Selections from: The Bondage of the
Will
by Martin Luther
Written in response to Erasmus' book FREEDOM OF THE WILL
(iii) Of the importance of knowing what power free will has
It is not irreligious, idle, or superfluous, but in the highest degree
wholesome and necessary, for a Christian to know whether or not his will
has anything to do in matters pertaining to salvation. Indeed, let me tell
you, this is the hinge on which our discussion turns, the crucial issue
between us; our aim is, simply, to investigate what ability free will has,
in what respect it is the subject of Divine action and how it stands related
to the grace of God. If we know nothing of these things, we shall know
nothing whatsoever of Christianity, and shall be in worse case than any
people on earth! He who dissents from that statement should acknowledge
that he is no Christian; and he who ridicules or derides it should realize
that he is the Christian's chief foe. For if I am ignorant in the nature,
extent and limits of what I can and must do with reference to God, I shall
be equally ignorant and uncertain of the nature, extent and limits of what
God can and will do in me - though God, in fact, works all in all [ICor
12:6]. Now, if I am ignorant of God's works and power, I am ignorant of
God himself; and if I do not know God, I cannot worship, praise, give thanks
or serve Him, for I do not know how much I should attribute to myself and
how much to Him. We need, therefore, to have in mind a clear-cut distinction
between God's power and ours, and God's work and ours, if we would live
a godly life.
(iv) Of the necessitating foreknowledge of God
It is fundamentally necessary and wholesome for Christians to know that
God foreknows nothing contingently, but that He foresees, purposes, and
does all things according to His own immutable, eternal and infallible
will. This bombshell knocks free-will flat, and utterly shatters it; so
that those who want to assert it must either deny my bombshell, or pretend
not to notice it, or find some other way of dodging it.
Surely it was you, my good Erasmus, who a moment ago asserted that God
is by nature just, and kindness itself? If this is true, does it not follow
that He is immutably just and kind? that, as His nature remains unchanged
to all eternity, so do His justice and kindness? And what is said of His
justice and kindness must be said also of His knowledge, His wisdom, His
goodness, His will, and the other Divine attributes. But if it is religious,
godly and wholesome, to affirm these things of God, as you do, what has
come over you, that now you should contradict yourself by affirming that
it is irreligious, idle and vain to say that God foreknows by necessity?
You insist that we should learn the immutability of God's will, while forbidding
us to know the immutably of His foreknowledge! Do you suppose that He does
not will what He foreknows, or that He does not foreknow what He wills?
If he wills what He foreknows, His will is eternal and changeless, because
His nature is so. From which it follows, by resistless logic, that all
we do, however it may appear to us to be done mutably and contingently,
is in reality done necessarily and immutably in respect of God's will.
For the will of God is effective and cannot be impeded, since power belongs
to God's nature; and His wisdom is such that He cannot be deceived. Since,
then His will is not impeded, what is done cannot but be done where, when,
how, as far as, and by whom, He foresees and wills...
I could wish, indeed, that a better term was available for our discussion
than the accepted one, necessity, which cannot accurately be used of either
man's will or God's. Its meaning is too harsh, and foreign to the subject;
for it suggests some sort of compulsion, and something that is against
one's will, which is no part of the view under debate. This will, whether
it be God's or man's does what it does, good or bad, under no compulsion,
but just as it wants or pleases, as if totally free. Yet the will of God,
which rules over our mutable will, is changeless and sure - as Boetius
sings, Immovable Thyself, Thou movement giv'st to all; and our will, principally
because of its corruption, can do no good of itself. The reader's understanding,
therefore, must supply what the word itself fails to convey, from his knowledge
of the intended signification - the immutable will of God on the one hand,
and the impotence of our corrupt will on the other. Some have called it
necessity of immutability, but the phrase is both grammatically and theologically
defective.
(v) Of the importance of knowing that God necessitates all things
I would also point out, not only how true these things are (I shall discuss
that more fully from Scripture on a later page), but also how godly, reverent
and necessary it is to know them. For where they are not known, there can
be no faith, nor any worship of God. To lack this knowledge is really to
be ignorant of God - and salvation is notoriously incompatible with such
ignorance. For if you hesitate to believe, or are too proud to acknowledge,
that God foreknows and wills all things, not contingently, but necessarily
and immutably, how can you believe, trust and rely on His promises? When
He makes promises, you ought to be out of doubt that He knows, and can
and will perform, what He promises; otherwise, you will be accounting Him
neither true nor faithful, which is unbelief, and the height of irreverence,
and a denial of the most high God! And how can you be thus sure and certain,
unless you know that certainly, infallibly, immutably and necessarily,
He knows, wills and will perform what He promises? Not only should we be
sure that God wills, and will execute His will, necessarily and immutably;
we should glory in the fact, as Paul does in Romans 3:4 - Let God be true,
but every man a liar, and again, Not that the word of God has failed [Romans
9:6], and in another place, The foundation of God standeth sure, having
this seal, the Lord knoweth them that are His [IITim 2:19]. In Titus 1:2
he says: Which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began...
If, then, we are taught and believe that we ought to be ignorant of
the necessary foreknowledge of God and the necessity of events, Christian
faith is utterly destroyed, and the promises of God and the whole gospel
fall to the ground completely; for the Christian's chief and only comfort
in every adversity lies in knowing that God does not lie, but brings all
things to pass immutably, and that His will cannot be resisted, altered
or impeded.
(ix) That a will which has no power without grace is not free
You describe the power of free-will as small, and wholly ineffective apart
from the grace of God. Agreed? Now then, I ask you: If God's grace is wanting,
if it is taken away from that small power, what can it do? It is ineffective,
you say, and can do nothing good. So it will not do what God or His grace
wills. Why? Because we have now taken God's grace away from it, and what
the grace of God does not do is not good. Hence it follows that free-will
without God's grace is not free at all, but is the permanent prisoner and
bondslave of evil, since it cannot turn itself to good. This being so,
I give you full permission to enlarge the power of free-will as much as
you like; make it angelic, make it divine, if you can! - but when you add
this doleful postscript, that it is ineffective apart from God's grace,
straightway you rob it of all its power. What is ineffective power but
(in plain language) no power? So to say that free-will exists and has power,
albeit ineffective power, is, in the Sophists' phrase, a contradiction
in terms. It is like saying 'free-will' is something which is not free
- as if you said that fire is cold and earth hot. Fire certainly has power
to heat; but if hell-fire (even) was cold and chilling instead of burning
and scorching, I would not call it fire, let alone hot (unless you meant
to refer to an imaginary fire, or a painted one). Note, however, that if
we meant by the power of free-will the power which makes human beings fit
subjects to be caught up by the Spirit and touched by God's grace, as creatures
made for eternal life or eternal death, we should have a proper definition.
And I certainly acknowledge the existence of this power, this fitness,
or dispositional quality and passive aptitude (as the Sophists call it),
which, as everyone knows, is not given to plants or animals. As the proverb
says, God did not make heaven for geese!
It is a settled truth, then, even on the basis of your own testimony,
that we do everything of necessity, and nothing by free-will; for the power
of free-will is nil, and it does no good, nor can do, without grace. It
follows, therefore, that free-will is obviously a term applicable only
to Divine Majesty; for only He can do, and does (as the Psalmist sings)
whatever he wills in heaven and earth [Psalms 135:6]. If free-will is ascribed
to men, it is ascribed with no more propriety than divinity itself would
be - and no blasphemy could exceed that! So it befits theologians to refrain
from using the term when they want to speak of human ability, and to leave
it to be applied to God only. They would do well also to take the term
out of men's mouths and speech, and to claim it for their God, as if it
were His own holy and awful Name. If they must at all hazards assign some
power to men, let them teach that it be denoted by some other term than
free-will; especially since we know from our own observation that the mass
of men are sadly deceived and misled by this phrase. The meaning which
it conveys to their minds is far removed from anything that theologians
believe and discuss. The term free-will is too grandiose and comprehensive
and fulsome. People think it means what the natural force of the phrase
would require, namely, a power of freely turning in any direction, yielding
to none and subject to none. If they knew that this was not so, and that
the term signifies only a tiny spark of power, and that utterly ineffective
in itself, since it is the devil's prisoner and slave, it would be a wonder
if they did not stone us as mockers and deceivers, who say one thing and
mean another - indeed, who have not yet decided what we do mean!
Since, therefore, we have lost the meaning and the real reference of
this glorious term, or, rather, have never grasped them (as was claimed
by the Pelagians, who themselves mistook the phrase) why do we cling so
tenaciously to an empty word, and endanger and delude faithful people in
consequence? There is no more wisdom in so doing then there is in the modern
foible of kings and potentates, who retain, or lay claim to, empty titles
of kingdoms and countries, and flaunt them, while all the time they are
really paupers, and anything but the possessors of those kingdoms and countries.
We can tolerate their antics, for they fool nobody, but just feed themselves
up - unprofitably enough - on their own vainglory. But this false idea
of free-will is a real threat to salvation, and a delusion fraught with
the most perilous consequences.
If we do not want to drop this term altogether - which would really
be the safest and most Christian thing to do - we may still in good faith
teach people to use it to credit man with free-will in respect, not of
what is above him, but of what is below him. That is to say, man should
realize that in regard to his money and possessions he has a right to use
them, to do or to leave undone, according to his own free-will - though
that very free-will is overruled by the free-will of God alone, according
to His own pleasure. However, with regard to God, and in all that bears
on salvation or damnation, he has no free-will, but is a captive, prisoner
and bondslave, either to the will of God, or to the will of Satan.
(x) Of God preached and not preached, and of His revealed and secret will.
As to why some are touched by the law and others not, so that some receive
and others scorn the offer of grace, that is another question, which Ezekiel
does not here discuss. He speaks of the published offer of God's mercy,
not of the dreadful hidden will of God, Who, according to His own counsel,
ordains such persons as He wills to receive and partake of the mercy preached
and offered. This will is not to be inquired into, but to be reverently
adored, as by far the most awesome secret of the Divine Majesty. He has
kept it to Himself and forbidden us to know it; and it is much more worthy
of reverence than an infinite number of Corycian caverns!
Now, God in His own nature and majesty is to be left alone; in this
regard, we have nothing to do with Him, nor does He wish us to deal with
Him. We have to do with Him as clothed and displayed in His Word, by which
He presents Himself to us. That is His glory and beauty, in which the Psalmist
proclaims Him to be clothed [Ps. 21:5]. I say that the righteous God does
not deplore the death of His people which He Himself works in them, but
He deplores the death which He finds in His people and desires to remove
from them. God preached works to the end that sin and death may be taken
away, and we may be saved. He sent His word and healed them [Ps. 107:20].
But God hidden in Majesty neither deplores nor takes away death, but works
life, and death, and all in all; nor has He set bounds to Himself by His
Word, but has kept Himself free over all things.
The Diatribe is deceived by its own ignorance in that it makes no distinction
between God preached and God hidden, that is, between the Word of God and
God Himself. God does many things which He does not show in His word, and
He wills many things which he does not in His Word show us that He wills.
Thus, He does not will the death of a sinner - that is, in His Word; but
He wills it by His inscrutable will. At present, however, we must keep
in view His Word and leave alone His inscrutable will; for it is by His
Word, and not by His inscrutable will, that we must be guided. In any case,
who can direct himself according to a will that is inscrutable and incomprehensible?
It is enough simply to know that there is in God an inscrutable will; what,
why, and within what limits It wills, it is wholly unlawful to inquire,
or wish to know, or be concerned about, or touch upon; we may only fear
and adore!
So it is right to say: If God does not desire our death, it must be
laid to the charge of our own will if we perish; this, I repeat, is right
if you spoke of God preached. For He desires that all men should be saved,
in that He comes to all by the word of salvation, and the fault is in the
will which does not receive Him; as He says in Matt. 23:37 How often would
I have gathered thy children together, and thou wouldst not! But why the
Majesty does not remove or change this fault of will in every man (for
it is not in the power of man to do it), or why He lays this fault to the
charge of the will, when man cannot avoid it, it is not lawful to ask;
and though you should ask much, you would never find out; as Paul says
in Romans 11: Who art thou that repliest against God? [Romans 9:20].
(vi) Of the hardening of Pharaoh
... This is why Moses generally repeats after each plague: And the heart
of Pharaoh was hardened, so that he would not let the people go; as the
Lord had spoken [Exodus 7:13, 22; 8:15; 9:12]. What was the point of: As
the Lord had spoken, but that the Lord might appear true, as having foretold
that Pharaoh should be hardened? Had there been in Pharaoh any power to
turn, or freedom of will that might have gone either way, God could not
with such certainty have foretold his hardening. But as it is, He who neither
deceives nor is deceived guarantees it; which means that it is completely
certain, and necessary, that Pharaoh's hardening will come to pass. And
it would not be so, were not that hardening wholly beyond the strength
of man, and in the power of God alone, in the manner that I spoke of above:
that is, God was certain that He would not suspend the ordinary operation
of omnipotence in Pharaoh, or on Pharaoh's account - indeed, He could not
omit it; and He was equally certain that the will of Pharaoh, being naturally
evil and perverse, could not consent to the word and work of God which
opposed it; hence, while by the omnipotence of God the energy of willing
was preserved to Pharaoh within, and the word and work that opposed him
was set before him without, nothing could happen in Pharaoh but the offending
and hardening of his heart. If God had suspended the action of His omnipotence
in Pharaoh when He set before him the word of Moses which opposed him,
and if the will of Pharaoh might be supposed to have acted alone by its
own power, then there could perhaps have been a place for debating which
way it had power to turn. But as it is, since he is impelled and made to
act by his own willing, no violence is done to his will; for it is not
under unwilling constraint, but by an operation of God consonant with its
nature it is impelled to will naturally, according to what it is (that
is, evil). Therefore, it could not but turn upon one word, and thus become
hardened. Thus we see that this passage makes most forcibly against free-will
on this account that God, who promises, cannot lie; and, if He cannot lie,
then Pharaoh cannot but be hardened.
(xviii) Of the comfort of knowing that salvation does not depend on free-will
I frankly confess that, for myself, even if it could be, I should not want
free-will to be given to me, nor anything to be left in my own hands to
enable me to endeavor after salvation; not merely because in face of so
many dangers, and adversities, and assaults of devils, I could not stand
my ground and hold fast my free-will (for one devil is stronger than all
men, and on these terms no man could be saved); but because, even were
there no dangers, adversities, or devils, I should still be forced to labor
with no guarantee of success, and to beat my fists at the air. If I lived
and worked to all eternity, my conscience would never reach comfortable
certainty as to how much it must do to satisfy God. Whatever work I had
done, there would still be a nagging doubt as to whether it pleases God,
or whether He required something more. The experience of all who seek righteousness
by works proves that; and I learned it well enough myself over a period
of many years, to my own great hurt. But now that God has taken my salvation
out the control of my own will , and put it under the control of His, and
promised to save me, not according to my working or running, but according
to His own grace and mercy, I have the comfortable certainty that He is
faithful and will not lie to me, and that He is also great and powerful,
so that no devils or opposition can break Him or pluck me from Him. No
one, He says, shall pluck them out of my hand, because my father which
gave them me is greater than all [John 10:28-29]. Thus it is that, if not
all, yet some, indeed many, are saved; whereas, by the power of free-will
none at all could be saved, but every one of us would perish.
Furthermore, I have the comfortable certainty that I please God, not
by reason of the merit of my works, but by reason of His merciful favor
promised to me; so that, if I work too little, or badly, He does not impute
it to me, but with fatherly compassion pardons me and makes me better.
This is the glorying of all the saints in their God.
(xix) Of faith in the justice of God in His dealings with men
You may be worried that it is hard to defend the mercy and equity of God
in damning the undeserving, that is, ungodly persons, who, being born in
ungodliness, can by no means avoid being ungodly, and staying so, and being
damned, but are compelled by natural necessity to sin and perish; as Paul
says: We were all the children of wrath, even as others [Eph. 2:3], created
such by God Himself from a seed that had been corrupted by the sin of one
man, Adam. But here God must be reverenced and held in awe, as being most
merciful to those whom He justifies and saves in their own utter unworthiness;
and we must show some measure of deference to His Divine wisdom by believing
Him just when to us He seems unjust. If His justice were such as could
be adjudged just by human reckoning, it clearly would not be Divine; it
would in no way differ from human justice. But inasmuch as He is the one
true God, wholly incomprehensible and inaccessible to man's understanding,
it is reasonable, indeed inevitable, that His justice also should be incomprehensible;
as Paul cries, saying: O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and
knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past
finding out! [Romans 11:33]. They would not, however, be unsearchable if
we could at every point grasp the grounds on which they are just. What
is man compared with God? How much can our power achieve compared with
His power? What is our strength compared with His strength? What is our
knowledge compared with His wisdom? What is our substance compared with
His substance? In a word, what is all that we are compared with all that
He is? If, now, even nature teaches to acknowledge that human power, strength,
wisdom, knowledge and substance, and all that is ours, is nothing compared
with the Divine power, strength, wisdom, knowledge and substance, what
perversity is it on our part to worry at the justice and the judgment of
the only God, and to arrogate so much to our own judgment as to presume
to comprehend, judge and evaluate God's judgment!
I shall here end this book, ready though I am to pursue the matter further,
if need be; but I think that abundant satisfaction has here been afforded
for the godly man who is willing to yield to truth without stubborn resistance.
For if we believe it to be true that God foreknows and foreordains all
things; that He cannot be deceived or obstructed in His foreknowledge and
predestination; and that nothing happens but at His will (which reason
itself is compelled to grant); then, on reason's own testimony, there can
be no free-will in man, or angel, or in any creature.
So, if we believe that Satan is the prince of this world, ever ensnaring
and opposing the kingdom of Christ with all his strength, and that he does
not let his prisoners go unless he is driven out by the power of the Divine
Spirit, it is again apparent that there can be no free-will.
So, if we believe that original sin has ruined us to such an extent
that even in the godly, who are led by the Spirit, it causes abundance
of trouble by striving against good, it is clear that in a man who lacks
the Spirit nothing is left that can turn itself to good, but only to evil.
Again, if the Jews, who followed after righteousness with all their
powers, fell into unrighteousness instead, while the Gentiles, who followed
after unrighteousness, attained to an un-hoped-for righteousness, by God's
free gift, it is equally apparent from their very works and experience
that man without grace can will nothing but evil.
And, finally, if we believe that Christ redeemed men by His blood, we
are forced to confess that all of man was lost; otherwise, we make Christ
either wholly superfluous, or else the redeemer of the least valuable part
of man only; which is blasphemy, and sacrilege.
Martin Luther, The Bondage of The Will, 1525