Good Shepherd Lutheran Church - Goleta, CA
About the Rose and Martin
Luther
While he was a professor at Wittenberg University, Martin Luther
designed this seal
which he declared was meant to be "expressive of his theology."
The following letter was written to his friend, Herr Spangler,
town clerk in Nuremberg, Germany.
July 8, 1530
Grace and peace in Christ!
Honorable, kind, dear Sir and Friend! Since you ask whether my seal
has come out correctly, I shall answer most amiably and tell you of those
thoughts which now come to my mind about my seal as a symbol of my theology.
There is first to be a cross, black and placed in a heart,
which should be of its natural color [red], so that I myself would
be reminded that faith in the Crucified saves us. For if one believes from
the heart he will be justified. Even though it is a black cross, which
mortifies and which also should hurt us, yet it leaves the heart in its
natural color and does not ruin nature; that is, the cross does not kill
but keeps man alive. For the just man lives by faith, but by faith in the
Crucified One.
Such a heart is to be in the midst of a white rose, to symbolize
that faith gives joy, comfort, and peace; in a word it places the believer
into a white joyful rose; for this faith does not give peace and joy as
the world gives and, therefore, the rose is to be white and not red, for
white is the color of the spirits and of all the angels.
Such a rose is to be in a sky-blue field, symbolizing that such
joy in the Spirit and in faith is a beginning of the future heavenly joy;
it is already a part of faith, and is grasped through hope, even though
not yet manifest. And around this field is a golden ring, symbolizing
that in heaven such blessedness lasts forever and has no end, and in addition
is precious beyond all joy and goods, just as gold is the most valuable
and precious metal.
May Christ, our dear Lord, be with your spirit until the life to come.
Amen.
Luther’s Works, American Edition, Volume 49, pp. 356-359
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