@1689Dave
Here's what this author you found actually states: (My comments are in red) Here's what he ACTUALLY said, what you so twisted.
Limited Atonement
Did Luther agree with this part of TULIP? No (though Luther himself was inconsistent).
Luther and other early Lutherans usually taught a general doctrine of the atonement (a view codified in the
Book of Concord).
Early in his life, during his lectures on Romans (1516)
This is BEFORE Luther was "Lutheran" , Luther made a famous statement affirming a limited atonement, one that Calvinists like Timothy George have used to argue that Luther was with Calvin on this issue.
One quote from 1515 before the Reformation even began, when Luther was a Catholic monk. Neglecting to quote Luther later in his life. As we have seen above, moreover, Luther believed in unconditional, particular election. He believed that the elect alone would be saved through faith on the basis of the atoning work of Christ . But his usual tendency, especially later in his life, was to stress the Scripture promise that whosoever repents and believes will be saved, that it is not salutary to seek the hidden decrees of God, and that the atoning work of Christ was broad and powerful enough to cover the sins of the whole world. He worried far more often about biblical consistency and pastoral utility than about logical precision. Modern Calvinists have often charged him with logical inconsistency (though he was certainly not the first to favor an asymmetrical layout of these issues).
Here’s the famous early affirmation of limited atonement:
Luther,
Lectures on Romans (
1515-1516), from the scholia at
Rom. 15:33 (“Now the God of peace be with you all,”
LW 25:375–76): “The second argument [against predestination] is that ‘God desires all men to be saved’ (
1 Tim. 2:4). . . . these verses must always be understood as pertaining to the elect only, as the apostle says in
2 Tim. 2:10 ‘everything for the sake of the elect.’ For in an absolute sense Christ did not die for all, because he says: ‘This is my blood which is poured out for you’ and ‘for many’—he does not say: for all—‘for the forgiveness of sins’ (
Mark 14:24,
Matt. 26:28).”
Here are some later, more definitive statements of Luther: All supporting that Jesus died for all
Luther,
Bondage of the Will (
1525), 4.12: “We say, as we have said before, that the secret will of the Divine Majesty is not a matter for debate, and the human temerity which with continual perversity is always neglecting necessary things in its eagerness to probe this one, must be called off and restrained from busying itself with the investigation of these secrets of God’s majesty, which it is impossible to penetrate because he dwells in light inaccessible, as Paul testifies [
1 Tim. 6:16]. Let it occupy itself instead with God incarnate, or as Paul puts it, with Jesus crucified, in whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge, though in a hidden manner [
Col. 2:3]; for through him it is furnished abundantly with what it ought to know and ought not to know. It is God incarnate, moreover, who is speaking here: “I would . . . you would not”—God incarnate, I say, who has been sent into the world for the very purpose of willing, speaking, doing, suffering, and offering to all men everything necessary for salvation. . . . It is likewise the part of this incarnate God to weep, wail, and groan over the perdition of the ungodly, when the will of the Divine Majesty purposely abandons and reprobates some to perish. And it is not for us to ask why he does so, but to stand in awe of God who both can do and wills to do such things.”
Luther, “Sermon for the First Sunday in Advent,
1533,” in
Day by Day We Magnify You: Daily Readings for the Entire Year Selected from the Writings of Martin Luther, rev. ed., p. 10: “[Christ] helps not against
one sin only but against
all my sin; and not against
my sin only, but against
the whole world’s sin. He comes to take away not sickness only, but death; and not
my death only, but
the whole world’s death.”
Luther and Melanchthon to the Council of the City of Nürnberg, April 18,
1533, a letter that speaks into the controversy in Nürnberg over private vs. public confession of sins in the church, in
LW 50:76-77:
Even if not all believe [the word of absolution], that is not reason to reject [public] absolution, for each absolution, whether administered publicly or privately, has to be understood as demanding faith and as being an aid to those who believe in it, just as the gospel itself also proclaims forgiveness to all men in the whole world and exempts no one from this universal context. Nevertheless the gospel certainly demands our faith and does not aid those who do not believe it; and yet the universal context of the gospel has to remain [valid].
Luther,
Sermons on the Gospel of St. John (
1537), at
John 1:29, in
LW 22:169: “There is nothing missing from the Lamb. He bears all the sins of the world from its inception; this implies that He also bears yours, and offers you grace.”
Continues in next post....
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