Chapter 14 - Of Repentance and the Conversion of Man
The doctrine of repentance is joined with the Gospel. For so has the Lord said
in the Gospel: "Repentance and forgiveness of sins should be preached in my name
to all nations" (Luke 24:47).
WHAT IS REPENTANCE? By repentance we understand (1) the recovery of a right mind
in sinful man awakened by the Word of the Gospel and the Holy Spirit, and
received by true faith, by which the sinner immediately acknowledges his innate
corruption and all his sins accused by the Word of God; and (2) grieves for them
from his heart, and not only bewails and frankly confesses them before God with
a feeling of shame, but also (3) with indignation abominates them; and (4) now
zealously considers the amendment of his ways and constantly strives for
innocence and virtue in which conscientiously to exercise himself all the rest
of his life.
TRUE REPENTANCE IS CONVERSION TO GOD. And this is true repentance, namely, a
sincere turning to God and all good, and earnest turning away from the devil and
all evil.
1. REPENTANCE IS A GIFT OF GOD. Now we expressly say that this repentance is a
sheer gift of God and not a work of our strength. For the apostle commands a
faithful minister diligently to instruct those who oppose the truth, if "God may
perhaps grant that they will repent and come to know the truth" (II Tim. 2:25).
2. LAMENTS SINS COMMITTED. Now that sinful woman who washed the feet of the Lord
with her tears, and Peter who wept bitterly and bewailed his denial of the Lord
(Luke 7:38; 22:62) show clearly how the mind of a penitent man ought to be
seriously lamenting the sins he has committed.
3. CONFESSES SINS TO GOD. Moreover, the prodigal son and the publican in the
Gospel, when compared with the Pharisee, present us with the most suitable
pattern of how our sins are to be confessed to God. The former said: "Father, I
have sinned against heaven and before you; I am no longer worthy to be called
your son; treat me as one of your hired servants" (Luke 15:8 ff.). And the
latter, not daring to raise his eyes to heaven, beat his breast, saying, "God be
merciful to me a sinner" (ch. 18:13). And we do not doubt that they were
accepted by God into grace. For the apostle John says: "If we confess our sins,
he is faithful and just, and will forgive our sins and cleanse us from all
unrighteousness. If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word
is not in us" (I John 1:9 f.).
SACERDOTAL CONFESSION AND ABSOLUTION. But we believe that this sincere
confession which is made to God alone, either privately between God and the
sinner, or publicly in the Church where the general confession of sins is said,
is sufficient, and that in order to obtain forgiveness of sins it is not
necessary for anyone to confess his sins to a priest, mumuring them in his ears,
that in turn he might receive absolution from the priest with his laying on of
hands, because there is neither a commandment nor an example of this in Holy
Scriptures. David testifies and says: "I acknowledged my sin to thee, and did
not hide my iniquity; I said, `I will confess my transgressions to the Lord';
then thou didst forgive the guilt of my sin" (Ps. 32:5). And the Lord who taught
us to pray and at the same time to confess our sins said: "Pray then like this:
Our Father, who art in heaven,...forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors" (Matt. 6:12). Therefore it is necessary that we confess our sins to God
our Father, and be reconciled with our neighbor if we have offended him.
Concerning this kind of confession, the Apostle James says: "Confess your sins
to one another" (James 5:16). If, however, anyone is overwhelmed by the burden
of his sins and by perplexing temptations, and will seek counsel, instruction
and comfort privately, either from a minister of the Church, or from any other
brother who is instructed in God's law, we do not disapprove; just as we also
fully approve of that general and public confession of sins which is usually
said in Church and in meetings for worship, as we noted above, inasmuch as it is
agreeable to Scripture.
OF THE KEYS OF THE KINGDOM OF HEAVEN. Concerning the keys of the Kingdom of
Heaven which the Lord gave to the apostles, many babble many astonishing things,
and out of them forge swords, spears, scepters and crowns, and complete power
over the greatest kingdoms, indeed, over souls and bodies. Judging simply
according to the Word of the Lord, we say that all properly called ministers
possess and exercise the keys or the use of them when they proclaim the Gospel;
that is, when they teach, exhort, comfort, rebuke, and keep in discipline the
people committed to their trust.
OPENING AND SHUTTING (THE KINGDOM). For in this way they open the Kingdom of
Heaven to the obedient and shut it to the disobedient. The Lord promised these
keys to the apostles in Matt., ch. 16, and gave them in John, ch. 20, Mark, ch.
16, and Luke, ch. 24, when he sent out his disciples and commanded them to
preach the Gospel in all the world, and to remit sins.
THE MINISTRY OF RECONCILIATION. In the letter to the Corinthians the apostle
says that the Lord gave the ministry of reconciliation to his ministers (II Cor.
5:18 ff.). And what this is he then explains, saying that it is the preaching or
teaching of reconciliation. And explaining his words still more clearly he adds
that Christ's ministers discharge the office of an ambassador in Christ's name,
as if God himself through ministers exhorted the people to be reconciled to God,
doubtless by faithful obedience. Therefore, they excercise the keys when they
persuade [men] to believe and repent. Thus they reconcile men to God.
MINISTERS REMIT SINS. Thus they remit sins. Thus they open the Kingdom of
Heaven, and bring believers into it: very different from those of whom the Lord
said in the Gospel, "Woe to you lawyers! For you have taken away the key of
knowledge; you did not enter yourselves, and you hindered those who were
entering."
HOW MINISTERS ABSOLVE. Ministers, therefore, rightly and effectually absolve
when they preach the Gospel of Christ and thereby the remission of sins, which
is promised to each one who believes, just as each one is baptized, and when
they testify that it pertains to each one peculiarly. Neither do we think that
this absolution becomes more effectual by being murmured in the ear of someone
or by being murmured singly over someone's head. We are nevertheless of the
opinion that the remission of sins in the blood of Christ is to be diligently
proclaimed, and that each one is to be admonished that the forgiveness of sins
pertains to him.
DILIGENCE IN THE RENEWAL OF LIFE. But the examples in the Gospel teach us how
vigilant and diligent the penitent ought to be in striving for newness of life
and in mortifying the old man and quickening the new. For the Lord said to the
man he healed of palsy: "See, you are well! Sin no more, that nothing worse
befall you" (John 5:14). Likewise to the adulteress whom he set free he said:
"Go, and sin no more" (ch. 8:11). To be sure, by these words he did not mean
that any man, as long as he lived in the flesh, could not sin; he simply
recommends diligence and a careful devotion, so that we should strive by all
means, and beseech God in prayers lest we fall back into sins from which, as it
were, we have been resurrected, and lest we be overcome by the flesh, the world
and the devil. Zacchaeus the publican, whom the Lord had received back into
favor, exclaims in the Gospel: "Behold, Lord, the half of my goods I give to the
poor; and if I have defrauded any one of anything, I restore it fourfold" (Luke
19:8). Therefore, in the same way we preach that restitution and compassion, and
even almsgiving, are necessary for those who truly repent, and we exhort all men
everywhere in the words of the apostle: "Let not sin therefore reign in your
mortal bodies, to make you obey their passions. Do not yield your members to sin
as instruments of wickedness, but yield yourselves to God as men who have been
brought from death to life, and your members to God as instruments of
righteousness" (Rom. 6:12 f.).
ERRORS. Wherefore we condemn all impious utterances of some who wrongly use the
preaching of the Gospel and say that it is easy to return to God. Christ has
atoned for all sins. Forgiveness of sins is easy. Therefore, what harm is there
in sinning? Nor need we be greatly concerned about repentance, etc.
Notwithstanding we always teach that an access to God is open to all sinners,
and that he forgives all sinners of all sins except the one sin against the Holy
Spirit (Mark 3:29).
THE SECTS. Wherefore we condemn both old and new Novatians and Catharists.
PAPAL INDULGENCES. We especially condemn the lucrative doctrine of the Pope
concerning penance, and against his simony and his simoniacal indulgences we
avail ourselves of Peter's judgment concerning Simon: "Your silver perish with
you, because you thought you could obtain the gift of God with money! You have
neither part nor lot in this matter, for your heart is not right before God"
(Acts 8:20 f.).
SATISFACTIONS. We also disapprove of those who think that by their own
satisfactions they make amends for sins committed. For we teach that Christ
alone by his death or passion is the satisfaction, propitiation or expiation of
all sins (Isa., ch.53; I Cor. 1:30). Yet as we have already said, we do not
cease to urge the mortification of the flesh. We add, however, that this
mortification is not to be proudly obtruded upon God as a satisfaction for sins,
but is to be performed humble, in keeping with the nature of the children of
God, as a new obedience out of gratitude for the deliverance and full
satisfaction obtained by the death and satisfaction of the Son of God.