Mark,
Originally posted by Saiph
Didn't Luther coin the phrase "antinomian" ? I am not a scholar, or seminarian. But what I read in his work is here:
I don't know. That's an interesting question. I'll look into it.
I have Graebner's 3rd edition of the commentary. Is that poor translation?
The standard edn of Luther's works is
Luther's Works (in English; the critical edn is the
Luthers Werke publ. in Weimar in the 19th c and reprinted since.
Check out page 77
He (Christ) permitted the Law to accuse Him, sin to condemn Him, and death to take Him, to abolish the Law, to condemn sin, and to destroy death for me.
Luther taught at least two (and implicitly) three uses of the law. They are numbered differently by different folks, but they are:
1. The elenctic use - that use which drives the sinner to Christ. It is this use Luther is describing here. All confessional Protestants, including those who wrote the Anglican Articles agreed with him on this. This is why Paul said that we are no longer under the law. Whoever is outside Christ, is under the law. Whoever is in Christ, i.e., legally united to him and to whom has been imputed Christ's righteousness, is no longer under the law that says: do and live.
2. The civil use - in Christendom it was agreed that the magistrate had a duty to enforce both tables of the law. Most confessionalists have abandoned this view as unbiblical.
3. The normative use - the law as the standard of Christian obedience in Christ. Some Luther scholars (e.g., Werner Elert and others) have argued that Luther did not teach the 3rd use but most confessional Lutherans (those that hold the Book of Concord faithfully) find him teaching it.
Defined historically, antinomianism is the rejection of the third use. Even those who argue Luther did not teach the 3rd use do not argue that he rejected it.
1. In your critique you did not observe the distinctions that Luther was making.
2. You have an idiosyncratic definition of antinomianism, so that anyone who is not a theonomist or theocrat (of some sort) is an antinomian. This does strike me as a particularly fair way to critique Luther.
3. You have not observed the distinction that all the Protestants made between the two kingdoms. They did it differently, but the all agreed that otoh, Christ is Lord over all things but otoh, he exercises his Lordship in the civil and ecclesiastical realms differently.
On your account everyone who makes such a distinction (Luther, Calvin, Bucer, Melanchthon, etc) would have to be judged antinomian.
rsc