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Martin Luther
(originally Martin Luder or Martinus Luther) (November
10,
1483 –
February 18,
1546)
was a
German
theologian of the
Christian religion and an
Augustinian
monk whose teachings inspired the
Protestant Reformation and deeply influenced the
doctrines of
Protestant and other Christian traditions (a broad movement
composed of many congregations and church bodies). His call to
the Church to return to the teachings of the
Bible
resulted in the formation of new traditions within Christianity
and his teachings undoubtedly impacted upon the
Counter-Reformation in the
Roman Catholic Church.
Luther made contributions in
fields beyond religion. His translation of the Bible helped to
develop a standard version of the
German language and added several principles to the art of
translation. Luther's
hymns
sparked anew the development of congregational singing in
Christianity. His marriage on
June 13,
1525
to
Katharina von Bora began the tradition of
clerical marriage within several Christian traditions.
Luther's early life
Martin Luther was born to Hans
and Margaretha Luder on
November 10,
1483
in
Eisleben,
Germany and was baptised on the feast day of
St. Martin of Tours, after whom he was named. His father
owned a
copper mine in nearby
Mansfeld. Having risen from the
peasantry, his father was determined to see his son ascend
to
civil service and bring further honor to the family. To that
end, Hans sent young Martin to schools in Mansfeld,
Magdeburg and
Eisenach.
At the age of seventeen in
1501
he entered the University of
Erfurt. The young student received a Bachelor's degree in
1502
and a Master's degree in
1505.
According to his father's wishes, Martin enrolled in the law
school of that university.
All that changed during a
thunderstorm in the summer of 1505. A lightning bolt struck near
to him as he was returning to school. Terrified, he cried out,
"Help, St. Anne! I'll become a monk!" [Brecht, vol. 1, p. 48].
Spared of his life, Luther left his law school and entered the
monastery there.
Luther's struggle to find
peace with God
Young Brother Martin fully
dedicated himself to monastic life, the effort to do good works
to please
God and to serve others through prayer for their souls. Yet
peace with God escaped him. He devoted himself to
fasts,
flagellations, long hours in
prayer and
pilgrimage, and constant
confession. The more he tried to do for God, it seemed, the
more aware he became of his sinfulness.
Johann von Staupitz[1] (http://newadvent.org/cathen/14283a.htm),
Luther's superior, concluded the young man needed more work to
distract him from excessive
rumination. He ordered the monk to pursue an academic
career. In
1507
Luther was ordained to the priesthood. In
1508
he began teaching
theology at the
University of Wittenberg. Luther earned his Bachelor's
degree in Biblical Studies on
March 9,
1508
and a Bachelor's degree in the
Sentences by
Peter Lombard (the main textbook of theology in the
Middle Ages), in
1509
[Brecht, Vol. 1, p. 93]. On
October 19,
1512,
the University of Wittenberg conferred upon Martin Luther the
degree of Doctor of Theology [Brecht, Vol. 1, pp. 126-27].
Luther's discovery of grace
The demands of study for
academic degrees and preparation for delivering lectures drove
Martin Luther to study the Scriptures in depth. Heeding the call
of
humanism ad fontes—"To the source"—he immersed
himself in the teachings of the Scripture and the early church.
Luther recounted that his great breakthrough came in
1513,
as he was lecturing on the
Psalms at Wittenberg. He realized that the phrase
"righteousness of God" in
Rom. 1:17 did not mean active righteousness, that by which
humans are adjudged righteous by God on the basis of their
works, but passive righteousness, by which humans receive
righteousness from God, who makes sinners just. Terms like
penance and
righteousness took on new meaning. Soon, Luther's study
of the Bible convinced him that the Church had lost sight of
several central truths. To Luther, the most important of these
was the doctrine of justification by faith alone.
With joy, Luther now believed
and taught that salvation is a gift of God's grace, received by
faith and trust in God's promise to forgive sins for the sake of
Christ's death on the cross.
The indulgence controversy
Luther's first public challenge
of papal power came in
1517,
over the selling of
indulgences. The question at hand was whether the Pope (or
any man besides Christ) had the power or authority
to apply the merits of Jesus Christ and the saints to those in
purgatory (as purgatory itself was not the doctrine in
question), thereby freeing them from the pains of purgatory.
Luther hated the practice,
since he believed that indulgences did nothing to save souls and
only lined the pockets of the clergy. Because they also
exonerated deeds not yet committed, they also encouraged
sin. He had taken a trip to
Rome
in 1510,
and was disgusted at the Papacy's greed and corruption.
In 1517,
Albert von Hohenzollern, Archbishop of Magdeburg and
Halberstadt wanted also the title of
Archbishop of Mainz (which brought with it much wealth and
the power of being a
Prince-Elector), but holding more than one
episcopal see was a violation of
canon law. Pope
Leo X,
needing money for the rebuilding of
St. Peter's Basilica, agreed that Albert could pay a fine
for the violation and keep both sees. Albert would borrow the
money to pay the pope, and would be allowed to repay the loan
using money from the sale of a special, plenary indulgence. The
Dominican friar
Johann Tetzel was enlisted to travel throughout Albert's
sees and sell the indulgences, and he was very successful at it.
Frederick the Wise,
Elector of Saxony and Luther's prince, owned a large
collection of
holy
relics which always attracted crowds to Wittenberg on All
Saints' Day (November
1), and Tetzel planned to be there too.
To
forestall him, on
October 31 Luther preached a sermon against indulgences and,
according to traditional accounts, posted the
95 Theses to the door of the castle's Church of All Saints
(the University's customary notice board) as an open invitation
to debate them. The Theses condemn the Church's greed and
worldliness (especially the selling of indulgences) as an abuse
and asked for a theological disputation. Soon they were widely
copied and printed; within two weeks they spread throughout
Germany, and within two months throughout Europe.
Response of the Papacy
After disregarding Luther as "a
drunken German who wrote the Theses; when sober he will change
his mind," Pope Leo X ordered the Dominican professor of
theology, Silvester Mazzolini, called from his birthplace
Prierio or
Prierias (also Prieras)[2] (http://newadvent.org/cathen/10095b.htm),
in 1518, to inquire into the matter. Prierias recognised
Luther's dangerous potential, declared him a heretic and wrote a
scholastic refutation of the Theses. It asserted papal authority
over the Catholic church, and denounced every departure from it
as a heresy. Luther replied in kind and a controversy developed.
Meanwhile Luther took part in
an Augustinian convention at Heidelberg, where he presented
theses on the slavery of man to sin and on divine grace. In the
course of the controversy on indulgences the question arose of
the absolute power of the pope, since the doctrine of the
"treasure of the Church" was based on a bull of Clement VI.
Luther saw himself branded as a heretic, and the pope, who had
determined to suppress his views, summoned him to Rome.
Yielding, however, to the
Elector Frederick, who was a candidate for the office of
Holy Roman Emperor, who was unwilling to part with his
theologian, the pope did not press the matter, and the cardinal
legate
Cajetan was deputed to receive Luther's submission at
Augsburg (Oct., 1518).
Luther, while professing his
implicit obedience to the Church, now boldly denied the absolute
power of the pope, and appealed first "from the pope not well
informed to the pope who should be better informed" and then
(Nov. 28) to a general
council. Luther now declared that the papacy formed no part
of the original and immutable essence of the Church, and he even
began to think that Antichrist ruled the Curia. He had already
asserted at least the potential fallibility of a council
representing the Church, and, denying the church doctrine of
excommunication, he was led by his concept of the way of
salvation to the new tenet that the Church is the congregation
of the faithful.
Still wishing to remain on
friendly terms with the elector, the pope made a last effort to
reach a peaceable conclusion with Luther. A conference with the
papal chamberlain
K. von Miltitz at
Altenburg in Jan., 1519, led Luther to agree to remain
silent so long as his opponents should, to write a humble letter
to the pope, and to prepare a work to testify his honor of the
Roman Church. The letter was written but not sent, since it
contained no retraction; while in a German treatise later
prepared, Luther, while recognizing purgatory, indulgences, and
the invocation of the saints, denied all effect of indulgences
on purgatory.
When
Johann Eck challenged Luther's colleague Carlstadt to a
disputation at
Leipzig, Luther joined in the debate (June 27-July 18,
1519). Here he denied the divine right of the papacy, and
holding that the "power of the keys" had been given to the
Church (i.e., to the congregation of the faithful), affirming
besides that belief in the preeminence of the Roman Church was
not essential to salvation and maintaining the validity of the
Greek Church. After the debate, Johann Eck would claim that he
had forced Luther to admit the similarity between Luther's
doctrine and that of
John Huss, who had been
burned at the stake.
Luther's thought develops
There was no longer hope of
peace. Luther's writings were now circulated most widely,
reaching France, England, and Italy as early as 1519, and
students thronged to Wittenberg to hear Luther, who had been
joined by
Melanchthon in 1518, and now published his shorter
commentary on Galatians and his Operationes in Psalmos,
while at the same time he received deputations from Italy and
from the Utraquists of Bohemia. These controversies necessarily
led Luther to develop his doctrines further, and in his
Sermon von dem hochwürdigen Sakrament des Leichnams Christi
(1519) he set forth the significance of the Eucharist,
interpreting the transubstantiation of the bread as the
transformation of the faithful into the spiritual body of
Christ, i.e., into fellowship with Christ and the Saints. The
basal concept of the Eucharist, moreover, according to him, is
the forgiveness of sins; and his entire theory is closely
connected with his view of the all-embracing participation in
salvation shared by the believer with Christ and his Church. At
the same time, he advocated that a council be called to restore
communion in both kinds, and denied the doctrine of seven
sacraments (letter of Dec. 18, 1519). He likewise stripped the
priesthood of all meaning other than the general priesthood
taught in the Bible, and cast doubt on the entire doctrine of
purgatory. The Lutheran concept of the Church, wholly based on
immediate relation to the Christ who gives himself in preaching
and the sacraments, was already developed in his Von dem
Papsttum zu Rom, a reply to the attack of the Franciscan
Alveld at Leipzig (June, 1520); while in his Sermon von
guten Werken, delivered in the spring of 1520, he
controverted the Roman Catholic doctrine of good works and works
of supererogation, holding that the works of the believer are
truly good in any secular calling ordered of God.
The three treatises of 1520
To the German Nobility
From the time of his
disputation at Leipzig, Luther came into relations with the
humanists, particularly with Melanchthon,
Reuchlin,
Erasmus, and
Crotur. The last was intimately associated with
Ulrich von Hutten who in his turn influenced
Franz von Sickingen, so that, when it became doubtful
whether it would be safe for Luther to remain in Saxony if the
ban which threatened should be pronounced against him, both
Franz von Sickingen and
Silvester of Schauenburg invited him to their fortresses and
their protection. Under these circumstances, complicated by the
crisis then confronting the German nobles, Luther issued his
To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation
(Aug., 1520), committing to the laity, as spiritual priests, the
reformation required by God but declined by the pope and the
clergy. The subjects proposed for amelioration were not points
of doctrine, but ecclesiastical abuser: diminution of the number
of cardinals and the demands of the papal court; the abolition
of annats (see Taxation, Ecclesiastical); recognition of secular
government; renunciation of claims to temporal power on the part
of the pope; abolition of the interdict, abuses connected with
the ban, harmful pilgrimages, the misdemeanors of the mendicant
orders, many holidays which led only to disorder; the
suppression of nunneries, beggary, and luxury; the reform of the
universities; abrogation of the celibacy of the clergy; and
reunion with the Bohemians; besides demanding a general reform
of public morality and denying transubstantiation as a
scholastic philosophic invention in favor of the literal meaning
of the Scriptural text of the true presence of the natural body
of Christ in the natural bread.
The Babylonian Captivity
The climax of Luther's
doctrinal polemics was reached in his Prelude on the
Babylonian Captivity of the Church, especially in regard
to the sacraments. As concerned the Eucharist, he denied
transubstantiation, the sacrificial character of the mass, and
the withholding of the cup or wine from the laity. In regard to
baptism, he taught that it brought justification only when
conjoined with belief, but that it remained a valid Christian
baptism in those who did not believe, but he recognized the lack
of belief prevented baptismal blessing from being received.. As
for penance, its essence consists in the words of promise given
to belief. Only these three can be regarded as sacraments, in
virtue of the promises attached to them; and strictly speaking
baptism and the Eucharist alone are sacraments, as being a “sign
divinely instituted.” with a physical element attached.
The sacrament of unction was discarded by Luther.
Freedom of a Christian
In like manner, the acme of
Luther's doctrine of salvation and the Christian life was
attained in his About the Freedom of a Christian.
Here he required complete union with Christ by means of the Word
through faith, entire freedom of the Christian as a priest and
king set above all outward things, and perfect love of one's
neighbor. The three works are considered among the chief
writings of Luther on the Reformation along with his Large and
Small Catechisms, the Smalcald Articles, and the Treatise on the
Power and Primacy of the Pope.
The excommunication of Luther
On
June 15,
1520,
the Pope warned Martin Luther with the
papal bull Exsurge Domine that he risked
excommunication lest he within 60 days recanted 41 points of
doctrine culled from his writings. In Oct., 1520, at the
instance of Miltitz, Luther sent his On the Freedom of a
Christian to the pope, adding the significant phrase: "I
submit to no laws of interpreting the word of God." Meanwhile it
had been rumored in August that Eck had arrived at Meissen with
a papal ban, which was actually pronounced there on
September 21. This last effort of Luther's for peace was
followed on
December 12 by his burning of the bull, which was to take
effect on the expiration of 120 days, and the papal decretals at
Wittenberg, a proceeding defended in his Warum des Papstes
und seiner Jünger Bücher verbrannt sind and his
Assertio omnium articulorum. The execution of the ban,
however, was prevented by the pope's relations with the elector
and by the new emperor, who, in view of the papal attitude
toward him and the feeling of the Diet, found it inadvisable to
lend his aid to measures against the Reformer. Subsequently, the
Pope excommunicated Luther on
January 3,
1521
in the bull Docet Romanum Pontificem.
Diet of Worms
Emperor Charles V opened the imperial
Diet of Worms on
22 January
1521.
Luther was summoned to renounce or reaffirm his views and was
given an imperial guarantee of safe-conduct to ensure his safe
passage. When he appeared before the assembly on
16 April, Johann Eck, an assistant of Archbishop of
Trier,
acted as spokesman for the Emperor. [Bainton, p. 141]. He
presented Luther with a table filled with copies of his
writings. Eck asked Luther if the books were his and if he still
believed what these works taught. Luther requested time to think
about his answer. It was granted.
Luther prayed, consulted with
friends and mediators and presented himself before the Diet the
next day. When the counselor put the same questions to Luther,
he said: "They are all mine, but as for the second question,
they are not all of one sort." Luther went on to say that some
of the works were well received by even his enemies. These he
would not reject.
A second class of the books
attacked the abuses, lies and desolation of the Christian world.
These, Luther believed, could not safely be rejected without
encouraging abuses to continue.
The third group contained
attacks on individuals. He apologized for the harsh tone of
these writings, but did not reject the substance of what he
taught in them. If he could be shown from the Scriptures that he
was in error, Luther continued, he would reject them. Otherwise,
he could not do so safely without encouraging abuse.
Counsellor Eck, after
countering that Luther had no right to teach contrary to the
Church through the ages, asked Luther to plainly answer the
question: Would Luther reject his books and the errors they
contain?
Luther replied: "Unless I am
convicted by Scripture and plain reason — I do not accept the
authority of popes and councils, for they have contradicted each
other — my conscience is captive to the Word of God. I cannot
and will not recant anything, for to go against conscience is
neither right nor safe."
According to tradition, Luther
is then said to have spoken these words: "Here I stand. I can do
no other. God help me. Amen." [Bainton, pp. 142-144].
Private conferences were held
to determine Luther's fate. Before a decision was reached,
Luther left Worms. During his return to Wittenberg, he
disappeared.
The Emperor issued the
Edict of Worms on
May
25, 1521, declaring Martin Luther an
outlaw and a
heretic and banning his literature.
Exile at the Wartburg Castle
Luther's disappearance during
his return trip was planned. Frederick the Wise arranged for
Luther to be seized on his way from the Diet by a company of
masked horsemen, who carried him to
Wartburg Castle at Eisenach, where he stayed for about a
year. He grew a wide flaring beard, took on the garb of a
knight, and assumed the pseudonym Jörg (George). During this
period of forced sojourn in the world, Luther was still hard at
work upon his celebrated translation of the
New Testament, though he couldn't rely on the isolation of a
monastery.
With Luther's residence in the
Wartburg began the constructive period of his career as a
reformer; while at the same time the struggle was inaugurated
against those who, claiming to proceed from the same Evangelical
basis, were deemed by him to swing to the opposite extreme and
to hinder, if not prevent, all constructive measures. In his
"desert" or "Patmos" (as he called it in his letters) of the
Wartburg, moreover, he began his translation of the Bible, of
which the New Testament was printed in Sept., 1522. Here, too,
besides other pamphlets, he prepared the first portion of his
German postilla and his Von der Beichte, in which
he denied compulsory confession, although he admitted the
wholesomeness of voluntary private confessions. He also wrote a
polemic against Archbishop Albrecht, which forced him to desist
from reopening the sale of indulgences; while in his attack on
Jacobus Latomus he set forth his views on the relation of grace
and the law, as well as on the nature of the grace communicated
by Christ. Here he distinguished the objective grace of God to
the sinner, who, believing, is justified by God because of the
justice of Christ, from the saving grace dwelling within sinful
man; while at the same time he emphasized the insufficiency of
this "beginning of justification," as well as the persistence of
sin after baptism and the sin still inherent in every good work.
Although his stay at Wartburg
kept Luther hidden from public view, Luther often received
letters from his friends and allies, asking for his views and
advice. For example,
Philipp Melanchthon wrote to him and asked how to answer the
charge that the reformers neglected pilgrimages, fasts and other
traditional forms of piety. Luther's replied: "If you are a
preacher of mercy, do not preach an imaginary but the true
mercy. If the mercy is true, you must therefore bear the true,
not an imaginary sin. God does not save those who are only
imaginary sinners. Be a sinner, and let your sins be strong, but
let your trust in Christ be stronger, and rejoice in Christ who
is the victor over sin, death, and the world. We will commit
sins while we are here, for this life is not a place where
justice resides. We, however, says Peter (2. Peter 3:13) are
looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth where justice
will reign." [Letter 99.13, To Philipp Melanchthon, 1
August 1521.]
[3]
Meanwhile some of the Saxon
clergy, notably
Bernhardi of Feldkirchen, had renounced the vow of celibacy,
while others, including Melanchthon, had assailed the validity
of monastic vows. Luther in his De votis monasticis,
though more cautious, concurred, on the ground that the vows
were generally taken "with the intention of salvation or seeking
justification." With the approval of Luther in his De
abroganda missa privata, but against the firm opposition
of the prior, the Wittenberg Augustinians began changes in
worship and did away with the mass. Their violence and
intolerance, however, were displeasing to Luther, and early in
December he spent a few days among them. Returning to the
Wartburg, he wrote his Eine treue Vermahnung . . . vor
Aufruhr und Empörung; but in Wittenberg Carlstadt and the
ex-Augustinian
Zwilling demanded the abolition of the private mass,
communion in both kinds, the removal of pictures from churches,
and the abrogation of the magistracy
About Christmas Anabaptists
from Zwickau added to the anarchy. Thoroughly opposed to such
radical views and fearful of their results, Luther entered
Wittenberg Mar. 7, and the Zwickau prophets left the city. The
canon of the mass, giving it its sacrificial character, was now
omitted, but the cup was at first given only to those of the
laity who desired it. Since confession had been abolished,
communicants were now required to declare their intention, and
to seek consolation, under acknowledgment of their faith and
longing for grace, in Christian confession. This new form of
service was set forth by Luther in his Formula missæ et
communionis (1523), and in 1524 the first Wittenberg
hymnal appeared with four of his own hymns. Since, however, his
writings were forbidden in that part of Saxon ruled by
Duke George, Luther declared, in his Ueber die
weltliche Gewalt, wie weit man ihr Gehorsam schuldig sei,
that the civil authority could enact no laws for the soul,
herein denying to a Roman Catholic government what he permitted
an Evangelical.
The Peasants' War
The
Peasants' War (1524-1525) was in many ways a response to the
preaching of Luther and other reformers. Revolts by the
peasantry had existed on a small scale since the 14th century,
but many peasants mistakenly believed that Luther's attack on
the Church and its hierarchy meant that the reformers would
support an attack on the social hierarchy as well. Because of
the close ties between the hereditary nobility and the princes
of the Church that Luther condemned, this is not surprising.
Revolts that broke out in Swabia, Franconia, and Thuringia in
1524
gained support among peasants and some disaffected nobles.
Gaining momentum and a new leader in
Thomas Münzer, the revolts turned into an all-out war, the
experience of which played an important role in the founding of
the
Anabaptist movement. Initially, Luther seemed to many to
support the peasants, condemning the oppressive practices of the
nobility that had incited many of the peasants. As the war
continued, and especially as atrocities at the hands of the
peasants increased, Luther came out forcefully against the
revolt. In
Against the Murderous, Thieving Hordes of Peasants (1525),
he encouraged the nobility to visit swift and bloody punishment
upon the peasants. Many of the revolutionaries considered
Luther's words a betrayal. Others withdrew once they realized
that there was neither support from the Church nor from its main
opponent. The war in Germany ended in 1525, when rebel forces
were put down by the armies of the
Swabian League.
Luther's German Bible
Luther translated the
New Testament into German to make it more accessible to the
commoners and erode the influence of priests. He used the recent
critical Greek edition of
Erasmus, a text which was later called textus receptus.
During his translation, he would make forays into the nearby
towns and markets to hear people speak, so that he could write
his translation in the language of the people. It was published
in 1522.
His first full Bible
translation into German, including the
Old Testament, was published in
1534.
As mentioned earlier, Luther's translation work helped
standardize German and are considered landmarks in German
literature.
Luther chose to omit parts of
the Old Testament that were found in the Greek
Septuagint but not in the Hebrew
Masoretic texts then available. These were included in his
earliest translation, but later removed. Those
Old Testament exclusions were eventually omitted by nearly
all Protestants, and are known in Protestant circles as the
Apocrypha. See
Biblical canon.
The Small and Large Catechisms
In
1529,
Frederick asked Luther to tour the local churches to determine
the quality of the peasants' Christian education. Luther wrote
in the preface to the Small
Catechism, "Mercy! Good God! what manifold misery I beheld!
The common people, especially in the villages, have no knowledge
whatever of Christian doctrine, and, alas! many pastors are
altogether incapable and incompetent to teach." In response,
Luther prepared the Small and Large Catechisms. They are
instructional and devotional material on what Luther considered
the fundamentals of the Christian faith, namely the
Ten Commandments; the
Apostle's Creed; the
Lord's Prayer;
Baptism; and the
Eucharist. The Small Catechism was supposed to be read by
the people themselves, the Large Catechism by the pastors.
The two catechisms are still
popular instructional materials among Lutherans.
Luther's writings
The number of books attributed
to Martin Luther is nothing short of impressive. His books
explain the settings of the epistles and show the conformity of
the books of the Bible to each other. Of special note would be
his writings about the Epistle to the Galatians in which he
compares himself to the
Apostle Paul in his defense of the Gospel (for example the
faith-building commentary in Luther and the Epistle to the
Galatians). Luther also wrote about church administration
and wrote much about the Christian home.
Luther's writing was very
polemical, and when he was passionate about a subject he would
often insult his opponents. In the preface to De Servo
Arbitrio (The Bondage of the Will), a response to
Erasmus's Diatribe seu collatio de libero arbitrio (Discussion,
or Collation, concerning free will), Luther writes, "your
book ... struck me as so worthless and poor that my heart went
out to you for having defiled your lovely, brilliant flow of
language with such vile stuff. I thought it outrageous to convey
material of so low a quality in the trappings of such rare
eloquence; it is like using gold or silver dishes to carry
garden rubbish or dung." Luther was quite intolerant of others'
beliefs, and this may have exacerbated the German Reformation.
Luther's work contains a number
of statements that modern readers would consider rather crude.
It should be remembered that Luther received many communications
from throughout Europe from people who could write anonymously,
that is, without the spectre of mass media making their
communications known. No public figure today could write in the
manner of the correspondences Luther received or in the way
Luther responded to them. Opinions today can be immediately
shared electronically with a wide audience. At least one such
statement would not be heard from most modern pastors: He
regularly told the Devil to kiss his ass.
Martin Luther and Judaism
Luther initially preached
tolerance towards the
Jewish
people, convinced that the reason they had never converted to
Christianity was that they were discriminated against, or had
never heard the Gospel of Christ. However, after his overtures
to Jews failed to convince Jewish people to adopt Christianity,
he began preaching that the Jews were set in evil,
anti-Christian ways, and needed to be expelled from the German
body politic. In his On the Jews and Their Lies, he
repeatedly quotes the words of Jesus in Matthew 12:34, where
Jesus called the Jewish religious leaders (Pharisees)
of his day "a brood of vipers and children of the devil". In the
book written three years before his death, he listed seven
recommendations to deal with the Jews:
- I shall give you my
sincere advice: First, to set fire to their synagogues or
schools and to bury and cover with dirt whatever will not
burn, so that no man will ever again see a stone or cinder
of them....
- Second, I advise that
their houses also be razed and destroyed. For they pursue in
them the same aims as in their synagogues. Instead they
might be lodged under a roof or in a barn, like the
gypsies....
- Third, I advise that all
their prayer books and Talmudic writings, in which such
idolatry, lies, cursing, and blasphemy are taught, be taken
from them.
- Fourth, I advise that
their rabbis be forbidden to teach henceforth on pain of
loss of life and limb. ...
- Fifth, I advise that
safe-conduct on the highways be abolished completely for the
Jews. ...
- Sixth, I advise that usury
be prohibited to them, and that all cash and treasure of
silver and gold be taken from them and put aside for
safekeeping. ...
- Seventh, I recommend
putting a flail, an ax, a hoe, a spade, a distaff, or a
spindle into the hands of young, strong Jews and Jewesses
and letting them earn their bread in the sweat of their
brow, as was imposed on the children of Adam (Gen. 3:19).
...
In spite of these seven
recommendations, he added:
- ... But if we are afraid
that they might harm us or our wives, children, — servants,
cattle, etc., if they had to serve and work for us — for it
is reasonable to assume that such noble lords of the world
and venomous, bitter worms are not accustomed to working and
would be very reluctant to humble themselves so deeply
before the accursed Goyim — then let us emulate the common
sense of other nations such as France, Spain, Bohemia, etc.,
compute with them how much their usury has extorted from us,
divide this amicably, but then eject them forever from the
country. For, as we have heard, God's anger with them is so
intense that gentle mercy will only tend to make them worse
and worse, while sharp mercy will reform them but little.
Therefore, in any case, away with them!
Luther's harsh comments about
the Jews are seen by many as a continuation of medieval
Christian
anti-Semitism, and as the above quote shows, reflects
earlier anti-Semitic expulsions in the
14th century, when Jews from other countries like France and
Spain were invited into Germany.
In 1983,
the
Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod made an official statement
([4] (http://www.lcms.org/pages/internal.asp?NavID=2166))
disassociating themselves from Luther's anti-Semitic statements.
Luther's death
Luther died in Eisleben, the
same town where he was born, on 18 February, 1546.
"Know that no one can have
indulged in the Holy Writers sufficiently, unless he has
governed churches for a hundred years with the prophets, such as
Elijah and
Elisha,
John the Baptist, Christ, and the
apostles ... We are beggars: this is true." [The Last
Written Words of Luther][5] (http://www.iclnet.org/pub/resources/text/wittenberg/luther/beggars.txt)
Rev.
David D.Reedy, 2005
This article is presented as
adapted by
permission from an article by the title Martin Luther on
Widipedia, a free online encyclopedia. The
original article was downloaded March 19,2005.