Heiko A. Oberman The Reformation Roots and Ramifications 2004 - PDFCOFFEE.COM (2024)

THE REFORMATION

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THE REFORMATION Roots and Ramifications

HEIKO A. OBERMAN Translated by Andrew Colin Gow

T&.T CLARK INTERNATIONAL A Continuum imprint LONDON

NEW YORK

Published by T&T Clark International A Continuum imprint The Tower Building, 11 York Road, London SE1 7NX 15 East 26th Street, Suite 1703, New York, NY 10010 www.tandtclark.com Authorised English translation copyright © T&T Clark Ltd, 1994 (See pages 221 and 222 for sources of original publications.) First published 1994 This edition published 2004 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library ISBN 0567082865 (paperback) Typeset by Buccleuch Printers Ltd, Hawick Printed on acid-free paper in Great Britain by The Cromwell Press Limited, Wiltshire, UK

Talma sub pondere crescit' Gerrit Willem Ida Hester Elsa Raoul Foppe Maarten Luther Bora Ruben Simon Wouter Darijn 'Fama crescit eundo'

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CONTENTS

Preface

xi

List of Abbreviations

xv

1. The Reformation: The Quest for the Historical Luther 1. The Growth of a Reformer 2. The Reformation: Conflicts and Controversies 3. Serfs and Citizens: The Reformation of the Princes Versus the City Reformation 4. The Punctum Protestantissimum: Worldly Reason and Faith in Christ 5. The Protestant Breakthrough and the Nominalist'Principle*

1 1 3 8 12 18

2. Martin Luther: Forerunner of the Reformation 1. The Reformation as a Failed Transformation 2. Desperate Times at the End of Time 3. Praeludium Lutheri: Prologue to the 'Reformation' 4. Toward Visitations: Cito Visitet Dominus Germaniam 5. The Antichrist: Myth or Mystery

23 23 24 33 43 47

3. Martin Luther: Between the Middle Ages and Modern Times 1. The Controversy 2. Discoveries Along the Way 3. Luther's Reforming Discoveries 4. A Prophet for Today

53 53 57 63 73

vii

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4. The Meaning of Mysticism from Meister Eckhart to Martin Luther 1. Disputed Experience 2. Mysticism and Mystical Theology 3. Interpretation and Misinterpretation of Mysticism 4. Christian Mysticism 5. High Mysticism and Its Alternatives 6. Late Medieval Mysticism as a Sign of the Times 7. Varieties of Mystical Theology 8. The Significance of Mystical Faith: Between Detachment from the World and Secularization

77 77 78 80 81 83 85 86 89

5. Wir sein pettier. Hoc est verum. Covenant and Grace in the Theology of the Middle Ages and Reformation 91 1. The Problem 91 2. Humilitas and the Cloaca 94 3. Covenant and Grace 103 6. Wittenberg's War on Two Fronts: What Happened in 1518 and Why 1. Martin Luther's Manifesto: From Provincial University to the Church Universal 2. Sylvester Prierias: Roman Papalism 3. John Eck: Papal Conciliarism 4. Gregory of Rimini: The Secret Master of Wittenberg Theology

117

117 122 130 135

7. From Protest to Confession: The Confessio Augustana as a Critical Test of True Ecumenism 1. The Non-violent Reformation 2 Not Roman, but Catholic !

149 150 158

8. Truth and Fiction: The Reformation in the Light of the Confutatio 1. Truth and Fiction 2. Reformation in the Light of the Confutatio 3. Evangelical Recognition of the Confutatio? 4. Gospel or Orthodoxy

167 167 171 175 178

CONTENTS

ix

9. Zwinglis Reformation Between Success and Failure 1. Cantonization and Parochialism 2. Zurich: The Prototypical City Reformation 3. Luther and Zwingli

183 183 184 195

10. One Epoch - Three Reformations 1. The Reformation: A Theological Revolution 2. Three Disguised Reformations 3. The Reformation of the Refugees

201 201 208 217

Publishing Information

221

Index of Persons

223

Index of Modern Authors

227

Index Verborum Latinorum

231

ix

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PREFACE

All of the essays in this volume share a common goal, in that each investigates the unity and the expansion of the Reformation movement. The books title announces both a program and an urgent question: What effect did the original reformer, Martin Luther, have on the Reformation of the sixteenth century? What was religiously changed; what was politically 're-formed' - in the cities and principalities, inside and outside the Empire, in the fast-changing social constellations - on the journey from the Protestant breakthrough to the Protestant diaspora? In my view the questions raised here are crucial to the central quest in Reformation scholarship today. In the past I have concentrated primarily on the transition from medieval to early modern Europe, and on the unmistakable identity of the Reformation when it is seen from the perspective of the later Middle Ages. This volume, however, follows the winding path of the Reformation from Wittenberg through the southern German cities, south to Zurich, and then on to Geneva. These essays, first published between 1966 and 1984, during my tenure at Tubingen, are not organized here by the dates of their publication or conception, but according to historical and chronological criteria. Nearly all of them were originally written to honor specific Reformation commemorations - not surprising, since I enjoyed the privilege of being able to help to plan and carry out a decade of recollective celebrations in Europe: the Peasants' War (1975), the Confessio Augustana (1980), the Luther-Year (1983) and the Zwingli Memorial (1984). These 'external' duties provided unique opportunities for interpreting history, both within and outside the lecture-hall, addressing specialists as well as a broader public - opportunities for xi

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making history relevant for today. One cannot reach this sort of goal by following the well-worn paths of contemporary trends and methods of thinking. Goethe's description of the Devil, 'Er is der Geist, der stets verneint', may not, in fact, fit him; but in three respects, in the face of three challenges, it must fit the historian - he must be the one who says 'No!' First, Reformation scholars tend to be moved by an ecumenical desire - by no means contemptible in itself- to blame the division of western Christendom on dogmatic disputes, which we today, from our enlightened perspective, are said to recognize as 'misunderstandings'. It is as if scholars breathe a sigh of long-overdue relief, and want to abandon our past in the dustbin of history. Reformation studies are exploited as a promising field in which they may test and prove their modern, optimistic theories. They hail the Catholic 'recognition' of the Augsburg Confession, and applaud the 'ecumenical breadth' of the Confutatio. And ecumenical rapprochement can indeed be brought about in this fashion - but only if the doctrine of justification, central to the Reformation, is truncated to fit the pronouncements of the Council of Trent, or rephrased in terms of its being the forerunner of psychological 'selffulfillment'. In either case, the cost is exorbitant: the doctrine of justification itself. Secondly, in our day social history is in its ascendancy; its impatience with traditional historiography is so well-founded that we cannot afford to ignore it. Social historians have presented Reformation scholars with a whopping bill for their withdrawal into the comfortable, exclusive, and safe world of ideas. The history of theology becomes powerless - senseless - when it is removed from the rough-and-ready conditions of 'real', everyday life. Hence the suspicion that the entire exercise of intellectual history is nothing but an artificial construct, built on literary sources drawn mainly from the pens of an educated elite, is quite understandable. It is true that historians have subjected the theology of the reformers to a probing and minute analysis for far too long, without seeking even a partial answer to the one inescapable question: How did a system so difficult and so refined spread so far and obtain such far-reaching results? It is not only the writings and sermons of the reformers that were significant; what was heard 'at the bottom' or 'on the highest rungs' -

PREFACE

xiii

what eventually changed in peoples beliefs, in their political and social mentality - was also of great importance. But now the antitheological reaction has gone so far that it is time to return once more to the sources of the Reformation, to re-emphasize the 'spade work' that is necessary to arrive at any understanding of these sources - to listen and to watch, with an eye bent keenly upon reality - in order to follow the Reformation from its theological inception to its religious impact. The third battleground is just as important as the first two, and is peculiarly connected with them: On both sides of the Atlantic a new 'orthodoxy' is emerging. The twentieth-century Luther renaissance freed the reformer from the fetters of the Lutheran Confessions (thanks primarily to the work of Karl Holl and his students). Since the Second World War, however, a new Luther has been molded along lines that only seem to have followed the path laid out by Holl. This new Luther is presented as the first modern man', who overcame the Middle Ages and cleared the way for modernity. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Luther went against the grain of both the Middle Ages and the modern world. From our perspective, he is a man between the times, not a man of any one particular era; but from his own perspective, his life and calling existed at the very end of time itself. The modern 'Lutheran' Luther must be completely reworked - an unexpected, and therefore expensive and painful, 'Reformation'. The title pages bear two classical proverbs, strangely appropriate to the roots and ramifications of the Reformation. The first, 'Palma sub pondere crescit', the motto of Queen Emma of the Netherlands, applies fully to the Reformation: the movement grew under pressure and under persecution, by which it developed in spiritual depth. 'Fama crescit eundo', also draws upon human experience; that is, not only misleading rumor, but the reforming message itself, 'grows as it spreads'. In its growth and spreading, this message spawned descendants of its own, quite different from the original, which deserve to be appreciated in their own right, and to be evaluated with insight and respect. The index of names and modern authors was compiled by Dr Sabine Holtz; Dr Sigrun Haude carefully gathered the Index Verborum Latinorum. Mr Scott Manetsch made many helpful

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comments and suggestions during the drafting of the penultimate version of the translation. Mr Peter Dykema applied his gift of precision to the proofs. Undoubtedly, the most difficult work was the English translation, undertaken by Dr Andrew Gow, who proved to be an able intermediary, not merely in rendering conventional words, but in bridging the unconventional worlds separated by the Atlantic. Finally, I must reveal my indebtedness to two people: to Ms Suse Rau, who has typed at least once the German versions of each of these essays, always under considerable pressure to beat yet another deadline; and to Mr Manfred Schulze, who thought through the architecture of the German edition with me, and who suggested - in places even demanded — revisions to the original texts. Heiko A. Oberman Tucson, Arizona

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

AWA C CC CChr Conf.

CR EA var. arg. MGH.SS PL RE RGG SVRG WA WAB WADE aD. ZKG ZThK ZW

Archiv zur Weimarer Lutherausgabe Centuria; see John Eck, Chrysopassus, Augsburg 1514 Corpus Catholicorum Corpus Christianorum Confutatio; in Herbert Immenkotter, Die Confutatio der Confessio Augustana vom 3. August 1530, CC 33, Munster 1979, 74-207 Corpus Reformatorum D. Martini Lutheri opera Latina varii argumenti, Erlangen 1865 Monumenta Germaniae Historical Scriptores Patrologiae cursus completes: Series Latina Realencyklopddiefurprotestantische Theologie undKirche Die Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart Schriften des Vereins fur Reformationsgeschichte D. Martin Luthers Werke: Kritische Gesamtausgabe, Schraiften D. Martin Luthers Werke: Kritische Gesamtausgabe, Briefwechasel D. Martin Luthers Werke: Kritische Gesamtausgabe, Die Deutsche Bibel D. Martin Luthers Werke: Kritische Gesamtausgabe, Tischreden Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte Zeitschrift fur Theologie undKirche Huldreich Zwinglis sdmtliche Werke

XV

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Chapter 1

THE REFORMATION: THE QUEST FOR THE HISTORICAL LUTHER

1. The Growth of a Reformer Intellectual history is under heavy fire. Its ambitious project of uncovering the idea 'ultimately' determinative of an era, 'the spirit of the age', has encountered vigorous opposition. Research in late medieval, Renaissance and Reformation history, with its deeplylayered intellectual traditions, is particularly susceptible to this sort of attack. Detailed work on Italian humanism and the history of its dissemination in the world of ideas is more and more frequently described as elitist scholarship, although book reviews are still the preferred forum for such ideas. Yet studies on the beginnings of the Reformation - for example, in the imperial cities - written without the slightest knowledge of theological history are no longer confined to the realm of nightmare. Historians who think nothing of applying psychosomatic insights to their everyday lives work hard in their professional writing and teaching to tear mind from matter, often without any clear ideological motivation for doing so. Yet this concentrated critical attack is justified only in so far as it concerns the history of ideas. The history of thought, however, is in my view something else altogether. It tells the story of how people come to grips, both intellectually and emotionally, with the circumstances and conditions of their life. Understood in this way, the history of thought is in no danger of being condemned as irrelevant and elitist. Individuals and groups struggle to make sense of life through what they think and what they do; this struggle in turn contributes to the environment and living conditions of both contemporaries and posterity. If history claims to do more than record data and statistics, it must address the question of how people come to grips with the conditions that govern their life. Yet it would be impossible to undertake such an analysis

1

2

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without a clear understanding of specific circumstances. The history of thought works best when it sticks to its topic — ever mindful of the goals set by its synthetic method - and searches the primary sources to discover the story of how people come to grips with the conditions that govern their life. For Luther scholarship this rules out any retreat to the 'ideal space' of the reformers study. Such a retreat permits the knowledge and recognition of one theme only: Luther, the interpreter of Scripture, outside time and space, on a lonely voyage of exploration through the Word of God, left to himself by the traditional authorities and soon abandoned by succeeding generations. The history of thought, on the other hand, gives the reformer back his historical position. It takes seriously the conditions in which he lived, and therefore takes root in concrete reality. It discovers Luther s schooling in the via moderna, then his life in an observant Augustinian monastery, with its ordered daily round of prayer, meditation and scholarly study. Decisive in the development of Luther s thought were his acceptance in 1512 of the Augustinian professorship at Wittenberg and, starting in 1515, political responsibility for the two Augustinian studia ('seminaries') in Saxony, as well as the maintenance of correct observance in a large district covering eleven religious houses. On this stage, he appears as an administrator and an organizer, led from the very beginning by a strong sense of the direct challenge of heresy and the danger it poses to the unity of the Church.1 From the Augustinian tradition he inherited the belief that theology is the guardian of the true Church, but this traditional truth became real and practical to him only during years of fierce controversy about the realization of the true Church within his own order. In what follows we will concentrate on the via moderna, because nominalism has been either discounted as a transitional phase or vilified as a lasting unCatholic poison, and used to attack the Reformation. Luther, at age 25, took with him from Erfurt to Wittenberg a fund of scholarly ground-work and religious convictions as well as the greatest respect for both faith and scholarship. But Luther's unmistakable traits first come into view in Wittenberg, as he learned to sift through the maelstrom of experiences that poured in on him. As he liked to put it, he strode forward through public disputation 1

91ff.

Cf. Ulrich Mauser, Der junge Luther und die Haresie, SVRG 184, Gutcrsloh 1968,

THE REFORMATION: THE QUEST FOR THE HISTORICAL LUTHER

3

and quiet study, through teaching, preaching and the necessity to express himself in writing.2 The historical Luther cannot be located and pinned down once and for all - as his development shows. His historical significance must not be allowed to work as a selective filter that automatically answers, in a pious and predetermined way, the question of how Luther digested and molded the tradition handed down to him. Luther's historical position does, however, compel us to set the reforming upheaval and breakthrough within the framework of the medieval inheritance that Luther brought with him to Wittenberg, a system and style of thinking and believing that continued, for the time being, to flourish at that university. This line of reasoning has certain consequences. In his commentary on Romans, Luther for the first time castigated the leaders of his own school and his teachers in the via moderna. His attack of 1515/16 on 'those stinking, swinish theologians [Sautheologen]' does not mean that he had 'sloughed off the [Roman] snakeskin'. His new beginning has been interpreted as a sharp break or a refounding of scholarship, theology, the Christian faith and the Catholic church, free of presuppositions and premises. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Coming to grips with the past, even when the attempt succeeds, will never obliterate the archetypes that provide our perceptual and conceptual models. Even the reformer has obligations; he too is bound by ties of kin. 2. The Reformation: Conflicts and Controversies These last statements carry us into the midst of the scholarly crossfire. The quest for the historical Luther compels us to take a stand on the broader question of just what the Reformation was. One choice has forced itself on generations of historians: either the Reformation was the last outlying foothills of the Middle Ages, or it was a new departure, the beginning of the modern era. According to an announcement made by two German secular historians in 1978, the assumption of a breach between the Middle Ages and the Reformation was caused by an optical illusion. Modern scholars have only recently discovered how to see through this illusion. The inner unity between the late medieval and early modern periods is now established as a 2

WAB 1, 389.21-390.24; May 1519.

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proven result of research, and the quest for a watershed is dismissed as antiquated: For quite some time now, the traditional frontier between the 'Middle Ages' and 'modern times' (a frontier generally placed about 1500) has posed a vexed question in historical research. The revolution involving the Renaissance, the Reformation,, discoveries and inventions, changes in society, economic life, church and state between the fifteenth century and the sixteenth evidently [sic!] lacks the profound significance ascribed to it for centuries. Compared to the fundamental changes introduced starting in the mid-eighteenth century by industrialization and revolution, the supposed chasm around 1500, which allegedly divides two whole eons from one another, looks rather small. That which connects before and after, what they have in common, and that which survived into the eighteenth century - the elements of social order and ways of life, and above all the values that sustain daily life and determine the conflicts of countries and religious denominations - is more and more evident, despite the changing times.3

The experiences of the post-Reformation era, from the beginning of the Enlightenment down to today's ecological crisis, make earlier periods look like an undifferentiated continuum. We may expect that in the next century, our own time will appear similarly 'medieval' to many a historian without firm ideological commitments. And yet this viewpoint, as a historical judgement, must be challenged: not primarily because it underestimates Luther's importance, although it does. Indeed, Luther would have been the first to insist that the Reformation had been unable to realize the hoped-for 'revaluation of all values' in the Church and among the 'common folk', in theology 3 'Schon seit langem ist der Forschung die traditionelle, gewohnlich um das Jahr 1500 angesetzte Grenzscheide zwischen "Mittelalter" und "Neuzeit" problematisch geworden. Der Umbruch, der durch Renaissance, Reformation, Entdeckungen, durch Erfindungen und Wandlungen in Gesellschaft, Wirtschaft, Kirche und Staat zwischen dem 15. und 16. Jahrhundert geschehen ist, hat offensichtlich [!] nicht die Tiefendimension, die ihm seit Jahrhunderten beigelegt worden ist. Angesichts der fundamentalen Veranderungen, die seit der Mitte des 18. Jahrhunderts durch Industrialisierung und Revolutionen eingeleitet worden sind, schrumpft der vermeintliche Graben um 1500, der gar zwei Weltalter voneinander trennen soil, zusammen: das Verbindende, Gemeinsame zwischen Vorher und Nachher und das bis ins 18. Jahrhundert hinein Oberdauernde gerade in den Grundziigen der Gesellschafts- und Lebensordnung und vor allem den Wertvorstellungen, die das tagliche Leben tragen und die Auseinandersetzungen der Staaten und Konfessionen bestimmten, tritt durch alle Veranderungen der Zeiten hindurch immer starker zutage' (Joseph Engel and Ernst Walter Zeeden, introduction to the series 'Spatmittelalter und Friihe Neuzeit. Tiibinger Beitrage zur Geschichtsforschung', in: Karl Triidinger, Stadt und Kirche in spdtmittelalterlichen Wiirzburg, Stuttgart 1978, 7).

THE REFORMATION: THE QUEST FOR THE HISTORICAL LUTHER

5

and in society. He grappled repeatedly with the abuse of 'Christian freedom' not only by the peasants, but also by the 'big shots'. His realistic perception of the true situation led to visitations and the Lutheran Catechism. The view that no dividing line is to be found here must be refuted. To hold this view, from the detached scholarly heights of great historical distance, is to judge by the standards of our modern, secular twentieth-century perspective, thus overlooking the way in which that earlier 'modern era saw and understood itself. Part of our task as historians is to make judgements based on our own 'modern' perspective, and thus to pursue historical investigation as the prehistory to our own times. But this is only one part of a larger task. It is equally important - and this is what makes the writing of history a scientific undertaking - for us as historians to be directed by an understanding of our own time as />0.tf-history. The modern era, by no means the inevitable outcome of earlier epochs, has fulfilled, adopted and pursued no more than a gleaning of the many possibilities offered by the past. The 'present' is the result of a selection process: we have left behind many forces and ideas, many false starts, but also many discoveries of earlier times. The way our ancestors saw and understood themselves must not, as a matter of principle, be overlooked. Their view of themselves finds eloquent expression precisely in sixteenth-century sources. Everywhere in these sources we find the awareness that what men and women are experiencing and suffering is an abrupt change in the times. This applies not only within the sphere of influence of the Reformation, but also in humanistically enlightened circles and in the opposing camp of the old Church. The canonization of whatever happens to be the most modern perspective at any given time has particularly serious consequences in the study of history. An indispensable tool in the hands of the historian, the historical scalpel is thus misused as a levelling scythe. The scalpel as a historical tool can be used specifically to expose both continuity and discontinuity between the late Middle Ages and the Reformation. The task at hand is as far as possible to present the Reformation as a medieval phenomenon - in order to work out what is new about it. The assumption of an inner unity between the late Middle Ages and the early modern period is not in question here.

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What is questionable is the decision to be content with asserting this unity without reference to the new understanding, characteristic for the early modern period, of God, human beings, the Church, hierarchical structures and the secular order. It is both peculiar and darkly significant that this position can find support in certain trends of the Luther renaissance, which has portrayed Luther's theology as so subtle that the reformer would have been understood by no single one of his contemporaries and by very few of those who came after him. It would be impossible to proclaim a change of epochs based on so solitary a figure, particularly if theology, spirituality and religion are conceded no part in shaping the course of history - which is supposed to have been determined 'in the final analysis' only by politics and economics. If we are to stick to the historians task of interrogating a particular epoch, of searching for the protean aspects of how it viewed itself, then we must track down the multifarious factors that contribute to the profile of the time, or even determine it. This means surveying the late Middle Ages, the Renaissance and the Reformation as a whole; this three-fold division, familiar to us though it is, also belongs to a view of the past as f re-history. What is in fact a single era is thus carved up into three. This epochal survey must be supplemented by respect for theological, political and social forces as determining factors if we are to gain access to the age of the Reformation. Constant change in the central viewpoint of the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries decreed that in each case one of these three factors would be judged to be entirely determinative; a comprehensive explanation was expected from each one in turn. We ought to treat such allencompassing claims with a healthy dose of skepticism. All three factors will have to be pressed into service to illuminate this epoch, each in its own way. All three will have to be pondered carefully and balanced each against the others on the level of what I regard as a new history of thought. For this history of thought is not the Hegelian history of ideas, but rather the history of how people have come to grips with the changing conditions that govern their lives. Understood in this way, the history of thought concerns the attempt by individuals or groups to cope with life. In so far as these attempts have been successful, they in their turn contribute to the environment

THE REFORMATION: THE QUEST FOR THE HISTORICAL LUTHER

7

and living conditions of contemporaries and posterity. Whenever either social structures, political events or polemical theological writings are required to carry alone the complete explanatory burden of this epoch and are invested with absolute hegemony, only one layer is exposed. We see only a fraction of the conditions that determined how life was lived. Even if we are forced to conclude that as specialists we can generally bring light to only one of these areas, such work must be understood as a contribution toward a complete portrait of the Reformation. We hardly need to worry whether the role of political and social factors has been accorded sufficient recognition. However, the theological dimension, the due regard for faith as a potent force in history, is clearly in danger of being forgotten. Reformation historians have reacted in very different ways to the enormous challenge of recent social history. Some have withdrawn to Luther s beginnings, clinging to him as the original figure of the Reformation, primal and unique. Others have jumped onto recent psychological and psychoanalytic bandwagons. They explain Luthers Reformation as the liberation of the conscience from the yoke of the confessional.4 A third group remains under the spell of the nineteenth century. Here, theological factors are barely touched on. The Reformation is absorbed into the course of German political history.5 The importance these historians ascribe to the Diet of Worms is reminiscent of the confident belief that publishing the documents concerning the imperial diets had finally made accessible the sources necessary to study the 'real* history of the Reformation. In all these approaches - Luther renaissance, psychohistory and political history - one great and obstinately irreducible sixteenthcentury dimension has been suppressed, though in a different way in each case. This dimension is that of faith and choices concerning faith, the dimension of theology, the dispute about the form of the Church, and the beginnings of a new spirituality. Scholars of the 4

Steven E. Ozment, The Reformation in the Cities. The Appeal of Protestantism to Sixteenth Century Germany and Switzerland, New Haven 1975. Cf. Hans-Christoph Rublack, 'Forschungsbericht Stadt und Reformation', in: Stadt und Kirche im 16. Jahrhundert, ed. B. Moeller, SVRG 190, Gutersloh 1978, 9-26; 23. 5 Bernd Moeller, Deutschland im Zeitalter der Reformation, Deutsche Geschichte 4, Gottingen 1977. Cf. here Robert Scribner's review in: The Journal of Ecclesiastical History 29(1978), 374fF.

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Luther renaissance have restricted themselves to the in-house debate. The psychohistorical viewpoint reduces the early sixteenth century to the phenomenon of anti-clericalism, understood as the driving force of psychological liberation. Political history skips Luther's concerns to concentrate on the Lutheran cause and its constitutional consequences for the Empire. To sum up in simplified form, in each case the events of the Reformation are coupled with a different sola (exclusive criterion), and subordinated to a different postulate: - without the Empire and the princes, no Reformation; - without the social crisis, no Reformation; - without the cities, no Reformation. On the other hand, we must recognize as fundamental to our understanding the following truism: - without the reformers, no Reformation. Social and political factors guided, accelerated and likewise hindered the spread and public effects of Protestant preaching. However, in a survey of the age as a whole they must not be overestimated and seen as causes of the Reformation, nor as its fundamental preconditions.

3. Serfs and Citizens: The Reformation of the Princes Versus the City Reformation The drive for a comprehensive survey of the Reformation that will be true to the sources now compels us to re-open files that have long been closed. Recent research has consolidated questions concerning various types of Reformation under the pair of opposites formed by 'the Reformation of the Princes' versus 'the City Reformation. Traditional Catholic accounts deal with the entire consolidation phase of the Reformation from this perspective, as a contrast to the new beginning of Trent when 'the sixteenth-century church, so corrupt within and so hard-pressed from without, was indeed able to renew itself under its own power and from within 6 - apparently 6 '[D]ie von innen her so korrupte und von aufien her so schwer angeschlagene Kirche des 16. Jahrhunderts sich doch aus eigener Kraft und von der eigenen Mitte her erneuert hat. . .', Erwin Iserloh, Luther und die Reformation. Beitrdgf zu einem okumenischen Lutherverstdndnis, Der Christ in der Welt XI, 4, Aschaffenburg 1974, 27. For the Catholic

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without any help from the princes! An analogous thesis, no longer confined to Anglo-American scholarship, and without a clear denominational thrust, is that the Veal' Reformation was the City Reformation, which was later paralysed and sterilized by selfinterested princes. The very terms and concepts used betray that these categories belong to the sphere of political and social history. The history of theology, which formerly was in advance of all other scholarship in this area, now commands no attention at all, and has not made any significant impression on this topic for quite some time. As a result, it has a good deal of catching up to do. Attempts to wring an allencompassing explanatory framework for historical research from theology have been discredited. This discipline - no longer strained beyond its capacity - can now make a much more precise and appropriate contribution of its own. The attempt to accord equal importance to the theological perspective in illuminating the history of the Reformation has demonstrated that the late medieval dispute between the via antiqua and the via moderna continued to exert a vital influence in the Reformation era, even in places where we would not initially expect to find it. Once our eyes are opened to possibilities other than the opposition 'prince versus city' - namely for the antithesis between via antiqua and via moderna - we discover how much more this opposition contributes to an understanding of Luther's theology than has hitherto been realized. The fierce hostility Luther felt toward the via moderna is sufficiently well known as a step on his way to becoming a reformer. Nonetheless, this opposition has been interpreted in widely varying ways: either as a tragically un-Catholic overreaction, or as part of a dramatically Protestant process of emancipation. Any attempt to grasp Luther's development in terms of his opposition to Gabriel Biel will produce a one-sided and therefore distorted picture. For one, Wittenberg theology solidly opposed the ecclesiastically-sanctioned scholasticism of both viae. For another, the 'Princes' Reform' and its extirpation of Protestantism, cf. for southern Europe Peter F. Barton, 'Schickt die protestantischen Prediger auf die Galeeren!', in: Kirche im Osten. Studien zur osteuropaischen Kirchengeschichte und Kirchenkunde 20 (1977), 57-71.

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influence of Luther's education cannot be seen in purely negative terms.7 Here we find the historically pertinent key to his thinking in 'sectors* measured out by God himself. Luther's use of the dialectic between God s absolute power (potentia del absoluta) and God s actual use of power (potentia dei ordinata) as a foundation for worldly order is exemplary and revealing. This order is based not on natural law or the requirements of our rationality, but on God's inscrutable wisdom: Absoluta potentia sua posset Deus alia ratione prohibere inoboedientes filios, sed utitur ordinata, scilicet magistrate'8 - that is, in his absolute power God could have restrained his disobedient children by other means, but he chose the worldly powers he ordained. This situates the power to constitute the worldly authority of the paterfamilias or of the civil powers outside the realm of changeable human designs and motives. Therefore, this constitutive power is not deduced from changeable theories of society based on natural law or philosophical concepts. However, because authority and its responsibilities are decreed by God, they are particularly vulnerable to the assaults of the Devil. All appearances in scholarship to the contrary, Luther does not blindly support the established authorities in the role of a princely vassal: when circumstances require it, he castigates the princes' 'diabolical perversion' with a free and forceful candor audacious not only to feudal ears.9 This is furthermore how Luther justified his triple progression: where domestic authority comes to grief, higher authority must intervene, albeit only in loco parentir™ where higher authority fails, all Hell breaks loose - beyond established authority lies not Utopia, but merely the end of human civilization. There is surely no state 7

The assumption concerning Luther's un-Catholic nominalist foundations has remained unshaken in recent research. See for example Vinzenz Pfniir, Einig in der Rechtfertigungslehre? Die Rechtfertigungslehre der Confessio Augustana (1530) und die Stellungnahme der katholischen Kontroverstheologen zwischen 1530 und 1535, Wiesbaden 1970,386. 9 WAT l,no.415;181.42f. 9 On Luther's political influence and his relationship to the princely authorities, cf. Hermann Kunst, Evangelischer Giaube und politische Verantwortung. Martin Luther als politischer Berater seines Landesherren und seine Teilnahme an den Fragen des offentlichen Lebens, Stuttgart 1976, 400f. 10 WAT 1, no. 415; 182.4.

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11

today, whatever its ideological stance, that would deny the truth of this assertion. If we use a scythe in place of the historian's scalpel, we will see nothing but the Middle Ages. Yet it is the very link between the two medieval elements - the dialectic between God's potentiae (possible powers) and the apocalyptic struggle of God and the Devil - that sheds new light on authority: installed in their office directly subordinate to God, the established authorities are freed from medieval papal domination. This also means that they are made pure, that is, made internally responsible to God. Their disobedience is not, however, excused on the grounds of internal jurisdiction over themselves, but branded as diabolical apostasy. This inscrutable divine decree comes to bear on a second point of concentration - and later of separation - peculiar to the reform era: the doctrine of the sacraments. The efficacy and effectiveness of the sacramental elements is ascribed to the pactum dei> that is, to God's unchangeable decree: this view is already expressed in the Dictata (1513-15); it is expounded in detail in the sermons on the sacraments of 1519, and can be traced right through to the Table Talk.u Reason, even the reason of the theologians, depends on the divine decision that precedes all our thinking. The doctrines of transubstantiation and signification are both attempts to solve the puzzle of God's decrees without taking Christ's intervention into account. For the urban Reformation, the height of reason is the height of access to revelation. The Mass, denounced with disgust as 'eating God' and 'drinking God', is too gross to correspond to the spiritual meaning of revelation. And it is quite certainly not reasonable to allow this question to become a matter of political dispute as well. For pactum refers at most to a clever policy of alliance, not to a divine decree that is beyond reason. In this way the urban drive for emancipation could be fused seamlessly with the Gospel: the common good (bonum commune) still embraces Church and society, as previously in the papal bull Unam sanctam, and therefore finds its 11 Thomas dixit, quod in baptismate im wasser soil ein heimliche kraft sein; ibi coepta est disputatio, et deinde imprimitur character. Sed Scotus dixit: Non, sed ex pacto divino quando sacerdos baptisat, tune adest Deus suo pacto; et recte dixit, und ist ein seher feiner mensch gewesen' (WAT 2, no. 1745; 202.21-5, 18 August 1532).

12

THE REFORMATION

significance, purpose and fulfilment in the cause of God - just as do all forms of learning in theology, according to the via antiqua.12 Concerning both the interpretation of authority and the sacraments, Luther was bound to remain incomprehensible to all urban theologians whose background was the via antiqua. This theological clash was a Catholic inheritance hidden in the seemingly closed ranks of the Protestant camp from the very beginning. To the profound disappointment of many supporters of the Reformation, it proved impossible to heal this rupture by way of the new 'reasonable' exegesis beholden to Erasmus. The breach between the confessional parties did not begin immediately before or after the outbreak of the Peasants' War with the so-called sacramentarian controversy. We should, however, be wary of putting our faith in closed 'chains of events' or of hypostatizing 'inevitable practical pressures and forces', be they theological, political or social. If we lose our intuitive sense that contingency is the basic structure of historical events, we will lose all access to history.

4. The Punctum Protestantissimum: Worldly Reason and Faith in Christ The city reformers, all of them educated at Latin schools and elevated to city preacherships, must nearly all be assigned to the via antiqua and to the circle of Erasmus' pupils. Zwingli is no exception. They all believed that Scripture and the common good mesh seamlessly with faith and learning, or at the very least, that the two sides could be combined in a harmonious way. Against this backdrop, one characteristic of Luther's theology stands out very clearly: justification by faith alone not only excludes human merit; 'faith alone' is another spearhead aimed at the claims of reason (ratio). If we take this to be one of the established cornerstones of Luther research, then an old controversial point becomes red-hot once again: Luther's famous address to the Imperial Diet at Worms.13 The double 12

Cf. Heiko A. Oberman, Werden und Wertung der Reformation. Vom Wegestreit zum Glaubenskampf, Tubingen 1979,2 377; English trans.: Masters of the Reformation. The emergence of a new intellectual climate in Europe, revised and abridged trans, by D. Martin, Cambridge 1981,294-5. 13 Joachim Rogge has provided an excellent volume of sources, while the Worms Festschrift offers important aids to the interpretation of this Diet. See Rogge, l$2i**-1971. Luther in Worms. Ein Quellenbucht Witten 1971; Fritz Reuter (ed.), Der Reichstag zu

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13

appeal Luther makes to Scripture and to pure reason in this address seems to me to have been sufficiently appreciated neither in its theological nor in its secular implications. Kurt-Victor Selge has presented a balanced account of the state of research. We are bound to agree with him completely when he says: In his famous concluding words Luther puts forward as the counterargument to which he is prepared to submit, in addition to the testimony of Scripture, the evidence of clear reason (ratio evidens). Luther himself continually used arguments based on reason to show his opponents that their proofs from Scripture were unsound. He knew that a pure Biblicism content to rely on quotation to solve all problems was insufficient. 14

But Selges next statement requires more reflection: 'Luther does not here place ratio beside scriptural evidence as an independent, autonomous authority.'15 This solution to the problem would be entirely in accord with the Protestant principle of 'Scripture alone'. However, it is still unclear why Luther insisted so firmly on distinguishing between two authorities.16 Emanuel Hirsch chose a different way out, anchoring this twofold, external authority immanently and anthropologically in the conscience. I would like to call to mind his apt formulation: Luther's confession of 18 April 1521

Worms von 1521. Reichspolitik und Luthersache, Worms 1971. As exegetical and existential (= tropological) background for the punctum protestantissimum cf. Luther's interpretation of Ps. 9.5 (God is index iustitiae) in the Operationes in Psalmos, the extensive commentary which Luther was forced to break off because he had been ordered to Worms (AWA 2, 520.6-18, and 28-37; WA 5, 292.11-23, and 32-41). 14 'In seinen bertihmten Schluftworten fiihrt Luther als Gegenargument, dem er sich beugen will, neben den Schriftzeugnissen auch den "klaren Grund" (ratio evidens) an. Luther hat selbst immer wieder mit Vernunftargumenten gearbeitet, um seinen Gegnern die Unstimmigkeit ihrer Schriftbeweise zu zeigen. Er hat gewuftt, daft man mit einem reinen Biblizismus, der sich mit Zitaten begniigt, um alle Fragen zu losen, nicht auskommt'; 'Capta conscientiae in verbis Dei, Luthers Widerrufsverweigerung in Worms', in: Der Reichstag zu Worms, 180-207; esp. 200. 15 ibid.; cf. Bernhard Lohse, Ratio und Fides, Gottingen 1958, 134. 16 For help in interpreting the idea of'double authority', see the passage which Luther himself cites, though not until 1530, from Augustine (Epistola 82, PL 33, col. 277; WA 3011, 385.4f.). Biel appeals to Gerson in the matter of a threefold certainty, although the third is of no use to the extent that it rests on 'probabilibus coniectures'. The first is based on the truths contained in Holy Scripture (certitudo supernaturalis}; the second (certitudo naturalis], on internal experience 'ut sol orietur'. Canonis Misse expositio resolutissima Gabrielis Biel, Lectio 8 B, ed. H. A. Oberman, W. J. Courtenay, I, Wiesbaden 1963, 59.

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became the beacon that has continued to shine through the history of the collective European spirit down to the present day, and that gave the word 'conscience' its essential significance concerning the ultimate questions of human existence.17

Hirsch comes to the conclusion - and here we sense that we are in the presence of a grateful pupil of Karl Holl - that Tor Luther the conscience is both the fountainhead of every human search for truth and the locus where all the certainty of truth received by mankind is to be found'.18 Indeed; for Luther, the conscience is the place where all the certainty of truth received by human beings can be found. However, did he really think at Worms that the conscience was also the source of every human search for truth, the anthropological bulwark of faith, proof against the incursion of sin? This might make sense to us as modern observers, but does not accord with Luther's own experience of conscience. He is all too aware that the human conscience is moveable and restless, a focus of unrest in human existence, capable of error and open to influence. The misery of mankind can even be identified with restless human conscience. The Augustinian principle that the heart finds rest only in God was transferred by Luther from the heart (cor) to the conscience (conscientia), specifically in the sense that the conscience finds a firm hold only in Scripture. The allegorical method can no longer be of help in finding out what the Word of God really means. The wall of the Babylonian captivity has been demolished with the rejection of the claim that the inerrant Church interprets Scripture without check or hindrance. So how is Holy Scripture to be interpreted properly? Up to now we have had recourse to Luther's epistemological principle: was Christum treibet - whatever furthers Christ. This certainly clarifies the interpretive goal or purpose, but sheds light neither on the authority for the interpretation nor on the interpretive process. Rational insight (ratio evidens), understood as immanent to theology, begins to 17

'[Ijst das Fanal geworden, das durch die Geschichte des gesamten europaischen Geistes weiter leuchtet bis heute und von dem das Wort Gewissen seine entschcidende Bedeutung fur die letzten Fragen des menschlichen Daseins empfangen hat' (Luthcrstudien /,Giitersloh 1954, 175). 18 '[Dafi] fur Luther das Gewissen sowohl der Quell alles menschlichen Wahrheitssuchens wie der Ort aller vom Menschen empfangenen Wahrheitsgewiflheit ist' (ibid., 179).

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15

function here. 'Was Christum treibet' is not left merely to the eruditi and the experti, the scholarly exegetes of the Old and New Testaments. Scripture is clear inasmuch as any given interpretation must be acceptable in terms of the worldly reason shared by all human beings. The interpretation of Scripture thus becomes a worldly affair, exposed to the chilly winds of critical reason, subject to the demand that its process and conclusions be comprehensible, and that it stand up to testing. Here Luther adopts a conclusion from the medieval dispute between academic and monastic theology. Academic theology had won the day: catholic truths were supposed to be based on authority (auctoritas) and reason (ratio), that is, on Scripture or tradition and on the conclusions drawn from these with the help of philosophy.19 For Luther, the tradition of the Church is not an autonomous court of appeal responsible for determining truth. Scripture is the only authority in matters of truth, since Scripture alone is the Word of God. But parallel to scriptural authority is the persuasive power of clear reason available to all. As authorities, Scripture and clear reason can clash strongly, for example if human reason threatens, in its foolishness, to smother divine truth, or when reason, quibbling over the clear sense of God's word, bends that sense according to its own standards, which are external to the text and therefore speculative. It is a different matter, however, when reason listens for the decisions of divine authority and seeks the conclusions that can be drawn in a clear, necessary and irrefutable manner from the Word of Scripture according to all the rules of logical procedure. Reason may make the same claim to truth as the Word of Scripture itself, a claim it need not put forward for discussion as an opinio but may formulate as an assertion that will give way only in the face of conclusive evidence to the contrary. That a counter-proof can still be demanded demonstrates the continuing distinction between the assertio and the Word of God; but as long as clear evidence to the contrary has not 19 Cf. the treatise by John Brevicoxa (+1423 as Bishop of Geneva), 'De Fide, et Ecclesia, Romano Pontifice, et Concilio Generali', in: Joannis Gersonii Opera Omnia, ed. L E. Du Pin, I, Antwerp 1706, col. 805-904. Cf. here also Hermann-Josef Sieben, 'Die "quaestio de infallibilitate concilii generalis" (Ockhamexzerpte) des Pariser Theologen Jean Courtecuisse (+1423)', in: Annuarium Historia Concilium 8 (1976), 176-99.

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been provided, the unconditionally obligatory power of the evident exegesis still stands. In his treatise De votis monasticis (On Monastic Vows), finished in November 1521 - that is, before the end of the year in which the Diet of Worms took place - Luther once again takes up his statement at Worms, maintaining in his conclusion that his concerns are justified by Scripture and by clear arguments understandable to everyone.20 If we examine more carefully the method of argument that Luther employed in this work, we see that he is working out his concept of 'Christian freedom' on the basis of Holy Scripture. But with the help of clear reason, he now extends this concern to mean it is 'as clear as day' (omnium evidentissimum) that vows plague the conscience uselessly with sins that are not true sins at all. Rather than freeing us, vows enslave those who take them and alienate them from true piety. Such vows are, therefore, nefarious, impious and contrary to the teachings of the Gospel.21 The second sphere of activity where clear reason (ratio evident) exerts its influence is within the world and worldly experience. Just as worldly reason cannot invade the sphere of revelation without becoming a whore, so in her own worldly sphere, reason is that original source of life which, undiminished by the fall and disbelief, belongs even to the godless. Indeed, reason is the discoverer and guide of all things and people (inventrix et gubernatrix omnium),22 disclosing, illuminating and ordering the world. Luther broadens the discussion, moving from the frequently ridiculed and fiercely criticized logic-chopping' of the moderni to experience as the central reference point for a nominalist understanding of the world. Luther, the alleged fideist, formulates the independent force of worldly reason more radically than anyone had ever dared to do before him. Reason has not been destroyed by the Fall - it has not even been impaired. On the contrary, it has been confirmed and strengthened in its position, able both to resist the assaults mounted by the world and to shape Creation, which has become hostile.23 20

'[A]rbitror omnia scripturis et rationibus evidentibus munita . . .' (WAS, 668.24F.). '[I]llicita, impia et Evangelic pugnantia' (WA 8, 668.16). 22 WH39I, 175.11. 23 'Nee earn Maiestatem Deus post lapsum Adae ademit ration!, sed potius confirmavit' (De homine, Thesis 9; WA 391, 175.20F.). Cf. Gerhard Ebeling, Lutherstudien II: Disputatio de homine 1, Tubingen 1977, 17. 21

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To sum up: when Luther is prepared at Worms to submit only to Scripture and reasonable proof, he is not striking a rhetorical blow on behalf of the appellate authority of Scripture. Nor is this a manifesto for the conscience as an inerrant source of truth.24 Conscience on its own is never wholly solid, but must be anchored in Holy Scripture. It must stand on the rock of the Word, super petram, in the firm knowledge that the God who speaks in Holy Scripture does not lie.25 Otherwise, conscience has fallen victim to the world, the flesh and the Devil, the entire realm that is hostile to God. At the same time, if the conscience is to stand fast it must face up to clear reason in the form of worldly experience. We must not interpret clear reason (ratio evidens) as reason in the philosophical sense, be it Thomist or post-Kantian. Rather, it means empirical knowledge of the world, based on the demonstrable facts of experience. Reason appeals to experience and must stand the test of experience. Its evidence can be verified by that secular experience which is stored up and passed down in proverbs and popular adages. Experience shares another characteristic with reason: in the sphere of faith (unlike in the worldly sphere), it can be assigned no constitutive function without, like reason, leading to 'whoredom' - that is, to arbitrary and unauthorized enthusiasm. When confined to the secular dimension, however, clear reason (ratio evidens) has the power to defend itself against attacks by ecclesiastical authority, even without Scripture: 'And that crazed ass of a pope has done things so badly, that [his behavior] would be felt [indefensible] even if judged by reason alone, even if we did not have Scripture'.26 With this secular dimension of clear reason, or everyday experience, Luther introduces elements of the nominalist inheritance into the Reformation. This experience is not reserved for mystics or experts, but is available to the man or woman in the street. Indebted as he was to the via moderna, at the end of 1532 Luther defined with succinct precision the differing place of experience in the two spheres we have discussed: 24 Cf. also Michael G. Baylor's apt criticism on this point in his book Action and Person. Conscience in late scholasticism and the young Luther, Leiden 1977, 265f. 25 WA 8, 669.2-4. 26 'Et ille insensatus asinus papa hats so grob gemacht, ut etiam palparetur iudicio rationis, etiamsi non haberemus scripturam' (WAT2, no. 1346; 60.16F.).

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THE REFORMATION In the sphere of the world, experience makes our perception possible, sharpens it and provides the foundation for our understanding. In the sphere of theology the reverse is true: listening in faith to God's Word and firm trust in his Word precede all experience.27

5. The Protestant Breakthrough and the Nominalist 'Principle' The document central to any understanding of the Protestant breakthrough is still (despite repeated objections and misgivings) the retrospective in the preface to the first edition of Luther's Opera Omnia, published at Wittenberg in 1545. This autobiographical piece is rather puzzling, especially because we generally assume that the text is a self-contained whole, without noticing that it is really the final product of a lengthy series of gradually expanding retrospective meditations. If we do not confine ourselves to the well-known parallels to this piece of autobiography, but seek also for its predecessors,28 we come upon the Table Talk. Its value as a source has up to now been unjustly underestimated. It also provides evidence that this text is the result of a process that began as early as 1532. One of these earlier forms now helps us to grasp the point at which the Wittenberg friar and doctor of philosophy became the reformer: Since I first read and sang [!] in the psalm: 'In your righteousness [iustitia\, set me free!' I shrank back and was an enemy to the words: 'the righteousness of God', 'the judgement of God', 'the work of God'; for I knew nothing other but that the righteousness of God meant his stern judgement. And should I now be saved according to this his stern 27

'In natura experientia est causa, cur audiamus, et praecedit assensum; in theologia autem experientiasequitur assensum, non praecedit' ( W A T \ , no. 423; 183.25-7; cf. WAT 4, no. 4091; 129.23F: 'experientia, rerum magistra, omnia moderari deberet'). 28 The degree to which Luther's reminiscences were bound up with the idea of a collected edition of his works is shown, for example, by a conversation with Georg Maior, the later co-editor of the Wittenberg Luther edition: 'Cum aliqui libri haberentur in mensa ex primis, quos edidit, inquit: O, ich wolt gern, das ich sic alle bei einander hett! Responsio Maioris: So kunde man sehen, Domine Doctor, quam haec doctrina accrevisset. - Respondit Doctor: Ja es ist war! Ergo eram primo valde imbecillis. Ich war in vilen dingen sehr schwach.' (Since certain books, among the first that he published, were on the table, he said: Oh, how glad I would be ifl had them all together! - Maior's answer: In this way one could see, Dominie Doctor, how this doctrine grew. - Doctor Luther responded: Indeed, that is right! I was, after all, very infirm at the beginning. I was very weak in many things.) (WAT5, no. 5471; 172.1-6; cf. no. 5511; 204.30-32). Tischrede(Table Talk] no. 5346 (75f.) is important because it testifies to Staupitz's intervention (according to my own view, in 1512 (75.20) and 1515 (76.6)), as well as because of the affirmation 'ego disputavi de indulgentiis' (I debated on the topic of indulgences) - 76.16.

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judgement? If so I should be eternally lost! But 'God's mercy' and 'God's help' - those words pleased me better. God be praised that I understood the substance and knew that the righteousness of God meant justice, by which we are justified through the righteousness given in Christ Jesus. Then did I understand the grammar [grammatical, and only then was the psalter sweet to me.29

The essential point marking the breakthrough which made Luther a reformer now proves to be entirely comprehensible in the context of the nominalist tradition with which Luther was so familiar: 'God be praised that I understood the substance . . . Then did I understand the grammar, and only then was the psalter sweet to me.' At first glance, this assertion would seem to contradict our thesis that Luther remained a nominalist even as a reformer. He could even say: 'Things are teachers. Anyone who does not understand the substance will be unable to tease meaning out of words'.30 Luther is undoubtedly following that classical tradition we can trace back to Tacitus and Cato: 'Rem tene, verba sequuntur'31 - hold fast to the substance, the words will follow. And who could fail to hear at the same time the battle cry of the via antiqua: 'We are concerned with the substance and leave the dispute over words to the nominalists'?32 Yet simply to make this the guiding principle of the via Lutheri would be to disregard the nominalist distinction between the two spheres that was a special concern of the reformer. In theology, contrary to the worldly sphere, the assensus - that is, submission to God's revelation - is paramount; it precedes all experience. The Word 29

'Da ich erstlich im psalmen la£ und sang: In iustitia tua libera me!, da erschrak ich alle mal und war den worten feindt: Iustitia Dei, iudicium Dei, opus Dei, denn ich wust nichts anders, iustitia Dei hies sein gestreng gericht. Nuhn solt er mich noch [nach] sein gestrengen gericht erretten? So wer ich ewig verloren! Aber misericordia Dei, adiutorium Dei, die wortt hett ich lieber. Gott lob, da ich die res verstunde und wiste, das iustitia Dei hief? iustitia, qua nos iustificat per donatam iustitiam in Christo Ihesu, da verstunde ich die grammatica, und schmeckt mir erst der Psalter.' WAT5, no. 5247; 26.18-26; cf. WAT4, no. 4769; 479.29-31: 'Multo maxime necessarium est in sacris literis, quid nominis primum et certissimum habere, quia de rebus incognitis et tantum fide perceptis agitur.' 30 'Res sunt praeceptores. Qui non intellegit res, non potest ex verbis sensum elicere' (WATS, no. 5246; 26.1 If.). 31 Cf. WADB.3, 121,n. 2. 32 Cf. Gerhard Ritter, 'Via antiqua und via moderna auf den deutschen Universitaten des XV. Jahrhunderts', in: Studien zur Spatscholastik II, Sitzungsberichte der Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften, Phil.-hist. Klasse, Jahrgang 1922, 7. Abhandlung, Heidelberg 1922 (Darmstadt 1975), 133.

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of God is revealed in its grammatica only at a second stage. This second stage acquires its underlying meaning in the biblical disclosure of the righteousness of God. The 'reforming' discovery becomes the joyful reforming experience - the much-discussed turning point only when Luther succeeds in connecting his 'assent' (assensus) to God's word with the 'grammar' (grammatica) of God's word. In general terms: the principle sola fide (by faith alone) became the 'reforming breakthrough' at the moment it could stand the test of Scripture alone. This observation is of considerable importance for the dating of the upheaval. It makes no sense to see the 'reforming breakthrough' wherever Luther mentions or even postulates freely given (unearned) justification in a reforming vein. The real breakthrough required both justification by faith and its exegetically verifiable foundation in the Word. The irreversible sequence leading from assent (that is, the living obedience of faith) to 'grammar' (faithfulness to Scripture) made Luther a reformer. But as a reformer he is at the same time obliged to the via moderna in that he distinguishes the two spheres from one another: the reverse sequence of thought - which is the rule in the worldly sphere - is, in the realm of Scripture, rigorously denounced as 'whoredom' and the Devil's own work. In theology there is no generally binding prior understanding, neither philological nor philosophical - in short, no understanding that can be attained by scientific means - that by-passes assent and is able to make Scripture so transparent that we can see right through it to the true God.33 Luther does not reduce Scripture to the bare letter, as he charges the spiritual enthusiasts with doing. Assent to the Word of God becomes the rock of personal conscience, the source of joy in faith, the basis of doctrinal assertions, and the foundation on which the Church is built only when assent is made fast to Scripture, and therefore is able to withstand and does withstand inner and outer contradiction. Our concern would be misunderstood if it were interpreted as an attempt to carve Luther up into his sources and his constituent parts. 33 This guiding principle is persuasively developed as a program for New Testament exegesis in Peter Stuhlmacher, Vom Verstehen des Neuen Testaments. Eine Hermeneutik, Das Neue Testament Deutsch, Erganzungsreihe 6, Gottingen 1979, 206fT.

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Placing him historically allows us to make distinctions between what is traditional and what is novel, to grasp the revaluation of the old and to discover and evaluate the new. To return to our point of departure: we asked about the relationship between the late Middle Ages and the Reformation. Based on the punctum protestantissimum - the confession of Worms - and that cause celebre, the 'Reformation breakthrough', we have seen that the distinction between 'continuity' and 'discontinuity' distorts the reformers' own view of themselves and obscures the characteristics of the period. As a result, modern observers are denied access to decisive episodes and aspects of the Reformation; hence, the ill-conceived assertion that The Reformation of the sixteenth century failed'.34

34 'Die Reformation im 16. Jahrhundert ist gescheitert'; Erwin Iserioh, Luther und die Reformation (see n. 6), 7.

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Chapter 2

MARTIN LUTHER: FORERUNNER OF THE REFORMATION

1. The Reformation as a Failed Transformation The school of social history that views the religious motives behind the Reformation as marginal phenomena specific to the period has, not surprisingly, found the thesis that the Reformation failed to be very attractive. According to this school of thought, new sources have led research away from the traditional fixation on the elite as the bearers of culture and have provided insight into the culture of the 'common man', who complied with the Europe-wide missionary activity of the reform only externally and temporarily, as Gerald Strauss argues.1 In other words, 'official Christianity' throughout the centuries was able to capture only a very narrow elite layer of the population, not the 'underground' constituted by popular culture. The 'Christian West' is therefore reduced to a hagiographic projection and a moral illusion. Given such a stubborn, vigorous 'subculture', the main goal of the Reformation is construed as a programmatic attempt finally to penetrate all of society in order to bring about the transformation2 1 G. Strauss, Luther's House of Learning. Indoctrination of the Young in the German Reformation, Baltimore/London 1978. Strauss writes of a 'vigorous subculture' (303). The deep current of popular life nourishing this subterranean religion was beyond the theologian's grasp, the preacher's appeal, or the visitor's power to compel' (ibid.). To Strauss, the stubbornness of popular superstition is both a symptom and proof of the failure of the Reformation: 'Success and Failure in the German Reformation', in: Past and Present 19 (1975), 30-63; 62f. Lionel Rothkrug has pursued the same issue independently of Strauss. 'Popular Religion and Holy Shrines. Their influence on the Origins of the German Reformation and Their Role in German Cultural Development', in: Religion and the People. 800-1700, ed. J. Obelkevich, Chapel Hill, N.C. 1979, 20-86. 2 '[I] fits central purpose was to make people - all people - think, feel and act as Christians, to imbue them with a Christian mind-set, motivational drive, and way of life, it failed' (Strauss, Luther's House of Learning, 307). The conditional 'if should not be understood to introduce an open question. The author is quite sure of his position. As far as he is concerned, the burden of proof is no longer in his camp but among those who think 'that the Reformation in Germany aroused a widespread, meaningful and lasting response to its message' (ibid., 307f.).

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THE REFORMATION

dreamed of by medieval missionaries and which the Inquisition tried in vain to produce. Martin Luther seems to be the ideal representative of such a vision,3 since he considered the common man to be a priest as well, and wanted to remodel his practical faith in a lasting and thorough way by means of visitations. We are obliged, however, to check the sources carefully with this fundamental question in mind: did Luther ever want or attempt to realize 'Reformation' in the terms of such a transformation?4

2. Desperate Times at the End of Time The image of Luther the heroic and fearless reformer, the confident advance guard of the 'transformation', evokes not only his performance at the Imperial Diet of Worms (April 1521) and his public refusal to renounce his writing. There is no doubt that 'Luther before the Emperor at Worms' became a symbol of reforming courage to confess and defend one's faith5 that reached many of those who could not read.6 The reforming 'deed' made a deep impression on the people, preparing them for the reforming Word. Even people of letters - right up to our own time - have read Luther's works in the 3 However, Strauss in no way feels obliged to 'interrogate' Luther on this topic: 'Luther himself blurred the division between secular and ecclesiastical competences, and - in any case - events soon passed him by' (ibid., 313, n. 50). 4 1 see Steven Ozment's closing remarks as an affirmative answer to this question, as he also uses the concept 'transformation' and includes Luther in his general critique: 'The great shortcoming of the Reformation was its naive expectation that the majority of people were capable of radical religious enlightenment and moral transformation, whether by persuasion or by coercion' (The Age of Reform 1250-1550. An Intellectual and Religious History of Late Medieval and Reformation Europe, New Haven/London 1980, 437). Although Bernd Moeller is concerned to distinguish between Luther ('the Christian stands as an individual before God') and the urban Reformation ('the common good' Gemeinwohl], he also opines that Luther 'in his optimistic early years' actually held 'the gradual victory of the Word' to be possible; 'he was still deeply-enough embedded in the intellectual world of the Middle Ages that he could see such a victory as an attainable goal' (Reichsstadt und Reformation, Gutersloh 1962, 37). I am not persuaded by Moeller's attempt to support this thesis by appealing to Luther's De instituendis ministris Ecclesiae (1523; WA 12, 169-96), a work addressed to the Bohemians, as 'characteristic of Luther's thoughts on this matter'. 5 See Luther's own retrospective interpretation of this event in a letter to Melanchthon dated 9 June 1530. (WAB 5, 456.3-9). 6 The cultural elite was also deeply impressed by the symbolic power of this action, as Albrecht Diirer's lament concerning Luther shows. Cf. Albrecht Diirer, 'Tagebuch der Reise in die Niederlande', in: Diirer, Schriftlicher Nachlafi, ed. H. Rupprich, Berlin 1956, vol. I, 170-2.

MARTIN LUTHER: FORERUNNER OF THE REFORMATION

25

light of this act. The reforming Word had continually to direct and correct this early tendency to cast Luther as a hero, to personalize his message, in order to push forward the real agenda of the Reformation. Read in this light, the works of 1520 are indeed a reforming program and the triumphant conclusion of Luther's early development. Even if the Edict of Worms had been able to stop Luther from writing anything more,7 the basic traits of his theology would nonetheless be clear to us today. To be fascinated by the 'act of Reformation' is to run the risk of confusing the person with the office in a Donatistic way. Luther himself was able to avoid this confusion. He understood his program of reform as a scientifically verifiable discovery that could exist only as an entity separate from his person. Such a distinction between person and office or function is in no way easy, particularly because it must disappear when the person becomes a figure of great historical significance. From the perspective of an enthusiastic contemporary, it makes perfect sense to see the years from 1519-21 as the 'hey-day' of the charismatic Luther: 'It was the marvelous time when Luther . . . charged on, as certain of himself as a sleepwalker, as though obsessed by the inevitability of his fate, abandoned to the will of his God.'8 However, what appeared in 1520 (a boom year for publishing) as Luther's own effervescent innovation was not 'the certainty of a sleepwalker' in the sense of a dream, but the fruits of hisr intellectual and literary labors, gathered during seven years of biblical exegesis. His polemical topics are firmly anchored in the exegetical results of work on the Hebrew text of the Psalms, results that were broadly developed, after years of painstakingly skillful interpretation of the 7 8

Cf. WAS 2, 336.1 Of.

'Es 1st jene wunderbare Zeit, da L u t h e r . . . in nachtwandlerischer Sicherheit vorwarts stiirmt, wie besessen von der Unausweichlichkeit seines Geschicks und preisgegeben dem Willen seines Gottes' (H. Freiherr von Campenhausen, 'Reformatorisches Selbstbewufitsein und reformatorisches Geschichtsbewufttsein bei Luther, 1517-1522' (1940), in: Tradition und Leben. Krafte der Kirchengeschichte. Aufiatze und Vortrdge, Tubingen 1960, 318-42; 330). Here (331, n. 67) von Campenhausen criticizes H. Preuft (Martin Luther. Der Prophet, Gutersloh 1933, 112-19), and corrects (329, n. 58; 339, n. 125) Karl Holl ('Luthers Urteile iiber sich selbst', in: Gesammelte Aufiatze zur Kirchengeschichte I, Tubingen 1932, 381-419). Von Campenhausen's clear and persuasive description is correct in all its parts, but nonetheless does not manage to bring the overall picture into focus: Luther's own conception of'reformatio' and the 'expectations of success' determined by this concept are not given their due.

26

THE REFORMATION

Bible, in his Operations in Psalmos, his Psalms commentary, which he was forced to break off abruptly by the summons to Worms. He elucidates the reforming message in a clear and concentrated way in the detailed exegesis of Psalm 10 (9b), which he had presented to his students in university lectures.9 Here he develops the basic ideas of his An den christlichen Adel deutscher Nation (To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation), which he would write in mid-August. He also establishes the textual foundation for his view of 'captivity' (captivitas), seen in the context of the 'history of salvation' (the Passion story). The De captivitate Babylonica (On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church) must be interpreted within this framework. Here Luther reveals his own understanding of reformatio> thus clarifying the duty of a reformer and the way in which he interpreted his own mission. This 'Reformation psalm' is both a portrayal and an announcement of the apocalyptic menace. It provided him, in its staccato verses, with a psychological, in fact a spiritual portrait of the Church in his times: 'For if the government of the clergy and of the powers of the Church were mine today, [and I were to] deal with it in prayer properly, appropriately, agreeably, fully and perfectly, I would recite this psalm .. .'.10 The leaders of the Church do not want to hear the Gospel, because it would make 'reformation' inevitable for them: 'the Church and the clergy must be reformed'.11 But reformation means turning away from power and pomp, as well as turning to preaching and prayer. It insists on apostolic poverty, and leads to the dangerous necessity of having to defend the Truth without any protection.12 This theme is not new. We find in an early sermon and in the Dictata Luther's conviction that the Church can be reformed 9 W. Maurer has dated the exegesis of Psalm 13 (14) to March 1520. Cf. Von der Freiheit eines Christenmenschen. Zwei Untersuchungen zu Luthers Reformationsschriften 1520/21, Gottingen 1949, 78. 10 'Nam si mihi ecclesiasticorum et dominantium in ecclesia administratio hodierna esset oratione propria, apta, commoda, plena perfectaque disserenda, hunc psalmum recitarem ...' (Psalm 10.7; AWA 2, 588.8-10; WA 5, 336.37-337.1). 11 'ecclesiam et ecclesiasticos oportere reformari' (AWA 2, 588.14; WA 5, 337.4F.). 12 *. . . positis pompa, fastu, regnis et mundi negotiis, ministerio verbi et orationi instandum sit et apostolorum exemplo in penuria et periculo vitae pro veritate vivendum; quod ne fiat, potius omnia praedicemus, sive hinc populorum animae maledictionem capiant sive quid peius' (AWA 2, 588.14-18; WA 5, 337.5-8).

MARTIN LUTHER: FORERUNNER OF THE REFORMATION

27

only by preaching the Word.13 The age of church reform is now over, no more reformers can be expected, God himself must14 and will carry out the 'reformation'.15 Only he merits the title 'reformer', because he will consummate the reformation at the end of time, on Judgement Day.16 What function, what task can there be for Luther in this vision of reformation? How did he make sense of his own role? The interpretive possibilities that have been popular are those of 'hero' or of'the German prophet', even 'the successful reformer of the Church'. These all originate in a belief in progress that no longer recognizes 'eschatology' as an integral element of Luther's way of thinking and living. We will get no closer to Luther's mission if we do not enter 13 See WA 1, 13.24-40 (1512?). In reference to the papalistic theses of Prierias, Luther says in his Commentary on Galatians 6.6 ('catechisatur verbo'): 'Et, ut dicam libere, impossibile est, scripturas posse elucidari et alias ecclesias reformari, nisi universale illud reale, Romana curia, quam primum reforetur. Haec enim verbum dei audire non potest nee sustinere ut pure tractetur: verbo autem dei non tractate neque caeteris ecclesiis succurri potest' (WA 2, 609.10-14 (1519)). 'Succurri' refers to the command to Peter in Luke 22.32:'. . . strengthen thy brethren'. The 'irreformability' of Rome blocks all 'reformation' this side of the Last Day. 14 'Ecclesia indiget reformatione, quod non est unius hominis Pontificis nee multorum Cardinalium officium, sicut probavit utrurnque novissimum concilium, sed tocius orbis, immo solius dei. Tempus autem huius reformationis novit solus Hie, qui condidit tempora. Interim vitia tam manifesta negare non possumus. Claves sunt in abusu et servitute avaritiae et ambitionis, et gurges accepit impetum: non est nostrum remorari eum. Iniquitates nostrae respondent nobis, et onus unicuique sermo suus' (Resolutiones disputationum de indulgentiarum virtute, 1518: WA 1, 627.27-34). I have italicized Luther's conclusion so that his view of the 'desperate times at the end of time' is clear, since this could have prevented errors in the interpretation of what has been said (see n. 16). 15 'Non vincitur Satanas et Christianorum hostis nobis operantibus, sed dumtaxat patientibus et clamantibus' (AWA2, 571.28f; WA 5, 327.13-15). 16 'Ita vides psalmum hunc finem suum in finem mundi et iudicii diem constituere' (AWA 2, 619.19f.; WA 5, 352.25F.). The statement 'immo solius dei' (see n. 14) has not been overlooked in the literature, but as far as I can see, it is without exception interpreted within the framework of the doctrine of justification, and its ecclesiological aspects are ignored. W.-E. Peuckert concludes: Luther 'feels that he is called to be a reformer, to be the one who must accomplish the task set by God'; in Diegrofe Wende II: Geistesgeschichte und Volkskunde, Darmstadt 1966, 568. W. Maurer sees Luther's refusal of the title 'Reformer' in moral terms as a 'humble attitude' and his expectation of what is yet to come - 'free of all apocalyptic expectations' - as resignation; see his article 'Was verstand Luther unter der Reformation der Kirche?', in: Luther 28 (1957), 49-62; 54f. R. Stupperich interprets the passage 'immo solius dei' in the strict sense of justification: 'Luther weift, daft Menschen Entscheidendes nicht zu leisten vermogen' - 'Luther und die Reform der Kirche', in: Reformatio EccLesiae. Festgabe fur Eru>in Iserloh, ed. R. Baumer, Paderborn 1980, 521-34; 524.

28

THE REFORMATION

into his graphic, dramatic eschatology. It cannot simply be brushed aside in order to get to his permanent, henceforth obligatory, theological view of history.17 For the purposes of our discussion, we cannot be content to posit late medieval apocalyptic fears specific to the period, fears that needed merely to be shaken off and disposed of. What is apocalyptic about Luther cannot be ascribed to the 'waning of the Middle Ages', characterized as an epoch weighed down by fantastic fears, a time whose only hope lay in feverish anticipation of the end of time. Certainly this belonged to the general tenor of the times.18 The expectation of a general renewal, fed by the Joachimite, Lollard and Hussite traditions, took root in the farthest-flung (and most central) parts of Europe, losing much of its heretical 'scandalousness' in the process. The main characteristic of this phenomenon is the inauguration of the third Reich or age, the epoch of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit: this is when the general transformation is supposed to happen, when the Body of Christians (Corpus Christianoruni) will finally coincide with the Body of Christ (Corpus Christi). Luther, however, energetically rejected this understanding of 'reformation' all through his life. In fact, it is surprising how closely his eschatology corresponds to that of Augustine in the City of God,1** 17 The relevant material has already been collected and reviewed, though for varying reasons and with varying emphasis. There is general agreement concerning the thesis that apocalypticism did not play a primordial role in Luther's development. Peuckert claims to find it only in 1531, and considers it to be a function of the 'peasant thinking' which he feels constrains and continually reasserts control over Luther (Peuckert, see n. 16, 544). Compared to Peuckert's work, that of M. Greschat ('Luthers Haltung im Bauernkrieg', in: ARC 56 (1965), 31-47) is an important step in the right direction. Greschat rightly emphasizes the apocalyptic context of Luther's treatises on the Peasants' War, though he too errs on the side of caution (p. 32) in dating this to November 20th, 1514 (Luther's sermon on the Synoptic Apocalypse, Matt. 24, 15ff.; WA 15, 738-58). As we will demonstrate, Greschat does not accord sufficient weight to Luther's teaching on the Two Kingdoms in his conclusion (35): 'Angesichts der Schrecken des kommenden Gerichts wird alles Ringen und Feilschen um irdische Vorteile und Rechte bedeutungslos.' J. Wallmann's conclusive new dating of the Treaty of Weingarten in his article 'Luthers letztes Wort im Bauernkrieg' (Der Wirklichkeitsanspmch von Theologie und Religion, Festschrift Ernst Steinbach, ed. D. Henke et al., Tubingen 1976, 57-75) rather underlines Luther's hopes for a general and secular peace settlement. 18 See the literature already cited and the work of H. Giilzow, 'Eschatologie und Politik. Zum religiosen Pluralismus im 16. Jahrhundert', in: Das 'Augsburger Bekenntnis'von 1530 damals undheute, ed. B. Lohse and O. H. Pesch, Munich 1980, 32-63. 19 See Augustine, De civitate Dei XX, 7-13; CC/;r48, 708-23.

MARTIN LUTHER: FORERUNNER OF THE REFORMATION

29

while also looking back, beyond the Church Fathers, to draw on and rekindle the imminentist expectations of the early Christians. Like Augustine,20 he keeps his distance from any form of chiliasm. The parousia of Christ is not prepared by a transformation of society or by a theocracy initiated by prophets', 'judges' or 'apostolic messengers'. Militant apocalypticism of the kind represented by Thomas Miintzer, Hans Hut, Melchior Hoffmann or Jan Matthijs, which predicted the extermination of the godless before the last Judgement, is therefore excluded from the very beginning.21 Luther also agrees with Augustine in interpreting Revelation 20.3 - 'and after that he [Satan] must be loosed a little season' - as the last phase of history, when God will allow the Antichrist to tempt the elect and to attack the true Church with all his might. But Augustine stresses that this period will be shortened by God's mercy, and will last only three years and six months.22 Luther, on the other hand, does not pretend to know how long it will last. He counts on a prelude of three to four hundred years, and allows his calculations concerning the End Time to be influenced repeatedly by 'signs of the times'; but the signs remain signs and never become revelation. The hidden God (Deus absconditus) is by no means a mere negative place-holder opposed to the revealed God (Deus revelatus),23 God the judge and lawgiver is no less real because we cannot make an accounting to him; his time is very close. Augustine concentrates on the great 'interim', the thousand-year interval between the first and second coming of Christ.24 He foretells the ordeals of the last days and confesses he is still unsure whether the 20

Cf. Augustine, ibid., XX.7; CChr 4%, 708-12. Cf. H.-W. Krumwiede, Glauhe und Geschichte in der Theologie Luthers. Zur Entstehungdesgeschichtlichen Denkens in Deutschland, Berlin 1952; J. M. Headley, Luther's View of Church History, New Haven/London 1963; U. Asendorf, Eschatologie bei Luther, Gottingen 1967; K. Deppermann, Melchior Hoffman. Soziale Unruhen undapokalyptischen Visionen im Zeitalter der Reformation, Gottingen 1979; M. Reeves, The Influence of Prophecy in the Later Middle Ages. A Study in Joachimism, Oxford 1969. On the background to late medieval apocalypticism, see H. D. Rauh, Das Eild des Antichrist im Mittelalter: Von Tyconius biszum Deutschen Symbolismus, Munster 1979.2 22 Cf. Augustine, DecivitateDetXX.8, 13; CChr48, 713.37-40; 722.If.; 723.47f. 23 See G. Ebeling, 'Existenz zwischen Gott und Gott. Ein Beitrag zur Frage nach der Existenz Gottes' (1965), in: Won und Glaube II, Tubingen 1969, 257-86, esp. 282. 24 Augustine, De civitate Dei XX. 13; CChr 48, 722.13-17; cf. XX.8; CChr 48, 712.21-713.27. 21

30

THE REFORMATION

Antichrist will appear within the Church itself, or outside it as an anti-church (2 Thess. 2.1-4).25 Luther considers Augustine's interval to be nearly over. He feels that he is living at the end of the 'interim', as he terms the time between the unchaining of Satan and the return of Christ: The only thing that comforts you in this interim is the coming Judgement and the belief that the Lord is King for ever and ever - finally all the godless will perish.'26 At the beginning of 1520, Luther is certain that the Antichrist - now, at the end of time - has infiltrated the Church from within, from its center, the Holy See at Rome. Although Augustine had mentioned this last and most cunning manifestation of Satan as one possible ending of history, Luther adds a new element: that God must renew his Gospel -already eclipsed for the past three or four hundred years - to gather the elect and protect them against this demonic imposture. Augustine counts on the baptized Christians who have been instructed in the faith, who can hold out for the final three and a half years without gospel preaching, buoyed by secret baptism and meditation on Scripture,27 while Luther believes that God openly intervenes by means of his Word to protect the 'poor in spirit' (pauperes), the chosen 'remainder of Israel' against the deceptions of the Antichrist. In his Dictata (1513), Luther had interpreted Psalm 10 (9b) as the call of the 'original congregation' for God's intervention against the Jews,28 but here he explicitly expands his field of vision to include the apocalyptic menace now presented by the Antichrist.29 Luther's only reservation at the beginning of 1520 is that he is not yet entirely certain whether or not the Antichrist has appeared in the flesh, which would mean that the End Time would 25

Augustine, ibid., XX.19; CO48, 731.26-52. 'Quare una interim consolatio tua erit futuri iudicii dies et fides, qua credis, dominum tuum regnare imperpetuum, et perituros esse tandem omnes impios' (Ps. 10(9b).l6; AWA 2,615.1-3; WA 5, 350.7-9). 27 '[Ajdiuvante Dei gratia per considerationem scripturarum . . .' (De civitate Z)«'XX.8; CChr 48, 715.117f.). 28 'Contra ludeos, qui apostolos et discipulos Christi persequebantur, hie Psalmus proprie loquitur et respicit in tempus apostolorum et discipulorum Christi, licet aliqui de Antichristo exponant' (WA 551, 76.16-18; cf. WA 4, 478.20f). 29 AWA 2, 567.13ff.; WA 5, 324.23F. Given the medieval collective understanding of Jews, heretics, Turks and 'antichristiani', this is in no way a shifting or blurring of the battle lines, but rather the prophesied and expected intensification of the End Times. Cf. AWA 2, 571.19-29; WA 5, 327.5-15. 26

MARTIN LUTHER: FORERUNNER OF THE REFORMATION

31

be over very soon. But it cannot be denied that everything the exegetes have unanimously ascribed to the Antichrist 'has now been fulfilled down to the last jot and tittle.'30 It is hardly credible that yet another Antichrist is to be expected who could cause worse damage (peiora)?} The oppression of the Gospel in the Church and in theology, which had been increasing for centuries, is without a doubt the prologue, the immediate preliminary act signaling his arrival: the last forerunners of the Antichrist - and this is certain - have already arrived.32 In this sense, a counter-reformation preceded the Reformation. Approximately six months before the publication of the bull threatening his excommunication (15 June 1520), Luther interpreted the psalms opening words Arise, O Lord' ('Exsurge Domine'; Psalm 10(9b).12) as the last gasp of the Church of Christ hard-pressed by the Antichrist: Arise, O Lord; O God, lift up thine hand.' No one else will ever again intervene to correct the situation, no other reformer will ever come other than Christ himself, at the Last Judgement. During the intervening period before the reform, the godless will make great gains: 'In the meanwhile the godless make constant advances from bad to worse, until the end.'33 The majority of the Church, especially its leadership (pars nobilior et melior), has already been led into Babylonian captivity.34 To Luther, it is certain that everything foretold in this psalm about the End Time is happening today (nostro saeculd), and in fact some of it has already happened.35 So this question becomes more and more germane: what office, what mission remains for Luther? The answer is: the office of the pre30

'hodie impletum esse usque ad minimum apicem et iota' (AWA 2, 589.2f.; WA 5, 337.13f.). 31 See AWA 2, 590.13f.; WA 5, 337.36f. 32 '[Fjortiter tamen Antichristo praeludunt...' (AWA 2, 593.7; WA 5, 339.12). For the originally typological, then eschatological meaning of praeludere and praeludium, see WA 4, 200.29-38 (the confractio of the Jews); 605.26; 1^9,461.11; WA 13,646.35; WA25, 282.7; WA 3III, 337.12 and 28. On WA 4, 605, the sermon of 6 November 1519, see E. Vogelsang, 'Zur Datierung der friihesten Lutherpredigten', in: ZKG5Q (1931), 112-45; 127. 33 'Interim proficient impii in peius semper usque in finem' (AWA 2, 605.12f.; WA 5, 345.19f.). CL AWA 2, 609.1 Of.; WA 5, 347.18f. 34 Cf. AWA 2, 600.9f; WA 5, 343.7f. 3

Heiko A. Oberman The Reformation Roots and Ramifications 2004 - PDFCOFFEE.COM (2024)
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