This continues from Part AG5 (Table of Contents in Part AG1a) in a series presenting Walther's essays to the Western District that supported his theme "That Only Through the Doctrine of the Lutheran Church is All Glory Given to God Alone". — This segment in Walther's series that the Lutheran Church gives all glory to God addresses how the doctrine of Election should be used: to comfort people, especially those needing consolation in their faith:
Notable Quotes:
26 (241): Calvinists "teach an absolute, i.e. unconditional, election…also to damnation"
28 (242): "A Calvinist cannot comfort an oppressed person; on the contrary, he plunges him deeper and deeper into despair. The latter thinks he has no faith; but the Calvinist teaches that the elect feel faith in their hearts. For they do not base it on the Word and Sacrament, as we do according to Scripture"
28 (243): "We know that even if a Christian does not feel his faith, he still has it, for faith by its very nature is not a feeling, but a turning to Christ with confidence."
29 (243): "…all men are redeemed and shall have life through faith in Christ; I am one of them. This is Lutheran consolation; no papist, no Calvinist, no fanatic can give it" [This is why I am a Lutheran.]
30 (245): "That is why God so often calls out to us: 'Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling!' … because we can so easily lose our salvation through our own fault."
31 (246): " the Baptist John Bunyan, the well-known author of 'Pilgrim’s Progress'…" [see other blog post]
32-34 (247-248): Luther's and Walther's counsel to one contemplating suicide.
34 (248): Luther vs. Calvinists: "It is something quite wonderful how purely, powerfully and comfortingly Luther teaches the universality of God's grace; therefore it is a shameful blasphemy of Luther to say, which also occurs here in America, that Luther was a particularist, i.e. that he denied the universality of God's grace, while no one emphasized it so powerfully as he did."
38 (252): "Many dogmatists… do not want faith to be described as a fruit, but rather as a cause of predestination"
39 (252): "This, then, is the final purpose of election, that I may be saved, and that I may already here be assured of my salvation."
40 (253): "This does not mean that anyone who is not certain that he belongs to the elect is not a Christian… But we should also lead a Christian to the point where he becomes certain of his salvation."
42 (255): "If someone asks: how can you know, have you seen God in your heart? then we can answer: yes, I have seen God in my heart. In the Bible, that's where I find it."
44 (257): "Luther is saying that if the election of grace consisted in God saying that these should go to heaven and those to hell, then he would not have needed to send his Son into the world." [This refutes LC-MS historian Roy Suelflow who stated in his 1946 Dissertation, p. 69, that "No matter how much we admire Luther, there is some truth in this statement: "We do list him …as a teacher of absolute predestination." Suelflow's advisors were "Walkout" pioneers W. G. Polack, Th. Graebner, W. Arndt.]
47 (259): "So one must not say, as some do, that I base my election of grace on my behavior. As soon as one does so, he bases it on the Law."
49 (262): "Methodists…claim that Christ appeared to them and that they heard a voice from heaven."
52 (264): "That is the terrible thing about the Calvinists, they only talk about the mystery, and instead of pointing a listener to the Scriptures, they point him to reason, and then Calvinistic predestination comes out."
56 (267-8): "If the good God had not determined from eternity to save me, I would not go to heaven.…I can find out from Scripture whether I am an elect person or not.…The election of grace is only held out to believers for their comfort, not to the world."
61 (273): "Your cross is a sign that you are elect, for God has also elected us to bear with Christ all the suffering and weakness in this world."
63 (274-5: "But the flesh must always falter, for we still have to fight with the world and the devil, and in such a battle the flesh is shaky. But, of course, only he who believes is in this struggle; therefore, if the faltering is gone from you, it is to be feared that you no longer have faith either."
64 (275): "For whoever wishes that Jesus is his Savior already believes that Jesus will save him; for whoever does not believe this does not wish it either; for no one wishes to believe something to be true that he considers to be a lie."
64 (275): "If I am certain of my salvation by faith, I am certain of it with fear and trembling…I am certain of my salvation a posteriori, namely, because I believe".
66 (277): "…(we should also believe according to love that all our church members are elect), and [Paul] is not at all concerned about the temporary believers.…do not concern yourself with them"
67 (278): Luther: The elect "can be deceived, but finally they come out again, before they depart from this vale of tears; as I often use the example of St. Bernard"
72 (282): "our glory, … namely, that we make our hearers firm and certain of their salvation. Even German theologians have found in this the explanation of the incomprehensibly rapid spread of our dear [Missouri] Synod."
73-4 (284): "It is true that election is different from justification; I say: you are all redeemed, justification is acquired by all men, you are now all to appropriate it. I cannot speak of election in such a way that I say: all men are elected"
80 (289): "It would be terrible if we were to be deprived of the certainty of our salvation for the sake of those who fall away."
81 (290): "One must not think that when the old theologians also add in the words: you also should pray diligently, watch, use the means of grace faithfully, they mean to say: therefore election is uncertain, dependent on a condition that may not be fulfilled." [Cp. Prof. Eggold's charge against Walther L09a]
86 (295): "even if I should stumble once, the good Lord will seek me again. This is not a carnal certainty, but a reliance on the promises of God."
89 (298): "Judas was of the number of the chosen apostles, but never of the number of the elect to be saved."
92 (300-1): "Hope is what distinguishes a Christian from the pagans.…Who has not noticed that worldly people envy Christians because of their certain hope of salvation?" [See this blog post]
96 (303): "If you are now an elect person, you will say: Lead me, God, as you will, give me good or bad days, peace or discord…"
99 (306): "[Paul] gives as the reason for his certainty a reason that all Christians have, namely that Christ died and rose again and ascended to heaven and is making intercession."
100 (308): "Because God does not want the light of faith of the elect to go out, he uses such warnings and admonitions, even threats. God does it here just like a doctor."
104 (311): "The believers alone are the elect, therefore only the believers can be certain of their election."
107 (314): A pious fear is "a fearful shyness to offend God and an earnest endeavor to avoid sin, combined with humility, conscientious care, love and invocation of God."
111 (317): "Election by grace, is by no means a resting-place for those who want to use the gospel to continue in their sin"
114, 116 (320, 322): "Our church rejects and condemns those who teach that not only God's grace in Christ is the reason for our election, but that there must also be a cause for it in man… The reason why the Formula of Concord bears this witness is that Melanchthon introduced this error." [See this blog]
Now I present my English translation of the full complete essay, with missing portions restored, all emphasized wording retained, and with hyperlinks for reference and navigation:
In the next Part AG7, the third of 3 essays, delivered in 1880, on the Doctrine of Election of Grace.
.jpg)

.jpg)