Constantine the Great: Hero of Luther and Exemplary Christian Ruler

This February, we’d love if you would renew your prayers and support for the Lutheran Center for Religious Liberty’s efforts to contend for the freedom to proclaim the faith.

Luther grounded his understanding of civil government and its duties toward God in creation, teaching that rulers are a type of father. In the Large Catechism he wrote, “Thus we have two kinds of fathers presented in this commandment, fathers in blood and fathers in office, or those to whom belongs the care of the family, and those to whom belongs the care of the country. Besides these there are yet spiritual fathers.” Luther recognized the universal responsibility of all mankind to acknowledge and serve God in accordance with one’s particular station. All earthly rulers, whether of Israelite or Gentile nations, were expected to follow God’s Word. If they did not serve the Lord, like emperors Nero and Domitian, they would be held guilty by Him. Luther maintained a consistently positive estimation of Constantine and other Christian rulers throughout his writings — especially their aid in resisting the grasping tyranny of the papacy. He held up David and the other faithful kings of Israel as examples of the universal duty of rulers to acknowledge and serve God.

In a letter to Charles V (August 30, 1520), Luther, casting himself in the role of Athanasius, urged the Holy Roman Emperor to follow the example of Constantine in aiding a beleaguered church:

As earthly sovereigns are images of the heavenly Sovereign, they ought to imitate him. … It has finally seemed wise to appeal to Your Imperial Majesty, according to the example of St. Athanasius, in case the Lord deigns to help his cause through Your Imperial Majesty. Humbly and on my knees, therefore, I beseech Your Most Serene Majesty, Charles, foremost of kings on earth, to deign take under the shadow of your wings not me but the very cause of truth, since it is only by this truth that authority is given you to carry the sword for the punishment of the evil and the praise of the good.[6]

Though Charles V would not aid the Reformation, Luther was blessed with other faithful Christian rulers such as Frederick the Wise, John the Steadfast and John Frederick of Saxony who did so.

In harmony with Luther, Melanchthon formulated what would become the standard Lutheran teaching on civil rulers and the duties before God. Click here to read more about what Dr. Luther had to say about Constantine and civic rulers.

 

Be Informed
Remember Jack Phillips, owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop in Colorado? How can someone like him still be persecuted simply for being a Christian? Listen to Phillips himself explain what’s gone awry in the way we teach civics, where students no longer recognize the biblical worldview foundations that support freedom for all.

 

Be Equipped
Some are wondering about the recent delay in the Centers for Disease Control’s annual abortion report. Dr. Michael New of the Charlotte Lozier Institute explains.

 

Be Encouraged
“The Declaration describes to what end we are to be governed, namely the protection of our rights, the rights that are written in our nature. These are inherent in man himself, instilled by the Creator Himself. What are these rights? To do the things a human being can do by nature: think, work, speak, learn, worship, and defend. We are born able to do these things. WE must do them or be diminished. We have a right to them.” –Larry Arnn

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NOW THAT’S A TEMPTATION!