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- Essay Name : 849.txt
- Uploader : Jay York
- Email Address : jyork@beaches.net
- Language : english
- Subject : Religion
- Title : Martin Luther
- Grade : 95 A
- School System : Community College
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : A great paper that took me forever to write.
- Teacher Comments : In need of a thesis statement
- Date : 11-10-96
- Site found at : Webcrawler
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- MARTIN LUTHER
- This essay is concerned with Martin Luther (1483-1546),
- and his concept of Christianity. Luther began his
- ecclesiastical career as an Augustinian Monk in the Roman
- Catholic Church. Consequently, Luther was initially loyal to
- the papacy, and even after many theological conflicts, he
- attempted to bring about his reconciliation with the Church.
- But this was a paradox not to endure because in his later
- years, Luther waged a continual battle with the papacy. Luther
- was to become a professor of biblical exegesis at Wittenberg
- where, in 1957, he posted his critique of the Roman Catholic
- Church's teachings and practices. This is otherwise known as
- The Ninety-Five Theses, which is usually considered to be the
- original document of the Reformation. Basically, this document
- was an indictment of the venality of the Roman Catholic
- Church, particularly the widespread practice of selling
- indulgences in association with the sacrament of penance.
- Luther's beliefs on the matter was that after confession,
- absolution relied upon the sinner's faith and God's Divine
- Grace rather than the intervention of a priest. At this point,
- Luther did not advocate an actual separation from the Roman
- Catholic Church. Instead, Luther felt his suggested reforms
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- could be implemented within Catholicism. If this had taken
- place, the Protestant Reformation would probably not of ever
- seen the light of day--nor would it have been necessary. But
- the theological practices being what they were in the Roman
- Church, there was little chance at that time for any great
- variations to occur within its folds. The Church of Rome was
- thoroughly monolithic and set in its ways and was not about to
- mutate into something else. If a metamorphosis had occurred
- within the Roman Catholic Church, Luther would have had a
- different destiny. But Luther's fate was sealed, and his job
- was cut out for him.
- Concerning Luther and the Reformation, Paul Tillich
- states: "The turning point of the Reformation and of church
- history in general is the experience of an Augustinian monk in
- his monastic cell--Martin Luther. Martin Luther did not merely
- teach different doctrines; others had done that also, such as
- Wyclif. But none of the others who protested against the Roman
- system were able to break through it. The only man who really
- made a breakthrough, and whose breakthrough has transformed
- the surface of the earth, was Martin Luther. . . . He is one
- of the few great prophets of the Christian Church, and his
- greatness is overwhelming, even if it was limited by some of
- his personal traits and his later development. He is
- responsible for the fact that a purified Christianity, a
- Christianity of the Reformation, was able to establish itself
- equal terms with the Roman tradition" (Tillich 227). Tillich's
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- main emphasis, then, is not on Luther as the founder of
- Lutheranism, but as the person who broke through the system of
- the Church of Rome. Luther shattered the theological
- restraints and distortions of the Roman Catholic religion.
- This accomplishment amounts to the establishment of another
- religion known as Protestantism, a faith that was generated
- from the Reformation, with its advocates such as Martin
- Luther, John Calvin, Ulrich Zwingli, and John Knox. However,
- Luther stood out as one of the Reformation titans in a most
- unique manner.
- Roland H. Bainton suggests the following concerning
- Luther's reforms with regard to the Catholic sacraments; "But
- Luther's rejection of the five sacraments might even have been
- tolerated had it not been for the radical transformation which
- he effected in the two which he retained. From his view of
- baptism, he was not a second baptism, and no vow should ever
- be taken beyond the baptismal vow. Most serious of all was
- Luther's reduction of the mass to the Lord's Supper. The mass
- is central for the entire Roman Catholic system because the
- mass is believed to be a repetition of the Incarnation and the
- Crucifixion. When the bread and wine are transubstantiated,
- God again becomes flesh and Christ again dies upon the altar.
- This wonder can be performed only by priests empowered through
- ordination. . . His first insistence was that the sacrament of
- the mass must be not magical but mystical. . . He, too, had no
- mind to subject it to human frailty and would not concede that
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- he had done so by positing the necessity of faith, since faith
- is itself a gift from God, but this faith is given by God
- when, where, and to whom he will and even without the
- sacrament is efficacious; whereas the reverse is not true,
- that the sacrament is of efficacy without faith. 'I may be
- wrong on indulgences,' declared Luther, 'but as to the need
- for faith diminished the role of the priests who may place
- awafer in the mouth but cannot engender faith in the heart"
- (Bainton 107). For Luther, the Holy Eucharist of Lord's supper
- was really a symbolic act rather than an actual instance of
- transubstantiation in which the bread and wine actually become
- the body and blood of Christ. That was a magical aspect to
- this sacrament which Luther could not accept. According to the
- Roman Church, the bread and wine may have the appearance of
- such, but their inner substances have literally become the
- flesh and blood of Christ. All of this is a literal acceptance
- of the words of Jesus at the Last Supper: "And as they were
- eating, Jesus took the bread, and blessed it, and brake it,
- and gave it to the disciples, and said, Take, eat; this is my
- body. And he took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to
- them, saying, Drink ye all of it; For this is my blood of the
- new testament, which is shed for many for the remission of
- sins" (Matthew 26: 26-28). Luther's view of the communion
- sacrament was strictly symbolic as is the view of Protestants
- to this day. However, this idea was heresy so far as the Roman
- Catholic Church was concerned. The sacramental power of its
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- priests was no longer necessary if this concept were to
- prevail. This is the type of change the Reformation and Martin
- Luther wrought. The power of the Roman clergy could not exist
- if Luther's concepts were to be accepted.
- Because the principal sacrament of the Roman Catholic
- Church is the Holy Eucharist of Holy Communion, the fact that
- Luther was tampering with it could not help but be looked upon
- by the Roman clergy with great dismay. Luther generated the
- Protestant belief that this sacrament is a commemoration
- through which clergy and communicants raise their spirits by
- symbolic remembrance of Christ's life and death. In contrast,
- according to the teachings of the Roman Church, Christ's human
- body and blood are actually present in the consecrated bread
- and wine.
- As Bertrand Russell states: "Even more important in the
- Middle Ages, was transubstantiation; only a priest could
- perform the miracle of the mass. It was not until the eleventh
- century in 1079, that the doctrine of transubstantiation
- became an article of faith, though it had generally been
- believed for a long time" (Russell 408). As Luther saw it, no
- sacrament is effective by itself without listening to the Word
- associated with the sacrament, and the faith that believes in
- it. There is no magical element to any sacrament, including
- the doctrine of transubstantiation. Consequently, Luther's
- teachings on the sacraments took away the power of the priests
- and the special nature of the Holy Eucharist. The Roman
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- Catholic mass depends completely on these concepts in order
- for the Roman Church to sustain its efficacy as the
- representative of Christ on earth. Paul Tillich states: "From
- this it followed that transubstantiation was destroyed,
- because this doctrine makes the bread and wine a piece of
- divine reality inside the shrine and put on the altar. But
- such a thing does not occur. The presence of God is not a
- presence in the sense of an objective presence, at a special
- place, in a special form; it is a presence for the faithful
- alone. There are two criteria for this: if it is only for the
- faithful, then it is only an action. Then if you enter a
- church and the sacrament is spread, you do not need to do
- anything, because it is pure bread. If becomes more than this
- only in action, that is when it is given to those who have
- faith. For the theory of transubstantiation, it is there all
- the time. When you enter an empty Roman church, you must bow
- down before the shrine because God himself is present there,
- even though no one else is present besides you and this
- sacrament. Luther abolished this concept of presence. He
- denounced the character indelebilis as a human fiction"
- (Tillich 236-237).
- For Luther to take this position required considerable
- courage on his part due to the fact he was facing an
- ecclesiastical force of great strength and authority. Luther
- did what most kings would fear to do. Thus his reservation
- over transubstantiation was monumental, besides being a highly
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- important concern, to say the least. After all, as a
- Augustinian Monk, who was he to fight the doctrines of the
- pope or even attempt any reforms? However, this is the task
- which Luther undertook against all odds. Luther's courage and
- boldness can be seen in his "Open Letter to Pope Leo X" dated:
- Wittenberg, September 6, 1520: "I have, to be sure, sharply
- attacked ungodly doctrines in general, and I have snapped at
- my opponents, not because of their bad morals, but because of
- their ungodliness. Rather than repent this in the least, I
- have determined to persist in that fervent zeal and to despise
- the judgment of men, following the example of Christ who in
- his zeal called his opponents 'a blood of vipers,' 'blind
- fools,' 'hypocrites'. . . I have truly despised your see, the
- Roman Curia, which, however, neither you nor anyone else can
- deny is more corrupt than any Babylon or Sodom ever was, and
- which, as far as I can see, is characterized by a completely
- depraved, hopeless, and notorious godlessness" (Luther and
- Dillenberger 44-45). It would seem statistics would favor the
- Church of Rome; however, such was not the situation.
- As the central figure of a violent religious rebellion in
- Germany, Martin Luther brought forth his principal theological
- doctrine about Christianity. According to Luther, mankind is
- justified by faith alone, and not by works. On the concept of
- this belief in a personal faith instead of the power of the
- Roman Catholic Church, Luther favored the abolition of many
- rituals and challenged the supreme authority of the pope. For
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- this, Luther paid the ultimate penalty the Roman Catholic
- Church could inflict, he was excommunicated. Luther then went
- before the Diet of Worms, where he took a firm stand
- concerning his beliefs and was placed under the ban of the
- Holy Roman Empire. All of this entails considerably more
- details concerning Luther's concept of Christianity.
- Justification by faith, not by works is perhaps Luther's most
- important doctrinal contribution to the Reformation, and all
- it implies.
- According to Luther, salvation is a gift from God, and no
- human being can possibly do anything to merit this blessing.
- Thus good works are of no avail with regard to the salvation
- of one's soul. Therefore, the most a Christian can do is to
- have faith in Jesus Christ as their Savior. This is basically
- what a Christian is. Because Christianity has only two real
- sacraments (baptism and the Lord's Supper), it is necessary
- for a person to partake of both in order to actually be a
- Christian. Certainly, a heathen or pagan can go around doing
- good works, but this means nothing to God. Christ is the
- Second Person of the Holy Trinity, with the father being the
- First Person of the Holy Trinity, and the Holy Spirit being
- the Third Person. However, a Christian should do good works;
- yet, this will not save one's soul. God blesses certain
- Christian persons with His Divine Grace according to His
- Divine Wisdom. Only God knows who will be saved. Nevertheless,
- all Christians must conduct their lives according to God's
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- teachings for the very reason that they are Christians. God,
- in His Infinite Mercy and Judgment knows his own. Only God is
- capable of judging His people fairly and wisely. Paul Tillich
- states: "I want to emphasize Luther's doctrines of sin and
- faith very much because they are points in which the
- Reformation is far superior to what we find today in popular
- Christianity. For Luther sin is 'Unbelief in the real sin.'
- 'Nothing justifies except faith, and nothing makes sinful
- except unbelief.' 'Unbelief is sin altogether.' 'Therefore the
- word 'sin' includes what we are living and doing besides the
- faith in God.' These statements presuppose a concept of faith
- which has nothing whatsoever to do with the acceptance of
- doctrines" (Tillich 245).
- Luther believed that mankind is totally depraved; but
- this does not mean there is nothing good in humanity. What
- this idea really means is that human beings are in continual
- conflict with themselves. Modern psychology would say the self
- is frustrated and neurotic concerning itself. In order to deal
- with this situation, Luther felt faith is something a true
- Christian must embrace. This is the faith that Jesus Christ is
- the Savior of mankind.
- Luther did not feel those persons having a profession
- involving violence are doomed to eternal damnation. For
- instance, Luther believed a Christian soldier could be saved
- even if he killed other people known as the 'enemy.' Luther
- provides a soldier's prayer is his essay "Whether Soldiers,
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- Too, Can Be Saved" (1526): ". . . But because I know and have
- learned from your gracious word that none of our good works
- can help us and that no one is saved as a soldier but only as
- a Christian, therefore, I will not in any way rely on my
- obedience and work, but place myself freely at the service of
- your will. I believe with all my heart that only the innocent
- blood of your dear son, my Lord Jesus Christ, redeems and
- saves me, which he shed for me in obedience to your holy will.
- This is the basis on which I stand before you. In this faith
- I will live and die, fight, and do everything else. Dear Lord
- God the Father, preserve and strengthen this faith in me by
- your Spirit. Amen" (Luther and Schultz 135-136). It should be
- understood, however, that Luther never sanctioned war, which
- he believed was a definite indication of mankind's depravity.
- Yet, a Christian soldier may possibly be saved by God's Grace
- just as any other Christian may be so blessed.
- One of the most important differences between the Roman
- Church and Luther's conception of Christianity is the
- personal relationship between God and the Christian. In
- Catholicism, the Church is an intermediary between God and the
- individual. However, no intermediary is needed at all in
- Luther's theological approach. This is one of Protestantism's
- most significant qualities.
- Another very important characteristic of Luther's reforms
- is the final authority of the Bible with respect to
- theological matters. This is also completely different from
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- the Roman Catholic view, which holds that the Church is the
- final authority with regard to theological concerns. In fact,
- when speaking excathedra, the pope is considered by
- Catholicism to be infalliable concerning faith and morals.
- Luther could not accept a human being with Holy Orders as the
- means through which a Christian reaches God. These are the
- teachings that caused Luther to be excommunicated by the Roman
- Church and helped to create the Protestant form of
- Christianity.
- When Luther appeared before the Diet of Worms, he was
- asked by Eck, an official of the Archbishop of Trier: "I ask
- you, Martin--answer candidly and without horns-- do you or do
- you not repudiate your books and the errors which they
- contain?" Luther replied, "Since then Your Majesty and your
- lordships desire a simple reply, I will answer without horns
- and without teeth. Unless I am convicted by Scripture and
- plain reason--I do not accept the authority of popes and
- councils, for they have contradicted each other--my conscience
- is captive to the Word of God. I cannot and I will not recant
- anything, for us to go against conscience is neither right nor
- safe. God help me. Amen" (Bainton 144). Essentially, Luther
- provided the Christian with a degree of freedom not at all
- present in Catholicism. Luther dared to defy the might and
- authority of the Roman Catholic Church, and the Reformation
- was born.
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- WORKS CITED
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- Bainton, Roland H. Here I Stand: A Life of Martin Luther. New
- York: Mentor, 1950.
- Dillenberger, John. Martin Luther: Selection From His
- Writings. New York: Anchor Books, 1962.
- Russell, Bertrand. A History of Western Philosophy. New York:
- Simon and Schuster, 1945.
- Schultz, Robert C. and Helmut T. Lehmann. Luther's Works,
- Volume 46, The Christianity in Society, III.
- Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1967.
- Tillich, Paul. A History of Christian Thought From Its Judaic
- and Hellenistic Origins to Existentialism. New York:
- Simon and Schuster, 1968.
- The Holy Bible. King James Version. New York: Thomas Nelson
- Publishers, 1972.
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- MARTIN LUTHER
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- JAY YORK
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- RELIGION IN AMERICAN LIFE
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- DR. JOSEPH HOWELL
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- APRIL 1, 1996
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