Hinweise zur Catholic Encyclopedia
Philipp Melancthon
Collaborator and friend of Luther, born at Bretten (in Unterpfalz, now Baden), 16 February, 1497; died at Wittenberg, 19 April, 1560.
(1) His Rearing and Education
Melancthon was of respectable and well-to-do parentage. His father, Georg Schwarzerd (Schwarzert) was a celebrated armourer, while his pious and intelligent mother was the daughter of Reuter, the burgomaster of Bretten. He received his first instruction at home from a private tutor, and in 1507 he went to Pforzheim, where he lived with his grandmother Elizabeth, sister of the great humanist, Johann Reuchlin. Here the rector, Georg Simler, made him acquainted with the Greek and Latin poets, and with the philosophy of Aristotle. But of greater influence still was his intercourse with Reuchlin, his grand-uncle, who gave a strong impetus to his studies. It was Reuchlin also who persuaded him to translate his name Schwarzerd into the Greek Melancthon, (written Melanthon after 1531). In 1509 Melancthon, not yet 13 years of age, entered the University of Heidelberg. This institution had already passed its humanistic prime under Dalberg and Agricola (see HUMANISM). It is true that Pallas Spangel, Melancthon's eminent teacher, was also familiar with humanists and humanism, but he was nonetheless an able scholastic and adherent of Thomism. Melancthon studied rhetoric under Peter Gunther, and astronomy under Conrad Helvetius, a pupil of Caesarius. Meanwhile he continued eagerly his private studies, the reading of ancient poets and historians as well as of the neo-Latins, grammar, rhetoric, and dialectics. He obtained the baccalaureate in 1511, but his application for the master's degree in 1512 was rejected because of his youth. He therefore went to Tübingen, where the scientific spirit was in full vigour, and he became there a pupil of the celebrated Latinist Heinrich Bebel, and, for a second time, of Georg Simler, who was then teaching humanities in Tübingen, and was later professor of jurisprudence. He studied astronomy and astrology under Stoffler. With Franciscus Stadianus he planned an edition of the genuine text of Aristotle, but nothing ever came of this. His thirst for knowledge led him into jurisprudence, mathematics, and even medicine.
In 1514 he won the master's degree as first among eleven candidates, and he
was made an instructor in the university. His subjects were Vergil and Terence;
later he was assigned the lectureship on eloquence and expounded Cicero and Livy.
He also became (1514) press-corrector in the printing office of Thomas Anshelm,
pursued his private studies, and at last turned to theology. For the antiquated
scholastic methods of this science as taught at Tübingen, and for Dr. Jacob Lemp,
who, as Melancthon said, had attempted to picture transubstantiation on the
blackboard, he had, later on, only words of derision. He studied patristics on
his own account and took up the New Testament in the original text, but did not
at this time reach any definite theological view; in this branch of knowledge,
as he himself afterwards repeatedly declared, his intellectual father was Luther.
He naturally took Reuchlin's part in the latter's controversy with the Cologne
professors (see HUMANISM), and wrote in 1514 a preface to the Epistolae
clarorum virorum
; but he did not come prominently to the fore. His own earliest
publications were an edition of Terence (1516), and a Greek grammar (1518). In
1518 he was offered, on Reuchlin's recommendation, a professorship of Greek at
Wittenberg. I know of no one among the Germans who is superior to him
, wrote
Reuchlin to the Elector of Saxony, save only Erasmus Roterodamus, and he is a
dutchman
. The first impression made by the simple, bashful and frail-looking
youth was not favourable. But his opening address: De corrigendis adolescentiae
studiis
(29 Aug., 1518), elicited enthusiastic applause. He extolled the return
to the authentic sources of genuine science as a signal merit of the new
humanistic and scientific spirit, and he promised to apply this method to the
study of theology.
(2) Melancthon and the German Reformation
Luther was a strong believer in making humanism serve the cause of the
Gospel
, and it was not long before the still plastic Melancthon fell under the
sway of Luther's powerful personality. He accompanied the latter to his Leipzig
disputation in 1519; though he did not participate in the discussion itself, he
seconded with his knowledge Luther's preparatory labours. After the disputation
he composed, with the co-operation of Oecolampadius, a report which was the
occasion of an attack upon him by Eck to whom he replied with his Defensio Phil.
Melancthonis contra Joh. Eckium professorem
. He was now persuaded by Luther to
take up theological lectures, and became in 1519 a Bachelor of Theology, then a
professor of the same science. For 42 years he laboured at Wittenberg in the
very front rank of university professors. His theological courses were folowed
by 500 or 600, later by as many as 1500 students, whereas his philological
lectures were often but poorly attended. Yet he persistently refused the title
of Doctor of Divinity, and never accepted ordination; nor was he ever known to
preach. His desire was to remain a humanist, and to the end of his life he
continued his work on the classics, along with his exegetical studies. And yet
he became the father of evangelical theology. He composed the first treatise on
evangelical
doctrine (Loci communes rerum theologicarum, 1521). It deals
principally with practical religious questions, sin and grace, law and gospel,
justification and regeneration. This work ran through more than 100 editions
before his death. He was a friend and supporter of Luther the Reformer, and
defended him, e.g., against the Italian Dominican, Thomas Radinus of Piacenza,
and the Sorbonne in Paris (1521).
But he was not qualified to play the part of a leader amid the turmoil of a
troublous period. The life which he was fitted for was the uiet existence of the
scholar. He was always of a retiring and timid disposition, temperate, prudent,
and peace-loving, with a pious turn of mind and a deeply religious training. He
never completely lost his attachment for the Catholic Church and for many of her
ceremonies. His limitations first became apparent when, during Luther's stay on
the Wartburg, 1521, he found himself in Wittenberg confronted with the task of
maintaining order against the Zwickau fanatics, with their wild notions as to
the establishment of Christ's Kingdom upon earth, communism and so forth. What
Luther accomplished in a few days on his return had proved impossible to
Melancthon. On the other hand he showed his ability as an organizer when he
undertook the reorganization of Church affairs in Saxony which then appeared to
be in a very bad state. For the visitations ordered by the Elector, Melancthon
drew up the Instructions for Visitors of the parochial clergy
(printed, 1528),
which work is remarkable for its practical sense and simplicity. Here also
appears the difference between Luther and Melancthon, for Melancthon warns
against reviling pope or bishop; whereas Luther remarks: You must denounce
vehemently the papacy and its followers, for it is already doomed by God even as
the devil and his kingdom
. Melancthon, it is true, preached the doctrine that
faith alone justifies and that God will forgive sins for the sake of Christ,
and without works on our part
; but he added: We must nevertheless do good
works, which God has commanded.
Later he invariably sought to preserve peace as
long as might be possible, and no one took so much to heart as he the break
between the churches.
While Luther in the Smalkaldic Articles (1537), described the pope as
Antichrist and other theologians subscribed to this declaration, Melancthon
wrote: My idea of the pope is this, that if he would give due recognition to
the Gospel, his supremacy over the bishops, which he enjoys by human consent
(not by Divine ordinance) should also be acknowledged by us for the sake of
peace and of the unity of those Christians who are now, and in the future may be,
subject to him.
He had made a diplomatic plea for the Reformation at the
Reichstag in Speyer (1529). He hoped that it would be recognized without
difficulty by the emperor and the Catholic party, but unstead of this, a
resolution was adopted to carry out vigorously the Edict of Worms (1521) which
prohibited all innovations. The evangelical element, a small handful
,
protested against this (whence the name, Protestants
), and Melancthon felt
grave concern over this terrible state of things
. At a religious conference
with the Zwinglians in Marburg (autumn of 1529), he joined hands with Luther in
opposing a union with Zwingli. The latter's views on the Eucharist seemed to him
an impious doctrine
. Melancthon composed for the Reichstag of Augsburg (1530)
the Augsburg Confession (confessio Augustana) in which he aimed to prove that
the Protestants, in spite of the innovations, still belonged to the Catholic
Church and had a right to remain in her fold. To this end he alleged in defence
of Protestant doctrine the Scriptures and statements of recognized Catholic
authorities. The innovations in question were represented as merely a
reformation of abuses which had crept into the Church. The tenor of the
Confession in general and its wording in particular, were the work of Melancthon.
Luther saw its outline and gave it his approval. It received numerous additions
and changes at Augsburg, and its final form was determined by common agreement
of theologians from all the evangelical bodies.
Melancthon's desire for peace appears even in this basic document of
Protestantism, and he has often been reproached with lack of vigour in his
opposition to the Catholic Church. Luther himself explained (only, it is true,
after the hopes of obtaining for the Confession the ear of the emperor and of
Catholics proved vain), that he had no intention of showing servile submission
,
and that he regretted the omission of an attack on Purgatory, the veneration of
the Saints and the Papacy. The formal merits of the Confession, its simple,
clear, calm, and terse statement of doctrine won the unanimous praise of the
Evangelical party. His masterful clearness and vigorous doctrine
were also
admired in the Apology
for the Augsburg Confession, which is more decided in
tone because written at a later date (when Melancthon himself had determined to
throw aside moderation
) and directed against the Catholic Confutatio
. On the
other hand, Melancthon was sharply criticized for his personal conduct in the
Reichstag, for his apprehension and concern, his failure to take a firm and
dignified attitude against the Catholic party. He himself once declared, in
justification of his course: I know that the people decry our moderation; but
it does not become us to heed the clamour of the multitude. We must labour for
peace and for the future It will prove a great blessing for us all if unity be
restored in Germany.
He feared the overthrow of all order. Hence he made
decided concessions to the Catholics at the subsequent conferences and debates
on religion. He seems to have been lured by some dream of an
Evangelical-Catholic Church. He thought it possible to remain within the
Catholic Church, even with the new theology. But he was never a Cryptocatholic,
as has been laid to his charge, and while evincing in every other way a spirit
of reconciliation, he held fast to the purified doctrine
, and repeatedly
qualified as blasphemy the lending of a hand, even in the cause of peace, to any
suppression of the truth.
The story that when his mother asked which was the better of the two
religions, he replied that the modified one was the more plausible, while the
old one was the surer, is nothing but a ridiculous invention. His attempt to
bring about a reconciliation between the two brought him, instead of thanks,
only mortification and abuse. From the age of 30 to that of 50, Melancthon was
at the height of his career as spokesman and advocate of the Reformation, which,
as had formerly been the case in Hesse and Prussia, was introduced under his
guidance into Wurtemberg, Brandenburg, and Saxony. He never absented himself
from a convention of theologians or statesmen, but found himself differing from
Luther on many points, for as time went on Melancthon emancipated himself more
and more from Luther's teaching. More eventful still and more painful was the
last portion of his life, following the death of Luther (1546). He rejected the
Augsburg Interim (1548) which was to regulate Church affairs until they should
be definitively settled by the Council, on the ground that it did not harmonize
with Evangelical principles. On the other hand he was prevailed upon to take
part in a conference for a modified interim, the so-called Leipzig Interim, and
he addressed on this occasion a letter (28 April, 1548) to Minister Carlowitz,
of Saxony, which once more provoked bitter criticism. He lamented therein the
thraldom in which he had been held by the violence of Luther, and again showed
himself favourable to the Catholic system of church organization and was even
ready to accept Catholic practices, though he desired to hold fast to the
evangelical
doctrines.
A result of this Adiaphora controversy, in which Melancthon declared Catholic
practices adiaphorous (indifferent things, neither good nor bad), hence
permissible provided that the proper doctrine were maintained and its import
made clear to the people. Matthias Flacius Illyricus and other zealots objected
that these practices had heretofore been the centres of impiety and superstition,
and Melancthon was attacked and reviled by Flacius, Amsdorf, and the other
Gnesiolutherans
, as a renegade and a heretic. The Lutheran theologians met at
Weimar in 1556, and declared their adhesion to Luther's teaching as to good
works and the Last Supper. Melancthon participated in the religious discussion
which took place at Worms, in 1557, between Catholic and Protestant theologians.
His Lutheran opponents' behaviour toward him here proved grossly insulting. The
last ten years of his life (1550-60) were almost completely taken up with
theological wrangles (adiaphoristic, osiandric, stankaristic, majoristic,
Calvinistic, and cryptocalvinistic) and with attempts to compose these various
differences. He continued in spite of all to labour for his Church and for her
peace. But one readily understands why, a few days before he died, he gave as a
reason for not fearing death: thou shalt be freed from the theologians' fury (a
rabie theologorum).
His last wish was that the Churches might become reunited
in Christ. He died praying, quietly and peacefully, without apparent struggle.
(3) Melancthon as a Theologian
Melancthon considered it his mission to bring together the religious thoughts
of the Reformation, to coordinate them and give them a clear and intelligible
form. He did not feel himself called upon to seek out their original premises or
to speculate on their logical results. His theology bears the substantial
impress of his humanistic thought, for he saw in ancient philosophy a precursor
of Christianity and sought to reconcile it with Christian Revelation. Even in
dogma he took up whatever adapted itself most easily to the general trend of
humanistic religious thought, and his dogmatic departures from Luther were a
softening of doctrine. His theological system is contained in the Loci
Communes
, as revised by him; in substance it was brought to completion by the
edition of 1535. As late as 1521 he had upheld the harsh tenets of fatalism with
regard to all events and of determinism with regard to the human will. He
subsequently gave Synergism
his support, as against the deterministic tendency
of the Reformation. That God is not the cause of sin, and that man is
responsible for his acts, must be firmly maintained. Man's salvation can only be
wrought out with the cooperation of his own will, although there can be no
question of merit on his part. Likewise he emphasized the necessity of good
works from the practical, ethical standpoint. He went so far as to say, in the
Loci of 1535, that good works are necessary for eternal life, inasmuch as they
must necessarily follow reconciliation with God. This was again attenuated later
on: what is necessary, he said, is a new spiritual life or sense of duty. i.e.,
a righteous conscience.
As years went by he even abandoned Luther's doctrine as to the Last Supper,
and looked on Christ's spiritual communication of Himself to the faithful and
their internal union with Him as the essential feature of the Sacrament; i.e.,
he inclined towards Calvin's theory. In 1560 his teachings were introduced into
all the churches of Saxony, through the Corpus Philippicum
(a collection of
Melancthonian doctrinal writings). But there came a change fourteen years after
his death. The Philippists or Crypto-Calvinists were thrown into prison and sent
into exile. They subsequently identified themselves more and more with Calvinism,
even on the question of predestination. Lutheranism, narrow and harsh, won the
day with its Formula of Concord (1580). So strong indeed was the opposition that
the saying ran: better a Catholic than a Calvinist. From that time on until well
into the eighteenth century, Melancthon's memory was assailed and reviled, even
in Wittenberg. It is said that Leonard Hutter, the leading theologian there at
the beginning of the seventeenth century, was so enraged by an appeal to
Melancthon as an authority, made in the course of a public disputation, that he
had the latter's portrait torn down from the wall and trampled underfoot before
the eyes of all. It was not until the period of the Enlightenment that
Melancthon was again appreciated and recognized as the real founder of a
German-Evangelical theology. Indeed, he carried his labours into all the other
theological fields, in some of which he worked as a pioneer, while in all he
toiled at least as a contributor. He promoted the study of the Scriptures not
only by his own active work thereon from first to last, but also by his
teachings and by his exhortations to the clergy. Like Luther, he laid particular
stress on the necessity of a thorough philological training, as well as of a
knowledge of history and archaeology, for the prper interpretation of the Bible.
He assisted Luther constantly in his German translation of the Bible, and also,
it is said, in the production of the Latin translation which appeared at
Wittenberg, in 1529. In exegesis he stood out vigorously for one sense, and that
the literal, (sensus literalis), as against the four senses
of the Scholastics.
Beyond this, he held, there was nothing to be sought in the words of the Bible
save the dogmatic and practical applications and development. His commentaries
on the Old Testament are not as important as those which he wrote on the New.
The most noteworthy are those on the Epistle to the Romans and the Colossians,
which have been published repeatedly. These are largely given to the discussion
of facts and of dogmatic and polemical matters, and they have considerable
influence on the history of Protestant doctrines. The impulse also which he gave
to the study of theology by historical methods, was felt for a long time. In his
handling of the Chronicle of Cario he treated of the history of the Church
jointly with that of the state, and thereby set an example which found many
imitators. He was also the first to attempt a history of dogma, and led the way
in Christian biography. In homiletics he was early recognized as the originator
of a more methodical form of pulpit oratory, as contrasted with the heroic
sermons of Luther. He did not himself appear as a preacher, but was content with
expounding selections from the Gospel on Sundays and Feast-days, in his house or
in a lecture hall, using for this purpose the Latin tongue for the benefit of
the Hungarian students who did not understand the German sermons preached in
church. This was the origin of his Postillen
(HomilieEine Homilie (von griech.„ὁμιλεῖν”, „vertraut miteinander reden”) ist eine Art von Predigt. Während eine Predigt die Großtaten Gottes preist (lat. „praedicare”, „preisen”) und Menschen für den Glauben begeistern will, hat die Homilie lehrhaften Charakter. s). Finally he was the
author of the first Protestant treatise on the method of theological study.
(4) Melancthon as Professor and Pedagogue
Melancthon was the embodiment of the entire intellectual culture of his time.
His learning covered all the branches of knowledge as it then existed, and what
is more remarkable, he possessed the gift of imparting his knowledge always in
the simplest, clearest and most practical form. On this account the numerous
manuals and guides to the Latin and Greek grammars, to dialectics, rhetoric,
ethics, physics, politics, and history, which he produced in addition to his
many editions of, and commentaries on, classical authors, were quickly adopted,
and were retained for more than a century. The exposition shows the utmost care;
the style is natural and clear. In his academic training also, he disdained all
rhetorical devices. His power lay not in brilliant oratory, but in clearness and
in the choice of the most appropriate expression (proprietas sermonis). He did
not look upon learning and literature as ends in themselves, but as means for
inculcating morality and religion. The union of knowledge with the spirit of
religion, of humanism with the Gospel
, was ever the keynote of his public
activity, and through him it became for centuries the educational ideal of
Evangelical
Germany, even, in a certain sense, of Germany as a whole. It is
not easy therefore to overrate Melancthon's importance in this field. By this
many-sided practical activity and his work as an organizer he became the founder
of higher education in Evangelical
Germany; the elementary school lay outside
his sphere. Numerous Latin schools and universities owed to him their
establishment or reorganization; and in numberless cases he was written to for
advice, or was called on to recommend competent instructors, to settle
controversies, or to give his opinion on the advantage or necessity of courses
of study. His ideas on teaching in the three-class Latin schools are more fully
set forth in the Unterricht der Visitatoren
(1528) already referred to, and
the Wittenberger Kirchen-und Schulordnung
(1533). Their novelty lies partly in
the selection of subjects, but chiefly in the method. Latin naturally holds the
place of honour.
Melancthon put an end to grammatical torture and the Doctrinale
of
Alexander de Villa Dei; grammar exercises were appended to the texts. He himself
had a Latin school, the Schola Privata,in his own house for ten years, in which
he prepared a few boys for the university. In 1526, he founded a second grade of
the more advanced school, the Obere Schule, in Nuremburg near St. Aegidien. He
looked on this as a connecting link between the Latin school and the university.
It comprised dialectics and rhetoric, readings from the poets, mathematics, and
Greek. This type of school, however, did not meet with any great success. The
reorganization of universities, as advocated by Melancthon, affected chiefly the
arts and theological courses. The faculty of Arts became wholly humanistic.
Logic, till then dominant in education, gave way to the languages, and Greek and
Hebrew assumed more prominence. As sources of philology the classic authors
replaced the writers of the Middle Ages. For the scholastic study of the liberal
arts a more simple and practical course in dialectics and rhetoric was
substituted. Likewise in theology, Scriptural interpretation was brought to the
fore. Dogmatic principles were developed by exegesis; to these were gradually
added special lectures on dogma. The essential fact was a decided return to
original sources. This transformation was wrought not only in the University of
Wittenberg, but also in that of Tübingen, where Melancthon himself took part in
the work of reform, in those of Frankfort, Leipzig, Rostock, and Heidelberg,
where in 1557 he took part in the deliberations concerning the university
statutes. Wherever he could not appear in person he sent his advice in writing,
while his disciples, for whom he obtained professorships taught in accordance
with his ideals and his method. The new universities of Marburg (1527),
Königsberg (1544), and Jena (1548), which were founded under the Reformation,
also found in Melancthon a guide and a counsellor. Hence his title Praeceptor
Germaniae
.
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