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e sentence: "Debet autem ad haec dona [Dei] accedere exercitatio nostra, quae et _conservat_ ea et meretur incrementum, iuxta illud: Habenti dabitur. Et Augustinus praeclare dixit: Dilectio meretur incrementum dilectionis, cum videlicet exercetur." (311.) 34. Alterations Render Confession Ambiguous. True in making all these changes, Melanchthon did not introduce any direct heresy into the Variata. He did, however, in the interest of his irenic and unionistic policy and dogmatic vacillations, render ambiguous and weaken the clear sense of the Augustana. By his changes he opened the door and cleared the way, as it were, for his deviations in the direction of Synergism, Calvinism (Lord's Supper), and Romanism (good works are necessary to salvation). Nor was Melanchthon a man who did not know what he was doing when he made alterations. Whenever he weakened and trimmed the doctrines he had once confessed, whether in his _Loci_ or in the Augustana, he did so in order to satisfy definite interests of his own, interests self-evidently not subservient to, but conflicting with, the clear expression and bold confession of the old Lutheran truth. Kolde, referring in particular to the changes made in the 10th Article, says: "It should never have been denied that these alterations involved real changes. The motives which actuated Melanchthon cannot be definitely ascertained, neither from his own expressions nor from contemporary remarks of his circle of acquaintances" [As late as 1575 Selneccer reports that Philip of Hesse had asked Melanchthon to erase the _improbatio_ of the 10th Article, because then also the Swiss would accept the Augustana as their confession]. "A comparison with the Wittenberg Concord of May, 1536 (_cum pane et vino vere et substantialiter adesse_--that the body and blood [of Christ] are really and substantially present with the bread and wine, _C. R._ 3, 75) justifies the assumption that by using the form: _cum pane et vino vere exhibeantur,_ he endeavored to take into account the existing agreement with the South Germans (_Oberlaender_). However, when, at the same time, he omits the words: _vere et substantialiter adesse,_ and the _improbatio,_ it cannot, in view of his gradually changed conception of the Lord's Supper, be doubted that he sought to leave open for himself and others the possibility of associating also with the Swiss." (25.) An adequate answer to the question what prompted Melanchthon to
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