“ We must not suffer ourselves to be deceived or troubled as to what the world thinks of us. To please the good is our virtue. ”
Martin Luther, Table Talk (1566). copy citation
Author | Martin Luther |
---|---|
Source | Table Talk |
Topic | suffering virtue |
Date | 1566 |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | Translated by William Hazlitt |
Weblink | http://www.ntslibrary.com/PDF%20Books/Luther%20Table%20Talk.pdf |
Context
“Wherefore I am not troubled that the world esteems the church so meanly; what care I that the usurers, the nobility, gentry, citizens, country-people, covetous men, and drunkards, condemn and esteem me as dirt? In due time, I will esteem them as little. We must not suffer ourselves to be deceived or troubled as to what the world thinks of us. To please the good is our virtue.
CCCLXXII. The church is misery on earth, first, that we may keep in mind we are banished servants, and exiled out of Paradise for Adam’s sake. Secondly, that we may always remember the misery of the Son of God, who, for our sake, was made man, walked in this vale of misery, suffered for us, died, and rose again from the dead, and so brought us again to our paternal home, whence we were driven.”
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