1] In the
Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and, below, in the Twentieth Article,
they condemn us, for teaching that men obtain remission of
sins not because of their own merits, but freely for Christ's
sake, through faith in Christ. [They reject quite stubbornly
both these statements.] For they condemn us both for denying
that men obtain remission of sins because of their own merits,
and for affirming that, through faith, men obtain remission
of sins, and through faith in Christ 2] are justified.
But since in this controversy the chief topic of Christian doctrine
is treated, which, understood aright, illumines and amplifies
the honor of Christ [which is of especial service for the clear,
correct understanding of the entire Holy Scriptures, and alone
shows the way to the unspeakable treasure and right knowledge
of Christ, and alone opens the door to the entire Bible], and
brings necessary and most abundant consolation to devout consciences,
we ask His Imperial Majesty to hear us with forbearance in regard
to matters of such importance. 3] For since the adversaries
understand neither what the remission of sins, nor what faith,
nor what grace, nor what righteousness is, they sadly corrupt
this topic, and obscure the glory and benefits of Christ, and
rob devout consciences of the consolations offered in Christ.
4] But that we may strengthen the position of our Confession,
and also remove the charges which the adversaries advance against
us, certain things are to be premised in the beginning, in order
that the sources of both kinds of doctrine, i.e., both
that of our adversaries and our own, may be known.
5] All Scripture
ought to be distributed into these two principal topics, the
Law and the promises. For in some places it presents the Law,
and in others the promise concerning Christ, namely, either
when [in the Old Testament] it promises that Christ will come,
and offers, for His sake, the remission of sins justification,
and life eternal, or when, in the Gospel [in the New Testament],
Christ Himself, since He has appeared, promises the remission
of sins, justification, and life eternal. 6] Moreover,
in this discussion, by Law we designate the Ten Commandments,
wherever they are read in the Scriptures. Of the ceremonies
and judicial laws of Moses we say nothing at present.
7] Of these
two parts the adversaries select the Law, because human reason
naturally understands, in some way, the Law (for it has the
same judgment divinely written in the mind); [the natural law
agrees with the law of Moses, or the Ten Commandments] and by
the Law they seek the remission of sins and justification. 8]
Now, the Decalog requires not only outward civil works, which
reason can in some way produce, but it also requires other things
placed far above reason, namely, truly to fear God, truly to
love God, truly to call upon God, truly to be convinced that
God hears us, and to expect the aid of God in death and in all
afflictions; finally, it requires obedience to God, in death
and all afflictions, so that we may not flee from these or refuse
them when God imposes them.
9] Here the
scholastics, having followed the philosophers, teach only a
righteousness of reason, namely, civil works, and fabricate
besides that without the Holy Ghost reason can love God above
all things. For, as long as the human mind is at ease, and does
not feel the wrath or judgment of God, it can imagine that it
wishes to love God, that it wishes to do good for God's sake.
[But it is sheer hypocrisy.] In this manner they teach that
men merit the remission of sins by doing what is in them, i.e.,
if reason, grieving over sin, elicit an act of love to God,
or 10] for God's sake be active in that which is good.
And because this opinion naturally flatters men, it has brought
forth and multiplied in the Church many services, monastic vows,
abuses of the mass; and, with this opinion the one has, in the
course of time, devised this act of worship and observances,
the other that. 11] And in order that they might nourish
and increase confidence in such works, they have affirmed that
God necessarily gives grace to one thus working, by the necessity
not of constraint but of immutability [not that He is constrained,
but that this is the order which God will not transgress or
alter].
12] In this
opinion there are many great and pernicious errors, which it
would be tedious to enumerate. Let the discreet reader think
only of this: If this be Christian righteousness, what difference
is there between philosophy and the doctrine of Christ? If we
merit the remission of sins by these elicit acts [that spring
from our mind], of what benefit is Christ? If we can be justified
by reason and the works of reason, wherefore is there need 13]
of Christ or regeneration [as Peter declares, 1 Pet. 1, 18ff
]? And from these opinions the matter has now come to such a
pass that many ridicule us because we teach that an other than
14] the philosophic righteousness must be sought after.
[Alas! it has come to this, that even great theologians at Louvain,
Paris, etc., have known nothing of any other godliness or righteousness
(although every letter and syllable in Paul teaches otherwise)
than the godliness which philosophers teach. And although we
ought to regard this as a strange teaching, and ought to ridicule
it, they rather ridicule us, yea, make a jest of Paul himself.]
We have heard that some after setting aside the Gospel, have,
instead of a sermon, explained the ethics of Aristotle. [I myself
have heard a great preacher who did not mention Christ and the
Gospel, and preached the ethics of Aristotle. Is this not a
childish, foolish way to preach to Christians?] Nor did such
men err if those things are true which the adversaries defend
[if the doctrine of the adversaries be true, the Ethics is a
precious book of sermons, and a fine new Bible]. For Aristotle
wrote concerning civil morals so learnedly that nothing further
concerning this need be demanded. 15] We see books extant
in which certain sayings of Christ are compared with the sayings
of Socrates, Zeno, and others, as though Christ had come for
the purpose of delivering certain laws through which we might
merit the remission of sins, as though we did not receive this
16] gratuitously because of His merits. Therefore, if
we here receive the doctrine of the adversaries, that by the
works of reason we merit the remission of sins and justification,
there will be no difference between philosophic, or certainly
pharisaic, and Christian righteousness.
17] Although
the adversaries, not to pass by Christ altogether, require a
knowledge of the history concerning Christ, and ascribe to Him
that it is His merit that a habit is given us or, as they say,
prima gratia, "first grace," which they understand as
a habit, inclining us the more readily to love God; yet, what
they ascribe to this habit is of little importance [is a feeble,
paltry, small, poor operation, that would be ascribed to Christ],
because they imagine that the acts of the will are of the same
kind before and after this habit. They imagine that the will
can love God; but nevertheless this habit stimulates it to do
the same the more cheerfully. And they bid us first merit this
habit by preceding merits; then they bid us merit by the works
of the Law an increase of this habit and 18] life eternal.
Thus they bury Christ, so that men may not avail themselves
of Him as a Mediator, and believe that for His sake they freely
receive remission of sins and reconciliation, but may dream
that by their own fulfilment of the Law they merit the remission
of sins, and that by their own fulfilment of the Law they are
accounted righteous before God; while, nevertheless, the Law
is never satisfied, since reason does nothing except certain
civil works, and, in the mean time, neither [in the heart] fears
God, nor truly believes that God cares for it. And although
they speak of this habit, yet, without the righteousness of
faith, neither the love of God can exist in man, nor can it
be understood what the love of God is.
19] Their
feigning a distinction between meritum congrui and meritum
condigni [due merit and true, complete merit] is only an
artifice in order not to appear openly to Pelagianize. For,
if God necessarily gives grace for the meritum congrui
[due merit], it is no longer meritum congrui, but meritum
condigni [a true duty and complete merit]. But they do not
know what they are saying. After this habit of love [is there],
they imagine that man can acquire merit de condigno.
And yet they bid us doubt whether there be a habit present.
How, therefore, do they know whether they acquire merit de
congruo or 20]de condigno [in full, or half]?
But this whole matter was fabricated by idle men [But, good
God! these are mere inane ideas and dreams of idle, wretched,
inexperienced men, who do not much reduce the Bible to practise],
who did not know how the remission of sins occurs, and how,
in the judgment of God and terrors of conscience, trust in works
is driven out of us. Secure hypocrites always judge that they
acquire merit de condigno, whether the habit be present
or be not present, because men naturally trust in their own
righteousness; but terrified consciences waver and hesitate,
and then seek and accumulate other works in order to find rest.
Such consciences never think that they acquire merit de condigno,
and they rush into despair unless they hear, in addition to
the doctrine of the Law, the Gospel concerning the gratuitous
remission of sins and the righteousness of faith. [Thus some
stories are told that when the Barefooted monks had in vain
praised their order and good works to some good consciences
in the hour of death, they at last had to be silent concerning
their order and St. Franciscus, and to say: "Dear man, Christ
has died for you." This revived and refreshed in trouble, and
alone gave peace and comfort.]
21] Thus the
adversaries teach nothing but the righteousness of reason, or
certainly of the Law, upon which they look just as the Jews
upon the veiled face of Moses; and, in secure hypocrites who
think that they satisfy the Law, they excite presumption and
empty confidence in works [they place men on a sand foundation,
their own works] and contempt of the grace of Christ. On the
contrary, they drive timid consciences to despair, which laboring
with doubt, never can experience what faith is, and how efficacious
it is; thus, at last they utterly despair.
22] Now, we
think concerning the righteousness of reason thus, namely, that
God requires it, and that, because of God's commandment, the
honorable works which the Decalog commands must necessarily
be performed, according to the passage Gal. 3, 24: The Law
was our schoolmaster; likewise 1 Tim. 1, 9: The Law is
made for the ungodly. For God wishes those who are carnal
[gross sinners] to be restrained by civil discipline, and to
maintain this, He has given laws, letters, doctrine, magistrates,
penalties. 23] And this righteousness reason, by its
own strength, can, to a certain extent, work, although it is
often overcome by natural weakness, and by the devil impelling
it to 24] manifest crimes. Now, although we cheerfully
assign this righteousness of reason the praises that are due
it (for this corrupt nature has no greater good [in this life
and in a worldly nature, nothing is ever better than uprightness
and virtue], and Aristotle says aright: Neither the evening
star nor the morning star is more beautiful than righteousness,
and God also honors it with bodily rewards), yet it ought not
to be praised with reproach to Christ.
25] For it
is false [I thus conclude, and am certain that it is a fiction,
and not true] that we merit the remission of sins by our works.
26] False
also is this, that men are accounted righteous before God because
of the righteousness of reason [works and external piety].
27] False
also is this that reason, by its own strength, is able to love
God above all things, and to fulfil God's Law, namely, truly
to fear God, to be truly confident that God hears prayer, to
be willing to obey God in death and other dispensations of God,
not to covet what belongs to others, etc.; although reason can
work civil works.
28] False
also and dishonoring Christ is this, that men do not sin who,
without grace, do the commandments of God [who keep the commandments
of God merely in an external manner, without the Spirit and
grace in their hearts].
29] We have
testimonies for this our belief, not only from the Scriptures,
but also from the Fathers. For in opposition to the Pelagians,
Augustine contends at great length that grace is not given because
of our merits. And in De Natura et Gratia he says: If
natural ability, through the free will, suffice both for learning
to know how one ought to live and for living aright, then Christ
has died in vain, then the offense of the Cross is made void.
30] Why may I not also here cry out? Yea, I
will cry out, and, with Christian grief, will chide them: Christ
has become of no effect unto you whosoever of you are justified
by the Law; ye are fallen from grace. Gal. 5, 4; cf. 2,
21. For they, being ignorant of God's righteousness, and
going about to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted
themselves unto the righteousness of God. For Christ is the
end of the Law for righteousness to every one that believeth.
Rom. 10, 3. 4. 31] And John 8, 36: If the Son therefore
shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed. Therefore
by reason we cannot be freed from sins and merit the remission
of sins. And in John 3, 5 it is written: Except a man be
born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God. But if it is necessary to be born again of the Holy
Ghost, the righteousness of reason does not justify us before
God, and does not 32] fulfil the Law, Rom. 3, 23: All
have come short of the glory of God, i.e., are destitute
of the wisdom and righteousness of God, which acknowledges and
glorifies God. Likewise Rom. 8, 7. 8: The carnal mind is
enmity against God; for it is not subject to the Law of God,
neither indeed can be. So then they that are in the flesh cannot
please God. 33] These testimonies are so manifest
that, to use the words of Augustine which he employed in this
case, they do not need an acute understanding, but only an attentive
hearer. If the carnal mind is enmity against God, the flesh
certainly does not love God; if it cannot be subject to the
Law of God, it cannot love God. If the carnal mind is enmity
against God, the flesh sins, even when we do external civil
works. If it cannot be subject to the Law of God, it certainly
sins even when, 34] according to human judgment, it possesses
deeds that are excellent and worthy of praise. The adversaries
consider only the precepts of the Second Table which contain
civil righteousness that reason understands. Content with this,
they think that they satisfy the Law of God. In the mean time
they do not see the First Table which commands that we love
God, that we declare as certain that God is angry with sin,
that we truly fear God, that we declare as certain that God
hears prayer. But the human heart without the Holy Ghost either
in security despises God's judgment, or in punishment flees
from, and 35] hates, God when He judges. Therefore it
does not obey the First Table. Since, therefore, contempt of
God, and doubt concerning the Word of God, and concerning the
threats and promises, inhere in human nature, men truly sin,
even when, without the Holy Ghost, they do virtuous works, because
they do them with a wicked heart, according to Rom. 14, 23:
Whatsoever is not of faith is sin. For such persons perform
their works with contempt of God, just as Epicurus does not
believe that God cares for him, or that he is regarded or heard
by God. This contempt vitiates works seemingly virtuous, because
God judges the heart.
36] Lastly,
it was very foolish for the adversaries to write that men who
are under eternal wrath merit the remission of sins by an act
of love, which springs from their mind since it is impossible
to love God, unless the remission of sins be apprehended first
by faith. For the heart, truly feeling that God is angry, cannot
love God, unless He be shown to have been reconciled. As long
as He terrifies us, and seems to cast us into eternal death,
human nature is not able to take courage, so as to love 37]
a wrathful, judging, and punishing God [poor, weak nature must
lose heart and courage, and must tremble before such great wrath,
which so fearfully terrifies and punishes, and can never feel
a spark of love before God Himself comforts]. It is easy for
idle men to feign such dreams concerning love, as, that a person
guilty of mortal sin can love God above all things, because
they do not feel what the wrath or judgment of God is. But in
agony of conscience and in conflicts [with Satan] conscience
experiences the emptiness of these philosophical speculations.
38] Paul says, Rom. 4, 15: The Law worketh wrath.
He does not say that by the Law men merit the remission of sins.
For the Law always accuses and terrifies consciences. Therefore
it does not justify, because conscience terrified by the Law
flees from the judgment of God. Therefore they err who trust
that by the Law, by their own works, they merit the remission
of sins. 39] It is sufficient for us to have said these
things concerning the righteousness of reason or of the Law,
which the adversaries teach. For after a while, when we will
declare our belief concerning the righteousness of faith, the
subject itself will compel us to adduce more testimonies, which
also will be of service in overthrowing the errors of the adversaries
which we have thus far reviewed.
40] Because,
therefore, men by their own strength cannot fulfil the Law of
God, and all are under sin, and subject to eternal wrath and
death, on this account we cannot be freed by the Law from sin
and be justified, but the promise of the remission of sins and
of justification has been given us for Christ's sake, who was
given for us in order that He might make satisfaction for the
sins of the world, and has been appointed as the [only] 41]
Mediator and Propitiator. And this promise has not the condition
of our merits [it does not read thus: Through Christ you have
grace, salvation etc., if you merit it], but freely offers the
remission of sins and justification as Paul says Rom. 11, 6:
If it be of works, then is it no more grace. And in another
place, Rom. 3, 21: The righteousness of God without the Law
is manifested, i.e., the remission of sins is freely
offered. Nor does reconciliation depend 42] upon our
merits. Because if the remission of sins were to depend upon
our merits, and reconciliation were from the Law, it would be
useless. For as we do not fulfil the Law, it would also follow
that we would never obtain the promise of reconciliation. Thus
Paul reasons, Rom. 4, 14: For if they which are of the Law
be heirs, faith is made void, and the promise made of none effect.
For if the promise would require the condition of our merits
and the Law, which we never fulfil, it would follow that the
promise would be useless.
43] But since
justification is obtained through the free promise it follows
that we cannot justify ourselves. Otherwise wherefore would
there be need to promise? [And why should Paul so highly extol
and praise grace?] For since the promise cannot be received
except by faith, the Gospel which is properly the promise of
the remission of sins and of justification for Christ's sake,
proclaims the righteousness of faith in Christ, which the Law
does not teach. Nor is this the righteousness of the Law. 44]
For the Law requires of us our works and our perfection. But
the Gospel freely offers, for Christ's sake, to us, who have
been vanquished by sin and death, reconciliation which is received
not by works, but by faith alone. This faith brings to God not
confidence in one's own merits, but only confidence in the promise,
or 45] the mercy promised in Christ. This special faith,
therefore, by which an individual believes that for Christ's
sake his sins are remitted him, and that for Christ's sake God
is reconciled and propitious, obtains remission of sins and
justifies us. And because in repentance, i.e. in terrors,
it comforts and encourages hearts, it regenerates us and brings
the Holy Ghost that then we may be able to fulfil God's Law,
namely, to love God, truly to fear God, truly to be confident
that God hears prayer, and to obey God in all afflictions; it
mortifies concupiscence etc. 46] Thus, because faith,
which freely receives the remission of sins, sets Christ, the
Mediator and Propitiator, against God's wrath, it does not present
our merits or our love [which would be tossed aside like a little
feather by a hurricane]. This faith is the true knowledge of
Christ, and avails itself of the benefits of Christ, and regenerates
hearts, and precedes the fulfilling of the Law. And 47]
of this faith not a syllable exists in the doctrine of our adversaries.
Hence we find fault with the adversaries, equally because they
teach only the righteousness of the Law, and because they do
not teach the righteousness of the Gospel, which proclaims the
righteousness of faith in Christ.
What Is Justifying
Faith?
48] The adversaries
feign that faith is only a knowledge of the history, and therefore
teach that it can coexist with mortal sin. Hence they say nothing
concerning faith, by which Paul so frequently says that men
are justified, because those who are accounted righteous before
God do not live in mortal sin. But that faith which justifies
is not merely a knowledge of history, [not merely this, that
I know the stories of Christ's birth, suffering, etc. (that
even the devils know,)] but it is to assent to the promise of
God, in which, for Christ's sake, the remission of sins and
justification are freely offered. [It is the certainty or the
certain trust in the heart, when, with my whole heart, I regard
the promises of God as certain and true, through which there
are offered me, without my merit, the forgiveness of sins, grace,
and all salvation, through Christ the Mediator.] And that no
one may suppose that it is mere knowledge, we will add further:
it is to wish and to receive the offered promise of the remission
of sins and of justification. [Faith is that my whole heart
takes to itself this treasure. It is not my doing, not my presenting
or giving, not my work or preparation, but that a heart comforts
itself, and is perfectly confident with respect to this, namely,
that God makes a present and gift to us, and not we to Him,
that He sheds upon us every treasure of grace in Christ.]
49] And the
difference between this faith and the righteousness of the Law
can be easily discerned. Faith is the latreiva [divine service],
which receives the benefits offered by God; the righteousness
of the Law is the latreiva [divine service] which offers to
God our merits. By faith God wishes to be worshiped in this
way, that we receive from Him those things which He promises
and offers.
50] Now, that
faith signifies, not only a knowledge of the history, but such
faith as assents to the promise, Paul plainly testifies when
he says, Rom. 4, 16: Therefore it is of faith, to the end
the promise might be sure. For he judges that the promise
cannot be received unless by faith. Wherefore he puts them together
as things that belong to one another, and connects promise and
faith. [There Paul fastens and binds together these two, thus:
Wherever there is a promise faith is required, and conversely,
wherever faith is required, there must be a promise.] 51]
Although it will be easy to decide what faith is if we consider
the Creed, where this article certainly stands: The forgiveness
of sins. Therefore it is not enough to believe that Christ was
born, suffered, was raised again, unless we add also this article,
which is the purpose of the history: The forgiveness of sins.
To this article the rest must be referred, namely, that for
Christ's sake, and not for the sake of our merits, 52]
forgiveness of sins is given us. For what need was there that
Christ was given for our sins if for our sins our merits can
make satisfaction?
53] As often,
therefore, as we speak of justifying faith, we must keep in
mind that these three objects concur: the promise, and
that, too, gratuitous, and the merits of Christ, as
the price and propitiation. The promise is received by faith;
the "gratuitous" excludes our merits, and signifies that the
benefit is offered only through mercy; the merits of Christ
are the price, because there must be a certain propitiation
for our sins. 54] Scripture frequently implores mercy;
and the holy Fathers often say that we 55] are saved
by mercy. As often, therefore, as mention is made of mercy,
we must keep in mind that faith is there required, which receives
the promise of mercy. And, again, as often as we speak of faith,
we wish an object to be understood, namely, the promised mercy.
56] For faith justifies and saves, not on the ground
that it is a work in itself worthy, but only because it receives
the promised mercy.
57] And throughout
the prophets and the psalms this worship, this latreiva, is
highly praised, although the Law does not teach the gratuitous
remission of sins. But the Fathers knew the promise concerning
Christ, that God for Christ's sake wished to remit sins. Therefore,
since they understood that Christ would be the price for our
sins, they knew that our works are not a price for so great
a matter [could not pay so great a debt]. Accordingly, they
received gratuitous mercy and remission of sins by faith, just
as the saints in the New Testament. 58] Here belong those
frequent repetitions concerning mercy and faith, in the psalms
and the prophets, as this, Ps. 130, 3 sq.: If Thou, Lord, shouldest
mark iniquities, O Lord, who shall stand? Here David confesses
his sins, and does not recount his merits. He adds: But there
is forgiveness with Thee. Here he comforts himself by his
trust in God's mercy, and he cites the promise: My soul doth
wait, and in His Word do I hope, i.e., because Thou
hast promised the remission of sins, 59] I am sustained
by this Thy promise. Therefore the fathers also were justified,
not by the Law, but by the promise and faith. And it is amazing
that the adversaries extenuate faith to such a degree, although
they see that it is everywhere praised as an eminent service,
as in Ps. 50, 15: Call upon Me in the day of trouble: I will
deliver thee. 60] Thus God wishes Himself to be known,
thus He wishes Himself to be worshiped, that from Him we receive
benefits, and receive them, too, because of His mercy, and not
because of our merits. This is the richest consolation in all
afflictions [physical or spiritual, in life or in death, as
all godly persons know]. And such consolations the adversaries
abolish when they extenuate and disparage faith, and teach only
that by means of works and merits men treat with God [that we
treat with God, the great Majesty, by means of our miserable,
beggarly works and merits].
That Faith in
Christ Justifies.
61] In the
first place, lest any one may think that we speak concerning
an idle knowledge of the history, we must declare how faith
is obtained [how the heart begins to believe]. Afterward we
will show both that it justifies, and how this ought to be understood,
and we will explain the objections of the adversaries. 62]
Christ, in the last chapter of Luke 24, 47, commands that
repentance and remission of sins should be preached in His name.
For the Gospel convicts all men that they are under sin, that
they all are subject to eternal wrath and death, and offers,
for Christ's sake, remission of sin and justification, which
is received by faith. The preaching of repentance, which accuses
us, terrifies consciences with true and grave terrors. [For
the preaching of repentance, or this declaration of the Gospel:
Amend your lives! Repent! when it truly penetrates the heart,
terrifies the conscience, and is no jest, but a great terror,
in which the conscience feels its misery and sin, and the wrath
of God.] In these, hearts ought again to receive consolation.
This happens if they believe the promise of Christ, that for
His sake we have remission of sins. This faith, encouraging
and consoling in these fears, receives remission of sins, justifies
and quickens. For this consolation is a new and spiritual
63] life [a new birth and a new life]. These things are
plain and clear, and can be understood by the pious, and have
testimonies of the Church [as is to be seen in the conversion
of Paul and Augustine]. The adversaries nowhere can say how
the Holy Ghost is given. They imagine that the Sacraments confer
the Holy Ghost ex opere operato, without a good emotion
in the recipient, as though indeed, the gift of the Holy Ghost
were an idle matter.
64] But since
we speak of such faith as is not an idle thought, but of that
which liberates from death and produces a new life in hearts,
[which is such a new light, life, and force in the heart as
to renew our heart, mind, and spirit, makes new men of us and
new creatures,] and is the work of the Holy Ghost; this does
not coexist with mortal sin [for how can light and darkness
coexist?], but as long as it is present, produces good 65]
fruits, as we will say after a while. For concerning the conversion
of the wicked, or concerning the mode of regeneration, what
can be said that is more simple and more clear? Let them, from
so great an array of writers, adduce a single commentary upon
the Sententiae that speaks 66] of the mode of
regeneration. When they speak of the habit of love, they imagine
that men merit it through works, and they do not teach that
it is received through the Word, precisely as also the Anabaptists
teach at this time. 67] But God cannot be treated with,
God cannot be apprehended, except through the Word. Accordingly,
justification occurs through the Word, just as Paul says, Rom.
1, 16: The Gospel is the power of God unto salvation to every
one that believeth. Likewise 10, 17: Faith cometh by
hearing. And proof can be derived even from this that faith
justifies, because, if justification occurs only through the
Word, and the Word is apprehended only by faith, it follows
that faith justifies. 68] But there are other and more
important reasons. We have said these things thus far in order
that we might show the mode of regeneration, and that the nature
of faith [what is, or is not, faith], concerning which we speak,
might be understood.
69] Now we
will show that faith [and nothing else] justifies.
Here, in the first place, readers must be admonished of this,
that just as it is necessary to maintain this sentence: Christ
is Mediator, so is it necessary to defend that faith justifies,
[without works]. For how will Christ be Mediator if in justification
we do not use Him as Mediator; if we do not hold that for His
sake we are accounted righteous? But to believe is to trust
in the merits of Christ, that for His sake God certainly wishes
to be reconciled with us. 70] Likewise, just as we ought
to maintain that, apart from the Law, the promise of Christ
is necessary, so also is it needful to maintain that faith justifies.
[For the Law does not preach the forgiveness of sin by grace.]
For the Law cannot be performed unless the Holy Ghost be first
received. It is, therefore, needful to maintain that the promise
of Christ is necessary. But this cannot be received except by
faith. Therefore, those who deny that faith justifies, teach
nothing but the Law, both Christ and the Gospel being set aside.
71] But when
it is said that faith justifies, some perhaps understand it
of the beginning, namely, that faith is the beginning of justification
or preparation for justification, so that not faith itself is
that through which we are accepted by God, but the works which
follow; and they dream, accordingly, that faith is highly praised,
because it is the beginning. For great is the importance of
the beginning, as they commonly say, Arch; h{misu pantov", The
beginning is half of everything; just as if one would say that
grammar makes the teachers of all arts, because it prepares
for other arts, although in fact it is his own art that renders
every one an artist. We do not believe thus concerning faith,
but we maintain this, that properly and truly, by faith itself,
we are for Christ's sake accounted righteous, or are acceptable
to God. 72] And because "to be justified" means that
out of unjust men just men are made, or born again, it means
also that they are pronounced or accounted just. For Scripture
speaks in both ways. [The term "to be justified" is used in
two ways: to denote, being converted or regenerated; again,
being accounted righteous.] Accordingly we wish first to show
this, that faith alone makes of an unjust, a just man,
i.e., receives remission of sins.
73] The particle
alone offends some, although even Paul says, Rom. 3, 28: We
conclude that a man is justified by faith, without the deeds
of the Law. Again, Eph. 2, 8: It is the gift of God;
not of works, lest any man should boast. Again, Rom. 3,
24: Being justified freely. If the exclusive alone
displeases, let them remove from Paul also the exclusives freely,
not of works, it is the gift, etc. For these also are [very
strong] exclusives. It is, however, the opinion of merit
that we exclude. We do not exclude the Word or Sacraments,
as the adversaries falsely charge us. For we have said above
that faith is conceived from the Word, and we honor the ministry
of the Word in the highest degree. 74] Love also and
works must follow faith. Wherefore, they are not excluded so
as not to follow, but confidence in the merit of love or
of works is excluded in justification. And this we will
clearly show.
That We Obtain
Remission of Sins by Faith Alone in Christ.
75] We think
that even the adversaries acknowledge that, in justification,
the remission of sins is necessary first. For we all are under
sin. Wherefore we reason thus:
76] To attain
the remission of sins is to be justified, according to Ps. 32,
1: Blessed 77]is he whose transgression is
forgiven. By faith alone in Christ, not through love, not
because of love or works, do we acquire the remission of sins,
although love follows faith. 78]Therefore by faith
alone we are justified, understanding justification as the
making of a righteous man out of an unrighteous, or that he
be regenerated.
79] It will
thus become easy to declare the minor premise [that we obtain
forgiveness of sin by faith, not by love] if we know how the
remission of sins occurs. The adversaries with great indifference
dispute whether the remission of sins and the infusion of grace
are the same change [whether they are one change or two]. Being
idle men, they did not know what to answer [cannot speak at
all on this subject]. In the remission of sins, the terrors
of sin and of eternal death, in the heart, must be overcome,
as Paul testifies, 1 Cor. 15, 56 sq.: The sting of death
is sin, and the strength of sin is the Law. But thanks be to
God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
That is, sin terrifies consciences, this occurs through the
Law, which shows the wrath of God against sin; but we gain the
victory through Christ. How? By faith, when we comfort ourselves
by confidence in the mercy promised for 80] Christ's
sake. Thus, therefore, we prove the minor proposition. The wrath
of God cannot be appeased if we set against it our own works,
because Christ has been set forth as a Propitiator, so that
for His sake, the Father may become reconciled to us. But Christ
is not apprehended as a Mediator except by faith. Therefore,
by faith alone we obtain remission of sins, when we comfort
our hearts with confidence in the mercy promised for 81]
Christ's sake. Likewise Paul, Rom. 5, 2, says: By whom also
we have access, and adds, by faith. Thus, therefore,
we are reconciled to the Father, and receive remission of sins
when we are comforted with confidence in the mercy promised
for Christ's sake. The adversaries regard Christ as Mediator
and Propitiator for this reason, namely, that He has merited
the habit of love; they do not urge us to use Him now as Mediator,
but, as though Christ were altogether buried, they imagine that
we have access through our own works, and, through these, merit
this habit, and afterwards, by this love, come to God. Is not
this to bury Christ altogether, and to take away the entire
doctrine of faith? Paul on the contrary, teaches that we have
access, i.e., reconciliation, through Christ. And to
show how this occurs, he adds that we have access by faith.
By faith, therefore, for Christ's sake, we receive remission
of sins. We cannot set our own love and our own works over
against God's wrath.
82] Secondly.
It is certain that sins are forgiven for the sake of Christ,
as Propitiator, Rom. 3, 25: Whom God hath set forth to be
a propitiation. Moreover, Paul adds: through faith.
Therefore this Propitiator thus benefits us, when by faith we
apprehend the mercy promised in Him, and set it against the
wrath and judgment of God. And to the same effect it is written,
Heb. 4, 14. 16: Seeing, then, that we have a great High Priest,
etc., let us therefore come with confidence. For the
Apostle bids us come to God, not with confidence in our own
merits, but with confidence in Christ as a High Priest; therefore
he requires faith.
83] Thirdly.
Peter, in Acts 10, 43, says: To Him give all the prophets
witness that through His name, whosoever believeth on Him, shall
receive remission of sins. How could this be said more clearly?
We receive remission of sins, he says, through His name, i.e.,
for His sake; therefore, not for the sake of our merits, not
for the sake of our contrition, attrition, love, worship, works.
And he adds: When we believe in Him. Therefore he requires
faith. For we cannot apprehend the name of Christ except by
faith. Besides he cites the agreement of all the prophets. This
is truly to cite the authority of the Church. [For when all
the holy prophets bear witness, that is certainly a glorious,
great excellent, powerful decretal and testimony.] But of this
topic we will speak again after a while, when treating of "Repentance."
84] Fourthly.
Remission of sins is something promised for Christ's sake. Therefore
it cannot be received except by faith alone. For a promise cannot
be received except by faith alone. Rom. 4, 16: Therefore
it is of faith that it might be by grace, to the end that the
promise might be sure; as though he were to say: "If the
matter were to depend upon our merits, the promise would be
uncertain and useless, because we never could determine when
we would have sufficient merit." And this, experienced consciences
can easily understand [and would not, for a thousand worlds
have our salvation depend upon ourselves]. Accordingly, Paul
says, Gal. 3, 22: But the Scripture hath concluded all under
sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given
to them that believe. He takes merit away from us, because
he says that all are guilty and concluded under sin; then he
adds that the promise, namely, of the remission of sins and
of justification, is given, and adds how the promise can be
received, namely, by faith. And this reasoning, derived from
the nature of a promise, is the chief reasoning [a veritable
rock] in Paul, and is often repeated. Nor can anything be devised
or imagined whereby this argument of Paul can be overthrown.
Wherefore 85] let not good minds suffer themselves to
be forced from the conviction that we receive remission of sins
for Christ's sake, only through faith. In this they have sure
and firm consolation against the terrors of sin, and against
eternal death, and against all the gates of hell. [Everything
else is a foundation of sand that sinks in trials.]
86] But since
we receive remission of sins and the Holy Ghost by faith alone,
faith alone justifies, because those reconciled are accounted
righteous and children of God, not on account of their own purity,
but through mercy for Christ's sake, provided only they by faith
apprehend this mercy. Accordingly, Scripture testifies that
by faith we are accounted righteous, Rom. 3, 26. We,
therefore, will add testimonies which clearly declare that faith
is that very righteousness by which we are accounted righteous
before God, namely, not because it is a work that is in itself
worthy, but because it receives the promise by which God has
promised that for Christ's sake He wishes to be propitious to
those believing in Him, or because He knows that Christ of
God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification,
and redemption, 1 Cor. 1, 30.
87] In the
Epistle to the Romans, Paul discusses this topic especially,
and declares that, when we believe that God, for Christ's sake,
is reconciled to us, we are justified freely by faith. And this
proposition, which contains the statement of the entire discussion
[the principal matter of all Epistles, yea, of the entire Scriptures],
he maintains in the third chapter: We conclude that a man
is justified by faith, without the deeds of the Law, Rom.
3, 28. Here the adversaries interpret that this refers to Levitical
ceremonies [not to other virtuous works]. But Paul speaks not
only of the ceremonies, but of the whole Law. For he quotes
afterward (7, 7) from the Decalog: Thou shalt not covet.
And if moral works [that are not Jewish ceremonies] would merit
the remission of sins and justification, there would also be
no need of Christ and the promise, and all that Paul speaks
of the promise would be overthrown. He would also have been
wrong in writing to the Ephesians, 2, 8: By grace are ye
saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift
of God, not of works. Paul likewise refers to Abraham and
David, Rom. 4, 1. 6. But they had the command of God concerning
circumcision. Therefore, if any works justified, these works
must also have justified at the time that they had a command.
But Augustine teaches correctly that Paul speaks of the entire
Law, as he discusses at length in his book, Of the Spirit
and Letter, where he says finally: These matters, therefore
having been considered and treated, according to the ability
that the Lord has thought worthy to give us, we infer that man
is not justified by the precepts of a good life, but by faith
in Jesus Christ.
88] And lest
we may think that the sentence that faith justifies, fell from
Paul inconsiderately, he fortifies and confirms this by a long
discussion in the fourth chapter to the Romans, and afterwards
repeats it in all his epistles. 89] Thus he says, Rom.
4, 4. 5: To him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of
grace, but of debt . But to him that worketh not, but believeth
on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for
righteousness. Here he clearly says that faith itself is imputed
for righteousness. Faith, therefore, is that thing which
God declares to be righteousness, and he adds that it is imputed
freely, and says that it could not be imputed freely, if it
were due on account of works. Wherefore he excludes also the
merit of moral works [not only Jewish ceremonies, but all other
good works]. For if justification before God were due to these,
faith would not be imputed for righteousness 90] without
works. And afterwards, Rom. 4, 9: For we say that faith was
reckoned to Abraham for righteousness. 91] Romans
5, 1 says: Being justified by faith, we have peace with God,
i.e., we have consciences that are tranquil and joyful 92]
before God. Rom. 10, 10: With the heart man believeth unto
righteousness. Here he declares that faith is 93]
the righteousness of the heart. Gal. 2, 16: We have believed
in Christ Jesus that we might be justified by the faith of Christ,
and not by the works of the Law. Eph. 2, 8: For by grace
are ye saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is
the gift of God; not of works, lest any man should boast.
94] John 1,
12: To them gave He power to become the sons of God, even
to them that believe on His name; which were born, not of blood,
nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of
God. 95] John 3, 14. 15: As Moses lifted up the
serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted
up, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish. 96]
Likewise, 3, 17: For God sent not His Son into the world
to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be
saved. He that believeth on Him is not condemned.
97] Acts 13,
38. 39: Be it known unto you therefore, men and brethren,
that through this Man is preached unto you the forgiveness of
sins; and by Him all that believe are justified from all things
from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses.
How could the office of Christ and justification be declared
more clearly? The Law, he says, did not justify. Therefore Christ
was given, that we may believe that for His sake we are justified.
He plainly denies justification to the Law. Hence, for Christ's
sake we are accounted righteous when we believe that God, for
His sake, has been reconciled to us. 98] Acts 4, 11.
12: This is the stone which was set at naught of you builders,
which is become the head of the corner. Neither is there salvation
in any other; for there is none other name under heaven given
among men whereby we must be saved. But the name of Christ
is apprehended only by faith. [I cannot believe in the name
of Christ in any other way than when I hear His merit preached,
and lay hold of that.] Therefore, by confidence in the name
of Christ, and not by confidence in our works, we are saved.
For "the name" here signifies the cause which is mentioned,
because of which salvation is attained. And to call upon the
name of Christ is to trust in the name of Christ, as the cause
or price because of which we are saved. 99] Acts 15,
9: Purifying their hearts by faith. Wherefore that faith
of which the Apostles speak is not idle knowledge, but a reality,
receiving the Holy Ghost and justifying us [not a mere knowledge
of history, but a strong powerful work of the Holy Ghost, which
changes hearts]
100] Hab.
2, 4: The just shall live by his faith. Here he says,
first, that men are just by faith, by which they believe that
God is propitious, and he adds that the same faith quickens,
because this faith produces in the heart peace and joy and eternal
life [which begins in the present life].
101] Is. 53,
11: By His knowledge shall He justify many. But what
is the knowledge of Christ unless to know the benefits of Christ,
the promises which by the Gospel He has scattered broadcast
in the world? And to know these benefits is properly and truly
to believe in Christ, to believe that that which God has promised
for Christ's sake He will certainly fulfill.
102] But Scripture
is full of such testimonies since, in some places, it presents
the Law and in others the promises concerning Christ, and the
remission of sins, and the free acceptance of the sinner for
Christ's sake.
103] Here
and there among the Fathers similar testimonies are extant.
For Ambrose says in his letter to a certain Irenaeus: Moreover,
the world was subject to Him by the Law for the reason that,
according to the command of the Law, all are indicted, and yet,
by the works of the Law, no one is justified, i.e., because,
by the Law, sin is perceived, but guilt is not discharged. The
Law, which made all sinners, seemed to have done injury, but
when the Lord Jesus Christ came, He forgave to all sin which
no one could avoid, and, by the shedding of His own blood, blotted
out the handwriting which was against us. This is what he says
in Rom. 5, 20: "The Law entered that the offense might
abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound."
Because after the whole world became subject, He took away
the sin of the whole world, as he [John] testified, saying
John 1, 29: "Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away
the sin of the world." And on this account let no one
boast of works, because no one is justified by his deeds. But
he who is righteous has it given him because he was justified
after the laver [of Baptism]. Faith, therefore,
is that which frees through the blood of Christ, because he
is blessed "whose transgression is forgiven, whose sin
is covered," Ps. 32, 1. 104] These are the
words of Ambrose, which clearly favor our doctrine; he denies
justification to works, and ascribes to faith that it sets us
free 105] through the blood of Christ. Let all the Sententiarists,
who are adorned with magnificent titles, be collected into one
heap. For some are called angelic; others, subtile, and others
irrefragable [that is, doctors who cannot err.] When all these
have been read and reread, they will not be of as much aid for
understanding Paul as is this one passage of Ambrose.
106] To the
same effect, Augustine writes many things against the Pelagians.
In Of the Spirit and Letter he says: The righteousness
of the Law, namely, that he who has fulfilled it shall live
in it, is set forth for this reason that when any one has recognized
his infirmity he may attain and work the same and live in it,
conciliating the Justifier not by his own strength nor by the
letter of the Law itself (which cannot be done),
but by faith. Except in a justified man, there is no right
work wherein he who does it may live. But justification is obtained
by faith. Here he clearly says that the Justifier is conciliated
by faith, and that justification is obtained by faith. And a
little after: By the Law we fear God; by faith we hope in
God. But to those fearing punishment grace is hidden; and the
soul laboring, etc., under this fear betakes itself by faith
to God's mercy, in order that He may give what He commands.
Here he teaches that by the Law hearts are terrified, but by
faith they receive consolation. He also teaches us to apprehend,
by faith, mercy, before we attempt to fulfil the Law. We will
shortly cite certain other passages.
107] Truly,
it is amazing that the adversaries are in no way moved by so
many passages of Scripture, which clearly ascribe justification
to faith, and, indeed, 108] deny it to works. Do they
think that the same is repeated so often for no purpose? Do
they think that these words fell inconsiderately from the Holy
Ghost? 109] But they have also devised sophistry whereby
they elude them. They say that these passages of Scripture,
(which speak of faith,) ought to be received as referring to
a fides formata, i.e., they do not ascribe justification
to faith except on account of love. Yea, they do not, in any
way, ascribe justification to faith, but only to love, because
they dream that faith can 110] coexist with mortal sin.
Whither does this tend, unless that they again abolish the promise
and return to the Law? If faith receive the remission of sins
on account of love, the remission of sins will always be uncertain,
because we never love as much as we ought, yea, we do not love
unless our hearts are firmly convinced that the remission of
sins has been granted us. Thus the adversaries, while they require
in the remission of sins and justification confidence in one's
own love, altogether abolish the Gospel concerning the free
remission of sins; although, at the same time, they neither
render this love nor understand it, unless they believe that
the remission of sins is freely received.
111] We also
say that love ought to follow faith, as Paul also says, Gal.
5, 6: For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth anything,
nor uncircumcision, but faith which worketh by love. 112]
And yet we must not think on that account that by confidence
in this love or on account of this love we receive the remission
of sins and reconciliation, just as we do not receive the remission
of sins because of other works that follow. But the remission
of sins is received by faith alone, and, indeed, by faith properly
so called, because the promise cannot be received except by
faith. 113] But faith, properly so called, is that which
assents to the promise [is when my heart, and the Holy Ghost
in the heart, says: The promise of God is true and certain].
Of 114] this faith Scripture speaks. And because it receives
the remission of sins, and reconciles us to God, by this faith
we are [like Abraham] accounted righteous for Christ's sake
before we love and do the works of the Law, although love necessarily
follows. 115]Nor, indeed, is this faith an idle knowledge,
neither can it coexist with mortal sin, but it is a work of
the Holy Ghost, whereby we are freed from death, and terrified
minds are encouraged and quickened. 116] And because
this faith alone receives the remission of sins, and renders
us acceptable to God, and brings the Holy Ghost, it could be
more correctly called gratia gratum faciens, grace rendering
one pleasing to God, than an effect following, namely, love.
117] Thus
far, in order that the subject might be made quite clear, we
have shown with sufficient fulness, both from testimonies of
Scripture, and arguments derived from Scripture, that by faith
alone we obtain the remission of sins for Christ's sake, and
that by faith alone we are justified, i.e., of unrighteous
men made righteous, or regenerated. 118] But how necessary
the knowledge of this faith is, can be easily judged, because
in this alone the office of Christ is recognized, by this alone
we receive the benefits of Christ; this alone brings sure and
firm 119] consolation to pious minds. And in the Church
[if there is to be a church, if there is to be a Christian Creed]
it is necessary that there should be the [preaching and] doctrine
[by which consciences are not made to rely on a dream or to
build on a foundation of sand, but] from which the pious may
receive the sure hope of salvation. For the adversaries give
men bad advice [therefore the adversaries are truly unfaithful
bishops, unfaithful preachers and doctors; they have hitherto
given evil counsel to consciences, and still do so by introducing
such doctrine] when they bid them doubt whether they obtain
remission of sins. For how will such persons sustain themselves
in death who have heard nothing of this faith, and think that
they ought to doubt whether they obtain the remission of sins?
120] Besides, it is necessary that in the Church of Christ
the Gospel be retained, i.e., the promise that for Christ's
sake sins are freely remitted. Those who teach nothing of this
faith, 121] concerning which we speak, altogether abolish
the Gospel. But the scholastics mention not even a word concerning
this faith. Our adversaries follow them, and reject this faith.
Nor do they see that, by rejecting this faith they abolish the
entire promise concerning the free remission of sins and the
righteousness of Christ.