Selections from the Table Talk of Martin Luther

When Martin Luther promulgated his “95 Theses” 1n 1517, he probably did not envision the initiation of the historical division of the indivisible Church, beginning what we now know as the Protestant Reformation. For his opposition to such practices as indulgences and Papal infallibility, he was excommunicated by Pope Leo X, and later, at the Diet of Worms, was declared an outlaw of the state. Luther made use of the new printing technology of Gutenberg to disseminate his writings. The first publication of his “Table Talk” (Colloquia Mensalia) was in 1566 arranged into 80 chapters. The complete work was published in Stuttgart and Leipzig in 1836 in the equivalent of 2,780 pages. Captain Henry Bell undertook the translation of these selections from the high German and published it in 1561. The topics are drawn from conversation with many of the great minds of Luther’s day and cover topics from The Word of God to Imperial Diets.


By : Martin Luther (1483 - 1546),Translated by Henry Bell (1650 - )

01 - Introduction



02 - Testimony of Joannes Aurifaber



03 - Captain Henry Bell's Narrative



04 - A Copy of the Order from the House of Commons



05 - Of the Word of God Part I



06 - Of the Word of God Part II



07 - Of the Word of God Part III



08 - Of God's Work Part I



09 - Of God's Work Part II



10 - Of the Nature of the World Part I



11 - Of the Nature of the World Part II



12 - Of the Lord Christ



13 - Of Sins and of Free-will



14 - Brief Sentences of the Catechism



15 - Of the Law and the Gospels



16 - Of Prayer



17 - Of the Confessions and Constancy of the Doctrine



18 - Of Imperial Diets Part I



19 - Of Imperial Diets Part II


Martin Luther died on the 18th of February, 1546, and the first publication of his “Table Talk”—Tischreden—by his friend, Johann Goldschmid (Aurifaber), was in 1566, in a substantial folio.  The talk of Luther was arranged, according to its topics, into eighty chapters, each with a minute index of contents.  The whole work in a complete octavo edition, published at Stuttgart and Leipzig in 1836, occupies 1,390 closely printed pages, equivalent to 2,780 pages, or full fourteen volumes, of this Library.

The nearest approach to a complete and ungarbled translation into English was that of Captain Henry Bell, made in the reign of Charles the First, under the circumstances set forth by himself; but even that was not complete.  Other English versions have subjected Luther’s opinions to serious manipulation, nothing being added, but anything being taken away that did not chance to agree with the editor’s digestion.  Even the folio of Captain Bell’s translation, from which these Selections have been printed, has been prepared for reprint by some preceding editor, whose pen has been busy in revision of the passages he did mean to reprint.  In these Selections every paragraph stands unabridged, exactly as it was translated by Captain Bell; and there has been no other purpose governing the choice of matter than a resolve to make it as true a presentment as possible of Luther’s mind and character.  At least one other volume of Selections from the Table-Talk of Martin Luther will be given in this Library.

Johann Goldschmid, the Aurifaber, and thereby true worker in gold, who first gave Luther’s Table-Talk to the world, was born in 1519.  He was a disciple of Luther, thirty-six years younger than his master.  Luther was born at Eisleben in 1483, and his father, a poor miner, presently settled at Mansfeld, the town in which Goldschmid afterwards was born.  Johann Goldschmid was sent by Count Albrecht of Mansfeld, in 1537, to the University of Wittenberg, where Luther had been made, in 1508, Professor of Philosophy, and where, on the 31st of October, 1517, he had nailed his ninety-five propositions against indulgences to the church door at the castle.  Luther had completed his translation of the Bible three years before Johann Goldschmid went to Wittenberg.  In 1540 Goldschmid was recalled from the University to act as tutor to Count Albrecht’s children.  In 1544 Goldschmid was army chaplain with the troops from Mansfeld in the French war; but in 1545 he was sent back to Wittenberg for special study of theology.  It was then that he attached himself to Luther as his famulus and house-companion during the closing months of Luther’s life, began already to collect from surrounding friends passages of his vigorous “Table Talk,” and remained with Luther till the last, having been present at his death in Eisleben in 1546.  He then proceeded steadily with the collection of Luther’s sayings and opinions expressed among his friends.  He was army chaplain among the soldiers of Johann Friedrich, of Saxony; he spent half a year also in a Saxon prison.  He became, in 1551, court preacher at Weimar; but in 1562 was deprived of his office, and then devoted himself to the forming of an Eisleben edition of those works of Luther, which had not already been collected.  In 1566 he was called to a pastorate at Erfurt, where he had many more troubles before his death.  Aurifaber died on the 18th of November, 1575.

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