"I have held many things in my hands, and I have lost them all -
but whatever I have placed in God's hands, that I still possess."
The Words of Martin Luther.
MARTIN LUTHER
The Former Monk Whom God Used
to Give Life and Power to the Protestant Faith
On a sultry day in July during the year 1505, a lonely traveller was trudging along a road on the outskirts of Stotterheim. He was a young man, short but sturdy, and wore the dress of a university student – his name was Martin Luther. The sky became overcast. Suddenly there was a shower, then a crashing storm. A bolt of lightning lit up the night and Luther fell to the ground. Terrified, he cried out, "St. Anne help me! I will become a monk!"
In a very definite sense therefore, it can be said that the Reformation began with 'an act of God'. Reflecting upon this, Dr. Martin Lloyd-Jones (former Royal Surgeon and pastor of Westminster Chapel) remarked that – "the Reformation began with a lightning bolt". Historians present this event as a vitally important landmark in the life of Martin Luther, a man who - by his courage, learning and single-eyed devotion to Holy Scripture - withstood the might of the papacy in his quest for truth.
A quick and receptive student, he seemed bent on following other pursuits of a more lucrative nature. Furthermore, his father had hoped to see him become a successful lawyer, thus contributing to the upkeep of the family. However, this 'lightning bolt' experience marked a turning point in his life - he therefore became a monk of the Augustinian Order – one of the strictest and most exacting orders in the RC church. To this new calling, he devoted all of his effort and service, soon making his mark as a scholar and lecturer.
Just five years after that, this young, dynamic monk had another experience that would prove to be pivotal in church history. It occurred during his first trip to Rome. A dispute had arisen in the Augustinian Order calling for settlement by the pope and, in tribute to Luther’s standing within his monastery, he was chosen as one of two brothers who would be sent to Rome in order to represent his chapter at Erfurt. In addition, he was also a lecturer at the nearby university. He was naturally thrilled at the prospect of visiting Rome and seeing everything regarding the RC church that could be viewed in that great city. What he saw shocked him, particularly the decadent lives of the priests, the carelessness of those administering the sacraments, and the total absence of any religious sense among the clergy or laity.
Like others before him, Luther climbed the 'Holy Stairs' on his hands and knees, repeating a prayer for each one and kissing each step for good measure in the hope of delivering a soul from purgatory. After doing so, Luther exclaimed: "Who knows whether it is so?"
This was the doubt that would inevitably lead to a mighty clash with the Vatican over: [1] the sufficiency and efficacy of the Scriptures; [2] the place of Scripture as the supreme rule of life and faith; and [3] the right of each individual to follow the dictates of their own conscience. It was this turn of mind that led one solitary monk on a journey that would see him "shake the world" and establish a watershed in the quest for individual freedom.
It is almost certain that the great doubts in Luther's mind as he surveyed the stairs was prompted by the text, "The just shall live by faith". He later recalled that it was while in Rome that these words came to him and, upon returning to Germany and his study of the Bible, the evangelical meaning of these words came rushing into his mind. Luther had gone to Rome as a devout, medieval, Roman Catholic pilgrim - but returned as a firm, convinced Protestant.
Martin Luther was born in Eisleben, Saxony, 10th November 1483, into a humble (but religious) family. His father was a miner, a man of vigour and self-reliance which enabled him to win something more than average success. Luther's mother had a marked influence upon his life. With her large family, she faced the world with a simple faith, cheerfulness and optimistic outlook that her son found to be of invaluable aid in future days during "the dark hours of my soul". His parents believed in giving their children the best possible education - and to do this, they made great personal sacrifices. After attending school in Mansfield, Magdeburg and Eisenach, Luther entered the University of Erfurt in 1501 and was known to be an earnest, music-loving and fun-loving student. He studied law for four years when, after his escape from death by lightning, he entered the Augustinian monastery.
His first years of monastic life were spent in fierce mental struggle. He had found a whole Bible and read it diligently, but it did not initially bring him peace. A feeling of his own sinfulness, and that of the entire human race, was burnt into him as he studied dogma and Scripture. He tried to remove this sense of his own sinfulness by living a very religious life, loaded with the severest discipline that he could imagine. In addition, he continually invented new forms of penance. However, despite all of this religious activity and supposed ‘good works’, he was never able to banish his sense of sin and unworthiness before God.
Nonetheless, he still continued to make considerable progress in his career as a monk within the Church of Rome. He became famous as a lecturer and, in 1509, his Biblical Studies lectures became something of a power within the university. His classroom was thronged, his fellow professors were students and his preaching attracted great crowds. Despite it all however, he was still unsaved - his sins were still were not washed away.
In a very definite sense therefore, it can be said that the Reformation began with 'an act of God'. Reflecting upon this, Dr. Martin Lloyd-Jones (former Royal Surgeon and pastor of Westminster Chapel) remarked that – "the Reformation began with a lightning bolt". Historians present this event as a vitally important landmark in the life of Martin Luther, a man who - by his courage, learning and single-eyed devotion to Holy Scripture - withstood the might of the papacy in his quest for truth.
A quick and receptive student, he seemed bent on following other pursuits of a more lucrative nature. Furthermore, his father had hoped to see him become a successful lawyer, thus contributing to the upkeep of the family. However, this 'lightning bolt' experience marked a turning point in his life - he therefore became a monk of the Augustinian Order – one of the strictest and most exacting orders in the RC church. To this new calling, he devoted all of his effort and service, soon making his mark as a scholar and lecturer.
Just five years after that, this young, dynamic monk had another experience that would prove to be pivotal in church history. It occurred during his first trip to Rome. A dispute had arisen in the Augustinian Order calling for settlement by the pope and, in tribute to Luther’s standing within his monastery, he was chosen as one of two brothers who would be sent to Rome in order to represent his chapter at Erfurt. In addition, he was also a lecturer at the nearby university. He was naturally thrilled at the prospect of visiting Rome and seeing everything regarding the RC church that could be viewed in that great city. What he saw shocked him, particularly the decadent lives of the priests, the carelessness of those administering the sacraments, and the total absence of any religious sense among the clergy or laity.
Like others before him, Luther climbed the 'Holy Stairs' on his hands and knees, repeating a prayer for each one and kissing each step for good measure in the hope of delivering a soul from purgatory. After doing so, Luther exclaimed: "Who knows whether it is so?"
This was the doubt that would inevitably lead to a mighty clash with the Vatican over: [1] the sufficiency and efficacy of the Scriptures; [2] the place of Scripture as the supreme rule of life and faith; and [3] the right of each individual to follow the dictates of their own conscience. It was this turn of mind that led one solitary monk on a journey that would see him "shake the world" and establish a watershed in the quest for individual freedom.
It is almost certain that the great doubts in Luther's mind as he surveyed the stairs was prompted by the text, "The just shall live by faith". He later recalled that it was while in Rome that these words came to him and, upon returning to Germany and his study of the Bible, the evangelical meaning of these words came rushing into his mind. Luther had gone to Rome as a devout, medieval, Roman Catholic pilgrim - but returned as a firm, convinced Protestant.
Martin Luther was born in Eisleben, Saxony, 10th November 1483, into a humble (but religious) family. His father was a miner, a man of vigour and self-reliance which enabled him to win something more than average success. Luther's mother had a marked influence upon his life. With her large family, she faced the world with a simple faith, cheerfulness and optimistic outlook that her son found to be of invaluable aid in future days during "the dark hours of my soul". His parents believed in giving their children the best possible education - and to do this, they made great personal sacrifices. After attending school in Mansfield, Magdeburg and Eisenach, Luther entered the University of Erfurt in 1501 and was known to be an earnest, music-loving and fun-loving student. He studied law for four years when, after his escape from death by lightning, he entered the Augustinian monastery.
His first years of monastic life were spent in fierce mental struggle. He had found a whole Bible and read it diligently, but it did not initially bring him peace. A feeling of his own sinfulness, and that of the entire human race, was burnt into him as he studied dogma and Scripture. He tried to remove this sense of his own sinfulness by living a very religious life, loaded with the severest discipline that he could imagine. In addition, he continually invented new forms of penance. However, despite all of this religious activity and supposed ‘good works’, he was never able to banish his sense of sin and unworthiness before God.
Nonetheless, he still continued to make considerable progress in his career as a monk within the Church of Rome. He became famous as a lecturer and, in 1509, his Biblical Studies lectures became something of a power within the university. His classroom was thronged, his fellow professors were students and his preaching attracted great crowds. Despite it all however, he was still unsaved - his sins were still were not washed away.
Luther Nails His Theses to the Church Door
1517 is believed by many to be 'The Year of the Reformation'. Pope Leo X sent agents throughout Germany selling indulgences. He chose Tetzel, a Dominican monk, to work in Saxony. Luther knew that God's forgiveness could not be purchased with money and therefore denounced Tetzel from his pulpit in Wittenberg. He urged princes to refuse the pardon-seller a passage through their lands. When Tetzel got near Wittenberg, Luther wrote out 95 theses denouncing indulgences and (on the 31st October) nailed them to the door of the Castle church. As a result, 31st October became known as 'Reformation Day'. It is sad to note that, right across our western Protestant democracies, the 31st October is frequently used to celebrate Halloween, Satan's mythical birthday, rather than 'Reformation Day'.
Within a short period of time, all Germany was ablaze, Luther's public life had begun and the Reformation was on its way.
There were many other reasons which drove Luther to think as he did. For instance, he rejected the pope's claim to absolute authority. He also became alarmed at a number of other corrupt practices that had gradually crept into the church in addition to indulgences. For example, Luther rejected – as foreign to true Christianity – holy water, the worship of Mary, the veneration of saints, penance, purgatory, and salvation by works. Time and time again, the pope tried to get him back into line with the Roman Catholic Church, but the monk's conscience forbade him to accept anything that was contrary to the Scriptures and the teachings of Christ therein.
Within a short period of time, all Germany was ablaze, Luther's public life had begun and the Reformation was on its way.
There were many other reasons which drove Luther to think as he did. For instance, he rejected the pope's claim to absolute authority. He also became alarmed at a number of other corrupt practices that had gradually crept into the church in addition to indulgences. For example, Luther rejected – as foreign to true Christianity – holy water, the worship of Mary, the veneration of saints, penance, purgatory, and salvation by works. Time and time again, the pope tried to get him back into line with the Roman Catholic Church, but the monk's conscience forbade him to accept anything that was contrary to the Scriptures and the teachings of Christ therein.
The Power of Luther's Pen
Luther continued preaching, lecturing and writing at Wittenberg with great success. Some of his finest work belongs to this period. His "Address to the Christian Nobility of the German Nation" created much excitement all over Europe - proclaiming as it did that secular power (not just spiritual power) is of God and has rule over everyone without exception (popes, bishops, monks, nuns and the RC Church included).
The most important work that he produced during this period of time was entitled "The Babylonian Captivity of the Church of God" - in which he boldly attacked the principles of the papacy. Luther contended that the church had been taken into bondage by the papacy in the same way that the Jews had been taken into bondage in Babylon. In the same way that the Jews needed to be freed from 'physical bondage' (i.e. literal Babylon) - so too, the church needed to be freed from 'spiritual bondage' (i.e. the spiritual Babylon of Roman Catholicism).
The result of Luther’s bold stand against the errors of Romanism led to the pope issuing a Bull condemning him. On the memorable night of 10th December 1520, Luther responded in Wittenberg by leading a procession of students and university professors to a bonfire where they burned the Papal Bull. A copy of canon law was also flung into the flames, signifying that henceforth Germany would be ruled by the law of the land, and not the law of the pope.
Rome, having shot its bolt, determined to crush Luther via civil power. In consequence, the pope issued another Bull of Excommunication and interdict upon any place where Luther or his followers might reside (calling upon the help of secular authorities - which the new Emperor was only too happy to provide). The Emperor however, found it prudent not to condemn Luther unheard (as the papal nuncio had demanded), and therefore summoned him to appear before the diet at Worms in January 1521. Luther went to Worms, believing that he was going to his death. However, his journey there was more of a triumphal tour - crowds flocked to cheer him on his way as he passed through different villages, towns and cities.
On 15th April 1521, following his triumphal journey, Martin Luther appeared before the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, the great Imperial Council and John Eck (the eminent Roman Catholic apologist and Orator of the Emperor).
His books were piled on the table and he was asked if he would retract what was written in them. Luther replied that, as the matter written concerned the highest of all subjects (namely the Word of God), he asked for time to consider before answering. He did this solely in order to convince his friends, as well as his foes, that he was not acting hastily at so decisive a moment. As for what answer he would give, Luther had already resolved what his course would be.
He gave his answer in great length the next day in a memorable speech which ended with the following words: "Well then, if your Imperial Majesty and your graces require a plain answer, I will give you one of that kind without horns and teeth. It is this. Unless I am convinced by the testimony of The Scriptures or by clear reason (for I do not trust either in the pope or in councils alone, since it is well known that they have often erred and contradicted themselves), I am bound by the Scriptures I have quoted and my conscience is captive to the Word of God. I cannot and will not recant anything, since it is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. May God help me. Amen."
Upon hearing these words, Eck asked Luther if he meant that the general councils of the Roman Catholic Church had erred. Luther replied that he could prove where they had erred in many places. To this, the Emperor made a sign to end the matter, and Luther said: "Here I stand, I can do no other. God help me. Amen!"
Following his utterance of these words, a decree was fraudulently obtained placing Luther under the ban of the Empire. This made him an outcast in most of Europe. His old friend, Frederick (Elector of Saxony) protected him by getting him out of Worms and hiding him away in Wartburg Castle (above Eisenach). Luther made great use of this time of seclusion by translating the New Testament into German. His Bible was proclaimed to be "Luther's greatest gift to the German people".
In 1525, Luther married Katharina von Bora, a former nun who forsook the cloister for the new evangelical faith. He also continued to help consolidate the various reformed groups that sprang up across Europe. In 1530, he was a prime influence in drawing up the Augsburg Confession – a high point in the progress of the German Reformation.
Luther died at Eisleben, 18th February 1546, leaving his wife and four children. When dying, two friends asked him if he would die in Christ and the doctrine that he had preached. In a joyful, audible voice, he said: "yes". He then began to repeat the words of Jesus – "Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit" – and died peacefully.
Favourable appraisals of the life and work of Martin Luther have been given by many eminent scholars down through the centuries. Goethe, Germany's greatest writer, said: “(Through the life and ministry of Martin Luther) we have been freed from the shackles of spiritual bondage, and are enabled to return to the source, and grasp Christianity in its purity."
Have you, like Martin Luther, ‘grasped Christianity in its purity’? If not, then we have good news for you. You can ‘grasp Christianity in its purity’ today by being saved.
The most important work that he produced during this period of time was entitled "The Babylonian Captivity of the Church of God" - in which he boldly attacked the principles of the papacy. Luther contended that the church had been taken into bondage by the papacy in the same way that the Jews had been taken into bondage in Babylon. In the same way that the Jews needed to be freed from 'physical bondage' (i.e. literal Babylon) - so too, the church needed to be freed from 'spiritual bondage' (i.e. the spiritual Babylon of Roman Catholicism).
The result of Luther’s bold stand against the errors of Romanism led to the pope issuing a Bull condemning him. On the memorable night of 10th December 1520, Luther responded in Wittenberg by leading a procession of students and university professors to a bonfire where they burned the Papal Bull. A copy of canon law was also flung into the flames, signifying that henceforth Germany would be ruled by the law of the land, and not the law of the pope.
Rome, having shot its bolt, determined to crush Luther via civil power. In consequence, the pope issued another Bull of Excommunication and interdict upon any place where Luther or his followers might reside (calling upon the help of secular authorities - which the new Emperor was only too happy to provide). The Emperor however, found it prudent not to condemn Luther unheard (as the papal nuncio had demanded), and therefore summoned him to appear before the diet at Worms in January 1521. Luther went to Worms, believing that he was going to his death. However, his journey there was more of a triumphal tour - crowds flocked to cheer him on his way as he passed through different villages, towns and cities.
On 15th April 1521, following his triumphal journey, Martin Luther appeared before the Holy Roman Emperor, Charles V, the great Imperial Council and John Eck (the eminent Roman Catholic apologist and Orator of the Emperor).
His books were piled on the table and he was asked if he would retract what was written in them. Luther replied that, as the matter written concerned the highest of all subjects (namely the Word of God), he asked for time to consider before answering. He did this solely in order to convince his friends, as well as his foes, that he was not acting hastily at so decisive a moment. As for what answer he would give, Luther had already resolved what his course would be.
He gave his answer in great length the next day in a memorable speech which ended with the following words: "Well then, if your Imperial Majesty and your graces require a plain answer, I will give you one of that kind without horns and teeth. It is this. Unless I am convinced by the testimony of The Scriptures or by clear reason (for I do not trust either in the pope or in councils alone, since it is well known that they have often erred and contradicted themselves), I am bound by the Scriptures I have quoted and my conscience is captive to the Word of God. I cannot and will not recant anything, since it is neither safe nor right to go against conscience. May God help me. Amen."
Upon hearing these words, Eck asked Luther if he meant that the general councils of the Roman Catholic Church had erred. Luther replied that he could prove where they had erred in many places. To this, the Emperor made a sign to end the matter, and Luther said: "Here I stand, I can do no other. God help me. Amen!"
Following his utterance of these words, a decree was fraudulently obtained placing Luther under the ban of the Empire. This made him an outcast in most of Europe. His old friend, Frederick (Elector of Saxony) protected him by getting him out of Worms and hiding him away in Wartburg Castle (above Eisenach). Luther made great use of this time of seclusion by translating the New Testament into German. His Bible was proclaimed to be "Luther's greatest gift to the German people".
In 1525, Luther married Katharina von Bora, a former nun who forsook the cloister for the new evangelical faith. He also continued to help consolidate the various reformed groups that sprang up across Europe. In 1530, he was a prime influence in drawing up the Augsburg Confession – a high point in the progress of the German Reformation.
Luther died at Eisleben, 18th February 1546, leaving his wife and four children. When dying, two friends asked him if he would die in Christ and the doctrine that he had preached. In a joyful, audible voice, he said: "yes". He then began to repeat the words of Jesus – "Father, into Thy hands I commend my spirit" – and died peacefully.
Favourable appraisals of the life and work of Martin Luther have been given by many eminent scholars down through the centuries. Goethe, Germany's greatest writer, said: “(Through the life and ministry of Martin Luther) we have been freed from the shackles of spiritual bondage, and are enabled to return to the source, and grasp Christianity in its purity."
Have you, like Martin Luther, ‘grasped Christianity in its purity’? If not, then we have good news for you. You can ‘grasp Christianity in its purity’ today by being saved.
You need to know this............
God is holy, but we’re not. If that is all there was to it, He could solve it all very easily indeed and just send us all to Hell. Fortunately for us however, God is loving as well as holy. He loves us despite the fact that we are sinners. He wants us to go to Heaven, therefore He sent Jesus to take our sins away. Do you want this? It can be yours if you want it. How do you receive it? You must be saved. How do you get saved? You receive the Lord Jesus Christ as your personal, one and only Saviour - placing all of your trust in Him (and Him alone) for entry into Heaven. For more information about how to make sure that you are going to Heaven - please click here.
"It is only through Christ that God wills to be known, and gives saving
knowledge of Himself. He who would know God, therefore, must seek Him
through the Biblical Gospel." Martin Luther, The Bondage of the Will
Moves, Dramas & Documentaries on the Life of Martin Luther
Luther (2003 Movie)
Martin Luther: Heretic (1983 Movie)
Luther (1953 Movie)
England's Reformation: Three Books That Changed a Nation
A Mini-Documentary Produced by the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster
Reformation (2017 Movie)
Martin Luther: Heretic (1983 Movie)
Luther (1953 Movie)
England's Reformation: Three Books That Changed a Nation
A Mini-Documentary Produced by the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster
Reformation (2017 Movie)
Of Historic Interest:
Some of Luther's Comments on the Subject of Islam
"Since we now have the Turk and his religion at our very doorstep, our people must be warned lest, either moved by the splendor of the Turkish religion and the external appearance of their customs, or offended by the meager display of our own faith or the deformity of our customs, they deny their Christ and follow Muhammad."
"Rather let them learn that the religion of Christ is something other than ceremonies and customs and that faith in Christ has absolutely nothing to do with discerning what ceremonies, customs, or laws are better or worse, but declares that all of them squeezed together into one mass are not enough for justification nor are they a work for them to perform. Unless we learn this, there is danger that many of our people will become Turks, disposed as they are to much less splendid errors."
"However effectively this author attacks the absurdities and evils of the Turks and candidly and rightly refutes their specious scandals (to which, as he confesses, he himself at one time was so moved as to fall prey), still it is clear that at that time our greatest fortification and strongest arms were not so publicly vigorous."
"These defenses are the articles about Christ, namely, that Christ is the son of God, that he died for our sins, that he was raised for our life, that justified by faith in him our sins are forgiven and we are saved, etc. These are the thunder that destroys not only Muhammad but even the gates of hell. For Muhammad denies that Christ is the son of God, denies that he died for our sins, denies that he arose for our life, denies that by faith in him our sins are forgiven and we are justified, denies that he will come as judge of the living and the dead (though he does believe in the resurrection of the dead and the day of judgment), denies the Holy Spirit and denies the gifts of the Spirit. By these and similar articles of faith consciences must be fortified against the ceremonies of Muhammad. With these weapons his Qur'an must be refuted."
"Rather let them learn that the religion of Christ is something other than ceremonies and customs and that faith in Christ has absolutely nothing to do with discerning what ceremonies, customs, or laws are better or worse, but declares that all of them squeezed together into one mass are not enough for justification nor are they a work for them to perform. Unless we learn this, there is danger that many of our people will become Turks, disposed as they are to much less splendid errors."
"However effectively this author attacks the absurdities and evils of the Turks and candidly and rightly refutes their specious scandals (to which, as he confesses, he himself at one time was so moved as to fall prey), still it is clear that at that time our greatest fortification and strongest arms were not so publicly vigorous."
"These defenses are the articles about Christ, namely, that Christ is the son of God, that he died for our sins, that he was raised for our life, that justified by faith in him our sins are forgiven and we are saved, etc. These are the thunder that destroys not only Muhammad but even the gates of hell. For Muhammad denies that Christ is the son of God, denies that he died for our sins, denies that he arose for our life, denies that by faith in him our sins are forgiven and we are justified, denies that he will come as judge of the living and the dead (though he does believe in the resurrection of the dead and the day of judgment), denies the Holy Spirit and denies the gifts of the Spirit. By these and similar articles of faith consciences must be fortified against the ceremonies of Muhammad. With these weapons his Qur'an must be refuted."
C.H. Spurgeon on Martin Luther
Saturday 10th November 1883 was the 400th Anniversary of Martin Luther's birth.
On the morning of Sunday 11th November 1883, C.H. Spurgeon preached
a special commemorative sermon at London's famous Metropolitan Tabernacle.
The Scripture text for his message was taken from Habakkuk 2:4: "the just shall live by his faith".
This text is employed three times by the apostle Paul as an argument. {Ro 1:17 Ga 3:11 Heb 10:38} In each of these cases it says, “The just shall live by faith.” This is the old original text to which the apostle referred when he said, “As it is written, ‘The just shall live by faith.’ ” We are not wrong in making the inspiration of the Old Testament to be as important as that of the New; for the truth of the gospel must stand or fall with that of the prophets of the Old Testament. The Bible is one and indivisible, and you cannot question the first Testament and retain the New. Habakkuk must be inspired, or Paul writes nonsense.
Yesterday, four hundred years ago, there came into this wicked world the son of a miner, or refiner of metals, who was to do very much towards undermining the Papacy and refining the church. The name of that babe was Martin Luther: a hero and a saint. Blessed was that day above all the days of the century which it honoured, for it bestowed a blessing on all succeeding ages, through “the monk who shook the world.” His brave spirit overturned the tyranny of error which had held nations in bondage for so long. All human history since then has been more or less affected by the birth of that marvellous boy. He was not an absolutely perfect man, we neither endorse all that he said nor admire all that he did; but he was a man upon whose equal men’s eyes shall seldom rest, a mighty judge in Israel, a kingly servant of the Lord. We ought more often to pray to God to send us men — men of God, men of power. We should pray that, according to the Lord’s infinite goodness, his ascension gifts may be continued and multiplied for the perfecting of his church; for when he ascended up on high he led captives captive, and received gifts for men, and “he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers.” He continues to bestow these choice gifts according to the church’s necessity, and he would scatter them more plentifully, maybe, if our prayers more earnestly ascended to the Lord of the harvest to sent out labourers into his harvest. Even as we believe in the crucified Saviour for our personal salvation, we ought to believe in the ascended Saviour for the perpetual enriching of the church with confessors and evangelists who shall declare the truth of God.
I wish to take my little share in commemorating Luther’s birthday, and I think I can do no better than use the key of truth by which Luther unlocked the dungeons of the human mind, and set hearts in bondage at liberty. That golden key lies in the truth briefly contained in the text before us — “The just shall live by his faith.”
Are you not a little surprised to find such a clear gospel passage in Habakkuk; to discover in that ancient prophet an explicit statement which Paul can use as a ready argument against the opponents of justification by faith? It shows that the cardinal doctrine of the gospel is no newfangled notion; assuredly it is not a novel dogma invented by Luther, nor even a truth which was first taught by Paul. This fact has been established in all ages, and, therefore, here we find it among the ancient things, a lamp to cheer the darkness which hung over Israel before the coming of the Lord.
This also proves that there has been no change concerning the gospel. The gospel of Habakkuk is the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. A clearer light was cast upon the truth by the giving of the Holy Spirit, but the way of salvation has been one and the same in all ages. No man has ever been saved by his good works. The way by which the just have lived has always been the way of faith. There has not been the slightest advance upon this truth; it is established and settled, for evermore the same, like the God who uttered it. At all times, and everywhere, the gospel is and must for ever be the same. “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and for ever.” We read of “the gospel” as of one; but never of two or three gospels, as of many. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but Christ’s word shall never pass away.
It is also noteworthy, not only that this truth should be so old, and should continue so unchanged, but that it should possess such vitality. This one sentence, “The just shall live by his faith,” produced the Reformation. Out of this one line, as from the opening of one of the Apocalyptic seals, came out all that sounding of gospel trumpets, and all that singing of gospel songs, which made in the world a sound like the noise of many waters. This one seed, forgotten and hidden away in the dark medieval times, was brought out, dropped into the human heart, made by the Spirit of God to grow, and in the end to produce great results. This handful of grain on the top of the mountains so multiplied that its fruit shook like Lebanon, and those of the city flourished like grass of the earth. The least bit of truth, thrown anywhere, will live! Certain plants are so full of vitality, that if you only take a fragment of a leaf and place it on the soil, the leaf will take root and grow. It is utterly impossible that such vegetation should become extinct; and so it is with the truth of God — it is living and incorruptible, and therefore there is no destroying it. As long as one Bible remains, the religion of free grace will live; indeed, if they could burn all printed Scriptures, as long as there remained a child who remembered a single text of the word, the truth would rise again. Even in the ashes of truth the fire is still living, and when the breath of the Lord blows on it, the flame will burst out gloriously. Because of this, let us be comforted in this day of blasphemy and of rebuke — comforted because though “the grass withers, and its flower falls away: but the word of the Lord endures for ever. And this is the word which by the gospel is preached to you.”
Let us now examine this text, which was the means of enlightening the heart of Luther, as I shall tell you eventually.
(1) I shall at the outset make a brief observation on it: A MAN WHO HAS FAITH IN GOD IS JUST. “The just shall live by his faith”; the man who possesses faith in God is a just man: his faith is his life as a just man.
He is “just” in the gospel sense, namely, that having the faith, which God prescribes as the way of salvation, he is by his faith justified in the sight of God. In the Old Testament we are told concerning Abraham that “he believed in the Lord; and he counted it to him for righteousness.” {Ge 15:1} This is the universal plan of justification. Faith lays hold upon the righteousness of God, by accepting God’s plan of justifying sinners through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, and by this act she makes the sinner just. Faith accepts and appropriates for itself the whole system of divine righteousness which is unfolded in the person and work of the Lord Jesus. Faith rejoices to see him coming into the world in our nature, and in that nature obeying the law in every jot and tittle, though not himself under that law until he chose to put himself there on our behalf; faith is further pleased when she sees the Lord, who had come under the law, offering himself up as a perfect atonement, and making a complete vindication of divine justice by his sufferings and death. Faith lays hold upon the person, life, and death of the Lord Jesus as her only hope, and in the righteousness of Christ she arrays herself. She cries, “The chastisement of my peace was upon him, and by his stripes I am healed.” Now, the man who believes in God’s method of making men righteous through the righteousness of Jesus, and accepts Jesus and leans upon him, is a just man. He who makes the life and death of God’s great propitiation to be his sole reliance and confidence is justified in the sight of God, and is written down among the just by the Lord himself. His faith is imputed to him for righteousness, because his faith grasps the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus. “All who believe are justified from all things, from which you could not be justified by the law of Moses.” This is the testimony of the inspired word, and who shall contradict it?
But the believer is also just in another sense, which the outside world better appreciates, though it is not more valuable than the former. The man who believes in God becomes by that faith moved to everything that is right, and good, and true. His faith in God rectifies his mind, and makes him just. In judgment, in desire, in aspiration, in heart, he is just. His sin has been forgiven him freely, and now, in the hour of temptation, he cries, “How then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?” He believes in the bloodshedding which God has provided for the cleansing of sin, and, being washed in it, he cannot choose to defile himself again. The love of Christ constrains him to seek after what is true, and right, and good, and loving, and honourable in the sight of God. Having received by faith the privilege of adoption, he strives to live as a child of God. Having obtained by faith a new life, he walks in newness of life. “Immortal principles forbid the child of God to sin.” If any man lives in sin and loves it, he does not have the faith of God’s elect; for true faith purifies the soul. The faith which is created in us by the Holy Spirit is the greatest sin-killer under heaven. By the grace of God it affects the innermost heart, changes the desires and the affections, and makes the man a new creature in Christ Jesus. If there is on earth any who can truly be called just, they are those who are made so by faith in God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Indeed, no other men are “just” except those to whom the holy God gives the title, and of these the text says that they live by faith. Faith trusts God, and therefore loves him, and therefore obeys him, and therefore grows like him. It is the root of holiness, the spring of righteousness, the life of the just.
(2) Upon that observation, which is vital to the text, I dwell no longer, but advance to another which is the converse of it, namely, that A MAN WHO IS JUST HAS FAITH IN GOD. Otherwise, let me say, he would not be just; for God deserves faith, and he who robs him of it is not just.
God is so true that to doubt him is an injustice: he is so faithful that to doubt him is to wrong him — and he who does the Lord such an injustice is not a just man. A just man must first be just with the greatest of all beings. It would be idle for him to be just to his fellow creatures only; if he did a wilful injustice to God, I say he would be unworthy of the name of just. Faith is what the Lord justly deserves to receive from his creatures: it is his due that we believe in what he says, and especially in reference to the gospel. When the great love of God in Christ Jesus is plainly presented it will be believed by the pure in heart. If the great love of Christ in dying for us is fully understood it must be believed by every honest mind. To doubt the witness of God concerning his Son is to do the most grave injustice to infinite love. He who does not believe has rejected God’s witness to the unspeakable gift and put from him what deserves man’s adoring gratitude, since only it can satisfy the justice of God, and give peace to the conscience of man. A truly just man must, in order for the completeness of his justness, believe in God, and in all that he has revealed.
Some dream that this matter of justness only concerns the outer life, and does not touch man’s belief. I say this is not so; righteousness concerns the inner parts of a man, the central region of his manhood; and truly just men desire to be made clean in the secret parts, and they wish to know wisdom in the hidden parts. Is it not so? We hear it continually asserted that the understanding and the belief constitute a province exempt from the jurisdiction of God. Is it indeed true that I may believe what I like without being accountable to God for my belief? No, my brethren; no single part of our manhood is beyond the range of the divine law. Our whole capacity as men lies under the sovereignty of him who created us, and we are as much bound to believe properly as we are bound to act properly: in fact, our actions and our thinkings are so intertwined and entangled that there is no separating the one from the other. To say that the rightness of the outward life suffices is to go completely contrary to the whole tenor of the word of God. I am as much bound to serve God with my mind as with my heart. I am as much bound to believe what God reveals as I am to do what God commands. Errors of judgment are as truly sins as errors of life. It is a part of our allegiance to our great Sovereign and Lord that we yield up our understanding, our thought, and our belief to his supreme control. No man is right until he is a right believer. A just man must be just towards God by believing in God, and trusting him in all that he is, and says, and does.
I also do not see, my dear friends, what reason there can be for a man to be just towards his fellow men when he has given up his belief in God. If it comes to a pinch, and a man can deliver himself by a piece of dishonesty, why should he not be dishonest if there is no higher law than what his fellow men have made, no judgment seat, no Judge and no hereafter? A few weeks ago a man deliberately killed his employer, who had offended him, and when he gave himself up to the police, he said that he was not in the least degree afraid nor ashamed of what he had done. He admitted the murder, and acknowledged that he knew the consequences very well; he expected to suffer about half a minute’s pain on the gallows, and then there would be an end of him, and he was quite prepared for that. He spoke and acted in consistency with his belief or his non-belief; and truly every form of crime becomes logical and legitimate if you take away from man faith in God and the hereafter. That gone, break up your commonwealth; there is nothing to hold humanity together; for without a God the moral government of the universe has ceased, and anarchy is the natural state of things. If there is no God, and no judgment to come, let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die. If necessary, let us thieve, lie, and kill. Why not? if there is no law, no judgment, and no punishment for sin. I forget — nothing can be sinful; for if there is no lawgiver, there is no law; and if there is no law, then there can be no transgression. To what a chaos must all things come if faith in God is renounced. Where will the just be found when faith is banished? The logically just man is a believer in some measure or other; and he who is worthy to be called “just” in the scriptural sense, is a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, who is made our righteousness by God.
(3) But now I come to the point upon which I intend to dwell. Thirdly, BY THIS FAITH THE JUST MAN SHALL LIVE.
This is at the outset a narrow statement; it cuts off many pretended ways of living by saying, “The just shall live by faith.” This sentence savours of the strait gate which stands at the head of the way — the narrow way which leads into eternal life. At one blow this ends all claims of righteousness apart from one mode of life. The best men in the world can only live by faith, there is no other way of being just in the sight of God. We cannot live in righteousness by ourselves. If we are going to trust in ourselves, or anything that comes from ourselves, we are dead while we so trust; we have not known the life of God according to the teaching of Holy Writ. You must come right out from confidence in everything that you are or hope to be. You must tear off the leprous garment of legal righteousness, and part with self in any and every form. Self-reliance concerning the things of religion will be found to be self-destruction; you must rest in God as he is revealed in his Son Jesus Christ, and there alone. The just shall live by faith; but those who look to the works of the law are under the curse, and cannot live before God. The same is also true of those who endeavour to live by sense or feeling. They judge God by what they see: if he is bountiful to them in providence, he is a good God; if they are poor, they have nothing good to say about him, for they measure him by what they feel, and taste, and see. If God works steadily towards a purpose, and they can see his purpose, they commend his wisdom; but when they either cannot see the purpose, or cannot understand the way by which the Lord is working towards it, immediately they judge him to be unwise. Living by sense turns out to be a senseless mode of life, bringing death to all comfort and hope.
Judge not the Lord by feeble sense,
But trust him for his grace,
For only by such trust can a just man live.
The text also cuts off all idea of living by mere intellect. Too many say, “I am my own guide, I shall make doctrines for myself, and I shall mould and form them according to my own devices.” Such a way is death to the spirit. To be abreast of the times is to be an enemy to God. The way of life is to believe what God has taught, especially to believe in him whom God has presented to be a propitiation for sin; for that is making God to be everything and ourselves nothing. Resting on an infallible revelation, and trusting in an omnipotent Redeemer, we have rest and peace; but on the other unsettled principle we become wandering stars, for whom is appointed the blackness of darkness for ever. By faith the soul can live, in all other ways we have a name to live and are dead.
The same is equally true of imagination. We often find a fanciful religion in which people trust in impulses, in dreams, in noises, and mystical things which they imagine they have seen: fiddle-faddle all of it, and yet they are quite wrapped up in it. I pray that you may cast out this chaffy stuff, there is no food for the spirit in it. The life of my soul does not lie in what I think, or what I dream, or what I imagine, or what I enjoy of fine feeling, but only in what faith apprehends to be the word of God. We live before God by trusting a promise, depending on a person, accepting a sacrifice, wearing a righteousness, and surrendering ourselves up to God — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Implicit trust in Jesus, our Lord, is the way of life, and every other way leads down to death. It is a narrowing statement, let those who call it intolerance say what they please; it will still be true when they have loathed it as much as it is now.
But, secondly, this is a very broad statement. Much is comprehended in the saying — “the just shall live by his faith.” It does not say what part of his life hangs on his believing, or what phase of his life best proves his believing: it comprehends the beginning, continuance, increase, and perfecting of spiritual life as being all by faith. Observe that the text means that the moment a man believes he begins to live in the sight of God: he trusts his God, he accepts God’s revelation of himself, he confides, reposes, leans upon his Saviour, and that moment he becomes a spiritually living man, quickened with spiritual life by God the Holy Spirit. All his existence before that belief was only a form of death: when he comes to trust in God he enters upon eternal life, and is born from above. Yes, but that is not all, nor half; for if that man is to continue living before God, if he is to hold on his way in holiness, his perseverance must be the result of continued faith. The faith which saves is not one single act done and ended on a certain day: it is an act continued and persevered in throughout the entire life of man. The just not only starts to live by his faith, but he continues to live by his faith: he does not begin in the spirit and end in the flesh, nor go so far by grace, and the rest of the way by the works of the law. “The just shall live by faith,” says the text in Hebrews, “but if any man draws back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him. But we are not of those who draw back to perdition; but of those who believe to the saving of the soul.” Faith is essential all along; every day and all the day, in all things. Our natural life begins by breathing, and it must be continued by breathing: what the breath is to the body, faith is to the soul.
Brethren, if we are to advance and increase in the divine life, it must still be in the same way. Our root is faith, and only through the root comes growth. Progress in grace does not come by carnal wisdom, or legal effort, or unbelief; indeed, the flesh brings no growth to the spiritual life, and efforts made in unbelief rather dwarf the inner life than cause it to grow. We become no stronger by mortifications, mournings, workings, or strivings, if these are apart from simple faith in God’s grace; for only by this one channel can nourishment come into the life of our spirit. The same door by which life came in at the first is that by which life continues to enter. If any man says to me, “I once lived by believing in Christ; but I have now become spiritual and sanctified, and therefore I have no longer any need to look as a sinner to the blood and righteousness of Christ”: I tell that man that he needs to learn the first principles of the faith. I warn him that he has drawn back from the faith; for he who is justified by the law, or in any other way besides the righteousness of Christ, has fallen from grace, and left the only foundation upon which a soul can be accepted with God. Indeed, up to heaven’s gate there is no staff for us to lean upon except faith in the ever-blessed Saviour and his divine atonement. Between this place and glory we shall never be able to live by merits, or live by imaginings, or live by intellect; we shall still have to be like children taught by God, as Israel in the desert depending wholly on the great Invisible One. It is ours for ever to look outside of self; and to look above all things that are seen; for “the just shall live by his faith.” It is a very broad sentence, a circle which encompasses our entire life which is worthy of the name. If there is any virtue, if there is any praise, if there is anything that is lovely or of good repute, we must receive it, exhibit it, and perfect it by the exercise of faith. Life in the Father’s house, life in the church, life in private, life in the world, must all be in the power of faith if we are righteous men. What is without faith is without life; dead works cannot gratify the living God; without faith it is impossible to please God.
I ask you to notice, in the third place, what a very unqualified statement it is. “The just shall live by his faith.” Then, if a man has only a little faith, he shall live; and if he is greatly just, he shall still live by faith. Many a just man has come no further than striving for holiness, but he is justified by his faith: his faith is trembling and struggling, and his frequent prayer is, “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief”; yet his faith has made him a just man. Sometimes he is afraid that he has no faith at all; and when he has deep depression of spirits, it is as much as he can do to keep his head above water; but even then his faith justifies him. He is like a barque upon a stormy sea: sometimes he is lifted up to heaven by flashing waves of mercy, and immediately he sinks into the abyss among billows of affliction. What, then, is he a dead man? I answer, Does that man truly believe God? Does he accept the record concerning the Son of God? Can he truly say, “I believe in the forgiveness of sins,” and with such faith as he has does he cling only to Christ and to no one else besides? Then that man shall live, he shall live by his faith. If the littleness of our faith could destroy us how few would be numbered with the living! “When the Son of man comes, shall he find faith on the earth?” Only here and there, and now and then, a Luther appears who really does believe with all his heart. Most of us are not so big as Luther’s little finger: we do not have so much faith in our whole souls as he had in one hair of his head: but yet even that little faith makes us live. I do not say that little faith will give us the strong, and vigorous, and lion-like life which Luther had; but we shall live. The statement makes no distinction between this and that degree of faith, but still lays it down as an unquestionable truth, “the just shall live by faith.” Blessed be God, then, I shall live, for I do believe in the Lord Jesus as my Saviour and my all. Do you not also believe in him?
Indeed, and is it not exceptional that this unqualified statement should not mention any other grace, as helping to make up the basis on which a just men lives? “The just shall live by his faith”: but does he not have love, does he not have zeal, does he not have patience, does he not have hope, does he not have humility, does he not have holiness? Oh, yes, he has all these, and he lives in them, but he does not live by them, because none of these so intimately connects him with Christ as his faith does. I will venture to use a very homely illustration, because it is the best I can think of. Here is a little child, a suckling. He has many necessary members, such as his eyes, his ears, his legs, his arms, his heart, and so forth, and all these are necessary for him; but the one organ by which the tiny babe lives is his mouth, by which he receives from his mother all his nourishment. Our faith is that mouth by which we receive fresh life from the promise of the ever-blessed God. So faith is what we live by. Other graces are necessary, but faith is the life of them all. We do not undervalue love, or patience, or penitence, or humility, any more than we depreciate the eyes or the feet of the babe. Still, the means of the life of the spiritual man is that mouth by which he receives divine food from the truth revealed by the Holy Spirit in sacred Scripture. Other graces produce results from what faith receives, but faith is the Receiver General for the whole isle of man.
This, dear friends, to proceed a little further, is a very suggestive statement, — “The just shall live by his faith”; because it has so many meanings. First, the righteous man is even to exist by his faith, that is to say, the lowest form of grace in a righteous character is dependent on faith. But, brother, I hope you will not be so foolish as to say, — “If I am only a living child of God, it is all I want”: no, we wish not only to have life, but also to have it more abundantly. See that man rescued from drowning he is still alive, but the only evidence of it is the fact that a mirror is somewhat bedewed by his breath: you would not be satisfied to be alive for years in that poor way, would you? You ought to be grateful if you are spiritually alive even in that feeble way; but still we do not want to remain in a swooning state, we wish to be active and vigorous. Yet even for that lowest life you must have faith. For the feeblest kind of spiritual existence that can be called life at all, faith is necessary. The just who barely live, who are feeble in mind, who are scarcely saved, are nevertheless delivered by faith. Without faith there is no heavenly life whatever.
Take the word “life” in a better sense, and the same will apply; “The just shall live by his faith.” We sometimes meet very poor people who say to us in a pitiful tone, “Our wages are dreadfully scant.” We say to them, “Do you really live upon so small a sum?” They answer, “Well, Sir, you can hardly call it living; but we exist somehow.” None of us would wish to live in that way if we could help it. We mean, then, by “life,” some measure of enjoyment, happiness, and satisfaction. The just, when they have comfort, and joy, and peace, have them by faith. Thank God, peace of heart is our normal state, because faith is an enduring grace. We sing for joy of heart and rejoice in the Lord, and blessed be the Lord this is no novelty to us; but we have known this bliss, and still know it by faith alone. The moment faith comes in, the music strikes up: if it were gone the owls would hoot. Luther can sing a psalm in spite of the devil; but he could not have done so if he had not been a man of faith. He could defy emperors, and kings, and popes, and bishops while he took firm hold upon the strength of God, but only then. Faith is the life of life, and makes life worth living. It puts joy into the soul to believe in the great Father and his everlasting love, and in the efficacious atonement of the Son, and in the indwelling of the Spirit, in resurrection, and eternal glory: without these we would be of all men most miserable. To believe these glorious truths is to live — “The just shall live by his faith.”
Life also means strength. We say of a certain man, “What life he has in him: he is full of life, he seems all alive.” Yes, the just obtain energy, force, vivacity, vigour, power, might, life — by faith. Faith bestows on believers a royal majesty. The more they can believe, the more mighty they become. This is the head that wears a crown; this is the hand that wields a sceptre; this is the foot whose royal tread shakes the nations; faith in God links us with the King, the Lord God Omnipotent.
By faith the just live on when others die. They are not overcome by prevalent sin, or fashionable heresy, or cruel persecution, or fierce affliction: nothing can kill spiritual life while faith remains — “The just shall live by faith.” Continuance and perseverance come this way. The righteous man when he is set back for a while is not baffled; and when he is wounded by enemies, he is not killed. Where another man is drowned, he swims; where another man is trampled underfoot, he rises and shouts victoriously, — “Do not rejoice over me, oh my enemy. If I fall, I shall still rise again!” In the fiery furnace of affliction he walks unharmed through faith. Indeed, and when his turn comes to die, and, with many tears his brethren carry his ashes to the tomb, “he being dead still speaks.” The blood of righteous Abel cried from the ground to the Lord, and it is still crying down through the ages, even to this hour. Luther’s voice through four hundred years still sounds in the ears of men, and quickens our pulses like the beat of the drum in martial music: he lives, he lives because he was a man of faith.
I would sum up and illustrate this teaching by mentioning certain incidents of Luther’s life. Upon the great Reformer gospel light broke by slow degrees. It was in the monastery that, while reading the pages of the old Bible that was chained to a pillar, he came upon this passage — “The just shall live by his faith.” This heavenly sentence stayed with him; but he hardly understood all its bearings. He could not, however, find peace in his religious profession and monastic habit. Knowing no better, he persevered in penances so many, and mortification’s so arduous, that sometimes he was found fainting through exhaustion. He brought himself to death’s door. He must make a journey to Rome, for in Rome there is a fresh church for every day, and you may be sure to win the pardon of sins and all kinds of benedictions in these holy shrines. He dreamed of entering a city of holiness; but he found it to be a haunt of hypocrites and a den of iniquity. To his horror he heard men say that if there was a hell Rome was built on the top of it, for it was the nearest approach to it that could be found in this world; but still he believed in its Pope and he went on with his penances, seeking rest, but finding none. One day he was climbing on his knees the Sancta Scala which still stands in Rome. I have stood amazed at the bottom of this staircase to see poor creatures go up and down on their knees in the belief that it is the very staircase that our Lord descended when he left Pilate’s house, and certain steps are said to be marked with drops of blood; these the poor souls kiss most devoutly. Well, Luther was crawling up these steps one day when that same text which he had read before in the monastery, sounded like a clap of thunder in his ears, “The just shall live by his faith.” He rose from his prostration, and went down the steps never to grovel upon them again. At that time the Lord accomplished in him a full deliverance from superstition, and he saw that not by priests, nor priestcraft, nor penances, nor by anything that he could do, was he to live, but that he must live by his faith. Our text of this morning had set the monk at liberty, and set his soul on fire.
No sooner did he believe this than he began to live in the sense of being active. A gentleman, named Tetzel, was going around all over Germany selling the forgiveness of sins for so much ready cash. No matter what your offence, as soon as your money touched the bottom of the box your sins were gone. Luther heard of this, grew indignant, and exclaimed, “I will beat a hole in his drum,” which assuredly he did, and in several other drums. The nailing up of his theses on the church-door was a sure way of silencing the indulgence music. Luther proclaimed pardon of sin by faith in Christ without money and without price, and the Pope’s indulgences were soon objects of derision. Luther lived by his faith, and therefore he who otherwise might have been quiet, denounced error as furiously as a lion roars upon his prey. The faith that was in him filled him with intense life, and he plunged into war with the enemy. After a while they summoned him to Augsburg, and to Augsburg he went, though his friends advised him not to go. They summoned him, as a heretic, to answer for himself at the Diet of Worms, and everyone told him to stay away, for he would be sure to be burned; but he felt it necessary that the testimony should be borne, and so in a wagon he went from village to village and town to town, preaching as he went, the poor people coming out to shake hands with the man who was standing up for Christ and the gospel at the risk of his life. You remember how he stood before that august assembly, and though he knew as far as human power went that his defence would cost him his life, for he would, probably, be committed to the flames like John Huss, yet he played the man for the Lord his God. That day in the German Diet Luther did a work for which ten thousand times ten thousand mothers’ children have blessed his name, and blessed even more the name of the Lord his God.
To put him out of harm’s way for a while a prudent friend took him prisoner, and kept him out of the strife in the castle of Wartburg. There he had a good time of it, resting, studying, translating, making music, and preparing himself for the future which was to be so eventful. He did all that a man can do who is outside of the fray; but “the just shall live by his faith,” and Luther could not be buried alive in ease, he must be getting on with his life-work. He sends word to his friends that he who was coming would soon be with them, and suddenly he appeared at Wittenburg. The prince meant to have kept him in retirement somewhat longer, but Luther must live; and when the Elector feared that he could not protect him, Luther wrote him, “I come under far higher protection than yours; indeed, I hold that I am more likely to protect your Grace than your Grace to protect me. He who has the strongest faith is the best Protector.” Luther had learned to be independent of all men, for he cast himself upon his God. He had all the world against him, and yet he lived very merrily: if the Pope excommunicated him he burned the papal bull; {edict} if the Emperor threatened him he rejoiced, because he remembered the word of the Lord, “The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together. He who sits in the heavens shall laugh.” When they said to him, “Where will you find shelter if the Elector does not protect you?” he answered, “Under the broad shield of God.”
Luther could not be still; he must speak, and write and thunder; and oh! with what confidence he spoke! Doubts about God and Scripture he abhorred. Melancthon says he was not dogmatic; I rather differ from Melancthon there, and consider Luther to be the chief of dogmatists. He called Melancthon the “soft treader,” and I wonder what we should have done if Luther had been Melancthon, and had trodden softly, too. The times needed a firmly assured leader, and faith made Luther all that for years, notwithstanding his many sorrows and infirmities. He was a Titan, a giant, a man of splendid mental calibre and strong physique; but still his main life and force lay in his faith. He suffered much in exercises of the mind and through diseases of body, and these might well have occasioned a display of weakness; but that weakness did not appear; for when he believed, he was as sure of what he believed as of his own existence, and hence he was strong. If every angel in heaven had passed before him and each one had assured him of the truth of God, he would not have thanked them for their testimony, for he believed God without the witness of either angels or men: he thought the word of divine testimony to be more sure than anything that seraphim could say.
This man was forced to live by his faith, for he was a man of stormy soul, and only faith could speak peace to him. Those stirring excitements of his brought on him afterwards fearful depressions of spirit, and then he needed faith in God. If you read a spiritual life of him you will find that it was hard work sometimes for him to keep his soul alive. Being a man of like passions with us, and full of imperfections, he was at times as desponding and despairing as the weakest among us; and the swelling grief within him threatened to burst his mighty heart. But both he and John Calvin frequently sighed for the rest of heaven, for they did not love the strife in which they lived, but would have been glad to peacefully feed the flock of God on earth, and then to enter into rest. These men lived with God in holy boldness of believing prayer, or they could not have lived at all.
Luther’s faith laid hold upon the cross of our Lord, and would not be stirred from it. He believed in the forgiveness of sins, and could not afford to doubt it. He cast anchor upon Holy Scripture, and rejected all the inventions of clerics and all the traditions of the fathers. He was assured of the truth of the gospel, and never doubted that it would not prevail although earth and hell were leagued against it. When he came to die his old enemy assailed him fiercely, but when they asked him if he held the same faith his “Yes” was positive enough. They did not need to have asked him, they might have been sure of that. And now today the truth proclaimed by Luther continues to be preached, and will be until our Lord himself shall come. Then the holy city shall need no candle, neither light of the sun, because the Lord himself shall be the light of his people; but until then we must shine with gospel light to our utmost. Brethren, let us stand to it that as Luther lived by faith even so will we; and may God the Holy Spirit work in us more of that faith. Amen and Amen.
The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Series, Volume 29, Sermon 1749
Yesterday, four hundred years ago, there came into this wicked world the son of a miner, or refiner of metals, who was to do very much towards undermining the Papacy and refining the church. The name of that babe was Martin Luther: a hero and a saint. Blessed was that day above all the days of the century which it honoured, for it bestowed a blessing on all succeeding ages, through “the monk who shook the world.” His brave spirit overturned the tyranny of error which had held nations in bondage for so long. All human history since then has been more or less affected by the birth of that marvellous boy. He was not an absolutely perfect man, we neither endorse all that he said nor admire all that he did; but he was a man upon whose equal men’s eyes shall seldom rest, a mighty judge in Israel, a kingly servant of the Lord. We ought more often to pray to God to send us men — men of God, men of power. We should pray that, according to the Lord’s infinite goodness, his ascension gifts may be continued and multiplied for the perfecting of his church; for when he ascended up on high he led captives captive, and received gifts for men, and “he gave some, apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, pastors and teachers.” He continues to bestow these choice gifts according to the church’s necessity, and he would scatter them more plentifully, maybe, if our prayers more earnestly ascended to the Lord of the harvest to sent out labourers into his harvest. Even as we believe in the crucified Saviour for our personal salvation, we ought to believe in the ascended Saviour for the perpetual enriching of the church with confessors and evangelists who shall declare the truth of God.
I wish to take my little share in commemorating Luther’s birthday, and I think I can do no better than use the key of truth by which Luther unlocked the dungeons of the human mind, and set hearts in bondage at liberty. That golden key lies in the truth briefly contained in the text before us — “The just shall live by his faith.”
Are you not a little surprised to find such a clear gospel passage in Habakkuk; to discover in that ancient prophet an explicit statement which Paul can use as a ready argument against the opponents of justification by faith? It shows that the cardinal doctrine of the gospel is no newfangled notion; assuredly it is not a novel dogma invented by Luther, nor even a truth which was first taught by Paul. This fact has been established in all ages, and, therefore, here we find it among the ancient things, a lamp to cheer the darkness which hung over Israel before the coming of the Lord.
This also proves that there has been no change concerning the gospel. The gospel of Habakkuk is the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ. A clearer light was cast upon the truth by the giving of the Holy Spirit, but the way of salvation has been one and the same in all ages. No man has ever been saved by his good works. The way by which the just have lived has always been the way of faith. There has not been the slightest advance upon this truth; it is established and settled, for evermore the same, like the God who uttered it. At all times, and everywhere, the gospel is and must for ever be the same. “Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and today, and for ever.” We read of “the gospel” as of one; but never of two or three gospels, as of many. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but Christ’s word shall never pass away.
It is also noteworthy, not only that this truth should be so old, and should continue so unchanged, but that it should possess such vitality. This one sentence, “The just shall live by his faith,” produced the Reformation. Out of this one line, as from the opening of one of the Apocalyptic seals, came out all that sounding of gospel trumpets, and all that singing of gospel songs, which made in the world a sound like the noise of many waters. This one seed, forgotten and hidden away in the dark medieval times, was brought out, dropped into the human heart, made by the Spirit of God to grow, and in the end to produce great results. This handful of grain on the top of the mountains so multiplied that its fruit shook like Lebanon, and those of the city flourished like grass of the earth. The least bit of truth, thrown anywhere, will live! Certain plants are so full of vitality, that if you only take a fragment of a leaf and place it on the soil, the leaf will take root and grow. It is utterly impossible that such vegetation should become extinct; and so it is with the truth of God — it is living and incorruptible, and therefore there is no destroying it. As long as one Bible remains, the religion of free grace will live; indeed, if they could burn all printed Scriptures, as long as there remained a child who remembered a single text of the word, the truth would rise again. Even in the ashes of truth the fire is still living, and when the breath of the Lord blows on it, the flame will burst out gloriously. Because of this, let us be comforted in this day of blasphemy and of rebuke — comforted because though “the grass withers, and its flower falls away: but the word of the Lord endures for ever. And this is the word which by the gospel is preached to you.”
Let us now examine this text, which was the means of enlightening the heart of Luther, as I shall tell you eventually.
(1) I shall at the outset make a brief observation on it: A MAN WHO HAS FAITH IN GOD IS JUST. “The just shall live by his faith”; the man who possesses faith in God is a just man: his faith is his life as a just man.
He is “just” in the gospel sense, namely, that having the faith, which God prescribes as the way of salvation, he is by his faith justified in the sight of God. In the Old Testament we are told concerning Abraham that “he believed in the Lord; and he counted it to him for righteousness.” {Ge 15:1} This is the universal plan of justification. Faith lays hold upon the righteousness of God, by accepting God’s plan of justifying sinners through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ, and by this act she makes the sinner just. Faith accepts and appropriates for itself the whole system of divine righteousness which is unfolded in the person and work of the Lord Jesus. Faith rejoices to see him coming into the world in our nature, and in that nature obeying the law in every jot and tittle, though not himself under that law until he chose to put himself there on our behalf; faith is further pleased when she sees the Lord, who had come under the law, offering himself up as a perfect atonement, and making a complete vindication of divine justice by his sufferings and death. Faith lays hold upon the person, life, and death of the Lord Jesus as her only hope, and in the righteousness of Christ she arrays herself. She cries, “The chastisement of my peace was upon him, and by his stripes I am healed.” Now, the man who believes in God’s method of making men righteous through the righteousness of Jesus, and accepts Jesus and leans upon him, is a just man. He who makes the life and death of God’s great propitiation to be his sole reliance and confidence is justified in the sight of God, and is written down among the just by the Lord himself. His faith is imputed to him for righteousness, because his faith grasps the righteousness of God in Christ Jesus. “All who believe are justified from all things, from which you could not be justified by the law of Moses.” This is the testimony of the inspired word, and who shall contradict it?
But the believer is also just in another sense, which the outside world better appreciates, though it is not more valuable than the former. The man who believes in God becomes by that faith moved to everything that is right, and good, and true. His faith in God rectifies his mind, and makes him just. In judgment, in desire, in aspiration, in heart, he is just. His sin has been forgiven him freely, and now, in the hour of temptation, he cries, “How then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?” He believes in the bloodshedding which God has provided for the cleansing of sin, and, being washed in it, he cannot choose to defile himself again. The love of Christ constrains him to seek after what is true, and right, and good, and loving, and honourable in the sight of God. Having received by faith the privilege of adoption, he strives to live as a child of God. Having obtained by faith a new life, he walks in newness of life. “Immortal principles forbid the child of God to sin.” If any man lives in sin and loves it, he does not have the faith of God’s elect; for true faith purifies the soul. The faith which is created in us by the Holy Spirit is the greatest sin-killer under heaven. By the grace of God it affects the innermost heart, changes the desires and the affections, and makes the man a new creature in Christ Jesus. If there is on earth any who can truly be called just, they are those who are made so by faith in God through Jesus Christ our Lord. Indeed, no other men are “just” except those to whom the holy God gives the title, and of these the text says that they live by faith. Faith trusts God, and therefore loves him, and therefore obeys him, and therefore grows like him. It is the root of holiness, the spring of righteousness, the life of the just.
(2) Upon that observation, which is vital to the text, I dwell no longer, but advance to another which is the converse of it, namely, that A MAN WHO IS JUST HAS FAITH IN GOD. Otherwise, let me say, he would not be just; for God deserves faith, and he who robs him of it is not just.
God is so true that to doubt him is an injustice: he is so faithful that to doubt him is to wrong him — and he who does the Lord such an injustice is not a just man. A just man must first be just with the greatest of all beings. It would be idle for him to be just to his fellow creatures only; if he did a wilful injustice to God, I say he would be unworthy of the name of just. Faith is what the Lord justly deserves to receive from his creatures: it is his due that we believe in what he says, and especially in reference to the gospel. When the great love of God in Christ Jesus is plainly presented it will be believed by the pure in heart. If the great love of Christ in dying for us is fully understood it must be believed by every honest mind. To doubt the witness of God concerning his Son is to do the most grave injustice to infinite love. He who does not believe has rejected God’s witness to the unspeakable gift and put from him what deserves man’s adoring gratitude, since only it can satisfy the justice of God, and give peace to the conscience of man. A truly just man must, in order for the completeness of his justness, believe in God, and in all that he has revealed.
Some dream that this matter of justness only concerns the outer life, and does not touch man’s belief. I say this is not so; righteousness concerns the inner parts of a man, the central region of his manhood; and truly just men desire to be made clean in the secret parts, and they wish to know wisdom in the hidden parts. Is it not so? We hear it continually asserted that the understanding and the belief constitute a province exempt from the jurisdiction of God. Is it indeed true that I may believe what I like without being accountable to God for my belief? No, my brethren; no single part of our manhood is beyond the range of the divine law. Our whole capacity as men lies under the sovereignty of him who created us, and we are as much bound to believe properly as we are bound to act properly: in fact, our actions and our thinkings are so intertwined and entangled that there is no separating the one from the other. To say that the rightness of the outward life suffices is to go completely contrary to the whole tenor of the word of God. I am as much bound to serve God with my mind as with my heart. I am as much bound to believe what God reveals as I am to do what God commands. Errors of judgment are as truly sins as errors of life. It is a part of our allegiance to our great Sovereign and Lord that we yield up our understanding, our thought, and our belief to his supreme control. No man is right until he is a right believer. A just man must be just towards God by believing in God, and trusting him in all that he is, and says, and does.
I also do not see, my dear friends, what reason there can be for a man to be just towards his fellow men when he has given up his belief in God. If it comes to a pinch, and a man can deliver himself by a piece of dishonesty, why should he not be dishonest if there is no higher law than what his fellow men have made, no judgment seat, no Judge and no hereafter? A few weeks ago a man deliberately killed his employer, who had offended him, and when he gave himself up to the police, he said that he was not in the least degree afraid nor ashamed of what he had done. He admitted the murder, and acknowledged that he knew the consequences very well; he expected to suffer about half a minute’s pain on the gallows, and then there would be an end of him, and he was quite prepared for that. He spoke and acted in consistency with his belief or his non-belief; and truly every form of crime becomes logical and legitimate if you take away from man faith in God and the hereafter. That gone, break up your commonwealth; there is nothing to hold humanity together; for without a God the moral government of the universe has ceased, and anarchy is the natural state of things. If there is no God, and no judgment to come, let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die. If necessary, let us thieve, lie, and kill. Why not? if there is no law, no judgment, and no punishment for sin. I forget — nothing can be sinful; for if there is no lawgiver, there is no law; and if there is no law, then there can be no transgression. To what a chaos must all things come if faith in God is renounced. Where will the just be found when faith is banished? The logically just man is a believer in some measure or other; and he who is worthy to be called “just” in the scriptural sense, is a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, who is made our righteousness by God.
(3) But now I come to the point upon which I intend to dwell. Thirdly, BY THIS FAITH THE JUST MAN SHALL LIVE.
This is at the outset a narrow statement; it cuts off many pretended ways of living by saying, “The just shall live by faith.” This sentence savours of the strait gate which stands at the head of the way — the narrow way which leads into eternal life. At one blow this ends all claims of righteousness apart from one mode of life. The best men in the world can only live by faith, there is no other way of being just in the sight of God. We cannot live in righteousness by ourselves. If we are going to trust in ourselves, or anything that comes from ourselves, we are dead while we so trust; we have not known the life of God according to the teaching of Holy Writ. You must come right out from confidence in everything that you are or hope to be. You must tear off the leprous garment of legal righteousness, and part with self in any and every form. Self-reliance concerning the things of religion will be found to be self-destruction; you must rest in God as he is revealed in his Son Jesus Christ, and there alone. The just shall live by faith; but those who look to the works of the law are under the curse, and cannot live before God. The same is also true of those who endeavour to live by sense or feeling. They judge God by what they see: if he is bountiful to them in providence, he is a good God; if they are poor, they have nothing good to say about him, for they measure him by what they feel, and taste, and see. If God works steadily towards a purpose, and they can see his purpose, they commend his wisdom; but when they either cannot see the purpose, or cannot understand the way by which the Lord is working towards it, immediately they judge him to be unwise. Living by sense turns out to be a senseless mode of life, bringing death to all comfort and hope.
Judge not the Lord by feeble sense,
But trust him for his grace,
For only by such trust can a just man live.
The text also cuts off all idea of living by mere intellect. Too many say, “I am my own guide, I shall make doctrines for myself, and I shall mould and form them according to my own devices.” Such a way is death to the spirit. To be abreast of the times is to be an enemy to God. The way of life is to believe what God has taught, especially to believe in him whom God has presented to be a propitiation for sin; for that is making God to be everything and ourselves nothing. Resting on an infallible revelation, and trusting in an omnipotent Redeemer, we have rest and peace; but on the other unsettled principle we become wandering stars, for whom is appointed the blackness of darkness for ever. By faith the soul can live, in all other ways we have a name to live and are dead.
The same is equally true of imagination. We often find a fanciful religion in which people trust in impulses, in dreams, in noises, and mystical things which they imagine they have seen: fiddle-faddle all of it, and yet they are quite wrapped up in it. I pray that you may cast out this chaffy stuff, there is no food for the spirit in it. The life of my soul does not lie in what I think, or what I dream, or what I imagine, or what I enjoy of fine feeling, but only in what faith apprehends to be the word of God. We live before God by trusting a promise, depending on a person, accepting a sacrifice, wearing a righteousness, and surrendering ourselves up to God — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. Implicit trust in Jesus, our Lord, is the way of life, and every other way leads down to death. It is a narrowing statement, let those who call it intolerance say what they please; it will still be true when they have loathed it as much as it is now.
But, secondly, this is a very broad statement. Much is comprehended in the saying — “the just shall live by his faith.” It does not say what part of his life hangs on his believing, or what phase of his life best proves his believing: it comprehends the beginning, continuance, increase, and perfecting of spiritual life as being all by faith. Observe that the text means that the moment a man believes he begins to live in the sight of God: he trusts his God, he accepts God’s revelation of himself, he confides, reposes, leans upon his Saviour, and that moment he becomes a spiritually living man, quickened with spiritual life by God the Holy Spirit. All his existence before that belief was only a form of death: when he comes to trust in God he enters upon eternal life, and is born from above. Yes, but that is not all, nor half; for if that man is to continue living before God, if he is to hold on his way in holiness, his perseverance must be the result of continued faith. The faith which saves is not one single act done and ended on a certain day: it is an act continued and persevered in throughout the entire life of man. The just not only starts to live by his faith, but he continues to live by his faith: he does not begin in the spirit and end in the flesh, nor go so far by grace, and the rest of the way by the works of the law. “The just shall live by faith,” says the text in Hebrews, “but if any man draws back, my soul shall have no pleasure in him. But we are not of those who draw back to perdition; but of those who believe to the saving of the soul.” Faith is essential all along; every day and all the day, in all things. Our natural life begins by breathing, and it must be continued by breathing: what the breath is to the body, faith is to the soul.
Brethren, if we are to advance and increase in the divine life, it must still be in the same way. Our root is faith, and only through the root comes growth. Progress in grace does not come by carnal wisdom, or legal effort, or unbelief; indeed, the flesh brings no growth to the spiritual life, and efforts made in unbelief rather dwarf the inner life than cause it to grow. We become no stronger by mortifications, mournings, workings, or strivings, if these are apart from simple faith in God’s grace; for only by this one channel can nourishment come into the life of our spirit. The same door by which life came in at the first is that by which life continues to enter. If any man says to me, “I once lived by believing in Christ; but I have now become spiritual and sanctified, and therefore I have no longer any need to look as a sinner to the blood and righteousness of Christ”: I tell that man that he needs to learn the first principles of the faith. I warn him that he has drawn back from the faith; for he who is justified by the law, or in any other way besides the righteousness of Christ, has fallen from grace, and left the only foundation upon which a soul can be accepted with God. Indeed, up to heaven’s gate there is no staff for us to lean upon except faith in the ever-blessed Saviour and his divine atonement. Between this place and glory we shall never be able to live by merits, or live by imaginings, or live by intellect; we shall still have to be like children taught by God, as Israel in the desert depending wholly on the great Invisible One. It is ours for ever to look outside of self; and to look above all things that are seen; for “the just shall live by his faith.” It is a very broad sentence, a circle which encompasses our entire life which is worthy of the name. If there is any virtue, if there is any praise, if there is anything that is lovely or of good repute, we must receive it, exhibit it, and perfect it by the exercise of faith. Life in the Father’s house, life in the church, life in private, life in the world, must all be in the power of faith if we are righteous men. What is without faith is without life; dead works cannot gratify the living God; without faith it is impossible to please God.
I ask you to notice, in the third place, what a very unqualified statement it is. “The just shall live by his faith.” Then, if a man has only a little faith, he shall live; and if he is greatly just, he shall still live by faith. Many a just man has come no further than striving for holiness, but he is justified by his faith: his faith is trembling and struggling, and his frequent prayer is, “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief”; yet his faith has made him a just man. Sometimes he is afraid that he has no faith at all; and when he has deep depression of spirits, it is as much as he can do to keep his head above water; but even then his faith justifies him. He is like a barque upon a stormy sea: sometimes he is lifted up to heaven by flashing waves of mercy, and immediately he sinks into the abyss among billows of affliction. What, then, is he a dead man? I answer, Does that man truly believe God? Does he accept the record concerning the Son of God? Can he truly say, “I believe in the forgiveness of sins,” and with such faith as he has does he cling only to Christ and to no one else besides? Then that man shall live, he shall live by his faith. If the littleness of our faith could destroy us how few would be numbered with the living! “When the Son of man comes, shall he find faith on the earth?” Only here and there, and now and then, a Luther appears who really does believe with all his heart. Most of us are not so big as Luther’s little finger: we do not have so much faith in our whole souls as he had in one hair of his head: but yet even that little faith makes us live. I do not say that little faith will give us the strong, and vigorous, and lion-like life which Luther had; but we shall live. The statement makes no distinction between this and that degree of faith, but still lays it down as an unquestionable truth, “the just shall live by faith.” Blessed be God, then, I shall live, for I do believe in the Lord Jesus as my Saviour and my all. Do you not also believe in him?
Indeed, and is it not exceptional that this unqualified statement should not mention any other grace, as helping to make up the basis on which a just men lives? “The just shall live by his faith”: but does he not have love, does he not have zeal, does he not have patience, does he not have hope, does he not have humility, does he not have holiness? Oh, yes, he has all these, and he lives in them, but he does not live by them, because none of these so intimately connects him with Christ as his faith does. I will venture to use a very homely illustration, because it is the best I can think of. Here is a little child, a suckling. He has many necessary members, such as his eyes, his ears, his legs, his arms, his heart, and so forth, and all these are necessary for him; but the one organ by which the tiny babe lives is his mouth, by which he receives from his mother all his nourishment. Our faith is that mouth by which we receive fresh life from the promise of the ever-blessed God. So faith is what we live by. Other graces are necessary, but faith is the life of them all. We do not undervalue love, or patience, or penitence, or humility, any more than we depreciate the eyes or the feet of the babe. Still, the means of the life of the spiritual man is that mouth by which he receives divine food from the truth revealed by the Holy Spirit in sacred Scripture. Other graces produce results from what faith receives, but faith is the Receiver General for the whole isle of man.
This, dear friends, to proceed a little further, is a very suggestive statement, — “The just shall live by his faith”; because it has so many meanings. First, the righteous man is even to exist by his faith, that is to say, the lowest form of grace in a righteous character is dependent on faith. But, brother, I hope you will not be so foolish as to say, — “If I am only a living child of God, it is all I want”: no, we wish not only to have life, but also to have it more abundantly. See that man rescued from drowning he is still alive, but the only evidence of it is the fact that a mirror is somewhat bedewed by his breath: you would not be satisfied to be alive for years in that poor way, would you? You ought to be grateful if you are spiritually alive even in that feeble way; but still we do not want to remain in a swooning state, we wish to be active and vigorous. Yet even for that lowest life you must have faith. For the feeblest kind of spiritual existence that can be called life at all, faith is necessary. The just who barely live, who are feeble in mind, who are scarcely saved, are nevertheless delivered by faith. Without faith there is no heavenly life whatever.
Take the word “life” in a better sense, and the same will apply; “The just shall live by his faith.” We sometimes meet very poor people who say to us in a pitiful tone, “Our wages are dreadfully scant.” We say to them, “Do you really live upon so small a sum?” They answer, “Well, Sir, you can hardly call it living; but we exist somehow.” None of us would wish to live in that way if we could help it. We mean, then, by “life,” some measure of enjoyment, happiness, and satisfaction. The just, when they have comfort, and joy, and peace, have them by faith. Thank God, peace of heart is our normal state, because faith is an enduring grace. We sing for joy of heart and rejoice in the Lord, and blessed be the Lord this is no novelty to us; but we have known this bliss, and still know it by faith alone. The moment faith comes in, the music strikes up: if it were gone the owls would hoot. Luther can sing a psalm in spite of the devil; but he could not have done so if he had not been a man of faith. He could defy emperors, and kings, and popes, and bishops while he took firm hold upon the strength of God, but only then. Faith is the life of life, and makes life worth living. It puts joy into the soul to believe in the great Father and his everlasting love, and in the efficacious atonement of the Son, and in the indwelling of the Spirit, in resurrection, and eternal glory: without these we would be of all men most miserable. To believe these glorious truths is to live — “The just shall live by his faith.”
Life also means strength. We say of a certain man, “What life he has in him: he is full of life, he seems all alive.” Yes, the just obtain energy, force, vivacity, vigour, power, might, life — by faith. Faith bestows on believers a royal majesty. The more they can believe, the more mighty they become. This is the head that wears a crown; this is the hand that wields a sceptre; this is the foot whose royal tread shakes the nations; faith in God links us with the King, the Lord God Omnipotent.
By faith the just live on when others die. They are not overcome by prevalent sin, or fashionable heresy, or cruel persecution, or fierce affliction: nothing can kill spiritual life while faith remains — “The just shall live by faith.” Continuance and perseverance come this way. The righteous man when he is set back for a while is not baffled; and when he is wounded by enemies, he is not killed. Where another man is drowned, he swims; where another man is trampled underfoot, he rises and shouts victoriously, — “Do not rejoice over me, oh my enemy. If I fall, I shall still rise again!” In the fiery furnace of affliction he walks unharmed through faith. Indeed, and when his turn comes to die, and, with many tears his brethren carry his ashes to the tomb, “he being dead still speaks.” The blood of righteous Abel cried from the ground to the Lord, and it is still crying down through the ages, even to this hour. Luther’s voice through four hundred years still sounds in the ears of men, and quickens our pulses like the beat of the drum in martial music: he lives, he lives because he was a man of faith.
I would sum up and illustrate this teaching by mentioning certain incidents of Luther’s life. Upon the great Reformer gospel light broke by slow degrees. It was in the monastery that, while reading the pages of the old Bible that was chained to a pillar, he came upon this passage — “The just shall live by his faith.” This heavenly sentence stayed with him; but he hardly understood all its bearings. He could not, however, find peace in his religious profession and monastic habit. Knowing no better, he persevered in penances so many, and mortification’s so arduous, that sometimes he was found fainting through exhaustion. He brought himself to death’s door. He must make a journey to Rome, for in Rome there is a fresh church for every day, and you may be sure to win the pardon of sins and all kinds of benedictions in these holy shrines. He dreamed of entering a city of holiness; but he found it to be a haunt of hypocrites and a den of iniquity. To his horror he heard men say that if there was a hell Rome was built on the top of it, for it was the nearest approach to it that could be found in this world; but still he believed in its Pope and he went on with his penances, seeking rest, but finding none. One day he was climbing on his knees the Sancta Scala which still stands in Rome. I have stood amazed at the bottom of this staircase to see poor creatures go up and down on their knees in the belief that it is the very staircase that our Lord descended when he left Pilate’s house, and certain steps are said to be marked with drops of blood; these the poor souls kiss most devoutly. Well, Luther was crawling up these steps one day when that same text which he had read before in the monastery, sounded like a clap of thunder in his ears, “The just shall live by his faith.” He rose from his prostration, and went down the steps never to grovel upon them again. At that time the Lord accomplished in him a full deliverance from superstition, and he saw that not by priests, nor priestcraft, nor penances, nor by anything that he could do, was he to live, but that he must live by his faith. Our text of this morning had set the monk at liberty, and set his soul on fire.
No sooner did he believe this than he began to live in the sense of being active. A gentleman, named Tetzel, was going around all over Germany selling the forgiveness of sins for so much ready cash. No matter what your offence, as soon as your money touched the bottom of the box your sins were gone. Luther heard of this, grew indignant, and exclaimed, “I will beat a hole in his drum,” which assuredly he did, and in several other drums. The nailing up of his theses on the church-door was a sure way of silencing the indulgence music. Luther proclaimed pardon of sin by faith in Christ without money and without price, and the Pope’s indulgences were soon objects of derision. Luther lived by his faith, and therefore he who otherwise might have been quiet, denounced error as furiously as a lion roars upon his prey. The faith that was in him filled him with intense life, and he plunged into war with the enemy. After a while they summoned him to Augsburg, and to Augsburg he went, though his friends advised him not to go. They summoned him, as a heretic, to answer for himself at the Diet of Worms, and everyone told him to stay away, for he would be sure to be burned; but he felt it necessary that the testimony should be borne, and so in a wagon he went from village to village and town to town, preaching as he went, the poor people coming out to shake hands with the man who was standing up for Christ and the gospel at the risk of his life. You remember how he stood before that august assembly, and though he knew as far as human power went that his defence would cost him his life, for he would, probably, be committed to the flames like John Huss, yet he played the man for the Lord his God. That day in the German Diet Luther did a work for which ten thousand times ten thousand mothers’ children have blessed his name, and blessed even more the name of the Lord his God.
To put him out of harm’s way for a while a prudent friend took him prisoner, and kept him out of the strife in the castle of Wartburg. There he had a good time of it, resting, studying, translating, making music, and preparing himself for the future which was to be so eventful. He did all that a man can do who is outside of the fray; but “the just shall live by his faith,” and Luther could not be buried alive in ease, he must be getting on with his life-work. He sends word to his friends that he who was coming would soon be with them, and suddenly he appeared at Wittenburg. The prince meant to have kept him in retirement somewhat longer, but Luther must live; and when the Elector feared that he could not protect him, Luther wrote him, “I come under far higher protection than yours; indeed, I hold that I am more likely to protect your Grace than your Grace to protect me. He who has the strongest faith is the best Protector.” Luther had learned to be independent of all men, for he cast himself upon his God. He had all the world against him, and yet he lived very merrily: if the Pope excommunicated him he burned the papal bull; {edict} if the Emperor threatened him he rejoiced, because he remembered the word of the Lord, “The kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers take counsel together. He who sits in the heavens shall laugh.” When they said to him, “Where will you find shelter if the Elector does not protect you?” he answered, “Under the broad shield of God.”
Luther could not be still; he must speak, and write and thunder; and oh! with what confidence he spoke! Doubts about God and Scripture he abhorred. Melancthon says he was not dogmatic; I rather differ from Melancthon there, and consider Luther to be the chief of dogmatists. He called Melancthon the “soft treader,” and I wonder what we should have done if Luther had been Melancthon, and had trodden softly, too. The times needed a firmly assured leader, and faith made Luther all that for years, notwithstanding his many sorrows and infirmities. He was a Titan, a giant, a man of splendid mental calibre and strong physique; but still his main life and force lay in his faith. He suffered much in exercises of the mind and through diseases of body, and these might well have occasioned a display of weakness; but that weakness did not appear; for when he believed, he was as sure of what he believed as of his own existence, and hence he was strong. If every angel in heaven had passed before him and each one had assured him of the truth of God, he would not have thanked them for their testimony, for he believed God without the witness of either angels or men: he thought the word of divine testimony to be more sure than anything that seraphim could say.
This man was forced to live by his faith, for he was a man of stormy soul, and only faith could speak peace to him. Those stirring excitements of his brought on him afterwards fearful depressions of spirit, and then he needed faith in God. If you read a spiritual life of him you will find that it was hard work sometimes for him to keep his soul alive. Being a man of like passions with us, and full of imperfections, he was at times as desponding and despairing as the weakest among us; and the swelling grief within him threatened to burst his mighty heart. But both he and John Calvin frequently sighed for the rest of heaven, for they did not love the strife in which they lived, but would have been glad to peacefully feed the flock of God on earth, and then to enter into rest. These men lived with God in holy boldness of believing prayer, or they could not have lived at all.
Luther’s faith laid hold upon the cross of our Lord, and would not be stirred from it. He believed in the forgiveness of sins, and could not afford to doubt it. He cast anchor upon Holy Scripture, and rejected all the inventions of clerics and all the traditions of the fathers. He was assured of the truth of the gospel, and never doubted that it would not prevail although earth and hell were leagued against it. When he came to die his old enemy assailed him fiercely, but when they asked him if he held the same faith his “Yes” was positive enough. They did not need to have asked him, they might have been sure of that. And now today the truth proclaimed by Luther continues to be preached, and will be until our Lord himself shall come. Then the holy city shall need no candle, neither light of the sun, because the Lord himself shall be the light of his people; but until then we must shine with gospel light to our utmost. Brethren, let us stand to it that as Luther lived by faith even so will we; and may God the Holy Spirit work in us more of that faith. Amen and Amen.
The Metropolitan Tabernacle Pulpit Series, Volume 29, Sermon 1749