Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
Martin Luther
Leader of the great religious revolt of the sixteenth century in Germany; born at Eisleben, 10 November, 1483; died at Eisleben, 18 February, 1546.
His father, Hans, was a miner, a rugged, stern, irascible character. In the
opinion of many of his biographers, it was an expression of uncontrolled rage,
an evident congenital inheritance transmitted to his oldest son, that compelled
him to flee from Mohra, the family seat, to escape the penalty or odium of
homicide. This, though first charged by Wicelius, a convert from Lutheranism,
has found admission into Protestant history and tradition. His mother, Margaret
Ziegler, is spoken of by Melancthon as conspicuous for modesty, the fear of God,
and prayerfulness
(Corpus Reformatorum
, Halle, 1834). Extreme simplicity and
inflexible severity characterized their home life, so that the joys of childhood
were virtully unknown to him. His father once beat him so mercilessly that he
ran away from home and was so embittered against him that he had to win me to
himself again.
His mother, on account of an insignificant nut, beat me till
the blood flowed, and it was this harshness and severity of the life I led with
them that forced me subsequently to run away to a monastery and become a monk.
The same cruelty was the experience of his earliest school-days, when in one
morning he was punished no less than fifteen times. The meager data of his life
at this period make it a work of difficulty to reconstruct his childhood. His
schooling at Mansfeld, whither his parents had returned, was uneventful. He
attended a Latin school, in which the Ten Commandments, Child's Belief
, the
Lord's Prayer, the Latin grammar of Donatus were taught, and which he learned
quickly. In his fourteenth year (1497) he entered a school at Magdeburg, where,
in the words of his first biographer, like many children of honourable and
well-to-do parents, he sang and begged for bread - panem propter Deum
(Mathesius, op.cit.). In his fifteenth year we find him at Eisenach. At eighteen
(1501) he entered the University of Erfurt, with a view to studying
jurisprudence at the request of his father. In 1502 he received the degree of
Bachelor of Philosophy, being the thirteenth among fifty-seven candidates. On
Epiphany (6 January, 1505), he was advanced to the master's degree, being second
among seventeen applicants. His philosophical studies were no doubt made under
Jodocus Trutvetter von Eisenach, then rector of the university, and Bartholomaus
Arnoldi von Usingen. The former was pre-eminently the Doctor Erfordiensis, and
stood without an admitted rival in Germany. Luther addresses him in a letter
(1518) as not only the first theologian and philosopher
, but also the first of
contemporary dialecticians. Usingen was an Augustinian friar, and second only to
Trutvetter in learning, but surpassing him in literary productivity. Although
the tone of the university, especially that of the students, was pronouncedly,
even enthusiastically, humanistic, and although Erfurt led the movement in
Germany, and in its theological tendencies was supposedly modern
, nevertheless
it nowise showed a depreciation of the currently prevailing [Scholastic] system
(ibid.). Luther himself, in spite of an acquaintaince with some of the moving
spirits of humanism, seems not to have been appreciably affected by it, lived on
its outer fringe, and never qualified to enter its poetic
circle.
Luther's sudden and unexpected entrance into the Augustinian monastery at
Erfurt occurred 17 July, 1505. The motives that prompted the step are various,
conflicting, and the subject of considerable debate. He himself alleges, as
above stated, that the brutality of his home and school life drove him into the
monastery. Hausrath, his latest biographer and one of the most scholarly Luther
specialists, unreservedly inclines to this belief. The house at Mansfeld rather
repelled than attracted him
(Beard, Martin Luther and the Germ. Ref.
, London,
1889, 146), and to the question 'Why did Luther go into the monastery?', the
reply that Luther himself gives is the most satisfactory
(Hausrath, Luthers
Leben
I, Berlin, 1904, 2, 22). He himself again, in a letter to his father, in
explanation of his defection from the Old Church, writes, When I was
terror-stricken and overwhelmed by the fear of impending death, I made an
involuntary and forced vow
. Various explanations are given of this episode.
Melancthon ascribes his step to a deep melancholy, which attained a critical
point when at one time he lost one of his comrades by an accidental death
(Corp. Ref., VI, 156). Cochlaeus, Luther's opponent, relates that at one time
he was so frightened in a field, at a thunderbolt as is commonly reported, or
was in such anguish at the loss of a companion, who was killed in the storm,
that in a short time to the amazement of many persons he sought admission to the
Order of St. Augustine
. Mathesius, his first biographer, attributes it to the
fatal stabbing of a friend and a terrible storm with a thunderclap
(op.cit.)
Seckendorf, who made careful research, following Bavarus (Beyer), a pupil of
Luther, goes a step farther, calling this unknown friend Alexius, and ascribes
his death to a thunderbolt (Seckendorf, Ausfuhrliche Historie des Lutherthums
,
Leipzig, 1714,51). D'Aubigné changes this Alexius into Alexis and has him
assassinated at Erfurt (D'Aubigné, History of the Reformation
, New York, s.d.,
I, 166). Oerger (Vom jungen Luther
, Erfurt, 1899, 27-41) has proved the
existence of this friend, his name of Alexius or Alexis, his death by lightning
or assassination, a mere legend, destitute of all historical verification.
Kostlin-Kawerau (I,45) states that returning from his Mansfeld home he was
overtaken by a terrible storm, with an alarming lightning flash and thunderbolt.
Terrified and overwhelmed he cries out: 'Help, St. Anna, I will be a monk'.
The inner history of the change is far less easy to narrate. We have no direct
contemporary evidence on which to rely; while Luther's own reminiscences, on
which we chiefly depend, are necessarily coloured by his later experiences and
feelings
(Beard, op.cit., 146).
Of Luther's monastic life we have little authentic information, and that is
based on his own utterances, which his own biographers frankly admit are highly
exaggerated, frequently contradictory, and commonly misleading. Thus the alleged
custom by which he was forced to change his baptismal name Martin into the
monastic name Augustine, a proceeding he denounces as wicked
and
sacrilegious
, certainly had no existence in the Augustinian Order. His
accidental discovery in the Erfurt monastery library of the Bible, a book he
had never seen in his life
(Mathesius, op. cit.), or Luther's assertion that he
had never seen a Bible until he was twenty years of age
, or his still more
emphatic declaration that when Carlstadt was promoted to the doctorate he had
as yet never seen a Bible and I alone in the Erfurt monastery read the Bible
,
which, taken in their literal sense, are not only contrary to demonstrable facts,
but have perpetuated misconception, bear the stamp of improbability written in
such obtrusive characters on their face, that it is hard, on an honest
assumption, to account for their longevity. The Augustinian rule lays especial
stress on the monition that the novice read the Scripture assiduously, hear it
devoutly, and learn it fervently
(Constitutiones Ordinis Fratr. Eremit. Sti.
Augustini, Rome, 1551, cap. xvii). At this very time Biblical studies were in a
flourishing condition at the university, so that its historian states that it
is astonishing to meet such a great number of Biblical commentaries, which force
us to conclude that theres an active study of Holy Writ
(Kampschulte, op.cit.,
I, 22). Protestant writers of repute have abandoned this legend altogether.
Parenthetical mention must be made of the fact that the denunciation heaped on
Luther's novice-master by Mathesius, Ratzeberger, and Jurgens, and copied with
uncritical docility by their transcribers - for subjecting him to the most
abject menial duties and treating him with outrageous indignity - rests on no
evidence. These writers are evidently led by hearsay, and follow the legendary
stories that have been spun about the person of the reformer
(Oerger, op.cit.,
80). The nameless novice-master, whom even Luther designates as an excellent
man, and without doubt even under the damned cowl, a true Christian,
must have
been a worthy representative of his order
(Oerger, op.cit.).
Luther was ordained to the priesthood in 1507. The precise date is uncertain. A strange oversight, running through three centuries, placed the date of his ordination and first Mass on the same day, 2 May, an impossible coincidence. Kostlin, who repeated it (Luther's Leben, I, 1883, 63) drops the date altogether in his latest edition. Oerger fixes on 27 February. This allows the unprecedented interval of more than two months to elapse between the ordination and first Mass. Could he have deferred his first Mass on account of the morbid scrupulosity, which played such a part in the later periods of his monastic life?
There is no reason to doubt that Luther's monastic career thus far was
exemplary, tranquil, happy; his heart at rest, his mind undisturbed, his soul at
peace. The metaphysical disquisitions, psychological dissertations, pietistic
maunderings about his interior conflicts, his theological wrestlings, his
torturing asceticism, his chafing under monastic conditions, can have little
more than an academic, possibly a psychopathic value. They lack all basis of
verifiable data. Unfortunately Luther himself in his self-revelation can hardly
be taken as a safe guide. Moreover, with an array of evidence, thoroughness of
research, fullness of knowledge, and unrivalled mastery of monasticism,
scholasticism, and mysticism, Denifle has removed it from the domain of
debatable ground to that of verifiable certainty. What Adolf Hausrath has done
in an essay for the Protestant side, was accentuated and confirmed with all
possible penetration by Denifle; the young Luther according to his
self-revelation is unhistorical; he was not the discontented Augustinian, nagged
by the monastic life, perpetually tortured by his conscience, fasting, praying,
mortified, and emaciated - no, he was happy in the monastery, he found peace
there, to which he turned his back only later
(Kohler, op.cit., 68-69).
During the winter of 1508-09 he was sent to the University of Wittenberg, then in its infancy (founded 2 July, 1502), with an enrolment of one hundred and seventy-nine students. The town itself was a poor insignificant place, with three hundred and fifty-six taxable properties, and accredited the most bibulous town of the most bibulous province (Saxony) of Germany. While teaching philosophy and dialectics he also continued his theological studies. On 9 March, 1509, under the deanship of Staupitz, he became Baccalaureus Biblicus in the theological course, as a stepping-stone to the doctorate. His recall to Erfurt occurred the same year.
His mission to Rome, extending over an estimated period of five months, one
of which he spent in the city of Rome, which played so important a part in his
early biographies, and even now is far from a negligible factor in Reformation
research, occurred in 1511, or, as some contend, 1510. Its true object has thus
far baffled all satisfactory investigation. Mathesius makes him go from
Wittenberg on monastic business
; Melancthon attributes it to a monkish
squabble
; Cochlaeus, and he is in the main followed by Catholic investigators,
makes him appear as the delegated representative of seven allied Augustinian
monasteries to voice a protest against some innovations of Staupitz, but as
deserting his clients and siding with Staupitz. Protestants say he was sent to
Rome as the advocate of Staupitz. Luther himself states that it was a pilgrimage
in fulfilment of a vow to make a general confession in the Eternal City. The
outcome of the mission, like its object, still remains shrouded in mystery. What
was the effect of this Roman visit on his spiritual life or theological thought?
Did this visit turn his reverence for Rome into loathing
? Did he find it a
sink of iniquity, its priests infidels, the papal courtiers men of shameless
lives?
(Lindsay, Luther and the German Reformation
, New York, 1900). He
returned from Rome as strong in the faith as he went to visit it. In a certain
sense his sojourn in Rome even strengthened his religious convictions
(Hausrath,
op.cit., 98), In his letters of those years he never mentions having been in
Rome. In his conference with Cardinal Cajetan, in his disputations with Dr. Eck,
in his letters to Pope Leo, nay, in his tremendous broadside of invective and
accusation against all things Romish, in his 'Address to the German Nation and
Nobility', there occurs not one unmistakable reference to his having been in
Rome. By every rule of evidence we are bound to hold that when the most furious
assailant Rome has ever known described from a distance of ten years upwards the
incidents of a journey through Italy to Rome, the few touches of light in his
picture are more trustworthy than its black breadths of shade
(Bayne, Martin
Luther
, I, 234). His whole Roman experience as expressed in later life is open
to question. We can really question the importance attached to remarks which in
a great measure date from the last years of his life, when he was really a
changed man. Much that he relates as personal experience is manifestly the
product of an easily explained self-delusion
(Hausrath, op.cit., 79). One of
the incidents of the Roman mission, which at one time was considered a pivotal
point in his career, and was calculated to impart an inspirational character to
the leading doctrine of the Reformation, and is still detailed by his
biographers, was his supposed experience while climbing the Scala Santa.
According to it, while Luther was in the act of climbimg the stairs on his knees,
the thought suddenly flashed through his mind: The just shall live by faith
,
whereupon he immediately discontinued his pious devotion. The story rests on an
autograph insertion of his son Paul in a Bible, now in possession of the library
of Rudolstadt. In it he claims that his father told him the incident. Its
historic value may be gauged by the considerations that it is the personal
recollections of an immature lad (he was born in 1533) recorded twenty years
after the event, to which neither his father, his early biographers, nor his
table companions before whom it is claimed the remark was made, allude, though
it could have been of primary importance. It is easy to see the tendency here
to date the (theological) attitude of the Reformer back into the days of his
monastic faith
(Hausrath, op.cit., 48).
Having acquitted himself with evident success, and in a manner to please both parties, Luther returned to Wittenberg in 1512, and received the appointment of sub-prior. His academic promotions followed in quick succession. On 4 October he was made licentiate, and on 19 October, under the deanship of Carlstadt - successively friend, rival, and enemy - he was admitted to the doctorate, being then in his thirtieth year. On 22 October he was formally admitted to the senate of the faculty of theology, and received the appointment as lecturer on the Bible in 1513. His further appointment as district vicar in 1515 made him the official representative of the vicar-general in Saxony and Thuringia. His duties were manifold and his life busy. Little time was left for intellectual pursuits, and the increasing irregularity in the performance of his religious duties could only bode ill for his future. He himself tells us that he needed two secretaries or chancellors, wrote letters all day, preached at table, also in the monastery and parochial churches, was superintendent of studies, and as vicar of the order had as much to do as eleven priors; he lectured on the psalms and St. Paul, besides the demand made on his economic resourcefulness in managing a monastery of twenty-two priests, twelve young men, in all forty-one inmates. His official letters breathe a deep solicitude for the wavering, gentle sympathy for the fallen; they show profound touches of religious feeling and rare practical sense, though not unmarred with counsels that have unorthodox tendencies. The plague which afflicted Wittenberg in 1516 found him courageously at his post, which, in spite of the concern of his friends, he would not abandon.
But in Luther's spiritual life significant, if not ominous, changes were
likewise discernible. Whether he entered the monastery and deserted the world
to flee from despair
(Jurgens, op.cit., I,522) and did not find the coveted
peace; whether the expressed apprehensions of his father that the call from
heaven
to the monastic life might be a satanic delusion
stirred up thoughts
of doubt; whether his sudden, violent resolve was the result of one of those
sporadic overmastering torpors which interrupt the circulatory system or
indicate arterial convulsion
(Hausrath, Luthers Leben
, I, 22), a heritage of
his depressing childhood, and a chronic condition that clung to him to the end
of his life; or whether deeper studies, for which he had little or no time,
created doubts that would not be solved and aroused a conscience that would not
be stilled, it is evident that his vocation, if it ever existed, was in jeopardy,
that the morbid interior conflict marked a drifting from old moorings, and that
the very remedies adopted to re-establish peace all the more effectually
banished it. This condition of morbidity finally developed into formal
scrupulosity. Infractions of the rules, breaches of discipline, distorted
ascetic practices followed in quick succession and with increasing gravity;
these, followed by spasmodic convulsive reactions, made life an agony. The
solemn obligation of reciting the daily Office, an obligation binding under the
penalty of mortal sin, was neglected to allow more ample time for study, with
the result that the Breviary was abandoned for weeks. Then in paroxysmal remorse
Luther would lock himself into his cell and by one retroactive act make amends
for all he neglected; he would abstain from all food and drink, torture himself
by harrowing mortifications, to an extent that not only made him the victim of
insomnia for five weeks at one time, but threatened to drive him into insanity.
The prescribed and regulated ascetical exercises were arbitrarily set aside.
Disregarding the monastic regulations and the counsels of his confessor, he
devised his own, which naturally gave him the character of singularity in his
community. Like every victim of scrupulosity, he saw nothing in himself but
wickedness and corruption. God was the minister of wrath and vengeance. His
sorrow for sin was devoid of humble charity and childlike confidence in the
pardoning mercy of God and Jesus Christ. This anger of God, which pursued him
like his shadow, could only be averted by his own righteousness
, by the
efficacy of servile works
. Such an attitude of mind was necessarily followed
by hopeless discouragement and sullen despondency, creating a condition of soul
in which he actually hated God and was angry at him
, blasphemed God, and
deplored that he was ever born. This abnormal condition produced a brooding
melancholy, physical, mental, and spiritual depression, which later, by a
strange process of reasoning, he ascribed to the teaching of the Church
concerning good works, while all the time he was living in direct and absolute
opposition to its doctrinal teaching and disciplinary code.
Of course this self-willed positiveness and hypochondriac asceticism, as
usually happens in cases of morbidly scrupulous natures, found no relief in the
sacraments. His general confessions at Erfurt and Rome did not touch the root of
the evil. His whole being was wrought up to such an acute tension that he
actually regretted his parents were not dead, that he might avail himself of the
facilities Rome afforded to save them from purgatory. For religion's sake he was
ready to become the most brutal murderer
, to kill all who even by syllable
refused submission to the pope
(Sämmtliche Werke, XXXX, Erlangen, 284). Such a
tense and neurotic physical condition demanded a reaction, and, as frequently
occurs in analogous cases, it went to the diametric extreme. The undue
importance he had placed on his own strength in the spiritual process of
justification, he now peremptorily and completely rejected. He convinced himself
that man, as a consequence of original sin, was totally depraved, destitute of
free will, that all works, even though directed towards the good, were nothing
more than an outgrowth of his corrupted will, and in the judgments of God in
reality mortal sins. Man can be saved by faith alone. Our faith in Christ makes
His merits our possession, envelops us in the garb of righteousness, which our
guilt and sinfulness hide, and supplies in abundance every defect of human
righteousness. Be a sinner and sin on bravely, but have stronger faith and
rejoice in Christ, who is the victor of sin, death, and the world. Do not for a
moment imagine that this life is the abiding place of justice: sin must be
committed. To you it ought to be sufficient that you acknowledge the Lamb that
takes away the sins of the world, the sin cannot tear you away from him, even
though you commit adultery a hundred times a day and commit as many murders
(Enders, Briefwechsel
, III, 208). The new doctrine of justification by faith,
now in its inchoate stage, gradually developed, and was finally fixed by Luther
as one of the central doctrines of Christianity. The epoch-making event
connected with the publication of the papal Bull of Indulgences in Germany,
which was that of Julius II renewed in adaptable form by Leo X, to raise funds
for the construction of St. Peter's Church in Rome, brought his spiritual
difficulties to a crisis.
Albert of Brandenburg was heavily involved in debt, not, as Protestant and Catholic historians relate, on account of his pallium, but to pay a bribe to an unknown agent in Rome, to buy off a rival, in order that the archbishop might enjoy a plurality of ecclesiastical offices. For this payment, which smacked of simony, the pope would allow an indemnity, which in this case took the form of an indulgence. By this ignoble business arrangement with Rome, a financial transaction unworthy of both pope and archbishop, the revenue should be partitioned in equal halves to each, besides a bonus of 10,000 gold ducats, which should fall to the share of Rome. John Tetzel, a Dominican monk with an impressive personality, a gift of popular oratory, and the repute of a successful indulgence preacher, was chosen by the archbishop as general-subcommissary. History presents few characters more unfortunate and pathetic than Tetzel. Among his contemporaries the victim of the most corrosive ridicule, every foul charge laid at his door, every blasphemous utterance placed in his mouth, a veritable fiction and fable built about his personality, in modern history held up as the proverbial mountebank and oily harlequin, denied even the support and sympathy of his own allies - Tetzel had to wait the light of modern critical scrutiny, not only for a moral rehabilitation, but also for vindication as a soundly trained theologian and a monk of irreproachable deportment. It was his preaching at Juterbog and Zerbst, towns adjoining Wittenberg, that drew hearers from there, who in turn presented themselves to Luther for confession, that made him take the step he had in contemplation for more than a year. It is not denied that a doctrine like that of the indulgences, which in some aspects was still a disputable subject in the schools, was open to misunderstanding by the laity; that the preachers in the heat of rhetorical enthusiasm fell into exaggerated statements, or that the financial considerations attached, though not of an obligatory character, led to abuse and scandal. The opposition to indulgences, not to the doctrine - which remains the same to this day - but to the mercantile methods pursued in preaching them, was not new or silent. Duke George of Saxony prohibited them in his territory, and Cardinal Ximenes, as early as 1513, forbade them in Spain.
On 31 October, 1517, the vigil of All Saints', Luther affixed to the castle
church door, which served as the black-board
of the university, on which all
notices of disputations and high academic functions were displayed, his
Ninety-five Theses. The act was not an open declaration of war, but simply an
academic challenge to a disputation. Such disputations were regarded in the
universities of the Middle Ages partly as a recognized means of defining and
elucidating truth, partly as a kind of mental gymnastic apt to train and quicken
the faculties of the disputants. It was not understood that a man was always
ready to adopt in sober earnest propositions which he was willing to defend in
the academic arena; and in like manner a rising disputant might attack orthodox
positions, without endangering his reputation for orthodoxy
(Beard, op. cit.).
The same day he sent a copy of the Theses with an explanatory letter to the
archbishop. The latter in turn submitted them to his councillors at
Aschaffenburg and to the professors of the University of Mainz. The councillors
were of the unanimous opinion that they were of an heretical character, and that
proceedings against the Wittenberg Augustinian should be taken. This report,
with a copy of the Theses, was then transmitted to the pope. It will thus be
seen that the first judicial procedure against Luther did not emanate from
Tetzel. His weapons were to be literary.
Tetzel, more readily than some of the contemporary brilliant theologians,
divined the revolutionary import of the Theses, which while ostensibly aimed at
the abuse of indulgences, were a covert attack on the whole penitential system
of the Church and struck at the very root of ecclesiastical authority. Luther's
Theses impress the reader as thrown together somewhat in haste
, rather than
showing carefully digested thought, and delicate theological intention
; they
bear him one moment into the audacity of rebellion and then carry him back to
the obedience of conformity
(Beard, 218, 219). Tetzel's anti-theses were
maintained partly in a disputation for the doctorate at Frankfort-on-the-Oder
(20 Jan., 1518), and issued with others in am unnumbered list, and are commonly
known as the One Hundred and Six Theses. They, however, did not have Tetzel for
their author, but were promptly and rightfully attributed to Conrad Wimpina, his
teacher at Leipzig. That this fact argues no ignorance of theology or
unfamiliarity with Latin on the part of Tetzel, as has been generally assumed,
is frankly admitted by Protestant writers. It was simply a legitimate custom
pursued in academic circles, as we know from Melancthon himself.
Tetzel's Theses - for he assumed all responsibility - opposed to Luther's
innovations the traditional teaching of the church; but it must be admitted that
they at times gave an uncompromising, even dogmatic, sanction to mere
theological opinions, that were hardly consonant with the most accurate
scholarship. At Wittenberg they created wild excitement, and an unfortunate
hawker who offered them for sale, was mobbed by the students, and his stock of
about eight hundred copies publicly burned in the market square - a proceeding
that met with Luther's disapproval. The plea then made, and still repeated, that
it was done in retaliation for Tetzel's burning Luther's Theses, is admittedly
incorrect, in spite of the fact that it has Melancthon as sponsor. Instead of
replying to Tetzel, Luther carried the controversy from the academic arena to
the public forum by issuing in popular vernacular form his Sermon on
Indulgences and Grace
. It was really a tract, where the sermon form was
abandoned and twenty propositions laid down. At the same time his Latin defence
of the Theses, the Resolutiones
, was well under way. In its finished form, it
was sent to his ordinary, Bishop Scultetus of Brandenburg, who counselled
silence and abstention from all further publications for the present. Luther's
acquiescence was that of the true monk: I am ready, and will rather obey than
perform miracles in my justification.
At this stage a new source of contention arose. Johann Eck, Vice-Chancellor
of the University of Ingoldstadt, by common consent acknowledged as one of the
foremost theological scholars of his day, endowed with rare dialectical skill
and phenomenal memory, all of which Luther candidly admitted before the Leipzig
disputation took place, innocently became involved in the controversy. At the
request of Bishop von Eyb, of Eichstatt, he subjected the Theses to a closer
study, singled out eighteen of them as concealing the germ of the Hussite heresy,
violating Christian charity, subverting the order of the ecclesiastical
hierarchy, and breeding sedition. These Obelisci
(obelisks
, the odd
printer's device for noting doubtful or spurious passages) were submitted to the
bishop in manuscript form, passed around among intimates, and not intended for
publication. In one of the transcribed forms, they reached Luther and wrought
him up to a high pitch of indignation. Eck in a letter of explanation sought to
mollify the ruffled tempers of Carlstadt and Luther and in courteous, urgent
tones begged them to refrain from public disputation either by lecture or print.
In spite of the fact that Carlstadt forestalled Luther, the latter gave out his
Asterisci
(10 August, 1518). This skirmish led to the Leipzig Disputation.
Sylvester Prierias, like Tetzel, a Dominican friar, domestic theologian of the
Court of Rome, in his official capacity as Censor Librorum of Rome, next
submitted his report In praesumtuosas M. Lutheri, Conclusiones Dialogus
. In it
he maintained the absolute supremacy of the pope, in terms not altogether free
from exaggeration, especially stretching his theory to an unwarrantable point in
dealing with indulgences. This evoked Luther's Responsio ad Silv. Prierietatis
Dialogum
. Hoogstraten, whose merciless lampooning in the Epistolae Obscurorum
Vivorum
was still a living memory, likewise entered the fray in defence of the
papal prerogatives, only to be dismissed by Luther's Schedam contra
Hochstratanum
, the flippancy and vulgarity of which one of Luther's most ardent
students apologetically characterizes as being in tone with the prevailing
taste of the time and the circumstances, but not to be commended as worthy of
imitation
(Loscher, op.cit., II, 325).
Before the Dialogus
of Prierias reached Germany, a papal citation reached
Luther (7 August) to appear in person within sixty days in Rome for a hearing.
He at once took refuge in the excuse that such a trip could not be undertaken
without endangering his life; he sought influence to secure the refusal of a
safe-conduct through the electorate and brought pressure to bear on the Emperor
Maximilian and Elector Frederick to have the hearing and judges appointed in
Germany. The university sent letters to Rome and to the nuncio Miltitz
sustaining the plea of infirm health
and vouching for his orthodoxy. His
literary activity continued unabated. His Resolutiones
, which were already
completed, he also sent to the pope (30 May). The letter accompanying them
breathes the most loyal expression of confidence and trust in the Holy See, and
is couched in such terms of abject subserviency and fulsome adulation, that its
sincerity and frankness, followed as it was by such an almost instantaneous
revulsion, is instinctively questioned. Moreover before this letter had been
written his anticipatory action in preaching his Sermon on the Power of
Excommunication
(16 May), in which it is contended that visible union with the
Church is not broken by excommunication, but by sin alone, only strengthens the
surmise of a lack of good faith. The inflammatory character of this sermon was
fully acknowledged by himself.
Influential intervention had the effect of having the hearing fixed during the Diet of Augsburg, which was called to effect an alliance between the Holy See, the Emperor Maximilian, and King Christian of Norway, Denmark, and Sweden, in the war against the Turks. In the official instructions calling the Diet, the name or cause of Luther does not figure.
The papal legate, Cajetan, and Luther met face to face for the first time at
Augsburg on 11 October. Cajetan (b. 1470) was one of the most remarkable
figures woven into the history of the Reformation on the Roman side … a man of
erudition and blameless life
(Weizacker); he was a doctor of philosophy before
he was twenty-one, at this early age filling chairs with distinction in both
sciences at some of the leading universities; in humanistic studies he was so
well versed as to enter the dialectic arena against Pico della Mirandola when
only twenty-four. Surely no better qualified man could be detailed to adjust the
theological difficulties. But the audiences were doomed to failure. Cajetan came
to adjudicate, Luther to defend; the former demanded submission, the latter
launched out into remonstrance; the one showed a spirit of mediating patience,
the other mistook it for apprehensive fear; the prisoner at the bar could not
refrain from bandying words with the judge on the bench. The legate, with the
reputation of the most renowned and easily the first theologian of his age
,
could not fail to be shocked at the rude, discourteous, bawling tone of the
friar, and having exhausted all his efforts, he dismissed him with the
injunction not to call again until he recanted. Fiction and myth had a wide
sweep in dealing with this meeting and have woven such an inextricable web of
obscurity about it that we must follow either the highly coloured narratives of
Luther and his friends, or be guided by the most trustworthy criterion of
logical conjecture.
The papal Brief to Cajetan (23 August), which was handed to Luther at
Nuremberg on his way home, in which the pope, contrary to all canonical
precedents, demands the most summary action in regard to the uncondemned and
unexcommunicated child of iniquity
, asks the aid of the emperor, in the event
of Luther's refusal to appear in Rome, to place him under forcible arrest, was
no doubt written in Germany, and is an evident forgery (Beard, op. cit., 257-258;
Ranke, Deutsche Gesch.
VI, 97-98). Like all forged papal documents, it still
shows a surprising vitality, and is found in every biography of Luther.
Luther's return to Wittenberg occurred on the anniversary of his nailing the Theses to the castle church door (31 October, 1518). All efforts towards a recantation having failed, and now assured of the sympathy and support of the temporal princes, he followed his appeal to the pope by a new appeal to an ecumenical council (28 November, 1518), which, as will be seen later, he again, denying the authority of both, followed by an appeal to the Bible.
The appointment of Karl von Miltitz, the young Saxon nobleman in minor orders,
sent as nuncio to deliver the Golden Rose to the Elector Frederick, was
unfortunate and abortive. The Golden Rose was not offered as a sop to secure the
good graces of the elector, but in response to prolonged and importunate
agitation on his part to get it (Hausrath, Luther
, I, 276). Miltitz not only
lacked prudence and tact, but in his frequent drinking bouts lost all sense of
diplomatic reticence; by continually borrowing from Luther's friends he placed
himself in a position only to inspire contempt. It is true that his unauthorized
overtures drew from Luther an act, which if it is no recantation, is at least
remarkably like one
(Beard, op.cit., 274). In it he promised:
1. to observe silence if his assailants did the same;
2. complete submission to the pope;
3. to publish a plain statement to the public advocating loyalty to the Church;
4. to place the whole vexatious case in the hands of a delegated bishop.
The whole transaction closed with a banquet, an embrace, tears of joy, and a kiss of peace - only to be disregarded and ridiculed afterwards by Luther. The nuncio's treatment of Tetzel was severe and unjust. When the sick and ailing man could not come to him on account of the heated public sentiment against him, Miltitz on his visit to Leipzig summoned him to a meeting, in which he overwhelmed him with reproaches and charges, stigmatized him as the originator of the whole unfortunate affair, threatened the displeasure of the pope, and no doubt hastened the impending death of Tetzel (1 August, 1519).
While the preliminaries of the Leipzig Disputation were pending, a true
insight into Luther's real attitude towards the papacy, the subject which would
form the main thesis of discussion, can best be gleaned from his own letters. On
3 March, 1519, he writes Leo X: Before God and all his creatures, I bear
testimony that I neither did desire, nor do desire to touch or by intrigue to
undermine the authority of the Roman Church and that of your holiness
(De Wette,
op. cit., I, 234). Two days later (5 March) he writes to Spalatin: It was never
my intention to revolt from the Roman Apostolic chair
(De Wette, op. cit., I,
236). Ten days later (13 March) he writes to the same: I am at a loss to know
whether the pope be antichrist or his apostle
(De Wette, op. cit., I, 239). A
month before this (20 Feb.) he thanks Scheurl for sending him the foul Dialogue
of Julius and St. Peter
, a most poisonous attack on the papacy, saying he is
sorely tempted to issue it in the vernacular to the public (De Wette, op. cit.,
I, 230). To prove Luther's consistency - to vindicate his conduct at all points,
as faultless both in veracity and courage - under those circumstances, may be
left to myth-making simpletons
(Bayne, op. cit., I, 457).
The Leipzig disputation was an important factor in fixing the alignment of
both disputants, and forcing Luther's theological evolution. It was an outgrowth
of the Obelisci
and Asterisci
, which was taken up by Carlstadt during
Luther's absence at Heidelberg in 1518. It was precipitated by the latter, and
certainly not solicited or sought by Eck. Every obstacle was placed in the wayof
its taking place, only to be brushed aside. The Bishops of Merseburg and
Brandenburg issued their official inhibitions; the theological faculty of the
Leipzig University sent a letter of protest to Luther not to meddle in an affair
that was purely Carlstadt's, and another to Duke George to prohibit it. Scheurl,
then an intimate of Luther's, tried to dissuade him from the meeting; Eck, in
terms pacific and dignified, replied to Carlstadt's offensive, and Luther's
pugnacious letters, in fruitless endeavour to avert all public controversy
either in print or lecture; Luther himself, pledged and forbidden all public
discourse or print, begged Duke Frederick to make an endeavour to bring about
the meeting (De Wette, op.cit., I, 175) at the same time that he personally
appealed to Duke George for permission to allow it, and this in spite of the
fact that he had already given the theses against Eck to the public. In the face
of such urgent pressure Eck could not fail to accept the challenge. Even at this
stage Eck and Carlstadt were to be the accredited combatants, and the formal
admission of Luther into the disputation was only determined upon when the
disputants were actually at Leipzig.
The disputation on Eck's twelve, subsequently thirteen, theses, was opened
with much parade and ceremony on 27 June, and the university aula being too
small, was conducted at the Pleissenburg Castle. The wordy battle was between
Carlstadt and Eck on the subject of Divine grace and human free will. As is well
known, it ended in the former's humiliating discomfiture. Luther and Eck's
discussion, 4 July, was on papal supremacy. The former, though gifted with a
brilliant readiness of speech, lacked - and his warmest admirers admit it - the
quiet composure, curbed self-restraint, and unruffled temper of a good disputant.
The result was that the imperturbable serenity and unerring confidence of Eck,
had an exasperating effect on him. He was querulous and censorious
, arbitrary
and bitter
(Mosellanus), which hardly contributed to the advantage of his cause,
either in argumentation or with his hearers. Papal supremacy was denied by him,
because it found no warrant in Holy Writ or in Divine right. Eck's comments on
the pestilential
errors of Wiclif and Hus condemned by the Council of
Constance was met by the reply, that, so far as the position of the Hussites was
concerned, there were among them many who were very Christian and evangelical
.
Eck took his antagonist to task for placing the individual in a position to
understand the Bible better than the popes, councils, doctors, and universities,
and in pressing his argument closer, asserting that the condemned Bohemians
would not hesitate to hail him as their patron, elicited the ungentle
remonstrance that is a shameless lie
. Eck, undisturbed and with the instinct
of the trained debater, drove his antagonist still further, until he finally
admitted the fallibility of an ecumenical council,upon which he closed the
discussion with the laconic remark: If you believe a legitimately assembled
council can err and has erred,then you are to me as a heathen and publican
(Köstlin-Kawerau, op. cit., I, 243-50). This was 15 July. Luther returned sullen
and crestfallen to Wittenberg, from what had proved to him an inglorious
tournament.
The disastrous outcome of the disputation drove him to reckless, desperate
measures. He did not scruple, at this stage, to league himself with the most
radical elements of national humanism and freebooting knighthood, who in their
revolutionary propaganda hailed him as a most valuable ally. His comrades in
arms now were Ulrich von Hutten and Franz von Sickingen, with the motley horde
of satellites usually found in the train of such leadership. With Melancthon,
himself a humanist, as an intermediary, a secret correspondence was opened with
Hutten, and to all appearances Sickingen was directly or indirectly in frequent
communication. Hutten, though a man of uncommon talent and literary brilliancy,
a moral degenerate, without conscience or character. Sickingen, the prince of
condottieri, was a solid mercenary and political marplot, whose daring deeds and
murderous atrocities form a part of German legendary lore. With his three
impregnable fastnesses, Ebernburg, Landstuhl, and Hohenburg, with their
adventurous soldiery, fleet-footed cavalry, and primed artillery, who took to
robbery as to a trade and considered it rather an honour to be likened to wolves
(Cammbridge Hist., II,154), a menace to the very empire, he was a most useful
adjunct. With Luther they had little in common, for both were impervious to all
religious impulses, unless it was their deadly hatred of the pope, and the
confiscation of church property and land. The disaffection among the knights was
particularly acute. The flourishing condition of industry made the agrarian
interests of the small landowners suffer; the new methods of warfare diminished
their political importance; the adoption of the Roman law while it strengthened
the territorial lords, threatened to reduce the lower nobility to a condition of
serfdom. A change, even though it involved revolution, was desired, and Luther
and his movement were welcomed as the psychological man and cause. Hutten
offered his pen, a formidable weapon; Sickingen his fortress, a haven of safety;
the former assured him of the enthusiastic support of the national humanists,
the latter bade him stand firm and offered to encircle him with … swords
(Bayne, op. cit., II,59). The attack would be made on the ecclesiastical princes,
as opposed to Lutheran doctrines and knightly privileges. In the meantime Luther
was saturating himself with published and unpublished humanistic anti-clerical
literature so effectually that his passionate hatred of Rome and the pope, his
genesis of Antichrist, his contemptuous scorn for his theological opponents, his
effusive professions of patriotism, his acquisition of the literary amenities of
the Epistolae Obscurorum Vivorum
, even the bodily absorption of Hutten's
arguments, not to allude to other conspicuous earmarks of his intercourse and
association with the humanistic-political agitators, can be unerringly traced
here. It was while living in the atmosphere surcharged with these influences,
that he issued his first epochal manifesto, Address to the German Nobility
. It
is in its form an imitation of Hutten's circular letter to the emperor and
German nobility
, and the greater part of its contents is an abstract of
Hutten's Vadiscus or Roman Trinity
, from his Lament and Exhortation
, and
from his letters to the Elector Frederick of Saxony. This seems to be admitted
by competent Lutheran specialists. He steps from the arena of academic gravity
and verbal precision to the forum of the public in an invective of dazzling
rhetoric
. He addresses the masses; his language is that of the populace; his
theological attitude is abandoned; his sweeping eloquence fairly carries the
emotional nature of his hearers - while even calm, critical reason stands aghast,
dumbfounded; he becomes the hieratic interpreter, the articulate voice of latent
slumbering national aspirations. In one impassioned outburst, he cuts from all
his Catholic moorings - the merest trace left seeming to intensify his fury.
Church and State, religion and politics, ecclesiastical reform and social
advancement, are handled with a flaming, peerless oratory. He speaks with
reckless audacity; he acts with breathless daring. War and revolution do not
make him quail - has he not the pledged support of Ulrich von Hutten, Franz von
Sickingen, Sylvester von Schaumburg? Is not the first the revolutionary master
spirit of his age - cannot the second make even an emperor bow to his terms? The
gospel
, he now sees, cannot be introduced without tumult, scandal, and
rebellion
; the word of God is a sword, a war, a destruction, a scandal, a ruin,
a poison
(De Wette, op.cit., I, 417). As for pope, cardinals, bishops, and the
whole brood of Roman Sodom
, why not attack it with every sort of weapon and
wash our hands in its blood
(Walch, XVIII, 245).
Luther the reformer had become Luther the revolutionary; the religious
agitation had become a political rebellion. Luther's theological attitude at
this time, as far as a formulated cohesion can be deduced, was as follows: The
Bible is the only source of faith; it contains the plenary inspiration of God;
its reading is invested with a quasi-sacramental character. Human nature has
been totally corrupted by original sin, and man, accordingly, is deprived of
free will. Whatever he does, be it good or bad, is not his own work, but God's.
Faith alone can work justification, and man is saved by confidently believing
that God will pardon him. This faith not only includes a full pardon of sin, but
also an unconditional release from its penalties. The hierarchy and priesthood
are not Divinely instituted or necessary, and ceremonial or exterior worship is
not essential or useful. Ecclesiastical vestments, pilgrimages, mortifications,
monastic vows, prayers for the dead, intercession of saints, avail the soul
nothing. All sacraments, with the exception of baptism, Holy Eucharist, and
penance, are rejected, but their absence may be supplied by faith. The
priesthood is universal; every Christian may assume it. A body of specially
trained and ordained men to dispense the mysteries of God is needless and a
usurpation. There is no visible Church or one specially established by God
whereby men may work out their salvation. The emperor is appealed to in his
three primary pamphlets, to destroy the power of the pope, to confiscate for his
own use all ecclesiastical property, to abolish ecclesiastical feasts, fasts,
and holidays, to do away with Masses for the dead, etc. In his Babylonian
Captivity
, particularly, he tries to arouse national feeling against the papacy,
and appeals to the lower appetite of the crowd by laying down a sensualized code
of matrimonial ethics, little removed from paganism, which again come to the
front during the French Revolution
(Hagen, Deutsche literar. u. religiöse
Verhältnisse
, II, Erlangen, 1843, 235). His third manifesto, On the Freedom of
a Christian Man
, more moderate in tone, though uncompromisingly radical, he
sent to the pope.
In April, 1520, Eck appeared in Rome, with the German works, containing most
of these doctrines, translated into Latin. They were submitted and discussed
with patient care and critical calmness. Some members of the four consisteries,
held between 21 May and 1 June, counselled gentleness and forbearance, but those
demanding summary procedure prevailed. The Bull of excommunication, Exsurge
Domine
, was accordingly drawn up 15 July. It formally condemned forty-one
propositions drawn from his writings, ordered the destruction of the books
containing the errors, and summoned Luther himself to recant within sixty days
or receive the full penalty of ecclesiastical punishment. Three days later (18
July) Eck was appointed papal prothonotary with the commission to publish the
Bull in Germany. The appointment of Eck was both unwise and imprudent. Luther's
attitude towards him was that of implacable personal hatred; the dislike of him
among the humanists was decidedly virulent; his unpopularity among Catholics was
also well known. Moreover, his personal feelings, as the relentless antagonist
of Luther, could hardly be effaced, so that a cause which demanded the most
untrammelled exercise of judicial impartiality and Christian charity would
hardly find its best exponent in a man in whom individual triumph would
supersede the pure love of justice. Eck saw this, and accepted the duty only
under compulsion. His arrival in Germany was signalized by an outburst of
popular protest and academic resentment, which the national humanists and
friends of Luther lost no time in fanning to a fierce flame. He was barely
allowed to publish the Bull in Meissen (21 Sept.), Merseburg (25 Sept.), and
Brandenburg (29 Sept.), and a resistance almost uniform greeted him in all other
parts of Germany. He was subjected to personal affronts, mob violence. The Bull
itself became the object of shocking indignities. Only after protracted delays
could even the bishops be induced to show it any deference. The crowning
dishonour awaited it at Wittenberg, where (10 Dec.), in response to a call
issued by Melancthon, the university students assembled at the Elster Gate, and
amid the jeering chant of Te Deum laudamus
, and Requiem aeternam
,
interspersed with ribald drinking songs, Luther in person consigned it to the
flames.
The Bull seemingly affected him little. It only drove him to further extremes
and gave a new momentum to the revolutionary agitation. As far back as 10 July,
when the Bull was only under discussion, he scornfully defied it. As for me,
the die is cast: I despise alike the favour and fury of Rome; I do not wish to
be reconciled with her, or ever to hold any communion with hher. Let her condemn
and burn my books; I, in turn, unless I can find no fire, will condemn and
publicly burn the whole pontifical law, that swamp of heresies
(De Wette, op.
cit., 466).
The next step, the enforcement of the provisions of the Bull, was the duty of
the civil power. This was done, in the face of vehement opposition now
manifesting itself, at the Diet of Worms, when the young newly-crowned Charles V
was for the first time to meet the assembled German Estates in solemn
deliberation. Charles, though not to be ranked with the greatest characters of
history, was an honourable Christian gentleman, striving in spite of physical
defect, moral temptations, and political impossibilities, to do his duty in that
state of life to which an unkind Providence had called him
(Armstrong, The
Emperor Charles V
, II, London, 1902, 383). Great and momentous questions,
national and religious, social and economic, were to be submitted for
consideration - but that of Luther easily became paramount. The pope sent two
legates to represent him - Marino Carricioli, to whom the political problems
were entrusted, and Jerome Aleander, who should grapple with the more pressing
religious one. Aleander was a man of brilliant, even phenomenal, intellectual
and linguistic endowments, a man of the world almost modern in his progressive
ideas, a trained statesman, not altogether free from the zeal and cunning which
at times enter the game of diplomacy. Like his staunch supporter, the Elector
George of Saxony, he was not only open-minded enough to admit the deplorable
corruption of the Church, the grasping cupidity of Roman curial procedure, the
cold commercialism and deep-seated immorality that infected many of the clergy,
but, like him, he was courageous enough to denounce them with freedom and point
to the pope himself. His problem, by the singular turn of events, was to become
the gravest that confronted not only the Diet, but Christendom itself. Its
solution or failure was to be pregnant with a fate that involved Church and
State, and would guide the course of the world's history. Germany was living on
a politico-religious volcano. All walks of life were in a convulsive state of
unrest that boded ill for Church and State. Luther by his inflammatory
denunciation of pope and clergy let loose a veritable hurricane of fierce,
uncontrollable racial and religious hatred, which was to spend itself in the
bloodshed of the Peasant's War and the orgies of the sack of Rome; his adroit
juxtaposition of the relative powers and wealth of the temporal and spiritual
estates fostered jealousy and avarice; the chicanery of the revolutionary
propagandists and pamphleteering poetasters lit up the nation with rhetorical
fireworks, in which sedition and impiety, artfully garbed in Biblical
phraseology and sanctimonious platitudes, posed as evangelical
liberty and
pure patriotism; the restive peasants, victims of oppression and poverty, after
futile and sporadic uprisings, lapsed into stifled but sullen and resentful
malcontents; the unredressed wrongs of the burghers and labourers in the
populous cities clamoured for a change, and the victims were prepared to adopt
any method to shake off disabilities daily becoming more irksome; the increasing
expense of living, the decreasing economic advancement, goaded the impecunious
knights to desperation, their very lives since 1495 being nothing more than a
struggle for existence; the territorial lords cast envious eyes on the teeming
fields of the monasteries and the princely ostentation of church dignitaries,
and did not scruple in the vision of a future German autonomy to treat even the
Spanish
sovereign with dictatorial arrogance or tolerant complacency. The
city of Worms itself was within the grasp of a reign of lawlessness, debauchery,
and murder. From the bristling Ebernburg, Sickingen's lair, only six miles from
the city, Hutten was hurling his truculent philippics, threatening with outrage
and death the legate (whom he had failed to waylay), the spiritual princes and
church dignitaries, not sparing even the emperor, whose pension as a bribe to
silence had hardly been received. Germany was in a reign of terror;
consternation seemed to paralyze all minds. A fatal blow was to be struck at the
clergy, it was whispered, and then the famished knights would scramble for their
property. Over all loomed the formidable apparition of Sickingen. He was in
Aleander's opinion sole king of Germany now; for he has a following, when and
as large as he wishes. The emperor is unprotected, the princes are inactive; the
prelates quake with fear. Sickingen at the moment is the terror of Germany
before whom all quail
(Brieger, Aleander u. Luther
, Gotha, 1884, 125). If a
proper leader could be found, the elements of revolution were already at hand,
and only awaited the signal for an outbreak
(Maurenbrecher, op. cit., 246).
Such was the critical national and local ferment, when Luther at the
psychological moment was projected into the foreground by the Diet of Worms,
where the devils on the roofs of the houses were rather friendly … than
otherwise
(Cambridge Hist., II, 147), to appear as the champion against Roman
corruption, which in the prevailing frenzy became the expression of national
patriotism. He was the hero of the hour solely because he stood for the
national opposition to Rome
(ibid., 148). His first hearing before the Diet (17
April) found him not precisely in the most confident mood. Acknowledging his
works, he met the further request that he recall them by a timid reply, in
tones so subdued that they could hardly be heard with distincness in his
vicinity
, that he be given time for reflection. His assurance did not fail him
at the second hearing (18 April) when his expected steadfastness asserted itself,
and his refusal was uttered with steady composure and firm voice, in Latin and
German, that, unless convinced of his errors by the Scriptures or plain reason,
he would not recant. I neither can nor will recant anything, for it is neither
safe nor right to act against one's conscience
, adding in German - God help me,
Amen.
The emperor took action the next day (19 April) by personally writing to
the Estates, that true to the traditions of his Catholic forefathers, he placed
his faith in the Christian doctrine and the Roman Church, in the Fathers, in the
councils representing Christendom, rather than in the teaching of an individual
monk, and ordered Luther's departure. The word which I pledged him
, he
concludes, and the promised safe-conduct he will receive. Be assured, he will
return unmolested whence he came
(Forstemann, Neues Urkundenbuch
, I, Hamburg,
1842, 75). All further negotiations undertaken in the meantime to bring about an
adjustment having failed, Luther was ordered to return, but forbidden to preach
or publish while on the way. The edict, drafted (8 May) was signed 26 May, but
was only to be promulgated after the expiration of the time allowed in the
safe-conduct. It placed Luther under the ban of the empire and ordered the
destruction of his writings.
It may not be amiss to state that the historicity of Luther's famed
declaration before the assembled Diet, Here I stand. I cannot do otherwise. So
help me, God. Amen
, has been successfully challenged and rendered inadmissible
by Protestant researches. Its retention in some of the larger biographies and
histories, seldom if ever without laborious qualification, can only be ascribed
to the deathless vitality of a sacred fiction or an absence of historical
rectitude on the part of the writer.
He left Worms 26 April, for Wittenberg, in the custody of a party consisting mainly, if not altogether, of personal friends. By a secret agreement, of which he was fully cognizant, being apprised of it the night before his departure by the Elector Frederick, though he was unaware of his actual destination, he was ambushed by friendly hands in the night of 4 May, and spirited to the Castle of Wartburg, near Eisenach.
The year's sojourn in the Wartburg marks a new and decisive period in his
life and career. Left to the seclusion of his own thoughts and reflections,
undisturbed by the excitement of political and polemical agitation, he became
the victim of an interior struggle that made him writhe in the throes of racking
anxiety, distressing doubts and agonizing reproaches of conscience. With a
directness that knew no escape, he was now confronted by the poignant doubts
aroused by his headlong course: was he justified in his bold and unprecedented
action; were not his innovations diametrically opposed to the history and
experience of spiritual and human order as it prevailed from Apostolic times;
was he, he alone
, the chosen vessel singled out in preference to all the
saints of Christendom to inaugurate these radical changes; was he not
responsible for the social and political upheaval, the rupture of Christian
unity and charity, and the consequent ruin of immortal souls? To this was added
an irrepressible outbreak of sensuality which assailed him with unbridled fury,
a fury that was all the more fierce on account of the absence of the approved
weapons of spiritual defence, as well as the intensifying stimulus of his
imprudent gratification of his appetite for eating and drinking. And, in
addition to his horror, his temptations, moral and spiritual, becamme vivid
realities; satanic manifestations were frequent and alarming; nor did they
consist in mere verbal encounters but in personal collision. His disputation
with Satan on the Mass has become historical. His life as Juncker George, his
neglect of the old monastic dietetic restrictions, racked hsi body in paroxysms
of pain, which did not fail to give colour to the tone of his polemical
writings
(Hausrath, op. cit., I, 476), nor sweeten the acerbity of his temper,
nor soften the coarseness of his speech. However, many writers regard his
satanic manifestations as pure delusions.
It was while he was in these sinister moods that his friends usually were in
expectant dread that the flood of his exhaustless abuse and unparalleled
scurrility would dash itself against the papacy, Church, and monasticism. I
will curse and scold the scoundrels until I go to my grave, and never shall they
hear a civil word from me. I will toll them to their graves with thunder and
lightning. For I am unable to pray without at the same time cursing. If I am
prompted to say: 'hallowed be Thy name', I must add: 'cursed, damned, outraged
be the name of the papists'. If I am prompted to say: 'Thy Kingdom come', I must
perforce add: 'cursed, damned, destroyed must be the papacy'. Indeed I pray thus
orally every day and in my heart without intermission
(Sammtl. W., XXV, 108).
Need we be surprised that one of his old admirers, whose name figured with his
on the original Bull of excommunication, concludes that Luther with his
shameless, ungovernable tongue, must have lapsed into insanity or been inspired
by the Evil Spirit
(Pirkheimer, ap. *Döllinger, Die Reformation
, Ratisbon, I,
1846-48).
While at the Wartburg, he published On Confession
, which cut deeper into
the mutilated sacramental system he retained by lopping off penance. This he
dedicated to Franz von Sickingen. His replies to Latomus of Louvain and Emser,
his old antagonist, and to the theological faculty of the University of Paris,
are characterized by his proverbial spleen and discourtesy. Of the writings of
his antagonists he invariably makes an arbitrary caricature and he belabours
them in blind rage … he hurls at them the most passionate replies
(Lange,
Martin Luther, ein religioses Characterbild
, Berlin, 1870, 109) His reply to
the papal Bull In coena Domini
, written in colloquial German, appeals to the
grossest sense of humour and sacrilegious banter.
His chief distinction while at the Wartburg, and one that will always be
inseparably connected with his name, was his translation of the New Testament
into German. The invention of printing gave a vigourous impetus to the
multiplication of copies of the Bible, so that fourteen editions and reprints of
German translations from 1466 to 1522 are known to have existed. But their
antiquated language, their uncritical revision, and their puerile glosses,
hardly contributed to their circulation. To Luther the vernacular Bible became a
necessary adjunct, an indispensable necessity. His subversion of the spiritual
order, abolition of ecclesiastical science, rejection of the sacraments,
suppression of ceremonies, degradation of Christian art, demanded a substitute,
and a more available one than the undefiled Word of God
, in association with
evangelical preaching
could hardly be found. In less than three months the
first copy of the translated New Testament was ready for the press. Assisted by
Melancthon, Spalatin, and others whose services he found of use, with the Greek
version of Erasmus as a basis, with notes and comments charged with polemical
animus and woodcuts of an offensively vulgar character supplied by Cranach, and
sold for a trivial sum, it was issued at Wittenberg in September. Its spread was
so rapid that a second edition was called for as early as December. Its
linguistic merits were indisputable; its influence on national literature most
potent. Like all his writings in German, it was the speech of the people; it
struck the popular taste and charmed the national ear. It unfolded the affluence,
clarity, and vigour of the German tongue in a manner and with a result that
stands almost without a parallel in the history of German literature. That he is
the creator of the new High German literary language is hardly in harmony with
the facts and researches of modern philological science. While from the
standpoint of the philologist it is worthy of the highest commendation,
theologically it failed in the essential elements of a faithful translation. By
attribution and suppression, mistranslation and wanton garbling, he made it the
medium of attacking the old Church, and vindicating his individual doctrines.
A book that helped to depopulate the sanctuary and monastery in Germany, one
that Luther himself confessed to be his most unassailable pronouncement, one
that Melancthon hailed as a work of rare learning, and which many Reformation
specialists pronounce, both as to contents and results, his most important work,
had its origin in the Wartburg. It was his Opinion on Monastic Orders
. Dashed
off at white heat and expressed with that whirlwind impetuosity that made him so
powerful a leader, it made the bold proclamation of a new code of ethics: that
concupiscence is invincible, the sensual instincts irrepressible, the
gratification of sexual propensities as natural and inexorable as the
performance of any of the physiological necessities of our being. It was a
trumpet call to priest, monk, and nun to break their vows of chastity and enter
matrimony. The impossibility
of successful resistance to our natural sensual
passions was drawn with such dazzling rhetorical fascination that the salvation
of the soul, the health of the body, demanded an instant abrogation of the laws
of celibacy. Vows were made to Satan, not to God; the devil's law was absolutely
renounced by taking a wife or husband. The consequences of such a moral code
were immediate and general. They are evident from the stinging rebuke of his old
master, Staupitz, less than a year after its promulgation, that the most
vociferous advocates of his old pupil were the frequenters of notorious houses,
not synonymous with a high type of decency. To us the whole treatise would have
nothing more than an archaic interest were it not that it inspired the most
notable contribution to Reformation history written in modern times, Denifle's
Luther and Luthertum
(Mainz, 1904). In it Luther's doctrines, writings, and
sayings have been subjected to so searching an analysis, his historical
inaccuracies have been proved so flagrant, his conception of monasticism such a
caricature, his knowledge of Scholasticism so superficial, his misrepresentation
of medieval theology so unblushing, his interpretation of mysticism so erroneous,
and this with such a merciless circumstantial mastery of detail, as to cast the
shadow of doubt on the whole fabric of Reformation history.
In the middle of the summer of this year (4 August) he sent his reply to the
Defence of the Seven Sacraments
by King Henry VIII. Its only claim to
attention is its tone of proverbial coarseness and scurrility. The king is not
only an impudent liar
, but is deluged with a torrent of foul abuse, and every
unworthy motive is attributed to him. It meant, as events proved, in spite of
Luther's tardy and sycophantic apologies, the loss of England to the German
Reformation movement. About this time he issued in Latin and German his
broadside, Against the falsely called spiritual state of Pope and Bishops
, in
which his vocabulary of vituperation attains a height equalled only by himself,
and then on but one or two occasions. Seemingly aware of the incendiary
character of his language, he tauntingly asks: But they say, 'there is fear
that a rebellion may arise against the spiritual Estate'. Then the reply is 'Is
it just that souls are slaughtered eternally, that these mountebanks may disport
themselves quietly'? It were better that all bishops should be murdered, and all
religious foundations and monasteries razed to the ground, than that one soul
should perish, not to speak of all the souls ruined by these blockheads and
manikins
(Sammtl. W., XXVIII, 148).
During his absence at the Wartburg (3 Apr., 1521-6 March, 1522) the storm
centre of the reform agitation veered to Wittenberg, where Carlstadt took up the
reins of leadership, aided and abetted by Melancthon and the Augustinian Friars.
In the narrative of conventional Reformation history, Carlstadt is made the
scapegoat for all the wild excesses that swept over Wittenberg at this time;
even in more critical history he is painted as a marplot, whose officious
meddling almost wrecked the work of the Reformation. Still, in the hands of cold
scientific Protestant investigators, his character and work have of late
undergone an astounding rehabilitation, one that calls for a reappraisement of
all historical values in which he figures. He appears not only as a man of
extensive learning, fearless trepidity…glowing enthusiasm for the truth
(Thudichum, op. cit., I, 178), but as the actual pathbreaker for Luther, whom he
anticipated in some of his most salient doctrines and audacious innovations.
Thus, for example, this new appraisal establishes the facts: that as early as 13
April, 1517, he published his 152 theses against indulgences; that on 21 June,
1521, he advocated and defended the right of priests to marry, and shocked
Luther by including monks; that on 22 July, 1521, he called for the removal of
all pictures and statuary in sanctuary and church; that on 13 May, 1521, he made
public protest against the reservation of the Blessed Sacrament, the elevation
of the Host, and denounced the withholding of the Chalice from the laity; that
so early as 1 March, 1521, while Luther was still in Wittenberg, he inveighed
against prayers for the dead and demanded that Mass be said in the vernacular
German. While in this new valuation he still retains the character of a
disputatious, puritanical polemist, erratic in conduct, surly in manner,
irascible in temper, biting in speech, it invests him with a shrinking
reluctance to adopt any action however radical without the approval of the
congregation or its accredited representatives. In the light of the same
researches, it was the mild and gentle Melancthon who prodded on Carlstadt until
he found himself the vortex of the impending disorder and riot. We must begin
some time
, he expostulates, or nothing will be done. He who puts his hand to
the plough should not look back
.
The floodgates once opened, the deluge followed. On 9 October, 1521,
thirty-nine out of the forty Augustinian Friars formally declared their refusal
to say private Mass any longer; Zwilling, one of the most rabid of them,
denounced the Mass as a devilish institution; Justus Jonas stigmatized Masses
for the dead as sacrilegious pestilences of the soul; Communion under two kinds
was publicly administered. Thirteen friars (12 Nov.) doffed their habits, and
with tumultuous demonstrations fled from the monastery, with fifteen more in
their immediate wake; those remaining loyal were subjected to ill-treatment and
insult by an infuriated rabble led by Zwilling; mobs prevented the saying of
Mass; on 4 Dec., forty students, amid derisive cheers, entered the Franciscan
monastery and demolished the altars; the windows of the house of the resident
canons were smashed, and it was threatened with pillage. It was clear that these
excesses, uncontrolled by the civil power, unrestrained by the religious leaders,
were symptomatic of social and religious revolution. Luther, who in the meantime
paid a surreptitious visit to Wittenberg (between 4 and 9 Dec.), had no words of
disapproval for these proceedings; on the contrary he did not conceal his
gratification. All I see and hear
, he writes to Spalatin, 9 Dec., pleases me
immensely
(Enders, op. cit., III, 253). The collapse and disintegration of
religious life kept on apace. At a chapter of Augustinian Friars at Wittenberg,
6 Jan., 1522, six resolutions, no doubt inspired by Luther himself, were
unanimously adopted, which aimed at the subversion of the whole monastic system;
five days later the Augustinians removed all altars but one from their church,
and burnt the pictures and holy oils. On 19 Jan., Carlstadt, now forty-one years
of age, married a young girl of fifteen, an act that called forth the hearty
endorsement of Luther; on 9 or 10 Feb., Justus Jonas, and about the same time,
Johann Lange, prior of the Augustinian monastery at Erfurt, followed his example.
On Christmas Day (1521) Carlstadt, in civilian dress, without any vestment
,
ascended the pulpit, preached the evangelical liberty
of taking Communion
under two kinds, held up Confession and absolution to derision, and railed
against fasting as an unscriptural imposition. He next proceeded to the altar
and said Mass in German, omitting all that referred to its sacrificial character,
left out the elevation of the Host, and in conclusion extended a general
invitation to all to approach and receive the Lord's Supper, by individually
taking the Host in their hands and drinking from the chalice. The advent of the
three Zwickau prophets (27 Dec.) with their communistic ideas, direct personal
communication with God, extreme subjectivism in Bible interpretation, all of
which impressed Melancthon forcibly, only added fuel to the already fiercely
burning flame. They came to consult Luther, and with good reason, for it was he
who taught the universal priesthood of all Christians, which authorized every
man to preach; it was he who announced the full liberty of all the sacraments,
especially baptism, and accordingly they were justified in rejecting infant
baptism
. That they associated with Carlstadt intimately at this time is
doubtful; that he fully subscribed to their teachings improbable, if not
impossible (Barge, op. cit., I,402).
What brought Luther in such hot haste to Wittenberg? The character given
Carlstadt as an instigator of rebellion, the leader of the devastating
iconoclastic movement
, has been found exaggerated and untrue in spite of its
universal adoption (Thudichum, op. cit., I,193, who brands it as a shameless
lie
); the assertion that Luther was requested to come to Wittenberg by the town
council or congregation, is dismissed as untenable
(Thudichum, op. cit.,
I,197). Nor was he summoned by the elector, although the elector had misgivings
about his return, and inferentially did not consider it necessary, so far as the
matter of bringing the reformatory zeal of the Wittenbergers into the bounds of
moderation was concerned; he did not forbid Luther to return, but expressly
permitted it
(Thudichum, op. cit., I,199; Barge, op. cit., I,435). Did perhaps
information from Wittenberg portend the ascendancy of Carlstadt, or was there
cause for alarm in the propaganda of the Zwickau prophets? At all events on 3
March, Luther on horseback, in the costume of a horseman, with buckled sword,
full grown beard, and long hair, issued from the Wartburg. Before his arrival at
Wittenberg, he resumed his monastic habit and tonsure, and as a fully groomed
monk, he entered the deserted monastery. He lost no timme in preaching on eight
successive days (9-17 March) sermons mostly in contravention of Carlstadt's
innovations, every one of which, as is well known, he subsequently adopted. The
Lord's Supper again became the Mass; it is sung in Latin, at the high altar, in
rubrical vestments, though all allusions to a sacrifice are expunged; the
elevation is retained; the Host is exposed in the monstrance; the adoration of
the congregation is invited. Communion under one kind is administered at the
high altar - but under two kinds is allowed at a side altar. The sermons
characterized by a moderation seldom found in Luther, exercised the thrall of
his accustomed eloquence, but proved abortive. Popular sentiment, intimidated
and suppressed, favoured Carlstadt. The feud between Luther and Carlstadt was on,
and it showed the former glaringly in his most repellent form
(Barge, I, op.
cit., VI), and was only to end when the latter, exiled and impoverished through
Luther's machinations, went to eternity accompanied by Luther's customary
benediction on his enemies.
Luther had one prominent trait of character, which in the consensus of those
who have made him a special study, overshadowed all others. It was an
overweening confidence and unbending will, buttressed by an inflexible dogmatism.
He recognized no superior, tolerated no rival, brooked no contradiction. This
was constantly in evidence, but now comes into obtrusive eminence in his
hectiring course pursued to drag Erasmus, whom he had long watched with jealous
eye, into the controversial arena. Erasmus, like all devotees of humanistic
learning, lovers of peace and friends of religion, was in full and accordant
sympathy with Luther when he first sounded the note of reform. But the bristling,
ungoverned character of his apodictic assertions, the bitterness and brutality
of his speech, his alliance with the conscienceless political radicalism of the
nation, created an instinctive repulsion, which, when he saw that the whole
movement from its very beginning was a national rebellion, a mutiny of the
German spirit and consciousness against Italian despotism
he, timorous by
nature, vacillating in spirit, eschewing all controversy, shrinkingly retired to
his studies. Popular with popes, honoured by kings, extravagantly extolled by
humanists, respected by Luther's most intimate friends, he was in spite of his
pronounced rationalistic proclivities, his withering contempt for monks, and
what was a controvertible term, Scholasticism, unquestionably the foremost man
of learning in his day. His satiric writings, which according to Kant, did more
good to the world than the combined speculations of all metaphysicians and which
in the minds of his contemporaries laid the egg which Luther hatched - gave him
a great vogue in all walks of life. Such a man's convictions were naturally
supposed to run in the same channel as Luther's - and if his cooperation, in
spite of alluring overtures, failed to be secured - his neutrality was at all
hazards to be won. Prompted by Luther's opponents, still more goaded by Luther's
militant attitude, if not formal challenge, he not only refused the personal
request to refrain from all participation in the movement, and become a mere
passive spectator of the tragedy
, but came before the public with his Latin
treatise On Free Will
. In it he would investigate the testimony afforded by
the Old and New Testament as to man's free will
, and to establish the result,
that in spite of the profound thought of philosopher or searching erudition of
theologian, the subject is still enshrouded in obscurity, and that its ultimate
solution could only be looked for in the fullness of light diffused by the
Divine Vision. It was a purely scholastic question involving philosophical and
exegetical problems, which were then, as they are now, arguable points in the
schools. In no single point does it antagonize Luther in his war with Rome. The
work received a wide circulation and general acceptance. Melancthon writes
approvingly of it to the author and Spalatin. After the lapse of a year Luther
gave his reply in Latin On the Servitude of the Will
. Luther never in his
whole life had a purely scientific object in view,least of ll in this writing
(Hausrath, op. cit., II,75). It consists of a torrent of the grossest abuse of
Erasmus
(Walch, op. cit., XVIII, 2049-2482 - gives it in German translation),
and evokes the lament of the hounded humanist, that he, the lover of peace and
quiet, must now turn gladiator and do battle with wild beasts
(Stichart, op.
cit., 370). His pen portraiture of Luther and his controversial methods, given
in his two rejoinders, are masterly, and even to this day find a general
recognition on the part of all unbiassed students.
His sententious characterization that where Lutheranism flourishes the
sciences perish
, that its adherents then, were men with but two objects at
heart, money and women
, and that the Gospel which relaxes the reins
and
allows averyone to do as he pleases, amply proves that something more deep than
Luther's contentiousness made him an alien to the movement. Nor did Luther's
subsequent efforts to reestablish amicable relations with Erasmus, to which the
latter alludes in a letter (11 April, 1526), meet with anything further than a
curt refusal.
The times were pregnant with momentous events for the movement. The humanists one after the other dropped out of the fray. Mutianus Rufus, Crotus Rubianus, Beatus Rhenanus, Bonifacius Amerbach, Sebastian Brant, Jacob Wimpheling, who played so prominent a part in the battle of the Obscure Men, now formally returned to the allegiance of the Old Church. Ulrich Zasius, of Freiburg, and Christoph Scheurl, of Nurnberg, the two most illustrious jurists of Germany, early friends and supporters of Luther, with statesmen's prevision detected the political complexion of affairs, could not fail to notice the growing religious anarchy, and, hearing the distant rumblings of the Peasants' War, abandoned his cause. The former found his preaching mixed with deadly poison for the German people, the latter pronounced Wittenberg a sink of error, a hothouse of heresy. Sickingen's last raid on the Archbishop of Trier (27 August, 1522) proved disastrous to his cause and fatal to himself. Deserted by his confederates, overpowered by his assailants, his lair - the fastness Landstuhl - fell into the hands of his enemies, and Sickingen himself horribly wounded died after barely signing its capitulation (30 August, 1523). Hutten, forsaken and solitary, in poverty and neglect, fell a victim to his protracted debauchery (August, 1523) at the early age of thirty-five. The loss sustained by these defections and deaths was incalculable for Luther, especially at one of the most critical periods in German history.
The peasant outbreaks, which in milder forms were previously easily
controlled, now assumed a magnitude and acuteness that threatened the national
life of Germany. The primary causes that now brought on the predicted and
inevitable conflict were the excessive luxury and inordinate love of pleasure in
all stations of life, the lust of money on the part of the nobility and wealthy
merchants, the unblushing extortions of commercial corporations, the artificial
advance in prices and adulteration of the necessities of life, the decay of
trade and stagnation of industry resulting from the dissolution of guilds, above
all, the long endured oppression and daily increasing destitution of the
peasantry, who were the main sufferers in the unbroken wars and feuds that rent
and devastated Germany for more than a century. A fire of repressed rebellion
and infectious unrest burned throughout the nation. This smouldering fire Luther
fanned to a fierce flame by his turbulent and incendiary writings, which were
read with avidity by all, and by none more voraciously than the peasant, who
looked upon the son of a peasant
not only as an emancipator from Roman
impositions, but the precursor of social advancement. His invectives poured oil
on the flames of revolt
. True, when too late to lay the storm he issued his
Exhortation to Peace
, but it stands in inexplicable and ineffaceable
contradiction to his second, unexampled blast Against the murderous and robbing
rabble of Peasants
. In this he entirely changes front, dipped his pen in blood
(Lang, 180), and calls upon the princes t slaughter the offending peasants like
mad dogs, to stab, strangle and slay as best one can, and holds out as a reward
the promise of heaven. The few sentences in which allusions to sympathy and
mercy for the vanquished are contained, are relegated to the background. What an
astounding illusion lay in the fact, that Luther had the hardihood to offer as
apology for his terrible manifesto, that God commanded him to speak in such a
strain!
(Schreckenbach, Luther u. der Bauernkrieg
, Oldenburg, 1895,44;
Sämmtl. W.
XXIV, 287-294). His advice was literally followed. The process of
repression was frightful. The encounters were more in the character of massacres
than battles. The undisciplined peasants with their rude farming implements as
weapons, were slaughtered like cattle in the shambles. More than 1000
monasteries and castles were levelled to the ground, hundreds of villages were
laid in ashes, the harvests of the nation were destroyed, and 100,000 killed.
The fact that one commander alone boasted that he hanged 40 evangelical
preachers and executed 11,000 revolutionists and heretics
, and that history
with hardly a dissenting voice fastens the origin of this war on Luther, fully
shows where its source and responsibility lay.
While Germany was drenched in blood, its people paralyzed with horror, the cry of the widow and wail of the orphan throughout the land, Luther then in his forty-second year was spending his honeymoon with Catherine von Bora, then twenty-six (married 13 June, 1525), a Bernardine nun who had abandoned her convent. He was regaling his friends with some coldblooded witticisms about the horrible catastrophe uttering confessions of self-reproach and shame, and giving circumstantial details of his connubial bliss, irreproducible in English. Melancthon's famous Greek letter to his bosom friend Camerarius, 16 June, 1525 on the subject, reflected his personal feelings, which no doubt were shared by most of the bridegroom's sincere friends.
This step, in conjunction with the Peasants' War, marked the point of
demarcation in Luther's career and the movement he controlled. The springtide
of the Reformation had lost its bloom. Luther no longer advanced, as in the
first seven years of his activity, from success to success…The plot of a
complete overthrow of Roman supremacy in Germany, by a torrential popular
uprising, proved a chimera
(Hausrath, op. cit., II,62). Until after the
outbreak of the social revolution, no prince or ruler, had so far given his
formal adhesion to the new doctrines. Even the Elector Frederick (d. May 5,
1525), whose irresolution allowed them unhampered sway, did not, as yet separate
from the Church. The radically democratic drift of Luther's whole agitation, his
contemptuous allusions to the German princes, generally the biggest fools and
worst scoundrels on earth
(Walch, op. cit., X, 460-464), were hardly calculated
to curry favour or win allegiance. The reading of such explosive pronouncements
as that of 1523 On the Secular Power
or his disingenuous Exhortation to Peace
in 1525, especially in the light of the events which had just transpired,
impressed them as breathing the spirit of insubordination, if not insurrection.
Luther, although the mightiest voice that ever spoke in the German language,
was a vox et praeteria nihil
, for it is admitted that he possessed none of the
constructive qualifications of statesmanship, and proverbially lacked the
prudential attribute of consistency. His championship of the masses seems to
have been limited to those occasions when he saw in them a useful weapon to hold
over the heads of his enemies
. The tragic failure of the Peasants' War now
makes him undergo an abrupt transition, and this at a moment when they stood in
helpless discomfiture and pitiful weakness, the especial objects of counsel and
sympathy. He and Melancthon, now proclaim for the first time the hitherto
unknown doctrine of the unlimited power of the ruler over the subject; demand
unquestioning submission to authority; preach and formally teach the spirit of
servility and despotism. The object lesson which was to bring the enforcement of
the full rigour of the law to the attention of the princes was the Peasants' war.
The masses were to be laden down with burdens to curb their refractoriness; the
poor man was to be forced and driven, as we force and drive pigs or wild cattle
(Sämmtl. W., XV, 276). Melancthon found the Germans such a wild, incorrigible,
bloodthirsty people
(Corp. Ref., VII, 432-433), that their liberties should by
all means be abridged and more drastic severity measured out. The same
autocratic power was not to be confined to mere political concerns, but the
Gospel
was to become the instrument of the princes to extend it into the
domain of religious affairs.
Luther by the creation of his universal priesthood of all Christians
, by
delegating the authority to judge all doctrines
to the Christian assembly or
congregation
, by empowering it to appoint or dismiss teacher or preacher,
sought the overthrow of the old Catholic order. It did not strike him, that to
establish a new Church, to ground an ecclesiastical organization on so
precarious and volatile a basis, was in its very nature impossible. The seeds of
inevitable anarchy lay dormant in such principles. Momentarity this was clear to
himself, when at this very time (1525) he does not hesitate to make the
confession, that there are nearly as many sects as there are heads
(De Wette,
op. cit., III, 61). This anarchy in faith was concomitant with the decay of
spiritual, charitable, and educational activities. Of this we have a fairly
staggering array of evidence from Luther himself. The whole situation was such,
that imperative necessity forced the leaders of the reform movement to invoke
the aid of the temporal power. Thus the whole Reformation was a triumph of the
temporal power over the spiritual. Luther himself, to escape anarchy, placed all
authority in the hands of the princes
. This aid was all the more readily given,
since there was placed at the disposition of the temporal power the vast
possessions of the old Church, and only involved the pledge, to accept the new
opinions and introduce them as a state or territorial religion. The free cities
could not resist the lure of the same advances. They meant the exemption from
all taxes to bishops and ecclesiastical corporations, the alienation of church
property, the suspension of episcopal authority, and its transfer to the
temporal power. Here we find the foundation of the national enactment of the
Diet of Augsburg, 1555, eternally branded with the curse of history
(Menzel,
op. cit., 615) embodied in the axiom Cujus regio, ejus religio, the religion of
the country is tetermined by the religion of its ruler, a foundation which was
but the consequence of Luther's well-known politics
(Idem, loc. cit.). Freedom
of religion became the monopoly of the ruling princes, it made Germany little
more than a geographical name, and a vague one withal
(Cambridge Hist. II, 142);
naturally serfdom lingered there longer than in any civilized country save
Russia
(ibid., 191), and was one of the causes of the national weakness and
intellectual sterility which marked Germany during the latter part of the
sixteenth century
(ibid.), and just as naturally we find as many new churches
as there were principalities or republics
(Menzel, op. cit., 739).
A theological event, the first of any real magnitude, that had a marked
influence in shaping the destiny of the reform movement, even more than the
Peasants' War, was caused by the brooding discontent aroused by Luther's
peremptory condemnation and suppression of every innovation, doctrinal or
disciplinary, that was not in the fullest accord with his. This weakness of
character was well-known to his admirers then, as it is fully admitted now.
Carlstadt, who by a strange irony, was forbidden to preach or publish in Saxony,
from whom a recantation was forced, and who was exiled from his home for his
opinions - to the enforcement of all which disabilities Luther personally gave
his attention - now contumeliously set them at defiance. What degree of
culpability there was between Luther doing the same with even greater
recklessness and audacity while under the ban of the Empire - or Carlstadt doing
it tentatively while under the ban of a territorial lord, did not seem to have
caused any suspicion of incongruity. However, Carlstadt precipitated a
contention that shook the whole reform fabric to its very centre. The
controversy was the first decisive conflict that changed the separatists' camp
into an internecine battleground of hostile combatants. The casus belli was the
doctrine of the Eucharist. Carlstadt in his two treatises (26 Feb. and 16 March,
1525), after assailing the new Pope
, gave an exhaustive statement of his
doctrine of the Lord's Supper. The literal interpretation of the institutional
words of Christ this is my body
is rejected, the bodily presence flatly denied.
Luther's doctrine of consubstantiation, that the body is in, with, and under the
bread, was to him devoid of all Scriptural support. Scripture neither says the
bread is
my body, nor in
the bread is my body, in fact it says nothing about
bread whatever. The demonstrative pronoun this
, does not refer to the bread at
all, but to the body of Christ, present at the table. When Jesus said this is
my body
, He pointed to Himself, and said this body shall be offered up, this
blood shall be shed, for you
. The words take and eat
refer to the profferred
bread - the words this is my body
to the body of Jesus. He goes further, and
maintains that this is
really means this signifies
. Accordingly grace should
be sought in Christ crucified, not in the sacrament. Among all the arguments
advanced none proved more embarrassing than the deictic this is
. It was the
insistence on the identical interpretation of this
referring to the present
Christ, that Luther used as his most clenching argument in setting aside the
primacy of the pope at the Leipzig Disputation. Carlstadt's writings were
prohibited, with the result that Saxony, as well as Strasburg, Basle, and now
Zurich forbade their sale and circulation. This brought the leader of the Swiss
reform movement, Zwingli, into the fray, as the apologist of Carlstadt, the
advocate of free speech and unfettered thought, and ipso facto Luther's
adversary.
The reform movement now presented the spectacle of Rome's two most formidable
opponents, the two most masterful minds and authoritative exponents of
contemporary separatistic thought, meeting in open conflict, with the Lord's
Supper as the gage of war. Zwingli shared Carlstadt's doctrines in the main,
with some further divergencies, that need no amplification here. But what gave a
mystic, semi-inspirational importance to his doctrine of the Lord's Supper, was
the account he gave of his difficulties and doubts concerning the institutional
words finding their restful solution in a dream. Unlike Luther at the Wartburg,
he did not remember whether this apparition was in black or white [Monitor iste
ater an albus fuerit nihil memini (Planck, op. cit., II, 256)]. Whether Luther
followed his own custom of never reading through the books that the enemies of
truth have written against me
(Mörikofer, Ulrich Zwingli
, II, Leipzig, 1869,
205), whether there was a tinge of jealousy that the Swiss were anxious to be
the most prominent
in the reform movement, the mere fact that Zwingli was a
confederate of Carlstadt and had an unfortunately dubious dream, afforded
subject matter enough for Luther to display his accustomed dialectic methods at
their best. A scientific discussion was not to be conducted with Luther, since
he attributed every disagreement with his doctrine to the devil
(Hausrath).
This poisoned the controversy at its source, because, with the devil he would
make no truce
(Hausrath, op. cit., II, 188-223). That the eyes of the masses
were turning from Wittenberg to Zurich, was only confirmatory evidence of
devilish delusion. Luther's replies to Zwingli's unorthodox private letter to
Alber (16 Nov., 1524) and his nettling treatises came in 1527. They showed that
the injustice and barbarity of his polemics
was not reserved for the pope,
monks, or religious vows. In causticity and contempt of his opponent [they]
surpassed all he had ever written
, they were the utterances of a sick man, who
had lost all self-control
. The politics of Satan and the artful machinations of
the Prince of Evil are traced in a chronological order from the heretical
incursions into the primitive Church to Carlstadt, Oecolampadius, and Zwingli.
It was these three satanic agencies that raised the issue of the Lord's Supper
to frustrate the work of the recovered Gospel
. The professions of love and
peace held out by the Swiss, he curses to the pit of hell, for they are
patricides and matricides. Furious the reply can no longer be called, it is
disgraceful in the manner in which it drags the holiest representations of his
opponents through the mire
. Indiscriminate and opprobrious epithets of pig, dog,
fanatic, senseless ass, go to your pigsty and roll in your filth
(Sammtl. W.
,
XXX, 68) are some of the polemical coruscations that illuminate this reply. Yet,
in few of his polemical writings do we find more conspicuous glimpses of a
soundness of theological knowledge, appositeness of illustration, familiarity
with the Fathers, reverence for tradition - remnants of his old training - than
in this document, which caused sorrow and consternation throughout the whole
reform camp. The hand which had pulled down the Roman Church in Germmany made
the first rent in the Church which was to take its place
(Cambridge History, II,
209).
The attempt made by the Landgrave Philip, to bring the contending forces
together and effect a compromise at the Marburg Colloquy, 1-3 October, 1529, was
doomed to failure before its convocation. Luther's iron will refused to yield to
any concession, his parting salutation to Zwingli, your spirit is not our
spirit
(De Wette, op. cit., IV, 28) left no further hope of negotiations, and
the brand he affixed on this antagonist and his disciples as not only liars,
but the very incarnation of lying, deceit, and hypocrisy
(Idem, op. cit.)
closed the opening chapter of a possible reunion. Zwingli returned to Zurich to
meet his death on the battlefield of Kappel (11 October, 1531). The damnation
Luther meted out to him in life accompanied his hated rival also in death
(Menzel, II, 420). The next union of the two reform wings was when they became
brothers in arms against Rome in the Thirty Years' War.
While occupied with his manifold pressing duties, all of them performed with
indefatigable zeal and consuming energy, alarmed at the excesses attending the
upheaval of social and ecclesiastical life, his reform movement generally viewed
from its more destructive side, he did not neglect the constructive elements
designed to give cohesion and permanency to his task. These again showed his
intuitional apprehension of the racial susceptibilities of the people and his
opportune political sagacity in enlisting the forces of the princes. His appeal
for schools and education was to counteract the intellectual chaos created by
the suppression and desertion of the monastic and church schools; his invitation
to the congregation to sing in the vernacular German in the liturgical services
in spite of the record of more than 1400 vernacular hymns before the Reformation
proved a masterstroke and gave him a most potent adjunct to his preaching; the
Latin Mass, which he retained, more to chagrin Carlstadt than for any other
accountable reason, he now abandoned, with many excisions and modifications for
the German. Still more important and far-reaching was the plan which Melancthon,
under his supervision, drew up to supply a workable regulative machinery for the
new Church. To introduce this effectively the evangelical princes with their
territorial powers stepped in
(Köstlin-Kawerau, op. cit., II, 24). The Elector
of Saxony especially showed a disposition to act in a summary, drastic manner,
which met with Luther's full approval. Not only were priests, who would not
conform, to lose their benefices, but recalcitrant laymen, who after instruction
were still obstinate, had a time allowed within which they were to sell their
property, and then leave the country
(Beard, op. cit., 177). The civil power
was invoked to decide controversies among preachers, and to put down theological
discussion with the secular arm. The publication of a popular catechism in
simple idiomatic colloquial German, had an influence, in spite of the many
Catholic catechetical works already in existence, that can hardly be
over-estimated.
The menacing religious war, between the adherents of the Gospel
and the
fictitious Catholic League (15 May, Breslau), ostensibly formed to exterminate
the Protestants, which with a suspicious precipitancy on the part of its leader,
Landgrave Philip, had actually gone to a formal declaration of war (15 May,
1528), was fortunately averted. It proved to be based on a rather clumsily
forged document of Otto von Pack, a member of Duke George's chancery. Luther,
who first shrank from war and counselled peace, by one of those characteristic
reactions now that peace had been established, began a war in real earnest
about the League
(Planck, op. cit., II, 434) in whose existence, in spite of
unquestionable exposure, he still firmly believed.
The Diet of Speyer (21 February-22 April, 1529), presided over by King
Ferdinand, as the emperor's deputy, like that held in the same city three years
earlier, arrived at a real compromise. The two Propositions
or Instructions
submitted, were expected to accomplish this. The decree allowed the Lutheran
Estates the practice and reform of the new religion within their territorial
boundaries, but claimed the same rights for those who should continue to adhere
to the Catholic Church. Melancthon expressed his satisfaction with this and
declared that they would work no hardship for them, but even protect us mmore
than the decrees of the earlier Diet
(Speyer, 1526; Corp. Ref., I, 1059). But
an acceptance, much less an effective submission to the decrees, was not to be
entertained at this juncture, and five princes most affected, on 19 April,
handed in a protestation which Melancthon in alarm called a terrible affair
.
This protest has become historic, since it gave the specific nomenclature
Protestant to the whole opposition movement to the Catholic Church. The Diet of
Speyer inaugurates the actual division of the German nation
(*Janssen, op. cit.,
III,51).
In spite of the successful Hungarian invasion of the Turks, political affairs,
by the reconciliation of pope and emperor (Barcelona, 29 June, 1529), the peace
with Francis I (Cambrai, 5 August, 1529), shaped themselves so happily, that
Charles V was crowned emperor by his whilom enemy, Clement VII (Bologna, 24 Feb.,
1530). However, in Germany, affairs were still irritant and menacing. To the
hostility of Catholics and Protestants was now added the acrimonious quarrel
between the latter and the Zwinglians; the late Diet of Speyer was inoperative,
practically a dead letter, the Protestant princes privily and publicly showed a
spirit that was not far removed from open rebellion. Charles again sought to
bring about religious peace and harmony by taking the tangled skein into his own
hands. He accordingly summoned the Diet of Augsburg, which assembled in 1530 (8
April-19 November), presided over it in person, arranged to have the disaffected
religious parties meet, calmly discuss and submit their differences, and by a
compromise or arbitration, reestablish peace. Luther being under the ban of the
Empire, for certain reasons
(De Wette, op. cit., III,368) did not make his
appearance, but was harboured in the fortress of Coburg, about four days journey
distant. Here he was in constant touch and confidential relations with
Melancthon and other Protestant leaders. It was Melancthon who, under the
dominant influence of Luther and availing himself of the previously accepted
Articles of Marburg (5 Oct., 1529), Schwabach (16 Oct., 1529), Torgau (20 March,
1530), and the Large Catechism, drew up the first authoritative profession of
the Lutheran Church. This religious charter was the Augsburg Confession
(Confessio Augustana), the symbolical book of Lutheranism.
In its original form it mmet with Luther's full endorsemment. It consists of
an introduction, or preamble, and is in two parts. The first, consisting of
twenty-one Articles, gives an exposition of the principal doctrines of the
Protestant creed, and aimms at an amicable adjustment; the second, consisting of
seven Articles, deals with abuses
, and concerning these there is a
difference
. The Confession as a whole is irenic and is more of an invitation
to union than a provocation to disunion. Its tone is dignified, moderate, and
pacific. But it allows its insinuating concessions to carry it so far into the
boundaries of the vague and indefinite as to leave a lurking suspicion of
artifice. Doctrinal differences, fundamental and irreconcilable, are pared down
or slurred over to an almost irreducible degree. No one was better qualified by
temper or training to clothe the blunt, apodictic phraseology of Luther in the
engaging vesture of truth than Melancthon. The Articles on original sin,
justification by faith alone, and free will - though perplexingly similar in
sound and terminology, lack the ring of the true Catholic metal. Again, many of
the conceded points, some of them a surprising and startling character, even
abstracting from their suspected ambiguity, were in such diametric conflict with
the past teaching and preaching of the petitioners, even in contradiction to
their written and oral communications passing at the very moment of deliberation,
as to cast suspicion on the whole work. That these suspicions were not unfounded
was amply proved by the aftermath of the Diet. The correction of the so-called
abuses dealt with in Part II under the headings: Communion under both kinds, the
marriage of priests, the Mass, compulsory confession, distinction of meats and
tradition, monastic vows, and the authority of bishops, for obvious reasons, was
not entertained, much less agreed to. Melancthon's advances for still further
concessions were promptly and peremptorily rejected by Luther. The Confession
was read at a public session of the Diet (25 June) in German and Latin, was
handed to the emperor, who in turn submitted it to twenty Catholic theologians,
including Luther's old antagonists Eck, Cochlaeus, Usingen, and Wimpina, for
examination and refutation. The first reply, on account of its prolixity, and
bitter and irritating tone, was quickly rejected, nor did the emperor allow the
Confutation of the Augsburg Confession
to be read before the Diet (3 August)
until it had been pruned and softened down by no less than five revisions.
Melancthon's Apology for the Augsburg Confession
, which was in the nature of a
reply to the Confutation
, and which passes as of equal official authority as
the Confession
itself, was not accepted by the emperor. All further attempts
at a favourable outcome proving unavailing, the imperial edict condemning the
Protestant contention was published (22 Sept.). It allowed the leaders until 15
April, 1532, for reconsideration.
The recess was read (13 Oct.) to the Catholic Estates, who at the same timme
formed the Catholic League. To the Protestants it was read 11 Nov., who rejected
it and formed the Smalkaldic League (29 March, 1531), an offensive and defensive
alliance of all Lutherans. The Zwinglians were not admitted. Luther, who
returned to Wittenberg in a state of great irritation at the outcome of the Diet,
was now invoked to prepare the public mind for the position assumed by the
princes, which at first blush looked suspiciously like downright rebellion. He
did this in one of his paroxysmal rages, one of those ruthless outpourings when
calm deliberation, religious charity, political prudence, social amenities are
openly and flagrantly set at defiance. The three popular publications were:
Warning to his dear German People
(Walch, op. cit., XVI, 1950-2016), Glosses
on the putative Imperial Edict
(Idem, op. cit., 2017-2062), and, far
outstripping these, Letter against the Assassin at Dresden
(Idemm, op. cit.,
2062-2086), which his chief biographer characterizes as one of the most savage
and violent of his writings
(Kostlin-Kawerau, op. cit., II, 252). All of them,
particularly the last, indisputably established his controversial methods as
being literally and wholly without decorum, conscience, taste or fear
(Mozley,
Historical Essays
, London, 1892, I, 375-378). His mad onslaught on Duke George
of Saxony, the Assassin of Dresden
, whom history proclaims the most honest
and consistent character of his age
(Armstrong, op. cit., I, 325), one of the
most estimable Princes of his age
(Cambridge Hist., II, 237), was a source of
mortification to his friends, a shock to the sensibilities of every honest man,
and has since kept his apologists busy at vain attempts at vindication. The
projected alliance with Francis I, Charles' deadly enemy, met with favour. Its
patriotic aspects need not be dwelt upon. Henry VIII of England, who was now
deeply concerned with the proceedings of his divorce from Catherine of Aragon,
was approached less successfully. The opinion about the divorce, asked from the
universities, also reached that of Wittenberg, where Robert Barnes, an English
Augustinian friar who had deserted his monastery, brought every influence to
bear to make it favourable. The opinion was enthusiastically endorsed by
Melancthon, Osiander, and Oecolampadius. Luther also in an exhaustive brief
maintained that before he would permit a divorce, he would rather that the king
took unto himself another queen
(De Wette, op. cit., 296). However, the
memorable theological passage at arms the king had had with Luther, the latter's
cringing apology, left such a feeling of aversion, if not contempt, in the soul
of his rival reformer, that the invitation was to all intents ignored.
In the beginning of 1534, Luther after twelve years of intermittent labour, completed and published in six parts his German translation of the entire Bible.
For years the matter of a general council had been agitated in ecclesiastical
ciecles. Charles V constantly appealed for it, the Augsburg Confession
emphatically demanded it, and now the accession of Paul III (13 Oct., 1534), who
succeeded Clement VII (d. 25 Sept., 1534), gave the movement an impetus, that
for once made it loom up as a realizable accomplishment. The pope sanctioned it,
on condition that the Protestants would abide by its decisions and submit their
credenda in concise, intelligible form. With a view of ascertaining the tone of
feeling at the German Courts, he sent Vergerius there as a legate. He, in order
to make the study of the situation as thorough as possible, did not hesitate,
while passing through Wittenberg on his way to the Elector of Brandenburg, to
meet Luther in person (7 Nov., 1535). His description of the jauntily groomed
reformer in holiday attire, in a vest of dark calmet, sleeves with gaudy atlas
cuffs … coat of serge lined with fox pelts…several rings on his fingers, a
massive gold chain about his neck
shows him in a somewhat unusual light. The
presence of the man who would reform the ancient Church decked out in so foppish
a manner, made an impression on the mind of the legate, that can readily be
conjectured. Aware of Luther's disputatious character, he dexterously escaped
discussion, by disclaiming all profound knowledge of theology, and diverted the
interview into the commonplace. Luther treated the interview as a comedy, a view
no doubt more fully shared by the keen-witted Italian.
The question was raised as to what participation the Protestants should
assume in the council, which had been announced to meet at Mantua. After
considerable discussion Luther was commissioned to draw up a document, giving a
summary of their doctrines and opinions. This he did after which the report was
submitted to the favourable consideration of the elector and a specially
appointed body of theologians. It contained the Articles of Smalkald a real
oppositional record against the Roman Church
(Guericke), eventually
incorporated in the Concordienformel
and accepted as a symbolical book. It is
on the whole such a brusque rejection and coarse philippic against the pope as
Antichrist
, that we need not marvel that Melancthon shrank from affixing his
unqualified signature to it.
Luther's serious illness during the Smalkaldic Convention, threatened a fatal
termination to his activities, but the prospect of death in no way seemed to
mellow his feelings towards the papacy. It was when supposedly on the brink of
eternity (24 Feb., 1537) that he expressed the desire to one of the elector's
chamberlains to have his epitaph written: Pestis eram vivus, moriens ero mors
tua, Papa
[living I was a pest to thee, O Pope, dying I will be thy death
(Kostlin-Kawerau, op. cit., II, 389)]. True, the historicity of this epitaph is
not in chronological agreement with the narrative of Mathesius, who maintains he
heard it in the house of Spalatin, 9 Jan., 1531, or with the identical words
found in his Address to the Clergy assembled at the Augsburg Diet
, in which he
hurled back the gibes flung at the priests who had enrolled under his banner and
married. Nevertheless it is in full consonance with the parting benediction the
invalid gave from his wagon, to his assembled friends on his homeward journey:
May the Lord fill you with His blessings and with hatred of the pope
, and the
verbatim sentiments chalked on the wall of his chamber, the night before his
death.
Needless to add, the Protestant Estates refused the invitation to the council, and herein we have the first public and positive renunciation of the papacy.
What Luther claimed for himself against Catholic authority, he refused to
Carlstadt and refused to Zwingli. He failed to see that their position was
exactly as his own, with a difference of result, which indeed was all the
difference in the world to him
(Tulloch, Leaders of the Reformation
,
Edinburgh and London, 1883, 171). This was never more manifest than in the
interminable Sacramentarian warfare. Bucer, on whom the weight of leadership
fell, after Zwingli's death, which was followed shortly by that of Oecolampadius
(24 Nov., 1531), was unremitting in bringing about a reunion, or at least an
understanding on the Lord's Supper, the main point of cleavage between the Swiss
and German Protestants. Not only religiously, but politically, would this mean a
step towards the progress of Zwinglianism. At its formation the Swiss
Protestants were not admitted to the Smalkaldic League (29 March, 1531); its
term of six years was about to expire (29 March, 1537) and they now renewed
their overtures. Luther, who all the time could not conceal his opposition to
the Zwinglians, even going to the extent of directing and begging Duke Albrecht
of Prussia, not to tolerate any of Munzer's or Zwingli's adherents in his
territory, finally yielded to the assembling of a peace conference. Knowing
their predicament, he used the covert threat of an exclusion from the league as
a persuasive to drive them to the acceptance of his views. This conference which,
owing to his sickness, was held in his own house at Wittenberg, was attended by
eleven theologians of Zwinglian proclivities and seven Lutherans. It resulted in
the theological compromise, reunion it can hardly be called, known as the
Concord of Wittenberg (21-29 Mat, 1536). The remonstrants, technically waiving
the points of difference, subscribed to the Lutheran doctrine of the Lord's
Supper, infant baptism, and absolution. That the Zwinglian theologians who
subscribed to the Concord and declared its contents true and scriptural, dropped
their former convictions and were transformed into devout Lutherans, no one who
was acquainted with these men more intimately can believe
(Thudichum, op. cit.,
II, 489). They simply yielded to the unbending determination of Luther, and
subscribed to escape the hostility of the Elector John Frederick who was
absolutely Luther's creature, and not to forfeit the protection of the
Smalkaldic League; they submitted to the inevitable to escape still greater
dangers
(Idem, op. cit.). As for Luther, the poor, wretched Concord
as he
designates it, received little recognition from him. In 1539, he coupled the
names of Nestorius and Zwingli in a way that gave deep offence at Zurich. At
Wittenberg, Zwingli and Oecolampadius became convertible terms for heretics, and
with Luther's taunting remark that he would pray and teach against them until
the end of his days
(De Wette, op. cit., V, 587), the rupture was again
commpleted.
The internal controversies of the Lutheran Church, which were to shatter its disjointed unity with the force of an explosive eruption after his death, and which now only his dauntless courage, powerful will, and imperious personality held within the limits of murmuring restraint, were cropping out on all sides, found their way into Wittenberg, and affected even his bosom friends. Though unity was out of the question, an appearance of uniformity had at all hazards to be maintained. Cordatus, Schenck, Agricola, all veterans in the cause of reform, lapsed into doctrinal aberrations that caused him much uneasiness. The fact that Melancthon, his most devoted and loyal friend, was under a cloud of suspicion for entertaining heterodox views, though not as yet fully shared by him, caused him no little irritation and sorrow. But all these domestic broils were trivial and lost sight of, when compared to one of the most critical problems that thus far confronted the new Church, which was suddenly sprung upon its leaders, focussing more especially on its hierophant. This was the double marriage of Landgrave Philip of Hesse.
Philip the Magnanimous (b. 23 Nov., 1504) was married before his twentieth
year to Christina, daughter of Duke George of Saxony, who was then in her
eighteenth year. He had the reputation of being the most immoral of
princelings
, who ruined himself, in the language of his court theologians, by
unrestrained and promiscuous debauchery
. He himself admits that he could not
remain faithful to his wife for three consecutive weeks. The malignant attack of
venereal disease, which compelled a temporary cessation of his profligacy, also
directed his thoughts to a more ordinate gratification of his passions. His
affections were already directed to Margaret von der Saal, a seventeen-year-old
lady-in-waiting, and he concluded to avail himself of Luther's advice to enter a
double marriage. Christina was a woman of excellent qualities and noble mind,
to whom, in excuse of his infidelities, he [Philip] ascribed all sorts of bodily
infirmities and offensive habits
(Schmidt, Melancthon
, 367). She had borne
him seven children. The mother of Margaret would only entertain the proposition
of her daughter becoming Philip's second wife
on condition that she, her
brother, Philip's wife, Luther, Melancthon, and Bucer, or at least, two
prominent theologians be present at the marriage. Bucer was entrusted with the
mission of securing the consent of Luther, Melancthon and the Saxon princes. In
this he was eminently successful. All was to be done under the veil of the
profoundest secrecy. This secrecy Bucer enjoined on the landgrave again and
again, even when on his journey to Wittenberg (3 Dec., 1539) that all might
redound to the glory of God
(Lenz, op. cit., I,119). Luther's position on the
question was fully known to him. The latter's opportunism in turn grasped the
situation at a glance. It was a question of expediency and necessity more than
propriety and legality. If the simultaneous polygamy were permitted, it would
prove an unprecendented act in the history of Christendom; it would, moreover,
affix on Philip the brand of a most heinous crime, punishable under recent
legislation with death by beheading. If refused, it threatened the defection of
the landgrave, and would prove a calamity beyond reckoning to the Protestant
cause.
Evidently in an embarrassing quandary, Luther and Melancthon filed their
joint opinion (10 Dec., 1539). After expressing gratification at the landgrave's
last recovery, for the poor, miserable Church of Christ is small and forlorn,
and stands in need of truly devout lords and rulers
, it goes on to say that a
general law that a man may have more than one wife
could not be handed down,
but that a dispensation could be granted. All knowledge of the dispensation and
the marriage should be buried from the public in deadly silence. All gossip on
the subject is to be ignored, as long as we are right in conscience, and this we
hold is right
, for what is permitted in the Mosaic law, is not forbidden in
the Gospel
(De Wette-Seidemann, VI, 239-244; Corp. Ref.
, III, 856-863). The
nullity and impossibility of the second marriage while the legality of the first
remained untouched was not mentioned or hinted at. His wife, assured by her
spiritual director that it was not contrary to the law of God
, gave her
consent, though on her deathbed she confessed to her son that her consent was
feloniously wrung from her. In return Philip pledged his princely word that she
would be the first and supreme wife
and that his matrimonial obligations
would be rendered her with more devotion than before
. The children of
Christina should be considered the sole princes of Hesse
(Rommel, op. cit.).
After the arrangement had already been completed, a daughter was born to
Christina, 13 Feb., 1540. The marriage took place (4 March, 1540) in the
presence of Bucer, Melancthon, and the court preacher Melander who performed the
ceremony. Melander was a bluff agitator, surly, with a most unsavoury moral
reputation
, one of his moral derelictions being the fact that he had three
living wives, having deserted two without going through the formality of a legal
separation. Philip lived with both wives, both of whom bore him children, the
landgravine, two sons and a daughter, and Margaret six sons. How can this
darkest stain
on the history of the German Reformation be accounted for? Was
it politics, biblicism, distorted vision, precipitancy, fear of the near
approaching Diet that played such a role in the sinful downfall of Luther?
Or
was it the logical sequence of premises he had maintained for years in speech
and print, not to touch upon the ethics of that extraordinary sermon on
marriage? He himself writes defiantly that he is not ashamed of his opinion
(Lauterbach, op. cit., 198). The marriage in spite of all precautions,
injunctions, and pledges of secrecy leaked out, caused a national sensation and
scandal, and set in motion an extensive correspondence between all intimately
concerned, to neutralize the effect on the public mind. Melancthon nearly died
of shame, but Luther wished to brazen the matter out with a lie
(Cambridge
Hist., II, 241). The secret yea
must for the sake of the Christian Church
remain a public nay
(De Witte-Seidemann, op. cit., VI, 263). What harm would
there be, if a man to accomplish better things and for the sake of the Christian
Church, does tell a good thumping lie
(Lenz, Briefwechsel
, I, 382; Kolde,
Analecta
, 356), was his extenuating plea before the Hessian counsellors
assembled at Eisenach (1540), a sentiment which students familiar with his words
and actions will remember is in full agreement with much of his policy and many
of his assertions. We are convinced that the papacy is the seat of the real and
actual Antichrist, and believe that against its deceit and iniquity everything
is permitted for the salvation of souls
(De Wette, op. cit., I, 478).
Charles V involved in a triple war, with a depleted exchequer, with a record
of discouraging endeavours to establish religious peace in Germany, found what
he thought was a gleam of hope in the concession half-heartedly made by the
Smalkaldic assembly of Protestant theologians (1540), in which they would allow
episcopal jurisdiction provided the bishops would tolerate the new religion.
Indulging this fond, but delusive expectation, he convened a religious colloquy
to meet at Speyer (6 June, 1540). The tone of the Protestant reply to the
invitation left little prospect of an agreement. The deadly epidemic raging at
Speyer compelled its transference to Hagenau, whence after two months of
desultory and ineffectual debate (1 June-28 July), it adjourned to Worms (28
Oct.). Luther from the beginning had no confidence in it, it would be a loss of
time, a waste of money, and a neglect of all home duties
(De Wette, op. cit., V,
308). It proved an endless and barren word-tilting of theologians, as may be
inferred from the fact that after three months constant parleying, an agreement
was reached on but one point, and that barnacled with so many conditions, as to
make it absolutely valueless. The emperor's relegation of the colloquy to the
Diet of Ratisbon (5 April-22 May), which he, as well as the papal legate
Contarini, attended in person, met with the same unhappy result. Melancthon,
reputed to favour reunion, was placed by the elector, John Frederick, under a
strict police surveillance, during which he was neither allowed private
interviews, private visits, or even private walks. The elector, as well as King
Francis 1, fearing the political ascendancy of the emperor, placed every barrier
in the way of compromise, and when the rejected articles were submitted by a
special embassy to Luther, the former not only warned him by letter against
their acceptance, but rushed in hot haste to Wittenberg, to throw the full
weight of his personal unfluence into the frustration of all plans of peace.
Luther's life and career were drawing to a close. His marriage to Catherine von Bora was on the whole, as far as we can infer from his own confession and public appearances, a happy one. The Augustinian monastery, which was given to him after his marriage by the elector, became his homestead. Here six children were born to them:
John (7 June, 1526),
Elizabeth (10 Dec., 1527),
Magdalen (4 May, 1529),
Martin (9 Nov., 1531),
Paul (28 Jan., 1533), and
Margaret (17 December, 1534).
Catherine proved to be a plain, frugal, domestic housewife; her interest in
her fowls, piggery, fish-pond, vegetable garden, home-brewery, were deeper and
more absorbing than in the most gigantic undertakings of her husband. Occasional
bickerings with her neighbours and the enlistment of her husband's intervention
in personal interests and biases, were frequent enough to engage the tongue of
public censure. She died at Torgau (20 Dec., 1552) in comparative obscurity,
poverty, and neglect, having found Wittenberg cold and unsympathetic to the
reformer's family. This he had predicted, after my death the four elements in
Wittenberg will not tolerate you after all
. Luther's rugged health began to
show marks of depleting vitality and unchecked inroads of disease. Prolonged
attacks of dyspepsia, nervous headaches, chronic granular kidney disease, gout,
sciatic rheumatism, middle ear abscesses, above all vertigo and gall stone colic
were intermittent or chronic ailments that gradually made him the typical
embodiment of a supersensitively nervous, prematurely old man. These physical
impairments were further aggravated by his notorious disregard of all ordinary
dietetic or hygienic restrictions. Even prescinding from his congenital heritage
of inflammable irascibility and uncontrollable rage, besetting infirmities that
grew deeper and more acute with age, his physical condition in itself would
measurably account for his increasing irritation, passionate outbreaks, and
hounding suspicions, which in his closing days became a problem more of
pathological or psychopathic interest, than biographic or historical importance.
It was this terrible temper
which brought on the tragedy of alienation,
that drove from him his most devoted friends and zealous co-labourers. Every
contradiction set him ablaze. Hardly one of us
, in the lament of one of his
votaries, can escape Luther's anger and his public scourging
(Corp. Ref., V,
314). Carlstadt parted with himm in 1522, after what threatened to be a personal
encounter; Melancthon in plaintive tones speaks of his passionate violence,
self-will, and tyranny, and does not mince words in confessing the humiliation
of his ignoble servitude; Bucer, prompted by political and diplomatic motives,
prudently accepts the inevitable just as the Lord bestowed him on us
; Zwingli
has become a pagan, Oecolampadius … and the other heretics have in-devilled,
through-devilled, over-devilled corrupt hearts and lying mouths, and no one
should pray for them
, all of them were brought to their death by the fiery
darts and spears of the devil
(Walch, op. cit., XX, 223); Calvin and the
Reformed are also the possessors of in-deviled, over-devilled, and
through-devilled hearts
; Schurf, the eminent jurist, was changed from an ally
to an opponent, with a brutality that defies all explanation or apology;
Agricola fell a prey to a repugnance that time did not soften; Schwenkfeld,
Armsdorf, Cordatus, all incurred his ill will, forfeited his friendship, and
became the butt of his stinging speech. The Luther, who from a distance was
still honoured as the hero and leader of the new church, was only tolerated at
its centre in consideration of his past services
(Ranke, op. cit., II, 421).
The zealous band of men, who once clustered about their standard-bearer,
dwindled to an insignificant few, insignificant in number, intellectuality, and
personal prestige. A sense of isolation palled the days of his decline. It not
alone affected his disposition, but played the most astonishing pranks with his
memory. The oftener he details to his table companions, the faithful chroniclers
who gave us his Tischreden
, the horrors of the papacy, the more starless does
the night of his monastic life appear. The picture of his youth grows darker
and darker. He finally becomes a myth to himself. Not only do dates shift
themselves, but also facts. When the old man drops into telling tales, the past
attains the plasticity of wax. He ascribes the same words promiscuously now to
this, now to that friend or enemy
(Hausrath, op.cit., II, 432).
It was this period that gave birth to the incredibilities, exaggerations,
distortions, contradictions, inconsistencies, that make his later writing an
inextricable web to untangle and for three hundred years have supplied
uncritical historiography with the cock-and-bull fables which unfortunately have
been accepted on their face value. Again the dire results of the Reformation
caused him unspeakable solicitude and grief
. The sober contemplation of the
incurable inner wounds of the new Church, the ceaseless quarrels of the
preachers, the galling despotism of the temporal rulers, the growing contempt
for the clergy, the servility to the princes, made him fairly writhe in anguish.
Above all the disintegration of moral and social life, the epidemic ravages of
vice and immorality, and that in the very cradle of the Reformmation, even in
his very household, nearly drove him frantic. We live in Sodom and Babylon,
affairs are growing daily worse
, is his lament (De Wette, op. cit., V, 722). In
the whole Wittenberg district, with its two cities and fifteen parochial
villages, he can find only one peasant and not more, who exhorts his domestics
to the Word of God and the catechism, the rest plunge headlong to the devil
(Lauterbach, Tagebuch
, 113,114,135; *Dollinger, Die Reformation
, I, 293-438).
Twice he was on the verge of deserting this Sodom
, having commissioned his
wife (28 July, 1545) to sell all their effects. It required the combined efforts
of the university, Bugenhagen, Melancthon, and the burgomaster, to make him
change his mind. And again in December, only the powerful intervention of the
elector prevented him carrying out his design. Then again came those torturing
assaults of the Devil, which left no rest for even a single day
. His nightly
encounters exhausted and martyred him to an intensity, that he was barely able
to gasp or take breath
. Of all the assaults none were more severe or greater
than about my preaching, the thought coming to me: All this confusion caused by
you
(Sammtl. W., LIX, 296; LX. 45-46; 108-109, 111; LXII, 494). His last sermon
in Wittenberg (17 Jan., 1546) is in a vein of despondency and despair. Usury,
drunkenness, adultery, murder, assassination, all these can be noticed, and the
world understands them to be sins, but the devil's bride, reason, that pert
prostitute struts in, and will be clever and means what she says, that it is the
Holy Ghost
(op. cit., XVI, 142-48). The same day he pens the pathetic lines I
am old, decrepit, indolent, weary, cold, and now have the sight of but one eye
(De Wette, op. cit., V, 778). Nevertheless peace was not his.
It was while in this agony of body and torture of mind, that his
unsurpassable and irreproducible coarseness attained its culminating point of
virtuosity in his anti-Semitic and antipapal pamphlets. Against the Jews and
their Lies
was followed in quick succession by his even more frenzied fusillade
On the Schem Hamphoras
(1542) and Against the Papacy established by the Devil
(1545). Here, especially in the latter, all coherent thought and utterance is
buried in a torrential deluge of vituperation for which no pen, much less a
printing press have ever been found
(Menzel, op. cit., II, 352). His mastery in
his chosen method of controversy remained unchallenged. His friends had a
feeling ofsorrow. His scolding remained unanswered, but also unnoticed
(Ranke,
op. cit., II,121). Accompanying this last volcanic eruption, as a sort of
illustrated commentary that the common man, who is unable to read, may see and
understand what he thought of the papacy
(Forstemann), were issued the nine
celebrated caricatures of the pope by Lucas Cranach, with expository verses by
Luther. These, the coarsest drawings that the history of caricature of all
times has ever produced
(Lange, Der Papstesel
, Gottingen, 1891,89), were so
inexpressibly vile that a common impulse of decency demanded their summary
suppression by his friends.
His last act was, as he predicted and prayed for, an attack on the papacy. Summoned to Eisleben, his native place, a short time after, to act as an arbiter in a contention between the brothers Albrecht and Gebhard von Mansfeld, death came with unexpected speed but not suddenly, and he departed this life about three o'clock in the morning, 18 February, 1546, in the presence of a number of friends. The body was taken to Wittenberg for interment, and was buried on the 22 Feb., in the castle church, where it now lies with that of Melancthon.
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