Revival Time

by Mark C. Mattes, Grand View College, Des Moines, Iowa

With two "great awakenings" and numerous outbursts of religious renewal on smaller scales, Americans are addicted to revivals.  There is no better way to fix America's immorality than through a revival.  Unfortunately, of late, no matter how hard one tries to manipulate a revival, they don't just seem to take.  Over the past four decades the American population has doubled, but church commitment has plateaued, even declined.  Yet, the illusion that revival can cure our ills remains.

Even Lutherans want a revival.  Lutherans are either "Ablaze" or "Book of Faith" people.  Surely these movements can light a flame that will shore up churches in decline.  Both ventures come across like attempts to engineer revivals  Thereby, they are true to Charles Finney, the revivalist par excellent, for whom revival was "not a miracle."  Revival is not a miracle because, if you establish the proper conditions, it can be manipulated.

No doubt revival has been successfully manipulated in various congregations.  If manipulating through guilt-"turn or burn (in hell!)"-doesn't seem to coax as it once did, the flattery of enhanced self-esteem or secure parenting does.  Americans don't believe that fellow Americans will end up in hell.  If they are to accept Jesus as their Lord and Savior, it can only be because he will enhance their self-esteem, social prestige, or parenting skills.  Why scare people with hell when you can supplement their self-help?  Contemporary revival congregations have done away with the mourner's bench and the sawdust trail and have substituted slick multi-media presentations in upscale theatre style venues, complete with seats accommodating drinks, and gimmicks such as driving motorcycles into the "sanctuary."  Gone are revival song books.  Praise ditties, sung by the "praise band," are projected onto the ubiquitous screen. 

The long, hard struggle for "liturgical worship" against the inroads of Pietism, Rationalism, and Revivalism is brought to naught by the pragmatic assessment of manipulative persuasion.  A sermon that could have been scripted by Dr. Phil or Oprah Winfrey touches "felt needs" more than "traditional worship" could ever do.

It is not as if revival is totally foreign to North American Lutheranism.  Certainly the heritage of the General Synod was open to the mourner's bench and it altered the sacramental theology of the Augsburg Confession in this light.  The heirs of Hans Nielsen Hauge fostered a "Lutheran Evangelistic Movement" which at one time had some religious influence in the upper Midwest.  In my first parish, which had been established by the Haugeaner, I was told the week before "Baptism of Jesus Sunday" by a devout laywoman, "pastor, you aren't going to preach on baptism are you?  Everyone in this congregation is baptized but most are not saved!"  (Of course, to this woman's consternation I preached on baptism!)  Even The American Lutheran Church (1960), for almost a decade after its origin, officially recognized the "Office of Evangelist," institutionalizing this very Hauge spirit, until inroads from the Charismatic Movement brought it into disrepute.

What are the fruits of revivalism?  The European context is markedly different than that of the American, given that it is far more secularistic.  Secularism is no less religious than traditional Christianity, even though it fails to admit this.  Secularism bills itself as a "scientific approach" to life.  However, its ideal-seek pleasure in moderation, and you need not fear judgment after death since we are wholly composed of atoms which disperse upon death-is nothing other than Epicureanism revived.  In this outlook, truly free, autonomous men and women are free from the oppressive ideologies and hierarchies of the church.  Ironically, revivalistic pietism perhaps fed such secularism.  Revivalism always undermined the institutional church as dead; the institutional church is composed of unconverted preachers, repetitious liturgy, and cold sacraments.  God is really present at the prayer meeting, not the church, for the followers of Spener, Hauge, Beck, and Rosenius.  Thereby, the church was undermined by those who purported to be her friends.

In a similar way, revivalistic congregations amongst the ELCA or the LCMS seldom take in the unchurched, as they so often claim.  They usually take in the disgruntled from other congregations.  Revival almost never reaches the unchurched.  It isn't designed to do that.  It is always designed, from its perspective, to turn a dead church around.  That it historically takes on a national presence in America is because even though Americans don't have an official state church, religion has been so deeply one with culture, due to the Reformed heritage of this country.

Luther sought to reform a corrupt church.  His reform centered on the gospel of Jesus Christ as sheer promise in contrast to law as accusation.  It was grounded in the objective word of truth, in contrast to both the Schwaermer of Rome (the Pope as the interpreter of scripture) or various "spiritualists" who wanted to ground human confidence in spiritual exercises.  He knew that Adam and Eve were the original "enthusiasts" and that part of their original sin as bound up in such god-within-ism.  Revivalism tries to manipulate the will by making it want to will.  As such, it shows that we only ever, as sinners, are bound to our wills and not to God.  We are captivated to ourselves.  Our piety is part of the problem: it keeps us in charge.  And our conscience at its best will have nothing to do this lie.  Revivalistic pep rallies toy with God.  And the God of Jacob will have nothing to do with us enthusiasts other than to engage us in a life or death struggle.  In many senses, spirituality is a disease-God is not here to help me cope but to bring me to my demise, my end.  Only in that way can a new person be reborn in faith, as trusting in the word of scripture.

Blazing or Bible-thumping denominational bandages will not be able to cure our membership slumps.  C. F. W. Walther knew that the elect were in God's hands and that as God is God, the elect would be saved.  Since that is the case, the most important part of our ministry is out of our hands.  It is God's church not ours.  It is God's elect not ours.  And, we can be quite free in letting God run his church as he pleases.  Can we really trust the word that has been entrusted to us?

No amount of manipulation of others' consciences will save the church, and indeed, will do the church in.  True enough, we are to be urgent in season and out of season.  But our urgency is not based on a neurotic need to inflate membership roles but to share, as one beggar to another, where bread is to be found.         

A Sermon on the Second Commandment

by Peter Brunner, delivered on July 22, 1945, the 8th Sunday after Trinity, translated by Jason Lane

You shall not take the name of the Lord, your God, in vain;
for the Lord will not let those who misuse His name go unpunished.

 

DEAR CONGREGATION!

 

The second commandment is like a barricade around the holy majesty of God's Name. When we together consider what we have in the name of our God, then we are confronted with a great, deep mystery, before which we stand awestruck.

 

Just how mysterious is evident in the fact that we people call the things in our surroundings, the creatures in our environment, but especially those people around us by name. "When the Lord God had made from the earth all kinds of beasts of the field and all sorts of birds under the heavens, he brought them to the man to see what he would name them. Whatever the man should call every type of animal, so they shall be called. And the man gave to every kind of livestock and every bird under heaven and to each kind of beast of the field its name." Perhaps man's language is essentially nothing other than such naming. With such naming man takes, so to speak, ownership of his environment. He spiritually makes it his own, subdues it and exercises authority over it.

 

Let's say we're wandering through a totally foreign land. We see mountains and valleys, forests and streams, villages and cities, but we don't know their names, we don't know where we are. How gloomy the land, how weird the foreigners seem. Then we meet a local. He tells us the mountain over there is called so and so and the name of that valley is this and the houses there belong to this and that village, and sure enough the whole place becomes more familiar. And let's say we even had a map with us, then we could find our way around based on the names we already know on the map. Through our knowledge of the names we suddenly become, so to say, lords of the land, whereas before we seemed like a helpless, lost and wandering little dot.

 

Let's say a scientist is working on his research and runs into an incomprehensible phenomenon. He tries everything conceivable to figure out the puzzling event. Finally he made a discovery, he's got the formula, he found the physical or chemical formula to explain the event that until that point was unexplainable, to classify it among that which is already known and to make the event usable for this or that end of humanity. The formula with which he discovered the previously unknown gives him now the lordship over that event. Are not all names of things and creatures such formulas by which the unknown is made known, the unconquerable conquered, the unruly ruled?

 

You go through the streets of the big city. Tons of people flood passed you. To you they're foreign - you stand as a foreigner among foreigners. Then, all of a sudden, a familiar face appears. You call him by name. He turns. You greet each other and a piece of solidarity, real human solidarity in the middle of the comfortless solitude of the big city masses. A young man moves to a foreign country. He comes in a city where he's completely unknown. But he has letter of commendation or maybe just a greeting from his father, grandfather or teacher with him. With this name he knocks on strange doors, and behold, his father's or grandfather's or his teacher's name opens the strange door in a strange land, smoothes his paths, removes obstruction out of the way, and makes a home for him in this strange land. What a peculiar and marvelous thing a name is! A name is a mysterious, powerful thing. With a name there's no smoke and mirrors. He who can call the unknown by its name unlocks the unknown, the foreign. He who calls the name, the formula that he has at his command, exercises an authority, which may seem to us at times to be downright eerie.

 

These examples are to help us understand what the story is with the holy name of the Lord our God. What a miracle that we have the name of our God among us! However, man did not invent God's name, nor did he determine it out of his own imagination as he invented and determined the names of things and animals. On our own we can't even figure out or determine the names of the people around us.  With all your might, you can't in and of yourself determine what to call your neighbor. Somebody's got to tell you that. We tell each other our names when we want to introduce ourselves or have fellowship with one another. Man rules over things and animals, and that's why he determines their names by his own authority and of himself. But when it comes to his fellow man, this lordship of man reaches its boundary. We have no right to lord over our neighbor. Instead, we're allowed to enter into personal fellowship with him in that we call each other by name. If I'm allowed to call another person by his or her name, that is, when it comes right down to it, always a permission that the other person had previously given me. That God has let us know His name - which is to be distinguished from what happens with us - is a completely one-sided act of God alone. We don't need to tell God our name. He who calls all creatures by name, He who with His almighty Word called into existence everything that is and constantly calls into existence things new, He who Himself calls the endless worlds of the starry skies by name, "that not one of them is missing."[1] Truly, He's known us little people from our mother's womb on and sees right through us every second, into our heart and guts. Before Him everything is unveiled as though it were the brightest day ever. But He lives in the dark, where nobody can approach. But out of this darkness flashes forth the light's ray of the holy name of God.          

 

First God only makes known mysterious suggestions of His name, like when Jacob wrestled with God on the banks of the Jabbok. There he was called by a new name: "Israel". But as for Jacob's question to the man he wrestled: "What's your name?" - that remains unanswered. When Moses was called and he asked about the name of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, the mysterious name of God of the old covenant was revealed to him. This name is called Jehovah, or we say it more precisely: Yahweh. But for Moses God's Old Testament name is more like a disguise than a revelation of God's name. For what God Himself means by the name Yahweh is stated in these words: "I am (ehye), who I am (ehye), that is My name." That means: "From now on, of every name that could be named in this and the world to come, I am who I am."  

 

From that we then anticipate the unimaginable magnitude that comes down on us in the incarnation of God's eternal Son in Jesus Christ and of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit. In Christ and in His Church the name of God is fully disclosed. Now Christ's word takes effect: "Father, I have revealed your name to men...I have made known Your name to them and I will make it known." Now, as the apostle said in today's epistle, through the Holy Spirit there is the call on the tip of our tough, "Abba, dear Father". The name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit has been given to us as a gift in Jesus Christ through the Holy Spirit. The Triune God Himself has made His inner life available to us, to the members of the Church of Jesus Christ, by His holy name. With unimaginable kindness He has let down His lofty majesty to us men by this revelation of His name. With this name of His He's put the key in our hands, so that we might again and again unlock for ourselves His world, His heavenly treasury, even His heart. God has given us permission to call on Him, the Holy One. And even though He lives in unapproachable light and lives in the darkness of concealed majesty, He gives us permission to call on Him as dear children call on their dear Father. With this gift of His name He has given us the power to be His children, and as His sons and daughters to stand before Him in His otherwise unapproachable sanctuary.

 

Has not God with the revelation of His name put Himself, so to speak, in our hands? Has not God with His name in an unthinkably deep descent granted us power [Macht], the power that provides us with a passageway to Him, the power with which we can call for help from Him in every need, and the power with which we are allowed to gather with all the angels and archangels before His throne praising Him in exaltation in all the world? O, that we would rightly want to know this powerful gift, to know that with His name God has laid Himself in our laps! O, that we would actually want to use this huge gift of God's holy name, this name so full of power! Really, this name with which we call on the Triune God is not empty or powerless. Some mighty names of men, even the most powerful name on earth can dissolve in empty clatter and vanishing smoke. But the holy name of our God remains in force now and forever.

 

He who has this name on his lips must also know what it does! Woe to him who misuses this name! Woe to him who misuses the descent of God! Woe to him who misuses the permission granted us with His name! The power that dwells in this name will become crashing lightning and scorching fire against anyone who misuses this name.

 

It's no surprise that people fall into the temptation to misuse God's name. We certainly saw how the use of this name bestows power. We call a process in nature by its name and with its formula and thereby capture it for our use. We call a creature by its name and thereby rope it in, as it were, and make it serve our purpose. We've already fallen into the temptation to use, that is, to misuse, a man's name - and with the name the man himself - as a means to an end for our power and lordship. If, however, the man now goes on to use the powerful name of God and the powerful permission that is bestowed with this name for his own gain, in order to set himself over God and make God subservient to his own purposes, what sacrilege is that, what horrifying misuse!

 

One such horrifying sacrilege is, for example, cursing. When man curses he also uses the power of God's name to consign his enemy to temporal and eternal perdition. A curse is not an empty word. A curse is a word laden with power. A curse is like a butcher knife being thrown at an adversary. God will not let him go unpunished, who hurls His holy name like a butcher knife at his fellow man for his own personal and selfish ends. God will guide the knife back on the blasphemer who threw it, and strike him.

 

Another misuse of God's holy name is the flippant oath, especially perjury. The invocation of God's name with an oath has the power to bring the truth to light with a definitive clarity and pointedness, as will be achieved only in the final judgment. Woe to him who, rather than using this last resort [God's name] to bring the truth to light, uses it as a cheap means for propaganda to secure his own power or as a cheap stopgap to get what he wants. Woe to him who, with the help of such an invocation of God's name under oath, wants to make truth out of lies, light out of dark, good out of evil. He who Himself is the originator of truth, He who Himself is the originator of light, He will reap vengeance terribly upon such wicked perversion that is conjured up with the aid of His holy name.

 

With that we're approaching that darkest and most horrible misuse of God's name. A misuse that is generally done in secret and strikes fear in people's hearts, because it dreads the light of day. I'm talking about enchantment, magic, the so-called black arts [Aberglaube]. Here man actually uses God's holy name like a scientist uses his formula, to seize with this formula power over God Himself. The descent of God, in which God gave to man His powerful and power-effective Name [machtvollen und machtwirkenden Namen], is taken with such outrageous defiance, as if God, in His name, surrendered Himself to men in such a way that man could now with this powerful means of God's holy name give himself control of supernatural powers and direct his supernatural powers according to his selfish will. Also astrology, horoscopes, tarot cards and other forms of fortune telling belong to this dark activity of magicians and sorcerers.

 

Hopefully, nobody among use misuses the name of God like that: for cursing, swearing and black magic. But we have to keep in mind that the little word "you" in the commandments has all of Christendom in view, and that each person is accountable for the spiritual disposition of other Christians, and therefore also accountable for the spiritual disposition of our people, who through the holy water of Baptism have scraped by. Are not those baptized under the name of God the ones so often cursed? Someday you can ask those who were soldiers. They'll be able to tell you how in the military the worst curses are uttered often over the littlest possible things. Do you think God is going to put up with this misuse of His name? Do you think God could be with an army in which God's name is constantly being cursed? A curse out of the mouth of a German who has been baptized into the Triune God has contributed more to the defeat of our people than a hundred enemy grenades.

 

How misused the oath was among our people! How cheaply, how worthless had the oath become - in fact, it was almost completely a means of propaganda! That's one of the main reasons why our people have fallen so deep, because our people had abused the Holiest One with His own means.

 

Has not God's name been used to lie and deceive? Has not God's name been used to disguise the Godlessness and enmity with God? Do we remember how "the Almighty" was called on again and again in public speeches from a man whose government deliberately bred the most defiant hostility against God and His word that recent history knows? Are we going too far to say that this man ultimately has fallen so deep because of the heinous misuse of God's holy name? The danger of using the name of God as a poster boy for completely different agendas, the danger of using that which is Christian as a way to disguise yourself for your own selfish gain, the danger of cloaking with "Christian" the desire for very concrete position of political power, this danger, in fact, still exists today as well. Let's be clear about this: God will know every misuse of His Name and it will have to come up against His judgment. Truly, not everybody who says "Lord, Lord" will enter the Kingdom of Heaven. From today's Gospel we heard how the "Lord, Lord talk" can be sheep's clothes, and behind it is hiding a raging wolf. Didn't also the German Christians say "Lord, Lord" and behind the cloak they preached a doctrine that blasphemed the name of God? Didn't these German Christians with their false doctrine die out just about overnight? The false doctrine in our church, which under the circumstances finds itself disguised as utterly pious, thoroughly Christian, totally orthodox, is also a misuse of God's holy name, and because of this doctrine the judgment of God will have to come upon us our children, that is unless we do everything in our power to drive out this false doctrine under the guise of God's name.

 

Have you any idea, my beloved, how far the darkness of this black magic [Aberglaube] has spread among us? After taking a trip for a few days through the land, I'm shocked to have to say that even Christian congregations - in places where one would never expect it - have been infected today by the plague of these soothsayers. They've caused this oppressive uncertainty, so that people don't even know the fate of their own family members. We at least know that much of this shady enterprise!

 

With all this mischief we must, each in his place, oppose it wherever we come across it. Today, this very hour, we want to make a covenant with each other, that we not only keep ourselves free from this trouble, but that every time we run into this mischief around us we'll make a resolute stand against it. It is our holy duty that we warn and take to task every kid on the street, every colleague at work from whose mouth we hear a curse. It is our holy duty that we confront every flippant, useless, and sacrilegious swearing around us and when possible hinder it. It is our holy duty that we not tolerate it when we encounter magic of the dark arts [abergläubischer Zauber]. These things truly are harmful. And for the sake of such things the wrath of God burns over us. For the sake of such things God's judgment has come over us and it will come over us again in the future, if everything remains in the way of past.

 

Most importantly, however, let us hold fast to the right use of God's name, even more now that we see the danger of its misuse. With His name, God has truly put a massive possibility in our lap, the possibility to enter into alliance with Him, the Almighty, the Eternal, the possibility to drive from us all god-defying forces in the power of His name, in the humble invocation of His name to take on the forces of calamity and disaster, and with praise and thanks to glorify His name in all the world. Don't let a day go by without morning and evening placing yourselves in the saving and blessed power of God's holy name. Let no Sunday or Festival go by without - if it is possible - gathering with the congregation in the name of the Father of the Son and the Holy Spirit. Let us be mindful of the word of our Lord: "Where two or three are gathered in My name, there I am in their midst." Let us fight with such a right use of God's name against the forces of darkness that are breaking in, so that God's name would be sanctified and His power spread out over all names, that God' lordship triumphs of all Kingdoms and God's will be done on earth as it is in heaven. Amen.


[1]    Brunner quotes a old children's song from Wilhelm Hey (1789 - 1854): "Weißt du wieviel Sternlein stehen an dem blauen Himmelszelt?" The italicized line (v.1) is what he references, which reads: "God, the Lord, has them [the stars] counted, that not one of them is missing."

        1.) Weißt du, wieviel Sternlein stehen an dem blauen Himmelszelt?
        Weißt du, wieviel Wolken gehen weit hinüber alle Welt?
Gott, der Herr, hat sie gezählet, daß ihm auch nicht eines fehlet
an der ganzen großen Zahl, an der ganzen großen Zahl.

        2.) Weißt du, wieviel Mücklein spielen in der heißen Sonnenglut,
wieviel Fischlein auch sich kühlen in der hellen Wasserflut?
Gott, der Herr, rief sie beim Namen, daß sie all ins Leben kamen,
daß sie nun so fröhlich sind, daß sie nun so fröhlich sind.

        3.) Weißt du, wieviel Kindlein frühe stehn aus ihren Betten auf,
daß sie ohne Sorg und Mühe fröhlich sind im Tageslauf?
Gott im Himmel hat an allen seine Lust, sein Wohlgefallen,
kennt auch dich und hat dich lieb, kennt auch dich und hat dich lieb.

Spirituality

Journal CoverEastertide 2009, Volume XVIII, Number 2Table of Contents

(A featured article from the journal: God's Smile: Worship as the Source of Christian Life, by Carl Axel Aurelius, translated by Holger Sonntag)

For Luther, the image of the Christian life is most clearly seen in the psalms. The mixture of joy and suffering, lamentation and praise found in them characterizes the life and different affects of a Christian. Some of the psalms allow us to look deeply into the most difficult afflictions. We get a picture of the emotions of this situation, for example, in Psalm 6 or Psalm 13.

Both are strange psalms, and they are so in a twofold way. On the one hand, it is certainly noteworthy that they are there at all. The afflicted one is apparently in a situation in which he has to ask himself: Does it really pay to pray? Yet he prays in spite of everything. Why? On the other hand, both psalms are noteworthy due to the sudden change in key. In the middle of the psalm there is a change from minor to major. Lament is transformed into a song of praise. What actually happens there? In his second great exposition of the Psalter, Operationes in Psalmos (1519–1521), Luther states:

For the afflicted ones have to be comforted now and then in order to be able to endure. This is why joyful psalms and psalms of lament are mixed in many ways, so that this mixture of different psalms and this confused order, as it is called, should be an example and image of the Christian life that is practiced under manifold grief from the world and under comfort from God’s word. (WA 5: 287.16 ff.)

As was said, both psalms show us the most difficult affliction. They are no longer about the grief the world causes. The afflicted one no longer wrestles with man but with God. More and more he sinks down into despair. On the outside, he or she suffers from something not known to us; yet on the inside, we know exactly how this human being regards his suffering. He thinks, “God has rejected me in his wrath forever.” This is the greatest affliction. The afflicted one finds himself in chaotic darkness.

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The Pope, Bishop Williamson, and what the Church is all about

The following article appeared in the monthly newsletter of St. Mary's Evangelical-Lutheran Parish in Berlin, which belongs to the Independent Evangelical Lutheran Church in Germany (SELK); the author is The Rev. Dr. Gottfried Martens and the translator Propst i. R. (retired provost) Wilhelm Torgerson:

In the last few weeks much attention has been paid to the lifting by Pope Benedict XVI of the excommunication imposed back in 1988 on the four bishops of the Society of St. Pius X, who were consecrated, without papal permission, by the late Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre. These bishops included the controversial English-born and former Anglican Richard Williamson, who denies the Holocaust suffered by the Jews in the concentration camps of the Third Reich. Even though we Lutheran Christians are not subjects of the Pope, this discussion should not leave us untouched. Before all else, we must have accurate information at our fingertips in order to form an intelligent judgement on the issues involved.

 

1. Is this topic even something to get excited about?

Yes, Holocaust denial is something for us to get very upset about, both as citizens and as Christians! We should indeed care passionately and speak up loudly whenever people try to minimize or even deny this unfathomable crime against the Jewish people. And even if Bishop Williamson, along with many people who think like him, tries to downplay the whole topic as a mere debate about historical facts, in which different historians express differing opinions, we are really dealing with something much more important. First and foremost, such statements cause deep hurt and offence to all those who lost relatives in the concentration camps, for whom therefore the denial of these crimes must be simply unbearable. Here the words of the Book of Proverbs apply: "Open your mouth for the speechless, in the cause of all who are appointed to die" (Proverbs 31:8 NKJV). This is why it behoves Christians to raise their voices and speak up on this matter.

Moreover, we should clearly see that denying the extermination of the Jews in the gas chambers of Auschwitz-Birkenau and other concentration camps can only happen when people develop certain conspiracy theories that serve but to weaken or refute the rather decisive evidence for these crimes. In matters historical you can of course start by doubting anything and everything - we face similar problems in dealings with the New Testament. In the realm of history one cannot from the outset "prove" anything because theoretically every document, record, or given piece of evidence could be forged. The question arises whether denying the veracity of such documents it is the reasonable thing to do in this particular instance. In the case of Holocaust denial, the highly dubious motives for questioning the historical records are always the same: oftentimes they show more or less open anti-Jewish sentiments; they evince a desire to describe the thinking leading to such crimes as not really that bad or even in some ways understandable.

Christians do well to be properly informed so that when in doubt and confronted with such spurious claims, we don't just express our indignation but rather are able to prove the contrary. In this connection I should like to recommend to you a non-theological book that I personally consider quite helpful: Markus Tiedemann's "In Auschwitz wurde niemand vergast" - 60 rechtsradikale Lügen und wie man sie widerlegt ("No one was gassed to death in Auschwitz - 60 Lies of the Rightwing Radicals and How to Refute Them").

Unfortunately, these discussions are not merely some kind of superfluous rearguard action. It happened just recently during one of our confirmands' retreats: nine-year-olds telling me in all innocence how they heard that Jews are evil, or when I find out what kind of repulsive "Jewish jokes" are told these days in Berlin schools, then that is a clear indication that we as citizens and as Christians are certainly called upon to be on guard. All manner of socio-psychological mechanisms are still at work in the search for scapegoats in our society.

In this regard we as Christians should always be mindful that according to the witness of the Holy Scriptures  the Jewish people  are not just like  any other nation  (to be sure,  genocide committed against any nation  is just  as heinous a crime  as the one perpetrated on the Jewish people). For the Jewish people are the apple of God's eye to whom God's special promises are directed, as St. Paul makes very clear indeed in Romans 9 and 11. Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ is himself a Jew, and any stupid joke about Jews would therefore also be directed at him. As a church we cannot cut ourselves off from our Jewish roots: "Remember that you do not support the root, but the root supports you" (Rom. 11:18). It is all the more horrible that people, who in the sight of Jews must appear to be "Christians", who in part even call themselves Christians, in the past century committed such crimes against the Jewish people; that in fact even baptized Christians of Jewish ancestry were often not protected during the Third Reich but callously abandoned by their fellow Christians, as an exhibit with its accompanying book Evangelisch getauft - als Juden verfolgt. Spurensuche Berliner Kirchengemeinden ("Baptized as Protestants - Persecuted as Jews. A Search for Traces in Berlin Congregations") has shockingly proven these last few months. Holocaust denial is indeed a big issue, and the relationship between Christians and the Jewish people is something that should be of great concern to us.

 

2. Did Pope Benedict XVI Rehabilitate a Denier of the Holocaust?

The answer to this question, however, raises an entirely different issue from what I hopefully just made sufficiently plain. To speak clearly at the very outset: The claim made by Germany's Spiegel Magazine ("Pope Rehabilitates Denier of the Holocaust"), and subsequently repeated by many others, is simply wrong.

 

What really happened?

To understand the ramifications, let's look back  about  50  years at  the  Second Vatican  Council (Vatican II) that was convened in the Roman-Catholic Church between 1962 and 1965. It was a reform council that in all likelihood changed the practice and image of the Roman-Catholic Church more than any other council in history. One of the decisions that came about as a result of the council involved the "reform of the liturgy": Services were no longer to be in Latin but in the vernacular language; during the service the priest was no longer to look away from the congregation towards the altar, but should now stand behind the altar to face the congregation; these are just two noteworthy changes. Additional changes quickly followed, e.g. placing the host into the hand of the usually standing recipient instead of placing it on the tongue, which had been the custom in the Roman Church and is still the use followed in our SELK. In many congregations, the historic uniform liturgy was replaced by "self-made" orders of worship.

Led by Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre, conservative Roman Catholics opposed these almost revolutionary changes. When conservative RC seminarians asked him to provide them with adequate theological training, Lebfebvre founded the Priestly Fraternity of St. Pius X (SSPX) and a seminary in  cone, Switzerland. To begin with the church approved the fraternity, but after Lefebvre increasingly distanced himself from the new order of worship the church had published in the meantime and from certain decisions of Vatican II, this approval was revoked. When, in 1976, Lefebvre ordained new priests without official (papal) permission, Pope Paul VI suspended him from office. Lefebvre never recognized this suspension. After having turned 80 years of age, he decided in 1988 to consecrate four priests as bishops, since he was the only bishop of the fraternity; otherwise, after his death, no seminarian in his Society could have been ordained a priest anymore.

According to Roman Catholic canon law, an illicit bishop's consecration automatically results in the excommunication of the consecrator and those consecrated; therefore Lefebvre and the four bishops, among them Richard Williamson, were excommunicated by Pope John Paul II. However, this church penalty does not alter the fact that the episcopal consecrations carried out by Lefebvre were and are valid according to the Roman Catholic canon law, even though they were illegitimate. But it is obvious that these thus consecrated bishops were excluded from the Roman Catholic Church and forbidden to act as priests and bishops. The Society of St. Pius X with its approximately 200,000 supporters worldwide is therefore leading an existence as an independent ecclesiastical entity.  It is in the difficult situation that,  on the one hand, they want to be more Roman than the Roman Catholic Church, while, on the other, they reject decisions made by the pope and church councils to whom, according to their own doctrinal understanding, they should be willingly subject.

As Lutheran Christians we certainly can understand to a certain extent some of the concerns of the Fraternity of St. Pius X and even agree with them. For instance, there is the concern that the liturgical reform in the Roman Catholic Church went too far and that the mystery of the worship service and of the sacrament of the altar became downright trite. The way external changes, such as the introduction of receiving the consecrated host in your hand rather than into your mouth, influence not only the piety of the people but in the end even the proclamation of the church, we can observe in many places within the Roman Catholic Church with some degree of regret.

And as much as we as Lutheran Christians concur with Martin Luther's concern to celebrate the worship service in the vernacular, we can certainly begin to understand what loss it must have entailed for the Roman-Catholic Church that the worldwide unifying band of the Latin language of worship was so rigorously severed, that the Latin mass, regularly celebrated up to the mid-1960s, was in fact generally forbidden in the congregations.

And we also agree with the criticism of the Fraternity regarding the statements made by Vatican II about the non-Christian religions, as for instance where the Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium says: "Those also can attain to salvation who through no fault of their own do not know the grace of Christ and his Church, yet sincerely seek God and moved by grace strive by their deeds to do his will as it is known to them through the dictates of their conscience." To ascribe to a person without faith in Christ such abilities, to attain salvation through his deeds, is certainly one of the more problematic formulations of Vatican II.

Despite such agreements with several of their concerns, the Fraternity, from a Lutheran standpoint, remains a problematic group: they vehemently refuse any agreement with Lutheran theology and our church, and they oppose many of the good and sensible decisions of Vatican II - even to the point of open criticism regarding the recognition of general human rights by that council. And aside from some of their reasonable representatives, such protest movements often provide a platform for those with highly problematic ideologies; anti-Jewish tendencies within the fraternity have repeatedly been detected, even though we would not want to charge all members with such thinking.

From the start, Pope Benedict XVI saw it as his duty to promote the unity of his church and to heal divisions. It is well known that at the beginning of his pontificate he invited the papal critic Hans Küng to Rome to signal his readiness for reconciliation. And, on the other hand, he had already as a cardinal repeatedly criticized the harshness with which, after Vatican II, the old Latin mass was decried and its celebration basically forbidden. It would be more than problematic to forbid something which for centuries had been the church's central method of presenting itself. Acting out of this conviction, Pope Benedict sent a signal of understanding to his traditionalist members by reducing the conditions to be met for celebrating the mass in Latin, so that in congregations wishing to do so it could thus be celebrated, though not as the only form of worship.

Subsequently there was a rapprochement between the Fraternity and the Vatican, culminating in the letter of 15 December 2008, by the superior of the fraternity, Bishop Bernard Fellay, one of the four consecrated by Lefebvre. In it he requested, in the name of the four bishops, the lifting of the excommunication that caused them so much pain. Since excommunication always (with us too!) has as its goal the call to repentance and the summons to change their ways of those affected, the pope considered that letter to be an expression of repentance and initiated the process of acceding to the requests of the bishops by revoking the excommunication.

In this regard we ought to be mindful of two things: At the time of his decision the pope was not aware of Bishop Williamson's remarks about the Holocaust, and secondly, he only revoked the excommunication of the four bishops, not their suspension from the performance of their priestly duties. To this day Bishop Williamson has no permission to preach or conduct the mass in the Roman Catholic Church. He is merely permitted to receive the forgiveness of sins (absolution) in the church. To claim that the pope "rehabilitated a denier of the Holocaust" is simply wrong in a twofold sense: first of all, the decision of the pope obviously did not refer in any way to Williamson's view on the Holocaust, which was unknown to the pope; and secondly, Williamson, even apart from his terrible statements, has not been "rehabilitated" but rather is still prohibited from performing the duties of a bishop.

By way of comparison: In 1980 Hans Küng was deprived of the right to teach (missio canonica), so that he no longer was allowed to instruct at the university in the name and by the authority of the Roman Catholic Church; but certainly he was and still is allowed to officiate as a priest and he was never excommunicated.

However offensive the content of the statements by Bishop Williamson was, the discussions during the last few weeks have shown that the public usually lacks understanding of what the church's nature really is: she is not an association of the like-minded like a political party, and she is not a gathering of morally decent people. Rather the church is an institute of salvation, and precisely because of that she is the church of sinners who desperately need to be offered salvation in this church. Thus membership in the church is granted by different criteria from those that apply in the case of membership in a political party. The church is open even to murderers and criminals, because no one belonging to the church receives eternal life because he is such a good, decent person or at least better than others. In the church all without exception are dependent upon the grace of God. Any form of Pharisaism ("I thank you, Lord, that I am not like others...") must be rejected.

Jesus himself provoked people back then by joining the chief publican Zachaeus, a despicable scoundrel (Schweinehund) in fellowship at table, even though he exploited other people. If similar press organs had existed back then,  no doubt  they would have asked Jesus  for his immediate resignation. And indeed, in the church we will have to put up with the fact that we kneel at the altar side by side with real sinners, even with people whose words and deeds we find personally repulsive because they do not conform to God's commandments. Whoever the church receives into her fellowship is not accepted according to criteria of political correctness but on account of pastoral concerns - and the church should not allow anyone to dictate such standards from the outside, however well-intentioned the advice offered might be.

Three things must remain absolutely clear:

1. The church must always distinguish clearly between the sinner and the sin. She can receive the sinner, who seeks her fellowship, into her midst - but that does not mean that she approves of the murder he has committed. Rather she must express her disapproval of this deed with a clear No.

2. It is of course the church's task to call members, who do not see the error of their ways, to change and repentance. But normally this will not happen by public pronouncements and newspaper articles, but in a pastoral process dealing with the individual, which, in case of persistent impenitence, may lead to exclusion, that is, to excommunication as the last step. What I just said about the murderer may equally be applied to Holocaust deniers or to others whose words and deeds we find repugnant.

3. The church must take special care about those acting in an official capacity, who therefore speak and act in the church's name. If that is not in accord with the position and teaching of the church, then the church has a right and the duty to forbid such a person the exercise of his office - which, however, does not mean that he must at the same time be excluded from the church.

It is an interesting observation, however, that many people expect the Vatican to act in this rigorous manner, even though this kind of process has previously been sharply criticized as "authoritarian" in other cases. To say it again: the pope has not permitted Bishop Williamson to perform any official acts. If he were to do so without Bishop Williamson having recanted his statements, then that, of course, would be most problematic. But at the moment this is not the case.

We cannot deny that the revoking of Bishop Williamson's excommunication was both a media and a diplomatic disaster. But on the other hand I consider it unfortunate that some of the Roman Catholic bishops in Germany scrambled to disavow the decisions made by the Vatican, but did not make much effort to explain why decisions about excommunication or the revocation of the same are made according to criteria quite different from those applied to the church and her action by people on the outside. We're dealing here with the very core of what makes church to be church: that she is the church for real sinners to whom certainly God's law has to be proclaimed in all clarity.

It is my impression that the public debate these days is certainly also designed in part to do damage to a pope whose clear theological positions have aroused opposition for a long time. And in this debate some thought to have found a starting point by somehow connecting the pope's standpoints with a stance of anti-Judaism - something extremely unfair, as is the insinuation that only the pressure exerted on him in the public media caused the pope to be willing to distance himself from Holocaust denial and to support the statements of Vatican II about the relationship between the church and Judaism.

Even though we as Lutheran Christians cannot agree with everything the pope has said, and we don't need to do that, we do well to acquire the necessary background knowledge  so we might be part of the informed debate on this topic; we ought not to participate in the process of using Holocaust denial for other church-political purposes.

And perhaps it will be possible for us, in various discussions on this issue, to remind those we talk to what is the great thing about the church: that indeed she is not an association of the decent people, but that in the church anyone is welcome who realizes that he is in need of God's forgiveness. It is the Lord's church, and already in the olden days her opponents made the essence of her mission crystal-clear: "This man receives sinners and eats with them."

Does the WordAlone Network have Theological Fundamentals?

by Mark D. Menacher, PhD

Dr. Dennis Bielfeldt, a professor at South Dakota State University - Brookings, has recently issued seven theses which he claims represent the "fundamentals" of the theology of the WordAlone Network (WAN). Dr. Bielfeldt is also the Director of the Institute of Lutheran Theology, likewise located in Brookings. Dr. Bielfeldt's theses and argumentation, entitled "WordAlone Fundamentalism? ... No, Fundamentals!," can be found on the Internet at:

http://www.wordalone.org/docs/wa-fundamentals.shtml

Contrary to Dr. Bielfeldt's theses, WAN's "fundamentals" are not "consistent with the thinking of Luther and the Lutheran Reformation." Instead, they misrepresent the basics of Lutheran theology. This is necessarily the case for two reasons. First, Dr. Bielfeldt uses the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA) rather than Jesus Christ as the point of reference for his argumentation. Second, Dr. Bielfeldt's reliance upon a particular philosophical-linguistic foundation for his theology ironically undermines that same theology. Dr. Bielfeldt's "science-fiction-like" language is apparently employed to ward off Kantian subjectivism and Feuerbachian projectionism. This, however, leaves God neither "causally related to the universe" nor concretely related to the cause of  theology, namely the homo peccator and the deusiustificans.

The following, friendly commentary to each of Dr. Bielfeldt's seven theses elucidates the methodological flaws of his argumentation and thereby questions the conceptual foundations of the WordAlone Network.

[Bielfeldt Thesis 1] "Theological statements have truth-conditions."

Dr. Bielfeldt claims that "WordAlone dares to suppose that theological statements have definite truth-conditions ..." According to the Lutheran Reformers, the "truth-condition" for theological statements is not supposition but rather Jesus Christ who is "the way and the truth and the life" (John 14:6). Unfortunately, WAN is unable to name Jesus Christ as the "truth-condition" for its theological statements. Instead, as Dr. Bielfeldt makes clear, WAN prefers the institutional ELCA as its point of reference for establishing its pseudo-theological, ecclesial-political "fundamentals." WAN came into existence due to the passage of the ELCA's fraudulent ecumenical accord Called to Common Mission (CCM) in 1999. That WAN has had the foresight nearly a decade after its founding to establish its "fundamentals," unfortunately, calls the reality and relevance of WAN's "truth-conditions" irretrievably into question.

[Bielfeldt Thesis 2] "God is causally related to the universe."

God is not merely "causally related to the universe." Lutherans (and all Christians) confess that God is the Creator of the universe. God called the universe into existence through his word (Genesis 1), and through that same word, namely Jesus Christ, all things were made (John 1:1-3). That same creation awaits its final liberation and redemption through the Holy Spirit (Romans 8, I Corinthians 15). Thus, the relationship of God to the universe is not "causal" but rather creational and incarnational and consummational.

[Bielfeldt Thesis 3] "All temporal structures, institutions and conceptual frameworks are historically-conditioned."

When God speaks, God creates history. When God spoke in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, God fulfilled all history which now awaits its temporal consummation. Thus, Jesus Christ as the incarnate word of God is the mediator between God and history. Dr. Bielfeldt claims that theology bridges "the gap between the eternal Word of God and the concrete temporal situation" and that the "divine Word of Scripture [is] wholly human at the same time." These claims, respectively, usurp Christ alone as mediator and denature Christ's humanity as being "without sin" (Hebrews 4:15).

[Bielfeldt Thesis 4] "Nothing finite is infinite."

The notion that "nothing finite is infinite" undermines the aseity of God as Creator in whom all finitude and infinitude have their origin and existence. It further undermines the lordship of Jesus Christ who by virtue of his incarnation and resurrection enters into but also transcends both time and space. As the word of God, "Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and today and for ever" (Hebrews 13:8). Therefore, all those who are justified through the faith invoked and evoked by the gospel of Jesus Christ already participate in the eternal life and reality which is Jesus Christ. As Christ says, "What is impossible with human beings is possible with God" (Luke 18:27).

[Bielfeldt Thesis 5] "The True Church is not visible, but remains hidden."

The notion of "true" church fails to acknowledge and to confess that there is only "one, holy, Christian, apostolic church." This church is solely created, sustained, and communicated by the gospel of Jesus Christ proclaimed purely in word and sacrament. Thus, the one church is solely a matter of promissory word and corresponding faith. All other expressions of human religiosity masquerading under the name "church" only make visible the sin which human beings strive to conceal, particularly through their self-righteous religiosity. Contrary to Dr. Bielfeldt, "The being of the church is" not "found in the justified being of those wearing the external righteousness of Christ." Instead, the church is founded by the proclamation of the gospel of Jesus Christ which alone creates the only faith through which sinners are justified. The proclamation of the gospel is only hidden when it is deliberately silenced, or cleverly camouflaged by causal kerfuffle.

[Bielfeldt Thesis 6] "The basic human orientation is to turn away from God in pride, sin and unbelief. Original sin is the condition of humanity's freely, but inevitably, turning from God toward something finite."

Contrary to Dr. Bielfeldt, human sin is not an "orientation" like the Roman Catholic understanding of concupiscence or like politically correct views of human sexuality. Instead, sin is the inescapable condition of all humanity. Sin does not exist due to "turning away from God in pride, sin and unbelief." Rather, unbelief is the essence and realization of human sin. Unbelief leads human beings away from God while simultaneously driving them to make gods (idols) of their own manipulation which manifest themselves as deliberate perversions of God's creation. WAN's use of the institutional ELCA, instead of Jesus Christ, as its causal point of reference is therefore an expression of such sin.

[Bielfeldt Thesis 7] "The Holy Spirit works monergistically, not synergistically, upon sinners effecting saving faith."

Contrary to Dr. Bielfeldt, the Holy Spirit works neither monergistically nor synergistically but instead freely and verbally in the purely proclaimed gospel of Jesus Christ. Through this gospel the Spirit of truth (John 14:17) communicates the word of truth which truly justifies sinners through the person of truth, namely Jesus Christ. Through faith alone, Christ frees (eleutheroo) fallen human beings from domination by sin, death, and the devil (John 8:31-36). Spurning this gift of Christian freedom in faith, i.e. being Lutheran, WAN has fundamentally, synergistically, and unequivocally bound itself to the institutional ELCA whose temporal, finite, and sinfully conditioned existence provides WAN with its only reason for existing. In so doing, WAN has "exchanged the truth about God for a lie and has worshipped and served the creature rather than the Creator" (Romans 1:25). Unfortunately, Dr. Bielfeldt's daring statements shy away from the truth of this lamentable condition.

To conclude, if Dr. Bielfeldt's theses represent the conceptual foundations of the WordAlone Network, then it would seem that WordAlone's self-styled reformation has "No Fundamentals" which can truthfully be described as "consistent with the thinking of Luther and the Lutheran Reformation."

The Use and Misuse of Luther in Contemporary Debates on Homosexuality: A Look at Two Theologians

By John T. Pless, delivered at the Aquinas-Luther Conference/Center for Theology, Lenoir-Rhyne College, Hickory, NC, 23 October 2004

 

Writing over forty years ago, Lutheran systematician and ethicist Helmut Thielicke observed "One cannot expect to find in the theological ethics of German-speaking Protestantism a clear, consistent attitude toward homosexuality simply because hitherto the writers on ethics have taken little or no notice of the mere fact itself and therefore a body of opinion - to say nothing of a unanimity of judgment - is almost non-existent. The indexes of many well-known works on ethics do not contain the word at all."[1] A survey of contemporary texts in ethics reveals that homosexuality has moved front and center even as a clear, consistent attitude toward homosexuality remains elusive.

 

 

How elusive this is issue has been may be seen by contrasting the approaches of two living Lutheran theologians, Edward Schroeder and Gerhard Forde. I have chosen to examine the work of these two theologians as both appeal to a classical distinction in Lutheran theology, the distinction of the law from the Gospel yet come to radically different conclusions. Some have argued that it is this very distinction that has landed present day Lutherans in a state of moral disarray[2]. I will suggest that it is not the law/gospel distinction that is at issue but a particular misuse of this dialectic. Through these two theologians, I will also assess how Luther is used and misused in the present debate.

 

Edward Schroeder was part of the post-World War II generation of theologians in The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod influenced and formed the theology emanating from Erlangen, especially that of Werner Elert and to a less degree, Paul Althaus. Elert seemed especially attractive to many young Missourians of this period as his emphasis on law and Gospel resonated with that of the Missouri Synod's patriarch, C.F.W. Walther. Schroeder himself would complete his doctorate not with Elert who died in November of 1954 but with Helmut Thielicke at Hamburg. Returning to the states, Schroeder took a position on the theology faculty at Valparaiso University and from there to Concordia Seminary, Saint Louis. In 1974, Schroeder was part of the faculty majority that left Concordia to form Concordia Seminary in Exile or Seminex, later called Christ Seminary. Writing from his home in Saint Louis, Schroeder publishes his Thursday Theology by e-mail each week. It is through this medium that Schroeder has set forth his approach to homosexuality.

 

For Schroeder, the questions of blessing same-sex unions and the ordination of homosexuals are answered in the affirmative on the basis of his application of a law/promise hermeneutic that he claims comes from Luther. According to Schroeder's construal of this hermeneutic, Luther's approach to the Scripture is to see Christ at the heart and center of the Bible. The Scripture itself consists of two words from God, a word of law and a word of promise. He puts it like this "Scripture's law serves as God's diagnostic agent- diagnosis of our malady, not prescription for our healing. God's Law is X-ray, not ethics. The healing for patients diagnosed by the Law is God's promise, the Christ-quotient of both OT and NT. The law's purpose (Paul said it first - after he received his 'new' hermeneutics beginning at Damascus) is to 'push sinners to Christ.'"[3]   Once sinners are in Christ, they are no longer under the law but under grace. Thus he writes "Once Christ-connected they come into the force-field of his 'new commandment,' and it really is new, not refurbished 'old' commandment, not 'Moses rehabilitated.' Christ supersedes Moses -not only for salvation, but also for ethics. In Paul's language the touchstone for this new commandment is the 'mind of Christ' and being led by, walking by, his Holy Spirit. More than once Paul makes it 'perfectly clear' that this is a new 'law-free' way of life."[4]  Schroeder then goes on to ask and answer the question of what we are to do with all the commands and imperatives in the Bible in light of this new way of life, free of the law. He concludes "First of all, this new hermeneutic relativizes them." [5]Here Schroeder sees himself in company with Luther, especially Luther's treatise of 1525, "How Christians Should Regard Moses" [6]to which we shall return a bit later. Arguing that the law applies only to the old creation while the promise constitutes life in the new creation, Schroeder asserts that human sexuality is clearly a component of the old creation, and hence is under the governance of the law.

 

Surely there is much in Luther and the Lutheran confessional writings that seems to give credence to Schroeder's argument. In 1522, Luther wrote in his ""The Estate of Marriage" that marriage was a bodily and outward thing: "Know therefore that marriage is an outward, bodily thing, like any other worldly undertaking."[7]  Thus Luther recognizes the place of civil authority in regulating matters of sexuality and marriage[8]

 

Does Luther's assessment of marriage as an outward thing, an artifact of the old creation, make questions of sexual ethics a matter of relativity as Schroeder contends and therefore lead to a definition of marriage elastic enough to include same-sex unions?  I think not. There are several difficulties with Schroeder's approach. The first has to do with his understanding of the place of creation in Luther's thinking. 

 

In contrasting old creation with new creation, Schroeder is concerned to show that the law is operative in creation both to deliver justice (recompense, as he puts it) and to preserve the fallen world from plunging into total chaos. Of course, these are themes that are readily found in Luther. But then Schroeder makes an interpretative move that Luther does not make. While Luther surely sees that neither the laws of Moses nor civil laws that indeed vary from place to place and one historical epoch to another, work salvifically, he does not view the law as being merely set aside by the Gospel. To use the language of the Formula of Concord, "the distinction between law and gospel is a particularly glorious light"[9]  but it is not a light that blinds us to the normative character of Holy Scripture. To reduce the distinction to an ideology, abstracted from the actual content of the biblical texts blurs both God's judgment and His grace. Schroeder's law/promise hermeneutic ends up with a divorce between creation and redemption, a schism between faith and life that is foreign to Luther.[10]

 

Luther understands creation as the arena for God's work. Schroeder introduces a relativism and subjectivism to creation that is not there in Luther when he makes the claim that homosexuals are simply "wired differently" [11] than hetrerosexuals. Luther, in fact, sees human identity as male and female as a creational reality. Or to use the words of William Lazareth, God's ordering of creation is hetreosexual.[12]  This can be seen in Luther's exposition of the sixth commandment in the Large Catechism where he writes "He has established it (marriage) before all others as the first of all institutions, and he created man and woman differently (as is evident) not for indecency but to be true to each other, to be fruitful, to beget children, and to nurture and bring them up to the glory of God." [13] This is also expressed in a letter Luther wrote to Wolfgang Reissenbush in March, 1527. After counseling Reissenbusch that he is free to renounce his vow of celibacy without committing sin, Luther observes "Our bodies are in great part the flesh of women, for by them we were conceived, developed, borne, suckled, and nourished. And it is quite impossible to keep entirely apart from them. This is in accord with the Word of God. He has caused it to be so and wishes it so."[14]

 

Earlier, in his "The Estate of Marriage" (1522), after noting God's design and purpose in creating humanity as male and female, Luther speaks of this ordinance or institution as "inflexible,"[15] beyond alteration. What Luther sees as a given, biological reality, Schroeder now moves into the realm of the subjective with an appeal to the explanation of the First Article in the Small Catechism. Luther's doxological confession that "God has created me together with all that exists. God has given and still preserves my body and soul" eyes, ears, and all limbs and senses" is now used by Schroeder to make God the author of homosexuality. He writes "Luther doesn't mention sexuality in that gift-list, but today God puts it on the lists we have. If 'hetero-' is one of the creator's ordainings, then wouldn't 'homo-' also be on the gift-list for those so ordained? Isn't it' most certainly true' for both that they 'thank, praise, serve and obey God' as the sexual persons they have been ordained to be?' Both homosexuals and heterosexuals have a common calling to care for creation, carrying out the double agenda in God's secular world - the law of preservation and the law of recompense. If the gifts are different, the pattern of care will be different. What examples are already available within the ELCA of Christians-gay and straight- doing just that-preservation and recompense -with the sexual gift that God has ordained? Despite the current conflict, is it true about sexuality too that 'what God ordains is always good?' "[16]

 

Luther's rejection of required clerical celibacy is seen by Schroeder as a precedent for relaxing requirements for individuals who understand themselves to be homosexual. Schroeder writes: "For outsiders to 'require' celibacy of them as a prerequisite for the validity of their Christ-confession is parallel to the Roman church's 'requirement' of celibacy for the clergy. Concerning that requirement the Lutheran Reformers said: God created  the sexual 'pressure' that surfaces at puberty. To 'require' celibacy of the clergy - or anybody- is blatantly contradicting God. For those whom God 'wired differently' as a student once described himself -regardless of how that different wiring came to pass-requiring celibacy for him sounds like the same thing to me. It is God, not the gay guy, who is being contradicted." [17]

 

Here Schroeder reveals a basic premise that is not shared by Luther, namely, that homosexuality is ordained by God. Luther does not speak of a generic sexual drive or instinct but of the desire of man for woman, and woman for man: "This is the Word of God, through whose power procreative seed is planted in man's body and a natural, ardent desire for woman is kindled and kept alive. This cannot be restrained either by vows or laws"[18] Luther seldom mentions homosexual behavior. But when he does, his evaluation is always negative. For example, Luther identifies the sin of Sodom with homosexuality. Commenting on Genesis 19:4-5, he writes "I for my part do not enjoy dealing with this passage, because so far the ears of the Germans are innocent of and uncontaminated by this monstrous depravity; for even though disgrace, like other sins, has crept in through an ungodly soldier and a lewd merchant, still the rest of the people are unaware of what is being done in secret. The Carthusian monks deserve to be hated because they were the first to bring this terrible pollution into Germany from the monasteries of Italy".[19] In the same section of the Genesis lecturers, Luther refers to "the heinous conduct of the people of Sodom " as "extraordinary, inasmuch as they departed from the natural passion and longing of the male for the female, which is implanted into nature by God, and desired what is altogether contrary to nature. Whence comes this perversity? Undoubtedly from Satan, who after people have once turned away from the fear of God, so powerfully suppresses nature that he blots out the natural desire and stirs up a desire that is contrary to nature." [20]

 

Luther's rejection of homosexual activity is not merely a matter of aesthetic preference but rather a theological judgment rooted in the reality of the way the wrath of God is revealed against all ungodliness that will not acknowledge God to be the Creator and Lord that He is. For Luther, homosexuality is a form of idolatry, of false worship as we see in his lectures on Romans [21]. In attributing homosexuality to the creative will of God for certain human beings, Schroeder strangely enough overlooks the teaching of his mentor, Werner Elert who maintains that creation places humanity in an ordered world of nomological existence.[22]

 

Schroeder sees his law/promise hermeneutic threatened by what he would term as a literalistic reading of the Bible and an appeal to the orders of creation or anything for that matter resembling natural law.[23] Especially troubling for Schroeder is any appeal  may to the orders of creation in defense of the traditional teaching that human existence is heterosexual by its very nature. Schroeder outlined his objections to both the terminology and content of the orders of creation in a March, 1972 article published in the Concordia Theological Monthly under the title "The Orders of Creation- Some Reflections on the History and Place of the Term in Systematic Theology." In this article Schroeder makes the case for "Creator's order" rather than "orders's of creation".[24]   His aim is to avoid any hierarchical and static notion of the orders and rather to show that God has put a person on earth in particular place and time. He writes "The explanation of the First Article of the Creed in Luther's Small Catechism is a classic expression of such localized specific placement 'ordained' or 'given' a person by the Creator. Perhaps the word 'Ordnung' would be better translated into English with the verbal form 'ordain.' This makes it easier to get to the present-tense character of the notion of the Creator's order, as well as the personal quality involved in one's understanding that God has put him on earth in a particular place, with particular parents, in a particular century, as a member of a particular race and community or a particular language group or national state, with a particular economic order, particular siblings, and so on. This is what God has ordained for him."[25] 

 

Schroeder's fundamental revision of the orders theology is essentially in place in the 1972 article. In his more recent missives, he brings his reading of the "Creator's order" to bear on sexual identity, concluding that the homosexual person is to understand him or herself as created this way by God. Thus acceptance not repentance, affirmation not exhortations to self-denial are said to characterize the church's ministry to men and women who find themselves created with sensual urgings for persons of the same gender.

 

While the nineteenth century rendition of the 'orders of creation" was certainly misused by some Lutheran theologians in their eager endorsement of National Socialism in Germany in the last century, Carl Braaten takes upon himself the task of rehabilitating this teaching. His article, "God in Public Life: Rehabilitating the 'Orders of Creation'"[26] is most relevant to the current discussion for Braaten has demonstrated that these orders are not as subjective and individualistic as Schroeder has suggested.

 

Braaten's work, along with that of the Tuebingen theologian Oswald Bayer offer theological resources that are a corrective to what actually turns out to be a "flight from creation" to borrow the title of the book by Gustaf Wingren[27]. Paricularly helpful is Bayer's treatment of Luther's use of the three orders or three estates. Luther speaks of three basic structures that are essential to human life: church, government and home. While "none of these orders is a means of salvation" [28] -that is found in Jesus Christ alone; the believer out of these temporal orders but now lives within them by faith and love. Christian faith is not limited to one estate but thrives in all of them. As Bayer points out, Luther avoids a move that is made in nineteenth century liberalism of pitting an "ethic of radical obedience" against an "ethic of the household code." Luther's theological achievement according to Bayer is "the indissoluble bonding of the ethics of the table of duties and the ethics of discipleship and having them guard one another." [29] The Christian lives under the First Commandment within the God-ordained estates. Love as the fulfillment of the law does not explode the orders but love is fulfilled within them.

 

These estates or orders are not personalized or individualized in the way that Schroeder argues. Rather, to use the language of Bayer, "element and institution"[30] are bound together. God's Word of institution is definitive in both creation and the sacraments. Nature, then is, not defined by the gnostic self, but by God whose almighty Word brings creation out of nothingness. Thus there is no room for enthusiasm in either theology or ethics. The "element cannot become autonomous" in Bayer's words.[31]

 

Yet, is this not exactly what has happened in Schroeder's appeal for a new ethic of homosexuality? The Word is stripped from the element as it were. We see, then, an ethical enthusiasm in Schroeder and others who take this approach. Careful exegetical study of the biblical texts, such as that done by Robert Gagnon[32], is dismissed as legalistic biblicism. Promise trumps the law, Spirit over the text, new creation triumphs over old creation, and we are left some rather fanciful attempts to justify a radical departure from biblical teaching and historic Christian practice. The new obedience is emptied of content and so evaporates into the new disobedience.

 

Schroeder dismisses New Testament texts that condemn homosexual behavior with an appeal to Article XXVIII of the Augsburg Confession. He writes "But surely the rules laid down by the apostles in the NT are permanent aren't they? Not really, says Article 28. 'Even the apostles ordained (sic!) many things that were changed by time, and they did not set them down as though they could not be changed' (Apology 28:16). Here's an example: 'The apostles commanded that one should abstain from blood, etc...Those who do not observe (this) commit no sin, for the apostles did not wish to burden consciences with such bondage but forbade such eating for a time to avoid offense. In connection with the (blood) decree one must consider what the perpetual aim of the Gospel is' (AC 28:65)."[33] From this citation of the Augustana, Schroeder concludes that New Testament prohibitions against homosexual expression are time-bound, related perhaps to a linkage between homosexuality and idolatry in the ancient world.

 

Schroeder overlooks the fact that "the perpetual aim of the Gospel" is the forgiveness of sins, not the overthrow of natural orders. Article XVI of the Augsburg Confession declares "The gospel does not overthrow secular government, public order, and marriage, but instead intends that a person keep all this as a true order of God and demonstrate in these walks of life Christian love and true good works according to each person's calling."[34] Rather than rightly distinguishing law from Gospel, Schroeder has done exactly what he accuses those who support the traditional Christian teaching on homosexuality of doing - he offers another gospel, a gospel unlike the gospel confessed in Augsburg XVI, that seeks to overthrow the good orders created and instituted by God to preserve His world. Underneath Schroeder's deeply flawed law/promise hermeneutic lies an understanding of creation that is foreign to Luther and the Lutheran Confessions. Others have identified the gnostic character in an approach that parades itself as relevant to current challenges for inclusiveness and tolerance[35]. Such a "serach for relevance" writes Christoph Schwoebel "comes into conflict with fundamental dogmatic tenets of a Christian theology of creation. What seems to be needed in not an ethics of creation, but an ethic of createdness which is informed by a theology of creation."[36]  An ethic of createdness so prominent in Luther cannot be sustained by the shallow reductionism of Schroeder's approach.

 

Gerhard Forde is the second contemporary Lutheran theologian that I wish to examine in this paper. Recently retired after a distinguished teaching and writing career at Luther Seminary in Saint Paul, Forde is recognized as both a Luther scholar and systematician. A festschrift[37], published by Eerdmans earlier this year, witnesses his broad influence both in the Lutheran-Roman Catholic Dialogue and in Reformation studies. Like Schroeder, Forde makes use of the law/gospel distinction. His first book, a reworked version of his doctoral dissertation at Harvard is entitled The Law-Gospel Debate.[38] Unlike Schroeder, Forde does not slip into antinomianism.

 

For Forde, Romans 10:4 is a crucial text in understanding the law/gospel dialectic: "For Christ is the end (telos) of the law, that everyone who has faith may be justified." This leads Forde to inquire as to the nature of the law, both in terms of content and function.[39]  Forde faults those calling for a revision of the church's moral teaching on homosexuality of missing a fundamental Lutheran insistence: the law always accuses. The accusation of the law can only be answered in Christ who was made sin for us. The law offers no compassion. Therefore Forde begins his essay on "Law and Sexual Behavior" by reminding his readers that "This is an essay about the function of the law as it confronts sexual behavior. Therefore the first thing that needs saying is that this paper cannot be about compassion"[40]

 

The law, Forde argues, has two uses or functions.[41] In its civil or political use it regulates human behavior. Here the law works horizontally to protect and preserve life. It curbs chaos and reigns in outbursts of immorality that would destroy the fabric of human community. The law, in its second use, unmasks sin coram deo and reveals the wrath of God against every idol. In its civil function, Forde notes that the law does not have to do with so-called "orientation"-which he deems a rather "modern invention that seems particularly pernicious." [42] Here the law has to do with human actions, with behavior. Yet ultimately the law accuses the sinner before God. But these two uses cannot be so easily segregated. "The doctrine of the uses of the law is simply an attempt analytically to discern what the law actually does. Law does two things to us, come what may. It sets limits to sinful and destructive behavior, usually by some sort of persuasion or coercion -ultimately by death itself; and it accuses of sin. That is simply what it does. We have no choice in the matter."[43]

 

Forde sees antinomianism, in whatever form it takes, as an attempt to find some other end for the law other than Christ crucified. So, for example, in the current debate on homosexuality, he observes that there are those who attempt to change the content of the law. He writes "...when we come up against laws that call our behavior into question we usually attempt by one means or another to erase, discredit, or change the laws. We become antinomians. If we don't like the law we seek to remove or abolish it by exgetical circumlocution, appeals to progress, to genetics, to the authority of ecclesiastical-task force pronouncements, or perhaps just to the assurance that 'things have changed."[44]  But the law will not disappear by exegetical attempts to expunge difficult texts from our hearing, or invocation of the latest scientific research to lessen the claim of Scripture, nor will it be house broken in the name of compassion or tolerance. The law cannot be so easily silenced. We cannot bring and end to the law. Only Christ is the end of the law for faith. Forde then proceeds to take up Paul's rhetorical question and answer in Romans 3:31-"Do we then overthrow the law by faith? By no means! On the contrary, we uphold the law." Faith does not set the law aside but rather lives with trust in Christ alone. Faith does not overthrow the law but establishes "it in its rightful place."[45]

 

The "rightful place" of the law then continues as it orders human community and as it accuses of sin, driving broken sinners to Christ alone. It is a pernicious misuse of the law/gospel distinction to legitimize homosexual unions or ordinations. Forde writes "The idea that law could be so altered in content that the civil use would be somehow milder or even contrary to the theological use is quite contrary to the doctrine. Law may indeed be applied variously according to the situation but the basic content remains the same".[46] This point can be demonstrated from Luther's treatise, "How Christian's Should Regard Moses." In this writing Luther develops the distinction between the laws of Moses that pertain only to the political entity of Old Testament Israel (ceremonial and civic ordinances) and the commandments of God which are also inscribed in the heart. "Nature also has these laws"[47]says Luther and they are reflected the Ten Commandments.

 

"It is not enough" says Luther "simply to look and see whether this is God's word, whether God has said it; rather we must look and see to whom it has been spoken, whether it fits us".[48]  One may not simply place the Old Testament prohibition against the eating of pork alongside of the sixth commandment. Forde's argument, consistent with Luther, is that the law of God in creation itself orders human existence in the bi-polarity of male and female. Creation itself is structured heterosexually. The nature of sexual intercourse as a one flesh union of two who are other, who are biologically different demonstrates this. "The two become one flesh, a substantial unity in difference".[49] Civil law rightly has a stake in regulating and protecting marriage for the good of the human race.

 

The civic realm draws us into Luther's understanding of life in the world, of the "three orders or estates." This is the location of vocation, calling. Forde writes "If marriage is to be understood as entry into an estate under the civil use of the law, then it should be the case that genital sexual activity involved must itself be seen in light one's vocation to serve God and the neighbor through a life of love in the world. 'The heart of the matter rests with the claim that the sexual activity itself must be an essential aspect of the exercise and realization of (one's) vocational calling and have social as well as personal import' (James Hanigan). Same-gender sexual relations cannot fulfill this vocational calling. In the first place, the calling is that in sexual activity the 'two shall become one flesh.' This is not possible for persons of the same sex. The most obvious outcome and instance of the two becoming one flesh is in their children. Homosexual sexual intercourse obviously cannot do that. Furthermore, persons of the same gender cannot become one flesh in the sense of a shared life of love as unity in difference. They cannot become one out of two in the sexual act itself. At best the sexual activity of homosexuals can only imitate but not participate in what the act symbolizes". [50]

 

Forde concludes that it is impossible for the church to bless same-sex unions or authorize the ordination of practicing homosexuals without resorting to antinomianism which finally undermines the Gospel itself.

 

Finally, I will conclude with several observations gleaned from examining these two approaches to the questions of the church's stance on homosexual practice.

 

In the last century, the Swedish theologian Gustaf Wingren argued the necessity of the doctrine of creation for evangelical theology. Every other article of the faith will be deformed, he contended, is the doctrine of creation is mishandled .[51].In a recent article, Gilbert Meilaender has demonstrated the importance of honoring the bios Lutheran bioethics.[52]  The same must be asserted for a sexual ethic as well. Too often, in the current debates on homosexuality, the biological reality of our being created male and female is dismissed as long as the relationship is consensual, committed, and caring. Thus one Lutheran ethicist, Paul Jersild, is worried that some Christians have adopted an "excessively physicalist approach to homosexuality."[53] Creation is seen as secondary if not irrelevant. But without creation, there is no incarnation. Without creation, the new creation is reduced to a spiritualistic construct of our own imagination. Is not God "excessively physicalist" in Jesus? Do we not confess the resurrection of the body?

 

Being open to the guidance of the Spirit, reliance on experience and reason, dialogue with others becomes a cover for a new enthusiasm that would cause the 16th century Anabaptists to blush! It is not given to us to speak as though God has not spoken. When the Bible is reduced to merely a conversation partner, we may be assured that the Scriptures will not have the final word.

 

Homosexuality is a disordering of God's design expressed in Genesis 1-2. Whatever else may be said about the causes of homosexuality, it cannot be attributed to God. From the standpoint of theological ethics it is irrelevant whether homosexuality is a result of a genetic disorder, environment or personal choice as the Scriptures teach us that all of creation after the fall is subject to bondage, disorder, and death. Robert Jenson is on target here: "We need not here resolve the question of whether there are such things as 'sensual orientations' and if so how they are acquired. What must anyway be clear is that 'homosexuality,' if it exists and whatever it is, cannot be attributed to creation; those who practice forms of homoerotic sensuality and attribute this to 'homosexuality' cannot refer to the characteristic as 'the way God created me,' if 'create' has anything like its biblical sense. No more in this context than in any other do we discover God's creative intent by examining the empirical situation; as we have seen, I may indeed have to blame God for the empirically present in me that contradicts his known intent, but this is an occasion for unbelief, not a believer's justification of the evil."[54]

 

Self justification is ultimately the justification of the evil. Opposite of self-justification is repentance. Luther defines repentance in relationship to Baptism in both catechisms. In the Small Catechism:

 

"What does such baptizing with water indicate? It indicates that the Old Adam in us should by daily contrition and repentance be drowned and die with all sins and evil desires, and that a new man should daily emerge and arise to live before God in righteousness and purity forever" [55]

 

 

And in the Large Catechism:

 

"Thus a Christian life is nothing else than a daily baptism, begun once and continued ever after. For we must keep at it without ceasing, always purging whatever pertains to the old Adam, so that whatever belongs to the new creature may come forth. What is the old creature? It is what is born in us from Adam, irascible, spiteful, envious, unchaste, greedy, lazy, proud - yes - and unbelieving; it is beset with all vices and by nature has nothing good in it." [56]

 

Martha Ellen Stortz contributed an article, "Rethinking Christian Sexuality: Baptized into the Body of Christ" to the volume, Faithful Conversation: Christian Perspectives on Homosexuality. Stortz proposes a discussion of sexuality that begins with baptism, thus avoiding the reality of humanity created as male and female. Her conclusions are predictable. Baptismal identity supercedes creation[57]. The old Adam is not put to death but affirmed. Baptism, to paraphrase Bonhoeffer, then becomes the justification of the sin, not the sinner. What suffers finally is not just morality, but the Gospel itself. We now find ourselves in a world, where "everything is permitted and nothing is forgiven." (Alan Jones)[58]

 

Acceptance and accommodation are not substitutes for absolution. Any use of Luther that aims for anything less misses the mark.

 

 

-Prof. John T.Pless

Concordia Theological Seminary

Fort Wayne, Indiana

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


[1] Helmut Thielicke, The Ethics of Sex, trans. John W. Doberstein (New York: Harper & Row Publishers, 1964), 269.

[2] See David Yeago, "Martin Luther on Grace, Law, and the Moral Life: Prolegomena to an Ecumenical Discussion of Veritatis Splendor" The Thomist 62 (1998), 163-191.

[3] Edward Schroeder, "Thursday Theology 159"  (January, 28, 2001), 4 at http//www.crossings

[4] Ibid. 4.

[5] Ibid. 4.

[6] Luther's Works, American Edition, 55 volumes, edited by J.Pelikan and H.T.Lehmann (Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House and Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1955-1986), 35:155-174. Hereafter abbreviated as LW.

[7] LW 45:25.

[8] Luther sees marriage as grounded in creation. It is not a sacrament that bestows forgiveness but there is no higher social calling where faith is exercised than that of the family. Marriage is the arena for faith and love. In 1519, Luther still regarded marriage as a sacrament. The change is evident in "The Babylonian Captivity" of 1520. In divesting marriage of its sacramental status, Luther actually elevates marriage as he makes it equal or superior to celibacy. See Scott Hendrix, "Luther on Marriage" Lutheran Quarterly XIV (Autumn 2000), 355; James Nestingen, "Luther on Marriage, Vocation, and the Cross" Word & World XXIII (Winter 2003), 31-39; William Lazareth, Luther on the Christian Home (Philadelphia: Muhlenberg Press, 1960); and Carter Lindberg, "The Future of a Tradition: Luther and the Family" in All Theology is Christology: Essays in Honor of David P. Scaer, edited by Dean Wenthe et al (Fort Wayne: Concordia Theological Seminary Press, 2000), 133-151. For a picture of Luther's contribution to the place of marriage in western culture, see John Witte, Jr., From Sacrament to Contract: Marriage, Religion, and Law in the Western Tradition (Louisville: Westminster/John Knox Press, 1997), 42-73. Lindberg aptly summarizes Luther's impact on marriage: "Luther's application of evangelical theology to marriage and family desacramentalized marriage; desacralized the clergy and resacralized the life of the laity; opposed the maze of canonical impediments to marriage; strove to unravel the skein of canon law, imperial law, and German customs; and joyfully affirmed God's good creation, including sexual relations" (133).

[9] Formula of Concord-Solid Declaration V:1, Robert Kolb and Timothy Wengert, translators, The Book of Concord (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2000),  581. Hereafter abbreviated as Kolb and Wengert.

[10] Contra this divorce, see Bernd Wannenwetsch, "Luther's Moral Theology" in The Cambridge Companion to Martin Luthr, edited by D. McKim (Cambridgge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 120-135; William Lazareth, Christians in Society: Luther ,the Bible and Social Ethics (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2001);Reinhard Huetter, "The Twofold Center of Lutheran Ethics" in The Promise of Lutheran Ethics edited by  K. Bloomquist and John Stumme (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1998), 31-54. Schroeder asserts that "Huetter's conclusion really is 'the end' of the promise of Lutheran ethics" -"Thursday Theology 26" (November 12, 1998), 1.

[11] "Thursday Theology 34" (January 28, 1999), 2.

[12] William Lazareth, "ELCA Lutherans and Luther on Heterosexual Marriage" VIII (Spring 1995), 235-268. Lazareth writes "Clearly, same-sex  'unions' do not qualify as marriages to be blessed for Christians who have been baptized as saints into the body of Christ. The Lutheran church should not condone the sinful acts (conduct) of an intrinsic disorder (orientation) in God's heterosexual ordering of creation" (236).

[13] Large Catechism I:207, Kolb and Wengert, 414.

[14] Theodore Tappert, editor, Luther: Letters of Spiritual Counsel (Vancouver, British Columbia: Regent College Press, 1995), 273.

[15] LW 45:18.

[16] "Thursday Theology 51"  (May 27, 1999), 3.

[17] "Thursday Theology 159, 5. Similar arguments are advanced by Christian Batalden Scharen, Married in the Sight of God (Landham, Maryland: University of America Press, 2000), although he finally must admit that "an ethic for same-sex relationships goes nowhere with the 'letter' of Luther's views (128). Likewise, Martha Ellen Stortz, "Rethinking Christian Sexuality: Baptized into the Body of Christ" in Faithful Conversations: Christian Perspectives on Homosexuality edited by James M. Childs, Jr. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2003). 64-66.

[18] Tappert, 273. For similar statements in Luther see Luther on Women: A Sourcebook, edited by Susan C.Karant-Nunn and Merry E.Wiesner-Hanks (Cambridge: University of Cambridge Press, 2003), 137-170.

[19] LW 3:251-252.

[20] LW 3:255; Also note Luther's comment on "On War Against the Turk" (1529): "Both the pope and the Turk are so blind and senseless that they commit the dumb sins shamelessly, as an honorable and praiseworthy thing. Since they think so lightly of marriage, it serves them right that there are dog-marriages (and would to God that they were dog-marriages), indeed, also 'Italian marriages' and 'Florentine brides' among them; and they think these things good. I hear one horrible thing after another about what an open and glorious Sodom Turkey is, and everybody who has looked around a little in Rome or Italy knows very well how God revenges and punishes the forbidden marriage, so that Sodom and Gommorah, which God overwhelmed in days of old with fire and brimestone (Gen. 19:24), must seem a mere jest and prelude compared with these abominations" LW 46:198.

[21] Luther, in exposition of Romans 1, Luther links homosexual behavior with idolatry: "For this reason, namely: idolatry, God gave, not only to the above-mentioned disgrace, them, some of them, up to dishonorable passions, to shameful feelings and desires, before God, although even they, like Sodom , called this sin....And the men likewise, with an overpowering drive of lust, gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion, which overpowered the judgment of their reason, for another, men with men, and thus they deal with each other in mutual disgrace, committing shameless acts and consequently, receiving the penalty, punishment, due for their error, fitting and just for so great a sin, the sin of idolatry, in their own persons, according to the teaching and arrangement of God" LW 25:12-13.

[22] See Werner Elert, The Christian Ethos. Trans. Carl J. Schneider (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1957). Elert writes "Creation places man into the world, nomos binds him to the world. In the first place, nomological under law means only that we, like all other creatures, are subject to the orderly rule of God and that we do not live in a world of chaos and arbitrariness" (51).

[23] For a more positive view of the place of "natural law" in Luther, see Carl Braaten, "Natural Law in Theology and Ethics" in The Two Cities of God: The Church's Responsibility for the Earthly City edited by Carl Braaten and Robert Jenson (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1997), 42-58; and Antti Raunio, "Natural Law and Faith: The Forgotten Foundations of Ethics in Luther's Theology" in Union with Christ: The New Finnish Interpretation of Luther edited by Carl Braaten and Robert Jenson (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1998), 96-128; Also see Paul Althaus, The Ethics of Martin Luther, trans. Robert Schultz (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1972), 25-35; Heinrich Bornkamm, Luther and the Old Testament, trans. Eric and Ruth Gritsch (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1969), 124-149; F.Edward Cranz, Luther's Thought on Justice, Law, and Society (Mifflintown,PA: Sigler Press, 1998), 41-72; Wannenwetsch, 123-126.

[24] Edward Schroeder, "The Orders of Creation - Some Reflections on the History and Place of the Term in Systematic Theology" Concordia Theological Monthly XLIII (March, 1972), 165-178. Schroeder attempts (unsuccessfully in my view) to pin "the orders of creation" on Calvinism. His target in this article is Friz Zerbst, The Office of Woman in the Church, trans. A.G.Merkens (Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1955). Schroeder accuses Zerbst of being a "Calvinist" (170). The same label is used for Robert Gagnon. See "Thursday Theology 323" (August 19, 2004), 2-3. In fact it was Adolph von Harless (1806-1879), a confessional Lutheran theologian of Erlangen who popularized the term. See Adolph von Harless, Christliche Ethik (Stuttgart, 1864), 477.

[25] Schroeder, "The Orders of Creation- Some Reflections on the History and Place of the Term in Systematic Theology," 172.

[26] Carl Braaten, "God in Public Life: Rehabilitating the 'Orders of Creation'" First Things (December 1990), 32-38.

[27] Gustaf Wingren, The Flight From Creation (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1971).

[28] LW 37:365; Luther treats the three estates or three orders in any number of places, most representative is the section in the 1528 "Confession Concerning Christ's Supper" LW 37:363-365.

[29] Oswald Bayer, "Nature and Institution: Luther's Doctrine of the Three Orders" Lutheran Quarterly XII (Summer 1998), 139.  Other writings of Bayer relevant to this discussion are "I Believe That God Has Created Me With All That Exists: An Example of Catechetical-Systematics" VIII (Summer 1994), 129-161 and "Luther's Ethics as Pastoral Care" IV (Summer 1990), 125-142. Also see his book, Schoepfung als Anrede (Tuebingen: J.C.B.Mohr, 1986).

[30] Ibid. 141.

[31] Ibid. 143.

[32] Robert Gagnon, The Bible and Homosexual Practice: Texts and Hermeneutics (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2001). See Schroeder's polemical response to Gagnon in "Thursday Theology 323"(August 19, 2004), 1-4.

[33] "Thursday Theology 51" (May 27, 1999), 4.

[34] AC XVIII:5-6, Kolb and Wengert, 49-50.

[35] See, for example, Philip Lee, Against the Protestant Gnostics (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987) and David Yeago, "Gnosticism, Antinomianism, and Reformation Theology: Reflections on the Cost Of A Construal" II Pro Ecclesia (Winter 1993), 37-49. Also note B. Wannenwetsch's critique of the "docetic" turn taken by advocates of homosexual unions in B. Wannenwetsch, "Old Docetism-New Moralism? Questioning a New Direction in the Homosexuality Debate" Modern Theology XVI (July 2000), 353-364.

[36] Christoph Schwoebel, "God, Creation, and the Christian Community: The Dogmatic Basis of a Christian Ethic of Createdness" in The Doctrine of Creation: Essays in Dogmatics, History, and Philosophy, edited by Colin Gunton (Edinburgh: T & T. Clark, 1997), 150.

[37] J. Burgress and M.Kolden, editors. By Faith Alone: Essays on Justification in Honor of Gerhard O. Forde (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2004).

[38] Gerhard Forde, The Law-Gospel Debate (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1969).

[39] For a helpful overview of Forde's method, see James Nestingen, "Examining Sources: Influences on Gerhard Forde's Theology" in Burgess and Kolden, 10-21.

[40] Gerhard Forde, "Law and Sexual Behavior" IX (Spring 1995), 3.

[41] I will forgo the question of the law's third use in this discussion of Forde. This issue of the third use of law in recent American Lutheranism is well-treated by Scott Murray, Law, Life, and the Living God: The Third Use of the Law in Modern American Lutheranism (Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 2002.

[42] Forde, "Law and Sexual Behavior," 4.

[43] Ibid. 7.

[44] Ibid. 5. Also see Forde's description of antinomianism as a "fake theology" in his article, "Fake Theology: Reflections on Antinomianism Past and Present" 22 (Fall 1983),  246-251 and "The Normative Character of Scripture for Matters of Faith and Life: Human Sexuality in Light of Romans 1:16-32" XIV (Summer 1994), 305-314; Also Gerhard Forde, A More Radical Gospel: Essays on Eschatology, Authority, Atonement, and Ecumenism, edited by Mark Mattes and Steven Paulson (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2004), 33-49 , 137-155.

[45] Ibid.6.

[46] Ibid.8.

[47] LW 35:168.

[48] LW 35:170.

[49] Forde, "Law and Sexual Behavior," 10. On this "unity in difference" note Meilaender: "The mutuality for which we are destined is a loving union of those who are other. And for creatures who are finite, historical, and earthly-for embodied human beings-that otherness has a biological grounding. Homosexual acts are forbidden precisely because lover and beloved are biologically, not sufficiently other. The relationship approaches too closely the forbidden love of self" Gilbert Meilaender, The Limits of Love (University Park: The Pennsylvania State University Press, 1987), 129.

[50] Ibid. 16. The fact that homosexual unions are non-productive is not a biological irrelevancy. "...in a world in which the language of love and consent have gradually come to trump all other moral language, we do well to remind ourselves at the outset that marriage, the first of all institutions, is not simply about love in general. It is about the creation of man and woman as different yet made to be true to each other; it is about being fruitful, begetting and rearing children. This pours content and structure into our understanding of sexual love, and it takes seriously the body's character within nature and history" Gilbert Meilaender, "The First of Institutions" VI (Fall 1997), 446.

[51] Gustaf Wingren, Creation and Law, trans. Ross MacKenzie (Philadelphia: Muhlenberg Press, 1961), 25-26. Also James Nestingen, "Luther on Marriage, Vocation, and the Cross" XXIII (Winter 2003), 31-39 and "The Lutheran Reformation and Homosexual Practice" in Childs, 41-58.

[52] Gilbert Meilaender, "Honoring the Bios in Lutheran Bioethics" 43 dialog (Summer 2004), 118-124.

[53] Paul Jersild, Spirit Ethics (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2000), 139.

[54] Robert Jenson, Systematic Theology - Volume 2: The Works of God  (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999),  93. This in contrast to both Schroeder but also Jersild who opines "But for those who discover their homosexual orientation, the norm becomes homosexual behavior" 141.

[55] SC IV:4 in Luther's Small Catechism (Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1986), 22-23.

[56] LC IV:66, Kolb and Wengert, 465.

[57] Stortz, 59-79.

[58] Quoted by Gerhard Forde, On Being a Theologian of the Cross (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1997), x.

Luther's Christocentric Approach to Ethics

By Naomichi Masaki, Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology at Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne, Indiana. This paper was presented at the 11th International Congress for Luther Research in July 2007 in Canoas, RS, Brazil.

 

Ethical Thinking Yesterday and Today

"I'm a spiritual person, just not religious." In North America today, while the mainline churches continue to decline in membership, spirituality, the impulse to seek communion with the Divine, is thriving. More people now ask how they may experience God in their lives rather than how much they should know about God. If they feel God within them then the important question is settled and the rest are details. People are seeking a religion that empowers them rather than a god who commands them.1

 

Among Eastern religions, such an endeavor to feel a god within is not a new phenomenon. For example, Zen Buddhism, which does not require followers to forsake the world to live in seclusion as original Buddhism did, teaches that one should live as if he were already a Buddha rather than make an effort to become a Buddha through rigorous self-disciplines. In the process, the emphasis lies on the empowerment of one's heart.2

In Luther's sixteenth century battles, he faced three fronts that asserted that man has some effective role to play before God: works, mysticism, and reason, which he met in Rome, Karlstadt, and the Swiss.3 Adolf Köberle, in his analysis of the history of religion, similarly observed the trio of moralism/conduct (Stoics, Confucianism, Buddhism, Pharisees, Kant, Fichte, Ritschl, Roman Catholics, pietism), mysticism/emotions (Karlstadt, Münzer, Schleiermacher, Romanticism, Taoism, Neoplatonism, Schwenkfeld, Zinzendorf), and speculation/reason (rationalism, Thomism, German Idealism, Hegel, Kant) to be the options in man's quest for holiness before God.4 Oswald Bayer has assessed the three ways of modern theology as moral/ethical (ethics/doing, represented by the Kantian tradition), existential/motivational (religion/feeling, represented by the followers of Schleiermacher), and theoretical/conceptual (metaphysics/knowing, as represented by the followers of Hegel).5 What is in common among the trios identified by Luther, Köberle, and Bayer is their point of departure: they all begin with something in us, which is the same accent found in modern spirituality and Eastern religions.

Already before 1520, Luther had begun to attack Aristotle's ethical system because it offered the idea that people become good by doing good and acquiring skill, habits, and virtue.6 Medieval scholastics built on this foundation by including grace as the energy to empower such ethics. On the other hand, during the second half of the 1520s, Luther saw Greek thought behind the teachings of Rome, Karlstadt, and the Swiss; namely, that there are two opposing realms: an earthly/external one and a spiritual/internal one. They held that, since man is trapped in earthly and material things, he is to find salvation by rising above this material realm into the inward spiritual sphere. Such upward movement required spiritual exercises that were heavily emotional, for the upward movement was none other than the inward movement. The Sacramentarians had made Christ's presence spiritualistic and remote with their aberrant view of the Lord's Supper, but in Luther's Large Confession (1528), he responded to such thought by crying, "Jesus is not far, but near."

In any theological system built upon Aristotle's ethics or a Neoplatonic dichotomy, man will be said to contribute somehow to his own salvation and Christian life. This tends to isolate ethics to the Third Article in combination with human strength; the quest for holiness is seen primarily as an activity of the Holy Spirit in cooperation with man's efforts. For example, when the Baptist Rick Warren says, "God's ultimate goal for your life on earth is not comfort, but character development," he encourages readers to cultivate an inward spiritual life.7 Warren writes that a Christ-like character in a believer is "the Holy Spirit's job to produce," which takes place in daily life "through the choices we make" when "we choose to do the right thing in situations and then trust God's Spirit to give us His power, love, faith, and wisdom to do it."8 If Warren is representative of modern North American Christian spirituality, this indicates a continuation of or return to the old system of Aristotelian ethics that Luther diagnosed and rejected in medieval Roman Catholicism. The combination of a positive view of man's spiritual ability with the assistance of the free-floating Holy Spirit is still present today.

 

Luther's Second Article Confession of Ethics in His Large Confession (1528)

By contrast, Luther's approach to ethics is refreshing. Unlike the many who locate ethics primarily under the First or Third Articles, in his Large Confession (1528), Luther places ethics within the Second Article (WA 26: 499-509; AE 37: 360-72).

It may appear that such a placement is rather accidental. One could argue that Luther discusses Christian vocation within the Second Article only because he was speaking against the abuses of monasteries and religious foundations that had departed from their original purposes of teaching young people to serve in the church, family, and the government. The monastic orders Luther was criticizing had long obscured Christ's atonement by their emphasis on works righteousness (WA 26: 503, 35-505, 28; AE 37: 363-65).

However, a further examination of the third section of the Large Confession indicates that Luther intentionally located ethics under the Second Article. For several reasons, it is clear that he wrote and organized his thought very carefully in this Large Confession. He was writing this confession coram Deo and coram mundo (WA 26: 499, 19-21; AE 37: 360). It was his theological legacy (WA 26: 499, 21-23; AE 37: 360). He put his life into it and considered it a confession to die with. He says that he has "most diligently traced all these articles through the Scriptures" and "examined them again and again in the light thereof" (WA 26: 499, 26-500, 20; AE 37: 360). This he did in full awareness that Satan is at work in the errors of enthusiasts concerning baptism and the Lord's Supper (WA 26: 499, 15-19; AE 37: 360).

Further support for the thesis that Luther intentionally located ethics under the Second Article is found in the fact that, for Luther, Jesus always occupied the central place of his confession. The Large Confession is not an exception, as the structure of its third part indicates. While Luther devotes about the same amount of space to confessing the divine majesty and the Holy Spirit, he uses ten times more to confess Jesus (WA 26: 500, 33-505, 28; AE 37: 361-65). Luther presents three subtopics under the Second Article: free will, original sin, and the holy orders of the church, family, and civil government.

In the Large Confession, after having briefly confessed the majesty of God in the Holy Trinity (WA 26: 500, 27-32; AE 37: 361), Luther moves from Jesus as a man to Jesus as God; then onto his passion, death, and burial for our redemption from sin, death, and the eternal wrath of God; and to his resurrection, ascension, and session to be our Lord and Bishop (WA 26: 500, 33-502, 34; AE 37: 361-62). The confession of the Holy Spirit follows, but it is as brief as the confession of the Holy Trinity. In short, the Holy Spirit gives us faith, resurrects our bodies, frees us from sin, and bestows a joyful heart and a sure conscience (WA 26: 505, 29-37; AE 37: 365-66).

After confessing the divine majesty of the Holy Trinity, the office and works of the Son, and the service of the Holy Spirit, Luther gives a summary of the works of the Triune God in terms of His giving:

The Father gives Himself to us, with heaven and earth and all the creatures, in order that they may serve us and benefit us...The Son Himself subsequently gave Himself and bestowed all His works, sufferings, wisdom, and righteousness...The Holy Spirit comes and gives Himself to us also, wholly and completely. He teaches us to understand this deed of Christ...He does this both inwardly and outwardly-inwardly through faith and other spiritual gifts, outwardly, however, through the Gospel, through baptism and the sacrament of the altar, through which as through three means or ways he comes to us and inculcates the sufferings of Christ to bring the benefit of salvation. (WA 26: 505, 38-506, 12; AE 37: 366; modified translation and emphasis mine)

[NI]His confession of baptism, the Lord's Supper, the church, holy absolution, etc. follows (WA 26: 506, 13-509, 28; AE 37: 366-72).

Overall, the heart of Luther's Large Confession concerns the works of Christ on the cross and how the fruits of the cross are to be delivered through the means of grace in the church. His confession is not about a static god devised by the human heart, but about the God who rejoices in giving. At the center of this giving is Christ and his office as the Savior.

Luther's Christocentric Large Confession may be appreciated further when it is compared with the confessions that were drafted chiefly by Melanchthon. The Schwabach Articles (Article V), the Marburg Articles (Article V-VII), and the Augsburg Confession (Article IV) all emphasize our faith for justification: "This faith is our righteousness."9 In contrast, Luther in his Large Confession writes that we are saved "through the one righteousness which our Savior Jesus Christ is and has bestowed upon us...We are saved through Christ alone" (WA 26: 502, 25, 505, 18-19, 506, 1; AE 37: 362, 364, 365, 366; emphasis mine). In fact, Luther does not give a formula for the doctrine of justification in the Large Confession. Rather, he confesses our salvation from the point of view of Christ in his accomplishment and delivery rather than from our human point of view in reception of the benefits of Christ's work through faith. The focal point in the Large Confession is not a faith event or spiritual event, but the Christ event.

 

"All heresy strikes at this dear article of Jesus Christ"

In Luther's extended section concerning the Son in the Large Confession, he extols Jesus as the Lamb of God and the Ebed Yahweh (WA 26: 502, 18-34; AE 37: 362). He rejects all doctrine that erroneously praises our free will as "diametrically contrary to the help and grace of our Savior Jesus Christ" (WA 26: 502, 36-503, 19; AE 37: 363). This Luther does because "outside of Christ" we are powerless to "prepare ourselves" for righteousness and life (WA 26: 503, 19-22; AE 37: 363). He then condemns all who deny original sin (WA 26: 503, 25-34; AE 37: 363).

The Augsburg Confession places original sin and justification into a logical relationship with each other and puts the articles on original sin and free will in two separate locations (AC II, AC XVIII). In contrast, Luther does not relate the doctrine of original sin to justification, but to Christ, and confesses the doctrines of free will and original sin side by side. He rejects all monastic orders and religious foundations because the works invented by men have replaced the office and work of Christ. As in the doctrine of free will and original sin, Luther evaluates the doctrine of vocation through the criteria of the office and works of Christ. We recall the words of Luther in The Three Symbols (1538): "All heresy strikes at this dear article of Jesus Christ" (WA 50: 267, 18; AE 34: 208; translation mine).

The confession of Christ alongside the rejection of heresies is also found in the Smalcald Articles, Luther's later confessional legacy of 1537. Again, Luther does not present a separate major article on justification, except for a brief one toward the end (SA III, XIII). What he called "the chief article" in Part II, Article I, has to do more with "the office and work of Christ," rather than justification by faith (BSLK, 415; Kolb-Wengert, 300). In SA II, I, Luther employs an approach also used in his Catechisms in their sections concerning baptism and the Lord's Supper; namely, he simply gives the words of the Lord instead of presenting well-thought-through theological formulations. Luther evaluates all other ecclesiastical practices such as the mass, pilgrimages, monasteries, relics, indulgences, the invocation of saints, and papacy itself, in terms of this chief article of Christ (SA II, II-IV). Among them, the Roman mass was "the greatest and most terrible abomination" of the chief article, because the benefits from the cross are not delivered in the mass (SA II, II, 1). For Luther, the confession of the office and works of Christ is never complete without confessing how the forgiveness won on Calvary is given out.

 

Free Will, Original Sin, and the Doctrine of Vocation

As noted above, for Luther, free will, original sin, and the doctrine of vocation are each confessed in relation to the office of Christ as the Lamb of God, the Ebed Yahweh. That the discussion of ethics is placed together with the doctrine of free will and original sin helps explain why Luther put ethics under the Second Article.

Luther must have been aware that when free will is affirmed and original sin is denied, then Christian vocation is also ruined. When Christ's office as Savior is replaced by something in the Christian (see LC V, 7), that something would seek to play a key role not only in the Christian's salvation but also in the Christian's daily walk in the world. The classical "three ladders" identified by Luther, Köberle, and Bayer are nothing other than expositions of "our own preparation, thoughts, and works" that Augustana V rejects. The externum verbum way of gift-bestowing Gospel is applicable to man not only before he is baptized but throughout the baptismal life. Luther has a means of grace doctrine of ethics. Theodor Kliefoth of the nineteenth century captured this thought rightly when he observed concerning the liturgy that nothing is more against the Lutheran way than that the sacrificium stands independently from the sacramentum.10

Since all humans, even those who are baptized, regard themselves as the center of the world, then for even the baptized to assume that they have control over how to use the law of God to walk a God-pleasing life is at best an illusion. Luther knew that Satan can use the best efforts of Christians to destroy them, just as he can accuse them for their unethical behaviors. Before men, Christians are measured by their performance, but coram Deo it must be confessed that outward service to the neighbor may be mingled with inward desire for human recognition and enhancement of personal status.

Luther's placement of ethics under the Second Article, and his confession of ethics together with the doctrines of free will and original sin, indicate that he sees the life of the baptized against the serious backdrop of the sinful flesh, the world, and the devil. Luther never loses sight of the Christian's sinful condition,11 so the forgiveness that Christ won on Calvary for Christians and delivers to them in the means of grace is never diminished to the sideline. Forgiveness is never taken for granted when Luther confesses Christian vocation.

 

Ethics and the Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel

Such a recognition leads one to confess that ethics is bound together with the doctrine of the proper distinction between law and gospel. Luther in his Great Galatians Lectures (1531) observed that since the devil ceaselessly attempts to take away the pure doctrine of faith and substitute for it the doctrine of works and human tradition, the doctrine of law and gospel can never be discussed and taught enough. In a Christian's life, he says, the gospel is "a rare guest" but the law is "a constant guest" in the conscience (WA 40 I: 209, 20-22; AE 26: 117).12 "As soon as reason and the law are joined, faith immediately loses its virginity" (WA 40 I: 204, 17-18; AE 26: 113).13 Thus, if the doctrine of the proper distinction between law and gospel is lost, all doctrine and life are lost. But if it flourishes, everything flourishes, including the life of the baptized in the world (WA 40 I: 39, 25-26; AE 26: 3).

The proper office of the law is to kill (WA 40 I: 517, 26; AE 26: 335).14 It makes people guilty and humbles them, leading them down to hell (WA 40 I: 529, 11-12; AE 26: 345).15 When the law has done its job, every mouth is stopped and silenced before God. There is nothing more one can say to him. The law strikes people dumb. While the law does not make a sinner, it seeks the sinner, and without fail it finds, judges, and kills the sinner it seeks.16 It strips the self-righteous, self-excusing sinner of every credential and covering. One's possibility of having a ground of confidence located within has been wiped out by the law. The Lord would destroy in humans everything that blocks him off from them. In his Lecture on Psalm 51 Luther pointed out: "A lawyer speaks of man as an owner and master of property, and a physician speaks of man as healthy or sick. But a theologian discusses man as a SINNER (PECCATORE)" (WA 40 II: 327, 19-21; AE 12: 310; emphasis mine, reflecting the Latin).17

While the proper office of the law is to kill, and increase sin by exposing it, the proper office of the gospel is the preaching of the forgiveness of sins.18 "It is the proper office of Christ alone to justify the sinner" (WA 40 I: 406, 24-25; AE 26: 259).19 The gospel makes man alive; it vivifies. Sinful man, exposed by the law, is now clothed by the gospel. The gospel does not seek the saint. It creates the saint it seeks. The gospel does not look for saving faith. It creates and sustains saving faith.20

The gospel deals with sinners in a way opposite that of the law, which uses coercion. Reason says, "It is unjust for God to damn a person." If this were true, then it would be even more vastly unjust for him to forgive people because someone took damnation in their place. Luther confessed, "Against my sin, which accuses and devours me, I find there another sin. But this other sin, namely, that which is in the flesh of Christ, takes away the sin of the world" (WA 40 I: 273, 18-21; AE 26: 159).21 Christ preaches through the mouth of his sent-one, the pastor, that sin is now located on the Lamb of God. What he does has no reason in humans, no ethical necessity, no emotional necessity, and no logical necessity. Jesus puts himself in the place of fallen sinners, which is the reverse of them putting themselves in his place. This is the way of Calvary. Christ became "the greatest thief, murderer, adulterer, robber, desecrator, blasphemer" (WA 40 I: 433, 26-28; AE 26: 277).22

The gospel comes through resistible gifts. It comes in a gift-giving way and in "more than one way" (SA III, IV): through the waters of holy baptism, through the living voice of the gospel in preaching and absolution, and in the body and blood of the Lord's Supper.

Gifted by him, Christ's holy people live their lives enveloped in Christ's gifts and forgiveness, serving their neighbor in word and deed. Yet there are always temptations in the world that seek to diminish Jesus. Luther warns, "Therefore Satan continually mounts a new battle against us" (WA 40 I: 318, 12; AE 26: 193).23 The devil "often suggests a false Christ to me" (WA 40 I: 321, 32-33; AE 26: 196).24 Since Christians are powerless before Satan, their daily life of vocation is a daily return to baptism.

Luther presents the life of Christians in their daily callings as a life that is lived within the forgiveness of sins. Ethics may not be detached from the body and blood of Jesus that the baptized receive. This is where the forgiveness is bestowed (WA 18: 203, 39-204, 9; AE 40: 214). Bodied together and blooded together, the communicants are enlivened to serve one another in word and deed, not only in the church but in the world.

 

Ethics as the Gift of the Lord

Luther's location of ethics under the Second Article does not mean that this doctrine has nothing to do with the Third Article. Luther does not speak of the works of a free-floating Holy Spirit which are supposed to assist the Christian's efforts in faith and life. But it is precisely because the Holy Spirit teaches the work of Christ that Christian vocation is seen Christocentrically (WA 26: 506, 4-12; AE 37: 366). When the Holy Spirit has done his job, the Christian sees only Jesus. And when the sinner is thus reconciled with the Father through Christ, he is brought back to the world and receives the creation as his First Article gift (WA 26: 505, 40-506, 3; AE 37: 366).25 Creation is the sphere and arena of Christian vocation in church, family, and government. It is where the common order of Christian love is also exercised. In the Christian life, the order of the Holy Trinity moves from the Holy Spirit to the Son and to the Father.

All three Articles are fully confessed by Luther when the office and works of Christ remain central. The orders of church, family, and government, as well as the common order of Christian love, belong to the Second Article of the Creed, because the Lord Jesus continues to preserve the person who occupies these orders and offices as a forgiven person. In this way, Jesus keeps opening the way for the baptized to serve him. Orders established by human traditions, on the other hand, do away with saving faith.

For Luther, ethics is a means of grace doctrine, because only when the Lord's gifts that are given are received does his blessing then move Christians out into their callings, where his gifts have their fruition. The placement of ethics under the Second Article in the Large Confession (1528) provides an occasion for recalling that the One who delivers the forgiveness from Calvary to enliven Christians is Jesus Himself. Ethics in each Christian's callings is the arena where the Lord has his way with his people in the world.

 


1.              See  Jerry Adler, "In Search of the Spiritual," MSNBC.com, September 5, 2005; Cheslyn Jones, Geoffrey Wainwright, and Edward Yarnold eds., The Study of Spirituality (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986); Frank Senn ed., Protestant Spiritual Traditions (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1986); James M. Kittelson, "Contemporary Spirituality's Challenge to Sola Gratia," Lutheran Quarterly 9 (Winter 1995): 367-90; Scott Hendrix, "Martin Luther's Reformation of Spirituality," Lutheran Quarterly 13 (Autumn 1999): 249-70; Bradley Hanson, A Graceful Life: Lutheran Spirituality for Today (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 2000). John Pless gives an excellent Lutheran critique of contemporary trends in spirituality in his "The Triangular Shape of the Pastor's Devotional Life," in Lord Jesus Christ, Will You Not Stay: Essays in Honor of Ronald Feuerhahn on the Occasion of his Sixty-fifth Birthday, eds. J. Bart Day, Jon D. Vieker, Albert B. Collver, Scott A. Bruzek, Kent J. Burreson, Martin E. Conkling, and Naomichi Masaki (Houston: The Feuerhahn Festschrift Committee, 2002), 317-31, particularly on pages 317-18.

2.             See Naomichi Masaki, "The Quest for Experiencing the Divine: The Rise and Effect of Eastern Religious," For the Life of the World 11 (January 2007): 8-10.

3.            Norman E. Nagel, "Luther's Understanding of Christ in Relation to His Doctrine of the Lord's Supper," Ph.D. dissertation, University of Cambridge, 1961.

4.            Adolf Köberle, The Quest for Holiness: A Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Investigation, trans. John C. Mattes (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1936), 1-48. The original title is Rechtfertigung und Heiligung: eine biblische, theologiegeschichtliche und systematische Untersuchung.

5.             Oswald Bayer, Theology the Lutheran Way, ed. and trans. Jeffrey G. Silcock and Mark C. Mattes (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2007): 93-171.

6.            Gerhard O. Forde, "Luther's ‘Ethics,'" in A More Radical Gospel: Essays on Eschatology, Authority, Atonement, and Ecumenism, eds. Mark C. Mattes and Steven D. Paulson (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2004), 137-41.

7.           Rick Warren, The Purpose Driven Life: What on Earth Am I Here For? (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2002), 173.

8.          Ibid., 174.

9.            Robert Kolb and James A. Nestingen eds., Sources and Contexts of The Book of Concord (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2001), 85, 89-90; Kolb-Wengert, 40-41; BSLK, 56-57.

10.             Theodor Kliefoth, Die ursprüngliche Gottesdienstordnung in den deutschen Kirchen lutherischen Bekenntnisses, ihre Destruction und Reformation (Rostock and Schwerin: Stillerschen Hofbuchhandlung, 1847), 197.

11.            See WA 40 I: 84, 17-19; AE 26: 33. In his Great Galatian Lectures of 1531, Luther teaches that man is indifferent and regards sin as something trivial, a mere nothing. The sinner supposes that sin has so little weight and force that some little work or merit will remove it. That is why the hammer of God is needed (Jer 23:29; SA III, II, 4).

12.           Sed quando ad experientiam venit, tum invenis Evangelium rarum et e contra legem assiduum esse hospitem in conscientia.

13.          Quam primum autem Lex et ratio coniunguntur, statim virginitas fidei violate est.

14.         Legis ergo officium est tantum occidere.

15.          Quare legis proprium offficium est nos reos facere, humiliare, occidere, ad infernum deducere et omnia nobis auferre.

16.         See Heidelberg Disputation (1518), Thesis 23. WA 1: 354. 25-26; AE 31: 41.

17.        Sic Iureconsultus loquitur der homine possessore et domino suarum rerum, Medicus loquitur de homine sano et aegro, Theologus autem disputat de homine PECCATORE.

18.       Das egentliche Ampt des Evengelii, proprium officium evangelii is the preaching of the forgiveness of sins (SA III, IV).

19.         Iustificare peccatorem sit solius Christi proprium officium.

20.          See Heidelberg Disputation (1518), Thesis 28. WA 1: 354. 35-36; AE 31: 41.

21.         Ibi peccatum aliud invenio contra meum peccatum quod me accusat et devorat. Peccatum vero aliud, scilicet in carne Christi, quod tollit peccatum totius mundi, omnipotens est, damnat ac devorat peccatum meum.

22.        Et hoc viderunt omnes Prophetae, quod Christus futurus esset omnium maximus latro, homicida, adulter, fur, sacrilegus, blasphemus etc., quod nullus maior unquam in mundo fuerit.

23.       Quare subinde novam pugnam nobis movet Satan.

24.       Sed subinde suggerit mihi Diabolus falsum Christum.

25.        Also see SC II, 1-2; LC II, 9-24.

Luther's Christocentric Approach to Ethics By Naomichi Masaki

Ethical Thinking Yesterday and Today "I'm a spiritual person, just not religious." In North America today, while the mainline churches continue to decline in membership, spirituality, the impulse to seek communion with the Divine, is thriving. More people now ask how they may experience God in their lives rather than how much they should know about God. If they feel God within them then the important question is settled and the rest are details. People are seeking a religion that empowers them rather than a god who commands them.1

Among Eastern religions, such an endeavor to feel a god within is not a new phenomenon. For example, Zen Buddhism, which does not require followers to forsake the world to live in seclusion as original Buddhism did, teaches that one should live as if he were already a Buddha rather than make an effort to become a Buddha through rigorous self-disciplines. In the process, the emphasis lies on the empowerment of one's heart.2

In Luther's sixteenth century battles, he faced three fronts that asserted that man has some effective role to play before God: works, mysticism, and reason, which he met in Rome, Karlstadt, and the Swiss.3 Adolf Köberle, in his analysis of the history of religion, similarly observed the trio of moralism/conduct (Stoics, Confucianism, Buddhism, Pharisees, Kant, Fichte, Ritschl, Roman Catholics, pietism), mysticism/emotions (Karlstadt, Münzer, Schleiermacher, Romanticism, Taoism, Neoplatonism, Schwenkfeld, Zinzendorf), and speculation/reason (rationalism, Thomism, German Idealism, Hegel, Kant) to be the options in man's quest for holiness before God.4 Oswald Bayer has assessed the three ways of modern theology as moral/ethical (ethics/doing, represented by the Kantian tradition), existential/motivational (religion/feeling, represented by the followers of Schleiermacher), and theoretical/conceptual (metaphysics/knowing, as represented by the followers of Hegel).5 What is in common among the trios identified by Luther, Köberle, and Bayer is their point of departure: they all begin with something in us, which is the same accent found in modern spirituality and Eastern religions.

Already before 1520, Luther had begun to attack Aristotle's ethical system because it offered the idea that people become good by doing good and acquiring skill, habits, and virtue.6 Medieval scholastics built on this foundation by including grace as the energy to empower such ethics. On the other hand, during the second half of the 1520s, Luther saw Greek thought behind the teachings of Rome, Karlstadt, and the Swiss; namely, that there are two opposing realms: an earthly/external one and a spiritual/internal one. They held that, since man is trapped in earthly and material things, he is to find salvation by rising above this material realm into the inward spiritual sphere. Such upward movement required spiritual exercises that were heavily emotional, for the upward movement was none other than the inward movement. The Sacramentarians had made Christ's presence spiritualistic and remote with their aberrant view of the Lord's Supper, but in Luther's Large Confession (1528), he responded to such thought by crying, "Jesus is not far, but near."

In any theological system built upon Aristotle's ethics or a Neoplatonic dichotomy, man will be said to contribute somehow to his own salvation and Christian life. This tends to isolate ethics to the Third Article in combination with human strength; the quest for holiness is seen primarily as an activity of the Holy Spirit in cooperation with man's efforts. For example, when the Baptist Rick Warren says, "God's ultimate goal for your life on earth is not comfort, but character development," he encourages readers to cultivate an inward spiritual life.7 Warren writes that a Christ-like character in a believer is "the Holy Spirit's job to produce," which takes place in daily life "through the choices we make" when "we choose to do the right thing in situations and then trust God's Spirit to give us His power, love, faith, and wisdom to do it."8 If Warren is representative of modern North American Christian spirituality, this indicates a continuation of or return to the old system of Aristotelian ethics that Luther diagnosed and rejected in medieval Roman Catholicism. The combination of a positive view of man's spiritual ability with the assistance of the free-floating Holy Spirit is still present today.

 

Luther's Second Article Confession of Ethics in His Large Confession (1528)

By contrast, Luther's approach to ethics is refreshing. Unlike the many who locate ethics primarily under the First or Third Articles, in his Large Confession (1528), Luther places ethics within the Second Article (WA 26: 499-509; AE 37: 360-72).

It may appear that such a placement is rather accidental. One could argue that Luther discusses Christian vocation within the Second Article only because he was speaking against the abuses of monasteries and religious foundations that had departed from their original purposes of teaching young people to serve in the church, family, and the government. The monastic orders Luther was criticizing had long obscured Christ's atonement by their emphasis on works righteousness (WA 26: 503, 35-505, 28; AE 37: 363-65).

However, a further examination of the third section of the Large Confession indicates that Luther intentionally located ethics under the Second Article. For several reasons, it is clear that he wrote and organized his thought very carefully in this Large Confession. He was writing this confession coram Deo and coram mundo (WA 26: 499, 19-21; AE 37: 360). It was his theological legacy (WA 26: 499, 21-23; AE 37: 360). He put his life into it and considered it a confession to die with. He says that he has "most diligently traced all these articles through the Scriptures" and "examined them again and again in the light thereof" (WA 26: 499, 26-500, 20; AE 37: 360). This he did in full awareness that Satan is at work in the errors of enthusiasts concerning baptism and the Lord's Supper (WA 26: 499, 15-19; AE 37: 360).

Further support for the thesis that Luther intentionally located ethics under the Second Article is found in the fact that, for Luther, Jesus always occupied the central place of his confession. The Large Confession is not an exception, as the structure of its third part indicates. While Luther devotes about the same amount of space to confessing the divine majesty and the Holy Spirit, he uses ten times more to confess Jesus (WA 26: 500, 33-505, 28; AE 37: 361-65). Luther presents three subtopics under the Second Article: free will, original sin, and the holy orders of the church, family, and civil government.

In the Large Confession, after having briefly confessed the majesty of God in the Holy Trinity (WA 26: 500, 27-32; AE 37: 361), Luther moves from Jesus as a man to Jesus as God; then onto his passion, death, and burial for our redemption from sin, death, and the eternal wrath of God; and to his resurrection, ascension, and session to be our Lord and Bishop (WA 26: 500, 33-502, 34; AE 37: 361-62). The confession of the Holy Spirit follows, but it is as brief as the confession of the Holy Trinity. In short, the Holy Spirit gives us faith, resurrects our bodies, frees us from sin, and bestows a joyful heart and a sure conscience (WA 26: 505, 29-37; AE 37: 365-66).

After confessing the divine majesty of the Holy Trinity, the office and works of the Son, and the service of the Holy Spirit, Luther gives a summary of the works of the Triune God in terms of His giving:

The Father gives Himself to us, with heaven and earth and all the creatures, in order that they may serve us and benefit us...The Son Himself subsequently gave Himself and bestowed all His works, sufferings, wisdom, and righteousness...The Holy Spirit comes and gives Himself to us also, wholly and completely. He teaches us to understand this deed of Christ...He does this both inwardly and outwardly-inwardly through faith and other spiritual gifts, outwardly, however, through the Gospel, through baptism and the sacrament of the altar, through which as through three means or ways he comes to us and inculcates the sufferings of Christ to bring the benefit of salvation. (WA 26: 505, 38-506, 12; AE 37: 366; modified translation and emphasis mine)

[NI]His confession of baptism, the Lord's Supper, the church, holy absolution, etc. follows (WA 26: 506, 13-509, 28; AE 37: 366-72).

Overall, the heart of Luther's Large Confession concerns the works of Christ on the cross and how the fruits of the cross are to be delivered through the means of grace in the church. His confession is not about a static god devised by the human heart, but about the God who rejoices in giving. At the center of this giving is Christ and his office as the Savior.

Luther's Christocentric Large Confession may be appreciated further when it is compared with the confessions that were drafted chiefly by Melanchthon. The Schwabach Articles (Article V), the Marburg Articles (Article V-VII), and the Augsburg Confession (Article IV) all emphasize our faith for justification: "This faith is our righteousness."9 In contrast, Luther in his Large Confession writes that we are saved "through the one righteousness which our Savior Jesus Christ is and has bestowed upon us...We are saved through Christ alone" (WA 26: 502, 25, 505, 18-19, 506, 1; AE 37: 362, 364, 365, 366; emphasis mine). In fact, Luther does not give a formula for the doctrine of justification in the Large Confession. Rather, he confesses our salvation from the point of view of Christ in his accomplishment and delivery rather than from our human point of view in reception of the benefits of Christ's work through faith. The focal point in the Large Confession is not a faith event or spiritual event, but the Christ event.

 

"All heresy strikes at this dear article of Jesus Christ"

In Luther's extended section concerning the Son in the Large Confession, he extols Jesus as the Lamb of God and the Ebed Yahweh (WA 26: 502, 18-34; AE 37: 362). He rejects all doctrine that erroneously praises our free will as "diametrically contrary to the help and grace of our Savior Jesus Christ" (WA 26: 502, 36-503, 19; AE 37: 363). This Luther does because "outside of Christ" we are powerless to "prepare ourselves" for righteousness and life (WA 26: 503, 19-22; AE 37: 363). He then condemns all who deny original sin (WA 26: 503, 25-34; AE 37: 363).

The Augsburg Confession places original sin and justification into a logical relationship with each other and puts the articles on original sin and free will in two separate locations (AC II, AC XVIII). In contrast, Luther does not relate the doctrine of original sin to justification, but to Christ, and confesses the doctrines of free will and original sin side by side. He rejects all monastic orders and religious foundations because the works invented by men have replaced the office and work of Christ. As in the doctrine of free will and original sin, Luther evaluates the doctrine of vocation through the criteria of the office and works of Christ. We recall the words of Luther in The Three Symbols (1538): "All heresy strikes at this dear article of Jesus Christ" (WA 50: 267, 18; AE 34: 208; translation mine).

The confession of Christ alongside the rejection of heresies is also found in the Smalcald Articles, Luther's later confessional legacy of 1537. Again, Luther does not present a separate major article on justification, except for a brief one toward the end (SA III, XIII). What he called "the chief article" in Part II, Article I, has to do more with "the office and work of Christ," rather than justification by faith (BSLK, 415; Kolb-Wengert, 300). In SA II, I, Luther employs an approach also used in his Catechisms in their sections concerning baptism and the Lord's Supper; namely, he simply gives the words of the Lord instead of presenting well-thought-through theological formulations. Luther evaluates all other ecclesiastical practices such as the mass, pilgrimages, monasteries, relics, indulgences, the invocation of saints, and papacy itself, in terms of this chief article of Christ (SA II, II-IV). Among them, the Roman mass was "the greatest and most terrible abomination" of the chief article, because the benefits from the cross are not delivered in the mass (SA II, II, 1). For Luther, the confession of the office and works of Christ is never complete without confessing how the forgiveness won on Calvary is given out.

 

Free Will, Original Sin, and the Doctrine of Vocation

As noted above, for Luther, free will, original sin, and the doctrine of vocation are each confessed in relation to the office of Christ as the Lamb of God, the Ebed Yahweh. That the discussion of ethics is placed together with the doctrine of free will and original sin helps explain why Luther put ethics under the Second Article.

Luther must have been aware that when free will is affirmed and original sin is denied, then Christian vocation is also ruined. When Christ's office as Savior is replaced by something in the Christian (see LC V, 7), that something would seek to play a key role not only in the Christian's salvation but also in the Christian's daily walk in the world. The classical "three ladders" identified by Luther, Köberle, and Bayer are nothing other than expositions of "our own preparation, thoughts, and works" that Augustana V rejects. The externum verbum way of gift-bestowing Gospel is applicable to man not only before he is baptized but throughout the baptismal life. Luther has a means of grace doctrine of ethics. Theodor Kliefoth of the nineteenth century captured this thought rightly when he observed concerning the liturgy that nothing is more against the Lutheran way than that the sacrificium stands independently from the sacramentum.10

Since all humans, even those who are baptized, regard themselves as the center of the world, then for even the baptized to assume that they have control over how to use the law of God to walk a God-pleasing life is at best an illusion. Luther knew that Satan can use the best efforts of Christians to destroy them, just as he can accuse them for their unethical behaviors. Before men, Christians are measured by their performance, but coram Deo it must be confessed that outward service to the neighbor may be mingled with inward desire for human recognition and enhancement of personal status.

Luther's placement of ethics under the Second Article, and his confession of ethics together with the doctrines of free will and original sin, indicate that he sees the life of the baptized against the serious backdrop of the sinful flesh, the world, and the devil. Luther never loses sight of the Christian's sinful condition,11 so the forgiveness that Christ won on Calvary for Christians and delivers to them in the means of grace is never diminished to the sideline. Forgiveness is never taken for granted when Luther confesses Christian vocation.

 

Ethics and the Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel

Such a recognition leads one to confess that ethics is bound together with the doctrine of the proper distinction between law and gospel. Luther in his Great Galatians Lectures (1531) observed that since the devil ceaselessly attempts to take away the pure doctrine of faith and substitute for it the doctrine of works and human tradition, the doctrine of law and gospel can never be discussed and taught enough. In a Christian's life, he says, the gospel is "a rare guest" but the law is "a constant guest" in the conscience (WA 40 I: 209, 20-22; AE 26: 117).12 "As soon as reason and the law are joined, faith immediately loses its virginity" (WA 40 I: 204, 17-18; AE 26: 113).13 Thus, if the doctrine of the proper distinction between law and gospel is lost, all doctrine and life are lost. But if it flourishes, everything flourishes, including the life of the baptized in the world (WA 40 I: 39, 25-26; AE 26: 3).

The proper office of the law is to kill (WA 40 I: 517, 26; AE 26: 335).14 It makes people guilty and humbles them, leading them down to hell (WA 40 I: 529, 11-12; AE 26: 345).15 When the law has done its job, every mouth is stopped and silenced before God. There is nothing more one can say to him. The law strikes people dumb. While the law does not make a sinner, it seeks the sinner, and without fail it finds, judges, and kills the sinner it seeks.16 It strips the self-righteous, self-excusing sinner of every credential and covering. One's possibility of having a ground of confidence located within has been wiped out by the law. The Lord would destroy in humans everything that blocks him off from them. In his Lecture on Psalm 51 Luther pointed out: "A lawyer speaks of man as an owner and master of property, and a physician speaks of man as healthy or sick. But a theologian discusses man as a SINNER (PECCATORE)" (WA 40 II: 327, 19-21; AE 12: 310; emphasis mine, reflecting the Latin).17

While the proper office of the law is to kill, and increase sin by exposing it, the proper office of the gospel is the preaching of the forgiveness of sins.18 "It is the proper office of Christ alone to justify the sinner" (WA 40 I: 406, 24-25; AE 26: 259).19 The gospel makes man alive; it vivifies. Sinful man, exposed by the law, is now clothed by the gospel. The gospel does not seek the saint. It creates the saint it seeks. The gospel does not look for saving faith. It creates and sustains saving faith.20

The gospel deals with sinners in a way opposite that of the law, which uses coercion. Reason says, "It is unjust for God to damn a person." If this were true, then it would be even more vastly unjust for him to forgive people because someone took damnation in their place. Luther confessed, "Against my sin, which accuses and devours me, I find there another sin. But this other sin, namely, that which is in the flesh of Christ, takes away the sin of the world" (WA 40 I: 273, 18-21; AE 26: 159).21 Christ preaches through the mouth of his sent-one, the pastor, that sin is now located on the Lamb of God. What he does has no reason in humans, no ethical necessity, no emotional necessity, and no logical necessity. Jesus puts himself in the place of fallen sinners, which is the reverse of them putting themselves in his place. This is the way of Calvary. Christ became "the greatest thief, murderer, adulterer, robber, desecrator, blasphemer" (WA 40 I: 433, 26-28; AE 26: 277).22

The gospel comes through resistible gifts. It comes in a gift-giving way and in "more than one way" (SA III, IV): through the waters of holy baptism, through the living voice of the gospel in preaching and absolution, and in the body and blood of the Lord's Supper.

Gifted by him, Christ's holy people live their lives enveloped in Christ's gifts and forgiveness, serving their neighbor in word and deed. Yet there are always temptations in the world that seek to diminish Jesus. Luther warns, "Therefore Satan continually mounts a new battle against us" (WA 40 I: 318, 12; AE 26: 193).23 The devil "often suggests a false Christ to me" (WA 40 I: 321, 32-33; AE 26: 196).24 Since Christians are powerless before Satan, their daily life of vocation is a daily return to baptism.

Luther presents the life of Christians in their daily callings as a life that is lived within the forgiveness of sins. Ethics may not be detached from the body and blood of Jesus that the baptized receive. This is where the forgiveness is bestowed (WA 18: 203, 39-204, 9; AE 40: 214). Bodied together and blooded together, the communicants are enlivened to serve one another in word and deed, not only in the church but in the world.

 

Ethics as the Gift of the Lord

Luther's location of ethics under the Second Article does not mean that this doctrine has nothing to do with the Third Article. Luther does not speak of the works of a free-floating Holy Spirit which are supposed to assist the Christian's efforts in faith and life. But it is precisely because the Holy Spirit teaches the work of Christ that Christian vocation is seen Christocentrically (WA 26: 506, 4-12; AE 37: 366). When the Holy Spirit has done his job, the Christian sees only Jesus. And when the sinner is thus reconciled with the Father through Christ, he is brought back to the world and receives the creation as his First Article gift (WA 26: 505, 40-506, 3; AE 37: 366).25 Creation is the sphere and arena of Christian vocation in church, family, and government. It is where the common order of Christian love is also exercised. In the Christian life, the order of the Holy Trinity moves from the Holy Spirit to the Son and to the Father.

All three Articles are fully confessed by Luther when the office and works of Christ remain central. The orders of church, family, and government, as well as the common order of Christian love, belong to the Second Article of the Creed, because the Lord Jesus continues to preserve the person who occupies these orders and offices as a forgiven person. In this way, Jesus keeps opening the way for the baptized to serve him. Orders established by human traditions, on the other hand, do away with saving faith.

For Luther, ethics is a means of grace doctrine, because only when the Lord's gifts that are given are received does his blessing then move Christians out into their callings, where his gifts have their fruition. The placement of ethics under the Second Article in the Large Confession (1528) provides an occasion for recalling that the One who delivers the forgiveness from Calvary to enliven Christians is Jesus Himself. Ethics in each Christian's callings is the arena where the Lord has his way with his people in the world.

 

By Naomichi Masaki, Assistant Professor of Systematic Theology at Concordia Theological Seminary in Fort Wayne, Indiana. This paper was presented at the 11th International Congress for Luther Research in July 2007 in Canoas, RS, Brazil.

 


1.              See  Jerry Adler, "In Search of the Spiritual," MSNBC.com, September 5, 2005; Cheslyn Jones, Geoffrey Wainwright, and Edward Yarnold eds., The Study of Spirituality (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986); Frank Senn ed., Protestant Spiritual Traditions (Mahwah, NJ: Paulist Press, 1986); James M. Kittelson, "Contemporary Spirituality's Challenge to Sola Gratia," Lutheran Quarterly 9 (Winter 1995): 367-90; Scott Hendrix, "Martin Luther's Reformation of Spirituality," Lutheran Quarterly 13 (Autumn 1999): 249-70; Bradley Hanson, A Graceful Life: Lutheran Spirituality for Today (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 2000). John Pless gives an excellent Lutheran critique of contemporary trends in spirituality in his "The Triangular Shape of the Pastor's Devotional Life," in Lord Jesus Christ, Will You Not Stay: Essays in Honor of Ronald Feuerhahn on the Occasion of his Sixty-fifth Birthday, eds. J. Bart Day, Jon D. Vieker, Albert B. Collver, Scott A. Bruzek, Kent J. Burreson, Martin E. Conkling, and Naomichi Masaki (Houston: The Feuerhahn Festschrift Committee, 2002), 317-31, particularly on pages 317-18.

2.             See Naomichi Masaki, "The Quest for Experiencing the Divine: The Rise and Effect of Eastern Religious," For the Life of the World 11 (January 2007): 8-10.

3.            Norman E. Nagel, "Luther's Understanding of Christ in Relation to His Doctrine of the Lord's Supper," Ph.D. dissertation, University of Cambridge, 1961.

4.            Adolf Köberle, The Quest for Holiness: A Biblical, Historical, and Systematic Investigation, trans. John C. Mattes (Minneapolis: Augsburg, 1936), 1-48. The original title is Rechtfertigung und Heiligung: eine biblische, theologiegeschichtliche und systematische Untersuchung.

5.             Oswald Bayer, Theology the Lutheran Way, ed. and trans. Jeffrey G. Silcock and Mark C. Mattes (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2007): 93-171.

6.            Gerhard O. Forde, "Luther's ‘Ethics,'" in A More Radical Gospel: Essays on Eschatology, Authority, Atonement, and Ecumenism, eds. Mark C. Mattes and Steven D. Paulson (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2004), 137-41.

7.           Rick Warren, The Purpose Driven Life: What on Earth Am I Here For? (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2002), 173.

8.          Ibid., 174.

9.            Robert Kolb and James A. Nestingen eds., Sources and Contexts of The Book of Concord (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2001), 85, 89-90; Kolb-Wengert, 40-41; BSLK, 56-57.

10.             Theodor Kliefoth, Die ursprüngliche Gottesdienstordnung in den deutschen Kirchen lutherischen Bekenntnisses, ihre Destruction und Reformation (Rostock and Schwerin: Stillerschen Hofbuchhandlung, 1847), 197.

11.            See WA 40 I: 84, 17-19; AE 26: 33. In his Great Galatian Lectures of 1531, Luther teaches that man is indifferent and regards sin as something trivial, a mere nothing. The sinner supposes that sin has so little weight and force that some little work or merit will remove it. That is why the hammer of God is needed (Jer 23:29; SA III, II, 4).

12.           Sed quando ad experientiam venit, tum invenis Evangelium rarum et e contra legem assiduum esse hospitem in conscientia.

13.          Quam primum autem Lex et ratio coniunguntur, statim virginitas fidei violate est.

14.         Legis ergo officium est tantum occidere.

15.          Quare legis proprium offficium est nos reos facere, humiliare, occidere, ad infernum deducere et omnia nobis auferre.

16.         See Heidelberg Disputation (1518), Thesis 23. WA 1: 354. 25-26; AE 31: 41.

17.        Sic Iureconsultus loquitur der homine possessore et domino suarum rerum, Medicus loquitur de homine sano et aegro, Theologus autem disputat de homine PECCATORE.

18.       Das egentliche Ampt des Evengelii, proprium officium evangelii is the preaching of the forgiveness of sins (SA III, IV).

19.         Iustificare peccatorem sit solius Christi proprium officium.

20.          See Heidelberg Disputation (1518), Thesis 28. WA 1: 354. 35-36; AE 31: 41.

21.         Ibi peccatum aliud invenio contra meum peccatum quod me accusat et devorat. Peccatum vero aliud, scilicet in carne Christi, quod tollit peccatum totius mundi, omnipotens est, damnat ac devorat peccatum meum.

22.        Et hoc viderunt omnes Prophetae, quod Christus futurus esset omnium maximus latro, homicida, adulter, fur, sacrilegus, blasphemus etc., quod nullus maior unquam in mundo fuerit.

23.       Quare subinde novam pugnam nobis movet Satan.

24.       Sed subinde suggerit mihi Diabolus falsum Christum.

25.        Also see SC II, 1-2; LC II, 9-24.

Growth in Grace: Where Neuhaus is Right and Where he is Wrong

by Mark C. Mattes, Grand View University, Des Moines, Iowa

 


Richard Neuhaus, circa 1970

Richard John Neuhas was one of the most important commentators on the interrelationship of religion and democracy in America. We can especially be grateful for his critique of secular voices in higher education, law, social work, and politics as out of touch with the faith-based views held by most Americans. While respecting his erudition and gentle character, Evangelical-Lutherans will protest his decision to leave the faith of his birth for Rome: the truth of the gospel is not to be exchanged for the perception of security against inroads of secularism.

In the February 2009 issue of First Things Neuhaus defended a view of grace as not only pardon (forgiveness) but also power (transformation). It is interesting that as he was approaching death he wished to set the record straight with respect to the proper relationship between law and gospel. And, not to read too much into the matter, perhaps indirectly he was offering a defense of his entering fellowship in the Roman Catholic Church. It would seem that Neuhaus wanted to take a parting shot at the Lutheranism of his birth.

A Last Will and Testament

He begins his article with the reminiscence that as "a young Lutheran seminarian" he had been "struck by a professor's forceful declaration that the phrase growth in grace is a contradiction in terms." "The grace of the gospel of forgiveness is absolute, unqualified, perfect. It allows for no growth or improvement." Thereby, Lutheranism reduces the law to an enemy and the gospel to a friend. Ultimately, as an enemy, the law must go away, be vanquished, and disappear.

Of course, Neuhaus explains the common, and confessional, Lutheran distinctions of the law as a mirror, curb, and guide, noting that this latter use is in dispute, since it leads to ideas such as "growth in grace," "which end up denying grace altogether." Neuhaus appeals to Gilbert Meilaender's contention that in the gospel we receive not only forgiveness, but also with such pardon, the power to grow in godliness, fulfill the commandments, and better imitate Christ.

Neuhaus fails to say that not all versions of North American or European Lutheranism, especially those influenced by Pietism, Rationalism, Revivalism, Unionism (and thus the majority of Lutheran groups in North America and Europe!), would have even understood the terms of the discussion. The notion of a law-gospel dialectic is quite foreign to many churches and theologies that are under the umbrella of the name "Lutheranism." It was, in fact, the particular branch of Lutheranism in which Neuhaus was raised, the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod, with its theological heritage so firmly established in C. F. W. Walther's classic, The Proper Distinction between Law and Gospel, which brings Luther's own teaching into the late nineteenth through twenty-first centuries. According to Neuhaus, this perspective feeds antinomianism, particularly that of certain parties in the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America with respect to sexuality. At its core, however, this law-gospel distinction, for Neuhaus, fails to uphold the conviction that the gospel is the power which transforms people. Neuhaus's reception into fellowship with Rome is a testimony against his unnamed seminary professor who was wrong to assert that since forgiveness is perfect there is no need to affirm growth in grace.

Neuhaus is quick to point out that Luther himself seemed to talk out of two sides of his mouth. On the one hand, Luther's greater Commentary on Galatians offers an "exhilarating display of uncompromised grace and faith;" however, the Small and Large Catechisms's explanations of the Ten Commandments seem to assume our capacity to honor each of these commandments, and thus grow in grace. Luther was, thus, inconsistent. But that holds out some hope for Luther himself as capable of being put on the right track, as opposed to his current followers, who undermine the faith. It is Lutherans, especially those who deny a "third use" of the law who jeopardize the faith.

Situating the Debate

In some respects the debate that both Neuhaus and Meilaender provoke is one which is long standing, particularly within Lutheranism. The discussion parallels the debate between freedom and responsibility between Flacians and Melanchthonians which helped forge confessional Lutheran identity in the sixteenth century. As Robert Kolb has so ably shown, this debate is best seen as parties seeking to correct the excesses of the other position. Surely the affirmation of freedom, as so forcefully expressed by the Flacians is not to be had at the expense of human responsibility. Likewise, the affirmation of responsibility, as ably represented by the Melanchthonians, is not to be had at the expense of freedom.

And that sense of correcting the oversights of opposed parties should help us uncover the core insights of the disputants behind this debate over freedom and responsibility even in today's world. No doubt, those who flee to Rome or wish to situate Lutheran identity within a wider Catholic ethos are greatly troubled with what appears to be the all-encompassing specter of a secularism that prioritizes the unencumbered individual's wishes, "provided no harm is done" to other such individuals. Apart from a common social framework about the common good and the chief end of humanity, our best efforts seem to do nothing other than work against our best intentions. In our quest for an ideal, or at least effective, society, we inadvertently reproduce nothing other than a Hobbesian "state of nature," a war of all against all. Even the quest for tolerance does not result in turning swords into plowshares but instead leads us to cover up our loaded weapons-pointing them at our enemies with the stated intention of détente.

Apart from an ultimate goal which can serve as our common end, the center doesn't hold. And, if that doesn't hold, perhaps we are on the verge of anarchy. No wonder we seek an authority to govern Christian consciences and foster Christian virtue. For Neuhaus, the law-gospel dialectic is misused: it is tantamount to an irresponsible freedom from authority, tradition, and order. It contributes to a lawless world, an environment not safe for rearing children or rectifying injustice or growth in truth, beauty, and goodness. It betrays a Christian alternative to the sanctioned violence of the modern world. We agree with Neuhaus: Christians need to work for social stability and well-being lest the quest for a common good be subverted and betrayed by individualism run amok.

Many who operate from the "law-gospel" dialectic share these concerns with "evangelical Catholics" and conservative Roman Catholics. If ELCA leaders examining sexuality concerns sidestep biblical and historic teachings about sexuality, it has little or nothing to do with any reading of law and gospel. Their minds are already made up and they are seeking any kind of legitimation for changing the standards set forth in Visions and Expectations. Certainly those theologians in the ELCA influenced by Gerhard O. Forde do not see the demands and threats of the law, whether with respect to sexuality or other matters, as having changed. Those seeking changes for Visions and Expectations are best understood as "decadent Pietists" and not practitioners of law and gospel.

The Lutheran Suspicion

What the unique Lutheran "dialectic" does is unmask the inevitable misuse of the law for self-justification in the hands of all sinners. The Lutheran insight into sinful human beings is that they are inherently self-legitimating or self-justifying, using God's law to eradicate their own insecurities, rather than honoring the Lord for his own sake-a suspicion that even unmasks the traditional "masters of suspicion" (Marx, Feuerbach, Freud), since even they affirm either human perfectibility or some kind of secularistic growth as "virtuous" humans.

While unmasking ethics and spirituality in the hands of the old Adam as simply another form of self-legitimation-specifically the one that nailed Jesus to the cross- seems to threaten ethical and spiritual endeavors, it is simply an exercise in truth, a necessary result of the law itself as always accusing. Even our attempt to grow in spirituality or ethics, when done by the old Adam, is nothing other than an expression of self-interest, the attempt to make oneself serve as one's own god for oneself. In this sense, Jesus' reaching out to the social rejects of his time is an expression of the Hebrew prophetic critique that God seeks justice and not sacrifice. In light of Jesus' death and resurrection, God's eternal right is to claim sinners as his own, for the sake of him who shed his blood on sinners' behalf.

The Lutheran insight is that there is no moral or spiritual reform for the old being. Christianity is no program for moral rearmament even in the face of our pressing moral needs. The old being, in truth, cannot be recycled. The old being can only be brought to an end; die. And, the Christian life shares in this death (the wages of sin) by which God is bringing down all old beings, whether they be Christian or not. The good news is that God in Christ is raising the dead, allowing new beings to emerge who live by faith, and through faith honor God's deity as truth, beauty, and goodness, and, as beings set free from their self-legitimating, self-centered ways, are able to begin to care for their neighbors, often from the heart.

Solving the World's Problems?

If our over-riding concern is, like Neuhaus, to provide an alternate path of Catholic authority and stability to the apparent chaos that seems to envelop us, a world bereft of civility, akin to Israel in the days of the Judges, when everyone did what was right in their own eyes, then we are bound to look at Christianity as a program for moral reform. Such a Christianity's advantage over deontological or utilitarian approaches to ethics is that through imitatio Christi it will lead us to ever greater vistas of conformity to and analogy with God's truth, beauty, and goodness. In this view, Christianity can offer a program for moral regeneration and social reform as an alternative to all secular visions which with their good intentions lead to a "culture of death." And, the evidence is clear: the world of its own accord is not able to solve its own problems.

Who then can solve the world's problems? Is that the job of Christianity? Or, is it not possible that God works through a variety of figures, both Christian and non-Christian, to bring about his will on earth. Ultimately, however, it is not clear that politics can solve the problems generated by politics or that the problems of ethics can be solved by the reflections of ethicists. Such problems reside in human nature itself: politics and ethics are themselves capable of becoming their own problems. Chances are, only partial solutions at best can be offered for entrenched problems in this world beset by sin. Christian faith offers the medicine of immortality, not an elixir for moral rearmament.

Perhaps a culture deeply influenced by Christianity offers the best hope for the world. But it is not as if the world can take on a Christian agenda apart from that specific agenda itself becoming an agent of the world. We must always remember: it is through the foolishness of preaching that God brings about a new creation. As foolish to the world, Christian faith in the crucified one will always encounter tension with the world, and vice versa. And, that tension will continue to exist even when Christian faith affirms everything that can be affirmed in the world as God's good creation.

In this light, we should be skeptical of Christianity's ability to offer an alternative political agenda for the world, either of the right or the left. Looking to God's commands and Christ's example, Christians must deal with political and ethical mattes as they arise on a case by case basis. Nevertheless, we can and should affirm Neuhaus' insightful critique that a truly secular approach to politics is an illusion: the public square can never be religion-free, "naked."

Christianity: A Program?

But when all is said and done we need to ask: is Christianity really, truly, and ultimately simply another program of moral reform? No doubt many Christians see it that way: Christianity offers a "purpose-driven life." As a program, it would have to complete with 12-step groups (which have reasonably successful outcomes), or Buddhism, or Stoicism, or Epicureanism, and many other such venues. Indeed, when Christianity does not have the upper hand in an environment, which it increasingly does not have in secular venues such as higher education, social work, business, and industry, it will offer an ethos as an alternative to such secularity (even as it did in the Roman world), and with much good. (Hopefully people today could say of us as was said of ancient Christians: "see how they love one another.")

It is true that the entire Christian message offers both God's commands and parenetic guidance. But, again, is the core of faith a program? Or, is it not rather, more than anything else, a promise? A promise was given first to Adam, renewed with Noah, made specific with Abraham and his descendents, and made incarnate in the earthly ministry of Jesus Christ? Is Jesus Christ not first primarily gift (sacramentum) and secondarily example (exemplum)? If Jesus Christ as the Word of God is primarily a promise, and not a directive, then the gospel cannot be configured within an overarching program of moral transformation. Just the opposite. Morality rather is relativized in light of the gospel. Morality as our best coram deo is annihilated. For faith (and faith alone), Christ is both the telos and even the finis of the law.

Does the gospel deliver us from structures by which the necessities and opportunities of social life are required? Of course not. What does happen as old beings die and new beings are brought forth is the strengthening (indeed growth) in faith, such that we become increasingly less defensive about life and the need to chronically justify ourselves, to the dishonor of God and at the expense of our neighbor. As new beings we are returned to this old world; in it, but not of it. We are called to be light, salt, and witnesses in word and deed. As Christians, we are to share mercy to those in need, and as citizens, we are to seek the common good for our nation, the world, and the environment.

But at its core, even our sanctification, ultimately, is not our doing, not a program, but the work of the Holy Spirit. In sanctification it is God who gets more of us and not so much we who get more of God. As we are being conformed more and more to the image of Christ, we are less and less concerned about our spiritual progress and more concerned about matters at hand: how can I honor God and serve neighbor in word and deed? Growth in grace: less of oneself and more of God, and all of this do finally to God's own doing! This is our pilgrimage, our itinerarium. And, the more sway that Christ has over me, and the less sway that the old Adam has over me, is there not more power, even more growth, in Christ-likeness...even if such growth defies calculation and measurement?

The last judgment has been rendered in Jesus' death and resurrection: God justifies the entire world for Jesus' sake. He justifies it because he loves it.

Going Up the Down Staircase?

What is problematic in the Roman Catholic "quantitative, linear" approach which lends itself to self- and other-evaluations of up/down, better/worse, is judgmentalism about where one stands in the hierarchy. And, ironically, such judgmentalism can never finally be justified in light of God's standards of purity in thought, word, and deed. It is not the hierarchy per se that is problematic. It is that the staircase is not for going up, but for going down. Christ comes down to us, "for us and for our salvation." And, in light of this gift, we can share his good gifts with others, especially forgiveness.

Our conformity with Christ is not to be found in the intentional aiming for an analogical imitation which could be evaluated and measured. Our "imitation" of Christ, Christ as our example, is in dying to self-righteousness of whatever stripe and living freely in faith. No doubt, where our culture errs, where it borders on fostering self-sabotaging chaos, we need to seek to correct it-not so as to build the kingdom of God on earth-but to build healthy community for the neighbor, especially those who are vulnerable.

It is not lawless antinomians who put an end to the law-it is the gospel-Jesus Christ himself who does that. No antinomian is capable of ridding the world of God's law. But God's law is quite capable of rendering death on every antinomian.

The law needs no defense from us, especially when it is being attacked by Christ himself. If the law attacks, as well it should, the defense is Christ himself who fights back and brings it to an end. More theoretically said, in the face of Christ, God as comforting us is against God as accusing us.

No Reductionism

Must "law-gospel dialecticians" (not a term that they themselves have adopted) reduce human experience to either indifference or terror, as Neuhaus contends? I think not. As Christians we live in the world through the lens of scripture. The scriptures alone divulge the meaning of nature and history. Scripture provides the code that allows us to see nature as testifying to God's glory, and history as running its course. Scripture is the way whereby the indifferent person is awakened in light of the law and the terrified conscience is comforted. But scripture also indicates that life can be unsettled not just by accusation but by insecurity: "where is God?" is a question asked by Job not especially as a sinner but as a human. Likewise, to humans, the scripture calls us to lamentation when we hurt, even as it calls us to joy and praise in God's goodness. It also calls us to acknowledge God's wisdom in the law and to "delight" in it. "Law-gospel dialecticians" need not be, and should not be, reductionistic. We encounter God in accusation, wrath, and consolation; but we also encounter God even when he seems hidden and when we are confident of his goodness. Surely, as redeemed, the new being can and does affirm God's ways. So, we can say with the Psalmist, "Thou dost show me the path of life; in thy presence there is fullness of joy, at thy right hand pleasures forevermore" (Psalm 16:11). We can be grateful for guidance found in God's commands and wisdom and learn from it.

Richard John Neuhaus left his Lutheran heritage for Rome because he saw it as a refuge and answer to rising secularism. Only Rome, from his perspective, has the authority to prevent hodge-podge theology in the church, rampant consumerist drives feeding contemporary congregationalism, and moral experimentation and adventure. But, is Rome true to the gospel? One can repeat over and over that Lutherans and Rome share a similar, if not the same, view of grace. But the issue between Rome and Lutheranism has never primarily been over grace. Instead it is over faith. Is faith enough? Is faith enough to save...and also conform us to Christ? If the gospel is promise, then faith alone is enough. Good works spring from a good source, like good fruit coming from a well-tended tree.

Conclusion

We can be grateful for the insights into democracy, secularization, and theology which Richard John Neuhaus had and shared. We share his concerns about secularization and we treasure his insights about democracy. But, the gospel we will not compromise. This world is God's world. We can and will challenge secularism, but Rome itself is no guarantee of theological safety. We can see that well enough in the plurality of theological trends which has beset Rome for over sixty years.

It is time to renew our commitment to the gospel, the promise which raises the dead.

Potpourri

Journal CoverEpiphany 2009, Volume XVIII, Number 1Table of Contents

(A featured article from the journal: The Harrowing of Hell: Filling in the Blanks by Peter Burfeind)

Christ’s descent into hell (descensus ad infernum) has inspired the imagination of theologians, the creativity of artists, and the comfort of laymen. The event is a veritable warehouse of doctrines through which the church has often rummaged. Yet, one cannot help but be puzzled by the usual parenthetical manner with which the doctrine is handled in most Lutheran circles.

Only a novel approach to the descensus can sever it from a discussion of the state of souls in the intermediate period between death and resurrection. After all, Christ’s descent is precisely that: the intermediate period between death and resurrection. Unfortunately, speculation on this intermediate state is often met with knee-jerk anti-Romanism. Surely the Confessions — reflecting Luther’s hands-off approach to the topic — unintentionally provoke this attitude, speaking of “useless, unnecessary” [Latin: inutiles et curiosas; German: unnützlichen, unnotwendigen] questions on the descent. But what is “useless and unnecessary” and what is not? What limits are established by the Epitome when it formulates the doctrine in its “simplest manner”? Has the modern church simplified the doctrine out of practical existence?

Or is it possible to wrestle with what amounts to the roots of purgatory and see if the church may short-circuit the doctrine at its early stages, claim for herself — and resurrect! — a beautiful doctrine purged of its antievangelical developments? An odyssey into the terrains mapped by these questions is the purview of this article.

 

...read or download the rest of this article here (free, PDF)

...purchase the full journal here

Hamann and the Tradition

John Pless passed along the following itinerary. This is an international conference on Johann Georg Hamann (1730-1788), the great anti-rationalist philosopher of Konigsberg so influential on the confessional revival of the 19th century including the Erlangen School. He has been used extensively by Oswald Bayer who will be a major speaker at this conference.

Friday, March 20, 2009

9:30     Breakfast & Registration

10:00   Welcome & Opening Remarks: Lisa Marie Anderson, Hunter College

10:15   John Betz,  Assistant Professor of Theology, Loyola College (Maryland) "Reading Sibylline Leaves: Hamann in the History of Ideas"

11:00   Break

11:15   Gwen Griffith-Dickson, Director, Lokahi Foundation, Visiting Professor, King's College; Emeritus Professor, Gresham College (London) "God, I & Thou: Hamann and the Personalist Tradition"

12:00   Catered Lunch

1:15     Panel Discussion 1: Hamann Shaping Europe: Literary and Political Identities

            - Lori Yamato, CUNY Graduate Center, "Hamann's Fables of Dismemberment"

            - Kamaal Haque, Dickson College, "Hamann, Goethe and the West-östlicher Divan"

            - Christian Sinn, Universität Konstanz, "Hallucinating Europe: Hamann and His Impact on German Romantic Drama"

2:30     Break

2:45     Katie Terezakis, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Rochester Institute of Technology (New York) "Is Theology Possible After Hamann?"

3:30     Coffee Break

4:00     Keynote Address: Oswald Bayer, Professor of Systematic Theology & Philosophy of Religion, Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen  "God as Author: The Theological Foundation of Hamann's Autorpoetik"

5:30     Reception hosted by Shirley Clay Scott, Dean of Arts & Sciences, Hunter College

Saturday, March 21, 2009

9:30     Breakfast

10:15   Kenneth Haynes, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature, Brown University (Providence) "Tradition and Testimony in Hamann"

11:00   Break

11:15   Manfred Kuehn, Professor of Philosophy, Boston University "Hamann on Reason, Hume, and Kant"

12:00   Catered Lunch

1:00     Johannes von Lüpke, Professor of Systematic Theology, Kirchliche Hochschule Wuppertal, Director, Internationales Hamann-Kolloquium "Metaphysics and Metacritique. Hamann's Understanding of the Word of God in the Tradition of Lutheran Theology"

 1:45     Break

2:00     Panel Discussion 2: The Heart of the Matter: Language and Theology in Hamann

            - Kelly Dean Jolley, Auburn University, "Apophatic Living. Indirection as an Existential Strategy"

            - Gregory Walter, St. Olaf College, "Christ the Hieroglyph: Prophetic Reason and Semiotics Between Mendelssohn and Hamann"

            - Jonathan Gray, University of London, "Hamann, Nietzsche and Wittgenstein on the Language of Philosophers"

            - Stephen Cole Leach, University of Texas Pan American, "Skepticism and Faith in Hamann and Kierkegaard"

3:45     Closing Remarks

Gratefully acknowledging the support of: The Max Kade Foundation, The Office of the Dean of Arts & Sciences, Hunter College (CUNY), The Office of the Provost, Hunter College (CUNY), The Department of German, Hunter College (CUNY)

Location: Hunter College, New York, NY, Screening Room, Leona & Marcy Chanin Center (Room B126) Subway/Basement Level, West Building, 68th Street & Lexington Avenue.

For more information, contact Prof. John Pless [john.pless@ctsfw.edu].

The Suspended Answer

A chapel sermon by the Reverend Professor John T. Pless delivered Friday in Advent I, 5 December 2008, at Kramer Chapel, Concordia Theological Seminary, Fort Wayne, Indiana.

Text: Mark 11:27-33

Advent announces that the time is short. The scribes, elders and chief priests were running out of time and want an answer. It is high time that Jesus account for Himself and what He has been doing all along. At His Baptism in the Jordan, the Father had declared of Jesus: "You are my beloved Son; with you I am well pleased." Jesus took it as true. He acted accordingly. He shows His authority over the unclean spirits; they obey Him. To demonstrate that the Son of Man has authority on earth to forgive sins, He says to the crippled man: "My son, your sins are forgiven." It was an absolution that occasioned the charge of blasphemy for who can forgive sins but God alone. He heals on the Sabbath. His disciples pluck grain on the divinely-sanctioned day of rest for a snack to satisfy their hunger. When the Pharisees complain, Jesus asserts His authority over the holy day: "The Son of man is lord even over the Sabbath. Then the Pharisees take counsel with the Herodians against Jesus, looking for a way to destroy Him.

 

Fast forward with Mark's quickly moving script through miracles and parables to Palm Sunday. As they approach Jerusalem, Jesus dispatches two of his disciples to go into the city. He tells them that they will see a colt. They are instructed to untie it and bring it to Jesus. Who does Jesus think that He is, taking another man's donkey, treating it as His own? Luther observes that this little donkey and all donkeys are His. He is their creator. He is not stealing when He claims that which is His already. By the authority of its Creator, the donkey goes to Him to whom it belongs.

Donkeys are His and so are fig trees. When a barren fig tree does not yield the fruits intended by the Word of the Lord who blessedly decreed that fruit-bearing tree would produce food for man, Jesus speaks a curse and no one eats from its withered and vacant branches. His ownership extends to more than fig trees. Jesus goes into the temple and He treats it as His own house. He says "My house shall be called a house of prayer for all the nations. But you have made it a den of robbers." Clothed in holy anger, He turns over tables and disperses money-changers and pigeon sellers.

By what authority? That is the question these events evoke. And the chief priests, elders and scribes want an answer. And they want it now. Instead they get a question: The baptism of John - it is from heaven or from man? Answer me that, says Jesus, and I'll tell you by what authority I do these things. Pushed to the wall by the Lord's counter question, they have a meeting of the CTCR to figure this out this doctrinal dilemma, or call for a theological convocation to solve this confessional conundrum:  If we say that John's baptism is from God then we're stuck with explaining why we didn't believe him. If we say it was from men, we'll have to face the ruthless judge of public opinion for the masses thought John was an authentic prophet. They can only answer: "We don't know."

They will get an answer but not yet. It will come from the lips of a centurion who stands in the presence of Jesus' body battered and blood, hanging lifeless on the cross and confesses: "Truly this man was the Son of God." It will come as that young man sitting by an open tomb announces: "Do not be amazed; you seek Jesus of Nazareth who was crucified. He has risen. He is not here."

By what authority does the Lord Jesus do what He does?

It is by the authority given Him by His Father as the Beloved Son.

It is authority over wind and wave,
over demon and disease,
over donkeys and fig trees,
over Sabbath and temple.

But is astonishingly more; it is authority over your sin to forgive it by the shedding of His blood. And it is by this authority that I now preach the Word of Advent to you this morning: Repent and believe the Gospel for your King and His Kingdom are here.

It's too late to question His authority. Amen.

-Prof. John T. Pless

The Piltdown Man

A poem by Joel Allen Hess

We found him, lying there
"Dawn man", Darwin's man
Mouth wide open
Stuck in the mud

Trapped by a higher mind
We tripped upon him
Monkey man
Ave Verum Corpus?

His Fragments fit like a puzzle
The picture on the box is a mirror
What do you see, Mr. Dawson?

Do you see the real you? The original you?
Do you see your mother? Do you feel her warm arms?
Do you see your cozy home
when you touch his cold bones?

Do you now know why you cried when lucy sent you that punishing letter?
Or why your best friend in childhood died from T.B.?

What do you see?

Don't be disappointed, though you've been tricked.
You discovered something far more significant

The inner man; the mortal man; the prime man evil
Desperately rationalizing
His own existence.
By calculation, hoax, or naive sincerity
Yes, Professor Dawson
You have found the Dawn Man

[From Wikipedia: The "Piltdown Man" is a famous hoax consisting of fragments of a skull and jawbone collected in 1912 from a gravel pit at Piltdown, a village near Uckfield, East Sussex. The fragments were thought by many experts of the day to be the fossilised remains of a hitherto unknown form of early human. The Latin name Eoanthropus dawsoni ("Dawson's dawn-man", after the collector Charles Dawson) was given to the specimen.]

On Glory, Suffering, and the Cross

A reflection by Eric Andrae in the wake of shooting sprees and massacres

For since, in the wisdom of God, the world through wisdom did not know God, it pleased God through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe. For Jews request a sign, and Gentiles seek after wisdom; but we preach Christ crucified, to the Jews a stumbling block and to the Gentiles foolishness, but to those who are called, both Jews and Gentiles, Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God.

Because the foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the weakness of God is stronger than men.  For you see your calling, brethren, that not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called. But God has chosen the foolish things of the world to put to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the world to put to shame the things which are mighty; and the base things of the world and the things which are despised God has chosen, and the things which are not, to bring to nothing the things that are, that no flesh should glory in his presence. But of him you are in Christ Jesus, who became for us wisdom from God - and righteousness and sanctification and redemption (1 Corinthians 1:21-30).

Sadly, very sadly, I am not surprised by the recent and frequent shooting sprees of the past few years.  In an ultra-violent culture that happily feeds the depraved mind and offers incredibly and immorally easy access to means of bloodshed, to guns; in an academia that teaches the Darwinist lie that you are a meaningless result of chance and the post-modernistic fantasy that there is no objective truth; in a society in which the family "is under siege" and "opposed by an anti-life mentality as is seen in abortion, infanticide and euthanasia; scorned and banalized by pornography, desecrated by fornication and adultery, mocked by homosexuality, sabotaged by irregular unions and cut in two by divorce" (Cardinal Francis Arinze in Julia Duin, "Criticism of Gays by Catholic Cardinal Riles Georgetown University," The Washington Times, 30 May 2003); in such a context, this comes as no surprise at all.

Nevertheless, we must not lose our focus.  A "theology of glory" focuses on what we do; and when it does focus on God, it focuses on his power and majesty. His providence and sovereignty are allowed to overshadow, perhaps even obliterate, his mercy and grace. It teaches that Jesus is more-or-less Mr. Fix-it-man, that the Bible is a manual for happy and successful living, and that when we "decide" to become Christians, all will be right and we will be happy. It is typical "American Christian" religious nonsense - it permeates most churches' teachings, focuses on our works, and, if logically followed, would finally deny the necessity of the cross.

However, Christians - whether mourning yet another school/mall/workplace shooting massacre or daily repenting and clinging to Jesus for life and breath - hold to "the theology of the cross." It is only in the weakness and foolishness of the cross that the Lord helps us (1 Corinthians 1:21-30); through small things like bread and wine, water, words, men - in other words, the Means of Grace: Holy Communion, Holy Baptism, Holy Absolution, Holy Bible, Holy Ministry, Holy Church. "The theology of the cross" focuses on what the Lord does; as the creed confesses:  he creates, he saves, and he sanctifies us. But the Lord does not deal with us as he did with ancient Israel, with armies and by direct revelation. Rather, he deals with us, the New Israel, mediately in weak sinful pastors, through his Means of Grace.

As such, being marked with the cross in Holy Baptism, we acknowledge suffering (though not good in itself) as a real part of this fallen world and of the Christian's life in it. But can there be any purpose of suffering in the Christian life?  Yes.  It mysteriously unifies you with Jesus, who is the Suffering Servant (Isaiah 53); it provides an opportunity for you to give glory to God (John 9:1-3); it tests and thus strengthens your faith (1 Peter 1:3-9); it teaches you to love God for his own sake, and not for the sake of prosperity; it conforms and shapes you into the image of Christ (Romans 8:17); it humbles you, reminding you that the servant is not greater than the master and therefore prevents self-righteousness from closing you to his gifts (John 15:20); finally, it teaches you that our theology is indeed and ultimately the theology of the cross, of glory after going through suffering, of forgiveness after repentance, of life through death (Luke 9:22-24; Psalm 34:19-22; Hebrews 4:14-16; Psalm 22). Suffering is the result of evil, of sin, of satanic temptation and human cooperation.  But even out of suffering, even this suffering, God can and does and will bring good.  Suffering, punishment, is certainly not the way the Lord reacts to our sin; he reacts to sin by offering his Son into death instead of us; he reacts to sin by forgiving the repentant sinner, removing the sin (see especially Psalm 103:8-12, John 9:1-3, and Luke 13:1-5; also Psalm 130 and Jeremiah 31:31-34). 

So, we know why suffering happens: it is because of sin, individual and corporate. But we must also be willing to say "I don't know" when it is the honest answer, for we do not know why specific people suffer in specific ways at specific times: We do not know why those specific 33 people [from the Virginia Tech massacre] perished instead of you or me (Luke 13:1-5). As Christians, though, we need to stick to what the Lord has revealed to us: that the crucified and risen Christ comes to comfort us with consolation, peace, and forgiveness in bread, wine, water, words: the different forms and means of the Word that he is for us.

Let us pray for all who are anxious or troubled:  Most merciful God, the Consolation of the troubled and the Hope of all who cast their cares on you, may the hearts that cry unto you in their anxiety, distress, and tribulation find rest in your grace and mercy, knowing that all things must work together for good to them that love you and are called according to your purpose.  Grant unto us all that peace which passes all understanding, so that with a quiet mind we may view the storms and troubles of life, the cloud and the thick darkness, ever rejoicing to know that the darkness and the light are both alike to you, through Jesus Christ, our Lord, who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.  Amen. (The Lutheran Liturgy, 280-81, adapted).

Now may our Lord Jesus Christ himself, and our God and Father, who has loved us and given us everlasting consolation and good hope by grace, comfort your hearts and establish you in every good word and work (2 Thessalonians 2:16-17).  

 Amen.

Originally delivered as the mediation for a Evening Prayer service of Lutheran Student Fellowship at Carnegie Mellon University on April 18, 2007 following the Virginia Tech tragedy.

Christ in the Psalms: A Consideration of Luther's "Preface of Jesus Christ"

by Daniel Metzger

I

The Prefaces to Luther's Dictata: Introduction and Background

It might seem odd at first that anyone should still show interest in Luther's Dictata,[1] his early lectures on the Psalms.  After all, these lectures of 1513-1514-sometimes referred to with perhaps a bit of condescension as Initium theologiae Lutheri (the beginning of Luther's theology) contain much that Luther would leave behind as his theology developed through study and controversy.  For example, he still shows a kind of "monastic orientation" to his thinking in his emphasis not so much on faith in Christ as on humility-admitting God is right in his verdict-as the prerequisite for any righteousness that can come by faith;[2] or there is the careful distinction he makes between peccatum malitiae and peccatum ignorantiae (malicious sins and sins done out of ignorance),[3] or again his accepting reference to the "spark" (syntaresis) of life that remains not only in the human intellect but also in the will[4]--all vestiges of a medieval theological apparatus which, eventually, Luther would for the most part discard. 

Among these remnants of a past Luther needed to leave behind, it has been assumed, is the exegetical approach to the Psalms which he presents in the "Prefaces" to those early lectures.  That way of reading the Psalms can best be summarized in Luther's own words from his Praefatio Iesu Christi-the Preface of Jesus Christ-which his students received with their copy of the psalm texts:  "Every prophecy and every prophet (Luther is applying this to the psalms and to David here) must be understood as referring to Christ the Lord, except where it is clear from plain words that someone else is spoken of."  Most recently, Luther scholars have recognized that he never abandoned this fundamental way of reading the Old Testament and, specifically for our discussion here today, of reading the Psalms.

In our brief time together, I would like to present for consideration a number of points pertaining to Luther's Christological reading of all the Psalms.  Luther means far more than that certain psalms can in some way or another be applied to Jesus and his life.  For Luther, the letter-the literal meaning of the text, the primary Spirit-intended meaning-refers directly to Christ.  In saying this, Luther is rooted solidly in the tradition and, I would assert, in the New Testament.  A few brief examples will demonstrate that Lutheran commentators of the Twentieth Century-even those with a high view of Scripture who stressed its "inerrancy"-have departed from Luther here.  Instead, they have opted-perhaps out of a caution arising from the very kinds of "enlightenment" attitudes against which they wished to defend the text-for a pale imitation of Luther's more robust claim that all the Psalms deal directly with Christ.  Those who have adopted a more critical approach to the text have gone further away from Luther and the tradition.

In addition to this (perhaps rather diffuse) discussion of how Luther compares to what came before and what has come after, I would like to present a couple of case studies-treatments of individual psalms-with Luther's help and/or following his pattern.  And finally, I would like to suggest for discussion that Luther's approach needs to be resurrected- consciously re-appropriated-and set to work again in the assembly of God's people, that without it something immensely precious to the church goes unused and is in danger of being lost, and that it is in the parish-in worship-that the riches of Luther's understanding of the Psalms can best and most meaningfully be recovered and appreciated.

Luther's Preparations for his Lectures on the Psalms

Luther began his lectures on the Psalms at Wittenberg in 1513, just over eight years after he had first sought entrance into the monastery of observant Augustinian monks in Erfurt.[5]  Within a year, the order's Vicar General-Johannes von Staupitz-had singled Luther out for biblical studies.  Luther's first assignment was to memorize the Scriptures (the Latin text, which remained Luther's primary text all his life) page by page.  In the coming years leading up to his transferal to the faculty at Wittenberg, Luther studied the theology of Augustine and Gabriel Biel, lectured on Theology at Erfurt and on Ethics at Wittenberg, made a trip to Rome as an Augustinian emissary to the pope, and, in 1512, was awarded the degree of doctor. Thus he was no mere beginner in theology when, in that same year he took up the chair at Wittenberg as Bible lecturer, the position which he retained until his death.

Assuming that Luther's teaching schedule was similar to that which he followed later in his career, he delivered his lectures on the Psalms from nine to ten o'clock a.m. on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays.  In preparation for the lectures, he created a "handout" for the students.  He had printed for them the Latin text of the Psalms, with wide margins and interlinear spacing adequate for taking notes, as well as brief summaries of the contents of each psalm.  Luther took one of these handouts for himself, and on it inserted his own "glosses" on the text-grammatical and lexical notations, meaning of particular phrases, insights from his growing knowledge of Hebrew, etc.[6]  The students would be expected to copy into the text given to them whatever they could of these notes.  In addition, they would add their own summarizing notes of Luther's scholia-his more extensive commentary on the content of each psalm.  Luther wrote out these scholia in long-hand.  It is probable that, in the context of the classroom, he would expand on some sections and perhaps shorten others in response to questions from the students.

The Preface to the Glosses

Although it is not clear that Luther intended that the students should receive this preface,[7] it contains an important outline of the approach he takes to the text of the Psalms.  Here Luther connects himself to the tradition and the so-called quadriga or four-fold sense of the text. (The term refers to a chariot drawn by four horses.)  The tradition had divided the text according to St. Paul's dichotomy of the letter which kills and the spirit which gives life (2 Cor. 3: 4).   The figurative meaning-the spiritual meaning behind and above the literal-was three-fold: the "allegorical" meaning which spoke of Christ and the church, the "tropological" meaning which imparted moral instruction, and the "anagogical" meaning which spoke of our final destination-heaven or hell. This treatment of the text had been codified by the time of St. Thomas Aquinas in the thirteenth century.  In his Summa Theologica, Aquinas defends this approach from the charge that it leads to confusion, and he also lends a kind of "scientific" basis for it.  The multiple meanings of the text do not make for confusion or equivocation, he asserts, because the various senses do not arise from multiple meanings in a given word or phrase.  It is the things which are signified in the literal text which can and do point to spiritual realities, and thus all the senses are founded on the solid basis of the literal meaning.[8] 

The finding of various combinations of multiple meanings in the text goes back to the New Testament itself, and it had been discussed and developed by the early fathers-especially Origen in the East and Jerome and Augustine in the West.  By the twelfth century, western (Latin) commentators had arrived at a general consensus in favor of a four-fold rather than a three-fold division of these meanings in the text.  As early as 1282, Augustine of Dacia had put this standardized approach into verse:      

Littera gesta docet, quid credas allegoria.

Moralis quid agas, quo tendas anagogia.

(The letter teaches events, allegory what you should believe,

The moral sense what you should do, anagogy where you are heading.)[9]

Thus Luther's appropriation of this four-fold approach to the text is rooted deeply in the tradition.  Even Luther's example of "Jerusalem" was entirely conventional:

Jerusalem:

allegorically: the good people

 

tropologically: virtues

 

anagogically: rewards

Babylon:

allegorically: the bad people

 

tropologically: vices

 

anagogically: punishments

These three figurative senses had been derived from the "spirit" in St. Paul's "letter and spirit" wording.  Now Luther goes on to double this division of the senses of Scripture according to a schema in which both the "killing letter" and the "life-giving spirit" have figurative significance.  In this new framework, he uses the term "Mt. Zion" as his example.

 

The killing letter

The life-giving spirit

historical:

-the land of Canaan

-the people of Zion

allegorical:

-the synagogue or a prominent person in it

-the church or any teacher, bishop, or prominent man  

tropological:

-the righteousness of faith the Pharisees and of the Law

-the righteousness of or some other prominent matter

anagogical:

-the future glory after the flesh

-the eternal glory in the heavens

Even in this doubling of the senses, Luther really follows the tradition as Aquinas had outlined it.  There is nothing arbitrary in the applications he makes-"the things signified are themselves signs of other things."  The example might give the impression that the medievals, and Luther with them, expected to find all the figurative meanings in each and every passage in Scripture, but that was not the case.  

For our purposes today, this doubling of the meanings of Scripture is less important than the simple fact of Luther's acceptance of the multiple senses in the text.  Even more important is the point that Luther makes immediately after laying out his chart:

In the Scriptures...no allegory, tropology, or anagogy is valid unless the same truth is expressly stated historically elsewhere.  Otherwise Scripture would become a mockery.  But one must indeed take in an allegorical sense what is elsewhere stated historically.[10]

This "control" over the use of figurative meanings was a commonplace for the Fathers and in medieval times.  The figurative senses were primarily for devotional use, never for establishing articles of faith or formulating binding statements of Christian doctrine.  The fact that Luther found it necessary to state it, however, probably points beyond the rule's general acceptance to its being a law honored "more in the breach than in the keeping"-too frequently ignored-and it sheds light on why Luther will at various times shake his fist against the use of the "four senses."

One can note also that there is a natural inclusion of "Law and Gospel" within the figurative senses.  The allegorical pointed to God's gifts-Christ and the church, while the tropological sense instructed the reader about God's will for our lives.

Two points need to be made about the quadriga.  First, truisms promoted by some (especially earlier Luther scholarship) notwithstanding, Luther did not "break away" from this form of interpretation.  Historian of exegesis Kenneth Hagen, for example, provides overwhelming evidence that Luther continued to find precisely these traditional multiple senses in the scriptural text throughout his career.[11]  He had no problem using the four- sense approach because it did not conflict with, and in fact supported, his other formulations about what the meaning of Scripture is-such as "the one simple sense which promotes Christ" (was Christum treibt), or that the "grammatical meaning of the text and theology are the same thing," or that "every prophecy and every prophet must be understood as referring to Christ," as he states in his "Preface of Jesus Christ," or one of the other ways that he will formulate it.[12]

A second point about the quadriga is that it had not become a standard for the Church Fathers and the medievals in some kind of arbitrary fashion.  Nor, as is sometimes alleged, was their philosophically "platonic" orientation the primary reason they read Scripture this way.[13]  Rather, they found allegorical or figurative treatments of Old Testament texts in the New Testament itself.  They were familiar with how, for St. Paul, the "Seed" of Abraham is first of all Christ himself and then also all believers (Gal. 4: 16, 29).  They saw St. Paul draw allegorical meaning-Christ and the church-from the story of Abraham, Sarah, and Hagar (Galatians 4).  They read how Paul ascribed figurative meaning-baptism-to the story of Israel crossing the sea and how he made a moral (tropological) application of God's punishment of the Israelites who died in the wilderness (I Cor. 10).  And they saw how Jerusalem could signify-anagogically-the heavenly city (Gal. 4, Rev. 21, etc.). Contrary to later Protestant polemic, the medievals thought of themselves as being thoroughly scriptural in finding the figurative senses.

Luther's oft-repeated warnings against and condemnations of allegorical interpretation are well-known enough.  Some six years later, for example, Luther refers to the little poem about the four senses as "impious verses." [14]  That harsh word of censure, however, needs to be understood both in its immediate setting and within the broader context of late medieval trends. 

Luther attacks the little poem about the four-senses while commenting on Psalm 22: 19-"They divide my garments among them, and for my clothing they cast lots"-in his Operationes in Psalmos of 1519.  This particular verse provides the opportunity for a lengthy excursus on scriptural interpretations which wrongly "divide up" the Word of God.  In an extended polemic against various abuses which he has heard, Luther expresses his concern for how the simple history of the scriptural text has been clouded and covered up by misuses of the "spiritual senses"-what Luther calls "fables, farcical stories, and outright lies"-such as Lenten-season sermons in which preachers quickly depart from the history of Christ's passion in their eagerness to tell stories of the sufferings of Mary. While Luther further condemns the practice of inventing four "senses" which have no connection with each other except the imagination of the exegete, he specifically commends his own Christological approach in which what is true of Christ (the real kernel of the history) pertains also to his body the church (the real kernel of the allegorical) and therefore to the members of the body-the individual believers (Luther's tropological or moral sense).[15]  In this way he preserves the same applications of the text which he proposes in his Dictata.  Despite his protests here against Aquinas, he is not so very different from what is said in the Summa.     

Luther thus fits nicely into one of the trends of his day.  It was not at all unusual especially in the later Middle Ages for commentators to condemn the use of the figurative senses-especially how others did it-while going on in practice to find those meanings everywhere.  That is what one finds in Luther, who speaks approvingly of the four senses in his own commentary on Galatians as late as 1536.[16]  What Luther consistently attacks is what was rejected by responsible interpreters all through the Middle Ages-all frivolous and arbitrary applications,[17] any figurative interpretations which produce new and additional teachings or practices which are not warranted by the literal text elsewhere,[18] or what he considered to be overly speculative conclusions which-although not actually wrong and even possible, nevertheless went beyond what could be established by the letter of Scripture.[19]  Luther's primary concern is that the reader of Psalm 22 should find Christ there and "not doubt that (he) has suffered everything for you, and the punishment that he suffers comes from your sins which he has taken on himself."[20]

One way of understanding Luther's continued use of this "four-senses" approach to Scripture is to see it as part of the tradition of theology as the study of the  "Sacred Page"-Sacra Pagina-which obtained in the early Church and in the monasteries, and which was formative also for Luther.  One has to think of the monk-copying Scripture, singing it in the holy office, praying the Psalter both with others and privately in his cell.  The monk was immersed in the Latin text and carried it in his heart and mind the whole day.  And for the monk, there was no difference between the world of the sacred page and his own.[21]    

Doing theology as "sacred page" in this way is different from thinking of Scripture as a source of "doctrines" which can be drawn up in the form of thesis and antithesis.   Such a study of the sacred page entailed a direct immersion of the reader into the world of Scripture,[22] without the pressing consciousness of historical distance and difference which was to develop during the time of the Enlightenment.[23]  The monk was a "walking concordance" who naturally made linguistic connections from one book of Scripture to another, from one Testament to the other.  The one assumption necessary for seeing these spiritual senses in the text was the complete unity of Scripture with Christ as its center.  The Old and the New Testaments-and all of the books of which they were comprised-made up one unified revelation, and the subject matter of that revelation was Christ.[24]  In the preface which he handed out to his students, Luther makes explicit the way in which his adaptation of the quadriga fits a completely Christological interpretation of the Psalms.   

Praefatio Iesu Christi-the Preface of Jesus Christ

Printed and distributed to the students with the copies of the Psalm texts which Luther provided to them was his "Preface of Jesus Christ,"[25] about which it is safe to say that a.  it is surely one of the more remarkable assertions of interpretive principle which the Lutheran tradition has produced, and yet b.  it remains unknown to many Lutherans-both laity and clergy, and c.  (it is my contention) nothing could be more beneficial to the average reader of Scripture than to take to heart what Luther says here-every psalm should be read as spoken by and about Jesus Christ. 

Luther begins by laying a scriptural foundation for his interpretive principles with a series of Scripture quotations from the Gospel of John, the book of Revelation, Psalm 40, John's Gospel again, and Isaiah.  What becomes clear with just a bit of reflection is that not only the Johannine citations from the Gospel and Revelation but also the words from the Psalmist and from the prophet Isaiah are to be understood as direct quotations of Jesus himself.  And, together, the passages point to Jesus Christ as the center-point of and key to understanding revelation-Christ the door through whom we can go in and out and find pasture, Christ the true and holy One who has the key of David (which Luther takes to mean the "interpretive key to David the prophet"), Christ who points to the record of the scroll which speaks of him, etc.

Then Luther adduces four sources-Moses, the prophet Zechariah, St. Peter, and St. Paul-as witnesses that Christ is the Door, the Key, the Speaker of Scripture, and its Subject.  The four citations really comprise an interesting exercise in doing theology as "Sacred Page."  They might not provide proof to the Enlightenment-era skeptic who might accuse Luther of begging the question.  But they serve as "witnesses" for a monk and lecturer like Luther who is already convinced that Christ is the central point and for whom every passage resonates with Christological significance.  And the fourth witness-St. Paul writing to the Corinthians-says, "For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified" (I Cor. 2: 2), specifying further that it is the crucified Jesus Christ-Mary's Son who dies, condemned as a criminal, on the cross-of whom the prophet David speaks.  For Luther the verse also furnishes the true interpretation of the church, his body.  The only true church is the persecuted church which participates in the sufferings of Christ throughout its history.[26]  Luther then states the principle of interpretation which he draws from these passages and witnesses, and he gives further scriptural evidence for it:

Every prophecy and every prophet must be understood as referring to Christ the Lord, except where it is clear from plain words that someone else is spoken of.  For thus he himself says: "Search the Scriptures,...and it is they that bear witness of me." (John 5: 39).

For Luther, then, what is usually the first element in the quadriga-what we might think of as the literal or historical sense-has really been eliminated.  In its first, Spirit-intended sense, the text speaks directly of Christ. 

It's not that Luther would deny that there was an historical setting and circumstance to which David fittingly responded with a given psalm.  But that historical setting and circumstance is simply of no consequence.  One thinks here of Luther's interpretive gesture in dealing with the great Exodus event-the parting of the Red Sea waters.  For Luther, the event as pure history has little significance-"He didn't part the waters for me," he says in a brusque dismissal of that level of textual reference.  For Luther, living millennia after that event, the text still has importance, however-in how it points to baptism.  That is his view of the "historical" referent in the Psalms.

For Luther, this makes the appropriation of the Psalm for ourselves much more certain and direct.  You and I are not shepherds, or kings of Israel, or the leader of the temple choir.  If making the Psalms our own depends on our ability to identify with the experience and the "feelings" of the original writer, we are left with educated guesses and approximations. 

But Luther does not have to go through the mediation of the prophet David and his experience-first as shepherd and then as king-in order to derive an application to himself.  The text speaks directly of Christ, and nothing can be closer or more intimate than the relationship between Christ and his people. 

From the text's primary sense referring to Christ, figurative meanings can be derived which correspond to the categories of the tradition: 

Whatever is said literally concerning the Lord Jesus Christ as to his person must be understood allegorically of a help that is like him and of the church conformed to him in all things.  And at the same time this must be understood tropologically of any spiritual and inner man against his flesh and the outer man.

Luther goes on to illustrate these "spiritual" senses as he understands them.  The first example is taken from Psalm 1:1, "Blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked...."  Luther says, "Literally this means that the Lord Jesus made no concessions to the designs of the Jews and of the evil and adulterous age that existed at his time."  (As an aside, it might as well be faced here that Luther's commentary is not politically correct by today's standards.  Wherever the text denotes conflict of any kind, Luther sees its primary, literal point of reference as the conflict between Jesus of Nazareth and the Jews who did not accept him.)  Note that Luther's direct Christological application does not result in vagaries.  The passage for him is specific and vivid, but in reference to Christ. 

Luther goes on to derive "spiritual" meanings from this literal, Christological sense.  "Allegorically it means that the holy Church did not agree to the evil designs of persecutors, heretics, and ungodly Christians."  These three-"persecutors, heretics, and ungodly Christians"-correspond to the three successive stages Luther recognizes in the demonic assault on the church-the age of persecution and martyrdom, the age of Trinitarian and Christological heresies, and the third and ongoing stage-lasting until Christ's return-in which the church is troubled by evil from within its own ranks.  This schema shows up in all three of the examples here in the preface and often in Luther's allegorical applications.

In the standard quadriga, the letter gives rise to the allegorical sense which deals with the faith and points either to Christ or to the church. Since Luther sees the Christological sense as primary and literal, it is natural that the allegorical sense for him must refer to the church.  What is true of the Head is true of his Body.  And the passage also has a moral or tropological sense-pointing to the inner struggle between the "new man" in the Christian and the "old adam."  What is true of the Body is true of its individual members.   

Luther carries this pattern of interpretation out through two more examples.  For Psalm 2:1-2, he gives the abbreviated citation, "The kings of the earth take their stand and the rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against his anointed...." He comments:

Literally this refers to the raging of the Jews and Gentiles against Christ during his suffering.  Allegorically it is directed against tyrants, heretics, and ungodly leaders of the church.  Tropologically, it has to do with the tyranny, temptation, and tempest of the carnal and outer man who provokes and torments the spirit as the dwelling place of Christ.

In connection with this passage from Psalm 2, it is worth noting that it was not a far-fetched idea for Luther to apply the "letter" to Christ.  That is the way it read in the Latin Bible which he had memorized, "...consurgent reges terrae et principes tractabunt pariter adversum Dominum et adversum christum eius."  Moderns tend to think of the medieval as practicing a naïve  form of eisegesis, fancifully "reading Christ into the text" when he isn't there.  For the medieval reader-for Luther-it wasn't a matter of "reading in" anyone into anything.  The same is true of ecclesial applications.  Where our English Bibles have "congregation" or "assembly," routinely the Latin word is ecclesia.  The medieval saw Christ and church everywhere in the Old Testament-not just the New-because they were right there in the text.

Finally, Luther's third example is Psalm 3:1, "O Lord, how many are my foes."  Luther again precisely follows his pattern:

"This is literally Christ's complaint concerning the Jews, his enemies.  Allegorically it is a complaint and accusation of the church regarding tyrants, heretics, etc.  But tropologically it is a complaint, or prayer, of the devout and afflicted spirit placed into trials. 

We can note here that Luther does not provide an "anagogical" application referring to the final reward of heaven (or hell)-the traditional fourth level of significance-for any of these examples.  He will occasionally include this level of interpretation during his lectures, so one might ask why he leaves it out here. It is not unlikely that Heiko Oberman is correct in suggesting that this omission is a conscious decision of Luther which is based on his conviction that the end times were at hand, making quite superfluous applications to a return of Christ in the far future.[27]  Just a few years earlier (1510-1511), Luther had travelled to Rome as emissary for the Augustinian Order.  It was a commonplace of the day that the church was in a bad way and needed a reforming Council.  For Luther, however, this general observation had become a deeply rooted conviction with eschatological implications; the scandalous conditions especially among the clergy which he had personally witnessed in the Holy City fit all-too-well into the scriptural accounts of the end-time darkness just before the dawn of Christ's return.

The last sentence of this "Preface of Jesus Christ" deserves some reflection.  Luther says, "In their own way we must also judge in other places, lest we become burdened with a closed book and receive no food."  The only alternative to reading the Psalms with Christ as their focus is to receive no benefit-no food-from them at all.  Benefit-sustenance for our faith-comes from reading them through Luther's lenses, or (since Luther always stressed the spoken/sung word over the silent letter) hearing them with Luther's ears, understanding them through the creedal and scriptural categories which Luther has sharpened for us: the unity of the two Testaments, the incarnation of the Son of God and his voluntary self-emptying on our behalf, the "great exchange" in which our sin is placed on him and his righteousness is given to us, the holiness of the church, the inner battle between the newly created believer in us and the "Old Adam," etc.  Without that Christ-centered focus, we face a "closed book."

The Preface to the Scholia

There is yet a third "preface" to Luther's early lectures on the Psalms, this one delivered probably after he had lectured on Psalm 1.[28]  Addressing his students with a courtier's polite formality, Luther humbly claims his inadequacy for the task.  Then he calls attention to what David says of himself in 2 Samuel 23: 1-4, "The man to whom it was appointed concerning the Christ of the God of Jacob, the excellent psalmist of Israel said: ‘The Spirit of the Lord has spoken by me, and his word by my tongue.

The God of Israel spoke to me, the Strong One of Israel spoke, the Ruler of men, the just Ruler in the fear of God....'"  The point that Luther emphasizes is that there is something unique here about David as prophet:

...I want to be brief.  However, I implore you by God, whence comes such great presumption and unique boasting beyond all prophets, and the same often repeated, that the Lord spoke by him, that by his tongue came the latter's speech, "to whom it was appointed concerning the Christ of the God of Jacob...Other prophets used the expression "The word of the Lord came to me."  This one, however, ...says, in a new manner of speaking, "His word was spoken by me."

Luther will, at a later date, carry out his stated plan of dealing with David's final words in more depth, and in that late and mature work his Christological/Trinitarian approach to the text is even more pronounced.[29]  But already in 1513, there could be no doubt for those who attended his lectures on the Psalms-both fellow monks and superiors in the order-that Luther understood the Psalms as speaking directly of Christ.                            

Gleanings from Luther's Treatment of Psalm 1

Reading Luther's Dictata can be challenging on a number of counts.  His thought seems to jump about oddly at times-even taking into account the relatively complex framework of application he has outlined in his prefaces-and in some places he seems to spend time making the very kinds of artificial distinctions against which he and every other medieval expositor would rail.  It helps, therefore, to focus on how he finds Christ in the text, with the allegorically derived applications to the church and to the Christian's psychomachia hovering in the background.  In briefly considering here his treatment of Psalm 1in the Dictata, I suggest that there is a sharp contrast between the sacramental, gospel benefit one obtains from reading the Psalm Luther's way on the one hand and on the other hand, what is left-namely law-if one does not. 

Luther begins by reasserting what he has already said in his "Preface of Jesus Christ"-"The first psalm speaks literally of Christ..."-and then goes on to deal with the first phrase of the psalm, "Blessed is the Man."  What deepens the gospel tone in this verse is the way Luther ties Christ the "Blessed Man" to the church-his people-and thus to every individual Christian, by stressing the unity of Christ the "Firstfruits" to those who spring from him:

He is the only blessed one and the only man from whose fullness they have all received (John 1: 16) that they might be blessed and men and everything that follows in this psalm.  He is the "Firstfruits" of those who have fallen asleep" (I Cor. 15:20), so that he might also be the Firstfruits of those who are awake....[30] 

Taking the term "firstfruits"-with its picture implying more fruit to come- to be synonymous with the picture of Christ and church as Head and body, Luther can make a sacramental application to every believer.  Everything the Psalm says of the blessedness of the "righteous" is true of the church, and thus of every Christian, because it applies directly and fully to Christ.  To hear that truth is to be offered his righteousness.  To believe it to be true of Christ is to receive it for oneself.

Again, in the second verse, Luther treats the phrase, "But his will is in the Law of the Lord."  Here his first application is tropological-to the "new person" in the believer, and he works back from there to Christ:  He says:

This does not apply to those who are under the law in a spirit of bondage in fear, but to those who are in grace and a spirit of freedom.  Thence Christians are called free...spontaneous and willing, because of their Christ, who is the First of their kind.

Cleansed by his forgiveness and wearing his righteousness as ours, the believer-as believer-is of the same kind as Christ the Firstfruit-renewed by the grace of baptism and paradoxically sustained in the freedom of spontaneous loving by being a "member of his Body."  Whatever one wants to say about the need for development and sharpening in the theology of the young Luther at this point, this way of reading the Psalms surely provided a firm basis for the vital reformation breakthroughs to follow.[31] And his insights should ring true for us today, since they reflect for us St. Paul's words in 2 Cor. 5: 21 "that we might become the righteousness of God in him."

In verse three, the Psalmist says of the righteous man, "His (Its) leaf will not fall off."  One might expect Luther to speak generally about Christ's eternity.  But he is much more specific than that.  The psalmist, he says, is speaking about the Word of Christ, and therefore Luther takes the opportunity to rhapsodize-through a series of scriptural picture-connections-on the productive power of the Gospel:

Leaves are words.  It is clear, however, in which way these words of Christ have not withered, since they are written splendidly in the Gospels and in the hearts of the faithful.  The words which he speaks are life and spirit (John 6: 63).  Therefore they are worthy to be written not in stones and in dead books but in living hearts.  Therefore (the phrase) "does not fall off" says less and means more: Heaven and earth will pass away," but his words will not pass away (Matt.24: 35) He is therefore the "tree of life" (Rev. 22: 2), firmly "planted in the house of the Lord" (cf. Ps. 92:13), producing his fruit in its season, the firstfruits of all the trees that imitate him in these.[32]

Finally, we look at Luther's comments on the brief phrase, "And all that he does will prosper."  Again, his application is concrete and specific-what is meant here is what Christ does through his ministry of word and sacrament, and the spread of the gospel through the earth:

"...all that he instituted to be done by the apostles and disciples, in sacraments and mysteries...What things?  New heavens, a new earth (Is. 66:22), yes, he who sits on the throne makes all things new (Rev. 21:5)....These (works of Christ) are the ones of which it is here stated that they will prosper.  And they were fulfilled, as we see, because the church, which is the work of his splendor, has filled up the whole world.[33]

I have been selective here, naturally, because Luther's comments on this psalm go on for twenty pages in the American Edition of his works.  Besides gems like this, Luther includes some scathing language against the Jews of Jesus' day who rejected him, and he takes the time, in connection with verse 2, to go off on a tangent and condemn lazy monks who are not obedient to their superior-who ask "why" instead of complying immediately with the orders they receive.  All of this, of course, is in good keeping with the monastic, sacra pagina tradition in which lecturer and hearer are immersed in the world of the sacred page. 

Nevertheless, these brief sections serve to illustrate Luther's Christological approach and what is lost if one reads the Psalms in a different way.  What is left to us if the first verse does not refer to Christ, but instead enunciates a general principle: all those-and only those-are blessed who avoid the wicked and their ways-walking, standing, or sitting-and who delight in and meditate every moment on the teaching of the Lord?  What is left is only what we are to do-an unattainable standard from which we always fall short-pure law in its rawest, most uncompromising form which condemns us and leaves us to perish as "the chaff which the wind drives away." 

Taking Luther's approach brings us that same law as the description of Christ's holiness, but now in repentant faith we claim his righteousness as our own.  And we can profit also from a tropological application in which the new creation in us rejoices in Christ's example and seeks to follow it in humble obedience, always enabled by the Spirit of him who is the firstfruits among his brethren and the Head of his church.

I include a quick note here on what I consider to be a most unfortunate consequence of a change in language adopted by the ELCA's new cranberry-colored hymnal Evangelical Lutheran Worship.  In their zeal to eliminate masculine pronouns wherever possible, the Worship Committee that assembled the hymnal has lost something.  Note ELW's rendition of this same Psalm:

1) Happy are they who have not walked in the counsel of the wicked...

2) Their delight is in the law of the Lord, and they meditate on God's teaching day and night.

3) They are like trees planted by streams of water, bearing fruit in due season, with leaves that do not wither; everything they do shall prosper.

At very best, the typological/Christological reading has been obscured to the point that it can only be recovered with a great deal of explanation-and when will that take place in the worship service?  Even if a clear explanation is given, how well will it be understood and retained without the concrete reinforcement of the psalm's real language?  

I can understand the desire to avoid language which can be perceived as sexist and oppressive.  And frankly, if Luther's Christological understanding of the psalm is not offered and taught, then, in my opinion, the change is probably not a bad thing-perhaps the lesser of two evils as opposed to a Christ-less understanding of the text which can also be used to marginalize women.  However, if one is convinced not only of the correctness of Luther's approach but also of its necessity and great benefits, the change here from the masculine pronoun is a singularly ill-thought-out and most unfortunate concession to changing sensibilities about what is and is not offensive. 

At worst, where the reference to Christ is lost entirely and goes un-remarked, the congregation is left only with a proclamation of conditioned blessing which is really nothing but pure law-"This is the kind of person that you must be if you want God to bless you." 

Naturally, such a concern will ring rather hollow with those for whom Luther's Christological reading of the Psalms is only a quaint relic of a naïve and pre-critical age, but Lutherans should feel a loss here.  The glib and pharisaical smugness by which one easily includes oneself in such a "they" who are righteous and upright may be prevalent in the kind of pan-Protestant, produced-for-television "evangelicalism" to which God's people are exposed constantly here in America.  But it has little to do with the piety of the penitent tax-gatherer of whom Jesus says, "He went to his house justified,"-the piety witnessed to and promoted in the writings of Luther and in the Lutheran Confessions.

II

Gleanings from Psalm 22, with Luther's Help

So many details in the Gospel-and especially the passion histories-reference the Psalms that it has become a commonplace for modern, critical scholarship to posit a kind of "writer's creative license" on the part of the shapers of the Jesus-tradition and the Gospel writers.  The assumption is that the evangelists wrote their accounts with the Psalter and the prophetic books in hand, as it were.  Details and images from those were imaginatively inserted into the narrative about Jesus, not because eye-witnesses in fact actually saw things happen that way, but because the writer thought that something like that MUST have happened.  If Jesus of Nazareth was indeed the promised One, then what was written by the prophets MUST apply to him, and so it was put into the text.[34]    One should at least appreciate the tacit acknowledgment which lies behind this skeptical assumption-the recognition not only of Messianic expectations in Jesus' day but also of a consistently Messianic interpretation of the Psalms and prophets.

In the Psalms, the details reflected in the Gospel accounts of Jesus' passion are indeed legion.  According to the evangelists, Jesus quotes the Psalms twice-the cry of dereliction, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" (Psalm 22:1) and his dying prayer, "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit" (Psalm 31: 5).  Psalm 22 also records the marks of the crucifixion nails-"They pierce my hands and my feet" (v. 16) and the division of Jesus' clothing by the death-squad soldiers, "They divide my garments among them, and for my clothing they cast lots" (v. 18).  Several psalms speak of the special hurt caused to Jesus by the betrayal of Judas: Psalm 41:7-9, "All who hate me whisper together against me; Against me they devise my hurt...Even my close friend, in whom I trusted, who ate my bread, has lifted up his heel against me," and 55:12-13, "For it is not an enemy who reproaches me, then I could bear it; nor is it one who hates me who has exalted himself against me, then I could hide myself from him.  But it is you, a man my comrade, my companion and my familiar friend.  We ...had sweet fellowship together, walked in the house of God in the throng."  Because the soldiers did not break Jesus' legs to hasten his death, St. John cites Psalm 34:20, "He keeps all his bones, not one of them is broken."  In Psalm 35, the speaker pleads with the Lord about the "malicious witnesses" who have risen against him, the "smiters" who "slander (him) unceasingly," and his enemies who hate him, plot against him, and rejoice over his fall.  In Psalm 69:19-21, the speaker complains of the scorn and shame poured on him by his enemies who give him gall and vinegar to drink.  Some of these are explicitly noted by the Gospel-writers as being fulfilled in the story of Jesus' sufferings; some are not.   

If one takes Luther's approach to reading the Psalms, the individual details cited in the New Testament become part of a great tapestry in which everything fits the life and death of Jesus of Nazareth.  Psalm 22-understood as the vivid record of his very thoughts while on the cross, becomes not the exception but the paradigm.

One of the occasionally frustrating features in the Luther's early lectures on the Psalms is that the manuscript left to us of the Scholia is incomplete, and a number of psalms are missing-among them Psalm 22.  However, one can find a lengthy treatment of this psalm from only a few years later in Luther's Operationes in Psalmos of 1519-1521, as well as a briefer, summarizing treatment from the year 1530-his Kurze Auslegung ueber die ersten 22 Psalmen. (In the following pages I make use of the text in the St. Louis edition.) 

According to the Gospel accounts of both Matthew (27: 45) and Mark (15: 34), Jesus prayed at least the first verse of Psalm 22 from the cross, and Matthew, Luke, and John all point to the actions of the soldiers as the fulfillments of verse 18.  Offering as it does a detailed picture of Jesus' sufferings, Psalm 22 was always considered by the church to be prophetic and directly Christological.  In fact, one (relatively obscure) controversy had to do not with whether the Psalm was prophetic and Christological or not, but whether it must be taken as referring to Christ and his sufferings ad litteram-according to its literal sense-and not according to a spiritual understanding derived from a literal reading which had instead some other historical referent-presumably in the life of the prophet David.[35]  The general verdict of the church-that the Psalm refers to Christ and his crucifixion sufferings-is still reflected in the practice of reading it during Lent and especially during Holy Week.  For Luther, there is no question that the literal sense of the Psalm is taught to us by the Gospels-the historical referent is Christ on the cross-his prayer in the very midst of his crucifixion sufferings.  In some important ways, Psalm 22 serves as a model for Luther's approach and for making use of that approach today, if one takes seriously the question, "How would Christ himself pray this psalm?" In what follows I have made use of the translation from the New American Standard Bible.

For the choir director upon "the hind of the morning"

Luther finds the content of the entire psalm summarized already in the picture presented in this title:

For he sings of the doe in the morning light-hunted by dogs.  He speaks of the doe and not the stag on account of its fecundity and its gentleness...For in this psalm he will describe the sufferings and the kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ.[36]

Christ is the gentle and suffering doe who is hounded by human and demonic enemies-Luther connects the dogs (which he has inserted into the title-picture!) to the dogs of verse 17, "Many dogs have surrounded me."  He also comments on the phrase "of the morning"-it distinguishes this particular doe from the Israelite priesthood and the entire Israelite system of practice, because the "early morning" which is meant is the dawn ending the night of the law.[37]  In an instructive example of the monastic sacra pagina way of reading Scripture-the way of the "walking concordance"-Luther connects the title phrase "of the morning" to St. Paul's words in Romans 13:12, "The night is passed.  The day has arrived," and Galatians 4:4, "The time was fulfilled."  Christ, his sufferings for us, demonic enemies, the ending of the law-and Luther has not gotten past the title yet!

1) My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Far from my deliverance are the words of my groaning.

2) O my God, I cry by day, but you do not answer;
And by night but I have no rest.

As one would expect, the "cry of dereliction" in verse one is treated at great length by Luther. These haunting words of the Son of God drive us into the heart of the Christian creed and the Trinitarian mystery of oneness and otherness which can only be grasped in faith, never parsed or mastered by the intellect.  Within that mystery, the Father turns his back on his beloved Son who is "of one being with him."  The incarnate One, the God/Man,   bears the wrath of God against our fallen lovelessness. He is left in the hands of the devil who tempts him to doubt the Father's word.[38] Luther draws a tropological application which is of help in our struggle for holiness.  What we learn from his questioning cry is that our great High Priest knows what it is to be tempted as we are (Hebrews 4: 15).

"...but you do not answer."  As he often does, Luther shows some insight gained by imaginatively identifying with the Speaker of the psalm.  For Christ on the cross, the suffering is intensified by God's silence-made unendurable by the delay in God's answer.  As Luther keenly notes, it is easier to suffer if one can see the end of it all, and what one might otherwise endure becomes simply unbearable if that end is not in sight.  And that perception-that one's suffering has no end-is intrinsic to the pain of hell itself.  In the same way, at the dark moment when he cried out, Jesus could see no end to his pain.[39]   And, writing in 1530, Luther makes the most practical kind of allegorical application to the church-the Body of Christ.  The brave souls who were even then gathered to give their confession before Emperor Charles V-"unsere Leute jetzt zu Augsburg"-they, too, could see no end of the matter.[40]  For Luther, to hear Christ in the Psalms is never a merely intellectual point to be debated, nor is it ever merely satisfying and rewarding on some aesthetic level.  It is important to faith, and it affords the viator the most practical help.  In dark times, the Christian can pray this psalm and receive direct comfort.  The first verse may express what we, too, must sometimes experience, but we know the outcome!

Luther stresses that what is expressed here is the deepest point in Christ's sufferings-it is the pain of the damned who are separated from God and conscious of their own sin.  Christ has taken on our sins "as if they were his own," and he feels the bite of his conscience in the sharpest way-sharper than you or I because of his own innocence; unstained by any misdoing of his own, his conscience must bear the reproach of our every foul, perverse, hateful thought, word, and deed.  His strength is drained from him just because the law is driven home by the Holy Spirit. [41]  Here Luther acknowledges that to meditate on such a mystery as this verse with the paradoxes that it presents is not for the weak. Yet nothing can be more beneficial for faith.  It is "solid food and wine" that provides the richest comfort-both to those who are strong enough not to be offended and to those who suffer greatly themselves.[42]   

This is Luther's scriptural understanding of the "great exchange" in which our sin is taken into the very conscience of Christ as his own.  One sees this illustrated, to cite another example, in Psalm 69.   At least in the minds of the disciples-and to St. John as evangelist-the psalm refers directly to Jesus, since they apply to him verse 9, "Zeal for your house has consumed me."  In this psalm is also recorded (verse 21) one of those startling details from the crucifixion scene of Good Friday, "They also gave me gall for my food, and for my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink" (to which all the evangelists refer). In verse 5 of this psalm which thus clearly refers to Christ, the psalmist prays, "O God, it is you who know my folly, and my wrongs are not hidden from you."  If we take the language here seriously, these words must mean that the incarnate Son of God feels the guilt of my sin as his own guilt.  That is how thoroughly St. Paul means it when he writes, "(God) made him to be sin who knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him" (2 Cor. 5: 21). 

All of the penitential psalms lend themselves to this same understanding.  If one asks, "How would Jesus pray this confessional prayer?", the first and most important answer is that he prays concerning our sin. It is because Christ has prayed this way from the cross that our prayers of repentance are answered-because the Son of God and Mary's Son has made our sin so completely his own.   

3) Yet you are holy,
O you who are enthroned upon the praises of Israel,

4) In you our fathers trusted;
They trusted and you delivered them.

5) To you they cried out and were delivered;
In you they trusted and were not disappointed.

Always conscious of the incarnate Christ in his role as obedient Servant under the law for us-the One, indeed, who "learned obedience from the things which he suffered" (Heb. 5:8), Luther finds in verse 3 that the crucified One must speak these words-they come right at the point where to go further in questioning would be to fall into blasphemy.  Instead, he practices the obedience which we owe and remains resolute and firm in his faith.   

On the one hand, this acknowledgment of the Lord's absolute faithfulness to Israel and to the fathers, Luther says, must sharpen the pains that Christ endures, as he is afflicted by the thought, "You helped them-yet I am abandoned."  On the other hand, the recollection of the Lord's trustworthiness in helping Israel is a comfort-for Christ himself is Israel par excellence.  In what is both a sacramental bestowal of what he has done for us and a "tropological" application of that gift for us in our battle for holiness, Luther calls attention to the "high art" practiced here by Christ in claiming comfort for himself by remembering the Lord's absolute faithfulness in doing what he has done for Israel.[43]  That is the same high art and Holy Spirit-given skill practiced by the Christian who prays this psalm and claims the comfort in the absolute faithfulness of the Lord who raised  Christ from the dead.

6) But I am a worm and not a man,
A reproach of men and despised by the people.

7)  All who see me sneer at me;
They separate with the lip, they wag the head, saying,

8) Commit yourself to the Lord; let him deliver him;
Let him rescue him, because he delights in him.

The Gospels record the vivid fulfillment of the prophecy in verses 7-8: those gathered around the cross-including one of the thieves crucified with him-mocked the suffering Servant in precisely the terms described here.  Luther directs his attention much more to the phrase "but I am a worm and not a man."

He rejects, first of all, the one patristic interpretation (he does not identify the source) which understood these words as a reference to Christ's conception and birth from a virgin, so that the phrase "...and not a man" emphasizes his divinity, "I am God and not only human."  For Luther, this interpretation is odd and out of place here.  On the other hand, there is another strong patristic tradition which saw the "worm" as the humanity of Christ which is the bait which lures Satan to attempt to swallow it.  But the devil destroys himself on the "hook" of Christ's divinity.[44]  And that ancient interpretation seems to lurk not far beneath the surface of Luther's meditations.  For Luther the phrase "I am a worm" points purely to Christ's humanity-he is "ein lauterer Mensch."  But more, it points to his utter and complete "self-emptying," his humiliation (Phil. 2:5-8).  Here, Luther says, the psalmist must use "risky, strange words"-Christ the worm-and Luther draws out the connotations of that phrase-Christ has become abject-the lowest of the low, an object of contempt, "forsaken, nauseating, abominable, rotten, scandalous, stench, a rotting worm."[45]  Luther understands this language of total humiliation to be filled with the most profound soteriological significance-that is what he willingly made himself on our behalf. 

Luther immediately makes an allegorical application to include the church in his interpretation of the phrase.  Also the people of Christ will be considered less than human-to others they seem to be nothing but the shadows of real human beings, and one steps on them in utter contempt, "like a worm after it rains."   Again, Luther's comments here pertain to all the confessional psalms, but they also pertain to those in which the speaker bemoans the contempt which is unjustly put upon him. 

On the one hand, that means that the individual Christian joins Christ in these words in repentant confession.  "I am a worm" corresponds to our recognizing the sin and the "old Adam" which still inheres in us here.  "I am a worm" is the psalmist's way, and-via the "great exchange"-the way of Christ, of confessing, and thus it is also the individual Christian's act of  acknowledging, "I am by nature sinful and unclean-a rotten worm, and I have sinned against you in thought, word, and deed."  It is the Christian's recognition-with St. Paul, of the truth of God's verdict, that "in me-that is, in my flesh-dwells no good thing." 

But the phrase "I am a worm" for Luther also applies to the church in the way that it must bear the contempt and scorn of the world unjustly, just as Christ did-and for his sake.  Because of the "great exchange," the church is dressed in his righteousness; yet she must bear the opprobrium, the scorn, and the hate-filled contempt which was poured on her Master.  Naturally, not everyone personally experiences that kind of oppression for Christ's sake to the same degree.  But the church is a unity, not just a collection of individuals.  A bit of "corporate" thinking reminds us that the Body of Christ does actually bear the hostility and contempt of the world, and that oppression is a reality also today.  Luther's emphasis on the unity between each member of the body of Christ and our complete solidarity with our Head, it seems to me, provides some needed counterbalance for us to the individualism so strongly present in the American ecclesial scene-with its emphases on my decision for Christ, liturgical forms cut back to fit my preferences, the church's musical tradition jettisoned to fit my taste in favor of song forms designed to manipulate my emotions in pleasant ways, etc.      

9) Yet you are he who brought me forth from the womb;
You made me trust when upon my mother's breasts.

10) Upon you I was cast from birth;
You have been my God from my mother's breasts.

11)  Be not far from me, for trouble is near;
For there is none to help

12) Many bulls have surrounded me,
Strong bulls of Bashan have encircled me.

13) They open wide their mouth at me,
As a ravening and a roaring lion.

Throughout Christ's suffering, he remains firm in faith and continues to pray.  Verse 11 points to his utter loneliness.  So many had followed him before.  Now even his disciples had fled.  The Gospel accounts mention only a few brave women and John there at the cross.  There were none to help.  Instead, he is surrounded by enemies-and the animalistic imagery presents them as dangerous, enraged, frothing and "roaring." 

14) I am poured out like water,
And all my bones are out of joint;
My heart is like wax;
It is melted within me.

15) My strength is dried up like a potsherd,
And my tongue cleaves to my jaws;
And you lay me in the dust of death.

16) For dogs have surrounded me;
A band of evil-doers has encompassed me.
They pierced my hands and my feet.

17) I can count all my bones,
They look, they stare at me;

18) They divide my garments among them,
And for my clothing they cast lots.

Luther recognizes a progression now to physical sufferings.   Crucifixion was never gentle, but it was made considerably worse than usual for Jesus of Nazareth because of what he had already endured: sleep deprivation, beatings, scourging with the attendant loss of blood which was exacerbated by the crown of thorns, etc.[46]  Without minimizing them, Luther is relatively cursory in speaking of those physical pains; he goes rather to the prophetic verse 18.  Why, he asks, does the evangelist John speak of this-the seemingly most minor of his pains-while not recording the cry of dereliction in verse 1?  That leads him rather to discuss the great shame and humiliation endured by Christ-the shame earned by our sin.  "Some of my sins I know," we confess, "the thoughts and words and deeds of which I am ashamed."  The shame of our sin was exposed to all in the crucified Christ, exposed and naked on the cross.

The church's devotions centered on these sufferings of Christ have been a rich source of the "benefit," the "food" for faith of which Luther speaks in his Praefatio Jesu Christi.  To meditate on what Christ endured on the cross is, in the most practical and most powerful way, to be confronted with the real nature of and the real cost of my sin.  At the same time it is to read, to hear, to grasp in faith how completely he has taken up what we owe and paid the last farthing.   

19) But you, O Lord, be not far off;
O you my Help, hasten to my assistance.

20) Deliver my soul from the sword,
Deliver my soul from the power of the dog.

21) Save me from the lion's mouth;
From the horns of the wild oxen, you answer me.

In faith Christ continues to pray for delivery from the enemies that surround him.  In discussing verse 21 with its reference to the threatening dog, lion, and wild oxen (Luther's translation here is "unicorn") Luther makes a seamless transition from the human enemies of Jesus and applies the text to the devil and his minions-the demonic foes lying behind the human faces surrounding the cross.  That naturally leads him to make an application to what the church faces in an ongoing way.  The bestial pictures hardly suffice to describe the horrors arrayed against Christ, "because there is no more horrible cruelty or envy than that with which Satan rages against salvation and against the doctrine and the teachers of salvation...because he knows his kingdom on earth is endangered by that alone."[47]

For Luther-the practitioner of "theology as the study of the sacred page"-the animalistic imagery connects to the serpent of Genesis 3 and the deadly, soul-devouring, "roaring lion" of St. Peter's first epistle (5:8).

Those images of lion and serpent show up a number of times in the Psalter as pictures of the speaker's enemies. What Luther says in connection with this verse is really his answer to all who find an insurmountable obstacle to praying the Psalms in the vexing problem of the "psalms of imprecation" or "cursing psalms."  It is ultimately Satan and his minions who are the objects of the curses which Christ speaks against those who unjustly torment him.  For Luther, the standard triad- tyrants who persecuted the early church, heretics who troubled the church of the following centuries, and corrupt prelates and hypocrites who trouble the church from within today-are only faces for the "old evil foe."  In the same way, a tropological extension of that allegorical interpretation would include our own sinful self-the unbeliever in us against whom we battle every day through repentance (Rom. 7)-thus completing the catechetical phrase, "the devil, the world, and our own sinful flesh."

To imagine that this is an excessively pessimistic description of human fallenness and that it leads to some kind of morose and even macabre sin-consciousness as described, for example, in Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story "The Minister's Black Veil," is to mix the kingdoms of God's right hand and his left-to confuse observable psychology with matters of faith.  It is worth remembering in this connection that the "old Adam" in us goes beyond our understanding.  Some strands of Pietism have left us with the bad business of trying to "experience" or connect emotively with that evil within-to "feel" as fallen as God's verdict says we are.  Finally, however, what is needed is the sober analysis of Luther in the Smalcald Articles (III, 1, 3)-it "must be learned and believed from the revelation of Scriptures."  The extent of our fallenness has nothing to do with having some kind of "low self-esteem" in the psychological sense, and it must be accepted by faith-by that humility before God's verdict so characteristic of the monks. 

Luther does not treat in depth the phrase which is translated in the NASB, "You answer me," perhaps because it is rendered somewhat differently in the Latin.  But the NASB's reading is more accurate, in my opinion, and it is worth considering.  It is the turning point in the psalm-the moment at which the melody seems to change from a minor to a major key.  From this phrase to the end of the psalm, all is victory and triumph.  Now, if we imagine Christ on the cross praying this psalm, we have up to this point followed him through the deepest moments of the suffering he endures for us: abandoned by God, burdened with our sin, reproachfully sneered at by those who stand around the cross, forsaken by his friends and instead surrounded and raged at by the forces of hell, suffering enormous physical pain, shamed and humiliated-a worm and not a man.  Despite all the evidence which he sees, hears, and feels, he continues to trust and to pray in faith for deliverance, and it is the words of this very psalm which he is praying-words which Jesus, of course, knew by heart.  Thus, when he comes to this phrase, "You answer me," it is the point at which-through the very word of the psalm which he prays-he is assured that his prayer is answered, and he grasps in faith the promise that is expressed there as a faith-sustaining statement of fact in response to his entreaty.  From this point on, the Savior can draw together his strength to cry out, "It is finished!" and to pray, in the words of Psalm 31:5, "Into your hands I commit my spirit."

Luther's understanding of "Christ as worm" here in this psalm makes just this point so relevant for you and me.  Christ experiences this suffering as a human being-at the lowest point of his humiliation or self-emptying.  There is no little bit of divinity creeping into his human consciousness here to deaden the suffering or to tell him that it will all be over soon. That means that he must rely on the very same means on which you and I must rely, namely, the word of God.  In those darkest moments of pain or grief, the viator does not need to look for zen-like moments of enlightenment from within or for "writing on the wall" or for mystic insights into "God's plan" which will make everything seem okay, or for any of the various forms of pure Schwaermerei that are pedaled today on T.V. or in Christian bookstores.  The Holy Spirit works through the word, period.  Christ-who became a worm for us-depended on that word and found strength in it.  That is really what Luther has taught us to do when he directs us to say in our moments of anguish and doubt, "Nevertheless, I am baptized."

22) I will tell of your name to my brethren;
In the midst of the assembly I will praise you.

23) You who fear the Lord, praise him;
All you descendants of Jacob, glorify him,
And stand in awe of him, all you descendants of Israel.

24) For he has not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted;
Neither has he hidden his face from him;
But when he cried to him for help, he heard.

25) From you comes my praise in the great assembly;
I shall pay my vows before those who fear him,

26) The afflicted shall eat and be satisfied;
Those who seek him will praise the Lord.
Let your heart live forever!

27) All the ends of the earth will remember and turn to the Lord,
And all the families of the nations will worship before you.

28) For the kingdom is the Lord's,
And he rules the nations.

29) All the prosperous of the earth will eat and worship,
All those who go down to the dust will bow before him,
Even he who cannot keep his soul alive.

30) Posterity will serve him;
It will be told of the Lord to the coming generation.

31) They will come and will declare his righteousness
To a people who will be born, that he has performed it.

For Luther, what begins with verse 22 is the victory-song of Christ, risen and triumphant, whose kingdom is established by his sufferings, death, and resurrection and who speaks through the ministry of the church to proclaim the glory of the One who has answered him.  He proclaims his resurrection here in advance, as well as its fruits and its effects, which is the praise and honor of God.[48]   The crucified One dies in triumph.  No one takes his life from him; he surrenders it willingly into the Father's care.

Luther calls attention to two concrete ways in which the action described in verse 22 is carried out.  Christ himself preached the name of God and his praise to his disciples in the forty days between his resurrection and his ascension.  And he continues to fulfill the prophesied actions of this verse through the office of the ministry-through the preaching of law and gospel.[49]  

For Luther, the action of "praising and honoring God" thus has little to do with our telling God how wonderful he is; instead, it is intimately connected to the idea of Gottesdienst-God serving us.  God is honored and his name is praised when his ministers preach what he has done for sinners, and when his people believe that message.  In his name and in his praise is the heart of the gospel which is offered to and appropriated by the church and by her individual members as they pray this psalm in that solidarity with Christ which faith is.[50]  All of what St. Paul says in the eighth chapter of his letter to the Romans about the triumph of faith is taught-experienced-in these verses.  Nothing can separate us from the love of Christ.

It is worth noting, finally, that for Luther the text of verse 22 read, "Narrabo nomen tuum fratribus meis, in media ecclesia laudabo..."-I will tell of Your name to my brothers; I will praise You in the midst of the church."  (See also verse 25, "apud te laus mea in ecclesia..."-from you is my praise in the church.)

That Was Then; This Is Now

When Luther wrote his "Preface of Jesus Christ," he was giving a variation-an intensified Christological turn-to what was the common understanding of the Psalter, according to which the Psalms-all of them-speak directly of Christ.  The changes which came to scriptural studies during what came to be known as the period of the "Enlightenment" have left us with a different understanding today. 

The current state of affairs can be illustrated by two of the sources used extensively for this presentation-the magisterial work of Henri DeLubac on the four-fold "spiritual sense," and Beryl Smalley's History of Medieval Exegesis, which remains something of a classic in the field of the history of exegesis.  DeLubac and Smalley represent two sides of the issue as it was played out in ecclesial/academic circles during the second half of the Twentieth Century. 

Henri DeLubac was part of the "new theology" movement within the Roman Catholic Church, a group of theologians calling especially for a return to traditional sources (Scriptures, creeds, liturgies, etc.) and stressing the need for a retrieval of the theology of the patristic era.  Among his own contributions was his defense of-and assertion of the value of-the ancient, figurative interpretations of the Scriptures-the "four sense" approach. 

Smalley's work was something of a sustained polemic against the ideas promoted in DeLubac's book.  In a thinly veiled reference to theologians like DeLubac, she suggests (somewhat condescendingly) that some of the "new" trends in Scripture studies (she means the medieval, "four-sense" type of approach) can be explained by the rise of an anti-intellectual "mysticism" caused by the traumas of World War II, and that it is up to responsible academicians to help cleanse the church of such primitive influences:

What does concern (us) is the change which has taken place in the attitude of modern scholars to medieval exegesis within the last ten years.  The spiritual exposition, predominant in patristic and medieval commentators, had few defenders ten years ago.  There was a certain rather tepid admiration for St. Thomas for having defined its limits, but only blame for the extravagance and subjectivism of its exponents.  Now the revived interest in mysticism has led certain students to reverse their judgment...a fascinating and alarming example of the way in which the history of exegesis prolongs itself in that of its historians.[51]

Much of her book is an extended argument for how the church "progressed" toward emphasizing the literal and historical meaning, without other layers of significance.   

One enters a whole new realm of problematic definitions when one talks of "the view of the Enlightenment"-comprised of some rationalism as well as some dependence on empirical findings, a growing consciousness of historical distance from the world of Scripture, skepticism toward the miraculous, confidence in the ability of human reason and human morality.  Various "enlightenment" views came to have influence in more than just the halls of academia, sometimes in the reaction they provoked.  Some very "conservative" Lutheran commentators adopted an approach which, while a reaction to skeptical rationalism, may itself have had a "rationalist" component. 

The medievals and Luther had felt justified in following the example of the New Testament, continuing and extending the figurative interpretation they found practiced there.  For conservative commentators of the Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment eras, however, the neuralgic point tended to be the "inerrancy" of Scripture as the authoritative source for drawing up doctrinal statements.  The struggle for an errorless authority necessitated, it seems, more stress on preserving the text's factual accuracy in relation to its historical referent and a much more cautious approach than Luther's to the prophetic nature of the Psalms.  Typically, one would confidently call "prophetic" and "Christological" only those psalms which were referred to as such in the New Testament-and sometimes only the exact verses which were cited and not the whole psalm.  In the discussions about "typology" or "rectilinear" (direct) prophecy, Luther's Preface of Jesus Christ was virtually never mentioned.[52] 

Among those who have more fully invested in a "critical" approach to Scripture, the resonance of Christ is, of course, much fainter.  In one fairly recent "Lutheran" treatment of the Psalter, for example, the writer seems somewhat grudgingly to admit that some of the Psalms may seem to reflect a piety geared toward a "future king."  Nevertheless, these psalms are not to be understood as though the Gospel accounts were the story of their fulfillment.  What seem to be reflections of the life and experiences of Jesus of Nazareth are merely coincidental.  While paying careful attention to all the relevant matters of scholarship-text, lexical and grammatical questions, the surrounding history as we can know it-the writer establishes and maintains an historical distance to the content of the Psalms which, finally, leaves the reader with little but examples (law) and some vague promises which have no real Christological basis and therefore are little more than wishful thinking on the part of the psalmist.  Far from being Christologically focused-the thoughts and prayers of Christ himself-the Psalms, we should see, reflect a whole variety of "spiritualities" concerned with psychological and political issues such as "orientation" and "disorientation," "social justice," "creation," etc.[53]

Another recent "Lutheran" expositor of the Psalms explicitly takes up the question of whether or not any of them can be understood as referring to Christ.  He responds in the negative, and asserts that the case is rather that New Testament writers saw coincidental parallels between what the psalmist wrote and what they thought Jesus experienced-an example of that commonplace assumption of critical scholarship mentioned above.  In reality, we are told, the Psalms should be understood as expressions of various "Hebrew spiritualities" which, apparently, had no Messianic component at all.[54]  It is not surprising that, finally, he finds the imprecatory psalms not only problematic but simply indefensible.[55]

What is striking about all these approaches to the Psalms mentioned here-"conservative" and "not-so-conservative"-is that the net result in their interpretations is much the same.  A given psalm is drained of its Christ-for-me gospel content and it is made into law-a good example for us to follow, at best, and the promise of blessedness for the righteous (as in Psalm 1) is made contingent on my own goodness.

Naturally, the church has never completely lost the Christ-centered understanding of the Psalms.  After all, the New Testament is replete with references to those psalms as they point directly to Christ, and the reading and singing of the Psalms has continued to have its place in worship.  It is also true that the Body of Christ can worship "in spirit and in truth" without all its members necessarily being conscious of the correct "meta-narrative" concerning its songs and prayers (just as those members are justified by God's grace alone, through faith alone, even if they wouldn't know enough to word it that way). 

It is probably safe to say that most folks in the pews today do not think of the Psalms in terms of the interpretive principal which was held in patristic and medieval times and set forward as a hermeneutical program by Luther in the prefaces to his first lectures on the Psalter.  Nevertheless, here is a treasure from the tradition which can and should play a role in how the church feeds her children.  Understanding the Psalms with Christ as their primary speaker and their primary subject and focus can make them come alive as existential exercises-devotions-in the themes of Lutheran, i.e. scriptural/Christian theology-Trinity and Incarnation, repentance, the "great exchange" and atonement, battle against and final victory over Christ's enemies, supplication for help as we carry our cross, thanksgiving in the midst of suffering, etc.-for us who "have the mind of Christ," as the Apostle Paul says.

Some simple ways of teaching and re-enforcing Luther's insight might be effective: occasional Bible studies on the Psalms in which his Christological approach is discussed and the question is asked, "How would Jesus pray this psalm?"; a simple explanation of one or two lines regularly inserted into worship bulletins over psalms which are read or sung antiphonally; an occasional sermon-or perhaps a series of sermons, an article in the pastor's corner of the parish newsletter, etc.    

The Psalter can perform for Christ's people the same kind of formative and "faith-shaping" function as other liturgical acts which we are taught in Scripture.  Just as penitent faith in Christ is shaped by the institutions of Confession and Absolution and the Lord's Supper, and our prayers follow the pattern of the Lord's Prayer, so the Psalter-as the thoughts and prayers of Christ himself-help to put our thinking and our faith, our supplication and our praise into the above-mentioned creedal categories.  For Christ's people, who must walk through the valley of death's shadow by faith and not by sight as they await his return, nothing could be more practical or helpful.


[1]   Luther himself is responsible for the title Dictata, since he refers to his lectures in a letter to George Spalatin as mea dictata super Psalterium.

[2]   Heiko Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1989), pp. 161 ff.

[3]   LW 10, p. 11.

[4]   LW 10, p. 49.  Luther refers to synteres in the plural. 

[5]   See Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil, 136 ff.  Minimally, Luther read Augutine's  On the Trinity and The City of God, and Biel's commentary on Lombard's Sentences, which would have made for a wide-ranging theological education indeed!

[6]   Brian Cummings, The Literary Culture of the Reformation (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), p. 77. Cummings notes that Luther had purchased Reuchlin's Hebrew grammar already in 1508.

[7]   See LW 10, p. 3, note.

[8]   Aquinas, Summa Theologica, I. 10. 

[9]   Henri De Lubac, Medieval Exegesis: Vol. 1, The Four Senses of  Scripture, trans. Mark Sebanc (Grand

Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1998), p. 1.

[10]   LW 10, p. 4.

[11]  Kenneth Hagen, The Bible in the Churches: How Different Christians Interpret the Scriptures, eds.

Kenneth Hagen, Daniel J. Harrington, S. J., Grant R. Osborne, Joseph A. Burgess (New York: Paulist Press, 1985), p. 22.

[12]   Ibid, p. 22 ff.

[13]   Kenneth Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity, vol 1 (New York: Harper and Row, 1975), pp. 15, 150. I cite this work merely as representative. When Latourette discusses the allegorical interpretive methods of Philo and Origen, it is in direct connection to their "Hellenic" and platonic orientation.   Naturally, my point here is not at odds with the rather obvious assertion that a "platonic" mindset was conducive to and lent support to allegorizing-albeit not with the historical grounding of Christ's Person as the solid and necessary unifying point of focus.

[14]   See De Lubac, p. 9.  "This approach of dividing up the text into four compartments strikes him as introducing otiose and questionable divisions, which serve neither faith nor morals."

[15]   Operationes in Psalmos, 1519-1521, St. Louis IV, 4, 1226-1355.

[16]   Kenneth Hagen, Luther's Approach to Scriptures as Seen in His Commentaries on Galatians, 1519-1538,  (Orlando: Mohr, 1993), p. 11.  Hagen points out that Luther speaks approvingly of the four senses in his later commentary on Galatians of 1538. 

[17]   Ibid, p. xiii, De Lubac mentions the many "artificial distinctions" he encountered in his studies of medieval exegetical practice. One can imagine the textual gamesmanship of monks bored with the routine of the cloister.

[18]   Hagen, The Bible in the Churches, p. 129, note. Luther, for example, rejected the allegorical application that equated Moses' brother Aaron with the papacy.

[19]   Ibid, p. 129.  Luther calls Augustine's discussion of the image of God "not unattractive," but it goes beyond what the letter can prove elsewhere.  For Luther, of course, the imago Dei consisted in the right relationship with God, which is included in Augustine's picture.

[20]   St. Louis, IV, 4, 1235.

[21]   Hagen, The Bible in the Churches, p. 3.

[22]   For example, in describing Luther's approach to the text in his lectures on Genesis, H. G. Haile speaks of Luther's "embarrassingly total identification" with Noah.  He notes that Luther was anything but naïve in speaking this way.  Instead, he was "quite self-aware, even programmatic."  He expected his students to follow his example.

[23]   Ibid, p. 3.

[24]   De Lubac waxes almost poetic in his lengthy chapter insisting on this very point.  See Medieval Exegesis, vol. 1, pp. 225 ff.

[25]   Here and following, see LW 10, pp. 6-7.

[26] Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil, p. 252.

[27]   Oberman, p. 252.

[28]   Here and following, LW 10, pp. 8-10. 

[29]   See LW 15, pp. 265-352, "The Last Words of David."

[30]   LW 10, p 11.

[31]   In this regard, one thinks of Luther scholars such as Oberman or Steven Ozment who find in Luther's Dictata all the vital components of what was to follow. 

[32]   LW 10, p. 22.

[33]   LW 10, p. 22.

[34]   Gerd Theissen and Annette Merz, The Historical Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), pp. 106 ff.  Theissen/Merz summarize this assumption as follows: "The first Christians not only interpreted memories of Jesus in the light of the Old Testament but often produced them in the first place.  The body of scriptures of Israel were more reliable for them as God's testimony than the testimony of eye-witnesses" (my emphasis).  The "counter-arguments" of Theissen/Merz assume the basic correctness of this assumption.

[35]   See the unpublished paper by Kenneth Hagen who discovered references in commentaries of both Nicholas of Lyra and Aquinas to a "Synod of Toledo" which had condemned as heretical the assertion that the text could be understood ad litteram as having a different referent than Christ.  Hagen could find no decisions of any Synod of Toledo corresponding to Lyra's and Aquinas's comments.  However, he did note that the Council of Nicea had condemned that same kind of contention by Theodore of Mopsuestia (the central figure, of course, in the so-called "Antiochene School" of theology that stressed the literal/historical sense over spiritual senses during the late third and early fourth centuries).

[36]  Operationes in Psalmos, St. Louis IV, 4, 1226 ff.

[37]   Ibid., 1227 ff.

[38]   Ibid, 1231-32.

[39]   Kurze Auslegung, 1532.

[40]   Ibid., 1532.

[41]   Operationes in Psalmos, 1233.

[42]   Ibid., 1238.

[43]   Kurze Auslegung... St. Louis, IV, 4, 1534. 

[44]   Gustav Aulen, Christus Victor (Eugene, Or.: Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2003).  Aulen cites Origen.

[45]   Operationes in Psalmos, 1251.

[46]   One can find on the internet the medical description by a doctor of the excruciating pains endured by Christ-above and beyond the horrors of "normal" crucifixion.

[47]   Operationes in Psalmos, 1325.

[48]   St. Louis IV, 4, 1327, "Daher verkuendigt er hier seine Auferstehung vorher, ja, die Frucht und das Werk der Auferstehung..."

[49]   Ibid, 1328.

[50]   Ibid, 1328-1329.

[51]   Smalley, pp. 359-360.  DeLubac cites one of  Smalley's conference papers in which she dismissed any figurative understanding of Scripture as a primitive stage through which all religions go through in their understanding of their sacred texts (Medieval Exegesis, p. 229)

[52]   See, for example, Walter Roehrs, Concordia Self-Study Commentary (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1979), pp. 336 ff.  In the introduction to the Psalms in this excellent and useful commentary, Roehrs makes points of the continuity between the Testaments established by the Psalms, the fact that Jesus prayed the Psalms, and how the speakers in the Psalms "delight in the kingdom of heaven and its Messiah."  Nevertheless, Luther's Christological approach has been sharply mitigated, and it is with the "saints of the Old Testament" who prayed these prayers that the church joins, not Christ himself, and Roehrs makes no mention of Christ in his treatment of Psalm 1.  Another example of this type of "conservative" treatment is that of Darrel Kautz in The Contemporary Bible-Study Guides, vol. 9, Israel's Psalms (Kautz: Milwaukee, 1970) p. 16.  Kautz, too, makes no mention of Luther's "Preface of Jesus Christ" and takes a much more tepid approach to the extent of the Christological content of the book, "Certain of the psalms can be spoken of as ‘Messianic' since they bear some sort of relationship to the Messiah...It is necessary, however, to be cautious in determining which psalms have Messianic significance.  To force a psalm to speak of the Christ when it does not clearly do so is as incorrect as to blind oneself to the Messianic element when it is present." 

[53]   Walter Brueggemann, The Message of the Psalms: a Theological Commentary (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1984), p. 123 ff.

[54]   Marshall Johnson, Psalms through the Year: Spiritual Exercises for Every Day (Minneapolis: Augsburg Books, 2007), pp. 379-380.

[55]   Ibid., 380-382.

Christ in the Psalms: A Consideration of Luther's "Preface of Jesus Christ" by Daniel Metzger

I

The Prefaces to Luther's Dictata: Introduction and Background

It might seem odd at first that anyone should still show interest in Luther's Dictata,[1] his early lectures on the Psalms.  After all, these lectures of 1513-1514-sometimes referred to with perhaps a bit of condescension as Initium theologiae Lutheri (the beginning of Luther's theology) contain much that Luther would leave behind as his theology developed through study and controversy.  For example, he still shows a kind of "monastic orientation" to his thinking in his emphasis not so much on faith in Christ as on humility-admitting God is right in his verdict-as the prerequisite for any righteousness that can come by faith;[2] or there is the careful distinction he makes between peccatum malitiae and peccatum ignorantiae (malicious sins and sins done out of ignorance),[3] or again his accepting reference to the "spark" (syntaresis) of life that remains not only in the human intellect but also in the will[4]--all vestiges of a medieval theological apparatus which, eventually, Luther would for the most part discard.

Among these remnants of a past Luther needed to leave behind, it has been assumed, is the exegetical approach to the Psalms which he presents in the "Prefaces" to those early lectures.  That way of reading the Psalms can best be summarized in Luther's own words from his Praefatio Iesu Christi-the Preface of Jesus Christ-which his students received with their copy of the psalm texts:  "Every prophecy and every prophet (Luther is applying this to the psalms and to David here) must be understood as referring to Christ the Lord, except where it is clear from plain words that someone else is spoken of."  Most recently, Luther scholars have recognized that he never abandoned this fundamental way of reading the Old Testament and, specifically for our discussion here today, of reading the Psalms.

In our brief time together, I would like to present for consideration a number of points pertaining to Luther's Christological reading of all the Psalms.  Luther means far more than that certain psalms can in some way or another be applied to Jesus and his life.  For Luther, the letter-the literal meaning of the text, the primary Spirit-intended meaning-refers directly to Christ.  In saying this, Luther is rooted solidly in the tradition and, I would assert, in the New Testament.  A few brief examples will demonstrate that Lutheran commentators of the Twentieth Century-even those with a high view of Scripture who stressed its "inerrancy"-have departed from Luther here.  Instead, they have opted-perhaps out of a caution arising from the very kinds of "enlightenment" attitudes against which they wished to defend the text-for a pale imitation of Luther's more robust claim that all the Psalms deal directly with Christ.  Those who have adopted a more critical approach to the text have gone further away from Luther and the tradition.

In addition to this (perhaps rather diffuse) discussion of how Luther compares to what came before and what has come after, I would like to present a couple of case studies-treatments of individual psalms-with Luther's help and/or following his pattern.  And finally, I would like to suggest for discussion that Luther's approach needs to be resurrected- consciously re-appropriated-and set to work again in the assembly of God's people, that without it something immensely precious to the church goes unused and is in danger of being lost, and that it is in the parish-in worship-that the riches of Luther's understanding of the Psalms can best and most meaningfully be recovered and appreciated.

Luther's Preparations for his Lectures on the Psalms

Luther began his lectures on the Psalms at Wittenberg in 1513, just over eight years after he had first sought entrance into the monastery of observant Augustinian monks in Erfurt.[5]  Within a year, the order's Vicar General-Johannes von Staupitz-had singled Luther out for biblical studies.  Luther's first assignment was to memorize the Scriptures (the Latin text, which remained Luther's primary text all his life) page by page.  In the coming years leading up to his transferal to the faculty at Wittenberg, Luther studied the theology of Augustine and Gabriel Biel, lectured on Theology at Erfurt and on Ethics at Wittenberg, made a trip to Rome as an Augustinian emissary to the pope, and, in 1512, was awarded the degree of doctor. Thus he was no mere beginner in theology when, in that same year he took up the chair at Wittenberg as Bible lecturer, the position which he retained until his death.

Assuming that Luther's teaching schedule was similar to that which he followed later in his career, he delivered his lectures on the Psalms from nine to ten o'clock a.m. on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Wednesdays.  In preparation for the lectures, he created a "handout" for the students.  He had printed for them the Latin text of the Psalms, with wide margins and interlinear spacing adequate for taking notes, as well as brief summaries of the contents of each psalm.  Luther took one of these handouts for himself, and on it inserted his own "glosses" on the text-grammatical and lexical notations, meaning of particular phrases, insights from his growing knowledge of Hebrew, etc.[6]  The students would be expected to copy into the text given to them whatever they could of these notes.  In addition, they would add their own summarizing notes of Luther's scholia-his more extensive commentary on the content of each psalm.  Luther wrote out these scholia in long-hand.  It is probable that, in the context of the classroom, he would expand on some sections and perhaps shorten others in response to questions from the students.

The Preface to the Glosses

Although it is not clear that Luther intended that the students should receive this preface,[7] it contains an important outline of the approach he takes to the text of the Psalms.  Here Luther connects himself to the tradition and the so-called quadriga or four-fold sense of the text. (The term refers to a chariot drawn by four horses.)  The tradition had divided the text according to St. Paul's dichotomy of the letter which kills and the spirit which gives life (2 Cor. 3: 4).   The figurative meaning-the spiritual meaning behind and above the literal-was three-fold: the "allegorical" meaning which spoke of Christ and the church, the "tropological" meaning which imparted moral instruction, and the "anagogical" meaning which spoke of our final destination-heaven or hell. This treatment of the text had been codified by the time of St. Thomas Aquinas in the thirteenth century.  In his Summa Theologica, Aquinas defends this approach from the charge that it leads to confusion, and he also lends a kind of "scientific" basis for it.  The multiple meanings of the text do not make for confusion or equivocation, he asserts, because the various senses do not arise from multiple meanings in a given word or phrase.  It is the things which are signified in the literal text which can and do point to spiritual realities, and thus all the senses are founded on the solid basis of the literal meaning.[8]

The finding of various combinations of multiple meanings in the text goes back to the New Testament itself, and it had been discussed and developed by the early fathers-especially Origen in the East and Jerome and Augustine in the West.  By the twelfth century, western (Latin) commentators had arrived at a general consensus in favor of a four-fold rather than a three-fold division of these meanings in the text.  As early as 1282, Augustine of Dacia had put this standardized approach into verse:

Littera gesta docet, quid credas allegoria.

Moralis quid agas, quo tendas anagogia.

(The letter teaches events, allegory what you should believe,

The moral sense what you should do, anagogy where you are heading.)[9]

Thus Luther's appropriation of this four-fold approach to the text is rooted deeply in the tradition.  Even Luther's example of "Jerusalem" was entirely conventional:

Jerusalem: allegorically: the good people
  tropologically: virtues
  anagogically: rewards
Babylon: allegorically: the bad people
  tropologically: vices
  anagogically: punishments

These three figurative senses had been derived from the "spirit" in St. Paul's "letter and spirit" wording.  Now Luther goes on to double this division of the senses of Scripture according to a schema in which both the "killing letter" and the "life-giving spirit" have figurative significance.  In this new framework, he uses the term "Mt. Zion" as his example.

  The killing letter The life-giving spirit
historical: -the land of Canaan -the people of Zion
allegorical: -the synagogue or a prominent person in it -the church or any teacher, bishop, or prominent man
tropological: -the righteousness of faith the Pharisees and of the Law -the righteousness of or some other prominent matter
anagogical: -the future glory after the flesh -the eternal glory in the heavens

Even in this doubling of the senses, Luther really follows the tradition as Aquinas had outlined it.  There is nothing arbitrary in the applications he makes-"the things signified are themselves signs of other things."  The example might give the impression that the medievals, and Luther with them, expected to find all the figurative meanings in each and every passage in Scripture, but that was not the case.

For our purposes today, this doubling of the meanings of Scripture is less important than the simple fact of Luther's acceptance of the multiple senses in the text.  Even more important is the point that Luther makes immediately after laying out his chart:

In the Scriptures...no allegory, tropology, or anagogy is valid unless the same truth is expressly stated historically elsewhere.  Otherwise Scripture would become a mockery.  But one must indeed take in an allegorical sense what is elsewhere stated historically.[10]

This "control" over the use of figurative meanings was a commonplace for the Fathers and in medieval times.  The figurative senses were primarily for devotional use, never for establishing articles of faith or formulating binding statements of Christian doctrine.  The fact that Luther found it necessary to state it, however, probably points beyond the rule's general acceptance to its being a law honored "more in the breach than in the keeping"-too frequently ignored-and it sheds light on why Luther will at various times shake his fist against the use of the "four senses."

One can note also that there is a natural inclusion of "Law and Gospel" within the figurative senses.  The allegorical pointed to God's gifts-Christ and the church, while the tropological sense instructed the reader about God's will for our lives.

Two points need to be made about the quadriga.  First, truisms promoted by some (especially earlier Luther scholarship) notwithstanding, Luther did not "break away" from this form of interpretation.  Historian of exegesis Kenneth Hagen, for example, provides overwhelming evidence that Luther continued to find precisely these traditional multiple senses in the scriptural text throughout his career.[11]  He had no problem using the four- sense approach because it did not conflict with, and in fact supported, his other formulations about what the meaning of Scripture is-such as "the one simple sense which promotes Christ" (was Christum treibt), or that the "grammatical meaning of the text and theology are the same thing," or that "every prophecy and every prophet must be understood as referring to Christ," as he states in his "Preface of Jesus Christ," or one of the other ways that he will formulate it.[12]

A second point about the quadriga is that it had not become a standard for the Church Fathers and the medievals in some kind of arbitrary fashion.  Nor, as is sometimes alleged, was their philosophically "platonic" orientation the primary reason they read Scripture this way.[13]  Rather, they found allegorical or figurative treatments of Old Testament texts in the New Testament itself.  They were familiar with how, for St. Paul, the "Seed" of Abraham is first of all Christ himself and then also all believers (Gal. 4: 16, 29).  They saw St. Paul draw allegorical meaning-Christ and the church-from the story of Abraham, Sarah, and Hagar (Galatians 4).  They read how Paul ascribed figurative meaning-baptism-to the story of Israel crossing the sea and how he made a moral (tropological) application of God's punishment of the Israelites who died in the wilderness (I Cor. 10).  And they saw how Jerusalem could signify-anagogically-the heavenly city (Gal. 4, Rev. 21, etc.). Contrary to later Protestant polemic, the medievals thought of themselves as being thoroughly scriptural in finding the figurative senses.

Luther's oft-repeated warnings against and condemnations of allegorical interpretation are well-known enough.  Some six years later, for example, Luther refers to the little poem about the four senses as "impious verses." [14]  That harsh word of censure, however, needs to be understood both in its immediate setting and within the broader context of late medieval trends.

Luther attacks the little poem about the four-senses while commenting on Psalm 22: 19-"They divide my garments among them, and for my clothing they cast lots"-in his Operationes in Psalmos of 1519.  This particular verse provides the opportunity for a lengthy excursus on scriptural interpretations which wrongly "divide up" the Word of God.  In an extended polemic against various abuses which he has heard, Luther expresses his concern for how the simple history of the scriptural text has been clouded and covered up by misuses of the "spiritual senses"-what Luther calls "fables, farcical stories, and outright lies"-such as Lenten-season sermons in which preachers quickly depart from the history of Christ's passion in their eagerness to tell stories of the sufferings of Mary. While Luther further condemns the practice of inventing four "senses" which have no connection with each other except the imagination of the exegete, he specifically commends his own Christological approach in which what is true of Christ (the real kernel of the history) pertains also to his body the church (the real kernel of the allegorical) and therefore to the members of the body-the individual believers (Luther's tropological or moral sense).[15]  In this way he preserves the same applications of the text which he proposes in his Dictata.  Despite his protests here against Aquinas, he is not so very different from what is said in the Summa.

Luther thus fits nicely into one of the trends of his day.  It was not at all unusual especially in the later Middle Ages for commentators to condemn the use of the figurative senses-especially how others did it-while going on in practice to find those meanings everywhere.  That is what one finds in Luther, who speaks approvingly of the four senses in his own commentary on Galatians as late as 1536.[16]  What Luther consistently attacks is what was rejected by responsible interpreters all through the Middle Ages-all frivolous and arbitrary applications,[17] any figurative interpretations which produce new and additional teachings or practices which are not warranted by the literal text elsewhere,[18] or what he considered to be overly speculative conclusions which-although not actually wrong and even possible, nevertheless went beyond what could be established by the letter of Scripture.[19]  Luther's primary concern is that the reader of Psalm 22 should find Christ there and "not doubt that (he) has suffered everything for you, and the punishment that he suffers comes from your sins which he has taken on himself."[20]

One way of understanding Luther's continued use of this "four-senses" approach to Scripture is to see it as part of the tradition of theology as the study of the  "Sacred Page"-Sacra Pagina-which obtained in the early Church and in the monasteries, and which was formative also for Luther.  One has to think of the monk-copying Scripture, singing it in the holy office, praying the Psalter both with others and privately in his cell.  The monk was immersed in the Latin text and carried it in his heart and mind the whole day.  And for the monk, there was no difference between the world of the sacred page and his own.[21]

Doing theology as "sacred page" in this way is different from thinking of Scripture as a source of "doctrines" which can be drawn up in the form of thesis and antithesis.   Such a study of the sacred page entailed a direct immersion of the reader into the world of Scripture,[22] without the pressing consciousness of historical distance and difference which was to develop during the time of the Enlightenment.[23]  The monk was a "walking concordance" who naturally made linguistic connections from one book of Scripture to another, from one Testament to the other.  The one assumption necessary for seeing these spiritual senses in the text was the complete unity of Scripture with Christ as its center.  The Old and the New Testaments-and all of the books of which they were comprised-made up one unified revelation, and the subject matter of that revelation was Christ.[24]  In the preface which he handed out to his students, Luther makes explicit the way in which his adaptation of the quadriga fits a completely Christological interpretation of the Psalms.

Praefatio Iesu Christi-the Preface of Jesus Christ

Printed and distributed to the students with the copies of the Psalm texts which Luther provided to them was his "Preface of Jesus Christ,"[25] about which it is safe to say that a.  it is surely one of the more remarkable assertions of interpretive principle which the Lutheran tradition has produced, and yet b.  it remains unknown to many Lutherans-both laity and clergy, and c.  (it is my contention) nothing could be more beneficial to the average reader of Scripture than to take to heart what Luther says here-every psalm should be read as spoken by and about Jesus Christ.

Luther begins by laying a scriptural foundation for his interpretive principles with a series of Scripture quotations from the Gospel of John, the book of Revelation, Psalm 40, John's Gospel again, and Isaiah.  What becomes clear with just a bit of reflection is that not only the Johannine citations from the Gospel and Revelation but also the words from the Psalmist and from the prophet Isaiah are to be understood as direct quotations of Jesus himself.  And, together, the passages point to Jesus Christ as the center-point of and key to understanding revelation-Christ the door through whom we can go in and out and find pasture, Christ the true and holy One who has the key of David (which Luther takes to mean the "interpretive key to David the prophet"), Christ who points to the record of the scroll which speaks of him, etc.

Then Luther adduces four sources-Moses, the prophet Zechariah, St. Peter, and St. Paul-as witnesses that Christ is the Door, the Key, the Speaker of Scripture, and its Subject.  The four citations really comprise an interesting exercise in doing theology as "Sacred Page."  They might not provide proof to the Enlightenment-era skeptic who might accuse Luther of begging the question.  But they serve as "witnesses" for a monk and lecturer like Luther who is already convinced that Christ is the central point and for whom every passage resonates with Christological significance.  And the fourth witness-St. Paul writing to the Corinthians-says, "For I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified" (I Cor. 2: 2), specifying further that it is the crucified Jesus Christ-Mary's Son who dies, condemned as a criminal, on the cross-of whom the prophet David speaks.  For Luther the verse also furnishes the true interpretation of the church, his body.  The only true church is the persecuted church which participates in the sufferings of Christ throughout its history.[26]  Luther then states the principle of interpretation which he draws from these passages and witnesses, and he gives further scriptural evidence for it:

Every prophecy and every prophet must be understood as referring to Christ the Lord, except where it is clear from plain words that someone else is spoken of.  For thus he himself says: "Search the Scriptures,...and it is they that bear witness of me." (John 5: 39).

For Luther, then, what is usually the first element in the quadriga-what we might think of as the literal or historical sense-has really been eliminated.  In its first, Spirit-intended sense, the text speaks directly of Christ.

It's not that Luther would deny that there was an historical setting and circumstance to which David fittingly responded with a given psalm.  But that historical setting and circumstance is simply of no consequence.  One thinks here of Luther's interpretive gesture in dealing with the great Exodus event-the parting of the Red Sea waters.  For Luther, the event as pure history has little significance-"He didn't part the waters for me," he says in a brusque dismissal of that level of textual reference.  For Luther, living millennia after that event, the text still has importance, however-in how it points to baptism.  That is his view of the "historical" referent in the Psalms.

For Luther, this makes the appropriation of the Psalm for ourselves much more certain and direct.  You and I are not shepherds, or kings of Israel, or the leader of the temple choir.  If making the Psalms our own depends on our ability to identify with the experience and the "feelings" of the original writer, we are left with educated guesses and approximations.

But Luther does not have to go through the mediation of the prophet David and his experience-first as shepherd and then as king-in order to derive an application to himself.  The text speaks directly of Christ, and nothing can be closer or more intimate than the relationship between Christ and his people.

From the text's primary sense referring to Christ, figurative meanings can be derived which correspond to the categories of the tradition:

Whatever is said literally concerning the Lord Jesus Christ as to his person must be understood allegorically of a help that is like him and of the church conformed to him in all things.  And at the same time this must be understood tropologically of any spiritual and inner man against his flesh and the outer man.

Luther goes on to illustrate these "spiritual" senses as he understands them.  The first example is taken from Psalm 1:1, "Blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked...."  Luther says, "Literally this means that the Lord Jesus made no concessions to the designs of the Jews and of the evil and adulterous age that existed at his time."  (As an aside, it might as well be faced here that Luther's commentary is not politically correct by today's standards.  Wherever the text denotes conflict of any kind, Luther sees its primary, literal point of reference as the conflict between Jesus of Nazareth and the Jews who did not accept him.)  Note that Luther's direct Christological application does not result in vagaries.  The passage for him is specific and vivid, but in reference to Christ.

Luther goes on to derive "spiritual" meanings from this literal, Christological sense.  "Allegorically it means that the holy Church did not agree to the evil designs of persecutors, heretics, and ungodly Christians."  These three-"persecutors, heretics, and ungodly Christians"-correspond to the three successive stages Luther recognizes in the demonic assault on the church-the age of persecution and martyrdom, the age of Trinitarian and Christological heresies, and the third and ongoing stage-lasting until Christ's return-in which the church is troubled by evil from within its own ranks.  This schema shows up in all three of the examples here in the preface and often in Luther's allegorical applications.

In the standard quadriga, the letter gives rise to the allegorical sense which deals with the faith and points either to Christ or to the church. Since Luther sees the Christological sense as primary and literal, it is natural that the allegorical sense for him must refer to the church.  What is true of the Head is true of his Body.  And the passage also has a moral or tropological sense-pointing to the inner struggle between the "new man" in the Christian and the "old adam."  What is true of the Body is true of its individual members.

Luther carries this pattern of interpretation out through two more examples.  For Psalm 2:1-2, he gives the abbreviated citation, "The kings of the earth take their stand and the rulers take counsel together against the Lord and against his anointed...." He comments:

Literally this refers to the raging of the Jews and Gentiles against Christ during his suffering.  Allegorically it is directed against tyrants, heretics, and ungodly leaders of the church.  Tropologically, it has to do with the tyranny, temptation, and tempest of the carnal and outer man who provokes and torments the spirit as the dwelling place of Christ.

In connection with this passage from Psalm 2, it is worth noting that it was not a far-fetched idea for Luther to apply the "letter" to Christ.  That is the way it read in the Latin Bible which he had memorized, "...consurgent reges terrae et principes tractabunt pariter adversum Dominum et adversum christum eius."  Moderns tend to think of the medieval as practicing a naïve  form of eisegesis, fancifully "reading Christ into the text" when he isn't there.  For the medieval reader-for Luther-it wasn't a matter of "reading in" anyone into anything.  The same is true of ecclesial applications.  Where our English Bibles have "congregation" or "assembly," routinely the Latin word is ecclesia.  The medieval saw Christ and church everywhere in the Old Testament-not just the New-because they were right there in the text.

Finally, Luther's third example is Psalm 3:1, "O Lord, how many are my foes."  Luther again precisely follows his pattern:

"This is literally Christ's complaint concerning the Jews, his enemies.  Allegorically it is a complaint and accusation of the church regarding tyrants, heretics, etc.  But tropologically it is a complaint, or prayer, of the devout and afflicted spirit placed into trials.

We can note here that Luther does not provide an "anagogical" application referring to the final reward of heaven (or hell)-the traditional fourth level of significance-for any of these examples.  He will occasionally include this level of interpretation during his lectures, so one might ask why he leaves it out here. It is not unlikely that Heiko Oberman is correct in suggesting that this omission is a conscious decision of Luther which is based on his conviction that the end times were at hand, making quite superfluous applications to a return of Christ in the far future.[27]  Just a few years earlier (1510-1511), Luther had travelled to Rome as emissary for the Augustinian Order.  It was a commonplace of the day that the church was in a bad way and needed a reforming Council.  For Luther, however, this general observation had become a deeply rooted conviction with eschatological implications; the scandalous conditions especially among the clergy which he had personally witnessed in the Holy City fit all-too-well into the scriptural accounts of the end-time darkness just before the dawn of Christ's return.

The last sentence of this "Preface of Jesus Christ" deserves some reflection.  Luther says, "In their own way we must also judge in other places, lest we become burdened with a closed book and receive no food."  The only alternative to reading the Psalms with Christ as their focus is to receive no benefit-no food-from them at all.  Benefit-sustenance for our faith-comes from reading them through Luther's lenses, or (since Luther always stressed the spoken/sung word over the silent letter) hearing them with Luther's ears, understanding them through the creedal and scriptural categories which Luther has sharpened for us: the unity of the two Testaments, the incarnation of the Son of God and his voluntary self-emptying on our behalf, the "great exchange" in which our sin is placed on him and his righteousness is given to us, the holiness of the church, the inner battle between the newly created believer in us and the "Old Adam," etc.  Without that Christ-centered focus, we face a "closed book."

The Preface to the Scholia

There is yet a third "preface" to Luther's early lectures on the Psalms, this one delivered probably after he had lectured on Psalm 1.[28]  Addressing his students with a courtier's polite formality, Luther humbly claims his inadequacy for the task.  Then he calls attention to what David says of himself in 2 Samuel 23: 1-4, "The man to whom it was appointed concerning the Christ of the God of Jacob, the excellent psalmist of Israel said: ‘The Spirit of the Lord has spoken by me, and his word by my tongue.

The God of Israel spoke to me, the Strong One of Israel spoke, the Ruler of men, the just Ruler in the fear of God....'"  The point that Luther emphasizes is that there is something unique here about David as prophet:

...I want to be brief.  However, I implore you by God, whence comes such great presumption and unique boasting beyond all prophets, and the same often repeated, that the Lord spoke by him, that by his tongue came the latter's speech, "to whom it was appointed concerning the Christ of the God of Jacob...Other prophets used the expression "The word of the Lord came to me."  This one, however, ...says, in a new manner of speaking, "His word was spoken by me."

Luther will, at a later date, carry out his stated plan of dealing with David's final words in more depth, and in that late and mature work his Christological/Trinitarian approach to the text is even more pronounced.[29]  But already in 1513, there could be no doubt for those who attended his lectures on the Psalms-both fellow monks and superiors in the order-that Luther understood the Psalms as speaking directly of Christ.

Gleanings from Luther's Treatment of Psalm 1

Reading Luther's Dictata can be challenging on a number of counts.  His thought seems to jump about oddly at times-even taking into account the relatively complex framework of application he has outlined in his prefaces-and in some places he seems to spend time making the very kinds of artificial distinctions against which he and every other medieval expositor would rail.  It helps, therefore, to focus on how he finds Christ in the text, with the allegorically derived applications to the church and to the Christian's psychomachia hovering in the background.  In briefly considering here his treatment of Psalm 1in the Dictata, I suggest that there is a sharp contrast between the sacramental, gospel benefit one obtains from reading the Psalm Luther's way on the one hand and on the other hand, what is left-namely law-if one does not.

Luther begins by reasserting what he has already said in his "Preface of Jesus Christ"-"The first psalm speaks literally of Christ..."-and then goes on to deal with the first phrase of the psalm, "Blessed is the Man."  What deepens the gospel tone in this verse is the way Luther ties Christ the "Blessed Man" to the church-his people-and thus to every individual Christian, by stressing the unity of Christ the "Firstfruits" to those who spring from him:

He is the only blessed one and the only man from whose fullness they have all received (John 1: 16) that they might be blessed and men and everything that follows in this psalm.  He is the "Firstfruits" of those who have fallen asleep" (I Cor. 15:20), so that he might also be the Firstfruits of those who are awake....[30]

Taking the term "firstfruits"-with its picture implying more fruit to come- to be synonymous with the picture of Christ and church as Head and body, Luther can make a sacramental application to every believer.  Everything the Psalm says of the blessedness of the "righteous" is true of the church, and thus of every Christian, because it applies directly and fully to Christ.  To hear that truth is to be offered his righteousness.  To believe it to be true of Christ is to receive it for oneself.

Again, in the second verse, Luther treats the phrase, "But his will is in the Law of the Lord."  Here his first application is tropological-to the "new person" in the believer, and he works back from there to Christ:  He says:

This does not apply to those who are under the law in a spirit of bondage in fear, but to those who are in grace and a spirit of freedom.  Thence Christians are called free...spontaneous and willing, because of their Christ, who is the First of their kind.

Cleansed by his forgiveness and wearing his righteousness as ours, the believer-as believer-is of the same kind as Christ the Firstfruit-renewed by the grace of baptism and paradoxically sustained in the freedom of spontaneous loving by being a "member of his Body."  Whatever one wants to say about the need for development and sharpening in the theology of the young Luther at this point, this way of reading the Psalms surely provided a firm basis for the vital reformation breakthroughs to follow.[31] And his insights should ring true for us today, since they reflect for us St. Paul's words in 2 Cor. 5: 21 "that we might become the righteousness of God in him."

In verse three, the Psalmist says of the righteous man, "His (Its) leaf will not fall off."  One might expect Luther to speak generally about Christ's eternity.  But he is much more specific than that.  The psalmist, he says, is speaking about the Word of Christ, and therefore Luther takes the opportunity to rhapsodize-through a series of scriptural picture-connections-on the productive power of the Gospel:

Leaves are words.  It is clear, however, in which way these words of Christ have not withered, since they are written splendidly in the Gospels and in the hearts of the faithful.  The words which he speaks are life and spirit (John 6: 63).  Therefore they are worthy to be written not in stones and in dead books but in living hearts.  Therefore (the phrase) "does not fall off" says less and means more: Heaven and earth will pass away," but his words will not pass away (Matt.24: 35) He is therefore the "tree of life" (Rev. 22: 2), firmly "planted in the house of the Lord" (cf. Ps. 92:13), producing his fruit in its season, the firstfruits of all the trees that imitate him in these.[32]

Finally, we look at Luther's comments on the brief phrase, "And all that he does will prosper."  Again, his application is concrete and specific-what is meant here is what Christ does through his ministry of word and sacrament, and the spread of the gospel through the earth:

"...all that he instituted to be done by the apostles and disciples, in sacraments and mysteries...What things?  New heavens, a new earth (Is. 66:22), yes, he who sits on the throne makes all things new (Rev. 21:5)....These (works of Christ) are the ones of which it is here stated that they will prosper.  And they were fulfilled, as we see, because the church, which is the work of his splendor, has filled up the whole world.[33]

I have been selective here, naturally, because Luther's comments on this psalm go on for twenty pages in the American Edition of his works.  Besides gems like this, Luther includes some scathing language against the Jews of Jesus' day who rejected him, and he takes the time, in connection with verse 2, to go off on a tangent and condemn lazy monks who are not obedient to their superior-who ask "why" instead of complying immediately with the orders they receive.  All of this, of course, is in good keeping with the monastic, sacra pagina tradition in which lecturer and hearer are immersed in the world of the sacred page.

Nevertheless, these brief sections serve to illustrate Luther's Christological approach and what is lost if one reads the Psalms in a different way.  What is left to us if the first verse does not refer to Christ, but instead enunciates a general principle: all those-and only those-are blessed who avoid the wicked and their ways-walking, standing, or sitting-and who delight in and meditate every moment on the teaching of the Lord?  What is left is only what we are to do-an unattainable standard from which we always fall short-pure law in its rawest, most uncompromising form which condemns us and leaves us to perish as "the chaff which the wind drives away."

Taking Luther's approach brings us that same law as the description of Christ's holiness, but now in repentant faith we claim his righteousness as our own.  And we can profit also from a tropological application in which the new creation in us rejoices in Christ's example and seeks to follow it in humble obedience, always enabled by the Spirit of him who is the firstfruits among his brethren and the Head of his church.

I include a quick note here on what I consider to be a most unfortunate consequence of a change in language adopted by the ELCA's new cranberry-colored hymnal Evangelical Lutheran Worship.  In their zeal to eliminate masculine pronouns wherever possible, the Worship Committee that assembled the hymnal has lost something.  Note ELW's rendition of this same Psalm:

1) Happy are they who have not walked in the counsel of the wicked...

2) Their delight is in the law of the Lord, and they meditate on God's teaching day and night.

3) They are like trees planted by streams of water, bearing fruit in due season, with leaves that do not wither; everything they do shall prosper.

At very best, the typological/Christological reading has been obscured to the point that it can only be recovered with a great deal of explanation-and when will that take place in the worship service?  Even if a clear explanation is given, how well will it be understood and retained without the concrete reinforcement of the psalm's real language?

I can understand the desire to avoid language which can be perceived as sexist and oppressive.  And frankly, if Luther's Christological understanding of the psalm is not offered and taught, then, in my opinion, the change is probably not a bad thing-perhaps the lesser of two evils as opposed to a Christ-less understanding of the text which can also be used to marginalize women.  However, if one is convinced not only of the correctness of Luther's approach but also of its necessity and great benefits, the change here from the masculine pronoun is a singularly ill-thought-out and most unfortunate concession to changing sensibilities about what is and is not offensive.

At worst, where the reference to Christ is lost entirely and goes un-remarked, the congregation is left only with a proclamation of conditioned blessing which is really nothing but pure law-"This is the kind of person that you must be if you want God to bless you."

Naturally, such a concern will ring rather hollow with those for whom Luther's Christological reading of the Psalms is only a quaint relic of a naïve and pre-critical age, but Lutherans should feel a loss here.  The glib and pharisaical smugness by which one easily includes oneself in such a "they" who are righteous and upright may be prevalent in the kind of pan-Protestant, produced-for-television "evangelicalism" to which God's people are exposed constantly here in America.  But it has little to do with the piety of the penitent tax-gatherer of whom Jesus says, "He went to his house justified,"-the piety witnessed to and promoted in the writings of Luther and in the Lutheran Confessions.

II

Gleanings from Psalm 22, with Luther's Help

So many details in the Gospel-and especially the passion histories-reference the Psalms that it has become a commonplace for modern, critical scholarship to posit a kind of "writer's creative license" on the part of the shapers of the Jesus-tradition and the Gospel writers.  The assumption is that the evangelists wrote their accounts with the Psalter and the prophetic books in hand, as it were.  Details and images from those were imaginatively inserted into the narrative about Jesus, not because eye-witnesses in fact actually saw things happen that way, but because the writer thought that something like that MUST have happened.  If Jesus of Nazareth was indeed the promised One, then what was written by the prophets MUST apply to him, and so it was put into the text.[34]    One should at least appreciate the tacit acknowledgment which lies behind this skeptical assumption-the recognition not only of Messianic expectations in Jesus' day but also of a consistently Messianic interpretation of the Psalms and prophets.

In the Psalms, the details reflected in the Gospel accounts of Jesus' passion are indeed legion.  According to the evangelists, Jesus quotes the Psalms twice-the cry of dereliction, "My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" (Psalm 22:1) and his dying prayer, "Father, into your hands I commit my spirit" (Psalm 31: 5).  Psalm 22 also records the marks of the crucifixion nails-"They pierce my hands and my feet" (v. 16) and the division of Jesus' clothing by the death-squad soldiers, "They divide my garments among them, and for my clothing they cast lots" (v. 18).  Several psalms speak of the special hurt caused to Jesus by the betrayal of Judas: Psalm 41:7-9, "All who hate me whisper together against me; Against me they devise my hurt...Even my close friend, in whom I trusted, who ate my bread, has lifted up his heel against me," and 55:12-13, "For it is not an enemy who reproaches me, then I could bear it; nor is it one who hates me who has exalted himself against me, then I could hide myself from him.  But it is you, a man my comrade, my companion and my familiar friend.  We ...had sweet fellowship together, walked in the house of God in the throng."  Because the soldiers did not break Jesus' legs to hasten his death, St. John cites Psalm 34:20, "He keeps all his bones, not one of them is broken."  In Psalm 35, the speaker pleads with the Lord about the "malicious witnesses" who have risen against him, the "smiters" who "slander (him) unceasingly," and his enemies who hate him, plot against him, and rejoice over his fall.  In Psalm 69:19-21, the speaker complains of the scorn and shame poured on him by his enemies who give him gall and vinegar to drink.  Some of these are explicitly noted by the Gospel-writers as being fulfilled in the story of Jesus' sufferings; some are not.

If one takes Luther's approach to reading the Psalms, the individual details cited in the New Testament become part of a great tapestry in which everything fits the life and death of Jesus of Nazareth.  Psalm 22-understood as the vivid record of his very thoughts while on the cross, becomes not the exception but the paradigm.

One of the occasionally frustrating features in the Luther's early lectures on the Psalms is that the manuscript left to us of the Scholia is incomplete, and a number of psalms are missing-among them Psalm 22.  However, one can find a lengthy treatment of this psalm from only a few years later in Luther's Operationes in Psalmos of 1519-1521, as well as a briefer, summarizing treatment from the year 1530-his Kurze Auslegung ueber die ersten 22 Psalmen. (In the following pages I make use of the text in the St. Louis edition.)

According to the Gospel accounts of both Matthew (27: 45) and Mark (15: 34), Jesus prayed at least the first verse of Psalm 22 from the cross, and Matthew, Luke, and John all point to the actions of the soldiers as the fulfillments of verse 18.  Offering as it does a detailed picture of Jesus' sufferings, Psalm 22 was always considered by the church to be prophetic and directly Christological.  In fact, one (relatively obscure) controversy had to do not with whether the Psalm was prophetic and Christological or not, but whether it must be taken as referring to Christ and his sufferings ad litteram-according to its literal sense-and not according to a spiritual understanding derived from a literal reading which had instead some other historical referent-presumably in the life of the prophet David.[35]  The general verdict of the church-that the Psalm refers to Christ and his crucifixion sufferings-is still reflected in the practice of reading it during Lent and especially during Holy Week.  For Luther, there is no question that the literal sense of the Psalm is taught to us by the Gospels-the historical referent is Christ on the cross-his prayer in the very midst of his crucifixion sufferings.  In some important ways, Psalm 22 serves as a model for Luther's approach and for making use of that approach today, if one takes seriously the question, "How would Christ himself pray this psalm?" In what follows I have made use of the translation from the New American Standard Bible.

For the choir director upon "the hind of the morning"

Luther finds the content of the entire psalm summarized already in the picture presented in this title:

For he sings of the doe in the morning light-hunted by dogs.  He speaks of the doe and not the stag on account of its fecundity and its gentleness...For in this psalm he will describe the sufferings and the kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ.[36]

Christ is the gentle and suffering doe who is hounded by human and demonic enemies-Luther connects the dogs (which he has inserted into the title-picture!) to the dogs of verse 17, "Many dogs have surrounded me."  He also comments on the phrase "of the morning"-it distinguishes this particular doe from the Israelite priesthood and the entire Israelite system of practice, because the "early morning" which is meant is the dawn ending the night of the law.[37]  In an instructive example of the monastic sacra pagina way of reading Scripture-the way of the "walking concordance"-Luther connects the title phrase "of the morning" to St. Paul's words in Romans 13:12, "The night is passed.  The day has arrived," and Galatians 4:4, "The time was fulfilled."  Christ, his sufferings for us, demonic enemies, the ending of the law-and Luther has not gotten past the title yet!

1) My God, my God, why have you forsaken me? Far from my deliverance are the words of my groaning.

2) O my God, I cry by day, but you do not answer; And by night but I have no rest.

As one would expect, the "cry of dereliction" in verse one is treated at great length by Luther. These haunting words of the Son of God drive us into the heart of the Christian creed and the Trinitarian mystery of oneness and otherness which can only be grasped in faith, never parsed or mastered by the intellect.  Within that mystery, the Father turns his back on his beloved Son who is "of one being with him."  The incarnate One, the God/Man,   bears the wrath of God against our fallen lovelessness. He is left in the hands of the devil who tempts him to doubt the Father's word.[38] Luther draws a tropological application which is of help in our struggle for holiness.  What we learn from his questioning cry is that our great High Priest knows what it is to be tempted as we are (Hebrews 4: 15).

"...but you do not answer."  As he often does, Luther shows some insight gained by imaginatively identifying with the Speaker of the psalm.  For Christ on the cross, the suffering is intensified by God's silence-made unendurable by the delay in God's answer.  As Luther keenly notes, it is easier to suffer if one can see the end of it all, and what one might otherwise endure becomes simply unbearable if that end is not in sight.  And that perception-that one's suffering has no end-is intrinsic to the pain of hell itself.  In the same way, at the dark moment when he cried out, Jesus could see no end to his pain.[39]   And, writing in 1530, Luther makes the most practical kind of allegorical application to the church-the Body of Christ.  The brave souls who were even then gathered to give their confession before Emperor Charles V-"unsere Leute jetzt zu Augsburg"-they, too, could see no end of the matter.[40]  For Luther, to hear Christ in the Psalms is never a merely intellectual point to be debated, nor is it ever merely satisfying and rewarding on some aesthetic level.  It is important to faith, and it affords the viator the most practical help.  In dark times, the Christian can pray this psalm and receive direct comfort.  The first verse may express what we, too, must sometimes experience, but we know the outcome!

Luther stresses that what is expressed here is the deepest point in Christ's sufferings-it is the pain of the damned who are separated from God and conscious of their own sin.  Christ has taken on our sins "as if they were his own," and he feels the bite of his conscience in the sharpest way-sharper than you or I because of his own innocence; unstained by any misdoing of his own, his conscience must bear the reproach of our every foul, perverse, hateful thought, word, and deed.  His strength is drained from him just because the law is driven home by the Holy Spirit. [41]  Here Luther acknowledges that to meditate on such a mystery as this verse with the paradoxes that it presents is not for the weak. Yet nothing can be more beneficial for faith.  It is "solid food and wine" that provides the richest comfort-both to those who are strong enough not to be offended and to those who suffer greatly themselves.[42]

This is Luther's scriptural understanding of the "great exchange" in which our sin is taken into the very conscience of Christ as his own.  One sees this illustrated, to cite another example, in Psalm 69.   At least in the minds of the disciples-and to St. John as evangelist-the psalm refers directly to Jesus, since they apply to him verse 9, "Zeal for your house has consumed me."  In this psalm is also recorded (verse 21) one of those startling details from the crucifixion scene of Good Friday, "They also gave me gall for my food, and for my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink" (to which all the evangelists refer). In verse 5 of this psalm which thus clearly refers to Christ, the psalmist prays, "O God, it is you who know my folly, and my wrongs are not hidden from you."  If we take the language here seriously, these words must mean that the incarnate Son of God feels the guilt of my sin as his own guilt.  That is how thoroughly St. Paul means it when he writes, "(God) made him to be sin who knew no sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him" (2 Cor. 5: 21).

All of the penitential psalms lend themselves to this same understanding.  If one asks, "How would Jesus pray this confessional prayer?", the first and most important answer is that he prays concerning our sin. It is because Christ has prayed this way from the cross that our prayers of repentance are answered-because the Son of God and Mary's Son has made our sin so completely his own.

3) Yet you are holy, O you who are enthroned upon the praises of Israel,

4) In you our fathers trusted; They trusted and you delivered them.

5) To you they cried out and were delivered; In you they trusted and were not disappointed.

Always conscious of the incarnate Christ in his role as obedient Servant under the law for us-the One, indeed, who "learned obedience from the things which he suffered" (Heb. 5:8), Luther finds in verse 3 that the crucified One must speak these words-they come right at the point where to go further in questioning would be to fall into blasphemy.  Instead, he practices the obedience which we owe and remains resolute and firm in his faith.

On the one hand, this acknowledgment of the Lord's absolute faithfulness to Israel and to the fathers, Luther says, must sharpen the pains that Christ endures, as he is afflicted by the thought, "You helped them-yet I am abandoned."  On the other hand, the recollection of the Lord's trustworthiness in helping Israel is a comfort-for Christ himself is Israel par excellence.  In what is both a sacramental bestowal of what he has done for us and a "tropological" application of that gift for us in our battle for holiness, Luther calls attention to the "high art" practiced here by Christ in claiming comfort for himself by remembering the Lord's absolute faithfulness in doing what he has done for Israel.[43]  That is the same high art and Holy Spirit-given skill practiced by the Christian who prays this psalm and claims the comfort in the absolute faithfulness of the Lord who raised  Christ from the dead.

6) But I am a worm and not a man, A reproach of men and despised by the people.

7)  All who see me sneer at me; They separate with the lip, they wag the head, saying,

8) Commit yourself to the Lord; let him deliver him; Let him rescue him, because he delights in him.

The Gospels record the vivid fulfillment of the prophecy in verses 7-8: those gathered around the cross-including one of the thieves crucified with him-mocked the suffering Servant in precisely the terms described here.  Luther directs his attention much more to the phrase "but I am a worm and not a man."

He rejects, first of all, the one patristic interpretation (he does not identify the source) which understood these words as a reference to Christ's conception and birth from a virgin, so that the phrase "...and not a man" emphasizes his divinity, "I am God and not only human."  For Luther, this interpretation is odd and out of place here.  On the other hand, there is another strong patristic tradition which saw the "worm" as the humanity of Christ which is the bait which lures Satan to attempt to swallow it.  But the devil destroys himself on the "hook" of Christ's divinity.[44]  And that ancient interpretation seems to lurk not far beneath the surface of Luther's meditations.  For Luther the phrase "I am a worm" points purely to Christ's humanity-he is "ein lauterer Mensch."  But more, it points to his utter and complete "self-emptying," his humiliation (Phil. 2:5-8).  Here, Luther says, the psalmist must use "risky, strange words"-Christ the worm-and Luther draws out the connotations of that phrase-Christ has become abject-the lowest of the low, an object of contempt, "forsaken, nauseating, abominable, rotten, scandalous, stench, a rotting worm."[45]  Luther understands this language of total humiliation to be filled with the most profound soteriological significance-that is what he willingly made himself on our behalf.

Luther immediately makes an allegorical application to include the church in his interpretation of the phrase.  Also the people of Christ will be considered less than human-to others they seem to be nothing but the shadows of real human beings, and one steps on them in utter contempt, "like a worm after it rains."   Again, Luther's comments here pertain to all the confessional psalms, but they also pertain to those in which the speaker bemoans the contempt which is unjustly put upon him.

On the one hand, that means that the individual Christian joins Christ in these words in repentant confession.  "I am a worm" corresponds to our recognizing the sin and the "old Adam" which still inheres in us here.  "I am a worm" is the psalmist's way, and-via the "great exchange"-the way of Christ, of confessing, and thus it is also the individual Christian's act of  acknowledging, "I am by nature sinful and unclean-a rotten worm, and I have sinned against you in thought, word, and deed."  It is the Christian's recognition-with St. Paul, of the truth of God's verdict, that "in me-that is, in my flesh-dwells no good thing."

But the phrase "I am a worm" for Luther also applies to the church in the way that it must bear the contempt and scorn of the world unjustly, just as Christ did-and for his sake.  Because of the "great exchange," the church is dressed in his righteousness; yet she must bear the opprobrium, the scorn, and the hate-filled contempt which was poured on her Master.  Naturally, not everyone personally experiences that kind of oppression for Christ's sake to the same degree.  But the church is a unity, not just a collection of individuals.  A bit of "corporate" thinking reminds us that the Body of Christ does actually bear the hostility and contempt of the world, and that oppression is a reality also today.  Luther's emphasis on the unity between each member of the body of Christ and our complete solidarity with our Head, it seems to me, provides some needed counterbalance for us to the individualism so strongly present in the American ecclesial scene-with its emphases on my decision for Christ, liturgical forms cut back to fit my preferences, the church's musical tradition jettisoned to fit my taste in favor of song forms designed to manipulate my emotions in pleasant ways, etc.

9) Yet you are he who brought me forth from the womb; You made me trust when upon my mother's breasts.

10) Upon you I was cast from birth; You have been my God from my mother's breasts.

11)  Be not far from me, for trouble is near; For there is none to help

12) Many bulls have surrounded me, Strong bulls of Bashan have encircled me.

13) They open wide their mouth at me, As a ravening and a roaring lion.

Throughout Christ's suffering, he remains firm in faith and continues to pray.  Verse 11 points to his utter loneliness.  So many had followed him before.  Now even his disciples had fled.  The Gospel accounts mention only a few brave women and John there at the cross.  There were none to help.  Instead, he is surrounded by enemies-and the animalistic imagery presents them as dangerous, enraged, frothing and "roaring."

14) I am poured out like water, And all my bones are out of joint; My heart is like wax; It is melted within me.

15) My strength is dried up like a potsherd, And my tongue cleaves to my jaws; And you lay me in the dust of death.

16) For dogs have surrounded me; A band of evil-doers has encompassed me. They pierced my hands and my feet.

17) I can count all my bones, They look, they stare at me;

18) They divide my garments among them, And for my clothing they cast lots.

Luther recognizes a progression now to physical sufferings.   Crucifixion was never gentle, but it was made considerably worse than usual for Jesus of Nazareth because of what he had already endured: sleep deprivation, beatings, scourging with the attendant loss of blood which was exacerbated by the crown of thorns, etc.[46]  Without minimizing them, Luther is relatively cursory in speaking of those physical pains; he goes rather to the prophetic verse 18.  Why, he asks, does the evangelist John speak of this-the seemingly most minor of his pains-while not recording the cry of dereliction in verse 1?  That leads him rather to discuss the great shame and humiliation endured by Christ-the shame earned by our sin.  "Some of my sins I know," we confess, "the thoughts and words and deeds of which I am ashamed."  The shame of our sin was exposed to all in the crucified Christ, exposed and naked on the cross.

The church's devotions centered on these sufferings of Christ have been a rich source of the "benefit," the "food" for faith of which Luther speaks in his Praefatio Jesu Christi.  To meditate on what Christ endured on the cross is, in the most practical and most powerful way, to be confronted with the real nature of and the real cost of my sin.  At the same time it is to read, to hear, to grasp in faith how completely he has taken up what we owe and paid the last farthing.

19) But you, O Lord, be not far off; O you my Help, hasten to my assistance.

20) Deliver my soul from the sword, Deliver my soul from the power of the dog.

21) Save me from the lion's mouth; From the horns of the wild oxen, you answer me.

In faith Christ continues to pray for delivery from the enemies that surround him.  In discussing verse 21 with its reference to the threatening dog, lion, and wild oxen (Luther's translation here is "unicorn") Luther makes a seamless transition from the human enemies of Jesus and applies the text to the devil and his minions-the demonic foes lying behind the human faces surrounding the cross.  That naturally leads him to make an application to what the church faces in an ongoing way.  The bestial pictures hardly suffice to describe the horrors arrayed against Christ, "because there is no more horrible cruelty or envy than that with which Satan rages against salvation and against the doctrine and the teachers of salvation...because he knows his kingdom on earth is endangered by that alone."[47]

For Luther-the practitioner of "theology as the study of the sacred page"-the animalistic imagery connects to the serpent of Genesis 3 and the deadly, soul-devouring, "roaring lion" of St. Peter's first epistle (5:8).

Those images of lion and serpent show up a number of times in the Psalter as pictures of the speaker's enemies. What Luther says in connection with this verse is really his answer to all who find an insurmountable obstacle to praying the Psalms in the vexing problem of the "psalms of imprecation" or "cursing psalms."  It is ultimately Satan and his minions who are the objects of the curses which Christ speaks against those who unjustly torment him.  For Luther, the standard triad- tyrants who persecuted the early church, heretics who troubled the church of the following centuries, and corrupt prelates and hypocrites who trouble the church from within today-are only faces for the "old evil foe."  In the same way, a tropological extension of that allegorical interpretation would include our own sinful self-the unbeliever in us against whom we battle every day through repentance (Rom. 7)-thus completing the catechetical phrase, "the devil, the world, and our own sinful flesh."

To imagine that this is an excessively pessimistic description of human fallenness and that it leads to some kind of morose and even macabre sin-consciousness as described, for example, in Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story "The Minister's Black Veil," is to mix the kingdoms of God's right hand and his left-to confuse observable psychology with matters of faith.  It is worth remembering in this connection that the "old Adam" in us goes beyond our understanding.  Some strands of Pietism have left us with the bad business of trying to "experience" or connect emotively with that evil within-to "feel" as fallen as God's verdict says we are.  Finally, however, what is needed is the sober analysis of Luther in the Smalcald Articles (III, 1, 3)-it "must be learned and believed from the revelation of Scriptures."  The extent of our fallenness has nothing to do with having some kind of "low self-esteem" in the psychological sense, and it must be accepted by faith-by that humility before God's verdict so characteristic of the monks.

Luther does not treat in depth the phrase which is translated in the NASB, "You answer me," perhaps because it is rendered somewhat differently in the Latin.  But the NASB's reading is more accurate, in my opinion, and it is worth considering.  It is the turning point in the psalm-the moment at which the melody seems to change from a minor to a major key.  From this phrase to the end of the psalm, all is victory and triumph.  Now, if we imagine Christ on the cross praying this psalm, we have up to this point followed him through the deepest moments of the suffering he endures for us: abandoned by God, burdened with our sin, reproachfully sneered at by those who stand around the cross, forsaken by his friends and instead surrounded and raged at by the forces of hell, suffering enormous physical pain, shamed and humiliated-a worm and not a man.  Despite all the evidence which he sees, hears, and feels, he continues to trust and to pray in faith for deliverance, and it is the words of this very psalm which he is praying-words which Jesus, of course, knew by heart.  Thus, when he comes to this phrase, "You answer me," it is the point at which-through the very word of the psalm which he prays-he is assured that his prayer is answered, and he grasps in faith the promise that is expressed there as a faith-sustaining statement of fact in response to his entreaty.  From this point on, the Savior can draw together his strength to cry out, "It is finished!" and to pray, in the words of Psalm 31:5, "Into your hands I commit my spirit."

Luther's understanding of "Christ as worm" here in this psalm makes just this point so relevant for you and me.  Christ experiences this suffering as a human being-at the lowest point of his humiliation or self-emptying.  There is no little bit of divinity creeping into his human consciousness here to deaden the suffering or to tell him that it will all be over soon. That means that he must rely on the very same means on which you and I must rely, namely, the word of God.  In those darkest moments of pain or grief, the viator does not need to look for zen-like moments of enlightenment from within or for "writing on the wall" or for mystic insights into "God's plan" which will make everything seem okay, or for any of the various forms of pure Schwaermerei that are pedaled today on T.V. or in Christian bookstores.  The Holy Spirit works through the word, period.  Christ-who became a worm for us-depended on that word and found strength in it.  That is really what Luther has taught us to do when he directs us to say in our moments of anguish and doubt, "Nevertheless, I am baptized."

22) I will tell of your name to my brethren; In the midst of the assembly I will praise you.

23) You who fear the Lord, praise him; All you descendants of Jacob, glorify him, And stand in awe of him, all you descendants of Israel.

24) For he has not despised nor abhorred the affliction of the afflicted; Neither has he hidden his face from him; But when he cried to him for help, he heard.

25) From you comes my praise in the great assembly; I shall pay my vows before those who fear him,

26) The afflicted shall eat and be satisfied; Those who seek him will praise the Lord. Let your heart live forever!

27) All the ends of the earth will remember and turn to the Lord, And all the families of the nations will worship before you.

28) For the kingdom is the Lord's, And he rules the nations.

29) All the prosperous of the earth will eat and worship, All those who go down to the dust will bow before him, Even he who cannot keep his soul alive.

30) Posterity will serve him; It will be told of the Lord to the coming generation.

31) They will come and will declare his righteousness To a people who will be born, that he has performed it.

For Luther, what begins with verse 22 is the victory-song of Christ, risen and triumphant, whose kingdom is established by his sufferings, death, and resurrection and who speaks through the ministry of the church to proclaim the glory of the One who has answered him.  He proclaims his resurrection here in advance, as well as its fruits and its effects, which is the praise and honor of God.[48]   The crucified One dies in triumph.  No one takes his life from him; he surrenders it willingly into the Father's care.

Luther calls attention to two concrete ways in which the action described in verse 22 is carried out.  Christ himself preached the name of God and his praise to his disciples in the forty days between his resurrection and his ascension.  And he continues to fulfill the prophesied actions of this verse through the office of the ministry-through the preaching of law and gospel.[49]

For Luther, the action of "praising and honoring God" thus has little to do with our telling God how wonderful he is; instead, it is intimately connected to the idea of Gottesdienst-God serving us.  God is honored and his name is praised when his ministers preach what he has done for sinners, and when his people believe that message.  In his name and in his praise is the heart of the gospel which is offered to and appropriated by the church and by her individual members as they pray this psalm in that solidarity with Christ which faith is.[50]  All of what St. Paul says in the eighth chapter of his letter to the Romans about the triumph of faith is taught-experienced-in these verses.  Nothing can separate us from the love of Christ.

It is worth noting, finally, that for Luther the text of verse 22 read, "Narrabo nomen tuum fratribus meis, in media ecclesia laudabo..."-I will tell of Your name to my brothers; I will praise You in the midst of the church."  (See also verse 25, "apud te laus mea in ecclesia..."-from you is my praise in the church.)

That Was Then; This Is Now

When Luther wrote his "Preface of Jesus Christ," he was giving a variation-an intensified Christological turn-to what was the common understanding of the Psalter, according to which the Psalms-all of them-speak directly of Christ.  The changes which came to scriptural studies during what came to be known as the period of the "Enlightenment" have left us with a different understanding today.

The current state of affairs can be illustrated by two of the sources used extensively for this presentation-the magisterial work of Henri DeLubac on the four-fold "spiritual sense," and Beryl Smalley's History of Medieval Exegesis, which remains something of a classic in the field of the history of exegesis.  DeLubac and Smalley represent two sides of the issue as it was played out in ecclesial/academic circles during the second half of the Twentieth Century.

Henri DeLubac was part of the "new theology" movement within the Roman Catholic Church, a group of theologians calling especially for a return to traditional sources (Scriptures, creeds, liturgies, etc.) and stressing the need for a retrieval of the theology of the patristic era.  Among his own contributions was his defense of-and assertion of the value of-the ancient, figurative interpretations of the Scriptures-the "four sense" approach.

Smalley's work was something of a sustained polemic against the ideas promoted in DeLubac's book.  In a thinly veiled reference to theologians like DeLubac, she suggests (somewhat condescendingly) that some of the "new" trends in Scripture studies (she means the medieval, "four-sense" type of approach) can be explained by the rise of an anti-intellectual "mysticism" caused by the traumas of World War II, and that it is up to responsible academicians to help cleanse the church of such primitive influences:

What does concern (us) is the change which has taken place in the attitude of modern scholars to medieval exegesis within the last ten years.  The spiritual exposition, predominant in patristic and medieval commentators, had few defenders ten years ago.  There was a certain rather tepid admiration for St. Thomas for having defined its limits, but only blame for the extravagance and subjectivism of its exponents.  Now the revived interest in mysticism has led certain students to reverse their judgment...a fascinating and alarming example of the way in which the history of exegesis prolongs itself in that of its historians.[51]

Much of her book is an extended argument for how the church "progressed" toward emphasizing the literal and historical meaning, without other layers of significance.

One enters a whole new realm of problematic definitions when one talks of "the view of the Enlightenment"-comprised of some rationalism as well as some dependence on empirical findings, a growing consciousness of historical distance from the world of Scripture, skepticism toward the miraculous, confidence in the ability of human reason and human morality.  Various "enlightenment" views came to have influence in more than just the halls of academia, sometimes in the reaction they provoked.  Some very "conservative" Lutheran commentators adopted an approach which, while a reaction to skeptical rationalism, may itself have had a "rationalist" component.

The medievals and Luther had felt justified in following the example of the New Testament, continuing and extending the figurative interpretation they found practiced there.  For conservative commentators of the Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment eras, however, the neuralgic point tended to be the "inerrancy" of Scripture as the authoritative source for drawing up doctrinal statements.  The struggle for an errorless authority necessitated, it seems, more stress on preserving the text's factual accuracy in relation to its historical referent and a much more cautious approach than Luther's to the prophetic nature of the Psalms.  Typically, one would confidently call "prophetic" and "Christological" only those psalms which were referred to as such in the New Testament-and sometimes only the exact verses which were cited and not the whole psalm.  In the discussions about "typology" or "rectilinear" (direct) prophecy, Luther's Preface of Jesus Christ was virtually never mentioned.[52]

Among those who have more fully invested in a "critical" approach to Scripture, the resonance of Christ is, of course, much fainter.  In one fairly recent "Lutheran" treatment of the Psalter, for example, the writer seems somewhat grudgingly to admit that some of the Psalms may seem to reflect a piety geared toward a "future king."  Nevertheless, these psalms are not to be understood as though the Gospel accounts were the story of their fulfillment.  What seem to be reflections of the life and experiences of Jesus of Nazareth are merely coincidental.  While paying careful attention to all the relevant matters of scholarship-text, lexical and grammatical questions, the surrounding history as we can know it-the writer establishes and maintains an historical distance to the content of the Psalms which, finally, leaves the reader with little but examples (law) and some vague promises which have no real Christological basis and therefore are little more than wishful thinking on the part of the psalmist.  Far from being Christologically focused-the thoughts and prayers of Christ himself-the Psalms, we should see, reflect a whole variety of "spiritualities" concerned with psychological and political issues such as "orientation" and "disorientation," "social justice," "creation," etc.[53]

Another recent "Lutheran" expositor of the Psalms explicitly takes up the question of whether or not any of them can be understood as referring to Christ.  He responds in the negative, and asserts that the case is rather that New Testament writers saw coincidental parallels between what the psalmist wrote and what they thought Jesus experienced-an example of that commonplace assumption of critical scholarship mentioned above.  In reality, we are told, the Psalms should be understood as expressions of various "Hebrew spiritualities" which, apparently, had no Messianic component at all.[54]  It is not surprising that, finally, he finds the imprecatory psalms not only problematic but simply indefensible.[55]

What is striking about all these approaches to the Psalms mentioned here-"conservative" and "not-so-conservative"-is that the net result in their interpretations is much the same.  A given psalm is drained of its Christ-for-me gospel content and it is made into law-a good example for us to follow, at best, and the promise of blessedness for the righteous (as in Psalm 1) is made contingent on my own goodness.

Naturally, the church has never completely lost the Christ-centered understanding of the Psalms.  After all, the New Testament is replete with references to those psalms as they point directly to Christ, and the reading and singing of the Psalms has continued to have its place in worship.  It is also true that the Body of Christ can worship "in spirit and in truth" without all its members necessarily being conscious of the correct "meta-narrative" concerning its songs and prayers (just as those members are justified by God's grace alone, through faith alone, even if they wouldn't know enough to word it that way).

It is probably safe to say that most folks in the pews today do not think of the Psalms in terms of the interpretive principal which was held in patristic and medieval times and set forward as a hermeneutical program by Luther in the prefaces to his first lectures on the Psalter.  Nevertheless, here is a treasure from the tradition which can and should play a role in how the church feeds her children.  Understanding the Psalms with Christ as their primary speaker and their primary subject and focus can make them come alive as existential exercises-devotions-in the themes of Lutheran, i.e. scriptural/Christian theology-Trinity and Incarnation, repentance, the "great exchange" and atonement, battle against and final victory over Christ's enemies, supplication for help as we carry our cross, thanksgiving in the midst of suffering, etc.-for us who "have the mind of Christ," as the Apostle Paul says.

Some simple ways of teaching and re-enforcing Luther's insight might be effective: occasional Bible studies on the Psalms in which his Christological approach is discussed and the question is asked, "How would Jesus pray this psalm?"; a simple explanation of one or two lines regularly inserted into worship bulletins over psalms which are read or sung antiphonally; an occasional sermon-or perhaps a series of sermons, an article in the pastor's corner of the parish newsletter, etc.

The Psalter can perform for Christ's people the same kind of formative and "faith-shaping" function as other liturgical acts which we are taught in Scripture.  Just as penitent faith in Christ is shaped by the institutions of Confession and Absolution and the Lord's Supper, and our prayers follow the pattern of the Lord's Prayer, so the Psalter-as the thoughts and prayers of Christ himself-help to put our thinking and our faith, our supplication and our praise into the above-mentioned creedal categories.  For Christ's people, who must walk through the valley of death's shadow by faith and not by sight as they await his return, nothing could be more practical or helpful.


[1]   Luther himself is responsible for the title Dictata, since he refers to his lectures in a letter to George Spalatin as mea dictata super Psalterium.

[2]   Heiko Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1989), pp. 161 ff.

[3]   LW 10, p. 11.

[4]   LW 10, p. 49.  Luther refers to synteres in the plural.

[5]   See Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil, 136 ff.  Minimally, Luther read Augutine's  On the Trinity and The City of God, and Biel's commentary on Lombard's Sentences, which would have made for a wide-ranging theological education indeed!

[6]   Brian Cummings, The Literary Culture of the Reformation (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), p. 77. Cummings notes that Luther had purchased Reuchlin's Hebrew grammar already in 1508.

[7]   See LW 10, p. 3, note.

[8]   Aquinas, Summa Theologica, I. 10.

[9]   Henri De Lubac, Medieval Exegesis: Vol. 1, The Four Senses of  Scripture, trans. Mark Sebanc (Grand

Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1998), p. 1.

[10]   LW 10, p. 4.

[11]  Kenneth Hagen, The Bible in the Churches: How Different Christians Interpret the Scriptures, eds.

Kenneth Hagen, Daniel J. Harrington, S. J., Grant R. Osborne, Joseph A. Burgess (New York: Paulist Press, 1985), p. 22.

[12]   Ibid, p. 22 ff.

[13]   Kenneth Scott Latourette, A History of Christianity, vol 1 (New York: Harper and Row, 1975), pp. 15, 150. I cite this work merely as representative. When Latourette discusses the allegorical interpretive methods of Philo and Origen, it is in direct connection to their "Hellenic" and platonic orientation.   Naturally, my point here is not at odds with the rather obvious assertion that a "platonic" mindset was conducive to and lent support to allegorizing-albeit not with the historical grounding of Christ's Person as the solid and necessary unifying point of focus.

[14]   See De Lubac, p. 9.  "This approach of dividing up the text into four compartments strikes him as introducing otiose and questionable divisions, which serve neither faith nor morals."

[15]   Operationes in Psalmos, 1519-1521, St. Louis IV, 4, 1226-1355.

[16]   Kenneth Hagen, Luther's Approach to Scriptures as Seen in His Commentaries on Galatians, 1519-1538,  (Orlando: Mohr, 1993), p. 11.  Hagen points out that Luther speaks approvingly of the four senses in his later commentary on Galatians of 1538.

[17]   Ibid, p. xiii, De Lubac mentions the many "artificial distinctions" he encountered in his studies of medieval exegetical practice. One can imagine the textual gamesmanship of monks bored with the routine of the cloister.

[18]   Hagen, The Bible in the Churches, p. 129, note. Luther, for example, rejected the allegorical application that equated Moses' brother Aaron with the papacy.

[19]   Ibid, p. 129.  Luther calls Augustine's discussion of the image of God "not unattractive," but it goes beyond what the letter can prove elsewhere.  For Luther, of course, the imago Dei consisted in the right relationship with God, which is included in Augustine's picture.

[20]   St. Louis, IV, 4, 1235.

[21]   Hagen, The Bible in the Churches, p. 3.

[22]   For example, in describing Luther's approach to the text in his lectures on Genesis, H. G. Haile speaks of Luther's "embarrassingly total identification" with Noah.  He notes that Luther was anything but naïve in speaking this way.  Instead, he was "quite self-aware, even programmatic."  He expected his students to follow his example.

[23]   Ibid, p. 3.

[24]   De Lubac waxes almost poetic in his lengthy chapter insisting on this very point.  See Medieval Exegesis, vol. 1, pp. 225 ff.

[25]   Here and following, see LW 10, pp. 6-7.

[26] Oberman, Luther: Man between God and the Devil, p. 252.

[27]   Oberman, p. 252.

[28]   Here and following, LW 10, pp. 8-10.

[29]   See LW 15, pp. 265-352, "The Last Words of David."

[30]   LW 10, p 11.

[31]   In this regard, one thinks of Luther scholars such as Oberman or Steven Ozment who find in Luther's Dictata all the vital components of what was to follow.

[32]   LW 10, p. 22.

[33]   LW 10, p. 22.

[34]   Gerd Theissen and Annette Merz, The Historical Jesus: A Comprehensive Guide (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1996), pp. 106 ff.  Theissen/Merz summarize this assumption as follows: "The first Christians not only interpreted memories of Jesus in the light of the Old Testament but often produced them in the first place.  The body of scriptures of Israel were more reliable for them as God's testimony than the testimony of eye-witnesses" (my emphasis).  The "counter-arguments" of Theissen/Merz assume the basic correctness of this assumption.

[35]   See the unpublished paper by Kenneth Hagen who discovered references in commentaries of both Nicholas of Lyra and Aquinas to a "Synod of Toledo" which had condemned as heretical the assertion that the text could be understood ad litteram as having a different referent than Christ.  Hagen could find no decisions of any Synod of Toledo corresponding to Lyra's and Aquinas's comments.  However, he did note that the Council of Nicea had condemned that same kind of contention by Theodore of Mopsuestia (the central figure, of course, in the so-called "Antiochene School" of theology that stressed the literal/historical sense over spiritual senses during the late third and early fourth centuries).

[36]  Operationes in Psalmos, St. Louis IV, 4, 1226 ff.

[37]   Ibid., 1227 ff.

[38]   Ibid, 1231-32.

[39]   Kurze Auslegung, 1532.

[40]   Ibid., 1532.

[41]   Operationes in Psalmos, 1233.

[42]   Ibid., 1238.

[43]   Kurze Auslegung... St. Louis, IV, 4, 1534.

[44]   Gustav Aulen, Christus Victor (Eugene, Or.: Wipf and Stock Publishers, 2003).  Aulen cites Origen.

[45]   Operationes in Psalmos, 1251.

[46]   One can find on the internet the medical description by a doctor of the excruciating pains endured by Christ-above and beyond the horrors of "normal" crucifixion.

[47]   Operationes in Psalmos, 1325.

[48]   St. Louis IV, 4, 1327, "Daher verkuendigt er hier seine Auferstehung vorher, ja, die Frucht und das Werk der Auferstehung..."

[49]   Ibid, 1328.

[50]   Ibid, 1328-1329.

[51]   Smalley, pp. 359-360.  DeLubac cites one of  Smalley's conference papers in which she dismissed any figurative understanding of Scripture as a primitive stage through which all religions go through in their understanding of their sacred texts (Medieval Exegesis, p. 229)

[52]   See, for example, Walter Roehrs, Concordia Self-Study Commentary (St. Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1979), pp. 336 ff.  In the introduction to the Psalms in this excellent and useful commentary, Roehrs makes points of the continuity between the Testaments established by the Psalms, the fact that Jesus prayed the Psalms, and how the speakers in the Psalms "delight in the kingdom of heaven and its Messiah."  Nevertheless, Luther's Christological approach has been sharply mitigated, and it is with the "saints of the Old Testament" who prayed these prayers that the church joins, not Christ himself, and Roehrs makes no mention of Christ in his treatment of Psalm 1.  Another example of this type of "conservative" treatment is that of Darrel Kautz in The Contemporary Bible-Study Guides, vol. 9, Israel's Psalms (Kautz: Milwaukee, 1970) p. 16.  Kautz, too, makes no mention of Luther's "Preface of Jesus Christ" and takes a much more tepid approach to the extent of the Christological content of the book, "Certain of the psalms can be spoken of as ‘Messianic' since they bear some sort of relationship to the Messiah...It is necessary, however, to be cautious in determining which psalms have Messianic significance.  To force a psalm to speak of the Christ when it does not clearly do so is as incorrect as to blind oneself to the Messianic element when it is present."

[53]   Walter Brueggemann, The Message of the Psalms: a Theological Commentary (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1984), p. 123 ff.

[54]   Marshall Johnson, Psalms through the Year: Spiritual Exercises for Every Day (Minneapolis: Augsburg Books, 2007), pp. 379-380.

[55]   Ibid., 380-382.