Luther and the Reformation: - The Life-Springs of Our Liberties by Joseph A. Seiss
page 21 of 154 (13%)
page 21 of 154 (13%)
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and was so earnest in her inculcations of right that she preferred to
see her son bleed beneath the rod rather than that he should do a questionable thing even respecting so small a matter as a nut. From his childhood Luther was thus trained and attempered to fear God, reverence truth and honesty, and hate hypocrisy and lies. Possibly his parents were severer with him than was necessary, but it was well for him, as the prospective prophet of a new era, to learn absolute obedience to those who were to him the representatives of that divine authority which he was to teach the world supremely to obey. But no birth, or blood, or parental drilling, or any mere human culture, could give the qualities necessary to a successful Reformer. The Church had fallen into all manner of evils, because it had drifted away from the apostolic doctrine as to how a man shall be just with God; which is the all-conditioning question of all right religion. There could then be no cure for those evils except by the bringing of the Church back to that doctrine. But to do anything effectual toward such a recovery it was pre-eminently required that the Reformer himself should first be brought to an experimental knowledge of what was to be witnessed and taught. On two different theatres, therefore, the Reformation had to be wrought out: first, in the Reformer's own soul, and then on the field of the world outside of him. FOOTNOTES: [2] The maiden name of Margaret Luther, the mother of Martin, was |
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