We Lutherans have
gathered like eagles round the carcase of cheap grace, and there we have drunk
of the poison which has killed the life of following Christ. It is true, of course, that we have paid the
doctrine of pure grace divine honors unparalleled in Christendom, in fact we
have exalted that doctrine to the position of God himself. Everywhere Luther's formula has been
repeated, but its truth perverted into self-deception. So long as our Church holds the correct
doctrine of justification, there is no doubt whatever that she is a justified
Church! So they said, thinking that we
must vindicate our Lutheran heritage by making this grace available on the
cheapest and easiest terms. To be
'Lutheran' must mean that we leave the following of Christ to legalists,
Calvinists, and enthusiasts - and all this for the sake of grace. We justified the world, and condemned as
heretics those who tried to follow Christ.
The result was that a nation became Christian and Lutheran, but at the
cost of true discipleship. The price it
was called upon to pay was all too cheap.
Cheap grace had won the day.
But do we also
realize that this cheap grace has turned back upon us like a boomerang? The price we are having to pay to-day in the
shape of the collapse of the organized Church is only the inevitable
consequence of our policy of making grace available to all at too low a
cost. We gave away the word and
sacraments wholesale, we baptized, confirmed, and absolved a whole nation
unasked and without condition. Our
humanitarian sentiment made us give that which was holy to the scornful and
unbelieving. We poured forth unending
streams of grace. But the call to follow
Jesus in the narrow way was hardly ever heard.
Where were those truths which impelled the early Church to institute the
catechumenate, which enabled a strict watch to be kept over the frontier
between the Church and the world, and afforded adequate protection for costly
grace? What had happened to all those
warnings of Luther's against preaching the gospel in such a manner as to make
men rest secure in their ungodly living?
Was there ever a more terrible or disastrous instance of the
Christianizing the world than this? What
are those three thousand Saxons put to death by Charlemagne compared with the
millions of spiritual corpses in the country to-day?
Dietrich
Bonhoeffer
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