THE FREEDOM OF A CHRISTIAN
1520
Luther: “To make the way smoother for the unlearned — for only them do I serve — I shall set down
the following two propositions concerning the freedom and bondage of the spirit:
A Christian is a perfectly free lord of all, subject to none.
A Christian is a perfectly dutiful servant of all, subject to all.”
The first power of faith:
The Word (=Jesus Christ in the power of the Spirit) confers righteousness upon believers
as the “happy exchange” (2 Cor. 5) occurs:
my shame for his glory,
my condemnation for his acceptance with the Father,
my sin for his righteousness.
The second power of faith:
Believers honour God by vesting all their trust in God. To honour God and trust him in this
way is to obey him. God can be obeyed only in faith.
Note Luther’s understanding here of the kind of obedience the Decalogue enjoins: not conformity to a moral code but rather eager, glad, grateful self-abandonment to the “character” God wills for me. My gratitude is born of the fact that God has redeemed me at measureless cost to himself.
E.g., the commandment, “Thou shalt not steal” is violated if I merely refrain from stealing.
God wants not external conformity from me but rather a living relationship (faith) with him wherein I cheerfully embrace the shape he ordains for my life. He ordains this shape for my good
(i.e., as blessing.) I gladly endorse it out of gratitude for what he has already done for me and
promises yet to do for me. My not-stealing is my faith-quickened abandonment of my selfist self
as I “put on” the “new man (woman)” he wills for my good.
In other words, the Decalogue never encourages moralism but always faith and the Christ-shaped
“new creature” that faith glories in.
The third power of faith:
We are united with Christ. (Actually the third is logically prior to and the ground of the first
two.)
Since faith “puts on” Christ, believers are free from sin, death, the world and the devil as Christ was free from the domination of sin, death, world and devil.
Since faith “puts on” Christ, believers are bound to the needy as Christ bound himself to them.
When Luther’s opponents told him that his elevation of faith underserved the neighbour, Luther replied that faith always serves the neighbour in love. Such love is love only if it disregards the neighbour’s ingratitude and one’s own loss.
Finally Luther insists that faith is the (only) cure for anxiety. Anxiety is a form of self-preoccupation. The Christian doesn’t live in herself but in another: in Christ through faith, in the neighbour through love.
Paradoxically, she finds herself, discovers her identity, to the extent that she doesn’t seek it but rather forgets herself through her immersion in Christ (faith) and neighbour (love.)
[Loving the neighbour entails sharing the neighbour’s material scarcity, suffering and disgrace.]