Friday, September 11, 2015

Martin Luther on Original Sin



“But what, then, is original sin? According to the Apostle it is not   only the lack of a good quality in the will, nor merely the loss of   man’s righteousness and ability. It is rather the loss of all his   powers of body and soul, of his whole outward and inward perfections.   In addition to this, it is his inclination to all that is evil, his   aversion against that which is good, his antipathy against light and   wisdom, his love for error and darkness, his flight from and his   loathing of good works, and his seeking after that which is sinful.   Thus we read in Psalm 14:3: “They are all gone aside, they are all   together become filthy; there is none that doeth good, no, not one”;   and in Genesis 8:21: “The imagination of man’s heart is evil from his   youth.” Actual sins essentially consist in this that they come from   out of us, as the Lord says in Matthew 15:19: “Out of the heart   proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts,   false witness, blasphemies.” But original enters into us; we do not   commit it, but we suffer it. We are sinners because we are the sons of   a sinner. A sinner can beget only a sinner, who is like him.”  

― Martin Luther
Commentary on Romans

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