Sola Scriptura: Luther On Biblical: Authority
Sola Scriptura: Luther On Biblical: Authority
Sola Scriptura: Luther On Biblical: Authority
Authority
DAVI D W . LOT
Z
Washburn Professor of Church
History
The Union Theological Seminary in New York
1
Holy Scripture. Certainl y Luther' s own so-called Reformatio n
consciousness, or evangelical breakthroug h , was itself th e produc t of a n
exegetical discovery as h e wrestled with th e meanin g of th e biblical
"righteousness of Go d " (cf. Ps.
2
31:1 ; R om . 1:17). At th e Diet of Worm s in April 1521 Luthe r is reporte d
to
have said, "m y conscience is captive to th e Wor d of Go d , " an d wha t was
3
so dramaticall y tru e at Worm s was consistently tru e throughou t his life. I n
late r years, reflecting upo n th e course of th e Reformatio n h e ever ascribed
4
its suc cess to th e agency of th e Wor d alone.
I n brief, then , th e life, thought , an d work of Marti n Luthe r was inseparabl
y boun d u p with th e Wor d of Go d as found in Holy Scripture . His theology
is preeminentl y a theology of th e Wor d and , as such, implicitly maintain s
th e sufficient authorit y of tha t Wor d for th e church' s faith a n d life.
Luther , however, never offered a comprehensive, systematic formulatio n of
th e concep t of biblical authority , such as ca n b e foun d in th e first book
of Calvin's Institutesan d i n th e length y prolegomen a "Concerni n g t h e Sacre
d Scriptures " {De scriptura sacra) in th e doctrina l textbooks of late r
5
Luther a n an d Reforme d Orthodoxy. Luther' s position ha s to b e
reconstructe d from relevant statement s in his academi c lectures an d
disputation s , his polemica l , catechetical , an d devotional works, an d
particular l y his sermons an d biblical prefaces, in short, from his entir e
literary corpu s (includin g his correspon dence , tabl e talk, an d Bible
translations) .
T h e sheer volum e an d variety of pertinen t materia l rende r synthesis a n d
summati o n imperative ; they ma y also lur e th e unwar y int o hasty
generaliza tio n an d unwarrant e d simplification. Scholarship in this are a
ha s bee n
260
Sola Scriptura : Luther on Biblical Authority
Interpretati o n
For the gospel —even more than the bread and baptism —is the unique, most cer
tain, and noblest sign of the church, since it is through the gospel alone that the
13. W A 7 , 721 .
14. L W 35 , 12 1/ W A 10-1-1, 13-1 4 ("Brief Instruction , " 1522). O n th e inseparabilit y
an d implicit identit y of Wor d , Christ, an d gospel, cf. L W 26, 6 4 / W A 40-1 , 130: ". . .
Nothin g is mo r e dangerou s tha n to beco m e tire d of th e Wo rd . Therefor e anyon e who is
so cold tha t h e think s h e knows enoug h an d graduall y begins to loath e th e W o r d ha s
lost Christ a n d th e Gospel. "
15. T h e gospel as th e rea l presenc e of th e exalte d Christ is so centra l to Luther' s
theology tha t on e encounter s it throughou t his works. T h e 1535 Galatian s lectures contai n
man y chara c • teristic formulation s of Luther' s position . For example , see L W 26 , 1 6/ W A
40-1 , 57 : "Fo r they [Paul' s hearers ] ar e no t listening to Paul ; bu t in Pau l they ar e listening
to Christ Himself a n d to Go d th e Father , who sends hi m forth. " L W 26, 9 4 / W A 40-1 , 173 :
Go d "does no t wan t us to ad• mir e an d ador e th e apostolat e in th e persons of Pete r a n d
Paul , bu t th e Christ who speaks in the m an d th e W or d of Go d itself tha t proceed s from
thei r m o u th . " L W 26 , 2 4 0/ W A 40-1 , 379: "Toda y Christ is still presen t to some, bu t to other
s H e is still to come . T o believers H e is presen t an d has come ; to unbelievers H e ha s no t yet
com e a n d does no t hel p the m . Bu t if they hea r His Wo r d an d believe, Christ become s
presen t to them , justifies an d saves t he m . " Thi s last quota • tion clearly shows tha t th e
faithful preachin g an d hearin g of th e gospel constitut e th e presen t event of salvation, tha i
justificatio n ever an d agai n occurs whe n W o r d a n d faith meet , becaus e Christ himself is
truly presen t in th e gospel an d trul y presen t in th e faith whic h comes by hear • ing.
Sola Scriptura : Luther on Biblical Authority
Interpretatio n
16. W A 7, 97-9 8 ("Assertio o mni u m ar ticulorum , " 1521). Cf. W A 40-III , 254 ("In X
V Psalmos g r a du u m , " 1540): "No t only th e words , bu t also th e expression [phrasis] is divine
whic h th e Holy Spirit an d Scriptur e employ. "
17. L W 34, 1 12 / W A 39-1, 47 ("Theses Concernin g Fait h an d Law, " 1535): "Briefly,
Christ is th e Lord , no t th e servant, th e Lor d of th e Sabbath , of law, a n d of all things . T h e
Scripture s mus t b e understoo d in favor of Christ, no t agains t him . For tha t reaso n they mus t
eithe r refer to
without contradictio n or inconsistency, Luthe r ca n say at on e an d th e
sam e tim e tha t Scriptur e alone is to rul e in th e churc h as quee n and tha t
Scriptur e is ever th e servant of Christ its king . I n his 1535 Lectures on
Galatians, for ex• ample , Luthe r says of Scriptur e (apropo s of Gal . 1:9):
This queen must rule, and everyone must obey, and be subject to, her The pope,
Luther, Augustine, Paul, an angel from heaven —these should not be masters,
18
judges, or arbiters but only witnesses, disciples, and confessors of Scripture.
You are stressing the servant, that is, Scripture —and not all of it at that or
even its most powerful part, but only a few passages concerning works. I leave
19
this ser• vant to you. I for my part stress the Lord, who is the King of Scripture.
Thi s insistence on Scripture's servant status shows tha t Luthe r di d in fact ran
20
k th e several forms of God's Wor d on a relative scale of intrinsic value.
I n sum, within th e overarchin g category of "Wo r d of God, " thre e forms
of this Wor d —the personal Wor d (Christ), th e spoken Wo r d (gospel), an d
th e written Wor d (Scripture) —may be distinguished an d ranked , althoug h
they mus t no t be separated .
Luthe r himself draws a n especially shar p distinction between Scriptur e an
d gospel. Whil e Christ, th e gospel, an d Holy Scriptur e ar e all th e Wor d of
God, Scriptur e an d gospel ar e two very different forms of this Wor d an d
mus t no t be lumpe d together . For, properl y speaking, Scripture , die Schrift,
designates th e Old Testamen t alone . T h e Old Testament , says Luther ,
is necessarily somethin g written, th e "letter. " I n contrast, h e adds ,
the gospel should really not be something written, but a spoken word which
brought forth the Scriptures, as Christ and the apostles have done This is why
264
Sola Scriptura : Luther on Biblical Authority
Interpretati o n
Christ himself did not write anything but only spoke. He called his teaching not
Scripture but gospel, meaning good news or a proclamation that is spread not by
2 1
pen, but by word of mouth.
25 See Β A Gernsh , "Biblica l Authorit y a n d th e Continent a l Refo rmat ion , " SjT h
10 337-60(195 7 )
26 See F Kropatschek , Das Schriftpnncip der lutherischen Kirche, I Die Vorgeschieht e
Das Erbe des Mittelalters (Leipzig, A D ei ch e n , 1904), a n d esp Heik o A O b e r m a n , The
Harvest of Medieval Theology (G ra n d Rapid s , W m Β E erd ma n s Publishin g Co , 1967), p p
361 412, Forerunners of the Reformation The Shape of Late Medieval Thought (Lond on ,
Lutterwort h Press, 1967), p p 53-6 6
27 Cf G e r h a r d Ebehng , " 'Sola Scriptura ' a n d T r a d i t i o n , " in The Word of God and Tradi
tion, p p 102 47 , " L u t h e r u n d die Bibel, " m Lutherstudien I (Tubingen , J C Β Mohr , 1971),
286-30 1
28 A Skevmgto n Wood , Captive to the Word Martin Luther—Doctor of Sacred Scripture
(Lond o n Paternoste r Press, 1969), ma in ta i n s th a t "for Luthe r , th e suprema c y of th e biblica
l revelatio n arose from its supernatur a l origin , a n d this in t u r n was b o u n d u p wit h th e fact of
in spiratio n All th a t Luth e r taug h t abo u t th e authorit y of th e Bible a n d th e n a tu r e of revela
tio n foun d its clima x a n d corollary in his doctrin e of inspiration " ( p 139) I n reference , ho
w ever to W A 46, 780 ("If [wha t th e c hur c h teaches ] agree s wit h wha t Chris t t aug h t us, th e
n let us accep t it a n d d o accordi n g to it" ) , Wo o d concede s "W e ca n detec t her e wha t is t o b
e foun d agai n m Luth e r —namely , a st and ar d even with m th e st and ar d [of Scripture ] The
Word is the Word of Christ, and its authority is really his" ( p 122, italics added ) Woo d fails t o
unpa c k thi s crucia l distinctio n betwee n Scriptur e a n d W o r d of Christ , no r does h e resolve th e
pat e n t contr a dictio n betwee n a concep t of biblica l authori t y whose "clima x " is th e doctri n e
of inspiratio n a n d a n app roa c h wherei n biblica l authorit y is "really " (') predict e d o n
Christ' s authori t y Woo d himself clearly sees, a n d at least acknowledge s in passing, th a t
Luther' s christocentris m break s entirel y th rou g h th e framewor k of a forma l bibhcis m
267
hesitate to point out apparen t contradiction s an d discrepancies in Scriptur e
— in th e Old Testamen t historical books, for example , an d in th e
Synoptic Gospels. H e also showed little patienc e with pious efforts at
harmonizin g dis• crepan t accounts. Nevertheless, he attribute d all such
problem s to our lack of exact historical an d philological knowledge rathe r
29
t ha n attribut e any defects to Holy Scriptur e itself.
An d yet, for all that , Luthe r did no t derive th e Bible's authorit y from a
for• ma l Scriptur e principle , in the manne r of bot h Medieval
scholasticism an d late r Protestan t neo-scholasticism. T h e best evidence for
this assertion, in my judgment , is th e often-remarke d fact tha t one looks in
vain to Luther' s works for anythin g like a systematic locus ' O n Holy
Scripture. " Thi s circumstanc e is usually attribute d to Luther' s vocation as
a n exegetical rathe r tha n a dog• mati c theologian or to his presume d lack
of talen t for systematization. Yet it is now a scholarly commonplac e tha t
Luthe r was a far mor e careful craftsman an d rigorous thinke r tha n allowed
by th e old caricatur e of hi m as a n undisci• pline d religious genius.
Moreover, ther e is no compelling reason, in principl e at least, why Luthe r th
e exegete could not have articulate d a full-blown doc• trin e of Scripture ,
replete with biblical an d traditiona l proofs, to be inserted at relevant points
in his academi c lectures an d disputation s or into his polemi• cal writings. Th a
t Luthe r di d no t pursu e such a course ca n only b e attribute d to a prio r
theological decision which itself carries weighty theological conse•
quences. It is scarcely surprising, then , tha t th e first section of this e s s a y
- devoted to basic terminological distinctions —should already show
beyond doub t tha t Luther' s theology is incompatibl e with a formal
30
biblicism.
Luthe r canno t contemplat e speaking abou t th e Bible in isolation from
th e Bible's incomparabl e content : Jesus Christ an d th e gospel which
proclaim s him . Biblicism is thereb y rule d ou t of cour t from th e outset.
Wh a t is surprising, however, at least from a historical standpoint , is tha
t Luthe r was not 2L biblicist. On e would initially expect tha t Luthe r —of all
th e theologians in churc h history—would have bee n most insistent on th e
Bible's formal authorit y as th e verbally inspired an d inerran t Wor d of God;
tha t he ,
before all others, would have sought iron-clad proofs for the Bible's total per•
fection as a divine book in order to defend its sufficient authority for Christian
faith and morals. Instead, in direct opposition to these reasonable expecta•
tions, Luther has articulated a subtly nuanced, highly dialectical, intrinsically
complex approach to Scripture. He sharply distinguishes between written
Word and spoken Word, asserts Scripture's servant status relative to Christ
and the gospel, and locates the church's "total life and substance" in the
gospel rather than in canonical Scripture as such. One can hardly conceive a
less formal, less biblicistic approach to Scripture. Yet Luther remained confi•
dent that the Bible would authenticate itself as Word of God through the
faithful proclamation of the Christ who is in Scripture; or, more accurately,
that the Bible would demonstrate its authority through the self-authentication
of the risen Christ who is himself the acting subject in this proclamation.
31 . Cf. LW 32, 193/W A 8, 82 ("Against Latomus," 1521): ". . . In order that we may
have unfailing peace, [God] has given us his Word in Christ, o n which we rely with
confidence, secure from all evil. Th e gates of hell, together with all sins, do not prevail against
that Word . This is our rock of refuge where we, with Jacob, can wrestle against God and, so to
speak, dare to press hard upon him with his promises, his truth, and his own Word. Wh o
will judge God and his Word? Wh o will accuse or condemn faith in his Word?" Passages
such as this one,
269
T h e God who speaks in an d throug h Scriptur e is non e other , of
course, tha n th e God who speaks in an d throug h Jesus Christ. An d this
sam e Jesus Christ is th e one , above all, of who m Scriptur e speaks. Thi s
"christological concentration " is the decisive element in Luther' s
interpretatio n an d use of Scripture . It is also the key to his concept of
biblical authority , as th e following considerations show.
Th e assertion tha t Christ is in Scriptur e as its hear t an d center ca n b e expli•
cate d by reference to thre e of Luther' s distinctive
themes :
(1) Christ is the center of Scripture because all the Scriptuies are oriented
to him Luthe r advance d this claim tim e an d again ; it is his fundamenta l
her- meneutica l principle . "Tak e Christ from th e Scriptures, " h e queries
3 2
Erasmus , "an d what mor e will you find in them?" "If you would
interpre t well an d confidently," he writes in his Preface to the Old Testament
(1545), "set Christ
3 3
before you, for he is th e m a n to whom it all applies, every bit of it." So
also he confides: "Every tim e I find a text tha t is like a har d nut , whose shell
I can• not crack, I quickly throw it against the Rock [Christ], an d the n I find
34
its deli• cious kernel." Luthe r prizes th e Old Testamen t writings because
35
they ar e "th e swaddling cloths an d the mange r in which Christ lies." T h
e gospel is thus found in the Old Testamen t in the form of promises of the
Christ who is to come . As for th e New Testament , "what is [it] bu t a publi c
proclamatio n of Christ set forth throug h th e sayings of th e Old
3 6
Testamen t an d fulfilled throug h Christ?" Th u s Christ is th e Bible's
essential conten t an d th e focal point of all its teaching .
(2) Christ is the center of Scripture because he is the goal and content of the
law-gospel dialectic As exemplified in "Moses an d th e prophets, " th e
preach • ing of the divine law —of God's holy will an d of God's righteous
judgmen t on hum a n sin —has as its ultimat e purpose to lead to Christ an d
to th e apostolic gospel concernin g him . Th e prophet s "hold fast to th e
purpose of keeping th e people conscious of their own impotenc e throug h a
3
right understandin g of the law, thus driving the m to Christ, as Moses did."
7
Thi s preachin g of th e law functions as God's "strange work" {opus
ahenum) whereby he calls sinners to account , to the recognition
an d confession of sin and , hence, to the humbl e
whic h ca n b e multiplie d at will, establish th e skopos or "target " for all tha t Luthe r says
abou t Scriptur e as God's writte n Wo r d Luthe r ever "aims " at Christ, the Word , whenever h
e speaks of th e Bible an d its authorit y
32 W A 18, 6 0 6 / L W 33 , 26 ("De servo arbitrio, " 1525) See also th e docu mentati o n given
in not e 9
33 L W 35 , 247/W A - D B 8, 28
34 W A 3, 1 2 / L W 10, 6 ("Dictat a super Psalterium, " 1513-15 )
35 L W 35 , 2 36/W A- D B 8, 12 ("Preface to th e Ol d Testament,"154 5 )
36 L W 3 5 , 23 6/ W A DB 8,11
37 L W 35 , 2 47 / W A DB 8, 29
Sola Scriptura : Luther on Biblical Authority
Interpretati o n
plea for mercy, namely, for God's "prope r work" {opus proprium), his recon•
ciling love displayed in Jesus Christ an d proclaime d in an d actualized by th
e gospel. I n this way, then , th e law-gospel dialectic is directe d to Christ an d
ha s Christ as its content .
271
tu e of th e sovereign authorit y of th e risen Christ who still speaks
throug h
Scripture
.
For Luther , therefore, Scripture's christological concentratio n determine
s not only th e Bible's prope r interpretatio n an d salutary use, bu t n o less
estab• lishes its sole normativ e authorit y for Christia n faith an d life. If any
further proof of this conclusion is required , one nee d only recall th e
remarkabl e way in which Luthe r exercised biblical criticism, or canonica l
criticism, in th e nam e an d for th e sake of Christ. Th a t is, while Luthe r
used Scriptur e to criti• cize th e church' s doctrina l tradition , h e also used
his Christ-principle to criti• cize th e biblical cano n itself. If Scriptur e must
often be opposed to tradition , th e need ma y also arise to oppose Christ to
Scripture .
Luthe r showed tha t h e was prepare d to do this, in th e first instance,
by undertakin g a christocentric determinatio n of th e "tru e an d noblest
books of the New Testament, " thereb y creating , so to speak, a cano n within
th e canon .
'John' s Gospel an d St. Paul's epistles, especially tha t to th e Romans , an d
St. Peter's first epistle ar e th e tru e kernel an d marro w of all th e books, "
indee d th e "foremost books" {Hauptbücher).™ Why? Because
in them you do not find many works and miracles of Christ described, but you do
find depicted in masterly fashion how faith in Christ overcomes sin, death, and
hell, and gives life, righteousness, and salvation. This is the real nature of the
41
gospel. . . ,
That is the true test by which to judge all books, when we see whether ornot they
incul• cate [treiben] Christ . . . . Whatever does not teach Christ [was Christian nicht
leret] is not yet apostolic, even though St. Peter or St. Paul does the teaching. Again,
what• ever preaches Christ [was Christum predigt] would be apostolic, even if Judas,
44
Annas, Pilate, and Herod were doing it.
44 . LW3 5 , 396/WA-DB7 ,
384.
45 . L W 35 , 3 98 - 99 /W A - D B 7,
404 .
^ s
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