De Servo Arbitrio
The Bondage of the Will
By
Dr. Martin Luther
Table of Contents
3.
Introduction
4.
Erasmus'
Preface Reviewed (Sections 1)
5.
Erasmus' Scepticism (Sections 2—6)
6.
The Necessity of Knowing God and His Power (Sections 7—8)
7.
The
Sovereignty of God (Sections 9—27)
9.
Discussion:
First Part (Sections 41—75)
10.
Discussion: Second Part (Sections 76—134)
11.
Discussion: Third Part (Sections 135—166)
12.
Conclusion: (Sections 167—168)
13.
Appendix: Martin Luther's Judgment of
Erasmus of Rotterdam
14.
Appendix: Martin Luther to Nicolas
Armsdoff Concerning Erasmus of Rotterdam
BY
HENRY ATHERTON,
Minister of Grove Chapel, Camberwell, S. E.
AND
General Secretary of The
Sovereign Grace Union.
THIS EXCELLENT WORK of that eminent servant of God, Martin Luther—one of
the noble Reformers is acknowledged to be one of the greatest, if not the
greatest of Luther's productions. Luther himself considered it his best
publication.
I had purposed
writing a short account of each of the Opponents—Erasmus and Luther—who come
before us in the book, and of the controversy, but from lack of time owing to
many calls, and wishing to get the volume into the hands of lovers of Luther as
soon as possible, I had to forego this privilege.
I believe I have
succeeded in producing the best English edition of this Masterpiece of Luther
that has been published. Cole's translation has been used with slight
alterations from
My task has been a
difficult one, especially as I am ignorant of the German Language. Luther's
Scriptural quotations are of course in the German Tongue, and as he often
seemed to quote them from memory and as no references to verses, and sometimes
none to chapters are given, and sometimes the wrong name of the Book is given,
English Concordances have been of very little help to me, and often no use at
all; yet I trust this edition will prove a success in spite of my handicaps.
Although Luther
used certain words that I should not employ, yet I have adhered faithfully to
his own phraseology as translated by Cole. Luther speaks for himself.
This book is most
needful at the present day. The teachings of many so-called Protestants are
more in accordance with the Dogmas of the Papists, or the ideas of Erasmus,
than with the Principles of the Reformers; they are more in harmony with the
Canons and Decrees of the Council of Trent than with any Protestant or Reformed
Confessions of Faith.
If the Lord should
be pleased to open the eyes and understanding of some of these so-called
Protestants to whom I have referred—through the perusal of this work of the
great Reformer—Luther—enabling them to see that they are at present believing
and teaching awful delusions contrary to the Word of God, and the Protestant
Reformed Religion, and causing them to return to The Old Paths, the labours of
"THE SOVEREIGN GRACE UNION" will not have been in vain.
The labour
involved in the preparation of this work for publication in its present form
has been enjoyable, although it has often been carried out in much pain, and
sometimes during sleepless nights. I rejoice in being able to issue it, and do
earnestly pray that the Lord will bless it to the Ingathering of His Elect, and to the maintenance of His Cause and Truth in the
days in which our lot has been cast.
Grove Chapel
Parsonage,
Camberwell Grove, S.E.S.
June, 1931.
BY
THE TRANSLATOR.
THE
Translator has long had it in meditation, to present the
As it respects the character of the version
itself—the Translator, after much consideration of the eminence of his Author
as a standard authority in the Church of God, and the importance of deviating
from the original text in any shape whatever, at last decided upon translating
according to the following principle; to which, it is his design strictly to
adhere in every future translation with which he may present the public—to
deliver FAITHFULLY the MIND of LUTHER; retaining LITERALLY, as
much of his own WORDING,
PHRASEOLOGY, and EXPRESSION,
as could be admitted into the English version.—With what degree of
fidelity he has adhered to this principle in the present work, the public are
left to decide.
The addition of the following few remarks
shall suffice for observation.
1. The Work is translated from Melancthon's
Edition, which he published immediately after Luther's death.
2. The division-heads of the Treatise,
which are not distinctively expressed in the original, are so expressed in the
Translation, to facilitate the Reader's view of the whole work and all its
parts. The Heads are these—Introduction, Preface, Exordium, Discussion part the
First, part the Second, part the Third, and Conclusion.
3. The subdividing Sections of the matter,
which, in the original, are distinguished by a very large capital at the
commencement, are, in the Translation, for typographical reasons, distinguished
by Sections I, II, III, IV, &c.
4. The Quotations from the Diatribe, are,
in the Translation, preceded and followed by a dash and inverted commas: but
with this distinction—where Erasmus' own words are quoted in the original the
commas are double; but single, where the substance of his sentiments only is
quoted. The reader will observe, however, that this distinction was not adopted
till after the first three sheets were printed: which will account for all the
quotations, in those sheets, being preceded and followed by double commas.
Though it is presumed, there will be no difficulty in discovering which are Erasmus' own words, and which are his sentiments in
substance only.
5. The portions of Scripture adduced by Luther, are, in some instances, translated from his own
words, and not given according to our English version. This particular was
attended to, in those few places where Luther's reading varies a little from
our version, as being more consistent with a correct Translation of the author,
but not with any view to favour the introduction of innovated and diverse
readings of the Word of God.
With these few and brief preliminary
observations, the Translator presents this profound Treatise of the immortal Luther
on the Bondage of the Will to the Public. And he trusts he has a sincere
desire, that his own labour may prove to be, in every respect, a faithful
Translation: and that the work itself may be found, under the Divine blessing,
to be—an invaluable acquisition to the Church—"a sharp threshing
instrument having teeth" for the exposure of subtlety and error—a banner
in defence of the truth—and a means of edification and establishment to all
those, who are willing to come to the light to have their deeds made manifest,
and to be taught according to the oracles of God!
HENRY COLE.
Martin Luther, to the venerable D. Erasmus
of Rotterdam, wishing Grace and Peace in Christ.
THAT I have been so long
answering your DIATRIBE on
FREE-WILL,
venerable Erasmus, has happened contrary to the expectation of all, and contrary to my own custom also. For hitherto, I
have not only appeared to embrace willingly opportunities of this kind for
writing, but even to seek them of my own accord. Some one may, perhaps, wonder
at this new and unusual thing, this forbearance or fear, in Luther, who could
not be roused up by so many boasting taunts, and letters of adversaries,
congratulating Erasmus on his victory and singing to him the song of Triumph—What
that Maccabee, that obstinate assertor, then, has at last found an Antagonist a
match for him, against whom he dares not open his mouth!
But so far from accusing them, I myself
openly concede that to you, which I never did to any one before:—that you not
only by far surpass me in the powers of eloquence, and in genius, (which we all
concede to you as your desert, and the more so, as I am but a barbarian and do
all things barbarously,) but that you have damped my spirit and impetus, and
rendered me languid before the battle; and that by two means. First, by art:
because, that is, you conduct this discussion with a most specious and uniform
modesty; by which you have met and prevented me from being incensed against
you. And next, because, on so great a subject, you say nothing but what has
been said before: therefore, you say less about, and attribute more unto
"Free-will," than the Sophists have hitherto said and attributed: (of
which I shall speak more fully hereafter.) So that it seems even superfluous to
reply to these your arguments, which have been indeed often refuted by me; but
trodden down, and trampled under foot, by the incontrovertible Book of Philip
Melancthon "Concerning Theological Questions:" a book, in my
judgment, worthy not only of being immortalized, but of being included in the
ecclesiastical canon: in comparison of which, your Book is, in my estimation,
so mean and vile, that I greatly feel for you for having defiled your most
beautiful and ingenious language with such vile trash; and I feel an
indignation against the matter also, that such unworthy stuff should be borne
about in ornaments of eloquence so rare; which is as if rubbish, or dung,
should he carried in vessels of gold and silver. And this you yourself seem to
have felt, who were so unwilling to undertake this work of writing; because
your conscience told you, that you would of necessity have to try the point
with all the powers of eloquence; and that, after all, you would not be able so
to blind me by your colouring, but that I should, having torn off the
deceptions of language, discover the real dregs beneath. For, although I am
rude in speech, yet, by the grace of God, I am not rude in understanding. And,
with Paul, I dare arrogate tomyself understanding and with confidence derogate
it from you; although I willingly, and deservedly, arrogate eloquence and
genius to you, and derogate it from myself.
Wherefore, I thought thus—If there be any
who have not drank more deeply into, and more firmly held my doctrines, which
are supported by such weighty Scriptures, than to be moved by these light and
trivial arguments of Erasmus, though so highly ornamented, they are not worthy
of being healed by my answer. Because, for such men, nothing could be spoken or
written of enough, even though it should be in many thousands of volumes a
thousands times repeated: for it is as if one should plough the seashore, and
sow seed in the sand, or attempt to fill a cask, full of holes, with water.
For, as to those who have drank into the teaching of the Spirit in my books, to
them, enough and an abundance has been administered,
and they at once contemn your writings. But, as to those who read without the
Spirit, it is no wonder if they be driven to and fro, like a reed, with every
wind. To such, God would not have said enough, even if all his creatures should
be converted into tongues. Therefore it would, perhaps, have been wisdom, to
have left these offended at your book, along with those who glory in you and
decree to you the triumph.
Hence, it was not from a multitude of
engagements, nor from the difficulty of the undertaking, nor from the greatness
of your eloquence, nor from a fear of yourself; but from mere irksomeness,
indignation, and contempt, or (so to speak) from my judgment of your Diatribe,
that my impetus to answer you was damped. Not to observe, in the mean time,
that, being ever like yourself, you take the most diligent care to be on every
occasion slippery and pliant of speech; and while you wish to appear to assert
nothing, and yet, at the same time, to assert something, more cautious than
Ulysses, you seem to be steering your course between Scylla and Charybdis. To
meet men of such a sort, what, I would ask, can be brought forward or composed,
unless any one knew how to catch Proteus himself? But
what I may be able to do in this matter, and what profit your art will be to
you, I will, Christ cooperating with me, hereafter shew.
This my
reply to you, therefore, is not wholly without cause. My brethren in Christ
press me to it, setting before me the expectation of all; seeing that the
authority of Erasmus is not to be despised, and the truth of the Christian
doctrine is endangered in the hearts of many. And indeed, I felt a persuasion
in my own mind, that my silence would not be altogether right, and that I was
deceived by the prudence or malice of the flesh, and not sufficiently mindful
of my office, in which I am a debtor, both to the wise and to the unwise; and
especially, since I was called to it by the entreaties of so many brethren.
For although our cause is such, that it
requires more than the external teacher, and, beside him that planteth and him
that watereth outwardly, has need of the Spirit of God to give the increase,
and, as a living Teacher, to teach us inwardly living things, (all which I was
led to consider;) yet, since that Spirit is free, and bloweth, not where we
will, but where He willeth, it was needful to observe that rule of Paul,
"Be instant in season, and out of season." (2 Tim. iv.
2.) For we know not at what hour the Lord cometh. Be it, therefore, that those who have not yet felt the teaching of the Spirit in my
writings, have been overthrown by that Diatribe—perhaps their hour was
not yet come.
And who knows but that God may even
condescend to visit you, my friend Erasmus, by me His poor weak vessel; and
that I may (which from my heart I desire of the Father of mercies through Jesus
Christ our Lord) come unto you by this Book in a happy hour, and gain over a
dearest brother. For although you think and write wrong concerning
"Free-will," yet no small thanks are due unto you from me, in that
you have rendered my own sentiments far more strongly confirmed, from my seeing
the cause of "Free-will" handled by all the powers of such and so
great talents, and so far from being bettered, left worse than it was before
which leaves an evident proof, that "Free-will" is a downright lie;
and that, like the woman in the gospel, the more it is taken in hand by
physicians, the worse it is made. Therefore the greater thanks will be rendered
to you by me, if you by me gain more information, as I have gained by you more
confirmation. But each is the gift of God, and not the work of our own
endeavours. Wherefore, prayer must be made unto God, that He would open the
mouth in me, and the heart in you and in all; that He would be the Teacher in
the midst of us, who may in us speak and hear.
But from you, my friend Erasmus, suffer me
to obtain the grant of this request; that, as I in these matters bear with your
ignorance, so you in return, would bear with my want of eloquent utterance. God
giveth not all things to each; nor can we each do all things. Or, as Paul saith, "there are diversities of gifts, but
the same Spirit." (1 Cor. xii. 4.) It remains,
therefore, that these gifts render a mutual service; that the one, with his
gift, sustain the burden and what is lacking in the other; so shall we fulfill
the law of Christ (Gal. vi. 2.)
Sect. 1.—FIRST of all, I would just
touch upon some of the heads of your PREFACE; in
which, You somewhat disparage our cause and adorn your own. In the first place,
I would notice your censuring in me, in all your former books, an obstinacy of
assertion; and saying, in this book,—"that you are so far from delighting
in assertions, that you would rather at once go over to the sentiments of the
skeptics, if the inviolable authority of the Holy Scriptures, and the decrees
of the church, would permit you: to which authorities You willingly submit
yourself in all things, whether you follow what they prescribe, or follow it
not."—These are the principles that please you.
I consider, (as in courtesy bound,) that
these things are asserted by you from a benevolent mind, as being a lover of
peace. But if any one else had asserted them, I should, perhaps, have attacked
him in my accustomed manner. But, however, I must not even allow you, though so
very good in your intentions, to err in this opinion. For not to delight in
assertions, is not the character of the Christian mind: nay, he must delight in
assertions, or he is not a Christian. But, (that we may not be mistaken in
terms) by assertion, I mean a constant adhering, affirming, confessing,
defending, and invincibly persevering. Nor do I believe the term signifies any
thing else, either among the Latins, or as it is used by us at this day. And
moreover, I speak concerning the asserting of those things, which are delivered
to us from above in the Holy Scriptures. Were it not so, we should want neither
Erasmus nor any other instructor to teach us, that, in things doubtful,
useless, or unnecessary; assertions, contentions, and strivings, would be not
only absurd, but impious: and Paul condemns such in more places than one. Nor
do you, I believe, speak of these things, unless, as a ridiculous orator, you
wish to take up one subject, and go on with another, as the Roman Emperor did
with his Turbot; or, with the madness of a wicked writer, you wish to contend,
that the article concerning "Free-will" is doubtful, or not
necessary.
Be skeptics and academics far from us
Christians; but be there with us assertors twofold more determined than the
stoics themselves. How often does the apostle Paul require that assurance of
faith; that is, that most certain, and most firm assertion of Conscience,
calling it (
But I am the greatest fool, who thus lose
words and time upon that, which is clearer than the sun. What Christian would
bear that assertions should be contemned? This would be at once to deny all piety
and religion together; or to assert, that religion, piety, and every doctrine,
is nothing at all. Why therefore do you too say, that you do not delight in
assertions, and that you prefer such a mind to any other?
But you would have it understood that you
have said nothing here concerning confessing Christ, and His doctrines.—I
receive the admonition. And, in courtesy to you, I give up my right and custom,
and refrain from judging of your heart, reserving that for another time, or for
others. In the mean time, I admonish you to correct your tongue, and your pen,
and to refrain henceforth from using such expressions. For, how upright and
honest soever your heart may be, your words, which are the index of the heart,
are not so. For, if you think the matter of "Free-will" is not
necessary to be known, nor at all concerned with Christ, you speak honestly,
but think wickedly: but, if you think it is necessary, you speak wickedly, and
think rightly. And if so, then there is no room for you to complain and exaggerate
so much concerning useless assertions and contentions: for what have they to do
with the nature of the cause?
Sect. 2.—BUT what will you say to these your
declarations, when, be it remembered, they are not confined to "Free-will"
only, but apply to all doctrines in general throughout the world—that, "if
it were permitted you by the inviolable authority of the sacred Writings and
decrees of the church, you would go over to the sentiments of the
Sceptics?"—
What an all-changeable Proteus is there in
these expressions, "inviolable authority" and "decrees of the
church!" As though you could have so very great a reverence for the
Scriptures and the church, when at the same time you signify, that you wish you
had the liberty of being a Skeptic! What Christian would talk in this way? But
if you say this in reference to useless and doubtful doctrines, what news is
there in what you say? Who, in such things, would not wish for the liberty of
the skeptical profession? Nay, what Christian is there who does not actually
use this liberty freely, and condemn all those who are drawn away with, and
captivated by ever opinion? Unless you consider all Christians to be such (as
the term is generally understood) whose doctrines are useless, and for which
they quarrel like fools, and contend by assertions. But if you speak of
necessary things, what declaration more impious can any one make, than that he
wishes for the liberty of asserting nothing in such matters? Whereas, the
Christian will rather say this—I am so averse to the sentiments of the
Sceptics, that wherever I am not hindered by the infirmity of the flesh, I will
not only steadily adhere to the Sacred Writings every where, and in all parts
of them, and assert them, but I wish also to be as certain as possible in
things that are not necessary, and that lie without the Scripture; for what is
more miserable than uncertainty.
What shall we say to these things also,
where you add—"To which authorities I submit my opinion in all things;
whether I follow what they enjoin, or follow it not."—
What say you, Erasmus? Is it not enough
that you submit your opinion to the Scriptures? Do you submit it to the decrees
of the church also? What can the church decree, that
is not decreed in the Scriptures? If it can, where then
remains the liberty and power of judging those who make the decrees? As
Paul, 1 Cor. xiv., teaches "Let others
judge." Are you not pleased that there should be any one to judge the
decrees of the church, which, nevertheless, Paul enjoins? What new kind of
religion and humility is this, that, by our own example, you would take away
from us the power of judging the decrees of men, and give it unto men without
judgment? Where does the Scripture of God command us to do this?
Moreover, what Christian would so commit
the injunctions of the Scripture and of the church to the winds,—as to say
"whether I follow them, or follow them not?" You submit yourself, and
yet care not at all whether you follow them or not. But let that Christian be
anathema, who is not certain in, and does not follow, that which is enjoined
him. For how will he believe that which he does not follow?—Do you here, then,
mean to say, that following is understanding a thing certainly, and not
doubting of it at all in a skeptical manner? If you do, what is there in any creature which any one can follow, if following be
understanding, and seeing and knowing perfectly? And if this be the case, then
it is impossible that any one should, at the same time, follow some things, and
not follow others: whereas, by following one certain thing, God, he follows all
things; that is, in Him, whom whoso followeth not, never followeth any part of
His creature.
In a word, these declarations of yours
amount to this—that, with you, it matters not what is believed by any one, any
where, if the peace of the world be but undisturbed; and if every one be but
allowed, when his life, his reputation, or his interest is at stake, to do as
he did, who said, "If they affirm, I affirm, if they deny, I deny:" and
to look upon the Christian doctrines as nothing better than the opinions of
philosophers and men: and that it is the greatest of folly to quarrel about,
contend for, and assert them, as nothing can arise therefrom but contention,
and the disturbance of the public peace: "that what is above us, does not
concern us." This, I say, is what your declarations amount to.—Thus, to
put an end to our fightings, you come in as an intermediate peace-maker, that
you may cause each side to suspend arms, and persuade us to cease from drawing
swords about things so absurd and useless.
What I should cut at here, I believe, my
friend Erasmus, you know very well. But, as I said before, I will not openly
express myself. In the mean time, I excuse your very good intention of heart;
but do you go no further; fear the Spirit of God, who searcheth the reins and
the heart, and who is not deceived by artfully contrived expressions. I have,
upon this occasion, expressed myself thus, that henceforth you may cease to
accuse our cause of pertinacity or obstinacy. For, by so doing, you only evince
that you hug in your heart a Lucian, or some other of the swinish tribe of the
Epicureans; who, because he does not believe there is a God himself, secretly
laughs at all those who do believe and confess it. Allow us to be
assertors, and to study and delight in assertions: and do you favour your
Sceptics and Academics until Christ shall have called you also. The Holy Spirit
is not a Skeptic, nor are what he has written on our
hearts doubts or opinions, but assertions more certain, and more firm, than
life itself and all human experience.
Sect. 3.—Now I come to the next
head, which is connected with this; where you make a "distinction between
the Christian doctrines," and pretend that some are necessary, and some
not necessary." You say, that "some are abstruse, and some quite
clear." Thus you merely sport the sayings of others, or else exercise
yourself, as it were, in a rhetorical figure. And you bring forward, in support
of this opinion, that passage of Paul, Rom xi. 33,
"O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and goodness of God!" And also that of Isaiah xl. 13,
"Who hath holpen the Spirit of the Lord, or who hath been His
counselor?"
You could easily say these things, seeing
that, you either knew not that you were writing to
Luther, but for the world at large, or did not think that you were writing
against Luther: whom, however, I hope you allow to have some acquaintance with,
and judgment in, the Sacred Writings. But, if you do not allow it, then,
behold, I will also twist things thus. This is the distinction which I make;
that I also may act a little the rhetorician and logician—God, and the
Scripture of God, are two things; no less so than God, and the Creature of God.
That there are in God many hidden things which we know
not, no one doubts: as He himself saith concerning the last day: "Of that
day knoweth no man but the Father." (Matt. xxiv.
36.) And (Acts i. 7.) "It is not yours to know the times and
seasons." And again, "I know whom I have chosen," (John xiii.
18.) And Paul, "The Lord knoweth them that are His," (2 Tim. ii.
19.). And the like.
But, that there are in the Scriptures some
things abstruse, and that all things are not quite plain, is a report spread
abroad by the impious Sophists by whose mouth you speak here, Erasmus. But they
never have produced, nor ever can produce, one article whereby to prove this
their madness. And it is with such scare-crows that Satan has frightened away
men from reading the Sacred Writings, and has rendered the Holy Scripture
contemptible, that he might cause his poisons of philosophy to prevail in the
church. This indeed I confess, that there are many places in the
Scriptures obscure and abstruse; not from the majesty of the thing, but from
our ignorance of certain terms and grammatical particulars; but which do not
prevent a knowledge of all the things in the Scriptures. For what thing
of more importance can remain hidden in the Scriptures, now that the seals
are broken, the stone rolled from the door of the sepulcher, and that greatest
of all mysteries brought to light, Christ made man: that God is Trinity and
Unity: that Christ suffered for us, and will reign to all eternity? Are not
these things known and proclaimed even in our streets? Take Christ out of
the Scriptures, and what will you find remaining in them?
All the things, therefore, contained
in the Scriptures; are made manifest, although some places, from the
words not being understood, are yet obscure. But to know that all things
in the Scriptures are set in the clearest light, and then, because a few words
are obscure, to report that the things are obscure, is absurd and
impious. And, if the words are obscure in one place, yet they are clear in
another. But, however, the same thing, which has been most openly
declared to the whole world, is both spoken of in the Scriptures in plain
words, and also still lies hidden in obscure words. Now, therefore, it matters
not if the thing be in the light, whether any certain representations of
it be in obscurity or not, if, in the mean while, many other representations of
the same thing be in the light. For who would say that the public fountain is
not in the light, because those who are in some dark narrow lane do not see it,
when all those who are in the Open market place can see it plainly?
Sect. 4.—WHAT you adduce, therefore, about the darkness
of the Corycian cavern, amounts to nothing; matters are not so in the
Scriptures. For those things which are of the greatest majesty, and the most
abstruse mysteries, are no longer in the dark corner, but before the very
doors, nay, brought forth and manifested openly. For Christ has opened our
understanding to understand the Scriptures, Luke xxiv. 45. And the Gospel is
preached to every creature. (Mark xvi. 15, Col. i.
23.) "Their sound is gone out into all the earth." (Psalm xix. 4.)
And "All things that are written, are written for
our instruction." (Rom. xv. 4.) And again,
"All Scripture is inspired from above, and is profitable for
instruction." (2 Tim. iii. 16.)
Therefore come forward, you and all the
Sophists together, and produce any one mystery which is still abstruse in the
Scriptures. But, if many things still remain abstruse to many, this does not
arise from obscurity in the Scriptures, but from their own blindness or want of
understanding, who do not go the way to see the all-perfect clearness of the
truth. As Paul saith concerning the Jews, 2 Cor. iii. 15. "The veil still
remains upon their heart." And again, "If our gospel be hid it is hid
to them that are lost, whose heart the god of this world hath blinded." (2
Cor. iv. 3-4.) With the same rashness any one may
cover his own eyes, or go from the light into the dark and hide himself, and
then blame the day and the sun for being obscure. Let, therefore, wretched men
cease to impute, with blasphemous perverseness, the darkness and obscurity of
their own heart to the all-clear Scriptures of God.
You, therefore, when you adduce Paul,
saying, "His judgments are incomprehensible," seem to make the
pronoun His (ejus) refer to Scripture (Scriptura). Whereas Paul
does not say, The judgments of the Scripture are
incomprehensible, but the judgments of God. So also Isaiah xl.
13, does not say, Who has known the mind of the
Scripture, but, who has known "the mind of the Lord?" Although Paul
asserts that the mind of the Lord is known to Christians: but it is in those
things which are freely given unto us: as he saith also in the same place, 1
Cor. ii. 10, 16. You see, therefore, how sleepily you
have looked over these places of the Scripture: and you cite them just as aptly
as you cite nearly all the passages in defense of "Free-will."
In like manner, your examples which you
subjoin, not without suspicion and bitterness, are nothing at all to the
purpose. Such are those concerning the distinction of Persons: the union of the
Divine and human natures: the unpardonable sin: the ambiguity attached to
which, you say, has never been cleared up.—If you mean the questions of
Sophists that have been agitated upon those subjects, well. But
what has the all-innocent Scripture done to you, that you impute the abuse of
the most wicked of men to its purity? The Scripture simply confesses the
Trinity of God, the humanity of Christ, and the unpardonable sin. There is
nothing here of obscurity or ambiguity. But how these things are the
Scripture does not say, nor is it necessary to be known. The Sophists employ
their dreams here; attack and condemn them, and acquit the Scripture.—But, if
you mean the reality of the matter, I say again, attack not the Scriptures, but
the Arians, and those to whom the Gospel is hid, that, through the working of Satan,
they might not see the all-manifest testimonies concerning the Trinity of the
Godhead, and the humanity of Christ.
But to be brief.
The clearness of the Scripture is twofold; even as the obscurity is
twofold also. The one is external, placed in the ministry of the word;
the other internal, placed in the understanding of the heart. If you
speak of the internal clearness, no man sees one iota in the Scriptures, but he
that hath the Spirit of God. All have a darkened heart; so that, even if they
know how to speak of, and set forth, all things in the Scripture, yet, they
cannot feel them nor know them: nor do they believe that they are the creatures
of God, nor any thing else: according to that of Psalm xiv, 1. "The fool
hath said in his heart, God is nothing." For the Spirit is required to
understand the whole of the Scripture and every part of it. If you speak of the
external clearness, nothing whatever is left obscure or ambiguous; but all
things that are in the Scriptures, are by the Word brought forth into the
clearest light, and proclaimed to the whole world.
Sect. 5.—BUT this is still more intolerable,—Your
enumerating this subject of "Free-will" among those things that are
"useless, and not necessary;" and drawing up for us, instead of it, a
"Form" of those things which you consider "necessary unto
Christian piety." Such a form as, certainly, any Jew or any Gentile
utterly ignorant of Christ, might draw up. For of Christ you make no mention in
one iota. As though you thought, that there may be Christian piety without
Christ, if God be but worshipped with all the powers as being by nature most
merciful.
What shall I say here, Erasmus? To me, you
breathe out nothing but Lucian, and draw in the gorging surfeit of Epicurus. If
you consider this subject "not necessary" to Christians, away, I pray
you, out of the field; I have nothing to do with you. I consider it necessary.
If, as you say, it be
"irreligious," if it be "curious," if it be
"superfluous," to know, whether or not God foreknows any thing by contingency;
whether our own will does any thing in those things which pertain unto eternal
salvation, or is only passive under the work of grace; whether or not we do,
what we do of good or evil, from necessity, or rather from being passive; what
then, I ask, is religious; what is grave; what is useful to be known? All this,
Erasmus, is to no purpose whatever. And it is difficult to attribute this to
your ignorance, because you are now old, have been conversant with Christians,
and have long studied the Sacred Writings: therefore you leave no room for my
excusing you, or having a good thought concerning you.
And yet the Papists pardon and put up with
these enormities in you: and on this account, because you are writing against
Luther: otherwise, if Luther were not in the case, they would tear you in
pieces tooth and nail. Plato is a friend; Socrates is a friend; but Truth is to
be honoured above all. For, granting that you have but little understanding in
the Scriptures and in Christian piety, surely even an enemy to Christians ought
to known what Christians consider useful and necessary, and what they do not.
Whereas you, a theologian, a teacher of Christians, and about to draw up for
them a "Form" of Christianity, not only in your skeptical manner
doubt of what is necessary and useful to them, but go away into the directly
opposite, and, contrary to your own principles, by an unheard of assertion,
declare it to be your judgment, that those things are "not
necessary:" whereas, if they be not necessary, and certainly known, there
can remain neither God, nor Christ, nor Gospel, nor Faith, nor any thing else,
even of Judaism, much less of Christianity! In the name of the Immortal God,
Erasmus, what an occasion, yea, what a field do you open for acting and speaking
against you! What could you write well or correctly concerning
"Free-will," who confess, by these your
declarations, so great an ignorance of the Scripture and of Godliness? But I
draw in my sails: nor will I here deal with you in my words (for that perhaps I
shall do hereafter) but in your own.
Sect. 6.—THE "Form" of Christianity set forth
by you, among other things, has this—"That we should strive with all our
powers, have recourse to the remedy of repentance, and in all ways try to gain
the mercy of God; without which, neither human will, nor endeavour, is
effectual." Also, "that no one should despair of
pardon from a God by nature most merciful."—
These statements of yours are without
Christ, without the Spirit, and more cold than ice: so that, the beauty of your
eloquence is really deformed by them. Perhaps a fear of the Popes and those tyrants, extorted them from you their miserable vassal, lest
you should appear to them a perfect atheist. But what they assert is this—That
there is ability in us; that there is a striving with all our powers; that
there is mercy in God; that there are ways of gaining that mercy; that there is
a God, by nature just, and most merciful, &c.—But if a man does not know
what these powers are; what they can do, or in what they are to be passive;
what their efficacy, or what their inefficacy is; what can such an one do? What
will you set him about doing?
"It is irreligious, curious, and
superfluous, (you say) to wish to know, whether our own will does any thing in
those things which pertain unto eternal salvation, or whether it is wholly
passive under the work of grace."—But here, you say the contrary: that it
is Christian piety to "strive with all the powers;" and that,
"without the mercy of God the will is ineffective."
Here you plainly assert, that the will does
something in those things which pertain unto eternal
salvation, when you speak of it as striving: and again, you assert that it is
passive, when you say, that without the mercy of God it is ineffective. Though,
at the same time, you do not define how far that doing, and being passive, is
to be understood: thus, designedly keeping us in ignorance how far the mercy of
God extends, and how far our own will extends; what our own will is to do, in
that which you enjoin, and what the mercy of God is to do. Thus, that prudence
of yours, carries you along; by which, you are resolved to hold with neither
side, and to escape safely through Scylla and Charybdis; in order that, when
you come into the open sea, and find yourself overwhelmed and confounded by the
waves, you may have it in your power, to assert all that you now deny, and deny
all that you now assert.
THE NECESSITY OF
KNOWING GOD AND HIS POWER.
Sect. 7.—BUT I will set your theology before your eyes
by a few similitudes.—What if any one, intending to compose a poem, or an
oration, should never think about, nor inquire into his abilities, what he
could do, and what he could not do, nor what the subject undertaken required;
and should utterly disregard that precept of Horace, "What the shoulders
can sustain, and what they must sink under;" but should precipitately dash
upon the undertaking and think thus—I must strive to get the work done; to
inquire whether the learning I have, the eloquence I have, the force of genius
I have, be equal to it, is curious and superfluous:—Or, it any one, desiring to
have a plentiful crop from his land, should not be so curious as to take the
superfluous care of examining the nature of the soil, (as Virgil curiously and
in vain teaches in his Georgics,) but should rush on at once, thinking of
nothing but the work, and plough the seashore, and cast in the seed wherever
the soil was turned up, whether sand or mud:—Or if any one, about to make war,
and desiring a glorious victory, or intending to render any other service to
the state, should not be so curious as to deliberate upon what it was in his
power to do; whether the treasury could furnish money, whether the soldiers
were fit, whether any opportunity offered; and should pay no regard whatever to
that of the historian, "Before you act, there must be deliberation, and
when you have deliberated, speedy execution;" but should rush forward with
his eyes blinded, and his ears stopped, only exclaiming war! war!
and should be determined on the undertaking:—What, I
ask you, Erasmus, would you think of such poets, such husbandmen, such
generals, and such heads of affairs? I will add also that of the Gospel—If any
one going to build a tower, sits not down first and counts the cost, whether he
has enough to finish it,—What does Christ say of such an One? (Luke xiv. 28-32).
Thus you also enjoin us works only. But you
forbid us to examine, weigh, and know, first, our ability, what we can do, and
what we cannot do, as being curious, superfluous, and irreligious. Thus, while
with your over-cautious prudence you pretend to detest temerity, and make a
show of sobriety, you go so far, that you even teach the greatest of all
temerity. For, although the Sophists are rash and mad in reality while they
pursue their curious inquiries, yet their sin is less enormous than yours; for
you even teach and enjoin men to be mad, and to rush on with temerity. And to
make your madness still greater, you persuade us, that this temerity is the
most exalted and Christian piety, sobriety, religious gravity, and even
salvation. And you assert, that if we exercise it not, we are irreligious,
curious, and vain: although you are so great an enemy to assertions. Thus, in
steering clear of Charybdis, you have, with excellent grace, escaped Scylla
also. But into this state you are driven by your confidence in your own
talents. You believe, that you can by your eloquence, so impose upon the
understandings of all, that no one shall discover the design which you secretly
hug in your heart, and what you aim at in all those your pliant writings. But
God is not mocked, (Gal. vi. 7,) upon whom it is not safe to run.
Moreover, had you enjoined us this temerity
in composing poems, in preparing for fruits, in conducting wars or other
undertakings, or in building houses; although it would have been intolerable,
especially in so great a man, yet you might have been deserving of some pardon,
at least from Christians, for they pay no regard to these temporal things. But
when you enjoin Christians themselves to become rash workers, and charge them
not to be curious about what they can do and what they cannot do, in obtaining
eternal salvation; this, evidently, and in reality, is the sin unpardonable.
For while they know not what or how much they can do, they will not know what
to do; and if they know not what to do, they cannot repent when they do wrong;
and impenitence is the unpardonable sin: and to this, does that moderate and
skeptical theology of yours lead us.
Therefore, it is not irreligious, curious,
or superfluous, but essentially wholesome and necessary, for a Christian to
know, whether or not the will does any thing in those things which pertain unto
Salvation. Nay, let me tell you, this is the very hinge upon which our
discussion turns. It is the very heart of our subject. For our object is this:
to inquire what "Free-will" can do, in what it is passive, and how it
stands with reference to the grace of God. If we know nothing of these
things, we shall know nothing whatever of Christian matters, and shall be far
behind all People upon the earth. He that does not feel this,
let him confess that he is no Christian. And he that
despises and laughs at it, let him know that he is the Christian's greatest
enemy. For, if I know not how much I can do myself, how far my ability extends,
and what I can do God-wards; I shall be equally uncertain and ignorant how much
God is to do, how far His ability is to extend, and what He is to do toward me:
whereas it is "God that worketh all in all." (1
Cor. xii. 6.) But if I know not the distinction between our working and the
power of God, I
know not God Himself. And if I know not God, I cannot worship Him, praise Him,
give Him thanks, nor serve Him; for I shall not know how much I ought to
ascribe unto myself, and how much unto God. It is necessary, therefore, to hold
the most certain distinction, between the power of God and our power, the
working of God and our working, if we would live in His fear.
Hence you see, this point, forms another
part of the whole sum of Christianity; on which depends, and in which is at
stake, the knowledge of ourselves, and the knowledge and glory of God.
Wherefore, friend Erasmus, your calling the knowledge
of this point irreligious, curious, and vain, is not to be borne in you. We owe
much to you, but we owe all to the fear of God. Nay you yourself see, that all
our good is to be ascribed unto God, and you assert that in your Form of
Christianity: and in asserting this, you certainly, at the same time assert
also, that the mercy of God alone does all things, and that our own will does
nothing, but is rather acted upon: and so it must be, otherwise the whole is
not ascribed unto God. And yet, immediately afterwards, you say, that to assert
these things, and to know them, is irreligious, impious, and vain. But at this
rate a mind, which is unstable in itself, and unsettled and inexperienced in
the things of godliness, cannot but talk.
Sect. 8.—ANOTHER part of the sum of Christianity is, to
know, whether God foreknows any thing by contingency, or whether we do all
things from necessity. This part also you make to be irreligious, curious, and
vain, as all the wicked do: the devils , and the
damned also, make it detestable and execrable. And you shew your wisdom in
keeping yourself clear from such questions, wherever you can do it. But
however, you are but a very poor rhetorician and theologian, if you pretend to
speak of "Free-will" without these essential parts of it. I will
therefore act as a whetstone, and though no rhetorician myself, will tell a
famed rhetorician what he ought to do—If, then, Quintilian, purposing to write
on Oratory, should say, "In my judgment, all that superfluous nonsense
about invention, arrangement, elocution, memory, pronunciation, need not be
mentioned; it is enough to know, that Oratory, is the art of speaking
well"—would you not laugh at such a writer? But you act exactly like this:
for pretending to write on "Free-will," you first throw aside, and
cast away, the grand substance and all the parts of the subject on which you
undertake to write. Whereas, it is impossible that you should know what
"Free-will" is, unless you know what the human will does, and what
God does or foreknows.
Do not your rhetoricians teach, that he who
undertakes to speak upon any subject, ought first to show, whether the thing
exist; and then, what it is, what its parts are, what is contrary to it,
connected with it, and like unto it, &c.? But you
rob that miserable subject in itself, "Free will," of all these
things: and define no one question concerning it, except this first, viz.,
whether it exist: and even this with such arguments as we shall presently see:
and so worthless a book on "Free-will" I never saw, excepting the
elegance of the language. The Sophists, in reality, at least argue upon this
point better than you, though those of them who have attempted the subject of
"Free-will," are no rhetoricians; for they define all the questions
connected with it: whether it exists, what it does, and how it stands with
reference to, &c.: although they do not effect what they attempt. In this
book, therefore, I will push you, and the Sophists
together, until you shall define to me the power of "Free-will," and
what it can do: and I hope I shall so push you, (Christ willing) as to make you
heartily repent that you ever published your Diatribe.
Sect. 9.—THIS, therefore, is also essentially necessary
and wholesome for Christians to know: That God foreknows nothing by
contingency, but that He foresees, purposes, and does all things according to
His immutable, eternal, and infallible will. By this thunderbolt,
"Free-will" is thrown prostrate, and utterly dashed to pieces. Those,
therefore, who would assert "Free-will," must either deny this
thunderbolt, or pretend not to see it, or push it from them. But, however,
before I establish this point by any arguments of my own, and by the authority
of Scripture, I will first set it forth in your words.
Are you not then the person, friend
Erasmus, who just now asserted, that God is by nature just, and by nature most
merciful? If this be true, does it not follow that He is immutably just
and merciful? That, as His nature is not changed to all
eternity, so neither His justice nor His mercy? And
what is said concerning His justice and His mercy, must be said also concerning
His knowledge, His wisdom, His goodness, His will, and His other Attributes. If
therefore these things are asserted religiously, piously, and wholesomely
concerning God, as you say yourself, what has come to you, that, contrary to
your own self, you now assert, that it is irreligious, curious, and vain, to
say, that God foreknows of necessity? You openly declare that the immutable will
of God is to be known, but you forbid the knowledge of His immutable prescience.
Do you believe that He foreknows against His will, or that He wills in
ignorance? If then, He foreknows, willing, His will is eternal and immovable,
because His nature is so: and, if He wills, foreknowing, His knowledge is
eternal and immovable, because His nature is so.
From which it follows unalterably, that all
things which we do, although they may appear to us to be done mutably and
contingently, and even may be done thus contingently by us, are yet, in
reality, done necessarily and immutably, with respect to the will of God. For
the will of God is effective and cannot be hindered; because the very power of
God is natural to Him, and His wisdom is such that He cannot be deceived. And
as His will cannot be hindered, the work itself cannot be hindered from being
done in the place, at the time, in the measure, and by whom He foresees and
wills. If the will of God were such, that, when the work was done, the work
remained but the will ceased, (as is the case with the will of
men, which, when the house is built which they wished to build, ceases to will,
as though it ended by death) then, indeed, it might be said, that things
are done by contingency and mutability. But here, the case is the contrary; the
work ceases, and the will remains. So far is it from possibility,
that the doing of the work or its remaining, can be said to be from contingency
or mutability. But, (that we may not be deceived in terms) being done by
contingency, does not, in the Latin language, signify that the work itself
which is done is contingent, but that it is done according to a contingent and
mutable will—such a will as is not to be found in God! Moreover, a work cannot
be called contingent, unless it be done by us
unawares, by contingency, and, as it were, by chance; that is, by our will or
hand catching at it, as presented by chance, we thinking nothing of it, nor
willing any thing about it before.
Sect. 10.—I COULD wish, indeed,
that we were furnished with some better term for this discussion, than this
commonly used term, necessity, which cannot rightly be used, either with
reference to the human will, or the divine. It is of a signification too harsh
and ill-suited for this subject, forcing upon the mind an idea of compulsion,
and that which is altogether contrary to will; whereas, the subject
which we are discussing, does not require such an idea: for Will, whether
divine or human, does what it does, be it good or evil, not by any compulsion
but by mere willingness or desire, as it were, totally free. The will of God,
nevertheless, which rules over our mutable will, is immutable and infallible;
as Boëtius sings, "Immovable Thyself, Thou movement giv'st to all."
And our own will, especially our corrupt will, cannot of itself do good;
therefore, where the term fails to express the idea required, the understanding
of the reader must make up the deficiency, knowing what is wished to be
expressed—the immutable will of God, and the impotency of our depraved will;
or, as some have expressed it, the necessity of immutability, though
neither is that sufficiently grammatical, or sufficiently theological.
Upon this point, the Sophists have now
laboured hard for many years, and being at last conquered, have been compelled
to retreat. All things take place from the necessity of the consequence, (say
they) but not from the necessity of the thing consequent. What
nothingness this amounts to, I will not take the trouble to show. By the necessity
of the consequence, (to give a general idea of it) they mean this—If God
wills any thing, that same thing must, of necessity be done; but it is not
necessary that the thing done should be necessary: for God alone is necessary;
all other things cannot be so, if it is God that wills. Therefore, (say they)
the action of God is necessary, where He wills, but the act itself is not
necessary; that is, (they mean) it has not essential necessity. But what do they effect by this playing upon words? Only
this, that the act itself is not necessary, that is, it has not essential
necessity. This is no more than saying, the act is not
God Himself. This, nevertheless, remains certain, that if the action of God is
necessary, or if there is a necessity of the consequence, every thing takes
place of necessity, how much soever the act be not
necessary; that is, be not God Himself, or have not essential necessity. For, if I be not made of necessity, it is of little moment with me,
whether my existence and being be mutable or not, if, nevertheless, I, that
contingent and mutable being, who am not the necessary God, am made.
Wherefore, their ridiculous play upon
words, that all things take place from the necessity of the consequence, but
not from the necessity of the thing consequent, amounts to nothing more
than this—all things take place of necessity, but all the things that do take
place are not God Himself. But what need was there to tell us this? As though
there were any fear of our asserting, that the things
done were God Himself, or possessed divine or necessary nature. This asserted
truth, therefore, stands and remains invincible—that all things take place
according to the immutable will of God! which they
call the necessity of the consequence. Nor is there here any
obscurity or ambiguity. In Isaiah he saith, "My counsel shall
stand, and My will shall be done." (Isa. xlvi. 10.) And what schoolboy does not under-stand the
meaning of these expressions, "Counsel," "will,"
"shall be done," "shall stand?"
Sect. 11.—BUT why should these things be abstruse to us
Christians, so that it should be considered irreligious, curious, and vain, to
discuss and know them, when heathen poets, and the very commonalty, have them
in their mouths in the most frequent use? How often does Virgil alone make
mention of Fate? "All things stand fixed by law immutable." Again,
"Fixed is the day of every man." Again, "If
the Fates summon you." And again, "If
thou shalt break the binding chain of Fate." All this
poet aims at, is to show, that in the destruction of
Those men of wisdom knew that which the
event itself, with experience, proves; that no man's own counsels ever
succeeded but that the event happened to all contrary to what they thought.
Virgil's Hector says, "Could
Sect. 12.—I OBSERVE further, not
only how true these things are (concerning which I shall speak more at large
hereafter out of the Scriptures) but also how religious, pious, and necessary
it is to know them; for if these things be not known there can be neither
faith, nor any worship of God: nay, not to know them, is to be in reality
ignorant of God, with which ignorance salvation, it is well known, cannot
consist. For if you doubt, or disdain to know that God foreknows and wills all
things, not contingently, but necessarily and immutably, how can you believe
confidently, trust to, and depend upon His promises? For when He promises, it
is necessary that you should be certain that He knows, is able, and willing to
perform what He promises; otherwise, you will neither hold Him true nor
faithful; which is unbelief, the greatest of wickedness, and a denying of the
Most High God!
And how can you be certain and secure,
unless you are persuaded that He knows and wills certainly, infallibly,
immutably, and necessarily, and will perform what He promises? Nor ought we to
be certain only that God wills necessarily and immutably, and will perform, but
also to glory in the same; as Paul, (Rom. iii. 4,) "Let God be true, but
every man a liar." And again, "For the word
of God is not without effect." (Rom. ix. 6.) And
in another place, "The foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal,
the Lord knoweth them that are His." (2 Tim. ii.
19.) And, "Which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world
began." (Titus i. 2.) And,
"He that cometh, must believe that God is, and that He is a rewarder of
them that hope in Him." (Heb. xi. 6.)
If, therefore, we are taught, and if we
believe, that we ought not to know the necessary prescience of God, and the
necessity of the things that are to take place, Christian faith is utterly
destroyed, and the promises of God and the whole Gospel entirely fall to the
ground; for the greatest and only consolation of Christians in their
adversities, is the knowing that God lies not, but does all things immutably,
and that His will cannot be resisted, changed, or hindered.
Sect. 13.—Do you now, then, only
observe, friend Erasmus, to what that most moderate, and most peace-loving
theology of yours would lead us. You call us off, and forbid our endeavouring
to know the prescience of God, and the necessity that lies on men and things,
and counsel us to leave such things, and to avoid and disregard them; and in so
doing, you at the same time teach us your rash sentiments; that we should seek
after an ignorance of God, (which comes upon us of its own accord, and is
engendered in us), disregard faith, leave the promises of God, and account the
consolations of the Spirit and the assurances of conscience, nothing at all!
Such counsel scarcely any Epicure himself would give!
Moreover, not content with this, you call him
who should desire to know such things, irreligious, curious, and vain; but him
who should disregard them, religious, pious, and sober. What else do these
words imply, than that Christians are irreligious, curious, and vain? And that
Christianity is a thing of nought, vain, foolish, and plainly impious? Here
again, therefore, while you wish by all means to deter us from temerity,
running, as fools always do, directly into the contrary, you teach nothing but
the greatest temerity, impiety, and perdition. Do you not see, then, that in
this part, your book is so impious, blasphemous, and sacrilegious, that its like is not any where to be found.
I do not, as I have observed before, speak
of your heart; nor can I think that you are so lost, that from your heart, you
wish these things to be taught and practiced. But I would shew you what
enormities that man must be compelled unknowingly to broach, who undertakes to
support a bad cause. And moreover, what it is to run against divine things and
truths, when, in mere compliance with others and against our own conscience, we
assume a strange character and act upon a strange stage. It is neither a game
nor a jest, to undertake to teach the sacred truths and godliness: for it is very easy here to meet with that fall which James speaks
of, "he that offendeth in one point is guilty of all." (James ii. 10.) For when we begin to be, in the least
degree, disposed to trifle, and not to hold the sacred truths in due reverence,
we are soon involved in impieties, and overwhelmed with blasphemies: as it has
happened to you here, Erasmus—May the Lord pardon, and have mercy upon you!
That the Sophists have given birth to such
numbers of reasoning questions upon these subjects, and have intermingled
with them many unprofitable things, many of which you mention, I know and
confess, as well as you: and I have inveighed against them much more than you
have. But you act with imprudence and rashness, when you liken the purity of
the sacred truths unto the profane and foolish questions of the impious, and
mingle and confound it with them. "They have defiled the gold with dung,
and changed the good colour," (Lam. iv. 1., as Jeremiah saith.) But the gold is not to be compared
unto, and cast away with the dung; as you do it. The gold must be wrested from
them, and the pure Scripture separated from their dregs and filth; which it has
ever been my aim to do, that the divine truths may be looked upon in one light,
and the trifles of these men in another. But it ought
not to be considered of any service to us, that nothing has been effected by
these questions, but their causing us to favour them less with the whole
current of our approbation, if, nevertheless, we still desire to be wiser than
we ought. The question with us is not how much the Sophists have effected by
their reasonings, but how we may become good men, and Christians. Nor ought you to impute it to the Christian doctrine that the
impious do evil. That is nothing to the purpose: you may speak of that
somewhere else, and spare your paper here.
Sect. 14.—UNDER your third head, you attempt to make us
some of those very modest and quiet Epicureans. With a different kind of advice
indeed, but no better than that, with which the two forementioned particulars
are brought forward:—"Some things (you say) are of that nature, that,
although they are true in themselves, and might be known, yet it would not be
prudent to prostitute them to the ears of every one."—
Here again, according to your custom, you
mingle and confound every thing, to bring the sacred things down to a level
with the profane, without making any distinction whatever: again falling into
the contempt of, and doing an injury to God. As I have said before, those
things which are either found in the sacred Writings, or may be proved by them,
are not only plain, but wholesome; and therefore may be, nay, ought to be,
spread abroad, learnt, and known. So that your saying, that they ought not to
be prostituted to the ears of every one, is false: if, that is, you speak of
those things which are in the Scripture: but if you speak of any other things,
they are nothing to me, and nothing to the purpose: you lose time and paper in
saying any thing about them.
Moreover, you know that I agree not with
the Sophists in any thing: you may therefore spare me, and not bring me in at
all as connected with their abuse of the truth. You had, in this book of yours,
to speak against me. I know where the Sophists are wrong, nor do I want you for
my instructor, and they have been sufficiently inveighed against by me: this,
therefore, I wish to be observed once for all, whenever you shall bring me in
with the Sophists, and disparage my side of the subject by their madness. For
you do me an injury; and that you know very well.
Sect. 15.—NOW let us see your reasons for giving this
advice—'you think, that, although it may be true, that God, from His nature, is
in a beetle's hole, or even in a sink, (which you have too much holy reverence
to say yourself, and blame the Sophists for talking in such a way) no less than
in Heaven, yet it would be unreasonable to discuss such a subject before the
multitude.'—
First of all, let them talk thus, who can
talk thus. We do not here argue concerning what are facts in men, but
concerning justice and law: not that we may live, but that we may live as we
ought. Who among us lives and acts rightly? But justice and the doctrine of law
are not therefore condemned: but rather they condemn us. You fetch from afar
these irrelevant things, and scrape together many such from all quarters,
because you cannot get over this one point, the prescience of God: and since
you cannot overthrow it in any way, you want, in the mean time, to tire out the
reader with a multiplicity of empty observation. But
of this, no more. Let us return to the point.
What then is your intention, in observing
that there are some things which ought not to be spoken of openly? Do you mean
to enumerate the subject of "Free-will" among those things? If you
do, the whole that I have just said concerning the necessity of knowing what
"Free-will" is, will turn round upon you. Moreover, if so, why do you
not keep to your own principles, and have nothing to do with your Diatribe?
But, if you do well in discussing "Free-will," why do you speak
against such discussion? and if it is a bad subject,
why do you make it worse? But if you do not enumerate it among those things,
then, you leave your subject-point; and like an orator of words only, talk
about those irrelevant things that have nothing to do with the subject.
Sect. 16.—NOR are you right in the use of this example;
nor in condemning the discussion of this subject before the multitude, as
useless—that God is in a beetle's hole and even in a sink! For your thoughts
concerning God are too human. I confess indeed, that there are certain
fantastical preachers, who, not from any religion, or fear of God, but from a
desire of vain-glory, or from a thirst after some novelty, or from impatience
of silence, prate and trifle in the lightest manner. But such please neither
God nor men, although they assert that God is in the Heaven of Heavens. But
when there are grave and pious preachers, who teach in modest, pure, and sound
words; they, without any danger, nay, unto much profit, speak on such a subject
before the multitude.
Is it not the duty of us all to teach, that
the Son of God was in the womb of the Virgin, and proceeded forth from her
belly? And in what does the human belly differ from any other unclean place?
Who, moreover, may not describe it in filthy and shameless terms? But such
persons we justly condemn; because, there are numberless pure words, in which
we speak of that necessary subject, even with decency and grace. The body also
of Christ Himself was human, like ours. Than which body, what is more filthy?
But shall we, therefore, not say what Paul saith, that God dwelt in it bodily?
(Col. ii. 9.) What is more unclean than death? What
more horrible than hell? Yet the prophet glorieth that God was with him in
death, and left him not, in hell. (Ps. xvi 10, Ps. cxxxix.
8.)
The pious mind, therefore, is not shocked
at hearing that God was in death and in hell: each of which is more horrible,
and more loathsome, than either a hole or a sink. Nay, since the Scripture
testifies that God is every where, and fills all things, such a mind, not only
says that He is in those places, but will, of necessity learn and know that He
is there. Unless we are to suppose that if I should at any time be taken and
cast into a prison or a sink, (which has happened to many saints,) I could not
there call upon God, or believe that He was present with me, until I should
come into some ornamented church. If you teach us that we are thus to trifle
concerning God, and if you are thus offended at the places of His essential
presence, by and by you will not even allow that He dwells with us in Heaven.
Whereas, "the Heaven of Heavens cannot contain Him," (1 Kings viii. 27.); or, they are not worthy. But, as I
said before, you, according to your custom, thus maliciously point your sting
at our cause, that you may disparage and render if hateful, because you find it
stands against you insuperable, and invincible.
Sect. 17.—IN the example concerning confession and
satisfaction, it is wonderful to observe with what dexterous prudence you
proceed. Throughout the whole, according to your custom, you move along on the
tiptoe of caution, lest you should seem, neither plainly to condemn my
sentiments nor to oppose the tyranny of the Popes: a path which you found to be
by no means safe. Therefore, throwing off, in this matter, both God and
conscience, (for what are these things to Erasmus? What has he to do with them?
What profit are they to him?) you rush upon the
external bugbear, and attack the commonalty.
—'That they, from their depravity, abuse
the preaching of a free confession and of satisfaction, to an occasion of the
flesh. But, nevertheless, (you say) by the necessity of confessing, they are,
in a measure, restrained.'—
O memorable and excellent speech! Is this
teaching theology? To bind souls by laws, and, (as Ezekiel saith, xiii. 18,) to
hunt them to death, which are not bound by God! Why, by this speech you bring
upon us the universal tyranny of the laws of the Popes, as useful and
wholesome; because, that by them also the depravity of the commonalty is
restrained.
But I will not inveigh against this place
as it deserves. I will descant upon it thus briefly—A
good theologian teaches, that the commonalty are to be restrained by the
external power of the sword, where they do evil: as Paul teaches. (Rom. xiii. 1-4.) But their consciences are not to be
fettered by false laws, that they might be tormented with sins where God wills
there should be no sins at all. For consciences are bound by the law of God
only. So that, that intermediate tyranny of Popes, which falsely terrifies and
murders the souls within, and vainly wearies the bodies without is to be taken
entirely out of the way. Because, although it binds to confession and other
things, outwardly, yet the mind is not, by these things restrained, but
exasperated the more into the hatred both of God and men. And in vain does it
butcher the body by external things, making nothing but hypocrites.—So that
tyrants, with laws of this kind, are nothing else but ravening wolves, robbers,
and plunderers of souls. And yet you, an excellent counselor of souls,
recommend these to us again: that is, you are an advocate for these most
barbarous soul-murderers, who fill the world with hypocrites, and with such as
blaspheme God and hate Him in their hearts, in order that they may restrain
them a little from outward sin. As though there were no other way of
restraining, which makes no hypocrites, and is wrought
without any destroying of consciences.
Sect. 18.—HERE you produce similitudes (in which you aim
at appearing to abound, and to use very appropriately); that is,—'that there
are diseases, which may be borne with less evil than they can be cured: as the
leprosy, &c.' You add, moreover, the example of Paul, who makes a distinction
between those things that are lawful, and those that are not expedient.
"It is lawful (you say) to speak the truth; but, before every one, at all
times, and in every way, it is not expedient."—
How copious an orator! And yet you
understand nothing of what you are saying. In a word, you treat this
discussion, as though it were some matter between you and me only, about the
recovering of some money that was at stake, or some other trivial thing, the
loss of which, as being of much less consideration than the general peace of
the community, ought not so to concern any one, but that he may yield, act and
suffer upon the occasion, in any way that may prevent the necessity of the
whole world being thrown into a tumult. Wherein, you plainly evince, that this
peace and tranquility of the flesh, are, with you, a matter of far greater
consideration than faith, than conscience, than salvation, than the Word of
God, than the glory of Christ, than God Himself! Wherefore, let me tell you
this; and I entreat you to let it sink deep into your mind—I am, in this
discussion, seeking an object solemn and essential; nay, such, and so great,
that it ought to be maintained and defended through death itself; and that,
although the whole world should not only be thrown into tumult and set in arms
thereby, but even if it should be hurled into chaos and reduced to nothing.—If
you cannot receive this, or if you are not affected by it, do you mind your own
business, and allow us to receive it and to be affected by it, to whom it is
given of God.
For, by the grace of God, I am not so great
a fool or madman, as to have desired to sustain and defend this cause so long,
with so much fortitude and so much firmness, (which you call obstinacy) in the
face of so many dangers of my life, so much hatred, so many traps laid for me;
in a word, in the face of the fury of men and devils—I have not done this for
money, for that I neither have nor desire; nor for vain-glory, for that, if I
wished, I could not obtain in a world so enraged against me, nor for the life
for my body, for that cannot be made sure of for an hour.—Do you think, then,
that you only have a heart that is moved by these tumults? Yet, I am not made
of stone, nor was I born from the Marpesian rocks. But since it cannot be otherwise,
I choose rather to be battered in temporal tumult, happy in the grace of God,
for God's word's sake, which is to be maintained with a mind incorrupt and
invincible, than to be ground to powder in eternal tumult, under the wrath of
God and torments intolerable! May Christ grant, what I desire and hope, that
your heart may not be such—but certainly your words imply, that, with Epicurus,
you consider the Word of God and a future life, to be mere fables. For, in your
instructions, you would have us, for the sake of the Popes, the heads, and the
peace of the community, to put off, upon an occasion, and depart from the
all-certain word of God: whereas, if we put off that, we put off God, faith,
salvation and all Christianity together. How far different from this is the
instruction of Christ: that, we should rather despise the whole world!
Sect. 19.—BUT you say these things, because you either
do not read or do not observe, that such is most constantly the case with the
word of God, that because of it, the world is thrown into tumult. And that Christ openly declares: "I came not (says He)
to send peace but a sword." (Matt. x. 34.) And in Luke, "I came to send fire upon the earth."
(Luke xii. 49.) And Paul, (2 Cor. vi. 5,) "In
tumults," &c. And the Prophet, in the Second
Psalm, abundantly testifies the same: declaring, that the nations are in
tumult, the people roaring, the kings rising up, and the princes conspiring
against the Lord and against His Christ. As though He had said, multitude,
height, wealth, power, wisdom, righteousness, and whatever is great in the
world, sets itself against the word of God.
Look into the Acts of the Apostles, and see
what happened in the world on account of the word of
Paul only (to say nothing of the other apostles): how he alone throws both the
Gentiles and Jews into commotion: or, as the enemies themselves express it, "turns the world
upside down." (Acts xvii. 6.) Under Elijah, the
Therefore, to wish to silence these
tumults, is nothing else, than to wish to hinder the Word of God, and to take
it out of the way. For the Word of God, wherever it comes, comes to change and
to renew the world. And even heathen writers testify,
that changes of things cannot take place, without commotion and tumult, nor
even without blood. It therefore belongs to Christians, to expect and endure
these things, with a stayed mind: as Christ says, "When ye shall hear of
wars and rumours of wars, be not dismayed, for these things must first come to
pass, but the end is not yet." (Matt. xxiv. 6.)
And as to myself, if I did not see these tumults, I should say the Word of God
was not in the world. But now, when I do see them, I rejoice from my heart, and
fear them not: being surely persuaded, that the kingdom of the Pope, with all
his followers, will fall to the ground: for it is especially against this, that
the word of God, which now runs, is directed.
I see indeed, my friend Erasmus, that you
complain in many books of these tumults, and of the loss of peace and concord; and
you attempt many means whereby to afford a remedy, and (as I am inclined to
believe) with a good intention. But this gouty foot laughs at your doctoring
hands. For here, in truth, as you say, you sail against the tide; nay, you put
out fire with straw. Cease from complaining, cease from doctoring; this tumult
proceeds, and is carried on, from above, and will not cease until it shall make
all the adversaries of the word as the dirt of the streets. Though
I am sorry that I find it necessary to teach you, so great a theologian, these
things, like a disciple, when you ought to be a teacher of others.
Your excellent sentiment, then, that some
diseases may be borne with less evil than they can be cured applies here: which
sentiment you do not appositely use. Rather call these tumults, commotions,
perturbations, seditions, discords, wars, and all other things of the same kind
with which the world is shaken and tossed to and fro on account of the Word of
God,—the diseases. These things, I say, as they are temporal, are borne with
less evil than inveterate and evil habits; by which all souls must be destroyed
if they be not changed by the word of God: which being taken away, eternal
good, God, Christ, and the Spirit, must be taken away with it.
But how much better is it to lose the whole
world, than to lose God the Creator of the world, who can create innumerable
worlds again, and is better than infinite worlds? For what are temporal things
when compared with eternal? This leprosy of temporal things, therefore, is
rather to be borne, than that every soul should be destroyed and eternally
damned, and the world kept in peace, and preserved from these tumults, by their
blood and perdition: whereas, one soul cannot be redeemed with the price of the
whole world!
You certainly have command of elegant and
excellent similitudes, and sentiments: but, when you are engaged in sacred
discussions, you apply them childishly, nay, pervertedly: for you crawl upon
the ground, and enter in thought into nothing above what is human. Whereas,
those things which God works, are neither puerile, civil, nor
human, but divine; and they exceed human capacity. Thus, you do not see,
that these tumults and divisions increase throughout the world, according to
the counsel, and by the operation of God; and therefore, you fear lest heaven
should tumble about our ears. But I, by the grace of God, see these things
clearly; because, I see other tumults greater than these that will arise in the
age to come in comparison of which, these appear but as the whispering of a
breath of air, or the murmuring of a gentle brook.
Sect. 20.—BUT, the doctrine concerning the liberty of
confession and satisfaction, you either deny, or know not that there is the
Word of God.—And here arises another inquiry. But we
know, and are persuaded, that there is a Word of God, in which the Christian
liberty is asserted, that we might not suffer ourselves to be ensnared into
bondage by human traditions and laws. This I have abundantly shewn elsewhere.
But if you wish to enter the lists, I am prepared to discuss the point with
you, and to fight it out. Though upon these subjects I
have books extant not a few.
But,—"the laws of the Popes (you say,)
may at the same time be borne with and observed, in charity; if perchance thus,
eternal salvation by the word of God, and the peace of the world, may together
consist, without tumult."—
I have said before, that cannot be. The
prince of this world will not allow the Pope and his high priests, and their
laws to be observed in liberty, but his design is, to entangle and bind
consciences. This the true God will not bear. Therefore, the Word of God, and
the traditions of men, are opposed to each other with implacable discord; no
less so, than God Himself and Satan; who each destroy the works and overthrow
the doctrines of the other, as regal kings each destroying the kingdom of the
other. "He that is not with Me (saith Christ) is
against Me." (Luke xi. 23.)
And as to—"a fear that many who are
depravedly inclined, will abuse this liberty"—
This must be considered among those
tumults, as a part of that temporal leprosy which is to be borne, and of that
evil which is to be endured. But these are not to be considered of so much
consequence, as that, for the sake of restraining their abuse, the word of God
should be taken out of the way. For if all cannot be saved, yet some are saved;
for whose sake the word of God is sent; and these, on that account, love it the
more fervently, and assent to it the more solemnly. For, what evils did not
impious men commit before, when there was no word? Nay, what good did they do?
Was not the world always drowned in war, fraud, violence, discord, and every
kind of iniquity? For if Micah (vii. 4) compares the best among them to a thorn
hedge, what do you suppose he would call the rest?
But now the Gospel is come, men begin to
impute unto it, that the world is evil. Whereas, the truth is, that by the good
Gospel, it is more manifest how evil it was, while, without the Gospel, it did all its works in darkness. Thus also the illiterate
attribute it to learning, that, by its flourishing, their ignorance becomes
known. This is the return we make for the word of life and salvation!—And what fear must we suppose there was among the Jews, when
the Gospel freed all from the law of Moses? What occasion did not this great
liberty seem to give to evil men? But yet, the Gospel was not, on that account,
taken away; but the impious were left, and it was preached to the pious, that
they might not use their liberty to an occasion of the flesh. (Gal. v. 13.)
Sect. 21.—NOR is this part of your advice, or your
remedy, to any purpose, where you say—"It is lawful to speak the truth but
it is not expedient, either before every one, or at all times, or in every
manner." And ridiculously enough, you adduce
Paul, where he says, "All things are lawful for me, but all things are not
expedient."—(1 Cor. vi. 12.)
But Paul does not there speak of teaching
doctrine or the truth; as you would confound his words, and twist them which
way you please. On the contrary, he will have the truth spoken every where, at
all times, and in every manner. So that he even rejoices that Christ is
preached even through envy and strife. Nay, he declares in plain words, that he
rejoices, let Christ be preached in any way. (Phil. i.
15-18.)
Paul is speaking of facts, and the use of
doctrine: that is, of those, who, seeking their own, had no consideration of
the hurt and offence given to the weak. Truth and doctrine, are to be preached
always, openly, and firmly, and are never to be dissembled or concealed; for
there is no offence in them; they are the staff of uprightness.—And who gave
you the power, or committed to you, the right, of confining the Christian
doctrine to persons, places, times, and causes, when Christ wills it to be
proclaimed, and to reign freely, throughout the world? For Paul saith, "the Word of God is not bound," (2 Tim. ii. 9,) but
Erasmus bounds the word. Nor did God give us the word that it should be had
with respect of places, persons, or times: for Christ saith, "Go ye out
into the whole world,": He does not say, as
Erasmus does,—go to this place and not to that. Again, "Preach the Gospel
to every creature." (Mark xvi. 15.) He does not say—preach it to some and
not to others. In a word, you enjoin, in the administration of the word of God,
a respect of persons, a respect of places, a respect of customs, and a respect
of times: whereas, the one and especial part of the glory of the word consists
in this,—that, as Paul saith, there is, with it, no respect of persons; and
that God is no respecter of persons. You see therefore, again, how rashly you
run against the Word of God, as though you preferred far before it, your own
counsel and cogitations.
Hence, if we should demand of you that you
would determine for us, the times in which, the persons to whom, and the manner
in which, the truth is to be spoken, when would you come to an end? The world
would sooner compute the termination of time and its own end, than you would
settle upon any one certain rule. In the meantime, where would remain the duty
of teaching? Where that of teaching the soul? And how could you, who know
nothing of the nature of persons, times, and manner, determine upon any rule at
all? And even if you should know them perfectly, yet you could not know the
hearts of men. Unless, with you, the manner, the time, and the person be this:—teaching the truth so, that the Pope be not
indignant, Caesar be not enraged, and that many be not offended and made worse!
But what kind of counsel this is, you have seen above.—I have thus rhetorically
figured away in these vain words, lest you should appear to have said nothing
at all.
How much better is it for us wretched men
to ascribe unto God, who knoweth the hearts of all men, the glory of
determining the manner in which, the persons to whom, and the times in which
the truth is to be spoken. For He knows what is to be spoken
to each, and when, and how it is to be spoken. He then, determines that
His Gospel which is necessary unto all, should be confined to no place, no
time; but that it should be preached unto all, at all times and in all places.
And I have already proved, that those things which are handed down to us in the
Scriptures, are such, that they are quite plain and wholesome, and of necessity
to be proclaimed abroad; even as you yourself determined in your Paraclesis was
right to be done; and that, with much more wisdom than you advise now. But let
those who would not that souls should be redeemed, such as the Pope and his
adherents—let it be left to them to bind the Word of God, and hinder men from
life and the kingdom of heaven, that they might neither enter in themselves nor
suffer others to enter:—to whose fury you, Erasmus, by this advice of yours,
are perniciously subservient.
Sect. 22.—OF the same stamp with this, is that prudence
of yours also, with which you next give it as your advice—'that, if any thing
were settled upon, in the councils, that was wrong, it ought not to be openly
confessed: lest, a handle should be thereby afforded, for contemning the
authority of the fathers.'—
This, indeed, is just what the Pope wished
you to say! And he hears it with greater pleasure than
the Gospel itself, and will be a most ungrateful wretch, if he do not honour
you in return, with a cardinal's cap together with all the revenues belonging
to it. But in the mean time, friend Erasmus, what will the souls do that shall
be bound and murdered by that iniquitous statute? Is that nothing to you? But
however, you always think, or pretend to think, that human statutes can be
observed together with the Word of God, without peril. If they could, I would
at once go over to this your sentiment.
But if you are yet in ignorance, I tell you
again, that human statutes cannot be observed together with the Word of God:
because, the former bind consciences, the latter looses them. They are directly
opposed to each other, as water to fire. Unless, indeed, they
could be observed in liberty; that is, not to bind the conscience. But
this the Pope wills not, nor can he will it, unless he wishes his kingdom to be
destroyed and brought to an end: for that stands only in ensnaring and binding
those consciences, which the Gospel pronounces free. The authority of the
fathers, therefore, is to be accounted nought: and those statutes which have
been wrongly enacted, (as all have been that are not according to the Word of
God) are to be rent in sunder and cast away: for Christ is better than the
authority of the fathers. In a word, if it be concerning the Word of God that
you think thus, you think impiously; if it be concerning other things, your
verbose disputing about your sentiment is nothing to me: I am disputing
concerning the Word of God!
Sect. 23.—IN the last part of your Preface, where you
deter us from this kind of doctrine, you think your victory is almost gained.
"What (you say) can be more useless
than that this paradox should be proclaimed openly to the world—that whatever
is done by us, is not done by Free-will, but from mere
necessity. And that of Augustine also—that God works in us both good and evil:
that He rewards His good works in us, and punishes His evil works in us."
(You are mightily copious here in giving, or rather, in expostulating concerning
a reason.) "What a flood-gate of iniquity (you say) would these things,
publicly proclaimed, open unto men! What bad man would
amend his life! Who would believe that he was loved of God! Who would war
against his flesh!"
I wonder, that in so
great vehemency, and contending zeal, you did not remember our main subject,
and say—where then would be found "Free-will."
My friend, Erasmus! here,
again, I also say, if you consider that these paradoxes are the inventions of
men, why do you contend against them? Why are you so enraged? Against whom do
you rail? Is there any man in the world, at this day, who
has inveighed more vehemently against the doctrines of men, than Luther! This
admonition of yours, therefore, is nothing to me! But if you believe that those
paradoxes are the words of God, where is your countenance, where is your shame,
where is, I will not say your modesty, but that fear of, and that reverence
which is due to the true God, when you say, that nothing is more useless to be
proclaimed than that Word of God! What! shall your
Creator, come to learn of you His creature, what is useful, and what not useful
to be preached? What! did that foolish and unwise God, know not what is
necessary to be taught, until you His instructor prescribed to Him the measure,
according to which He should be wise, and according to which He should command?
What! did He not know before you told Him, that that
which you infer would be the consequence of this His paradox? If, therefore,
God willed that such things should be spoken of and proclaimed abroad, without
regarding what would follow,—who art thou that forbiddest it?
The apostle Paul, in his Epistle to the
Romans, discourses on these same things, not "in a corner," but in
public and before the whole world, and that with a freely open mouth, nay in
the harshest terms, saying, "whom He will He
hardeneth." (Rom. ix. 18.) And again, "God,
willing to shew forth His wrath," &c. (Rom ix. 22.) What is more
severe, that is to the flesh, than that word of Christ "Many are called
but few chosen?" (Matt. xxii. 14.) And again,
"I know whom I have chosen?" (John xiii.
18.) According to your judgment then, all these things are such, that nothing
can be more uselessly spoken; because that by these things, impious men may
fall into desperation, hatred, and blasphemy.
Here then, I see, you suppose that the
truth and the utility of the Scripture are to be weighed and judged of
according to the opinion of men, nay, of men the most impious; so that, what
pleases them or seems bearable, should be deemed true, divine, and wholesome:
and what has the contrary effect upon them, should at once be deemed useless,
false, and pernicious. What else do you mean by all this, than that the words
of God should depend on, stand on, and fall by, the will and authority of men?
Whereas the Scripture, on the contrary saith, that all things stand and fall by
the will and authority of God: and in a word, that "all the earth keeps
silence before the face of the Lord." (Hab. ii.
20.) He who could talk as you do, must imagine that the living God is nothing
but a kind of trifling and inconsiderate pettifogger declaiming on a certain
rostrum, whose words you may if you be disposed, interpret, understand, and
refute as you please, because He merely spoke as He saw a set of impious men to
be moved and affected.
Here you plainly discover how much your
advice above,—'that the majesty of the judgments of God should be
reverenced,'—was from your heart! There, when we were speaking of the doctrines
of the Scripture only, where there was no need of reverencing things abstruse
and hidden, because there were no such doctrines, you awed us, in the most
religious terms, with the darkness of the Corycian cavern, lest we should rush
forward with too much curiosity; so that, by the awe, you well nigh frightened
us from reading the Scriptures altogether; (to the reading of which Christ and
His apostles urge and persuade us, as well as you do yourself elsewhere.) But
here, where we are come not to the doctrines of the Scripture, nor to the
Corycian cavern only, but to the very, and greatly to be reverenced secrets of
the divine Majesty, viz., why He works thus?—here, as they say, you burst open
all bars and rush in; all but, openly blaspheming! What indignation against God
do you not discover, because you cannot see His reason why, and His design in
this His counsel! Why do you not here frame, as an excuse, obscurity and
ambiguity? Why do you not restrain yourself, and deter others from prying into
these things which God wills should be hidden from us, and which He has not
delivered to us in the Scriptures? It is here the hand is to be laid upon the
mouth, it is here we are to reverence what lies hidden, to adore the secret
counsels of the divine Majesty, and to exclaim with Paul, "Who art thou, O
man, that contendest with God?" (Rom. ix. 20.)
Sect. 24.—"WHO (you say) will endeavour to amend
his life?"—I answer, No man! no man can! For your
self-amenders without the Spirit, God regardeth not, for they are hypocrites.
But the Elect, and those that fear God, will be amended by the Holy Spirit; the
rest will perish unamended. Nor does Augustine say, that the works of none,
nor that the works of all are crowned, but the
works of some. Therefore, there will be some, who shall amend
their lives.
"Who will believe (you say) that he is
loved of God?"—I answer, no man will believe it! No man can! But the Elect
shall believe it; the rest shall perish without believing it, filled with
indignation and blaspheming, as you here describe them. Therefore, there will
be some who shall believe it.
And as to your saying that—"by these
doctrines the flood-gate of iniquity is thrown open unto men"—be it so.
They pertain to that leprosy of evil to be borne, spoken of before.
Nevertheless, by the same doctrines, there is thrown open to the Elect and to
them that fear God, a gate unto righteousness,—an entrance into heaven—a way
unto God! But if, according to your advice, we should refrain from these
doctrines, and should hide from men this Word of God, so that each, deluded by
a false persuasion of salvation, should never learn to fear God, and should
never be humbled, in order that through this fear he might come to grace and
love; then, indeed, we should shut up your flood-gate to purpose! For in the
room of it, we should throw open to ourselves and to all, wide gates, nay,
yawning chasms and sweeping tides, not only unto iniquity, but unto the depths
of hell! Thus, we should not enter into Heaven ourselves, and them that were
entering in we should hinder.
—"What utility therefore (you say) is
there in, or necessity for proclaiming such things openly, when so many evils
seem likely to proceed therefrom?"—
I answer. It were enough to say—God has
willed that they should be proclaimed openly: but the reason of the divine will
is not to be inquired into, but simply to be adored, and the glory to be given
unto God: who, since He alone is just and wise, doth evil to no one, and can do
nothing rashly or inconsiderately, although it may appear far otherwise unto
us. With this answer those that fear God are content. But that, from the
abundance of answering matter which I have, I may say a little more than this,
which might suffice;—there are two causes which require such things to be
preached. The first is, the humbling of our pride, and
the knowledge of the grace of God. The second is, Christian faith itself.
First, God has promised certainly His grace
to the humbled: that is, to the self-deploring and despairing. But a man cannot
be thoroughly humbled, until he comes to know that his salvation is utterly
beyond his own powers, counsel, endeavours, will, and works, and absolutely
depending on the will, counsel, pleasure, and work of another, that is, of God
only. For if, as long as he has any persuasion that he can do even the least
thing himself towards his own salvation, he retain a confidence in himself and
do not utterly despair in himself, so long he is not humbled before God; but he
proposes to himself some place, some time, or some work, whereby he may at
length attain unto salvation. But he who hesitates not to depend wholly upon
the good-will of God, he totally despairs in himself, chooses nothing for
himself, but waits for God to work in him; and such an one, is the nearest unto
grace, that he might be saved.
These things, therefore, are openly
proclaimed for the sake of the Elect: that, being by these means humbled and
brought down to nothing, they might be saved. The rest resist this humiliation;
nay, they condemn the teaching of self-desperation; they wish to have left a
little something that they may do themselves. These secretly remain proud, and
adversaries to the grace of God. This, I say, is one reason—that those who fear
God, being humbled, might know, call upon, and receive the grace of God.
The other reason is—that faith is, in things
not seen. Therefore, that there might be room for faith, it is necessary
that all those things which are believed should be hidden. But they are
not hidden more deeply, than under the contrary of sight, sense, and experience.
Thus, when God makes alive, He does it by killing; when He justifies, He does
it by bringing in guilty: when He exalts to Heaven, He does it by bringing down
to hell: as the Scripture saith, "The Lord killeth and maketh alive, He
bringeth down to the grave and raiseth up, " (I Sam. ii. 6.); concerning
which, there is no need that I should here speak more at large, for those who
read my writings, are well acquainted with these things. Thus He conceals His
eternal mercy and loving-kindness behind His eternal wrath: His righteousness,
behind apparent iniquity.
This is the highest degree of faith—to
believe that He is merciful, who saves so few and damns so many; to believe Him
just, who according to His own will, makes us necessarily damnable, that He may
seem, as Erasmus says, 'to delight in the torments of the miserable, and to be
an object of hatred rather than of love.' If, therefore, I could by any means
comprehend how that same God can be merciful and just, who carries the
appearance of so much wrath and iniquity, there would be no need of faith. But
now, since that cannot be comprehended, there is room for exercising faith,
while such things are preached and openly proclaimed: in the same manner as,
while God kills, the faith of life is exercised in death. Suffice it to have
said thus much upon your PREFACE.
In this way, we shall more rightly consult
for the benefit of those who dispute upon these paradoxes, than according to
your way: whereby, you wish to indulge their impiety by silence, and a refraining
from saying any thing: which is to no profit whatever. For if you believe, or
even suppose these things to be true, (seeing they are paradoxes of no small
moment,) such is the insatiable desire of mortals to search into secret things,
and the more so the more we desire to keep them secret, that, by this
admonition of yours, you will absolutely make them public; for all will now
much more desire to know whether these paradoxes be true or not: thus they
will, by your contending zeal, be so roused to inquiry, that not one of us ever
afforded such a handle for making them known, as you yourself have done by this
over-religious and zealous admonition. You would have acted much more
prudently, had you said nothing at all about being cautious in mentioning these
paradoxes, if you wished to see your desire accomplished. But, since you do not
directly deny that they are true, your aim is frustrated: they cannot be
concealed: for, by their appearance of truth, they will draw all men to search
into them. Therefore, either deny that they are true
altogether, or else hold your own tongue first, if you wish others to hold
theirs.
Sect. 25.—AS to the other paradox you mention,—that,
'whatever is done by us, is not done by Free-will, but from mere necessity'—
Let us briefly consider this, lest we
should suffer any thing most perniciously spoken, to pass by unnoticed. Here
then, I observe, that if it be proved that our salvation is apart from our own
strength and counsel, and depends on the working of God alone, (which I hope I
shall clearly prove hereafter, in the course of this discussion,) does it not
evidently follow, that when God is not present with us to work in us, every
thing that we do is evil, and that we of necessity do those things which are of
no avail unto salvation? For if it is not we ourselves, but God only, that
works salvation in us, it must follow, whether or no, that we do nothing unto
salvation before the working of God in us.
But, by necessity, I do not mean compulsion;
but (as they term it) the necessity of immutability, not of compulsion;
that is, a man void of the Spirit of God, does not evil against his will as
by violence, or as if he were taken by the neck and forced to it, in the same
way as a thief or cut-throat is dragged to punishment against his will; but he
does it spontaneously, and with a desirous willingness. And this willingness
and desire of doing evil he cannot, by his own power, leave off, restrain, or
change; but it goes on still desiring and craving. And even if he should be
compelled by force to do any thing outwardly to the contrary, yet the
craving will within remains averse to, and rises in indignation against
that which forces or resists it. But it would not rise in indignation, if it
were changed, and made willing to yield to a constraining power. This is what
we mean by the necessity of immutability:—that the will cannot change itself,
nor give itself another bent; but rather the more it is resisted, the more it
is irritated to crave; as is manifest from its indignation. This would not be
the case if it were free, or had a
"Free-will." Ask experience, how hardened against all persuasion they
are, whose inclinations are fixed upon any one thing. For if they yield at all,
they yield through force, or through something attended with greater advantage;
they never yield willingly. And if their inclinations be not thus fixed, they
let all things pass and go on just as they will.
But again, on the other hand, when God
works in us, the will, being changed and sweetly breathed on by the
Spirit of God, desires and acts, not from compulsion, but responsively,
from pure willingness, inclination, and accord; so that it cannot be turned
another way by any thing contrary, nor be compelled or overcome even by the
gates of hell; but it still goes on to desire, crave after, and love that which
is good; even as before, it desired, craved after, and loved that which was
evil. This, again, experience proves. How invincible and unshaken are holy men,
when, by violence and other oppressions, they are only compelled and irritated
the more to crave after good! Even as fire, is rather fanned into flames than
extinguished, by the wind. So that neither is there here any
willingness, or "Free-will," to turn itself into another direction,
or to desire any thing else, while the influence of the Spirit and grace of God
remain in the man.
In a word, if we be under the god of this
world, without the operation and Spirit of God, we are led captives by him at his
will, as Paul saith. (2 Tim. ii. 26.) So that, we
cannot will any thing but that which he wills. For he is that "strong man
armed," who so keepeth his palace, that those whom he holds captive are
kept in peace, that they might not cause any motion or feeling against him;
otherwise, the kingdom of Satan, being divided against itself, could not stand;
whereas, Christ affirms it does stand. And all this we
do willingly and desiringly, according to the nature of will: for if it
were forced, it would be no longer will. For compulsion is (so to speak)
unwillingness. But if the "stronger than he" come and overcome
him, and take us as His spoils, then, through the Spirit, we are His servants
and captives (which is the royal liberty) that we may desire and do, willingly,
what He wills.
Thus the human will is, as it were, a beast
between the two. If God sit thereon, it wills and goes where God will: as the
Psalm saith, "I am become as it were a beast
before thee, and I am continually with thee." (Ps.
lxxiii. 22-23.) If Satan sit thereon, it wills and goes as Satan will.
Nor is it in the power of its own will to choose, to which rider it will run,
nor which it will seek; but the riders themselves contend, which shall have and
hold it.
Sect. 26.—AND now, what if I prove from your own words,
on which you assert the freedom of the will, that there is no such thing as
"Free-will" at all! What if I should make it manifest that you
unknowingly deny that, which, with so much policy, you labour to affirm. And if
I do not this, actually, I vow that I will consider all that I advance in this
book against you, revoked; and all that your Diatribe advances against me, and
aims at establishing, confirmed.
You make the power of "Free-will"
to be—'that certain small degree of power, which, without the grace of God, is
utterly ineffective.'
Do you not acknowledge this?—Now then, I
ask and demand of you, if the grace of God be wanting, or, if it be taken away
from that certain small degree of power, what can it do of itself? 'It is ineffective
(you say) and can do nothing of good.' Therefore, it cannot do what God or His
grace wills. And why? because
we have now separated the grace of God from it; and what the grace of God does
not, is not good. And hence it follows, that "Free-will," without the
grace of God is, absolutely, not FREE;
but, immutably, the servant and bond-slave of evil; because, it cannot turn
itself unto good. This being determined, I will allow you to make the power of
"Free-will," not only a certain small degree of power, but to make it
evangelical if you will, or, if you can, to make it divine: provided that, you
add to it this doleful appendage—that, without the grace of God, it is
ineffective. Because, then you will at once take from it all power: for, what
is ineffective power, but plainly, no power at all?
Therefore, to say, that the will is FREE, and that it
has indeed power, but that it is ineffective, is what the sophists call 'a
direct contrariety.' As if one should say, "Free-will" is that which
is not free. Or as if one should term fire cold, and
earth hot. For if fire had the power of heat, yea of the heat of hell, yet, if
it did not burn or scorch, but were cold and produced cold, I should not call
it fire, much less should I term it hot; unless, indeed, you were to mean an
imaginary fire, or a fire represented in a picture.—But if we call the power of
"Free-will" that, by which a man is fitted to be caught by the
Spirit, or to be touched by the grace of God, as one created unto eternal life
or eternal death, may be said to be; this power, that is, fitness, or, (as the
Sophists term it) 'disposition-quality,' and 'passive aptitude,' this I also
confess. And who does not know, that this is not in trees or beasts? For, (as
they say) Heaven was not made for geese.
Therefore, it stands confirmed, even by
your own testimony, that we do all things from necessity, not from
"Free-will:" seeing that, the power of "Free-will" is
nothing, and neither does, nor can do good, without grace. Unless you wish
efficacy to bear a new signification, and to be understood as meaning perfection:
that is, that "Free-will" can, indeed, will and begin, but cannot
perfect: which I do not believe: and upon this I shall speak more at large
hereafter.
It now then follows, that Free-will is
plainly a divine term, and can be applicable to none but the divine Majesty
only: for He alone "doth, (as the Psalm sings) what He will in Heaven and
earth." (Ps. cxxxv. 6.) Whereas, if it be
ascribed unto men, it is not more properly ascribed, than the divinity of God
Himself would be ascribed unto them: which would be the greatest of all
sacrilege. Wherefore, it becomes Theologians to refrain from the use of this
term altogether, whenever they wish to speak of human ability, and to leave it
to be applied to God only. And moreover, to take this same term out of the
mouths and speech of men; and thus to assert, as it were, for their God, that
which belongs to His own sacred and holy Name.
But if they must, whether or no, give some
power to men, let them teach, that it is to be called by some other term than
Free-will"; especially since we know and clearly see, that the people are
miserably deceived and seduced by that term, taking and understanding it to
signify something far different from that which Theologians mean and understand
by it, in their discussions. For the term, "Free-will," is by far too
grand, copious, and full: by which, the people imagine is signified (as the
force and nature of the term requires) that power, which can freely turn itself
as it will, and such a power as is under the influence of, and subject to no
one. Whereas, if they knew that it was quite otherwise, and that by that term
scarcely the least spark or degree of power was signified, and that, utterly
ineffective of itself, being the servant and bond-slave of the devil, it would
not be at all surprising if they should stone us as mockers and deceivers, who
said one thing and meant something quite different; nay, who left it uncertain
and unintelligible what we meant. For "he who speaks sophistically (the
wise man saith) is hated," and especially if he does so in things
pertaining to godliness, where eternal salvation is at stake.
Since, therefore, we have lost the
signification of so grand a term and the thing signified by it, or rather,
never had them at all, (which the Pelagians may heartily wish had been the
case, being themselves illuded by this term,) why do we so tenaciously hold an
empty word, to the peril and mockery of the believing people? There is no more
wisdom in so doing, than there is in kings and potentates retaining, or
claiming and boasting of, empty titles of kingdoms and countries, when they are
at the same time mere beggars, and any thing but the possessors of those kingdoms
and countries. But however, this is bearable, since they deceive and mock no
one thereby, but only feed themselves on vanity without any profit. But here,
is a peril of salvation, and the most destructive mockery.
Who would not laugh at, or rather hold up
to hatred, that most untimely innovator of terms, who, contrary to all
established use, should attempt to introduce such a mode of speaking, as by the
term 'beggar,' to have understood, 'wealthy;' not because such an one has any
wealth himself, but because some king may, perchance, give him his wealth? And what if such an one should really do this, not by any
figure of speech, as by periphrasis or irony, but in plain serious meaning? In
the same way, speaking of one 'sick unto death,' he may wish to be understood
as meaning, one in 'perfect health:' giving this as his reason, because the one
may give the other his health. So also, he may, by 'illiterate idiot,' mean 'most learned;' because some other may perchance
give him his learning. Of precisely the same nature is this:—man has a
"Free-will:" for this reason, if perchance God should give him His.
By this abuse of the manner of speaking, any one may boast that he has any
thing: that He is the Lord of heaven and earth—if perchance God should give
this unto him. But this is not the way in which
Theologians should proceed, this is the way of stage-players and public
informers. Our words ought to be proper words, pure and sober; and, as Paul
saith, "sound speech that cannot be condemned." (Titus
ii. 7-8.)
But, if we do not like to leave out this
term altogether, (which would be most safe, and also most religious) we may,
nevertheless, with a good conscience teach, that it be used so far as to allow
man a "Free-will," not in respect of those which are above him, but
in respect only of those things which are below him: that is, he may be allowed
to know, that he has, as to his goods and possessions the right of using,
acting, and omitting, according to his "Free-will;" although, at the
same time, that same "Free-will" is overruled by the Free-will of God
alone, just as He pleases: but that, God-ward, or in things which pertain unto
salvation or damnation, he has no "Free-will," but is a captive,
slave, and servant, either to the will of God, or to the will of Satan.
Sect. 27.—THESE observations have I made upon the heads of
your PREFACE,
which, indeed, themselves, may more properly be said to embrace the whole
subject, than the following body of the book. But however, the whole of these
observations in reply, might have been summed up and made in this one short
compendious answer to you.—Your Preface complains, either of the Words of God,
or of the word of men. If of the words of men, the whole is written in vain; if
of the Words of God, the whole is impious. Wherefore, it would have saved much
trouble, if it had been plainly mentioned, whether we were disputing concerning
the Words of God, or the words of men. But this, perhaps, will be handled in
the EXORDIUM which follows, or in the body of the discussion itself.
But the hints which
you have thrown together in the conclusion of your Preface, have no weight
whatever.
—Such as, your calling my doctrines
'fables, and useless:' and saying, 'that Christ crucified should rather be
preached, after the example of Paul: that wisdom is to be taught among them
that are perfect that the language of Scripture is attempered to the various
capacities of hearers: and your therefore thinking, that it should be left to
the prudence and charity of the teacher, to teach that which may be profitable
to his neighbour'—
All this you advance senselessly, and away
from the purpose. For rather do we teach anything but Christ
crucified. But Christ crucified, brings all these things along with
Himself, and that 'wisdom also among them that are perfect:' for there is no
other wisdom to be taught among Christians, than that which is 'hidden in a
mystery:' and this belongs to the 'perfect,' and not to the sons of the Jewish
and legal generation, who, without faith, glory in their works, as Paul, 1 Cor.
ii., seems to think! Unless by preaching Christ crucified, you mean nothing
else but calling out these words—Christ is crucified!
And as to your observing—'that, God is
represented as being angry, in a fury, hating, grieving, pitying, repenting,
neither of which, nevertheless, ever takes place in Him'—
This is only purposely stumbling on plain
ground. For these things neither render the Scriptures
obscure, nor necessary to be attempered to the various capacities of hearers.
Except that, many like to make obscurities where there are none. For these
things are no more than grammatical particulars, and certain figures of speech,
with which even school-boys are acquainted. But we, in this disputation, are
contending, not about grammatical figures, but about doctrines of truth.
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
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
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
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
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
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, (1 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 resist, and persist 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 persist in
their opinion, and go on to resist 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 traveling 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."
FIRST PART.
Sect. 41.—AND, first of all, let us begin regularly with
your definition: according to which, you define "Free-will"
thus,
—"Moreover I consider Free-will in
this light: that it is a power in the human will, by which, a man may apply
himself to those things which lead unto eternal salvation, or turn away from
the same."—
With a great deal of policy indeed, you
have here stated a mere naked definition, without declaring any part of
it, (as all others do); because, perhaps, you feared more shipwrecks than one.
I therefore am compelled to state the several parts myself. The thing defined
itself, if it be closely examined, has a much wider extent than the definition
of it: and such a definition, the Sophists would call faulty: that is, when the
definition does not fully embrace the thing defined. For I have shown before,
that "Free-will" cannot be applied to any one but to God only. You
may, perhaps, rightly assign to man some kind of will,
but to assign unto him "Free-will" in divine things, is going too
far. For the term "Free-will," in the judgment of the ears of all,
means, that which can, and does do God-ward, whatever it pleases, restrainable
by no law and no command. But you cannot call him Free, who is a servant
acting under the power of the Lord. How much less, then, can we rightly call
men or angels free, who so live under the all-overruling command of God,
(to say nothing of sin and death,) that they cannot consist one moment by their
own power.
Here then, at the outset, the definition of the term, and the definition of the thing termed,
militate against each other: because the term signifies one thing, and
the thing termed is, by experience, found to be another. It would indeed be
more properly termed "Vertible-will," or "Mutable-will."
For in this way Augustine, and after him the Sophists, diminished the glory and
force of the term, free; adding thereby this detriment, that they assign
vertibility to "Free-will." And it becomes us thus to speak,
lest, by inflated and lofty terms of empty sound, we should deceive the hearts
of men. And, as Augustine also thinks, we ought to speak according to a certain
rule, in sober and proper words; for in teaching, simplicity and propriety of
argumentation is required, and not highflown figures of rhetorical persuasion.
Sect. 42.—BUT that we might not seem to delight in a
mere war of words, we cede to that abuse, though great and dangerous, that
"Free-will means "Vertible-will." We will cede also that to
Erasmus, where he makes "Free-will" 'a power of the human will:' (as
though angels had not a "Free-will" too, merely because he designed
in this book to treat only on the "Free-will" of men!) We make this
remark, otherwise, even in this part, the definition
would be too narrow to embrace the thing defined.
We come then to those parts of the
definition, which are the hinge upon which the matter turns. Of these things
some are manifest enough; the rest shun the light, as if conscious to
themselves that they had every thing to fear: because, nothing ought to be
expressed more clearly, and more decisively, than a definition; for to define
obscurely, is the same thing as defining nothing at all.
The clear parts of the definition then are
these:—'power of human will:' and 'by which a man can:' also, 'unto eternal
salvation.' But these are Andabatae:—'to apply:' and, 'to those things which
lead:' also, 'to turn away.' What shall we divine that this 'to apply' means? And this 'to turn away,' also? And also what these words
mean, 'which pertain unto eternal salvation?' Into what dark corner have these
withdrawn their meaning? I seem as if I were engaged in dispute with a very
Scotinian, or with Heraclitus himself, so as to be in the way of being worn out
by a twofold labour. First, that I shall have to find out my adversary by
groping and feeling about for him in pits and darkness, (which is an enterprise
both venturous and perilous,) and if I do not find him, to fight to no purpose
with ghosts, and beat the air in the dark. And, secondly, if I should bring him
out into the light, that then, I shall have to fight with him upon equal
ground, when I am already worn out with hunting after him.
I suppose, then, what you mean by the
'power of the human will' is this:—a power, or faculty, or disposition, or
aptitude, to will or not to will, to choose or refuse, to approve or
disapprove, and what other actions soever belong to the will. Now then, what it
is for this same power 'to apply itself,' or 'to turn away,' I do not see:
unless it be the very, willing or not willing, choosing or refusing, approving
or disapproving; that is, the very action itself of the will. But may we
suppose, that this power is a kind of medium, between the will itself and the
action itself; such as, that by which the will itself allures forth the action
itself of willing or not willing, or by which the action itself of willing or
not willing is allured forth? Any thing else beside this, it is impossible for
one to imagine or think of. And if I am deceived, let the fault be my author's
who has given the definition, not mine who examine it. For it
is justly said among lawyers, 'his words who speaks obscurely, when he can
speak more plainly, are to be interpreted against himself.' And here I wish to know nothing of our moderns and their
subtleties, for we must come plainly to close quarters in what we say, for the
sake of understanding and teaching.
And as to those words, 'which lead unto
eternal salvation,' I suppose by them are meant the words and works of God,
which are offered to the human will, that it might either apply itself to them,
or turn away from them. But I call both the Law and the Gospel the words of
God. By the Law, works are required; and by the Gospel, faith. For there are no
other things which lead either unto the grace of God, or unto eternal
salvation, but the word and the work of God: because grace or the spirit is the
life itself, to which we are led by the word and the work of God.
Sect. 43.—BUT this life or salvation is an eternal
matter, incomprehensible to the human capacity: as Paul shews, out of Isaiah,
(1 Cor. ii. 9.) "Eye hath not seen nor ear heard, neither hath it entered
into the heart of man to conceive, the things which God hath prepared for them
that love him." For when we speak of eternal life, we speak of that which
is numbered among the chiefest articles of our faith. And what
"Freewill" avails in this article Paul testifies, (1 Cor. ii. 10.)
Also: "God (saith he) hath revealed them unto us by His Spirit." As
though he had said, the heart of no man will ever understand or think of any of
those things, unless the Spirit shall reveal them; so far is it from
possibility, that he should ever apply himself unto them or seek after them.
Look at experience. What have the most
exalted minds among the nations thought of a future life, and of the
resurrection? Has it not been, that the more exalted
they were in mind, the more ridiculous the resurrection and eternal life have
appeared to them? Unless you mean to say, that those
philosophers and Greeks at
Sect.
44. – UPON the
authority of Erasmus, then, "Free-will," is a power of the human
will, which can, of itself, will and not will to embrace the word and work of
God, by which it is to be led to those things which are beyond its capacity and
comprehension. If then, it can will and not will, it can also love and
hate. And if it can love and hate, it can, to a certain degree, do the Law and
believe the Gospel. For it is impossible, if you can will and not will, that
you should not be able by that will to begin some kind of work, even though,
from the hindering of another, you should not be able to perfect it. And
therefore, as among the works of God which lead to salvation, death, the cross,
and all the evils of the world are numbered, human will can will its own death
and perdition. Nay, it can will all things while it can will the embracing of
the word and work of God. For what is there that can be any where beneath,
above, within, and without the word and work of God, but God Himself? And what
is there here left to grace and the Holy Spirit? This is plainly to ascribe divinity
to "Free-will." For to will to embrace the Law and the Gospel,
not to will sin, and to will death, belongs to the power of God alone: as Paul
testifies in more places than one.
Wherefore, no one, since the Pelagians, has
written more rightly concerning "Free-will" than Erasmus. For I have
said above, that "Free-will" is a divine term, and signifies a divine
power. But no one hitherto, except the Pelagians, has ever assigned to it that
power. Hence, Erasmus by far outstrips the Pelagians themselves: for they
assign that divinity to the whole of "Free-will," but Erasmus to the
half of it only. They divide "Free-will" into two parts; the power
of discerning, and the power of choosing; assigning the one to
reason, and the other to will; and the Sophists do the same. But Erasmus,
setting aside the power of discerning, exalts the power of choosing alone, and
thus makes a lame, half-membered "Free-will," God himself! What must
we suppose then he would have done, had he set about describing the whole of
"Free-will."
But, not contented with this, he outstrips
even the philosophers. For it has never yet been settled among them, whether or
not any thing can give motion to itself; and upon this point, the Platonics and
Peripatetics are divided in the whole body of philosophy. But according to
Erasmus, "Freewill" not only of its own power gives motion to itself,
but 'applies itself' to those things which are eternal; that is, which are
incomprehensible to itself! A new and unheard-of definer of
"Freewill," truly, who leaves the philosophers, the Pelagians, the
Sophists, and all the rest of them, far behind him! Nor is
this all. He does not even spare himself, but dissents from, and
militates against himself, more than against all the rest together. For he had
said before, that 'the human will is utterly ineffective without grace:'
(unless perhaps this was said only in joke!) but here, where he gives a serious
definition, he says, that 'the human will has that power by which it can
effectively apply itself to those things which pertain unto eternal salvation;'
that is, which are incomparably beyond that power. So that, in this part,
Erasmus outstrips even himself!
Sect. 45.—DO you see, friend Erasmus, that by this
definition, you (though unwittingly I presume,) betray yourself, and make it
manifest that you either know nothing of these things whatever, or that,
without any consideration, and in a mere air of contempt, you write upon the
subject, not knowing what you say nor whereof you affirm? And as I said before,
you say less about, and attribute more to "Free-will," than all
others put together; for you do not describe the whole of
"Free-will," and yet you assign unto it all things. The opinion of
the Sophists, or at least of the father of them, Peter Lombard, is far more tolerable: he says, '"Free-will" is the
faculty of discerning, and then choosing also good, if with grace, but evil if
grace be wanting.' He plainly agrees in sentiment with Augustine, that
'"Freewill," of its own power, cannot do any thing but fall, nor
avail unto any thing but to sin.' Wherefore Augustine also, Book ii., against Julian, calls "Free-will" 'under
bondage,' rather than 'free.'—But you make the power of "Free-will"
equal in both respects: that it can, by its own power, without grace, both
apply itself unto good, and turn itself from evil. For you do not imagine how
much you assign unto it, by this pronoun itself, and by itself, when
you say 'can apply itself:' for you utterly exclude the Holy Spirit with all
His power, as a thing superfluous and unnecessary. Your definition, therefore,
is condemnable even by the Sophists; who, were they not so blinded by hatred
and fury against me, would be enraged at your book
rather than at mine. But now, as your intent is to oppose Luther, all that you
say is holy and catholic, even though you speak against both yourself and
them,—so great is the patience of holy men!
Not that I say this, as approving the
sentiments of the Sophists concerning "Free-will," but because I
consider them more tolerable, for they approach nearer to the truth. For though
they do not say, as I do, that "Free-will" is nothing at all, yet
since they say that it can of itself do nothing without grace, they militate
against Erasmus, nay, they seem to militate against themselves, and to be
tossed to and fro in a mere quarrel of words, being more earnest for contention
than for the truth, which is just as Sophists should be. But now, let us
suppose that a Sophist of no mean rank were brought before me, with whom I
could speak upon these things apart, in familiar conversation, and should ask
him for his liberal and candid judgment in this way:—'If any one should tell
you, that that was free, which of its own power could only go one way,
that is, the bad way, and which could go the other way indeed, that is, the
right way, but not by its own power, nay, only by the help of another—could you
refrain from laughing in his face, my friend?'—For in this way, I will make it
appear, that a stone, or a log of wood has "Freewill," because it can
go upwards and downwards; although, by its own power, it can go only downwards,
but can go upwards only by the help of another. And,
as I said before, by meaning at the same time the thing itself, and also
something else which may be joined with it or added to it, I will say,
consistently with the use of all words and languages—all men are no man, and
all things are nothing!
Thus, by a multiplicity of argumentation,
they at last make "Free-will," free by accident; as being
that, which may at some time be set free by another. But our point in dispute
is concerning the thing itself, concerning the reality of
"Free-will." If this be what is to be solved, there now remains
nothing, let them say what they will, but the empty name of
"Free-will."
The Sophists are deficient also in
this—they assign to "Free-will," the power of discerning good from
evil. Moreover, they set light by regeneration, and the renewing of the Spirit,
and give that other external aid, as it were, to "Freewill:"
but of this hereafter.—Let this be sufficient concerning the definition. Now
let us look into the arguments that are to exalt this empty thing of a TERM.
Sect. 46.—FIRST of all, we have that of Ecclesiasticus xv.
15-18.—"God from the beginning made man, and left him in the hand of his
own counsel. He gave him also His commandments, and His precepts: saying, If thou wilt keep My commandments, and wilt keep
continually, the faith that pleaseth Me, they shall preserve thee. He hath set
before thee fire and water; and upon which thou wilt, stretch forth thine hand.
Before man is life and death, good and evil; and whichsoever pleaseth him,
shall be given unto him."—
Although I might justly refuse this book,
yet, nevertheless, I receive it; lest I should, with loss of time, involve
myself in a dispute concerning the books that are received into the canon of
the Hebrews: which canon you do not a little reproach and deride, when you
compare the Proverbs of Solomon, and the Love-song, (as, with a double-meaning
sneer, you call it,) with the two books Esdras and Judith, the History of
Susannah, of the Dragon, and the Book of Esther, though they have this last in
their canon, and according to my judgment, it is much more worthy of being
there, than any one of those that are considered not to be in the canon.
But I would briefly answer you here in your
own words, 'The Scripture, in this place, is obscure and ambiguous;' therefore,
it proves nothing to a certainty. But however, since I stand in the negative, I
call upon you to produce that place which declares, in plain words, what
"Free-will" is, and what it can do. And this perhaps you will do by
about the time of the Greek Calends.—In order to avoid this necessity, you spend
many fine sayings upon nothing; and moving along on the tip-toe of prudence,
cite numberless opinions concerning "Free-will," and make of Pelagius
almost an Evangelist. Moreover, you vamp up a four-fold grace, so as to assign
a sort of faith and charity even to the philosophers. And also that new fable,
a three-fold law; of nature, of works, and of faith, so as to assert with all
boldness, that the precepts of the philosophers agree with the precepts of the
Gospel. Again, you apply that of Psalm iv. 6.
"The light of Thy countenance is settled upon us," which speaks of
the knowledge of the very countenance of the Lord, that is, of faith, to
blinded reason. All which things together, if taken into consideration by any
Christian, must compel him to suspect, that you are mocking and deriding the
doctrines and religion of Christians: For to attribute these things as so much
ignorance to him, who has illustrated all our doctrines with so much diligence,
and stored them up in memory, appears to me very difficult indeed. But however,
I will here abstain from open exposure, contented to wait until a more
favourable opportunity shall offer itself. Although I entreat you, friend
Erasmus, not to tempt me in this way like one of those who say—who sees us? For
it is by no means safe in so great a matter, to be continually mocking every
one with Vertumnities of words. But to the subject.
Sect.
47. – OUT of
the ONE
opinion concerning "Free-will" you make THREE. You say—'that THE FIRST OPINION, of those
who deny that man can will good without special grace, who deny that it can
begin, who deny that it can make progress, perfect, &c., seems to you severe,
though it may be VERY
PROBABLE.' And this you prove, as leaving to man the desire
and the effort, but not leaving what is to be ascribed to his own power. 'That
THE SECOND OPINION of those who contend, that "Free-will" avails unto
nothing but to sin, and that grace alone works good in us, &c. is more
severe still.' And THIRDLY 'that the opinion of those who say that
"Free-will" is an empty term, for that God works in us both good and
evil, is most severe. And, that, it is against these last that you
profess to write.'—
Do you know what you are saying, friend
Erasmus? You are here making three different opinions as if belonging to three
different sects: because you do not know that it is the same subject handled by
us same professors of the same sect, only by different persons, in a different
way and in other words. But let me just put you in remembrance, and set before
you the yawning inconsiderateness, or stupidity of your judgment.
How does that definition of
"Free-will," let me ask you, which you gave us above, square with
this first opinion which you confess to be, 'very probable?' For you said that
"Free-will" is a power of the human will, by which a man can apply
himself unto good;' whereas here, you say and approve the saying, that 'man,
without grace, cannot will good!' The definition, therefore, affirms what its
example denies. And hence there are found in your "Free-will" both a YEA and a NAY:" so that,
in one and the same doctrine and article, you approve and condemn us, and
approve and condemn yourself. For do you think, that to 'apply itself to those
things which pertain unto eternal salvation,' which power your definition assigns
to "Free-will," is not to do good, when, if there were so much good
in "Free-will," that it could apply itself unto good, it would have
no need of grace? Therefore, the "Free-will" which you define is one,
and the "Free-will" you defend is another. Hence then, Erasmus,
outstripping all others, has two "Free-wills;" and they, militating
against each other!
Sect. 48.—BUT, setting aside that "Freewill"
which the definition defines, let us consider that
which the opinion proposes as contrary to it. You grant, that man, without
special grace, cannot will good: (for we are not now discussing what the
grace of
God can do, but what man can do without grace:) you grant, then, that
"Free-will" cannot will good. This is nothing else but granting that
it cannot 'apply itself to those things which pertain unto eternal salvation,'
according to the tune of your definition. Nay, you say a little before, 'that
the human will after sin, is so depraved, that having lost its liberty, it is
compelled to serve sin, and cannot recall itself into a better state.' And if I
am not mistaken, you make the Pelagians to be of this opinion. Now then I
believe, my Proteus has here no way of escape: he is caught and held fast in
plain words:—' that the will, having lost its liberty, is tied and bound a
slave to sin.' O noble Free-will! which, having lost
its liberty, is declared by Erasmus himself, to be the slave of sin! When Luther asserted this, 'nothing was ever heard of so absurd;'
'nothing was more useless than that this paradox should be proclaimed abroad!'
So much so, that even a Diatribe must be written
against him!
But perhaps no one will believe me, that
these things are said by Erasmus. If the Diatribe be read in this part, it will
be admired: but I do not so much admire it. For he who does not treat this as a
serious subject, and is not interested in the cause, but is in mind alienated
from it, and grows weary of it, cold in it, and disgusted with it, how shall
not such an one everywhere speak absurdities, follies, and contrarieties,
while, as one drunk or slumbering over the cause, he belches out in the midst
of his snoring, It is so! it is not so! just as the different words sound against his ears? And therefore it is, that rhetoricians require a feeling of
the subject in the person discussing it. Much more then does
theology require such a feeling, that it may make the person vigilant, sharp,
intent, prudent, and determined.
If therefore "Free-will" without
grace, when it has lost its liberty, is compelled to serve sin and cannot will
good, I should be glad to know, what that desire is, what that endeavour is,
which that first 'probable opinion' leaves it. It cannot be a good desire or a
good endeavour, because it cannot will good, as the opinion affirms, and as you
grant. Therefore, it is an evil desire and an evil endeavour that is left,
which, when the liberty is lost, is compelled to serve sin.—But above all,
what, I pray, is the meaning of this saying: 'this opinion leaves the desire
and the endeavour, but does not leave what is to be ascribed to its own power.'
Who can possibly conceive in his mind what this means? If the desire and the
endeavour be left to the power of "Free-will," how are they not
ascribed to the same? If they be not ascribed to it, how can they be left to
it? Are then that desire and that endeavour before grace, left to grace itself
that comes after, and not to "Free-will" so as to be at the same time
left, and not left, to the same "Free-will?" If these things be not
paradoxes, or rather enormities, then pray what are enormities?
Sect. 49.—BUT perhaps the Diatribe is dreaming this,
that between these two 'can will good' and 'cannot will good' there may be a
medium; seeing that, to will is absolute, both in respect of good, and
evil. So that thus, by a certain logical subtlety, we may steer clear of the
rocks, and say, in the will of man there is a certain willing, which
cannot indeed will good without grace, but which, nevertheless, being without
grace, does not immediately will nothing but evil, but is a sort of mere
abstracted willing, vertible, upwards unto good by grace, and downwards
unto evil by sin. But then, what will become of that which you have said, that,
'when it has lost its liberty it is compelled to serve sin?' What will become
of that desire and endeavour which are left? Where will be that power of
'applying itself to those things which pertain unto eternal salvation?' For
that power of applying itself unto salvation, cannot be a mere willing, unless
the salvation itself be said to be a nothing. Nor, again, can that desire and
endeavour be a mere willing; for desire must strive and attempt
something, (as good perhaps,) and cannot go forth into nothing, nor be
absolutely inactive.
In a word, which way soever the Diatribe
turns itself, it cannot keep clear of inconsistencies and contradictory
assertions; nor avoid making that very "Free-will" which it defends,
as much a bond-captive as it is a bond-captive itself. For, in attempting to
liberate "Free-will," it is so entangled, that it is bound, together
with "Free-will," in bonds indissoluble.
Moreover, it is a mere logical figment that
in man there is a medium, a mere willing, nor can they who assert this
prove it; it arose from an ignorance of things and an observance
of terms. As though the thing were always in reality, as it is set
forth in terms; and there are with the Sophists many such misconceptions.
Whereas the matter rather stands as Christ saith, "He that is not with Me is against Me." (Matt. xii.
30.) He does not say, He that is not with Me is yet
not against Me, but in the medium. For
if God be in us, Satan is from us, and it is present with us to will nothing
but good. But if God be not in us, Satan is in us, and it is present
with us to will evil only, Neither God nor Satan admit of a mere abstracted
willing in us; but, as you yourself rightly said, when our liberty is lost
we are compelled to serve sin: that is, we will sin and evil, we speak
sin and evil, we do sin and evil.
Behold then! invincible and all-powerful
truth has driven the witless Diatribe to that dilemma, and so turned its wisdom
into foolishness, that whereas, its design was to speak against me, it is
compelled to speak for me against itself; just in the same way as
"Free-will" does any thing good; for when it attempts so to do, the
more it acts against evil the more it acts against good. So that the Diatribe
is, in saying, exactly what "Freewill" is in doing. Though the
whole Diatribe itself, is nothing else but a notable effort of
"Free-will," condemning by defending, and defending by condemning:
that is, being a twofold fool, while it would appear to be wise.
This, then, is the state of the first
opinion compared with itself:—it denies that a man can will any thing good;
but yet that a desire remains; which desire, however, is not his own!
Sect. 50.—NOW let us compare
this opinion with the remaining two.
The next of these, is that opinion 'more
severe still,' which holds, that "Free-will"
avails unto nothing but to sin. And this indeed is Augustine's opinion,
expressed, as well in many other places, as more especially, in his book
"Concerning the Spirit and the Letter;" in (if I mistake not) the
fourth or fifth chapter, where he uses those very words.
The third, is that 'most severe' opinion;
that "Free-will" is a mere empty term, and that every thing which we
do, is done from necessity under the bondage of sin.—It is with these two that
the Diatribe conflicts.
I here observe, that perhaps it may be,
that I am not able to discuss this point intelligibly, from not being
sufficiently acquainted with the Latin or with the German. But I call God to
witness, that I wish nothing else to be said or to be understood by the words
of the last two opinions than what is said in the first opinion: nor does
Augustine wish any thing else to be understood, nor do I understand any thing
else from his words, than that which the first opinion asserts: so that, the three
opinions brought forward by the Diatribe are with me nothing else than my one
sentiment. For when it is granted and established, that
"Free-will," having once lost its liberty, is compulsively bound to
the service of sin, and cannot will any thing good: I, from these words, can
understand nothing else than that "Free-will" is a mere empty term,
whose reality is lost. And a lost liberty, according to my grammar, is no
liberty at all. And to give the name of liberty to that which has no liberty,
is to give it an empty term. If I am wrong here, let him set me right who can.
If these observations be obscure or ambiguous, let him who can, illustrate and
make them plain. I for my part, cannot call that health which is lost, health;
and if I were to ascribe it to one who was sick, I should think I was giving
him nothing else than an empty name,
But away with these
enormities of words. For who would bear such an abuse of the manner of
speaking, as that we should say a man has "Free-will," and yet at the
same time assert, that when that liberty is once lost, he is compulsively bound
to the service of sin, and cannot will any thing good? These things are
contrary to common sense, and utterly destroy the common manner of speaking.
The Diatribe is rather to be condemned, which in a drowsy way, foists forth its
own words without any regard to the words of others. It does not, I say,
consider what it is, nor how much it is to assert,
that man, when his liberty is lost, is compelled to serve sin and cannot will
any thing good. For if it were at all vigilant or observant, it would plainly
see, that the sentiment contained in the three opinions is one and the same,
which it makes to be diverse and contrary. For if a man, when he has lost his
liberty, is compelled to serve sin, and cannot will good, what conclusion
concerning him can be more justly drawn, than that he can do nothing but sin,
and will evil? And such a conclusion, the Sophists themselves would draw, even
by their syllogisms. Wherefore, the Diatribe, unhappily, contends
against the last two opinions, and approves the first; whereas, that is
precisely the same as the other two; and thus again, as usual, it condemns
itself and approves my sentiments, in one and the same article.
Sect. 51.—LET us now come to that passage in
Ecclesiasticus, and also with it compare that first 'probable opinion.' The
opinion saith, 'Freewill cannot will good.' The passage in Ecclesiasticus is
adduced to prove, that "Free-will" is something, and can do
something. Therefore, the opinion which is to be proved by Ecclesiasticus,
asserts one thing; and Ecclesiasticus, which is adduced to prove it, asserts
another. This is just as if any one, setting about to prove that Christ was the
Messiah, should adduce a passage which proves that Pilate was governor of
Syria, or any thing else equally discordant. It is in the same way that
"Free-will" is here proved. But, not to mention my having above made
it manifest, that nothing clear or certain can be said or proved concerning
"Free-will," as to what it is, or what it can do, it is worth while
to examine the whole passage thoroughly.
First he
saith, "God made man in the beginning.'' Here he speaks of the creation of
man; nor does he say any thing, as yet, concerning
either "Free-will" or the commandments.
Then he goes on, "and left him in the
hand of his own counsel." And what is here? Is "Freewill" built
upon this? But there is not here any mention of commandments, for the doing of
which "Free-will" is required; nor do we read any thing of this kind
in the creation of man. If any thing be understood by "the hand of his own
counsel," that should rather be understood which is in Genesis i. and ii.:
that man was made lord of all things that he might freely exercise dominion
over them: and as Moses saith, "Let us make man, and let him have dominion
over the fishes of the sea:" nor can any thing else be proved from those
words: for it is in these things only that man may act of his own will, as
being subject unto him. And moreover, he calls this man's counsel, in
contradiction as it were to the counsel of God. But after this, when He
has said, that man was made and left thus in the hand of his own counsel—he
adds,
"He added moreover His commandments
and His precepts." Unto what did He add them? Certainly unto that counsel
and will of man, and over and above unto that constituting of His dominion over
other things. By which commandments He took from man the dominion over one part
of His creatures, (that is, over the tree of knowledge of good and evil,) and
willed rather that he should not be free.—Having added the commandments,
He then comes to the will of man towards God and towards the things of God.
"If thou wilt keep the commandments
they shall preserve thee," &c. From this part, therefore, "If
thou wilt," begins the question concerning "Free-will." So that,
from Ecclesiasticus we learn, that man is constituted as divided into two
kingdoms.—The one, is that in which he is led
according to his own will and counsel, without the precepts and the
commandments of God: that is, in those things which are beneath him. Here he
has dominion and is lord, as "left in the hand of his own counsel."
Not that God so leaves him to himself, as that He does not co-operate with him;
but He commits unto him the free use of things according to his own will,
without prohibiting him by any laws or injunctions. As we may say, by way of similitude,
the Gospel has left us in the hands of our own counsel, that we may use, and
have dominion over all things as we will. But Moses and the Pope left us not in
that counsel, but restrained us by laws, and subjected us rather to their own
will.—But in the other kingdom, he is not left in the hand of his own counsel,
but is directed and led according to the Will and Counsel of God. And as, in
his own kingdom, he is led according to his own will, without the precepts of
another; so, in the kingdom of God, he is led according to the precepts of
another, without his own will. And this is what Ecclesiasticus means, when he
says, "He added moreover His commandments and His precepts: saying, If
thou wilt," &c.
If, therefore, these things be
satisfactorily clear, I have made it fully evident, that this passage of
Ecclesiasticus does not make for "Freewill," but directly against it:
seeing that, it subjects man to the precepts and will of God, and takes from
him his "Free-will." But if they be not satisfactorily clear, I have
at least made it manifest, that this passage cannot make for
"Freewill;" seeing that, it may be understood in a sense different
from that which they put upon it, that is, in my sense already stated, which is
not absurd, but most holy and in harmony with the whole Scripture. Whereas, their sense militates against the whole Scripture, and is
fetched from this one passage only, contrary to the tenor of the whole
Scripture. I stand therefore, secure in the good sense, the negative of
"Free-will," until they shall have confirmed their strained and
forced affirmative.
When, therefore, Ecclesiasticus says,
"If thou wilt keep the commandments, and keep the faith that pleaseth Me, they shall preserve thee," I do not see that
"Free-will" can be proved from those words. For, "if thou
wilt," is a verb of the subjunctive mood, which asserts nothing: as the
logicians say, 'a conditional asserts nothing indicatively:' such as, if the
devil be God, he is deservedly worshipped: if an ass fly, an ass has wings, so
also, if there be "Free-will," grace is nothing at all. Therefore, if
Ecclesiasticus had wished to assert "Free-will," he ought to have
spoken thus:—man is able to keep the commandments of God, or, man, has
the power to keep the commandments.
Sect. 52.—BUT here the Diatribe will sharply
retort—"Ecclesiasticus by saying, "if thou wilt keep," signifies
that there is a will in man, to keep, and not to keep: otherwise, what is the
use of saying unto him who has no will, "if thou wilt?" Would it not
be ridiculous if any were to say to a blind man, if thou wilt see, thou mayest
find a treasure? Or, to a deaf man, if thou wilt hear, I will relate to thee an
excellent story? This would be to laugh at their misery" –
I answer: These are the arguments of human
reason, which is wont to shoot forth many such sprigs of wisdom. Wherefore, I
must dispute now, not with Ecclesiasticus, but with human reason concerning a
conclusion; for she, by her conclusions and syllogisms, interprets and twists
the Scriptures of God just which way she pleases. But I will enter upon this
willingly, and with confidence, knowing, that she can prate nothing but follies
and absurdities; and that more especially, when she attempts to make a shew of
her wisdom in these divine matters.
First then, if I should demand of her how
it can be proved, that the freedom of the will in man is signified and
inferred, wherever these expressions are used, 'if thou wilt,' 'if thou shalt
do,' 'if thou shalt hear;' she would say, because the nature of words, and the
common use of speech among men, seem to require it. Therefore, she judges of
divine things and words according to the customs and things of men; than which,
what can be more perverse; seeing that, the former things are heavenly, the
latter earthly. Like a fool, therefore, she exposes herself, making it manifest
that she has not a thought concerning God but what is human.
But, what if I prove, that the nature of
words and the use of speech even among men, are not always of that tendency, as
to make a laughing stock of those to whom it is said, 'if thou wilt,' 'if thou
shalt do it.' 'if thou shalt hear?'—How often do
parents thus play with their children, when they bid them come to them, or do
this or that, for this purpose only, that it may plainly appear to them how
unable they are to do it, and that they may call for the aid of the parent's
hand? How often does a faithful physician bid his obstinate patient do or omit
those things which are either injurious to him or impossible, to the intent
that, he may bring him, by an experience, to the knowledge of his disease or
his weakness? And what is more general and common,
than to use words of insult or provocation, when we would show either enemies
or friends, what they can do and what they cannot do?
I merely go over these things, to shew
Reason her own conclusions, and how absurdly she tacks them to the Scriptures:
moreover, how blind she must be not to see, that they do not always stand good
even in human words and things. But the case is, if
she see it to be done once, she rushes on headlong, taking it for granted, that
it is done generally in all the things of God and men, thus making, according
to the way of her wisdom, of a particularity an universality.
If then God, as a Father, deal with us as
with sons, that He might shew us who are in ignorance our impotency, or as a
faithful physician, that He might make our disease known unto us, or that He
might insult His enemies who proudly resist His counsel; and for this end, say
to us by proposed laws (as being those means by which He accomplishes His
design the most effectually) 'do,' 'hear,' 'keep,' or, 'if thou wilt,' 'if thou
wilt do,' 'if thou wilt hear;' can this be drawn herefrom as a just
conclusion—therefore, either we have free power to act, or God laughs at us?
Why is this not rather drawn as a conclusion—therefore, God tries us, that by
His law He might bring us to a knowledge of our impotency, if we be His
friends; or, He thereby righteously and deservedly insults and derides us, if
we be His proud enemies.' For this, as Paul teaches, is the intent of the
divine legislation. (Rom. iii. 20; v. 20. Gal. iii. 19, 24.) Because human
nature is blind, so that it knows not its own powers, or rather its own diseases.
Moreover, being proud, it self-conceitedly imagines,
that it knows and can do all things. To remedy which pride and ignorance, God
can use no means more effectual than His proposed law: of which we shall say
more in its place: let it suffice to have thus touched upon it here, to refute
this conclusion of carnal and absurd wisdom:—'if thou wilt'—therefore thou art
able to will freely.
The Diatribe dreams, that man is whole and
sound, as, to human appearance, he is in his own affairs; and therefore, from
these words, 'if thou wilt,' 'if thou wilt do,' 'if thou wilt hear,' it pertly
argues, that man, if his will be not free, is laughed at. Whereas, the
Scripture describes man as corrupt and a captive; and added to that, as proudly
contemning and ignorant of his corruption and captivity: and therefore, by
those words, it goads him and rouses him up, that he might know, by a real
experience, how unable he is to do any one of those things.
Sect. 53.—BUT I will attack the Diatribe itself. If thou
really think, O Madam Reason! that these conclusions
stand good, 'If thou wilt—therefore thou hast a free power,' why dost thou not
follow the same thyself? For thou sayest, according to that 'probable opinion,'
that "Free-will" cannot will any thing good. By what conclusion then
can such a sentiment flow from this passage also, 'if thou wilt keep,' when
thou sayest that the conclusion flowing from this, is,
that man can will and not will freely? What! can
bitter and sweet flow from the same fountain? Dost thou not here much more
deride man thyself, when thou sayest, that he can keep that, which he can
neither will nor choose? Therefore, neither dost thou, from thy heart, believe
that this is a just conclusion, 'if thou wilt—therefore thou hast a free
power,' although thou contendest for it with so much zeal, or, if thou dost
believe it, then thou dost not, from thy heart, say, that that opinion is
'probable,' which holds that man cannot will good. Thus, reason is so caught in
the conclusions and words of her own wisdom, that she knows not what she says,
nor concerning what she speaks: nay, knows nothing but that which it is most
right she should know—that "Free-will" is defended with such
arguments as mutually devour, and put an end to each other; just as the Midianites
destroyed each other by mutual slaughter, when they fought against Gideon and
the people of God. Judges vii.
Nay, I will expostulate more fully with
this wisdom of the Diatribe. Ecclesiasticus does not say, 'if thou shalt have
the desire and the endeavour of keeping,' (for this is not to be ascribed to
that power of yours, as you have concluded) but he says, "if thou wilt keep the commandments they shall preserve
thee." Now then, if we, after the manner of your wisdom, wish to draw
conclusions, we should infer thus:—therefore, man is able to keep the
commandments. And thus, we shall not here make a certain small degree of
desire, or a certain little effort of endeavour to be left in man, but we shall
ascribe unto him the whole, full, and abundant power of keeping the
commandments. Otherwise, Ecclesiasticus will be made to laugh at the misery of
man, as commanding him to 'keep,' who, he knows, is not able to 'keep.'
Nor would it have been sufficient if he had supposed the desire and the
endeavour to be in the man, for he would not then have escaped the suspicion of
deriding him, unless he had signified his having the full power of keeping.
But however, let us suppose that that
desire and endeavour of "Free-will" are a real something. What shall
we say to those, (the Pelagians, I mean) who, from this passage, have denied
grace in toto, and ascribed all to "Free-will?" If the conclusion of the Diatribe stand good, the Pelagians have
evidently established their point. For the words of Ecclesiasticus speak of keeping,
not of desiring or endeavouring. If, therefore, you deny the
Pelagians their conclusion concerning keeping, they, in reply, will much
more rightly deny you your conclusion concerning endeavouring. And if
you take from them the whole of "Free-will," they will take from you
your remnant particle of it: for you cannot assert a remnant particle of that,
which you deny in toto. In what degree soever, therefore, you speak
against the Pelagians, who from this passage ascribe the whole to
"Freewill," in the same degree, and with much more determination,
shall we speak against that certain small remnant desire of your
"Free-will." And in this, the Pelagians themselves will agree with
us, that, if their opinion cannot be proved from this passage, much less will
any other of the same kind be proved from it: seeing, that if the subject be to
be conducted by conclusions, Ecclesiasticus, above all makes the most forcibly
for the Pelagians: for he speaks in plain words concerning keeping only,
"If thou wilt keep the commandments:" nay, he speaks also
concerning faith, "If thou wilt keep the faith:" so
that, by the same conclusion, keeping the faith ought also to be in our power,
which, however, is the peculiar and precious gift of God.
In a word, since so many opinions are
brought forward in support of "Free-will," and there is no one that
does not catch at this passage of Ecclesiasticus in defence of itself; and
since they are diverse from, and contrary to each other, it is impossible but
that they must make Ecclesiasticus contradictory to, and diverse from
themselves in the self same words; and therefore, they can from him prove
nothing. Although, if that conclusion of yours be admitted, it will make for
the Pelagians against all the others; and consequently, it makes against the
Diatribe; which, in this passage, is stabbed by its own sword!
Sect. 54.—BUT, as I said at first, so I say here: this
passage of Ecclesiasticus is in favour of no one of those who assert
"Free-will," but makes against them all. For that conclusion is not
to be admitted, 'If thou wilt—therefore thou art able;' but those words, and
all like unto them, are to be understood thus:—that by them man is admonished
of his impotency; which, without such admonitions, being proud and ignorant, he
would neither know nor feel.
For he here speaks, not concerning the
first man only, but concerning any man: though it is of little consequence
whether you understand it concerning the first man, or any others. For although
the first man was not impotent, from the assistance of grace, yet, by this
commandment, God plainly shews him how impotent he would be without grace. For
if that man, who had the Spirit, could not by his new will, will good newly
proposed, that is, obedience, because the Spirit did not add it unto him, what can we do without the Spirit toward the good that is lost!
In this man, therefore, it is shewn, by a terrible example for the breaking
down of our pride, what our "Free-will" can do when it is left to
itself, and not continually moved and increased by the Spirit of God. He
could do nothing to increase the Spirit who had its first-fruits, but fell from
the first-fruits of the Spirit. What then can we who are fallen, do
towards the first-fruits of the Spirit which are taken away? Especially, since
Satan now reigns in us with full power, who cast him down, not then
reigning in him, but by temptation alone! Nothing can be more forcibly brought
against "Free-will," than this passage of Ecclesiasticus, considered
together with the fall of Adam. But we have no room
for these observations here, an opportunity may perhaps offer itself elsewhere.
Meanwhile, it is sufficient to have shewn, that Ecclesiasticus, in this place,
says nothing whatever in favour of "Free-will" (which nevertheless they
consider as their principal authority), and that these expressions and the
like, 'if thou wilt,' 'if thou hear,' 'if thou do,' shew, not what men can
do, but what they ought to do!
Sect. 55.—ANOTHER passage is adduced by our Diatribe out of
Gen. iv. 7.: where the Lord saith unto Cain,
"Under thee shall be the desire of sin, and thou shalt rule over
it."—"Here it is shewn (saith the Diatribe) that the motions of the
mind to evil can be overcome, and that they do not carry with them the
necessity of sinning."—
These words, 'the motions of the mind to
evil can be overcomes' though spoken with ambiguity, yet, from the scope of the
sentiment, the consequence, and the circumstances, must mean this:—that
"Free-will," has the power of overcoming its motions to evil; and that,
those motions do not bring upon it the necessity of sinning. Here, again; what
is there excepted which is not ascribed unto
"Free-will?" What need is there of the Spirit, what need of Christ,
what need of God, if "Free-will" can overcome the motions of the mind
to evil! And where, again, is that 'probable opinion' which affirms, that
"Free-will" cannot so much as will good? For here, the victory over
evil is ascribed unto that, which neither wills nor wishes for good. The
inconsiderateness of our Diatribe is really—too—too bad!
Take the truth of the matter in a few
words. As I have before observed, by such passages as these, it is shewn to man
what he ought to do, not what he can do. It is said, therefore,
unto Cain, that he ought to rule over his sin, and to hold its desires in
subjection under him. But this he neither did nor
could do, because he was already pressed down under the contrary dominion of
Satan.—It is well known, that the Hebrews frequently use the future
indicative for the imperative: as in Exod. xx. 1-17. "Thou
shalt, have none other gods but Me," "Thou
shalt not kill," "Thou shalt not commit adultery," and in
numberless other instances of the same kind. Otherwise, if these sentences were
taken indicatively, as they really stand, they would be promises of God;
and as He cannot lie, it would come to pass that no man could sin; and then, as
commands, they would be unnecessary; and if this were the case, then our
interpreter would have translated this passage more correctly thus:—"let
its desire be under thee, and rule thou over it," (Gen. iv. 7.) Even as it
then ought also to be said concerning the woman, "Be thou under thy
husband, and let him rule over thee," (Gen. iii.
16.) But that it was not spoken indicatively unto Cain is manifest from
this:—it would then have been a promise. Whereas, it
was not a promise; because, from the conduct of Cain, the event proved the
contrary.
Sect.
56. – THE
third passage is from Moses, (Deut. xxx. 19.) "I have set before thy face
life and death, choose what is good,
&c."—"What words (says the Diatribe) can be more
plain? It leaves to man the liberty of choosing."—
I answer: What is more
plain, than, that you are blind? How, I pray, does it leave the liberty
of choosing? Is it by the expression 'choose'?—Therefore, as Moses saith
'choose,' does it immediately come to pass that they do choose? Then, there is
no need of the Spirit. And as you so often repeat and inculcate the same
things, I shall be justified in repeating the same things also.—If there be a liberty
of choosing, why has the 'probable opinion' said that "Freewill"
cannot will good? Can it choose not willing or against its will? But
let us listen to the similitude,—
—"It would be ridiculous to say to a
man standing in a place where two ways met, Thou seest two roads, go by which
thou wilt, when one only was open."—
This, as I have before observed, is from
the arguments of human reason, which thinks, that a man is mocked by a command
impossible: whereas I say, that the man, by this means, is admonished and
roused to see his own impotency. True it is, that we are in a place where two
ways meet, and that one of them only is open, yea rather neither of them is
open. But by the law it is shewn how impossible the one is, that is, to good,
unless God freely give His Spirit; and how wide and easy the other is, if God
leave us to ourselves. Therefore, it would not be said ridiculously, but with a
necessary seriousness, to the man thus standing in a place where two ways meet,
'go by which thou wilt,' if he, being in reality impotent, wished to seem to
himself strong, or contended that neither way was hedged up.
Wherefore, the words of the law are spoken,
not that they might assert the power of the will, but that they might
illuminate the blindness of reason, that it might see that its own light is
nothing, and that the power of the will is nothing. "By the law
(saith Paul) is the knowledge of sin," (Rom. iii. 20.): he does not say—is
the abolition of, or the escape from sin. The whole nature and design of the
law is to give knowledge only, and that of nothing else save of sin, but not to
discover or communicate any power whatever. For knowledge is not power, nor
does it communicate power, but it teaches and shows how great the impotency
must there be, where there is no power. And what else can the knowledge of sin
be, but the knowledge of our evil and infirmity? For he does not say—by the law
comes the knowledge of strength or of good. The whole that the law does,
according to the testimony of Paul, is to make known sin.
And this is the place, where I take
occasion to enforce this my general reply:—that man, by the words of the law,
is admonished and taught what he ought to do, not what he can do: that
is, that he is brought to know his sin, but not to believe that he has any
strength in himself. Wherefore, friend Erasmus, as often as you throw in my
teeth the Words of the law, so often I throw in yours that of Paul, "By
the law is the knowledge of sin,"—not of the power of the will. Heap
together, therefore, out of the large Concordances all the imperative words
into one chaos, provided that, they be not words of the promise but of the
requirement of the law only, and I will immediately declare, that by them is
always shewn what men ought to do, not what they can do, or do
do. And even common grammarians and every little school-boy in the street
knows, that by verbs of the imperative mood, nothing else is signified than
that which ought to be done, and that, what is done or can be done, is
expressed by verbs of the indicative mood.
Thus, therefore, it comes to pass, that you
theologians, are so senseless and so many degrees
below even school-boys, that when you have caught hold of one imperative verb
you infer an indicative sense, as though what was commanded were immediately
and even necessarily done, or possible to be done. But how many slips are
there between the cup and the lip! So that, what you command to be done,
and is therefore quite possible to be done, is yet never done at all. Such a
difference is there, between verbs imperative and verbs indicative, even in the
most common and easy things. Whereas you, in these things which are as far
above those, as the heavens are above the earth, so quickly make indicatives
out of imperatives, that the moment you hear the voice of him commanding,
saying, "do," "keep," "choose," you will have,
that it is immediately kept, done, chosen, or fulfilled, or, that our powers
are able so to do.
Sect. 57.—IN the fourth place, you adduce from
Deuteronomy xxx. many passages of the same kind which speak of choosing, of
turning away from, of keeping; as, 'If thou shalt keep,' 'if thou shalt turn
away from,' 'if thou shalt choose.'—"All these expressions (you say) are
made use of preposterously if there be not a "Free-will" in man unto
good"—
I answer: And you, friend Diatribe,
preposterously enough also conclude from these expressions the freedom of the
will. You set out to prove the endeavour and desire of
"Free-will" only, and you have adduced no passage which proves such
an endeavour. But now, you adduce those passages,
which, if your conclusion hold good, will ascribe all to
"Free-will."
Let me here then again make a distinction,
between the words of the Scripture adduced, and the conclusion of the Diatribe
tacked to them. The words adduced are imperative, and they say nothing but what
ought to be done. For, Moses does not say, 'thou hast the power and
strength to choose.' The words 'choose,' 'keep,' 'do,' convey the precept 'to
keep,' but they do not describe the ability of man. But
the conclusion tacked to them by that wisdom-aping Diatribe, infers
thus:—therefore, man can do those things, otherwise the precepts are given in
vain. To whom this reply must be made:—Madam Diatribe, you make a bad inference,
and do not prove your conclusion, but the conclusion and the proof merely seem
to be right to your blind and inadvertent self. But
know, that these precepts are not given preposterously nor in vain; but that
proud and blind man might, by them, learn the disease of his own impotency, if
he should attempt to do what is commanded. And hence your similitude amounts to
nothing where you say.
—"Otherwise it would be precisely the
same, as if any one should say to a man who was so bound that he could only stretch
forth his left arm,—Behold! thou
hast on thy right hand excellent wine, thou hast on thy left poison; on which
thou wilt stretch forth thy hand"—
These your similitudes I presume are
particular favourites of yours. But you do not all the
while see, that if the similitudes stand good, they prove much more than you
ever purposed to prove, nay, that they prove what you deny and would have to be
disproved:—that "Free-will" can do all things. For by the
whole scope of your argument, forgetting what you said, 'that
"Free-will" can do nothing without grace,' you actually prove that
"Free-will" can do all things without grace. For your conclusions and
similitudes go to prove this:—that either "Free-will" can of itself
do those things which are said and commanded, or they are commanded in vain,
ridiculously, and preposterously. But these are nothing more than the old songs
of the Pelagians sung over again, which even the Sophists have exploded, and
which you have yourself condemned. And by all this your forgetfulness and
disorder of memory, you do nothing but evince how little you know of the
subject, and how little you are affected by it. And what can be worse in a
rhetorician, than to be continually bringing forward things wide of the nature
of the subject, and not only so, but to be always declaiming against his
subject and against himself?
Sect. 58.—WHEREFORE I observe, finally, the passages
of Scripture adduced by you are imperative, and neither prove any thing, nor
determine any thing concerning the ability of man, but enjoin only what things
are to be done, and what are not to be done. And as to your conclusions or
appendages, and similitudes, if they prove any thing they prove this:—that
"Free-will" can do all things without grace. Whereas this you did not
undertake to prove, nay, it is by you denied. Wherefore, these your proofs are
nothing else but the most direct confutations.
For, (that I may, if I can, rouse the
Diatribe from its lethargy) suppose I argue thus—If Moses say, 'Choose life and
keep the commandment', unless man be able to choose life and keep the
commandment, Moses gives that precept to man ridiculously.—Have I by this
argument proved my side of the subject, that "Free-will" can do
nothing good, and that it has no external endeavour separate from its own
power? Nay, on the contrary, I have proved, by an assertion sufficiently
forcible, that either man can choose life and keep the commandment as it is
commanded, or Moses is a ridiculous law-giver? But who would dare to assert
that Moses was a ridiculous law-giver? It follows therefore, that man can do
the things that are commanded.
This is the way in which the Diatribe
argues throughout, contrary to its own purposed design; wherein, it promised
that it would not argue thus, but would prove a certain endeavour of
"Freewill;" of which however, so far from proving it, it scarcely
makes mention in the whole string of its arguments; nay, it proves the contrary
rather; so that it may itself be more properly said to affirm and argue all
things ridiculously.
And as to its making it, according to its
own adduced similitude, to be ridiculous, that a man 'having his right arm
bound, should be ordered to stretch forth his right hand when he could only
stretch forth his left.'—Would it, I pray, be ridiculous, if a man, having both
his arms bound, and proudly contending or ignorantly presuming that he could do
any thing right or left, should be commanded to stretch forth his hand right
and left, not that his captivity might be derided, but that he might be
convinced of his false presumption of liberty and power, and might be brought
to know his ignorance of his captivity and misery?
The Diatribe is perpetually setting before
us such a man, who either can do what is commanded, or at least knows
that he cannot do it. Whereas, no such man is to
be found. If there were such an one, then
indeed, either impossibilities would be ridiculously commanded, or the Spirit
of Christ would be in vain.
The Scripture, however, sets forth such a
man, who is not only bound, miserable, captive, sick, and dead, but who, by the
operation of his lord, Satan, to his other miseries, adds that of blindness: so
that he believes he is free, happy, at liberty, powerful, whole, and alive. For
Satan well knows that if men knew their own misery he could retain no one of
them in his kingdom: because, it could not be, but that God would immediately
pity and succour their known misery and calamity: seeing that, He is with so
much praise set forth, throughout the whole Scripture as, being near unto the
contrite in heart, that Isaiah lxi. 1-3, testifies, that Christ was sent
"to preach the Gospel to the poor, and to heal the broken hearted."
Wherefore, the work of Satan is, so to hold
men, that they come not to know their misery, but that they presume that they
can do all things which are enjoined. But the work of
Moses the legislator is the contrary, even that by the law he might discover to
man his misery, in order that he might prepare him, thus bruised and confounded
with the knowledge of himself, for grace, and might send him to Christ to be
saved. Wherefore, the office of the law is not ridiculous, but above all things
serious and necessary.
Those therefore who thus far understand
these things, understand clearly at the same time, that the Diatribe, by the
whole string of its arguments effects nothing whatever; that it collects
nothing from the Scriptures but imperative passages, when it understands,
neither what they mean nor wherefore they are spoken; and that, moreover, by
the appendages of its conclusions and carnal similitudes it mixes up such a
mighty mass of flesh, that it asserts and proves more than it ever intended,
and argues against itself. So that there were no need to pursue particulars any
further, for the whole is solved by one solution, seeing that the whole depends
on one argument. But however, that it may be drowned in the same profusion in
which it attempted to drown me, I will proceed to touch upon a few particulars
more.
Sect. 59.—THERE is that of Isaiah i. 19.,
"If ye be willing and obedient, ye shall eat the fat of the
land:"—'Where, (according to the judgment of the Diatribe,) if there be no
liberty of the will, it would have been more consistent, had it been said, If I
will, if I will not.'
The answer to this may be plainly found in
what has been said before. Moreover, what consistency would
there then have been, had it been said, 'If I will, ye shall eat the fat of the
land?' Does the Diatribe from its so highly exalted wisdom imagine, that the fat of the land can be eaten contrary to
the will of God? Or, that it is a rare and new thing,
that we do not receive of the fat of the land but by the will of God.
So also, that of Isaiah xxx. 21.
"If ye will inquire, inquire ye: return,
come."—"To what purpose is it (saith the Diatribe) to exhort those
who are not in any degree in their own power? It is just like saying to one
bound in chains, Move thyself to this place."—
Nay, I reply, to what purpose is it to cite
passages which of themselves prove nothing, and which, by the appendage of your
conclusion, that is, by the perversion of their sense, ascribe all unto
"Free-will," when a certain endeavour only was to be ascribed unto
it, and to be proved?
—"The same may be said (you observe)
concerning that of Isaiah xlv. 20. "Assemble yourselves and come."
"Turn ye unto me and ye shall be saved." And
that also of Isaiah lii. 1-2.
"Awake! awake!" "shake thyself from the dust," "loose the bands of
thy neck." And that of Jeremiah xv. 19. "If
thou wilt turn, then will I turn thee; and if thou shalt separate the precious
from the vile, thou shalt be as My mouth." And Malachi more evidently still, indicates the endeavour of
"Free-will" and the grace that is prepared for him who endeavours,
"Turn ye unto Me, saith the Lord of hosts, and I will turn unto you, saith
the Lord.' (Mal. iii. 7.)
Sect. 60.—IN these passages, our friend Diatribe makes
no distinction whatever, between the voice of the Law and the voice of the
Gospel: because, forsooth, it is so blind and so ignorant, that it knows not
what is the Law and what is the Gospel. For out of all
the passages from Isaiah, it produces no one word of the law, save this, 'If
thou wilt;' all the rest is Gospel, by which, as the word of offered grace, the
bruised and afflicted are called unto consolation. Whereas,
the Diatribe makes them the words of the law. But, I pray thee, tell me,
what can that man do in theological matters, and the Sacred Writings, who has
not even gone so far as to know what is Law and what is Gospel, or, who, if he
does know, condemns the observance of the distinction between them? Such an one must confound all things, heaven with hell, and life
with death; and will never labour to know any thing of Christ. Concerning
which, I shall put my friend Diatribe a little in remembrance, in what follows.
Look then, first, at that of Jeremiah and
Malachi "If thou wilt turn, then will I turn thee:" and, "turn ye unto me, and I will turn unto you." Does it then
follow from "turn ye"—therefore, ye are able to turn? Does it follow
also from "Love the Lord thy God with all thy heart"—therefore, thou
art able to love with all thine heart? If these arguments stand good, what do
they conclude, but that "Free-will" needs not the grace of God, but
can do all things of its own power? And then, how much more right would it be
that the words should be received as they stand—'If thou shalt turn, then will
I also turn thee?' That is;—if thou shalt cease from sinning, I also will cease
from punishing; and if thou shalt be converted and live well, I also will do
well unto thee in turning away thy captivity and thy evils. But even in this
way, it does not follow, that man can turn by his own power, nor do the words
imply this; but they simply say, "If thou wilt turn;" by which, a man
is admonished of what he ought to do. And when he has thus known and seen what
he ought to do but cannot do, he would ask how he is to do it,
were it not for that Leviathan of the Diatribe (that is, that appendage,
and conclusion it has here tacked on) which comes in and between and
says,—'therefore, if man cannot turn of his own power, "turn ye" is
spoken in vain:' But, of what nature all such conclusion is, and what it
amounts to, has been already fully shewn.
It must, however, be a certain stupor or
lethargy which can hold, that the power of "Free-will" is confirmed
by these words "turn ye," "if thou wilt turn," and the
like, and does not see, that for the same reason, it must be confirmed by this
Scripture also, "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine
heart," seeing that, the meaning of Him who commands and requires is the
same in both instances. For the loving of God, is not less required than our
conversion, and the keeping of all the commandments; because, the loving of God
is our real conversion. And yet, no one attempts to prove "Free-will"
from that command 'to love,' although from those words "if thou
wilt," "if thou wilt hear," "turn ye", and the like,
all attempt to prove it. If therefore from that word, "love the Lord thy
God with all thy heart," it does not follow that "Free-will" is
any thing or can do anything, it is certain that it neither follows from these
words, "if thou wilt," "if thou wilt hear," "turn
ye," and the like, which either require less, or require with less force
of importance, than these words "Love God!" "Love the
Lord!"
Whatever, therefore, is said against
drawing a conclusion in support of "Free-will" from this word
"love God," the same must be said against drawing a conclusion in
support of "Free-will" from every other word of command or requirement. For, if by the command 'to love,' the nature of
the law only be shewn, and what we ought to do, but not the power of the
will or what we can do, but rather, what we cannot do, the same
is shewn by all the other Scriptures of requirement. For it is well known, that
even the schoolmen, except the Scotinians and moderns, assert,
that man cannot love God with all his heart. Therefore, neither can he perform
any one of the other precepts, for all the rest, according to the testimony of
Christ, hang on this one. Hence, by the testimony even of the doctors of the
schools, this remains as a settled conclusion:—that the words of the law do not
prove the power of "Free-will," but shew what we ought to
do, and what we cannot do.
Sect. 61.—BUT our friend Diatribe, proceeding to still
greater lengths of inconsiderateness, not only infers from that passage of
Malachi iii. 7., "turn ye unto me," an
indicative sense, but also, goes on with zeal to prove therefrom,
the endeavour of
"Free-will," and the grace prepared for the person endeavouring.
Here, at last, it makes mention of the
endeavour and by a new kind of grammar, 'to turn,' signifies, with it,
the same thing as 'to endeavour:' so that the sense is, "turn ye
unto me," that is, endeavour ye to turn; "and I will turn unto
you," that is, I will endeavour to turn unto you: so that, at last, it
attributes an endeavour even unto God, and perhaps, would have grace to be
prepared for Him upon His endeavouring: for if turning signify endeavouring in
one place, why not in every place?
Again, it says, that from Jeremiah xv. 19.,
"If thou shalt separate the precious from the vile," not the
endeavour only, but the liberty of choosing is proved; which, before, it
declared was 'lost,' and changed into a 'necessity of serving sin.' You see,
therefore, that in handling the Scriptures the Diatribe has a
"Free-will" with a witness: so that, with it, words of the same kind
are compelled to prove endeavour in one place, and liberty in
another, just as the turn suits.
But, to away with
vanities, the word TURN is
used in the Scriptures in a twofold sense, the one legal, the other evangelical.
In the legal sense, it is the voice of the exactor and commander, which
requires, not an endeavour, but a change in the whole life. In this sense
Jeremiah frequently uses it, saying, "Turn ye now every one of you from
his evil way:" and, "Turn ye unto the Lord:" in which, he
involves the requirement of all the commandments; as is sufficiently evident.
In the evangelical sense, it is the voice of the divine consolation and
promise, by which nothing is demanded of us, but in which the grace of God is
offered unto us. Of this kind is that of Psalm cxxvi. 1, "When the Lord
shall turn again the captivity of
"TURN YE."
It becomes a wise reader of the Scriptures, therefore, to observe what are words of the law and what are words of grace, that he
might not be involved in confusion like the unclean Sophists, and like this
sleepily-yawning Diatribe.
Sect.
62. NOW observe, in what way the Diatribe handles that single
passage in Ezekiel xviii. 23, "As I live, saith
the Lord, I desire not the death of a sinner, but rather that he should turn
from his wickedness and live." In the first place—"if (it says) the
expressions "shall turn away," "hath done," "hath
committed," be so often repeated in this chapter, where are they who deny
that man can do any thing?"—
Only remark, I pray, the excellent
conclusion! It set out to prove the endeavour and the desire of "Free-will,"
and now it proves the whole work, that all things are fulfilled by
"Free-will! "Where now, I pray, are those who need grace and the Holy Spirit? For it pertly
argues thus: saying, 'Ezekiel says, "If the wicked man shall turn away,
and shall do righteousness and judgment, he shall live." Therefore, the
wicked man does that immediately and can do it.' Whereas Ezekiel is signifying,
what ought to be done, but the Diatribe understands it as being done,
and having been done. Thus teaching us, by a new kind of grammar,
that ought to be is the same as having been, being exacted the
same as being performed, and being required the same as being
rendered.
And then, that voice of the all-sweet
Gospel, "I desire not the death of a sinner," &c., it perverts
thus:—"Would the righteous Lord deplore that death of His people which He
Himself wrought in them? If, therefore, He wills not our death, it certainly is
to be laid to the charge of our own will, if we perish. For, what can you lay
to the charge of Him, who can do nothing either of good or evil?"
It was upon this same string that Pelagius
harped long ago, when he attributed to "Free-will" not a desire nor
an endeavour only, but the power of doing and fulfilling all things. For as I
have said before, these conclusions prove that power, if they prove any thing;
so that, they make with equal, nay with more force against the Diatribe which
denies that power of "Free-will," and which attempts to establish the
endeavour only, than they do, against us who deny "Free-will" altogether.—But,
to say nothing of the ignorance of the Diatribe, let us speak to the subject.
It is the Gospel voice, and the sweetest
consolation to miserable sinners, where Ezekiel saith, "I desire not the
death of a sinner, but rather, that he should be converted and live," and
it is in all respects like unto that of Psalm xxx. 5.; "For His wrath is
but for a moment, in His willingness is life." And
that of Psalm xxxvi. 7., "How sweet is thy
loving-kindness, O God." Also, "For I am merciful," And that of
Christ, (Matt. xi. 28.) "Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest." And
also that of Exodus xx. 6, "I will shew mercy unto thousands of
them that love me."
And what is more than half of the Holy
Scripture, but mere promises of grace, by which, mercy, life, peace, and
salvation, are extended from God unto men? And what else is the whole word of
promise but this:—"I desire not the death of a sinner?" Is not His
saying, "I am merciful," the same as saying, I am not angry, I am
unwilling to punish, I desire not your death, My will is to pardon, My will is
to spare? And if there were not these divine promises standing, by which
consciences, afflicted with a sense of sin and terrified at the fear of death
and judgment might be raised up, what place would there be for pardon or for
hope! What sinner would not sink in despair! But as "Free-will" is
not proved from any of the other words of mercy, of promise, and of comfort, so
neither is it from this:—"I desire not the death of a sinner,"
&c.
But our friend Diatribe, again making no
distinction between the words of the law, and the words of the promise, makes
this passage of Ezekiel the voice of the law, and expounds it thus:—"I
desire not the death of a sinner:" that is, I desire not that he should
sin unto death, or should become a sinner guilty of death; but rather, that he
should be converted from sin, if he have committed any, and thus live. For if it do not expound the passage thus, it will make nothing to
its purpose. But this is utterly to destroy and
take away that most sweet place of Ezekiel, "I desire not the death."
If we in our blindness will read and understand the Scriptures thus, what
wonder if they be 'obscure and ambiguous.' Whereas God does not say, "I desire not the sin of man, but, I
desire not the death of a sinner," which manifestly shews that He is
speaking of the punishment of sin, of which the sinner has a sense on account
of his sin, that is, of the fear of death; and that He is raising up and
comforting the sinner lying under this affliction and desperation, that He
might not "break the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flax," but
raise him to the hope of pardon and salvation, in order that he might be
further converted, that is, by the conversion unto salvation from the fear of
death, and that he might live, that is, might be in peace and rejoice in a good
conscience.
And this is also to be observed, that as
the voice of the law is not pronounced but upon those who neither feel nor know
their sins, as Paul saith, "By the law is the knowledge of sin;"
(Rom. iii. 20,) so, the word of grace does not come but unto those, who,
feeling their sins, are distressed and exercised with desperation. Therefore,
in all the words of the law, you will find sin to be implied while it shews
what we ought to do; as on the contrary, in all the words of the promise, you
will find the evil to be implied under which the sinners, or those who are
raised up, labour: as here, "I desire not the death of a sinner," clearly
points out the death and the sinner, both the evil itself which is felt, and
the sinner himself who feels it. But by this, 'Love God with all thine heart,'
is shewn what good we ought to do, not what evil we feel,
in order that we might know, how far we are from doing good.
Sect. 63.—NOTHING, therefore, could be more absurdly adduced
in support of "Free-will" than this passage of Ezekiel, nay, it makes
with all possible force directly against "Free-will." For it is here
shewn, in what state "Free-will" is, and what it can do under the
knowledge of sin, and in turning itself from it:—that is, that it can only go
on to worse, and add to its sins desperation and impenitency, unless God soon
come in to help, and to call back, and raise up by the word of promise. For the
concern of God in promising grace to recall and raise up the sinner, is itself
an argument sufficiently great and conclusive, that "Free-will," of
itself, cannot but go on to worse, and (as the Scripture saith) 'fall down to
hell:' unless, indeed, you imagine that God is such a trifler, that He pours
forth so great an abundance of the words of promise, not from any necessity of
them unto our salvation, but from a mere delight in loquacity! Wherefore, you
see, that not only all the words of law stand against "Free-will,"
but also, that all the words of the promise utterly confute it; that is, that,
the whole Scripture makes directly against it.
Hence, you see, this word, "I desire
not the death of a sinner," does nothing else but preach and offer divine
mercy to the world, which none receive with joy and gratitude but those who are
distressed and exercised with the fears of death, for they are they in whom the
law has now done its office, that is, in bringing them to the knowledge of sin.
But they who have not yet experienced the office of the law, who do not yet
know their sin nor feel the fears of death, despise the mercy promised in that
word.
Sect. 64.—BUT, why it is, that some are touched
by the law and some are not touched, why some receive the offered grace and
some despise it, that is another question which is not here treated on by
Ezekiel; because, he is speaking of THE
PREACHED AND
OFFERED MERCY OF GOD, not
of that SECRET AND TO BE FEARED WILL
OF GOD,
who, according to His own counsel, ordains whom, and such as He will, to be
receivers and partakers of the preached and offered mercy: which WILL, is not to be
curiously inquired into, but to be adored with reverence as the most profound SECRET of the divine
Majesty, which He reserves unto Himself and keeps hidden from us, and that,
much more religiously than the mention of ten thousand Corycian caverns.
But since the Diatribe thus pertly
argues—"Would the righteous Lord deplore that death of His people, which
He Himself works in them? This would seem quite absurd"—
I answer, as I said before,—we are to argue
in one way, concerning the WILL
OF GOD preached, revealed, and offered unto us, and worshipped by us; and in
another, concerning GOD
HIMSELF not preached, not revealed, not offered unto us, and
worshipped by us. In whatever, therefore, God hides Himself and will be unknown
by us, that is nothing unto us' and here, that sentiment' stands good—'What is
above us, does not concern us.'
And that no one might think that this
distinction is my own, I follow Paul, who, writing to the Thessalonians
concerning Antichrist, saith, (2 Thess. ii. 4.) "that he should exalt
himself above all that is God, as preached and worshipped:" evidently
intimating, that any one might be exalted above God as He is preached and
worshipped, that is, above the word and worship of God, by which He is known
unto us and has intercourse with us. But, above God not worshipped and
preached, that is, as He is in our own nature and majesty, nothing can be
exalted, but all things are under His powerful hand.
God, therefore, is to be left to remain in
His own Nature and Majesty; for in this respect, we have nothing to do with
Him, nor does He wish us to have, in this respect, anything to do with Him: but
we have to do with Him, as far as He is clothed in, and delivered to us by, His
Word; for in that He presents Himself unto us, and that is His beauty and His
glory, in which the Psalmist celebrates Him as being clothed. Wherefore, we
say, that the righteous God does not 'deplore that death of His people which He
Himself works in them;' but He deplores that death which He finds in His
people, and which He desires to remove from them. For GOD PREACHED desires this:—that, our sin and
death being taken away, we might be saved; "He sent His word and healed
them." (Psalm cvii. 20.) But GOD
HIDDEN IN MAJESTY neither deplores, nor takes away death, but works
life and death and all things: nor has He, in this Character, defined Himself
in His Word, but has reserved unto Himself, a free power over all things.
But the Diatribe is deceived by its own
ignorance, in not making a distinction between GOD PREACHED and GOD HIDDEN: that is, between the word of God
and God Himself. God does many things which He does not make known unto us in His
word: He also wills many things which He does not in His word make known unto
us that He wills. Thus, He does not 'will the death of a sinner,' that
is, in His word; but He wills it by that will inscrutable. But
in the present case, we are to consider His word only, and to leave that will
inscrutable; seeing that, it is by His word, and not by that will inscrutable,
that we are to be guided; for who can direct himself according to a will
inscrutable and incomprehensible? It is enough to know only, that there is in
God a certain will inscrutable: but what, why, and how far that
will wills, it is not lawful to inquire, to wish to know, to be concerned
about, or to reach unto—it is only to be feared and adored!
Therefore it is rightly said, 'if God does
not desire our death, it is to be laid to the charge of our own will, if we
perish:' this, I say, is right, if you speak of GOD PREACHED. For He desires that all men
should be saved, seeing that, He comes unto all by the word of salvation, and
it is the fault of the will which does not receive Him: as He saith. (Matt. xxiii. 37.) "How often would I have gathered thy
children together, and thou wouldest not!" But WHY that Majesty does not take away or change
this fault of the will IN ALL,
seeing that, it is not in the power of man to do it; or why He lays that to the
charge of the will, which the man cannot avoid, it becomes us not to inquire,
and though you should inquire much, yet you will never find out: as Paul saith,
(Rom. ix, 20,) "Who art thou that repliest against God!"—Suffice it
to have spoken thus upon this passage of Ezekiel. Now let us proceed to the
remaining particulars.
Sect. 65.—THE Diatribe next argues—"If what is
commanded be not in the power of every one, all the numberless exhortations in
the Scriptures, and also all the promises, threatenings, expostulations,
reproofs, asseverations, benedictions and maledictions, together with all the
forms of precepts, must of necessity stand coldly useless."—
The Diatribe is perpetually forgetting the
subject point, and going on with that which is
contrary to its professed design: and it does not see, that all these things
make with greater force against itself than against us. For from all these
passages, it proves the liberty and ability to fulfil all things, as the very
words of the conclusion which it draws necessarily declare: whereas, its design
was, to prove 'that "Free-will" is that, which cannot will any
thing good without grace, and is a certain endeavour that is not to be ascribed
to its own powers.' But I do not see that such an endeavour is proved by
any of these passages, but that as I have repeatedly said already, that only is
required which ought to be done' unless it be needful to repeat it again, as
often as the Diatribe harps upon the same string, putting off its readers with
a useless profusion of words.
About the last passage which it brings
forward out of the Old Testament, is that of Deut. xxx. 11-14. "This
commandment which I command thee this day, is not above thee, neither is it far
off. Neither is it in heaven, that thou shouldest say, Who
of us shall ascend up into heaven and bring it down unto us, that we may hear
it and do it. But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth and in thy
heart, that thou mayest do it." The Diatribe contends—'that it is declared
by this passage, that what is commanded is not only placed in us, but is
down-hill work, that is, easy to be done, or at least, not difficult.'—
I thank the Diatribe for such wonderful
erudition! For if Moses so plainly declare, that there is in us, not only an
ability, but also a power to keep all the commandments with ease, why have I
been toiling all this time! Why did I not at once produce this passage and
assert "Free-will" before the whole world! What need now of Christ!
What need of the Spirit! We have now found a passage which stops the mouths of
all, and, which not only plainly asserts the liberty of the will, but teaches
that the observance of all the commandments is easy!—What need was there for
Christ to purchase for us, even with His own blood, the Spirit, as though
necessary, in order that He might make the keeping of the commandments easy
unto us, when we were already thus qualified by nature! Nay, here, the Diatribe
itself recants its own assertions, where it affirmed, that
'"Freewill" cannot will any thing good without grace,' and now
affirms, that "Free-will" is of such power, that it can, not only
will good, but keep the greatest, nay, all the commandments, with ease.
Only observe, I pray, what a mind does,
where the heart is not in the cause, and how impossible it is that it should
not expose itself! And can there still be any need to confute the Diatribe? Who
can more effectually confute it, than it confutes itself! This truly, is that
beast that devours itself! How true is the proverb, that 'A liar should have a
good memory!'
I have already spoken upon this passage of
Deuteronomy, I shall now treat upon it briefly; if indeed, there be any need so
far to set aside Paul, who, Rom. x. 5-11, so powerfully handles this
passage.—You can see nothing here to be said, nor one single syllable to speak,
either of the ease or difficulty, of the power or impotency of
"Free-will" or of man, either to keep or not to keep the
commandments. Except that those, who entangle the Scriptures in their own
conclusions and cogitations, make them obscure and ambiguous to themselves, that they might thus make of them what they
please. But, if you cannot turn your eyes this way,
turn your ears, or feel out what I am about to say with your hands.—Moses
saith, "it is not above thee," "neither is it far from
thee," "neither is it in heaven," "neither is it beyond the
sea." Now, what is the meaning of this, "above thee?" What, of
this "far from thee?" What, of this "in heaven?" What, of this
"beyond the sea?" Will they then make the most commonly used terms,
and even grammar so obscure unto us, that we shall not be able to speak any
thing to a certainty, merely that they might establish their assertion, that
the Scriptures are obscure?
According to my grammar, these terms
signify neither the quality nor the quantity of human powers, but the distance
of places only. For "above thee" does not signify a
certain power of the will, but a certain place which is above us. So
also "far from thee," "in heaven," "beyond the
sea," do not signify any thing of ability in man, but a certain place at a
distance above us, or on our right hand, or on our left hand, or behind us, or
over against us. Some one may perhaps laugh at me for disputing in so plain a
way, thus setting, as it were, a ready-marked-out lesson before such great men,
as though they were little boys learning their alphabet, and I were teaching
them how to put syllables together—but what can I do, when I see darkness to be
sought for in a light so clear, and those studiously desiring to be blind, who
boastingly enumerate before us such a series of ages, so much talent, so many
saints, so many martyrs, so many doctors, and who with so much authority boast
of this passage, and yet will not deign to look at the syllables, or to command
their cogitations so far, as to give the passage of which they boast one
consideration? Let the Diatribe now go home and consider, and say, how it can
be, that one poor private individual should see that, which escaped the notice
of so many public characters, and of the greatest men of so many ages. This
passage surely, even in the judgment of a school-boy, proves that they must
have been blind not very unfrequently!
What therefore does Moses mean by these
most plain and clear words, but, that he has worthily performed his office as a
faithful law-giver; and that therefore, if all men have not before their eyes
and do not know all the precepts which are enjoined, the fault does not rest
with him; that they have no place left them for excuse, so as to say, they did
not know, or had not the precepts, or were obliged to seek them elsewhere; that
if they do not keep them, the fault rests not with the law, or with the
law-giver, but with themselves, seeing that the law is before them, and the
law-giver has taught them; and that they have no place left for excusation of
ignorance, only for accusation of negligence and disobedience? It is not, saith he, necessary to fetch the laws down from heaven,
nor from lands beyond the sea, nor from afar, nor can you frame as an excuse,
that you never had them nor heard them, for you have them nigh unto you; they
are they which God hath commanded, which you have heard from my mouth, and
which you have had in your hearts and in your mouths continually; you have
heard them treated on by the Levites in the midst of you, of which this my word
and book are witnesses; this, therefore only remains—that you do them.—What, I
pray you, is here attributed unto "Free-will?" What is there,
but the 'demanding that it would do the laws which it has,
and the taking away from it the excuse of ignorance and the want of the laws?
These passages are the sum of what the
Diatribe brings forward out of the Old Testament in support of
"Free-will," which being answered, there remains nothing that is not
answered at the same time, whether it have brought forward, or wished to bring
forward more; seeing that, it could bring forward nothing but imperative, or
conditional, or optative passages, by which is signified, not what we can
do, or do do, (as I have so often replied, to the so often repeating
Diatribe) but what we ought to do, and what is required of us, in
order that we might come to the knowledge of our impotency, and that there
might be wrought in us the knowledge of our sin. Or, if they do prove any
thing, by means of the appended conclusions and similitudes invented by human
reason, they prove this:—that "Free-will" is not a certain small
degree of endeavour or desire only, but a full and free ability and power to do
all things, without the grace of God, and without the Holy Spirit.
Thus, nothing less is proved by the whole
sum of that copious, and again and again reiterated and inculcated
argumentation, than that which was aimed at to be proved, that is, the PROBABLE OPINION; by which,
"Free-will" is defined to be of that impotency, 'that it cannot will
any thing good without grace, but is compelled into the service of sin; though
it has an endeavour, which, nevertheless, is not to be ascribed to its own powers.'—A
monster truly! which, at the same time, can do nothing
by its own power, and yet, has an endeavour within its own power: and thus,
stands upon the basis of a most manifest contradiction!
Sect. 66.—We now come to the NEW
TESTAMENT, where again, are marshalled up in defence of that miserable bondage
of "Free-will," an host of imperative sentences, together with all
the auxiliaries of carnal reason, such as, conclusions, similitudes, &c.,
called in from all quarters. And if you ever saw represented in a picture, or
imagined in a dream, a king of flies attended by his forces armed with lances
and shields of straw or hay, drawn up in battle array against a real and
complete army of veteran warriors—it is just thus, that the human dreams of the
Diatribe are drawn up in battle array against the hosts of the words of God!
First of all, marches forth in front, that
of Matt. xxiii. 37-39, as it were the Achilles of these flies, "O
Jerusalem,
I answer: Granting in the mean time that
this conclusion and proof of the Diatribe is good and true, what, I ask, is proved
thereby?—that 'probable opinion,' which affirms that "Freewill"
cannot will good? Nay, the will is proved to be free, whole, and able to do all
things which the prophets have spoken; and such a will the Diatribe never
intended to prove. But let the Diatribe here reply to itself. If
"Free-will" cannot will good, why is it laid to its charge, that it
did not hear the prophets, whom, as they taught good,
it could not hear by its own powers? Why does Christ in useless tears weep over
those as though they could have willed that, which He certainly knew they could
not will? Here, I say, let the Diatribe free Christ from the imputation of
madness, according to its 'probable opinion,' and then my opinion is
immediately set free from that Achilles of the flies. Therefore, that passage
of Matthew either forcibly proves "Free-will" altogether, or makes
with equal force against the Diatribe itself, and strikes it prostrate with its
own weapon!
But I here observe as I have observed
before, that we are not to dispute concerning that SECRET WILL of the divine Majesty; and that,
that human temerity, which, with incessant perverseness, is ever leaving those
things that are necessary, and attacking and trying this point, is to be called
off and driven back, that it employ not itself in prying into those secrets of
Majesty which it is impossible to attain unto, seeing that, they dwell in that
light which is inaccessible; as Paul witnesseth. (1 Tim. vi.
16.) But let the man acquaint himself with the God Incarnate, or, as Paul
saith, with Jesus crucified, in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge—but hidden! for in Him, there is an
abundance both of that which he ought to know, and of that which he ought not
to know.
[See Note] The God
Incarnate, then, here speaks thus—"I WOULDand THOU WOULDST NOT!" The God
Incarnate,—I say, was sent for this purpose—that He might desire, speak, do,
suffer, and offer unto all, all things that are necessary unto salvation,
although He should offend many, who, being either left or hardened by that
secret will of Majesty, should not receive Him thus desiring, speaking, doing,
and offering: as John i. 5, saith, "The light shineth in darkness, and the
darkness comprehended it not." And again, "He came unto His own, and
His own received Him not." (11.) It belongs also to this same God
Incarnate, to weep, to lament, and to sigh over the perdition of the wicked,
even while that will of Majesty, from purpose, leaves and reprobates some, that they might perish. Nor does it become us to
inquire why He does so, but to revere that God who can do, and wills to
do, such things.
Nor do I suppose that any one will
cavillingly deny, that that will which here saith, "How often would
I!" was displayed to the Jews, even before God became Incarnate; seeing
that, they are accused of having slain the prophets, before Christ, and having
thus resisted His will. For it is well known among Christians, that all things
were done by the prophets in the name of Christ to come, who was promised that
He should become Incarnate: so that, whatever has been offered unto men by the
ministers of the word from the foundation of the world, may be rightly called,
the Will of Christ.
Sect. 67.—BUT here Reason, who is always very knowing
and loquacious, will say,—This is an excellently invented scape-gap; that, as
often as we are pressed close by the force of arguments, we might run back to
that to-be-revered will of Majesty, and thus silence the disputant as soon as
he becomes troublesome; just as astrologers, do, who, by their invented
epicycles, elude all questions concerning the motion of the whole heaven.—
I answer: It is no invention of mine, but a
command supported by the Holy Scriptures. Paul, (Rom. ix. 19,) speaks thus:
"Why therefore doth God find fault; for who hath resisted His will? Nay,
but O man, who art thou that contendest with God?" "Hath not the
potter power?" And so on. And before him, Isaiah
lviii. 2, "Yet they seek Me daily, and desire to
know My ways, as a nation that did righteousness: they ask of Me the ordinances
of justice, and desire to approach unto God."
From these words it is, I think,
sufficiently manifest that it is not lawful for men to search into that will of
Majesty. And this subject is of that nature, that perverse men are here the
most led to pry into that to-be-revered will, and therefore, there is here the
greatest reason why they should be exhorted to silence and reverence. In other
subjects, where those things are handled for which we can give a reason, and
for which we are commanded to give a reason, we do not this. And if any one
still persist in searching into the reason of that will, and do not choose to
hearken to our admonition, we let him go on, and, like the giants, fight
against God; while we look on to see what triumph he will gain, persuaded in
ourselves, that he will do nothing, either to injure our cause or to advance
his own. For it will still remain unalterable, that he must either prove that
"Free-will" can do all things, or that the Scriptures which he
adduces must make against himself. And, which soever of the two shall take
place, he vanquished, lies prostrate, while we as conquerors "stand
upright!"
Sect. 68.—ANOTHER passage is that of Matt. xix. 17,)
"If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments."—"With what face, (says the Diatribe,) can "if thou
wilt" be said to him who has not a Free-will?'—
To which I reply:—Is,
therefore, the will, according to this word of Christ, free? But you wish to
prove, that "Free-will" cannot will any thing good; and that, without
grace, it of necessity serves sin. With what face, then, do
you now make will wholly free?
The same reply will be made to that
also—"If thou wilt be perfect," "If any one will come after
me," "He that will save his life," "If ye love me,"
"If Ye shall continue." In a word, as I said before, (to ease the
Diatribe's labour in adducing such a load of words) let all the conditional
ifs and all the imperative verbs be collected together.—"All
these precepts (says the Diatribe) stand coldly useless, if nothing be
attributed to the human will. How ill does that conjunctive if accord
with mere necessity?"—
I answer: If they stand coldly useless, it
is your fault that they stand coldly useless, who, at one time, assert that
nothing is to be attributed to "Free-will," while you make
"Free-will" unable to will good, and who, on the contrary, here make
the same "Free-will" able to will all good; nay, you thus make them
to stand as nothing at all: unless, with you, the same words stand coldly
useless and warmly useful at the same time, while they at once assert all
things and deny all things.
I wonder how any author can delight in
repeating the same things so continually, and to be as continually forgetting
his subject design: unless perhaps, distrusting his cause, he wishes to
overcome his adversary by the bulk of his book, or to weary him out with the
tedium and toil of reading it. By what conclusion, I ask, does it follow, that will
and power must immediately take place as often as it is said, 'If
thou wilt,' 'If any one will,' 'If thou shalt?' Do we not most frequently imply
in such expressions impotency rather, and impossibility? For instance.—If thou
wilt equal Virgil in singing, my friend Mevius, thou must sing in another
strain.—If thou wilt surpass Cicero, friend Scotus, instead of thy subtle
jargon, thou must have the most exalted eloquence. If thou wilt stand in
competition with David, thou must of necessity produce Psalms like his. Here are
plainly signified things impossible to our own powers, although, by divine
power, all these things may be done. So it is in the Scriptures, that by such
expressions, it might be shewn what we cannot do ourselves, but what can be
done in us by the power of God.
Moreover, if such expressions should be
used in those things which are utterly impossible to be done, as being those
which God would never do, then, indeed, they might rightly be called either
coldly useless, or ridiculous, because they would be spoken in vain. Whereas
now, they are so used, that by them, not only the impotency of
"Free-will" is shewn, by which no one of those things can be done,
but it is also signified, that a time will come when all those things shall be
done, but by a power not our own, that is, by the divine power; provided that,
we fully admit, that in such expressions, there is a certain signification of
things possible and to be done: as if any one should interpret them
thus:—"If thou wilt keep the commandments, (that is, if thou shalt at any
time have the will to keep the commandments, though thou wilt have it, not of
thyself, but of God, who giveth it to whom He will,) they also shall preserve
thee."
But, to take a wider scope.—These
expressions, especially those which are conditional, seem to be so placed also,
on account of the Predestination of God, and to involve that as being unknown
to us. As if they should speak thus:—"If thou desire," "If thou
wilt:" that is, if thou be such with God, that he shall deign to give thee
this will to keep the commandments, thou shalt be saved. According to which
manner of speaking, it is given us to understand both truths.—That we can do nothing ourselves; and that, if we do any
thing, God works that in us. This is what I would say to those, who will not be
content to have it said, that by these words our impotency only is shewn, and
who will contend, that there is also proved a certain power and ability to do
those things which are commanded. And in this way, it will also appear to be truth,
that we are not able to do any of the things which are commanded, and yet,
'that we are able to do them all: that is, speaking of the former, with
reference to our own powers, and of the latter, with reference to the grace of
God.
Sect. 69.—THE third particular that moves the Diatribe
is this:—"How there can be (it observes) any place for mere necessity
there, where mention is so frequently made of good works and of bad works, and
where there is mention made of reward, I cannot understand; for neither nature
nor necessity can have merit."—
Nor can I understand any thing but
this:—that that 'probable opinion,' asserts 'mere necessity' where it affirms
that "Free-will" cannot will any thing good, and yet, nevertheless,
here attributes to it even 'merit.' Hence,
"Free-will" gains ground so fast, as the book and argumentation of
the Diatribe increases, that now, it not only has an endeavour and desire of
its own, 'though not by its own powers,' nay, not only wills good and does
good, but also merits eternal life according to that saying of Christ, (Matt.
v. 12,) "Rejoice and be exceeding glad, for great is your reward in
heaven." "Your reward," that is, the
reward of "Free-will." For the Diatribe so understands this
passage, that Christ and the Spirit of God are nothing. For what need is there
of them, if we have good works and merit by "Free-will!" I say these
things, that we may see, that it is no rare thing for men of exalted talent, to
be blind in a matter which is plainly manifest even to one of a thick and
uninformed understanding; and that we may also see, how weak, arguments drawn
from human authority are in divine things, where the authority of God alone
avails.
But we have here to speak upon two things. First, upon the precepts of the New Testament. And next, upon merit. We shall touch upon each briefly,
having already spoken upon them more fully elsewhere.
The New Testament, properly, consists of
promises and exhortations, even as the Old, properly, consists of laws and
threatenings. For in the New Testament, the Gospel is preached; which is
nothing else than the word, by which, are offered unto us the Spirit, grace;
and the remission of sins obtained for us by Christ crucified; and all entirely
free, through the mere mercy of God the Father, thus favouring us unworthy
creatures, who deserve damnation rather than any thing else.
And then follow exhortations, in order to
animate those who are already justified, and who have obtained mercy, to be
diligent in the fruits of the Spirit and of righteousness received, to exercise
themselves in charity and good works, and to bear courageously the cross and
all the other tribulations of this world. This is the whole sum of the New
Testament. But how little Erasmus understands of this matter is manifest from this:—it
knows not how to make any distinction between the Old Testament and the New,
for it can see nothing any where but precepts, by which, men are formed to good
manners only. But what the new-birth is, the new-creature, regeneration, and
the whole work of the Spirit, of all this it sees nothing whatever. So that, I
am struck with wonder and astonishment, that the man, who has spent so much
time and study upon these things, should know so little about them.
This passage therefore, "Rejoice, and
be exceeding glad, for great is your reward in heaven," agrees as well
with "Free-will" as light does with darkness. For
Christ is there exhorting, not "Free-will," but His apostles, (who
were not only raised above "Free-will" in grace, and justified, but
were stationed in the ministry of the Word, that is, in the highest degree of
grace,) to endure the tribulations of the world. But we are now
disputing about "Free-will," and that particularly, as it is without
Grace; which, by laws and threats, or the Old Testament, is instructed in the
knowledge of itself only, that it might flee to the promises presented to it in
the New Testament.
Sect. 70.—AS to merit, or a proposed reward, what is it
else but a certain promise? But that promise does not prove that we can do any
thing; it proves nothing more than this:—if any one shall do this thing or
that, he shall then have a reward. Whereas, our subject inquiry is, not what
reward is to be given, or how it is to be given, but, whether or not we can do
those things, for the doing of which the reward is to be given. This is the
point to be settled and proved. Would not these be ridiculous conclusions?—The
prize is set before all that run in the race: therefore, all can so run as to
obtain.—If Cæsar shall conquer the Turks, he shall gain the kingdom of Syria:
therefore, Cæsar can conquer, and does conquer the Turks.—If
"Free-will" shall gain dominion over sin, it shall be holy before the
Lord: therefore "Free-will' is holy before the Lord.
But away with things so stupid and openly
absurd: (except that, "Free-will' deserves to be proved what it is by
arguments so excellent) let us rather speak to this point:—'that necessity, has
neither merit nor reward.' If we speak of the necessity of compulsion, it
is true: if we speak of the necessity of immutability, it is false. For
who would bestow a reward upon, or ascribe merit to, an unwilling workman? But with respect to those who do good or evil willingly,
even though they cannot alter that necessity by their own power, the reward or punishment
follows naturally and necessarily: as it is written "thou shalt render
unto every man according to his works." (Pro. xxiv.
12.) It naturally follows—if thou remain under water, thou wilt be suffocated;
if thou swim out, thou wilt be saved.
To be brief: As it respects merit or
reward, you must speak, either of the worthiness or of the
consequence. If you speak of the worthiness, there is no merit, no
reward. For if "Free-will" cannot of itself will good, but wills good
by grace alone, (for we are speaking of "Free-will" apart from grace
and inquiring into the power which properly belongs to each) who does not see,
that that good
will, merit, and
reward, belong to grace alone. Here then, again, the Diatribe dissents from
itself, while it argues from merit the freedom of the will; and with me,
against whom it fights, it stands in the same condemnation as ever; that is,
its asserting that there is merit, reward, and liberty, makes the same as ever
directly against itself; seeing that, it asserted above, that it could will
nothing good, and undertook to prove that assertion.
If you speak of the consequence, there
is nothing either good or evil which has not its reward. And here arises an
error, that, in speaking of merits and rewards, we agitate opinions and
questions concerning worthiness, which has not existence, when we ought
to be disputing concerning consequences. For there remains, as a
necessary consequence the judgment of God and a hell for the wicked, even
though they themselves neither conceive nor think of such a reward for their
sins, nay, they utterly detest it; and, as Peter saith, execrate it. (2 Pet. ii. 10-14.)
In the same manner, there remains a kingdom
for the just, even though they themselves neither seek it nor think of it;
seeing that, it was prepared for them by their Father, not only before they
themselves existed, but before the foundation of the world. Nay, if they should
work good in order to obtain the Kingdom, they never would obtain it, but would
be numbered rather with the wicked, who, with an evil and mercenary eye, seek
the things of self even in God. Whereas, the sons of God, do good with a
free-will, seeking no reward, but the glory and will of God only; ready to do
good, even if (which is impossible) there were neither a Kingdom nor a hell.
These things are, I believe, sufficiently
confirmed even from that saying of Christ only, which I have just cited, Matt.
xxv. 34, "Come, ye blessed of my Father, receive the kingdom which was
prepared for you from the foundation of the world."—How can they merit
that, which is theirs, and prepared for them before they had existence? So that
we might much more rightly say, the
Sect. 71.—BUT, says the Diatribe—"what then mean
all those Scriptures which promise a kingdom and threaten hell? Why is the word
reward so often repeated in the Scriptures; as, "Thou hast thy
reward," "I am thy exceeding great reward?" Again,
"Who rendereth unto every man according to his work;" and
It is answered: By all these passages, the consequence
of reward is proved and nothing else, but by no means the worthiness of
merit: seeing that, those who do good, do it not from a servile and
mercenary principle in order to obtain eternal life, but they seek eternal
life, that is, they are in that way, in which they shall come unto and find
eternal life. So that seeking, is striving with desire, and
pursuing with ardent diligence, that, which always leads unto eternal life.
And the reason why it is declared in the Scriptures,
that those things shall follow and take place after a good or bad life, is,
that men might be instructed, admonished, awakened, and terrified. For as
"by the law is the knowledge of sin" (Rom. iii. 20,) and an
admonition of our impotency, and as from that, it cannot be inferred that we
can do any thing ourselves; so, by these promises and threats, there is
conveyed an admonition, by which we are taught, what will follow sin and that
impotency made known by the law; but there is not, by them, any thing of
worthiness ascribed unto our merit
Wherefore, as the words of the law
are for instruction and illumination, to teach us what we ought to do, and also
what we are not able to do; so the words of reward, while they signify what
will be hereafter, are for exhortation and threatening, by which the just are
animated, comforted, and raised up to go forward, to persevere, and to conquer;
that they might not be wearied or disheartened either in doing good or in
enduring evil; as Paul exhorts his Corinthians, saying, "Be ye steadfast,
knowing that your labour is not in vain in the Lord." (1 Cor. xv. 58.) So also God supports Abraham, saying "I
am thy exceeding great reward." (Gen. xv. 1.)
Just in the same manner as you would console any one, by signifying to him,
that his works certainly pleased God, which kind of consolation the Scripture
frequently uses; nor is it a small consolation for any one to know, that he so
pleases God, that nothing but a good consequence can follow, even though it
seem to him impossible.
Sect. 72.—TO this point pertain all those words which are spoken concerning the hope and expectation,
that those things which we hope for will certainly come to pass. For the
pious do not hope because of these words themselves, nor do they expect such
things because they hope for them. So also the wicked by the words of
threatening, and of a future judgment, are only terrified and cast down that
they might cease and abstain from sin, and not become proud, secure, and
hardened in their sins.
But if Reason
should here turn up her nose and say—Why does God will these things to be done
by His words, when by such words nothing is effected, and when the will can
turn itself neither one way nor the other? Why does He not do what He does
without the Word, when He can do all things without the Word? For the will is
of no more power, and does no more with the Word, if the Spirit to move within
be wanting; nor is it of less power, nor does it do less without the Word, if
the Spirit be present, seeing that, all depends upon the power and operation of
the Holy Spirit.
I answer: Thus it pleaseth God—not to give
the Spirit without the Word, but through the Word; that He might have us as
workers together with Him, while we sound forth in the Word without, what He
alone works by the breath of His Spirit within, wheresoever it pleaseth Him;
which, nevertheless, He could do without the Word, but such is not His will.
And who are we that we should inquire into the cause of the divine will? It
is enough for us to know, that such is the will of God; and it becomes us,
bridling the temerity of reason, to reverence, love, and adore that will. For
Christ, (Matt. xi. 25-26,) gives no other reason why the Gospel is hidden from
the wise, and revealed unto babes, than this:—So it
pleased the Father! In the same manner also, He might nourish us without bread;
and indeed He has given a power which nourishes us
without bread, as Matt. iv. 4, saith, "Man doth not live by bread alone,
but by the Word of God:" but yet, it hath pleased Him to nourish us by His
Spirit within, by means of the bread, and instead of the bread used without.
It is certain, therefore, that merit cannot
be proved from the reward, at least out of the Scriptures; and that, moreover,
"Free-will" cannot be proved from merit, much less such a
"Free-will" as the Diatribe set out to prove, that is, 'which of
itself cannot will any thing good!' And even if you grant merit, and add to it,
moreover, those usual similitudes and conclusions of reason, such as, 'it is
commanded in vain,' 'the reward is promised in vain,' 'threatenings are
denounced in vain,' if there be no "Free-will:" all these, I say, if
they prove any thing, prove this:—that "Free-will" can of itself do
all things. But if it cannot of itself do all things, then that conclusion of
reason still remains—therefore, the precepts are given in vain, the promises
are made in vain, and the threatenings are denounced in vain.
Thus, the Diatribe is perpetually arguing
against itself, as often as it attempts to argue against me. For God alone by
His Spirit works in us both merit and reward, but He makes known and declares each,
by His external Word, to the whole world; to the intent that, His power and
glory and our impotency and vileness might be proclaimed even among the wicked,
the unbelieving, and the ignorant, although those alone who fear God receive
these things into their heart, and keep them faithfully; the rest despise them.
Sect. 73.—IT would be too tedious to repeat here each
imperative passage which the Diatribe enumerates out of the New Testament,
always tacking to them her own conclusions, and vainly arguing, that those
things which are so said are 'to no purpose,' are 'superfluous,' are 'coldly
useless,' are 'ridiculous,' are 'nothing at all,' if the will be not free. And I have already repeatedly observed, even to disgust,
that nothing whatever is effected by such arguments; and that if any thing be
proved, the whole of "Free-will" is proved. And this is nothing less
than overthrowing the Diatribe altogether; seeing that, it set out to prove
such a "Free-will" as cannot of itself do good, but serves sin; and then
goes on to prove such a "Free-will" as can do all things; thus,
throughout, forgetting and not knowing itself.
It is mere cavillation where it
makes these remarks—"By their fruits, saith the Lord, 'ye shall know
them.' (Matt. vii. 16, 20.) He
calls works fruits, and He calls them ours, but they are not ours if all things
be done by necessity."—
I pray you, are not those things most
rightly called ours, which we did not indeed make ourselves, but which we
received from others? Why should not those works be called ours, which God has
given unto us by His Spirit? Shall we then not call Christ ours, because we did
not make Him, but only received Him? Again: if we made all those things which are called ours—therefore, we made our own
eyes, we made our own hands, we made our own feet: unless you mean to say, that
our eyes, our hands, and our feet are not called our own! Nay, "What have
we that we did not receive," saith Paul. (1 Cor. iv.
7.) Shall we then say, that those things are either not ours, or else we made
them ourselves? But suppose they are called our fruits
because we made them, where then remain grace and the Spirit?—Nor does He say,
"By their fruits, which are in a certain small part their own, ye shall
know them." This cavillation rather is ridiculous, superfluous, to no
purpose, coldly useless, nay, absurd and detestable,
by which the holy words of God are defiled and profaned.
In the same way also is that saying of
Christ upon the cross trifled with, "Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do." (Luke
xxiii. 34.) Here, where some assertion might have been expected which
should make for "Free-will," recourse is again had to
conclusions—"How much more rightly (says the Diatribe) would He have
excused them on this ground—because they have not a Free-will, nor can they if
they willed it, do otherwise."—
No! nor is that "Free-will" which
'cannot will any thing good,' concerning which we are disputing, proved by this
conclusion either; but that "Free-will" is proved by it which can do
all things; concerning which no one disputes, to except the Pelagians.
Here, where Christ openly saith, "they
know not what they do," does He not testify that they could not will good?
For how can you will that which you do not know? You certainly cannot desire
that of which you know nothing! What more forcible can be advanced against
"Free-will", than that it is such a thing of nought, that it not only
cannot will good, but cannot even know what evil it does, and what good is? Is
there then any obscurity in this saying, "they know not what they
do?" What is there remaining in the Scriptures which may not, upon the
authority of the Diatribe, declare for "Free-will," since this word
of Christ is made to declare for it, which is so clearly and so directly
against it? In the same easy way any one might affirm that this word declares
for "Free-will"—"And the earth was without form and void:"
(Gen. i. 2.) or this, "And God rested on the
seventh day:" (Gen. ii. 2,) or any word of the same kind. Then, indeed,
the Scriptures; would be obscure and ambiguous, nay, would be nothing at all.
But to dare to make use of the Scriptures in this way, argues a mind that is in
a signal manner, a contemner both of God and man, and that deserves no
forbearance whatever.
Sect. 74.—AGAIN the Diatribe receives that word of John i.
12, "To them gave He power to become the sons of God," thus—"How
can there be power given unto them, to become the sons of God, if there be no
liberty in our will?"—
This word also, is a hammer that beats down
"Free-will," as is nearly the whole of the evangelist John, and yet,
even this is brought forward in support of "Free-will." Let us, I
pray you, just took into this word. John is not speaking concerning any work of
man, either great or small but concerning the very renewal and transformation
of the old man who is a son of the devil, into the new man who is a son of God.
This man is merely passive (as the term is used), nor does he do any thing, but
is wholly made: and John is speaking of being made: he saith we are made the
sons of God by a power given unto us from above, not by the power of
"Free-will" inherent in ourselves.
Whereas, our friend Diatribe here
concludes, that "Free-will" is of so much power, that it makes us the
sons of God; if not, it is prepared to aver, that the word of John is
ridiculous and stands coldly useless. But who ever so exalted
"Freewill" as to assign unto it the power of making us the sons of
God, especially such a "Free-will as cannot even will good, which "Free-will"
it is that the Diatribe has taken upon itself to establish? But let this
conclusion be gone after the rest which have been so often repeated; by which,
nothing else is proved, if any thing be proved at all, than that which the
Diatribe denies—that "Free-will" can do all things.
The meaning of John is this.—That by the coming of Christ into the world by His Gospel,
by which grace was offered, but not works required, a full opportunity was
given to all men of becoming the sons of God, if they would believe. But as
to this willing and this believing on His
name, as "Free-will" never knew it nor thought of it before, so much
less could it then do it of its own power. For how could reason then think that
faith in Jesus as the Son of God and man was necessary, when even at this day
it could neither receive nor believe it, though the whole Creation should cry
out together—there is a certain person who is both God and man! Nay it is
rather offended at such a saying, as Paul affirms. (1 Cor. i. 17-31.) so far is it from possibility that it should either will it,
or believe it.
John, therefore, is preaching, not the
power of "Free-will," but the riches of the kingdom of God offered to
the world by the Gospel; and signifying at the same time, how few there are who
receive it; that is, from the enmity of the "Free-will" against it;
the power of which is nothing else than this:—Satan reigning over it and
causing it to reject grace, and the Spirit which fulfils the law. So
excellently do its 'endeavour' and 'desire' avail unto the fulfilling of the law.
But we shall hereafter shew more fully what
a thunderbolt this passage of John is against "Freewill." Yet I am
not a little astonished that passages which make so signally and so forcibly
against "Free-will" are brought forward by the Diatribe in support of
"Free-will;" whose stupidity is such, that it makes no distinction
whatever between the promises, and the words of the law: for it most
ridiculously sets up "Free-will" by the words of the law, and far
more absurdly still confirms it by the words of the promise. But how this
absurdity is, may be immediately solved, if it be but considered with what an
unconcerned and contemptuous mind the Diatribe is here disputing: With whom, it
matters not, whether grace stand or fall, whether "Free-will" lie
prostrate or sit in state, if it can but, by words of vanity, serve the turn of
tyrants, to the odium of the cause!
Sect. 75.—AFTER this, it comes to Paul also, the most
determined enemy to "Free-will," and even he is dragged in to confirm
"Free-will;" "Or despisest thou the riches of His goodness, and
patience, and long-suffering, not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth to
repentance?"—(Rom. ii. 4.)—"How (says the
Diatribe) can the despising of the commandment be imputed where there is not a
Free-will? How can God invite to repentance, who is the author of impenitence?
How can the damnation be just, where the judge compels unto evil doing?"—
I answer: Let the Diatribe see to these
questions itself. What are they unto us! The Diatribe said according to that
'probable opinion.' 'that "Free-will" cannot
will good, and is of necessity compelled to serve sin.' How, therefore, can the
despising of the commandment be charged on the will, if it cannot will good,
and has no liberty, but is necessarily compelled to the service of sin? How can
God invite to repentance who is the author of the reason why it cannot repent,
while it leaves, or does not give grace to, that, which cannot of itself will good? How can the damnation be just, where the
judge, by taking away his aid, compels the wicked man to be left in his
wickedness who cannot of his own power do otherwise?
All these conclusions therefore recoil back
upon the head of the Diatribe. Or, if they prove any thing, as I said, they
prove that "Free-will" can do all things: which, however, is denied
by the Diatribe and by all. Thus these conclusions of reason torment the
Diatribe, throughout all the passages of Scripture: seeing that, it must appear
ridiculous and coldly useless, to enforce and exact with so much vehemence,
when there is no one to be found who can perform: for the apostle's intent is,
by means of these threats, to bring the impious and proud to a knowledge of
themselves and of their impotency, that he might prepare them for grace when
humbled by the knowledge of sin.
And what need is there to speak of, singly,
all those parts which are brought forward out of Paul, seeing that, they are
only a collection of imperative or conditional passages, or of those by which
Paul exhorts Christians to the fruits of faith? Whereas the Diatribe, by its
appended conclusions, forms to itself a power of "Free-will," such
and so great, which can, without grace, do all things which Paul in his
exhortations prescribes. Christians, however, are not led by
"Free-will," but by the Spirit of God (Rom. viii. 14): and to be led, is not to lead, but to be impelled, as a saw or an axe
is impelled by a carpenter.
And that no one might doubt whether or not
Luther asserted things so absurd, the Diatribe recites his own words; which,
indeed, I acknowledge. For I confess that that article of Wycliffe, 'all things
take place from necessity, that is, from the immutable will of God, and our
will is not compelled indeed, but it cannot of itself do good,' was falsely condemned
by the Council of Constance, or that conspiracy or cabal rather. Nay the
Diatribe itself defends the same together with me, while it asserts, 'that
Free-will cannot by its own power will any thing good,' and that, it of
necessity serves sin: although in furnishing this defence, it all the while
designs the direct contrary.
Suffice it to have spoken thus in reply to
the FIRST PART of
the Diatribe, in which it has endeavoured to establish "Free-will."
Let us now consider the latter part in which our arguments are refuted, that
is, those by which "Free-will" is utterly overthrown.—Here you will see, what the smoke of man can do, against the
thunder and lightning of God!
SECOND PART.
Sect. 76.—THE Diatribe, having thus first cited
numberless passages of Scripture, as it were a most formidable army in support
of "Free-will," in order that it might inspire courage into the
confessors and martyrs, the men saints and women saints on the side of
"Free-will," and strike terror into all the fearful and trembling
deniers of, and transgressors against "Free-will," imagines to itself
a poor contemptible handful only standing up to oppose "Free-will:"
and therefore it brings forward no more than two Scriptures, which seem to be
more prominent than the rest, to stand up on their side: intent only upon
slaughter, and that, to be executed without much trouble. The one of these
passages is from Exod. ix. 13, "The Lord hardened the heart of
Pharaoh:" the other is from Malachi i. 2-3, "Jacob have
I loved, but Esau have I hated." Paul has explained at large both these
passages in the Romans ix. 11-17. But, according to the judgment of the
Diatribe, what a detestable and useless discussion has he made of it! So that,
did not the Holy Spirit know a little something of rhetoric, there would be
some danger, lest, being broken at the outset by such an artfully managed show
of contempt, he should despair of his cause, and openly yield to
"Free-will" before the sound of the trumpet for the battle. But,
however, I, as a recruit taken into the rear of those two passages, will
display the forces on our side. Although, where the state of the battle is
such, that one can put to flight ten thousand, there is no need of forces. If
therefore, one passage shall defeat "Free-will," its numberless
forces will profit it nothing.
Sect. 77.—IN this part of the discussion, then, the
Diatribe has found out a new way of eluding the most clear
passages: that is, it will have that there is, in the most simple and clear
passages, a trope. And as, before, when speaking in defence of
"Free-will," it eluded all the imperative and conditional sentences
of the law by means of conclusions tacked, and similitudes added to them; so
now, where it designs to speak against us, it twists all the words of the
divine promise and declaration just which way it pleases, by means of a trope
which it has invented; thus, being everywhere an incomprehensible Proteus! Nay,
it demands with a haughty brow, that this permission should be granted it,
saying, that we ourselves, when pressed closely, are accustomed to get off by
means of invented tropes: as in these instances:—"On which thou wilt,
stretch forth thine hand:" (Ex. viii. 5,) that is, grace shall extend thine
hand on which it will. "Make you a new heart:" (Ezek. xviii. 31,)
that is, grace shall make you a new heart: and the like. It seems, therefore,
an indignity offered, that Luther should be allowed to give forth an
interpretation so forced and twisted, and that it should not be far more
allowable to follow the interpretations of the most approved doctors.
You see then, that here, the contention is
not for the text itself, no, nor for conclusions and similitudes, but for
tropes and interpretations. When then shall we ever have any plain and pure
text, without tropes and conclusions, either for or against
"Free-will?" Has the Scriptures no such
texts anywhere? And shall the cause of "Freewill" remain for ever in
doubt, like a reed shaken with the wind, as being that which can be supported
by no certain text, but which stands upon conclusions and tropes only,
introduced by men mutually disagreeing with each other?
But let our sentiment rather be this:—that
neither conclusion nor trope is to be admitted into the Scriptures, unless the
evident strife of the particulars, or the absurdity of any particular as
militating against an article of faith, require it: but, that the simple, pure,
and natural meaning of the words is to be adhered to, which is according to the
rules of grammar, and to that common use of speech which God has given unto
men. For if every one be allowed, according to his own
lust, to invent conclusions and tropes in the Scriptures, what will the whole
Scripture together be, but a reed shaken with the wind, or a kind of Vertumnus?
Then, in truth, nothing could, to a certainty, be determined on or proved
concerning any one article of faith, which you might not subject to cavillation
by means of some trope. But every trope ought to be avoided as the most deadly
poison, which is not absolutely required by the Scriptures itself.
See what happened to that trope-inventor,
Origen, in expounding the Scriptures. What just occasion did he give the
calumniator Porphery, to say, 'those who favour Origen, can be no great friends
to Hieronymus.' What happened to the Arians by means of that trope, according
to which, they made Christ God nominally? What happened in our own times
to those new prophets concerning the words of Christ, "This is my
body?" [See Note] One invented a trope in the word
"this," another in the word "is," another in the word
"body." I have therefore observed this:—that all heresies and errors
in the Scriptures, have not arisen from the simplicity of the words, as is the
general report throughout the world, but from men not attending to the
simplicity of the words, and hatching tropes and conclusions out of their own
brain.
For example.
"On which soever thou wilt, stretch forth thine hand." I, as far as I
can remember, never put upon these words so violent an interpretation, as to
say, 'grace shall extend thine hand on which soever it will:' "Make
yourselves a new heart," 'that is, grace shall make you a new heart, and
the like;' although the Diatribe traduces me thus in a public work, from being
so carried away with, and illuded by its own tropes and conclusions, that it
knows not what it says about any thing. But I said this:—that by the words,
'stretch forth thine hand,' simply taken as they are, without tropes or conclusions,
nothing else is signified than what is required of us in the stretching forth
of our hand, and what we ought to do; according to the nature of an imperative
expression, with grammarians, and in the common use of speech.
But the Diatribe, not attending to this
simplicity of the word, but with violence adducing conclusions and tropes,
interprets the words thus:—"Stretch forth thine hand;" that is, thou
art able by thine own power to stretch forth thine hand. "Make you a new
heart," that is, ye are able to make a new heart. 'Believe in Christ,'
that is, ye are able to believe in Christ. So that, with it, what is spoken
imperatively, and what is spoken indicatively, is the same thing; or else, it
is prepared to aver, that the Scripture is ridiculous and to no purpose. And
these interpretations, which no grammarian will bear, must not be called, in
Theologians, violent or invented, but the productions of the most approved
doctors received by so many ages.
But it is easy for the Diatribe to admit
and follow tropes in this part of the discussion, seeing that, it cares not at
all whether what is said be certain or uncertain. Nay, it aims at making all
things uncertain; for its design is, that the
doctrines concerning "Free-will" should be left alone, rather than
searched into. Therefore, it is enough for it, to be enabled in any way to
avoid those passages by which it finds itself closely pressed.
But as for me, who
am maintaining a serious cause, and who am inquiring what is, to the greatest
certainty, the truth, for the establishing of consciences, I must act very
differently. For me, I say, it is not enough that you say there may be a trope
here: but I must inquire, whether there ought to be, or can be a trope there.
For if you cannot prove that there must, of necessity,
be a trope in that passage, you will effect nothing at all. There stands there
this word of God—"I will harden the heart of Pharaoh." (Ex. iv. 21, Rom. ix. 17-18.) If
you say that it can be understood or ought to be understood thus:—I will permit
it to be hardened: I hear you say, indeed, that it may be so understood. And I
hear this trope used by every one, 'I destroyed you, because I did not correct
you immediately when you began to do wrong.' But here, there is no place for
that interpretation. We are not here inquiring, whether that trope be in use;
we are not inquiring whether any one can use it in that passage of Paul: but
this is the point of inquiry—whether or not it be sure and safe to use this
passage plainly as it stands, and whether Paul would have it so used. We are
not inquiring into the use of an indifferent reader of this passage, but into
the use of the author Paul himself.
What will you do with a conscience
inquiring thus?—Behold God, as the Author, saith, "I will harden the heart
of Pharaoh:" the meaning of the word "harden" is plain and well
known. But a man, who reads this passage, tells me, that in this place, 'to
harden,' signifies 'to give an occasion of becoming hardened,' because, the
sinner is not immediately corrected. But by what authority does he this? With
what design, by what necessity, is the natural signification of this passage
thus twisted? And suppose the reader and interpreter should be in error, how
shall it be proved that such a turn ought to be given to this passage? It is
dangerous, nay, impious, thus to twist the Word of God, without necessity and
without authority. Would you then comfort a poor soul thus labouring, in this
way?—Origen thought so and so. Cease to search into such things, because they are
curious and superfluous. But he would answer you, this admonition should have
been given to Moses or Paul before they wrote, and so also to God Himself, for
it is they who vex us with these curious and superfluous Scriptures.
Sect. 78.—THIS miserable scape-gap of tropes, therefore,
profits the Diatribe nothing. But this Proteus of ours must here be held fast,
and compelled to satisfy us fully concerning the trope in this passage; and
that, by Scriptures the most clear, or by miracles the most evident. For as to
its mere opinion, even though supported by the laboured industry of all ages,
we give no credit to that whatever. But we urge on and press it home, that
there can be here no trope whatever, but that the Word of God is to be
understood according to the plain meaning of the words. For it is not given
unto us (as the Diatribe persuades itself to turn the words of God backwards
and forwards according to our own lust: if that were the case, what is there in
the whole Scripture, that might not be resolved into the philosophy of
Anaxagoras—'that any thing might be made from any thing?' And thus I will say,
"God created the heavens and the earth:" that is, He stationed them,
but did not make them out of nothing. Or, "He created the heavens and the
earth;" that is, the angels and the devils; or the just and the
wicked. Who, I ask, if this were the case, might not become a theologian at the
first opening of a book?
Let this, therefore, be a fixed and settled
point:—that since the Diatribe cannot prove, that there is a trope in these our
passages which it utterly destroys, it is compelled to cede to us, that the
words are to be understood according to their plain meaning; even though it
should prove, that the same trope is contained in all the other passages of
Scripture, and used in common by every one. And by the
gaining of this one point, all our arguments are at the same time defended,
which the Diatribe designed to refute; and thus, its refutation is found to
effect nothing, to do nothing, and to be nothing.
Whenever, therefore, this passage of Moses,
"I will harden the heart of Pharaoh," is interpreted thus:—My long-suffering, by which I bear with the sinner, leads,
indeed, others unto repentance, but it shall render Pharaoh more hardened in
iniquity:—it is a pretty interpretation, but it is not proved that it ought to
be so interpreted. But I am not content with what is said, I must have the
proof.
And that also of
Paul, "He hath mercy on whom He will have mercy, and whom He will He
hardeneth, "(Rom. ix. 18,) is plausibly interpreted thus:—that is, God
hardens when He does not immediately punish the sinner; and he has mercy when
He immediately invites to repentance by afflictions.—But how is this
interpretation proved?
And also that
of Isaiah lxiii. 17, "Why hast Thou made us to
err from Thy ways and hardened our heart from Thy fear?" Be it so, that
Jerome interprets it thus from Origen:—He is said to
'make to err' who does not immediately recall from error. But who shall certify
us that Jerome and Origen interpret rightly? It is, therefore, a settled
determination with me, not to argue upon the authority of any teacher whatever,
but upon that of the Scripture alone. What Origens and Jeromes does the
Diatribe, then, forgetting its own determination, set before us! especially when, among all the ecclesiastical writers, there
are scarcely any who have handled the Holy Scriptures less to the purpose, and
more absurdly, than Origen and Jerome.
In a word: this liberty of interpretation,
by a new and unheard-of kind of grammar, goes to confound all things. So that,
when God saith, "I will harden the heart of Pharaoh," you are to
change the persons and understand it thus:—Pharaoh hardens himself by My long-suffering. God hardeneth our hearts;—that is, we
harden ourselves by God's deferring the punishment. Thou, O Lord, has made us to err;—that is, we have made ourselves to err
by Thy not punishing us. So also, God's having mercy, no longer signifies His
giving grace, or showing mercy, or forgiving sin, or justifying, or delivering
from evil, but, on the contrary, signifies bringing on evil and punishing.
In fact, by these tropes matters will come
to this:—you may say, that God had mercy upon the children of Israel when He
sent them into Assyria and to Babylon; because, He there punished the sinners,
and there invited them, by afflictions, to repentance: and that, on the other
hand, when He delivered them and brought them back, He had not then mercy upon
them, but hardened them; that is, by His long-suffering and mercy He gave them
an occasion of becoming hardened. And also, God's
sending the Saviour Christ into the world, will not be said to be the mercy,
but the hardening of God; because, by this mercy, He gave men an occasion of
hardening themselves. On the other hand, His destroying
And be it so, that good men are made better
both by the long-suffering and by the severity of God; yet, when we are
speaking of the good and the bad promiscuously, these tropes, by an utter
perversion of the common manner of speaking, will make, out of the mercy of God
His wrath, and His wrath out of His mercy; seeing that, they call it the wrath
of God when He does good, and His mercy when He afflicts.
Moreover, if God be
said then to harden, when He does good and endures with long-suffering, and
then to have mercy when He afflicts and punishes, why is He more particularly
said to harden Pharaoh than to harden the children of
Sect. 79.—BUT this is the most excellent statement of
all—'that God is said to harden, when He indulges sinners by long-suffering;
but to have mercy upon them, when He visits and afflicts, and thus, by
severity, invites to repentance.'—
What, I ask, did God leave undone in afflicting, punishing, and calling Pharaoh to repentance? Are there not, in His dealings with him, ten plagues recorded? If, therefore, your definition stand good, that shewing mercy, is punishing and calling the sinner immediately, God certainly had mercy upon Pharaoh! Why then does not God say