Luther and the Reformation: - The Life-Springs of Our Liberties by Joseph A. Seiss
page 74 of 154 (48%)
page 74 of 154 (48%)
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demonstrations. Great communions still look back to its Confessions as
their rallying-centres, and millions of worshipers still render their devotions in the forms which then were cast. But pre-eminent over all the achievements of that sublime century was the giving of God's Word to the people in their own language, which had its chief centre and impulse in the production of Luther's _German Bible_. Well has it been said, "He who takes up that, grasps a whole world in his hand--a world which will perish only when this green earth itself shall pass away." It was the Word that kindled the heart of Luther to the work of Reformation, and the Word alone could bring it to its consummation. With the Word the whole Church of Christ and the entire fabric of our civilization must stand or fall. Undermine the Bible and you undermine the world. It is the one, true, and only Charter of Faith, Liberty, and salvation for man, without which this race of ours is a hopeless and abandoned wreck. And when Luther gave forth his German Bible, it was not only a transcendent literary achievement, which created and fixed the classic forms of his country's language,[15] but an act of supremest wisdom and devotion; for the hope of the world is for ever cabled to the free and open Word of God. FOOTNOTES: [15] Chevalier Bunsen says; "It is Luther's genius applied to the Bible which has preserved the only unity which is, in our days, remaining to the German nation--that of language, literature, and thought. There is no similar instance in the known history of the world of a single man achieving such a work." |
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