Here is Luther on the obedience of faith
Faith receives, love gives. Faith leads people to God, love leads people to others. In faith a person lets God do good to them; in love a person does good to others. For he who believes has all things from God, and he is blessed and rich. Therefore he needs nothing more, but devotes his life and work to the good and welfare of other people. In love he does for his fellow people what God has done for him in faith - as though by faith he draws upon the good from above and by love he distributes good here below.
In a remarkable and readable book, Faith Victorious, the Finnish Lutheran scholar Lennart Pinomaa introduces the spiritual theology of the great Reformer. Here's Pinomaa's comment on Luther's view of the obedience of faith
While Catholicism looked upon sanctification as a continuous activity on man's part, as cultivation of self, as 'school', Luther saw it theocentrically: God does everything. Man's struggle is a struggle for faith, not for works. Faith involves the total man totally. faith cannot result in inactivity, for it lives by God's judgement and grace, which in turn give rise to the activity of faith. If something is lacking, it at once becomes a matter of faith. The activity of faith in the service of others; the other person is therefore an inseparable part of aith. The aim of faith can never be merely one's own salvation.
Both quotes from Faith Victorious.An Introduction to Luther's Theology. (Lima, Ohio: Academic Renewal Press 2001), 75, 77.
To use the modern grammatical oddity -that is so not wrong!
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