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The Gospel & ChristTwenty-Fourth Sunday after Trinity; Matthew 9:18-26A Sermon by Martin Luther; taken from his Church Postil. |
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[The
following sermon is taken from volume V:328-343 of The Sermons
of Martin Luther, published by Baker Book House (Grand Rapids,
MI, 1983). It was originally published in 1905 in English by
Lutherans in All Lands (Minneapolis, MN), as The Precious and
Sacred Writings of Martin Luther, vol. 14. The pagination from
the Baker edition has been maintained for referencing. This e-text
was scanned and edited by Richard P. Bucher, it is in the public
domain and it may be copied and distributed without restriction.] Page
328 --------------------------- 1.
Dear friends, you know that the Gospel is nothing else than a
sermon about one person who is called Christ. And although there
are many other books written here and there, and many sermons
preached by many different persons, both about the heathen and
the Christians, yea, also about the mother of God, St. Peter,
angels and many of the saints; yet they are not Gospels, for
this alone is the true Gospel which sets before us Christ, and
teaches the good things we may hope from him. 2.
Of course there is also at times something in the Gospel on John
the Baptist, Mary and the Apostles, but this is not properly
the Gospel, for they are taken into consideration so as more
perfectly to indicate whence Christ came and what his office
is. So Luke relates the history of John the Baptist from the
beginning, his conception and birth; and that of the Virgin Mary,
all which is written not for their sake, but only for the sake
of the one person Christ, so that everything written in the Gospel
concerns this person Christ alone. In St. Paul's Epistles there
is nothing written about the saints, all there is about Christ
alone. The Evangelists describe what miracles and wonders Christ
performed; but they write of no work that John or Mary did; but
only what Christ did, how he helped the people in body and soul,
and how the people clung to him. 3.
For God has decreed it is his will that all should cling to the
one man Christ, to hope in him and hold fast to him if they would
be saved. Thus they know nothing of any one aside from Christ,
who alone has been presented unto us by God as our mercy-seat,
as St. Paul writes, Rom. 3, 25. Hitherto one has clung to this
saint, another to that, one has had Mary, another Saint Barbara,
and there have been manifold sects and orders. But no one cared
anything for Christ except for the name. We have had many mediators,
all of whom we abandoned and held only to Christ. Therefore St.
Paul says in Rom. 1, 2, that the Gospel was Page
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by God through the prophets concerning his Son. And he insists
upon it so very strongly, that nothing avails in the Gospel except
the one only person, Jesus Christ. He who knows this may well
thank God, that he knows where to place his comfort, help and
confidence, and he will then despise and cast away all sermons
about other persons. 4.
For this reason the Lord is pictured to us in today's Gospel,
mingling among the people, drawing all the world unto himself
by his friendliness and comforting doctrine so that they may
cling to him with their hearts, depend upon his goodness, and
hope to receive from him both spiritual and temporal treasures.
Nor do you see him take anything from those he heals and helps;
yea, he receives nothing from them but scorn and mockery, as
we shall hear. Good deeds proceed from him, but he receives mockery
and scorn in return. 5.
Now this is preached and submitted to the whole world, that they
may learn to know this man aright, and to know how to become
Christians, not how to become good and innocent. Other doctrines
outside of the Gospel, like the books of the heathen masters,
insist that the people should through them become good; again,
the legends of the saints especially insist that the people are
to live as the saints lived. To make good people does not belong
to the Gospel, for it only makes Christians. It takes much more
to be a Christian than to be pious. A person can easily be pious,
but not a Christian. A Christian knows nothing to say about his
piety, for he finds in himself nothing good or pious. If he is
to be pious, he must look for a different piety, a piety in some
one else. 6.
To this end Christ is presented to us as an inexhaustible fountain,
who at all times overflows with pure goodness and grace. And
for such goodness and kindness he accepts nothing, except that
the good people, who acknowledge such kindness and grace, thank
him for it, praise and love him, although others despise him
for it. This is what he reaps from it. So one is not called a
Christian because he does much, but because he receives something
from Page
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draws from him and lets Christ only give to him. If one no longer
receives anything from Christ, he is no longer a Christian, so
that the name Christian continues to be based only on receiving,
and not on giving and doing, and he receives nothing from any
one except from Christ alone. If you look at what you do, you
have already lost the Christian name. It is indeed true, that
we are to do good works, help, advise and give to others; but
no one is called a Christian by reason of that, nor is he on
that account a Christian. 7.
Therefore, if you wish to consider the word in its true meaning,
you must identify a Christian by the fact that he only receives
something from Christ, and has Christ within him; for this is
what the word properly means. Just as a person is called "white,"
because of his white color, black because of his dark color,
large because of his size. So also one is called a "Christian"
because of Christ, who dwells in him and from whom he receives
his blessings. So, if one is called a Christian because of Christ,
he is certainly then not called a Christian because of his works.
From this it also follows that no one is called a Christian by
reason of his good works. If this be true, as it undoubtedly
is, then it must follow that our orders and sects do not belong
under the Christian name, and they do not develop Christians. 8.
Therefore they are deceivers, who preach or teach in the church,
and occupy themselves with commandments, works and statutes,
that accomplish nothing. Although they pretend to be Christians,
nevertheless they still, under this name, attempt to burden and
torment us with their commands and works. By reason of my works
I may well be called one who fasts, one who prays, or a pilgrim,
but not a Christian. If you were to weave all your works together,
and add to them all the works of others, you would still not
have Christ, and from these things you could not be called a
Christian. Christ is something different and higher than law
and the commandments of men. He is the Son of God, who is ready
alone to give and not to Page
331 --------------------------- receive.
If I am so wise as to take what he offers, I have him, and if
I have him I am then justly called a Christian. Thus you have
the distinction as to what a Christian is and what Christ is. 9.
Now this Gospel teaches us that Christ is the greatest and highest
person, renowned in all the world, not in order to terrify the
people, but to pour out all earthly and heavenly gifts, so that
all men may depend upon and trust in him, and continually receive
from him alone what they need. If sin terrifies my conscience
and preachers of the law come and want to help me with their
works, they will accomplish nothing. Christ alone can help here
and no one else. Yea, the others only make it worse, even if
they were Peter or Paul, or even Mary, the mother of God herself.
Christ alone can do this, being ordained of God to the end that
he should send forth the good news in which is proclaimed how
my sins are to be forgiven gratuitously, with out any work or
merit on my part, only and simply out of pure grace through faith
in this Christ. If now I accept what is preached I have a comfort
that my sins are forgiven me before God and before the world.
If I at heart hold fast to this, then I am a Christian, and for
this I thank God through Christ, who at all times gives me his
Holy Spirit and grace, that sin may not harm me either here or
at the day of judgment. 10.
If I fear death and do not like to die, I find in this Christ
a comfort and medicine, so that I care nothing for death. If
terrified at the anger of God, I have here a Mediator. Many a
one runs into the desert or puts on garments of coarse hair,
and thinks he will force God not to be angry with him; but it
will amount to nothing; whoever has not this Christ, on him the
wrath of God remaineth forever, for it is so decreed. John 3,
36. 11.
Therefore, whoever would have a joyful conscience that does not
fear sin, death, hell, nor the wrath of God, dare not reject
this Mediator, Christ. For he is the fountain that overflows
with grace, that gives temporal and eternal life. Only open thy
heart and hold it forth and you Page
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receive all. He gushes and flows forth, and can do nothing else
but only give, flow and gush forth, if you can only believe it.
You justly deserve that people should call you a Christian, when
you are called a Christian by virtue of what you receive from
Christ; if not, and you want to give him so much, you are no
Christian. This is the rich precious word which St. Paul praises
so highly, and can never sufficiently praise, that he so graciously
gives us his Son, to pour out his grace over all who receive
it. Rom. 3, 24 and 8, 32; Gal. 3, 25. 12.
From this it further follows, when a Christian does good works
and shows love to his neighbor, that he does not thereby become
a Christian or pious, but before this is done he must have been
a Christian and pious. He indeed does good works, but his good
works do not make him a Christian. The tree brings or yields
good fruit, but the fruit does not make the tree good. So also
here, no one becomes a Christian through his works, but through
Christ. 13.
From this you understand what kind of people Christians are,
and what their kingdom is, namely, that they are a multitude
that cling to Christ, and have one Spirit and the same gifts
with him. And through this all Christians are equal, and no one
has any more of Christ than another; St. Peter is no more than
the thief on the cross; Mary the mother of God is no more than
the sinner, Mary Magdalene. In external acts and works, of course,
there is a difference among them, for the Virgin Mary had a greater
work to do than Mary Magdalene, St. Peter a greater work than
the thief on the cross. This is the case when we reckon according
to works; but by virtue of our works we are not Christians. The
Virgin Mary is not a Christian on account of her great work that
she bore in her body Christ, such a costly and inexpressible
treasure, as Christ himseslf said to the woman, Luke 11, 27-28,
who cried aloud among the people to the Lord: "Blessed is
the body that bore thee, and the breasts which thou hast sucked."
"Yes, blessed are they," said he, "who hear the
Word of God and keep it." Here you see he exalts believers
above his mother. For Chris- Page
333 --------------------------- tians
are called Christians because they believe in Christ. Virgin
and mother are two very beautiful names, but they are nothing
in comparison to the name of believers or Christians. Again,
St. Paul is so proud, that in his Epistle to the Galatians, 2,
6, he gives the office of the great and high apostles a reputation
which amounts to little before God, except as it brings a blessing
and is of service to others. 14.
Therefore we are all alike through faith in Christ. Although
St. Peter has a stronger faith than I, it is still the same faith
in Christ. For his Father offers his Son Christ to the promiscuous
crowd, and whoever receives him, gets the whole Christ, whether
in weakness or in strength, it makes no difference. The woman
in this Gospel who had been sick for a long time lays hold of
Christ as well as Mary the Virgin, his mother did. Therefore
Christians have the same Spirit, one is as high-born as another,
St. Peter must call me his brother, and I can also call him my
brother. Yea, Christ receives us unto himself and holds us as
his brothers, as after his resurrection he said to Mary Magdalene:
"Go unto my brethren and tell them, I ascend unto my Father
and to your Father, to my God and to your God." John 20,
17. And St. Paul calls Christ the first-born among many brethren,
Rom. 8, 29. Of this he speaks very beautifully in his First Epistle
to the Corinthians, 8, 9-12, where he speaks of weak brethren
thus: "But take heed lest by any means this liberty of yours
become a stumblingblock to the weak. For if a man see thee who
hast knowledge sitting at meat in an idol's temple, will not
his conscience, if he is weak, be emboldened to eat things sacrificed
to idols? For through thy knowledge he that is weak perisheth,
the brother for whose sake Christ died. And thus, sinning against
the brethren, and wounding their conscience when it is weak,
ye sin against Christ." 15.
The summary of this entire Gospel is, that we learn to know Christ
aright, and not only that we have the mere name, but know that
we have all things from him. If we are Christians we have all
things, and God is our Father, and we are lords of all things
in heaven and on earth; this Page
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work of ours can bring to pass, be it as great and costly as
it may. Now you see how far they are from the Christian name,
who live under the dominion of the Pope. The Gospel preaches
nothing but the one person, Christ; not even Mary, much less
the Pope or any work, be it as costly as it can. It must offer
Christ alone and no one else, whom God the Father has sent among
us, only that we should draw all from him, and wait for his grace
and goodness. 16.
Now when they preach to you Christ as a judge, how he is to appear
on the judgment day, and how you should do many good works that
he may reward you for them, and you agree to this, then he will
indeed be a judge to you and not a Savior. And if he be thus
presented to you as people are accustomed to paint his mother
showing him her breasts, this is actually to preach the devil
and not Christ, who only gives but receives nothing. It is indeed
true, when you have received from him, then good works will follow
of themselves, without force or demand; and this is represented
to us very beautifully in today's Gospel. 17.
For here, you see, Christ preaches the Gospel to the people.
Now preaching is no insignificant work, for here he does us a
great service, in that he becomes our teacher and instructs us,
how we may come to the knowledge of himself. This is a part of
his great grace and kindness. While he is here on earth he does
not cease to teach, so that we may receive him as our Savior
and Redeemer; afterwards he follows us with his good works which
he manifests everywhere to everyone as he needs. You find no
one in the Gospel who ever asked anything of the Lord, whose
help was denied and not given. As many as came to him, blind,
deaf, lame, palsied and dropsical, he received and helped all
as they desired, and healed them from all diseases, as Luke 6,
19 says: "And all the multitude sought to touch him; for
power came forth from him, and healed them all." PART
II.--OF THE GOSPEL AND CHRIST IN DETAIL. 18.
Thus he does also to this woman. The woman hears Page
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preach, and perceives he is a good, indulgent man, who appears
friendly toward all the world; then she also began to cleave
to him and take courage to think, because he cut none away from
him, she too was welcomed to enjoy his friendship and goodness.
Therefore she lets all the Apostles go, and casts her heart's
trust and confidence only on the Lord, and says to herself: "If
I do but touch his garment, I shall be made whole." 19.
Only see what a heart the woman had. Hers is indeed a noble,
great faith and confidence. She did not think otherwise in her
heart than that he would certainly help her, if she only touched
his garment with her hand, and yet she is not so bold as to approach
him openly. She regards herself as unworthy to speak to him or
look at him; for she knows that she deserved nothing, and never.
did anything for the Lord. Therefore she so plans as to approach
him from behind, falls down at his feet and merely touches the
hem of his garment. There is nothing but mere awkwardness and
unworthiness here. Who had merited that the Lord should permit
the Gospel to be preached to these people? There is no preparation,
no work; yet the poor woman is there and hopes to obtain great
things from the Lord, that he would release her from her sickness.
She had had an issue of blood for about twelve successive years.
How could she earn anything under such circumstances, or how
could she because of her disease be worthy of anything? Of course
she was worthy, but only to receive and not to give; for at that
time she was not able to give the least thing. 20.
And this is the true preparation for the grace and goodness of
Christ, that I feel my need of it. And then it harmonizes beautifully,
that the two meet together, the rich and the poor, Christ and
the sinner. Yet it is a great art, to persuade people that they
are poor and in need of grace. It is a difficult matter, nor
does the devil permit it to be done, but always diverts the people
to their good works, that they may under no circumstances receive
the idea that they stand in need of the grace and mercy of Christ. 21.
The text says the wretched woman had the issue of Page
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for twelve years, and to cure it, had spent all her living upon
physicians. And the more she spent for this purpose, the worse
she became. Luke and Mark both especially refer to this, and
show thereby that, the more the law and works are preached, the
worse it becomes among us, and we receive nothing from it but
one harm and injury after another. The conscience can never be
quieted by our good works. When one sin is expelled from the
conscience, another soon enters, yea, the medicine and the work
often make a sin, where otherwise there is none, until we come
to Christ; as this woman here who had been sick so long and would
never have received help, had she never come to Christ, from
whom she received her health without any work whatever; she gives
him nothing, and only receives from him, and allows him to give. 22.
So it goes with all sermons that do not preach Christ, and it
is here indicated that we must constantly employ the Word, and
always exercise ourselves in the Word without intermission, for
such men we still find at all times, who have like anxious and
troubled consciences. For this woman signifies all poor consciences
who have an issue of blood, that is, they feel their sins. And
the issue of blood flows continually and cannot cease. For flesh
and blood does nothing but what they wish. Now when feeling gets
the upperhand, the wretched people go to work and want to help
themselves; then one does this, the other that, and none as yet
has accomplished anything. 23.
Hence many orders and institutions have arisen because men have
conjured up so many works that all of them can scarcely be named.
What was the cause of all this? Nothing but the conscience tormented
with sin, that has so exercised and harrassed us, that we thought
thereby to redeem our souls and be free from all sins. But Christ
was not in it, because we only wished to give without receiving.
Therefore it has ever become worse with us, as with this woman,
whom all the physicians endeavored to heal, but she never found
one able to help her. Thus too we have believed all the physicians;
if any one came who had accomplished some Page
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work we welcomed him. Dear Lord, we were anxious to be well,
were anxious to have a joyful conscience, and were anxious to
be free from sin. 24.
The physicians are the preachers of the law and the lords over
Christians. If one were very anxious to be free from sin, what
did they do to him? They gave him medicine from which he only
became weaker and sicker. This we have seen and in part also
felt a great deal, how, to our great and real injury, the people
sought to be good by means of their own works, and thereby deliver
themselves from sin. But it did no good, we only became more
and more discouraged by sin and death, so that there were no
more discouraged people to be found on earth than just the priests,
the monks, the nuns, and those who go about with their good works.
If one had a boil, then the druggists had to work, there was
a drugging, a going and running as though the soul would immediately
pass away; thus they were afraid and discouraged. And no one
fears the last judgment so keenly as just these very spiritual
people. This they also beautifully show, when they so treat of
works that they always add one work to the other, and never constantly
trust in any single work; and the more they do the worse they
become, the more discouraged and unbelieving they become, and
it is with them just as with this woman. 25.
It is quite a beautiful parable, and is well adapted for our
benefit. We have not only spent our temporal goods for this purpose.
but we have also risked our lives with fasting, with castigation,
and with other unbearable burdens, so that some become insane
over it, and lose all their natural strength and finally lose
their souls in the bargain. I have also been one of these and
have been caught deeper in this drugstore than many others. I
could not so quickly come to the point, to cast to the winds
the law of the Pope. It was a bitter and difficult task for me
to eat meat on Friday, and conclude that the law and order of
the Pope amounted to nothing. God help us, how difficult it was
for me, before I dared to do it! Therefore one should become
free from this in his conscience, and despise the traditions
of the Pope, Page
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do which he must indeed have a strong, firm foundation in faith;
if he has this not, he will think several times before he takes
the risk. 26.
And as it was with this woman, who spent all her living upon
the physicians, and even then was not made whole, yea, only became
worse, so it is with us. Here all our works, cares and labors
are lost. Here all our human obedience and all our orders fall
to the ground, and all we spent in that line was wholly lost.
Now we see the laws and traditions of the Pope and the bishops
are nothing, before which we trembled and feared. All this helped
us just as much as it did this poor woman, who spent all her
goods and possessions, yes, and also risked her life to this
end. 0, what medicine and treatment this woman had to use! How
tried, weak and sick she often became from them! Yea, if she
could have become well, she would have devoured the whole drugstore.
But all availed nothing, she had to bear her sickness for twelve
long years. 27.
But how was the poor woman at last helped? As soon as she approached
the man called Christ and placed her hope and comfort in him,
she became well. But who directed her to this man? Of course
the physicians did not. For when our pastors preach Christ, the
affairs of the Pope and all his traditions are overthrown. Who
then told her? She heard it from some one who also had been healed,
and that not by the physicians. He without doubt told her there
was one who is called Jesus, who is a friendly, gracious man,
helps everyone, and allows no one to go from his presence unassisted,
and that he is sent from God just for the purpose of helping
everyone. And many had told her who received help from him. So
that they also brought her to him. As the woman heard these things
she abandoned the physicians and went to Christ. 28.
And so it takes place today. Christ is not preached, but only
mere human works: do this, and do that. And in spite of this
the knowledge of Christ enters among the people, what we are
to expect of him, and that he alone must do everything, without
our works and merit. When we hear Page
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voice we follow him, and obey his Word, and let the physicians
go for good, and care no longer for the preachers of the law
or of works, nor inquire about their commandments and traditions,
but we go with all the desire of our heart to this man, called
Christ, and say: Yes, indeed, from this man we must receive it
without any merit, yea, how foolish I acted, that I ventured
so much for it! May God bless thee, my dear Pope! May God bless
you, my dear bishops, monks and priests, I shall never need your
medicine again, your work and merit, your commandments and traditions,
you have martyred me too long with these things. I have found
one who gives me all things freely, that I in time past had to
buy from you with piles of money. He gives it to me without work
or merit, whereas I before had to risk my body, strength, health
and life for it. Good night and farewell! I will never come to
you again. 29.
Thus one becomes a Christian, not by the decretals of the Pope,
or by means of works and human traditions, but by the grace and
kindness of Christ. Now whoever has a troubled, distressed conscience,
fears sin and is terrified at death, or otherwise experiences
no good in himself, let him come hither to this man and confess
what ails him, call upon him, and he will most certainly help.
"Pour out your heart before him; God is a refuge for us,"
Ps. 62. 8; 50, 15, and say to him: Behold, here is an empty vessel
that needs to be filled. Fill it, 0 Lord! I am weak in faith,
strengthen me; I am cold in love, warm me and make me burn, that
my love may flow out to my neighbor. I have not a firm, strong
faith, at times I doubt, and cannot wholly trust in God! Alas,
Lord, help me, increase in me my faith and trust. I have locked
up the treasure of all my goods in thee. I am poor, thou art
rich, and hast mercy on the poor, I am a sinner, and thou art
righteous. In me is the river of sin; in thee is all fulness
and righteousness. 30.
If you once learn this, the laws of the Pope cannot take thee
captive. From his laws and commands you receive nothing, but
like this woman you spend everything you have, your body and
goods, and at last your soul besides. And Page
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you will say: I desire him from whom I can receive something,
not him to whom I must give. 31.
The other Gospels write thus of this woman: When she became well
Jesus felt that a power had gone out of him, and turned to the
people and asked: "Who is it that touched me? And then the
Disciples answered: "Master, the multitudes press thee and
crush thee;" but the Lord was not satisfied with this, and
replied: "Some one did touch me; for I perceived that power
had gone forth from me," Mark. 5, 25; Luke 8, 46; I know
that some one has received something from me. The Lord did all
this because this woman's faith was acceptable to him, which
he desired to make known to all people. For he desires nothing
more than that a man trust and believe in him. It was also done
for the sake of the ruler, to confirm his faith by this miracle
and transaction. Therefore Mark writes thus: As the woman saw
that the Lord knew it, she feared and trembled and came and cast
herself at the feet of the Lord and told him all in truth that
was done to her by him. Then the Lord goes to work and absolves
her and says to her: "Daughter, thy faith hath made thee
whole; go in peace, and be whole of thy plague." 32.
Are not these friendly words? What joy must not this woman have
experienced, as she permitted another to show her a kindness?
This joy and peace all receive, who look to this man for help.
Now where this joy is there its works must immediately follow,
which prove this joy. So the peace and joy in this woman had
to become manifest. For as soon as she received the good deed
from the Lord, she confessed it before all the people, and was
not ashamed to have it told that she received something from
him, and yet gave nothing for it. This work and thanksgiving,
however, God desires from us, namely, that we confess and proclaim
his kindness, grace and good deeds before all men, so that others
may also come and receive his benefits as this woman did. Thus
my Christian life urges me to do good to others, as God has done
to me through Christ, only that thus Christ may become known;
but thereby I do not become a Christian. Just as Page
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woman is not made whole by her knowledge, for she was well before
all her work and knowledge. But after she becomes well she confesses
Christ, and praises him, only for the good of others, and goes
and does good works, one after the other. Thus we, too, live,
if we are only Christians, in order that one may serve the others
wherever we can. Hence, as this woman became well before she
did all her works, so we Christians must also become whole before
we can do any good works. CONCERNING
THE DAUGHTER OF THE RULER. 34.
As the Gospel is represented in this woman, so it is also represented
to us in the daughter of the ruler. This ruler of the Synagogue
whom Mark calls Jairus, had a strong faith and confidence in
the Lord that he would raise his deceased daughter to life. For
had he not had such a disposition of heart toward him, he would
not have come to him, and requested a thing of him which was
by nature impossible. Therefore in this he shows his faith. When
now the Lord observed the faith in him, he could not but do his
will, and immediately arose and went with him. During his journey
the history of this woman takes place, who had been sick for
twelve years, as we have heard. 35.
And when Jesus came into the ruler's house, and saw the flute-players
and the crowd making a tumult, who were there in compliance with
the law of Moses, and blew with horns and trumpets, as in our
country the bells are rung, to call the people together; he commanded
the people and the flute-players to give place and said: "The
damsel is not dead, but sleepeth." And they laughed him
to scorn. This
means that, when the preaching of the Word goes forth thus, that
Christ is the man who helps and our works will not do it, then
the world cannot avoid it, it must laugh and scorn, and be offended
(1 Cor. 1, 23), for it is not acceptable to the world that Christ
should help us. As the people do here, who said without doubt:
Alas, this is a grand master or doctor, what shall he help? for
he does not know what it is to sleep or enter the grave. Page
342 --------------------------- 36.
In the world the Gospel must have the reputation of being a foolish
sermon, despised and scorned; for the devil cannot hear that
this preaching is honored in the world, for it brings no advantage
to his kingdom, this he feels, of course, and hence he attacks
it with all cunning, so that he may hinder it and cause it to
be worthless among his own followers, whose hearts he has entirely
blinded and possessed, that the light of the Gospel may not shine
for them, as St. Paul says in 2 Cor. 4, 4. For it is impossible
that the preaching of Christ should not produce some fruit. It
will not be preached in vain, Is. 55, 11; although there be but
few who receive it, it matters not. 37.
As satan feels it is a loss to him, and that the preaching of
the Word is directed against his kingdom, he has no rest, he
persecutes, despises and attacks it on all sides, as he at present
rages and storms in all the world. For the preaching of Christ
overthrows everything pleasing to the devil and the world, and
what the world regards as the most holy and costly. For the world
paints for itself a god who accepts our good works, and is pleased
with the mass, vigils, foundations, rosaries, caps, pates, hempen
ropes, and what more be the works of fools with which the Pope
is employed. Now when one comes and brings the Gospel, and preaches
against this nonsense of the Pope, and he is obliged to do, and
says: It is nothing, it is deception, it is opposed to Christ
and the Scriptures; he must suffer himself to be called a heretic
and a worthless fellow, a perverter of the people, and then they
quite grandly assert: Do you want to rule the whole world? do
you think you are the wisest? Our forbears also were not fools.
Many holy, pious people have done these works and preached of
them, should you first come to destroy all? This must not be!
Then the raging and storming time begins, with persecution and
death, and the devil will claim he is right, let it go as it
may. 38.
This is enough on today's Gospel for the present. Mark well,
that you learn from the Gospels that all things are to be found
in the one person who is called Christ. And remember, too, that
a Christian receives his name alone from Page
343 --------------------------- Christ. I do not say this in vain, for I know what it costs to keep it, in temptation and in the battle of life. Let us call upon God for grace, that we may take this in earnest, and grasp it with our hearts. Amen. |