THE TREATISE
I. We ought first to know that there are no good works
except those which God has commanded, even as there is no
sin except that which God has forbidden. Therefore
whoever wishes to know and to do good works needs nothing
else than to know God's commandments. Thus Christ says,
Matthew xix, "If thou wilt enter into life, keep the
commandments." And when the young man asks Him, Matthew
xix, what he shall do that he may inherit eternal life,
Christ sets before him naught else but the Ten
Commandments. Accordingly, we must learn how to
distinguish among good works from the Commandments of
God, and not from the appearance, the magnitude, or the
number of the works themselves, nor from the judgment of
men or of human law or custom, as we see has been done
and still is done, because we are blind and despise the
divine Commandments.
II. The first and highest, the most precious of all good
works is faith in Christ, as He says, John vi. When the
Jews asked Him: "What shall we do that we may work the
works of God?" He answered: "This is the work of God,
that ye believe on Him Whom He hath sent." When we hear
or preach this word, we hasten over it and deem it a very
little thing and easy to do, whereas we ought here to
pause a long time and to ponder it well. For in this work
all good works must be done and receive from it the
inflow of their goodness, like a loan. This we must put
bluntly, that men may understand it.
We find many who pray, fast, establish endowments, do
this or that, lead a good life before men, and yet if you
should ask them whether they are sure that what they do
pleases God, they say, "No"; they do not know, or they
doubt. And there are some very learned men, who mislead
them, and say that it is not necessary to be sure of
this; and yet, on the other hand, these same men do
nothing else but teach good works. Now all these works
are done outside of faith, therefore they are nothing and
altogether dead. For as their conscience stands toward
God and as it believes, so also are the works which grow
out of it. Now they have no faith, no good conscience
toward God, therefore the works lack their head, and all
their life and goodness is nothing. Hence it comes that
when I exalt faith and reject such works done without
faith, they accuse me of forbidding good works, when in
truth I am trying hard to teach real good works of faith.
III. If you ask further, whether they count it also a
good work when they work at their trade, walk, stand,
eat, drink, sleep, and do all kinds of works for the
nourishment of the body or for the common welfare, and
whether they believe that God takes pleasure in them
because of such works, you will find that they say, "No";
and they define good works so narrowly that they are made
to consist only of praying in church, fasting, and
almsgiving. Other works they consider to be in vain, and
think that God cares nothing for them. So through their
damnable unbelief they curtail and lessen the service of
God, Who is served by all things whatsoever that are
done, spoken or thought in faith.
So teaches Ecclesiastes ix: "Go thy way with joy, eat and
drink, and know that God accepteth thy works. Let thy
garments be always white; and let thy head lack no
ointment. Live joyfully with the wife whom thou lovest
all the days of the life of thy vanity." "Let thy
garments be always white," that is, let all our works be
good, whatever they may be, without any distinction. And
they are white when I am certain and believe that they
please God. Then shall the head of my soul never lack the
ointment of a joyful conscience.
So Christ says, John viii: "I do always those things that
J please Him." And St. John says, I. John iii: "Hereby I
we know that we are of the truth, if we can comfort our
hearts before Him and have a good confidence. And if our
heart condemns or frets us, God is greater than our
heart, and we have confidence, that whatsoever we ask, we
shall receive of Him, because we keep His Commandments,
and do those things that are pleasing in His sight."
Again: "Whosoever is born of God, that is, whoever
believes and trusts God, doth not commit sin, and cannot
sin." Again, Psalm xxxiv: "None of them that trust in I
Him shall do sin." And in Psalm ii: "Blessed are all E
they that put their trust in Him." If this be true, then
all that they do must be good, or the evil that they do
must be quickly forgiven. Behold, then, why I exalt faith
so greatly, draw all works into it, and reject all works
which do not flow from it.
IV. Now every one can note and tell for himself E when he
does what is good or what is not good; for if he 1 finds
his heart confident that it pleases God, the work is 5
good, even if it were so small a thing as picking up a
straw. If confidence is absent, or if he doubts, the work
is not good, although it should raise all the dead and
the man should I give himself to be burned. This is the
teaching of St. Paul, Romans xiv: "Whatsoever is not done
of or in faith is sin." Faith, as the chief work, and no
other work, has given us the name of "believers on
Christ." For all other works a heathen, a Jew, a Turk, a
sinner, may also do; but to trust firmly that he pleases
God, is possible only for a Christian who is enlightened
and strengthened by grace.
That these words seem strange, and that some call me a
heretic because of them, is due to the fact that men have
followed blind reason and heathen ways, have set faith
not above, but beside other virtues, and have given it a
work of its own, apart from all works of the other
virtues; although faith alone makes all other works good,
acceptable and worthy, in that it trusts God and does not
doubt that for it all things that a man does are well
done. Indeed, they have not let faith remain a work, but
have made a habitus of it, as they say, although
Scripture gives the name of a good, divine work to no
work except to faith alone. Therefore it is no wonder
that they have become blind and leaders of the blind. And
this faith brings with it at once love, peace, joy and
hope. For God gives His Spirit at once to him who trusts
Him, as St. Paul says to the Galatians: "You received the
Spirit not because of your good works, but when you
believed the Word of God."
V. In this faith all works become equal, and one is like
the other; all distinctions between works fall away,
whether they be great, small, short, long, few or many.
For the works are acceptable not for their own sake, but
because of the faith which alone is, works and lives in
each and every work without distinction, however numerous
and various they are, just as all the members of the body
live, work and have their name from the head, and without
the head no member can live, work and have a name.
From which it further follows that a Christian who lives
in this faith has no need of a teacher of good works, but
whatever he finds to do he does, and all is well done; as
Samuel said to Saul: "The Spirit of the Lord will come
upon thee, and thou shalt be turned into another man;
then do thou as occasion serves thee; for God is with
thee." So also we read of St. Anna, Samuel's mother:
"When she believed the priest Eli who promised her God's
grace, she went home in joy and peace, and from that time
no more turned hither and thither," that is, whatever
occurred, it was all one to her. St. Paul also says:
"Where the Spirit of Christ is, there all is free." For
faith does not permit itself to be bound to any work, nor
does it allow any work to be taken from it, but, as the
First Psalm says, "He bringeth forth his fruit in his
season," that is, as a matter of course.
VI. This we may see in a common human example. A When a
man and a woman love and are pleased with each A other,
and thoroughly believe in their love, who teaches them
how they are to behave, what they are to do, leave
undone, say, not say, think? Confidence alone teaches
them all this, and more. They make no difference in
works: they do the great, the long, the much, as gladly
as the small, the short, the little, and vice versa; and
that too with joyful, peaceful, confident hearts, and
each is a free companion of the other. But where there is
a doubt, search is made for what is best; then a
distinction of works is imagined whereby a man may win
favor; and yet he goes about it with a heavy heart, and
great disrelish; he is, as it were, taken captive, more
than half in despair, and often makes a fool of himself.
So a Christian who lives in this confidence toward God, a
knows all things, can do all things, undertakes all
things B that are to be done, and does everything
cheerfully and F freely; not that he may gather many
merits and good works, N but because it is a pleasure for
him to please God thereby, and he serves God purely for
nothing, content that his service pleases God. On the
other hand, he who is not at one with God, or doubts,
hunts and worries in what way he may do enough and with
many works move God. He runs to St. James of Compostella,
to Rome, to Jerusalem, hither and yon, prays St.
Bridget's prayer and the rest, fasts on this day and on
that, makes confession here, and makes confession there,
questions this man and that, and yet finds no peace. He
does all this with great effort, despair and disrelish of
heart, so that the Scriptures rightly call such works in
Hebrew A v e n a m a 1, that is, labor and travail. And
even then they are not good works, and are all lost. Many
have been crazed thereby; their fear has brought them
into all manner of misery. Of these it is written, Wisdom
of Solomon v: "We have wearied ourselves in the wrong
way; and have gone through deserts, where there lay no
way; but as for the way of the Lord, we have not known
it, and the sun of righteousness rose not upon us."
VII. In these works faith is still slight and weak; let
us ask further, whether they believe that they are
well-pleasing to God when they suffer in body, property,
honor, friends, or whatever they have, and believe that
God of His mercy appoints their sufferings and
difficulties for them, whether they be small or great.
This is real strength, to trust in God when to all our
senses and reason He appears to be angry; and to have
greater confidence in Him than we feel. Here He is
hidden, as the bride says in the Song of Songs: "Behold
he standeth behind our wall, he looketh forth at the
windows"; that is, He stands hidden among the sufferings,
which would separate us from Him like a wall, yea, like a
wall of stone, and yet He looks upon me and does not
leave me, for He is standing and is ready graciously to
help, and through the window of dim faith He permits
Himself to be seen. And Jeremiah says in Lamentations,
"He casts off men, but He does it not willingly."
This faith they do not know at all, and give up, thinking
that God has forsaken them and is become their enemy;
they even lay the blame of their ills on men and devils,
and have no confidence at all in God. For this reason,
too, their suffering is always an offence and harmful to
them, and yet they go and do some good works, as they
think, and are not aware of their unbelief. But they who
in such suffering trust God and retain a good, firm
confidence in Him, and believe that He is pleased with
them, these see in their sufferings and afflictions
nothing but precious merits and the rarest possessions,
the value of which no one can estimate. For faith and
confidence make precious before God all that which others
think most shameful, so that it is written even o, death
in Psalm cxvi, "Precious in the i sight of the Lord is
the death of His saints." And just as the confidence and
faith are better, higher and stronger at this stage than
in the first stage, so and to the same degree do the
sufferings which are borne in this faith excel all works
of faith. Therefore between such works and sufferings
there is an immeasurable difference and the sufferings
are infinitely better.
VIII. Beyond all this is the highest stage of faith,
when; God punishes the conscience not only with temporal
sufferings, but with death, hell, and sin, and refuses
grace and mercy, as though it were His will to condemn
and to be 4 angry eternally. This few men experience, but
David cries out in Psalm vi, "O Lord, rebuke me not in
Thine anger." To believe at such times that God, in His
mercy, is pleased with us, is the highest work that can
be done by and in the creature; but of this the
work-righteous and doers of good works know nothing at