Law
Can Only Point to What it Cannot Provide
“We see that the law simply cannot bring into being what it
commands…The law says, ‘Thou shalt love!’ It is right; it is ‘holy,
true, good’. Yet it can’t bring about what it demands. It might impel
toward the works of the law, the motions of love, but in the end they
will become irksome and will all too often lead to hate.
If we go up to someone on the street, grab them by the lapels and say,
‘Look here, you're supposed to love me!’ the person may drudgingly admit
that we are right, but it won't work. The results will likely be just
the opposite from what our ‘law’ demands. Law is indeed right, but it
simply cannot realize what it points to. So it works wrath. It can
curse, but it can't bless. In commanding love law can only point
helplessly to that which it cannot produce.”
-Gerhard Forde, On Being a Theologian of the Cross, p. 107 (discussing Thesis 26 of Martin Luther’s Heidelberg Disputation)
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