Monday, May 21, 2012

Dr. Martin Luther to the Christian Reader



http://www.iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/wittenberg/luther/luther-reader.txt

                _Dr. Martin Luther to the Christian Reader_
                          by Dr. Martin Luther, 1545
                                Published in:
                           _Works of Martin Luther_
     Adolph Spaeth, L.D. Reed, Henry Eyster Jacobs, et Al., Trans. & Eds.
        (Philadelphia: A. J. Holman Company, 1915), Vol. 1, pp. 10-11.
 
         
       DR. MARTIN LUTHER TO THE CHRISTIAN READER
                          
         
       EDITION OF 1545
                          
                    
       Above all things I beseech the Christian reader and beg him  for
       the sake of our Lord Jesus Christ, to read my earliest books  very
       circumspectly and with much pity, knowing that before now I  too
       was a monk, and one of the right frantic and raving papists.  When
       I took up this matter against Indulgences, I was so full and 
       drunken, yea, so besotted in papal doctrine that, out of my great 
       zeal, I would have been ready to do murder -- at least, I would 
       have been glad to see and help that murder should be done -- on 
       all who would not be obedient and subject to the pope, even to 
       his smallest word.
         
       Such a Saul was I at that time; and I meant it right earnestly;
       and there are still many such to-day. In a word, I was not such a
       frozen and ice-cold champion of the papacy as Eck and others of
       his kind have been and still are. They defend the Roman See more
       for the sake of the shameful belly, which is their god, than
       because they are really attached to its cause. Indeed I am wholly
       of the opinion that like latter-day Epicureans, they only laugh at
       the pope. But I verily espoused this cause in deepest earnest and
       in all fidelity; the more so because I shrank from the Last Day
       with great anxiety and fear and terror, and yet from the depths of
       my heart desired to be saved. 
         
       Therefore, Christian reader, thou wilt find in my earliest books
       and writings how many points of faith I then, with all humility,
       yielded and conceded to the pope, which since then I have held and
       condemned for the most horrible blasphemy and abomination, and
       which I would have to be so held and so condemned forever. Amen. 
                                                         
       Thou wilt therefore ascribe this my error, or as my opponents
       venomously call it, this inconsistency of mine, to the time, and
       to my ignorance and inexperience. At the beginning I was quite
       alone and without any helpers, and moreover, to tell the truth,
       unskilled in all these things, and far too unlearned to discuss
       such high and weighty matters. For it was without any intention,
       purpose, or will of mine that I fell, quite unexpectedly, into
       this wrangling and contention.  This I take God, the Searcher of
       hearts, to witness. 
                                                        
       I tell these things to the end that, if thou shalt read my books,
       thou mayest know and remember that I am one of those who, as St.
       Augustine says of himself, have grown by writing and by teaching
       others, and not one of those who, starting with nothing, have in a
       trice become the most exalted and most learned doctors. We find,
       alas! many of these self-grown doctors; who in truth are nothing,
       do nothing and accomplish nothing, are moreover untried and
       inexperienced, and yet, after a single look at the Scriptures,
       think themselves able wholly to exhaust its spirit. 
                                                        
       Farewell, dear reader, in the Lord. Pray that the Word may be
       further spread abroad, and may be strong against the miserable
       devil. For he is mighty and wicked, and just now is raving
       everywhere and raging cruelly, like one who well knows and feels
       that his time is short, and that the kingdom of his Vicar, the
       Antichrist in Rome, is sore beset. But may the God of all grace
       and mercy strengthen and complete in us the work He has begun, to
       His honor and to the comfort of His little flock. Amen. 
       _________________________________________________________________ 
 
       This text was converted to ascii format for Project Wittenberg by 
       Allen Mulvey and is in the public domain.  You may freely 
       distribute, copy or print this text.  Please direct any comments 
       or suggestions to: Rev. Robert E. Smith of the Walther Library at 
       Concordia Theological Seminary. 
 
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