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Luther's Rose
The Luther Rose

Dr. Martin Luthers Coat of Arms

Letter to Lazarus Spengler  July 8, 1530

>From Dr. Martin Luther at Coburg Castle

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.

>From the wilderness Grubok, July 8, 1530. (Grubok is Coburg spelled
backwards.)

Luthers Works, American Edition, Volume 49, pp. 356-359

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