Martin Luther

| Martin Luther (1483-1546)
stands in history as one of those unique forces, an individual who by force
of will and by his ideas changed the world fundamentally. There are several
ironies incumbent on Luther's pivotal role in history: 1) he doesn't really
represent a break with the past, but rather a flash point where ideas and
trends which had been smoldering in Europe for several centuries suddenly
blazed aflame; 2) Luther initially saw himself as a great reformer of the
Catholic church, a simple monk who thought the force of his ideas would
single-handedly redirect the Leviathan of the church; in the end, however,
he divided Christianity into two separate churches and that second division,
Protestantism, would divide over the next four centuries into a near
infinity of separate churches; 3) finally, Luther (and all the other
reformers) saw themselves as returning Christianity to its roots, they
believed that they were setting the clock back; in reality, their ideas
irreparably changed the world and pushed it kicking and screaming, not into
some ideal past, but into the modern era. Luther was not a person you would want to have dinner with; he was temperamental, peevish, egomaniacal, and argumentative. But this single-mindedness, this enormous self-confidence and strident belief in the rightness of his arguments, allowed him to stand against opposition, indeed, to harden his position in the face of death by fire, the usual punishment for heretics. Luther became an Augustinian monk in 1505, disappointing his equally strong-willed father, who wished him to become a lawyer. He earned a doctorate in theology from the University of Wittenberg, but instead of settling down to a placid and scholarly monkish life or an uneventful university career teaching theology, he began to develop his own personal theology, which erupted into outright blasphemy when he protested the use of indulgences in his 95 Theses. Indulgences, which were granted by
the pope, forgave individual sinners not their sins, but the temporal
punishment applied to those sins. These indulgences had become big business
in much the same way pledge drives have become big business for public
television in modern America. Luther's Theses, which outlined his
theological argument against the use of indulgences, were based on the
notion that Christianity is fundamentally a phenomenon of the inner world of
human beings and had little or nothing to do with the outer world, such as
temporal punishments. It is this fundamental argument, not the controversy
of the indulgences themselves, that most people in the church disapproved of
and that led to Luther's being hauled into court in 1518 to defend his
arguments against the cardinal Cajetan. When the interview focused on the
spiritual value of "good works," that is, the actions that people do in this
world to benefit others and to pay off the debts they've incurred against
God by sinning, Cajetan lost his temper and demanded that Luther recant.
Luther ran, and his steady scission from the church was set in motion. The
Northern Humanists, however, embraced Luther and his ideas.
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In a more conciliatory effort, Luther wrote a letter to Pope Leo explaining the
substance of his ideas, Von der Freiheit des
His Works
Luther_Galatians "Luther's Commentary on Galatians"
LUTHER_LARGECATECHISM "Martin Luther's Large Catechism"
LUTHER_ROMANS "Luther, Martin- Preface to Romans"