|
The Second
Helvetic Confession
Chapters XI-XV
CHAPTER XI - Of Jesus Christ, True God and Man, the Only Savior
of the World
CHRIST IS TRUE GOD. We further believe and teach that the Son
of God, our Lord Jesus Christ, was predestinated or foreordained
from eternity by the Father to be the Savior of the world. And
we believe that he was born, not only when he assumed flesh of
the Virgin Mary, and not only before the foundation of the world
was laid, but by the Father before all eternity in an inexpressible
manner. For Isaiah said: "Who can tell his generation?" (Ch.
53:8). And Micah says: "His origin is from of old, from
ancient days" (Micah 5:2). And John said in the Gospel: "In
the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the
Word was God," etc. (Ch. 1:1). Therefore, with respect to
his divinity the Son is coequal and consubstantial with the Father;
true God (Phil. 2:11), not only in name or by adoption or by
any merit, but in substance and nature, as the apostle John has
often said: "This is the true God and eternal life" (I
John 5:20). Paul also says: "He appointed the Son the heir
of all things, through whom also he created the world. He reflects
the glory of God and bears the very stamp of his nature, upholding
all things by his word of power" (Heb. 1:2 f.). For in the
Gospel the Lord himself said: "Father, glorify Thou me in
Thy own presence with the glory which I had with Thee before
the world was made" (John 17:5). And in another place in
the Gospel it is written: "The Jews sought all the more
to kill him because he . . . called God his Father, making himself
equal with God" (John 5:18).
THE SECTS. We therefore abhor the impious doctrine of Arius
and the Arians against the Son of God, and especially the blasphemies
of the Spaniard, Michael Servetus, and all his followers, which
Satan through them has, as it were, dragged up out of hell and
has most audaciously and impiously spread abroad in the world.
CHRIST IS TRUE MAN, HAVING REAL FLESH. We also believe and teach
that the eternal Son of the eternal God was made the Son of man,
from the seed of Abraham and David, not from the coitus of a
man, as the Ebionites said, but was most chastely conceived by
the Holy Spirit and born of the ever virgin Mary, as the evangelical
history carefully explains to us (Matt., ch. 1). And Paul says: "He
took not on him the nature of angels, but of the seed of Abraham." Also
the apostle John says that whoever does not believe that Jesus
Christ has come in the flesh, is not of God. Therefore, the flesh
of Christ was neither imaginary nor brought from heaven, as Valentinus
and Marcion wrongly imagined.
A RATIONAL SOUL IN CHRIST. Moreover, our Lord Jesus Christ did
not have a soul bereft of sense and reason, as Apollinaris thought,
nor flesh without a soul, as Eunomius taught, but a soul with
its reason, and flesh with its senses, by which in the time of
his passion he sustained real bodily pain, as he himself testified
when he said: "My soul is very sorrowful, even to death" (Matt.
26:38). And, "Now is my soul troubled" (John 12:27).
TWO NATURES IN CHRIST. We therefore acknowledge two natures
or substances, the divine and the human, in one and the same
Jesus Christ our Lord (Heb., ch. 2). And we say that these are
bound and united with one another in such a way that they are
not absorbed, or confused, or mixed, but are united or joined
together in one person--the properties of the natures being unimpaired
and permanent.
NOT TWO BUT ONE CHRIST. Thus we worship not two but one Christ
the Lord. We repeat: one true God and man. With respect to his
divine nature he is consubstantial with the Father, and with
respect to the human nature he is consubstantial with us men,
and like us in all things, sin excepted (Heb. 4:15).
THE SECTS. And indeed we detest the dogma of the Nestorians
who make two of the one Christ and dissolve the unity of the
Person. Likewise we thoroughly execrate the madness of Eutyches
and of the Monothelites or Monophysites who destroy the property
of the human nature.
THE DIVINE NATURE OF CHRIST IS NOT PASSIBLE, AND THE HUMAN NATURE
IS NOT EVERYWHERE. Therefore, we do not in anyway teach that
the divine nature in Christ has suffered or that Christ according
to his human nature is still in this world and thus is everywhere.
For neither do we think or teach that the body of Christ ceased
to be a true body after his glorification, or was deified, and
deified in such a way that it laid aside its properties as regards
body and soul, and changed entirely into a divine nature and
began to be merely one substance.
THE SECTS. Hence we by no means approve of or accept the strained,
confused and obscure subtleties of Schwenkfeldt and of similar
sophists with their self-contradictory arguments; neither are
we Schwenkfeldians.
OUR LORD TRULY SUFFERED. We believe, moreover, that our Lord
Jesus Christ truly suffered and died for us in the flesh, as
Peter says (I Peter 4:1). We abhor the most impious madness of
the Jacobites and all the Turks who execrate the suffering of
the Lord. At the same time we do not deny that the Lord of glory
was crucified for us, according to Paul's words (I Cor. 2:8).
IMPARTATION OF PROPERTIES. We piously and reverently accept
and use the impartation of properties which is derived from Scripture
and which has been used by all antiquity in explaining and reconciling
apparently contradictory passages.
CHRIST IS TRULY RISEN FROM THE DEAD. We believe and teach that
the same Jesus Christ our Lord, in his true flesh in which he
was crucified and died, rose again from the dead, and that not
another flesh was raised other than the one buried, or that a
spirit was taken up instead of the flesh, but that he retained
his true body. Therefore, while his disciples thought they saw
the spirit of the Lord, he showed them his hands and feet which
were marked by the prints of the nails and wounds, and added: "See
my hands and my feet, that it is I myself; handle me, and see,
for a spirit has not flesh and bones as you see that I have" (Luke
24:39).
CHRIST IS TRULY ASCENDED INTO HEAVEN. We believe that our Lord
Jesus Christ, in his same flesh, ascended above all visible heavens
into the highest heaven, that is, the dwelling-place of God and
the blessed ones, at the right hand of God the Father. Although
it signifies an equal participation in glory and majesty, it
is also taken to be a certain place about which the Lord, speaking
in the Gospel, says: "I go to prepare a place for you" (John
14:2). The apostle Peter also says: "Heaven must receive
Christ until the time of restoring all things" (Acts 3:21).
And from heaven the same Christ will return in judgment, when
wickedness will then be at its greatest in the world and when
the Antichrist, having corrupted true religion, will fill up
all things with superstition and impiety and will cruelly lay
waste the Church with bloodshed and flames (Dan., ch. 11). But
Christ will come again to claim his own, and by his coming to
destroy the Antichrist, and to judge the living and the dead
(Acts 17:31). For the dead will rise again (I Thess. 4:14 ff.),
and those who on that day (which is unknown to all creatures
[Mark 13:32]) will be alive will be changed "in the twinkling
of an eye," and all the faithful will be caught up to meet
Christ in the air, so that then they may enter with him into
the blessed dwelling-places to live forever (I Cor. 15:51 f.).
But the unbelievers and ungodly will descend with the devils
into hell to burn forever and never to be redeemed from torments
(Matt. 25:46).
THE SECTS. We therefore condemn all who deny a real resurrection
of the flesh (II Tim. 2:18), or who with John of Jerusalem, against
whom Jerome wrote, do not have a correct view of the glorification
of bodies. We also condemn those who thought that the devil and
all the ungodly would at some time be saved, and that there would
be an end to punishments. For the Lord has plainly declared: "Their
fire is not quenched, and their worm does not die" (Mark
9:44). We further condemn Jewish dreams that there will be a
golden age on earth before the Day of Judgment, and that the
pious, having subdued all their godless enemies, will possess
all the kingdoms of the earth. For evangelical truth in Matt.,
chs. 24 and 25, and Luke, ch. 18, and apostolic teaching in II
Thess., ch. 2, and II Tim., chs. 3 and 4, present something quite
different.
THE FRUIT OF CHRIST'S DEATH AND RESURRECTION. Further by his
passion and death and everything which he did and endured for
our sake by his coming in the flesh, our Lord reconciled all
the faithful to the heavenly Father, made expiation for sins,
disarmed death, overcame damnation and hell, and by his resurrection
from the dead brought again and restored life and immortality.
For he is our righteousness, life and resurrection, in a word,
the fullness and perfection of all the faithful, salvation and
all sufficiency. For the apostle says: "In him all the fullness
of God was pleased to dwell," and, "You have come to
fullness of life in him" (Col., chs. 1 and 2).
JESUS CHRIST IS THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WORLD, AND THE TRUE AWAITED
MESSIAH. For we teach and believe that this Jesus Christ our
Lord is the unique and eternal Savior of the human race, and
thus of the whole world, in whom by faith are saved all who before
the law, under the law, and under the Gospel were saved, and
however many will be saved at the end of the world. For the Lord
himself says in the Gospel: "He who does not enter the sheepfold
by the door but climbs in by another way, that man is a thief
and a robber . . . I am the door of the sheep" (John 10:1
and 7). And also in another place in the same Gospel he says: "Abraham
saw my day and was glad" (ch. 8:56). The apostle Peter also
says: "There is salvation in no one else, for there is no
other name under heaven given among men by which we must be saved." We
therefore believe that we will be saved through the grace of
our Lord Jesus Christ, as our fathers were (Acts 4:12, 10:43;
15:11). For Paul also says: "All our fathers ate the same
spiritual food, and all drank the same spiritual drink. For they
drank from the spiritual Rock which followed them, and the Rock
was Christ" (I Cor. 10:3 f.). And thus we read that John
says: "Christ was the Lamb which was slain from the foundation
of the world" (Rev. 13:8), and John the Baptist testified
that Christ is that "Lamb of God, who takes away the sin
of the world" (John 1:29). Wherefore, we quite openly profess
and preach that Jesus Christ is the sole Redeemer and Savior
of the world, the King and High Priest, the true and awaited
Messiah, that holy and blessed one whom all the types of the
law and predictions of the prophets prefigured and promised;
and that God appointed him beforehand and sent him to us, so
that we are not now to look for any other. Now there only remains
for all of us to give all glory to Christ, believe in him, rest
in him alone, despising and rejecting all other aids in life.
For however many seek salvation in any other than in Christ alone,
have fallen from the grace of God and have rendered Christ null
and void for themselves (Gal. 5:4).
THE CREEDS OF FOUR COUNCILS RECEIVED. And, to say many things
with a few words, with a sincere heart we believe, and freely
confess with open mouth, whatever things are defined from the
Holy Scriptures concerning the mystery of the incarnation of
our Lord Jesus Christ, and are summed up in the Creeds and decrees
of the first four most excellent synods convened at Nicaea, Constantinople,
Ephesus and Chalcedon-- together with the Creed of blessed Athanasius,
and all similar symbols; and we condemn everything contrary to
these.
THE SECTS. And in this way we retain the Christian, orthodox
and catholic faith whole and unimpaired; knowing that nothing
is contained in the aforesaid symbols which is not agreeable
to the Word of God, and does not altogether make for a sincere
exposition of the faith.
CHAPTER XII - Of the Law of God
THE WILL OF GOD IS EXPLAINED FOR US IN THE LAW OF GOD. We teach
that the will of God is explained for us in the law of God, what
he wills or does not will us to do, what is good and just, or
what is evil and unjust. Therefore, we confess that the law is
good and holy.
THE LAW OF NATURE. And this law was at one time written in the
hearts of men by the finger of God (Rom. 2:15), and is called
the law of nature (the law of Moses is in two Tables), and at
another it was inscribed by his finger on the two Tables of Moses,
and eloquently expounded in the books of Moses (Ex. 20:1 ff.;
Deut. 5:6 ff.). For the sake of clarity we distinguish the moral
law which is contained in the Decalogue or two Tables and expounded
in the books of Moses, the ceremonial law which determines the
ceremonies and worship of God, and the judicial law which is
concerned with political and domestic matters.
THE LAW IS COMPLETE AND PERFECT. We believe that the whole will
of God and all necessary precepts for every sphere of life are
taught in this law. For otherwise the Lord would not have forbidden
us to add or to take away anything from this law; neither would
he have commanded us to walk in a straight path before this law,
and not to turn aside from it by turning to the right or to the
left (Deut. 4:2; 12:32).
WHY THE LAW WAS GIVEN. We teach that this law was not given
to men that they might be justified by keeping it, but that rather
from what it teaches we may know (our) weakness, sin and condemnation,
and, despairing of our strength, might be converted to Christ
in faith. For the apostle openly declares: "The law brings
wrath," and, "Through the law comes knowledge of sin" (Rom.
4:15; 3:20), and, "If a law had been given which could justify
or make alive, then righteousness would indeed be by the law.
But the Scripture (that is, the law) has concluded all under
sin, that the promise which was of the faith of Jesus might be
given to those who believe . . . Therefore, the law was our schoolmaster
unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith" (Gal.
3:21 ff.).
THE FLESH DOES NOT FULFILL THE LAW. For no flesh could or can
satisfy the law of God and fulfil it, because of the weakness
in our flesh which adheres and remains in us until our last breath.
For the apostle says again: "God has done what the law,
weakened by the flesh, could not do: sending his own Son in the
likeness of sinful flesh and for sin" (Rom. 8:3). Therefore,
Christ is the perfecting of the law and our fulfilment of it
(Rom. 10:4), who, in order to take away the curse of the law,
was made a curse for us (Gal. 3:13). Thus he imparts to us through
faith his fulfilment of the law, and his righteousness and obedience
are imputed to us.
HOW FAR THE LAW IS ABROGATED. The law of God is therefore abrogated
to the extent that it no longer condemns us, nor works wrath
in us. For we are under grace and not under the law. Moreover,
Christ has fulfilled all the figures of the law. Hence, with
the coming of the body, the shadows ceased, so that in Christ
we now have the truth and all fulness. But yet we do not on that
account contemptuously reject the law. For we remember the words
of the Lord when he said: "I have not come to abolish the
law and the prophets but to fullfil them" (Matt. 5:17).
We know that in the law is delivered to us the patterns of virtues
and vices. We know that the written law when explained by the
Gospel is useful to the Church, and that therefore its reading
is not to be banished from the Church. For although Moses' face
was covered with a veil, yet the apostle says that the veil has
been taken away and abolished by Christ.
THE SECTS. We condemn everything that heretics old and new have
taught against the law.
CHAPTER XIII - Of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, of the Promises,
and of the Spirit and Letter
THE ANCIENTS HAD EVANGELICAL PROMISES. The Gospel is, indeed,
opposed to the law. For the law works wrath and announces a curse,
whereas the Gospel preaches grace and blessing. John says: "For
the law was given through Moses; grace and truth came through
Jesus Christ" (John 1:17). Yet notwithstanding it is most
certain that those who were before the law and under the law,
were not altogether destitute of the Gospel. For they had extraordinary
evangelical promises such as these are: "The seed of the
woman shall bruise the serpent's head" (Gen. 3:15). "In
thy seed shall all the nations of the earth be blessed" (Gen.
22:18). "The scepter shall not depart from Judah . . . until
he comes" (Gen. 49:10). "The Lord will raise up a prophet
from among his own brethren" (Deut. 18:15; Acts 3:22), etc.
THE PROMISES TWOFOLD. And we acknowledge that two kinds of promises
were revealed to the fathers, as also to us. For some were of
present or earthly things, such as the promises of the Land of
Canaan and of victories, and as the promise today still of daily
bread. Others were then and are still now of heavenly and eternal
things, namely, divine grace, remission of sins, and eternal
life through faith in Jesus Christ.
THE FATHERS ALSO HAD NOT ONLY CARNAL BUT SPIRITUAL PROMISES.
Moreover, the ancients had not only external and earthly but
also spiritual and heavenly promises in Christ. Peter says: "The
prophets who prophesied of the grace that was to be yours searched
and inquired about this salvation" (I Peter 1:10). Wherefore
the apostle Paul also said: "The Gospel of God was promised
beforehand through his prophets in the holy scriptures" (Rom.
1:2). Thereby it is clear that the ancients were not entirely
destitute of the whole Gospel.
WHAT IS THE GOSPEL PROPERLY SPEAKING? And although our fathers
had the Gospel in this way in the writings of the prophets by
which they attained salvation in Christ through faith, yet the
Gospel is properly called glad and joyous news, in which, first
by John the Baptist, then by Christ the Lord himself, and afterwards
by the apostles and their successors, is preached to us in the
world that God has now performed what he promised from the beginning
of the world, and has sent, nay more, has given us his only Son
and in him reconciliation with the Father, the remission of sins,
all fulness and everlasting life. Therefore, the history delineated
by the four Evangelists and explaining how these things were
done or fulfilled by Christ, what things Christ taught and did,
and that those who believe in him have all fulness, is rightly
called the Gospel. The preaching and writings of the apostles,
in which the apostles explain for us how the Son was given to
us by the Father, and in him everything that has to do with life
and salvation, is also rightly called evangelical doctrine, so
that not even today, if sincerely preached, does it lose its
illustrious title.
OF THE SPIRIT AND THE LETTER. That same preaching of the Gospel
is also called by the apostle "the spirit" and "the
ministry of the spirit" because by faith it becomes effectual
and living in the ears, nay more, in the hearts of believers
through the illumination of the Holy Spirit (II Cor. 3:6). For
the letter, which is opposed to the Spirit, signifies everything
external, but especially the doctrine of the law which, without
the Spirit and faith, works wrath and provokes sin in the minds
of those who do not have a living faith. For this reason the
apostle calls it "the ministry of death." In this connection
the saying of the apostle is pertinent: "The letter kills,
but the Spirit gives life." And false apostles preached
a corrupted Gospel, having combined it with the law, as if Christ
could not save without the law.
THE SECTS. Such were the Ebionites said to be, who were descended
from Ebion the heretic, and the Nazarites who were formerly called
Mineans. All these we condemn, while preaching the pure Gospel
and teaching that believers are justified by the Spirit alone,
and not by the law. A more detailed exposition of this matter
will follow presently under the heading of justification.
THE TEACHING OF THE GOSPEL IS NOT NEW, BUT MOST ANCIENT DOCTRINE.
And although the teaching of the Gospel, compared with the teaching
of the Pharisees concerning the law, seemed to be a new doctrine
when first preached by Christ (which Jeremiah also prophesied
concerning the New Testament), yet actually it not only was and
still is an old doctrine (even if today it is called new by the
Papists when compared with the teaching now received among them),
but is the most ancient of all in the world. For God predestinated
from eternity to save the world through Christ, and he has disclosed
to the world through the Gospel this his predestination and eternal
counsel (II Tim. 2:9 f.). Hence it is evident that the religion
and teaching of the Gospel among all who ever were, are and will
be, is the most ancient of all. Wherefore we assert that all
who say that the religion and teaching of the Gospel is a faith
which has recently arisen, being scarcely thirty years old, err
disgracefully and speak shamefully of the eternal counsel of
God. To them applies the saying of Isaiah the prophet: "Woe
to those who call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for
light and light for darkness, who put bitter for sweet and sweet
for bitter!" (Isa. 5:20).
CHAPTER XIV - Of Repentance and the Conversion of Man
The doctrine of repentance is joined with the Gospel. For so
has the Lord said in the Gospel: "Repentance and forgiveness
of sins should be preached in my name to all nations" (Luke
24:27). WHAT IS REPENTANCE? By repentance we understand (1) the
recovery of a right mind in sinful man awakened by the Word of
the Gospel and the Holy Spirit, and received by true faith, by
which the sinner immediately acknowledges his innate corruption
and all his sins accused by the Word of God; and (2) grieves
for them from his heart, and not only bewails and frankly confesses
them before God with a feeling of shame, but also (3) with indignation
abominates them; and (4) now zealously considers the amendment
of his ways and constantly strives for innocence and virtue in
which conscientiously to exercise himself all the rest of his
life.
TRUE REPENTANCE IS CONVERSION TO GOD. And this is true repentance,
namely, a sincere turning to God and all good, and earnest turning
away from the devil and all evil.
1. REPENTANCE IS A GIFT OF GOD. Now we expressly say that this
repentance is a sheer gift of God and not a work of our strength.
For the apostle commands a faithful minister diligently to instruct
those who oppose the truth, if "God may perhaps grant that
they will repent and come to know the truth" (II Tim. 2:25).
2. LAMENTS SINS COMMITTED. Now that sinful woman who washed
the feet of the Lord with her tears, and Peter who wept bitterly
and bewailed his denial of the Lord (Luke 7:38; 22:62) show clearly
how the mind of a penitent man ought to be seriously lamenting
the sins he has committed.
3. CONFESSES SINS TO GOD. Moreover, the prodigal son and the
publican in the Gospel, when compared with the Pharisee, present
us with the most suitable pattern of how our sins are to be confessed
to God. The former said: "'Father, I have sinned against
heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called your
son; treat me as one of your hired servants'" (Luke 15:8
ff.). And the latter, not daring to raise his eyes to heaven,
beat his breast, saying, "God be merciful to me a sinner" (ch.
18:13). And we do not doubt that they were accepted by God into
grace. For the apostle John says: "If we confess our sins,
he is faithful and just, and will forgive our sins and cleanse
us from all unrighteousness. If we say we have not sinned, we
make him a liar, and his word is not in us" (I John 1:9
f.).
SACERDOTAL CONFESSION AND ABSOLUTION. But we believe that this
sincere confession which is made to God alone, either privately
between God and the sinner, or publicly in the Church where the
general confession of sins is said, is sufficient, and that in
order to obtain forgiveness of sins it is not necessary for anyone
to confess his sins to a priest, murmuring them in his ears,
that in turn he might receive absolution from the priest with
his laying on of hands, because there is neither a commandment
nor an example of this in Holy Scriptures. David testifies and
says: "I acknowledged my sin to thee, and did not hide my
iniquity; I said, 'I will confess my transgressions to the Lord';
then thou didst forgive the guilt of my sin" (Ps. 32:5).
And the Lord who taught us to pray and at the same time to confess
our sins said: "Pray then like this: Our Father, who art
in heaven, . . . forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors" (Matt. 6:12).
Therefore it is necessary that we confess our sins to God our
Father, and be reconciled with our neighbor if we have offended
him. Concerning this kind of confession, the Apostle James says: "Confess
your sins to one another" (James 5:16). If, however, anyone
is overwhelmed by the burden of his sins and by perplexing temptations,
and will seek counsel, instruction and comfort privately, either
from a minister of the Church, or from any other brother who
is instructed in God's law, we do not disapprove; just as we
also fully approve of that general and public confession of sins
which is usually said in Church and in meetings for worship,
as we noted above, inasmuch as it is agreeable to Scripture.
OF THE KEYS OF THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN. Concerning the keys of
the Kingdom of Heaven which the Lord gave to the apostles, many
babble many astonishing things, and out of them forge swords,
spears, scepters and crowns, and complete power over the greatest
kingdoms, indeed, over souls and bodies. Judging simply according
to the Word of the Lord, we say that all properly called ministers
possess and exercise the keys or the use of them when they proclaim
the Gospel; that is, when they teach, exhort, comfort, rebuke,
and keep in discipline the people committed to their trust.
OPENING AND SHUTTING (THE KINGDOM). For in this way they open
the Kingdom of Heaven to the obedient and shut it to the disobedient.
The Lord promised these keys to the apostles in Matt., ch. 16,
and gave them in John, ch. 20, Mark, ch. 16, and Luke, ch. 24,
when he sent out his disciples and commanded them to preach the
Gospel in all the world, and to remit sins.
THE MINISTRY OF RECONCILIATION. In the letter to the Corinthians
the apostle says that the Lord gave the ministry of reconciliation
to his ministers (II Cor. 5:18 ff.). And what this is he then
explains, saying that it is the preaching or teaching of reconciliation.
And explaining his words still more clearly he adds that Christ's
ministers discharge the office of an ambassador in Christ's name,
as if God himself through ministers exhorted the people to be
reconciled to God, doubtless by faithful obedience. Therefore,
they exercise the keys when they persuade [men] to believe and
repent. Thus they reconcile men to God.
MINISTERS REMIT SINS. Thus they remit sins. Thus they open the
Kingdom of Heaven, and bring believers into it: very different
from those of whom the Lord said in the Gospel, "Woe to
you lawyers! for you have taken away the key of knowledge; you
did not enter yourselves, and you hindered those who were entering."
HOW MINISTERS ABSOLVE. Ministers, therefore, rightly and effectually
absolve when they preach the Gospel of Christ and thereby the
remission of sins, which is promised to each one who believes,
just as each one is baptized, and when they testify that it pertains
to each one peculiarly. Neither do we think that this absolution
becomes more effectual by being murmured in the ear of someone
or by being murmured singly over someone's head. We are nevertheless
of the opinion that the remission of sins in the blood of Christ
is to be diligently proclaimed, and that each one is to be admonished
that the forgiveness of sins pertains to him.
DILIGENCE IN THE RENEWAL OF LIFE. But the examples in the Gospel
teach us how vigilant and diligent the penitent ought to be in
striving for newness of life and in mortifying the old man and
quickening the new. For the Lord said to the man he healed of
palsy: "See, you are well! Sin no more, that nothing worse
befall you" (John 5:14). Likewise to the adulteress whom
he set free he said: "Go, and sin no more" (ch. 8:11).
To be sure, by these words he did not mean that any man, as long
as he lived in the flesh, could not sin; he simply recommends
diligence and a careful devotion, so that we should strive by
all means, and beseech God in prayers lest we fall back into
sins from which, as it were, we have been resurrected, and lest
we be overcome by the flesh, the world and the devil. Zacchaeus
the publican, whom the Lord had received back into favor, exclaims
in the Gospel: "Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give
to the poor; and if I have defrauded any one of anything, I restore
it fourfold" (Luke 19:8).
Therefore, in the same way we preach that restitution and compassion,
and even almsgiving, are necessary for those who truly repent,
and we exhort all men everywhere in the words of the apostle: "Let
not sin therefore reign in your mortal bodies, to make you obey
their passions. Do not yield your members to sin as instruments
of wickedness, but yield yourselves to God as men who have been
brought from death to life, and your members to God as instruments
of righteousness" (Rom. 6:12 f.).
ERRORS. Wherefore we condemn all impious utterances of some
who wrongly use the preaching of the Gospel and say that it is
easy to return to God. Christ has atoned for all sins. Forgiveness
of sins is easy. Therefore, what harm is there in sinning? Nor
need we be greatly concerned about repentance, etc. Notwithstanding
we always teach that an access to God is open to all sinners,
and that he forgives all sinners of all sins except the one sin
against the Holy Spirit (Mark 3:29).
THE SECTS. Wherefore we condemn both old and new Novatians and
Catharists.
PAPAL INDULGENCES. We especially condemn the lucrative doctrine
of the Pope concerning penance, and against his simony and his
simoniacal indulgences we avail ourselves of Peter's judgment
concerning Simon: "Your silver perish with you, because
you thought you could obtain the gift of God with money! You
have neither part nor lot in this matter, for your heart is not
right before God" (Acts 8:20 f.).
SATISFACTIONS. We also disapprove of those who think that by
their own satisfactions they make amends for sins committed.
For we teach that Christ alone by his death or passion is the
satisfaction, propitiation or expiation of all sins (Isa., ch.
53; I Cor. 1:30). Yet as we have already said, we do not cease
to urge the mortification of the flesh. We add, however, that
this mortification is not to be proudly obtruded upon God as
a satisfaction for sins, but is to be performed humbly, in keeping
with the nature of the children of God, as a new obedience out
of gratitude for the deliverance and full satisfaction obtained
by the death and satisfaction of the Son of God.
CHAPTER XV - Of the True Justification of the Faithful
WHAT IS JUSTIFICATION? According to the apostle in his treatment
of justification, to justify means to remit sins, to absolve
from guilt and punishment, to receive into favor, and to pronounce
a man just. For in his epistle to the Romans the apostle says: "It
is God who justifies; who is to condemn?" (Rom. 8:33). To
justify and to condemn are opposed. And in The Acts of the Apostles
the apostle states: "Through Christ forgiveness of sins
is proclaimed to you, and by him everyone that believes is freed
from everything from which you could not be freed by the law
of Moses" (Acts 13:38 f.). For in the Law and also in the
Prophets we read: "If there is a dispute between men, and
they come into court . . . the judges decide between them, acquitting
the innocent and condemning the guilty" (Deut. 25:1). And
in Isa., ch. 5: "Woe to those . . . who acquit the guilty
for a bribe."
WE ARE JUSTIFIED ON ACCOUNT OF CHRIST. Now it is most certain
that all of us are by nature sinners and godless, and before
God's judgment-seat are convicted of godlessness and are guilty
of death, but that, solely by the grace of Christ and not from
any merit of ours or consideration for us, we are justified,
that is, absolved from sin and death by God the Judge. For what
is clearer than what Paul said: "Since all have sinned and
fall short of the glory of God, they are justified by his grace
as a gift, through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus" (Rom.
3:23 f.).
IMPUTED RIGHTEOUSNESS. For Christ took upon himself and bore
the sins of the world, and satisfied divine justice. Therefore,
solely on account of Christ's sufferings and resurrection God
is propitious with respect to our sins and does not impute them
to us, but imputes Christ's righteousness to us as our own (II
Cor. 5:19 ff.; Rom. 4:25), so that now we are not only cleansed
and purged from sins or are holy, but also, granted the righteousness
of Christ, and so absolved from sin, death and condemnation,
are at last righteous and heirs of eternal life. Properly speaking,
therefore, God alone justifies us, and justifies only on account
of Christ, not imputing sins to us but imputing his righteousness
to us.
WE ARE JUSTIFIED BY FAITH ALONE. But because we receive this
justification, not through any works, but through faith in the
mercy of God and in Christ, we therefore teach and believe with
the apostle that sinful man is justified by faith alone in Christ,
not by the law or any works. For the apostle says: "We hold
that a man is justified by faith apart from works of law" (Rom.
3:28). Also: "If Abraham was justified by works, he has
something to boast about, but not before God. For what does the
scripture say? Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned to him
as righteousness. . . . And to one who does not work but believes
in him who justified the ungodly, his faith is reckoned as righteousness" (Rom.
4:2 ff.; Gen. 15:6). And again: "By grace you have been
saved through faith; and this is not your own doing, it is the
gift of God--not because of works, lest any man should boast," etc.
(Eph. 2:8 f.). Therefore, because faith receives Christ our righteousness
and attributes everything to the grace of God in Christ, on that
account justification is attributed to faith, chiefly because
of Christ and not therefore because it is our work. For it is
the gift of God.
WE RECEIVE CHRIST BY FAITH. Moreover, the Lord abundantly shows
that we receive Christ by faith, in John, ch. 6, where he puts
eating for believing, and believing for eating. For as we receive
food by eating, so we participate in Christ by believing.
JUSTIFICATION IS NOT ATTRIBUTED PARTLY TO CHRIST OR TO FAITH,
PARTLY TO US. Therefore, we do not share in the benefit of justification
partly because of the grace of God or Christ, and partly because
of ourselves, our love, works or merit, but we attribute it wholly
to the grace of God in Christ through faith. For our love and
our works could not please God if performed by unrighteous men.
Therefore, it is necessary for us to be righteous before we may
love and do good works. We are made truly righteous, as we have
said, by faith in Christ purely by the grace of God, who does
not impute to us our sins, but the righteousness of Christ, or
rather, he imputes faith in Christ to us for righteousness. Moreover,
the apostle very clearly derives love from faith when he says: "The
aim of our command is love that issues from a pure heart, a good
conscience, and a sincere faith" (I Tim. 1:5).
JAMES COMPARED WITH PAUL. Wherefore, in this matter we are not
speaking of a fictitious, empty, lazy and dead faith, but of
a living, quickening faith. It is and is called a living faith
because it apprehends Christ who is life and makes alive, and
shows that it is alive by living works. And so James does not
contradict anything in this doctrine of ours. For he speaks of
an empty, dead faith of which some boasted but who did not have
Christ living in them by faith (James 2:14 ff.). James said that
works justify, yet without contradicting the apostle (otherwise
he would have to be rejected) but showing that Abraham proved
his living and justifying faith by works. This all the pious
do, but they trust in Christ alone and not in their own works.
For again the apostle said: "It is no longer I who live,
but Christ who lives in me; and the life I now live in the flesh
I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself
for me. I do not reject the grace of God; for if justification
were through the law, then Christ died to no purpose," etc.
(Gal. 2:20 f.).
|