THE AUGSBURG CONFESSION
Delivered to the Emperor, Charles V, at the
Diet of Augsburg, A.D. 1530
“I will speak of Your testimonies
also before kings, and will not be ashamed.”
(Psalm 119:46)
Most Invincible Emperor,
Caesar Augustus, most Clement Lord: Your Imperial Majesty summoned a Diet of
the Empire here at Augsburg to resolve what measures should be taken against
the Turk, that most atrocious, hereditary and ancient enemy of the Christian
name and religion; namely, that it might be decided how to effectually
withstand his furor and assaults with a strong and lasting military
arrangement. This Diet was also summoned to resolve dissensions in the matter
of our holy religion and Christian Faith, that in this matter of religion the
opinions and judgments of parties might be heard in each other’s
presence, and considered and weighed among ourselves in charity, leniency and
mutual kindness. Then the things in the Scriptures which on either side have
been differently interpreted or misunderstood, being corrected and laid aside,
may be settled and brought back to one perfect truth and Christian concord.
Thus in the future one pure and true religion may be embraced and maintained by
us, that as we all serve and do battle under Christ, so we may be able also to
live in unity and concord in one Christian Church. And since we, the
undersigned Electors and Princes, with others joined with us, have been called
to the aforesaid Diet, the same as the other Electors, Princes and
Representatives, in obedient compliance with the Imperial mandate we have come
to Augsburg, and without boasting we can say that we were among the first to be
here.
Since then Your Imperial
Majesty caused to be proposed to the Electors, Princes, and other
Representatives of the Empire, also here at Augsburg, at the very beginning of
this Diet, that among other things, by order of the Imperial Edict the several
Representatives of the Empire should present their opinions and judgments in
the German and Latin languages, after due deliberation, answer was given to
Your Imperial Majesty last Wednesday, that on the next Friday the Articles of
our Confession would be presented.
Therefore, in obedience to
Your Imperial Majesty’s wishes, we offer in this matter of religion the
Confession of our preachers and of ourselves, showing what sort of doctrine
from the Holy Scriptures and the pure Word of God has been up to this time
presented in our lands, territories, dominions and cities, and what has been
taught in our churches. And if the other Electors, Princes and Representatives
of the Empire will present similar writings in Latin and German, according to
the Imperial proposition and give their opinions in this matter of religion
here before Your Imperial Majesty, our most clement Lord, we are prepared to
confer amicably with them concerning all possible ways and means, as far as may
be honorably done, that we may come together. And when the matter between us
has been peacefully discussed on both sides without offensive strife, by
God’s help the dissension may be done away and we of one accord returned
to the true religion. For as we all serve and do battle under one Christ, we
ought to confess the one Christ and conduct ourselves according to the truth of
God; and this we entreat of God with our most fervent prayers.
But, should the other
Electors, Princes and Representatives decide that this mutual presentation of
writings and calm conferring among ourselves, so wisely proposed by Your
Imperial Majesty, should not proceed, or be unfruitful in results, so be it.
We, at least, leave behind the clear testimony that we decline or refuse
nothing at all allowed of God and a good conscience which might bring about
Christian concord. Your Imperial Majesty, the other Electors and
Representatives of the Empire, and all who are moved by sincere love and zeal
for religion and will give an impartial hearing to this matter, will graciously
perceive and understand this more and more from our Confession.
Also in dealing with this
matter of religion Your Imperial Majesty, not only once but often, graciously
signified to the Electors, Princes and Representatives of the Empire, and
publicly proclaimed at the Diet of Spires, held in 1526 according to the
prescribed form of Your Imperial instruction and commission, that while for
certain reasons that were alleged in Your Majesty’s name Your Majesty was
not willing to decide and could not determine anything, yet Your Majesty would
diligently use Your Majesty’s office with the Roman Pontiff for the
convening of a General Council. All of this was publicly set forth at greater
length over a year ago at the last Diet which met in Spires. There Your
Imperial Majesty, through His Highness Ferdinand, King of Bohemia and Hungary,
our friend and most clement Lord, as well as through the Orator and Imperial
Commissioners, caused this, among other things, to be proclaimed: that Your
Imperial Majesty had known of and pondered the resolution of Your
Majesty’s Ambassador in the Empire, and of the President and Imperial
Counselors, and the Legates from other Estates convened at Ratisbon, concerning
the calling of a Council, and that this also was judged by Your Imperial
Majesty to be of advantage to all; and because the matters to be negotiated
between Your Imperial Majesty and the Roman Pontiff were nearing agreement and
Christian reconciliation, Your Imperial Majesty did not doubt the Roman Pontiff
could be induced to hold a General Council; therefore Your Imperial Majesty
himself signified that he would endeavor to secure the Chief Pontiff’s
consent together with Your Imperial Majesty to convene such General Council,
and that letters to that effect would be publicly issued as quickly as
possible.
In the event, therefore,
that the differences between us and the other parties in the matter of religion
cannot be amicably and charitably settled here before Your Imperial Majesty, in
all obedience we make this offer: in addition to what we have already done we
are prepared to defend the cause in such a general, free, Christian Council. In
all the Imperial Diets held during Your Majesty’s reign there has always
been accordant action and agreement of votes for the convening of such a
council on the part of the Electors, Princes, and other Representatives of the
Empire. To this General Council, and at the same time to Your Imperial Majesty,
we have made appeal in this greatest and gravest of matters even before this, in
due manner and form of law. To this appeal, both to Your Imperial Majesty and
to a Council, we still adhere, neither do we intend, nor would it be possible
for us to relinquish it by this or any other document, unless the matter
between us and the other side, according to the tone of the latest Imperial
citation, can be amicably and charitably settled and brought to Christian
accord, for this is our solemn and public testimony.
CHIEF ARTICLES OF FAITH
Article I
God
Our churches with common consent
teach that the decree of the Council of Nicea concerning the Unity of the
Divine Essence and concerning the Three Persons, is true and to be believed
without any doubting; that is to say, there is one Divine Essence which is
called and which is God: eternal, without body, without parts, of infinite
power, wisdom and goodness, the Maker and Preserver of all things, visible and
invisible; and yet that there are Three Persons, of the same essence and power,
who are co-eternal, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. And we use the
term “person” as the Fathers have used it, to signify not a part or
a quality in another, but that which subsists of itself.
We condemn all heresies
which have sprung up against this article, such as that of the Manichaeans, who
assert two gods, one Good and the other Evil; also that of the Valentinians,
Arians, Eunomians, Mohammedans, and all like them.[1] We also condemn the Samosatenes, old and
new, who contend that there is but one Person, arguing with sophistry and
impiety that the Word and the Holy Spirit are not distinct Persons, but that
“Word” signifies a spoken word, and “Spirit” signifies
the motion created in things.
Article II
Original Sin
We teach that since the fall
of Adam all who are propagated according to nature are born in sin, that is,
without the fear of God, without trust in God, and with concupiscence; and that
this disease, or vice of origin is truly sin, even now condemning and bringing
eternal death upon those not born again through Baptism and the Holy Spirit.
We condemn the Pelagians and
others who deny that the vice of origin is sin, and who, to obscure the glory
of Christ’s merit and benefits, argue that a person can be justified
before God by his own strength and reason.
Article III
The Son of God
We teach that the Word, that
is, the Son of God, took on man’s nature in the womb of the blessed
Virgin Mary, so that there are two natures, the divine and the human,
inseparably conjoined in one person, one Christ, true God and true Man, who was
born of the Virgin Mary, truly suffered, was crucified, died and was buried,
that He might reconcile the Father unto us and be a sacrifice, not only for
original guilt, but for all actual sins of men.
He also descended into hell,
and truly rose again the third day; afterward He ascended into heaven, that He
might sit at the right hand of the Father, and forever reign, and have dominion
over all creatures and sanctify those who believe in Him by sending the Holy
Spirit into their hearts to rule, comfort and enliven them, and to defend them
against the devil and the power of sin. The same Christ shall openly come again
to judge the living and the dead, etc., according to the Apostles’ Creed.
Article IV
Justification
We teach that men cannot be
justified before God by their own strength, merits or works, but are freely
justified for Christ’s sake through faith, when they believe that they
are received into favor and that their sins are forgiven for Christ’s
sake, who by His death has made satisfaction for our sins. This faith God
accounts as righteousness in His sight, Rom. 3 and 4.
Article V
The Ministry of the Church
That we may obtain this
faith, the ministry of teaching the Gospel and administering the sacraments was
instituted. For through the Word and sacraments, as through instruments, the
Holy Spirit is given, who works faith where and when it pleases God in those
who hear the Gospel. That is, God, not because of our own merits, but for
Christ’s sake, justifies those who believe that they are received into
favor for Christ’s sake.
We condemn the Anabaptists
and others who think that the Holy Spirit comes without the external Word but
through their own preparations and works.
Article VI
New Obedience
We teach that this faith is bound
to bring forth good fruits, and that it is necessary to do good works commanded
by God because it is God’s will. Yet we should not rely on those works to
merit justification before God. For the forgiveness of sins and justification
are apprehended by faith, as the words of Christ attest, “When you have
done all those things which you are commanded, say, ‘We are unprofitable
servants’” [Luke 17:10]. The same is also taught by the Fathers.
For Ambrose says, “It is ordained of God that he who believes in Christ
is saved, freely receiving remission of sins, without works, by faith
alone.”
Article VII
The Church
We teach that one holy
Church is to continue forever. The Church is the congregation of saints, in
which the Gospel is rightly taught and the sacraments rightly administered. And
concerning the true unity of the Church, it is enough to agree concerning the
doctrine of the Gospel and the administration of the sacraments. Nor is it
necessary that human traditions, rites, or ceremonies, instituted by men,
should be the same everywhere. As St. Paul says, “One faith, one baptism,
one God and Father of all,” etc. [Eph. 4:5,6].
Article VIII
What the Church Is
Although the Church is
properly the congregation of saints and true believers, nevertheless, since in
this life many hypocrites and evil persons are mingled among the believers, it
is allowable to use the sacraments which are administered by evil men,
according to the saying of Christ, “The Scribes and the Pharisees sit in
Moses’ seat,” etc. [Matt. 23:2]. Both the sacraments and the Word
are effective because of the institution and commandment of Christ, even when
administered by evil men.
We condemn the Donatists,
and all like them, who denied it to be allowable to use the ministry of evil
men in the Church, and who thought the ministry of evil men to be unprofitable
and of no effect.
Article IX
Baptism
Of Baptism we teach that it
is necessary to salvation, and that through Baptism is offered the grace of
God; and that children are to be baptized, who, being offered to God through
Baptism, are received into His grace.
We condemn the Anabaptists,
who do not allow the baptism of children and say that children are saved
without Baptism.
Article X
The Lord’s Supper
Of the Lord’s Supper
we teach that the Body and Blood of Christ are truly present and are
distributed to those who eat in the Lord’s Supper. We reject those who
teach otherwise.
Article XI
Confession
Of Confession we teach that
Private Absolution ought to be retained in the churches, although an
enumeration of all sins is not necessary in confession. Indeed, it is
impossible according to the Psalm, “Who can understand his errors?”
[Psalm 19:12]
Article XII
Repentance
Of repentance we teach that
for those that have fallen after Baptism there is remission of sins whenever
they are converted; and that the Church ought to impart Absolution to those
thus returning to repentance.
Now repentance consists
properly of two parts: One is contrition, that is, terrors smiting the
conscience through the knowledge of sin; the other is faith, which, born of the
Gospel, or of Absolution, believes that for Christ’s sake sins are
forgiven, comforts the conscience and delivers it from terrors. Then good works
are bound to follow, being the fruits of repentance.
We condemn the Anabaptists,
who deny that those once justified can lose the Holy Spirit. We also condemn
those who contend that some may attain to such perfection in this life that
they cannot sin. The Novatians are also condemned, who would not absolve those
who had fallen after Baptism even though they repented. They are also rejected
who do not teach that forgiveness of sins comes through faith, but command us
to merit grace by satisfactions of our own.
Article XIII
The Use of the Sacraments
Of the use of the sacraments
we teach that the sacraments were ordained not simply to be marks of profession
among us but rather to be signs and testimonies of the will of God toward us,
instituted to awaken and confirm faith in those who use them. Therefore we must
so use the sacraments that faith be added to believe the promises which are
offered and set forth through the sacraments.
We therefore condemn those
who teach that the sacraments justify by the outward act and do not teach that,
in the use of the sacraments, faith, which believes that sins are forgiven, is
required.
Article XIV
Ecclesiastical Order
Of ecclesiastical order we
teach that no one should publicly teach in the Church or administer the
sacraments unless he is rightfully called.
Article XV
Ecclesiastical Rites
Of rites in the Church we
teach that those ought to be observed which may be observed without sin, and
which are profitable for tranquility and good order in the Church, such as
particular holidays, festivals, and the like.
Nevertheless, concerning
such things, let all be admonished that consciences are not to be burdened, as
though such an observance were necessary to salvation. We also admonish that
human traditions instituted to appease God, to merit grace and to make
satisfaction for sins, are opposed to the Gospel and the doctrine of faith.
Therefore vows and traditions concerning foods and days, etc., instituted to
merit grace and to make satisfaction for sins, are useless and contrary to the
Gospel.
Article XVI
Civil Affairs
Of civil affairs we teach
that lawful civil ordinances are good works of God, and that it is right for
Christians to hold civil office, to sit as judges, to determine matters by the
Imperial and other existing laws, to award just punishments, to engage in just
wars, to serve as soldiers, to make legal contracts, to own property, to make
an oath when required by a judge, to marry and to be given in marriage.
We condemn the Anabaptists
who forbid these civil offices to Christians. Also we condemn those who place
the perfection of the Gospel not in the fear of God and in faith, but in
forsaking civil offices; for the Gospel teaches an eternal righteousness in the
heart. Meanwhile, it does not destroy the State or the family, but very much
requires their preservation as the ordinances of God, and that charity be
practiced in them. Therefore, Christians are necessarily bound to obey their
own governments and laws, unless they command them to sin, for then they ought
to obey God rather than men [Acts 5:29].
Article XVII
Christ’s Return to Judgment
We teach that at the
consummation of the world Christ shall appear for its judgment, and shall raise
up all the dead; He shall give to the godly and elect eternal life and
everlasting joys, but the ungodly and the devils He shall condemn to be
tormented without end.
We condemn the Anabaptists
who think that there will be an end to the punishments of the damned and the
devils. We also condemn others who are now spreading certain Jewish opinions
that, before the resurrection of the dead, the godly shall take possession of
the kingdom of the world, the ungodly being everywhere suppressed.
Article XVIII
The Freedom of the Will
Of the freedom of the will
we teach that a person’s will has some liberty to choose civil
righteousness, and to choose in things subject to reason. Nevertheless it has
no power without the Holy Spirit to work the righteousness of God, that is,
spiritual righteousness, since “the natural man does not receive the
things of the Spirit of God” [1 Cor. 2:14]. Rather, this righteousness is
worked in the heart when the Holy Spirit is received through the Word. These
things are said in as many words by Augustine in his Hypognosticon, book 3: “We grant that all have a
certain freedom of the will, inasmuch as we have the ability to reason. Yet the
human will does not have a freedom which without God is capable to begin, much
less complete, any one of the things pertaining to God. Only in the deeds of
this life are we able to choose good or evil. ‘Good’ I call those works
which spring from the good in nature; that is, to be willing to labor in the
field, to eat and drink, to have a friend, to clothe oneself, to build a house,
to marry, to keep cattle, to learn various and useful arts, or whatever good
pertains to this life, none of which things are without dependence on the
providence of God; yea, of Him and through Him they are and have their
beginning. ‘Evil’ I call such works as to want to worship an idol,
to commit murder,” etc.
We condemn the Pelagians and
others who teach that without the Holy Spirit, by the power of human nature
alone, we are able to love God above all things; also the notion that we can
keep the commandments of God as touching “the substance of the
act.” For, although human nature is able in some sort to do the outward
work (for it is able to keep the hands from theft and murder), yet it cannot
work the inward motions, such as the fear of God, trust in God, chastity,
patience, etc.
Article XIX
The Cause of Sin
Of the cause of sin we teach
that although God does create and preserve nature, yet the cause of sin is the
will of the wicked, that is, of the devil and the ungodly. For unaided by God,
the human will turns itself away from God, as Christ says, “When he
speaks a lie, he speaks from his own resources” [John 8:44].
Article XX
Faith and Good Works
Our teachers are falsely
accused of forbidding good works. Indeed their published writings on the Ten
Commandments and similar things bear witness that we have taught with good
intentions concerning all stations and duties of life, as to what stations of
life and what duties in every calling are pleasing to God. Before this
preachers taught very little about these things, and urged only childish and
needless works, such as particular Church festivals, particular fasts,
brotherhoods, pilgrimages, services in honor of saints, the use of rosaries,
monasticism, and the like. And now that our adversaries have been admonished
about these things they are unlearning them, and do not preach these
unprofitable works as they did before. They are beginning to mention faith,
about which before there was extraordinary silence. They now teach that we are
not justified by works only, but they join faith and works, and say that we are
justified by faith and works. This doctrine is more tolerable than the former
one, and at least gives more consolation than their old doctrine.
Seeing that the doctrine
concerning faith, which ought to be the foremost in the Church, has so long
lain unknown (as all must concede that there was the deepest silence in their
sermons concerning the righteousness of faith, while only the doctrine of works
was treated in the churches), our teachers have instructed the churches
concerning faith as follows:
First, that our works cannot
reconcile us to God or merit forgiveness of sins, grace and justification; but
that we obtain this only by faith when we believe that we are received into
grace for Christ’s sake, who alone has been set forth the Mediator and
Propitiation, in order that the Father may be reconciled through Him. Whoever,
therefore, trusts that by works he merits grace, despises the merit and grace
of Christ and seeks a way to God by human strength without Christ, even though
Christ has said of Himself, “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life”
[John 14:6].
This doctrine concerning
faith is everywhere treated by Paul in this way: “By grace you have been
saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of
works” [Eph. 2:8], etc.
And lest anyone should sneer
and say that we have devised a new interpretation of Paul, this entire matter
is supported by the testimonies of the Fathers. For in many volumes Augustine
defends grace and the righteousness of faith over against the merits of works.
And Ambrose, in his De Vocatione Gentium and elsewhere, teaches to like effect. For in his De
Vocatione Gentium he
writes as follows: “Redemption by the Blood of Christ would become of
little value, neither would the preeminence of man’s works be superseded
by the mercy of God, if justification, which is worked through grace, were due
to previous merits, making it not the gift of a donor but the reward due a
laborer.”
But although this doctrine
is despised by the inexperienced, nevertheless God-fearing and distressed
consciences have through experience found that it brings the greatest
consolation. Consciences can never be pacified through any works, but only by
faith, being assured that for Christ’s sake they have a gracious God,
just as Paul teaches: “Having been justified by faith, we have peace with
God” [Rom. 5:1]. This whole doctrine is to be linked to that struggle in
the conscience. Therefore, inexperienced and profane men judge poorly in this
matter, imagining that Christian righteousness is nothing but the civil
righteousness of natural reason.
Before this consciences were
plagued with the doctrine of works and never heard any consolation from the
Gospel. Some were driven by conscience into the desert, some into monasteries, hoping
to merit grace there by a monastic life. Some devised other works to merit
grace and make satisfaction for sins. There was a very great need to treat of
and renew this doctrine of faith in Christ, so that distressed consciences are
not without consolation, but know that grace, forgiveness of sins, and
justification are apprehended by faith in Christ.
We also caution that here
the term “faith” does not mean a mere knowledge of history, for
even the ungodly and the devil possess that. Rather it means a faith which
believes not only the history, but also the effect of the history—namely,
the article of the forgiveness of sins; that through Christ we have grace,
righteousness and forgiveness of sins.
Now he that knows he has a
Father reconciled to him through Christ, since he truly knows God, also knows
that God cares for him and calls upon God. In short, he is not without God as
the heathen are. For devils and the ungodly are not able to believe this
article of the forgiveness of sins. Hence, they hate God as an enemy, do not
call upon Him, and expect no good from Him. Augustine also admonishes his
readers concerning the word “faith” and teaches that the term
“faith” is used in the Scriptures not for knowledge such as you
find in the ungodly, but for confidence which consoles and encourages the
terrified mind.
Furthermore, it is taught by
us that it is necessary to do good works, not so that we can believe we merit
grace by them, but because it is the will of God. It is only by faith that
forgiveness of sins and grace are apprehended. We also teach this because it is
through faith that the Holy Spirit is received, hearts are renewed and endowed
with new affections, so as to be able to bring forth good works. For Ambrose
says, “Faith is the mother of a good will and right doing.” For
without the Holy Spirit human powers are full of ungodly affections and are too
weak to do works that are good in God’s sight. Besides, they are in the
power of the devil, who impels men to various sins, to ungodly opinions and to
open crimes. We see this in the philosophers, who although they endeavored to
live an honest life, could not succeed but were defiled with many open crimes.
Such is the impotence of humanity when it is without faith and without the Holy
Spirit and governs itself only by human strength.
Hence it may be readily seen
that this doctrine is not to be charged with prohibiting good works, but rather
it is to be further commended because it shows how we are able to do good
works. For without faith, human nature can never do the works of the First or
of the Second Commandment. Without faith, it does not call upon God, nor expect
any help from Him, nor bear the cross; but it seeks and trusts in man’s
help. And thus, when there is no faith and trust in God, all manner of lusts
and human vices rule in the heart. For this reason Christ said [John 15:5],
“Without Me you can do nothing,” and the Church sings:
We know no dawn but Thine:
Send forth Thy beams divine
On our dark souls to shine
And make us blest.[2]
Article XXI
The Worship of Saints
Of the worship of the saints
we teach that the memory of saints may be set before us that we may follow
their faith and good works according to our calling, as the Emperor may follow
the example of David in making war to drive away the Turk from his country, for
both are kings. But the Scriptures do not teach the invocation of saints, or to
ask help of saints, since it sets before us Christ as the only Mediator,
Propitiation, High Priest, and Intercessor. He is to be prayed to and has promised
that He will hear our prayer. This worship He approves above all: that in
afflictions He be called upon: “If any man sins, we have an Advocate with
the Father” [1 John 2:1], etc.
This is about the sum of our
doctrine, in which it can be seen there is nothing that varies from the
Scriptures or from the Church Catholic or from the Church of Rome as known from
its writers. This being the case, they judge harshly who insist that our
teachers be regarded as heretics. Rather the disagreement is on certain abuses
which have crept into the Church without rightful authority. And even in these,
if there were some difference, there should be proper leniency on the part of
bishops to bear with us by reason of the Confession which we have now drawn up.
For even the Canons[3] are not so severe as to demand the same
rites everywhere, neither at any time have the rites of all churches been the
same, although the majority among us diligently observe the ancient rites. For
it is a false and malicious charge that all the ceremonies, all the things
instituted of old, are abolished in our churches. But it has been a common
complaint that some abuses were connected with ordinary rites. These, insofar
as they could not be approved with good conscience, have been to some extent
corrected.
Articles in which are Recounted the
Abuses which have been Corrected
Inasmuch as our churches
dissent in no article of the faith from the Church Catholic, but omit some
abuses which are new and, contrary to the intent of the Canons, have been
erroneously accepted by fault of the times, we pray that Your Imperial Majesty
would graciously hear both what has been changed, and also what were the
reasons, in order that the people be not compelled to observe those abuses
against their conscience. Nor should Your Imperial Majesty believe those who,
in order to excite the hatred of men against our side, disseminate outlandish
slanders among our people. Having thus excited the minds of good people, they
have first given rise to this controversy, and now endeavor by those same
methods to increase the discord. For Your Imperial Majesty will undoubtedly
find that the form of doctrine and of ceremonies with us is not so intolerable
as these ungodly and malicious men represent. Furthermore, the truth cannot be
gathered from common rumors or the revilings of our enemies. But it can be
readily judged that nothing would serve better to maintain the dignity of
worship and to nourish reverence and pious devotion among the people than
proper observance of the ceremonies in the churches.
Article XXII
Both Kinds in the Lord’s
Supper
[Note: It was the
practice of the Roman Church to distribute only in one kind, to give only the
bread to the laity during the celebration of the Lord’s Supper. The
reformers show this to be contrary to the command of Christ and the practice of
the ancient Church.]
To the laity are given both
kinds in the sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, because this practice has
the commandment of the Lord: “Drink of it, all of you,” where
Christ has expressly commanded concerning the cup that all should drink. And
lest anyone should craftily say that this refers only to priests, Paul [1 Cor.
11:27] recites an example from which it appears that the whole congregation did
use both kinds. And this practice has long remained in the Church, nor is it
known when, or by whose authority, it was changed, although Cardinal Cusanus
mentions the time when it was approved. Cyprian in some places testifies that
the Blood was given to the people. We have the same testimony from Jerome, who
says, “The priests administer the Eucharist and distribute the Blood of
Christ to the people.” Indeed, Pope Gelasius commands that the sacrament
not be divided in De Consecratione, dist. 2, chapter “Comperimus.” Only custom, and then
not so ancient, has it otherwise. But it is evident that any custom introduced
against the commandments of God is not to be allowed, as the Canons witness
(Dist. 3, chapter “Veritate,” and the following chapters). But this
custom has been received not only against the Scriptures, but also against the
old Canons and the example of the Church. Therefore if any preferred to use
both kinds of the sacrament, they ought not to have been compelled with offense
to their consciences to do otherwise.
And because the division of
the sacrament does not agree with the ordinance of Christ we are accustomed to
omit the procession, which up until now has been in use.[4]
Article XXIII
The Marriage of Priests
[Note: This article
shows how the forbidding of the marriage of priests was also a departure from
Scripture and the practice of the ancient Church.]
There has been common
complaint concerning the examples of priests who were not chaste. For that
reason also, Pope Pius is reported to have said that there were certain reasons
why marriage was taken away from priests, but that there were far weightier
ones why it ought to be given back, as reported by Platina.[5] Since therefore, our priests wished to
avoid these open scandals, they married wives and taught that it was lawful for
them to contract matrimony. First, because Paul says [1 Cor. 7:2]:
“Because of sexual immorality, let each man have his own wife,” and
[v. 9], “It is better to marry than to burn.” Secondly, Christ says
[Matt. 19:11], “All cannot accept this saying”, where He teaches
that not all men are fit to lead a single life, for God created man for
procreation [Gen. 1:28]. Nor is it in man’s power, without a singular
gift and work from God, to alter this creation. Therefore those who are not fit
to lead a single life ought to contract matrimony. For no human law, no vow,
can annul the commandment and ordinance of God. For these reasons the priests
teach that it is lawful for them to marry wives. It is also evident that in the
ancient Church priests were married men, for Paul says [1 Tim. 3:2] that a
bishop must be the husband of one wife. And four hundred years ago in Germany
priests were for the first time violently compelled to lead a single life. They
offered such resistance that the Archbishop of Mainz was almost killed in the
insurrection raised by angry priests as he was about to proclaim the
Pope’s decree in this matter. And so harsh was the dealing in the matter
that not only were future marriages forbidden, but existing marriages were annulled,
contrary to all laws, divine and human, contrary even to the Canons themselves,
which were made not only by the Popes but by the finest councils.
Seeing also that, as the
world is aging, human nature is gradually growing weaker, it is well to guard
that no more vices steal into Germany. Furthermore, God ordained marriage to be
a help against human infirmity. The Canons themselves say that the old rigors
ought now and then be relaxed in the later times because of human weakness, and
it is devoutly desired this be done regarding the marriage of priests. And it
is to be expected that churches shall soon lack pastors if marriage should be
forbidden much longer.
But while the commandment of
God is in force, while the custom of the Church is well known, while impure
celibacy causes many scandals, adulteries and other crimes deserving the
punishments of good judges, yet it is astonishing that nowhere do we see more
cruelty than what is exercised against the marriage of priests. God has given
the commandment to honor marriage. By the laws of all well-ordered nations,
even among the heathen, marriage is most highly honored. But now, against the
intent of the Canons, men, even priests, are cruelly put to death for no other
cause than marriage. In 1 Timothy 4:3 Paul calls a teaching that forbids
marriage a “doctrine of demons.” This is now easily understood when
the law against marriage is enforced by such penalties.
And as no human law can
annul the commandment of God, so neither can it be done by any vow.
Accordingly, Cyprian also advises that women who do not keep the chastity they
have promised should marry. He writes [Book I, Epistle XI], “But if they
are unwilling or unable to persevere, it is better for them to marry than to
fall into the fire by their lusts, for at least then they will give no offense
to their brothers and sisters.” And even the Canons show some leniency
toward those who have taken vows before the proper age, as up until now has
generally been the case.
Article XXIV
The Mass
[Note: The Roman Church
accused the Lutherans of abolishing the observance of the Lord’s Supper.
In this article the Lutherans show their high regard for the Sacrament of the
Altar, and that what they abolished were practices which degraded the
Lord’s Supper, obscured its benefits or misinterpreted its purpose.]
Falsely are our churches
accused of abolishing the Mass, for the Mass is retained by us and celebrated
with the highest reverence. All the usual ceremonies are also preserved, except
that the parts sung in Latin are interspersed here and there with German hymns,
which have been added to teach the people. For ceremonies are needed for this
reason alone: that the unlearned be taught. And not only has Paul, in 1
Corinthians 14, commanded that the Church use a language understood by the
people, but it has also been so ordained by human law.
The people are accustomed to
receive the sacrament together, if any are fit to do so, and this increases the
reverence and devotion of public worship. For none are admitted unless they are
first examined. The people are also advised concerning the dignity and use of
the sacrament, what great consolation it brings troubled consciences, that they
might learn to believe God and to expect and ask of Him all that is good. This
worship pleases God; for such use of the sacrament nourishes true devotion
toward God. It does not, therefore, appear that the Mass is more devoutly
celebrated among our adversaries than among us.
But it is evident that for a
long time it has been the public and most serious complaint of all good people
that Masses have been basely profaned and even used for the purpose of
collecting money. For it is unknown how far this abuse extends in all the
churches, what kind of men say Masses only for fees and stipends, and how many
celebrate them contrary to the Canons. But Paul severely threatens those who
deal unworthily with the Eucharist when he says [1 Cor. 11:27], “Whoever
eats this bread or drinks this cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be
guilty of the body and blood of the Lord.” So when our priests were
admonished concerning this sin, private Masses were discontinued among us, as
hardly any private Masses were celebrated except for collecting money.
Neither were the bishops
ignorant of these abuses, and if they had corrected them in time there would
now be less dissension. Up until the present time, by their own negligence they
allowed many corruptions to creep into the Church. Now, when it is too late,
they begin to complain about the troubles of the Church, seeing that this
disturbance has been occasioned simply by those abuses, which are so open that
they could be tolerated no longer. Great dissensions have arisen concerning the
Mass, concerning the Sacrament. Perhaps the world is being punished for such
long and continued profanations of the Mass as have been tolerated in the
churches for so many centuries by the very men who were both able and duty
bound to correct them. For in the Ten Commandments [Exodus 20:7] it is written,
“The LORD will not hold him guiltless who takes His name in vain.”
But since the world began, nothing that God ever ordained seems to have been so
abused for dishonest gain as the Mass.
There was also added the
opinion, which infinitely increased Private Masses, that Christ by His Passion
had made satisfaction for original sin and instituted the Mass so that
offerings might be made for daily sins, venial and mortal. From this has arisen
the common opinion that the Mass takes away the sins of the living and the
dead, simply by the outward act. Then they began to argue whether one Mass said
for many was worth as much as special Masses for individuals, and this brought
forth that infinite multitude of Masses. Our teachers have warned that these
opinions depart from the Holy Scriptures and diminish the glory of the Passion
of Christ. For Christ’s Passion was both sacrifice and satisfaction, not
only for original guilt, but also for all sins, just as it is written [Hebrews
10:10]: “We have been sanctified through the offering of the body of
Jesus Christ once for all.” Also [v. 14], “By one offering He has
perfected forever those who are being sanctified.” Scripture also teaches
that we are justified before God through faith in Christ when we believe that
our sins are forgiven for Christ’s sake. Now if the Mass takes away the
sins of the living and the dead by the outward act, then justification comes
through the work of the Masses and not of faith. This the Scriptures do not
allow.
Rather, Christ commanded us,
“This do in remembrance of Me” [Luke 22:19]; therefore the Mass was
instituted that the faith of those who use the Sacrament should remember what
benefits are received through Christ and should cheer and comfort the troubled
conscience. For to remember Christ is to remember His benefits and to realize
that they are truly offered to us. Nor is it enough only to remember the
history, for this the Jews and the ungodly also can remember. Therefore the
Mass is to be used for this purpose, that there the sacrament may be
administered to them that have need of consolation, as Ambrose says,
“Because I always sin, I am always bound to take the medicine.”
Now, inasmuch as the Mass is
such a giving of the sacrament, we hold one Communion every holy day, and on
other days it is given to those who ask for it, should any desire the
sacrament. Nor is this custom new in the Church; for the Fathers before Gregory
make no mention of any private Mass, but of the common Mass they speak very
much. Chrysostom says, “The priest stands daily at the altar, inviting
some to Communion and keeping back others.” And it appears from the
ancient Canons that one man celebrated the Mass, from whom all the other
presbyters and deacons received the Body of the Lord, for the words of the
Nicene Canon say: “Let the deacons, according to their order, receive the
Holy Communion after the presbyters, from the bishop or from a
presbyter.” And Paul in 1 Cor. 11:33 commands concerning the Communion,
“Wait for one another,” so that there may be a common
participation.
Since we celebrate the Mass
according to the example of the Church, taken from Scripture and the Fathers,
we are confident that it cannot be disapproved, especially since the public
ceremonies are retained for the most part, like those currently in use. Only
the number of Masses differs, a number which, in consideration of the manifest
abuses, might without doubt be profitably reduced. For in the past, even in
churches most frequented, the Mass was not celebrated every day, as the Tripartite
History, book 9, chapter
33, testifies: “Again in Alexandria, every Wednesday and Friday, the
Scriptures are read and the doctors expound them; all things are done except
the solemn rite of Communion.”
Article XXV
Confession
[Note: When accused of
abolishing the practice of private confession, the Lutherans respond by showing
they retained this worthy practice, as stated in Article XI. However, while the
Roman Church had focused on the enumeration, or listing of sins, the Lutherans
retained private confession for the sake of private Absolution, that Christians
might individually hear the blessed Gospel of forgiveness.]
Confession in our churches
is not abolished, for it is not usual to give the Body of the Lord except to
those who have been previously examined and absolved. And the people are most
carefully taught concerning the faith and assurance of absolution, about which
before there was profound silence. Our people are taught that they should
highly esteem absolution, for it is the voice of God proclaimed by God’s
command. The power of the Keys is acclaimed as an ornament of the Church, and
we show what great consolation it brings to troubled consciences; furthermore
that God requires faith to believe the absolution as a voice sounding from
heaven and that such faith in Christ truly obtains and receives the forgiveness
of sins.
Formerly, satisfactions were
excessively advocated, and no mention was made of faith or the merit of Christ
or the righteousness of faith. Because of this there is no reason to blame our
churches on this point. For even our adversaries must concede this to us, that
the doctrine concerning repentance has been most diligently treated and laid
open by our teachers.
But of confession we teach
that enumeration of sins is not necessary, and that consciences not be burdened
with the anxiety to enumerate all sins, for it is impossible to remember all
sins, as Psalm 19:12 testifies, “Who can understand his errors?”
Also Jeremiah 17:9, “The heart is deceitful…who can know it?”
If no sins were forgiven except those recounted, consciences could never find
peace, for there are many sins they neither see nor remember.
The ancient writers also
testify that an enumeration is not necessary. For in the Decrees Chrysostom is
quoted as saying, “I do not say to you that you should disclose yourself
in public or that you should accuse yourself before others, but I would have
you obey the prophet who says, ‘Disclose your way before God.’[6] Therefore, with prayer confess your sins
before God, the true Judge. Tell your errors not with your tongue but with the
memory of your conscience.” And the gloss in De Poenitentia, dist. 5, chapter
“Consideret,” admits that confession comes to us by human right
only. Nevertheless, on account of the great benefit of absolution and because
it is otherwise useful to the conscience, confession is retained among us.
Article XXVI
The Distinction of Foods
[Note: The Roman
Church taught that observing special times of fasting (such as not eating meat
during Lent) and other traditions were works that merited grace, indeed that
these were better works than those of secular duties at work or home. The
Reformers show that while such traditions are often beneficial, their
observance should never be allowed to burden consciences or obscure Christ.]
It has been the general
opinion, and not of the people alone, but also of some who teach in the
churches, that making distinction of foods and similar human traditions are
good works; that they merit grace and are able to make satisfaction for sins.
And that the world so thought is obvious from this, that new ceremonies, new
orders, new Church festivals and new fastings were daily instituted, and the
teachers in the Church demanded these works as a service necessary to merit
grace, and greatly terrified consciences if a person should omit any of these
things. From this opinion concerning traditions much detriment has resulted in
the Church.
First, the doctrine of grace
and of the righteousness of faith has been obscured by it. This is the chief
part of the Gospel and ought to stand out as the most prominent teaching in the
Church, so that the merits of Christ may be well known and that faith, which
believes that sins are forgiven for Christ’s sake, may be exalted far
above works. For this reason Paul also lays the greatest stress on this
article, putting aside the law and human traditions in order to show that the
righteousness of the Christian is apart from such works, indeed, it is the
faith that believes that sins are freely forgiven for Christ’s sake. But this
doctrine of Paul has been almost wholly smothered by traditions, which has
produced the opinion that by making distinctions in food and like services we
must merit grace and righteousness. In treating repentance there was no mention
made of faith; all that was done was to set forth those works of satisfaction,
and repentance seemed to consist solely in these.
Secondly, these traditions
have obscured the commandments of God, because traditions were placed far above
the commandments of God. Christianity was thought to consist wholly in the
observance of certain festivals, rites, fasts and vestures. These observances
have won for themselves the exalted title of being the spiritual life and the
perfect life. Meanwhile, the commandments of God, according to each one’s
calling, were without honor; namely, that the father brought up his family,
that the mother bore children, that the prince governed the state—these
works were labeled worldly and imperfect, and far below those glittering
observances. And this error greatly tormented devout consciences, which grieved
that they were trapped in an imperfect state in life, such as marriage, the
office of magistrate or other civil administrations. On the other hand, they
admired the monks and those like them, and falsely imagined that the
observances of these were more acceptable to God.
Thirdly, traditions brought
great danger to consciences, for it was impossible to keep all traditions, and
yet men judged these observances to be necessary acts of worship. Gerson[7] writes that many fell into despair and
that some even took their own lives, because they felt that they were not able
to satisfy the traditions. Meanwhile, they had not heard the consolation of the
righteousness of faith and grace.
We see that the summists[8] and theologians gather the traditions
together and seek mitigations to ease consciences. Yet they do not succeed in
releasing them but sometimes entangle consciences even more. And the schools
and sermons have been so much occupied with the assembling of these traditions
that they do not have the leisure to touch upon Scripture, and to seek the more
beneficial doctrines of faith, of the cross, of hope, of the dignity of civil
affairs, and of the consolation of sorely tried consciences. Hence Gerson and
some other theologians have with sorrow complained that by these strivings
concerning traditions they were prevented from giving attention to a better
kind of doctrine. Augustine also forbids that a person’s conscience
should be burdened with such observances, and prudently advises Januarius that
he must know that they are to be observed as indifferent things; these are his
words.
Therefore our teachers must
not be looked upon as having taken up this matter rashly or out of hatred of
the bishops, as some falsely suspect. There was great need to warn the churches
of these errors which had arisen from misunderstanding the traditions. For the
Gospel compels us to insist in the churches upon the doctrine of grace and of
the righteousness of faith. These however cannot be understood if people think
they merit grace by observances of their own choice.
Thus they have taught that
by the observance of human traditions we cannot merit grace or be justified;
and hence we must not think such observances to be necessary acts of worship.
They add to this the
testimonies of Scripture. Christ [Matt. 15:3] defends the Apostles who had not
observed the usual tradition, which seemed to pertain to a matter which was not
unlawful, but indifferent, and was related to the purifications of the law. He
says, “In vain they worship Me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of
men.” Christ, therefore, does not demand an unnecessary service. Shortly
thereafter He adds, “Not what goes into a mouth defiles a man.” So
also St. Paul [Rom. 14:17]: “The kingdom of God is not food and
drink.” And in Colossians [2:16]: “Let no one judge you in food or
in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or sabbaths”; also,
“If you died with Christ from the basic principles of this world, why, as
though living in the world, do you subject yourself to
regulations—‘Do not touch, do not taste, do not
handle’?” And St. Peter says [Acts 15:10–11]: “Why do
you test God by putting a yoke on the neck of the disciples which neither our
fathers nor we were able to bear? But we believe that through the grace of the
Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved in the same manner as they.” Here
Peter forbids the burdening of consciences with many rites, either of Moses or
of others.
And in 1 Timothy [4:1, 3]
St. Paul calls the prohibition of foods a “doctrine of demons,” for
it is against the Gospel to institute or to do such works so that by them we
may merit grace, or as though Christianity could not exist without such service
to God.
Here our adversaries object
that our teachers are opposed to discipline and mortification of the flesh,
calling them Jovinian[9]. But the contrary may be learned from the
writings of our teachers. For they have always taught concerning the cross that
Christians are under obligation to bear afflictions. This is the true, earnest
and unfeigned mortification: being harassed with various afflictions and to be
crucified with Christ.
Moreover, they teach that
every Christian ought to discipline and subdue himself with exercise and labor,
so that neither plenty nor laziness tempt him to sin; but not that we may merit
grace or make satisfaction for sins with such activities. And such external
discipline ought to be urged at all times, not only on a few and set days. So
Christ commands [Luke 21:34]: “Take heed to yourselves, lest your hearts
be weighed down with carousing;” also [Matt. 17:21]: “This kind
does not go out except by prayer and fasting.” St. Paul also says [1 Cor.
9:27]: “I discipline my body and bring it under subjection.” Here
he clearly shows he was disciplining his body not to merit forgiveness of sins
by that discipline, but to have his body in subjection and fitted for spiritual
things, and for the discharge of duty according to his calling. Therefore we do
not condemn fasting, but the traditions that prescribe certain days and certain
foods with peril of conscience, as though works of such kind were a necessary
service.
Nevertheless, very many
traditions are kept on our part, for they lead to good order in the Church,
such as the Order of Lessons in the Mass and the chief festivals. But at the
same time people are warned that such observances do not justify before God,
and that in such things it should not be called a sin if they are omitted without
scandal. Such liberty in human rites was not unknown to the Fathers. For in the
East they kept Easter at a different time than in Rome, and when on account of
this diversity the Romans accused the Eastern Church of schism, they were
admonished by others that such rites need not be alike everywhere. And Irenaeus
says: “Diversity concerning fasting does not destroy the harmony of
faith,” as also Pope Gregory intimates, in Dist. xii, that such diversity does not violate
any unity of the Church. And in the Tripartite History, book 9, many examples of dissimilar
rites are gathered, and the following statement is made: “It was not the
mind of the Apostles to enact rules concerning Church festivals, but to preach
godliness and a holy life.”
Article XXVII
Monastic Vows
[Note: The Lutherans
had three criticisms concerning monastic life. First, monastic life used to be
voluntary; one could freely join and freely leave at any time. However by
Luther’s time many in the monasteries and convents had been forced to
join, and once they had taken their vows it was almost impossible for them to
leave. Secondly, the Roman Church touted monastic life as the Christian life, all other occupations being something
less. Finally, the Roman Church taught that one could earn grace by becoming a
monk or nun, and thus obscured the work of Christ. The Lutherans did not
necessarily want to abolish the monasteries and convents, but wished to
eliminate the vows of perpetual celibacy, poverty and obedience, whose
introduction had given rise to the abuses listed.]
What is taught among us
concerning monastic vows will be better understood if it is remembered what the
state of the monasteries has been, and how many things were daily done in those
very monasteries contrary to the Canons. In Augustine’s time they were
voluntary associations. Afterward, when discipline declined, vows were
everywhere added for the purpose of restoring discipline, as in a carefully
planned prison. Gradually many other observances were added besides vows. And
these fetters were laid upon many before a lawful age, contrary to the Canons.
Many also entered into this kind of life through ignorance, being unable to
judge their own strength, though they were of sufficient age. Being thus
ensnared, they were compelled to remain even though some could have been freed
by the provision of the Canons. And this was more the case in the convents of
women than of monks, even though more consideration should have been shown the
weaker sex. This rigor displeased many good men before now, who saw that many
good young men and women were thrown into convents for a living, and what
unfortunate results came from this procedure, what scandals were created, what
snares were cast upon consciences! They were grieved that the authority of the
Canons in so important a matter was utterly despised and set aside.
To these evils was added an
opinion concerning vows, which, it is well known, in former times displeased
even those monks who were more thoughtful. They taught that vows were equal to Baptism!
They taught that by this kind of life they merited forgiveness of sins and
justification before God. They even added that monastic life not only merited
righteousness before God, but even greater things, because it kept not only the
precepts, but also the so-called “evangelical counsels.”
Thus they made people
believe that the profession of monasticism was far better than Baptism, and
that the monastic life was more meritorious than that of magistrates, than the
life of pastors and such who serve their calling in accordance with God’s
commands, without man-made services. None of these things can be denied, for
they appear in their own books.
What then happened in the
monasteries? They once were schools of theology and of other branches
beneficial to the Church, and from there pastors and bishops were obtained. Now
it is another thing. It is needless to repeat what is known to all. They used
to come together to learn; now they pretend that it is a kind of life
instituted to merit grace and righteousness; indeed they even preach that it is
a state of perfection and put it far above all other kinds of life ordained of
God.
These things we have
repeated without offensive exaggeration, in order that the doctrine of our
teachers on this point might be better understood. First, concerning those who
contract matrimony, they teach on our part that it is lawful for all who are
not suited for the single life to marry, because vows cannot annul the
ordinance and commandment of God. But the commandment of God is [1 Cor. 7:2]:
“Because of sexual immorality, let each man have his own wife, and let
every woman have her own husband.” Nor is it the commandment only, but
also the creation and ordinance of God which compels those to marry who are not
excepted by a singular work of God, according to the text [Gen. 2:18]:
“It is not good that man should be alone.” Therefore they do not
sin who obey this commandment and ordinance of God.
What objection can be raised
to this? Let men extol the obligation of a vow as much as they wish, yet they
shall not make it so that the vow annuls the commandment of God. The Canons
teach that the right of the superior is excepted in every vow. Much less,
therefore, are the vows in force that are against the commandments of God.
Now if the obligation of
vows could not be changed for any cause whatever, the Roman Pontiffs could
never have given dispensation; for it is not lawful for man to annul an
obligation which is altogether divine. But the Roman Pontiffs have wisely
judged that leniency is to be observed in this obligation, and therefore we
read that many times they have released from vows. The case of the King of
Aragon who was called back from the monastery is well known[10], and there are also examples in our own
times.
In the second place, why do
our adversaries exaggerate the obligation or effect of a vow, when at the same
time they have not a word to say on the nature of the vow itself, that it ought
to be a thing possible, voluntary, and chosen of one’s own accord and
deliberately? But it is not known to what extent perpetual chastity is within
human powers. And how few there are who have taken the vow of their own accord
and deliberately! Young men and women, before they are able to judge, are
persuaded and sometimes even compelled, to take the vow. For this reason it is
not fair to insist so rigorously on the obligation, since it is granted by all
that it is against the nature of a vow when it is not taken of one’s own
accord or deliberately.
Many canonical laws rescind
vows made before the age of fifteen, for before that age there does not seem
sufficient judgment in a person to make a decision regarding the rest of his
life. Another Canon, granting even more liberty to human weakness, adds a few
years and forbids a vow to be made before the age of eighteen. But whether we
followed the one or the other, most of them have an excuse for leaving the
monasteries because most of them took their vows before they reached these
ages.
But finally, even though the
violation of a vow might be rebuked, yet it does not follow that the marriages
of such persons ought to be dissolved. For Augustine denies that they ought to
be dissolved in Nuptiarum, Question 27, chapter 1; and his authority is not to be regarded
lightly, although men afterwards thought otherwise.
But although it appears that
God’s command concerning marriage delivers many from their vows, yet our
teachers introduce yet another argument concerning vows, to show that they are
void. For every service of God that is ordained and chosen of men without the
commandment of God to merit justification and grace is wicked, as Christ says
[Matt. 15:9]: “In vain they worship Me, teaching as doctrines the
commandments of men.” And Paul teaches everywhere that righteousness is
not to be sought by our own observances and acts of worship, devised by us, but
that it comes by faith to those who believe that they are received by God into
grace for Christ’s sake.
But it is evident that monks
have taught that human services of our making satisfy for sins and merit grace
and justification. What else is this but to detract from the glory of Christ
and to obscure and deny the righteousness of faith? It follows, therefore, that
the vows thus commonly taken have been wicked services, and consequently are
void. For a wicked vow, taken against the commandment of God, is not valid.
Just as the Canon says, no vow should bind a person to wickedness.
Paul says [Gal. 5:4]:
“You have become estranged from Christ, you who attempt to be justified
by the law; you have fallen from grace.” They, therefore, who want to be
justified by their vows are severed from Christ and fall from grace. For those
who ascribe justification to vows, ascribe to their own works that which
properly belongs to the glory of Christ. But it is undeniable that the monks
have taught us that by their vows and observances they were justified and
merited forgiveness of sin. Indeed, they invented still greater absurdities,
saying that they could give others a share of their works. If anyone should be
inclined to expand on those things with evil intent, how many things could he
bring together, of which things even the monks are now ashamed! Over and above
this, they persuaded people that services of human origin were a state of
Christian perfection. Is not this assigning justification to works? It is no
light offense in the Church to set forth to the people a service of human
origin, without the commandment of God, and to teach that such service
justifies. For the righteousness of faith in Christ, which ought to be first in
the Church, is obscured when these wonderful angelic forms of worship, with
their show of poverty, humility and chastity are cast before the people’s
eyes.
Furthermore, the precepts of
God and the true service of God are obscured when people hear that only monks
are in a state of perfection. For Christian perfection is to fear God from the
heart, again to have great faith, to trust that for Christ’s sake we have
a gracious God, and to ask of God and assuredly to expect His aid in all things
that are to be borne according to our calling; and meanwhile to be diligent in
outward good works and to serve our calling. In these things consist the true
perfection and the true service of God. It does not consist in the unmarried
life, or in begging, or in shabby apparel. But the people conceive many harmful
opinions from the erroneous commendations of monastic life. They hear unmarried
life praised above measure, therefore they lead their married life with offense
to their consciences. They hear that only beggars are perfect, therefore they
keep their possessions and do business with offense to their consciences. They
hear that it is an evangelical counsel not to avenge, therefore some in private
life are not afraid to take revenge, for they hear that it is only a counsel
and not a commandment; while others believe that the Christian cannot
rightfully hold a civil office or be a magistrate.
There are on record examples
of men who, forsaking marriage and the administration of the State, have hid
themselves in monasteries. They call this “fleeing from the world”
and “seeking a life which should be more pleasing to God.” They did
not see that God ought to be served in those commandments which He Himself has
given, and not by commandments of human origin. A good and perfect kind of life
is that which has the commandment of God in its favor. It is necessary to
admonish people in these things. Before this, Gerson denounced this error
concerning perfection, and testified that in his day it was a new thing to say
that the monastic life is a state of perfection.
So many wicked opinions are
inherent in the vows; such as that they justify, that they constitute Christian
perfection, that they keep the counsels and commandments, and that they have
works of supererogation. All these things, since they are false and empty, make
vows null and void.
Article XXVIII
Ecclesiastical Power
[Note: By the time of
the Reformation, the Roman Church had become a civil power. It was not unusual
for the Pope or bishops to intervene in civil affairs to protect their
interests. They had also allowed the traditions of the Church to become
regulations, and they told the people they sinned when they did not observe
them. The Lutherans insist on the distinction between the power of the Church
and the power of the State, and that traditions not be allowed to obscure
Christ or burden consciences. They then repeat the theme of Article XV, that we
observe those traditions which may be observed without sin.]
There has been a great
controversy concerning the power of bishops, in which some have unfortunately
confused the power of the Church and the power of the sword. And from this
confusion very great wars and tumults have resulted, while the Pontiffs,
emboldened by the power of the Keys, have not only instituted new services and
burdened consciences with reservation of cases[11] and harsh excommunications, but have
undertaken to transfer kingdoms of this world and to take the Empire from the
Emperor. These wrongs have long since been rebuked in the Church by learned and
godly men. Therefore, our teachers, for the comforting of consciences, were
constrained to show the difference between the power of the Church and the
power of the sword, and taught that both of them, because of God’s
commandment, are to be held in reverence and honor, as among the chief
blessings of God on earth.
This is their opinion: that
the power of the Keys, or the power of the bishops, according to the Gospel, is
a power or commandment of God to preach the Gospel, to forgive and retain sins,
and to administer the sacraments. For with that commandment Christ sends forth
His Apostles [John 20:21ff]: “As the Father has sent Me, I also send
you…. Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are
forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.” [Mark
16:15]: “Go, preach the Gospel to every creature.”
According to the calling
this power is exercised only by teaching or preaching the Gospel and
administering the sacraments, either to many or to individuals. For thereby are
granted not physical but eternal things, as eternal righteousness, the Holy
Spirit, and eternal life. These things cannot come except by the ministry of
the Word and sacraments. As Paul says [Rom. 1:16]: “The Gospel is the
power of God to salvation for everyone who believes.” Therefore, since
the power of the Church grants eternal things and is exercised only by the
ministry of the Word, it does not interfere with civil government; no more than
the art of singing interferes with civil government. For civil government deals
with other things than does the Gospel. The civil rulers do not defend souls,
but bodies and physical things against various injuries. It restrains with the
sword and physical punishments in order to preserve civil justice and peace.
Therefore the power of the
Church and the civil power must not be confused. The power of the Church has
its own commission: to teach the Gospel and administer the sacraments. Let it
not interfere with the office of another; let it not transfer the kingdoms of
this world; let it not abrogate the laws of civil rulers; let it not abolish
lawful obedience; let it not interfere with judgments concerning civil
ordinances and contracts; let it not prescribe laws to civil rulers concerning
the form of the State. As Christ says [John 18:36]: “My kingdom is not of
this world”; also [Luke 12:14]: “Who made Me a judge or an
arbitrator over you?” Paul also says [Phil. 3:20]: “Our citizenship
is in heaven”; [2 Cor. 10:4]: “The weapons of our warfare are not
carnal but mighty in God for casting down arguments.” In this way our
teachers distinguish between the duties of both these powers, and command that
both be honored and acknowledged as gifts and blessings of God.
If bishops have any power of
the sword, they have that power not as bishops by the commission of the Gospel,
but by human law, having received it of Kings and Emperors, for the civil
administration is theirs. Yet this is a different office than the ministry of
the Gospel.
So when a question arises
concerning the jurisdiction of bishops, civil authority must be distinguished
from ecclesiastical jurisdiction. Again, according to the Gospel (or as they
say, according to Divine Law), “to the bishops as bishops,” that
is, to those to whom has been committed the ministry of Word and sacraments, no
jurisdiction belongs except to forgive sins, to discern doctrine, to reject
doctrines contrary to the Gospel, and to exclude from the communion of the
Church wicked people whose wickedness is known, and this without human force
but simply by the Word. Herein the congregations are bound by Divine Law to
obey them, according to Luke 10:16: “He who hears you hears Me.”
But when they teach or
ordain anything against the Gospel, then the congregations have a commandment
of God prohibiting obedience [Matt. 7:15]: “Beware of false
prophets”; [Gal. 1:8]: “Even if an angel from heaven preach any
other gospel, let him be accursed”; [2 Cor. 13:8]: “We can do nothing
against the truth, but for the truth”; also [v. 10]: “The authority
of the Lord has [been] given me for edification and not for destruction.”
So also the Canonical Laws command (II, question 7, in chapters
“Sacerdotes” and “Oves”). And Augustine writes in his Letter
Against Petilian:
“We must not even submit to the Catholic bishops if they happen to err or
hold anything contrary to the Canonical Scriptures of God.”
If they have any other power
of jurisdiction in hearing and judging cases, as of matrimony or tithes, they
have it by human law. But where the bishops fail, princes are bound, even
against their will, to dispense justice to their subjects for the maintenance
of peace.
Moreover, it is disputed
whether bishops or pastors have the right to introduce ceremonies in the Church
and to make laws concerning foods, festivals and degrees, that is, orders of
ministers, etc. They who claim this right for bishops refer to this passage
[John 16:12–13]: “I still have many things to say to you, but you
cannot bear them now. However, when He, the Spirit of truth, has come, He will
guide you into all truth.” They also refer to the example of the Apostles
who commanded to abstain from blood and things strangled in Acts 15:29. They
refer to the Sabbath Day as having been changed to Sunday; seemingly contrary
to the Ten Commandments. Indeed, there is no other example they make more of
than the one concerning the Sabbath Day. Great, they say, is the power of the
Church, since it has dispensed with one of the Ten Commandments!
But concerning this question
it is taught by us (as has been shown above) that bishops have no power to
decree anything against the Gospel. The Canonical Laws teach the same thing in
Dist. 9. Now it is against Scripture to establish or require the observance of
any traditions, so that by such observance we may make satisfaction for sins or
merit grace and righteousness. For the glory of Christ’s merit is
dishonored when by such observations we undertake to merit justification. Yet
it is obvious that by such belief traditions have almost infinitely multiplied
in the Church, the doctrine concerning faith and the righteousness of faith
being meanwhile suppressed. For gradually more festivals were created, fasts
appointed, new ceremonies and services in honor of saints were instituted;
because the authors of these things thought that by these works they were
meriting grace. Thus, in times past, the Penitential Canons increased, and we
still see traces of them in the satisfactions.
Again, the authors of traditions
do contrary to the command of God when they find matters of sin in food, in
days and similar things, and burden the Church with the bondage of the law; as
if we ought to find among Christians a Levitical-like service to merit
justification that God committed to the Apostles and bishops. For thus some of
them write, and the Pontiffs in some measure seem to be misled by the example
of the Law of Moses. From this come burdens such as these: that it is a mortal
sin to do work on festival days, even without offense to others, to omit the
Canonical Hours, that certain foods corrupt the conscience, that fasting is a
work which appeases God, that sin in a reserved case cannot be forgiven except
by the authority of him who reserved it; whereas the Canons speak only of
reserving the ecclesiastical penalty, not of reserving the guilt.
Where do the bishops get the
right to lay these traditions on the Church for the ensnaring of consciences,
when Peter [Acts 15:10] forbids that a yoke be put on the neck of the disciples,
and Paul says [2 Cor. 13:10] that the authority given to him was for
edification and not for destruction? Why do they increase sins by these
traditions?
But there are clear
testimonies that prohibit the making of such traditions as though they merited
grace or were necessary to salvation. Paul says [Col. 2:16]: “Let no one
judge you in food or in drink, or regarding a festival or a new moon or
sabbaths;” also [v. 20–23] “If you died with Christ from the
basic principles of this world, why, as though living in the world, do you
subject yourself to regulations—‘Do not touch, do not taste, do not
handle,’ which all concern things which perish with the
using—according to the commandments and doctrines of men? These things
indeed have an appearance of wisdom.” Also in Titus [1:14] he openly
forbids traditions: “Not giving heed to Jewish fables and commandments of
men who turn from the truth.” And Christ [Matt. 15:14] says of those who
require traditions: “Let them alone. They are blind leaders of the blind”;
and He condemns such works [v. 13]: “Every plant which My heavenly Father
has not planted will be uprooted.”
If bishops have the right to
burden churches with infinite traditions and to ensnare consciences, why does
Scripture so often prohibit making and listening to traditions? Why does it
call them a “doctrine of demons” [1 Tim. 4:1]? Did the Holy Spirit
forewarn against these things in vain?
Therefore since ordinances
instituted as being necessary or with the idea that they merit grace are
contrary to the Gospel, it follows that it is not lawful for any bishop to
institute or require such services. For it is necessary that the doctrine of
Christian liberty be preserved in the churches; namely that bondage to law is
not necessary to justification, as it is written in the Epistle to the
Galatians [5:1]: “Do not be entangled again with a yoke of
bondage.” It is necessary that the chief article of the Gospel be
preserved: that we obtain grace freely by faith in Christ, and not because of
certain observances or acts of worship devised by men.
What then, are we to think
of Sunday and similar rites in the house of God? To this we answer that it is
lawful for bishops and pastors to make ordinances so that things are done
orderly in the Church, not so that we should merit grace or make satisfaction
for sins by them, or that consciences be bound to think them necessary services
and that it is a sin to break them without offense to others. Thus Paul ordains
[1 Cor. 11:5] that women should cover their heads in the congregation; [1 Cor.
14:30] and that interpreters of Scripture be heard in an orderly way in the
Church, etc.
It is proper that the Church
keep such ordinances for the sake of charity and tranquility, so far that one
does not offend another, and that all things be done in the churches in an
orderly way, without confusion. Yet consciences are not to be burdened,
thinking they are necessary to salvation, or that they sin when they break them
without offense to others, as no one will say that a woman sins who goes out in
public with her head uncovered, provided that no offense is given.
Likewise the observance of
Sunday, Easter, Pentecost, and like festivals and rites. For they greatly err
who judge that by the authority of the Church the observance of Sunday instead
of the Sabbath Day was ordained as being necessary. Scripture has abrogated the
Sabbath Day; for it teaches that since the Gospel has been revealed, all the
ceremonies of Moses can be omitted. And yet because it was necessary to appoint
a certain day so that the people would know when they might come together, it
appears that the Church designated Sunday for this purpose. This day seems to
have been chosen all the more for this additional reason: that people might
have an example of Christian liberty and might know that neither the keeping of
the Sabbath or any other day is necessary.
There are monstrous
arguments concerning the changing of the law, the ceremonies of the new law,
the changing of the Sabbath Day, all of which have sprung from the false belief
that the Church must have a Levitical-like service, that Christ had
commissioned the Apostles and bishops to devise new ceremonies as necessary to
salvation. These errors crept into the Church when the righteousness of faith
was not taught clearly enough. Some argue that while the keeping of Sunday is
not actually a divine
right, it is almost a
divine right. They prescribe how much a person may work on a festival day. What
else are such arguments but snares of conscience? For although they endeavor to
modify the traditions, the moderation can never be achieved so long as the
opinion remains that they are necessary, which must remain where the
righteousness of faith and Christian liberty are cast aside.
The Apostles commanded to
abstain from blood [Acts 15:20]. Who now observes this? And yet those who do
not observe it do not sin, for not even the Apostles themselves wished to
burden consciences with such bondage. They only forbade it for a time, to avoid
offense. For in any decree we must consider the perpetual aim of the Gospel.
Hardly any Canons are kept with exactness; from day to day many fall into
disuse even with those who are the most zealous advocates of traditions.
Neither can any counsel be given to consciences unless this moderation be observed:
that we know the Canons are kept without holding them to be necessary, and that
no harm is done to consciences even though traditions fall into disuse.
The bishops might easily
retain the lawful obedience of the people if they would not insist upon the
observance of those traditions which cannot be kept with a good conscience. But
now they demand celibacy and will admit none unless they swear that they will
not teach the pure doctrine of the Gospel. The churches do not ask that the
bishops restore concord at the expense of their honor (which, nevertheless, it
would be proper for good pastors to do). They only ask them to relieve unjust
burdens which are new and have been allowed contrary to the custom of the
Church Catholic. It may be that there were plausible reasons for some of these
ordinances, and yet they are not adapted to later times. It is also evident
that some were adopted because of erroneous conceptions. Therefore it would be
befitting the clemency of the Pontiffs to mitigate them now, because such a
modification does not shake the unity of the Church. For many human traditions
have been changed with the passing of time, as the Canons themselves show. But
if it be impossible to obtain a mitigation of those observances which cannot be
kept without sin, we are bound to follow the Apostolic rule [Acts 5:29] which
commands us to obey God rather than men. Peter [1 Pet. 5:3] forbids bishops to
be lords and to rule over the churches. Nor is it our intent to wrest the
government from the bishops, but rather to ask this one thing: that they allow
the Gospel to be purely taught and that they relax a few observances which
cannot be kept without sin. But if they make no concession, they will have to
give account to God for having created a schism by their obstinacy.
CONCLUSION
These are the chief articles which seem to
be in controversy. For although we might have spoken of more abuses, yet to
avoid undue length we have set forth the chief points, from which the rest may
be readily judged. There have been a great many complaints concerning
indulgences, pilgrimages, and the abuses of excommunication. The parishes have
been vexed in many ways by the dealers of indulgences. There were endless
contentions between the pastors and the monks concerning the parochial rites,
confessions, burials, sermons on special occasions and innumerable other
things. Things of this sort we have passed over, so that the chief points in
this matter, having been briefly set forth, might be the most readily
understood. Nor has anything been said or presented here to show contempt of
anyone. Only those things have been recounted which we thought necessary to
say, so that it might be understood that in doctrine and in ceremonies, nothing
has been allowed by us that is against Scripture or the Church Catholic, since
it is obvious that we have been very careful that no new and ungodly doctrine
should creep into our churches.
The above articles we desire
to present in accordance with the edict of Your Imperial Majesty, so that in
them our Confession should be shown forth and a summary of the doctrine of our
teachers be discerned. If anything further be desired, we are ready, God
willing, to present ampler information according to the Scriptures.
John, Duke of Saxony,
Elector
George, Margrave of
Brandenburg
Ernest, Duke of
Lüneburg
Philip, Landgrave of Hesse
John Frederick, Duke of
Saxony
Francis, Duke of
Lüneburg
Wolfgang, Prince of Anhalt
Senate and Magistracy of
Nuremburg
Senate of Reutlingen
[1]All of these groups denied the Trinity.
[2]This is from verse 3 of the hymn: “Come, Holy Ghost, in love.” Literally, the hymn verse reads, “Without Your divine will nothing is found in man, nothing that is innocent.”
[3]The Canons are the rules concerning life and discipline in the Roman Catholic Church.
[4]The reformers here refer to the Festival of Corpus Christi, during which consecrated bread was carried through the streets.
[5]Bartolomeo Platina was an Italian humanist who in 1479 wrote a history of the popes.
[6]Psalm 37:5 in the Vulgate.
[7]Jean le Charlier de Gerson was a French churchman who wrote many treatises on spiritual life.
[8]A summist studied and interpreted a summa, a compendium of theology, philosophy, or canon law. Summists were very often teachers in the universities.
[9]Jovinian was a 4th century monk who denied that virginity was a higher state than marriage and that fasting was better than thankful eating, and taught that Christians should always seek pleasures.
[10]He was released from his vows so that he could assume the throne after the death of his childless brother.
[11]Situations where only the Pope or a bishop
could pronounce Absolution.