We celebrate Reformation Day not to glorify Luther or the past, but to glorify the God who still reforms hearts.
We celebrate Reformation Day not to glorify Luther or the past, but to glorify the God who still reforms hearts.
Luther knew that truth was not determined by majority vote or human decree. Truth belongs to God. To compromise it for the sake of approval is to betray the very message of salvation.
When Luther’s own heart was set free by Scripture, he longed for everyone to know its power. During his time hiding in the Wartburg Castle after the Diet of Worms, he began to translate the New Testament into German.
Luther’s hammer was not the sound of rebellion. It was the sound of awakening. It was the noise of chains breaking as the gospel returned to the center of faith. The same truth still has power to break chains today.
Luther finally understood that peace with God did not come from climbing toward heaven through good works, but from trusting the One who came down from heaven to save us. The righteousness of God was not against him, it was for him. It was the righteousness of Christ, credited to his account through faith.
What the Church needed, and what Luther longed for, was not new truth but rediscovered truth. Just as Josiah’s priests found the lost book, Luther would one day find the long-buried message of Scripture: “The just shall live by faith.”