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[The following
sermon is taken from volume IV:316-335 of The
Sermons of Martin Luther, published by Baker Book
House (Grand Rapids, MI, 1983). It was originally
published in 1904 in English by Lutherans in All
Lands (Minneapolis, MN), as The Precious and Sacred
Writings of Martin Luther, vol. 13. The pagination
from the Baker edition has been maintained for
referencing. This e-text was scanned and edited by
Richard P. Bucher, it is in the public domain and it
may be copied and distributed without restriction.]
[Ed. This sermon appeared first in the year 1525 and
was issued in pamplet form in nearly a dozen
separate editions. From this we conclude that it
awakened a great interest among the people, as it
certainly ought to have done. It bore the title: "A
sermon on destruction of Jerusalem. In like manner
will Germany also be destroyed, if she will not
recognize the time of her visitation. What the
temple of God is. Martin Luther. Wittenberg, 1525."]
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PART I. THE PROPHECY OF THE DESTRUCTION OF
JERUSALEM.
1. This Gospel presents that which took place on
Palm Sunday, when Christ rode into Jerusalem. On
this occasion, he preached two or three days in the
temple, which was more than he ever did before at
one time. The sum and substance of this Gospel is,
that Christ grieves and laments over the afflictions
of those who despise God's Word.
2. Now you have often heard what the Word of God is,
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what it brings us, and what kind of scholars it has.
Of all this nothing is said here. Only the
punishment and distress which shall come upon the
Jews because they would not recognize the time of
their visitation, are here described. And let us
well consider this, because the time of their
visitation also deeply concerns us. If they are
punished who do not know the time of their
visitation, what will be done to those who
maliciously persecute, blaspheme and disgrace the
Gospel and the Word of God? However, here he only
speaks of those who do not know it.
3. There are two methods of preaching against the
despisers of God's Word. The first is by threats, as
Christ threatens them in Mat. 11:21-24: "Woe unto
thee, Chorazin! woe unto thee Bethsaida! for if the
mighty works had been done in Tyre and Sidon which
were done in you, they would have repented long ago
in sackcloth and ashes. But I say unto you, it shall
be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon in the day of
judgment than for you. And thou, Capernaum (which
was his own city, where he performed most of his
mighty works), shalt thou be exalted unto heaven?
thou shalt go down unto hell; for if the mighty
works bad been done in Sodom which were done in
thee, it
would have remained until this day. But I say unto
you that it shall be more tolerable for the land of
Sodom in the day of judgment, than for thee." With
these threatening words he would frighten them to
their senses, and not to cast to the winds the Word
which God sends them.
4. The other method the Lord gives here when he
weeps, and shows his sympathy for the poor blinded
people, and rebukes and threatens them, not as the
hardened and stubbornly blind; but when he melts in
love and compassion over his enemies, and with great
heart- rending pity and cries, he tells them what
shall befall them, which he would gladly prevent,
but all is in vain. In the passage just quoted, Mat.
11:21-24, where he rebukes them, he does not treat
them in love, but in the severity of faith. However
here, it is all sincere love and mercy. This is
worthy of our consideration.
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5. First, as he approached the city they went before
and followed him with songs of great joy, saying:
"Hosanna to the Son of David!" and spread their
garments in the way and cut branches from the trees
and strewed them in the way; the whole scene was
most glorious. But in the midst of all this joy he
begins to weep. He permits all the world to be
joyful, while he himself was bowed with grief, when
he beheld the city and said:
"If thou hadst known in this day, even thou, the
things that belong unto peace! but now they are hid
from thine eyes."
6. As though he would say: Oh, if you only knew what
belongs to your peace, that you might not be
destroyed, but be preserved with both temporal and
eternal peace, you would yet this day consider, and
redeem the time! And now it is high time for You to
know what is for your highest welfare. But you are
blind, and will neglect the opportunity, until there
shall be neither help nor counsel. As though to say:
Here you stand, firmly built, and within you are
strong and mighty men, who, secure and happy, think
there is no danger! Yet, about forty years more, and
you shall be utterly destroyed The Lord plainly says
this in these words:
"For the days shall come upon thee, when thy enemies
shall cast up a bank about thee, and compass thee
round, and keep thee in on every side and shall dash
thee to the ground and thy children within thee; and
they shall not leave in thee one stone upon another;
because thou knowest not the time of thy
visitation."
7. But the Jews were stubborn, and depended on God's
promises, which they thought meant nothing else than
that they should continue forever. They were secure,
and vainly thought: God will not do such things to
us. We own the temple; here God himself dwells;
besides we have mighty men, money and treasures
enough to defy all our enemies! For even the Romans,
and the emperor after he had conquered the city,
confessed that the city was so well and firmly
built, that it would have been impossible to take
it, had God not especially willed it. Therefore they
trusted
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in their own glory, and built their confidence on a
false delusion, which finally deceived them.
8. The Lord, however, saw deeper into the future
than they when he said: 0, Jerusalem! if thou hadst
known what I know, thou wouldst seek thy peace.
Peace in the Scriptures means, when all things go
well with us. You now think you have pleasant days,
but if you knew how your enemies will encamp round
about you, compass you about and hedge you in on
every side, crush you to the ground and demolish all
your beautiful buildings, and leave not one stone
upon another; you would eagerly accept the Word,
which brings to you solid peace and every blessing.
[The woeful history of the destruction of Jerusalem
you can read in books, from which those who wish
will easily understand this Gospel.]
9. God caused his threats to be executed even thus,
that the city was besieged at the time of the Easter
festival, when the Jews were assembled within the
walls of Jerusalem from every land, and as the
historian Josephus writes, there were together at
that time about three million people. This was an
enormous multitude. Only one hundred thousand people
would have been enough to crowd the city. But all
this great multitude God in his wrath intended to
bake, melt and weld together into one mass of ruin.
Yet, the Apostles and Christians were all out of the
city, they had withdrawn into the land of Herod,
Samaria, Galilee, and were scattered among the
heathen. Thus God separated and saved the good grain
and poured the chaff into one place. There was such
an immense multitude of Jews present., that they
were sufficient to devour a whole kingdom, to say
nothing of only one city. They also fell into such
distress and famine, that they devoured everything
and had nothing left, until they were at last
compelled to eat their leather bow-strings, shoe
latchets and shoe leather; and finally mothers moved
by their distress butchered their own children,
which the soldiers snatched from them, for they
smelt the odor of the boiling meat through the
squares of the city. They used dove's dung for salt,
which commanded
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a high price. In short, there was distress and
bloodshed enough to melt a rock to tears; so that no
one could have believed that God's wrath could be so
horrible and that he would so unmercifully martyr a
people. The buildings and the streets were piled
full of the dead, who perished from starvation, and
yet the Jews were so raging that they defied God and
refused to yield, until the emperor was compelled to
use force and capture the city, when they could no
longer maintain their ground.
10. And as some Jews were such rogues as to swallow
their money so that it could not be taken from them,
the soldiers thought that they all had swallowed
their money; therefore they cut them open by the
thousands, hunting for it. The slaughter and
destruction were so great, that even the heathen
were moved to compassion, and the emperor was forced
to give orders no longer to destroy them, but to
take them prisoners and sell them as slaves. The
Jews then became so cheap, that thirty were sold for
a penny; and thus they were scattered throughout the
whole world, and were everywhere despised as the
vilest people on earth, and thus they are everywhere
regarded at the present day, everywhere dispersed,
without a city or a country of their own, and they
can never meet again as they vainly believe to
establish their priesthood and kingdom. Thus God
avenged the death of Christ and all his prophets,
and paid them back because they knew not the day of
their visitation.
APPLICATION TO GERMANY.
11. Here let us learn a lesson, for this concerns
us, not us alone who are here present, but the whole
country of Germany. It is not a mere jest, nor
should we think that it will go different with us.
The Jews would not believe until they experienced it
and became conscious of it. God has now also visited
us, and has opened the precious treasures of his
holy Gospel unto us, by which we can learn God's
will, and see how we were held by the power of the
devil. Yet no one will earnestly be-
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believe it, yea, we much more despise it and make
light of it. No city, no officer of the government
is thankful for the Gospel; and what is still worse
the great majority persecute and blaspheme it. God
has great patience; he waits to see how we will deal
with his Gospel; but when we once let the
opportunity slip, he will take his Word from us, and
then the wrath which consumed the Jews will also
consume us. For it is one and the selfsame Word, the
very same God, and the identical Christ, the Jews
themselves had; therefore the punishment in body and
soul will also most certainly be the same. [We, of
course, regard it as mockery, and care nothing for
it. This is only an evidence of our own blindness.
We ought to perceive that God is hardening us; for
there is not a single city that is concerned about
it; no officer of the law shows any zeal in its
favor. It is most deplorable.] And I fear the time
will yet come when Germany will lay in a heap of
ruins. The evil winds have already begun to blow
destruction in our peasant war. We have already lost
many people. Nearly one hundred thousand men, only
between Easter and Pentecost! It is an awful work of
God, and I fear it will not stop at this. It is only
a foretaste of a threat to frighten us, that we may
prepare ourselves for the coming ordeal. So far it
is but a fox's tail, but God will soon come with a
terrible scourge, and lash us to pieces.
12. But we will act just like the Jews, and care
nothing for it, until all help and counsel are lost
forever. Now we might check it, for now it is high
time for us to know what is best for us, and accept
the Gospel in peace, while grace is brought, and
peace is offered unto us. But we permit one day
after another, one year after another to pass, and
do even less than formerly. No one prays now, no one
is in earnest. When the time is past, prayers will
be of no avail. We do not lay it to heart, and think
we are safe, and do not see the awful calamity which
has already begun, and are not aware that God so
dreadfully punishes us with false prophets and
sects, which he sends us everywhere, and who preach
so securely as though they
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had swallowed the Holy Spirit whole. Those whom we
had thought were the very best among us, go to work
and lead the people astray, until they scarcely know
what to do or leave undone.
13. But this is only a beginning, although it is
frightful and terrible enough. For there is no
greater distress and calamity than when God sends us
sects and false spirits, because they are so
impudent and daringly bold, that they are really to
be pitied. On the other hand the Word of God is such
a great treasure, that no one can sufficiently
comprehend its worth. For God himself considers his
treasure immensely great, and when he visits us with
his grace, he earnestly desires that we should
gladly and freely accept it, and does not compel us
as he is able to do, but it is his will that we
should gladly obey it from choice and love. For he
does not wait until we come to him, but he comes
first to us. He comes into the world, becomes man,
serves us, dies for us, rises again from the dead,
sends us his Holy Spirit, gives us his Word, and
opens heaven so wide that all men can enter; besides
he gives us rich promises and assurances that he
will care for us in time and in eternity, here and
there, and pours out into our bosoms all the fulness
of his grace. Therefore the acceptable time of grace
is now at hand. Yet, we neglect it, and cast it to
the winds, so that he will not and cannot give it to
us.
14. For when we fall and sin in other ways, he can
better spare us and be lenient, he of course will
spare us and forgive; but when we despise his Word,
it calls for punishment, and he will also punish us,
even if he delays a hundred years. But he will not
wait that long. And the clearer the Word is preached
the greater the punishment will be. I fear it will
be the destruction of all Germany. Would to God I
were a false prophet in this matter. Yet it will
most certainly take place. God cannot permit this
shameful disregard of his Word to go unpunished, nor
will he wait long, for the Gospel is so abundantly
proclaimed that it has never been as plainly
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and clearly taught since the days of the Apostles,
as it is at present. God be praised! Hence it
applies to Germany, as I fear it will be destroyed,
unless we act differently.
15. We, who have heard the Gospel for a long time,
ought earnestly to pray God that he continue to
grant us peace. The princes and officers want to
settle everything with the sword, and too impudently
interfere with God's office, until God himself shall
smite them down. So it is high time faithfully to
beseech God to permit his Gospel to be further
spread through Germany, to those who have not yet
heard it. For if the punishment came suddenly upon
us, all will be lost, and many souls will be taken
before the Gospel comes to them. Therefore I wish
that we would not so terribly despise the Gospel,
the costly treasure, not only for our own sakes, but
also for the sake of those who have not yet heard
it. It has become a little quiet, God grant that it
may so continue, and that both the princes and the
citizens may become more sane; for if it should
begin afresh, I fear it would have no end.
16. But we act just like the Jews, who cared more
for the belly than for God. They were more concerned
how to fill their stomachs than how to be saved. For
this reason they have lost both, and have been
served just right. Because they would not accept
eternal life and peace, God took their bodily life,
so that they have lost both body and soul. They also
immediately put forth the excuse, just as our own
people do today. We would of course gladly accept
the Gospel, if it would not place our bodies and
property in jeopardy, and if thereby we would not
hazzard the loss of our wives and children. For the
Jews said, if we believe in him, the Romans will
come and take away both our place and nation, John
11:48. As nothing will happen sooner than what the
wicked fear, as Solomon says, Prov. 10:24: "The fear
of the wicked, it shall come upon him."
This prevented the Jews to believe God, and they did
not consider the great and rich promises God
bestowed upon them. So we also pass them by, and are
not aware
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of the all powerful and comfortable promises Christ
gives when he says, Mat. 19:29: Ye shall receive a
hundredfold here, and there ye shall inherit eternal
life. Let wife and child go, I will care for them,
and restore them again to you. Only courageously
trust in me. [Do you not think that I can build you
another house? Do you regard me as being a hard man?
Yet I will give you heaven; will you not risk it on
my Word?] If you are robbed of your treasures,
blessed are ye, heaven and earth are mine, I will
reward you a hundredfold.
17. We pass over these and many like passages, and
besides despise them, and depend only on what we
have in our banks, and how we may keep our purses
filled, and do not consider that God has also given
us what we have, and will still give us more; nor do
we consider that when we lose God, the stomach will
also be lost. Therefore we are served just right in
losing both the creator and the creature besides.
18. But believers in God risk all in him and
transfer all things into his care, for him to do
according to his pleasure, and think thus: God has
given you your home and wife, you have not produced
them Yourself; now because they are God's, I will
entrust them all to his care, he will keep them from
all harm. I must otherwise leave all at any rate,
therefore I will bravely trust him with them, and
for his sake give up all I have. If God wants me
here, he will give me other treasures, for he has
promised to give enough for this life and for the
life to come. If he does not want me here, I owe him
a death, which will bring me into eternal life; when
he calls me, I will go trusting in his Word.
19. Whoever is not thus disposed, denies God, and
must at the same time lose both, the present and the
eternal life. The belly with its foul odors is our
God, and prevents us from clinging to God's Word.
First, I will be certain how I shall feed, and where
my supplies are. The Gospel says: Trust in God; and
your stomach shall most certainly be provided for,
and have enough [without believing or
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trusting in it]. But if I have only five dollars
they give me so much courage to think I have anyhow
enough food for ten days, that I trust in such
limited provisions, and do not trust God who fed me
hitherto, that he will care for me tomorrow.
20. Is it not a shameful vexation or calamity that I
trust in a penny that I will have something to eat
tomorrow? How contemptible this carcass! Shall a
penny have more weight in my heart and give me more
courage than God himself, who holds heaven and earth
in his power, who gives us the air we breathe and
the water we, drink, who makes our corn to grow and
gives us all things? it is so scandalous that it
cannot be uttered, that God should not amount to as
much with us as a hundred guilders. Why not think
that God, who has created me, will surely feed me,
if he wants me to live? If he does not want this,
very well, I shall be satisfied.
21. Yes, says the stomach, I find no God in my
chest! You silly donkey, who assures you that you
will live tomorrow? You are not certain whether you
will have a belly tomorrow, and you want to know
where to find the bread and the food! Yes, you have
a fine assurance! When our hearts are thus prompted,
we see what a government of hell there would be on
earth; yes, it would be the devil himself. Is it not
a thing most abominable, that God who feeds so many
mouths, should be held in such low esteem by me,
that I will not trust him to feed me? Yea, that a
guilder, thirty-eight cents, should be valued more
highly than God, who pours out his treasures
everywhere in rich profusion. For the world is full
of God and his works. He is everywhere present with
his gifts, and yet we will not trust in him, nor
accept his visitation. Shame on thee, thou cursed
world! What kind of a child is that, who cannot
trust in God for a single day, but trusts in a
guilder?
22. Now, I think, we see what the world is, how on
account of the belly the world despises God, and yet
must lose the belly together with body and soul. Oh,
what
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godless people we are, and yet we are to spit upon
or despise the world. If one would consider that he
is such a godless wretch, that he cannot trust in
God, he would not wish to live. Only choke away; for
as captives we stick too deeply in the old Adam. The
world is hell in prospect, yea, the real kingdom of
Satan, a court yard in hell, except that the body is
still here, otherwise it is true hell.
23. For this reason Christ admonishes us with tears
to know our salvation and accept his visitation,
that the calamity may not follow, which will surely
come upon those who do not accept it, who are
secure, until swift and sudden destruction comes
upon them. May God give us grace, that we may know
ourselves! The Gospel further reads:
"And he entered into the temple, and began to cast
out them that sold, saying unto them: It is written,
And my house shall be a house of prayer; but ye have
made it a den of robbers."
PART II. THE CLEANSING OF THE TEMPLE.
24. This is the second part of our Gospel, where the
Lord takes hold of matters in earnest with his
powerful hand, when he goes into the temple and
casts out those who bought and sold there. For the
first part was nothing but an admonition and
incentive unto faith. Here the Lord now tells us
what the temple of God is, and quotes passages from
the Scriptures, and especially from the prophet
Isaiah, 56:7, where God says: "For my house shall be
called a house of prayer for all peoples." You,
however, have made it a house of merchandise. This
is a strong passage which the prophet utters: "for
all peoples, for all Gentiles," is against the Jews,
who trusted in the temple of God at Jerusalem, and
thought that this material house in Jerusalem would
stand forever, and that it was impossible for God to
demolish this temple or destroy this city. The Word
of God does not lie. For this reason they also
murdered Stephen, because he spoke against that holy
place and said, Acts 6:14: "Jesus shall destroy this
place, and shall change the customs which Moses
delivered unto
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us." And they said: have not the prophets praised
this house, and Christ himself says here, that it is
a house of prayer, and you Apostles say, he will
destroy it.
25. But we must rightly understand this expression,
that the city of Jerusalem, the temple and the
people, should remain until the time of Christ. With
this agree all the prophets, who have given all
things into the hands of Christ; as he would then
dispose of it, so it should be and remain. Hence the
passage in Isaiah goes no further than unto the
times of Christ, as also all the prophets say, that
after that there shall come a kingdom extending over
the whole world, as in Malachi 1:10-11 we read: "For
from the rising of the sun unto the going down of
the same my name shall be great among the Gentiles;
and in every place incense shall be offered unto my
name, and a pure offering; for my name shall be
great among the Gentiles, saith Jehovah of hosts."
Here the prophet speaks of the spiritual kingdom of
Christ, who shall build himself a house of prayer as
extensive as the whole world.
26. It is true that God himself has established the
temple at Jerusalem, not because it consisted of
beautiful stones and costly buildings, or because it
was consecrated by bishops, as at present men employ
such foolery and juggling tricks; but God himself
had consecrated and sanctified it with his Word,
when he said: This house is my house! for his Word
was preached in it. Now, wherever God's Word is
preached, there is God's own true house, there God
most certainly dwells with his grace. Wherever his
Gospel is, there is a house of prayer, there men
shall and may truly pray, and God will also hear
their prayer, as Christ in John 16:23-24 says: "If
ye shall ask anything of the Father, he will give it
you in my name. Hitherto have ye asked nothing in my
name; ask, and ye shall receive, that your joy may
be made full." Here again, where the Word is not
found, there the devil has full sway.
27. That we have imitated the Jews and built so many
churches, would be well enough, if we had done it in
order that the Word of God might be preached there;
for where
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the Word goes there God is present, and looks down
from heaven and pours out his grace. Therefore he
says to the Jews here: I will not that you should
make out of my house a den of robbers. For there
were money changers in it who sold sheep and oxen,
that strangers might buy them for their offerings in
divine service. Why then does he call it a den of
robbers? Surely, he gives it a scandalous name. He
does it however because they no longer appreciate
the house as the house of God, but as a market
house; that is, the priests did not inquire how the
Word of God was preached in it, although they sang,
they babbled and read the prophets and Moses; but
God cares nothing for such a murmuring of Psalms;
that belongs to children.
28. They did just as our priests and monks do now,
who have also made dens of robbers of our churches
and cloisters, and have preached poison, and held
masses only that the people might give them money
and presents for holding them that they might thus
fill their stomachs.
They made the church a market house, in which they
carried on their idle talk, corrupted and destroyed
the sheep of God's pastures by their scandalous
false doctrine, that it may well be called a
robber's den for the soul. This title we should
write on all churches in which the Gospel is not
preached, for there they mock God, destroy souls,
banish the pure Word and establish dens of murder;
for he who listens to their words must die. Oh, how
shamefully we have been deceived! Now, however, we
should praise God, that this Word again brings us
life, drives out the murderers, and teaches us how
to pray aright; for an honest heart must pray, not
with the mouth, but with the heart.
THE CONCLUSION.
29. Thus we have heard the second part of our
Gospel, how Christ drove out the merchants that
pandered to base appetites, and made room for his
Word. It would be a good thing, in this same way to
cleanse our cloisters, and turn them into schools or
preaching places; if this is not done they will be
and continue to be nothing but dens of
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robbers; for if Christ calls his own house a den of
robbers, how much more will our churches and
temples, not consecrated by God, be called dens of
robbers?
30. I have often requested you to pray God to turn
his wrath and restrain the devil now in the world.
For you have undoubtedly heard of the great
calamity, how many have been slain in the
insurrection. We fear they have all been lost, for
God requires obedience, and has himself pronounced
the sentence, Mat. 26:52: "For all they that take
the sword shall perish with the sword." The devil
has taken possession of the world, who knows when
our turn will come. Therefore let us pray that God's
kingdom may come and Christians may be multiplied,
that he send wise and intelligent ministers to care
for the people and listen to their wants. He who
knows the gift of God prays for others who have not
yet heard the Word, it is high time to do so. [Pray
the Lord's Prayer.]
31. Well, wherever this calamity begins and
prevails, that the people maliciously despise the
day God visits us with his Word and grace, for the
sake of the belly and a little temporal benefit and
advantage; there must follow as a consequence of
such treatment the final punishment and wrath of
God, who will utterly destroy them, remove the
foundation of their trust, and overthrow the country
and the people, so that both temporal and eternal
interests go down together. For how shall he
otherwise treat us, because of our scandalous
ingratitude for his great love and mercy which he
publicly declared unto us by his gracious
visitation? How shall or can he do more for us,
while we with wantonness and defiance spurn his
help, and ever struggle and strive after wrath and
destruction? For if those are not free of punishment
who transgress the law and sin against the ten
commandments; how much less will he permit those to
go unpunished, who blaspheme and despise the Gospel
of his grace, Seeing the law by far does not bring
as many good things as the Gospel?
32. If we will not wish to enjoy this happy day
which he gives us unto grace and our salvation, he
can also instead
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permit us to see and experience nothing but the dark
and terrible night of all affliction and misfortune.
And since we will not hear this precious Word and
the proclamation of peace, we will be forced to hear
the devil's cry of murder ring in our ears from
every direction. Now is the time for us to know the
day, and well employ the rich and golden year, while
the annual fair is before our very doors, and
acknowledge that he has severely punished us. If we
neglect it and allow it to pass, we can never hope
for a better day or expect any peace; for the Lord,
who is the Lord of peace, will be with us no longer.
33. But if Christ be no longer with us, our hope
will vanish; and wherever this beloved guest is
rejected, and his Christians no longer tolerated,
government, peace and everything shall perish, for
he too desires to eat with us, to rule and to
provide bountifully. However, he desires also to be
known as such a Lord, in order that we may be
thankful to him, and also permit this guest and his
Christians to eat with us, and give him his due
tribute; if not, we will then be forced to give it
to another, who will so thank and reward us for it,
that we shall not be able to retain a bite of bread
or a penny in peace. But the world will not believe
this, just as the Jews also would not believe it,
until they experienced it, and faith came to their
assistance. For God has ordained, that this Christ
shall be Lord and King upon the earth, under whose
feet he has put all things, and whoever would have
peace and good days, must be kind and obedient to
him, or he will be dashed to pieces like a potter's
vessel. Ps. 2:9.
THE SECOND PART OF THIS GOSPEL.
"And he entered into the temple, and began to cast
out those that sold, saying unto them: It is
written, And my house shall be a house of prayer,
but ye have made it a den of robbers."
34. Here he shows the aim of his great activity, and
what concerns him most of all, which was also the
cause of his weeping. It is indeed a terrible
history, that he who so recently wept out of great
sympathy and compassion, so
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soon can change and come forth in great anger, (for
our beloved Lord burns with great devotion and
zeal), and goes into the temple as in a storm, and
strikes with his uplifted arm as the Lord of the
temple, of course with an excellent and warm spirit
by which he is moved, beholding the chief cause of
distress and the destruction, of which he spoke and
over which he wept; namely, that the chief
government, which should be God's own and be called
his temple, is all perverted and desolate, God's
Word and true worship entirely suppressed and
corrupted, even by those who would be leaders and
teachers of the people, on account of their
disgraceful greed and their own glory. He would say
by this: Yes, it is this, that will completely bring
on the calamity, and make an end of everything among
this people.
35. Therefore, as merciful and compassionate as he
showed himself to be to the poor multitude of people
who are so wretchedly misled to their destruction;
so great was the anger he showed against those who
are the cause of this destruction. Otherwise he did
not often resort to physical force and cause an
uproar, as he does here, so that it is a strange act
for an excellent and kind man, so full of love. But
the cause of it is the great and powerful zeal and
fervency of Spirit, which sees whence all affliction
and sorrow come, namely, because the true worship of
God is abolished and the name of God is so
blasphemed that it is used merely for a show.
36. For the temple and the whole priesthood were
ordained for the purpose of enforcing God's Word, to
praise his grace and mercy, etc.; and to testify to
this and thank him for his Word by an external
worship of offerings. However, they did not teach
praise and thanksgiving to God, but instead they
perverted it into the doctrine of monks and works,
so that with such offerings one merited the grace of
God, and if they only offered a great deal, God
would give them heaven and every good thing on
earth. And hence they built their hopes for
everything, which they ought to look for out of pure
grace and mercy of God, on their own works and
merits. And besides they were misled
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so far in the devil's name, that their avarice set
up there in the temple tables for bankers and
counters for traders in doves and all kinds of
cattle used for offerings, so that those coming from
distant lands and cities could find enough there to
purchase, or if they had no money, they might barter
for or borrow it, so that there might by all means
be as many and as great offerings as possible.
Thus under the name of divine worship the true
worship of God was overthrown and rooted out; and
they substituted for God's grace and goodness their
own merits, and for his free gift their own works,
which he was obliged to accept from us and thank us
for them, and allow himself to be treated as an
idol, compelled to do what pleases us, be angry or
laugh, just as we wish it; and besides satiate their
outrageous greed, by such idoltrous doings, and
without any sense of shame carry on a public annual
fair.
37. Just as our Pope's crowd, priests and monks,
also did, who taught nothing but to trust in human
works, and on this doctrine constructed everything
in their church government, so that the people are
compelled to purchase these things from them, who
thus established a daily public fair over the whole
world. And nothing was omitted that could be made to
serve their greed, and for money they sold God,
Christ, the Sacrament of the mass, absolution, and
forgiveness of sins, the loosing and binding key.
And to this must be added their own invented human
nonsense, which they pretend is divine worship, such
as the brotherhood of monks, and their own
superfluous merits; yea, even to put upon the dead a
monk's hood and cords; likewise the bishop's and
priest's nasty oil, all kinds of bones of the dead
which they call holy, letters of indulgence to eat
butter, married women, children of priests and the
like. All this had to bring and yield them money
daily.
38. And especially the great rat king at Rome with
his Judas purse, which is the great money gulch that
in the name of Christ and the church has
appropriated to itself all the possessions of the
world. For he has reserved unto himself the power to
forbid whatever he pleased and again
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to allow it for money, even to take and give
kingdoms, whenever and as often as he pleased, and
taxed lords and kings as it suited him.
This is a much more infamous and barefaced
perversion of the temple of God into a house of
merchandise, than was perpetrated by the Jews at
Jerusalem. For it belonged to Antichrist, as is
prophesied of him, to levy and collect for himself
the treasures of the world; and St. Peter speaking
of such a hoard in 2 Pet. 2:3 says: "And in
covetousness shall they with feigned words make
merchandise of you: whose sentence now from of old
lingereth not, and their destruction slumbereth
not."
39. Therefore Christ is justly angry at such
desecration of his temple by these bloated misers,
who do not only despise and forsake the true worship
of God, but also per vert it and trample it under
their feet. And thus they truly make out of the
temple which God ordained for the purpose of
teaching the people the Word of God and guiding them
to heaven, nothing but a den of robbers, where
nothing but the destruction and the murder of
immortal souls take place, because they silence
God's Word, through which alone souls can be saved,
and instead they are fed on the devil's lies, etc.
This is truly the chief sin and principal cause, why
the Jews with their temple and all they had,
deserved to go to destruction and ruin. For, as they
destroyed the kingdom of God itself, he will no
longer build up their kingdom for them. Wherefore he
says: Because you go to work, and instead of my
kingdom you build the kingdom of Satan, so will I
also work against you, and will destroy everything
utterly, that I have built for you. This is an
example he began to do on that very day when he
rushed among them in the temple, as his last public
act before his death, which after his departure the
Romans would effectually complete; namely, they with
all they had would be totally swept away, as he
cleanses his temple of them, that they may no more
possess either their worship, temple nor priesthood,
country or people.
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40. He has, God be praised, even commenced to
overthrow our idols and spectres, and Popery's
abominable merchandise of perfidy, and to purify his
churches through the Gospel, also as a prelude, that
it may be seen that he will also make an end of
them, as before our eyes they have already begun to
fall, and they must daily fall more and more, and
they will be much more horribly dashed to the earth
and everlastingly destroyed, than the Jews were
destroyed and exterminated, because theirs is still
a much more shameful abomination. This shall first
properly begin when the Gospel has departed on
account of their disgraceful, horrible blasphemy;
but it will finally come to an end on the last day
and be completely and forever destroyed.
41. Let Germany, which, praise to God, now has the
Gospel, beware, that she may not meet the same fate,
as it already so strongly everywhere indicates she
will. For we dare not think that the contempt and
unthankfulness, which are gaining control among us
as great as among the Jews, will remain unpunished.
After that he will let the godless world complain
and cry: If the Gospel had not come, such things
would not have come upon us; just like the Jews at
Jerusalem blamed all their calamities to the
preaching of the Gospel, and they themselves at the
risk of their own necks prophesied that if Christ
with his Gospel should continue, the Romans would
come and take away their place and nation. And
afterward also, even the Romans blamed their
destruction to this new God and new doctrine. Just
as it is said at present, since the Gospel has
appeared things have never been right.
42. And thus it will also go with the world; as its
people despise and persecute God's Word, and become
so hardened and blinded, they will blame no one as
the cause and merit of their destruction but the
precious Gospel itself; which nevertheless alone
preserves, thank God, what is still preserved;
otherwise all things would long since lay in one
common heap of ruins. And yet it must bear the blame
for everything that the devil and his clans
transact.
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Because people continue to blaspheme and will not
recognize what our sins deserve and the grace and
mercy which we have in the Gospel, God must thus
repay such blasphemers, so that they become their
own prophets, and for a double wickedness receive a
double reward.
This premonition has already gone forth, except that
it is yet withheld on account of the faithful few;
just as he beforehand admonished the Jews by this
example when he cast those that sold and bought out
of the temple, and afterwards went into the temple
himself and finally taught until the day of his
death, and yet for a time withheld as long as he
could, and afterwards by his Apostles until they
would no longer tolerate them; so now we, who cleave
to Christ, restrain punishment as long as we live;
but when these too shall lay down their heads, then
the world will realize what it once had. |