Thursday, June 1, 2023

Alister E. McGrath on the Lack of Patristic Attestation to Luther's Understanding of "the Righteousness of God" in Romans 1:17

  

One of the most important sources for our understanding of this radical alteration in Luther’s doctrine of justification is the 1545 autobiographical fragment in which Luther records the intense personal difficulties he experienced at an early stage in his career over the concept of the ‘righteousness of God’. (WA 54.185.12-186.21)

 

I had certainly been overcome with a great desire to understand St Paul in his letter to the Romans, but what had hindered me thus far was not any ‘coldness of the blood’ so much as that one phrase is the first chapter: ‘the righteousness of God (iustitia Dei) is revealed in it.’ For I had hated that phrase ‘the righteousness of God’, which, according to the use and custom of all the doctors, I had been taught to understand philosophically, in the sense of the formal or active (as they termed it) righteousness by which God is righteous, and punishes unrighteous sinners.

 

The modern preoccupation of scholars with this autobiographical fragment dates from 1904, when the historian Henrich Denifle argued that Luther’s discussion of the term iustitia Dei indicated an ignorance of its use in the western theological tradition. (Denifle, Luther und Luthertum in der ersten Entwickelung, especially 392-5, 404-15. See also Denifle, Die abendländischen Schriftausleger bis Luther über Iustitia Dei) Denifle produced a detailed analysis of the exposition of Romans 1:16-17 by some sixty doctors of the western church, indicating that not one of them, from Ambrosiaster onwards, understood iustitita Dei in the sense Luther notes in the above citation. However, the conclusion which Denifle drew from this demonstration—that Luther was either ignorant of the Catholic tradition, or else deliberately perverted it—was clearly unjustified. With the benefit of hindsight, Denifle’s contribution to the discussion lay largely in having precipitated more detailed scholarly discussion of the issue.

 

It is quite clear that Luther intended to make no global reference to the western tradition of interpretation of Romans 1:16-17 but was referring specifically to the doctors who taught him—an unequivocal reference to the moderni at Erfurt, under whom he received his initial theological education. Luther here refers to the specific concept of iustitita Dei associated with the via moderna: God is righteous in the sense that God rewards the person who does quod in se est [“to do what lies within you”] with grace, and punishes the person who does not. In view of Gabriel Biel’s unambiguous assertion that individuals cannot know for certain whether they have, in fact, done quod in se est, there is clearly every reason to state that Luther’s early concept of iustitia Dei was that of the righteousness of an utterly scrupulous and impartial judge, who rewarded or punished humans on the basis of an ultimate unknown quality. (Alister E. McGrath, Iustitia Dei: A History of the Christian Doctrine of Justification [4th ed.; Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020], 194-95, emphasis in bold added, comment in square brackets added for clarification)