everything terrible that can be imagined, martyring and piercing them as
with fiery darts, until they may find no good thing nor comfort before God. His
object in both cases is to ruin souls by means of his lies and to lead them to
eternal death."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed. John N. Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, III,
p. 302. John 14:23-31
"What he calls 'the old man' is well known to us; namely, the
whole nature of man as descended from Adam after his fall in paradise, being
blinded by the devil, depraved in soul, not keeping God before his eyes nor
trusting him, yes, utterly regardless of God and the judgment day. Though with
his mouth he may honor God's Word and the Gospel, yet in reality he is
unchanged; if he does have a little addtional knowledge, he has just as little
fear, love and trust in God as heretofore."
Martin Luther Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, VIII, p. 306. Ephesians 4:22-28
"I have often told you, dearly beloved, that the entire
Scriptures consist of two parts, of the law and the Gospel. It is the law that
teaches us what we are required to do; the Gospel teaches where we shall
receive what the law demands. For it is quite a different thing to know what we
should have, and to know where to get it. Just as when I am given into the
hands of the physicians, where it is quite a different art to tell what my
disease is than to tell what medicine I must take so as to recover. Thus it is
likewise here. The law discovers the disease, the Gospel ministers the
medicine."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, V, p. 31. Luke 10:23-37
"Now, where Paul's Christian doctrine does not obtain,
naturally each individual forgets the beam in his own eye and perceives only
the mote in his neighbor's. One will not bear with the faults of the other;
each requires perfection of his fellow...These puff themselves up and put on
airs. Whoever is not just like them is held in disgrace, in disparagement and
contempt. Only themselves are worthy of admiration...They are not aware of the
secret satanical pride in the inmost recesses of their hearts, which pride is
the very reason they haughtily and meanly despise their neighbors for their
imperfections."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, VI, p. 35. Romans 15:4-13
"The second characteristic of faith is that it does not desire
to know, nor first to be assured whether it is worthy of grace and will be
heard, like the doubters, who grasp after God and tempt Him. Just as a blind
man runs against a wall, so they also plunge against God, and would first
gladly feel and be assured that he can not escape out of their hands."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker,
Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, V, p. 66. Luke 17:11-19
"Thirdly, Christ shows love is still greater, in that He
exercises it where it is lost and receives ingratitude from the majority; ten
lepers were cleansed and only one thanks Him, on the nine His love is lost. If
He would have made use of justice here instead of love, as men are accustomed
to do and nature teaches, He would have made them all lepers again."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, 8 vols., ed., John Nicholaus Lenker,
Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1983, V, p. 75. Luke 17:11-19; James 2:26 [woman in travail] ..."but wait
thou patiently and permit God to do with you according to His will. He shall
accomplish it; permit Him to work. We shall accomplish nothing ourselves, but
at times we shall feel death and hell. This the ungodly shall also feel, but
they do not believe that God is present in it and wants to help them. Just as
the woman here accomplishes nothing, she only feels pain, distress and misery;
but she cannot help herself out of this state."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, 8 vols., ed. John Nicholas Lenker, Grand Rapids: Baker Book House,
1983, III, p. 82. John 16:16-23
"Now the Christian Creed indicates that the Lord's ascension
is in no way our doing, but an article we are to believe. All festivals in the
church are celebrated by Christians for the sake of faith, that it might be
served by preaching. Just as it is not my work nor that of anyone else that
God's Son is conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary, so also it
is not my doing that Christ rose from the dead, ascended into heaven, and has
sent the Holy Spirit."
Martin Luther, Sermons of Martin
Luther, The House Postils, 3 vols., ed. Eugene F. A. Klug, Grand Rapids: Baker
Book House, 1996, II, p. 113. Acts 1:1-11
"Learn well the lesson of this text: The sin which God
considers the greatest sin of all, the one that He condones or tolerates less
than any other, is the sin of His people not acknowledging His Day of
Judgement. Here God lumps all sins into one, says nothing about all the other
sins, and addresses only their sin of living in a false sense of security, of
not only disregarding all the warnings and admonitions of the prophets, but of
even persecuting them, shedding innocent blood, until, as the Scriptures say,
all Jerusalem was filled with blood, just as Germany today is sinning horribly
by its almost universal persecution of the Word and its servants." Martin
Luther, Sermons of Martin Luther, The House Postils, 3 vols., ed., Eugene Klug,
Grand Rapids: Baker Book House, 1996, II, p. 369. Luke 19:41-48 (3) "Therefore my hope is in the Lord
And not in mine own merit; It rests upon His faithful Word To them of contrite
spirit That He is merciful and just; This is my comfort and my trust. His help
I wait with patience."
Martin Luther, 1523, "From
Depths of Woe I Cry to Thee," The Lutheran Hymnal, Trans., Catherine
Winkworth, 1863 alt. St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1941, Hymn #329.
Psalm 130.
"Even the heathen say, that is, daily experience teaches:
Summum ius, summa iniuria, Strict justice is the greatest injustice. We may say
exactly the same thing of grace: Mere grace is the greatest disgrace (Ungnade).
Just so a father can perform no act that is more unfatherly that sparing the
rod and allowing the little child to have its own wanton way. For by such
foolish love he finally raises a son for the executioner, who will later on be
obliged to raise him in a different way - with a rope on the gallows."
Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An
Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1959, I, p. 139f. Psalm 101.
"The 'rod of His mouth' signifies the spoken Word or the
Gospel, which proceeds from the mouth of all whose teaching is pure. It is not
inefficacious; it bears fruit; it justifies the godly and destroys the
ungodly." [Footnote F. Pieper, Dogmatics, Word of God has twofold effect.
It illumines and blinds. I, p. 125.] Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An
Anthology, 3 vols., ed. Ewald M. Plass St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1959, III, p. 1469. Isaiah 11:4
"We, too, say that a faith without works is vain and good for
nothing. But papists and enthusiasts understand this to mean that faith does
not justify without works, or that faith, however genuine it may be, is unable
to achieve anything if it does not have works. This view is wrong. Yet faith
without works, that is, a fanatical notion, a mere empty boasting (vanitas) and
dream of the heart, is a false faith and does indeed not justify."
Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An
Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1959, I, p. 494. Galatians 2:18.
"By the one solid rock which we call the doctrine (locum) of
justification we mean that we are redeemed from sin, death, and the devil and
are made partakers of life eternal, not by ourselves...but by help from without
(alienum auxilium), by the only-begotten Son of God, Jesus Christ."
Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An
Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1959, II, p. 701. Galatians.
"The article of justification is the master and prince, the
lord, the ruler, and the judge over all kinds of doctrines; it preserves and
governs all church doctrine and raises up our conscience before God. Without
this article the world is utter death and darkness. No error is so mean, so
clumsy, and so outworn as not to be supremely pleasing to human reason and to
seduce us if we are without the knowledge and the contemplation of this
article."
Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An
Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1959, II, p. 703.
"If the article of justification is lost, all Christian
doctrine is lost at the same time. And all the poeple in the world who do not
hold to this justification are either Jews or Turks or papists or heretics; for
there is no middle ground between these two righteousnesses: the active one of
the Law and the passive one which comes from Christ. Therefore the man who
strays from Christian righteousness must relapse into the active one, that is,
since he has lost Christ, he must put his confidence in his own works."
Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed., Ewald Plass, St.
Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, II, p. 703. Galatians.
"In justification faith and works exclude each other
entirely." Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols., ed.,
Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, II, p. 712. Galatians
3:23-29.
"The Holy Scripture is God's Word, written and, so to speak,
lettered and put into the form of letters, just as Christ, the eternal Word of
God, is clothed in humanity. And men regard and treat the written Word of God
in this world just as they do Christ. It is a worm and no book compared with
other books; for the honor people accord other writings of men by studying,
reading, pondering, keeping, and using them they do not accord Scripture. If it
is treated well, it lies there in neglect. Others tear it to pieces, scourge
and crucify it, and subject it to all manner of torture until they stretch it
sufficiently to apply to their heresy, meaning, and whim...It is a good sign,
therefore, if a man has the precious gift of loving and liking Scripture, of
gladly reading it, of highly esteeming and treasuring it. Such a man God, in turn,
will surely honor.... Martin Luther, What Luther Says, An Anthology, 3 vols.,
ed. Ewald Plass, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959, J-52 I, p. p.
71f. Psalm 22:6
"The doctrine of the means of grace is understood properly
only when it is considered in the light of Christ's redemptive work
(satisfactio vicaria) and the objective justification, or reconciliation, 2
Corinthians 5:19-20, which He secured by His substitutionary obedience
(satisfactio vicaria). If these two doctrines are corrupted (Calvinism: denial
of the gratia universalis; synergism: denial of sola gratia), then also the
Scripture doctrine of the means of grace will become perverted."
John Theodore Mueller, Christian
Dogmatics, A Handbook of Doctrinal Theology, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing
House, 1934, p. 442. 2 Corinthians 5:19-20.
"In 1532 he denied any notion of a special conception of
Mary. 'Mary is conceived in sin just like us....'" WA 36, 41 Thomas
O'Meara, O.P., Mary in Protestant and Catholic Theology, New York: Sheed and
Ward, 1966, p. 116. "The starting
point in presenting the doctrine of the means of grace must be the universal
objective reconciliation or justification. This is the procedure of Scripture."
Francis Pieper, Christian
Dogmatics, 3 vols., trans., Walter W. F. Albrecht, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1953, III, p. 105.
"In so far as Pietism did not point poor sinners directly to
the means of grace, but led them to reflect on their own inward state to
determine whether their contrition was profound enough and their faith of the
right caliber, it actually denied the complete reconciliation by Christ (the
satisfactio vicaria), robbed justifying faith of its true object, and thus
injured personal Christianity in its foundation and Christian piety in its very
essence."
Francis Pieper, Christian
Dogmatics, 3 vols., trans., Walter W. F. Albrecht, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1953, III, p. 175.
"The Word of the Gospel has the inherent power to work faith
in the Gospel. Romans 10:17: 'Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the Word
of God.' Thus it creates in man the assurance that his sins are forgiven.
Romans 5:1: 'Therefore, being justified by faith, we have peace with God
thorugh our Lord Jesus Christ.' Human strength and human learning, even at
their best, do not suffice to work faith in the Gospel, as Scripture teaches
clearly when it says that the crucified Christ is 'unto the Jews a stumbling
block and unto the Greeks foolishness' (1 Corinthians 1:23) and that the
natural man, the psychikos anthrwpos, 'receiveth not the things of the Spirit
of God, for they are foolishness unto him, neither can he know them' (1
Corinthians 2:14). All the children of God in the Old and New Testament have
experienced this truth."
Francis Pieper, Christian
Dogmatics, 3 vols., trans. Walter W. F. Albrecht, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1950, I, p. 316.
"In the Papacy we have the most pronounced and greatest
imaginable 'falling away' from the Christian religion. Christians know that man
is justified and saved only by faith in Christ, without the deeds of the
Law."
Francis Pieper, Christian
Dogmatics, 3 vols., trans., Walter W. F. Albrecht, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1953, J-122 III, p. 465. 2 Thessalonians 2:3ff.
"In the Papacy we have the most pronounced and greatest
imaginable 'falling away' from the Christian religion. Christians know that man
is justified and saved only by faith in Christ, without the deeds of the
Law."
Francis Pieper, Christian
Dogmatics, 3 vols., trans., Walter W. F. Albrecht, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1953, J-122 III, p. 465. 2 Thessalonians 2:3ff; 1 Peter 4:11;
1 Timothy 6:3f; Matthew 28:20.
"We have no intention of yielding aught of the eternal,
immutable truth of God for the sake of temporal peace, tranquility, and unity
(which, moreover, is not in our power to do). Nor would such peace and unity,
since it is devised against the truth and for its suppression, have any
permanency. Still less are we inclined to adorn and conceal a corruption of the
pure doctrine and manifest, condemned errors. But we entertain heartfelt
pleasure and love for, and are on our part sincerely inclined and anxious to
advance, that unity according to our utmost power, by which His glory remains
to God uninjured, nothing of the divine truth of the Holy Gospel is
surrendered, no room is given to the least error, poor sinners are brought to
true, genuine repentance, raised up by faith, confirmed in new obedience, and
thus justified and eternally saved alone through the sole merit of
Christ." (Closing of Formula of Concord, Trigl. p. 1095)
Francis Pieper, The Difference
Between Orthodox And Heterodox Churches, and Supplement, Coos Bay, Oregon: St.
Paul's Lutheran Church, 1981, p. 65.
"The Lutheran Church Faces the World by Clinging to the Means
of Grace. The doctrine of the means of grace is truly a most timely subject.
For just in these last times, according to divine revelation, there will be at
work many spiritual brigands who will perpetrate the grossest kind of
deception."
Edwin E. Pieplow, "The Means
of Grace," The Abiding Word, ed., Theodore Laetsch, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1946, II, p. 322.
"Wherever the means of grace are present, there the Lord Himself
is present, and where the Lord rules there is victory. The true doctrine of
justification is intimately bound up with the true doctrine of the means of
grace. In order to keep the doctrine of justification in all its purity, one
must ever maintain that the forgiveness of sins which Christ earned for mankind
can never be appropriated by man through any other means than the Word and the
Sacrament. Therefore, Walther said, the correct doctrine on justification
stands or falls with the correct doctrine concerning the means of grace."
Edwin E. Pieplow, "The Means of Grace," The Abiding Word, ed.,
Theodore Laetsch, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1946, II, p. 327.
"But just as the Word of God is the means of Grace, it is
also the means of judgment. 'He that rejected Me,' says Christ, John 12:48,
'and receiveth not My words, hath one that judgeth him: the Word that I have
spoken, the same shall judge him in the Last Day.'" Eduard Preuss,
"The Means of Grace," The Justification of the Sinner before God,
trans., Julius A. Friedrich, Chicago: F. Allerman, 1934, p. 63. John
12:48. "Thus it is evident
that we receive forgiveness in the Word. Whoever does not lay hold of it there
may open his mouth as wide as he pleases, he will nevertheless not receive it,
just as little as a wanderer will cross a stream if he does not use the bridge
spanning it." Eduard Preuss, "The Means of Grace," The
Justification of the Sinner before God, trans., Julius A. Friedrich, Chicago:
F. Allerman, 1934, p. 64.
"Hollazius (993): 'A divine power is communicated to the Word
by the Holy Spirit joined with it indissolubly.' Hence, there is a native or
intrinsic power and efficacy belonging to the Word, deeply inherent in it. The
Dogmaticians draw proofs of this, (1) From the qualities which the divine Word
ascribes to itself, John 6:63; Romans 1:16; Hebrews 4:12-13; 1 Thessalonians
2:13; 1 Peter 1:23; James 1:21. (2) From the similar supernatural and divine
operations which are ascribed to the Word of God and the Holy Spirit, ex. gr.,
calling, 2 Timothy 2:14; illumination, 2 Peter 1:19; conversion, Jeremiah
23:29; regeneration, 1 Peter 1:23; justification, 2 Corinthians 3:9;
sanctification, John 17:17." Heinrich Schmid, Doctrinal Theology of the
Evangelical Lutheran Church, trans., Charles A. Hay and Henry E. Jacobs,
Philadelphia: United Lutheran Publication House, 1899, J-409 p. 505.
"Hollazius (993) uses the following figures: 'It possesses
and retains its internal power and efficacy even when not used, just as the
illuminating power of the sun continues, although, when the shadow of the moon
intervenes, no person may see it; and just as an internal efficacy belongs to
the seed, although it may not be sown in the field.'"
Heinrich Schmid, Doctrinal Theology
of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, trans., Charles A. Hay and Henry E. Jacobs,
Philadelphia: United Lutheran Publication House, 1899, J-411 p. 506.
"'In order to avoid misapprehension, it is expressly observed
that the Word does not operate physically (by the contact of an agent, as
opium, poison, fire, etc.), but morally (by enlightening the mind, moving the
will, etc.); and a distinction is made between the efficacy of the Word
considered in the first act and in the second act, or between efficacy and
efficiency. When it is said that the Word operates extra usum, when not used,
it is only meant that the power is constantly inherent in the Word, just as the
power to give light always exists in the sun; so that, when the Word is to
produce a certain effect, the power must not first come to it, but that the
Word exercises its legitimate influence only where it is properly used.'"
(Hollazius, 993)
Heinrich Schmid, Doctrinal Theology
of the Evangelical Lutheran Church, trans., Charles A. Hay and Henry E. Jacobs,
Philadelphia: United Lutheran Publication House, 1899, p. 506.
"It is legitimate for Christians to use civil ordinances just
as it is legitimate for them to use the air, light, food, and drink. For as
this universe and the fixed movements of the stars are truly ordinances of God
and are preserved by God, so lawful governments are ordinances of God and are
preserved and defended by God against the devil." Apology to the Augsburg
Confession Daniel Preus, Affirm, June, 1991, p. 5-8. [Translation of Gottfried Fritschel article on Justification]
ed., Thedore Tappert, Lutheran Confessional Theology in America, 1840-1880, New
York: Oxford University Press, 1972,
"This faith, encouraging and consoling in these fears,
receives remission of sins, justifies and quickens. For this consolation is a
new and spiritual life [a new birth and a new life]. These things are plain and
clear, and can be understood by the pious, and have testimonies of the Church
[as is to be seen in the conversion of Paul and Augustine]. The adversaries
nowhere can say how the Holy Ghost is given. They imagine that the Sacraments
confer the Holy Ghost ex opere operato, without a good emotion in the
recipient, as though, indeed, the gift of the Holy Ghost were an idle matter."
Article IV., Justification, Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Concordia
Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 139.
"Truly, it is amazing that the adversaries are in no way
moved by so many passages of Scripture, which clearly ascribe justification to
faith, and, indeed, deny it to works. Do they think that the same is repeated
so often for no purpose? Do they think that these words fell inconsiderately
from the Holy Ghost? But they have also devised sophistry whereby they elude
them." Article IV., Justification, Apology of the Augsburg Confession,
Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 153.
"But just as the dissimilar length of day and night does not
injure the unity of the Church, so we believe that the true unity of the Church
is not injured by dissimilar rites instituted by men; although it is pleasing
to us that, for the sake of tranquility [unity and good order], universal rites
be observed, just as also in the churches we willingly observe the order of the
Mass, the Lord's Day, and other more eminent festival days. And with a very
grateful mind we embrace the prfitable and ancient ordinances, especially since
they contain a discipline by which is is profitable to educate and train the
people and those who are ignorant [the young peopele]." Article VII &
VIII, The Church, #33, Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Concordia Triglotta,
St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 239.
"If we call
Sacraments rites which have the command of God, and to which the promise of
grace has been added, it is easy to decide what are properly
Sacraments...Therefore Baptism, the Lord's Supper, and Absolution, which is the
Sacrament of Repentance, are truly Sacraments. For these rites have God's
command and the promise of grace, which is peculiar to the New Testament. For
when we are baptized, when we eat the Lord's body, when we are absolved, our
hearts must be firmly assured that God truly forgives us for Christ's sake. And
God, at the same time, by the Word and by the rite, moves hearts to believe and
conceive faith, just as Paul says, Romans 10:17: 'Faith cometh by hearing.' But
just as the Word enters the ear in order to strike our heart, so the rite
itself strikes the eye, in order to move the heart. The effect of the Word and
of the rite is the same..." [Luther, Bab Captivity, 3 sacraments] Article
XIII, Number/Use Sacraments, Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Concordia
Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 309.
"Although concerning the saints we concede that, just as,
when alive, they pray for the Church universal in general, albeit no testimony
concerning the praying of the dead is extant in the Scriptures, except the
dream taken from the Second Book of Maccabees, 15:14." Article XXI,
Invocation of Saints, Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Concordia Triglotta,
St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 345. 2 Maccabees 15:14.
"James, therefore, did not believe that by good works we
merit the remission of sins and grace. For he speaks of the works of those who
have been justified, who have already been reconciled and accepted, and have
obtained remission of sins. Wherefore the adversaries err when they infer that
James teaches that we merit remission of sins and grace by good works, and that
by our works we have access to God, without Christ as Propitiator."
Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Article IV, Justification, Concordia
Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 189. James 2:24.
"And just as the Word has been given in order to excite this
faith, so the Sacrament has been instituted in order that the outward
appearance meeting the eyes might move the heart to believe [and strengthen
faith]. For through these, namely, through Word and Sacrament, the Holy Ghost
works." Augsburg Confession, Article XXIV (XII), #70, Concordia Triglotta,
St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 409.
"Also they teach that since the fall of Adam, all men
begotten in the natural way are born with sin, that is, without the fear of
God, without trust in God, and with concupiscence; and that this disease, or
vice of origin, is truly sin, even now condemning and bringing eteranl death
upon those not born again through Baptism and the Holy Ghost. They condemn the
Pelagians and others who deny that original depravity is sin, and who, to
obscure the glory of Christ's merit and benefits, argue that man can be
justified before God by his own strength and reason." Augsburg Confession,
Article II: Of Original Sin Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1921, p. 43f.
"Also they teach that men cannot be justified before God by
their own strength, merits, or works, but are freely justified for Christ's
sake, through faith, when they believe that they are received into favor, and
that their sins are forgiven for Christ's sake, who, by His death, has made
satisfaction for our sins. This faith God imputes for righteousness is His
sight. Romans 3 and 4." Augsburg Confession, Article IV, Justification,
Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 45. Romans
3 and 4.
"That we may obtain this faith, the Ministry of Teaching the
Gospel and administering the Sacraments was instituted. For through the Word
and Sacraments, as through instruments, the Holy Ghost is given, who works
faith, where and when it pleases God, in them that hear the Gospel, to wit,
that God, not for our own merits, but for Christ's sake, justifies those who
believe that they are received into grace for Christ's sake. They condemn the
Anabaptists and others who think that the Holy Ghost comes to men without the
external Word, through their own preparation and works." Augsburg
Confession, Article V, The Office of the Ministry, Concordia Triglotta, St.
Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 45.
"Also they teach that this faith is bound to bring forth good
fruits, and that it is necessary to do good works commanded by God, because of
God's will, but that we should not rely on those works to merit justification
before God. For remission of sins and justification is apprehended by faith, as
also the voice of Christ attests: 'When ye shall have done all these things,
say: We are unprofitable servants.' Luke 17:10." Augsburg Confession,
Article VI, The New Obedience, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1921, p. 47. Luke 17:10.
"Of Civil Affairs they teach that lawful civil ordinances are
good works of God, and that it is right for Christians to bear civil office, to
sit as judges, to judge matters by the Imperial and other existing laws, to
award just punishments, to engage in just wars, to serve as soldiers, to make
legal contracts, to hold property, to make oath when required by the
magistrates, to marry a wife, to be given in marriage." Augsburg
Confesion, Article XVI, Of Civil Affairs, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis:
Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 51.
"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." Formula of Concord, Epitome, Article II, Free
Will, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 789.
"On the other hand, the enthusiasts should be rebuked with
great earnestness and zeal, and should in no way be tolerated in the Church of
God, who imagine [dream] that God, without any means, without the hearing of
the divine Word, and without the use of the holy Sacraments, draws men to
Himself, and enlightens, justifies, and saves them." Formula of Concord,
Epitome, Article II, Free Will, 80, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1921, p. 911.
"...it has been unanimously taught by the other teachers of
the Augsburg Confession that Christ is our righteousness not according to His
divine nature alone, nor according to His human nature alone, but according to
both natures; for He has redeemed, justified, and saved us from our sins as God
and man, through His complete obedience; that therefore the righteousness of
faith is the forgiveness of sins, reconciliation with God, and our adoption as
God's children only on account of the obedience of Christ, which through faith
alone, out of pure grace, is imputed for righteousness to all true believers,
and on account of it they are absolved from all their unrighteousness."
Formula of Concord, Thorough Declaration, III. 4 Righteousness Concordia Triglotta,
St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 917.
"Therefore it is considered and understood to be the same
thing when Paul says that we are justified by faith, Romans 3:28, or that faith
is counted to us for righteousness, Romans 4:5, and when he says that we are
made righteous by the obedience of One, Romans 5:19, or that by the
righteousness of One justification of faith comes to all men, Romans 5:18. For
faith justifies, not for this cause and reason that it is so good a work and so
fair a virtue, but because it lays hold of and accepts the merit of Christ in
the promise of the holy Gospel; for this must be applied and appropriated to us
by faith, if we are to be justified thereby." Formula of Concord, Thorough
Declaration, III 12 Righteousness Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1921, p. 919. Romans 4:5; Romans 3:28; Romans 5:19
"Accordingly, the word justify here means to declare
righteous and free from sins, and to absolve one from eternal punishment for
the sake of Christ's righteousness, which is imputed by God to faith,
Philippians 3:9. For this use and understanding of this word is common in the
Holy Scriptures of the Old and the New Testament. Proverbs 17:15: He that
justifieth the wicked, and he that condemneth the just, even they both are
abomination to the Lord. Isaiah 5:23: Woe unto them which justify the wicked
for reward, and take away the righteousness of the righteous from him! Romans
8:33: Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect? It is God that
justifieth, that is, absolves from sins and acquits." Formula of Concord,
Thorough Declaration, III 17 Righteousness Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis:
Concordia Publishing House, 1921, p. 921 Philippians 3:9; Proverbs 17:15;
Isaiah 5:23; Romans 8:33
"For when man is justified through faith [which the Holy
Ghost alone works], this is truly a regeneration, because from a child of wrath
he becomes a child of God, and thus is transferred from death to life, as it is
written; When we were dead in sins, He hath quickened us together with Christ,
Ephesians 2:5. Likewise: The just shall live by faith, Romans 1:17; Habakkuk
2:4."
Formula of Concord, Thorough
Declaration, III 20 Righteousness Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1921, p. 921.
"Here belongs also what St. Paul writes Romans 4:3, that
Abraham was justified before God by faith alone, for the sake of the Mediator,
without the cooperation of his works, not only when he was first converted from
idolatry and had no good works, but also afterwards, when he had been renewed
by the Holy Ghost, and adorned with many excellent good works, Genesis 15:6;
Hebrews 11:8. And Paul puts the following questions, Romans 4:1ff.: On what did
Abraham's righteousness before God for everlasting life, by which he had a
gracious God, and was pleasing and acceptable to Him, rest at that time?
Formula of Concord, Thorough
Declaration, III 33 Righteousness Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1921, p. 927. Romans 4:3; Romans 4:1ff; Genesis 15:6; Hebrews
11:8
"For good works do not precede faith, neither does
sanctification precede justification. But first faith is kindled in us in
conversion by the Holy Ghost from the hearing of the Gospel.This lays hold of
God's grace in Christ, by which the person is justified. Then, when the person
is justified, he is also renewed and sanctified by the Holy Ghost, from which
renewal and sanctification the fruits of good works then follow."
Formula of Concord, Thorough
Declaration, III 41 Righteousness Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1921, p. 929,
"Hence it is manifest how unjustly and maliciously the
Sacramentarian fanatics (Theodore Beza) deride the Lord Christ, St. Paul, and
the entire Church in calling this oral partaking, and that of the unworthy,
duos pilos caudae equinae et commentum, cuius vel ipsum Satanam pudeat, as also
the doctrine concerning the majesty of Christ, excrementum Satanae, quo
diabolus sibi ipsi et hominibus illudat, that is, they speak so horribly of it
that a godly Christian man should be ashamed to translate it. [two hairs of a
horse's tail and an invention of which even Satan himself would be ashamed;
Satan's excrement, by which the devil amuses himself and deceives men]
Formula of Concord, Epitome,
Article VII, Lord's Supper, 67, Concordia Triglotta, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1921, p. 997.
"'Pay more attention to pure life, and you will raise a
growth of genuine Christianity.' That is exactly like saying to a farmer: 'Do
not worry forever about good seed; worry about good fruits.' Is not a farmer
properly concerned about good fruit when he is solicitous about getting good
seed? Just so a concern about pure doctrine is the proper concern about genuine
Christianity and a sincere Christian life. False doctrine is noxious seed, sown
by the enemy to produce a progeny of wickedness. The pure doctrine is
wheat-seed; from it spring the children of the Kingdom, who even in the present
life belong in the kingdom of Jesus Christ and in the life to come will be
received into the Kingdom of Glory."
C. F. W. Walther, The Proper
Distinction Between Law and Gospel, trans., W. H. T. Dau, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1928, p. 21.
"When a theologian is asked to yield and make concessions in
order that peace may at last be established in the Church, but refuses to do so
even in a single point of doctrine, such an action looks to human reason like
intolerable stubbornness, yea, like downright malice. That is the reason why
such theologians are loved and praised by few men during their lifetime. Most
men rather revile them as disturbers of the peace, yea, as destroyers of the
kingdom of God. They are regarded as men worthy of contempt. But in the end it becomes
manifest that this very determined, inexorable tenacity in clinging to the pure
teaching of the divine Word by no means tears down the Church; on the contrary,
it is just this which, in the midst of greatest dissension, builds up the
Church and ultimately brings about genuine peace. Therefore, woe to the Church
which has no men of this stripe, men who stand as watchmen on the walls of
Zion,
C. F. W. Walther, The Proper
Distinction between Law and Gospel, trans., W. H. T. Dau, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1928, p. 28.
"If a minister who is otherwise conscientious has had the
misfortune of putting something into his manuscript that is wrong and even
saying it from the pulpit, he must, if he notices his mistake while preaching,
immediately correct himself and tell his hearers that he really did not mean to
say what they have just heard from him. If he notices his mistake later and the
matter is of considerable importance, he must make the correction later, lest
his hearers be led utterly astray. Yea, he may not only have to correct his
wrong statement, but solemnly to revoke it. That will not lower him in the
esteem of his listeners; on the contrary, his conscientious striving for
accuracy will rather impress them favorably. He must not rely on the ability of
his hearers to give the correct interpretation to incorrect statements of his,
but must speak so as not to be misunderstood in what he says."
C. F. W. Walther, The Proper
Distinction between Law and Gospel, trans., W. H. T. Dau, St. Louis: Concordia
Publishing House, 1928, p. 296f.
"Mrs. Barnhill looked at me and said, with such a loving look
in her gray eyes, 'Oh, Grace, Christ said, 'No man cometh unto the Father but
by Me,' and, my dear, you have no way of approach to a holy God unless you come
through Christ, His Son, as your Saviour.' "The Scripture which she
quoted," Mrs. Fuller continues, "was the Sword of the Spirit, and at
that moment Unitarianism was killed forever in my heart. I saw the light like a
flash and believed at that moment, though I said nothing. She had quoted God's
Word, the Spirit had used it, and, believing, I instantly became a new creation
in Christ Jesus. She might have talked and even argued with me about it, but
instead she just used the Word."
[conversion of Mrs. Grace Fuller, wife of Charles Fuller, Old Fashioned
Revival Hour broadcast, founder of Fuller Seminary] J. Elwin Wright, The Old
Fashioned Revival Hour and the Broadcasters, Boston: The Fellowship Press,
1940, J-112 p. 54.