Martin Luther's Preface to the Book of
Romans
An outstanding introduction to
Romans.
Preface
To The Letter Of St. Paul To The Romans
by
Dr. Martin Luther
(1483-1546 )
Translated
by Andrew Thornton, OSB “Vorrede auff die Epistel S. Paul: an die
Romer” in “D. Martin Luther: Die gantze Heilige Schrifft Deudsch
1545 aufs new zurericht, ed. Hans Volz and Heinz Blanke. Munich: Roger
& Bernhard. 1972, vol. 2, pp. 2254-2268.
TRANSLATOR'S
NOTE The material between square brackets is explanatory in nature and
is not part of Luther's preface. The terms “just, justice, justify”
in this piece are synonymous with the terms “righteous, righteousness,
make righteous.” Both sets of English words are common translations of
German “gerecht” and related words. A similar situation exists with
the word “faith”; it is synonymous with “belief.” Both words can
be used to translate German “Glaube.” Thus, “We are justified by
faith” translates the same original German sentence as does “We are
made righteous by belief.”
Preface
to Romans
This
letter is truly the most important piece in the New Testament. It is
purest Gospel. It is well worth a Christian's while not only to memorize
it word for word but also to occupy himself with it daily, as though it
were the daily bread of the soul. It is impossible to read or to
meditate on this letter too much or too well. The more one deals with
it, the more precious it becomes and the better it tastes. Therefore I
want to carry out my service and, with this preface, provide an
introduction to the letter, insofar as God gives me the ability, so that
every one can gain the fullest possible understanding of it. Up to now
it has been darkened by glosses [explanatory notes and comments which
accompany a text] and by many a useless comment, but it is in itself a
bright light, almost bright enough to illumine the entire Scripture.
To
begin with, we have to become familiar with the vocabulary of the letter
and know what St. Paul means by the words law, sin, grace, faith,
justice, flesh, spirit, etc. Otherwise there is no use in reading it.
You must not understand the word law here in human fashion, i.e., a
regulation about what sort of works must be done or must not be done.
That's the way it is with human laws: you satisfy the demands of the law
with works, whether your heart is in it or not. God judges what is in
the depths of the heart. Therefore his law also makes demands on the
depths of the heart and doesn't let the heart rest content in works;
rather it punishes as hypocrisy and lies all works done apart from the
depths of the heart. All human beings are called liars (Psalm 116),
since none of them keeps or can keep God's law from the depths of the
heart. Everyone finds inside himself an aversion to good and a craving
for evil. Where there is no free desire for good, there the heart has
not set itself on God's law. There also sin is surely to be found and
the deserved wrath of God, whether a lot of good works and an honorable
life appear outwardly or not. Therefore in chapter 2, St. Paul adds that
the Jews are all sinners and says that only the doers of the law are
justified in the sight of God. What he is saying is that no one is a
doer of the law by works. On the contrary, he says to them, “You teach
that one should not commit adultery, and you commit adultery. You judge
another in a certain matter and condemn yourselves in that same matter,
because you do the very same thing that you judged in another.” It is
as if he were say ing, “Outwardly you live quite properly in the works
of the law and judge those who do not live the same way; you know how to
teach everybody. You see the speck in another's eye but do not notice
the beam in your own.” Outwardly you keep the law with works out of
fear of punishment or love of gain. Likewise you do everything without
free desire and love of the law; you act out of aversion and force.
You'd rather act otherwise if the law didn't exist. It follows, then,
that you, in the depths of your heart, are an enemy of the law. What do
you mean, therefore, by teaching another not to steal, when you, in the
depths of your heart, are a thief and would be one outwardly too, if you
dared. (Of course, outward work doesn't last long with such hypocrites.)
So then, you teach others but not yourself; you don't even know what you
are teaching. You've never understood the law rightly. Furthermore, the
law increases sin, as St. Paul says in chapter 5. That is because a
person becomes more and more an enemy of the law the more it demands of
him what he can't possibly do.
In
chapter 7, St. Paul says, “The law is spiritual.” What does that
mean? If the law were physical, then it could be satisfied by works, but
since it is spiritual, no one can satisfy it unless everything he does
springs from the depths of the heart. But no one can give such a heart
except the Spirit of God, who makes the person be like the law, so that
he actually conceives a heartfelt longing for the law and henceforward
does everything, not through fear or coercion, but from a free heart.
Such a law is spiritual since it can only be loved and fulfilled by such
a heart and such a spirit. If the Spirit is not in the heart, then there
remain sin, aversion and enmity against the law, which in itself is
good, just and holy. You must get used to the idea that it is one thing
to do the works of the law and quite another to fulfill it. The works of
the law are every thing that a person does or can do of his own free
will and by his own powers to obey the law. But because in doing such
works the heart abhors the law and yet is forced to obey it, the works
are a total loss and are completely useless. That is what St. Paul means
in chapter 3 when he says, “No human being is justified before God
through the works of the law.” From this you can see that the
schoolmasters [i.e., the scholastic theologians] and sophists are
seducers when they teach that you can prepare yourself for grace by
means of works. How can anybody prepare himself for good by means of
works if he does no good work except with aversion and constraint in his
heart? How can such a work please God, if it proceeds from an averse and
unwilling heart?
But
to fulfill the law means to do its work eagerly, lovingly and freely,
without the constraint of the law; it means to live well and in a manner
pleasing to God, as though there were no law or punishment. It is the
Holy Spirit, however, who puts such eagerness of unconstained love into
the heart, as Paul says in chapter 5. But the Spirit is given only in,
with, and through faith in Jesus Christ, as Paul says in his
introduction. So, too, faith comes only through the word of God, the
Gospel, that preaches Christ: how he is both Son of God and man, how he
died and rose for our sake. Paul says all this in chapters 3, 4 and 10.
That is why faith alone makes someone just and fulfills the law; faith
it is that brings the Holy Spirit through the merits of Christ. The
Spirit, in turn, renders the heart glad and free, as the law demands.
Then good works proceed from faith itself. That is what Paul means in
chapter 3 when, after he has thrown out the works of the law, he sounds
as though the wants to abolish the law by faith. No, he says, we uphold
the law through faith, i.e. we fulfill it through faith.
“Sin”
in the Scriptures means not only external works of the body but also all
those movements within us which bestir themselves and move us to do the
external works, namely, the depth of the heart with all its powers.
Therefore the word “do” should refer to a person's completely
falling into sin. No external work of sin happens, after all, unless a
person commit himself to it completely, body and soul. In particular,
the Scriptures see into the heart, to the root and main source of al
sin: unbelief in the depth of the heart. Thus, even as faith alone makes
just and brings the Spirit and the desire to do good external works, so
it is only unbelief which sins and exalts the flesh and brings desire to
do evil external works. That's what happened to Adam and Eve in Paradise
(cf. Genesis 3). That is why only unbelief is called sin by Christ, as
he says in John, chapter 16, “The Spirit will punish the world because
of sin, because it does not believe in me.” Furthermore, before good
or bad works happen, which are the good or bad fruits of the heart,
there has to be present in the heart either faith or unbelief, the root,
sap and chief power of all sin. That is why, in the Scriptures, unbelief
is called the head of the serpent and of the ancient dragon which the
offspring of the woman, i.e. Christ, must crush, as was promised to Adam
(cf. Genesis 3). “Grace” and “gift” differ in that grace
actually denotes God's kindness or favor which he has toward us and by
which he is disposed to pour Christ and the Spirit with his gifts into
us, as becomes clear from chapter 5, where Paul says, “Grace and gift
are in Christ, etc.” The gifts and the Spirit increase daily in us,
yet they are not complete, since evil desires and sins remain in us
which war against the Spirit, as Paul says in chapter 7, and in
Galatians, chapter 5. And Genesis, chapter 3, proclaims the enmity
between the offspring of the woman and that of the serpent. But grace
does do this much: that we are accounted completely just before God.
God's grace is not divided into bits and pieces, as are the gifts, but
grace takes us up completely into God's favor for the sake of Christ,
our intercessor and mediator, so that the gifts may begin their work in
us. In this way, then, you should understand chapter 7, where St. Paul
portrays himself as still a sinner, while in chapter 8 he says that,
because of the incomplete gifts and because of the Spirit, there is
nothing damnable in those who are in Christ. Because our flesh has not
been killed, we are still sinners, but because we believe in Christ and
have the beginnings of the Spirit, God so shows us his favor and mercy,
that he neither notices nor judges such sins. Rather he deals with us
according to our belief in Christ until sin is killed.
Faith
is not that human illusion and dream that some people think it is. When
they hear and talk a lot about faith and yet see that no moral
improvement and no good works result from it, they fall into error and
say, “Faith is not enough. You must do works if you want to be
virtuous and get to heaven.” The result is that, when they hear the
Gospel, they stumble and make for themselves with their own powers a
concept in their hearts which says, “I believe.” This concept they
hold to be true faith. But since it is a human fabrication and thought
and not an experience of the heart, it accomplishes nothing, and there
follows no improvement.
Faith
is a work of God in us, which changes us and brings us to birth anew
from God (cf. John 1). It kills the old Adam, makes us completely
different people in heart, mind, senses, and all our powers, and brings
the Holy Spirit with it. What a living, creative, active powerful thing
is faith! It is impossible that faith ever stop doing good. Faith
doesn't ask whether good works are to be done, but, before it is asked,
it has done them. It is always active. Whoever doesn't do such works is
without faith; he gropes and searches about him for faith and good works
but doesn't know what faith or good works are. Even so, he chatters on
with a great many words about faith and good works.
Faith
is a living, unshakeable confidence in God's grace; it is so certain,
that someone would die a thousand times for it. This kind of trust in
and knowledge of God's grace makes a person joyful, confident, and happy
with regard to God and all creatures. This is what the Holy Spirit does
by faith. Through faith, a person will do good to everyone without
coercion, willingly and happily; he will serve everyone, suffer
everything for the love and praise of God, who has shown him such grace.
It is as impossible to separate works from faith as burning and shining
from fire. Therefore be on guard against your own false ideas and
against the chatterers who think they are clever enough to make
judgments about faith and good works but who are in reality the biggest
fools. Ask God to work faith in you; otherwise you will remain eternally
without faith, no matter what you try to do or fabricate.
Now
“justice” is just such a faith. It is called God's justice or that
justice which is valid in God's sight, because it is God who gives it
and reckons it as justice for the sake of Christ our Mediator. It
influences a person to give to everyone what he owes him. Through faith
a person becomes sinless and eager for God's commands. Thus he gives God
the honor due him and pays him what he owes him. He serves people
willingly with the means available to him. In this way he pays everyone
his due. Neither nature nor free will nor our own powers can bring
about such a justice, for even as no one can give himself faith, so too
he cannot remove unbelief. How can he then take away even the smallest
sin? Therefore everything which takes place outside faith or in unbelief
is lie, hypocrisy and sin (Romans 14), no matter how smoothly it may
seem to go. You must not understand flesh here as denoting only
unchastity or spirit as denoting only the inner heart. Here St. Paul
calls flesh (as does Christ in John 3) everything born of flesh, i.e.
the whole human being with body and soul, reason and senses, since
everything in him tends toward the flesh. That is why you should know
enough to call that per son “fleshly” who, without grace,
fabricates, teaches and chatters about high spiritual matters. You can
learn the same thing from Galatians, chapter 5, where St. Paul calls
heresy and hatred works of the flesh. And in Romans, chapter 8, he says
that, through the flesh, the law is weakened. He says this, not of unchastity,
but of all sins, most of all of unbelief, which is the most spiritual
of vices.
On
the other hand, you should know enough to call that person
“spiritual” who is occupied with the most outward of works as was
Christ, when he washed the feet of the disciples, and Peter, when he
steered his boat and fished. So then, a person is “flesh” who,
inwardly and outwardly, lives only to do those things which are of use
to the flesh and to temporal existence. A person is “spirit” who,
inwardly and outwardly, lives only to do those things which are of use
to the spirit and to the life to come.
Unless
you understand these words in this way, you will never understand either
this letter of St. Paul or any book of the Scriptures. Be on guard, therefore
against any teacher who uses these words differently, no matter who he
be, whether Jerome, Augustine, Ambrose, Origen or anyone else as great
as or greater than they. Now let us turn to the letter itself. The first
duty of a preacher of the Gospel is, through his revealing of the law
and of sin, to rebuke and to turn into sin everything in life that does
not have the Spirit and faith in Christ as its base. [Here and elsewhere
in Luther's preface, as indeed in Romans itself, it is not clear whether
“spirit” has the meaning “Holy Spirit” or “spiritual
person,” as Luther has previously defined it.] Thereby he will lead
people to a recognition of their miserable condition, and thus they will
become humble and yearn for help.
This
is what St Paul does. He begins in chapter 1 by rebuking the gross sins
and unbelief which are in plain view, as were (and still are) the sins
of the pagans, who live without God's grace. He says that, through the
Gospel, God is revealing his wrath from heaven upon all mankind because
of the godless and unjust lives they live. For, although they know and
recognize day by day that there is a God, yet human nature in itself,
without grace, is so evil that it neither thanks not honors God. This
nature blinds itself and continually falls into wickedness, even going
so far as to commit idolatry and other horrible sins and vices. It is
unashamed of itself and leaves such things unpunished in others. In
chapter 2, St. Paul extends his rebuke to those who appear outwardly
pious or who sin secretly. Such were the Jews, and such are all
hypocrites still, who live virtuous lives but without eagerness and
love; in their heart they are enemies of God's law and like to judge
other people.
That's
the way with hypocrites: they think that they are pure but are actually
full of greed, hate, pride and all sorts of filth (cf. Matthew 23).
These are they who despise God's goodness and, by their hardness of
heart, heap wrath upon themselves. Thus Paul explains the law rightly
when he lets no one remain without sin but proclaims the wrath of God to
all who want to live virtuously by nature or by free will. He makes them
out to be no better than public sinners; he says they are hard of heart
and unrepentant. In chapter 3, Paul lumps both secret and public sinners
together: the one, he says, is like the other; all are sinners in the
sight of God. Besides, the Jews had God's word, even though many did not
believe in it. But still God's truth and faith in him are not thereby
rendered use less. St. Paul introduces, as an aside, the saying from
Psalm 51, that God remains true to his words. Then he returns to his
topic and proves from Scripture that they are all sinners and that no
one becomes just through the works of the law but that God gave the law
only so that sin might be perceived. Next St. Paul teaches the right way
to be virtuous and to be saved; he says that they are all sinners,
unable to glory in God. They must, however, be justified through faith
in Christ, who has merited this for us by his blood and has become for
us a mercy seat [cf. Exodus 25:17, Leviticus 16:14 ff, and John 2:2] in
the presence of God, who forgives us all our previous sins. In so doing,
God proves that it is his justice alone, which he gives through faith,
that helps us, the justice which was at the appointed time revealed
through the Gospel and, previous to that, was witnessed to by the Law
and the Prophets. Therefore the law 6 is set up by faith, but the works
of the law, along with the glory taken in them, are knocked down by
faith. [As with the term “spirit,” the word “law” seems to have
for Luther, and for St. Paul, two meanings. Sometimes it means
“regulation about what must be done or not done,” as in the third
paragraph of this preface; sometimes it means “the Torah,” as in the
previous sentence. And sometimes it seems to have both meanings, as in
what follows.] In chapters 1 to 3, St. Paul has revealed sin for what it
is and has taught the way of faith which leads to justice. Now in
chapter 4 he deals with some objections and criticisms. He takes up
first the one that people raise who, on hearing that faith make just
without works, say, “What? Shouldn't we do any good works?” Here St.
Paul holds up Abraham as an example. He says, “What did Abraham
accomplish with his good works? Were they all good for nothing and
useless?” He concludes that Abraham was made righteous apart from all
his works by faith alone. Even before the “work” of his
circumcision, Scripture praises him as being just on account of faith
alone (cf. Genesis 15). Now if the work of his circumcision did nothing
to make him just, a work that God had commanded him to do and hence a
work of obedience, then surely no other good work can do anything to
make a person just. Even as Abraham's circumcision was an outward sign
with which he proved his justice based on faith, so too all good works
are only outward signs which flow from faith and are the fruits of
faith; they prove that the person is already inwardly just in the sight
of God.
St.
Paul verifies his teaching on faith in chapter 3 with a powerful example
from Scripture. He calls as witness David, who says in Psalm 32 that a
person becomes just without works but doesn't remain with out works once
he has become just. Then Paul extends this example and applies it
against all other works of the law. He concludes that the Jews cannot be
Abraham's heirs just because of their blood relationship to him and
still less because of the works of the law. Rather, they have to inherit
Abrahams's faith if they want to be his real heirs, since it was prior
to the Law of Moses and the law of circumcision that Abraham became just
through faith and was called a father of all believers. St. Paul adds
that the law brings about more wrath than grace, because no one obeys it
with love and eagerness. More disgrace than grace come from the works of
the law. Therefore faith alone can obtain the grace promised to Abraham.
Examples like these are written for our sake, that we also should have
faith. In chapter 5, St. Paul comes to the fruits and works of faith,
namely: joy, peace, love for God and for all people; in addition:
assurance, steadfastness, confidence, courage, and hope in sorrow and
suffering. All of these follow where faith is genuine, because of the
overflowing good will that God has shown in Christ: he had him die for
us before we could ask him for it, yes, even while we were still his
enemies. Thus we have established that faith, without any good works,
makes just. It does not follow from that, however, that we should not do
good works; rather it means that morally upright works do not remain
lacking. About such works the “works-holy” people know nothing; they
invent for themselves their own works in which are neither peace nor joy
nor assurance nor love nor hope nor steadfastness nor any kind of
genuine Christian works or faith. Next St. Paul makes a digression, a
pleasant little side-trip, and relates where both sin and justice, death
and life come from. He opposes these two: Adam and Christ. What he wants
to say is that Christ, a second Adam, had to come in order to make us
heirs of his justice through a new spiritual birth in faith, just as the
old Adam made us heirs of sin through the old fleshy birth.
St.
Paul proves, by this reasoning, that a person cannot help himself by his
works to get from sin to justice any more than he can prevent his own
physical birth. St. Paul also proves that the divine law, which should
have been well-suited, if anything was, for helping people to obtain
justice, not only was no help at all when it did come, but it even
increased sin. Evil human nature, consequently, becomes more hostile to
it; the more the law forbids it to indulge its own desires, the more it
wants to. Thus the law makes Christ all the more necessary and demands
more grace to help human nature.
In
chapter 6, St. Paul takes up the special work of faith, the struggle
which the spirit wages against the flesh to kill off those sins and
desires that remain after a person has been made just. He teaches us
that faith doesn't so free us from sin that we can be idle, lazy and
self-assured, as though there were no more sin in us. Sin “is”
there, but, because of faith that struggles against it, God does not
reckon sin as deserving damnation. Therefore we have in our own selves a
lifetime of work cut out for us; we have to tame our body, kill its
lusts, force its members to obey the spirit and not the lusts. We must
do this so that we may conform to the death and resurrection of Christ
and complete our Baptism, which signifies a death to sin and a new life
of grace. Our aim is to be completely clean from sin and then to rise
bodily with Christ and live forever St. Paul says that we can accomplish
all this because we are in grace and not in the law. He explains that to
be “outside the law” is not the same as having no law and being able
to do what you please. No, being “under the law” means living
without grace, surrounded by the works of the law. Then surely sin
reigns by means of the law, since no one is naturally well-disposed
toward the law. That very condition, however, is the greatest sin. But
grace makes the law lovable to us, so there is then no sin any more, and
the law is no longer against us but one with us.
This
is true freedom from sin and from the law; St. Paul writes about this
for the rest of the chapter. He says it is a freedom only to do good
with eagerness and to live a good life without the coercion of the law.
This freedom is, therefore, a spiritual freedom which does not suspend
the law but which supplies what the law demands, namely eagerness and
love. These silence the law so that it has no further cause to drive
people on and make demands of them. It's as though you owed something to
a moneylender and couldn't pay him. You could be rid of him in one of
two ways: either he would take nothing from you and would tear up his
account book, or a pious man would pay for you and give you what you
needed to satisfy your debt. That's exactly how Christ freed us from the
law. Therefore our freedom is not a wild, fleshy freedom that has no
obligation to do anything. On the contrary, it is a freedom that does a
great deal, indeed everything, yet is free of the law's demands and
debts. In chapter 7, St. Paul confirms the foregoing by an analogy drawn
from married life. When a man dies, the wife is free; the one is free
and clear of the other. It is not the case that the woman may not or
should not marry another man; rather she is now for the first time free
to marry someone else. She could not do this before she was free of her
first husband. In the same way, our conscience is bound to the law so
long as our condition is that of the sinful old man. But when the old
man is killed by the spirit, then the conscience is free, and conscience
and law are quit of each other. Not that conscience should now do
nothing; rather, it should now for the first time truly cling to its
second husband, Christ, and bring forth the fruit of life.
Next
St. Paul sketches further the nature of sin and the law. It is the law
that makes sin really active and powerful, because the old man gets more
and more hostile to the law since he can't pay the debt demanded by the
law. Sin is his very nature; of himself he can't do otherwise. And so
the law is his death and torture. Now the law is not itself evil; it is
our evil nature that cannot tolerate that the good law should demand
good from it. It's like the case of a sick person, who cannot tolerate
that you demand that he run and jump around and do other things that a
healthy person does.
St.
Paul concludes here that, if we understand the law properly and
comprehend it in the best possible way, then we will see that its sole
function is to remind us of our sins, to kill us by our sins, and to
make us deserving of eternal wrath. Conscience learns and experiences
all this in detail when it comes face to face with the law. It follows,
then, that we must have something else, over and above the law, which
can make a person virtuous and cause him to be saved. Those, however,
who do not understand the law rightly are blind; they go their way
boldly and think they are satisfying the law with works. They don't know
how much the law demands, namely, a free, willing, eager heart. That is
the reason that they don't see Moses rightly before their eyes. [In both
Jewish and Christian teaching, Moses was commonly held to be the author
of the Pentateuch, the first five books of the bible. Cf. the involved
imagery of Moses' face and the veil over it in 2 Corinthians 3:7-18.]
For them he is covered and concealed by the veil. Then St. Paul shows
how spirit and flesh struggle with each other in one person. He gives
himself as an example, so that we may learn how to kill sin in
ourselves. He gives both spirit and flesh the name “law,” so that,
just as it is in the nature of divine law to drive a person on and make
demands of him, so too the flesh drives and demands and rages against
the spirit and wants to have its own way. Likewise the spirit drives and
demands against the flesh and wants to have its own way. This feud lasts
in us for as long as we live, in one person more, in another less,
depending on whether spirit or flesh is stronger. Yet the whole human
being is both: spirit and flesh. The human being fights with himself
until he becomes completely spiritual.
In
chapter 8, St. Paul comforts fighters such as these and tells them that
this flesh will not bring them condemnation. He goes on to show what the
nature of flesh and spirit are. Spirit, he says, comes from Christ, who
has given us his Holy Spirit; the Holy Spirit makes us spiritual and
restrains the flesh. The Holy Spirit assures us that we are God's
children no matter how furiously sin may rage within us, so long as we
follow the Spirit and struggle against sin in order to kill it. Because
nothing is so effective in deadening the flesh as the cross and
suffering, Paul comforts us in our suffering. He says that the Spirit,
[cf. previous note about the meaning of “spirit.”] love and all
creatures will stand by us; the Spirit in us groans and all creatures
long with us that we be freed from the flesh and from sin. Thus we see
that these three chapters, 6, 7 and 8, all deal with the one work of
faith, which is to kill the old Adam and to constrain the flesh. In
chapters 9, 10 and 11, St. Paul teaches us about the eternal providence
of God. It is the original source which determines who would believe and
who wouldn't, who can be set free from sin and who cannot. Such matters
have been taken out of our hands and are put into God's hands so that we
might become virtuous. It is absolutely necessary that it be so, for we
are so weak and unsure of ourselves that, if it depended on us, no human
being would be saved. The devil would overpower all of us. But God is
steadfast; his providence will not fail, and no one can prevent its
realization. Therefore we have hope against sin. But here we must shut
the mouths of those sacrilegious and arrogant spirits who, mere
beginners that they are, bring their reason to bear on this matter and
commence, from their exalted position, to probe the abyss of divine
providence and uselessly trouble themselves about whether they are
predestined or not. These people must surely plunge to their ruin, since
they will either despair or abandon them selves to a life of chance.
You, however, follow the reasoning of this letter in the order in which
it is presented. Fix your attention first of all on Christ and the
Gospel, so that you may recognize your sin and his grace. Then struggle
against sin, as chapters 1-8 have taught you to. Finally, when you have
come, in chapter 8, under the shadow of the cross and suffering, they
will teach you, in chapters 9-11, about providence and what a comfort it
is. [The context here and in St. Paul's letter makes it clear that this
is the cross and passion, not only of Christ, but of each Christian.]
Apart from suffering, the cross and the pangs of death, you cannot come
to grips with providence without harm to yourself and secret anger
against God. The old Adam must be quite dead before you can endure this
matter and drink this strong wine. Therefore make sure you don't drink
wine while you are still a babe at the breast. There is a proper
measure, time and age for understanding every doctrine.
In
chapter 12, St. Paul teaches the true liturgy and makes all Christians
priests, so that they may offer, not money or cattle, as priests do in
the Law, but their own bodies, by putting their desires to death. Next
he describes the outward conduct of Christians whose lives are governed
by the Spirit; he tells how they teach, preach, rule, serve, give,
suffer, love, live and act toward friend, foe and everyone. These are
the works that a Christian does, for, as I have said, faith is not idle.
In chapter 13, St. Paul teaches that one should honor and obey the
secular authorities. He includes this, not because it makes people
virtuous in the sight of God, but because it does insure that the
virtuous have outward peace and protection and that the wicked cannot do
evil without fear and in undisturbed peace. Therefore it is the duty of
virtuous people to honor secular authority, even though they do not,
strictly speaking, need it. Finally, St. Paul sums up everything in love
and gathers it all into the example of Christ: what he has done for us,
we must also do and follow after him.
In
chapter 14, St. Paul teaches that one should carefully guide those with
weak conscience and spare them. One shouldn't use Christian freedom to
harm but rather to help the weak. Where that isn't done, there follow
dissention and despising of the Gospel, on which every thing else
depends. It is better to give way a little to the weak in faith until
they become stronger than to have the teaching of the Gospel perish
completely. This work is a particularly necessary work of love
especially now when people, by eating meat and by other freedoms, are
brashly, boldly and unnecessarily shaking weak consciences which have
not yet come to know the truth.
In
chapter 15, St. Paul cites Christ as an example to show that we must
also have patience with the weak, even those who fail by sinning
publicly or by their disgusting morals. We must not cast them aside but
must bear with them until they become better. That is the way Christ
treated us and still treats us every day; he puts up with our vices, our
wicked morals and all our imperfection, and he helps us ceaselessly.
Finally Paul prays for the Christians at Rome; he praises them and
commends them to God. He points out his own office and the message that
he preaches. He makes an unobtrusive plea for a contribution for the
poor in Jerusalem. Unalloyed love is the basis of all he says and does.
The
last chapter consists of greetings. But Paul also includes a salutary
warning against human doctrines which are preached alongside the Gospel
and which do a great deal of harm. It's as though he had clearly seen
that out of Rome and through the Romans would come the deceitful,
harmful Canons and Decretals along with the entire brood and swarm of
human laws and commands that is now drowning the whole world and has
blotted out this letter and the whole of the Scriptures, along with the
Spirit and faith. Nothing remains but the idol Belly, and St. Paul
depicts those people here as its servants. God deliver us from them.
Amen.
We
find in this letter, then, the richest possible teaching about what a
Christian should know: the meaning of law, Gospel, sin, punishment,
grace, faith, justice, Christ, God, good works, love, hope and the
cross. We learn how we are to act toward everyone, toward the virtuous
and sinful, toward the strong and the weak, friend and foe, and toward
our selves. Paul bases everything firmly on Scripture and proves his
points with examples from his own experience and from the Prophets, so
that nothing more could be desired. Therefore it seems that St. Paul, in
writing this letter, wanted to compose a summary of the whole of
Christian and evangelical teaching which would also be an introduction
to the whole Old Testament. Without doubt, whoever takes this letter to
heart possesses the light and power of the Old Testament. Therefore each
and every Christian should make this letter the habitual and constant
object of his study. God grant us his grace to do so. Amen
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