Tuesday after Trinity XVI - Devotion in semi-Exile
Tuesday after Trinity XVI - Devotion in semi-Exile
Deuteronomy 1:19-36 Matthew 5:21-48
You often hear Lutheran pastors (at least in the LCMS) talk about Law and Gospel. What exactly is the distinction? Why the distinction? This is a great article that hopefully clears up the question.
V. Law and Gospel
Status Controversiae.
The Principal Question In This Controversy.
1] Whether the preaching of the Holy Gospel is properly not only a preaching of grace, which announces the forgiveness of sins, but also a preaching of repentance and reproof, rebuking unbelief, which, they say, is rebuked not in the Law, but alone through the Gospel.
Affirmative Theses.
Pure Doctrine of God's Word.
2] 1. We believe, teach, and confess that the distinction between the Law and the Gospel is to be maintained in the Church with great diligence as an especially brilliant light, by which, according to the admonition of St. Paul, the Word of God is rightly divided.
Deuteronomy 1:19-36 Matthew 5:21-48
You often hear Lutheran pastors (at least in the LCMS) talk about Law and Gospel. What exactly is the distinction? Why the distinction? This is a great article that hopefully clears up the question.
V. Law and Gospel
Status Controversiae.
The Principal Question In This Controversy.
1] Whether the preaching of the Holy Gospel is properly not only a preaching of grace, which announces the forgiveness of sins, but also a preaching of repentance and reproof, rebuking unbelief, which, they say, is rebuked not in the Law, but alone through the Gospel.
Affirmative Theses.
Pure Doctrine of God's Word.
2] 1. We believe, teach, and confess that the distinction between the Law and the Gospel is to be maintained in the Church with great diligence as an especially brilliant light, by which, according to the admonition of St. Paul, the Word of God is rightly divided.
3] 2.
We believe, teach, and confess that the Law is properly a divine doctrine,
which teaches what is right and pleasing to God, and reproves everything that
is sin and contrary to God's will.
4] 3.
For this reason, then, everything that reproves sin is, and belongs to, the
preaching of the Law.
5] 4.
But the Gospel is properly such a doctrine as teaches what man who has not
observed the Law, and therefore is condemned by it, is to believe, namely, that
Christ has expiated and made satisfaction for all sins, and has obtained and
acquired for him, without any merit of his [no merit of the sinner
intervening], forgiveness of sins, righteousness that avails before God, and
eternal life.
6] 5.
But since the term Gospel is not used in one and the same sense in the Holy
Scriptures, on account of which this dissension originally arose, we believe,
teach, and confess that if by the term Gospel is understood the entire doctrine
of Christ which He proposed in His ministry, as also did His apostles (in which
sense it is employed, Mark 1:15; Acts 20:21), it is correctly said and
written that the Gospel is a preaching of repentance and of the forgiveness of
sins.
7] 6.
But if the Law and the Gospel, likewise also Moses himself [as] a teacher of
the Law and Christ as a preacher of the Gospel are contrasted with one another,
we believe, teach, and confess that the Gospel is not a preaching of repentance
or reproof, but properly nothing else than a preaching of consolation, and a
joyful message which does not reprove or terrify, but comforts consciences
against the terrors of the Law, points alone to the merit of Christ, and raises
them up again by the lovely preaching of the grace and favor of God, obtained
through Christ's merit.
8] 7.
As to the revelation of sin, because the veil of Moses hangs before the eyes of
all men as long as they hear the bare preaching of the Law, and nothing
concerning Christ, and therefore do not learn from the Law to perceive their
sins aright, but either become presumptuous hypocrites [who swell with the
opinion of their own righteousness] as the Pharisees, or despair like Judas,
Christ takes the Law into His hands, and explains it spiritually, Matt. 5:21ff ; Rom. 7:14. And thus the wrath of God is
revealed from heaven against all sinners [ Rom. 1:18 ], how great it is; by this
means they are directed [sent back] to the Law, and then first learn from it to
know aright their sins-a knowledge which Moses never could have forced out of
them.
9] Accordingly,
although the preaching of the suffering and death of Christ, the Son of God, is
an earnest and terrible proclamation and declaration of God's wrath, whereby
men are first led into the Law aright, after the veil of Moses has been removed
from them, so that they first know aright how great things God in His Law
requires of us, none of which we can observe, and therefore are to seek all our
righteousness in Christ:
10] 8.
Yet as long as all this (namely, Christ's suffering and death) proclaims God's
wrath and terrifies man, it is still not properly the preaching of the Gospel,
but the preaching of Moses and the Law, and therefore a foreign work of Christ,
by which He arrives at His proper office, that is, to preach grace, console,
and quicken, which is properly the preaching of the Gospel.
Negative Theses.
Contrary Doctrine which is Rejected.
Contrary Doctrine which is Rejected.
11] Accordingly
we reject and regard as incorrect and injurious the dogma that the Gospel is
properly a preaching of repentance or reproof, and not alone a preaching of
grace; for thereby the Gospel is again converted into a doctrine of the Law,
the merit of Christ and Holy Scripture are obscured, Christians robbed of true
consolation, and the door is opened again to [the errors and superstitions of]
the Papacy.
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