Yes. Luther’s sola fide had to mutate quite a bit to turn into what we know as “OSAS theology” today, but it certainly opened the gate. And of course the potential for “antinomianism” was there from the start, in things like Luther’s infamous pastoral counsel to “sin boldly.” Luther could say that, in his early years, because he was confident that believers would naturally want to do good works and would not want to sin. In his later Galatians commentary he says explicitly that if people do not struggle against the works of the flesh they will lose faith and will be damned if they don’t repent. And after his death Lutheranism was torn by controversy over just how to talk about faith and works. So clearly Topper is right that Luther didn’t think ahead very carefully about how his ideas would be interpreted and what their possible implications were. I cut him a lot more slack for that than Topper does, but he has a valid criticism.
Dr. Tait,
I suspect that for you (and some others here) I represent the category of
persona non grata. Nonetheless, I have no problem stating I’ve benefited from the bulk of your comments in this thread. Some of what you have said has magnified certain things that I hadn’t considered before, and even with some of the conclusions you have that I don’t share- I’ve been challenged to consider how to formulate a response in ways I’ve never had to before. For this I am grateful, despite perhaps being
persona non grata.
I have some questions on your words I’ve selected above- and I ask it fully realizing it may be perceived as rabbit trail from the actual focus of discussion.
Is it logically consistent to see Luther’s
sola fide as responsible for “
opened the gate” and having “
the potential for antinomianism”? In other words, my question to you is do you see Luther’s
sola fide as rightly deserving blame (or credit) for the mutation you speak of? Should Luther really be charged with fault because he “
didn’t think ahead very carefully about how his ideas would be interpreted and what their possible implications were”?
I ask, because in my opinion, a sufficient source is not responsible for those who misuse the source. For instance, the Bible itself has been misused to prove all sorts of things- the subjugation of women slavery, etc. Yet, as those who believe the Bible is the very Word of God, the fault is not God’s, but rather those who misuse the sufficient source. Or to take an example meaningful to the Catholic church: people love to charge her with all sorts of things because of her defined stance on priestly celibacy. Is it the church’s stance on celibacy that’s at fault, or the people who fall short of the standard or deviate or abuse the standard? Logically, it’s the later, not the former. If the speed limit is 65, and I drive 125 miles per hour causing a serious accident, my defense should not be, “the car manufacturer did not think ahead when they made a car capable of 125 miles per hour.”
I’ve read enough Luther, particularly his sermons, to see that he consistently explained his view of
sola fide, and he was aware early on that faith without love was not enough. Revisit for instance, the Eight Wittenberg Sermons of 1522 (which are less than a year after the “sin boldly” statement you mention). It doesn’t appear to me “
he was confident that believers would naturally want to do good works and would not want to sin.” Certainly he taught that we receive Christ by faith and we are to serve our neighbor. He constantly preached this, throughout his career. It’s almost overkill.
The “sin boldly” comment is from a fragment of a private letter purported to have been written from Luther to Melanchthon from the Wartburg. It was not, as far as I know, something Luther intended to represent his view of
sola fide- though it is certainly consistent with it. The statement itself has quite a history of interpretive abuse. To me, the interpretive abuse stands as an example that people have bias, and would rather get information from a sound-bite than an exposition of a view. To quote Topper’s favorite biographer,
“If we know anything about the encounter of people and print in the twentieth century, it is that the masses see in a long discourse only what they want to see. The sound-bite is not the creation of television news. The great ideas of history have always become sound-bites of one sort or another before the multitudes could live and die for them.”
I contend that in Luther’s career long exposition of his view of
sola fide, many hear only the sound-bite “sin boldly” as representing Luther’s view. The fault was not with
sola fide as expounded by Luther, the fault is with those who misinterpret his view.
Regards,
JS