Chap7 Martin Luther: The Freedom of a Christian [1520]
- “On the basis of righteousness of faith, the cornerstone of his new gospel, Luther repudiated the rigidity of Catholic morality...repudiated the Aristotelian notion that good works make a good man and insisted a good man does good works, and does so freely and without legal regimentation. Luther’s tract aimed to show how a vibrant and dynamic faith makes this possible. A slightly condensed version of the entire tract is below: ... It is impossible to write well about it or to understand what has been written about it unless one has at one time or another experienced the courage which faith gives a man when trials oppress him. But he who has had even a faint taste of it can never write, speak, meditate, or hear enough concerning it. It is a living ‘spring of water welling up to eternal life’ as Christ calls it in John 4[:14]. ... To make the way smoother for the unlearned—for only them do I serve—I shall set down the following two propositions concerning the freedom and the bondage of the spirit: A Christian is a perfectly free lord of all, subject to none. A Christian is a perfectly dutiful servant of all, subject to all. ...Love by its very nature is ready to serve and be subject to him who is loved. ... Man has a twofold nature, a spiritual one and a bodily one. ...*It does not help the soul of the body is adorned with sacred robes of priests or dwells in sacred places or is occupied with sacred duties”*** (huge dig at Catholicism) ...”One thing, and only one thing, is necessary for Christian life, righteousness and freedom. That one thing is the most holy word of God, the gospel of Christ .... nor was Christ sent into the world for any other ministry except that of the word. Moreover, the entire spiritual estate—all the apostles, bishops, and priests—has been called and instituted only for the ministry of the word”
53 For a Christian, as a free person, will say,’I will fast, pray, do this and that as men command, not because it is necessary to my righteousness or salvation; but that I may show due respect to the pope, the bishop, the community, a magistrate, or my neighbor, and give them an example. I will do and suffer all things, just as Christ did and suffered far more for me...”