Luther Before the Diet
      
      
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        service for his countrymen by translating the New Testament into the
      
      
        German tongue. From his rocky Patmos he continued for nearly a
      
      
        whole year to proclaim the gospel and rebuke the sins and errors of
      
      
        the times.
      
      
        But it was not merely to preserve Luther from the wrath of his
      
      
        enemies, nor even to afford him a season of quiet for these important
      
      
        labors, that God had withdrawn His servant from the stage of public
      
      
        life. There were results more precious than these to be secured. In the
      
      
        solitude and obscurity of his mountain retreat, Luther was removed
      
      
        from earthly supports and shut out from human praise. He was thus
      
      
        saved from the pride and self-confidence that are so often caused
      
      
        by success. By suffering and humiliation he was prepared again to
      
      
        walk safely upon the dizzy heights to which he had been so suddenly
      
      
        exalted.
      
      
        As men rejoice in the freedom which the truth brings them, they
      
      
        are inclined to extol those whom God has employed to break the chains
      
      
        of error and superstition. Satan seeks to divert men’s thoughts and
      
      
        affections from God, and to fix them upon human agencies; he leads
      
      
        them to honor the mere instrument and to ignore the Hand that directs
      
      
        all the events of providence. Too often religious leaders who are thus
      
      
        praised and reverenced lose sight of their dependence upon God and
      
      
        are led to trust in themselves. As a result they seek to control the minds
      
      
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        and consciences of the people, who are disposed to look to them for
      
      
        guidance instead of looking to the word of God. The work of reform is
      
      
        often retarded because of this spirit indulged by its supporters. From
      
      
        this danger, God would guard the cause of the Reformation. He desired
      
      
        that work to receive, not the impress of man, but that of God. The eyes
      
      
        of men had been turned to Luther as the expounder of the truth; he was
      
      
        removed that all eyes might be directed to the eternal Author of truth.
      
      
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