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Against
the Robbing and Murdering Hordes of Peasants
Introduction
The exact date when Against the
Robbing and Murdering Hordes of Peasants was written cannot be fixed with
any degree of certainty. Because of the similarity of ideas and language in a
letter written to Ruehel8 on May 4, 1525, it is assumed that Luther
wrote this strongly worded treatise at or about the same time as the letter.
There is a similar difficulty with the date of publication. It was certainly
before the middle of May, but a more exact date of publication cannot be given.
In the treatise Luther arraigned the
peasants on three charges: (1) they had violated their oaths of loyalty to
their rulers and were therefore subject to temporal punishment; (2) they had
robbed, plundered, and murdered, and were subject to death in body and soul;
and (3) they had committed their crimes under the cover of Christ’s name,
thereby shamefully blaspheming God. The peasants were like a mad dog which had
to be destroyed. The government, he argued, must use its God‑given office to
subdue the rebels with force, the only language they understood. Whoever lost
his life in suppressing this rebellion, Luther argues, would be a martyr to the
gospel.
The translation by Charles M. Jacobs
was based on CL 3, 69-74. The revision presented here is based on the
German text, Wider die räuberischen. und mürderischen Rotten der Bauern, in
WA 18, (344) 357‑361.
1
Cf. Schwiebert, Luther and His Times, p. 562.
2
Geyer (ca. 1490‑1525 ), a Franconian noble, had been a professional soldier in
the service of Albert of Prussia. An early convert to Protestantism, he
commanded an army of peasants to which Würzburg, Rothenburg, and Margrave
Casimir of Brandenburg submitted. It was his aim to establish a kingdom based
on the gospel. He was murdered after the battle of Ingolstadt.
3 A
Swabian of noble background, von Berlichingen (1480‑1582) wore an iron hand to
replace one lost in battle. Against his will he commanded the Odenwald
peasants. He was released from prison in 1530 and returned to professional
soldiering.
4 Cf. WA
18, 344‑345 and PE 4, 247.
5 Cf. BG
7, 342.
6 Cf. MA3
4, 387‑388.
7 cf. WA
17I, 195‑196.
8 WA,
Br 3, 480‑482.
Against the rioting peasants, Martin
Luther.
In my earlier book on this
matter,1 I did not venture to judge the peasants, since they had
offered to be corrected and to be instructed;2 and Christ in
Matthew 7 [:1] commands us not to judge. But before I could even inspect the
situation,3 they forgot their promise and violently took matters
into their own hands and are robbing and raging like mad dogs. All this now
makes it clear that they were trying to deceive us and that the assertions they
made in their Twelve Articles4 were nothing but lies
presented under the name of the gospel. To put it briefly, they are doing the
devil’s work. This is particularly the work of that archdevil who rules at
Mühlhausen,5 and does nothing except stir up robbery, murder, and
bloodshed; as Christ describes him in John 8 [:44], “He was a murderer from the
beginning.” Since these peasants and wretched people have now let themselves
be misled and are acting differently than they promised, I, too, must write
differently of them than I have written, and begin by setting their sin before
them, as God commands Isaiah [58:1] and Ezekiel [2:7], on the chance that some
of them may see themselves for what they are. Then I must instruct the rulers
how they are to conduct themselves in these circumstances.
The peasants have taken upon
themselves the burden of three terrible sins against God and man; by this they
have abundantly merited death in body and soul. In the first place, they have
sworn6 to be true and faithful, submissive and obedient, to their
rulers, as Christ commands when he says, “Render to Caesar the things that are
Caesar’s” [Luke 20:25]. And Romans 13 [:1] says, “Let every person be subject
to the governing authorities.” Since they are now deliberately and violently
breaking this oath of obedience and setting themselves in opposition to their
masters, they have forfeited body and soul, as faithless, perjured, lying, disobedient
rascals and scoundrels usually do. St. Paul passed this judgment on them in
Romans 13 [:2] when he said that those who resist the authorities will bring a
judgment upon themselves. This saying will smite the peasants sooner or later,
for God wants people to be loyal and to do their duty.
In the second place, they are
starting a rebellion, and are violently robbing and plundering monasteries and
castles which are not theirs; by this they have doubly deserved death in body
and soul as highwaymen and murderers. Furthermore, anyone who can be proved to
be a seditious person is an outlaw before God and the emperor; and whoever is
the first to put him to death does right and well. For if a man is in open
rebellion, everyone is both his judge and his executioner; just as when a fire
starts, the first man who can put it out is the best man to do the job. For
rebellion is not just simple murder; it is like a great fire, which attacks
and devastates a whole land. Thus rebellion brings with it a land filled with
murder and bloodshed; it makes widows and orphans, and turns everything upside
down, like the worst disaster. Therefore let everyone who can, smite; slay,
and stab, secretly or openly, remembering that nothing can be more poisonous,
hurtful, or devilish than a rebel. It is just as when one must kill a mad dog;
if you do not strike him, he will strike you, and a whole land with you.
In the third place, they cloak
this terrible and horrible sin with the gospel, call themselves “Christian
brethren,”7 take oaths and submit to them, and compel people to go
along with them in these abominations. Thus they become the worst blasphemers
of God and slanderers of his holy name. Under the outward appearance of the
gospel, they honor and serve the devil, thus deserving death in body and soul
ten times over. I have never heard of a more hideous sin. I suspect that the
devil feels that the Last Day is coming. and therefore he undertakes such an
unheard‑of act, as though saying to himself, “This is the end, therefore it
shall be the worst; I will stir up the dregs and knock out the bottom.”8
God will guard us against him! See what a mighty prince the devil is, how he
has the world in his hands and can throw everything into confusion, when he can
so quickly catch so many thousands of peasants, deceive them, blind them,
harden them, and throw them into revolt, and do with them whatever his raging
fury undertakes.
It does not help the peasants
when they pretend that according to Genesis 1 and 2 all things were created
free and common, and that all of us alike have been baptized.9 For
under the New Testament, Moses does not count; for there stands our Master,
Christ, and subjects us, along with our bodies and our property, to the emperor
and the law of this world, when he says, “Render to Caesar the things that are
Caesar’s” [Luke 20:25]. Paul, too, speaking in Romans 12 [13:1] to all baptized
Christians, says, “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities.”
And Peter says, “Be subject to every ordinance of man” [I Pet. 2:13]. We are
bound to live according to this teaching of Christ, as the Father commands from
heaven, saying, “This is my beloved Son, listen to him” [Matt. 17:5].
For baptism does not make men
free in body and property, but in soul; and the gospel does not make goods
common, except in the case of those who, of their own free will, do what the
apostles and disciples did in Acts 4 [:32‑37]. They did not demand, as do our
insane peasants in their raging, that the goods of others—of Pilate and
Herod—should be common, but only their own goods. Our peasants, however, want
to make the goods of other men common, and keep their own for themselves. Fine
Christians they are! I think there is not a devil left in hell; they have all
gone into the peasants. Their raving has gone beyond all measure. Now since the
peasants have brought [the wrath of] both God and man down upon themselves and
are already many times guilty of death in body and soul, and since they submit
to no court and wait for no verdict, but only rage on, I must instruct the
temporal authorities on how they may act with a clear conscience in this
matter.
First, I will not oppose a ruler
who, even though he does not tolerate the gospel, will smite and punish these
peasants without first offering to submit the case to judgment.10 He
is within his rights, since the peasants are not contending any longer for the
gospel, but have become faithless, perjured, disobedient, rebellious murderers,
robbers, and blasphemers, whom even a heathen ruler has the right and authority
to punish. Indeed, it is his duty to punish such scoundrels, for this is why he
bears the sword and is “the servant of God to execute his wrath on the
wrongdoer,” Romans 13 [:4].
But if the ruler is a Christian
and tolerates the gospel,11 so that the peasants have no appearance
of a case against him, he should proceed with fear. First he must take the
matter to God, confessing that we have deserved these things, and remembering
that God may, perhaps, have thus aroused the devil as a punishment upon all
Germany. Then he should humbly pray for help against the devil, for we are
contending not only “against flesh and blood,” but “against the spiritual hosts
of wickedness in the air” [Eph. 6:12; 2:2], which must be attacked with prayer.
Then, when our hearts are so turned to God that we are ready to let his divine
will be done, whether he will or will not have us to be princes and lords, we
must go beyond our duty, and offer the mad peasants an opportunity to come to
terms, even though they are not worthy of it. Finally, if that does not help,
then swiftly take to the sword.
For in this case a prince and
lord must remember that according to Romans 13 [:4] he is God’s minister and
the servant of his wrath and that the sword has been given him to use against
such people. If he does not fulfil the duties of his office by punishing some
and protecting others, he commits as great a sin before God as when someone
who has not been given the sword commits murder. If he is able to punish and
does not do it—even though he would have had to kill someone or shed blood—he
becomes guilty of all the murder and evil that these people commit. For by
deliberately disregarding God’s command he permits such rascals to go about
their wicked business, even though he was able to prevent it and it was his
duty to do so. This is not a time to sleep. And there is no place for patience
or mercy. This is the time of the sword, not the day of grace.
The rulers, then, should press on
and take action in this matter with a good conscience as long as their hearts
still beat. It is to the rulers’ advantage that the peasants have a bad
conscience and an unjust cause, and that any peasant who is killed is lost in
body and soul and is eternally the devil’s. But the rulers have a good
conscience and a just cause; they can, therefore, say to God with all
confidence of heart, “Behold, my God, you have appointed me prince or lord, of
this I can have no doubt; and you have given me the sword to use against
evildoers (Romans 13 [:4]). It is your word, and it cannot lie, so I must
fulfil the duties of my office, or forfeit your grace. It is also plain that
these peasants have deserved death many times over, in your eyes and in the
eyes of the world, and have been committed to me for punishment. If you will me
to be slain by them, and let my authority be taken from me and destroyed, so be
it: let your will be done. I shall be defeated and die because of your divine
command and word and shall die while obeying your command and fulfilling the
duties of my office. Therefore I will punish and smite as long as my heart
beats. You will be the judge and make things right.”
Thus, anyone who is killed
fighting on the side of the rulers may be a true martyr in the eyes of God, if
he fights with the kind of conscience I have just described, for he acts in
obedience to God’s word. On the other hand, anyone who perishes on the peasants’
side is an eternal firebrand of hell, for he bears the sword against God’s word
and is disobedient to him, and is a member of the devil. And even if the
peasants happen to gain the upper hand (God forbid!)—for to God all things are
possible, and we do not know whether it may be his will, through the devil, to
destroy all rule and order and cast the world upon a desolate heap, as a
prelude to the Last Day, which cannot be far off12—nevertheless,
those who are found exercising the duties of their office can die without worry
and go to the scaffold with a good conscience; and leave the kingdom of this
world to the devil and take in exchange the everlasting kingdom. These are
strange times, when a prince can win heaven with bloodshed better than other
men with prayer!
Finally, there is another thing
that ought to motivate the rulers. The peasants are not content with belonging
to the devil themselves; they force and compel many good people to join their
devilish league against their wills, and so make them partakers of all of their
own wickedness and damnation. Anyone who consorts with them goes to the devil
with them and is guilty of all the evil deeds that they commit, even though he
has to do this because he is so weak in faith that he could not resist them. A
pious Christian ought to suffer a hundred deaths rather than give a hairsbreadth
of consent to the peasants’ cause. O how many martyrs could now be made by the
bloodthirsty peasants and the prophets of murder!13 Now the rulers
ought to have mercy on these prisoners of the peasants, and if they had no
other reason to use the sword with a good conscience against the peasants, and
to risk their own lives and property in fighting them, this would be reason
enough, and more than enough: they would be rescuing and helping these souls
whom the peasants have forced into their devilish league and who, without
willing it, are sinning so horribly and must be damned. For truly these souls
are in purgatory; indeed, they are in the bonds of hell and the devil.
Therefore, dear lords, here is a
place where you can release, rescue, help. Have mercy on these poor people! Let
whoever can stab, smite, slay. If you die in doing it, good for you! A more
blessed death can never be yours, for you die while obeying the divine word and
commandment in Romans 13 [:1, 2], and in loving service of your neighbor, who
you are rescuing from the bonds of hell and of the devil. And so I beg everyone
who can to flee from the peasants as from the devil himself; those who do not
flee, I pray that God will enlighten and convert. As for those who are not to
be converted, God grant that they may have neither fortune nor success. To this
let every pious Christian say, “Amen!” For this prayer is right and good, and
pleases God; this I know. If anyone thinks this too harsh, let him remember
that rebellion is intolerable and that the destruction of the world is to be
expected every hour.
1 Admonition to Peace. See
pp, 17.43.
2 Luther refers to the conclusion
of The Twelve Articles; see pp. 15‑18.
3 Luther became more closely
acquainted with the situation during a journey through Thuringia. See p. 47.
4 For the text of The Twelve
Articles, see pp. 8‑18.
5 Thomas Münzer. Cf. p. 5, n. 3.
6 All men took this oath under the
feudal system.
7 Cf. p. 7, n. 14
8 Cf. Thiele, Luthers
Sprichwörtersammlung, No. 335.
9 Cf. the claim of the peasants in
the third of their twelve articles that serfdom is un‑Christian, p. 12.
10 In other words, a ruler need not
wait for a judicial verdict against the peasants.
11 I.e., has evangelical
sympathies.
12 Luther anticipated the imminent
coming of the Last Day. Cf. p. 18, n. 3.
13 Cf. p. 20, n. 8.
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