Concerning the following articles
we may [will be able to] treat with learned and reasonable men, or among
ourselves. The Pope and his [the Papal] government do not care much about these.
For with them conscience is nothing, but money, [glory] honors, power are [to
them] everything.
I. Of Sin 1] Here we must confess, as
Paul says in Rom. 5, 11, that sin originated [and entered the world] from one
man Adam, by whose disobedience all men were made sinners, [and] subject to
death and the devil. This is called original or capital sin.2] The fruits of this sin
are afterwards the evil deeds which are forbidden in the Ten Commandments, such
as [distrust] unbelief, false faith, idolatry, to be without the fear of God,
presumption [recklessness], despair, blindness [or complete loss of sight], and,
in short not to know or regard God; furthermore to lie, to swear by [to abuse]
God's name [to swear falsely], not to pray, not to call upon God, not to regard
[to despise or neglect] God's Word, to be disobedient to parents, to murder, to
be unchaste, to steal, to deceive, etc.3] This hereditary sin is so
deep and [horrible] a corruption of nature that no reason can understand it, but
it must be [learned and] believed from the revelation of Scriptures, Ps. 51, 5;
Rom. 6, 12ff ; Ex. 33, 3; Gen. 3, 7ff Hence, it is nothing but error and
blindness in regard to this article what the scholastic doctors have taught,
namely:4] That since the fall of
Adam the natural powers of man have remained entire and incorrupt, and that man
by nature has a right reason and a good will; which things the philosophers
teach.5] Again, that man has a
free will to do good and omit evil, and, conversely, to omit good and do evil.6] Again, that man by his
natural powers can observe and keep [do] all the commands of God.7] Again, that, by his
natural powers, man can love God above all things and his neighbor as himself.8] Again, if a man does as
much as is in him, God certainly grants him His grace.9] Again, if he wishes to go
to the Sacrament, there is no need of a good intention to do good, but it is
sufficient if he has not a wicked purpose to commit sin; so entirely good is his
nature and so efficacious the Sacrament.10] [Again,] that it is not
founded upon Scripture that for a good work the Holy Ghost with His grace is
necessary.11] Such and many similar
things have arisen from want of understanding and ignorance as regards both this
sin and Christ, our Savior and they are truly heathen dogmas, which we cannot
endure. For if this teaching were right [approved], then Christ has died in
vain, since there is in man no defect nor sin for which he should have died; or
He would have died only for the body, not for the soul, inasmuch as the soul is
[entirely] sound, and the body only is subject to death.
II. Of
the Law 1] Here we hold that the Law
was given by God, first, to restrain sin by threats and the dread of punishment,
and by the promise and offer of grace and benefit. But all this miscarried on
account of the wickedness which sin has wrought in man. 2] For thereby a
part [some] were rendered worse, those, namely, who are hostile to [hate] the
Law, because it forbids what they like to do, and enjoins what they do not like
to do. Therefore, wherever they can escape [if they were not restrained by]
punishment, they [would] do more against the Law than before. These, then, are
the rude and wicked [unbridled and secure] men, who do evil wherever they
[notice that they] have the opportunity.3] The rest become blind and
arrogant [are smitten with arrogance and blindness], and [insolently] conceive
the opinion that they observe and can observe the Law by their own powers, as
has been said above concerning the scholastic theologians; thence come the
hypocrites and [self-righteous or] false saints.4] But the chief office or
force of the Law is that it reveal original sin with all its fruits, and show
man how very low his nature has fallen, and has become [fundamentally and]
utterly corrupted; as the Law must tell man that he has no God nor regards
[cares for] God, and worships other gods, a matter which before and without the
Law he would not have believed. In this way he becomes terrified, is humbled,
desponds, despairs, and anxiously desires aid, but sees no escape; he begins to
be an enemy of [enraged at] God, and to murmur, etc. 5] This is what Paul
says, Rom. 4, 15: The Law worketh wrath. And Rom. 5, 20: Sin is
increased by the Law. [The Law entered that the offense might abound.]
III.
Of Repentance. 1] This office [of the Law]
the New Testament retains and urges, as St. Paul, Rom. 1, 18 does, saying: The
wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness
of men. Again, 3, 19: All the world is guilty before God. No man is
righteous before Him. And Christ says, John 16, 8: The Holy Ghost will
reprove the world of sin.2] This, then, is the
thunderbolt of God by which He strikes in a heap [hurls to the ground] both
manifest sinners and false saints [hypocrites], and suffers no one to be in the
right [declares no one righteous], but drives them all together to terror and
despair. This is the hammer, as Jeremiah 23, 29 says: Is not My Word like a
hammer that breaketh the rock in pieces? This is not activa contritio or manufactured repentance, but passiva contritio [torture of
conscience], true sorrow of heart, suffering and sensation of death.3] This, then, is what it
means to begin true repentance; and here man must hear such a sentence as this:
You are all of no account, whether you be manifest sinners or saints [in your
own opinion]; you all must become different and do otherwise than you now are
and are doing [no matter what sort of people you are], whether you are as great,
wise, powerful, and holy as you may. Here no one is [righteous, holy], godly,
etc.4] But to this office the
New Testament immediately adds the consolatory promise of grace through the
Gospel, which must be believed, as Christ declares, Mark 1, 15: Repent and
believe the Gospel, i.e., become different and do otherwise, and
believe My promise. And John, preceding Him, is called a preacher of repentance,
however, for the remission of sins, i.e., John was to accuse all, and
convict them of being sinners, that they might know what they were before God,
and might acknowledge that they were lost men, and might thus be prepared for
the Lord, to receive grace, and to expect and accept from Him the remission of
sins. Thus also Christ Himself says, Luke 24, 47: 6] Repentance and
remission of sins must be preached in My name among all nations.7] But whenever the Law
alone, without the Gospel being added exercises this its office there is
[nothing else than] death and hell, and man must despair, like Saul and Judas;
as St. Paul, Rom. 7, 10, says: Through sin the Law killeth. 8] On
the other hand, the Gospel brings consolation and remission not only in one way,
but through the word and Sacraments, and the like, as we shall hear afterward in
order that [thus] there is with the Lord plenteous redemption, as Ps.
130, 7 says against the dreadful captivity of sin.9] However, we must now
contrast the false repentance of the sophists with true repentance, in order
that both may be the better understood.
Of
the False Repentance of the Papists. 10] It was impossible that
they should teach correctly concerning repentance, since they did not [rightly]
know the real sins [the real sin]. For, as has been shown above, they do not
believe aright concerning original sin, but say that the natural powers of man
have remained [entirely] unimpaired and incorrupt; that reason can teach aright,
and the will can in accordance therewith do aright [perform those things which
are taught], that God certainly bestows His grace when a man does as much as is
in him, according to his free will.11] It had to follow thence
[from this dogma] that they did [must do] penance only for actual sins such as
wicked thoughts to which a person yields (for wicked emotion [concupiscence,
vicious feelings, and inclinations], lust and improper dispositions [according
to them] are not sins), and for wicked words and wicked deeds, which free will
could readily have omitted.12] And of such repentance
they fix three parts contrition, confession, and satisfaction, with this
[magnificent] consolation and promise added: If man truly repent, [feel
remorse,] confess, render satisfaction, he thereby would have merited
forgiveness, and paid for his sins before God [atoned for his sins and obtained
a plenary redemption]. Thus in repentance they instructed men to repose
confidence in their own works. 13] Hence the expression originated, which
was employed in the pulpit when public absolution was announced to the people: Prolong
O God, my life, until I shall make satisfaction for my sins and
amend my life.14] There was here [profound
silence and] no mention of Christ nor faith; but men hoped by their own works to
overcome and blot out sins before God. And with this intention we became priests
and monks, that we might array ourselves against sin.15] As to contrition, this
is the way it was done: Since no one could remember all his sins (especially as
committed through an entire year), they inserted this provision, namely, that if
an unknown sin should be remembered later [if the remembrance of a concealed sin
should perhaps return], this also must be repented of and confessed etc.
Meanwhile they were [the person was] commended to the grace of God.16] Moreover, since no one
could know how great the contrition ought to be in order to be sufficient before
God, they gave this consolation: He who could not have contrition, at least
ought to have attrition, which I may call half a contrition or the beginning of
contrition, for they have themselves understood neither of these terms nor do
they understand them now, as little as I. Such attrition was reckoned as
contrition when a person went to confession.17] And when it happened
that any one said that he could not have contrition nor lament his sins (as
might have occurred in illicit love or the desire for revenge, etc.), they asked
whether he did not wish or desire to have contrition [lament]. When one would
reply Yes (for who, save the devil himself, would here say No?), they accepted
this as contrition, and forgave him his sins on account of this good work of his
[which they adorned with the name of contrition]. Here they cited the example of
St. Bernard, etc.18] Here we see how blind
reason, in matters pertaining to God, gropes about, and, according to its own
imagination, seeks for consolation in its own works, and cannot think of
[entirely forgets] Christ and faith. But if it be [clearly] viewed in the light,
this contrition is a manufactured and fictitious thought [or imagination],
derived from man's own powers, without faith and without the knowledge of
Christ. And in it the poor sinner, when he reflected upon his own lust and
desire for revenge, would sometimes [perhaps] have laughed rather than wept
[either laughed or wept, rather than to think of something else], except such as
either had been truly struck by [the lightning of] the Law, or had been vainly
vexed by the devil with a sorrowful spirit. Otherwise [with the exception of
these persons] such contrition was certainly mere hypocrisy, and did not mortify
the lust for sins [flames of sin]; for they had to grieve, while they would
rather have continued to sin, if it had been free to them.19] As regards confession,
the procedure was this: Every one had [was enjoined] to enumerate all his sins
(which is an impossible thing). This was a great torment. From such as he had
forgotten [But if any one had forgotten some sins] he would be absolved on the
condition that, if they would occur to him, he must still confess them. In this
way he could never know whether he had made a sufficiently pure confession
[perfectly and correctly], or when confessing would ever have an end. Yet he was
pointed to his own works, and comforted thus: The more fully [sincerely and
frankly] one confesses, and the more he humiliates himself and debases himself
before the priest, the sooner and better he renders satisfaction for his sins;
for such humility certainly would earn grace before God.20] Here, too, there was no
faith nor Christ, and the virtue of the absolution was not declared to him, but
upon his enumeration of sins and his self-abasement depended his consolation.
What torture, rascality, and idolatry such confession has produced is more than
can be related.21] As to satisfaction, this
is by far the most involved [perplexing] part of all. For no man could know how
much to render for a single sin, not to say how much for all. Here they have
resorted to the device of imposing a small satisfaction, which could indeed be
rendered, as five Paternosters, a day's fast, etc.; for the rest [that was
lacking] of the [in their] repentance they were directed to purgatory.22] Here, too, there was
nothing but anguish and [extreme] misery. [For] some thought that they would
never get out of purgatory, because, according to the old canons seven years'
repentance is required for a single mortal sin. 23] Nevertheless,
confidence was placed upon our work of satisfaction, and if the satisfaction
could have been perfect, confidence would have been placed in it entirely, and
neither faith nor Christ would have been of use. But this confidence was
impossible. For although any one had done penance in that way for a hundred
years, he would still not have known whether he had finished his penance. That
meant forever to do penance and never to come to repentance.24] Here now the Holy See at
Rome, coming to the aid of the poor Church, invented indulgences, whereby it
forgave and remitted [expiation or] satisfaction, first, for a single instance,
for seven years, for a hundred years and distributed them among the cardinals
and bishops, so that one could grant indulgence for a hundred years and another
for a hundred days. But he reserved to himself alone the power to remit the
entire satisfaction.25] Now, since this began to
yield money, and the traffic in bulls became profitable he devised the golden
jubilee year [a truly gold-bearing year], and fixed it at Rome. He called this
the remission of all punishment and guilt. Then the people came running, because
every one would fain have been freed from this grievous, unbearable burden. This
meant to find [dig up] and raise the treasures of the earth. Immediately the
Pope pressed still further, and multiplied the golden years one upon another.
But the more he devoured money, the wider grew his maw.Later, therefore, he issued them
[those golden years of his] by his legates [everywhere] to the countries, until
all churches and houses were full of the Golden Year. 26] At last he also
made an inroad into purgatory among the dead, first, by founding masses and
vigils, afterwards, by indulgences and the Golden Year, and finally souls became
so cheap that he released one for a farthing.27] But all this, too, was
of no avail. For although the Pope taught men to depend upon, and trust in,
these indulgences [for salvation], yet he rendered the [whole] matter again
uncertain. For in his bulls he declares: Whoever would share in the indulgences
or a Golden Year must be contrite, and have confessed, and pay money. Now, we
have heard above that this contrition and confession are with them uncertain and
hypocrisy. Likewise, also no one knew what soul was in purgatory, and if some
were therein, no one knew which had properly repented and confessed. Thus he
took the precious money [the Pope snatched up the holy pence], and comforted
them meanwhile with [led them to confidence in] his power and indulgence, and
[then again led them away from that and] directed them again to their uncertain
work.28] If, now [although],
there were some who did not believe [acknowledge] themselves guilty of such
actual sins in [committed by] thoughts, words, and works,—as I, and such as I,
in monasteries and chapters [fraternities or colleges of priests], wished to be
monks and priests, and by fasting, watching, praying, saying Mass, coarse
garments, and hard beds, etc., fought against [strove to resist] evil thoughts,
and in full earnest and with force wanted to be holy, and yet the hereditary,
inborn evil sometimes did in sleep what it is wont to do (as also St. Augustine
and Jerome among others confess),—still each one held the other in esteem, so
that some, according to our teaching, were regarded as holy, without sin and
full of good works, so much so that with this mind we would communicate and sell
our good works to others, as being superfluous to us for heaven. This is indeed
true, and seals, letters, and instances [that this happened] are at hand.29] [When there were such, I
say,] These did not need repentance. For of what would they repent, since they
had not indulged wicked thoughts? What would they confess [concerning words not
uttered], since they had avoided words? For what should they render
satisfaction, since they were so guiltless of any deed that they could even sell
their superfluous righteousness to other poor sinners? Such saints were also the
Pharisees and scribes in the time of Christ.30] Here comes the fiery
angel, St. John [Rev. 10], the true preacher of [true] repentance, and with one
[thunderclap and] bolt hurls both [those selling and those buying works] on one
heap, and says: Repent! Matt. 3, 2. 31] Now, the former [the poor
wretches] imagine: Why, we have repented! The latter [the rest] say: We need no
repentance. 32] John says: Repent ye, both of you, for ye are false
penitents; so are these [the rest] false saints [or hypocrites], and all of you
on either side need the forgiveness of sins, because neither of you know what
true sin is not to say anything about your duty to repent of it and shun it. For
no one of you is good; you are full of unbelief, stupidity, and ignorance of God
and God's will. For here He is present of whose fulness have all we received, and grace for grace, John 1, 16, and without Him no man can be just
before God. Therefore, if you wish to repent, repent aright; your penance will
not accomplish anything [is nothing]. And you hypocrites, who do not need
repentance, you serpents' brood, who has assured you that you will escape the
wrath to come? etc. Matt. 3, 7; Luke 3, 7.33] In the same way Paul
also preaches, Rom. 3, 10-12: There is none righteous, there is none
that understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God, there is
none that doeth good, no not one; they are all gone out of the way; they
are together become unprofitable. 34] And Acts 17, 30: God now
commandeth all men everywhere to repent. "All men," he says; no
one excepted who is a man. 35] This repentance teaches us to discern sin,
namely, that we are altogether lost, and that there is nothing good in us from
head to foot [both within and without], and that we must absolutely become new
and other men.36] This repentance is not
piecemeal [partial] and beggarly [fragmentary], like that which does penance for
actual sins, nor is it uncertain like that. For it does not debate what is or is
not sin, but hurls everything on a heap, and says: All in us is nothing but sin
[affirms that, with respect to us, all is simply sin (and there is nothing in us
that is not sin and guilt)]. What is the use of [For why do we wish]
investigating, dividing, or distinguishing a long time? For this reason, too,
this contrition is not [doubtful or] uncertain. For there is nothing left with
which we can think of any good thing to pay for sin, but there is only a sure
despairing concerning all that we are, think, speak, or do [all hope must be
cast aside in respect of everything], etc.37] In like manner
confession, too, cannot be false, uncertain, or piecemeal [mutilated or
fragmentary]. For he who confesses that all in him is nothing but sin
comprehends all sins, excludes none, forgets none. 38] Neither can the
satisfaction be uncertain, because it is not our uncertain, sinful work, but it
is the suffering and blood of the [spotless and] innocent Lamb of God who taketh
away the sin of the world.39] Of this repentance John
preaches, and afterwards Christ in the Gospel, and we also. By this [preaching
of] repentance we dash to the ground the Pope and everything that is built upon
our good works. For all is built upon a rotten and vain foundation, which is
called a good work or law, even though no good work is there, but only wicked
works, and no one does the Law (as Christ, John 7, 19, says), but all transgress
it. Therefore the building [that is raised upon it] is nothing but falsehood and
hypocrisy, even [in the part] where it is most holy and beautiful.40] And in Christians this
repentance continues until death, because, through the entire life it contends
with sin remaining in the flesh, as Paul, Rom. 7, 14-25, [shows] testifies that
he wars with the law in his members, etc.; and that, not by his own
powers, but by the gift of the Holy Ghost that follows the remission of sins.
This gift daily cleanses and sweeps out the remaining sins, and works so as to
render man truly pure and holy.41] The Pope, the
theologians, the jurists, and every other man know nothing of this [from their
own reason], but it is a doctrine from heaven, revealed through the Gospel, and
must suffer to be called heresy by the godless saints [or hypocrites].42] On the other hand, if
certain sectarists would arise, some of whom are perhaps already extant, and in
the time of the insurrection [of the peasants] came to my own view, holding that
all those who had once received the Spirit or the forgiveness of sins, or had
become believers, even though they should afterwards sin, would still remain in
the faith, and such sin would not harm them, and [hence] crying thus: "Do
whatever you please; if you believe, it all amounts to nothing; faith blots out
all sins," etc.—they say, besides, that if any one sins after he has
received faith and the Spirit, he never truly had the Spirit and faith: I have
had before me [seen and heard] many such insane men, and I fear that in some
such a devil is still remaining [hiding and dwelling].
43] It is, accordingly,
necessary to know and to teach that when holy men, still having and feeling
original sin, also daily repenting of and striving with it, happen to fall into
manifest sins, as David into adultery, murder, and blasphemy, that then faith
and the Holy Ghost has departed from them [they cast out faith and the Holy
Ghost]. For the Holy Ghost does not permit sin to have dominion, to gain the
upper hand so as to be accomplished, but represses and restrains it so that it
must not do what it wishes. But if it does what it wishes, the Holy Ghost and
faith are [certainly] not present. For St. John says, 1 John 3, 9: Whosoever
is born of God doth not commit sin, ... and he cannot sin. And yet it
is also the truth when the same St. John says, 1, 8: If we say that we have
no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us.