25. MARTIN LUTHER 1483 - 1546.
Luther's
grievances against the Church arose gradually. In 1510, he had taken a trip to Rome, and had been shocked at the
venality and worldliness of the Roman clergy. But the immediate issue that stimulated his protest was the Church practice of selling indulgences. (An indulgence was a remission, granted by the Church, of the penalties for sin; it might include a reduction of the time that a sinner would have to
spend in purgatory.) On October 31, 1517, Luther posted on the door of the
church at Wattenberg his celebrated Ninety-five Theses, in which he strongly
denounced Church venality in general, and the practice of selling indulgences
in particular. Luther sent a copy of his Ninety-five Theses to the Archbishop
of Main z. In addition, the Theses were printed, and copies were widely
distributed in the area.
venality and worldliness of the Roman clergy. But the immediate issue that stimulated his protest was the Church practice of selling indulgences. (An indulgence was a remission, granted by the Church, of the penalties for sin; it might include a reduction of
The scope
of Luther's protests against the Church rapidly broadened, and he soon came to
deny the authority of the Pope, and of general Church councils, insisting that
he would be guided only by the Bible and by plain reason. Not surprisingly,
the Church did not look kindly upon these views. Luther was summoned to appear
before Church officials, and after various hearing and orders to recant, he was finally pronounced a heretic and
an outlaw by the Diet of Worms (1521), and his writings were proscribed.
The
normal outcome would have been for Luther to be burned at the stake. However, his
views had found widespread support among the German people, and among quite a
few of the German princes. Though Luther had to go into hiding for a period of
about a year, his support in Germany was strong enough to enable him to avoid
any serious criminal penalties.
Luther was a prolific author, and
many of his writings proved widely influential. One of his most important works
was a translation of the Bible into German. This, of course, made it possible
for any literate person to study the Scriptures himself, without relying on the
Church or its priests. (Incidentally, the superb prose of Luther's translation
had an enormous influence on German language and literature.)
Luther's theology, of course, cannot
be fully described in a short space. One of
his key ideas was the doctrine of justification by faith alone, an idea
derived from the writings of St. Paul. Luther believed that man was by nature
so tarnished with sin that good works alone could not save him from eternal damnation. Salvation comes only through faith, and only by the grace of God.
If this were so, it was obvious that the Church practice of selling indulgences was improper and
ineffective. Indeed, the traditional view
that the Church was the necessary mediator between the individual
Christian and God was in error. If one followed Luther's doctrines,
the whole raison
d'etre of the Roman Catholic Church was wiped
out at a stroke.
In
addition to questioning the essential role of the Church, Luther also protested against a variety of
specific Church beliefs and
practices. For example, he denied the existence of purgatory, and he
denied that the clergy should be celibate. He himself, in 1525, married a former nun, and they had six
children together. Luther died in 1546 while on a visit to his home town
of Eisleben.
Martin Luther, of course, was not the
first Protestant thinker. He had been preceded a century earlier by Jan Hus in
Bohemia, and by the fourteenth-century English scholar John Wycliffe. Indeed,
the twelfth-century Frenchman Peter Waldo might well be considered an early
Protestant. But the effect of each of those earlier movements had been
basically local.
Luther nails the Ninety-five Theses to the door of the church at Wattenberg.
By 1517, however, discontent with the
Catholic Church was so common that Luther's words promptly ignited a chain of
protests that spread rapidly through a large part of Europe. Luther, therefore,
is rightly considered to be the
man chiefly responsible for the commencement of the Reformation.
man chiefly responsible for the commencement of the Reformation.
The most
obvious consequence of the Reformation, of course, is the formation of the
various Protestant sects. While Protestantism is only one branch of
Christianity, and not the most numerous branch at that, it still has more
adherents than Buddhism, or, in fact, than most other religions.
A second
important consequence of the Reformation was the widespread religious warfare
in Europe which followed it. Some of these religious wars (for example, the
Thirty Years' War in Germany, which lasted from 1618 to 1648) were incredibly
bloody. Even aside from the wars, political conflicts between Catholics and
Protestants were to play a major role in European politics for the next few
centuries.
The
Reformation also played a subtle but very important role in the intellectual
development of western Europe. Before 1517, there had been a single established
church, the Roman Catholic Church, and dissenters were branded as heretics.
Such an atmosphere was certainly not conducive to independent thinking. After
the Reformation, as various countries accepted the principle of freedom of
religious thought, it became safer to speculate on other subjects as well.
Another point is
perhaps worth noting. More persons on this
list come from Great Britain than from any other country. Germans are the next
most numerous people. Indeed, the list as a whole is strongly dominated by
persons coming from the Protestant countries of northern Europe and America.
However, one notices that only two of those persons (Gutenberg and Charlemagne)
lived before 1517. Prior to that date, most of the persons on this list came
from other parts of the world, and the peoples living in what are now
Protestant countries made a comparatively small contribution to human culture
and history. This obviously suggests
that Protestantism or the Reformation may in some way be responsible for the fact that there
have been such a large number of eminent persons from these regions in
the last 450 years.
Perhaps the greater intellectual
freedom existing in these areas has been an important factor.
Luther
was not without his faults. Though himself a rebel against religious authority,
he could be extremely intolerant of those who disagreed with him on religious
matters. Possibly, it was partly due to the
example set by Luther's intolerance that the religious wars were far
fiercer and bloodier in Germany than they were, say, in England. In addition,
Luther was ferociously anti Semitic, and the extraordinary viciousness of his
writings about the Jews may have helped to pave the way for the Hitler era in
twentieth-century Germany.
Luther frequently stressed the importance of obedience to
lawful civil authority. Probably, his principal motivation for this was his
objection to the Church's interfering in civil government. (It should be borne
in mind that the Reformation was not just a theological dispute. To a
considerable extent, it was a nationalist German revolt against the influence
of Rome, and it was partly for this reason that Luther received so much support
from German princes.) Regardless of Luther's intentions, however, his
statements seem to have led many German Protestants to accept absolutism in
political matters. In this way, too, Luther's writings may have helped prepare
the way for the Hitler era.
Some people may question why Martin Luther is not placed
even higher on this list. In the first place, although Luther may seem very
important to Europeans and Americans, he seems far less important to the
inhabitants of Asia and Africa, relatively few of whom are Christians. As far as most Chinese,
Japanese, or Indians are
concerned, the differences between Catholics and Protestants are quite
insignificant. (Similarly, not many Europeans are interested in the differences between the Sunni
and the Shiite branches
of Islam.) In the second place, Luther is a comparatively recent figure in
history, and has influenced a much smaller span of human history than have
Muhammad, Buddha, or Moses. Furthermore, during the past few centuries
religious belief has been declining in the West, and the influence of religion
on human affairs is likely to be far smaller during the next thousand years
than it was during the preceding thousand. If religious belief continues to
decline, Luther is apt to appear far less important to future historians than
he does today.
Finally, one should remember that the religious disputes
of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries did not, in the long run, affect as
many persons as did the scientific advances which occurred during the same
period. That is the main reason why Luther has been ranked behind Copernicus (who was his
contemporary), even
though Luther played a larger individual role in the Protestant Reformation than Copernicus played
in the scientific revolution.
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