Walther on St. Bernard of Clairvaux

Walther on St. Bernard of Clairvaux

Were there no gospel-believing Christians under medieval Catholicism? Do conservative Lutherans think they alone are right with God? Well, consider what Missouri Synod founder C. F. W. Walther said about St. Bernard of Clairvaux (as quoted by Paul McCain at Cyberbrethren:

“St. Bernard, the famous abbot of Clairvaux, who died in 1153, is a noteworthy example how the most pious and the best of those in the papacy, when they came into great trials, rejected all of their trust in their own human holiness, in their own works and service, and in the intercession of the saints in heaven, and took sole comfort in the all sufficient service of JESUS Christ for their salvation. Even though in his life Bernard had most strictly pursued holiness and had ascribed such a high value to his position as a monk that he considered it as if it were another baptism (Apolog. Ad Builielm. Abb.), he nevertheless confessed when he suddenly cried out for his salvation because of a severe trial: “I confess that I am not worthy of myself nor can I receive heaven through my own service. But my LORD JESUS Christ has a double right to heaven; first because he is by nature its heir, and then because he has earned it through his meritorious suffering. That first right he has for himself, the second he gives me. Through this gift heaven is mine by rights, so I cannot be lost.”

(Bernard’s commemoration day was yesterday.)

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