Martin Luther's Seal
Martin Luther |
The
first thing expressed in my seal is a cross, black, within the heart, to
put me in mind that faith in Christ crucified saves us. 'For with
the heart man believeth unto righteousness.'
---Now, although the cross
is black, mortified, and intended to cause pain, yet it does not change
the colour of the heart, does not destroy nature-i.e., does not kill, but
keeps alive. 'For the just shall live by faith,'-by faith in the
Saviour.
---But this heart is fixed
upon the center of a white rose, to show that faith causes joy, consolation
and peace. The rose is white, no red, because white is the ideal
colour of all angels and blessed spirits.
---This rose, moreover, is
fixed in a sky-coloured ground, to denote that such joy of faith in the
spirit is but an earnest and beginning of heavenly joy to come, as anticipated
and held by hope, though not yet revealed.
---And around this groundbase
is a golden ring, to signify that such bliss in heaven is endless, and
more precious than all joys and treasures, since gold is the best and most
precious metal. Christ, our dear Lord, He will give grace unto eternal
life.
While a professor at Wittenberg,
Luther devised this seal which he declared was meant to be "expressive
of his theology." This explanation is the gist of a letter written
to his friend, Herr Spengler, town clerk of Nuremberg.
(The information for
this page was supplied by Lutheran Brotherhood)
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