Published in:
Triglot Concordia: The Symbolical Books of the Ev. Lutheran Church.
(St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House,
1921), pp. 565-773
First.
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS OF GOD.
1. Thou
shalt have no other gods before Me.
2. Thou
shalt not take the name of th Lord, thy God, in vain [for the Lord will not hold
him guiltless that taketh His name in vain].
3.
Thou shalt sanctify the holy-day. [Remember the Sabbath-day to keep it
holy.]
4. Thou shalt honor thy father and
mother [that thou mayest live long upon the
earth].
5. Thou shlt not
kill.
6. Thou shalt not commit
adultery.
7. Thou shalt not
steal.
8. Thou shalt not bear false witness
against thy neighbor.
9. Thou shalt not covet
thy neighbor's house.
10. Thou shalt not covet
thy neighbor's wife, nor his man-servant, nor his maidservant, nor his cattle
[ox, nor his ass], nor anything that is
his.
Secondly.
THE CHIEF ARTICLES OF OUR
FAITH.
1. I
believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and
earth.
2. And in Jesus Christ, His only Son,
our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the Virgin Mary; suffered
under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead and buried; He descended into hell;
the third day He rose again from the dead; He ascended into heaven, and sitteth
on the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence He shall come to judge
the quick and the dead.
3. I believe in the
Holy Ghost, the holy Christian Church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness
of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting.
Amen.
Thirdly.
THE PRAYER, OR "OUR FATHER," WHICH
CHRIST
TAUGHT
Our
Father who art in heaven.
1. Hallowed be Thy
name.
2. Thy kingdom
come.
3. Thy will be done on earth as it is in
heaven.
4. Give us this day our daily
bread.
5. And forgive us our trespasses as we
forgive those who trespass against us.
6. And
lead us not into temptation.
7. But deliver us
from evil. [For Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory, forever and
ever.]
Amen.
These
are the most necessary parts which one should first learn to repeat word for
word and which our children should be accustomed to recite daily when they arise
in the morning when they sit down to their meals, and when they retire at night;
and until they repeat them, they should be given neither food nor drink.
Likewise every head of a household is obliged to do the same with respect to his
domestics, ma-servants and maid-servants and not to keep them in his house if
they do not know these things and are unwilling to learn them. For a person who
is so rude and unruly as to be unwilling to learn these things is not to be
tolerated, for in these three parts everything that we have in the Scriptures is
comprehended in short, pain, and simple terms. For the holy Fathers or apostles
(whoever they were) have thus embraced in a summary the doctrine, life, wisdom,
and art of Christians, of which they speak and treat, and with which they are
occupied.
Now, when these three arts are
apprehended, it behooves a person also to know what to say concerning our
Sacraments, which Christ Himself instituted, Baptism and the holy body and blood
of Christ, namely, the text which Matthew [28, 19 ff.] and Mark [16, 15 f.]
record at the close of their Gospels when Christ said farewell to His disciples
and sent them forth.
OF BAPTISM.
Go ye and teach all nations, baptizing them in
the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be
damned.
So much is sufficient for a simple
person to know fro the Scriptures concerning Baptism. In like manner, also,
concerning the other Sacrament in short, simple words, namely the text of St.
Paul [1 Cor. 11, 23 f.].
OF THE SACRAMENT
Our Lord Jesus Christ, the same night in which
He was betrayed, took bread; and when He had given thanks, He brake it, and gave
it to His disciples and said, Take, eat; this is My body, which is given for
you: this do in remembrance of Me.
After the
same manner also He took the cup, when He had supped, gave thanks, and gave it
to them, saying, Drink ye all of it; this cup is the new testament in My blood,
which is shed for you for the remission of sins: this do ye, as oft as ye drink
it, in remembrance of Me.
Thus, ye would have,
in all, five parts of the entire Christian doctrine which should be constantly
treated and required [of children] and heard recited word for word. For you must
not rely upon it that the young people will learn and retain these things from
the sermon alone. When these parts have been well learned, you may, as a
supplement and to fortify them. lay before them also some psalms or hymns, which
have been composed on these parts, and thus lead the young into the Scriptures,
and make daily progress therein.
However, it
is not enough for them to comprehend and recite these parts according to the
words only, but the young people should also be made to attend the preaching,
espeially during the time which is devoted to the Catechism, that they may hear
it explained and may learn to understand what every part contains, so as to be
able to recite it as they have heard it, and, when asked, may give a correct
answer, so that the preaching may not be without profit and fruit. For the
reason why we exercise such diligence in preaching the Catechis so often is that
it may be inculcated on our youth, not in a high and subtile manner, but briefly
and with the greatest simplicity, so as to enter the mind readily and be fixed
in the memory.
Therefore we shall now take up
the abovementioned articles one by one and in the plainest manner possible say
about them as much as is necessary.
Thou shalt have no other gods before
Me.
That
is: Thou shalt have [and worship] Me alone as thy God. What is the force of
this, and how is it to be understood? What does it mean to have a god? or, what
is God? Answer: A god means that from which we are to expect all good and to
which we are to take refuge in all distress, so that to have a God is nothing
else than to trust and believe Him from the [whole] heart; as I have often said
that the confidence and faith of the heart alone make both God and an idol. If
your faith and trust be right, then is your god also true; and, on the other
hand, if your trust be false and wrong, then you have not the true God; for
these two belong together faith and God. That now, I say, upon which you set
your heart and put your trust is properly your
god.
Therefore it is the intent of this
commandment to require true faith and trust of the heart which settles upon the
only true God and clings to Him alone. That is as much as to say: "See to it
that you let Me alone be your God, and never seek another," i.e.: Whatever you
lack of good things, expect it of Me, and look to Me for it, and whenever you
suffer misfortune and distress, creep and cling to Me. I, yes, I, will give you
enough and help you out of every need; only let not your heart cleave to or rest
in any other.
This I must unfold somewhat more
plainly, that it may be understood and perceived by ordinary examples of the
contrary. Many a one thinks that he has God and everything in abundance when he
has money and possessions; he trusts in them and boasts of them with such
firmness and assurance as to care for no one. Lo, such a man also has a god,
Mammon by name, i.e., money and possessions, on which he sets all his heart, and
which is also the most common idol on earth. He who has money and possessions
feels secure, and is joyful and undismayed as though he were sitting in the
midst of Paradise. On the other hand, he who has none doubts and is despondent,
as though he knew of no God. For very few are to be found who are of good cheer,
and who neither mourn nor complain if they have not Mammon. This [care and
desire for money] sticks and clings to our nature, even to the
grave.
So, too, whoever trusts and boasts that
he possesses great skill, prudence, power, favor friendship, and honor has also
a god, but not this true and only God. This appears again when you notice how
presumptuous, secure, and proud people are because of such possessions, and how
despondent when they no longer exist or are withdrawn. Therefore I repeat that
the chief explanation of this point is that to have a god is to have something
in which the heart entirely trusts.
Besides,
consider what in our blindness, we have hitherto been practising and doing under
the Papacy. If any one had toothache, he fasted and honored St. Apollonia
[[acerated his flesh by voluntary fasting to the honor of St. Apollonia]; if he
was afraid of fire, he chose St. Lawrence as his helper in need; if he dreaded
pestilence, he made a vow to St. Sebastian or Rochio, and a countless number of
such abominations, where every one selected his own saint, worshiped him, and
called for help to him in distress. Here belong those also, as, e.g., sorcerers
and magicians, whose idolatry is most gross, and who make a covenant with the
devil, in order that he may give them plenty of money or help them in
love-affairs, preserve their cattle, restore to them lost possessions, etc. For
all these place their heart and trust elsewhere than in the true God, look for
nothing good to Him nor seek it from Him.
Thus
you can easily understand what and how much this commandment requires, namely,
that man's entire heart and all his confidence be placed in God alone, and in no
one else. For to have God, you can easily perceive, is not to lay hold of Him
with our hands or to put Him in a bag [as money], or to lock Him in a chest [as
silver vessels]. But to apprehend Him means when the heart lays hold of Him and
clings to Him. But to cling to Him with the heart is nothing else than to trust
in Him entirey. For this reason He wishes to turn us away from everything else
that exists outside of Him, and to draw us to Himself, namely, because He is the
only eternal good. As though He would say: Whatever you have heretofore sought
of the saints, or for whatever [things] you have trusted in Mammon or anything
else, expect it all of Me, and regard Me as the one who will help you and pour
out upon you richly all good things.
Lo, here
you have the meaning of the true honor and worship of God, which pleases God,
and which He commands under penalty of eternal wrath, namely, that the heart
know no other comfort or confidence than in Him, and do not suffer itself to be
torn from Him, but, for Him, risk and disregard everything upon earth. On the
other hand, you can easily see and judge how the world practises only false
worship and idolatry. For no people has ever been so reprobate as not to
institute and observe some divine worship; every one has set up as his special
god whatever he looked to for blessings, help, and
comfort.
Thus, for example, the heathen who put
their trust in power and dominion elevated Jupiter as the supreme god; the
others, who were bent upon riches, happiness, or pleasure, and a life of ease,
Hercules, Mercury, Venus or others; women with child, Diana or Lucina, and so
on; thus every one made that his god to which his heart was inclined, so that
even in the mind of the heathen to have a god means to trust and believe. But
their error is this that their trust is false and wrong for it is not placed in
the only God, besides whom there is truly no God in heaven or upon earth.
Therefore the heathen really make their self-invented notions and dreams of God
an idol, and put their trust in that which is altogether nothing. Thus it is
with all idolatry; for it consists not merely in erecting an image and
worshiping it, but rather in the heart, which stands gaping at something else,
and seeks help and consolation from creatures saints, or devils, and neither
cares for God, nor looks to Him for so much good as to believe that He is
willing to help, neither believes that whatever good it experiences comes from
God.
Besides, there is also a false worship and
extreme idolatry, which we have hitherto practised, and is still prevalent in
the world, upon which also all ecclesiastical orders are founded, and which
concerns the conscience alone that seeks in its own works help, consolation, and
salvation, presumes to wrest heaven from God, and reckons how many bequests it
has made, how often it has fasted, celebrated Mass, etc. Upon such things it
depends, and of them boasts, as though unwilling to receive anything from God as
a gift, but desires itself to earn or merit it superabundantly, just as though
He must serve us and were our debtor, and we His liege lords. What is this but
reducing God to an idol, yea, [a fig image or] an apple-god, and elevating and
regarding ourselves as God ? But this is slightly too subtile, and is not for
young pupils.
But let this be said to the
simple, that they may well note and remember the meaning of this commandment,
namely, that we are to trust in God alone, and look to Him and expect from Him
naught but good, as from one who gives us body, life, food, drink, nourishment,
health, protection, peace, and all necessaries of both temporal and eternal
things. He also preserves us from misfortune, and if any evil befall us,
delivers and rescues us, so that it is God alone (as has been sufficiently said)
from whom we receive all good, and by whom we are delivered from all evil. Hence
also, I think, we Germans from ancient times call God (more elegantly and
appropriately than any other language) by that name from the word good as being
an eternal fountain which gushes forth abundantly nothing but what is good, and
from which flows forth all that is and is called
good.
For even though otherwise we experience
much good from men, still whatever we receive by His command or arrangement is
all received from God. For our parents, and all rulers, and every one besides
with respect to his neighbor, have received from God the command that they
should do us all manner of good, so that we receive these blessings not from
them, but, through them, from God. For creatures are only the hands, channels,
and means whereby God gives all things, as He gives to the mother breasts and
milk to offer to her child, and corn and all manner of produce from the earth
for nourishment, none of which blessings could be produced by any creature of
itself.
Therefore no man should presume to take
or give anything except as God has commanded, in order that it may be
acknowledged as God's gift, and thanks may be rendered Him for it, as this
commandment requires. On this account also these means of receiving good gifts
through creatures are not to be rejected, neither should we in presumption seek
other ways and means than God has commanded. For that would not be receiving
from God, hut seeking of ourselves.
Let every
one, then, see to it that he esteem this commandment great and high above all
things, and do not regard it as a joke. Ask and examine your heart diligently,
and you will find whether it cleaves to God alone or not. If you have a heart
that can expect of Him nothing but what is good, especially in want and
distress, and that, moreover renounces and forsakes everything that is not God,
then you have the only true God. If on the contrary, it cleaves to anything
else, of which it expects more good and help than of God, and does not take
refuge in Him, but in adversity flees from Him, then you have an idol, another
god.
In order that it may be seen that God will
not have this commandment thrown to the winds, but will most strictly enforce
it, He has attached to it first a terrible threat, and then a beautiful,
comforting promise which is also to be urged and impressed upon young people,
that they may take it to heart and retain
it:
[Exposition of the Appendix to the First
Commandment.]
For I am the Lord, thy God,
strong and jealous, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto
the third and fourth generation of them that hate Me; and showing mercy unto
thousands of them that love Me and keep My
commandments.
Although these words relate to
all the commandments (as we shall hereafter learn), yet they are joined to this
chief commandment because it is of first importance that men have a right head;
for where the head is right, the whole life must be right, and vice versa.
Learn, therefore, from these words how angry God is with those who trust in
anything but Him, and again, how good and gracious He is to those who trust and
believe in Him alone with the whole heart; so that His anger does not cease
until the fourth generation, while, on the other hand, His blessing and goodness
extend to many thousands lest you live in such security and commit yourself to
chance, as men of brutal heart, who think that it makes no great difference [how
they live]. He is a God who will not leave it unavenged if men turn from Him,
and will not cease to be angry until the fourth generation, even until they are
utterly exterminated. Therefore He is to be feared, and not to be
desisted.
He has also demonstrated this in all
history, as the Scriptures abundantly show and daily experience still teaches.
For from the beginning He has utterly extirpated all idolatry, and, on account
of it, both heathen and Jews; even as at the present day He overthrows all false
worship, so that all who remain therein must finally perish. Therefore, although
proud, powerful, and rich worldlings [Sardanapaluses and Phalarides, who surpass
even the Persians in wealth] are now to be found, who boast defiantly of their
Mammon, with utter disregard whether God is angry at or smiles on them, and dare
to withstand His wrath, yet they shall not succeed, but before they are
aware,they shall be wrecked, with all in which they trusted; as all others have
perished who have thought themselves more secure or
powerful.
And just because of such hardened
heads who imagine because God connives and allows them to rest in security, that
He either is entirely ignorant or cares nothing about such matters, He must deal
a smashing blow and punish them,,so that He cannot forget it unto children's
children; so that every one may take note and see that this is no joke to Him.
For they are those whom He means when He says: Who hate Me, i.e., those who
persist in their defiance and pride; whatever is preached or said to them, they
will not listen; when they are reproved, in order that they may learn to know
themselves and amend before the punishment begins, they become mad and foolish
so as to fairly merit wrath, as now we see daily in bishops and
princes.
But terrible as are these
threatenings, so much the more powerful is the consolation in the promise, that
those who cling to God alone should be sure that He will show them mercy that
is, show them pure goodness and blessing not only for themselves, but also to
their children and children's children, even to the thousandth generation and
beyond that. This ought certainly to move and impel us to risk our hearts in all
confidence with God, if we wish all temporal and eternal good, since the Supreme
Majesty makes such sublime offers and presents such cordial inducements and such
rich promises.
Therefore let everyone seriously
take this to heart, lest it be regarded as though a man had spoken it. For to
you it is a question either of eternal blessing, happiness, and salvation, or of
eternal wrath, misery, and woe. What more would you have or desire than that He
so kindly promises to be yours with every blessing, and to protect and help you
in all need?
But, alas! here is the failure,
that the world believes nothing of this, nor regards it as God's Word, because
it sees that those who trust in God and not in Mammon suffer care and want, and
the devil opposes and resists them, that they have neither money, favor, nor
honor, and, besides, can scarcely support life; while, on the other hand, those
who serve Mammon have power, favor, honor, possessions, and every comfort in the
eyes of the world. For this reason, these words must be grasped as being
directed against such appearances; and we must consider that they do not lie or
deceive, but must come true.
Reflect for
yourself or make inquiry and tell me: Those who have employed all their care and
diligence to accumulate great possessions and wealth, what have they finally
attained? You will find that they have wasted their toil and labor, or even
though they have amassed great treasures, they have been dispersed and
scattered, so that the themselves have never found happiness in their wealth,
and afterwards never reached the third
generation.
Instances of this you will find a
plenty in all histories, also in the memory of aged and experienced people. Only
observe and ponder them.
Saul was a great king,
chosen of God and a godly man; but when he was established on his throne, and
let his heart decline from God, and put his trust in his crown and power, he had
to perish with all that he had, so that none even of his children
remained.
David, on the other hand, was a poor,
despised man, hunted down and chased, so that he nowhere felt secure of his
life; yet he had to remain in spite of Saul, and become king. For these words
had to abide and come true, since God cannot lie or deceive. Only let not the
devil and the world deceive you with their show, which indeed remains for a
time, but finally is nothing.
Let us, then,
learn well the First Commandment, that we may see how God will tolerate no
presumption nor any trust in any other object, and how He requires nothing
higher of us than confidence from the heart for everything good, so that we may
proceed right and straightforward and use all the blessings which God gives no
farther than as a shoemaker uses his needle, awl, and thread for work, and then
lays them aside, or as a traveler uses an inn, and food, and his bed only for
temporal necessity, each one in his station, according to God's order, and
without allowing any of these things to be our food or idol. Let this suffice
with respect to the First Commandment, which we have had to explain at length,
since it is of chief importance, because, as before said, where the heart is
rightly disposed toward God and this commandment is observed, all the others
follow.
Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord, thy God, in
vain.
As
the First Commandment has instructed the heart and taught [the basis of] faith,
so this commandment leads us forth and directs the mouth and tongue to God. For
the first objects that spring from the heart and manifest themselves are words.
Now, as I have taught above how to answer the question, what it is to have a
god, so you must learn to comprehend simply the meaning of this and all the
commandments, and to apply it to yourself.
If,
then, it be asked: How do you understand the Second Commandment, or what is
meant by taking in vain, or misusing God's name? answer briefly thus: It is
misusing God's name when we call upon the Lord God no matter in what way, for
purposes of falsehood or wrong of any kind. Therefore this commandment enjoins
this much, that God's name must not be appealed to falsely, or taken upon the
lips while the heart knows well enough, or should know, differently; as among
those who take oaths in court, where one side lies against the other. For God's
name cannot be misused worse than for the support of falsehood and deceit.
Let4this remain the exact German and simplest meaning of this
commandment.
From this every one can readily
infer when and in how many ways God's name is misused, although it is impossible
to enumerate all its misuses. Yet, to tell it in a few words, all misuse of the
divine name occurs, first, in worldly business and in matters which concern
money, possessions, honor, whether it be publicly in court, in the market, or
wherever else men make false oaths in God's name, or pledge their souls in any
matter. And this is especially prevalent in marriage affairs where two go and
secretly betroth themselves to one another, and afterward abjure [their plighted
troth].
But. the greatest abuse occurs in
spiritual matters, which pertain to the conscience, when false preachers rise up
and offer their Lying vanities as God's
Word.
Behold, all this is decking one's self
out with God's name, or making a pretty show, or claiming to be right, whether
it occur in gross, worldly business or in sublime, subtile matters of faith and
doctrine. And among liars belong also blasphemers, not alone the very gross,
well known to every one, who disgrace God's name without fear (these are not for
us, but for the hangman to discipline); but also those who publicly traduce the
truth and God's Word and consign it to the devil. Of this there is no need now
to speakfurther.
Here, then, let us learn and
take to heart the great importance of this commandment, that with all diligence
we may guard against and dread every misuse of the holy name, as the greatest
sin that can be outwardly committed. For to lie and deceive is in itself a great
sin, but is greatly aggravated when we attempt to justify it, and seek to
confirm it by invoking the name of God and usiig it as a cloak for shame, so
that from a single lie a double lie, nay, manifold lies,
result.
For this reason, too, God has added a
solemn threat to this commandment, to wit: For the Lord will not hold him
guiltless that taketh His name in van. That is: It shall not be condoned to any
one nor pass unpunished. For as little as He will leave it unavenged if any one
turn his heart from Him, as little will He suffer His name to be employed for
dressing up a lie. Now alas! it is a common calamity in all the word that there
are as few who are not using the name of God for purposes of Lying and all
wickedness as there are those who with their heart trust alone in
God.
For by nature we all have within us this
beautiful virtue, to wit, that whoever has committed a wrong would like to cover
up and adorn his disgrace, so that no one may see it or know it; and no one is
so bold$as to boast to all the world of the wickedness he has perpetrated, all
wish to act by stealth and without any one being aware of what thy do. Then, if
any one be arraigned, the name of God is dragged into the affair and must make
the villainy look like godliness, and the shame like honor. This is the common
course of the world, hich, like a great deluge, has flooded all lands. Hence we
have also as our reward what we seek and deserve: pestilences wars, famines,
conflagrations, floods, wayward wives, children, servants, and all sorts of
defilement. Whence else should so much misery come? It is still a great mercy
that the earth bears and supports
us.
Therefore, above all things, our young
people should have this commandment earnestly enforced upon them, and they
should be trined to hold this and the First Commandment in high regard; and
whenever they transgress, we must at once be after them with the rod and hold
the commandment before them, andconstantly inculcate it, so as to bring them up
not only with punishment, but also in the reverence and fear of
God.
Thus you now understand what. it is to
take God's name in vain, that is (to recapitulate briefly), eiher simply for
purposes of falsehood, and to allege God's name for something that is not so, or
to curse, swear, conjure, and, in short, to practise whhtever wickedness one
may.
Besides this you must also know how to use
the name [of God] aright. For when saying: Thou shalt not take the name of the
Lord thy God, in vain, He gives us to understand at the same time that it is to
be used properly. For it has been revealed and given to us for the very purpose
that it may be of constant use and profit. Hence it is a natural inference,
since using the holy name for falsehood or wickedness is here forbidden, that we
are, on the other hand, commanded to employ it for truth and for all good, as
when one swears truly where there is need and it is demanded. So also when there
is right teaching, and when the name is invoked in trouble or praised and
thanked in prosperity etc.; all of which is comprehended summarily and commanded
in the passage Ps. 50, 15: Call upon Me in the days of trouble; I will deliver
thee, and thou shalt glorify Me. For all this is bringing 't into the service of
truth, and using it in a blessed way, and thus His name is hallowed, as we pray
in the Lord's Prayer.
Thus you have the sum of
the entire commandment explained. And with this understanding the question with
which many teachers have troubled themselves has been easily solved, to wit, why
swearing is prohibited in the Gospel, and yet Christ, St. Paul, and other saints
often swore. The explanation is briefly this: We are not to swear in support of
evil, that is, of falsehood, and where there is no need or use; but for the
support of good and the advantage of our neighbor we should swear. For it is a
truly good work, by which God is praised, truth and right are established,
falsehood is refuted, peace is made among men, obedience is rendered, and
quarrels are settled. For in this way God Himself interposes and separates
between right and wrong, good and evil. If one part swears falsely, he has his
sentence that he shall not escape punishment, ad though it be deferred a long
time, he shall not succeed; that all that he may gain thereby will slip out of
his hands, and he will never enjoy it; as I have seen in the case of many who
perjured themselves in their marriage-vows, that they have never had a happy
hour or a healthful day, and thus perished miserably in body, soul, and
possessions.
Therefore I advise and exhort as
before that by means of warning and threatening, restraint and punishment, the
children be trained betimes to shun falsehood, and especially to avoid the use
oo God's ame in its support. For where they are allowed to do as they please, no
good will result, aa is even now evident that the world is worse than it has
ever been and that there is no government, no obedience, no fidelity, no faith,
but only daring, unbridled men, whom no teaching or reproof helps; all of which
is God's wrath and punishment for such wanton contempt of this
commandment.
On the other hand, they should be
constantly urged and incited to honor God's name, and to have it always upon
their lips in everything that may happen to them or come to their notice: For
that is the true honor of His Name, to look to it and implore it for all
consolation, so that (as we have heard above) first the heart by faith gives God
the honor due Him, and afterwards the lips by
confession.
This is also a blessed and useful
habit and very effectual against the devil, who is ever about us, and lies in
wait to bring us into sin and shame, calamity and trouble, but who is very loath
to hear God's name, and cannot remain long where it is uttered and called upon
from the heart. And, indeed, many a terrible and shocking calamity would befall
us if, by our calling upon His name, God did not preserve us. I have myself
tried it, and learned by experience that often sudden great calamity was
immediately averted and removed during such invocation. To vex the devil, I say,
we should always have this holy name in oor mouth, so that he may not be able to
injure us as he wishes.
For this end it is also
of service that we form the habit of daily commending ourselves to God, with
soul and body, wife, children, servants, and all that we have, against every
need that may occur; whence also the blessing and thanksgiving at meals, and
other prayers, morning and evening, have originated and remain in use. Likewise
the practises of children to cross themselves when anything monstrous or
terrible is seen or heard, and to exclaim: "Lord God, protect us!" "Help, dear
Lord Jesus!" etc. Thus, too, if any one meets with unexpected good fortune,
however trivial, that he say: "God be praised and thanked; this God has bestowed
on me!" etc., as formerly the children were accustomed to fast and pray to St.
Nicholas and other saints. This would be more pleasing and acceptable to God
than all monasticism and Carthusian
sanctity.
Behold, thus we might train our youth
in a childlike way and playfully in the fear and honor of God, so that the First
and Second Commandments might be well observed and in constant practise. Then
some good might take root, spring up and bear fruit, and men grow up whom an
entire land might relish and enjoy. Moreover, this would be the true way to
bring Up children well as long as they can become trained with kinnness and
delight. For what must be enforced with rods and blows only will not develop
into a good breed and at best they will remain godly under such treatment no
longer than while the rod is upon their
back.
But this [manner of training] so spreads
its roots in the heart that they fear God more than rods and clubs. This I say
with such simplicity for the sake of the young, that it may penetrate their
minds. For since we are preaching to children, we must also prattle with them.
Thus we have prevented the abuse and have taught the right use of the divine
name, which should consist not only in words, but also in practises and life, so
that we may know that God is well pleased with this and will as richly reward it
as He will terribly punish the abuse.
Thou shalt sanctify the holy day.
[Remember the Sabbath day to
keep it
holy.]
The
word holy day (Feiertag) is rendered from the Hebrew word sabbath which properly
signifies to rest, that is, to abstain from labor. Hence we are accustomed to
say, Feierbend machen [that is, to cease working], or heiligen Abend geben
[sanctify the Sabbath]. Now, in the Old Testament, God separated the seventh
day, and appointed it for rest, and commanded that it should be regarded as holy
above all others. As regards this external observance, this commandment was
given to the Jews alone, that they should abstain from toilsome work, and rest,
so that both man and beast might recuperate, and not be weakened by unremitting
labor. Although they afterwards restricted this too closely, and grossly abused
it, so that they traduced and could not endure in Christ those works which they
themselves were accustomed to do on that day, as we read in the Gospel just as
though the commandment were fulfilled by doing no external [manual] work
whatever, which, however, was not the meaning, but, as we shall hear, that they
sanctify the holy day or day of rest.
This
commandment, therefore, according to its gross sense, does not concern us
Christians; for it is altogether an external matter, like other ordinances of
the Old Testament, which were attached to particular customs, persons, times,
and places, and now have been made free through
Christ.
But to grasp a Christian meaning for
the simple as to what God requires in this commandment, note that we keep holy
days not for the sake of intelligent and learned Christians (for they have no
need of it [holy days]), but first of all for bodily causes and necessities,
which nature teaches and requires; for the common people, man-servants and
maid-servants, who have been attending to their work and trade the whole week,
that for a day they may retire in order to rest and be refreshed.
Secondly, and most especially, that on such
day of rest (since we can get no other opportunity) freedom and time be taken to
attend divine service, so that we come together to hear and treat of God's and
then to praise God, to sing and pray.
However,
this, I say, is not so restricted to any time, as with the Jews, that it must be
just on this or that day; for in itself no one day is better than another; but
this should indeed be done daily; however, since the masses cannot give such
attendance, there must be at least one day in the week set apart. But since from
of old Sunday [the Lord's Day] has been appointed for this purpose, we also
should continue the same, in order that everything be done in harmonious order,
and no one create disorder by unnecessary
innovation.
Therefore this is the simple
meaning of the commandment: since holidays are observed anyhow, such observance
should be devoted to hearing God's Word, so that the special function of this
day should be the ministry of the Word for the young and the mass of poor
people, yet that the resting be not so strictly interpreted as to forbid any
other incidental work that cannot be
avoided.
Accordingly, when asked, What is meant
by the commandment: Thou shalt sanctify the holy day? answer: To sanctify the
holy day is the same as to keep it holy. But what is meant by keeping it holy?
Nothing else than to be occupied in holy words, works, and life. For the day
needs no sanctification for itself; for in itself it has been created holy [from
the beginning of the creation it was sanctified by its Creator]. But God desires
it to be holy to you. Therefore it becomes holy or unholy on your account,
according as you are occupied on the same with things that are holy or unholy.
How, then, does such sanctification take
place? Not in this manner, that [with folded hands] we sit behind the stove and
do no rough [external] work, or deck ourselves with a wreath and put on our best
clothes, but (as has been said) that we occupy ourselves with God's Word, and
exercise ourselves therein.
And, indeed, we
Christians ought always to keep such a holy day, and be occupied with nothing
but holy things, i.e., daily be engaged upon God's Word, and carry it in our
hearts and upon our lips. But (as has been said) since we do not at all times
have leisure, we must devote several hours a week for the sake of the young, or
at least a day for the sake of the entire multitude, to being concerned about
this alone, and especially urge the Ten Commandments, the Creed, and the Lord's
Prayer, and thus direct our whole life and being according to God's Word. At
whatever time, then, this is being observed and practised, there a true holy day
is being kept; otherwise it shall not be called a Christians' holy day. For,
indeed, non-Christians can also cease from work and be idle, just as the entire
swarm of our ecclesiastics, who stand daily in the churches, singing, and
ringing bells but keeping no holy day holy, because they neither preach nor
practises God's Word, but teach and live contrary to
it.
For the Word of God is the sanctuary above
all sanctuaries, yea, the only one which we Christians know and have. For though
we had the bones of all the saints or all holy and consecrated garments upon a
heap, still that would help us nothing; for all that is a dead thing which can
sanctify nobody. But God's Word is the treasure which sanctifies everything, and
by which even all the saints themselves were sanctified. At whatever hour then,
God's Word is taught, preached, heard, read or meditated upon, there the person,
day, and work are sanctified thereby, not because of the external work, but
because of the Word which makes saints of us all. Therefore I constantly say
that all our life and work must be ordered according to God's Word, if it is to
be God-pleasing or holy. Where this is done, this commandment is in force and
being fulfilled.
On the contrary, any
observance or work that is practised without God's Word is unholy before God, no
matter how brilliantly it may shine! even though it be covered with relics, such
as the fictitious spiritual orders which know nothing of God's Word and seek
holiness in their own works.
Note, therefore,
that the force and power of this commandment lies not in the resting but in the
sanctifying so that to this day belongs a special holy exercise. For other works
and occupations are not properly called holy exercises, unless the man himself
be first holy. But here a work is to be done by which man is himself made holy,
which is done (as we have heard ) alone through God's Word. For this, then,
fixed places, times, persons, and the entire external order of worship have been
created and appointed, so that it may be publicly in
operation.
Since, therefore, so much depends
upon God's Word that without it no holy day can be sanctified, we must know that
God insists upon a strict observance of this commandment, and will punish all
who despise His Word and are not willing to hear and learn it, especially at the
time appointed for the purpose.
Therefore not
only those sin against this commandment who grossly misuse and desecrate the
holy day, as those who on account of their greed or frivolity neglect to hear
God's Word or lie in taverns and are dead drunk like swine; but also that other
crowd, who listen to God's Word as to any other trifle, and only from custom
come to preaching, and go away again, and at the end of the year know as little
of it as at the beginning. For hitherto the opinion prevailed that you had
properly hallowed Sunday when you had heard a mass or the Gospel read; but no
one cared for God's Word, as also no one taught it. Now, while we have God's
Word we nevertheless do not correct the abuse; we suffer ourselves to be
preached to and admonished, but we listen without seriousness and
care.
Know, therefore, that you must be
concerned not only about hearing, but also about learning and retaining it in
memory, and do not think that it is optional with you or of no great importance,
but that it is God's commandment, who will require of you how you have heard,
learned, and honored His Word.
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 _achedia_, 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.
For let me tell you this, even though you
know it perfectly and be already master in all things, still you are daily in
the dominion of the devil, who ceases neither day nor night to steal unawares
upon you, to kindle in your heart unbelief and wicked thoughts against the
foregoing and all the commandments. Therefore you must always have God's Word in
your heart, upon your lips, and in your ears. But where the heart is idle, and
the Word does not sound, he breaks in and has done the damage before we are
aware. On the other hand, such is the efficacy of the Word, whenever it is
seriously contemplated heard, and used, that it is bound never to be without
fruit, but always awakens new understanding, pleasure, and devoutness, and
produces a pure heart and pure thoughts. For these words are not inoperative or
dead, but creative, living words. And even though no other interest or necessity
impel us, yet this ought to urge every one thereunto, because thereby the devil
is put to flight and driven away, and, besides, this commandment is fulfilled,
and [this exercise in the Word] is more pleasing to God than any work of
hypocrisy, however brilliant.
Thou shalt honor thy father and thy
mother.
To
this estate of fatherhood and motherhood God has given the special distinction
above all estates that are beneath it that He not simply commands us to love our
parents, but to honor them. For with respect to brothers, sisters, and our
neighbors in general He commands nothing higher than that we love them, so that
He separates and distinguishes father and mother above all other persons upon
earth, and places them at His side. For it is a far higher thing to honor than
to love one, inasmuch as it comprehends not only love, but also modesty,
humility, and deference as to a majesty there hidden, and requires not only that
they be addressed kindly and with reverence, but, most of all that both in heart
and with the body we so act as to show that we esteem them very highly, and
that, next to God, we regard them as the very highest. For one whom we are to
honor from the heart we must truly regard as high and
great.
We must, therefore impress it upon the
young that they should regard their parents as in God's stead, and remember that
however lowly, poor, frail, and queer they may be, nevertheless they are father
and mother given them by God. They are not to be deprived of their honor because
of their conduct or their failings. Therefore we are not to regard their
persons, how they may be, but the will of God who has thus created and ordained.
In other respects we are, indeed, all alike in the eyes of God; but among us
there must necessarily be such inequality and ordered difference, and therefore
God commands it to be observed, that you obey me as your father, and that I have
the supremacy.
Learn, therefore, first, what is
the honor towards parents required by this commandment to wit, that they be held
in distinction and esteem above all things, as the most precious treasure on
earth. Furthermore, that also in our words we observe modesty toward them, do
not accost them roughly, haughtily, and defiantly, but yield to them and be
silent even though they go too far. Thirdly, that we show them such honor also
by works, that is, with our body and possessions, that we serve them, help them,
and provide for them when they are old, sick, infirm, or poor, and all that not
only gladly, but with humility and reverence, as doing it before God. For he who
knows how to regard them in his heart will not allow them to suffer want or
hunger, but will place them above him and at his side, and will share with them
whatever he has and possesses.
Secondly,
notice how great, good, and holy a work is here assigned children, which is
alas! utterly neglected and disregarded, and no one perceives that God has
commanded it or that it is a holy, divine Word and doctrine. For if it had been
regarded as such, every one could have inferred that they must be holy men who
live according to these words. Thus there would have been no need of inventing
monasticism nor spiritual orders, but every child would have abided by this
commandment, and could have directed his conscience to God and said: "If I am to
do good and holy works, I know of none better than to render all honor and
obedience to my parents, because God has Himself commanded it. For what God
commands must be much and far nobler than everything that we may devise
ourselves, and since there is no higher or better teacher to be found than God,
there can be no better doctrine, indeed, than He gives forth. Now, He teaches
fully what we should do if we wish to perform truly good works, and by
commanding them, He shows that they please Him. If, then, it is God who commands
this, and who knows not how to appoint anything better, I will never improve
upon it."
Behold, in this manner we would have
had a godly child properly taught, reared in true blessedness, and kept at home
in obedience to his parents and in their service, so that men should have had
blessing and joy from the spectacle. However, God's commandment was not
permitted to be thus [with such care and diligence] commended, but had to be
neglected and trampled under foot, so that a child could not lay it to heart,
and meanwhile gaped [like a panting wolf] at the devices which we set up,
without once [consulting or] giving reverence to
God.
Let us, therefore, learn at last, for
God's sake, that, placing all other things out of sight, our youths look first
to this commandment, if they wish to serve God with truly good works, that they
do what is pleasing to their fathers and mothers, or to those to whom they may
be subject in their stead. For every child that knows and does this has, in the
first place, this great consolation in his heart that he can joyfully say and
boast (in spite of and against all who are occupied with works of their own
choice): "Behold, this work is well pleasing to my God in heaven that I know for
certain." Let them all come together with their many great, distressing, and
difficult works and make their boast, we will see whether they can show one that
is greater and nobler than obedience to father and mother, to whom God has
appointed and commanded obedience next to His own majesty; so that if God's Word
and will are in force and being accomplished nothing shall be esteemed higher
than the will and word of parents; yet so that it, too, is subordinated to
obedience toward God and is not opposed to the preceding
commandments.
Therefore you should be heartily
glad and thank God that He has chosen you and made you worthy to do a work so
precious and pleasing to Him. Only see that, although it be regarded as the most
humble and despised you esteem it great and precious, not on account of our
worthiness, but because it is comprehended in, and controlled by, the jewel and
sanctuary, namely, the Word and commandment of God. Oh, what a high price would
all; Carthusians, monks, and nuns pay, if in all their religious doings they
could bring into God's presence a single work done by virtue of His commandment,
and be able before His face to say with joyful heart: "Now I know that this work
is well pleasing to Thee." Where will these poor wretched persons hide when in
the sight of God and all the world they shall blush with shame before a young
child who has lived according to this commandment, and shall have to confess
that with their whole life they are not worthy to give it a drink of water? And
it serves them right for their devilish perversion in treading God's commandment
under foot that they must vainly torment themselves with works of their own
device, and, in addition, have scorn and loss for their
reward.
Should not the heart, then, leap and
melt for joy when going to work and doing what is commanded, saying: Lo, this is
better than all holiness of the Carthusians, even though they kill themselves
fasting and praying upon their knees without ceasing? For here you have a sure
text and a divine testimony that He has enjoined this, but concerning the other
He did not command a word. But this is the plight and miserable blindness of the
world that no one believes these things; to such an extent the devil has
deceived us with false holiness and the glamour of our own
works.
Therefore I would be very glad (I say it
again) if men would open their eyes and ears and take this to heart, lest some
time we may again be led astray from the pure Word of God to the lying vanities
of the devil. Then, too, all would be well; for parents would have more joy,
love, friendship, and concord in their houses; thus the children could captivate
their parents' hearts. On the other hand, when they are obstinate, and will not
do what they ought until a rod is laid upon their back, they anger both God and
their parents, whereby they deprive themselves of this treasure and joy of
conscience and lay up for themselves only misfortune. Therefore, as every one
complains, the course of the world now is such that both young and old are
altogether dissolute and beyond control, have no reverence nor sense of honor,
do nothing except as they are driven to it by blows, and perpetrate what wrong
and detraction they can behind each other's back; therefore God also punishes
them, that they sink into all kinds of filth and misery. As a rule, the parents,
too, are themselves stupid and ignorant; one fool trains [teaches] another, and
as they have lived, so live their children after them.
This, now, I say should be the first and most
important consideration to urge us to the observance of this commandment; on
which account, even if we had no father and mother we ought to wish that God
would set up wood and stone before Us, whom we might call father and mother. How
much more, since He has given us living parents, should we rejoice to show them
honor and obedience, because we know it is so highly pleasing to the Divine
Majesty and to all angels, and vexes all devils, and is, besides, the highest
work which we can do, after the sublime divine worship comprehended in the
previous commandments, so that giving of alms and every other good work toward
our neighbor are not equal to this. For God has assigned this estate the highest
place, yea, has set it up in His own stead, upon earth. This will and pleasure
of God ought to be a sufficient reason and incentive to us to do what we can
with good will and pleasure.
Besides this, it
is our duty before the world to be grateful for benefits and every good which we
have of our parents. But here again the devil rules in the world, so that the
children forget their parents, as we all forget God, and no one considers how
God nourishes, protects, and defends us, and bestows so much good on body and
soul; especially when an evil hour comes we are angry and grumble with
impatience and all the good which we have received throughout our life is wiped
out [from our memory]. Just so we do also with our parents, and there is no
child that understands and considers this [what the parents have endured while
nourishing and fostering him], except the Holy Ghost grant him this
grace.
God knows very well this perverseness of
the world; therefore He admonishes and urges by commandments that every one
consider what his parents have done for him and he will find that he has from
them body and life, moreover, that he has been fed and reared when otherwise he
would have perished a hundred times in his own filth. Therefore it is a true and
good saying of old and wise men: Deo, parentibus et magistris non potest satis
gratiae rependi, that is, To God, to parents, and to teachers we can never
render sufficient gratitude and compensation. He that regards and considers this
will indeed without compulsion do all honor to his parents, and bear them up on
his hands as those through whom God has done him all good.
Over and above all this, another great reason
that should incite us the more [to obedience to this commandment] is that God
attaches to this commandment a temporal promise and says: That thou mayest live
long upon the land which the Lord, thy God, giveth thee.
Here you can see yourself how much God is in
earnest in respect to this commandment, inasmuch as He not only declares that it
is well pleasing to Him, and that He has joy and delight therein; but also that
it shall be for our prosperity and promote our highest good; so that we may have
a pleasant and agreeable life, furnished with every good thing. Therefore also
St. Paul greatly emphasizes the same and rejoices in it when he says, Eph. 6, 2.
3: This is the first commandment with promise: That it may be well with thee,
and thou mayest live long on the earth. For although the rest also have their
promises contained in them, yet in none is it so plainly and explicitly stated.
Here, then, you have the fruit and the reward,
that whoever observes this commandment shall have happy days, fortune, and
prosperity; and on the other hand, the punishment, that whoever is disobedient
shall the sooner perish, and never enjoy life. For to have long life in the
sense of the Scriptures is not only to become old, but to have everything which
belongs to long life, such as health, wife, and children, livelihood, peace,
good government, etc., without which this life can neither be enjoyed in
cheerfulness nor long endure. If, therefore, you will not obey father and mother
and submit to their discipline, then obey the hangman; if you will not obey him,
then submit to the skeleton-man, i.e., death [death the all-subduer, the teacher
of wicked children]. For on this God insists peremptorily: Either if you obey
Him rendering love and service, He will reward you abundantly with all good, or
if you offend Him, He will send upon you both death and the hangman.
Whence come so many knaves that must daily be
hanged, beheaded, broken upon the wheel, but from disobedience [to parents],
because they will not submit to discipline in kindness, so that, by the
punishment of God, they bring it about that we behold their misfortune and
grief? For it seldom happens that such perverse people die a natural or timely
death.
But the godly and obedient have this
blessing, that they live long in pleasant quietness and see their children's
children (as said above) to the third and fourth generation.
Thus experience also teaches, that where there
are honorable, old families who fare well and have many children, they owe their
origin to the fact, to be sure, that some of them were brought up well and were
regardful of their parents. On the other hand, it is written of the wicked, Ps.
109,13: Let his posterity be cut off; and in the generation following let their
name be blotted out. Therefore heed well how great a thing in God's sight
obedience is since He so highly esteems it, is so highly pleased with it, and
rewards it so richly, and besides enforces punishment so rigorously on those who
act contrariwise.
All this I say that it may
be well impressed upon the young. For no one believes how necessary this
commandment is, although it has not been esteemed and taught hitherto under the
papacy. These are simple and easy words, and everybody thinks he knew them a
fore; therefore men pass them lightly by, are gaping after other matters, and do
not see and believe that God is so greatly offended if they be disregarded, nor
that one does a work so well pleasing and precious if he follows them.
In this commandment belongs a further
statement regarding all kinds of obedience to persons in authority who have to
command and to govern. For all authority flows and is propagated from the
authority of parents. For where a father is unable alone to educate his
[rebellious and irritable] child, he employs a schoolmaster to instruct him; if
he be too weak, he enlists the aid of his friends and neighbors; if he departs
this life, he delegates and confers his authority and government upon others who
are appointed for the purpose. Likewise, he must have domestics, man-servants
and maid-servants, under himself for the management of the household, so that
all whom we call masters are in the place of parents and must derive their power
and authority to govern from them. Hence also they are all called fathers in the
Scriptures, as those who in their government perform the functions of a father,
and should have a paternal heart toward their subordinates. As also from
antiquity the Romans and other nations called the masters and mistresses of the
household patres- et matresfamiliae that is, housefathers and housemothers. So
also they called their national rulers and overlords patres patriae, that is
fathers of the entire country, for a great shame to us who would be Christians
that we do not likewise call them so, or, at least do not esteem and honor them
as such.
Now, what a child owes to father and
mother, the same owe all who are embraced in the household. Therefore
man-servants and maid-servants should be careful not only to be obedient to
their masters and mistresses but also to honor them as their own fathers and
mothers, and to do everything which they know is expected of them, not from
compulsion and with reluctance, but with pleasure and joy for the cause just
mentioned, namely that it is God's command and is pleasing to Him above all
other works. Therefore they ought rather to pay wages in addition and be glad
that they may obtain masters and mistresses to have such joyful consciences and
to know how they may do truly golden works; a matter which has hitherto been
neglected and despised, when, instead, everybody ran in the devil's name, into
convents or to pilgrimages and indulgences, with loss [of time and money] and
with an evil conscience.
If this truth, then,
could be impressed upon the poor people, a servant-girl would leap and praise
and thank God; and with her tidy work for which she receives support and wages
she would acquire such a treasure as all that are esteemed the greatest saints
have not obtained. Is it not an excellent boast to know and say that, if you
perform your daily domestic task, this is better than all the sanctity and
ascetic life of monks? And you have the promise, in addition, that you shall
prosper in all good and fare well. How can you lead a more blessed or holier
life as far as your works are concerned? For in the sight of God faith is what
really renders a person holy, and alone serves Him, but the works are for the
service of man. There you have everything good, protection and defense in the
Lord, a joyful conscience and a gracious God besides, who will reward you a
hundredfold, so that you are even a nobleman if you be only pious and obedient.
But if not, you have, in the first place, nothing but the wrath and displeasure
of God, no peace of heart, and afterwards all manner of plagues and misfortunes.
Whoever will not be influenced by this and
inclined to godliness we hand over to the hangman and to the skeleton-man.
Therefore let every one who allows himself to be advised remember that God is
not making sport, and know that it is God who speaks with you and demands
obedience. If you obey Him, you are His dear child; but if you despise to do it,
then take shame, misery, and grief for your reward.
The same also is to be said of obedience to
civil government, which (as we have said) is all embraced in the estate of
fatherhood and extends farthest of all relations. For here the father is not one
of a single family, but of as many people as he has tenants, citizens, or
subjects. For through them, as through our parents, God gives to us food, house
and home, protection and security. Therefore since they bear such name and title
with all honor as their highest dignity, it is our duty to honor them and to
esteem them great as the dearest treasure and the most precious jewel upon
earth.
He, now, who is obedient here, is
willing and ready to serve, and cheerfully does all that pertains to honor,
knows that he is pleasing God and that he will receive joy and happiness for his
reward. If he will not do it in love, but despises and resists [authority] or
rebels, let him also know, on the other hand, that he shall have no favor nor
blessing, and where he thinks to gain a florin thereby, he will elsewhere lose
ten times as much, or become a victim to the hangman, perish by war, pestilence,
and famine, or experience no good in his children, and be obliged to suffer
injury, injustice, and violence at the hands of his servants, neighbors, or
strangers and tyrants; so that what we seek and deserve is paid back and comes
home to us.
If we would ever suffer ourselves
to be persuaded that such works are pleasing to God and have so rich a reward,
we would be established in altogether abundant possessions and have what our
heart desires. But because the word and command of God are so lightly esteemed,
as though some babbler had spoken it, let us see whether you are the man to
oppose Him. How difficult, do you think, it will be for Him to recompense you!
Therefore you would certainly live much better with the divine favor, peace, and
happiness than with His displeasure and misfortune. Why, think you, is the world
now so full of unfaithfulness, disgrace, calamity, and murder, but because every
one desires to be his own master and free from the emperor, to care nothing for
any one, and do what pleases him? Therefore God punishes one knave by another,
so that, when you defraud and despise your master, another comes and deals in
like manner with you, yea, in your household you must suffer ten times more from
wife, children, or servants.
Indeed, we feel
our misfortune, we murmur and complain of unfaithfulness, violence, and
injustice, but will not see that we ourselves are knaves who have fully deserved
this punishment, and yet are not thereby reformed. We will have no favor and
happiness, therefore it is but fair that we have nothing but misfortune without
mercy. There must still be somewhere upon earth some godly people because God
continues to grant us so much good! On our own account we should not have a
farthing in the house nor a straw in the field. All this I have been obliged to
urge with so many words, in hope that some one may take it to heart, that we may
be relieved of the blindness and misery in which we are steeped so deeply, and
may truly understand the Word and will of God, and earnestly accept it. For
thence we would learn how we could have joy, happiness, and salvation enough,
both temporal and eternal.
Thus we have two
kinds of fathers presented in this commandment, fathers in blood and fathers in
office, or those to whom belongs the care of the family, and those to whom
belongs the care of the country. Besides these there are yet spiritual fathers;
not like those in the Papacy, who have indeed had themselves called thus, but
have performed no function of the paternal office. For those only are called
spiritual fathers who govern and guide us by the Word of God; as St. Paul boasts
his fatherhood 1 Cor. 4, 15, where he says: In Christ Jesus I hove begotten you
through the Gospel. Now, since they are fathers they are entitled to their
honor, even above all others. But here it is bestowed least; for the way which
the world knows for honoring them is to drive them out of the country and to
grudge them a piece of bread and, in short, they must be (as says St. Paul 1
Cor. 4, 13) as the filth of the world and everybody's refuse and footrag.
Yet there is need that this also be urged upon
the populace, that those who would be Christians are under obligation in the
sight of God to esteem them worthy of double honor who minister to their souls,
that they deal well with them and provide for them. For that, God is willing to
add to you sufficient blessing and will not let you come to want. But in this
matter every one refuses and resists, and all are afraid that they will perish
from bodily want, and cannot now support one respectable preacher, where
formerly they filled ten fat paunches. In this we also deserve that God deprive
us of His Word and blessing, and again allow preachers of lies to arise to lead
us to the devil, and, in addition, to drain our sweat and blood.
But those who keep in sight God's will and
commandment have the promise that everything which they bestow upon temporal and
spiritual fathers, and whatever they do to honor them, shall be richly
recompensed to them, so that they shall have, not bread, clothing, and money for
a year or two, but long life, support, and peace, and shall be eternally rich
and blessed. Therefore only do what is your duty, and let God take care how He
is to support you and provide for you sufficiently. Since He has promised it,
and has never yet lied, He will not be found lying to you.
This ought indeed to encourage us, and give us
hearts that would melt in pleasure and love toward those to whom we owe honor,
so that we would raise our hands and joyfully thank God who has given us such
promises, for which we ought to run to the ends of the world [to the remotest
parts of India]. For although the whole world should combine, it could not add
an hour to our life or give us a single grain from the earth. But God wishes to
give you all exceeding abundantly according to your heart's desire. He who
despises and casts this to the winds is not worthy ever to hear a word of God.
This has now been stated more than enough for all who belong under this
commandment.
In addition, it would be well to
preach to the parents also, and such as bear their office, as to how they should
deport themselves toward those who are committed to them for their government.
For although this is not expressed in the Ten Commandments, it is nevertheless
abundantly enjoined in many places in the Scriptures. And God desires to have it
embraced in this commandment when He speaks of father and mother. For He does
not wish to have in this office and government knaves and tyrants; nor does He
assign to them this honor, that is, power and authority to govern, that they
should have themselves worshiped; but they should consider that they are under
obligations of obedience to God; and that, first of all, they should earnestly
and faithfully discharge their office, not only to support and provide for the
bodily necessities of their children, servants, subjects, etc., but, most of
all, to train them to the honor and praise of God. Therefore do not think that
this is left to your pleasure and arbitrary will, but that it is a strict
command and injunction of God, to whom also you must give account for it.
But here again the sad plight arises that no
one perceives or heeds this, and all live on as though God gave us children for
our pleasure or amusement, and servants that we should employ them like a cow or
ass, only for work, or as though we were only to gratify our wantonness with our
subjects, ignoring them, as though it were no concern of ours what they learn or
how they live; and no one is willing to see that this is the command of the
Supreme Majesty, who will most strictly call us to account and punish us for it;
nor that there is so great need to be so seriously concerned about the young.
For if we wish to have excellent and apt persons both for civil and
ecclesiastical government we must spare no diligence, time, or cost in teaching
and educating our children, that they may serve God and the world, and we must
not think only how we may amass money and possessions for them. For God can
indeed without us support and make them rich, as He daily does. But for this
purpose He has given us children, and issued this command that we should train
and govern them according to His will, else He would have no need of father and
mother. Let every one know therefore, that it is his duty, on peril of losing
the divine favor, to bring up his children above all things in the fear and
knowledge of God, and if they are talented, have them learn and study something,
that they may be employed for whatever need there is [to have them instructed
and trained in a liberal education, that men may be able to have their aid in
government and in whatever is necessary].
If
that were done, God would also richly bless us and give us grace to train men by
whom land and people might be improved and likewise well educated citizens,
chaste and domestic wives, who afterwards would rear godly children and
servants. Here consider now what deadly injury you are doing if you be negligent
and fail on your part to bring up your child to usefulness and piety, and how
you bring upon yourself all sin and wrath, thus earning hell by your own
children, even though you be otherwise pious and holy. And because this is
disregarded, God so fearfully punishes the world that there is no discipline,
government, or peace, of which we all complain, but do not see that it is our
fault; for as we train them, we have spoiled and disobedient children and
subjects. Let this be sufficient exhortation; for to draw this out at length
belongs to another time.
Thou shalt not
kill.
We
have now completed both the spiritual and the temporal government, that is, the
divine and the paternal authority and obedience. But here now we go forth from
our house among our neighbors to learn how we should live with one another,
every one himself toward his neighbor. Therefore God and government are not
included in this commandment nor is the power to kill, which they have taken
away. For God has delegated His authority to punish evil-doers to the government
instead of parents, who aforetime (as we read in Moses) were required to bring
their own children to judgment and sentence them to death. Therefore, what is
here forbidden is forbidden to the individual in his relation to any one else,
and not to the government.
Now this commandment
is easy enough and has been often treated, because we hear it annually in the
Gospel of St. Matthew, 5, 21 ff., where Christ Himself explains and sums it up,
namely, that we must not kill neither with hand, heart, mouth, signs, gestures,
help, nor counsel. Therefore it is here forbidden to every one to be angry,
except those (as we said) who are in the place of God, that is, parents and the
government. For it is proper for God and for every one who is in a divine estate
to be angry, to reprove and punish, namely, on account of those very persons who
transgress this and the other commandments.
But
the cause and need of this commandment is that God well knows that the world is
evil, and that this life has much unhappiness; therefore He has placed this and
the other commandments between the good and the evil. Now, as there are many
assaults upon all commandments, so it happens also in this commandment that we
must live among many people who do us harm, so that we have cause to be hostile
to them.
As when your neighbor sees that you
have a better house and home [a larger family and more fertile fields], greater
possessions and fortune from God than he, he is sulky, envies you, and speaks no
good of you.
Thus by the devil's incitement you
will get many enemies who cannot bear to see you have any good, either bodily or
spiritual. When we see such people, our hearts, in turn, would rage and bleed
and take vengeance. Then there arise cursing and blows, from which follow
finally misery and murder. Here, now, God like a kind father steps in ahead of
Us, interposes and wishes to have the quarrel settled, that no misfortune come
of it, nor one destroy another. And briefly He would hereby protect, set free,
and keep in peace every one against the crime and violence of every one else;
and would have this commandment placed as a wall, fortress, and refuge about our
neighbor, that we do him no hurt nor harm in his
body.
Thus this commandment aims at this, that
no one offend his neighbor on account of any evil deed, even though he have
fully deserved it. For where murder is forbidden, all cause also is forbidden
whence murder may originate. For many a one, although he does not kill, yet
curses and utters a wish, which would stop a person from running far if it were
to strike him in the neck [makes imprecations, which if fulfilled with respect
to any one, he would not live long]. Now since this inheres in every one by
nature and it is a common practice that no one is willing to suffer at the hands
of another, God wishes to remove the root and source by which the heart is
embittered against our neighbor, and to accustom us ever to keep in view this
commandment, always to contemplate ourselves in it as in a mirror, to regard the
will of God, and with hearty confidence and invocation of His name to commit to
Him the wrong which we suffer. Thus we shall suffer our enemies to rage and be
angry, doing what they can, and we learn to calm our wrath, and to have a
patient, gentle heart, especially toward those who give us cause to be angry,
that is, our enemies.
Therefore the entire sum
of what it means not to kill is to be impressed most explicitly upon the
simple-minded. In the first place that we harm no one, first, with our hand or
by deed. Then, that we do not employ our tongue to instigate or counsel thereto.
Further, that we neither use nor assent to any kind of means or methods whereby
any one may be injured. And finally, that the heart be not ill disposed toward
any one, nor from anger and hatred wish him ill, so that body and soul may be
innocent in regard to every one, but especially those who wish you evil or
inflict such upon you. For to do evil to one who wishes and does you good is not
human, but diabolical.
Secondly, under this
commandment not only he is guilty who does evil to his neighbor, but he also who
can do him good, prevent, resist evil, defend and save him, so that no bodily
harm or hurt happen to him and yet does not do it. If, therefore, you send away
one that is naked when you could clothe him, you have caused him to freeze to
death; you see one suffer hunger and do not give him food, you have caused him
to starve. So also, if you see any one innocently sentenced to death or in like
distress, and do not save him, although you know ways and means to do so, you
have killed him. And it will not avail you to make the pretext that you did not
afford any help, counsel, or aid thereto for you have withheld your love from
him and deprived him of the benefit whereby his life would have been
saved.
Therefore God also rightly calls all
those murderers who do not afford counsel and help in distress and danger of
body and life, and will pass a most terrible sentence upon them in the last day,
as Christ Himself has announced when He shall say, Matt.25, 42f.: I was an
hungered, and ye gave Me no meat; I was thirsty, and ye gave Me no drink; I was
a stranger, and ye took Me not in; naked, and ye clothed Me not; sick and in
prison and ye visited Me not. That is: You would have suffered Me and Mine to
die of hunger thirst, and cold, would have suffered the wild beasts to tear us
to pieces, or left us to rot in prison or perish in distress. What else is that
but to reproach them as murderers and bloodhounds? For although you have not
actually done all this, you have nevertheless, so far as you were concerned,
suffered him to pine and perish in
misfortune.
It is just as if I saw some one
navigating and laboring in deep water [and struggling against adverse winds] or
one fallen into fire, and could extend to him the hand to pull him out and save
him, and yet refused to do it. What else would I appear, even in the eyes of the
world, than as a murderer and a
criminal?
Therefore it is God's ultimate
purpose that we suffer harm to befall no man, but show him all good and love;
and, as we have said it is specially directed toward those who are our enemies.
For to do good to our friends is but an ordinary heathen virtue as Christ says
Matt. 5, 46.
Here we have again the Word of God
whereby He would encourage and urge us to true noble and sublime works, as
gentleness patience, and, in short, love and kindness to our enemies, and would
ever remind us to reflect upon the First Commandment, that He is our God, that
is, that He will help, assist, and protect us, in order that He may thus quench
the desire of revenge in us.
This we ought to
practice and inculcate and we would have our hands full doing good works. But
this would not be preaching for monks; it would greatly detract from the
religious estate, and infringe upon the sanctity of Carthusians, and would even
be regarded as forbidding good works and clearing the convents. For in this wise
the ordinary state of Christians would be considered just as worthy, and even
worthier, and everybody would see how they mock and delude the world with a
false, hypocritical show of holiness, because they have given this and other
commandments to the winds, and have esteemed them unnecessary, as though they
were not commandments but mere counsels, and have at the same time shamelessly
proclaimed and boasted their hypocritical estate and works as the most perfect
life, in order that they might lead a pleasant, easy life, without the cross and
without patience, for which reason, too, they have resorted to the cloisters, so
that they might not be obliged to suffer any wrong from any one or to do him any
good. But know now that these are the true, holy, and godly works, in which,
with all the angels He rejoices, in comparison with which all human holiness is
but stench and filth, and besides, deserves nothing but wrath and
damnation.
Thou shalt not commit
adultery.
These
commandments now [that follow] are easily understood from [the explanation of]
the preceding; for they are all to the effect that we [be careful to] avoid
doing any kind of injury to our neighbor. But they are arranged in fine
[elegant] order. In the first place, they treat of his own person. Then they
proceed to the person nearest him, or the closest possession next after his body
namely, his wife, who is one flesh and blood with him, so that we cannot inflict
a higher injury upon him in any good that is his. Therefore it is explicitly
forbidden here to bring any disgrace upon him in respect to his wife. And it
really aims at adultery, because among the Jews it was ordained and commanded
that every one must be married. Therefore also the young were early provided for
[married], so that the virgin state was held in small esteem, neither were
public prostitution and lewdness tolerated (as now). Therefore adultery was the
most common form of unchastity among them.
But
because among us there is such a shameful mess and the very dregs of all vice
and lewdness, this commandment is directed also against all manner of
unchastity, whatever it may be called; and not only is the external act
forbidden, but also every kind of cause, incitement, and means, so that the
heart, the lips, and the whole body may be chaste and afford no opportunity,
help, or persuasion to unchastity. And not only this, but that we also make
resistance, afford protection and rescue wherever there is danger and need; and
again, that we give help and counsel, so as to maintain our neighbor's honor.
For whenever you omit this when you could make resistance, or connive at it as
if it did not concern you, you are as truly guilty as the one perpetrating the
deed. Thus, to state it in the briefest manner, there is required this much,
that every one both live chastely himself and help his neighbor do the same, so
that God by this commandment wishes to hedge round about and protect [as with a
rampart] every spouse that no one trespass against
them.
But since this commandment is aimed
directly at the state of matrimony and gives occasion to speak of the same, you
must well understand and mark, first, how gloriously God honors and extols this
estate, inasmuch as by His commandment He both sanctions and guards it. He has
sanctioned it above in the Fourth Commandment: Honor thy father and thy mother;
but here He has (as we said ) hedged it about and protected it. Therefore He
also wishes us to honor it, and to maintain and conduct it as a divine and
blessed estate; because, in the first place, He has instituted it before all
others, and therefore created man and woman separately (as is evident), not for
lewdness, but that they should [legitimately] live together, be fruitful, beget
children, and nourish and train them to the honor of
God.
Therefore God has also most richly blessed
this estate above all others, and, in addition, has bestowed on it and wrapped
up in it everything in the world, to the end that this estate might be well and
richly provided for. Married life is therefore no jest or presumption; but it is
an excellent thing and a matter of divine seriousness. For it is of the highest
importance to Him that persons be raised who may serve the world and promote the
knowledge of God, godly living, and all virtues, to fight against wickedness and
the devil.
Therefore I have always taught that
this estate should not be despised nor held in disrepute, as is done by the
blind world and our false ecclesiastics, but that it be regarded according to
God's Word, by which it is adorned and sanctified, so that it is not only placed
on an equality with other estates, but that it precedes and surpasses them all,
whether they be that of emperor, princes, bishops, or whoever they please. For
both ecclesiastical and civil estates must humble themselves and all be found in
this estate as we shall hear. Therefore it is not a peculiar estate, but the
most common and noblest estate, which pervades all Christendom, yea which
extends through all the world.
In the second
place, you must know also that it is not only an honorable, but also a necessary
state, and it is solemnly commanded by God that, in general, in all conditions,
men and women, who were created for it, shall be found in this estate; yet with
some exceptions (although few) whom God has especially excepted, so that they
are not fit for the married estate, or whom He has released by a high,
supernatural gift that they can maintain chastity without this estate. For where
nature has its course, as it is implanted by God, it is not possible to remain
chaste without marriage. For flesh and blood remain flesh and blood, and the
natural inclination and excitement have their course without let or hindrance,
as everybody sees and feels. In order, therefore, that it may be the more easy
in some degree to avoid unchastity, God has commanded the estate of matrimony,
that every one may have his proper portion and be satisfied therewith; although
God's grace besides is required in order that the heart also may be
pure.
From this you see how this popish rabble,
priests, monks, and nuns, resist God's order and commandment, inasmuch as they
despise and forbid matrimony, and presume and vow to maintain perpetual
chastity, and, besides, deceive the simple-minded with lying words and
appearances [impostures]. For no one has so little love and inclination to
chastity as just those who because of great sanctity avoid marriage, and either
indulge in open and shameless prostitution, or secretly do even worse, so that
one dare not speak of it, as has, alas! been learned too fully. And, in short,
even though they abstain from the act, their hearts are so full of unchaste
thoughts and evil lusts that there is a continual burning and secret suffering,
which can be avoided in the married life. Therefore all vows of chastity out of
the married state are condemned by this commandment, and free permission is
granted, yea, even the command is given, to all poor ensnared consciences which
have been deceived by their monastic vows to abandon the unchaste state and
enter the married life, considering that even if the monastic life were godly,
it would nevertheless not be in their power to maintain chastity, and if they
remain in it, they must only sin more and more against this
commandment.
Now, I speak of this in order that
the young may be so guided that they conceive a liking for the married estate,
and know that it is a blessed estate and pleasing to God. For in this way we
might in the course of time bring it about that married life be restored to
honor, and that there might be less of the filthy, dissolute, disorderly doings
which now run riot the world over in open prostitution and other shameful vices
arising from disregard of married life. Therefore it is the duty of parents and
the government to see to it that our youth be brought up to discipline and
respectability, and when they have come to years of maturity, to provide for
them [to have them married] in the fear of God and honorably; He would not fail
to add His blessing and grace, so that men would have joy and happiness from the
same.
Let me now say in conclusion that this
commandment demands not only that every one live chastely in thought, word, and
deed in his condition, that is, especially in the estate of matrimony, but also
that every one love and esteem the spouse given him by God. For where conjugal
chastity is to be maintained, man and wife must by all means live together in
love and harmony, that one may cherish the other from the heart and with entire
fidelity. For that is one of the principal points which enkindle love and desire
of chastity, so that, where this is found, chastity will follow as a matter of
course without any command. Therefore also St. Paul so diligently exhorts
husband and wife to love and honor one another. Here you have again a precious,
yea, many and great good works, of which you can joyfully boast, against all
ecclesiastical estates, chosen without God's Word and
commandment.
Thou shalt not
steal.
After
your person and spouse temporal property comes next. That also God wishes to
have protected, and He has commanded that no one shall subtract from, or
curtail, his neighbor's possessions. For to steal is nothing else than to get
possession of another's property wrongfully, which briefly comprehends all kinds
of advantage in all sorts of trade to the disadvantage of our neighbor. Now,
this is indeed quite a wide-spread and common vice, but so little regarded and
observed that it exceeds all measure, so that if all who are thieves, and yet do
not wish to be called such, were to be hanged on gallows the world would soon be
devastated and there would be a lack both of executioners and gallows. For, as
we have just said, to steal is to signify not only to empty our neighbor's
coffer and pockets, but to be grasping in the market, in all stores, booths,
wine- and beer-cellars, workshops, and, in short, wherever there is trading or
taking and giving of money for merchandise or
labor.
As, for instance, to explain this
somewhat grossly for the common people, that it may be seen how godly we are:
When a manservant or maid-servant does not serve faithfully in the house, and
does damage, or allows it to be done when it could be prevented, or otherwise
ruins and neglects the goods entrusted to him, from indolence idleness, or
malice, to the spite and vexation of master and mistress, and in whatever way
this can be done purposely (for I do not speak of what happens from oversight
and against one's will), you can in a year abscond thirty, forty florins, which
if another had taken secretly or carried away, he would be hanged with the rope.
But here you [while conscious of such a great theft] may even bid defiance and
become insolent, and no one dare call you a
thief.
The same I say also of mechanics,
workmen, and day-laborers, who all follow their wanton notions, and never know
enough ways to overcharge people, while they are lazy and unfaithful in their
work. All these are far worse than sneak-thieves, against whom we can guard with
locks and bolts, or who, if apprehended, are treated in such a manner that they
will not do the same again. But against these no one can guard, no one dare even
look awry at them or accuse them of theft, so that one would ten times rather
lose from his purse. For here are my neighbors, good friends, my own servants,
from whom I expect good [every faithful and diligent service], who defraud me
first of all.
Furthermore, in the market and in
common trade likewise, this practice is in full swing and force to the greatest
extent, where one openly defrauds another with bad merchandise, false measures,
weights, coins, and by nimbleness and queer finances or dexterous tricks takes
advantage of him; likewise, when one overcharges a person in a trade and
wantonly drives a hard bargain, skins and distresses him. And who can recount or
think of all these things? To sum up, this is the commonest craft and the
largest guild on earth, and if we regard the world throughout all conditions of
life, it is nothing else than a vast, wide stall, full of great
thieves.
Therefore they are also called
swivel-chair robbers, land- and highway-robbers, not pick-locks and
sneak-thieves who snatch away the ready cash, but who sit on the chair [at home]
and are styled great noblemen, and honorable, pious citizens, and yet rob and
steal under a good pretext.
Yes, here we might
be silent about the trifling individual thieves if we were to attack the great,
powerful arch-thieves with whom lords and princes keep company, who daily
plunder not only a city or two, but all Germany. Yea, where should we place the
head and supreme protector of all thieves, the Holy Chair at Rome with all its
retinue, which has grabbed by theft the wealth of all the world, and holds it to
this day?
This is, in short, the course of the
world: whoever can steal and rob openly goes free and secure, unmolested by any
one, and even demands that he be honored. Meanwhile the little sneak-thieves,
who have once trespassed, must bear the shame and punishment to render the
former godly and honorable. But let them know that in the sight of God they are
the greatest thieves, and that He will punish them as they are worthy and
deserve.
Now, since this commandment is so
far-reaching [and comprehensive], as just indicated, it is necessary to urge it
well and to explain it to the common people, not to let them go on in their
wantonness and security, but always to place before their eyes the wrath of God,
and inculcate the same. For we have to preach this not to Christians, but
chiefly to knaves and scoundrels, to whom it would be more fitting for judges,
jailers, or Master Hannes [the executioner] to preach. Therefore let every one
know that it is his duty, at the risk of God's displeasure, not only to do no
injury to his neighbor, nor to deprive him of gain, nor to perpetrate any act of
unfaithfulness or malice in any bargain or trade, but faithfully to preserve his
property for him, to secure and promote his advantage, especially when one
accepts money, wages, and one's livelihood for such
service.
He now who wantonly despises this may
indeed pass along and escape the hangman, but he shall not escape the wrath and
punishment of God; and when he has long practiced his defiance and arrogance, he
shall yet remain a tramp and beggar, and, in addition, have all plagues and
misfortune. Now you are going your way [wherever your heart's pleasure calls
you] while you ought to preserve the property of your master and mistress, for
which service you fill your crop and maw, take your wages like a thief, have
people treat you as a nobleman; for there are many that are even insolent
towards their masters and mistresses, and are unwilling to do them a favor or
service by which to protect them from loss.
But
reflect what you will gain when, having come into your own property and being
set up in your home (to which God will help with all misfortunes), it [your
perfidy] will bob up again and come home to you, and you will find that where
you have cheated or done injury to the value of one mite, you will have to pay
thirty again.
Such shall be the lot also of
mechanics and day-laborers of whom we are now obliged to hear and suffer such
intolerable maliciousness, as though they were noblemen in another's
possessions, and every one were obliged to give them what they demand. Just let
them continue practicing their exactions as long as they can; but God will not
forget His commandment, and will reward them according as they have served, and
will hang them, not upon a green gallows, but upon a dry one so that all their
life they shall neither prosper nor accumulate anything. And indeed, if there
were a well-ordered government in the land, such wantonness might soon be
checked and prevented, as was the custom in ancient times among the Romans,
where such characters were promptly seized by the pate in a way that others took
warning.
No more shall all the rest prosper who
change the open free market into a carrion-pit of extortion and a den of
robbery, where the poor are daily overcharged, new burdens and high prices are
imposed, and every one uses the market according to his caprice, and is even
defiant and brags as though it were his fair privilege and right to sell his
goods for as high a price as he please, and no one had a right to say a word
against it. We will indeed look on and let these people skin, pinch, and hoard,
but we will trust in God -- who will, however, do this of His own accord, --
that, after you have been skinning and scraping for a long time, He will
pronounce such a blessing on your gains that your grain in the garner, your beer
in the cellar, your cattle in the stalls shall perish; yea, where you have
cheated and overcharged any one to the amount of a florin, your entire pile
shall be consumed with rust, so that you shall never enjoy
it.
And indeed, we see and experience this
being fulfilled daily before our eyes, that no stolen or dishonestly acquired
possession thrives. How many there are who rake and scrape day and night, and
yet grow not a farthing richer! And though they gather much, they must suffer so
many plagues and misfortunes that they cannot relish it with cheerfulness nor
transmit it to their children. But as no one minds it, and we go on as though it
did not concern us, God must visit us in a different way and teach us manners by
imposing one taxation after another, or billeting a troop of soldiers upon us,
who in one hour empty our coffers and purses, and do not quit as long as we have
a farthing left, and in addition, by way of thanks, burn and devastate house and
home, and outrage and kill wife and
children.
And, in short, if you steal much,
depend upon it that again as much will be stolen from you; and he who robs and
acquires with violence and wrong will submit to one who shall deal after the
same fashion with him. For God is master of this art, that since every one robs
and steals from the other, He punishes one thief by means of another. Else where
should we find enough gallows and ropes?
Now,
whoever is willing to be instructed let him know that this is the commandment of
God, and that it must not be treated as a jest. For although you despise us,
defraud, steal, and rob, we will indeed manage to endure your haughtiness,
suffer, and, according to the Lord's Prayer, forgive and show pity; for we know
that the godly shall nevertheless have enough, and you injure yourself more than
another.
But beware of this: When the poor man
comes to you (of whom there are so many now) who must buy with the penny of his
daily wages and live upon it, and you are harsh to him, as though every one
lived by your favor, and you skin and scrape to the bone, and, besides, with
pride and haughtiness turn him off to whom you ought to give for nothing, he
will go away wretched and sorrowful, and since he can complain to no one he will
cry and call to heaven, -- then beware (I say again) as of the devil himself.
For such groaning and calling will be no jest, but will have a weight that will
prove too heavy for you and all the world. For it will reach Him who takes care
of the poor sorrowful hearts, and will not allow them to go unavenged. But if
you despise this and become defiant, see whom you have brought upon you: if you
succeed and prosper, you may before all the world call God and me a
liar.
We have exhorted, warned, and protested
enough; he who will not heed or believe it may go on until he learns this by
experience Yet it must be impressed upon the young that they may be careful not
to follow the old lawless crowd, but keep their eyes fixed upon God's
commandment, lest His wrath and punishment come upon them too. It behooves us to
do no more than to instruct and reprove with God's Word; but to check such open
wantonness there is need of the princes and government, who themselves would
have eyes and the courage to establish and maintain order in all manner of trade
and commerce, lest the poor be burdened and oppressed nor they themselves be
loaded with other men's sins.
Let this suffice
as an explanation of what stealing is, that it be not taken too narrowly but
made to extend as far as we have to do with our neighbors. And briefly, in a
summary, as in the former commandments, it is herewith forbidden, in the first
place, to do our neighbor any injury or wrong (in whatever manner supposable, by
curtailing, forestalling, and withholding his possessions and property), or even
to consent or allow such a thing, but to interpose and prevent it. And, on the
other hand, it is commanded that we advance and improve his possessions, and in
case he suffers want, that we help, communicate, and lend both to friends and
foes.
Whoever now seeks and desires good works
will find here more than enough such as are heartily acceptable and pleasing to
God, and in addition are favored and crowned with excellent blessings, that we
are to be richly compensated for all that we do for our neighbor's good and from
friendship; as King Solomon also teaches Prov. 19, 17: He that hath pity upon
the poor lendeth unto the Lord; and that which he hath given will He pay him
again. Here, then you have a rich Lord, who is certainly sufficient for you, and
who will not suffer you to come short in anything or to want; thus you can with
a joyful conscience enjoy a hundred times more than you could scrape together
with unfaithfulness and wrong. Now, whoever does not desire the blessing will
find wrath and misfortune enough.
Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy
neighbor.
Over
and above our own body, spouse, and temporal possessions, we have yet another
treasure, namely, honor and good report [the illustrious testimony of an upright
and unsullied name and reputation], with which we cannot dispense. For it is
intolerable to live among men in open shame and general contempt. Therefore God
wishes the reputation, good name, and upright character of our neighbor to be
taken away or diminished as little as his money and possessions, that every one
may stand in his integrity before wife, children, servants, and neighbors. And
in the first place, we take the plainest meaning of this commandment according
to the words (Thou shalt not bear false witness), as pertaining to the public
courts of justice, where a poor innocent man is accused and oppressed by false
witnesses in order to be punished in his body, property, or
honor.
Now, this appears as if it were of
little concern to us at present; but with the Jews it was quite a common and
ordinary matter. For the people were organized under an excellent and regular
government; and where there is still such a government, instances of this sin
will not be wanting. The cause of it is that where judges, burgomasters,
princes, or others in authority sit in judgment, things never fail to go
according to the course of the world; namely, men do not like to offend anybody,
flatter, and speak to gain favor, money, prospects, or friendship; and in
consequence a poor man and his cause must be oppressed, denounced as wrong, and
suffer punishment. And it is a common calamity in the world that in courts of
justice there seldom preside godly men.
For to
be a judge requires above all things a godly man, and not only a godly, but also
a wise, modest, yea, a brave and bold man; likewise, to be a witness requires a
fearless and especially a godly man. For a person who is to judge all matters
rightly and carry them through with his decision will often offend good friends,
relatives, neighbors, and the rich and powerful, who can greatly serve or injure
him. Therefore he must be quite blind, have his eyes and ears closed, neither
see nor hear, but go straight forward in everything that comes before him, and
decide accordingly.
Therefore this commandment
is given first of all that every one shall help his neighbor to secure his
rights, and not allow them to be hindered or twisted, but shall promote and
strictly maintain them, no matter whether he be judge or witness, and let it
pertain to whatsoever it will. And especially is a goal set up here for our
jurists that they be careful to deal truly and uprightly with every case,
allowing right to remain right, and, on the other hand, not perverting anything
[by their tricks and technical points turning black into white and making wrong
out to be right], nor glossing it over or keeping silent concerning it,
irrespective of a person's money, possession, honor, or power. This is one part
and the plainest sense of this commandment concerning all that takes place in
court.
Next, it extends very much further, if
we are to apply it to spiritual jurisdiction or administration; here it is a
common occurrence that every one bears false witness against his neighbor. For
wherever there are godly preachers and Christians, they must bear the sentence
before the world that they are called heretics, apostates, yea, seditious and
desperately wicked miscreants. Besides the Word of God must suffer in the most
shameful and malicious manner, being persecuted blasphemed, contradicted,
perverted and falsely cited and interpreted. But let this pass; for it is the
way of the blind world that she condemns and persecutes the truth and the
children of God, and yet esteems it no sin.
In
the third place, what concerns us all, this commandment forbids all sins of the
tongue whereby we may injure or approach too closely to our neighbor. For to
bear false witness is nothing else than a work of the tongue. Now, whatever is
done with the tongue against a fellow-man God would have prohibited, whether it
be false preachers with their doctrine and blasphemy, false judges and witnesses
with their verdict, or outside of court by lying and evil-speaking. Here belongs
particularly the detestable, shameful vice of speaking behind a person's back
and slandering, to which the devil spurs us on and of which there would be much
to be said. For it is a common evil plague that every one prefers hearing evil
to hearing good of his neighbor; and although we ourselves are so bad that we
cannot suffer that any one should say anything bad about us, but every one would
much rather that all the world should speak of him in terms of gold, yet we
cannot bear that the best is spoken about
others.
Therefore, to avoid this vice we should
note that no one is allowed publicly to judge and reprove his neighbor, although
he may see him sin, unless he have a command to judge and to reprove. For there
is a great difference between these two things, judging sin and knowing sin. You
may indeed know it, but you are not to judge it. I can indeed see and hear that
my neighbor sins, but I have no command to report it to others. Now, if I rush
in, judging and passing sentence, I fall into a sin which is greater than his.
But if you know it, do nothing else than turn your ears into a grave and cover
it, until you are appointed to be judge and to punish by virtue of your
office.
Those, then, are called slanderers who
are not content with knowing a thing, but proceed to assume jurisdiction, and
when they know a slight offense of another, carry it into every corner, and are
delighted and tickled that they can stir up another's displeasure [baseness], as
swine roll themselves in the dirt and root in it with the snout. This is nothing
else than meddling with the judgment and office of God, and pronouncing sentence
and punishment with the most severe verdict. For no judge can punish to a higher
degree nor go farther than to say: "He is a thief, a murderer, a traitor," etc.
Therefore, whoever presumes to say the same of his neighbor goes just as far as
the emperor and all governments. For although you do not wield the sword, you
employ your poisonous tongue to the shame and hurt of your
neighbor.
God therefore would have it
prohibited that any one speak evil of another even though he be guilty, and the
latter know it right well; much less if he do not know it, and have it only from
hearsay. But you say: Shall I not say it if it be the truth? Answer: Why do you
not make accusation to regular judges? Ah, I cannot prove it publicly, and hence
I might be silenced and turned away in a harsh manner [incur the penalty of a
false accusation]. "Ah, indeed, do you smell the roast?" If you do not trust
yourself to stand before the proper authorities and to make answer, then hold
your tongue. But if you know it, know it for yourself and not for another. For
if you tell it to others, although it be true, you will appear as a liar,
because you cannot prove it, and you are, besides acting like a knave. For we
ought never to deprive any one of his honor or good name unless it be first
taken away from him publicly.
False witness,
then, is everything which cannot be properly proved. Therefore, what is not
manifest upon sufficient evidence no one shall make public or declare for truth;
and in short, whatever is secret should be allowed to remain secret, or, at any
rate, should be secretly reproved, as we shall hear. Therefore, if you encounter
an idle tongue which betrays and slanders some one, contradict such a one
promptly to his face, that he may blush thus many a one will hold his tongue who
else would bring some poor man into bad repute from which he would not easily
extricate himself. For honor and a good name are easily taken away, but not
easily restored.
Thus you see that it is
summarily forbidden to speak any evil of our neighbor, however the civil
government, preachers, father and mother excepted, on the understanding that
this commandment does not allow evil to go unpunished. Now, as according to the
Fifth Commandment no one is to be injured in body, and yet Master Hannes [the
executioner] is excepted, who by virtue of his office does his neighbor no good,
but only evil and harm, and nevertheless does not sin against God's commandment,
because God has on His own account instituted that office; for He has reserved
punishment for His own good pleasure, as He threatens in the First Commandment,
-- just so also, although no one has a right in his own person to judge and
condemn anybody, yet if they to whose office it belongs fail to do it, they sin
as well as he who would do so of his own accord, without such office. For here
necessity requires one to speak of the evil, to prefer charges, to investigate
and testify; and it is not different from the case of a physician who is
sometimes compelled to examine and handle the patient whom he is to cure in
secret parts. Just so governments, father and mother, brothers and sisters, and
other good friends, are under obligation to each other to reprove evil wherever
it is needful and profitable.
But the true way
in this matter would be to observe the order according to the Gospel, Matt. 18,
15, where Christ says: If thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell
him his fault between thee and him alone. Here you have a precious and excellent
teaching for governing well the tongue, which is to be carefully observed
against this detestable misuse. Let this, then, be your rule, that you do not
too readily spread evil concerning your neighbor and slander him to others, but
admonish him privately that he may amend [his life]. Likewise, also, if some one
report to you what this or that one has done, teach him, too, to go and admonish
him personally if he have seen it himself; but if not, that he hold his
tongue.
The same you can learn also from the
daily government of the household. For when the master of the house sees that
the servant does not do what he ought, he admonishes him personally. But if he
were so foolish as to let the servant sit at home, and went on the streets to
complain of him to his neighbors, he would no doubt be told: "You fool, what
does that concern us? Why do you not tell it to him ?" Behold, that would be
acting quite brotherly, so that the evil would be stayed, and your neighbor
would retain his honor. As Christ also says in the same place: If he hear thee,
thou host gained thy brother. Then you have done a great and excellent work; for
do you think it is a little matter to gain a brother? Let all monks and holy
orders step forth, with all their works melted together into one mass, and see
if they can boast that they have gained a
brother.
Further, Christ teaches: But if he
will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the mouth of
two or three witnesses every word may be established. So he whom it concerns is
always to be treated with personally, and not to be spoken of without his
knowledge. But if that do not avail, then bring it publicly before the
community, whether before the civil or the ecclesiastical tribunal. For then you
do not stand alone, but you have those witnesses with you by whom you can
convict the guilty one, relying on whom the judge can pronounce sentence and
punish. This is the right and regular course for checking and reforming a wicked
person. But if we gossip about another in all corners and stir the filth, no one
will be reformed, and afterwards when we are to stand up and bear witness, we
deny having said so. Therefore it would serve such tongues right if their itch
for slander were severely punished, as a warning to others. If you were acting
for your neighbor's reformation or from love of the truth, you would not sneak
about secretly nor shun the day and the
light.
All this has been said regarding secret
sins. But where the sin is quite public so that the judge and everybody know it
you can without any sin avoid him and let him go, because he has brought himself
into disgrace, and you may also publicly testify concerning him. For when a
matter is public in the light of day, there can be no slandering or false
judging or testifying; as, when we now reprove the Pope with his doctrine, which
is publicly set forth in books and proclaimed in all the world. For where the
sin is public, the reproof also must be public, that every one may learn to
guard against it.
Thus we have now the sum and
general understanding of this commandment, to wit, that no one do any injury
with the tongue to his neighbor, whether friend or foe, nor speak evil of him,
no matter whether it be true or false, unless it be done by commandment or for
his reformation, but that every one employ his tongue and make it serve for the
best of every one else, to cover up his neighbor's sins and infirmities, excuse
them, palliate and garnish them with his own reputation. The chief reason for
this should be the one which Christ alleges in the Gospel, in which He
comprehends all commandments respecting our neighbor, Matt. 7, 12: Whatsoever ye
would that men should do to you, do ye even so to
them.
Even nature teaches the same thing in our
own bodies, as St. Paul says, 1 Cor. 12, 22: Much more, those members of the
body which seem to be more feeble are necessary; and those members of the body
which we think to be less honorable, upon these we bestow more abundant honor;
and our uncomely parts have more abundant comeliness. No one covers his face,
eyes, nose, and mouth, for they, being in themselves the most honorable members
which we have, do not require it. But the most infirm members, of which we are
ashamed, we cover with all diligence; hands, eyes, and the whole body must help
to cover and conceal them. Thus also among ourselves should we adorn whatever
blemishes and infirmities we find in our neighbor, and serve and help him to
promote his honor to the best of our ability, and, on the other hand, prevent
whatever may be discreditable to him. And it is especially an excellent and
noble virtue for one always to explain advantageously and put the best
construction upon all he may hear of his neighbor (if it be not notoriously
evil), or at any rate to condone it over and against the poisonous tongues that
are busy wherever they can pry out and discover something to blame in a
neighbor, and that explain and pervert it in the worst way; as is done now
especially with the precious Word of God and its
preachers.
There are comprehended therefore in
this commandment quite a multitude of good works which please God most highly,
and bring abundant good and blessing, if only the blind world and the false
saints would recognize them. For there is nothing on or in entire man which can
do both greater and more extensive good or harm in spiritual and in temporal
matters than the tongue, though it is the least and feeblest
member.
Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house. Thou shalt not covet thy
neighbor's wife, nor his man-servant, nor his maid-servant, nor his cattle, nor
anything that is
his.
These
two commandments are given quite exclusively to the Jews; nevertheless, in part
they also concern us. For they do not interpret them as referring to unchastity
or theft, because these are sufficiently forbidden above. They also thought that
they had kept all those when they had done or not done the external act.
Therefore God has added these two commandments in order that it be esteemed as
sin and forbidden to desire or in any way to aim at getting our neighbor's wife
or possessions; and especially because under the Jewish government man-servants
and maid-servants were not free as now to serve for wages as long as they
pleased, but were their master's property with their body and all they had, as
cattle and other possessions. Moreover, every man had power over his wife to put
her away publicly by giving her a bill of divorce, and to take another.
Therefore they were in constant danger among each other that if one took a fancy
to another's wife, he might allege any reason both to dismiss his own wife and
to estrange the other's wife from him, that he might obtain her under pretext of
right. That was not considered a sin nor disgrace with them; as little as now
with hired help, when a proprietor dismisses his man-servant or maid-servant, or
takes another's servants from him in any
way.
Therefore (I say) they thus interpreted
these commandments, and that rightly (although their scope reaches somewhat
farther and higher), that no one think or purpose to obtain what belongs to
another, such as his wife, servants, house and estate, land meadows, cattle,
even with a show of right or by a subterfuge, yet with injury to his neighbor.
For above, in the Seventh Commandment, the vice is forbidden where one wrests to
himself the possessions of others, or withholds them from his neighbor, which he
cannot do by right. But here it is also forbidden to alienate anything from your
neighbor, even though you could do so with honor in the eyes of the world, so
that no one could accuse or blame you as though you had obtained it
wrongfully.
For we are so inclined by nature
that no one desires to see another have as much as himself, and each one
acquires as much as he can; the other may fare as best he can. And yet we
pretend to be godly, know how to adorn ourselves most finely and conceal our
rascality, resort to and invent adroit devices and deceitful artifices (such as
now are daily most ingeniously contrived) as though they were derived from the
law codes; yea, we even dare impertinently to refer to it, and boast of it, and
will not have it called rascality, but shrewdness and caution. In this lawyers
and jurists assist, who twist and stretch the law to suit it to their cause,
stress words and use them for a subterfuge, irrespective of equity or their
neighbor's necessity. And, in short, whoever is the most expert and cunning in
these affairs finds most help in law, as they themselves say: Vigilantibus iura
subveniunt [that is, The laws favor the
watchful].
This last commandment therefore is
given not for rogues in the eyes of the world, but just for the most pious, who
wish to be praised and be called honest and upright people, since they have not
offended against the former commandments, as especially the Jews claimed to be,
and even now many great noblemen, gentlemen, and princes. For the other common
masses belong yet farther down, under the Seventh Commandment, as those who are
not much concerned whether they acquire their possessions with honor and
right.
Now, this occurs most frequently in
cases that are brought into court, where it is the purpose to get something from
our neighbor and to force him out of his own. As (to give examples), when people
quarrel and wrangle about a large inheritance, real estate, etc., they avail
themselves of, and resort to, whatever has the appearance of right, so dressing
and adorning everything that the law must favor their side, and they keep the
property with such title that no one can make complaint or lay claim thereto. In
like manner, if any one desire to have a castle, city, duchy, or any other great
thing, he practises so much financiering through relationships, and by any means
he can, that the other is judicially deprived of it, and it is adjudicated to
him, and confirmed with deed and seal and declared to have been acquired by
princely title and honestly.
Likewise also in
common trade where one dexterously slips something out of another's hand, so
that he must look after it, or surprises and defrauds him in a matter in which
he sees advantage and benefit for himself, so that the latter, perhaps on
account of distress or debt, cannot regain or redeem it without injury, and the
former gains the half or even more; and yet this must not be considered as
acquired by fraud or stolen, but honestly bought. Here they say: First come,
first served, and every one must look to his own interest, let another get what
he can. And who can be so smart as to think of all the ways in which one can get
many things into his possession by such specious pretexts? This the world does
not consider wrong [nor is it punished by laws], and will not see that the
neighbor is thereby placed at a disadvantage, and must sacrifice what he cannot
spare without injury. Yet there is no one who wishes this to be done to him;
from which we can easily perceive that such devices and pretexts are
false.
Thus it was done formerly also with
respect to wives: they knew such devices that if one were pleased with another
woman, he personally or through others (as there were many ways and means to be
invented) caused her husband to conceive a displeasure toward her, or had her
resist him and so conduct herself that he was obliged to dismiss her and leave
her to the other. That sort of thing undoubtedly prevailed much under the Law,
as also we read in the (Gospel of King Herod that he took his brother's wife
while he was yet living, and yet wished to be thought an honorable, pious man,
as St. Mark also testifies of him. But such an example, I trust, will not occur
among us, because in the New Testament those who are married are forbidden to be
divorced, except in such a case where one [shrewdly] by some stratagem takes
away a rich bride from another. But it is not a rare thing with us that one
estranges or alienates another's man-servant or maid-servant, or entices them
away by flattering words.
In whatever way such
things happen, we must know that God does not wish that you deprive your
neighbor of anything that belongs to him so that he suffer the loss and you
gratify your avarice with it, even if you could keep it honorably before the
world; for it is a secret and insidious imposition practised under the hat, as
we say, that it may not be observed. For although you go your way as if you had
done no one any wrong, you have nevertheless injured your neighbor; and if it is
not called stealing and cheating, yet it is called coveting your neighbor's
property, that is, aiming at possession of it, enticing it away from him without
his will, and being unwilling to see him enjoy what God has granted him. And
although the judge and every one must leave you in possession of it, yet God
will not leave you therein; for He sees the deceitful heart and the malice of
the world, which is sure to take an ell in addition wherever you yield to her a
finger's breadth, and at length public wrong and violence
follow.
Therefore we allow these commandments
to remain in their ordinary meaning, that it is commanded, first, that we do not
desire our neighbor's damage, nor even assist, nor give occasion for it, but
gladly wish and leave him what he has, and, besides, advance and preserve for
him what may be for his profit and service, as we should wish to be treated.
Thus these commandments are especially directed against envy and miserable
avarice, God wishing to remove all causes and sources whence arises everything
by which we do injury to our neighbor, and therefore He expresses it in plain
words: Thou shalt not covet, etc. For He would especially have the heart pure,
although we shall never attain to that as long as we live here; so that this
commandment will remain, like all the rest, one that will constantly accuse us
and show how godly we are in the sight of
God!
I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and
earth.
This
portrays and sets forth most briefly what is the essence, will, activity, and
work of God the Father. For since the Ten Commandments have taught that we are
to have not more than one God, the question might be asked, What kind of a
person is God? What does He do? How can we praise or portray and describe Him,
that He may be known? Now, that is taught in this and in the following article,
so that the Creed is nothing else than the answer and confession of Christians
arranged with respect to the First Commandment. As if you were to ask a little
child: My dear, what sort of a God have you? What do you know of Him? he could
say: This is my God: first, the Father, who has created heaven and earth;
besides this only One I regard nothing else as God; for there is no one else who
could create heaven and earth.
But for the
learned, and those who are somewhat advanced [have acquired some Scriptural
knowledge], these three articles may all be expanded and divided into as many
parts as there are words. But now for young scholars let it suffice to indicate
the most necessary points, namely, as we have said, that this article refers to
the Creation: that we emphasize the words: Creator of heaven and earth But what
is the force of this, or what do you mean by these words: I believe in God the
Father Almighty, Maker, etc.? Answer: This is what I mean and believe, that I am
a creature of God; that is, that He has given and constantly preserves to me my
body, soul, and life, members great and small, all my senses, reason, and
understanding, and so on, food and drink, clothing and support, wife and
children, domestics, house and home, etc. Besides, He causes all creatures to
serve for the uses and necessities of life -- sun, moon and stars in the
firmament, day and night, air, fire, water, earth, and whatever it bears and
produces, birds and fishes, beasts, grain, and all kinds of produce, and
whatever else there is of bodily and temporal goods, good government, peace,
security. Thus we learn from this article that none of us has of himself, nor
can preserve, his life nor anything that is here enumerated or can be
enumerated, however small and unimportant a thing it might be, for all is
comprehended in the word Creator.
Moreover, we
also confess that God the Father has not only given us all that we have and see
before our eyes, but daily preserves and defends us against all evil and
misfortune, averts all sorts of danger and calamity; and that He does all this
out of pure love and goodness, without our merit, as a benevolent Father, who
cares for us that no evil befall us. But to speak more of this belongs in the
other two parts of this article, where we say: Father
Almighty
Now, since: all that we possess, and,
moreover, whatever, in addition, is in heaven and upon the earth, is daily
given, preserved, and kept for us by God, it is readily inferred and concluded
that it is our duty to love, praise, and thank Him for it without ceasing, and,
in short, to serve Him with all these things as He demands and has enjoined in
the Ten Commandments.
Here we could say much if
we were to expatiate, how few there are that believe this article. For we all
pass over it, hear it and say it, but neither see nor consider what the words
teach us. For if we believed it with the heart, we would also act accordingly,
and not stalk about proudly, act defiantly, and boast as though we had life,
riches, power, and honor, etc., of ourselves, so that others must fear and serve
us, as is the practise of the wretched, perverse world, which is drowned in
blindness, and abuses all the good things and gifts of God only for its own
pride, avarice, lust, and luxury, and never once regards God, so as to thank Him
or acknowledge Him as Lord and
Creator.
Therefore, this article ought to
humble and terrify us all, if we believed it. For we sin daily with eyes, ears,
hands, body and soul, money and possessions, and with everything we have,
especially those who even fight against the Word of God. Yet Christians have
this advantage, that they acknowledge themselves in duty bound to serve God for
all these things, and to be obedient to Him [which the world knows not how to
do].
We ought, therefore, daily to practise
this article, impress it upon our mind, and to remember it in all that meets our
eyes, and in all good that falls to our lot, and wherever we escape from
calamity or danger, that it is God who gives and does all these things, that
therein we sense and see His paternal heart and His transcendent love toward us.
Thereby the heart would be warmed and kindled to be thankful, and to employ all
such good things to the honor and praise of
God.
Thus we have most briefly presented the
meaning of this article, as much as is at first necessary for the most simple to
learn, both as to what we have and receive from God, and what we owe in return,
which is a most excellent knowledge, but a far greater treasure. For here we see
how the Father has given Himself to us, together with all creatures, and has
most richly provided for us in this life, besides that He has overwhelmed us
with unspeakable, eternal treasures by His Son and the Holy Ghost, as we shall
hear.
This is, indeed, somewhat obscure, and not
expressed in good German, for in our mother-tongue we would say: Heavenly
Father, help that by all means Thy name may be holy. But what is it to pray that
His name may be holy? Is it not holy already? Answer: Yes, it is always holy in
its nature, but in our use it is not holy. For God's name was given us when we
became Christians and were baptized, so that we are called children of God and
have the Sacraments by which He so incorporates us in Himself that everything
which is God's must serve for our use.
Here now
the great need exists for which we ought to be most concerned, that this name
have its proper honor, be esteemed holy and sublime as the greatest treasure and
sanctuary that we have; and that as godly children we pray that the name of God,
which is already holy in heaven, may also be and remain holy with us upon earth
and in all the world.
But how does it become
holy among us? Answer, as plainly as it can be said: When both our doctrine and
life are godly and Christian. For since in this prayer we call God our Father,
it is our duty always to deport and demean ourselves as godly children, that He
may not receive shame, but honor and praise from
us.
Now the name of God is profaned by us
either in words or in works. (For whatever we do upon the earth must be either
words or works, speech or act.) In the first place, then, it is profaned when
men preach, teach, and speak in the name of God what is false and misleading, so
that His name must serve to adorn and to find a market for falsehood. That is,
indeed, the greatest profanation and dishonor of the divine name. Furthermore,
also when men, by swearing, cursing, conjuring, etc., grossly abuse the holy
name as a cloak for their shame. In the second place also by an openly wicked
life and works, when those who are called Christians and the people of God are
adulterers, drunkards, misers, envious, and slanderers. Here again must the name
of God come to shame and be profaned because of us. For just as it is a shame
and disgrace to a natural father to have a bad perverse child that opposes him
in words and deeds, so that on its account he suffers contempt and reproach, so
also it brings dishonor upon God if we who are called by His name and have all
manner of goods from Him teach, speak, and live in any other manner except as
godly and heavenly children, so that people say of us that we must be not God's,
but the devil's children.
Thus you see that in
this petition we pray just for that which God demands in the Second Commandment;
namely, that His name be not taken in vain to swear, curse, lie, deceive, etc.,
but be usefully employed to the praise and honor of God. For whoever employs the
name of God for any sort of wrong profanes and desecrates this holy name, as
aforetime a church was considered desecrated when a murder or any other crime
had been committed in it, or when a pyx or relic was desecrated, as being holy
in themselves, yet become unholy in use. Thus this point is easy and clear if
only the language is understood, that to hallow is the same as in our idiom to
praise, magnify, and honor both in word and
deed.
Here, now, learn how great need there is
of such prayer. For because we see how full the world is of sects and false
teachers, who all wear the holy name as a cover and sham for their doctrines of
devils, we ought by all means to pray without ceasing, and to cry and call upon
God against all such as preach and believe falsely and whatever opposes and
persecutes our Gospel and pure doctrine, and would suppress it, as bishops,
tyrants, enthusiasts, etc. Likewise also for ourselves who have the Word of God,
but are not thankful for it, nor live as we ought according to the same. If now
you pray for this with your heart, you can be sure that it pleases God; for He
will not hear anything more dear to Him than that His honor and praise is
exalted above everything else, and His Word is taught in its purity and is
esteemed precious and dear.
As we prayed in the First Petition
concerning the honor and name of God that He would prevent the world from
adorning its lies and wickedness with it, but cause it to be esteemed sublime
and holy both in doctrine and life, so that He may be praised and magnified in
us, so here we pray that His kingdom also may come. But just as the name of God
is in itself holy, and we pray nevertheless that it be holy among us, so also
His kingdom comes of itself, without our prayer, yet we pray nevertheless that
it may come to us, that is, prevail among us and with us, so that we may be a
part of those among whom His name is hallowed and His kingdom
prospers.
But what is the kingdom of God?
Answer: Nothing else than what we learned in the Creed, that God sent His Son
Jesus Christ our Lord, into the world to redeem and deliver us from the power of
the devil, and to bring us to Himself, and to govern us as a King of
righteousness, life and salvation against sin death, and an evil conscience, for
which end He has also bestowed His Holy Ghost, who is to bring these things home
to us by His holy Word, and to illumine and strengthen us in the faith by His
power.
Therefore we pray here in the first
place that this may become effective with us, and that His name be so praised
through the holy Word of God and a Christian life that both we who have accepted
it may abide and daily grow therein, and that it may gain approbation and
adherence among other people and proceed with power throughout the world, that
many may find entrance into the Kingdom of Grace, be made partakers of
redemption, being led thereto by the Holy Ghost, in order that thus we may all
together remain forever in the one kingdom now
begun.
For the coming of God's Kingdom to us
occurs in two ways; first, here in time through the Word and faith; and
secondly, in eternity forever through revelation. Now we pray for both these
things, that it may come to those who are not yet in it, and, by daily increase,
to us who have received the same, and hereafter in eternal life. All this is
nothing else than saying: Dear Father, we pray, give us first Thy Word, that the
Gospel be preached properly throughout the world; and secondly, that it be
received in faith, and work and live in us, so that through the Word and the
power of the Holy Ghost Thy kingdom may prevail among us, and the kingdom of the
devil be put down, that he may have no right or power over us, until at last it
shall be utterly destroyed, and sin, death, and hell shall be exterminated, that
we may live forever in perfect righteousness and
blessedness.
From this you perceive that we
pray here not for a crust of bread or a temporal, perishable good, but for an
eternal inestimable treasure and everything that God Himself possesses; which is
far too great for any human heart to think of desiring if He had not Himself
commanded us to pray for the same. But because He is God, He also claims the
honor of giving much more and more abundantly than any one can comprehend, --
like an eternal, unfailing fountain, which, the more it pours forth and
overflows, the more it continues to give, -- and He desires nothing more
earnestly of us than that we ask much and great things of Him, and again is
angry if we do not ask and pray
confidently.
For just as when the richest and
most mighty emperor would bid a poor beggar ask whatever he might desire, and
were ready to give great imperial presents, and the fool would beg only for a
dish of gruel, he would be rightly considered a rogue and a scoundrel who
treated the command of his imperial majesty as a jest and sport, and was not
worthy of coming into his presence: so also it is a great reproach and dishonor
to God if we, to whom He offers and pledges so many unspeakable treasures,
despise the same, or have not the confidence to receive them, but scarcely
venture to pray for a piece of bread.
All this
is the fault of the shameful unbelief which does not look to God for as much
good as will satisfy the stomach, much less expects without doubt such eternal
treasures of God. Therefore we must strengthen ourselves against it, and let
this be our first prayer; then, indeed, we shall have all else in abundance, as
Christ teaches [Matt. 6, 33]: Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His
righteousness and all these things shall be added unto you. For how could He
allow us to suffer want and to be straitened in temporal things when He promises
that which is eternal and imperishable?
Thus far we have prayed that God's name be
honored by us, and that His kingdom prevail among us; in which two points is
comprehended all that pertains to the honor of God and to our salvation, that we
receive as our own God and all His riches. But now a need just as great arises,
namely, that we firmly keep them, and do not suffer ourselves to be torn
therefrom. For as in a good government it is not only necessary that there be
those who build and govern well, but also those who make defense, afford
protection and maintain it firmly, so here likewise, although we have prayed for
the greatest need, for the Gospel, faith, and the Holy Ghost, that He may govern
us and redeem us from the power of the devil, we must also pray that His will be
done. For there will be happenings quite strange if we are to abide therein, as
we shall have to suffer many thrusts and blows on that account from everything
that ventures to oppose and prevent the fulfilment of the two petitions that
precede.
For no one believes how the devil
opposes and resists them, and cannot suffer that any one teach or believe
aright. And it hurts him beyond measure to suffer his lies and abominations,
that have been honored under the most specious pretexts of the divine name, to
be exposed, and to be disgraced himself, and, besides, be driven out of the
heart, and suffer such a breach to be made in his kingdom. Therefore he chafes
and rages as a fierce enemy with all his power and might, and marshals all his
subjects, and, in addition enlists the world and our own flesh as his allies.
For our flesh is in itself indolent and inclined to evil, even though we have
accepted and believe the Word of God. The world, however, is perverse and
wicked; this he incites against us, fans and stirs the fire, that he may hinder
and drive us back, cause us to fall, and again bring us under his power. Such is
all his will, mind, and thought, for which he strives day and night, and never
rests a moment, employing all arts, wiles, ways, and means whichever he can
invent.
If we would be Christians, therefore,
we must surely expect and reckon upon having the devil with all his angels and
the world as our enemies, who will bring every possible misfortune and grief
upon us. For where the Word of God is preached, accepted, or believed, and
produces fruit, there the holy cross cannot be wanting. And let no one think
that he shall have peace; but he must risk what whatever he has upon earth --
possessions, honor. house and estate, wife and children, body and life. Now,
this hurts our flesh and the old Adam; for the test is to be steadfast and to
suffer with patience in whatever way we are assailed, and to let go whatever is
taken from us.
Hence there is just as great
need, as in all the others, that we pray without ceasing: "Dear Father, Thy will
be done, not the will of the devil and of our enemies, nor of anything that
would persecute and suppress Thy holy Word or hinder Thy kingdom; and grant that
we may bear with patience and overcome whatever is to be endured on that
account, lest our poor flesh yield or fall away from weakness or
sluggishness."
Behold, thus we have in these
three petitions, in the simplest manner, the need which relates to God Himself,
yet all for our sakes. For whatever we pray concerns only us, namely, as we have
said, that what must be done anyway without us, may also be done in us. For as
His name must be hallowed and His kingdom come without our prayer, so also His
will must be done and succeed although the devil with all his adherents raise a
great tumult, are angry and rage against it, and undertake to exterminate the
Gospel utterly. But for our own sakes we must pray that even against their fury
His will be done without hindrance also among us, that they may not be able to
accomplish anything and we remain firm against all violence and persecution, and
submit to such will of God.
Such prayer, then,
is to be our protection and defense now, is to repel and put down all that the
devil, Pope, bishops, tyrants, and heretics can do against our Gospel. Let them
all rage and attempt their utmost, and deliberate and resolve how they may
suppress and exterminate us, that their will and counsel may prevail: over and
against this one or two Christians with this petition alone shall be our wall
against which they shall run and dash themselves to pieces. This consolation and
confidence we have, that the will and purpose of the devil and of all our
enemies shall and must fail and come to naught, however proud, secure, and
powerful they know themselves to be. For if their will were not broken and
hindered, the kingdom of God could not abide on earth nor His name be
hallowed.
Here, now, we consider the poor
breadbasket, the necessaries of our body and of the temporal life. It is a brief
and simple word, but it has a very wide scope. For when you mention and pray for
daily bread, you pray for everything that is necessary in order to have and
enjoy daily bread and, on the other hand, against everything which interferes
with it. Therefore you must open wide and extend your thoughts not only to the
oven or the flour-bin but to the distant field and the entire land, which bears
and brings to us daily bread and every sort of sustenance. For if God did not
cause it to grow, and bless and preserve it in the field, we could never take
bread from the oven or have any to set upon the
table.
To comprise it briefly, this petition
includes everything that belongs to our entire life in the world, because on
that account alone do we need daily bread. Now for our life it is not only
necessary that our body have food and covering and other necessaries, but also
that we spend our days in peace and quiet among the people with whom we live and
have intercourse in daily business and conversation and all sorts of doings, in
short, whatever pertains both to the domestic and to the neighborly or civil
relation and government. For where these two things are hindered [intercepted
and disturbed] that they do not prosper as they ought, the necessaries of life
also are impeded, so that ultimately life cannot be maintained. And there is,
indeed, the greatest need to pray for temporal authority and government, as that
by which most of all God preserves to us our daily bread and all the comforts of
this life. For though we have received of God all good things in abundance we
are not able to retain any of them or use them in security and happiness, if He
did not give us a permanent and peaceful government. For where there are
dissension, strife, and war, there the daily bread is already taken away, or at
least checked.
Therefore it would be very
proper to place in the coat-of-arms of every pious prince a loaf of bread
instead of a lion, or a wreath of rue, or to stamp it upon the coin, to remind
both them and their subjects that by their office we have protection and peace,
and that without them we could not eat and retain our daily bread. Therefore
they are also worthy of all honor, that we give to them for their office what we
ought and can, as to those through whom we enjoy in peace and quietness what we
have, because otherwise we would not keep a farthing; and that, in addition, we
also pray for them that through them God may bestow on us the more blessing and
good.
Let this be a very brief explanation and
sketch, showing how far this petition extends through all conditions on earth.
Of this any one might indeed make a long prayer, and with many words enumerate
all the things that are included therein, as that we pray God to give us food
and drink, clothing, house, and home, and health of body; also that He cause the
grain and fruits of the field to grow and mature well; furthermore, that He help
us at home towards good housekeeping, that He give and preserve to us a godly
wife, children, and servants, that He cause our work, trade, or whatever we are
engaged in to prosper and succeed, favor us with faithful neighbors and good
friends, etc. Likewise, that He give to emperors, kings, and all estates, and
especially to the rulers of our country and to all counselors, magistrates, and
officers, wisdom, strength, and success that they may govern well and vanquish
the Turks and all enemies; to subjects and the common people, obedience, peace,
and harmony in their life with one another, and on the other hand, that He would
preserve us from all sorts of calamity to body and livelihood, as lightning,
hail, fire, flood, poison, pestilence, cattle-plague, war and bloodshed, famine,
destructive beasts, wicked men, etc. All this it is well to impress upon the
simple, namely, that these things come from God, and must be prayed for by
us.
But this petition is especially directed
also against our chief enemy, the devil. For all his thought and desire is to
deprive us of all that we have from God, or to hinder it; and he is not
satisfied to obstruct and destroy spiritual government in leading souls astray
by his lies and bringing them under his power, but he also prevents and hinders
the stability of all government and honorable, peaceable relations on earth.
There he causes so much contention, murder, sedition, and war also lightning and
hail to destroy grain and cattle, to poison the air, etc. In short, he is sorry
that any one has a morsel of bread from God and eats it in peace; and if it were
in his power, and our prayer (next to God) did not prevent him, we would not
keep a straw in the field, a farthing in the house, yea, not even our life for
an hour, especially those who have the Word of God and would like to be
Christians.
Behold, thus God wishes to indicate
to us how He cares for us in all our need, and faithfully provides also for our
temporal support. and although He abundantly grants and preserves these things
even to the wicked and knaves, yet He wishes that we pray for them, in order
that we may recognize that we receive them from His hand, and may feel His
paternal goodness toward us therein. For when He withdraws His hand, nothing can
prosper nor be maintained in the end, as, indeed, we daily see and experience.
How much trouble there is now in the world only on account of bad coin, yea, on
account of daily oppression and raising of prices in common trade, bargaining
and labor on the part of those who wantonly oppress the poor and deprive them of
their daily bread! This we must suffer indeed; but let them take care that they
do not lose the common intercession, and beware lest this petition in the Lord's
Prayer be against them.
This part now relates to our poor miserable
life, which, although we have and believe the Word of God, and do and submit to
His will, and are supported by His gifts and blessings is nevertheless not
without sin. For we still stumble daily and transgress because we live in the
world among men who do us much harm and give us cause for impatience, anger,
revenge, etc. Besides, we have Satan at our back, who sets upon us on every
side, and fights (as we have heard) against all the foregoing petitions, so that
it is not possible always to stand firm in such a persistent
conflict.
Therefore there is here again great
need to call upon God and to pray: Dear Father, forgive us our trespasses. Not
as though He did not forgive sin without and even before our prayer (for He has
given us the Gospel, in which is pure forgiveness before we prayed or ever
thought about it). But this is to the intent that we may recognize and accept
such forgiveness. For since the flesh in which we daily live is of such a nature
that it neither trusts nor believes God, and is ever active in evil lusts and
devices, so that we sin daily in word and deed, by commission and omission by
which the conscience is thrown into unrest, so that it is afraid of the wrath
and displeasure of God, and thus loses the comfort and confidence derived from
the Gospel; therefore it is ceaselessly necessary that we run hither and obtain
consolation to comfort the conscience
again.
But this should serve God's purpose of
breaking our pride and keeping us humble. For in case any one should boast of
his godliness and despise others, God has reserved this prerogative to Himself,
that the person is to consider himself and place this prayer before his eyes,
and he will find that he is no better than others, and that in the presence of
God all must lower their plumes, and be glad that they can attain forgiveness.
And let no one think that as long as we live here he can reach such a position
that he will not need such forgiveness. In short, if God does not forgive
without ceasing, we are lost.
It is therefore
the intent of this petition that God would not regard our sins and hold up to us
what we daily deserve, but would deal graciously with us, and forgive, as He has
promised, and thus grant us a joyful and confident conscience to stand before
Him in prayer. For where the heart is not in right relation towards God, nor can
take such confidence, it will nevermore venture to pray. But such a confident
and joyful heart can spring from nothing else than the [certain] knowledge of
the forgiveness of sin.
But there is here
attached a necessary, yet consolatory addition: As we forgive. He has promised
that we shall be sure that everything is forgiven and pardoned, yet in the
manner that we also forgive our neighbor. For just as we daily sin much against
God and yet He forgives everything through grace, so we, too, must ever forgive
our neighbor who does us injury, violence, and wrong, shows malice toward us,
etc. If, therefore you do not forgive, then do not think that God forgives you;
but if you forgive, you have this consolation and assurance, that you are
forgiven in heaven, not on account of your forgiving, -- for God forgives freely
and without condition, out of pure grace, because He has so promised, as the
Gospel teaches, -- but in order that He may set this up for our confirmation and
assurance for a sign alongside of the promise which accords with this prayer,
Luke 6, 37: Forgive, and ye shall be forgiven. Therefore Christ also repeats it
soon after the Lord's Prayer, and says, Matt. 6,14: For if ye forgive men their
trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you,
etc.
This sign is therefore attached to this
petition, that, when we pray, we remember the promise and reflect thus: Dear
Father, for this reason I come and pray Thee to forgive me, not that I can make
satisfaction, or can merit anything by my works, but because Thou hast promised
and attached the seal thereto that I should be as sure as though I had
absolution pronounced by Thyself. For as much as Baptism and the Lord's Supper
appointed as external signs, effect, so much also this sign can effect to
confirm our consciences and cause them to rejoice. And it is especially given
for this purpose, that we might use and practise it every hour, as a thing that
we have with us at all times.
We have now heard enough what toil and
labor is required to retain all that for which we pray, and to persevere
therein, which, however, is not achieved without infirmities and stumbling.
Besides, although we have received forgiveness and a good conscience and are
entirely acquitted, yet is our life of such a nature that one stands to-day and
to-morrow falls. Therefore, even though we be godly now and stand before God
with a good conscience, we must pray again that He would not suffer us to
relapse and yield to trials and
temptations.
Temptation, however, or (as our
Saxons in olden times used to call it) Bekoerunge, is of three kinds, namely, of
the flesh, of the world and of the devil. For in the flesh we dwell and carry
the old Adam about our neck, who exerts himself and incites us daily to
inchastity, laziness, gluttony and drunkenness, avarice and deception, to
defraud our neighbor and to overcharge him, and, in short, to all manner of evil
lusts which cleave to us by nature, and to which we are incited by the society,
example and what we hear and see of other people, which often wound and inflame
even an innocent heart.
Next comes the world,
which offends us in word and deed, and impels us to anger and impatience. In
short, there is nothing but hatred and envy, enmity, violence and wrong,
unfaithfulness, vengeance, cursing, raillery slander, pride and haughtiness,
with superfluous finery, honor, fame, and power, where no one is willing to be
the least, but every one desires to sit at the head and to be seen before
all.
Then comes the devil, inciting and
provoking in all directions, but especially agitating matters that concern the
conscience and spiritual affairs, namely, to induce us to despise and disregard
both the Word and works of God to tear us away from faith, hope, and love and
bring us into misbelief, false security, and obduracy, or, on the other hand, to
despair, denial of God, blasphemy, and innumerable other shocking things. These
are indeed snares and nets, yea, real fiery darts which are shot most venomously
into the heart, not by flesh and blood, but by the
devil.
Great and grievous, indeed, are these
dangers and temptations which every Christian must bear, even though each one
were alone by himself, so that every hour that we are in this vile life where we
are attacked on all sides, chased and hunted down, we are moved to cry out and
to pray that God would not suffer us to become weary and faint and to relapse
into sin, shame, and unbelief. For otherwise it is impossible to overcome even
the least temptation.
This, then, is leading us
not into temptation, to wit, when He gives us power and strength to resist, the
temptation, however, not being taken away or removed. For while we live in the
flesh and have the devil about us, no one can escape temptation and allurements;
and it cannot be otherwise than that we must endure trials, yea, be engulfed in
them; but we pray for this, that we may not fall and be drowned in
them.
To feel temptation is therefore a far
different thing from consenting or yielding to it. We must all feel it, although
not all in the same manner, but some in a greater degree and more severely than
others; as, the young suffer especially from the flesh, afterwards, they that
attain to middle life and old age, from the world, but others who are occupied
with spiritual matters, that is, strong Christians, from the devil. But such
feeling, as long as it is against our will and we would rather be rid of it, can
harm no one. For if we did not feel it, it could not be called a temptation. But
to consent thereto is when we give it the reins and do not resist or pray
against it.
Therefore we Christians must be
armed and daily expect to be incessantly attacked, in order that no one may go
on in security and heedlessly, as though the devil were far from us, but at all
times expect and parry his blows. For though I am now chaste, patient, kind, and
in firm faith, the devil will this very hour send such an arrow into my heart
that I can scarcely stand. For he is an enemy that never desists nor becomes
tired, so that when one temptation ceases, there always arise others and fresh
ones.
Accordingly, there is no help or comfort
except to run hither and to take hold of the Lord's Prayer, and thus speak to
God from the heart: Dear Father, Thou hast bidden me pray; let me not relapse
because of temptations. Then you will see that they must desist, and finally
acknowledge themselves conquered. Else if you venture to help yourself by your
own thoughts and counsel, you will only make the matter worse and give the devil
more space. For he has a serpent's head, which if it gain an opening into which
he can slip, the whole body will follow without check. But prayer can prevent
him and drive him back.
In the Greek text this petition reads thus:
Deliver or preserve us from the Evil One, or the Malicious One; and it looks as
if He were speaking of the devil, as though He would comprehend everything in
one so that the entire substance of all our prayer is directed against our chief
enemy. For it is he who hinders among us everything that we pray for: the name
or honor of God, God's kingdom and will, our daily bread, a cheerful good
conscience, etc.
Therefore we finally sum it
all up and say: Dear Father pray, help that we be rid of all these calamities.
But there is nevertheless also included whatever evil may happen to us under the
devil's kingdom -- poverty, shame, death, and, in short, all the agonizing
misery and heartache of which there is such an unnumbered multitude on the
earth. For since the devil is not only a liar, but also a murderer, he
constantly seeks our life, and wreaks his anger whenever he can afflict our
bodies with misfortune and harm. Hence it comes that he often breaks men's necks
or drives them to insanity, drowns some, and incites many to commit suicide, and
to many other terrible calamities. Therefore there is nothing for us to do upon
earth but to pray against this arch enemy without ceasing. For unless God
preserved us, we would not be safe from him even for an
hour.
Hence you see again how God wishes us to
pray to Him also for all the things which affect our bodily interests, so that
we seek and expect help nowhere else except in Him. But this matter He has put
last; for if we are to be preserved and delivered from all evil, the name of God
must first be hallowed in us, His kingdom must be with us, and His will be done.
After that He will finally preserve us from sin and shame, and, besides, from
everything that may hurt or injure us.
Thus God
has briefly placed before us all the distress which may ever come upon us, so
that we might have no excuse whatever for not praying. But all depends upon
this, that we learn also to say Amen, that is, that we do not doubt that our
prayer is surely heard and [what we pray] shall be done. For this is nothing
else than the word of undoubting faith, which does not pray at a venture, but
knows that God does not lie to him, since He has promised to grant it.
Therefore, where there is no such faith, there cannot be true prayer
either.
It is, therefore, a pernicious delusion
of those who pray in such a manner that they dare not from the heart say yea and
positively conclude that God hears them, but remain in doubt and say, How should
I be so bold as to boast that God hears my prayer? For I am but a poor sinner,
etc.
The reason for this is, they regard not
the promise of God, but their own work and worthiness, whereby they despise God
and reproach Him with lying, and therefore they receive nothing. As St. James
says [1, 6]: But let him ask in faith, nothing wavering; for he that wavereth is
like a wave of the sea, driven with the wind and tossed. For let not that man
think that he shall receive anything of the Lord. Behold, such importance God
attaches to the fact that we are sure we do not pray in vain, and that we do not
in any way despise our prayer.
We have now finished the three chief
parts of the common Christian doctrine. Besides these we have yet to speak of
our two Sacraments instituted by Christ, of which also every Christian ought to
have at least an ordinary, brief instruction, because without them there can be
no Christian; although, alas! hitherto no instruction concerning them has been
given. But, in the first place, we take up Baptism, by which we are first
received into the Christian Church. However, in order that it may be readily
understood we will treat of it in an orderly manner, and keep only to that which
it is necessary for us to know. For how it is to be maintained and defended
against heretics and sects we will commend to the
learned.
In the first place, we must above all
things know well the words upon which Baptism is founded, and to which
everything refers that is to be said on the subject, namely, where the Lord
Christ speaks in the last chapter of Matthew, v.
19:
Go ye therefore and teach all nations,
baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy
Ghost.
Likewise in St. Mark, the last chapter,
v. 16:
He that believeth and is baptized shall
be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned
.
In these words you must note, in the first
place, that here stand God's commandment and institution, lest we doubt that
Baptism is divine, not devised nor invented by men. For as truly as I can say,
No man has spun the Ten Commandments, the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer out of
his head, but they are revealed and given by God Himself, so also I can boast
that Baptism is no human trifle, but instituted by God Himself, moreover, that
it is most solemnly and strictly commanded that we must be baptized or we cannot
be saved, lest any one regard it as a trifling matter, like putting on a new red
coat. For it is of the greatest importance that we esteem Baptism excellent,
glorious, and exalted, for which we contend and fight chiefly, because the world
is now so full of sects clamoring that Baptism is an external thing, and that
external things are of no benefit. But let it be ever so much an external thing
here stand God's Word and command which institute, establish, and confirm
Baptism. But what God institutes and commands cannot be a vain, but must be a
most precious thing, though in appearance it were of less value than a straw. If
hitherto people could consider it a great thing when the Pope with his letters
and bulls dispensed indulgences and confirmed altars and churches, solely
because of the letters and seals, we ought to esteem Baptism much more highly
and more precious, because God has commanded it, and, besides, it is performed
in His name. For these are the words, Go ye baptize; however, not in your name,
but in the name of God.
For to be baptized in
the name of God is to be baptized not by men, but by God Himself. Therefore
although it is performed by human hands, it is nevertheless truly God's own
work. From this fact every one may himself readily infer that it is a far higher
work than any work performed by a man or a saint. For what work greater than the
work of God can we do?
But here the devil is
busy to delude us with false appearances, and lead us away from the work of God
to our own works. For there is a much more splendid appearance when a Carthusian
does many great and difficult works and we all think much more of that which we
do and merit ourselves. But the Scriptures teach thus: Even though we collect in
one mass the works of all the monks, however splendidly they may shine, they
would not be as noble and good as if God should pick up a straw. Why? Because
the person is nobler and better. Here, then, we must not estimate the person
according to the works, but the works according to the person, from whom they
must derive their nobility. But insane reason will not regard this, and because
Baptism does not shine like the works which we do, it is to be esteemed as
nothing.
From this now learn a proper
understanding of the subject, and how to answer the question what Baptism is,
namely thus, that it is not mere ordinary water, but water comprehended in God's
Word and command, and sanctified thereby, so that it is nothing else than a
divine water; not that the water in itself is nobler than other water, but that
God's Word and command are added.
Therefore it
is pure wickedness and blasphemy of the devil that now our new spirits, to mock
at Baptism, omit from it God's Word and institution, and look upon it in no
other way than as water which is taken from the well, and then blather and say:
How is a handful of water to help the soul? Aye, my friend, who does not know
that water is water if tearing things asunder is what we are after? But how dare
you thus interfere with God's order, and tear away the most precious treasure
with which God has connected and enclosed it, and which He will not have
separated? For the kernel in the water is God's Word or command and the name of
God which is a treasure greater and nobler than heaven and
earth.
Comprehend the difference, then, that
Baptism is quite another thing than all other water; not on account of the
natural quality, but because something more noble is here added; for God Himself
stakes His honor His power and might on it. Therefore it is not only natural
water, but a divine, heavenly, holy, and blessed water, and in whatever other
terms we can praise it, -- all on account of the Word, which is a heavenly, holy
Word, that no one can sufficiently extol, for it has, and is able to do, all
that God is and can do [since it has all the virtue and power of God comprised
in it]. Hence also it derives its essence as a Sacrament, as St. Augustine also
taught: Aocedat verbum ad elementum et fit sacramentum. That is, when the Word
is joined to the element or natural substance, it becomes a Sacrament, that is,
a holy and divine matter and sign.
Therefore we
always teach that the Sacraments and all external things which God ordains and
institutes should not be regarded according to the coarse, external mask, as we
regard the shell of a nut, but as the Word of God is included therein. For thus
we also speak of the parental estate and of civil government. If we propose to
regard them in as far as they have noses, eyes, skin, and hair flesh and bones,
they look like Turks and heathen, and some one might start up and say: Why
should I esteem them more than others? But because the commandment is added:
Honor thy father and thy mother, I behold a different man, adorned and clothed
with the majesty and glory of God. The commandment (I say) is the chain of gold
about his neck, yea, the crown upon his head which shows to me how and why one
must honor this flesh and blood.
Thus, and much
more even, you must honor Baptism and esteem it glorious on account of the Word,
since He Himself has honored it both by words and deeds; moreover, confirmed it
with miracles from heaven. For do you think it was a jest that, when Christ was
baptized, the heavens were opened and the Holy Ghost descended visibly, and
everything was divine glory and
majesty?
Therefore I exhort again that these
two the water and the Word, by no means be separated from one another and
parted. For if the Word is separated from it, the water is the same as that with
which the servant cooks, and may indeed be called a bath-keeper's baptism. But
when it is added, as God has ordained, it is a Sacrament, and is called
Christ-baptism. Let this be the first part regarding the essence and dignity of
the holy Sacrament.
In the second place, since
we know now what Baptism is, and how it is to be regarded, we must also learn
why and for what purpose it is instituted; that is, what it profits, gives and
works. And this also we cannot discern better than from the words of Christ
above quoted: He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved. Therefore state
it most simply thus, that the power, work, profit, fruit, and end of Baptism is
this, namely, to save. For no one is baptized in order that he may become a
prince, but, as the words declare, that he be saved. But to be saved. we know.
is nothing else than to be delivered from sin, death, and the devil, and to
enter into the kingdom of Christ, and to live with Him
forever.
Here you see again how highly and
precious we should esteem Baptism, because in it we obtain such an unspeakable
treasure, which also indicates sufficiently that it cannot be ordinary mere
water. For mere water could not do such a thing, but the Word does it, and (as
said above) the fact that the name of God is comprehended therein. But where the
name of God is, there must be also life and salvation, that it may indeed be
called a divine, blessed, fruitful, and gracious water; for by the Word such
power is imparted to Baptism that it is a laver of regeneration, as St. Paul
also calls it, Titus 3, 5.
But as our would-be
wise, new spirits assert that faith alone saves, and that works and external
things avail nothing, we answer: It is true, indeed, that nothing in us is of
any avail but faith, as we shall hear still further. But these blind guides are
unwilling to see this, namely, that faith must have something which it believes,
that is, of which it takes hold, and upon which it stands and rests. Thus faith
clings to the water, and believes that it is Baptism, in which there is pure
salvation and life; not through the water (as we have sufficiently stated), but
through the fact that it is embodied in the Word and institution of God, and the
name of God inheres in it. Now, if I believe this, what else is it than
believing in God as in Him who has given and planted His Word into this
ordinance, and proposes to us this external thing wherein we may apprehend such
a treasure?
Now, they are so mad as to separate
faith and that to which faith clings and is bound though it be something
external. Yea, it shall and must be something external, that it may be
apprehended by the senses, and understood and thereby be brought into the heart,
as indeed the entire Gospel is an external, verbal preaching. In short, what God
does and works in us He proposes to work through such external ordinances.
Wherever, therefore, He speaks, yea, in whichever direction or by whatever means
He speaks, thither faith must look, and to that it must hold. Now here we have
the words: He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved. To what else do
they refer than to Baptism, that is, to the water comprehended in God's
ordinance? Hence it follows that whoever rejects Baptism rejects the Word of
God, faith, and Christ, who directs us thither and binds us to
Baptism.
In the third place since we have
learned the great benefit and power of Baptism, let us see further who is the
person that receives what Baptism gives and profits. This is again most
beautifully and clearly expressed in the words: He that believeth and is
baptized shall be saved. That is, faith alone makes the person worthy to receive
profitably the saving, divine water. For, since these blessings are here
presented and promised in the words in and with the water, they cannot be
received in any other way than by believing them with the heart. Without faith
it profits nothing, notwithstanding it is in itself a divine superabundant
treasure. Therefore this single word (He that believeth) effects this much that
it excludes and repels all works which we can do, in the opinion that we obtain
and merit salvation by them. For it is determined that whatever is not faith
avails nothing nor receives anything.
But if
they say, as they are accustomed: Still Baptism is itself a work, and you say
works are of no avail for salvation; what then, becomes of faith? Answer: Yes,
our works, indeed, avail nothing for salvation; Baptism, however, is not our
work, but God's (for, as was stated, you must put Christ-baptism far away from a
bath-keeper's baptism). God's works, however, are saving and necessary for
salvation, and do not exclude, but demand, faith; for without faith they could
not be apprehended. For by suffering the water to be poured upon you, you have
not yet received Baptism in such a manner that it benefits you anything; but it
becomes beneficial to you if you have yourself baptized with the thought that
this is according to God's command and ordinance, and besides in God's name, in
order that you may receive in the water the promised salvation. Now, this the
fist cannot do, nor the body; but the heart must believe
it.
Thus you see plainly that there is here no
work done by us, but a treasure which He gives us, and which faith apprehends;
just as the Lord Jesus Christ upon the cross is not a work, but a treasure
comprehended in the Word, and offered to us and received by faith. Therefore
they do us violence by exclaiming against us as though we preach against faith;
while we alone insist upon it as being of such necessity that without it nothing
can be received nor enjoyed.
Thus we have these
three parts which it is necessary to know concerning this Sacrament especially
that the ordinance of God is to be held in all honor, which alone would be
sufficient, though it be an entirely external thing like the commandment, Honor
thy father and thy mother, which refers to bodily flesh and blood. Therein we
regard not the flesh and blood, but the commandment of God in which they are
comprehended, and on account of which the flesh is called father and mother; so
also, though we had no more than these words, Go ye and baptize, etc., it would
be necessary for us to accept and do it as the ordinance of God. Now there is
here not only God's commandment and injunction, but also the promise, on account
of which it is still far more glorious than whatever else God has commanded and
ordained, and is, in short, so full of consolation and grace that heaven and
earth cannot comprehend it. But it requires skill to believe this, for the
treasure is not wanting, but this is wanting that men apprehend it and hold it
firmly.
Therefore every Christian has enough in
Baptism to learn and to practise all his life; for he has always enough to do to
believe firmly what it promises and brings: victory over death and the devil,
forgiveness of sin, the grace of God, the entire Christ, and the Holy Ghost with
His gifts. In short, it is so transcendent that if timid nature could realize
it, it might well doubt whether it could be true. For consider, if there were
somewhere a physician who understood the art of saving men from dying, or, even
though they died, of restoring them speedily to life, so that they would
thereafter live forever, how the world would pour in money like snow and rain,
so that because of the throng of the rich no one could find access! But here in
Baptism there is brought free to every one's door such a treasure and medicine
as utterly destroys death and preserves all men
alive.
Thus we must regard Baptism and make it
profitable to ourselves, that when our sins and conscience oppress us, we
strengthen ourselves and take comfort and say: Nevertheless I am baptized; but
if I am baptized, it is promised me that I shall be saved and have eternal life,
both in soul and body. For that is the reason why these two things are done in
Baptism namely, that the body, which can apprehend nothing but the water, is
sprinkled, and, in addition, the word is spoken for the soul to apprehend. Now,
since both, the water and the Word, are one Baptism, therefore body and soul
must be saved and live forever: the soul through the Word which it believes, but
the body because it is united with the soul and also apprehends Baptism as it is
able to apprehend it. We have, therefore, no greater jewel in body and soul, for
by it we are made holy and are saved, which no other kind of life, no work upon
earth, can attain.
Let this suffice respecting
the nature, blessing, and use of Baptism, for it answers the present
purpose.
In the same manner as we have heard
regarding Holy Baptism, we must speak also concerning the other Sacrament,
namely, these three points: What is it? What are its benefits? and, Who is to
receive it? And all these are established by the words by which Christ has
instituted it, and which every one who desires to be a Christian and go to the
Sacrament should know. For it is not our intention to admit to it and to
administer it to those who know not what they seek, or why they come. The words,
however, are these:
Our Lord Jesus Christ, the
same night in which He was betrayed, took bread; and when He had given thanks,
He brake it, and gave it to His disciples, and said, Take, eat; this is My body,
which is given for you: this do in remembrance of
Me.
After the same manner also He took the cup
when He had supped, gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, Drink ye all of
it; this cup is the new testament in My blood, which is shed for you for the
remission of sins: this do ye, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of
Me.
Here also we do not wish to enter into
controversy and contend with the traducers and blasphemers of this Sacrament,
but to learn first (as we did regarding Baptism) what is of the greatest
importance, namely that the chief point is the Word and ordinance or command of
God. For it has not been invented nor introduced by any man, but without any
one's counsel and deliberation it has been instituted by Christ. Therefore, just
as the Ten Commandments, the Lord's Prayer, and the Creed retain their nature
and worth although you never keep, pray, or believe them, so also does this
venerable Sacrament remain undisturbed, so that nothing is detracted or taken
from it, even though we employ and dispense it unworthily. What do you think God
cares about what we do or believe, so that on that account He should suffer His
ordinance to be changed? Why, in all worldly matters every thing remains as God
has created and ordered it, no matter how we employ or use it. This must always
be urged, for thereby the prating of nearly all the fanatical spirits can be
repelled. For they regard the Sacraments, aside from the Word of God, as
something that we do.
Now, what is the
Sacrament of the Altar!
Answer: It is the true
body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, in and under the bread and wine which
we Christians are commanded by the Word of Christ to eat and to drink. And as we
have said of Baptism that it is not simple water, so here also we say the
Sacrament is bread and wine, but not mere bread and wine, such as are ordinarily
served at the table, but bread and wine comprehended in, and connected with, the
Word of God.
It is the Word (I say) which makes
and distinguishes this Sacrament, so that it is not mere bread and wine, but is,
and is called, the body and blood of Christ. For it is said: Accedat verbum ad
elementum, et At sacramentum. If the Word be joined to the element it becomes a
Sacrament. This saying of St. Augustine is so properly and so well put that he
has scarcely said anything better. The Word must make a Sacrament of the
element, else it remains a mere element. Now, it is not the word or ordinance of
a prince or emperor, but of the sublime Majesty, at whose feet all creatures
should fall, and affirm it is as He says, and accept it with all reverence fear,
and humility.
With this Word you can strengthen
your conscience and say: If a hundred thousand devils, together with all
fanatics, should rush forward, crying, How can bread and wine be the body and
blood of Christ? etc., I know that all spirits and scholars together are not as
wise as is the Divine Majesty in His little finger. Now here stands the Word of
Christ: Take, eat; this is My body; Drink ye all of it; this is the new
testament in My blood, etc. Here we abide, and would like to see those who will
constitute themselves His masters, and make it different from what He has
spoken. It is true, indeed, that if you take away the Word or regard it without
the words, you have nothing but mere bread and wine. But if the words remain
with them as they shall and must, then, in virtue of the same, it is truly the
body and blood of Christ. For as the lips of Christ say and speak, so it is, as
He can never lie or deceive.
Hence it is easy
to reply to all manner of questions about which men are troubled at the present
time, such as this one: Whether even a wicked priest can minister at, and
dispense, the Sacrament, and whatever other questions like this there may be.
For here we conclude and say: Even though a knave takes or distributes the
Sacrament, he receives the true Sacrament, that is, the true body and blood of
Christ, just as truly as he who [receives or] administers it in the most worthy
manner. For it is not founded upon the holiness of men, but upon the Word of
God. And as no saint upon earth, yea, no angel in heaven, can make bread and
wine to be the body and blood of Christ, so also can no one change or alter it,
even though it be misused. For the Word by which it became a Sacrament and was
instituted does not become false because of the person or his unbelief. For He
does not say: If you believe or are worthy, you receive My body and blood, but:
Take, eat and drink; this is By body and blood. Likewise: Do this (namely, what
I now do, institute, give, and bid you take) . That is as much as to say, No
matter whether you are worthy or unworthy, you have here His body and blood by
virtue of these words which are added to the bread and wine. Only note and
remember this well; for upon these words rest all our foundation, protection,
and defense against all errors and deception that have ever come or may yet
come.
Thus we have briefly the first point
which relates to the essence of this Sacrament. Now examine further the efficacy
and benefits on account of which really the Sacrament was instituted; which is
also its most necessary part, that we may know what we should seek and obtain
there. Now this is plain and clear from the words just mentioned: This is My
body and blood, given and shed FOR YOU, for the remission of sins. Briefly that
is as much as to say: For this reason we go to the Sacrament because there we
receive such a treasure by and in which we obtain forgiveness of sins. Why so?
Because the words stand here and give us this; for on this account He bids me
eat and drink, that it may be my own and may benefit me, as a sure pledge and
token, yea, the very same treasure that is appointed for me against my sins,
death, and every calamity.
On this account it
is indeed called a food of souls, which nourishes and strengthens the new man.
For by Baptism we are first born anew; but (as we said before) there still
remains, besides, the old vicious nature of flesh and blood in man, and there
are so many hindrances and temptations of the devil and of the world that we
often become weary and faint, and sometimes also
stumble.
Therefore it is given for a daily
pasture and sustenance, that faith may refresh and strengthen itself so as not
to fall back in such a battle, but become ever stronger and stronger. For the
new life must be so regulated that it continually increase and progress, but it
must suffer much opposition. For the devil is such a furious enemy that when he
sees that we oppose him and attack the old man, and that he cannot topple us
over by force, he prowls and moves about on all sides, tries all devices, and
does not desist until he finally wearies us, so that we either renounce our
faith or yield hands and feet and become listless or impatient. Now to this end
the consolation is here given when the heart feels that the burden is becoming
too heavy, that it may here obtain new power and
refreshment.
But here our wise spirits contort
themselves with their great art and wisdom, crying out and bawling: How can
bread and wine forgive sins or strengthen faith? Although they hear and know
that we do not say this of bread and wine, because in itself bread is bread, but
of such bread and wine as is the body and blood of Christ, and has the words
attached to it. That, we say, is verily the treasure, and nothing else, through
which such forgiveness is obtained. Now the only way in which it is conveyed and
appropriated to us is in the words (Given and shed for you). For herein you have
both truths, that it is the body and blood of Christ, and that it is yours as a
treasure and gift. Now the body of Christ can never be an unfruitful, vain
thing, that effects or profits nothing. Yet however great is the treasure in
itself, it must be comprehended in the Word and administered to us, else we
should never be able to know or seek
it.
Therefore also it is vain talk when they
say that the body and blood of Christ are not given and shed for us in the
Lord's Supper, hence we could not have forgiveness of sins in the Sacrament. For
although the work is accomplished and the forgiveness of sins acquired on the
cross, yet it cannot come to us in any other way than through the Word. For what
would we otherwise know about it, that such a thing was accomplished or was to
be given us if it were not presented by preaching or the oral Word? Whence do
they know of it, or how can they apprehend and appropriate to themselves the
forgiveness, except they lay hold of and believe the Scriptures and the Gospel?
But now the entire Gospel and the article of the Creed: I believe a holy
Christian Church, the forgiveness of sin, etc., are by the Word embodied in this
Sacrament and presented to us. Why, then, should we allow this treasure to be
torn from the Sacrament when they must confess that these are the very words
which we hear everywhere in the Gospel, and they cannot say that these words in
the Sacrament are of no use, as little as they dare say that the entire Gospel
or Word of God, apart from the Sacrament, is of no
use?
Thus we have the entire Sacrament, both as
to what it is in itself and as to what it brings and profits. Now we must also
see who is the person that receives this power and benefit. That is answered
briefly, as we said above of Baptism and often elsewhere: Whoever believes it
has what the words declare and bring. For they are not spoken or proclaimed to
stone and wood, but to those who hear them, to whom He says: Take and eat, etc.
And because He offers and promises forgiveness of sin, it cannot be received
otherwise than by faith. This faith He Himself demands in the Word when He says:
Given and shed for you. As if He said: For this reason I give it, and bid you
eat and drink, that you may claim it as yours and enjoy it. Whoever now accepts
these words, and believes that what they declare is true, has it. But whoever
does not believe it has nothing, as he allows it to be offered to him in vain,
and refuses to enjoy such a saving good. The treasure, indeed, is opened and
placed at every one's door, yea upon his table, but it is necessary that you
also claim it, and confidently view it as the words suggest to
you.
This, now, is the entire Christian
preparation for receiving this Sacrament worthily. For since this treasure is
entirely presented in the words, it cannot be apprehended and appropriated in
any other way than with the heart. For such a gift and eternal treasure cannot
be seized with the fist. Fasting and prayer, etc., may indeed be an external
preparation and discipline for children, that the body may keep and bear itself
modestly and reverently towards the body and blood of Christ; yet what is given
in and with it the body cannot seize and appropriate. But this is done by the
faith of the heart, which discerns this treasure and desires it. This may
suffice for what is necessary as a general instruction respecting this
Sacrament; for what is further to be said of it belongs to another
time.
In conclusion, since we have now the
true understanding and doctrine of the Sacrament, there is indeed need of some
admonition and exhortation, that men may not let so great a treasure which is
daily administered and distributed among Christians pass by unheeded, that is,
that those who would be Christians make ready to receive this venerable
Sacrament often. For we see that men seem weary and lazy with respect to it; and
there is a great multitude of such as hear the Gospel, and, because the nonsense
of the Pope has been abolished, and we are freed from his laws and coercion, go
one, two, three years, or even longer without the Sacrament, as though they were
such strong Christians that they have no need of it; and some allow themselves
to be prevented and deterred by the pretense that we have taught that no one
should approach it except those who feel hunger and thirst, which urge them to
it. Some pretend that it is a matter of liberty and not necessary, and that it
is sufficient to believe without it; and thus for the most part they go so far
that they become quite brutish, and finally despise both the Sacrament and the
Word of God.
Now, it is true, as we have said,
that no one should by any means be coerced or compelled, lest we institute a new
murdering of souls. Nevertheless, it must be known that such people as deprive
themselves of, and withdraw from, the Sacrament so long a time are not to be
considered Christians. For Christ has not instituted it to be treated as a show,
but has commanded His Christians to eat and drink it, and thereby remember
Him.
And, indeed, those who are true Christians
and esteem the Sacrament precious and holy will urge and impel themselves unto
it. Yet that the simple-minded and the weak who also would like to be Christians
be the more incited to consider the cause and need which ought to impel them, we
will treat somewhat of this point. For as in other matters pertaining to faith,
love, and patience, it is not enough to teach and instruct only, but there is
need also of daily exhortation, so here also there is need of continuing to
preach that men may not become weary and disgusted, since we know and feel how
the devil always opposes this and every Christian exercise, and drives and
deters therefrom as much as he can.
And we
have, in the first place, the clear text in the very words of Christ: Do this in
remembrance of Me. These are bidding and commanding words by which all who would
be Christians are enjoined to partake of this Sacrament. Therefore, whoever
would be a disciple of Christ, with whom He here speaks, must also consider and
observe this, not from compulsion, as being forced by men, but in obedience to
the Lord Jesus Christ, and to please Him. However, if you say: But the words are
added, As oft as ye do it; there He compels no one, but leaves it to our free
choice, answer: That is true, yet it is not written that we should never do so.
Yea, just because He speaks the words, As oft as ye do it, it is nevertheless
implied that we should do it often; and it is added for the reason that He
wishes to have the Sacrament free, not limited to special times, like the
Passover of the Jews, which they were obliged to eat only once a year, and that
just upon the fourteenth day of the first full moon in the evening, and which
they must not vary a day. As if He would say by these words: I institute a
Passover or Supper for you which you shall enjoy not only once a year, just upon
this evening, but often, when and where you will, according to every one's
opportunity and necessity, bound to no place or appointed time; although the
Pope afterwards perverted it, and again made a Jewish feast of
it.
Thus, you perceive, it is not left free in
the sense that we may despise it. For that I call despising it if one allow so
long a time to elapse and with nothing to hinder him yet never feels a desire
for it. If you wish such liberty, you may just as well have the liberty to be no
Christian, and neither have to believe nor pray; for the one is just as much the
command of Christ as the other. But if you wish to be a Christian, you must from
time to time render satisfaction and obedience to this commandment. For this
commandment ought ever to move you to examine yourself and to think: See, what
sort of a Christian I am! If I were one, I would certainly have some little
longing for that which my Lord has commanded [me] to
do.
And, indeed, since we act such strangers to
it, it is easily seen what sort of Christians we were under the Papacy, namely,
that we went from mere compulsion and fear of human commandments, without
inclination and love, and never regarded the commandment of Christ. But we
neither force nor compel any one; nor need any one do it to serve or please us.
But this should induce and constrain you by itself, that He desires it and that
it is pleasing to Him. You must not suffer men to coerce you unto faith or any
good work. We are doing no more than to say and exhort you as to what you ought
to do, not for our sake, but for your own sake. He invites and allures you; if
you despise it, you must answer for it
yourself.
Now, this is to be the first point,
especially for those who are cold and indifferent, that they may reflect upon
and rouse themselves. For this is certainly true, as I have found in my own
experience, and as every one will find in his own case, that if a person thus
withdraw from this Sacrament, he will daily become more and more callous and
cold, and will at last disregard it altogether. To avoid this, we must, indeed,
examine heart and conscience, and act like a person who desires to be right with
God. Now, the more this is done, the more will the heart be warmed and
enkindled, that it may not become entirely
cold.
But if you say: How if I feel that I am
not prepared? Answer: That is also my scruple, especially from the old way under
the Pope, in which a person tortured himself to be so perfectly pure that God
could not find the least blemish in us. On this account we became so timid that
every one was instantly thrown into consternation and said to himself: Alas! you
are unworthy! For then nature and reason begin to reckon our unworthiness in
comparison with the great and precious good; and then it appears like a dark
lantern in contrast with the bright sun, or as filth in comparison with precious
stones. Because nature and reason see this, they refuse to approach and tarry
until they are prepared so long that one week trails another, and one half year
the other. But if you are to regard how good and pure you are, and labor to have
no compunctions, you must never approach.
We
must, therefore, make a distinction here among men. For those who are wanton and
dissolute must be told to stay away; for they are not prepared to receive
forgiveness of sin since they do not desire it and do not wish to be godly. But
the others, who are not such callous and wicked people, and desire to be godly,
must not absent themselves, even though otherwise they be feeble and full of
infirmities, as St. Hilary also has said: If any one have not committed sin for
which he can rightly be put out of the congregation and esteemed as no
Christian, he ought not stay away from the Sacrament, lest he may deprive
himself of life. For no one will make such progress that he will not retain many
daily infirmities in flesh and blood.
Therefore
such people must learn that it is the highest art to know that our Sacrament
does not depend upon our worthiness. For we are not baptized because we are
worthy and holy, nor do we go to confession because we are pure and without sin,
but the contrary because we are poor miserable men and just because we are
unworthy; unless it be some one who desires no grace and absolution nor intends
to reform.
But whoever would gladly obtain
grace and consolation should impel himself, and allow no one to frighten him
away, but say: I, indeed, would like to be worthy, but I come, not upon any
worthiness, but upon Thy Word, because Thou hast commanded it, as one who would
gladly be Thy disciple, no matter what becomes of my worthiness. But this is
difficult; for we always have this obstacle and hindrance to encounter, that we
look more upon ourselves than upon the Word and lips of Christ. For nature
desires so to act that it can stand and rest firmly on itself, otherwise it
refuses to make the approach. Let this suffice concerning the first
point.
In the second place, there is besides
this command also a promise, as we heard above, which ought most strongly to
incite and encourage us. For here stand the kind and precious words: This is My
body, given for you. This is My blood, shed for you, for the remission of sins.
These words, I have said, are not preached to wood and stone, but to me and you;
else He might just as well be silent and not institute a Sacrament. Therefore
consider, and put yourself into this YOU, that He may not speak to you in
vain.
For here He offers to us the entire
treasure which He has brought for us from heaven, and to which He invites us
also in other places with the greatest kindness, as when He says in St. Matthew
11, 28: Come unto Me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you
rest. Now it is surely a sin and a shame that He so cordially and faithfully
summons and exhorts us to our highest and greatest good, and we act so distantly
with regard to it, and permit so long a time to pass [without partaking of the
Sacrament] that we grow quite cold and hardened, so that we have no inclination
or love for it. We must never regard the Sacrament as something injurious from
which we had better flee but as a pure wholesome, comforting remedy imparting
salvation and comfort, which will cure you and give you life both in soul and
body. For where the soul has recovered, the body also is relieved. Why, then, is
it that we act as if it were a poison, the eating of which would bring
death?
To be sure, it is true that those who
despise it and live in an unchristian manner receive it to their hurt and
damnation; for nothing shall be good or wholesome to them, just as with a sick
person who from caprice eats and drinks what is forbidden him by the physician.
But those who are sensible of their weakness, desire to be rid of it and long
for help, should regard and use it only as a precious antidote against the
poison which they have in them. For here in the Sacrament you are to receive
from the lips of Christ forgiveness of sin which contains and brings with it the
grace of God and the Spirit with all His gifts, protection, shelter, and power
against death and the devil and all
misfortune.
Thus you have, on the part of God,
both the command and the promise of the Lord Jesus Christ. Besides this, on your
part, your own distress which is about your neck, and because of which this
command, invitation and promise are given, ought to impel you. For He Himself
says: They that be whole need not a physician, but they that be sick; that is,
those who are weary and heavy-laden with their sins, with the fear of death
temptations of the flesh and of the devil. If therefore, you are heavy-laden and
feel your weakness, then go joyfully to this Sacrament and obtain refreshment,
consolation, and strength. For if you would wait until you are rid of such
burdens, that you might come to the Sacrament pure and worthy, you must forever
stay away. For in that case He pronounces sentence and says: If you are pure and
godly, you have no need of Me, and I, in turn, none of thee. Therefore those
alone are called unworthy who neither feel their infirmities nor wish to be
considered sinners.
But if you say: What, then,
shall I do if I cannot feel such distress or experience hunger and thirst for
the Sacrament? Answer: For those who are so minded that they do not realize
their condition I know no better counsel than that they put their hand into
their bosom to ascertain whether they also have flesh and blood. And if you find
that to be the case, then go, for your good, to St. Paul's Epistle to the
Galatians, and hear what sort of a fruit your flesh is: Now the works of the
flesh (he says [chap. 5, 19ff.]) are manifest, which are these: Adultery
fornication uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance,
emulations, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envyings, murders, drunkenness,
revelings, and such like.
Therefore, if you
cannot feel it, at least believe the Scriptures, they will not lie to you and
they know your flesh better than you yourself. Yea, St. Paul further concludes
in Rom. 7, 18: l know that in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing.
If St. Paul may speak thus of his flesh, we do not propose to be better nor more
holy. But that we do not feel it is so much the worse; for it is a sign that
there is a leprous flesh which feels nothing, and yet [the leprosy] rages and
keeps spreading. Yet as we have said, if you are quite dead to all sensibility,
still believe the Scriptures, which pronounce sentence upon you. And, in short,
the less you feel your sins and infirmities, the more reason have you to go to
the Sacrament to seek help and a remedy.
In the
second place, look about you and see whether you are also in the world, or if
you do not know it, ask your neighbors about it. If you are in the world, do not
think that there will be lack of sins and misery. For only begin to act as
though you would be godly and adhere to the Gospel, and see whether no one will
become your enemy, and, moreover, do you harm, wrong, and violence, and likewise
give you cause for sin and vice. If you have not experienced it, then let the
Scriptures tell you, which everywhere give this praise and testimony to the
world.
Besides this, you will also have the
devil about you, whom you will not entirely tread under foot, because our Lord
Christ Himself could not entirely avoid him. Now, what is the devil? Nothing
else than what the Scriptures call him, a liar and murderer. A liar, to lead the
heart astray from the Word of God, and to blind it, that you cannot feel your
distress or come to Christ. A murderer, who cannot bear to see you live one
single hour. If you could see how many knives, darts, and arrows are every
moment aimed at you, you would be glad to come to the Sacrament as often as
possible. But there is no reason why we walk so securely and heedlessly, except
that we neither think nor believe that we are in the flesh, and in this wicked
world or in the kingdom of the
devil.
Therefore, try this and practise it
well, and do but examine yourself, or look about you a little, and only keep to
the Scriptures. If even then you still feel nothing, you have so much the more
misery to lament both to God and to your brother. Then take advice and have
others pray for you, and do not desist until the stone be removed from your
heart. Then, indeed, the distress will not fail to become manifest, and you will
find that you have sunk twice as deep as any other poor sinner, and are much
more in need of the Sacrament against the misery which unfortunately you do not
see, so that, with the grace of God, you may feel it more and become the more
hungry for the Sacrament, especially since the devil plies his force against
you, and lies in wait for you without ceasing, to seize and destroy you, soul
and body, so that you are not safe from him one hour. How soon can he have
brought you suddenly into misery and distress when you least expect
it!
Let this, then, be said for exhortation,
not only for those of us who are old and grown, but also for the young people,
who ought to be brought up in the Christian doctrine and understanding. For
thereby the Ten Commandments, the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer might be the more
easily inculcated to our youth, so that they would receive them with pleasure
and earnestness, and thus would practise them from their youth and accustom
themselves to them. For the old are now well-nigh done for, so that these and
other things cannot be attained, unless we train the people who are to come
after us and succeed us in our office and work, in order that they also may
bring up their children successfully that the Word of God and the Christian
Church may be preserved. Therefore let every father of a family know that it is
his duty by the injunction and command of God, to teach these things to his
children, or have them learn what they ought to know. For since they are
baptized and received into the Christian Church, they should also enjoy this
communion of the Sacrament, in order that they may serve us and be useful to us;
for they must all indeed help us to believe, love, pray, and fight against the
devil.