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GraciousCall.org - Bondage of the Will: Exordium
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EXORDIUM.
Sect. 28. - AT your
entrance, then, upon the disputation, you promise - 'that you will go according to the
Canonical Scriptures: and that, because Luther is swayed by the authority of no other
writer whatever' -
Very well! I receive your promise! But however, you do not make the
promise on this account, because you judge that these same writers are of no service to
your subject; but that you might not enter upon a field of labour in vain. For you do not,
I know, quite approve of this audacity of mine, or, by what other term soever you choose
to designate this my mode of discussion.
For you say - 'so great a number of the most learned men, approved by
the consent of so many ages, has no little weight with you. Among whom were, some of the
most extensively acquainted with the sacred writings, and also some of the most holy
martyrs, many renowned for miracles, together with the more recent theologians, and so
many colleges, councils, bishops, and popes: so that, in a word, on your side of the
balance are (you say) learning, genius, multitude, greatness, highness, fortitude,
sanctity, miracles, and what not! - But that, on my side, are only a Wycliffe and a
Laurentius Valla (although Augustine also, whom you pass by, is wholly on my side), who in
comparison with the others, are of no weight whatever; that Luther, therefore, stands
alone, a private individual, an upstart, with his followers, in whom there is neither that
learning nor that genius, nor multitude, nor magnitude, nor sanctity, nor miracles. 'For
they have not ability enough (you say) to cure a lame horse. They make a show of
Scripture, indeed; concerning which, however, they are as much in doubt as those on the
other side of the question. They boast of the Spirit also, which however, they never show
forth.' - And many other things, which, from the length of your tongue, you are able to
enumerate in great profusion. But these things have no effect upon us, for we say to you,
as the wolf did to the nightingale, which he devoured,
"You are Sound, and that's
all
!" - "They say (you observe,) and upon this only, they would have us
believe them."
I confess, my friend Erasmus, that you may well be swayed by all these.
These had such weight with me for upwards of ten years, that I think no other mortal was
ever so much under their sway. And I myself thought it incredible that this Troy of ours,
which had for so long a time, and through so many wars stood invincible, could ever be
taken. And I call God for a record upon my soul, that I should have continued so, and have
been under the same influence even unto this day, had not an urging conscience and an
evidence of things, forced me into a different path. And you may easily imagine that my
heart was not of stone; and that, if it had been of stone, it would at least have been
softened in struggling against so many tides, and being dashed to and fro by so many
waves, when I was daring that, which, if I accomplished, I saw that the whole authority of
those whom you have just enumerated, would be poured down upon my head like an
overwhelming flood.
But this is not a time for setting forth a history of my own life or
works; nor have I undertaken this discussion for the purpose of commending myself,
but that I might exalt the grace of God. What I am, and with what spirit
and design I have been led to these things, I leave to Him who knows, that all this is
carrying on according to his own Free-will, not according to mine: though even the world
itself ought to have found that out already. And certainly, by this Exordium of yours, you
throw me into a very offensive situation, out of which, unless I speak in favour of
myself, and to the disparagement of so many fathers, I shall not easily extricate myself.
But I will do it in a few words. - According to your own judgment of me, then, I stand
apart from all such learning, talents, multitude, authority, and every thing else of the
kind.
Now, if I were to demand of you these three things, What is the
Manifestation of the Spirit? What are Miracles? What is Sanctification? As far as I have
known you from your letters and books, you would appear so great a novice and ignoramus
that you would not be able to give three syllables of explanation. Or, if I should put it
to you closely, and demand of you, which one among all those of whom you boast, you could
to a certainty bring forth, either as being or having been a saint, or as having possessed
the Spirit, or as having wrought miracles, I apprehend you would have hot work of it, and
all in vain. You bring forth many things that have been handed about in common use and in
public sermons; but you do not credit, how much of their weight and authority they lose,
when they are brought to the judgment of conscience. There is an old proverb, "Many
were accounted saints on earth, whose souls are now in hell!"
Sect. 29. - BUT we will
grant you, if you please 'that they were all saints, that they all had the Spirit, that
they all wrought miracles' (which, however, you do not require.) But tell me this - was
any one of them made a saint, did any one of them receive the Spirit or work miracles, in
the name, or by virtue of "Free-will," or to confirm the doctrine of
"Free-will"? Far be such a thought (you will say,) but in the name, and by
virtue of Jesus Christ, and for the confirmation of the doctrine of Christ, all these
things were done. Why then do you bring forward the sanctity, the spirit, 'and the
miracles of these, in confirmation of the doctrine of "Free-will,"' for which
they were not wrought and given?
Their miracles, Spirit, and sanctity, therefore, belong to us who
preach Jesus Christ, and not the ability and works of men. And now, what wonder if those
who were thus holy, spiritual, and wonderful for miracles, were sometimes under the
influence of the flesh, and spoke and wrought according to the flesh; since that happened,
not once only, to the very apostles under Christ Himself. For you do not deny, but assert,
that "Free-will" does not belong to the Spirit, or to Christ, but is human; so
that, the Spirit who is promised to glorify Christ, cannot preach "Free will."
If, therefore, the fathers have at any time preached "Free-will," they have
certainly spoken from the flesh, (seeing they were men,) not from the Spirit of God; much
less did they work miracles for its confirmation. Wherefore, your allegation concerning
the sanctity, the Spirit, and the miracles of the fathers is nothing to the purpose,
because "Free-will " is not proved thereby, but the doctrine of Jesus Christ
against the doctrine of "Free-will."
But come, shew forth still, you that are on the side of
"Free-will," and assert that a doctrine of this kind is true, that is, that it
proceeds from the Spirit of God - shew forth still, I say, the Spirit, still work
miracles, still evidence sanctity. Certainly you who make the assertion owe this to us,
who deny these things. The Spirit, sanctity, and miracles ought not to be demanded of us
who maintain the negative, but from you who assert in the affirmative. The negative
proposes nothing, is nothing, and is bound to prove nothing, nor ought to be proved: it is
the affirmative that ought to be proved. You assert the power of "Free-will" and
the human cause: but no miracle was ever seen or heard of, as proceeding from God, in
support of a doctrine of the human cause, only in support of the doctrines of the divine
cause. And we are commanded to receive no doctrine whatever, that
is not first proved by signs from on high. (Deut. xviii. 15-22.) Nay, the Scripture calls
man "vanity," and "a lie:" which is nothing less than saying, that all
human things are vanities and lies. Come forward then! come forward! I say, and prove,
that your doctrine, proceeding from human vanity and a lie, is true. Where is now your
shewing forth the Spirit! Where is your sanctity! Where are your miracles! I see your
talents, your erudition, and your authority; but those things God has given alike unto all
the world!
But however, we will not compel you to work great miracles, nor
"to cure a lame horse," lest you should plead, as an excuse, the carnality of
the age. Although God is wont to confirm His doctrines by miracles, without any respect to
the carnality of the age: nor is He at all moved, either by the merits or demerits of a
carnal age, but by pure mercy and grace, and a love of souls which are to be confirmed, by
solid truth, unto their glory. But we give you the choice of working any miracles, as
small an one as you please.
But come! I, in order to irritate your Baal into action, insult, and
challenge you to create even one frog, in the name, and by virtue of
"Free-will;" of which, the Gentile and impious Magi in Egypt, could create many.
I will not put you to the task of creating lice; which, neither could they produce. But I
will descend a little lower yet. Take even one flea, or louse, (for you tempt and deride
our God by your 'curing of the lame horse,') and if, after you have combined all the
powers, and concentrated all the efforts both of your god and your advocates, you can, in
the name and by virtue of "Free-will," kill it, you shall
be victors; your cause shall be established; and we also will immediately come over and
adore that god of yours, that wonderful killer of the louse. Not that I deny, that you
could even remove mountains; but it is one thing to say, that a certain thing was done by
"Free-will," and another to prove it.
And, what I have said concerning miracles, I say also concerning
sanctity. - If you can, out of such a series of ages, men, and all the things which you
have mentioned, shew forth one work, (if it be but the lifting a straw from the earth,) or
one word, (if it be but the syllable MY,) or
one thought of "Free-will," (if it be but the faintest sigh,) by which men
applied themselves unto grace, or by which they have merited the Spirit, or by which they
have obtained pardon, or by which they have prevailed with God even in the smallest
degree, (I say nothing about being sanctified thereby,) again, I say, you shall be
victors, and we vanquished; and that, as I repeat, in the name and by virtue of
"Free-will."
For what things soever are wrought in men by the power of divine
creation, are supported by Scripture testimonies in abundance. And certainly, you ought to
produce the same: unless you would appear such ridiculous teachers, as to spread abroad
throughout the world, with so much arrogance and authority, doctrines concerning that, of
which you cannot produce one proof. For such doctrines will be called mere dreams, which
are followed by nothing: than which, nothing can be more disgraceful to men of so many
ages, so great, so learned, so holy, and so miraculous! And if this be the case, we shall
rank even the stoics before you: for although they took upon them
to describe such a wise man as they never saw, yet they did attempt to set forth some part
of the character. But you cannot set forth any thing whatever, not even the shadow of your
doctrine.
The same also I observe concerning the Spirit. If you can produce one
out of all the assertors of "Free-will," who ever had a strength of mind and
affection, even in the smallest degree, so as, in the name and by virtue of
"Free-will," to be able to disregard one farthing, or to be willing to be
without one farthing, or to bear one word or sign of injury, (I do not speak of the
stoical contempt of riches, life, and fame,) again, the palm of victory shall be yours,
and we, as the vanquished, will willingly pass under the spear. And these proofs you, who
with such trumpeting mouths sound forth the power of "Free-will," are bound to
produce before us. Or else, again, you will appear to be striving to give establishment to
a nothing: or to be acting like him, who sat to see a play in an empty theatre.
Sect. 30. - BUT I will
easily prove to you the contrary of all this:- that such holy men as you boast of,
whenever they approach God, either to pray or to do, approach Him, utterly forgetful of
their own "Free-will" and despairing of themselves, crying unto Him for pure
grace only, feeling at the same time that they deserve everything that is the contrary. In
this state was Augustine often; and in the same state was Bernard, when, at the point of
death, he said, "I have lost my time, because I have lived wrong." I do not see,
here, that there was any power spoken of which could apply itself unto Grace, but that all
power was condemned as being only averse; although those same saints, at the time when
they disputed concerning "Free-will," spoke otherwise. And the same I see has
happened unto all, that, when they are engaged in words and disputations, they are one
thing; but another, when they come to experience and practice. In the former, they speak
differently from what they felt before; in the latter, they feel differently from what
they spoke before. But men, good as well as bad, are to be judged of, more from what they
feel, than from what they say.
But we will indulge you still further. We will not require miracles,
the Spirit, and sanctity. We return to the doctrine itself. We only require this of you:-
that you would at least explain to us, what work, what word, what thought, that power of
"Free-will" can move, attempt, or perform, in order to apply itself unto grace.
For it is not enough to say, there is! there is! there is a certain power of
"Free-will!" For what is more easily said than this? Nor does such a way of
proceeding become men the most learned, and the most holy, who have been approved by so
many ages, but must be called baby-like (as we say in a German proverb.) It must be
defined, what that power is, what it can do, in what it is passive, and what takes place.
To give you an example (for I shall press you most homely) this is what is required:-
Whether that power must pray, or fast, or labour, or chastise the body, or give alms; or
what other work of this kind it must do, or attempt. For if it be a power it must do some
kind of work. But here you are more dumb than Seriphian frogs and fishes. And how should
you give the definition, when, according to your own testimony, you are at an uncertainty
about the power itself, at difference among each other, and inconsistent with yourselves?
And what must become of the definition, when the thing to be defined has no consistency in
itself?
But be it so, that since the time of Plato, you are at length agreed
among yourselves concerning the power itself; and that its work may be defined to be
praying, or fasting, or something of the same kind, which perhaps, still lies undiscovered
in the ideas of Plato. Who shall certify us that such is truth, that it pleases God, and
that we are doing right, in safety? Especially when you yourselves assert that there is a
human cause which has not the testimony of the Spirit, because of its having been handled
by philosophers, and having existed in the world before Christ came, and before the Spirit
was sent down from heaven. It is most certain, then, that this doctrine was not sent down
from heaven with the Spirit, but sprung from the earth long before: and therefore, there
is need of weighty testimony, whereby it may be confirmed to be true and sure.
We will grant, therefore, that we are private individuals and few, and
you public characters and many; we ignorant, and you the most learned: we stupid, and you
the most acute: we creatures of yesterday, and you older than Deucalion; we never
received, and you approved by so many ages; in a word, we sinners, carnal, and dolts, and
you awe-striking to the very devils for your sanctity, spirit, and miracles. - Yet allow
us the right at least of Turks and Jews, to ask of you that reason for your doctrine,
which your favourite Peter has commanded you to give. We ask it of you in the most modest
way: that is, we do not require it to be proved by sanctity, by the Spirit, and by
miracles, (which however, we could do in our own right, seeing that you yourselves require
that of others): nay, we even indulge you so far, as not to require you to produce any
example of a work, a word, or a thought, in confirmation of your doctrine but only to
explain to us the doctrine itself, and merely to tell us plainly, what you would have to
be understood by it, and what the form of it is. If you will not, or cannot do this, then
let us at least attempt to set forth an example of it ourselves. For you are as bad as the
Pope himself, and his followers, who say, "You are to do as we
say,
but not to
do, as we
do.
" In the same manner you say, that that power requires a work to
be done: and so, we shall be set on to work, while you remain at your ease. But will you
not grant us this, that the more you are in numbers, the longer you are in standing, the
greater you are, the farther you are on all accounts superior to us, the more disgraceful
it is to you, that we, who in every respect are as nothing in your eyes, should desire to
learn and practice your doctrine, and that you should not be able to prove it, either by
any miracle, or by the killing of a louse, or by any the least motion of the Spirit, or by
any the least work of sanctity, nor even to bring forth any example of it, either in work
or word? And further, (a thing unheard of before) that you should not be able to tell us
plainly of what form the doctrine is, and how it is to be understood? - O excellent
teachers of "Free-will!" What are
you,
now, but
"Sound
only!"
Who now, Erasmus, are they who "boast of the Spirit but shew it not
forth?" Who "say only, and then wish men to believe them?" Are not your
friends they, who are thus extolled to the skies, and who can say nothing, and yet, boast
of, and exact such great things?
We entreat, therefore, you and yours, my friend Erasmus, that you will
allow us to stand aloof and tremble with fear, alarmed at the peril of our conscience; or,
at least, to wave our assenting to a doctrine, which, as you yourself see, even though you
should succeed to the utmost, and all your arguments should be proved and established, is
nothing but an empty term, and a sounding of these syllables - 'There is a power of
"Free-will!"' - There is a power of "Free-will!" - Moreover, it still
remains an uncertainty among your own friends themselves, whether it be
a term
even,
or
not
: for they differ from each other, and are inconsistent with themselves. It
is most iniquitous, therefore, nay, the greatest of miseries, that our consciences, which
Christ has redeemed by His blood, should be tormented by the ghost of one term, and that,
a term which has no certainty in it. And yet, if we should not suffer ourselves to be thus
tormented, we should be held as guilty of unheard-of pride, for disregarding so many
fathers of so many ages, who have asserted "Free-will." Whereas, the truth is,
as you see from what has been said, they never defined any thing what ever concerning
"Free-will": but the doctrine of "Free-will" is erected under the
covering, and upon the basis of their name: of which, nevertheless, they can shew no form,
and for which, they can fix no term: and thus they delude the world with a term, that is a
lie!
Sect. 31. - AND here,
Erasmus, I call to your remembrance your own advice. You just now advised - 'that
questions of this kind be omitted; and that, Christ crucified be rather taught, and those
things which suffice unto Christian piety' - but this, we are now seeking after and doing.
What are we contending for, but that the simplicity and purity of the Christian doctrine
should prevail, and that those things should be left and disregarded, which have been
invented, and introduced with it, by men? But you who give this advice, do not act
according to it yourself: nay you act contrary to it: you write Diatribes: you exalt the
decrees of the Popes: you honour the authority of man: and you try all means to draw us
aside into these strange things and contrary to the Holy Scriptures: but you consider not
the things that are necessary, how that, by so doing we should corrupt the simplicity and
sincerity of the Scriptures, and confound them with the added inventions of men. From
which, we plainly discover, that you did not give us that advice, from your heart; and
that you write nothing seriously, but take it for granted that you can, by the empty bulls
of your words, turn the world as you please. Whereas you turn them no where: for you say
nothing whatever but mere contradictions, in all things, and every where. So that he would
be most correct, who should call you, the very Proteus himself, or Vertumnus: or should
say with Christ, 'Physician, heal thyself.' - 'The teacher, whose own faults his ignorance
prove, has need to hide his head!' -
Until, therefore, you shall have proved your affirmative, we stand fast
in our negative. And in the judgment, even of all that company of saints of whom you
boast, or rather, of the whole world, we dare to say, and we glory in saying, that it is
our duty not to admit that which is nothing, and which cannot, to a certainty, be proved
what it is. And you must all be possessed of incredible presumption or of madness, to
demand that to be admitted by us, for no other reason, than because you, as being many,
great, and of long standing, choose to assert that, which you yourselves acknowledge to be
nothing. As though it were a conduct becoming Christian teachers, to mock the miserable
people, in things pertaining to godliness, with that which is nothing, as if it were a
matter that essentially concerned their salvation. Where is that former acumen of the
Grecian talent, which heretofore, at least covered lies under some elegant semblage of
truth - it now lies in open and naked words! Where is that former dexterously laboured
Latinity - it now thus deceives, and is deceived, by one most empty
term
!
But thus it happens to the senseless, or the malicious readers, of
books: all those things which were the infirmities of the fathers or of the saints, they
make to be of the highest authority: the fault, therefore, is not in the authors, but in
the readers. It is as though one relying on the holiness and the authority of St. Peter,
should contend that all that St. Peter ever said was true: and should even attempt to
persuade us that it was truth, when, (Matt. xvi. 22.) from the infirmity of the flesh, he
advised Christ not to suffer. Or that: where he commanded Christ to depart from him out of
the ship. (Luke v. 8.) And many other of those things, for which he was rebuked of Christ.
Men of this sort are like unto them, who, for the sake of ridicule,
idly say, that all things that are in the Gospel are not true. And they catch hold of
that, (John viii. 48.): where the Jews say unto Christ, "Do we not say well that thou
art a Samaritan, and hast a devil?" Or that: "He is guilty of death." Or
that: "We found this fellow perverting our nation, and forbidding to give tribute to
Caesar." These, do the same thing as those assertors of "Free-will," but
for a different end, and not willfully, but from blindness and ignorance; for they, so
catch at that which the fathers, falling by the infirmity of the flesh, have said in
favour of "Free-will," that they even oppose it to that which the same fathers
have elsewhere, in the power of the Spirit, said against "Free-will": nay, they
so urge and force it, that the better is made to give way to the worse. Hence it comes to
pass, that they give authority to the worse expressions, because they fall in with their
fleshly mind; and take it from the better, because they make against their fleshly mind.
But why do we not rather select the better? For there are many such in
the fathers. - To produce an example. What can be more carnally, nay, what more impiously,
sacrilegiously, and blasphemously spoken, than that which Jerome is wont to say -
'Virginity peoples heaven, and marriage, the earth.' As though the earth, and not heaven,
was intended for the patriarchs, the apostles, and Christian husbands. Or, as though
heaven was designed for gentile vestal virgins, who are without Christ. And yet, these
things and others of the same kind, the Sophists collect out of the fathers that they may
procure unto them authority, carrying all things more by numbers than by judgment. As that
disgusting carpenter of Constance did, who lately made that jewel of his, the Stable of
Augeas, a present to the public, that there might be a something to cause nausea and vomit
in the pious and the learned.
Sect. 32. - AND now,
while I am making these observations, I will reply to that remark of yours, where you say
- 'that it is not to be believed, that God would overlook an error in His Church for so
many ages, and not reveal to any one of His saints that, which we contend for as being the
grand essential of the Christian doctrine' -
In the first place, we do not say that this error was overlooked of God
in His Church, or in any one of His Saints. For the Church is ruled by the Spirit of God,
and the Saints are led by the Spirit of God. (Rom. viii. 14.) And Christ is with His
Church even unto the end of the world. (Matt. xxviii. 20.) And the Church is the pillar
and ground of the truth. (I Tim. iii. 15.) These things, I say, we know; for the Creed
which we all hold runs thus, "I believe in the holy Catholic Church;' so that, it is
impossible that she can err even in the least article. And even if we should grant, that
some of the Elect are held in error through the whole of their life; yet they must, of
necessity, return into the way of truth before their death; for Christ says, (John x. 28,)
"No one shall pluck them out of My hand." But this is the labour, this the point
- whether it can be proved to a certainty, that those, whom you call the church, were the
Church; or, rather, whether, having been in error throughout their whole life, they were
at last brought back before death. For this will not easily be proved, if God suffered all
those most learned men whom you adduce, to remain in error through so long a series of
ages - Therefore, God suffered His Church to be in error.
But, look at the people of Israel: where, during so many kings and so
long a time, not one king is mentioned who never was in error. And under Elijah the
Prophet, all the people and every thing that was public among them, had so gone away into
idolatry, that he thought that he himself was the only one left: whereas, while the kings,
the princes, the prophets, and whatever could be called the people or the Church of God
was going to destruction, God was reserving to Himself "seven thousand." (Rom.
xi. 4.) But who could see these or know them to be the people of God? And who, even now,
dares to deny that God, under all these great men, (for you make mention of none but men
in some high office, or of some great name,) was reserving to Himself a Church among the
commonalty, and suffering all those to perish after the example of the kingdom of Israel?
For it is peculiar to God, to restrain the elect of Israel, and to slay their fat ones:
but, to preserve the refuse and remnant of Israel, (Ps. lxxviii. 31.; Isaiah i. 9., x.
20-22., xi. 11-16.)
What happened under Christ Himself, when all the Apostles were offended
at Him, when He was denied and condemned by all the people, and there were only a Joseph,
a Nicodemus, and a thief upon the cross preserved? Were
they
then said to be the
people of God? There was, indeed, a people of God remaining, but it was not called the
people of God; and that which was so called, was not the people of God. And who knows who are the people of God, when
throughout the whole world, from its origin, the state of the church was always such, that
those were called the people and saints of God who were not so while others among them,
who were as a refuse, and were not called the people and saints of God, were the People
and Saints of God? as is manifest in the histories of Cain and Abel, of Ishmael and Isaac,
of Esau and Jacob.
Look again at the age of the Arians, when scarcely five catholic
bishops were preserved throughout the whole world, and they, driven from their places,
while the Arians reigned, every where bearing the public name and office of the church.
Nevertheless, under these heretics, Christ preserved His Church: but so, that it was the
least thought or considered to be the Church.
Again, shew me, under the kingdom of the Pope, one bishop discharging
his office. Shew me one council in which their transactions were, concerning the things
pertaining to godliness, and not rather, concerning gowns, dignities, revenues, and other
baubles, which they could not say, without being mad, pertained to the Holy Spirit.
Nevertheless they are called the church, when all, at least who live as they do, must be
reprobates and any thing but the church. And yet, even under them Christ preserved His
Church, though it was not called the Church. How many Saints must you imagine those of the
inquisition have, for some ages, burnt and killed, as John Huss and others, in whose time,
no doubt, there lived many holy men of the same spirit!
Why do you not rather wonder at this, Erasmus, that there ever were,
from the beginning of the world, more distinguished talents, greater erudition, more
ardent pursuit among the world in general than among Christians or the people of God? As
Christ Himself declares, "The children of this world are wiser than the children of
light." (Luke xvi. 8.) What Christian can be compared (to say nothing of the Greeks)
with Cicero alone for talents, for erudition, or for indefatigability? What shall we say,
then, was the preventive cause that no one of them was able to attain unto grace, who
certainly exerted "Free-will" with its utmost powers? Who dares say, that there
was no one among them who contended for truth with all his efforts? And yet we must affirm
that no one of them all attained unto it. Will you here too say, it is not to be believed,
that God would utterly leave so many great men, throughout such a series of ages, and
permit them to labour in vain? Certainly, if "Free-will" were any thing, or
could do any thing, it must have appeared and wrought something in those men, at least in
some one instance. But it availed nothing, nay it always wrought in the contrary
direction. Hence by this argument only, it may be sufficiently proved, that
"Free-will" is nothing at all, since no proof of it can be produced even from
the beginning of the world to the end!
Sect. 33. - BUT to return
- What wonder, if God should leave all the elders of the church to go their own ways, who
thus permitted all the nations to go
their
own ways, as Paul saith, Acts xiv. 16;
xvii. 30? - But, my friend Erasmus, THE CHURCH OF GOD INDEED, IS NOT SO COMMON A THING AS THIS TERM, CHURCH OF GOD: NOR ARE THE SAINTS OF GOD INDEED, EVERY WHERE TO BE
FOUND LIKE THE TERM, SAINTS OF GOD. THEY ARE
PEARLS AND PRECIOUS JEWELS, WHICH THE SPIRIT DOES NOT CAST BEFORE
SWINE; BUT WHICH, (AS THE SCRIPTURE EXPRESSES IT,) HE KEEPS HIDDEN, THAT THE WICKED SEE
NOT THE GLORY OF GOD! Otherwise, if they were openly known
of all, how could it come to pass that they should be thus vexed and afflicted in the
world? As Paul saith, (I Cor. ii. 8.) "Had they known Him, they would not have
crucified the Lord of glory."
I do not say these things, because I deny that those whom you mention are the saints
and church of God; but because it cannot be proved, if any one should deny
it, that they really are saints, but must be left quite in uncertainty; and because,
therefore, the position deduced from their holiness, is not sufficiently credible for the
confirmation of my doctrine. I call them saints, and look upon them as such: I call them the church, and look upon them as such - according to the law of
Charity, but not according to the law of Faith. That is, charity, which always thinks the
best of every one, and suspects not, but believeth and presumes all things for good
concerning its neighbour, calls every one who is baptized, a saint. Nor is there any peril
if she err, for charity is liable to err; seeing that she is exposed to all the uses and
abuses of all; an universal handmaid, to the good and to the evil, to the believing and to
the unbelieving, to the true and to the false. - But faith, calls no one a saint but him
who is declared to be so by the judgment of God, for faith is not liable to be deceived.
Therefore, although we ought all to be looked upon as saints by each other by the law of
charity, yet no one ought to be decreed a saint by the law of faith, so as to make it an
article of faith that such or such an one is a Saint. For in this way, that adversary of
God, the Pope, canonized his minions whom he knows not to be saints, setting himself in
the place of God. (2 Thess. ii. 4.)
All that I say concerning those saints of yours, or rather, ours, is
this:- that since they have spoken differently from each other, those should rather be
selected who have spoken the best: that is, who have spoken in defense of Grace, and
against "Free-will": and those left, who, through the infirmity of the flesh,
have borne witness of the flesh rather than of the Spirit. And also, that those who are
inconsistent with themselves, should be selected and caught at, in those parts of their
writings where they speak from the Spirit, and left, where they savour of the flesh. This
is what becomes a Christian reader, and a 'clean beast dividing the hoof and chewing the
cud.' (Lev. xi. 3., Deut. xiv. 6.) Whereas now, laying aside judgment, we swallow down all
things together, or, what is worse, by a perversion of judgment, we cast away the best and
receive the worst, out of the same authors; and moreover, affix to those worst parts, the
title and authority of their sanctity; which sanctity, they obtained, not on account of
"Free-will" or the flesh, but on account of the best things, even of the Spirit
only.
Sect. 34. - BUT as you say - "what therefore shall we do?
The Church is hidden, the Saints are unknown! What, and whom shall we believe? Or, as you
most sharply dispute, who will certify us? How shall we search out the Spirit? If we look
to erudition, all are rabbins ! If we look to life, all are sinners! If we look to the
Scripture, they each claim it as belonging to them! But however, our discussion is not so
much concerning the Scripture (which is not itself sufficiently clear,) but concerning the
sense of the Scripture. And though there are men of every order at hand, yet, as neither
numbers, nor erudition, nor dignity, is of any service to the subject, much less can
paucity, ignorance, and mean rank avail any thing." -
Well then! I suppose the matter must be left in doubt, and the point of dispute remain
before the judge so that, we should seem to act with policy if we should go over to the
sentiments of the Sceptics. Unless, indeed, we were to act as you wisely do, for you
pretend that you are so much in doubt, that you professedly desire to seek and learn the
truth; while, at the same time, you cleave to those who assert "Freewill," until
the truth be made glaringly manifest.
But no! I here in reply to you observe, that you neither say all, nor nothing. For we
shall not search out the Spirit by the arguments of erudition, of life, of talent, of
multitude, of dignity, of ignorance, of inexperience, of paucity, or of meanness of rank.
And yet, I do not approve of those, whose whole resource is in a boasting of the Spirit.
For I had the last year, and have still, a sharp warfare with those fanatics who subject
the Scriptures to the interpretation of their own boasted spirit. On the same account
also, I have hitherto determinately set myself against the Pope, in whose kingdom, nothing
is more common, or more generally received than this saying: - 'that the Scriptures are
obscure and ambiguous, and that the Spirit, as the Interpreter, should be sought from the
apostolical see of Rome!' than which, nothing could be said that was more destructive; for
by means of this saying, a set of impious men have exalted themselves above the Scriptures
themselves; and by the same, have done whatever pleased them; till at length, the
Scriptures are absolutely trodden under foot, and we compelled to believe and teach
nothing but the dreams of men that are mad. In a word, that saying is no human invention,
but a poison poured forth into the world by a wonderful malice of the devil himself, the
prince of all demons.
We hold the case thus: - that the spirits are to be tried and proved by a twofold
judgment. The one, internal; by which, through the Holy Spirit, or a peculiar gift of God,
any one may illustrate, and to a certainty, judge of, and determine on, the doctrines and
sentiments of all men, for himself and his own personal salvation concerning which it is
said. (1 Cor. ii. 15.) "The spiritual man judgeth all things, but he himself is
judged of no man." This belongs to faith, and is necessary for every, even private,
Christian. This, we have above called, 'the internal clearness of the Holy Scripture.' And
it was this perhaps to which
they
alluded, who, in answer to you said, that all
things must be determined by the judgment of the Spirit. But this judgment cannot profit
another, nor are we speaking of this judgment in our present discussion; for no one, I
think, doubts its reality.
The other, then, is the external judgment; by which, we judge, to the greatest
certainty, of the spirits and doctrines of all men; not for ourselves only, but for others
also, and for their salvation. This judgment is peculiar to the public ministry of the
Word and the external office, and especially belongs to teachers and preachers of the
Word. Of this we make use, when we strengthen the weak in faith, and when we refute
adversaries. This is what we before called, 'the external clearness of the Holy
Scripture.' Hence we affirm that all spirits are to be proved in the face of the church,
by the judgment of Scripture. For this ought, above all things, to be received, and most
firmly settled among Christians: - that the Holy Scriptures are a spiritual light by far
more clear than the sun itself, especially in those things which pertain unto salvation or
necessity.
Sect. 35. - BUT, since we have been persuaded to the contrary of
this, by that pestilent saying of the Sophists, 'the Scriptures are obscure and
ambiguous;' we are compelled, first of all, to prove that first grand principle of ours,
by which all other things are to be proved: which, among the Sophists, is considered
absurd and impossible to be done.
First then, Moses saith, (Deut. xvii. 8.) that, 'if there arise a matter too hard in
judgment, men are to go to the place which God shall choose for His name, and there to
consult the priests, who are to judge of it according to the law of the Lord.'
He saith, "according to the law of the Lord" - but how will they judge thus,
if the law of the Lord be not externally most clear, so as to satisfy them concerning it?
Otherwise, it would have been sufficient, if he had said, according to their own spirit.
Nay, it is so in every government of the people, the causes of all are adjusted according
to laws. But how could they be adjusted, if the laws were not most certain, and
absolutely, very lights to the people? But if the laws were ambiguous and uncertain, there
would not only be no causes settled, but no certain consistency of manners. Since,
therefore, laws are enacted that manners may be regulated according to a certain form, and
questions in causes settled, it is necessary that that, which is to be the rule and
standard for men in their dealings with each other, as the law is, should of all things be
the most certain and most clear. And if that light and certainty in laws, in profane
administrations where temporal things only are concerned, are necessary, and have been, by
the goodness of God, freely granted to the whole world; how shall He not have given to
Christians, that is to His own Elect, laws and rules of much greater light and certainty,
according to which they might adjust and settle both themselves and all their causes? And
that more especially, since He wills that all temporal things should, by
His,
be
despised. And "if God so clothe the grass of the field, which to-day is, and
to-morrow is cast into the oven," how much more shall He clothe us? (Matt. vi. 30) -
But, let us proceed, and drown that pestilent saying of the Sophists, in Scriptures.
Psalm xix. 8, saith, "The commandment of the Lord is clear (or pure), enlightening
the eyes." And surely, that which enlightens the eyes, cannot be obscure or
ambiguous!
Again, Psalm cxix. 130, "The door of thy words giveth light; it giveth
understanding to the simple." Here, it is ascribed unto the words of God, that they
are a door, and something open, which is quite plain to all and enlightens even the
simple.
Isaiah viii. 20, sends all questions "to the law and to the testimony;" and
threatens that if we do not this, the light of the east shall be denied us.
In Malachi, ii. 7, commands, 'that they should seek the law from the mouth of the
priest, as being the messenger of the Lord of Hosts.' But a most excellent messenger
indeed of the Lord of Hosts he must be, who should bring forth those things, which were
both so ambiguous to himself and so obscure to the people, that neither he should know
what he himself said, nor they what they heard!
And what, throughout the Old Testament, in the 119th Psalm especially, is more
frequently said in praise of the Scripture, than that, it is itself a most certain and
most clear light? For Ps. cxix. 105, celebrates its clearness thus: "Thy word is a
lamp unto my feet and a light unto my paths." He does not say only - thy Spirit is a
lamp unto my feet; though he ascribes unto Him also His office, saying, "Thy good
Spirit shall lead me into the land of uprightness." (Ps. cxliii. 10.) Thus the
Scripture is called a "way" and a "path:" that is from its most
perfect certainty.
Sect. 36. NOW let us come to the New Testament. Paul saith,
(Rom. i. 2,) that the Gospel was promised "by the Prophets in the Holy
Scriptures." And, (Rom. iii. 21,) that the righteousness of faith was testified
"by the law and the Prophets." But what testimony is that, if it be obscure?
Paul, however, throughout all his epistles makes the Gospel, the word of light, the Gospel
of clearness; and he professedly and most copiously sets it forth as being so, 2 Cor. iii.
and iv.; where he treats most gloriously concerning the clearness both of Moses and of
Christ.
Peter also saith, (2 Pet. i. 19,) "And we certainly have more surely the word of
prophecy; unto which, ye do well that ye take heed, as unto a light shining in a dark
place." Here Peter makes the Word of God a clear lamp, and all other things darkness:
whereas, we make obscurity and darkness of the Word.
Christ also often calls Himself, the "light of the world;" (John viii. 12.
ix. 5,) and John the Baptist, a "burning and a shining light," (John v. 35.)
Certainly, not on account of the holiness of his life, but on account of the word which he
ministered. In the same manner Paul calls the Philippians shining "lights of the
world." (Phil. ii. 15), because (says he,) ye "hold forth the word of
life." (16.) For life without the word is uncertain and obscure.
And what is the design of the apostles in proving their preaching by the Scriptures? Is
it that they may obscure their own darkness by still greater darkness? What was the
intention of Christ, in teaching the Jews to "search the Scriptures" (John v.
39,) as testifying of Him? Was it that He might render them doubtful concerning faith in
Him? What was
their
intention, who having heard Paul, searched the Scriptures night
and day, "to see if these things were so?" (Acts xvii. 11.) Do not all these
things prove that the Apostles, as well as Christ Himself, appealed to the Scriptures as
the most clear testimonies of the truth of their discourses? With what face then do we
make them 'obscure?'
Are these words of the Scripture, I pray you, obscure or ambiguous: "God created
the heavens and the earth" (Gen. i. 1). "The Word was made flesh." (John i.
14,) and all those other words which the whole world receives as articles of faith? Whence
then, did they receive them? Was it not from the Scriptures? And what do those who at this
day preach? Do they not expound and declare the Scriptures? But if the Scripture which
they declare, be obscure, who shall certify us that their declaration is to be depended
on? Shall it be certified by another new declaration? But who shall make that declaration?
- And so we may go on
ad infinitum.
In a word, if the Scripture be obscure or ambiguous, what need was there for its being
sent down from heaven? Are we not obscure and ambiguous enough in ourselves, without an
increase of it by obscurity, ambiguity, and darkness being sent down unto us from heaven?
And if this be the case, what will become of that of the apostle, "All Scripture is
given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for
correction?" (2 Tim. iii. 16.) Nay, Paul, thou art altogether useless, and all those
things which thou ascribest unto the Scripture, are to be sought for out of the fathers
approved by a long course of ages, and from the Roman see! Wherefore, thy sentiment must
be revoked, where thou writest to Titus, (chap. i. 9) 'that a bishop ought to be powerful
in doctrine, to exhort and to convince the gainsayers, and to stop the mouths of vain
talkers, and deceivers of minds.' For how shall he be powerful, when thou leavest him the
Scriptures in obscurity - that is, as arms of tow and feeble straws, instead of a sword?
And Christ must also, of necessity, revoke His word where He falsely promises us, saying,
"I will give you a mouth and wisdom which all your adversaries shall not be able to
resist," (Luke xxi. 15.) For how shall they not resist when we fight against them
with obscurities and uncertainties? And why do you also, Erasmus, prescribe to us a form
of Christianity, if the Scriptures be obscure to you!
But I fear I must already be burdensome, even to the insensible, by dwelling so long
and spending so much strength upon a point so fully clear; but it was necessary, that that
impudent and blasphemous saying, 'the Scriptures are obscure,' should thus be drowned. And
you, too, my friend Erasmus, know very well what you are saying, when you deny that the
Scripture is clear, for you at the same time drop into my ear this assertion: 'it of
necessity follows therefore, that all your saints whom you adduce, are much less clear.'
And truly it would be so. For who shall certify us concerning their light, if you make the
Scriptures obscure? Therefore they who deny the all-clearness and all-plainness of the
Scriptures, leave us nothing else but darkness.
Sect. 37. - BUT here, perhaps, you will say - all that you have
advanced is nothing to me. I do not say that the Scriptures are every where obscure (for
who would be so mad?) but that they are obscure in this, and the like parts. - I answer: I
do not advance these things against you only, but against all who are of the same
sentiments with you. Moreover, I declare against you concerning the whole of the
Scripture, that I will have no one part of it called obscure: and, to support me, stands
that which I have brought forth out of Peter, that the word of God is to us a "lamp
shining in a dark place." (2 Peter i. 19.) But if any part of this lamp do not shine,
it is rather a part of the dark place than of the lamp itself. For Christ has not so
illuminated us, as to wish that any part of His word should remain obscure, even while He
commands us to attend to it: for if it be not shiningly plain, His commanding us to attend
to it is in vain.
Wherefore, if the doctrine concerning "Free-will" be obscure and ambiguous,
it does not belong unto Christians and the Scriptures, and is, therefore to be left alone
entirely, and classed among those "old wives' fables" (1 Tim. iv. 7.) which Paul
condemns in contentious Christians. But if it do belong unto Christians and the
Scriptures, it ought to be clear, open, and manifest, and in every respect like unto all
the other most evident articles of faith. For all the articles of faith which belong unto
Christians ought to be such, as may not only be most evident to themselves but so defended
by manifest and clear Scriptures against the adversaries, as to stop the mouths of them
all, that they shall not be able in any thing to gainsay. And this Christ has promised us,
saying, "I will give you a mouth and wisdom which all your adversaries shall not be
able to resist." But if our mouth be weak in this part, that the adversaries are able
to resist, His saying, that no adversary shall be able to resist our mouth, is false. In
the doctrine of "Free-will," therefore, we shall either have no adversaries,
(which will be the case if it belong not unto us;) or, if it belong unto us, we shall have
adversaries indeed, but such as will not be able to resist.
But concerning the inability of our adversaries to resist, (as that particular falls in
here,) I would, by the way, observe that it is thus: - It does not mean, that they are
forced to yield with the heart, or to confess, or be silent. For who can compel men
against their will to yield, confess their error, and be silent? 'What (saith Augustine),
is more loquacious than vanity?' But what is meant by their mouths being stopped, their
not having a word to gainsay, and their saying many things, and yet, in the judgment of
common sense, saying nothing, will be best illustrated by examples.
When Christ, put the Sadducees to silence by proving the resurrection from the dead,
out of that Scripture of Moses. (Mat:. xxii. 23-32.) "I am the God of Abraham,
&c., God is not the God of the dead but of the living;" (Exod. iii. 6,) this they
were not able to resist, nor had they a word to gainsay. But did they, therefore, cease
from their opinion?
And how often did he, by the most evident Scriptures and arguments, so confute the
Pharisees, that the very people saw them to be confuted openly, and they themselves felt
it. Nevertheless, they still perseveringly continued His adversaries.
Stephen, (Acts vi. 10,) so spoke, that, according to the testimony of Luke, "they
could not resist the spirit and the wisdom with which he spake." But what did they?
Did they yield? No! from their shame of being overcome and their inability to resist, they
became furious, and shutting their eyes and ears they suborned false witnesses against
him. (Acts vi. 11-l3.)
Behold how the same apostle, standing in the council, confutes his adversaries, while
he enumerates to that people the mercies of God unto them from their beginning, and proves
to them, that God never commanded a temple to be built unto Him: (for it was upon that
point they then held him as guilty, and that was the subject in dispute.) At length
however, he grants, that there was a temple built under Solomon. But then he takes up the
point in this way: "but the Most High dwelleth not in temples made with hands."
And to prove this, he brings forward Isaiah the prophet, lxvi. 1, "What is the house
that ye build unto Me?" And, tell me, what could they here say against a Scripture so
manifest? Yet still, not at all moved by it, they stood fixed in their own opinion.
Wherefore, he then launches forth on them saying, "Ye uncircumcised in heart and
ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost, &c." (Acts vii 51.) He saith, "ye
do resist," although they were not able to resist.
But let us come to our own times. John Huss preached thus against the Pope from Matt.
xvi. 18 - 'The gates of hell shall not prevail against my church. Is there there any
obscurity or ambiguity? But the gates of hell do prevail against the Pope and his, for
they are notorious throughout the world of their open impiety and iniquities. Is there any
obscurity here either? ERGO: THE POPE AND HIS, ARE
NOT THE CHURCH CONCERNING WHICH CHRIST SPEAKS.' - What could
they gainsay here? How could they resist the mouth that Christ had given him? Yet, they
did
re
sist, and
per
sist until they had burnt him: so far were they from
yielding to Him, in heart. And this is the kind of resistance to which Christ alludes when
He saith, "Your adversaries shall not be able to resist." (Luke xxi. 15.) He
says they are "adversaries;" therefore they will resist, for otherwise, they
would not remain adversaries, but would become friends, And yet He says, they "shall
not be able to resist." What is this else but saying - though they resist, they shall
not be able to resist?
If therefore, I also shall be enabled so to refute the doctrine of "Free-will,
" that the adversaries shall not be able to resist, although they
per
sist in
their opinion, and go on to
re
sist contrary to their conscience, I shall have done
enough. For I know well, by experience, how unwilling every one is to be overcome; and (as
Quintillian says,) 'that there is no one, who would not rather appear to know, than to be
taught.' Although, now-a-days all men, in all places, have this proverb on their tongue,
but more from use, or rather abuse, than from heart-reality - 'I am willing to learn, and
I am ready to follow what is better, when I am taught it by admonition: I am man, and
liable to err.' Because, under this mask, this fair semblance of humility, they can with
plausible confidence say; 'I am not fully satisfied of it.' 'I do not comprehend it.' 'He
does violence to the Scriptures.' 'He asserts so obstinately.' And they nestle under this
confidence, taking it for granted, that no one would ever suspect, that souls of so much
humility could, ever pertinaciously resist and determinately impugn the known truth. Hence
their not yielding in heart, is not to be imputed to their malice, but to the obscurity
and duplicity of their arguments.
In the same manner did the philosophers of the Greeks, act; who, that the one might not
appear to give up to the other, though evidently confuted, began, as Aristotle records, to
deny first principles. In the same way
we
would mildly persuade ourselves and
others, that there are in the world many good men, who would willingly embrace the truth,
if there were but one who could plainly shew which it is; and that, it is not to be
supposed, that so many learned men, in such a course of ages, were all in error, and did
not know that truth. - As though we knew not, that the world is the kingdom of Satan,
where, in addition to the natural blindness that is engendered in our flesh, and those
most wicked spirits also which have dominion over us, we grow hardened in that very
blindness, and are bound in a darkness, no longer human, but devilish.
Sect. 38. - BUT you ask - "if then the Scripture be quite
clear, why have men of renowned talent, through so many ages, been blind upon this
point?" I answer: they have been thus blind, to the praise and glory of
"Free-will;" in order that, that highly boasted-of 'power,' by which a man is
'able to apply himself unto those things that pertain unto eternal salvation,' might be
eminently displayed; that very exalted power, which neither sees those things which it
sees, nor hears those things which it hears, and much less, understands and seeks after
them. For to this power, applies that which Christ and the evangelists so often bring
forward out of Isaiah vi. 9, "Hearing ye shall hear and shall not understand, and
seeing ye shall see and shall not perceive." What is this else but saying, that
"Free-will," or the human heart, is so bound by the power of Satan, that, unless
it be quickened up in a wonderful way by the Spirit of God, it cannot of itself see or
hear those things which strike against the eyes and ears so manifestly, as to be as it
were palpable by the hand? So great is the misery and blindness of the human race! Thus
also the Evangelists themselves, when they wondered how it could be that the Jews were not
won over by the works and words of Christ, which were evidently incontrovertible and
undeniable, satisfied themselves from that place of the Scripture, where it is shewn, that
man, left to himself, seeing seeth not, and hearing heareth not. And what can be more
monstrous! "The light (saith Christ) shineth in darkness, and the darkness
comprehendeth it not." (John i. 5.) Who could believe this? Who hath heard the like -
that the light should shine in darkness, and yet, the darkness still remain darkness, and
not be enlightened!
Wherefore, it is no wonder in divine things, that through so many ages, men renowned
for talent remained blind. It might have been a wonder in human things, but in divine
things, it would rather have been a wonder if there had been one here and there that did
not remain blind: that they all remained utterly blind alike, is no wonder at all. For
what is the whole human race together, without the Spirit, but the kingdom of the devil
(as I have said) and a confused chaos of darkness? And therefore it is, that Paul, (Ephes.
vi. 12,) calls the devils, "the rulers of this darkness." And, (1 Cor. ii. 8,)
he saith, that none of the princes of this world knew the wisdom of God. What then must he
think of the rest, who asserts that the princes of this world are the slaves of darkness?
For by princes, he means those greatest and highest ones, whom you call 'men renowned for
talent.' And why were all the Arians blind? Were there not among them men renowned for
talent? Why was Christ foolishness to the nations? Are there not among the nations men
renowned for talent? "God (saith Paul) knoweth the thoughts of the wise that they are
vain," (1 Cor. iii. 20.) He chose not to say "of men," as the text to which
he refers has it, but would point to the first and greatest among men, that from them we
might form a judgment of the rest. - But upon these points more at large, perhaps,
hereafter.
Suffice it thus to have premised, in Exordium, that the Scriptures are most clear, and
that by them, our doctrines can be so defended that the adversaries cannot resist: but
those doctrines that cannot be thus defended, are nothing to us, for they belong not unto
Christians. But if there be any who do not see this clearness, and are blind, or offend
under this sun, they, if they be wicked, manifest how great that dominion and power of
Satan is over the sons of men, when they can neither hear nor comprehend the all-clear
words of God, but are as one cheated by a juggler, who is made to think that the sun is a
cold cinder, or to believe that a stone is gold. But if they fear God, they are to be
numbered among those elect, who, to a certain degree, are led into error that the power of
God may be manifest in us, without which, we can neither see nor do any thing whatever.
For the not comprehending the words of God, does not arise, as you pretend, from weakness
of mind; nay, nothing is better adapted to the receiving of the words of God, than a
weakness of the mind; for it was on account of these weak ones, and to these weak ones,
that Christ came, and it is to them he sends His Word. But it is the wickedness of Satan
enthroned and reigning in our weakness, and resisting the Word of God: - for if Satan did
not do this, a whole world of men might be converted by one Word of God once heard, nor
could there be need of more.
Sect. 39. - BUT why do I go on enlarging? Why do I not conclude
this discussion with this Exordium, and give my sentence against you in your own words,
according to that saying of Christ, "By thy words thou shalt be justified, and by thy
words thou shalt be condemned?" (Matt. xii. 37.) For you say that the Scripture is
not quite clear upon this point. And then, suspending all declaration of your own
sentiment, you discuss each
side
of the subject, what may be said for, and what
against, and nothing else whatever do you do, in the whole of this book of yours; which,
for that very reason, you wished to call DIATRIBE (The Collation)
rather than APOPHASIS (The Denial), or something of that kind;
because, you wrote with a design to
collect all things,
and to
assert nothing
.
But if the Scripture be not quite clear upon this point, why do those of whom you
boast, not only remain blind to their side of the subject, but rashly and as fools, define
and assert "Free-will," as though proved by a certain and all-sure testimony of
Scripture, - that numberless series of the most learned men, I mean, whom the consent of
so many ages has approved, even unto this day, and many of whom, in addition to an
admirable acquaintance with the Sacred Writings, a piety of life commends? - Some have
given, by their blood, a testimony of that doctrine of Christ, which they had defended by
Scriptures. If you say what you say, from your heart, it is surely a settled point with
you, that "Free-will" has assertors, who are endowed with a wonderful
understanding in the sacred writings, and who even gave testimony of that doctrine by
their blood. If this be true, they certainly had clear Scripture on their side, else,
where would be their admirable understanding in the Sacred Writings? Moreover, what
lightness and temerity of spirit must it be, to shed ones blood for a matter uncertain and
obscure? This is not to be the martyrs of Christ, but the martyrs of devils!
Now then, do you just set the matter before you, and weigh it in your mind, and say, to
which of the two you consider the greater credit should be given; to the prejudices of so
many learned men, so many orthodox divines, so many saints, so many martyrs, so many
theologians old and recent, so many colleges, so many councils, so many bishops and
high-priest Popes, who were of opinion that the Scriptures are quite clear, and who
(according to you) confirmed the same by their writings and by their blood; or to your own
private judgment, who deny that the Scriptures are quite clear, and who, perhaps, never
spent one single tear or sigh for the doctrine of Christ, in the whole of your life? If
you believe they were right in their opinion, why do you not follow them in it? If you do
not believe they were right, why do you boast of them with such a trumpeting mouth, and
such a torrent of language, as though you would overwhelm us head and ears with a certain
storm or flood of eloquence? Which flood, however, will the more heavily rush back upon
your own head, whilst my Ark is borne along in safety on the top of the waters! Moreover,
you attribute to so many and great men, the utmost folly and temerity. For when you speak
of them as being men of the greatest understanding in the Scripture, and as having
asserted it by their pen, by their life, and by their death; and yet at the same time
contend yourself, that the same Scripture is obscure and ambiguous, this is nothing less
than making those men most ignorant in understanding, and most stupid in assertion. Thus
I, their poor private despiser, do not pay them such an ill compliment, as you do, their
public flatterer.
Sect. 40. - HERE, therefore, I hold you fast in a last-pinch
syllogism (as they say). For either the one or the other of your assertions must be false.
Either that, where you say, 'those men were admirable for their understanding in the
Sacred Writings, for their life, and for their martyrdom;' or that, where you say, that
'the Scriptures are not quite clear.' But since you are drawn more this latter way, that
is, to believe that the Scriptures are not quite clear, (for this is what you harp upon
throughout the whole of your book), it remains evident, that it was either from your own
natural inclination towards them, or for the sake of flattering them, but by no means from
seriousness, that you called those men, 'men of the greatest understanding in the
Scripture, and martyrs of Christ;' merely in order that you might blind the eyes of the
inexperienced commonalty, and make work for Luther by loading his cause with empty words,
odium, and contempt. But, however, I aver that
neither
of your assertions are true,
and that
both
are false. For, first of all, I aver, that the Scriptures are quite
clear: and next, that those men, as far as they asserted "Free-will," were most
ignorant of the Sacred Writings: and moreover, that they neither asserted it by their
life, nor by their death, but by their pen only; and that, while their heart was
travelling another road.
Wherefore this small part of the Disputation I conclude thus. - By the Scripture, as
being obscure, nothing ever has hitherto, nor ever can be defined concerning
"Free-will;" according to your own testimony. Moreover, nothing has ever been
manifested in confirmation of "Free-will," in the lives of all the men from the
beginning of the world; as we have proved above. To teach, then,
a something
which
is neither described by one word within the Scriptures, nor evidenced by one fact without
the Scriptures, is that, which does not belong to the doctrines of Christians, but to the
very fables of Lucian. Except, however, that Lucian, as he
amuses only
with
ludicrous stories from wit and policy)
deceives
and
injures
no one. But
these friends of ours, in a matter of importance which concerns eternal salvation, madly
trifle to the perdition of souls innumerable.
Thus I might here have concluded the whole of this discussion, even with the testimony
of my adversaries making
for
me, and
against
themselves. For no proof can be
more decisive, than the very confession and testimony of the guilty person against
himself. But however, as Paul commands us to stop the mouths of vain talkers, let us now
enter upon the Discussion itself, and handle the subject in the order in which the
Diatribe proceeds: that we may, FIRST, confute the arguments
adduced in support of "Free-will": SECONDLY, defend our
arguments that are confuted: and, LASTLY, contend for the Grace of
God against "Free-will."
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