An analysis by Janis Kuenning
Somewhere between 1517 and 1521 Luther’s resolve
became more clarified and strengthened. Though he had no initial
intention of breaking with Rome, his internal struggle with what
seemed to him the impossibility of salvation as presented by the
church broke into an adamant belief in the Pauline teaching that
“Man is justified by faith apart from the working of the Law!”
(Romans 3:28) This belief seemed to free Luther from the pressures
of his times that encouraged self-hatred and a blind obedience to
authority. His statements about the Roman Catholic Church reflected
this strong awakening in him to the point where he challenged the
Pope’s absolute authority. He was excommunicated and called to defend
his teachings at Worms before all the Christian rulers of his day.
Here again he formulated his new sense of freedom in the terms of
the supremacy of conscience, his own being “Captive to the Word of
God.” This defense seems similar to scriptural prophets of old.
After this hearing, Luther went into hiding. He had
now broken with any support from Rome and from sympathizers like
Erasmus who were against schism. Later Luther debated Erasmus over
the concept of ‘Free Will’ and it was here that a very complete
separation occurred. Luther simply did not accept the humanistic
outlook of the world. “Far be it for Christians to be skeptics and
academics.” Luther’s vision was more grounded in scripture and
social events that transformed him personally rather than any
scholarly pursuits.
Luther’s challenge to the religious authorities was
upheld and protected by the German princes, who were, for different
reasons, in tension with Rome over its workings in competition with
the nation-states. Unlike Erasmus, Luther actually seemed to have
no optimism for the Kingdoms of this world. Despite their
protection of him, Luther expressed in his ‘two Kingdoms’ theory
writing that peace would not come through princes and rarely ever
would rise a truly Christian prince: “The just shall live by
faith.” (Romans 1:17) Luther had confidence in the Kingdom of God
but very little confident in the Kingdoms of this world. He did not
foresee, as Erasmus did, Christian princes ruling a peaceable
kingdom.
Erasmus’s adamant stand on war, provoked especially by
popes such as Leo III, seemed in contrast to Luther’s stand on the
gruesome Peasant War (1524-1525) that was a result of the influence
of the Reformation. I think it is comparable to the doubt and fear
raised over Liberation theology in recent decades and teaches us an
unfortunate lesson in history.
Unlike Erasmus, Luther did not appeal to, nor remain
in the Catholic Church and gradually formed a new church in which
he supported the universal priesthood of the faithful and rejected
the ‘human thought’ that one could earn or deserve salvation. In
other words, I think he brought the church hierarchy, based on the
Roman model, down to ground level.
While Erasmus leaned toward acceptance of the ancient
wisdom of Roman rule overall, Luther saw it as a direct contrast to
Christian teaching found in scripture. Relying on scripture and the
words of Christ alone, Luther saw the hierarchy and its resulting
behavior as a worldly practice rather than a religious one. Luther
saw the structure as promulgating more of a nation-state than a
Christianity community. Freed from the guilt and shame many felt at
the time, (exemplified in the payment of indulgences), Luther in
the end was free not only of that guilt and shame so epic in his
times, but free to challenge the leaders of the church itself on
the basis of his own God given conscience.
Erasmus and Luther rode on tides of a tumultuous age
of upheaval and change. One might be seen more as a ‘thinker,’ the
other a ‘doer.’ One stood for gradual reform, the other for
immediate change. One helped guide the tide of necessary reform
within the Catholic Church. The other took the stand that even the
Church, and certainly it follows, that secular authorities can be
challenged, made up as they are of human beings. From Erasmus in
this sense, I learned of the value of objectivity and tolerance and
cool headedness in educating and guiding fellow men and women
through times of crisis. From Luther I learned that the primacy of
conscience is a fundamental principle that can stem the tides of
crisis by means of taking a firm and committed stand. Both lessons
of this historical period in Church history can and will, I am
sure, continue to guide great leaders and individuals in our
present culture.
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Thank you, Bill, for sharing Janis Kuenning's essay. I was lucky to have a father who wanted to discuss the important "stuff" with his children - important was religion and politics!! I remember my Dad being troubled by Luther's choice to go outside the church to pursue his corrections and beliefs. He often said Luther should have worked from within. No doubt - Dad would have been an enthusiastic member of Team Erasmus! But then, he was a life-long Republican. Thanks. Your blog is always thought provoking.
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