First Thoughts
 
 
Non-Lutherans  Reading Luther: 
What Makes “Good  Works” Good?
Wednesday, May 1, 2013, 4:34 PM
_Mathew Block_ 
(http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/author/mathew-block/)  | 
_@captainthin_ (http://twitter.com/@captainthin)  

 
One of my favorite podcasts is The Christian Humanist Podcast. The  podcast 
is “humanist” in the best sense of the term: the Renaissance sense. In  
other words, it’s committed to exploring “literature, philosophy and other  
things that human beings do well”—studying anything and everything in the 
world  from within a Christian framework.
 
Because it’s not a theology program per se, the three hosts (all  
literature scholars at Christian colleges) are able to take on a wide-ranging  
number 
of subjects.  For instance, since January they’ve had episodes  focusing on 
intellectualism, Edgar Allen Poe, the prophet Elijah, modernism,  online 
education, forests, pragmatism, and in-depth looks at the poems “Ode on a  
Grecian Urn,” “Kubla Khan,” and “Intimations of Immortality.” The semester 
prior  they discussed the Crusades, dystopian fiction, homiletics, chess, 
politics, and  death among other things. The discussions are always 
entertaining 
and  enlightening. (See _the blog here_ 
(http://www.christianhumanist.org/chb/)  and download _the  podcasts here_ 
(http://feeds.feedburner.com/TheChristianHumanistPodcast) ). 
It’s yesterday’s episode (Episode 105) that I’m interested in talking 
about  here though. The hosts recently encouraged their listeners to read 
Martin 
 Luther’s Freedom of a Christian in preparation for this week’s episode on 
 the same work. None of the three hosts are Lutheran, so I was curious to 
hear  their thoughts. What would these three non-Lutherans make of this 
important  early work by Luther?
 
The question is relevant, I think, as Luther is often more talked about by  
Christians than actually read. And when he is read, dabblers tend to  stick 
to works like The Bondage of the Will, Luther’s reactionary tirade  against 
Erasmus. While responses like The Bondage form an important  part of Luther’
s corpus, they’re hardly the only part. Readers who restrict  themselves to 
such works are in danger of mistaking Luther’s negative hyperbole  as if it 
were a fair representation of all his theology; one must also read the  
works in which he puts forth his ideas in a positive, rather than reactionary,  
way. 
The Freedom of a Christian is just such a work, and is important in  that 
it brings together in one place many of the theological topics which  
informed Luther’s theological writing throughout his life. Here Luther touches  
on 
the simultaneous sinner/saint state of Christians; explains Law and Gospel;  
argues justification by faith alone; defends the necessity of works as a 
fruit  of faith; discusses what makes works “good”; expounds on the 
priesthood of all  believers (both what it does and doesn’t mean); and delves 
into 
his theology of  vocation, as well as hinting at the doctrine of the “two 
kingdoms.”
 
So how does The Christian Humanist Podcast do in discussing these  things? 
There’s a lot I could say, but let’s just focus on one topic—what makes  
good works good—and provide a little constructive criticism. Luther writes in  
this book things like, “Good works do not make a man good.” One of the  
hosts—Nathan Gilmour—takes umbrage at the statement, and asks whether “Luther 
is  ignoring the fact that there are virtues that develop because of action…
 that  something genuinely good arises when human beings practice good 
lives.” Co-host  Michial Farmer suggests Luther is, more or less, doing exactly 
that. 
But this is to misunderstand Luther, as host David Grubbs explains.  “
[Luther’s] not interested in talking about virtue in terms of Aristotle’s  
Habits, what he’s interested in is whether or not this is good enough before 
the  
judgment seat.” When Luther says good works do not make a person good, he 
means  that they do not justify. He doesn’t mean they can’t be considered 
good on the  horizontal, person-to-person level: a person can be a good human 
being without  being a Christian, after all. But without faith, those works 
are not capable of  making one righteous in the eyes of God. Righteous acts 
can be considered  righteous on earth and still be filthy rags before God.
 
In saying this, Luther is channeling Hebrews and Romans: “Without faith it 
is  impossible to please God” (Hebrews 11:6) and “Whatever is not from 
faith is sin”  (Romans 14:23). This interpretation of these verses—that works, 
unless  proceeding from the faithful, are sins in God’s sight, however good 
they may  appear—is not even particularly Lutheran. St. Augustine says the 
same and is  approved for doing so by St. Thomas Aquinas. The latter writes: “
St. Augustine  explains the words of St. Paul [Romans 14:23]… in this way: ‘
Where there is no  knowledge of the eternal and unchanging Truth, virtue 
even in the midst of the  best moral life is false.’ Without faith, virtue is 
only skin-deep. Likewise,  it’s not just Lutheran Protestants who say the 
same: “Works done before the  grace of Christ, and the Inspiration of his 
Spirit, are not pleasant to God,”  the Anglican Articles of Religion say, “We 
doubt not but that they have the  nature of sin” (Article 13).
 
But while works may not in and of themselves justify, they nevertheless do  
play an important role in the Christian’s life, especially as a curb for 
the  sinful nature. Christians are “saints” in that they have been declared 
innocent  by God because of Christ; but this side of heaven, Christians still 
struggle  with sin. They have both the spiritual new man (the “saint”) 
alive in them and  the sinful old man (the “sinner”) at work in their flesh 
(cf. Romans 7:25).  That’s what works are for: not to find favour with God 
(the grace of Christ’s  sacrifice, received through faith, has already 
accomplished that), but rather to  subdue the Old Adam, the “old man” of sin at 
work within us. Indeed, such works  prove a safeguard for faith, helping it 
grow: “Your one care should be,” Luther  writes, “that faith may grow, whether 
it is trained by works or suffering.”  Without such works, the “old man” 
would rise again. [As an aside, Luther also  writes in this book of another 
purpose for works—namely, that they are for our  neighbors' benefit. See 
author_ Gene Edward Veith_ (http://www.patheos.com/blogs/geneveith/)  for more 
on Luther's theology of  vocation.]
 
This, then, is some of what Luther is getting at when he says “good works 
do  not make a good man, but a good man does good works.” The goodness of the 
man is  dependent not on his works but on God’s mercy in declaring him 
good. Once he is  declared good, the works he works (however imperfect) will 
also be accepted as  good by God. We freely strive to live holier lives because 
we know that our  goodness—our innocence before God—is already assured 
through faith in the death  and resurrection of Christ. We aim to become 
outwardly what we already are  inwardly. 
It’s well worth listening to these non-Lutheran scholars grapple with  
Luther’s words in The Freedom of a Christian. Kudos to all the hosts of  The 
Christian Humanist Podcast for taking the subject on, but I must  say that 
David Grubbs takes the prize for best understanding Luther. If any of  our 
Lutheran readers go to check it out, try to play nice: too many confessional  
Lutherans give in to Luther-esque confrontation when Melancthonian irenicism  
will do. I, for one, am glad to see other Christians wrestling with Luther’s  
ideas........

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