Nobody can understand Virgil in his Bucolics, unless he has been a shepherd for five years. Nobody can understand Virgil in his Georgics, unless he has been a plowman for five years. Nobody can understand Cicero in his Epistles unless he has lived for twenty-five years in a large commonwealth. Let no one think he has sufficiently grasped the Holy Scriptures, unless he has governed the churches for a hundred years with prophets like Elijah and Elisha, John the Baptist, Christ, and the apostles. Don't venture on this divine Aeneid, but rather bend low in reverence before its footprints! We are beggars! That is true.—Martin Marty, Martin Luther: A Life (New York: Penguin, 2004), 185.
Crumbs fallen from the table of the King—from his Word, his workmen, and his world.
Saturday, October 18, 2014
We Are Beggars
Luther two days before he died:
Jeff Wencel
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