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<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">CASSELL’S NATIONAL LIBRARY</span></p>
<div class="gapshortline"> </div>
<h1><span class="GutSmall">SELECTIONS FROM THE</span><br/> <span class="smcap">Table Talk</span><br/> <span class="GutSmall">OF</span><br/> MARTIN LUTHER.</h1>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">TRANSLATED
BY</span><br/>
CAPTAIN HENRY BELL.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">
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<p style="text-align: center">CASSELL & COMPANY, <span class="smcap">Limited</span>:<br/>
<span class="GutSmall"><i>LONDON</i></span><span class="GutSmall">, </span><span class="GutSmall"><i>PARIS</i></span><span class="GutSmall">,
</span><span class="GutSmall"><i>NEW YORK &
MELBOURNE</i></span><span class="GutSmall">.</span><br/>
<span class="GutSmall">1886.</span></p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<h2>INTRODUCTION.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">martin luther</span> died on the 18th of
February, 1546, and the first publication of his “Table
Talk”—<i>Tischreden</i>—by his friend, Johann
Goldschmid (Aurifaber), was in 1566, in a substantial
folio. The talk of Luther was arranged, according to its
topics, into eighty chapters, each with a minute index of
contents. The whole work in a complete octavo edition,
published at Stuttgart and Leipzig in 1836, occupies 1,390
closely printed pages, equivalent to 2,780 pages, or full
fourteen volumes, of this Library.</p>
<p>The nearest approach to a complete and ungarbled translation
into English was that of Captain Henry Bell, made in the reign of
Charles the First, under the circumstances set forth by himself;
but even that was not complete. Other English versions have
subjected Luther’s opinions to serious manipulation,
nothing being added, but anything being taken away that did not
chance to agree with the editor’s digestion. Even the
folio of Captain Bell’s translation, from which these
Selections have been printed, has been prepared for reprint by
some preceding editor, whose pen has been busy in revision of the
passages he did mean to reprint. In these Selections every
paragraph stands unabridged, exactly as it was translated by
Captain Bell; and there has been no other purpose governing the
choice of matter than a resolve to make it as true a presentment
as possible of Luther’s mind and character. At least
one other volume of <i>Selections from the Table-Talk of Martin
Luther</i> will be given in this Library.</p>
<p>Johann Goldschmid, the Aurifaber, and thereby true worker in
gold, who first gave Luther’s Table-Talk to the world, was
born in 1519. He was a disciple of Luther, thirty-six years
younger than his master. Luther was born at Eisleben in
1483, and his father, a poor miner, presently settled at
Mansfeld, the town in which Goldschmid afterwards was born.
Johann Goldschmid was sent by Count Albrecht of Mansfeld, in
1537, to the University of Wittenberg, where Luther had been
made, in 1508, Professor of Philosophy, and where, on the 31st of
October, 1517, he had nailed his ninety-five propositions against
indulgences to the church door at the castle. Luther had
completed his translation of the Bible three years before Johann
Goldschmid went to Wittenberg. In 1540 Goldschmid was
recalled from the University to act as tutor to Count
Albrecht’s children. In 1544 Goldschmid was army
chaplain with the troops from Mansfeld in the French war; but in
1545 he was sent back to Wittenberg for special study of
theology. It was then that he attached himself to Luther as
his <i>famulus</i> and house-companion during the closing months
of Luther’s life, began already to collect from surrounding
friends passages of his vigorous “Table Talk,” and
remained with Luther till the last, having been present at his
death in Eisleben in 1546. He then proceeded steadily with
the collection of Luther’s sayings and opinions expressed
among his friends. He was army chaplain among the soldiers
of Johann Friedrich, of Saxony; he spent half a year also in a
Saxon prison. He became, in 1551, court preacher at Weimar;
but in 1562 was deprived of his office, and then devoted himself
to the forming of an Eisleben edition of those works of Luther,
which had not already been collected. In 1566 he was called
to a pastorate at Erfurt, where he had many more troubles before
his death. Aurifaber died on the 18th of November,
1575.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">H. M.</p>
<h2>THE TESTIMONY OF JO. AURIFABER, DOCTOR IN DIVINITY, CONCERNING LUTHER’S DIVINE DISCOURSES.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">And</span> whereas hitherto I have caused
certain tomes of the Books, Sermons, Writings, and Missives of
Luther to be printed at Eisleben, so have I also now finished
this tome of his Discourses, and have ordered the same to be
printed, which at the first were collected together out of the
Manuscripts of these Divine Discourses, which that Reverend
Father Anthony Lauterbach himself noted and wrote out of the holy
mouth of Luther, and afterwards the same by me were collected
into sure and certain Loci Communes, or Common-places, and
distributed.</p>
<p>And whereas I, Joannes Aurifaber, in the years 1545 and 1546,
before the death of that most famous Divine, Luther, was much
with and about him, and with all diligence writ and noted down
many most excellent Histories and Acts, and other most necessary
and useful things which he related: I have therefore set in order
and brought the same also into this tome.</p>
<p>Now, forasmuch as very excellent declaration is made in this
tome of all the Articles and chief points of Christian Religion,
Doctrine, and Faith; and also therein are found necessary Rules,
Questions and Answers, many fair Histories, all sorts of
Learnings, Comforts, Advices, Prophecies, Warnings, and
Admonitions: I have therefore thought it a thing fitting to
dedicate the same to your Highnesses, Graces, Honours and
Worships, etc., as special favourers, protectors, and defenders
of the Doctrines which God, through Luther, hath cleared again,
to the end that by diligent reading therein, you may be
president, and give good examples to others, to your subjects,
citizens, etc., diligently to love, to read, to affect the same,
and to make good use thereof, as being fragments that fell from
Luther’s Table, and therewith may help to still, to slake,
and to satisfy the spiritual hunger and thirst of the soul.
For these most profitable Discourses of Luther, containing such
high spiritual things, we should in nowise suffer to be lost, but
worthily esteem thereof, whereout all manner of learning, joy,
and comfort may be had and received.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Dr.
Aurifaber</span>, in his Preface<br/>
to the Book.</p>
<p><i>Given at Eisleben</i>, <i>July 7th</i>, <i>1569</i>.</p>
<h2>CAPTAIN HENRY BELL’S NARRATIVE:</h2>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">OR,</span></p>
<p class="gutsumm"><span class="smcap">Relation of the Miraculous
Preserving of Dr. Martin Luther’s book, entitled
“Colloquia Mensalia,” or, “His Divine
Discourses at his Table,” held with Divers Learned Men and
Pious Divines; such as were Philip Melancthon, Casparus Cruciger,
Justus Jonas, Paulus Eberus, Vitus Dietericus, Joannes
Bugenhagen, Joannes Forsterus, and others</span>:</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">CONTAINING</span></p>
<p><i>Divers Discourses touching Religion</i>, <i>and other Main
Points of Doctrine</i>; <i>as also many notable Histories</i>,
<i>and all sorts of Learning</i>, <i>Comforts</i>,
<i>Advices</i>, <i>Prophecies</i>, <i>Admonitions</i>,
<i>Directions</i>, <i>and Instructions</i>; <i>and how the same
Book was</i>, <i>by God’s Providence</i>, <i>discovered
lying under the Ground</i>, <i>where it had lain hid Fifty-two
Years</i>; <i>and was a few years since sent over to the said
Captain Henry Bell</i>, <i>and by him translated out of the High
German into the English Tongue</i>.</p>
<p>“I, <span class="smcap">Captain Henry Bell</span>, do
hereby declare, both to the present age, and also to posterity,
that being employed beyond the seas in state affairs divers years
together, both by King James, and also by the late King Charles,
in Germany, I did hear and understand, in all places, great
bewailing and lamentation made, by reason of the destroying and
burning of above fourscore thousand of Martin Luther’s
books, entitled <i>His Last Divine Discourses</i>.</p>
<p>“For after such time as God stirred up the spirit of
Martin Luther to detect the corruptions and abuses of Popery, and
to preach Christ, and clearly to set forth the simplicity of the
Gospel, many Kings, Princes, and States, Imperial Cities, and
Hans-Towns fell from the Popish Religion, and became Protestants,
as their posterities still are, and remain to this very day.</p>
<p>“And for the further advancement of the great work of
Reformation then begun, the aforesaid Princes and the rest did
then order that the said Divine Discourses of Luther should
forthwith be printed; and that every parish should have and
receive one of the aforesaid printed books into every Church
throughout all their principalities and dominions, to be chained
up, for the common people to read therein.</p>
<p>“Upon which divine work, or Discourses, the Reformation,
begun before in Germany, was wonderfully promoted and increased,
and spread both here in England and other countries besides.</p>
<p>“But afterwards it so fell out that the Pope then
living, viz. Gregory XIII., understanding what great hurt and
prejudice he and his Popish religion had already received, by
reason of the said Luther’s Divine Discourses, and also
fearing that the same might bring further contempt and mischief
upon himself and upon the Popish Church, he therefore, to prevent
the same, did fiercely stir up and instigate the Emperor then in
being, viz. Rudolphus II., to make an Edict throughout the whole
Empire, that all the aforesaid printed books should be burned;
and also that it should be death for any person to have or keep a
copy thereof, but also to burn the same: which Edict was speedily
put in execution accordingly, insomuch that not one of all the
said printed books, nor so much as any one copy of the same,
could be found out nor heard of in any place.</p>
<p>“Yet it pleased God that, anno 1626, a German gentleman,
named Casparus Van Sparr, with whom, in the time of my staying in
Germany about King James’s business, I became very
familiarly known and acquainted, having occasion to build upon
the old foundation of a house, wherein his grandfather dwelt at
that time when the said Edict was published in Germany for the
burning of the aforesaid books; and digging deep into the ground,
under the said old foundation, one of the said original books was
there happily found, lying in a deep obscure hole, being wrapped
in a strong linen cloth, which was waxed all over with beeswax,
within and without; whereby the book was preserved fair, without
any blemish.</p>
<p>“And at the same time Ferdinandus II. being Emperor in
Germany, who was a severe enemy and persecutor of the Protestant
religion, the aforesaid gentleman and grandchild to him that had
hidden the said books in that obscure hole, fearing that if the
said Emperor should get knowledge that one of the said books was
yet forthcoming, and in his custody, whereby not only himself
might be brought into trouble, but also the book in danger to be
destroyed, as all the rest were so long before; and also calling
me to mind, and knowing that I had the High Dutch Tongue very
perfect, did send the said original book over hither into England
unto me; and therewith did write unto me a letter, wherein he
related the passages of the preserving and finding out the said
book.</p>
<p>“And also he earnestly moved me in his letter, that for
the advancement of God’s glory, and of Christ’s
Church, I would take the pains to translate the said book, to the
end that that most excellent divine work of Luther might be
brought again to light.</p>
<p>“Whereupon I took the said book before me, and many
times began to translate the same, but always I was hindered
therein, being called upon about other business, insomuch that by
no possible means I could remain by that work. Then, about
six weeks after I had received the said book, it fell out that I
being in bed with my wife one night, between twelve and one of
the clock, she being asleep, but myself yet awake, there appeared
unto me an ancient man, standing at my bedside, arrayed all in
white, having a long and broad white beard hanging down to his
girdle-stead, who, taking me by my right ear, spake these words
following unto me:—‘Sirrah! will not you take time to
translate that book which is sent unto you out of Germany?
I will shortly provide for you both place and time to do
it;’ and then he vanished away out of my sight.</p>
<p>“Whereupon, being much thereby affrighted, I fell into
an extreme sweat, insomuch that my wife awaking, and finding me
all over wet, she asked me what I ailed. I told her what I
had seen and heard; but I never did heed nor regard visions nor
dreams; and so the same fell soon out of my mind.</p>
<p>“Then about a fortnight after I had seen that vision, on
a Sunday, I went to Whitehall to hear the sermon, after which
ended I returned to my lodging, which was then in King Street, at
Westminster, and sitting down to dinner with my wife, two
Messengers were sent from the whole Council-board, with a warrant
to carry me to the keeper of the Gatehouse, Westminster, there to
be safely kept until further order from the Lords of the Council,
which was done without showing me any cause <SPAN name="citation17"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote17" class="citation">[17]</SPAN> at all wherefore I was committed.
Upon which said warrant I was kept there ten whole years close
prisoner, where I spent five years thereof about the translating
of the said book; insomuch as I found the words very true which
the old man, in the aforesaid vision, did say unto me: ‘I
will shortly provide for you both place and time to translate
it.’</p>
<p>“Then, after I had finished the said translation in the
prison, the late Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr. Laud,
understanding that I had translated such a book, called <i>Martin
Luther’s Divine Discourses</i>, sent unto me his chaplain,
Dr. Bray, into the prison, with this Message
following:—</p>
<blockquote><p>“‘Captain <span class="smcap">Bell</span>,</p>
<p> “‘My Lord Grace of Canterbury
hath sent me unto you, to tell you that his Grace hath understood
that you have translated a book of Luther’s, touching which
book his Grace, many years before, did hear of the burning of so
many thousands in Germany by the then Emperor. His Grace
therefore doth desire you, that you would send unto him the said
original book in Dutch, and also your translation; which, after
his Grace hath perused, shall be returned safely unto
you.’</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Whereupon I told Dr. Bray that I had taken a great deal
of pains in translating the said book, and was very loth to part
with it out of my hands, and therefore I desired him to excuse me
to his Grace, that I could not part from it; with which answer he
at that time returned again to his master.</p>
<p>“But the next day after he sent him unto me again, and
bade him tell me that, upon his honour, the book should be as
safe in his custody, if not safer than in mine own; for he would
lock it up in his own cabinet, to the end no man might come unto
it, but only himself. Thereupon I, knowing it would be a
thing bootless for me to refuse the sending of them, by reason he
was then of such great power that he would have them, <i>nolens
volens</i>, I sent them both unto him. Then, after he had
kept them in his custody two months, and had daily read therein,
he sent the said Doctor unto me, to tell me that I had performed
a work worthy of eternal memory, and that he had never read a
more excellent divine work; yet saying that some things therein
were fitting to be left out; and desired me not to think long
that he did not return them unto me so soon again. The
reason was because that the more he did read therein, the more
desire he had to go on therewith; and so, presenting me with ten
livres in gold, he returned back again.</p>
<p>“After which, when he had them in his custody one whole
year, and that I understood he had perused it all over, then I
sent unto his Grace, and humbly desired that his Grace would be
pleased to return me my books again. Whereupon he sent me
word by the said Dr. Bray, that he had not as yet perused them so
thoroughly over as he desired to do; then I stayed yet a year
longer before I sent to him again.</p>
<p>“In which time I heard for certain that it was concluded
by the King and Council that a Parliament should forthwith be
called; at which news I did much rejoice. And then I sent
unto his Grace an humble petition, and therein desired the
returning of my book again; otherwise I told him I should be
enforced to make it known, and to complain of him to the
Parliament, which was then coming on. Whereupon he sent
unto me again safely both the said original book and my
translation, and caused his Chaplain, the said Doctor, to tell me
that he would make it known unto his Majesty what an excellent
piece of work I had translated, and that he would procure an
order from his Majesty to have the said translation printed, and
to be dispersed throughout the whole kingdom, as it was in
Germany, and as he had heard thereof; and thereupon he presented
me again with forty livres in gold.</p>
<p>“And presently after I was set at liberty by warrant
from the whole House of Lords, according to his Majesty’s
direction in that behalf; but shortly afterwards the Archbishop
fell into his troubles, and was by the Parliament sent unto the
Tower, and afterwards beheaded; insomuch that I could never since
hear anything touching the printing of my book.</p>
<p>“The House of Commons having then notice that I had
translated the aforesaid book, they sent for me, and did appoint
a Committee to see it and the translation, and diligently to make
inquiry whether the translation did agree with the original or
no; whereupon they desired me to bring the same before them,
sitting then in the Treasury Chamber. And Sir Edward
Dering, being Chairman, said unto me that he was acquainted with
a learned minister beneficed in Essex, who had lived long in
England, but was born in High Germany, in the Palatinate, named
Mr. Paul Amiraut, whom the Committee sending for, desired him to
take both the original and my translation into his custody, and
diligently to compare them together, and to make report unto the
said Committee whether he found that I had rightly and truly
translated it according to the original: which report he made
accordingly, and they, being satisfied therein, referred it to
two of the Assembly, Mr. Charles Herle and Mr. Edward Corbet,
desiring them diligently to peruse the same, and to make report
unto them if they thought it fitting to be printed and
published.</p>
<p>“Whereupon they made report, dated the 10th of November,
1646, that they found it to be an excellent Divine Work, worthy
the light and publishing, especially in regard that Luther, in
the said Discourses, did revoke his opinion, which he formerly
held, touching Consubstantiation in the Sacrament.
Whereupon the House of Commons, the 24th of February, 1646, did
give order for the printing thereof.</p>
<p>“Thus, having been lately desired to set down in writing
the relation of the passages above-said concerning the said book,
as well for the satisfaction of judicious and godly Christians,
as for the conservation of the perpetual memory of God’s
extraordinary providence in the miraculous preservation of the
aforesaid Divine Discourses, and now bringing them again to
light: I have done the same according to the plain truth thereof,
not doubting but they will prove a notable advantage of
God’s glory, and the good and edification of the whole
Church, and an unspeakable consolation of every particular member
of the same.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">“Given under my hand the 3rd
day of July, 1650.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">“<span class="smcap">Henry
Bell</span>.”</p>
<h2>A COPY OF THE ORDER FROM THE HOUSE OF COMMONS.</h2>
<p style="text-align: right"><i>24th</i> <i>February</i>,
<i>1646</i>.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Whereas</span> Captain Henry Bell hath
strangely discovered and found a Book of Martin Luther’s,
called his Divine Discourses, which was for a long time very
marvellously preserved in Germany: the which book the said Henry
Bell, at his great costs and pains, hath translated into the
English out of the German Tongue, which Translation and substance
thereof is approved by Reverend Divines of the Assembly, as
appears by a Certificate under their hands:</p>
<p>It is Ordered and Ordained by the Lords and Commons assembled
in Parliament, that the said Henry Bell shall have the sole
disposal and benefit of Printing the said Book translated into
English by him as aforesaid, for the space of fourteen years, to
commence from the date hereof. And that none do Print or
Re-print the same but such as shall be licensed by the said
Captain by Authority under his hand.</p>
<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">Henry
Elsyng</span>.</p>
<p>(Vera Copia.)</p>
<h2><span class="smcap">Luther’s Table-Talk</span>.</h2>
<h3>OF GOD’S WORD.</h3>
<h4><i>Of the Word of God</i>; <i>or the Holy Scriptures
contained in the Bible</i>.</h4>
<p><span class="smcap">The Bible</span>, or Holy Scripture, said
Luther, is like a fair and spacious orchard, wherein all sorts of
trees do grow, from which we may pluck divers kinds of fruits;
for in the Bible we have rich and precious comforts, learnings,
admonitions, warnings, promises, and threatenings, etc.
There is not a tree in this orchard on which I have not knocked,
and have shaken at least a couple of apples or pears from the
same.</p>
<h4><i>Proofs that the Bible is the Word of God</i>.</h4>
<p>That the Bible is the Word of God, said Luther, the same I
prove as followeth. All things that have been and now are
in the world, also how it now goeth and standeth in the world,
the same was written altogether particularly at the beginning, in
the First Book of Moses concerning the Creation. And even
as God made and created it, even so it was, even so it is, and
even so doth it stand to this present day. And although
King Alexander the Great, the kingdom of Egypt, the empire of
Babel, the Persian, Grecian, and Roman Monarchs, the Emperors
Julius and Augustus, most fiercely did rage and swell against
this Book, utterly to suppress and destroy the same, yet
notwithstanding, they could prevail nothing; they are all gone
and vanished; but this Book, from time to time, hath remained,
and will remain unremoved, in full and ample manner, as it was
written at the first. But who kept and preserved it from
such great and raging power; or, Who defendeth it still?
Truly, said Luther, no human creature, but only and alone God
himself, who is the right Master thereof; and it is a great
wonder that it hath been so long kept and preserved, for the
devil and the world are great enemies unto it. The devil
doubtless hath destroyed many good books in the Church, as he
hath rooted out and slain many saints, concerning whom we have
now no knowledge. But, no thanks unto him, the Bible he was
fain to leave unmeddled with. In like manner Baptism, the
Sacrament, and the Office of Preaching have remained among us
against the power of many tyrants and heretics that have opposed
the same. These our Lord God hath kept and maintained by
his special strength. Homer, Virgil, and suchlike are
profitable and ancient books; but, in comparison of the Bible,
they are nothing to be regarded.</p>
<h4><i>By whom and at what Times the Bible was
translated</i>.</h4>
<p>Two hundred and forty-one years before the humanity of Christ,
the Five Books of Moses, and the Prophets, were translated out of
the Hebrew into the Greek tongue by the Septuagint Interpreters,
the seventy doctors or learned men then at Jerusalem, in the time
of Eleazar the High-priest, at the request of Ptolemeus
Philadelphus, King of Egypt, which King allowed great charges and
expenses for the translating of the same.</p>
<p>Then, one hundred and twenty-four years after the birth of
Christ, his death and passion, the Old Testament was translated
out of Hebrew into Greek by a Jew, named Aquila (being converted
to the Christian faith), in the time of Hadrian the Emperor.</p>
<p>Fifty and three years after this Aquila, the Bible was also
translated by Theodosius.</p>
<p>In the three-and-thirtieth year after Theodosius, it was
translated by Symmachus, under the Emperor Severus.</p>
<p>Eight years after Symmachus, the Bible was also translated by
one whose name is unknown, and the same is called the Fifth
Translation.</p>
<p>Afterwards the Bible was translated by Hieronymus (who first
amended and corrected the Seventy Interpreters) out of Hebrew
into the Latin tongue, which translation we use to this day in
the Church. And truly, said Luther, he did enough for one
man. <i>Nulla enim privata persona tantum efficere
potuisset</i>. But he had not done amiss if he had taken
one or two learned men to his translation besides himself, for
then the Holy Ghost would more powerfully have been discerned,
according to Christ’s saying, “Where two or three be
gathered together in my name, there will I be in the midst of
them.” And, indeed, said Luther, translators or
interpreters ought not to be alone, for good and apt words do not
always fall to one single man. And so long as the Bible was
in the Church of the Gentiles, it was never yet in such
perfection, that it could have been read so exactly and
significantly without stop, as we have prepared the same here at
Wittemberg, and, God be praised, have translated it out of Hebrew
into the High German tongue.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Differences between the Bible and other
Books</i>.</h4>
<p>The Holy Scripture, or the Bible, said Luther, is full of
divine gifts and virtues. The books of the Heathen taught
nothing of Faith, Hope, and Love; nay, they knew nothing at all
of the same; their books aimed only at that which was present, at
that which, with natural wit and understanding, a human creature
was able to comprehend and take hold of; but to trust in God and
hope in the Lord, nothing was written thereof in their
books. In the Psalms and in Job we may see and find how
those two books do treat and handle of Faith, of Hope, of
Patience, and Prayer.</p>
<p>To be short, the Holy Scripture, said Luther, is the best and
highest book of God, full of comfort in all manner of trials and
temptations; for it teacheth of Faith, Hope, and Love far
otherwise than by human reason and understanding can be
comprehended. And in times of troubles and vexations, it
teacheth how these virtues should light and shine; it teacheth,
also, that after this poor and miserable life there is another
which is eternal and everlasting.</p>
<h4><i>What we ought chiefly to seek for in the Bible</i>, <i>and
how we ought to study and learn the Holy Scriptures</i>.</h4>
<p>The chief lesson and study in Divinity, said Luther, is well
and rightly to learn to know Christ, for he is therein very
friendly and familiarly pictured unto us. From hence St.
Peter saith, “Grow up in the knowledge of Christ;”
and Christ himself also teacheth that we should learn to know him
only out of the Scriptures, where he saith, “Search the
Scriptures, for they do testify of me.”</p>
<p>We ought not, said Luther, to measure, censure, and understand
the Scriptures according to our own natural sense and reason, but
we ought diligently by prayer to meditate therein, and to search
after the same. The devil and temptations also do give
occasion unto us somewhat to learn and understand the Scriptures
by experience and practice. Without trials and temptations
we should never understand anything thereof; no, not although we
diligently read and heard the same. The Holy Ghost must be
the only master and tutor to teach us therein, and let youth and
scholars not be ashamed to learn of this tutor. When I find
myself in temptation, then I quickly lay hold and fasten on some
text in the Bible which Christ Jesus layeth before me, namely,
<i>that he died for me</i>, from whence I have and receive
comfort.</p>
<h4><i>That we should diligently read the Texts of the Bible</i>,
<i>and stay ourselves upon it as the only true
Foundation</i>.</h4>
<p>Whoso layeth a good foundation, and is a substantial Text-man,
that is, he that is well grounded in the Text, the same hath
whereupon he surely may keep footing, and runneth not lightly
into error. And truly, said Luther, the same is most
necessary for a Divine; for with the texts and grounds of the
Holy Scriptures I dazzled, astonished, and overcame all my
adversaries; for they approach dreamingly and lazily; they teach
and write according to their natural sense, reason, and
understanding, and they think the Holy Scripture is a slight and
a simple thing; like the Pharisee, who thought a business soon
done when our Saviour Christ said unto him, “Do that, and
thou shalt live.” The sectaries and seducing spirits
understand nothing in the Scriptures; but with their fickle,
inconstant, and uncertain books which they have devised, they run
themselves into error.</p>
<p>Whoso is armed with the Text, the same is a right pastor; and
my best advice and counsel is, said Luther, that we draw water
out of the true fountain, that is, diligently to read in the
Bible. He is a learned Divine that is well grounded in the
Text; for one text and sentence out of the Bible is of far more
esteem and value than many writings and glosses, which neither
are strong, sound, nor armour of proof. As when I have that
text before me of St. Paul, where he saith, “All the
creatures of God are good, if they be received with
thanksgiving.” This text showeth that what God hath
made is good. Now, eating, drinking, marrying, etc., are of
God’s making, therefore they are good. But the
glosses of the Primitive Fathers are against this text, for St.
Bernard, Basil, Dominicus, Hieronymus, and others have written
far otherwise of the same. But I prefer the Text before
them all, and it is far more to be esteemed of than all their
glosses; yet, notwithstanding, in Popedom the glosses of the
Fathers were of higher regard than the bright and clear text of
the Bible, through which great wrong oftentimes is done to the
Holy Scriptures; for the good Fathers, as Ambrose, Basil, and
Gregory, have ofttimes written very cold things touching the
Divine word.</p>
<h4><i>That the Bible is the Head of all Arts</i>.</h4>
<p>Let us not lose the Bible, said Luther, but with all diligence
and in God’s fear read and preach the same; for if that
remaineth, flourisheth, and be taught, then all is safe.
She is the head and empress of all faculties and arts. If
Divinity falleth, then whatsoever remaineth besides is nothing
worth.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Art of the School Divines in the Bible</i>.</h4>
<p>The art of the School Divines, said Luther, with their
speculations in the Holy Scriptures, are merely vain and human
reasonings, spun out of their own natural wit and understanding,
of which I have read much in Bonaventura, but he had almost made
me deaf. I fain would have learned and understood out of
that book how God and my sinful soul had been reconciled
together; but of that there was nothing to be found
therein. They talk much of the union of the will and
understanding, but all is mere phantasy and folly. The
right and true speculation is this: “Believe in Christ; do
what thou oughtest to do in thy vocation,” etc. This
is the only practice in Divinity. Also, <i>Mystica
Theologia Dionysii</i> is a mere fable, and a lie, like to
Plato’s Fables. <i>Omnia sunt non ens</i>, <i>et
omnia sunt ens</i>—All is something, and all is nothing;
and so he leaveth all hanging in frivolous and idle sort.</p>
<p>True and upright Divinity consisteth in the practice, use, and
exercise; her foundation is Christ; she taketh hold by faith on
his passion, death, and resurrection. All those, said
Luther, that concur not with us, and have not this doctrine
before their eyes, the same do feign unto themselves but only a
speculated Divinity, according to their carnal sense and reason,
and according as they use to censure in temporal causes; for no
man can divert them from these opinions, namely, “Whoso
doth good works, and liveth an honest and civil kind of life, the
same is an upright Christian, and he is well and safe;” but
they are therein far deceived; for this is the truth indeed,
“Whoso feareth God and trusteth in him, the same most
surely will be well and safe at last.”</p>
<p>Therefore, said Luther, these speculating Divines belong
directly to the devil in hell. They follow their own
opinions, and what with their five senses they are able to
comprehend; and such is also Origen’s divinity. But
David is of another mind; he acknowledgeth his sins, and saith,
“<i>Miserere mei Domini</i>,” God be merciful to me a
sinner. At the hands of these sophisticated Divines, God
can scarcely obtain that he is God alone; much less can he find
this favour of them, that they should allow only him to be good
and just; nay, very hardly will they yield that he is an immortal
God.</p>
<h4><i>The Depths of the Bible</i>.</h4>
<p>The wise of the world, and the great ones, said Luther,
understand not God’s Word; but God hath revealed it to the
poor contemned simple people, as our Saviour Christ witnesseth,
where he saith, “I thank thee, O Father, Lord of heaven and
earth, because thou hast hid these things from the wise and
prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes,” etc.; from
whence St. Gregory says well and rightly, that the Holy Scripture
is like a water, wherein an “elephant swimmeth, but a
little sheep goeth therein upon his feet.”</p>
<p>I remember a Fable, said Luther, which fitteth very well for
these times, and for this purpose, discoursed of before. A
Lion, said he, making a great feast, invited all the beasts
thereunto, and with them also he invited swine. Now, as all
manner and sorts of dainties were brought and set before the
guests, the swine demanded if Brewer’s grains might be had
for them. Even so, in these days it is with our Epicures;
we Preachers bring and set before them in the Church the most
dainty and costly dishes, as Everlasting Salvation, Remission of
Sins, and God’s Grace; but they, like swine, cast up their
snouts, and root after Dollars, Crowns, and Ducats; and, indeed,
said Luther, “what should a cow do with
nutmegs?” She would rather content herself with
oat-straw.</p>
<p>When we have God’s Word pure and clear, then we are
secure, we are negligent and regard it not, we think it will
always so remain; we do not watch and pray against the devil, who
is ready to tear the Word out of our hearts. It goeth with
us as with travellers, who, so long as they are on the right way,
are secure and careless; but when they go astray into woods or
by-ways, then they are careful which way to take, whether this or
that way be the right: even so are we secure by the pure doctrine
of the Gospel; we are sleepy and negligent; we stand not in
God’s fear, nor defend ourselves with prayer against the
devil. But those that entertain errors are highly busied,
yea, they are very careful and diligent how to keep and maintain
the same.</p>
<h4><i>Of the future Want of upright and true Preachers of
God’s Word</i>.</h4>
<p>In a short time, said Luther, will be such want of upright
Preachers and Ministers, that people would be glad to scratch out
of the earth these good and godly Teachers now living, if they
might but get them; then they will see what they have done in
molesting and contemning the Preachers and Ministers of
God’s Word. Of Physicians and Lawyers there are
enough, if not too many, to serve the world; but a country hath
need of two hundred Ministers where one Lawyer is
sufficient. My most gracious Lord, said Luther, the Prince
Elector of Saxony, hath enough of twenty Lawyers in all his
territories, but he must have near six thousand Preachers and
Ministers.</p>
<h4><i>That People</i>, <i>out of mere Wilfulness</i>, <i>do set
themselves against God’s Word</i>.</h4>
<p>Had I known, said Luther, when I first began to write, what I
now see and find, namely, that people had been such enemies to
God’s Word, and so fiercely had set themselves against the
same, truly I had held my peace; for I never should have been so
courageous as to have fallen upon the Pope, and to have angered
him, and almost the whole Christian world with him. I
thought at first that people had sinned ignorantly, and out of
human weakness, and not of set purpose and wittingly to endeavour
to suppress God’s Word; but it pleased God to lead me on in
the mouth of the cannon, like a bar-horse that hath his eyes
blinded, and seeth not who runneth upon him. Even so was I,
as it were, tugged by my hair to the office of preaching; but had
I then known what now I know, ten horses should scarce have drawn
me to it. Moses and Jeremiah also complained that they were
deceived.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Archbishop of Mentz</i>, <i>one of the Spiritual
Princes Electors</i>, <i>his Censure of the Bible</i>.</h4>
<p>Anno 1530, at the Imperial Assembly at Augsburg, Albertus,
Bishop of Mentz, by chance had got into his hands the Bible, and
for the space of four hours he continued reading therein; at
last, one of his Council on a sudden came into his bed-chamber
unto him, who, seeing the Bible in the Bishop’s hand, was
much amazed thereat, and said unto him, “what doth your
Highness with that book?” The Archbishop thereupon
answered him, and said, “I know not what this book is, but
sure I am, all that is written therein is quite against
us.”</p>
<h4><i>That the Bible is hated of the Worldly-wise and of the
Sophists</i>.</h4>
<p>Doctor Ussinger, an Austin Friar, with me in the Monastery at
Erfurt, said once unto me, as he saw that I diligently read and
affected the Bible, “Brother Martin, what is the
Bible? Let us,” said he, “read the ancient
Teachers and Fathers, for they have sucked the juice and truth
out of the Bible. The Bible is the cause of all dissension
and rebellion.”</p>
<p>This, said Luther, is the censure of the world concerning
God’s Word; therefore we must let them run on their course
towards that place which is prepared for them.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Errors which the Sectaries do hold concerning the
Word of God</i>.</h4>
<p>Bullinger said once in my hearing, said Luther, that he was
earnest against the sectaries, as contemners of God’s Word,
and also against those who attributed too much to the literal
Word; for, said he, such do sin against God and his almighty
power, as the Jews did in naming the ark “God.”
But, said he, whoso holdeth a mean between both, the same is
taught what is the right use of the Word and Sacraments.</p>
<p>Whereupon, said Luther, I answered him and said,
“Bullinger, you err: you know neither yourself nor what you
hold; I mark well your tricks and fallacies. Zuinglius and
Œcolampadius likewise proceeded too far in this your
ungodly meaning; but when Brentius withstood them, they then
lessened their opinions, alleging they did not reject the literal
Word, but only condemned certain gross abuses. By this your
error,” said Luther to Bullinger, “you cut in sunder
and separate the Word and the Spirit; you separate those that
preach and teach the Word from God who worketh the same; you also
separate thereby the Ministers that baptize from God who
commandeth it; and you think that the Holy Ghost is given and
worketh without the Word; which Word, you say, is an external
sign and mark that findeth the Spirit, which already and before
possesseth the heart. Insomuch, according to your
falsities, that if the Word findeth not the Spirit, but an
ungodly person, then it is not God’s Word; whereby you
define and hold the Word, not according to God who speaketh it,
but according as people do entertain and receive it. You
will only grant that such is God’s Word which purifieth and
bringeth peace and life; but seeing it worketh not in the
ungodly, therefore it is not God’s Word. You teach
that the outward Word is like an object or a picture, which
signifieth and presenteth something; you measure the use thereof
only according to the matter, like as a human creature speaketh
for himself; you will not yield that God’s Word is an
instrument through which the Holy Ghost worketh and accomplisheth
his work, and prepareth a beginning to righteousness or
justification. In these errors are you drowned, so that you
neither see nor understand yourselves.</p>
<p>“A man might vex himself to death against the devil,
who, in the Papists, is such an enemy to God’s Word.
The devil seeth and feeleth that the external Word and preaching
in the Church doth him great prejudice, therefore he rageth and
worketh these errors against the same; but I hope God ere long
will look into it, and will strike down the devil with these
seducers.</p>
<p>“A true Christian,” said Luther, “must hold
for certain, and must say, That Word which is delivered and
preached to the wicked, to the dissemblers, and to the ungodly,
is even as well God’s Word as that which is preached to the
good and godly upright Christians. As also, the true
Christian Church is among sinners, where good and bad are mingled
together. And that Word, whether it produceth fruit or not,
is nevertheless God’s strength, which saveth all that
believe thereon. And again, it will also judge the ungodly,
as St. John saith in chap. v., otherwise they might plead a good
excuse before God, that they neither ought to be nor could be
condemned; for then they might truly allege that they have not
had God’s Word, and so consequently could not receive the
same. But,” said Luther, “I say, teach and
acknowledge that the Preacher’s words, his absolutions, and
the sacraments, are not his words nor works, but they are
God’s words, works, cleansing, absolving, binding, etc.; we
are but only the instruments, fellow-workers, or God’s
assistants, through whom God worketh and finisheth his
work. We,” said Luther to Bullinger, “will not
endure these your metaphysical and philosophical distinctions and
differences, which merely are spun and hammered out of human and
natural sense and reason. You say, It is a man that
preacheth, that reproveth, that absolveth, comforteth, etc., and
that the Holy Ghost worketh; you say, likewise, the Minister
baptiseth, absolveth, and administereth the sacraments, but it is
God that cleanseth the hearts, and forgiveth sins, etc. Oh,
no,” said Luther, “but I conclude thus: God himself
preacheth, threateneth, reproveth, affrighteth, comforteth,
absolveth, administereth the sacraments, etc. As our
Saviour Christ saith, ‘Whoso heareth you, heareth me; and
what ye loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven,’
etc. Likewise, ‘It is not you that speak, but the
spirit of your Father which speaketh in you.’”</p>
<p>“I am sure and certain,” said Luther, “when
I go up to the pulpit, or to the cathedral, to preach or read,
that it is not my word which I speak, but my tongue is the pen of
a ready writer, as the Psalmist saith. God speaketh in the
Prophets and men of God, as St. Peter in his Epistle saith:
‘The holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy
Ghost.’ Therefore we must not separate nor part God
and man according to our natural reason and understanding.
In like manner, every hearer must conclude and say, I hear not
St. Paul, St. Peter, or a man speak; but I hear God himself
speak, baptize, absolve, excommunicate, and administer the holy
sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, etc.”</p>
<p>Bullinger, attentively hearkening to this discourse of that
holy man, Luther, fell down flat on his face to the ground, and
uttered these words following: “Oh, happy be the time that
brought me hither to hear the divine discourse of this man of
God” (Martin Luther), “a chosen vessel of the Lord to
declare his truth! And now I abjure and utterly renounce
these my former errors, finding them convinced and beaten down
through God’s infallible Word which out of his divine
mouth” (Martin Luther), “hath touched my heart, and
won me to his glory.” After he had uttered these
words lying on the ground, he arose and clasped his arms about
Luther’s neck, both of them shedding joyful tears.</p>
<p>Ah, God! said Luther at that time, what an unspeakable comfort
a poor, weak, and sorrowful conscience might have and receive, if
it could but believe that such words and comforts were the words
and comforts of God himself, as in truth they are; therefore we
conclude, short and round, that God through the Word worketh,
which is an instrument whereby we are instructed to know him in
heart, as by this present and happy example of the conversion of
this our loving brother, Bullinger, we apparently see and
find.</p>
<p>But whereas, said Luther, the Word produceth not fruit
everywhere alike, but worketh severally, the same is God’s
judgment, and his secret will, which from us is hid; we ought not
to desire to know it. For “the wind bloweth where it
listeth,” as Christ saith; we must not grabble nor search
after the same.</p>
<p>If, said Luther, I were addicted to God’s Word at all
times alike, and always had such love and desire thereunto as
sometimes I have, then should I account myself the most blessed
man on earth. But the loving Apostle St. Paul failed also
thereof, as he complains with sighs of heart, saying, “I
see another law in my members, warring against the law of my
mind,” etc. Should the Word be false because it
bringeth not always fruit? Truly this art of determining
and knowing the Word hath been in great danger from the beginning
of the world, and hath endured much: few people there are that
can hit it, except God, through his Holy Spirit, teacheth it them
in their hearts. The Sectaries understand not the strength
of God’s Word. I do wonder, said Luther, that they do
write and teach so much of God’s Word, seeing they so
little regard the same.</p>
<p>Ferdinand, Prince Elector of Saxony, used to say he had well
discerned that nothing could be propounded by human reason and
understanding, were it never so wise, cunning, or sharp, but that
a man, even out of the selfsame proposition, might be able to
confute and overthrow it; but God’s Word only stood fast
and sure, like a mighty wall which neither can be battered nor
beaten down.</p>
<h4><i>Which are the best Preachers and the best
Hearers</i>.</h4>
<p>I, said Luther, esteem those to be the best Preachers which
teach the common people and youth most plainly and simply,
without subtlety, screwed words, or enlargements. Christ
taught the people by plain and simple parables. In like
manner, those are the best Hearers that willingly do hear and
believe God’s Word simply and plainly, and although they be
weak in faith, yet so long as they doubt not of the doctrine they
are to be holpen forward; for God can and will bear with weakness
if it be but acknowledged, and that we creep again to the Cross
and pray to God for grace, and amend ourselves.</p>
<p>David saith, “I hate them that imagine evil things, but
thy law do I love,” and will show therewith that we ought
diligently to regard the strength of the Word of God, and not to
contemn it, as the enthusiasts do, for God will deal with us by
such means, and by the same will also work in us. Therefore
the ancient Fathers say well touching this point, namely, that we
ought not to look to the person baptizing or ministering the
Sacrament, but we must look to God’s Word.</p>
<p>Our Lord God electeth from hearts, to whom he revealeth his
Word, and therewithal he giveth them mouths to speak it;
preserveth and maintaineth it, not by sword, but through his
Divine Power.</p>
<h4><i>That we ought to direct all our Actions and Lives
according to God’s Word</i>.</h4>
<p>God, said Luther, hath his measuring-lines, and his canons,
which are called the Ten Commandments; they are written in our
flesh and blood. The contents of them is: “What thou
wouldest have done to thyself, the same thou oughtest also to do
to another.” For God presseth upon that point, and
saith, “Such measure as thou metest, the same shall be
measured to thee again.” With this measuring-line, or
measure, hath God marked the whole world. They that live
and do thereafter, well it is with them, for God doth richly
reward them in this life; and a Turk or a Heathen may as well be
partaker of such rewards as a Christian.</p>
<h4><i>Where God’s Word is loved</i>, <i>there dwelleth
God</i>.</h4>
<p>Upon these words of Christ, “If a man loveth me, he will
keep my Word, and my Father will love him, and we will come unto
him, and make our abode with him,” I say thus, said Luther:
Heaven and earth, the castles and palaces of all Emperors, Kings,
and Princes, are no way sufficient to make a dwelling-place for
God; yet, in a silly human creature that keepeth his Word he will
dwell. Isaiah calleth heaven his “seat,” and
earth his “footstool,” but not his dwelling;
therefore, when we long to seek after God, we shall be sure to
find him with them that hear and keep his Word, as Christ saith,
“He that keepeth my Word, I will come and dwell with
him.”</p>
<p>A man could not speak more simply and childishly than Christ
spake, and yet he confounded therewith all the wisdom of the
worldly-wise. To speak in such a manner, said Luther, is
not <i>in sublimi</i>, <i>sed humili genere</i>: if I should
teach a child, I would teach him in this sort: “He that
loves me, will keep my Word.” Here we see that Christ
saith not, Abstain from flesh, from marrying, from housekeeping,
etc., as the Papists teach, for that were even to invite the
devil and all his fellows to a feast.</p>
<h4><i>That true and upright Christians are ready to suffer Death
and all manner of Torments for the Gospel’s sake</i>,
<i>but Hypocrites do shun the Cross</i>.</h4>
<p>Not long since, said Luther, I invited to my table, at
Wittemberg, an Hungarian Divine, named Matthias de Vai, who told
me that, as he came first to be a Preacher in Hungary, he chanced
to fall out with a Papistical Priest. Now, he was
complained of by that Priest to a Friar that was brother to the
Vaivoda, or Governor of Buda, and they were both summoned to
appear before him. The one much accusing the other,
insomuch that the Friar could not reconcile nor take up the
controversy between them, at last, and after long debate, the
Friar said, “I know a way soon to discover the truth of
this cause,” and commanded that two barrels of gunpowder
should be set in the midst of the market-place at Buda, and said
unto the parties, “He that will maintain his Doctrine to be
right, and the true Word of God, let him sit upon one of these
barrels, and I will give fire unto it, and he that remaineth
living and unburned, his Doctrine is right.”
Then Matthias de Vai leaped presently upon one of the barrels and
sat himself down thereon; but the Papist Priest would not up to
the other barrel, but slunk away. Then the Friar said,
“Now I see and know that the Faith and Doctrine of Matthias
de Vai is the right, and that our Papistical Religion is
false.” And thereupon he punished and fined the
Papist, with his assistants, for wronging De Vai, in four
thousand Hungarian ducats, and compelled him for a certain time
to maintain one hundred soldiers at his own charge; but he
licensed Matthias de Vai openly to preach the Gospel. The
Friar himself, recanting his religion, was converted and became a
Protestant; whereupon Luther said, Never yet would any Papist
burn for religion, but our people go with joy to the fire, as
heretofore hath been well seen on the holy Martyrs.</p>
<h4><i>By what God preserveth his Word</i>.</h4>
<p>God will keep his Word, said Luther, through the writing-pen
upon earth; the Divines are the heads or quills of the pens, but
the Lawyers are the stumps. If, now, the world will not
keep the heads and quills—that is, if they will not hear
the Divines—then they must keep the stumps—that is,
they must hear the Lawyers, who will teach them manners.</p>
<h4><i>That in Causes of Religion we must not judge according to
human Wisdom</i>, <i>but according to God’s Word</i>.</h4>
<p>When the Pope and Emperor, said Luther, cited me to appear at
Worms, Anno Domini 1521, at the Imperial Assembly, they pressed
and earnestly advised me to refer the determining of my cause to
his Imperial Majesty; but I answered the three spiritual
Electors, Maintz, Tryer, and Cologne, and said, “I will
rather surrender up to his Majesty his letters of safe-conduct
which he hath given me than to put this cause to the determining
of any human creature whatsoever.” Whereupon my
master, the Prince Elector of Saxony, said also unto them,
“Truly no man could offer more.” But as they
still insisted and urged me touching that point, I said, I did
not dare to presume, without great danger of running myself into
God’s wrath, and of the loss of my soul’s health, to
refer this Cause, which is none of mine, but God’s Cause,
to the censure of earthly counsel; for the same, before all ages,
hath been had in consultation, hath been determined, censured,
concluded, and confirmed by the great Council in Heaven, to be
and remain the infallible, most certain and true Word of the High
Majesty of God; and therefore altogether needless, yea, most
presumptuous now it were, either to receive or to deliver it to
the determination and censure of human and natural sense, wit,
and wisdom, which is subject to nothing more than to error,
especially in and concerning God’s Word and divine
matters. And I told them flat and plain, I would rather
expose myself to endure all the torments that this world, flesh,
and the devil were able to devise and prepare than to give my
consent thereunto.</p>
<h4><i>That in former Times it was dangerous studying the Holy
Scriptures</i>.</h4>
<p>In times past, as also in part of our time, said Luther, it
was dangerous studying, when divinity and all good arts were
contemned; and when fine, expert, and prompt wits were plagued
with sophistry. Aristotle, the Heathen, was held in such
repute and honour, that whoso undervalued or contradicted him was
held, at Cologne, for the greatest heretic; whereas they
themselves understood not Aristotle. The Sophists did much
more darken Aristotle than illustrate him; like as that Friar
did, who wasted two whole hours in a sermon about Christ’s
Passion, and concerning this question: <i>Utrùm quantitas
realiter distincta sit à substantia</i>—whether the
quantity in itself were divided from the substance? He
showed this example, and said, “My head might well creep
through, but the bigness of my head could not;” insomuch
that, like an idiot, he divided the head from the bigness
thereof. A silly grammarian might easily have solved the
same, and said, The bigness of the head, that is, the big or
great head.</p>
<p>With such and the like fopperies were petty brains troubled,
said Luther, and were instructed neither in good arts nor in
divinity. Antipho, Chusa, Bovillus, and others were
likewise miserably molested and plagued about bringing a thing
which was round into four square, and to compare a straight line
with a crooked. But we, God be praised, have now happy
times; and it were to be wished that the youth made good use
thereof, and spent their studying diligently in such arts as at
this time are green, and flourish.</p>
<h4><i>That the Jews have better Teachers and Writers of the Holy
Scriptures than the Gentiles</i>.</h4>
<p>When I read in the Psalter, said Luther, I do much admire that
David had such a spirit. Oh, what high enlightened people
were among the Jews! This David was a married man; he was a
king, a soldier, and a preacher; he was busy in temporal affairs,
yet nevertheless he wrote such an excellent surpassing
book. The New Testament was written also by men that were
Jews, and the Apostles themselves were Jews: God would signify
thereby that we should adore his Word, we should preciously
esteem thereof, reverence, and love the same. We Gentiles
have no book that ruleth in the Church, therefore we are not
comparable to the Jews; from hence it is that St. Paul maketh a
very fine distinction or difference between Sarah and Hagar, and
the two sons, Isaac and Ishmael. Hagar was also a wife, but
nothing near like Sarah; therefore it is a great pride,
presumption, and wilfulness of the Pope, in that he, being but a
human creature, will presume, without Scripture, to set himself
against the Scripture, and will exalt himself above the same.</p>
<h4><i>Of Luther’s Complaint of the Multitude of
Books</i>.</h4>
<p>The multitude of books, said Luther, is much to be lamented;
no measure nor end is held in writing; every one will write
books; some out of ambition to purchase praise thereby, and to
raise them names; others for the sake of lucre and gain, and by
that means further much evil. Therefore the Bible, by so
many comments and books, will be buried and obscured, so that the
Text will be nothing regarded. I could wish that all my
books were buried nine ells deep in the ground, for evil
example’s sake, in that every one will imitate me with
writing many books, thereby to purchase praise. But Christ
died not for the sake of our ambition and vain-glory, but he died
only to the end that his name might be sanctified.</p>
<h4><i>That God’s Word will not be truly understood without
Trials and Temptations</i>.</h4>
<p>I, said Luther, did not learn my divinity at one only time,
but I was constrained to search deeper and deeper, to which my
temptations brought me; for no man, without trials and
temptations, can attain to the true understanding of the Holy
Scriptures. St. Paul had a devil that beat him with fists,
and with temptations drove him diligently to study the Holy
Scripture. I, said Luther, had cleaving and hanging on my
neck the Pope, the Universities, all the deep-learned, and with
them the devil himself; these hunted me into the Bible, where I
diligently read, and thereby, God be praised, at length I
attained to the true understanding of the same. Without
such a devil, we are but only speculators of divinity, and
according to our vain reasoning we dream that so-and-so it must
be, as the Monks and Friars in monasteries do. The Holy
Scripture of itself is certain and true enough; but God grant me
the grace that I may catch hold on the right use thereof; for
when Satan disputeth with me in this sort, namely, whether God be
gracious unto me or no? then I must not meet him with this text:
“Whoso loveth God with all his heart, with all his soul,
and with all his strength, the same shall inherit the kingdom of
God;” for then the devil presently objecteth, and hitteth
me in the teeth, and saith, “Thou hast not loved God with
all thy heart,” etc., which, indeed, is true, and my own
conscience therein witnesseth against me; but at such a time I
must arm myself and encounter him with this text, namely:
“That Jesus Christ died for me, and through him I have a
gracious God and Father; Christ hath made an atonement for
me,” as St. Paul saith, “He is of God given unto us
for wisdom, for righteousness, for holiness, and for
redemption.”</p>
<p>Tyrants, sectaries, seducers, and heretics do nothing else but
drive us into the Bible, to make us read more diligently therein,
and with more fervency to sharpen our prayers.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Advice of the Bishop of Salzburg</i>, <i>how to
qualify the Controversy between the Protestants and Papists</i>,
<i>propounded to Luther shortly before his Death</i>; <i>touching
which</i>, <i>Luther discoursed as followeth</i>:</h4>
<p>At the Imperial Assembly at Augsburg, in the year 1530, the
Bishop of Salzburg said unto me, “Four ways and means there
are to make a reconciliation or union between us and you
Protestants. One is, that ye yield unto us. To that
you say you cannot. The second is, that we yield unto you;
but that we will not do. The third is, that the one party,
by force, should be compelled to yield to the other; but
thereupon a great combustion and tumult might be raised.
Therefore the fourth way or means were to be applauded and used,
namely, that now being here assembled together, the one party
should strive to thrust out the other, and that party which shall
have the advantage, and be the stronger, the same should put the
other party into a bag and expel them.” Whereupon I,
said Luther, answered him and said, “This, indeed, were a
very substantial course to settle unity and peace, wonderful
wisely considered of, found out and expounded by such a holy and
Christian-like Bishop as you are.” And thereupon I
took letters out of my pocket, which shortly before I had
received from Rome, and gave the same to the Bishop to read,
which letter related a pretty passage that fell out there five
weeks before, between some Cardinals and the Pope’s Fool,
written as followeth:—</p>
<p>The said Cardinals had been in serious consultation how, and
by what means, the Protestants in Germany might be convinced
touching their error, and suppressed; but they saw the difficulty
of it, in that the Protestants, in their books and writings,
powerfully against the Papists, cited the sacred Scripture, and
especially they opposed and withstood them with the doctrine of
St. Paul, which were great blocks in the Papists’ way,
insomuch that they found it a business not so easily to be
accomplished. Then said the Fool unto the Cardinals,
“I know how to give you herein an advice, whereby you
easily may be rid and quitted of St. Paul, that his doctrines
shall not be approved of; as thus: The Pope,” said the
Fool, “hath power to make Saints; therefore let St. Paul be
taken out of the number of the Apostles, and preferred to be a
Saint, as then his <i>dicta</i>, or sayings, which are against
you, shall no more be held for apostolical.”
“This and your proposition,” said Luther to the
Bishop, “are of equal value.”</p>
<h3>OF GOD’S WORKS.</h3>
<h4><i>That human Sense and Reason cannot comprehend nor
understand God’s Works</i>.</h4>
<p>In all things, and in the least creatures, yea, also in their
members, God’s almighty power and great wonderful works do
clearly shine. For what man, how powerful, wise, and holy
soever, can make out of one fig, a fig-tree or another fig? or,
out of one cherry-stone, can make a cherry or a cherry-tree? or
what man can know how God createth and preserveth all things and
maketh them grow?</p>
<p>And truly we find and see printed the Holy Trinity in all good
arts and creatures, as the almighty power of God the Father, the
wisdom of God the Son, and the goodness of God the Holy
Ghost. Neither can we conceive or know how the apple of the
eye doth see, or how understanding words are spoken distinctly
and plainly when only the tongue is moved and stirred in the
mouth, all which are natural things, as we daily see and
act. How then should we be able to comprehend or understand
the secret counsel of God’s Majesty, or search it out with
our sense, wit, reason, or understanding?</p>
<h4><i>That no Man understands God’s Works</i>.</h4>
<p>No man, said Luther, is able to imagine, much less to
understand, what God hath done, and still doth without
ceasing. Although we laboured and sweated blood to write
but only three lines in such manner as St. John did write, yet
were we never able to perform it. What, then, should we any
way admire or wonder at our wisdom? I, for my part, said
Luther, will be a fool, and will yield myself captive.</p>
<p>When one asked where God was before Heaven was created, St.
Austin made answer thereunto and said, He was in himself.
And as another, said Luther, asked me the same question, I said,
He was building Hell for such idle, presumptuous, fluttering
spirits and inquisitors. After he had created all things,
he was everywhere, and yet he was nowhere; for I cannot fasten
nor take hold of him without the Word. But he will be found
there where he hath bound himself to be. The Jews found him
at Jerusalem by the Throne of Grace (Exodus xxv.). We find
him in the Word and Faith, in Baptism and Sacraments; but in his
Majesty he is nowhere to be found.</p>
<p>It was a special grace in the Old Testament, when God bound
himself to a certain place where he would be found, namely, in
that place where the Tabernacle was, towards which they prayed;
as first in Shiloh and Shechem, afterwards at Gibeon, and lastly
at Jerusalem in the Temple.</p>
<p>The Greeks and Heathens in after-times, said Luther, did
imitate the same, and did build temples for their idols in
certain places, as at Ephesus for Diana, at Delphos for Apollo,
etc. For where God built a church, there the devil would
also build a chapel. They imitated the Jews also in this,
namely, that as the most holy was dark and had no light, even so
and after the same manner did they make their places dark where
the devil made answer, as at Delphos and elsewhere. In such
sort is the devil always God’s ape.</p>
<p>But, said Luther, whereas the most holy must be dark, the same
did signify that the Kingdom of Christ no other way was to be
taken hold of and fastened, but only by the Word and by
Faith.</p>
<h4><i>That the Superfluity of temporal Wealth doth hinder the
Faith</i>.</h4>
<p>God, said Luther, could be rich soon and easily if he would be
more provident, and would deny us the use of his creatures.
If he would but keep back the sun, that it should not shine, or
lock up the air, detain the water, or quench out the
fire—ah! then would we willingly give all our money and
wealth to have the use of his creatures again.</p>
<p>But seeing God so liberally heapeth his gifts upon us, we
therefore will claim them as by right, in despite of him, and let
him deny them us if he dare. Therefore the unspeakable
multitude of his innumerable benefits do hinder and darken the
faith of the believers, much more of the ungodly.</p>
<h4><i>That God doth purchase nothing but Unthankfulness with his
Benefits</i>.</h4>
<p>God giveth sun and moon, said Luther, stars and elements, fire
and water, air and earth, and all creatures; body and soul, and
all manner of maintenance, of fruits, grain, corn, wine, and all
that is profitable for the preserving of this temporal life; and,
moreover, he giveth unto us his all-saving Word, yea, himself he
giveth unto us.</p>
<p>But, said Luther, what getteth God thereby? Truly
nothing else than that he is wickedly blasphemed; yea, that his
only Son is pitifully scorned, contemned, and hanged on the
gallows; his servants plagued, banished, persecuted and
slain. This is the thanks that he hath for his Grace, for
creating, for redeeming, sanctifying, nourishing, and for
preserving us: such a seed, fruit, and godly child is the
world. Oh, woe be to it!</p>
<h4><i>Of God’s Power in our Weakness</i>.</h4>
<p>God, said Luther, placeth his highest office very wonderfully;
he commits it to preachers that are poor sinners and beggars, who
do utter and teach it, and very weakly do thereafter, or live
according to the same.</p>
<p>Thus goeth it always with God’s power in our weakness;
for when he is weakest in us, then is he strongest.</p>
<h4><i>Howsoever God dealeth with us</i>, <i>it is always
unacceptable</i>.</h4>
<p>How, said Luther, should God deal with us? Good days we
cannot bear, evil we cannot endure. Giveth he riches unto
us? then are we proud, so that no man can live by us in peace;
nay, we will be carried upon hands and shoulders, and will be
adored as gods. Giveth he poverty unto us? then are we
dismayed, we are impatient, and murmur against him.
Therefore nothing were better for us than soon to be conveyed to
the last dance, and covered with shovels.</p>
<h4><i>Of the acknowledging of Nature</i>.</h4>
<p>Adam had no need of books, said Luther, for he had the Book of
Nature; and all the Patriarchs and Prophets, Christ and his
Apostles, do cite much out of that book; as, touching the sorrows
of women bearing children, of the fellowship and community of the
members of man’s body, as St. Paul relateth such parables,
and saith that one member cannot miss another: if the eyes did
not see, whither then would the feet go? how would they stumble
and fall? If the hands did not fasten and take hold, how
then should we eat? If the feet went not, where then would
the hands get anything? Only the maw, that lazy drone, lies
in the midst of the body, and is fatted like a swine. This
parable, said Luther, teacheth us that mankind should love one
another; as also the Greeks’ pictures do teach concerning
two men, the one lame and the other blind, who showed kindness
the one to the other, as much as in them lay. The lame
guided the blind in the way, which else he neither knew nor saw,
and the blind carried the lame, that else could not go; so that
they both were helped and came forward.</p>
<h4><i>Of God’s Goodness</i>, <i>if we could but trust unto
him</i>.</h4>
<p>Once, towards evening, came flying into Luther’s garden
two birds, and made a nest therein, but they were oftentimes
scared away by those that passed by. Then said Luther, O ye
loving pretty birds! fly not away; I am heartily well contented
with you, if ye could but trust unto me. Even so it is with
us: we neither can trust in God, who, notwithstanding, showeth
and wisheth us all goodness.</p>
<h4><i>That God made all Things for Mankind</i>.</h4>
<p>God’s power is great, said Luther, who holdeth and
nourisheth the whole world, and maintaineth it; and it is a hard
article where we say and acknowledge, “I believe in God the
Father.” He hath created all things sufficiently for
us. All the seas are our cellars, all woods are our
huntings; the earth is full of silver and gold, and of
innumerable fruits, which are created all for our sakes, and the
earth is a corn-house and a larder for us, etc.</p>
<h4><i>That God’s creatures are used</i>, <i>or rather
abused</i>, <i>for the most part by the Ungodly</i>.</h4>
<p>The wicked and ungodly, said Luther, do enjoy and use the most
part of God’s creatures; for the tyrants have the greatest
power, lands, and people in the world; the usurers have the
money; the farmers have eggs, butter, corn, barley, oats, apples,
pears, etc.; but good and godly Christians must suffer, be
persecuted, must sit in dungeons where they can see neither sun
nor moon, must be thrust out into poverty, must be banished, and
plagued, etc. But certainly it must be better one day; it
cannot always so remain; let us have but patience, and
steadfastly remain by the pure doctrine, and, notwithstanding all
this misery, let us not fall away from the same.</p>
<h4><i>That God</i>, <i>and not Money</i>, <i>preserves the
World</i>.</h4>
<p>God only, said Luther, and not money and wealth, maintains and
preserves the world; for riches and much money do make proud and
lazy people: as at Venice, where the richest people are, a
horrible dearth fell among them in our memory, so that they were
driven to call upon the Turks for help, who sent twenty-four
galleys laden with corn, all which, as they almost were arrived,
went down into the sea and sank before their eyes.</p>
<p>Therefore, said Luther, great wealth and money cannot still
the hunger, but rather occasioneth more dearth; for where rich
people are, there it is always dear, and things are at high
rates. Moreover, money maketh no man right merry, but much
more pensive and full of sorrow; for they are thorns which do
prick people, as Christ calls riches; yet is the world so mad
that they will set thereupon all their joy and felicity.</p>
<h4><i>That God’s corporeal Gifts are but little
regarded</i>.</h4>
<p>One evening, Luther saw cattle going in the fields, in a
pasture, and said: Behold, there go our preachers, our
milk-bearers, butter-bearers, cheese and wool-bearers, which do
daily preach unto us the faith towards God, that we should trust
in him, as in our loving Father; he careth for us, and will
maintain and nourish us.</p>
<h4><i>That God nourisheth all the Beasts</i>.</h4>
<p>No man, said Luther, can account the great charges which God
is at only in maintaining the birds and such creatures, which in
a manner are nothing or little worth. I am persuaded, said
he, that it costeth God yearly more to maintain only the sparrows
than the yearly revenue of the French King amounteth unto.
What then shall we say of all the rest of his creatures?</p>
<h4><i>That God is skilful in all Manner of Trades</i>.</h4>
<p>God, said Luther, is skilful in all occupations and trades, in
a most perfect and excellent manner; for, like a skilful tailor,
he makes such a coat for the stag, which he wears nine hundred
years together, and of itself it is not torn; also, like a good
shoemaker, he gives him shoes on his feet, that last longer than
the stag himself, etc.</p>
<p>God gives this world, with all his works, to those people who,
as he knows before, will anger, contemn, and blaspheme him.
What, then, may we think, will he give to those that through
faith are justified, and do know that they, so justified, shall
live and remain with him everlastingly?</p>
<h4><i>That God will be praised in all Languages</i>.</h4>
<p>“All that hath breath, praise the Lord,” saith the
Psalm; thence it followeth that in all and every language,
speeches, and tongues we should preach and praise the Lord.
Why then, said Luther, have the Pope and the Emperor forbidden to
sing and pray in the German tongue?</p>
<h4><i>That God is willing we should make use of his
Creatures</i>.</h4>
<p>Our loving Lord God is willing that we eat, drink, and be
merry, and make use of his creatures, for therefore he hath
created them. He will not have that we should complain, as
if he had not given sufficient, or that he could not maintain our
poor carcases; only that we do acknowledge him for our God, and
thank him for his gifts.</p>
<h4><i>That God fills the Bellies of the Ungodly</i>, <i>but he
gives the Kingdom of Heaven to the Good and Godly</i>.</h4>
<p>We believe, said Luther, that God will give to us no better
things than he giveth to the rich ungodly wretches in this world,
to whom he gives an overplus, and the fill of good wine, money,
wealth, power, honour, and all things that they would have or can
desire. But the best wealth and treasure, which they do not
desire, he denies them, namely, himself. But he that hath
not God, let him have else what he will, so is he,
notwithstanding, more miserable than was Lazarus, that lay at the
rich man’s gate and was starved to death. But it will
go even so with them as it went with the glutton, that they
everlastingly must hunger and want, and shall not have in all
their power so much as the least drop of water, etc.</p>
<p>If, then, said Luther, the almighty and liberal God in such
wise doth heap blessings upon his worst enemies and blasphemers,
with all manner of temporal goods and wealth, and gives to some
also kingdoms, principalities, etc., then may we, that are his
children, easily conceive what he will give unto us, who, for his
sake must suffer—yea, what he hath already given us.
He hath given unto us his only-begotten Son, and with him hath
bestowed all things upon us, so that through him we are
God’s children, and also heirs of his celestial treasure,
and are co-heirs with Christ according to hope.</p>
<h4><i>Court Cards</i>.</h4>
<p>God regards ungodly great Potentates, Kings, and Princes even
as children regard playing at cards. While they play, and
have good cards, they hold them in their hands; then, afterwards,
when they have bad cards, they are weary of them, and throw them
under the bench. Just so doth God with great
Potentates. While they are in the government, and rule
well, he holds them for good; but so soon as they do exceed, and
govern ill, then he throws them down from their seat, as Mary
sings, and there he lets them lie. <i>Ut Regem
Daniœ</i>.</p>
<p>The Queen of Denmark, that was sister to the Emperor Charles
and King Ferdinand, died at that time when her husband, King
Christian, was taken prisoner, who was kept in prison twenty
years. And his son, who was the only heir of the kingdom,
and was in the Court of the Emperor, died also at the Imperial
Diet held at Ratisbon the same year, 1541. God hath taken
up and gathered together a fine and glorious game at cards, all
of mighty Potentates, as Emperors, Kings, Princes, etc.; they
scuffle and fight one with another; touching which, said Luther,
I could show many examples done in our time, etc.</p>
<p>“The Pope,” said Melancthon, “for the space
of these certain hundred years, hath been held for the principal
Head of all Christendom. When he did but wink or hold up
one finger, so must the Emperors, Kings, and Princes have humbled
themselves and feared; insomuch that he was Lord of all Lords,
King of all Kings on earth; yea, he was an earthly god. But
now comes Almighty God, throws down the Pope, and wins that great
king with the ace (Luther), and there he lies. This is
God’s government, as Mary sings in her Magnificat:
<i>Deposuit potentes</i>—He puts down the mighty from their
seat, etc.</p>
<p>“If I were rich,” said Melancthon, “I would
have artificially made me a game at cards, and a chess-board all
of gold and silver, in a remembrance of God’s game at
cards, which are all great and mighty Emperors, Kings, and
Princes, where he always thrusteth one out through another.
N. is the four of diamonds, the Pope is the six of diamonds, the
Turk is the eight of diamonds, the Emperor is the king in the
game.</p>
<p>“At last comes our Lord God, divides the game, beats the
Pope with Luther (he is the ace). But the Pope is not yet
quite dead; Christ hath begun to slay him with the spirit of his
mouth, so that he is dead in the hearts of believing
Christians. I hope it is almost come so far that, in less
than two hundred years, God will quite make an end of him, and of
that antichristian idolatry, by his glorious coming.”</p>
<h4><i>Whoso from his Heart can humble himself before God</i>,
<i>he hath gained</i>.</h4>
<p>Whoso can earnestly humble himself from his heart before God,
he hath gained. For God can do nothing but to be merciful
towards them that humble themselves. For if God should
always be stern and angry, so should I, said Luther, be afraid of
him as of the executioner. And seeing that I must stand in
fear of the Pope, of the Emperor, of the Papistical Bishops, and
of other tyrants, which are God’s enemies, to whom then
should I fly and take my refuge, if I should also be afraid of
God?</p>
<h4><i>That God preserves Nurture and Discipline</i>.</h4>
<p>God’s works and actions will be where good nurture and
discipline is maintained, especially in wars, where a good
government is settled; otherwise it goeth strangely, dissolutely,
and ill, as in this time we see too well.</p>
<p>When God will confound the wisdom of the wise, he makes them
first mad and furious in their proceedings, as he dealt with the
Popish Princes and Bishops at the Imperial Diet held at
Augsburg.</p>
<p>Let the adversaries rage and swell their fills, said Luther,
and as long as they can. God hath set the sea her bounds;
he suffers the same to beat and rage with her waves, as if they
would over-run, cover, and drown everything; yet,
notwithstanding, they must not pass the shore and banks, although
God keeps the waters in their compass, not with iron, but with
weak walls of sand. This discourse Luther held at that time
when letters were written unto him from the Assembly at
Frankfort, concerning the Papists, with their practices and
exploits, intending to fall upon the Protestants in all
parts.</p>
<p>The second Psalm, said Luther, is one of the best
Psalms. I love that Psalm with my heart. It strikes
and slashes valiantly amongst the Kings, Princes, Counsellors,
Judges, etc. If it be true what this Psalm saith, then are
the allegations of the Papists stark lies. If I were as our
Lord God, and had committed the government to my son, as he hath
done to his Son, and that these angry gentlemen were so
disobedient as they now are, I would, said Luther, throw the
world into a lump.</p>
<p>Mary, the poor child-maid of Nazareth, also combateth with
these great Kings, Princes, etc., as she sings, “He hath
put down the mighty from their seat,” etc. No doubt,
said Luther, she had an excellent undaunted voice. I, for
my part, dare not sing so. The tyrants say, “Let us
break their bonds asunder.” What that is, said he,
present experience teacheth us; for we see how they drown, how
they hang, burn, behead, strangle, banish, and torture; and all
this they do in despite of God. “But he sits above in
heaven, and laugheth them to scorn.” If, said Luther,
God would be pleased to give me a little time and space, that I
might expound a couple of small Psalms, I would bestir myself so
boldly that, Samson-like, I would take all the Papists away with
me.</p>
<h4><i>By reason of our stiff-necked Hardness</i>, <i>God must be
both harsh and good too</i>.</h4>
<p>I was, said Luther, very lately sharply reprimanded and taxed
by a Popish flattering Courtier, a Priest, because with such
passion I had written, and so vehemently had reproved the
people. But I answered him and said, “Our Lord God
must first send a sharp pouring shower, with thunder and
lightning, and afterwards cause it mildly to rain, as then it
wetteth finely through. In like manner, a willow or a hazel
wand I can easily cut with my trencher-knife, but for a hard oak
a man must have and use axes, bills, and such-like, and all
little enough to fell and to cleave it.”</p>
<h4><i>What that is</i>, <i>God is nothing</i>, <i>and yet he is
all Things</i>.</h4>
<p>Plato, the Heathen, disputed of God, that God is nothing, and
yet he is all things; him followed Dr. Eck, and the Sophists, who
understood nothing thereof, as their words do show, which no man
could understand. But, said Luther, we must understand and
speak of it in this manner: God is incomprehensible and
invisible, therefore what may be seen and comprehended, that is
not God. And thus a man may speak also in another manner
and wise: As God is either visible or invisible; visible he is in
his Word and Works, but where his Word and Works are not, there a
man should not desire to have him, for he will be found nowhere
else than where he hath revealed himself. But these and
such-like will find and take hold of him with their speculations,
so that instead of God they take hold of the devil, and find him,
for he will be also a god. But I do truly admonish and warn
every one that they abstain from such speculations, and not to
flutter too high, but remain by the manger, and by the
swaddling-clothes wherein Christ doth lie (in the Holy
Scriptures), “in whom dwelleth all the fulness of the
Godhead bodily,” as St. Paul saith (Col. ii.). There
a man cannot fail of God, but finds and hits upon him most
certainly. I would willingly that this rule might be
observed after my death, namely: Human comfort and Divine comfort
are of two sorts: human comfort consisteth in external visible
help, which a man may see, hold, and feel; but Divine comfort
consisteth only in words and promises, where there is neither
seeing, hearing, nor feeling.</p>
<h4><i>That Children are God’s special Blessings and
Creatures</i>.</h4>
<p>Dr. Jonas, inviting Luther to a dinner, had caused a bough,
with ripe cherries, to be hung up over the table where they
dined, in remembrance of the creation, thereby to put his guests
in mind to praise the glorious God in his blessing and creating
such fruits, etc. But Luther asked him why he did not
rather remember the same by his children that were the fruit of
his body. For, said he, they surpass and are far more
excelling creatures of God than all the fruits of trees. By
them we see God’s Power, Wisdom, and Art, who hath made
them all out of nothing, hath given them in one year life and all
members, so exquisitely hath created and will maintain and
preserve them. Yet, notwithstanding, we do not much regard
it; nay, we are in such gifts of God blind and covetous, as
commonly it falleth out that people when they have got children
grow worse and more covetous; they rake and rend all they can, to
the end enough may be left for their children. They do not
know that before a child comes to the world, and is born, it hath
its lot; and already is ordained and determined what and how much
it shall have, and what shall be thereout. In the state of
matrimony we learn and find that begetting and bearing of
children stands and consists not in our wills and pleasures, for
the parents can neither see nor know whether they be fruitful or
no, nor whether God will give them a son or a daughter. All
this is done without our ordaining, thinking, or
foreknowledge. My father and mother did not think that they
should have brought a superintendent into the world; it is only
God’s Creation which we cannot rightly understand nor
conceive. I believe, said Luther, that in the life to come
we shall have nothing else to do than to meditate of our Creator,
and of his celestial creatures, and wonder at the same.</p>
<h3>OF THE NATURE OF THE WORLD.</h3>
<h4><i>Of the World</i>, <i>and of the Manner thereof</i>.</h4>
<p>The world, said Luther, will neither have nor hold God for
God, nor the devil for the devil. And if a man were left to
himself, and should be suffered to do after his own kind and
nature, then would he willingly throw our Lord God out at the
window; for the world regards God nothing at all, as the Psalm
saith, <i>Dixit impius in corde suo</i>, <i>non est
Deus</i>. On the contrary, the god of the world is riches,
pleasure, and pride, wherewith they abuse all the creatures and
gifts of God.</p>
<p>The Monks and Friars, in times past, boasted much of their
contemning of the world, and they made use of that speech of St.
Paul (Rom. xii.), “Be not conformed to this world;”
from whence they would touch no money, as if it were against God
to make use of riches, money, and wealth; whereas St. Paul and
the whole Scriptures forbid but only the abuse of heart, wicked
lust, desire, and inclination; as there is ambition,
incontinency, revenge, etc., which lusts do hang on the world;
yea, they altogether flow and flourish.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Manner of People in Eating</i>.</h4>
<p>We have the nature and manner of all wild beasts in
eating. The wolves eat sheep; we also. The foxes eat
hens, geese, etc.; we also. The hawks and kites eat fowl
and birds; we also. Pikes do eat other fish; we also.
With oxen, horse, and kine, we also eat sallets, grass, etc.</p>
<h4><i>The Unthankfulness of Husbandmen and Farmers</i>.</h4>
<p>The husbandmen and rich farmers, said Luther, are not worthy
of so many benefits and fruits which the earth doth bear and
bring unto them. I give more thanks to our Lord God for one
tree or bush than all rich farmers and husbandmen do for their
large and fruitful grounds. Yet, said he, we must except
some husbandmen, as Adam, Noah, Abraham, and Isaac, who went out
to see their grounds, to the end they might remember God’s
gifts in his creatures. (Gen. xxiv.)</p>
<p>The world will have night owls, said Luther, that is,
sectaries, seducers, and unbelievers, about whom the birds do
fly; that is, the world wonders at them, entertains them with
great honour, and gives them money and wealth enough.</p>
<h4><i>The Gospel discovereth the Wickedness of Mankind</i>.</h4>
<p>As the cold, said Luther, is always greater and more piercing
in winter when the days begin to lengthen, and when the sun draws
near unto us, for that maketh the cold thicker, and presseth it
together: just so the wickedness of mankind is greater, that is,
more visible, and breaks out when the Gospel is preached; for the
Holy Ghost reproveth the world of sin, which the world neither
can nor will endure.</p>
<h4><i>The World’s Unthankfulness towards the Servants of
God</i>.</h4>
<p>He must be of a high and great spirit that undertaketh to
serve the people both in body and soul, and nevertheless must
suffer the utmost danger and highest unthankfulness.
Therefore Christ said to Peter, Simon, etc., “Lovest thou
me?” and repeated it three times together. Afterwards
he said, “Feed my sheep,” as if he would say,
“Wilt thou be an upright Minister and a Shepherd? then love
must only do it; thy love to me must do the deed, otherwise it is
impossible.” For who can endure unthankfulness? to
study away his wealth and health, and afterwards to lay himself
open to the highest danger and unthankfulness of the wicked
world? Therefore he saith, “It is very needful that
thou lovest me.”</p>
<p>The Pope and Turk, said Luther, have thoroughly revenged our
cause, and have done to the world a great deal of right, as by
scourging experience they have thoroughly been taught, for so the
world will have it. Upright and true servants of God they
will not endure, nay, they murder them, therefore they must have
such fellows, yea, and moreover, they must maintain and hold them
in great honour and esteem, and yet nevertheless must by them be
cursed and deceived.</p>
<h4><i>The World must have stern and fierce Rulers</i>.</h4>
<p>The world, said Luther, cannot be without such stern
Governors, by whom they must be ruled. King Ferdinand, with
his Popish tyranny, is even a fine liquorish bit for the world;
therefore said God, through the Prophet Samuel, to his people of
Israel that prayed for a King, He would give them a King, but
this shall be his rule: “He will take your sons, and
appoint them for himself, for his chariots, and to be his
horsemen, and will take your daughters to be cooks,”
etc. As Ferdinand, the Prince Elector of Saxony, returned
home from the election of the Emperor Charles at Cologne, he
asked me how I liked the news, that they had elected Charles,
King of Spain, to be Roman Emperor. I answered him and
said, “The ravens must have a kite.”</p>
<h4><i>The World’s highest Wisdom</i>.</h4>
<p>The highest wisdom of the world is, said Luther, to trouble
themselves with temporal, earthly, and vanishing things; and as
it happeneth and falleth out with those things, they say,
“<i>Non putâram</i>” (I had not thought
it). For faith is a certain and a sure expectation of that
which a man hopeth for, and maketh no doubt of that which he
seeth not, as the Epistle to the Hebrews saith: Faith looks to
that which is to come, and not to that which is already
present. Therefore a true Christian doth not say,
“<i>Non putâram</i>” (I had not thought it);
but he is most certain that the beloved Cross is near at hand,
and will surely come upon him; therefore he is not afraid when it
goeth evil with him, and he is tormented. But the world,
and those that live securely in the world, cannot brook
misfortunes; they go on continually leaping and dancing in
pleasure and delight, like the rich Glutton in the Gospel.
He could not spare the scraps to poor Lazarus, but Lazarus
belonged to Christ, and he took his part.</p>
<h4><i>The Language and Doings of the World</i>.</h4>
<p>Albertus, Bishop of Mentz, had a physician attending on his
person who was a Protestant, and therefore the less in the
Bishop’s favour; the same, being covetous and puffed up
with ambition, recanted his religion and fell to Popery, uttering
these words: “I will, for awhile, set Christ behind the
door, until I be grown rich, and then I will take him to me
again.” Such and the like blasphemous words do
deserve the highest punishments, as befell that wicked
dissembling wretch, for the same night he was found in his bed in
a most fearful manner, with his tongue torn out of his mouth, as
black as a coal, and his neck wrung in twain. Myself, said
Luther, at that time coming from Frankfort to Mentz, was an
eye-witness of that just judgment of God. If, said he, a
man could bring to pass, and at his pleasure could set God behind
the door, and take him again when he listed, then was God his
prisoner. They were words of a damned Epicure, and so
accordingly he was rewarded.</p>
<h4><i>Luther’s Comparison of the World</i>.</h4>
<p>The world seems to me like unto a decayed house. David
and the Prophets are the spars; Christ is the main pillar in the
midst that supporteth all.</p>
<h4><i>The World seeketh Immortality with their Pride</i>.</h4>
<p>Whereas all people do feel and acknowledge, yea, do see, that
they must die and vanish away, every one therefore seeketh here
on earth immortality, that he may be had in everlasting
remembrance. Sometimes great Princes and Kings sought it by
causing great columns of marble stone and exceedingly high
pyramids, buildings, and pillars four square to be erected, as at
this time they do with building great churches, costly and
glorious palaces and castles, etc. Soldiers do look and
hunt after great praise and honour by overcoming and obtaining
famous victories. The learned seek an everlasting name in
writing books, as in our time is to be seen. With these and
such-like, people do think to be immortal. But on the true,
everlasting, and incorruptible honour and eternity of God, no man
thinketh nor looketh after the same. Ah! we are poor,
silly, and miserable people!</p>
<h4><i>What is to be considered in the executing of
Offices</i>.</h4>
<p>If, said Luther, the great pains and labour which I take
sprang not from love and for the sake of him that died for me,
the world could not give me money enough to write only one book,
or to translate the Bible. I desire not to be rewarded and
paid of the world for my book; the world is too poor and simple
to give me satisfaction. I have not desired the value of
one penny of my master the Prince Elector of Saxony, so long as I
have been in this place. The whole world is nothing else
but a turned-about <i>Decalogus</i>, or the Ten Commandments
backwards, a wizard, and a picture of the devil. All
contemners of God, all blasphemers, all disobedient; whoredom,
pride, theft, murder, etc., are now almost ripe for the
slaughter; neither is the devil idle, with Turk and Pope,
heresies and other erroneous sects. Every man draws the
Christian liberty only to carnal excess, as if now they had free
liberty and power to do what they list; therefore the kingdom of
the devil and Pope is the best government for the world, for
therewith they will be governed with strict laws and rights, with
superstition, unbelief, etc.</p>
<p>The world grows worse through the doctrine of God’s
Grace and preaching of the Gospel; for when they hear that after
this life there is another, they are well enough content with
this life, and that God should keep the other to himself; if they
may have here but only good days, honour, and wealth, that is all
they care for or desire.</p>
<p>At the time of my being in Rome, said Luther, there died a
Cardinal very rich, and left behind him great store of money;
shortly before his death he made his will, and laid it in a chest
where the money was. After his death the chest was opened,
and therein, by the money, was found lying a bull, written on
parchment, with these words:</p>
<blockquote><p style="text-align: center"><i>Dum potui</i>,
<i>rapui</i>; <i>rapiatis</i>, <i>quando potestis</i>.</p>
<p style="text-align: center">(I extorted and oppressed as long
as I was able; while ye have power, get what you can.)</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Oh! said Luther, how finely, think you, must this Cardinal
have departed and died?</p>
<h4><i>The World is full of Dissemblers and Blasphemers</i>:
<i>How many Sorts there be</i>.</h4>
<p>Luther discoursing, in the presence of the Prince Elector of
Saxony and other Princes, of the many sorts and differences of
wicked persons, said: Colax, Sycophanta, Cacoëthes; these
sins and blasphemies are almost alike the one to the other, only
that they go one after another, as a man going up the stairs and
steps ascends from one to another.</p>
<p>Colax, in my opinion, is he that in Terence they name Gnatho,
an ear-scratcher, a dissembler, a trencher-licker, one that
talketh for his belly’s sake, and is altogether a
man-pleaser. This is a sin of mankind, whose intent is to
get all they can though others are hurt thereby.</p>
<p>Sycophanta is such a dissembler, traitor, and backbiter that
would earn a grey coat. This sin is nearer allied to the
devil than to mankind. Gnatho acts his part in the
comedies, but Sycophanta in the tragedies. Phormio, in
Terence, is a very honest person, nothing, or very little,
stained with the other two vices.</p>
<p>Cacoëthes is a wicked villain, that wittingly and
wilfully prepareth mischief.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Wealth and Treasure of the World</i>.</h4>
<p>The Fuggars <SPAN name="citation97"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote97" class="citation">[97]</SPAN> of Augsburg, on a sudden, said Luther,
are able to levy one hundred tons of gold (one ton of gold is one
hundred thousand rix dollars, making, in English money,
two-and-twenty thousand pounds sterling, and more), which neither
the Emperor nor King of Spain is able to perform. One of
the Fuggars, after his death, left eighty tons of gold. The
Fuggars and the money-changers in Augsburg lent the Emperor at
one time eight-and-twenty tons of gold for the maintaining of his
wars before Padua.</p>
<p>The Cardinal of Brixen, who died at Rome very rich, left no
great sum of ready money behind him, but only there was found in
his sleeve a little note of a finger’s length. This
note was brought to Pope Julius, who presently imagined it was a
note of money, and therefore sent for the Fuggars’ factor
that was then at Rome, and asked him if he knew that
writing. The factor said, “Yea, it was the debt which
the Fuggars did owe to that Cardinal, which was the sum of forty
hundred thousand rix dollars.” The Pope asked him how
soon he could pay that sum of money. He answered and said,
“Every day, or, if need required, at an hour’s
warning.” Then the Pope called for the Ambassadors of
France and England, and asked them if either of their Kings, in
one hour’s space, were able to satisfy and pay forty tons
of gold. They answered, “No.”
“Then,” said the Pope, “one citizen of Augsburg
can do it.” And the Pope got all that money.
One of the Fuggars being warned by the Senate of Augsburg to
bring in and to pay his taxation, said, “I know not how
much I have, nor how rich I am, therefore I cannot be
taxed;” for he had his money out in the whole
world—in Turkey, in Greece, at Alexandria, in France,
Portugal, England, Poland, and everywhere, yet he was willing to
pay his tax of that which he had in Augsburg.</p>
<h4><i>Covetousness is a Sign of Death</i>; <i>we must not rely
on Money and Wealth</i>.</h4>
<p>Whoso hath money, said Luther, and depends thereon, as is
usual, it neither proceeds nor prospers well with that
person. The richest monarchs have had bad fortune, and
lamentably have been destroyed and slain in the wars; on the
contrary, poor and unable people, that have had but small store
of money, have overcome and had great fortune and victory.
As Emperor Maximilian overcame the Venetians, and continued wars
ten years with them, who were exceedingly rich and
powerful. Therefore we ought not to trust in money and
wealth, nor to depend thereon. I hear, said Luther, that
the Prince Elector, George, begins to be covetous, which is a
sign of his death very shortly. When I saw Dr. Goad begin
to count his puddings hanging in the chimney, I told him he would
not live long, which fell out accordingly; and when I begin to
trouble myself about brewing, malting, and cooking, etc., then
shall not I drive it long, but soon die.</p>
<h4><i>The Popes’ Covetousness</i>.</h4>
<p>The covetousness of the Popes has exceeded all others’,
therefore, said Luther, the devil made choice of Rome to be his
habitation; for which cause the ancients have said, “Rome
is a den of covetousness, a root of all wickedness.”
I have also read in a very old book this verse following:</p>
<h4><i> Versus Amor</i>,
<i>Mundi Caput est</i>, <i>et Bestia Terræ</i>.</h4>
<p>That is (when the word Amor is turned and read backward, then
it is Roma), Rome, the head of the world, a beast that sucketh
out and devoureth all lands. Truly at Rome is an abominable
trading with covetousness, for all is raked to their hands
without preaching or church-service, but only with superstition,
idolatry, and with selling their good works to the poor ignorant
lay-people for money; therefore St. Peter describeth such
covetousness with express and clear words when he saith,
“They have an heart exercised with covetous
practices.” I am persuaded a man cannot acknowledge
the disease of covetousness unless he knoweth Rome; for the
deceits and jugglings in other parts are nothing in comparison of
those at Rome; therefore, anno 1521, at the Imperial Diet held at
Worms, the State of the whole Empire made supplication against
such covetousness, and desired that his Imperial Majesty would be
pleased to suppress the same.</p>
<p>At that time, said Luther, my book was presented to the German
nobility, which Dr. Wick showed unto me. Then the Gospel
began to go on well, but the Pope’s power, together with
the Antinomians, gave it a great blow, and yet, notwithstanding,
through God’s Providence, it was thereby furthered.</p>
<p>The Pope’s power was above all Kings and Emperors, which
power I opposed with my little book; and therewith also I
assaulted the Bull on the Pope, and, by God’s assistance,
overthrew it. I did not write that book on purpose against
the Pope, but only against the abuses of Popedom; yet
nevertheless it startled them quickly, for their consciences
accused them.</p>
<h4><i>Princes do draw and tear Spiritual Livings unto
them</i>.</h4>
<p>The proverb is, said Luther, “Priests’ livings are
catching livings,” and that “Priests’ goods
never prosper.” This we know to be true by
experience, for such as have drawn spiritual livings unto them
are grown poor thereby, and become beggars, therefore this Fable
I like very well:</p>
<p>There was an Eagle that made amity and friendship with the
Fox; they agreed to dwell peaceably together. Now when the
Fox expected from the Eagle all manner of good offices and turns,
he brought his young ones and laid them under the tree on which
the Eagle had his nest and young ones; but the friendship between
them lasted not long, for so soon as the Eagle wanted meat for
his young (the Fox being out of the way), he flew down and took
the young Foxes and carried them into his nest, and therewith fed
his young Eagles. When, therefore, the old Fox returned,
and saw that his young were taken away, he made his complaint to
the great god Jupiter, desiring that he would revenge and punish
that injury of <i>Jus violati hospitii</i>. Not long after,
as the Eagle again wanted meat to feed his young, he saw that on
a place in the field they sacrificed to Jupiter. The Eagle
flew thither, and quickly snatched away a piece of roast from the
altar and brought the same to his young, and flew again to fetch
more; but it happened that a hot coal hung to one of the pieces;
the same, falling into the Eagle’s nest, set it on fire;
the young Eagles, not able to fly, were burned with the nest and
fell to the ground. Even so it usually fareth with those
that rake and rend spiritual livings unto them, which are given
to the maintaining of God’s honour and service; such at
last must lose their nests, that is, they must be left destitute
of their temporal goods and livings, and besides, must sustain
hurt of body and soul. Spiritual livings have in them the
nature of Eagle’s feathers, for when they are laid to other
feathers they devour the same. Even so, when men will
mingle spiritual livings (<i>per fas aut nefas</i>) with other
goods, so must the same likewise be consumed, insomuch that at
last nothing will be left.</p>
<p>I have seen a pretty dog, at Lintz, in Austria that was taught
to go with a hand-basket to the butcher’s shambles for
meat; now, when other dogs came about him, and would take the
meat out of the basket, he set it down, bit and fought lustily
with the other dogs; but when he saw they would be too strong for
him, then he himself would snatch out the first piece of meat,
lest he should lose all. Even so doth now our Emperor
Charles, who, after he hath a long time defended the spiritual
livings, and seeth that every Prince taketh and raketh the
monasteries unto himself, doth also now take possession of
bishoprics, as newly he hath snatched to himself the bishoprics
of Utrich and Luttich, to the end he may get also <i>partem de
tunica Christi</i>.</p>
<h4><i>A fearful Example of Covetousness</i>.</h4>
<p>A covetous farmer, well known at Erfurt, said Luther, carried
his corn to sell there in the market; but holding it at too dear
a rate, no man would buy of him nor give him his price; he being
thereby moved to anger, said, “I will not sell it cheaper,
but will rather carry it home again and give it to the
mice.” As he came home therewith, an innumerable
number of mice and rats flocked about his house and devoured up
all his corn. And the next day following, going out to see
his grounds, which were newly sown, he found that all the seed
was eaten up, and no hurt at all done upon the grounds belonging
to his neighbours. This certainly, said Luther, was a just
punishment from God, and a token of his wrath against the
unthankful world.</p>
<h4><i>Wealth is the least Gift of God</i>.</h4>
<p>Riches, said Luther, is the smallest thing on earth, and the
least gift that God hath bestowed on mankind. What is it in
comparison of God’s Word? yea, what is it to be compared
with corporeal gifts, as beauty, health, etc.? nay, what is it to
the gifts of the mind, as understanding, art, wisdom, etc.?
Yet are men so eager after it that no labour, travel, nor danger
is regarded in the getting of riches; there is in it neither
<i>Materialis</i>, <i>formalis</i>, <i>efficiens et finalis
causa</i>, nor anything else that is good; therefore our Lord God
commonly giveth riches to such from whom he withholds all
Spiritual good.</p>
<h4><i>Giving to the Poor that truly stand in need of our
Help</i>.</h4>
<p>St. John saith, “He that hath this world’s goods,
and seeth his brother have need, and shutteth up his bowels of
compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in
him?” And Christ saith, “He that desireth of
thee, give to him;” that is, to him that hath need and is
in want. He saith not to every idle, lazy, and wasteful
companion, which commonly are the greatest beggars, to whom
although one gave much and often, yet were they nothing helped
thereby. In this town, said Luther, no men are in greater
want than the students and scholars. The poverty here
indeed is great, but idleness and laziness are far greater.
A man can scarcely get a poor body to work for money, and yet
they will all beg. There is, said he, no good
government. Though I were able, yet I would not give to
those idle beggars, for the more one helpeth and giveth them, the
more and oftener they come. I will not cut my bread away
from my wife and children, and give it to such; but when one is
truly poor, to him I will give with all my heart, according to my
ability. And no man should forget that Scripture which
saith, “He that hath two coats, let him part with
one,” etc.; for the Holy Scripture, in naming a coat,
meaneth all manner of apparel that one hath need of, according to
his state and calling, as well for credit as for necessity.
As, also, by “the daily bread” is understood all
maintenance necessary for the body, therefore “a
coat,” in Scripture, is signified to be all usual
apparel.</p>
<h4><i>The World will always have new Things</i>.</h4>
<p>Before I translated the New Testament out of the Greek, said
Luther, every one longed after it, to read therein, but when it
was done their longing lasted scarce four weeks. Then they
desired the Books of Moses; when I had translated those, they had
enough thereof in a short time. After that they would have
the Psalter; of the same they were soon weary; when it was
translated, then they desired other books.</p>
<p>In like manner, said he, will it be with the Book of
Ecclesiasticus, which they now long for, and about which I have
taken great pains in the translating thereof. All are
acceptable, so long and until our giddy brains be satisfied;
afterwards they let them lie, and seek after new things;
therefore in the end there must come errors among us.</p>
<h3>OF THE LORD CHRIST.</h3>
<h4><i>That Christ warreth with great Potentates</i>.</h4>
<p>On the 18th of August, 1535, Luther, receiving letters from
Frankfort relating to the great preparations of the Emperor
against the Protestants, said: Our Saviour Christ will not wage
wars with beggars, but with great and powerful Kings and Princes,
as it is written, “Kings of the earth stand up, and the
rulers take counsel together against the Lord, and against his
anointed.” Well, on, said Luther, they will find
their counsels altogether vain and frivolous, for Christ shall
win the field. We see also how the Prophets contended and
strove with Kings, as the Kings of Babel and Assyria, etc.
In like manner Daniel, one of the chief Prophets, wrestled and
strove with Kings, and they again resisted the Prophets.
All those Kings are gone, and lie in the ashes, but Christ
remaineth, still, and will remain a King for ever.</p>
<h4><i>That it doth not follow because Christ did this and
that</i>, <i>therefore we must also do the same</i>.</h4>
<p>At this time, said Luther, there are those that allege Christ
by force drove the buyers and sellers out of the temple;
therefore we also may use the like power against the Popish
bishops and enemies of God’s Word, as Muntzer and other
seducers, in the time of the common rebellion, anno 1525.
Christ did many things which we neither may nor can do after
him. He went upon the water, he fasted forty days and forty
nights, he raised Lazarus from death after he had lain four days
in the grave, etc. Such and the like must we leave
undone. Much less will Christ have that we by force should
set against the enemies of the truth, but he commanded the
contrary, “Love your enemies, pray for them that vex and
persecute you,” etc. But we ought to follow him in
such works where he hath annexed an open command, as, “Be
merciful, as your Father is merciful;” likewise,
“Take my yoke upon you and learn of me, for I am meek and
humble in heart,” etc., also, “He that will follow
me, let him deny himself, take up his cross and follow
me.”</p>
<h4><i>That the weak in Faith do also belong to the Kingdom of
Christ</i>.</h4>
<p>The weak in faith, said Luther, do also belong to the kingdom
of Christ, otherwise the Lord would not have said to Peter,
“Strengthen thy brethren,” Luke xxii.; and Rom. xiv.,
“Receive the weak in faith;” also 1 Thess. v.,
“Comfort the feeble-minded, support the weak.”
If the weak in faith should not belong to Christ, where then
would the Apostles have been, whom the Lord oftentimes (also
after his resurrection, Mark xvi.) reproved because of their
unbelief?</p>
<h4><i>That Christ is the only Physician against Death</i>,
<i>whom notwithstanding very few do desire</i>.</h4>
<p>A cup of water, said Luther, if a man can have no better, is
good to quench the thirst. A morsel of bread stilleth the
hunger, and he that hath need seeketh earnestly thereafter.
So Christ is the best, surest, and only physic against the most
fearful enemy of mankind, the devil, but they believe it not with
their hearts. If they knew a physician who lived above one
hundred miles off, that could prevent or drive away temporal
death, oh, how diligently would he be sent for! No money
nor cost would be spared. Hence it appears how abominably
human nature is spoiled and blinded; yet, notwithstanding, the
small and little heap do stick fast to the true Physician, and by
this art do learn that which the holy old Simeon well knew, from
whence he joyfully sang, “Lord, now lettest thou thy
servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen thy
salvation,” etc., therefore death became his sleep; but
from whence came his great joy? Because that with spiritual
and corporeal eyes he saw the Saviour of the world—he saw
the true Physician against sin and death. Therefore it is a
great trouble to behold how desirous a thirsty body is of drink,
or one that is hungry of food, whereas a cup of water, a morsel
of bread, can still hunger and thirst no longer than two or three
hours, but no man, or very few, are desirous, or do long after
the most precious Physician, although he lovingly calleth and
allureth all to come unto him, and saith, “He that is
athirst, let him come to me and drink” (John vii.); so,
“He that believeth in me, from his body shall flow streams
of living water.”</p>
<h4><i>Of the Temple of all the Gods (except Christ)</i>, <i>at
Rome</i>, <i>called Pantheon</i>.</h4>
<p>In the year 606, Emperor Phocas, the murderer of that good and
godly Emperor Mauritius, and the first erector of the
Pope’s primacy, gave this temple Pantheon to Pope Boniface
the Third, to make thereof what he pleased. He gave it
another name, and instead of All-Idols he named it the Church of
All-Saints; he did not number Christ among them, from whom all
saints have their sanctity, but erected a new idolatry, the
Invocation of Saints.</p>
<p>In my chronicle, said Luther, I expound the name of Bonifacius
thus: Bonifacius is a Popish name, that is, a good form, fashion,
or show, for under the colour of a good form and show he acted
all manner of mischief against God and man.</p>
<p>As I was at Rome, said Luther, I saw this church; it had no
windows, but only a round hole on the top, which gave some
light. It was vaulted high, and had pillars of marble stone
so thick that two of us could scarcely fathom one about.
Above, on the vault, were portrayed all the gods of the heathen,
Jupiter, Neptune, Mars, Venus, and how else they are
called. These gods were at a union, to the end they might
fool and deceive the whole world; but Christ they cannot endure,
for he hath whipped them out. Now are the Popes come, and
have driven Christ away again; but who knoweth how long it will
continue?</p>
<h4><i>That the World knoweth not Christ</i>, <i>nor those that
are his</i>.</h4>
<p>Even as Christ is now invisible and unknown to the world, so
are we Christians also invisible and unknown therein.
“Your life,” saith St. Paul (Coloss. iii.), “is
hid with Christ in God.” Therefore, said Luther, the
world knoweth us not, much less do they see Christ in us.
And John the Apostle saith, “Behold, what love the Father
hath showed unto us, that we shall be called God’s
children” (1 John iii). Therefore we and the world
are easily parted; they care nothing for us, so we care less for
them; yea, through Christ the world is crucified unto us, and we
to the world. Let them go with their wealth, and leave us
to our minds and manners.</p>
<p>When we have our sweet and loving Saviour Christ, then we are
rich and happy more than enough, we care nothing for their state,
honour, and wealth. But we often lose our Saviour Christ,
and little think that he is in us, and we in him; that he is
ours, and we are his. And although he hideth himself from
us, as we think, in the time of need for a moment, yet are we
comforted in his promise, where he saith, “I am daily with
you to the world’s end;” the same is our best and
richest treasure.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Name Jesus Christ</i>.</h4>
<p>I know nothing of Jesus Christ, said Luther, but only his
name; I neither have heard nor seen him corporeally; yet
notwithstanding I have, God be praised, learned so much out of
the Scriptures that I am well and thoroughly satisfied;
therefore, I desire neither to see nor to hear him
corporeally. And besides this, when I was left and forsaken
of all men, in my highest weakness, in trembling and in fear of
death, when I was persecuted of the wicked world, then I
oftentimes felt most evidently the divine power which this name
(Christ Jesus) communicated unto me; this name (Christ Jesus)
oftentimes delivered me when I was in the midst of death, and
made me alive again. It comforted me in the greatest
despair, and particularly at the Imperial Assembly at Augsburg,
anno 1530, when I was forsaken of every man; insomuch that, by
God’s grace, I will live and die for that name.</p>
<p>And rather than I will yield, or through silence endure that
Erasmus Roterodamus, or any other whosoever he be, should too
nearly touch my Lord and Saviour Christ Jesus with his ungodly
false doctrine, how fairly coloured soever it be trimmed or
garnished, I say I will rather die; yea, it should be more
tolerable for me, with wife and children, to undergo all plagues
and torments, and at last to die the most shameful death, than
that I should give way thereunto.</p>
<h4><i>That Christ and the Pope are set on</i>, <i>the one
against the other</i>.</h4>
<p>I, said Luther, have set Christ and the Pope together by the
ears, therefore I trouble myself no further; and although I come
between the door and the hinges and be squeezed, it is no matter,
though I go to the ground; yet notwithstanding Christ will go
through with it.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Pre-eminence of God’s Word</i>.</h4>
<p>Christ once appeared visible here on earth, and showed his
glory, and, according to the divine counsel and purpose of God,
he finished the work of redemption and the deliverance of
mankind. I do not desire that he should come once more,
neither would I that he should send an angel unto me; and
although an angel should come and appear before mine eyes from
heaven, yet would I not believe him; for I have of my Saviour
Christ Jesus bond and seal; that is, I have his Word and Spirit;
thereon I do depend, and desire no new revelations. And,
said Luther, the more steadfastly to confirm me in the same
resolution, and to remain by God’s Word, and not to give
credit to any visions or revelations, I shall relate the
following circumstance:—I being on Good Friday last in my
inner chamber, in fervent prayer, contemplating with myself how
Christ my Saviour hung on the Cross, how he suffered and died for
our sins, there suddenly appeared upon the wall a bright shining
vision, and a glorious form of our Saviour Christ, with the five
wounds, steadfastly looking upon me, as if it had been Christ
himself corporeally. Now, at the first sight, I thought it
had been some good Revelation: yet I recollected that surely it
must needs be the juggling of the devil, for Christ appeareth
unto us in his word, and in a meaner and more humble form;
therefore I spake to the vision in this manner: “Avoid,
thou confounded devil; I know no other Christ than he who was
crucified, and who in his Word is pictured unto me.”
Whereupon the image vanished.</p>
<h4><i>That Christ is the Health and Wisdom of the
Faithful</i>.</h4>
<p>Alas! said Luther, what is our wit and wisdom? for before we
understand anything as we ought, we lie down and die; therefore
the devil hath good striving with us. When one is thirty
years old, so hath he as yet <i>Stultitias carnales</i>; yea,
also <i>Stultitias spirituales</i>; yet it is much to be admired
that, in such our imbecility and weakness, we achieve and
accomplish so much and such great matters; but it is God that
giveth it. God gave to Alexander the Great, <i>Sapientiam
et fortunam</i>, Wisdom and good success; yet, notwithstanding,
he calleth him, in the Prophet Jeremiah, <i>Juvenem</i>, a youth,
where he saith, “<i>Quis excitabit juvenem</i>” (A
young raw milksop boy shall perform it: he shall come and turn
the city Tyrus upside-down). But yet Alexander could not
leave off his foolishness, for oftentimes he swilled himself
drunk, and in his drunkenness he stabbed his best and worthiest
friends; yea, afterwards he drank himself to death at
Babel. Neither was Solomon above twenty years old when he
was made King, but he was well instructed by Nathan, and desired
wisdom, which was pleasing to God, as the text saith. But
now chests full of money are desired. “Oh!” say
we now, “if I had but money, then I would do
so-and-so.”</p>
<h3>OF SINS AND OF FREE-WILL.</h3>
<h4><i>Of the Fall of the Ungodly</i>, <i>and how they are
surprised in their Ungodliness and False Doctrine</i>.</h4>
<p>Our Lord God, said Luther, suffereth the ungodly to be
surprised and taken captive in very slight and small things, when
they think not of it, when they are most secure, and live in
delight and pleasure, in springing and leaping for joy. In
such a manner was the Pope surprised by me, in and about his
indulgences and pardons, which was altogether a slight
thing. The Venetians, likewise, were taken napping by
Emperor Maximilian.</p>
<p>That which falleth in Heaven is devilish, but that which
stumbleth on earth is human.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Acknowledgment of Sins</i>.</h4>
<p>It can be hurtful to none, said Luther, to acknowledge and
confess their sins. Have we done this or that sin, what
then? Let us freely in God’s name acknowledge the
same, and not deny it; let us not be ashamed to confess, but let
us from our hearts say, “O Lord God! I am such-and-such a
sinner,” etc.</p>
<p>And although thou hadst not committed this or that sin, yet
nevertheless thou art an ungodly creature; and if thou hast not
done that sin which another hath done, so hath he not committed
that sin which thou hast done; therefore cry quittance one with
another. It is even as one said that had young wolves to
sell; he was asked which of them was the best. He answered
and said, “If one be good, then they are all good; they are
like one another.” If, said Luther, thou hast been a
murderer, an adulterer, or a drunkard, etc., so have I been a
blasphemer of God, because for the space of fifteen years
together I was a Friar, and have blasphemed God with celebrating
that abominable idol the Mass. It had been better for me
that I had been a partaker of other great wickednesses instead of
the same; but what is done cannot be undone; he that hath stolen,
let him henceforward steal no more.</p>
<h4><i>What our Free-will doth effect</i>.</h4>
<p>I, said Luther, oftentimes have been directly resolved to live
uprightly, and to lead a true godly life, and to set everything
aside that would let or hinder; but it was far from being put in
execution, even as it was with Peter, when he swore he would lay
down his life for Christ.</p>
<p>I will not lie nor dissemble before my God, but will freely
confess I am not able to effect that good which I do intend, but
must expect the happy hour when God shall be pleased to meet me
with his grace.</p>
<h3>OF THE CATECHISM.</h3>
<h4><i>Of the Virtues and Vices concerning the Ten
Commandments</i>.</h4>
<p>The <i>Decalogus</i>, that is, the Ten Commandments of God,
are a looking-glass, and a brief sum of all virtues and
doctrines, both how we ought to behave towards God and also
towards our neighbour, that is, towards all mankind.</p>
<p>There never was at any time written a more excellent,
complete, nor compendious book of virtues.</p>
<p>The duty of the First and Second Commandment is to fear God,
to love and to trust in him; the contrary is sin and vice, an
ungodly life, contemning of God, hatred, despair, etc.</p>
<p>The duty of the Third Commandment is to acknowledge and to
preach the doctrine of God’s Word; the contrary is
blaspheming of God, to be silent and not to confess the truth
when need requireth.</p>
<p>The duty of the Fourth Commandment is the external service of
God, as the preaching of God’s Word, hearing, reading, and
meditating on the same, to the end we may make proof of our
faith; the contrary is the despising of God’s Word and the
outward service of God, as the Holy Sacraments.</p>
<p>The duty of the Fifth Commandment is obedience towards
parents, tutors, and magistrates in those things which are not
against God; the contrary is disobedience and rebellion.</p>
<p>The duty of the Sixth Commandment is meekness, not to be
desirous of revenge, not to bear malice; against this is tyranny,
rage, hatred, envy, etc.</p>
<p>The duty of the Seventh Commandment is continency and
chastity; against the same is lasciviousness, immodest behaviour,
adultery, etc.</p>
<p>The duty of the Eighth Commandment is to do good, to give and
lend willingly, to be liberal; the contrary is covetousness,
stealing, usury, fraud, and to wrong in trading and dealing.</p>
<p>The duty of the Ninth Commandment is to love the truth, not to
backbite and slander, to speak well of all men; the contrary is
lying, backbiting, and to speak evil of another.</p>
<p>The duty of the Tenth Commandment is righteousness, to let
every one possess his own; the contrary is to be miserable and
unjust.</p>
<p>The duty of this Commandment is to be without all covetous
desires in the heart, to be content with that which one hath;
against that are the lustings of the heart. St. Paul saith
the end of the Commandment is charity, out of a pure heart, and
of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned.</p>
<h3>BRIEF SENTENCES OF THE CATECHISM, ACCORDING AS LUTHER USED TO TEACH AND INSTRUCT HIS FAMILY AT HOME.</h3>
<h4><i>Of the Ten Commandments of God</i>.</h4>
<p>As the Faith is, so is also God.</p>
<p>God stayeth not quite away, though he stayeth long.</p>
<p>Despair maketh Priests and Friars.</p>
<p>God careth and provideth for us, but we must labour.</p>
<p>God will have the heart only and alone.</p>
<p>Idolatry is the imagination of the heart.</p>
<p>God giveth by creatures.</p>
<p>God’s Word placeth before our eyes the world, to the end
we may see what a fine spark it is.</p>
<p>God’s Word is our sanctification, and maketh everything
happy.</p>
<p>Works of obedience must highly be regarded.</p>
<p>All that govern are called Fathers.</p>
<p>Shepherds of Souls are worthy of double honour.</p>
<p>Magistrates belong not to the fifth Commandment.</p>
<p>Wrath is forbidden in every man, except in the
magistrates.</p>
<p>All occasions of death are forbidden.</p>
<p>Matrimony proceedeth freely in every state and calling.</p>
<p>Matrimony is necessary and commanded.</p>
<p>Matrimony forbidden and disallowed is against God’s
command.</p>
<p>Matrimony is a blessed state, and pleasing to God.</p>
<p>To steal is what one taketh unjustly.</p>
<p>Unfaithfulness is also stealing.</p>
<p>Thieving is the most common trade in the world.</p>
<p>Great thieves go scot-free, as the Pope and his crew.</p>
<p>Falseness and covetousness prosper not.</p>
<p>Backbiting is meddling with God’s judgment.</p>
<p>Censuring, and to speak evil behind one’s back,
belongeth only to the magistrates.</p>
<p>We must censure and reprove no man behind his back.</p>
<p>We must judge charitably in everything.</p>
<p>There are no good works without the Ten Commandments.</p>
<p>To fear God, and to trust in him, is the fulfilling of all the
Commandments.</p>
<p>The first Commandment driveth on all the rest.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Creed</i>.</h4>
<p>The Creed teacheth to know God, and what a God we have.</p>
<p>In all cases we must make use of faith.</p>
<p>God giveth himself unto us with all creatures.</p>
<p>We must always drive on the article of Jesus Christ.</p>
<p>The Holy Ghost bringeth Christ home unto us; he must reveal
him.</p>
<p>Where the Holy Ghost preacheth not, there is no Church.</p>
<p>The works of the Holy Ghost are wrought continually.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Lord’s Prayer</i>.</h4>
<p>To pray is to call upon God in all need, which is made
precious through God’s command, and necessity stirreth up
earnest and devout prayers, which are our weapons against the
devil.</p>
<p>The devil, the world, and our flesh is against God’s
Will.</p>
<p>The devil hindereth and destroyeth the daily bread and all the
gifts of God.</p>
<p>God careth for our bodies daily.</p>
<p>No man can live in the world without sin.</p>
<p>No man can bring his own righteousness before God.</p>
<p>We must forgive, as God forgiveth us.</p>
<p>To forgive our neighbour, assureth us fully that God hath
forgiven us.</p>
<p>We are tempted three manner of ways—of the devil, of the
world, and of our flesh.</p>
<p>Temptations serve against the secureness of our flesh.</p>
<p>Temptations are not overcome through our own strength.</p>
<p>The devil would hinder all that we pray for.</p>
<p>The devil goeth about to bring us into all manner of need.</p>
<h4><i>Of Baptism</i>.</h4>
<p>Faith is annexed to Baptism.</p>
<p>Faith must have before it some external thing.</p>
<p>Faith maketh the person worthy.</p>
<p>Baptism is not our work, but God’s.</p>
<p>Baptism is right, although no man believeth.</p>
<p>No man must build upon his faith.</p>
<p>Unbelief weakeneth not God’s Word.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Lord’s Supper</i>.</h4>
<p>The Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper is of God’s
ordaining.</p>
<p>The Word maketh a Sacrament.</p>
<p>Christ in the Sacrament is spiritual food for the soul.</p>
<p>Remission of sins is obtained only through the Word.</p>
<p>Faith receiveth the forgiveness of sins.</p>
<p>The Sacrament consisteth not in our worthiness.</p>
<p>Faith and human understanding are one against another.</p>
<p>Faith dependeth on the Word.</p>
<p>As we hold of Christ, even so we have him.</p>
<p>Faith is a Christian’s treasure.</p>
<p>The Gospel is the power of God.</p>
<h4><i>Good Works</i>.</h4>
<p>Good works are nameless.</p>
<p>A Christian’s work standeth for the good of the
neighbour.</p>
<p>Faith in Christ destroyeth sin.</p>
<p>The Holy Scriptures only give comfort, they forbid not good
works.</p>
<p>Christ is a general good.</p>
<p>Christians do pray for and desire the last Day of
Judgment.</p>
<p>The Church heareth none but Christ.</p>
<p>Christ is of a mean estate and small repute.</p>
<p>In adversities we should show ourselves like men, and pluck up
good spirits.</p>
<p>Our whole life should be manly; we should fear God and put our
trust in him.</p>
<p>Faith maketh us Christ’s heritage.</p>
<p>We should aim at celestial honour, and not regard the
contemning of men.</p>
<p>Christ spareth us out of mere grace through the Word.</p>
<p>The Gospel is altogether joyful.</p>
<p>Grace condemneth all people’s own righteousness.</p>
<p>Salvation is purchased and given unto us without our
deserts.</p>
<p>Regeneration is the work only of the Holy Ghost.</p>
<p>Human reason cannot comprehend nor understand the goodness and
benefits of God.</p>
<p>Good works are the seals and proofs of faith; for, even as a
letter must have a seal to strengthen the same, even so faith
must have good works.</p>
<p>Faith hath regard to the Word, and not to the Preacher.</p>
<p>The Preacher and the Word are two Persons.</p>
<p>This natural life is a little piece of the life
everlasting.</p>
<p>Own imaginations and conceits spoil all things.</p>
<p>The Gospel cometh of God, it showeth Christ, and requireth
Faith.</p>
<p>The Gospel is a light in the world, which lighteneth mankind,
and maketh children of God.</p>
<p>False Preachers are worse than deflowerers of virgins.</p>
<p>Righteousness is obtained through faith, and not through
works. Works make faith strong.</p>
<p>A Preacher is made good through temptations.</p>
<p>A Prince is venison in heaven.</p>
<p>A person must be good before his works can be good.</p>
<p>We must not be dejected, but believe and pray.</p>
<p>No State or Calling is of any value to make one good before
God.</p>
<p>Faith endureth no human traditions in the conscience.</p>
<p>The Saints oftentimes erred like men.</p>
<p>We must distinguish offices from the persons.</p>
<p>We hate punishment, but we love sin.</p>
<p>God preserveth the sanctified, yea, even in the midst of
errors.</p>
<p>No great Saint lived without errors.</p>
<p>A Christian’s life consisteth of three points—of
faith, love, and the cross.</p>
<p>We command a Christian in nothing, he is only admonished.</p>
<p>We must curb ourselves in our own wills and minds.</p>
<p>All revenge among Christians is taken away; they must grow up
and increase in the fruits of the spirit, among which love is the
greatest, for she goeth about with the people.</p>
<p>Human reason comprehendeth not, nor understandeth that Christ
is our brother.</p>
<p>Christ is given unto us that believe with all his benefits and
works.</p>
<p>Christ cometh unto us by preaching, so that he is in the midst
of us.</p>
<p>Without the Cross we cannot attain to glory.</p>
<p>The Gospel cannot be truly preached without offence and
tumult.</p>
<p>The Holy Ghost maketh one not instantly complete, but he must
grow and increase.</p>
<p>We lose nothing by the Gospel, therefore we should venture
thereupon all we have.</p>
<p>To believe the Gospel, delivereth from sins.</p>
<p>Works belong to the neighbour, faith to God.</p>
<p>Those that censure and judge others, condemn themselves.</p>
<p>Such as is the Faith, such is also the benefit.</p>
<p>To doubt is sin and everlasting death.</p>
<p>We know Christ when he himself is a schoolmaster in our
hearts, and breaketh bread unto us.</p>
<p>God’s Word kindleth Faith in the heart.</p>
<p>Faith is to build certainly on God’s mercy.</p>
<p>Christ requireth no seeming godliness, no hypocrisy nor
dissembling, but the godliness of the heart.</p>
<p>We are saved merely by grace and mercy, if we trust thereupon,
but God must alter our hearts.</p>
<p>The Law is nothing but a looking-glass.</p>
<p>Christ carrieth us upon his back before his Father.</p>
<p>Love regardeth not unthankfulness.</p>
<h3>OF THE LAW AND THE GOSPEL.</h3>
<h4><i>That we ought to beware of Sophistry</i>.</h4>
<p>If, said Luther, we diligently mark the world and the course
thereof, we shall find that it is governed merely by weenings or
conceits, <i>Mundus regitur opinionibus</i>. Therefore
sophistry, hypocrisy, and tyranny do rule and have the government
in the world.</p>
<p>The upright, pure, and clear Divine Word must be their
handmaid, and be by them controlled; this the world will
have. Therefore let us beware of sophistry, which
consisteth not only in a double tongue, in doubtful and screwed
words, which may be construed any way, but also it blossometh,
and flourisheth in all arts and vocations; it will likewise have
room and place in religion; it hath usurped and got a fine
painted colour, under the name of holy writ.</p>
<p>Nothing is more pernicious or hurtful than Sophistry; every
one knoweth it not; moreover, we are by nature prone and willing
to believe lies rather than the truth. Few people do know
what an evil sophistry is. Plato, the Heathen writer, made
thereof a wonderful definition. For my part, said Luther, I
compare it with a lie, which is like to a snowball, the longer it
is rolled the greater it becomes.</p>
<p>Therefore I do not approve of such persons as do pervert
everything, do under-value and find fault with other men’s
opinions, although they be good and sound; I like not such brains
which can dispute on both sides, and yet conclude nothing
certain. Such sophistications, said Luther, are nothing but
crafty and subtle inventions and contrivances to cozen and
deceive people.</p>
<p>But I like and love an honest and a well-affected mind, that
seeketh after truth simply and plainly, not to go about with
phantasies and cheating tricks.</p>
<h4><i>Whether we should preach only of God’s Grace and
Mercy</i>, <i>or not</i>.</h4>
<p>Philip Melancthon demanded of Luther whether the opinion of
Calixtus were to be approved of, namely, that the Gospel of
God’s Grace ought to be continually preached. For
thereby, doubtless, said Melancthon, people would grow worse and
worse. Luther answered him and said: We must preach
<i>Gratiam</i>, notwithstanding, because Christ hath commanded
it. And although we long and often preach of grace, yet
when people are at the point of death they know but little
thereof. Nevertheless we must also drive on with the Ten
Commandments in due time and place.</p>
<p>The ungodly, said Luther, out of the Gospel do suck only a
carnal freedom, and become worse thereby; therefore not the
Gospel, but the Law belongeth to them. Even as when my
little son John offendeth: if then I should not whip him, but
call him to the table unto me, and give him sugar and plums,
thereby, indeed, I should make him worse, yea, should quite spoil
him.</p>
<p>The Gospel is like a fresh, mild, and cool air in the extreme
heat of summer, that is, a solace and comfort in the anguish of
the conscience. But as this heat proceedeth from the rays
of the sun, so likewise the terrifying of the conscience must
proceed from the preaching of the Law, to the end we may know
that we have offended against the Laws of God.</p>
<p>Now, said Luther, when the mind is refreshed and quickened
again by the cool air of the Gospel, then we must not be idle,
lie down and sleep; that is, when our consciences are settled in
peace, quieted and comforted through God’s spirit, then we
must show also and prove our faith by such good works which God
hath commanded. But so long as we live in this vale of
misery, we shall be plagued and vexed with flies, with beetles,
and with vermin, etc., that is, with the devil, with the world,
and with our own flesh; yet we must press through, and not suffer
ourselves to recoil.</p>
<h4><i>Against the Opposers of the Law</i>.</h4>
<p>I do much condemn, said Luther, the Antinomians, who, void of
all shame, reject the doctrine of the Law, whereas the same is
both necessary and profitable. But they see not the effect,
the need, and the fruit thereof. St. Austin did picture the
strength, the office and operation of the Law, by a very fit
similitude, namely, that it discovereth our sins, and God’s
wrath against sin, and placeth them in our sight; for the Law is
not in fault, but our evil and wicked nature, even as a heap of
lime is still and quiet until water be poured thereon, but then
it beginneth to smoke and to burn, not that it is the fault of
the water, but it is the nature and kind of the lime, which will
not endure water; but if oil be poured upon it, then it lieth
still and burneth not. Even so it is with the Law and
Gospel. It is an exceedingly fair similitude.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Children’s Faith</i>.</h4>
<p>The little children, said Luther, do stand on the best terms
with God Almighty concerning their lives and faith. We old
doting fools do torment ourselves and have sorrow of heart with
our disputings, touching the Word, whether it be true or not:
“How can it be possible?” etc. But the children
with simple pure faith do hold the same to be certain and true,
without all doubting.</p>
<p>Now, if we intend to be saved, we must, according to their
example, give ourselves only to the Word. But the wicked
and crafty spirit, before we be aware, can, master-like, draw the
same away from us, by presenting new dealings and business to
keep us in action. Therefore best it were for us soon to
die, and to be covered over with shovels.</p>
<p>The loving children do live innocently, they know of no sins,
they are without malice, wrath, covetousness, and unbelief,
etc. Therefore they are merry and possess a good
conscience; they fear no danger, whether wars, pestilence, or
death.</p>
<p>They will take an apple rather than a crown; what they hear
concerning Christ, of the life to come, etc., the same do they
believe simply and plainly, and prattle joyfully thereof.
From whence Christ speaketh unto us old ones earnestly to follow
their examples, where he saith, “Whosoever shall not
receive the kingdom of God as a little child shall in no wise
enter therein.” For the children believe aright, and
Christ loveth them with their childish sports. On the
contrary, he is an enemy to the wisdom of the world (Matt.
xi.).</p>
<h4><i>Of an Example of Faith in the Time of Dearth</i>.</h4>
<p>At Eisleben, said Luther, I was well acquainted with a godly
matron, who, in the time of the last dearth, with two children,
had suffered extreme want and need. Now, when she had spent
all her provision, and had nothing more to live upon, she trimmed
herself with her children, and went towards a well or fountain to
drink. In her going she prayed that God would be pleased to
preserve and keep her in that fierce time of dearth. Upon
the way a man met her, questioned and disputed with her whether
she thought to get something to eat at the fountain. She
said, “Yea, why not? for all things are possible to God and
easy to be done; he that fed the great multitude of the people of
Israel forty years with manna in the wilderness, he can also
preserve me and mine with drinking of water.” Now, as
she remained steadfast in that mind, the man said unto her,
“Behold! seeing thou art so confident in faith, go home,
and thou shalt find three bushels of meal,” etc. And
according to the man’s word, so she found it.</p>
<h4><i>That Faith is the only Rule in Divinity</i>.</h4>
<p>There is but one only rule and article in divinity. He
that knoweth not well the same is no divine: namely, upright
faith and confidence in Christ. Out of this article all the
others do flow and issue forth, and without this article the
others are nothing. The devil, said Luther, hath opposed
this article from the beginning of the world, and would long
since willingly have rooted it out, and instead thereof have
laughed in his fist. Sorrowful, broken, tormented, and
vexed hearts, said Luther, do well relish this article, and they
only understand the same.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Consequences of Faith</i>.</h4>
<p>Believest thou? then thou wilt speak boldly. Speakest
thou boldly? then thou must suffer. Sufferest thou? then
thou shalt be comforted. For, said Luther, faith, the
confession thereof, and the cross do follow one after
another.</p>
<h4><i>That the Enemies of the Gospel must bear Witness to the
Doctrine of Faith</i>, <i>that thereby we only are justified
before God</i>.</h4>
<p>John Frederick, Prince Elector of Saxony, told me himself,
said Luther, that as Prince John, the eldest son of Prince
George, was near the time of his death, he desired to receive the
communion under both kinds. But when his father was
informed thereof, he caused an Austin Friar to be called to his
son, to give him good instructions for his soul’s health,
and to advise him to receive the Sacrament <i>sub una specie</i>,
or under one kind, and that he should tell his son he was the
same Friar who was privately acquainted with Martin Luther, and
was very conversant with him; and, the better to make the Prince
believe him, the Friar said that Luther himself lately had
advised certain persons to receive the communion under one
kind. Now, when this good and godly Prince was thus
pitifully induced to give credit to the Friar’s false
information, he then received the communion under one kind.</p>
<p>But when the Prince, his father, saw that his son drew near to
his last gasp, and must needs die, then he comforted his son with
the article of justification by faith in Christ, and put him in
mind to have regard only to the Saviour of the world, and utterly
to forget all his own works and deserts, and also that he should
banish out of his heart the invocating of the saints.</p>
<p>Now, when the son in his conscience felt great solace and
comfort by these his father’s admonitions, he asked his
father why he did not cause the same comfortable doctrine to be
preached openly through all his countries. His father
answered and said, “Loving child, we must say thus only to
those that are dying, and not to the sound and
healthful.”</p>
<p>Whereupon, said Luther, I told the Prince Elector that his
Highness might perfectly discern how wilfully our adversaries do
oppose the known truth. Albert, Bishop of Mentz, and Prince
George do know and confess that our doctrine is according to
God’s Word, and yet, because it proceedeth not from the
Pope, they refuse it; but their own consciences do strike them
down to the ground, therefore, said Luther, I fear them not.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Love towards the Neighbour</i>.</h4>
<p>The love towards the neighbour, said Luther, must be like a
pure and chaste love between bride and bridegroom, where all
faults are connived at, covered, and borne with, and only their
virtues regarded.</p>
<p>Respecting ceremonies and ordinances, the kingdom of love must
have the precedency and govern, and not tyranny. It must be
a willing love, and not a halter love; it must altogether be
directed and construed for the good and profit of the neighbour;
and the greater he be that doth govern, the more, said Luther, he
ought to serve according to love.</p>
<h4><i>Of that Sentence</i>, <i>“Give</i>, <i>and it shall
be given unto you</i>.<i>”</i></h4>
<p>This is a true speech which maketh people poor and rich; it is
that which maintaineth my house. I ought not to boast, said
Luther, but I well know what I give in the year. If my
gracious lord and master, the Prince Elector, should give a
gentleman two thousand guilders, yet he should hardly maintain my
housekeeping one year, and I have but three hundred guilders
pension per annum; yet God giveth sufficient and blesseth it.</p>
<p>There is in Austria a monastery which in former time was very
rich, and remained rich so long as it willingly gave to the poor;
but when it ceased in giving, then it became poor, and is so to
this day. It fell out that, not long since, a poor man came
thither and desired alms, which was denied. The poor man
demanded the cause why they refused to give for God’s
sake. The porter belonging to the monastery answered and
said, “We are become poor;” whereupon the poor man
said, “The cause of your poverty is this: ye have had in
this monastery two brethren; the one ye have thrust out, and the
other is gone secretly away of himself. For after the one
brother, ‘Give’ (<i>Date</i>), was put out and
cashiered, so hath the other brother, ‘So shall be
given’ (<i>Dabitur</i>), also lost himself.”</p>
<p>And indeed the world is bound to help the neighbour three
manner of ways—with giving, lending, and selling. But
no man giveth, but robbeth, scrapeth, and draweth all to himself;
would willingly take and steal, but give nothing; neither will
any man lend but upon usury. No man selleth but he
over-reacheth his neigbbour, therefore <i>Dabitur</i> is gone,
and our Lord God will bless no more so richly. Beloved,
said Luther, he that intendeth to have anything, the same must
also give; a liberal hand was never in want nor empty.</p>
<h4><i>That giving must be done with a free Heart</i>, <i>without
expecting a Requital</i>.</h4>
<p>In an evening, Luther, walking abroad to take the air, gave
alms to the poor. Doctor Jonas, being with him, gave also
something, and said, “Who knoweth whether God will give it
me again or no?” Whereat Luther, smiling, answered
him and said, “You speak as if God had not given you this
which you have now given to the poor. We must give freely
and willingly.”</p>
<h4><i>Of the expounding of the Prophet Isaiah’s
Speech</i>: <i>“In Quietness and in Confidence shall be
your Strength</i>.<i>”</i></h4>
<p>This sentence was expounded by Luther in this way: If thou
intendest to vanquish the greatest, the most abominable and
wickedest enemy, who is able to do thee mischief both in body and
soul, and against whom thou preparest all sorts of weapons, but
canst not overcome, then know that there is a sweet and loving
physical herb which serveth for the same, and that herb is named
<i>Patientia</i>.</p>
<p>But thou wilt say, “How may I attain to this
physic?” Answer—Take unto thee faith, who
saith; “No creature can do me mischief without the will of
God.” Now, in case thou receivest hurt and mischief
by thine enemy, the same is done by the sweet and gracious will
of God, in such sort that the enemy hurteth himself a thousand
times more. From hence floweth unto me, a Christian, the
love which saith, “I will, instead of the evil which mine
enemy doth unto me, do him all the good I can; I will heap coals
of fire upon his head.” This, said Luther, is the
Christian armour and weapon, wherewith to beat and overcome those
enemies that seem to be like huge mountains. In a word,
love teacheth to suffer and endure all things.</p>
<h4><i>Of Comfort against Envy</i>.</h4>
<p>A certain honest and God-fearing man at Wittemberg lately told
me, said Luther, he lived peaceably with every one, hurt no man,
but was still and quiet; yet notwithstanding, said he, many
people were enemies unto him. I comforted him in this
manner, and said: Arm yourself with patience, and give them no
cause of envy. I pray, what cause do we give the
devil? What aileth him to be so great an enemy unto us? but
only because he hath not that which God hath. I know none
other cause of his vehement hatred towards us. Therefore
when God giveth thee to eat, then eat; when he causeth thee to
fast, have patience; giveth he honour, take it; hurt or shame,
endure it; casteth he thee into prison, murmur not; will he make
thee a lord, follow him: casteth he thee down again, so care thou
not for it, nor regard it.</p>
<h4><i>That Patience is necessary in every Particular</i>.</h4>
<p>I, said Luther, must have patience with the Pope; I must have
patience with heretics and seducers; I must have patience with
the roaring courtiers; I must have patience with my servants: I
must have patience with Kate my wife; to conclude, the patiences
are so many, that my whole life is nothing but patience.
The Prophet Isaiah saith, “In being silent and hoping
consisteth our strength;” that is, have patience under
sufferings: hope, and despair not.</p>
<h3>OF PRAYER.</h3>
<h4><i>What Power Prayer hath</i>.</h4>
<p>No human creature can believe, said Luther, how powerful
prayer is, and what is it able to effect, but only those that
have learned it by experience.</p>
<p>It is a great matter when in extreme need, as then one can
take hold on prayer. I know, as often as I have earnestly
prayed, that I have been richly heard, and have obtained more
than I prayed for; indeed, God sometimes deferred, but
notwithstanding he came.</p>
<p>Ecclesiasticus saith, “The prayer of a good and godly
Christian availeth more to health, than the physician’s
physic.”</p>
<p>O how great and upright and godly Christian’s prayer is!
how powerful with God; that a poor human creature should speak
with God’s high majesty in heaven, and not be affrighted,
but, on the contrary, knoweth that God smileth upon him for
Christ’s sake, his dearly beloved Son. The heart and
conscience, in this act of praying, must not fly and recoil
backwards by reason of our sins and unworthiness, and must not
stand in doubt, nor be scared away. We must not do, said
Luther, as the Bavarian did, who with great devotion called upon
St. Leonard, an idol, set up in a church in Bavaria, behind which
idol stood one who answered the Bavarian and said, “Fie on
thee, Bavarian”; and in that sort oftentimes was repulsed,
and could not be heard: at last, the Bavarian went away, and
said, “Fie on thee, Leonard.”</p>
<p>But when we pray, we must not let it come to, fie upon thee;
but must certainly hold, conclude, and believe, that we are
already heard in that for which we pray with faith in
Christ. Therefore the ancients finely described prayer,
namely, that it is, <i>Ascensus mentis ad Deum</i>, a climbing up
of the heart unto God, that is, lifteth itself up, crieth and
sigheth to God: neither I myself, said Luther, nor any other that
I know, have rightly understood the definition of this
<i>Ascensus</i>. Indeed, we have boasted and talked much of
the climbing up of the heart; but we failed in <i>Syntaxi</i>, we
could not bring thereunto the word <i>Deum</i>; nay, we flew from
God, we were afraid to draw near unto him, and to pray through
Christ, in whom the strength of prayer wholly consisteth; we
always prayed in Popedom <i>conditionaliter</i>, conditionally,
and therefore uncertainly.</p>
<p>But let us pray in heart, and also with our lips; for prayer,
by our loving God, supporteth the world; otherwise, without
prayer, it would stand in a far more lamentable state.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Power of Prayer</i>, <i>and of the Lord’s
Prayer</i>.</h4>
<p>Our Saviour Christ, said Luther, most excellently, and with
very few words, comprehended, in the Lord’s Prayer, all
things both needful and necessary; but without trouble, trials,
and vexations, prayer cannot rightly be made. Therefore God
saith, “Call on me in the time of trouble,” etc.,
without trouble it is only a cold prattling, and goeth not from
the heart; the common saying is “Need teacheth to
pray.” And although the Papists say that God well
understandeth all the words of those that pray, yet St. Bernard
is far of another opinion, where he saith, “God heareth not
the words of one that prayeth, unless he that prayeth heareth
them first himself.” The Pope is a mere tormentor of
the conscience. The assembly of his greased and religious
crew in praying was altogether like the croaking of frogs, which
edified nothing at all. It was mere sophistry, and
deceiving, fruitless, and unprofitable.</p>
<p>Prayer is a strong wall, and a fort of the church; it is a
godly Christian’s weapon, which no man knoweth nor findeth,
but only he who hath the spirit of grace and of prayer.</p>
<p>The three first petitions in our Lord’s prayer do
comprehend such great and celestial things, that no heart is able
to search them out. The fourth petition containeth the
whole policy and economy, or the temporal and house-government,
and all things necessary for this life. The fifth prayer
striveth and fighteth against our own evil consciences, against
original and actual sins, which trouble the same, etc.
Truly they were penned by wisdom itself; none but God could have
done the like.</p>
<p>We cannot pray without faith in Christ the Mediator. The
Turks, the Jews, and the ungodly may rehearse and speak the words
of prayer after one, but they cannot pray. And although the
Apostles were taught this prayer by Christ, and prayed often, yet
they prayed not as they should have prayed: for Christ saith,
“Hitherto ye have not prayed in my name;” whereas,
doubtless, they had prayed much, and spoken the words. But
when the Holy Ghost came, then they prayed aright in the name of
Christ. If praying and reading of prayer be but only a bare
work, as the Papists hold it to be, then the righteousness of the
law is nothing worth. The upright prayer of a godly
Christian is a strong hedge, as God himself saith, “And I
sought for a man among them that should make up the hedge, and
stand in the gap before me for the land, that I should not
destroy it, but I found none,” etc. Therefore, said
Luther, when others do blaspheme, let us pray. David saith,
“He doth the will of them that fear Him, and heareth their
prayers.”</p>
<h4><i>That we must daily go on in Praying</i>.</h4>
<p>I, said Luther, have every day enough to do to pray. And
when I lay me down to rest, I pray the Lord’s Prayer, and
afterwards take hold on two or three sentences out of the Bible,
and so betake myself to sleep, then I am well satisfied.</p>
<h4><i>That Preachers ought to join their Prayers
together</i>.</h4>
<p>Dr. Aepinus, Superintendent of Hambrough, coming to Wittemberg
to speak with Luther, who, after his dispatch, and at his taking
leave, said, I commend myself and our church at Hambrough to your
prayers. Luther answered him, and said, Loving Aepine, the
cause is not ours, but God’s: let us join our prayers
together, as then the cause will be holpen. I will pray
against the Pope and the Turk as long as I live: and I like it
well that you take such course at Hambrough, earnestly to pray
against Mahomet and the Pope.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Power of Prayer</i>.</h4>
<p>God always giveth more than we pray for; when we truly pray
for a piece of bread, so giveth God a whole acre of land.
When my wife, said Luther, was sick, I prayed to God that she
might live, so he not only granted that request, but also
therewith he hath given us a goodly farm at Zolfdorf, and hath
blessed us with a fruitful year. At that time my wife said
unto me, Sir! how is it, that in Popedom they pray so often with
great vehemence, but we are very cold and careless in
praying? I answered her, the devil driveth on his servants
continually; they are diligent, and take great pains in their
false worshipping, but we, indeed, are ice cold therein, and
negligent.</p>
<h4><i>Of Luther’s Prayer for a gracious Rain</i>.</h4>
<p>In the year 1532, throughout all Germany was a great drought,
the corn in the fields in a lamentable way began to wither.
On the ninth of June the same year, Luther called together the
whole assembly into the church, and directed his prayer, with
deep sighs, to God in the manner following: “O Lord, behold
our prayers for thy promise sake; we have prayed, and our hearts
have sighed, but the covetousness of the rich farmers doth hinder
and hem in thy blessing; for seeing that through thy gospel they
are unbridled, they think it free for them to live and do what
they please; they now fear neither death nor hell, but say,
‘I believe, therefore I shall be saved;’ they become
haughty spiteful Mammonists, and accursed covetous cut-throats,
that suck out land and people. Moreover, also, the usurers
among the gentry in every place deal wickedly, insomuch, as it
seemeth, thou, O God, wilt now visit us, together with them, with
the rod; yet, nevertheless, thou hast still means whereby to
maintain those that are thine, although thou sufferest no rain to
fall among the ungodly.”</p>
<p>After he had said thus, he lifted up his eyes towards heaven,
and said, “Lord God, thou hast through the mouth of thy
servant David said, ‘The Lord is nigh unto all that call
upon him faithfully; he doth the will of those that fear him, and
heareth their prayers, and helpeth them in their
distress.’ How is it, Lord, that thou givest no rain,
seeing we have cried and prayed so long unto thee?
‘Thy will be done,’ O Lord! we know that although
thou givest not rain, yet, notwithstanding, thou wilt give us
something better, a still, a quiet, and a peaceable life.
Now we pray, O Lord, from the bottom of our hearts. If
thou, O Lord, wilt not be pleased to hear and give us rain, then
the ungodly will say, Christ thy only Son is a liar. For he
saith, ‘Verily, verily, I say unto you, Whatsoever ye pray
the Father in my name, the same he will give unto you,’
etc. Insomuch that they will give thy Son the lie. I
know, O Lord, that we do cry unto thee from our hearts, with
yearning and sighing, why then dost thou not hear
us?” Now, even the same day, and within the space of
half an hour after the people went from church, it began to rain
so sweet and mildly, which continued for a whole fortnight, so
that the grounds thereby were changed and refreshed in a most
miraculous manner. This happened June 9, 1532.</p>
<h4><i>Of Papistical Prayer</i>.</h4>
<p>The praying in Popedom, is a mere tormenting of the
consciences, it is only a prating and tongue threshing, no
praying, but a work of obedience. From thence proceeded a
confused sea-full of <i>Horas Canonicas</i>, the howling and
babbling in cells and monasteries, where they read and sang the
psalms and collects without all spiritual devotion, insomuch that
they neither understood the words, sentences, nor the
meaning.</p>
<p>In what manner, and how I tormented myself, said Luther, with
those <i>Horis Canonicis</i> before the Gospel came, which, by
reason of many businesses I often intermitted, I am not able to
express. On the Saturdays I used to lock myself up in my
cell, and accomplish what the whole week I had neglected.
But at last I was troubled with so many affairs, that I was fain
oftentimes to omit also my Saturday’s devotions. At
length, when I saw that Amsdorff and others derided such manner
of devotion, then I quite left it off.</p>
<p>It was a great torment, from which we are now delivered by the
Gospel. Although, said Luther, I had done no more but only
freed people from that torment, yet they might well give me
thanks for it. Innumerable laws and works were taught and
imposed upon people without the spirit, as in the book,
<i>Rationale Divinorum</i>, many abominable things are
written.</p>
<h4><i>To Pray for Peace</i>.</h4>
<p>Luther receiving a letter written unto him, from the Imperial
Assembly, by Philip Melancthon, after the reading of it, he said,
What Philip Melancthon writeth hath hands and feet, hath
authority and gravity, it is of weight, contained in a few words,
as always I have found by his letters. But, I perceive, we
must have wars; for the Papists would willingly go on, but they
want a good stomach, neither may we endure the case to stand upon
these terms. Let it therefore proceed <i>in nomine
Domini</i>; I will commit all things to God, and will be
<i>Crito</i> in the play. I will pray that God would
convert our adversaries. We have a good cause on our
side. Who would not fight and venture body and blood,
<i>pro Sacris</i>, for the Holidom, which is God’s
Word? And, besides, the temporal laws and statutes of
policy do also concur and agree with our proceedings; for we
always have desired and called for peace, but our Princes are
provoked and drawn to defend themselves and their subjects, and
of necessity must resist their power; our adversaries will not
suffer us to live in peace. This letter, said Luther, was
written ten days since; by this time it is concluded what shall
be done. The everlasting merciful God give His grace
thereunto! Let us watch and pray, for Satan sleepeth
not.</p>
<h4><i>Of Temporal Peace</i>.</h4>
<p>Worldly and outward peace is one of the highest gifts of God;
but we abuse it too much; every one liveth after his own will and
pleasure, against God and the Magistrate. Oh, how soundly
will our gentry and farmers, in Germany, pay for this before one
hundred and fifty years come to an end, as already they have done
in Hungary and in Austria; but afterwards God will restore them
again, and beat down Popedom. Let us not cease to pray.</p>
<h4><i>Of Unity and Concord</i>.</h4>
<p>Through concord small things and wealth do increase, as the
Heathen said; but dissension is dangerous and hurtful, especially
in schools, in professions, high arts, and in the professors
thereof, wherein the one ought to reach the hand to the
other—should kiss and embrace each other. But when we
bite and devour one another, then let us take heed lest we be
swallowed up together. Therefore let us pray and strive;
for the word of faith, and the prayers of the just, are the most
powerful weapons; moreover, God himself sendeth his holy angels
round about them that fear him. We ought valiantly to
fight, for we are under a Lord of Hosts, and a Prince of War;
therefore with one hand we must build, and in the other hand take
the sword—that is, we must both teach and resist.</p>
<p>It is now time to watch, for we are the mark they shoot at;
our adversaries intend to make a confederacy with the Turk; they
aim at us, we must venture it; for Antichrist will war and get
the victory against the saints of God, as Daniel saith. We,
said Luther, stand outwardly in the greatest danger, by reason of
treachery and treason; the Papists endeavour with money to grease
and corrupt our captains and officers. An ass laden with
money may do anything, as Cornelius Tacitus writeth of us
Germans; we have taught them to take money; there is neither
fidelity nor truth on earth.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Power of Prayer</i>.</h4>
<p>The prayer of the heart, said Luther, and the sighs of the
poor and oppressed, do make such an alarum and cry in heaven,
that God and all the angels must hear the same. O, our Lord
God hath a sharp listening ear.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Sighing of the Heart</i>.</h4>
<p>When Moses, with the children of Israel, came to the Red Sea,
then he cried with trembling and quaking, yet he opened not his
mouth, neither was his voice heard on earth by the people:
doubtless, said Luther, he cried and sighed in his heart, and
said, “Ah, Lord God! what course shall I now take?
Which way shall I now turn myself? How am I come to this
strait? No help nor counsel can save us: before us is the
sea; behind us are our enemies the Egyptians; on both sides high
and huge mountains; I am the cause that all this people shall now
be destroyed,” etc. Then answered God, and said,
“Wherefore criest thou unto me?” As if God
should say, “What an alarum, a shrieking, and a loud crying
dost thou make, that the whole heavens must ring
therewith!” etc. But, alas! said Luther, we read such
examples as dead letters; human reason is not able to search this
passage out. The way through the Red Sea is full as broad,
and wider far (if not further) than Wittenberg lieth from Coburg,
that is thirty Dutch miles, 120 English at least: doubtless the
people were constrained in the night season to rest, to bait and
eat therein; for six hundred thousand men, besides women and
children, would require a good time to pass through, although
they went one hundred and fifty in rank and file.</p>
<h4><i>God’s hearing Prayer</i>.</h4>
<p>It is impossible that God should not hear the prayers which
with faith are made in Christ, although God giveth not according
to the measure, manner, and time which we dictate unto him; he
will not be tied. In such sort dealt God with the mother of
St. Austin. She prayed to God that her son Austin might be
converted, but, as yet, it would not be; then she ran to the
learned, entreating them to persuade and advise him
thereunto. At last, she propounded unto him a marriage with
a Christian virgin, that thereby he might be drawn back, and
brought to the Christian faith; but all would not do as
yet. But when our Lord God came thereto, he came to
purpose, and made of him such an Austin, that he became a great
light to the Church. St. James saith, “Pray one for
another, for the prayer of the righteous availeth much,”
etc. Prayer, said Luther, is a powerful thing; for God hath
bound and tied himself thereunto. Christ taught the
Lord’s Prayer according to the manner of the
Jews—that is, he directed it only to the Father; whereas
they that pray in the same manner, are heard for the Son’s
sake. This was done because Christ would not be praised
before his death.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Power of Prayer</i>.</h4>
<p>As the King of Persia, said Luther, laid siege to the city
Nasili, the bishop that was therein saw that he was too weak (by
man’s help) to defend the city against so mighty a king;
wherefore he went upon the wall, lifted up his hands to Heaven,
and prayed, in the sight of his enemies. Whereupon
immediately the eyes of the horses in the whole army in such sort
were pestered with an innumerable multitude of flies stinging
them, that with their riders they ran away, and so raised the
siege, whereby the city was preserved. In such a manner
could God divert the wicked enterprises of the Papists against
us, if we would diligently pray.</p>
<h4><i>That a True Christian Prayeth Always</i>.</h4>
<p>The prayers of upright Christians are without ceasing; though
they pray not always with their mouth, yet their hearts do pray
continually, sleeping and waking; for the sigh of a true
Christian is a prayer. As the Psalm saith, “Because
of the deep sighing of the poor, I will up, saith the
Lord,” etc. In like manner a true Christian always
carrieth the cross, though he feeleth it not always.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Strength of the Lord’s Prayer</i>.</h4>
<p>The Lord’s Prayer, said Luther, bindeth the People
together, and knitteth them one to another, insomuch that one
prayeth for another, and together one with another; and it is so
strong and powerful that it even driveth away the fear of
death.</p>
<h3>OF THE CONFESSION AND CONSTANCY OF THE DOCTRINE.</h3>
<p>The word and article of justification (how we are justified
and saved before God) expelleth and overcometh all sorrow, all
perplexities, misfortunes, and adversities; and without this
article there is neither help nor advice.</p>
<p>We read in the histories of the Church, said Luther, that
Julian the Emperor forced his servants and soldiers to deny
Christ; but when many of them refused to do the same, he caused
them to be executed with the sword, and they went joyfully to
their deaths. Among them was a proper youth, for whom
earnest intercession was made, that he might be the first to
die. But Julian commanded to release him, in order to try
whether he would remain constant or no. Now, when he
kneeled down and offered his neck to the block, the executioner
was charged not to strike, but to let him rise again. Then
the youth stood up, and said, “Ah, sweet Jesu! am I not
worthy to suffer for thy sake?” These were words of a
great faith, which overcometh the fear of death.</p>
<p>When governors and rulers are enemies to God’s Word,
then our duty is to depart, to sell and forsake all we have, to
fly from one place to another, as Christ commandeth. We
must make and prepare no uproars nor tumults by reason of the
Gospel, but we must suffer all things.</p>
<h4><i>What Christ Requireth of us</i>.</h4>
<p>Christ requireth nothing more of us, than that we should
confess him, and speak freely and undauntedly of him. But
here thou wilt say, “Yea, if I do so, then I shall be
struck on the lips.” Christ answereth thereunto, and
saith, “Call upon me in the time of trouble, so I will hear
thee, and thou shalt praise me.” And “He shall
call upon me, and I will hear him, yea, I am with him in trouble,
I will deliver him, and bring him to honour,” etc.</p>
<p>There is no lighter nor more easy work on earth than the
upright and true service of God, to do what God commandeth in his
Word; we should only believe and speak, but then certain it is
that we shall suffer and be humbled with persecutions; but Christ
hath promised to be with us, and to help us.</p>
<h4><i>That every Christian is Bound to Confess Christ</i>.</h4>
<p>Every Christian, especially those in offices, should always be
ready (when need requireth) boldly to stand up and confess his
Saviour Christ, to maintain his faith and always be armed against
the world, the sectaries, the devil, and what else he were able
to produce. But no man will do this, except he be so sure
of his doctrine and religion, that, although I myself should play
the fool, and should recant and deny this my doctrine and
religion, which God forbid, he notwithstanding would not yield,
but say, if Luther, or an angel from heaven, should teach
otherwise, “Let him be accursed.”</p>
<h3>OF IMPERIAL DIETS.</h3>
<h4><i>Of Imperial Diets and Assemblies in Causes of
Religion</i>.</h4>
<p>In the year 1518, the 9th of July, when I, said Luther, was
cited and summoned, I came and appeared: Frederick Prince Elector
of Saxony having appointed me a great and strong convoy and
safe-conduct. I was warned in any case not to have
conversation with the Italians, nor to repose any trust or
confidence in them. I was three whole days in Augsburg
without the Emperor’s safe-conduct. In the mean time,
an Italian came unto me, and carried me to the Cardinal Cajetan;
and by the way he earnestly persuaded me to revoke and recant; I
should, said he, need to speak but only one word before the
Cardinal, namely, <i>Revoco</i>, and then the Cardinal would
recommend me to the Pope’s favour so that with honour I
might return safely again to my master, the Prince Elector.
After three days the Bishop of Trier came, who, in the
Emperor’s name, showed and declared to the Cardinal my
safe-conduct. Then I went unto him in all humility, fell
down first upon my knees; secondly, all along upon the ground;
thirdly, when I had remained awhile so lying, then the Cardinal
three times bade me arise; whereupon I stood up. This
pleased him well, hoping I would consider, and better bethink
myself.</p>
<p>The next day, when I came before him again, and would revoke
nothing at all, then he said unto me, “What? thinkest thou
that the Pope careth for Germany? or dost thou think that the
Princes will raise arms and armies to maintain and defend
thee? Oh, no; where wilt thou remain in
safety?” I said, Under Heaven. After this the
Pope humbled himself, and wrote to our church, yea, he wrote even
to the Prince Elector’s chaplain, and to one of his
counsellors, Spalatine and Pfeffinger, that they would surrender
me into his hands, and procure that his pleasure and command
might be put in execution. And the Pope wrote also to the
Prince Elector himself after the following manner:</p>
<p>“Although, as touching my person, thou art to me
unknown, yet I have seen thy father, Prince Ernestus, at Rome,
who was altogether an obedient son to the Church; he visited and
frequented our religion with great devotion, and held the same in
highest honour. I wish and would that thy illustrious
serenity would also tread in his footsteps,” etc.</p>
<p>But the Prince Elector well marked the Pope’s
unaccustomed humility, and his evil conscience; he was also
acquainted with the power and operation of the Holy
Scriptures. Therefore he remained where he was, and
returned thanks to the Pope for his affection towards him.</p>
<p>My books, said Luther, in a short time went, yea, flew
throughout Europe; therefore the Prince Elector was confirmed and
strengthened, insomuch that he utterly refused to execute the
Pope’s commands, but subjected himself under the
acknowledgment of the Scriptures.</p>
<p>If the Cardinal had handled me with more discretion at
Augsburg, and had dealt kindly with me when I fell at his feet,
then it had never come thus far; for at that time I saw very few
of the Pope’s errors which now I see. Had he been
silent, so had I lightly held my peace. The style and
custom of the Romish court in dark and confused cases, was this:
that the Pope said, We by papal power do take these causes unto
us; we quench them out and destroy them. I am persuaded
that the Pope willingly would give three Cardinals, on condition
that it were still in that vessel wherein it was before he began
to meddle with me.</p>
<h4><i>Of Luther’s Journey and Proceedings at the Imperial
Diet at Worms</i>, <i>Anno 1520</i>.</h4>
<p>On Tuesday in the Passion week, said Luther, I was cited by
the herald to appear at the Diet; he brought with him a
safe-conduct from the Emperor, and many other Princes, but the
safe-conduct was soon broken, even the next day (Wednesday), at
Worms, where I was condemned, and my books burned. Now,
when I came to Erfurt, I received intelligence that I was cast
and condemned at Worms, yea, and that in all cities and places
thereabout it was published and spread abroad; insomuch that the
herald asked me, whether I meant to go to Worms, or no?</p>
<p>Although I was somewhat astonished at the news, yet I answered
the herald, and said, although in Worms there were as many devils
as there are tiles on the houses, yet, God willing, I will go
thither.</p>
<p>When I came to Oppenheim, in the Palatinate, not far from
Worms, Bucer came unto me, and dissuaded me from entering into
the town; for, said he, Sglapian, the Emperor’s confessor,
had been with him, and had entreated him to warn me not to go
thither, for I should be burned; but rather that I should go to a
gentleman there near at hand, Francis Von Sickingen, and remain
with him, who willingly would receive and entertain me.
This plot the wicked wretches, said Luther, had devised against
me, to the end I should not appear; for if I had contracted the
time, and staid away three days, then my safe-conduct had been
expired, and then they would have locked the town-gates, and
without hearing, I should have been condemned and made
away. But I went on in all simplicity, and when I saw the
city, I wrote presently to Spalatine, and gave him notice of my
coming, and desired to know where I should be lodged. Then
they all wondered at my coming, which was so far from their
expectation; for they verily thought I would have stayed away, as
scared through their threatenings. There were two worthy
gentlemen (John Von Hirschfeld, and St. John Schott), who
received me by the Prince Elector’s command, and brought me
to their lodging.</p>
<p>No Prince came unto me, but only Earls and gentlemen, who
earnestly looked upon me, and who had exhibited four hundred
articles to his Imperial Majesty against those of the
spirituality, and desired a redress and a removing of those their
grievances, otherwise they themselves should be constrained to
remedy the same; from all which grievances they are now delivered
through the Gospel, which I (God be praised) have brought again
to light. The Pope at that time wrote to the Emperor, that
he should not perform the safe-conduct; for which end all the
Bishops also pressed the Emperor; but the Princes and States of
the Empire would not consent thereunto: for they alleged that a
great tumult thereupon would arise. I received of them a
great deal of courtesy, insomuch that the Papists were more
afraid of me than I was of them.</p>
<p>For the Landgrave of Hesse (being then but a young Prince)
desired that I might be heard, and he said openly unto me,
“Sir, is your cause just and upright, then I beseech God to
assist you.” Now being in Worms, I wrote to Sglapian,
and desired him to make a step unto me, but he would not.
Then being called, I appeared in the Senate House before the
Council and State of the whole Empire, where the Emperor, and the
Princes Electors in person were assembled.</p>
<p>Then Dr. Eck (the Bishop of Trier’s fiscal) began, and
said unto me, “Martin, thou art called hither to give
answer, whether thou acknowledgest these writings to be thy books
or no?” (The books lay on a table which he showed
unto me.) I answered and said, “I believe they be
mine.” But Hierome Schurfe presently thereupon said,
“Let the titles of them be read.” Now when the
same were read, then I said, “Yea, they are
mine.” Then he said, “Will you revoke
them?” I answered and said, “Most gracious Lord
and Emperor, some of my books are books of controversies, wherein
I touch my adversaries: some, on the contrary, are books of
doctrine; the same I neither can nor will revoke. But if in
case I have in my books of controversies been too violent against
any man, then I am content therein to be better directed, and for
that end I desire respite of time.” Then they gave me
one day and one night. The next day I was cited by the
Bishops and others, who were appointed to deal with me touching
my revocation. Then I said, “God’s Word is not
my word, therefore I know not how to give it away; but in
whatsoever is therein, besides the same, I will show
obedience.” Then Marquis Joachim said unto me
“Sir Martin, so far as I understand, you are content to be
instructed, excepting only what may concern the Holy
Writ.” I said, “Yea;” then they pressed
me to refer the cause to His Imperial Majesty; I said, I durst
not presume so to do. Then they said, “Do you not
think that we are also Christians, who with all care and
diligence would finish and end such causes? You ought to
put so much trust and confidence in us, that we would conclude
uprightly.” To that I answered and said, “I
dare not trust you so far, that you should conclude against
yourselves, who even now have cast and condemned me, being under
safe-conduct; yet, nevertheless, that ye may see what I will do,
I will yield up into your hands my safe-conduct, and do with me
what ye please.” Then all the Princes said,
“Truly, he offereth enough, if not too much.”
Afterwards they said, “Yield unto us yet in some
articles.” I said, “In God’s name, such
articles as concern not the Holy Scriptures I will not stand
against.” Presently hereupon, two Bishops went to the
Emperor, and showed him that I had revoked. Then the
Emperor sent another Bishop unto me, to know if I had referred
the cause to him, and to the Empire. I said, I had neither
done it, nor intended so to do. In this sort, said Luther,
did I alone resist so many, insomuch that my Doctor, and divers
others of my friends, were much offended and vexed by reason of
my constancy; yea, some of them said, if I had referred the
articles to their consideration, they would have yielded, and
given way to those articles which in the council at Costnitz had
been condemned. Then came Cocleus upon me, and said,
“Sir Martin, if you will yield up your safe-conduct, then I
will enter into dispute with you.” I, for my part,
said Luther, in my simplicity, would have accepted thereof.
But Hieronimus Schurfe earnestly entreated me not to do the same,
and in derision and scorn, answered Cocleus and said, “O
brave offer, if a man were so foolish as to entertain
it!”</p>
<p>Then came a Doctor unto me, belonging to the Marquis of Baden,
essaying, with a strain of high-carried words, to move me,
admonished me, and said: “Truly, Sir Martin, you are bound
to do much, and to yield for the sake of fraternal love, and to
the end that peace and tranquillity among the people may be
preserved, lest tumults and insurrections should be occasioned
and raised. Besides, it were also greatly befitting you to
show obedience to the Imperial Majesty, and diligently to beware
of causing offences in the world; therefore I would advise you to
revoke.” Whereupon, said Luther, I said: “For
the sake of brotherly love and amity I could and would do much,
so far as it were not against the faith and honour of
Christ.” When all these had made their vain assaults,
then the Chancellor of Trier said unto me, “Martin Luther,
you are disobedient to the Imperial Majesty; therefore you have
leave and licence to depart again with your
safe-conduct.” In this sort I again departed from
Worms with a great deal of gentleness and courtesy, to the
wondering of the whole Christian world, insomuch that the Papists
wished they had left me at home. After my departure, that
abominable edict of proscribing was put in execution at Worms,
which gave occasion to every man to revenge himself upon his
enemies, under the name and title of Protestant heresy. But
the tyrants, not long after, were constrained to recall the same
again.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Imperial Diet at Augsburg</i>, <i>Anno
1530</i>.</h4>
<p>The Imperial Diet held at Augsburg, 1530, is worthy of all
praise; for then and from thence came the Gospel among the people
in other countries, contrary to the wills and expectations both
of Emperor and Pope; therefore, said Luther, what hath been spent
there should be grievous to no man. God appointed the
Imperial Diet at Augsburg, to the end the Gospel should be spread
further abroad and planted. They over-climbed themselves at
Augsburg, for the Papists openly approved there of our
doctrine. Before that Diet was held, the Papists had made
the Emperor believe that our doctrine was altogether frivolous;
and when he came to the Diet, he should see that they would put
us all to silence, insomuch that none of us should be able to
speak a word in defence of our religion; but it fell out far
otherwise; for we openly and freely confessed the Gospel before
the Emperor and the whole Empire. And at that Diet we
confounded our adversaries in the highest degree. The
Imperial Diet at Augsburg was invaluable, by reason of the
Confession of Faith, and of God’s Word, which on our part
was there performed: for there the adversaries were constrained
to confess that our Confession was upright and true.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Confession and Apology which at Augsburg was
exhibited to the emperor</i>.</h4>
<p>The Emperor, said Luther, censured understandingly and
discreetly, and carried himself princely in this cause of
religion; he found our Confession to be far otherwise than the
Papists had informed him—namely, that we were most ungodly
people, and led most wicked and detestable kind of lives; and
that we taught against the first and second tables of the Ten
Commandments of God. For this cause, the Emperor sent our
Confession and Apology to all the universities; his council also
delivered their opinions, and said: “In case their doctrine
were against the holy Christian faith, then they thought fitting
that His Imperial Majesty should seek to suppress it with all his
power. But if it be only against ceremonies and abuses (as
now it appeareth to be) then to refer it to the consideration and
censure of learned people,” etc. This, said Luther,
was good and wise counsel.</p>
<p>Dr. Eck confessed openly, and said: “The Protestants
cannot be confuted and opposed out of Holy
Scriptures.” Therefore the Bishop of Mainz said unto
him, “Oh, how finely our learned Divines do defend us and
our doctrine!” “The Bishop of Mainz,”
said Luther, “holdeth our doctrine to be upright and true,
but he only courteth the Pope, otherwise long before this time he
would have played strange pranks with his Holiness.”</p>
<h4><i>Of the Strength and Profit of the Confession and Apology
of Augsburg</i>.</h4>
<p>God’s Word is powerful; the more it is persecuted the
more and further it spreadeth itself abroad. Behold the
Imperial Diet at Augsburg, which doubtless is the last trumpet
before the dreadful Day of Judgment. How raged the world
there against the Word! Oh, said Luther, how were we there
fain to pray the Pope and Papists, that they would be pleased to
permit and suffer Christ to live quietly in heaven! There
our doctrine broke through into the light in such sort, that by
the Emperor’s strict command the same was sent to all
Kings, Princes, and Universities. This our Doctrine
forthwith enlightened many excellent people, dispersed here and
there in Princes’ courts, among whom some of God were
chosen to take hold on this our doctrine, like unto tinder, and
afterwards kindled the same also in others.</p>
<p>Our Apology and Confession with great honour came to light;
the Papists’ confutations are kept in darkness, and do
stink. Oh, said Luther, how willingly would I that their
confutations might appear to the world; then I would set upon
that old torn and tattered skin, and in such sort would baste it,
that the flitches thereof should fly about here and there; but
they shun the light. This time twelvemonths no man would
have given a farthing for the Protestants, so sure the ungodly
Papists were of us. For, said Luther, when my most gracious
Lord and master, the Prince Elector of Saxony, before other
Princes came to the Diet, the Papists marvelled much thereat, for
they verily believed that he would not have appeared, by reason
(as they imagined) his cause was too bad and foul to be brought
before the light. But what fell out? Even this, that
in their greatest security they were overwhelmed with the
greatest fear and affrightments. Because the Prince
Elector, like an upright Prince, appeared so early at Augsburg,
then the other Popish princes swiftly posted away from Augsburg
to Innsbruck, where they held serious counsel with Prince George
and the Marquis of Baden, all of them wondering what the Prince
Elector’s so early approach to the Diet should mean,
insomuch that the Emperor himself thereat was astonished, and
doubted whether he might come and go in safety or not.
Whereupon the princes were constrained to promise, that they
would set up body, goods, and blood by the Emperor, the one
offering to maintain 6,000 horse, another so many thousands of
foot-soldiers, etc., to the end His Majesty might be the better
secured. There was a wonder among wonders to be seen, in
that God struck with fear and cowardliness the enemies of the
truth. And although at that time the Prince Elector of
Saxony was alone, and but only the hundredth sheep, while the
others were ninety-and-nine, yet, notwithstanding, it so fell out
that they all trembled and were afraid. Now when they came
to the point, and began to take the business in hand, then there
appeared but a very small heap that stood by God’s
Word.</p>
<p>But, said Luther, we brought with us a strong and mighty King,
a King above all Emperors and Kings, namely, Christ Jesus, the
powerful Word of God. Then all the Papists cried out, and
said, “Oh, it is insufferable that so small and silly a
heap should set themselves against the Imperial
power.” But, said Luther, the Lord of Hosts
frustrateth the councils of Princes. Pilate had power to
put our blessed Saviour to death, but willingly he would not;
Annas and Caiaphas willingly would have done it, but could
not.</p>
<p>The Emperor, for his own part, is good and honest; but the
Popish Bishops and Cardinals are undoubtedly knaves. And
forasmuch as the Emperor now refuseth to bathe his hands in
innocent blood, therefore the frantic Princes do bestir
themselves, do scorn and contemn the good Emperor in the highest
degree. The Pope also for anger is ready to burst in
pieces, because the Diet, in this sort, without shedding of
blood, should be dissolved; therefore he sendeth the sword to the
Duke of Bavaria, to proceed therewith, and intendeth to take the
crown from the Emperor’s head, and to set it upon the head
of Bavaria; but he shall not accomplish it. In this manner
ordered God the business, that Kings, Princes, yea, and the Pope
himself, fell from the Emperor, and that we joined with him,
which was a great wonder of God’s providence, in that he
whom the devil intended to use against us, even the same, God
taketh, maketh and useth for us. Oh, wonder, said Luther,
above all wonders!</p>
<h4><i>Of the Assembly of the Princes at Brunswick</i>,
<i>1531</i>.</h4>
<p>When the Princes (professing the Augustinian Confession) held
an assembly at Brunswick, then Luther received three letters,
wherein was shown that the Prince Elector of Saxony journeyed
five days through the Marquisate of Brandenburg, whereas Prince
Henry of Brunswick would neither give him convoy nor permit him
to go through his country. But the Prince Elector of
Brandenburg, in his country, gave him princely entertainment in
every place, and many went out of Brunswick to meet and to
receive him. But the Landgrave of Hessen went on the other
side, through Goslar, without a convoy. Christianus, King
of Denmark, the second day of the assembly, delivered up the
Confession of his Faith, and was held and esteemed a second
David. Whereupon Luther said, God of his mercy assist him
for the sanctifying of his name. But, said he, the pride of
the Duke of Brunswick may easily redound to his own hurt and
prejudice, who, contrary to all law and equity, denied a safe
convoy to one of his best and truest friends. Moses
likewise desired a safe convoy to the King of the Amorites; but
being denied, he thereby took occasion to raise war against
him. The Lord of Heaven grant us peace. The same day
other letters came to Luther from Brunswick, showing that the
King of Denmark in person, the Ambassadors of England and France,
and of many Imperial cities, were arrived there, among whom, some
carried themselves very strangely towards those of the Protestant
League. Luther said, under the name and colour of the
Gospel, they seek their own particular advantages, but in the
least danger they are afraid. These politic and terrestrial
leagues and unions have no hand nor share in the Gospel: God
alone preserveth and defendeth the same in times of
persecution. Let us put trust and confidence in him, and
with him; let us erect and establish an everlasting league, for
the world is the world, and will remain the world.</p>
<h4><i>Of the Convention and Assembly of the Protestant State at
Frankfort-on-the-Main</i>, <i>1539</i>.</h4>
<p>God, of his infinite mercy, said Luther, assist them at
Frankfort-on-the-Main, that they may Christian-like consult and
conclude, to the end that God’s honour, the good and profit
of the commonwealth may be furthered. Indeed, it is a very
small assembly; it hath a strange aspect to be held in an
Imperial city; but forasmuch as they are thereunto constrained by
the adversaries, they must be content.</p>
<p>The Papists, void of shame, do unwisely undertake to possess
themselves of the cities, and by fraud to draw thereunto their
adherents; then they make show of keeping peace, but in the
meantime they contrive how to separate and confuse the whole
body, and of the members to make a massacre; they secretly fall
upon Hamburg, upon Minden, and Frankfort. They might more
wisely go to work, if by open wars they assailed us. At
Augsburg they openly condemned us; and if those of our party had
not been patient, it had presently gone on at that time.
Anno 1539, the 16th of February, Luther commanded public prayers
to be made for the day at Frankfort, that peace might be
confirmed. For if the Landgrave be incensed, then all
resistance will be in vain. The Landgrave neither provoketh
nor giveth occasion to wars; but, on the contrary, when he is
provoked, he still seeketh peace; whereas, notwithstanding, he is
better furnished and provided for wars than his adversary is, by
2,000 horse, for Hessen and Saxon are horsemen; when they are set
in the saddle, they are then not so easily hoisted out
again. As for the high-country horsemen, they, said Luther,
are dancing gentlemen. God preserve the Landgrave; for a
valiant man and Prince is of great importance. Augustus
Cæsar was wont to say, “I would rather be in an army
of stags, where a lion is general, than to be in an army of lions
where a stag is general.”</p>
<p>The 25th of February, Luther prayed again with great devotion
for peace, and for the day at Frankfort, that through civil wars
(which are most hurtful), the religion, policy, and God’s
Word might not be sophisticated and torn in pieces. Wars
are pleasing to those that have had no trial or experience of
them; God bless us from wars.</p>
<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
<p><SPAN name="footnote17"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation17" class="footnote">[17]</SPAN> <i>Whatsoever was pretended</i>,
<i>yet the true cause of the Captain’s commitment was
because he was urgent with the Lord Treasurer for his
Arrears</i>; <i>which</i>, <i>amounting to a great sum</i>, <i>he
was not willing to pay</i>; <i>and to be freed from his clamours
he clapped him up into prison</i>.</p>
<p><SPAN name="footnote97"></SPAN><SPAN href="#citation97" class="footnote">[97]</SPAN> <i>The name of a rich
family</i>.</p>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
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