Dear
Rev. Know-it-all,
How
are you planning to celebrate the 500th anniversary of the Reformation year
after next?
Calvin
Martin
Dear
Calvin,
On October 31, 1517, Luther posted the ninety-five theses, which he had composed in
Latin, on the door of the Castle Church of Wittenberg, according to university
custom. In about one year the western world will break into paroxysms of joy to
celebrate this momentous event, an event that forever changed the world. Bells
will be rung, prayer services and ecumenical gatherings will be convened and we
will congratulate ourselves that we are better than our ancestors who couldn’t
just get along as the great American philosopher, Rodney King exhorted us. We
are the flower of human history because we know that “everything is beautiful
in its own way,” as the poet Ray Stevens taught us in the glorious 60’s and
early 70’s.
The
heroic Luther defied pope and emperor by changing his name, hiding out in a
remote castle and writing his own version of the New Testament, setting the
tone for the present age in which we can do anything we want provided we have
good intention and are sincere. It turns out that the nailing of the 95 theses
may be a myth. Erwin
Iserloh pointed out that the nailing of the theses to the church door may
be a myth created by Philipp
Melanchthon who wasn’t at Wittenberg University at the time. The story
appeared for the first time after Luther's death. The grand celebrations
planned for reformation day October 31, 2017 may just be the celebration of
something that never happened.
Nonetheless,
let us look at this hero of western culture, and the glorious legacy that he
has inspired. Much of the following is
taken from Luther’s
Tischreden. (Table Talk, a
collection of his sayings compiled by Johannes Mathesius. Mathesius, a disciple
of Luther, was a great note taker who wrote down everything, even stuff that a
less diligent or delicate student would have left out. It is interesting what
Luther let fly after a couple of beers.)
Luther, The Humble
Martin
had a pretty high opinion of himself. He once said, “St. Augustine or St.
Ambrose cannot be compared with me.” (Ref. Erlangen, Vol. 61, pg. 422). Luther
added a word to the text of Scripture on which he and much of the world have
based an entire religious philosophy. In
St. Paul’s letter to the Romans, (3:28) we read “For we maintain that a person
is justified by faith apart from the works of the law.” Martin translated it to read, “a person is
justified by faith ALONE.” The word “alone” doesn’t appear in the text.
When
one of his students said that all Christendom was wondering why he had added a
word to the text, Martin simply said, “If your Papist annoys you with the word
(‘alone’), tell him straightway, Dr. Martin Luther will have it so: Papist and
ass are one and the same thing. Whoever will not have my translation, let him
give it the go-by: the devil’s thanks to him who censures it without my will
and knowledge. Luther will have it so, and he is a doctor above all the doctors
in Popedom.” (Ref. Amic. Discussion, 1)
I
guess that includes Ambrose and Augustine. Being personally infallible, Martin
just assumed that he understood the phrase “works of the law” meant kindness
and generosity and morality. It is a shame that he hadn’t read the Dead Sea
Scrolls. The phrase “works of the law” appears in only two places as far as we
know St. Paul’s letters and the Dead Sea Scroll. Allow me to quote Miqsat
Ma’aseh HaTorah (Some Works of the Law, Dead Sea Scroll 4QMMT,
a real page turner.)
“And also concerning flowing liquids: we say that in these there is no purity. Even flowing liquids cannot separate unclean from clean because the moisture of flowing liquids and their containers is the same moisture.”
In
other words, if you are pouring water from a clay pitcher into an unclean clay pot, you have to destroy both the pitcher and the pot
because the ritual pollution will jump up the stream of water from the pot and
pollute the pitcher. The same principle applies to piddling on a power line.
Don’t even try it!
Luther
somehow failed to notice that in the previous chapter, (Romans 2:6) Paul warns
us that God “will repay each one according to his works.” We have untold
millions of people in the world who
count themselves perfectly good Christians who cheat on their spouse, cheat in
their business, cheat on everything and feel good about it because they are
saved, and as Luthier also taught “Once saved, always saved!”
Gosh
I hope Luther was right. If Martin is wrong, there are a lot of people in hell
who are saying, “But I was saved!”
Martin just didn’t like good works at all. “It is more important to
guard against good works than against sin.” (Ref. Tischreden, Wittenberg Edition, Vol. VI., p. 160).
Martin’s
dislike of good work and his personal infallibility also extended to the
Commandments. The Ten Commandments were worse than pointless as far as Martin
was concerned. “If we allow them (the
Commandments) any influence in our conscience, they become the cloak of all
evil, heresies and blasphemies” (ref. Comm.
ad Galat, p.310).
One
of Martin’s more startling beliefs had to do with “thou shalt not commit
adultery.” Martin once said, “Christ
committed adultery first of all with the woman at the well about whom St. John
tells us. Was not everybody about Him saying: ‘Whatever has He been doing with
her?’ Secondly, with Mary Magdalen, and thirdly with the women taken in
adultery whom He dismissed so lightly. Thus even, Christ who was so righteous,
must have been guilty of fornication before He died.” (Ref. Tischreden, Weimer Edition, Vol. 2, Pg.
107.
Like
I said, get a few beers in Him and the great reformer said some interesting
stuff. I bet you didn’t think people
accused Jesus of sin until the current era. Guess again. The current era is the fruit of the seeds
that Martin Luther planted.
To
be continued: More impolite and intolerant stuff about Luther.
So, like the papists he also manipulated the Bible to his own beliefs whether he had proof or not?
ReplyDeletePlease, more intolerant and impolite stuff. I knew he was
ReplyDeletecrude, but really.......Enjoy your blog very much.
Lorraine, who are "the papists" and how did they manipulate anything? Luther is a specific individual. "The papists" sounds like a made up cabal you can pin nefarious ideas to.
ReplyDelete