Martin Luther Collection: Luther, Martin - Table Talks: 12. Of The Law and the Gospel

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Martin Luther Collection: Luther, Martin - Table Talks: 12. Of The Law and the Gospel



TOPIC: Luther, Martin - Table Talks (Other Topics in this Collection)
SUBJECT: 12. Of The Law and the Gospel

Other Subjects in this Topic:

OF THE LAW AND THE GOSPEL



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CCLXXI.







We must reject those who so highly boast of Moses laws, as to temporal

affairs, for we have our written imperial and country laws, under which we

live, and unto which we are sworn. Neither Naaman the Assyrian, nor Job, nor

Joseph, nor Daniel, nor many other good and godly Jews, observed Moses laws

out of their country, but those of the Gentiles among whom they lived.

Moses law bound and obliged only the Jews in that place which God mad

choice of. Now they are free. If we should keep and observe the laws and

rites of Moses, we must also be circumcised, and keep the mosaical

ceremonies; for there is no difference; he that holds one to be necessary,

must hold the rest so too. Therefore let us leave Moses to his laws,

excepting only the Moralia, which God has planted in nature, as the ten

commandments, which concern God's true worshipping and service, and a civil

life.





CCLXXII.





The particular and only office of the law is, as St Paul teaches, that

transgressions thereby should be acknowledged; for it was added, because of

transgressions, till seed should come, to whom the promise was made. These

are the express and plain words of St Paul; therefore we trouble not

ourselves with what the papists allege to the contrary, and spin out of

human reason, extolling the maintainers and seeming observers of Moses law.





CCLXXIII.





God gives to the emperor the sword, the emperor delivers it to the

judge, and causes thieves, murderers, etc., to be punished and executed.

Afterwards, when God pleases, he takes the sword from the emperor again;

even so does God touching the law; he leaves it to the devil, and permits

him therewith to affright sinners.





CCLXXIV.





The law is used in two ways; first, for this worldly life, because God

has ordained all temporal laws and statutes to prevent and hinder sin. But

here some one may object: If the law hinder sin, then also it justifies. I

answer: Oh! no, this does not follow; that I do not murder, commit adultery,

steal, etc., is not because I love virtue and righteousness, but because I

fear the hangman, who threatens me with the gallows, sword, etc. It is the

hangman that hinders me from sinning, as chains, ropes, and strong bands

hinder bears, lions, and other wild beasts from tearing and rending in

pieces all that come in their way.

Hence we may understand, That the same can be no righteousness that is

performed out of fear of the curse, but sin and unrighteousness; for the law

binds mankind, who by nature are prone to wickedness, that they do not sin,

as willingly they would.

Therefore this is the first point concerning the law, that it must be

used to deter the ungodly from their wicked and mischievous intentions. For

the devil, who is an abbot and prince of this world, allures people to work

all manner of sin and wickedness; wherefore God has ordained magistrates,

elders, schoolmasters, laws and statutes, to the end, if they can do no

more, that at least they may bind the claws of the devil, and hinder him

from raging and swelling so powerfully in those who are his, according to

his will and pleasure.

Secondly, we use the law spiritually, as thus: To make transgressions

seem greater, as St Paul says, or to reveal and discover to people their

sins, blindness, and ungodly doings, wherein they were conceived and born;

namely, that they are ignorant of God, and are his enemies, and therefore

have justly deserved death, hell, God's judgments, his everlasting wrath and

indignation. But the hypocritical sophists in universities know nothing

thereof, neither do those who are of opinion that they are justified by the

law and their own works.

But to the end that God might put to silence, smother, suppress and

beat down to the ground these mischievous and furious beats, he has

appointed and ordained a particular Hercules with a club, powerfully to lay

hold on such beasts, take them captive, strike them down, and so dispatch

them out of the way; that is, he gave the law upon the hill of Sinai, with

such fearful thundering and lightning, that all people thereat were amazed

and affrighted.

It is exceeding necessary for us to know this use of the law. For he

that is not an open and a public murderer, an adulterer, or a thief, holds

himself to be an upright and godly man; as did the Pharisee, so blinded and

possessed spiritually of the devil, that he could neither see nor feel his

sins, nor his miserable case, but exalted himself touching his good works

and deserts. Such hypocrites and haughty saints can God by no better means

humble and soften, than by and through the law; for that is the right club

or hammer, the thunderclap from heaven, the axe of God's wrath, that strikes

through, beats down, and batters such stock-blind, hardened hypocrites. For

this cause, it is no small matter that we should rightly understand what the

law is, whereto it serves, and what is its proper work and office. We do not

reject the law and the works thereof, but on the contrary, confirm them, and

teach that we ought to do good works, and that the law is very good and

profitable, if we merely give it its right, and keep it to its own proper

work and office.

The law opens not nor makes visible God's grace and mercy, or the

righteousness whereby we obtain everlasting life and salvation; but our

sins, our weakness, death, God's wrath and judgment.

The light of the gospel is a far different manner of light,

enlightening affrighted, broken, sorrowful, and contrite hearts, and

reviving, comforting, and refreshing them. For it declares that God is

merciful to unworthy, condemned sinners, for the sake of Christ, and that a

blessing thereby is presented unto them who believe; that is, grace,

remission of sins, righteousness, and everlasting life.

When in this way we distinguish the law and the gospel, then we

attribute and give to each its right work and office. Therefore, I pray and

admonish all lovers of godliness and pure religion, especially those who in

time are to be teachers of others, that with highest diligence they study

this matter, which I much fear, after our time, will be darkened again, if

not altogether extinguished.





CCLXXV.



Never was a bolder, harsher sermon preached in the world than that

wherein St Paul abolished Moses and his law, as insufficient for a sinner's

salvation.

Hence the continual dissension and strife which this apostle had with

the Jews. And if Moses had not cashiered and put himself out of his office,

with these words: "The Lord thy God will raise up unto thee another prophet

out of thy brethren, him shalt thou here;" who then would or could have

believed the gospel, and forsaken Moses?

Hence the vehement accusation brought by the worthy Jews, who suborned

certain men to accuse the beloved Stephen, saying: "We have heard him speak

blasphemous words against Moses and against God." Likewise, "This man

ceaseth not to speak blasphemous words against the holy place and the law,"

etc. For to preach and teach that the observing of the law was not necessary

to salvation, was to the Jews as horrible, as though one should stand up and

preach among us Christians: Christ is not the Lamb of God, that taketh away

the sins of the world. St Paul could have been content they had kept and

observed the law, had they not asserted it was necessary to salvation. But

the Jews would no more endure this, than the papists, with their fopperies,

will now endure that we hold and observe the ceremonies, so that every one

shall be at liberty either to observe or not observe them, according as

occasion serves, and that the conscience therein may not be bound or

ensnared, and that God's Word freely be preached and taught. But Jews and

papists are ungodly wretches; they are two stockings made of one piece of

cloth.





CCLXXVI.



Moses with his law is most terrible; there never was any equal to him

in perplexing, affrighting, tyrannizing, threatening, preaching, and

thundering; for he lays sharp hold on the conscience, and fearfully works

it, but all by God's express command. When we are affrighted, feeling our

sins, God's wrath and judgments, most certainly, in the law is no

justification; therein is nothing celestial and divine, but `tis altogether

of the world, which world is the kingdom of the devil. Therefore it is clear

and apparent that the law can do nothing that is vivifying, saving,

celestial, or divine; what it does is altogether temporal; that is, it gives

us to know what evil is in the world, outwardly and inwardly. But, besides

this, the Holy Ghost must come over the law, and speak thus in thy heart;

God will not have thee affright thyself to death, only that through the law

thou shouldest know thy misery, and yet not despair, but believe in Christ,

who is the end of the law for righteousness.





CCLXXII.



St Paul now and then speaks scornfully of the law, but he means not

that we should condemn the law; he would rather we should esteem and hold it

precious. But where he teaches how we become justified before God, it was

necessary for him so to speak; for it is far another thing when we talk how

we may be justified before God, than when we talk about the law. When we

have in hand the righteousness that justifies before God, we cannot too much

disdain or undervalue the law.

The conscience must have regard to nothing but Christ; wherefore we

must with all diligence, endeavor to remove Moses with his law far from us

out of sight, when we intend to stand justified before God.





CCLXXVIII.



It is impossible for thy human strength, whosoever thou art, without

God's assistance, when Moses sets upon thee with his law, accuses and

threatens thee with God's wrath, and death, to possess such peace as if no

law or sin had ever been.

When thou feelest the terror of the law, thou mayest say thus: Madam

Law! I have no time to hear you speak; your language is very rough and

unfriendly; I would have you know that your reign is over, therefore I am

now free, I will endure your bondage no longer. When we thus address the

law, we shall find the difference between the law of grace and the law of

thundering Moses; and how great a divine and celestial gift it is to hope

against hope, when there seems nothing to hope for; and how true the speech

of St Paul is, where he says: "Through faith in Christ we are justified, and

not through the works of the law." When, indeed, justification is not the

matter in hand, we ought highly to esteem the law, extol it, and with St

Paul, call it good, true, spiritual, and divine, as in truth it is.

God will keep his Word through the writing pen upon earth; the divines

are the heads or quills of the pens, the lawyers the stumps. If the world

will not keep the heads and quills, that is, if they will not hear the

divines, they must keep the stumps, that is, they must hear the lawyers, who

will teach them manners.





CCLXXIX.



I will have none of Moses with his law, for he is an enemy to my Lord

and Saviour Christ. If Moses will go to law with me, I will give him his

dispatch, and say: Here stands Christ.

At the day of judgment Moses will doubtless look upon me, and say: Thou

didst understand me rightly, and didst well distinguish between me and the

law of faith; therefore we are now friends.

We must reject the law when it seeks to affright the conscience, and

when we feel God's anger against our sins, then we must eat, drink, and be

cheerful, to spite the devil. But human wisdom is more inclined to

understand the law of Moses, than the law of the Gospel. Old Adam will not

out.

Together with the law, Satan torments the conscience by picturing

Christ before our eyes, as an angry and stern judge, saying: God is an enemy

to sinners, for he is a just God; thou art a sinner, therefore God is thy

enemy. Hereat is the conscience dejected, beaten down, and taken captive.

Now he that can make a true difference in this case, will say: Devil! thou

art deceived, it is not so as thou pretendest; for God is not an enemy to

all sinners, but only to the ungodly and impenitent sinners and persecutors

of his Word. For even as sin is two-fold, even so is righteousness two-fold.





CCLXXX.



Two learned men came to me, and asked whether the law of God revealed

sin to people without the particular motion of the Holy Ghost? the one

affirming that it was so, the other denying it. The first would prove his

opinion out of St Paul, where he says: "By the law is the knowledge of sin;"

but the other alleged, that this was the work and office of the Holy Ghost

through the law; for many heard the preaching of the law, and yet did not

acknowledge their sins.

I answered them: Ye are both in the right if ye well understood one

another; your difference consists only in words; for the law must be

understood two manner of ways; first, as a law described and heard; when it

reveals not the strength or the sting of sin, it goes in at one ear and out

at the other; it neither touches nor strikes the heart at all.

Secondly, when the law is taught, and the Holy Ghost comes thereunto,

touches the heart, and gives strength to the Word, and the heart confesses

sin, feels God's wrath, and says: Ah! this concerns me; I have sinned

against God, and have offended. Then the law has well and rightly finished

its work and office.

After these came a third, and said: `tis one matter to be simply a law,

and another to be God's law; for the law of God must always have its

operation and strength, which the law of man has not. To him I made this

answer:

The law must be distinguished, understood, and divided three-fold:

first, a written law, second, a verbal, third, a spiritual law. The written

law, which is written in the book, is like a block, which, without motion,

remains lying; that law does nothing except we read therein. The verbal law

reveals and shows sin; yea, in the ungodly; for when adulterers hear the

seventh commandment, "Thou shalt not commit adultery," then they understand

that this reproves them; but they either condemn it, or else they persecute

those by whom they are reproved. But the spiritual law cannot be without the

motion of the Holy Ghost, which touches the heart, and moves it, so that a

man not only ceases to persecute, but has sorrow for sins committed, and

desires to be better.

The same person urged: St Paul says, that the word works in the

hearers; I answered: the word which in that place St Paul speaks of, must be

understood of the gospel; for even that Word, whether written or verbal,

taught or preached, does nothing without the Holy Ghost, which must kindle

it in their hearts, reviving and strengthening them.





CCLXXXI.



Every law or commandment contains two profitable points: first, a

promise; second, a threatening; for every law is, or should be, good,

upright, and holy, Rom. vii. It commands that which is good, and forbids

that which is evil: it rewards and defends the good and godly, but punishes

and resists the wicked; as St Paul says: "Rulers are not a terror to good

works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? do that

which is good." And St Peter: "For the punishment of evil-doers, and for the

praise of them that do well." And the imperial laws teach the same. Now,

seeing there are promises and threatenings in temporal laws, how much more

so are they fitting in God's laws, which require faith. The emperor's laws,

indeed, require faith, true or feigned; for those who do not fear or believe

that the emperor will punish or protect, observe not his laws, as we see,

but those observe them that fear and believe, whether from the heart or not.

Now, where in Scripture there is a promise without the law, there faith only

is necessary: as, when Abraham was promised that his seed should multiply as

the stars of heaven; he was not commanded at that time to accomplish any

work, but he heard of a work which God would accomplish, and which he

himself was not able to do. Thus is Christ promised unto us, and is

described to have done a work which we cannot do; therefore in this case,

faith is needful for us, because by works we cannot take hold thereof.





CCLXXXII.





The law, with its righteousness, is like a cloud without rain, which

promises rain but gives none; even so does the law promise salvation, but

gives it not, for the law was not assigned to that end, as St Paul says,

Gal. iii.





CCLXXXIII.





The Gospel preaches nothing of the merit of works; he that says the

Gospel requires works for salvation, I say, flat and plain, is a liar.

Nothing that is properly good proceeds out of the works of the law,

unless grace be present; for what we are forced to do, goes not from the

heart, nor is acceptable. The people under Mosts were always in a murmuring

state, would fain have stoned him, and were rather his enemies than his

friends.





CCLXXXIV.



He that will dispute with the devil out of the law, will be beaten and

taken captive; but he that disputes with him out of the Gospel, conquers

him. The devil has the written bond against us; therefore, let no man

presume to dispute with him of the law or sin. When the devil says to me:

behold, much evil proceeds from thy doctrine, then I say to him: much good

and profit come also from it. O! replies the devil, that is nothing to the

purpose. The devil is an artful orator; he can make out of a mote a beam,

and falsify that which is good; he was never in all his life so angry and

vexed as he is now; I feel him well.

It baptism, if the sacrament, if the Gospel be false, and if Christ be

not in heaven and governs not, then indeed I am in the wrong; but if these

are of God's instituting and ordaining, and if Christ is in heaven and

rules, then I am sure that the cause I have in hand is good; for what I

teach and do openly in the church is altogether of the Gospel, of baptism,

of the Lord's supper, of prayer, etc. Christ and his Gospel are here

present; therein I must and will continue.





CCLXXXV.



If we diligently mark the world, we shall find that it is governed

merely by its conceited opinions; sophistry, hypocrisy, and tyranny rule it;

the upright, pure and clear divine Word must be their handmaid, and by them

controlled. Therefore, let us beware of sophistry, which consists not only

in a double tongue, in twisting words, which may be construed any way, but

also blossoms and flourishes in all arts and vocations, and will likewise

have room and place in religion, where it has usurped a fine, fictitious

color.

Nothing is more pernicious than sophistry; we are by nature prone to

believe lies rather than truth. Few people know what an evil sophistry is;

Plato, the heathen writer, made thereof a wonderful definition. For my part,

I compare it with a lie, which, like a snowball, the more it is rolled the

greater it becomes.

Therefore, I approve not of such as pervert everything, undervaluing

and finding fault with other men's opinions, though they be good and sound.

I like not brains that can dispute on both sides, and yet conclude nothing

certain. Such sophistications are mere crafty and subtle inventions and

contrivances, to cozen and deceive people.

But I love an honest and well affected mind, that seeks after truth

simply and plainly, and goes not about with fantasies and cheating tricks.





CCLXXXVI.



St Paul says: "What the law could not do, in that it was weak through

the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for

sin condemned sin in flesh; that the righteousness of the law might be

fulfilled in us," etc. That is, Christ is the sum of all; he is the right,

the pure meaning and contents of the law. Whoso has Christ, has rightly

fulfilled the law. But to take away the law altogether, which sticks in

nature, and is written in our hearts and born in us, is a thing impossible

and against God. And whereas the law of nature is somewhat darker, and

speaks only of works, therefore, Moses and the Holy Ghost more clearly

declare and expound it, by naming those works which God will have us to do,

and to leave undone. Hence Christ also says: "I am not come to destroy the

law." Worldly people would willingly give him royal entertainment who could

bring this to pass, and make out that Moses, through Christ, is quite taken

away. O, then we should quickly see what a fine kind of life there would be

in the world! But God forbid, and keep us from such errors, and suffer us

not to live to see the same.





CCLXXXVII.



We must preach the law for the sake of evil and wicked, but for the

most part it lights upon the good and godly, who, although they need it not,

except so far as may concern the old Adam, flesh and blood, yet accept it.

The preaching of the Gospel we must have for the sake of the good and godly,

yet it falls among the wicked and ungodly, who take it to themselves,

whereas it profits them not; for they abuse it, and are thereby made

confident. It is even as when it rains in the water or on a desert

wilderness, and meantime, the good pastures and grounds are parched and

dried up. The ungodly out of the gospel suck only a carnal freedom, and

become worse thereby; therefore, not the Gospel, but the law belongs to

them. Even as when my little son John offends, if then I should not whip

him, but call him to the table to me, and give him sugar plums, thereby I

should make him worse, yea, quite spoil him.

The Gospel is like a fresh, mild, and cool air in the extreme heat of

summer, a solace and comfort in the anguish of conscience. But as this heat

proceeds 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.

Now, 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, we must prove our faith by such good works as God has commanded. But

so long as we live in this vale of misery, we shall be plagued and vexed

with flies, with beetles, and vermin, that is, with the devil, the world,

and our own flesh; yet we must press through, and not suffer ourselves to

recoil.





CCLXXXVIII.



In what darkness, unbelief, traditions, and ordinances of men have we

lived, and in how many conflicts of the conscience we have been ensnared,

confounded, and captivated under popedom, is testified by the books of the

papists, and by many people now living. From all which snares and horrors we

are now delivered and freed by Jesus Christ and his Gospel, and are called

to the true righteousness of faith; insomuch that with good and peaceable

consciences we now believe in God the Father, we trust in him, and have just

cause to boast that we have sure and certain remission of our sins through

the death of Christ Jesus, dearly bought and purchased. Who can sufficiently

extol these treasures of the conscience, which everywhere are spread abroad,

offered and presented merely by grace? We are now conquerors of sin, of the

law, of death, and of the devil; freed and delivered from all human

traditions. If we would but consider the tyranny of auricular confession,

one of the least things we have escaped from, we could not show ourselves

sufficiently thankful to God for loosing us out of that one snare. When

popedom stood and flourished among us, then every king would willingly have

given ten hundred thousand guilders, a prince one hundred thousand, a

nobleman one thousand, a gentleman one hundred, a citizen or countryman

twenty or ten, to have been freed from that tyranny. But now seeing that

such freedom is obtained for nothing, by grace, it is not much regarded,

neither give we thanks to God for it.





CCLXXXIX.



The Old Testament is chiefly a law-book, teaching what we should do or

not do, and showing examples and acts how such laws are observed and

transgressed. But besides the law, there are certain promises and sentences

of grace, whereby the holy patriarchs and prophets were preserved then, as

we are now. But the New Testament is a book wherein is written the gospel of

God's promises, and the acts of those that believed, and those that believed

not. And it is an open and public preaching and declaration of Christ, as

set down in the sentences of the Old Testament, and accomplished by him. And

like as the proper and chief doctrine of the New Testament is grace and

peace, through the forgiveness of sins declared in Christ, so the proper and

chief doctrine of the Old Testament is, through the law, to discover sin,

and to require good works and obedience.

We must take good heed that we make not a Moses out of Christ, nor out

of Christ as Moses, as often has been done. But where Christ and his

apostles, in the Gospel, give out commands and doctrines expounding the law,

these are as important as the other works and benefits of Christ. Yet to

only know Gospel precepts, is not to know the Gospel; but when the voice

sounds which says, Christ is thine own, with life and works, with death and

resurrection, with all what he is, and all he has, by this we see that he

forces not, but teaches amicably, saying: "Bless are the poor," etc., "Come

to me all ye that are weary and heavy laden," etc. and the apostles use the

words: "I admonish," "I exhort," "I pray," etc.; so that we see in every

place that the Gospel is not a law-book, but a mild preaching of Christ's

merits, given to be our own, if we believe.

Hence it follows that no law is given to the faithful whereby they

become justified before God, as St. Paul says, because they are already

justified and saved by faith; but they show and prove their faith by their

works, they confess and teach the gospel before people freely and

undauntedly, and thereupon venture their lives; and whatsoever they take in

hand, they direct to the good and profit of their neighbor, and so follow

Christ's example. For, where works and love do not break through and appear,

there faith is not.

We must make a clear distinction; we must place the Gospel in heaven,

and leave the law on earth; we must receive of the Gospel a heavenly and a

divine righteousness; while we value the law as an earthly and human

righteousness, and thus directly and diligently separate the righteousness

of the gospel from the righteousness of the law, even as God has separated

and distinguished heaven from earth, light from darkness, day from night,

etc., so that the righteousness of the Gospel be the light and the day, but

the righteousness of the law, darkness and night. Therefore all Christians

should learn rightly to discern the law and grace in their hearts, and know

how to keep one from the other, in deed and in truth, not merely in words,

as the pope and other heretics do, who mingle them together, and, as it

were, make thereout a cake not fit to eat.





CCXC.



Augustine pictured the strength, office, and operation of the law, by a

very fit similitude, to show, that it discovers our sins, and God's wrath

against sin, and places them in our sight. "The law," says he, "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 begins to smoke and burn,

not from the fault of the water, but from the nature and kind of the lime,

which will not endure water; whereas, if oil, instead, be poured upon it,

then it lies still, and burns not; even so it is with the law and the

Gospel."





CCXCI.



On this matter of the righteousness of the law, St Paul thoroughly

bestirred himself against God's professing people, as in Rom. ix., x., xi.,

he strives with powerful, well-based arguments; it produced him much sorrow

of heart.

The Jews argument was this: Paul kept the law at Jerusalem, therefore,

said they, we must also keep it. Answer: True, Paul for a certain time kept

the law, by reason of the weak, to win them; but, in this our time, it is

not so, and agrees not in any way therewith; as the ancient father well

said: Distinguish times, and we may easily reconcile the Scriptures

together.