MARTIN LUTHER
1483 - 1546
Martin Luther stands in history
as one of those unique forces, an individual
who by force of will and by his ideas changed
the world fundamentally. There are several
ironies incumbent on Luther's pivotal role
in history: 1) he doesn't really represent
a break with the past, but rather a flash
point where ideas and trends which had been
smoldering in Europe for several centuries
suddenly blazed aflame; 2) Luther initially
saw himself as a great reformer of the Catholic
church, a simple monk who thought the force
of his ideas would single-handedly redirect
the Leviathan of the church; in the end, however,
he divided Christianity into two separate
churches and that second division, Protestantism,
would divide over the next four centuries
into a near infinity of separate churches;
3) finally, Luther (and all the other reformers)
saw themselves as returning Christianity to
its roots, they believed that they were setting
the clock back; in reality, their ideas irreparably
changed the world and pushed it kicking and
screaming, not into some ideal past, but into
the modern era.
Luther was not a person
you would want to have dinner with; he was
temperamental, peevish, egomaniacal, and argumentative.
But this single-mindedness, this enormous
self-confidence and strident belief in the
rightness of his arguments, allowed him to
stand against opposition, indeed, to harden
his position in the face of death by fire,
the usual punishment for heretics. Luther
became an Augustinian monk in 1505, disappointing
his equally strong-willed father, who wished
him to become a lawyer. He earned a doctorate
in theology from the University of Wittenberg,
but instead of settling down to a placid and
scholarly monkish life or an uneventful university
career teaching theology, he began to develop
his own personal theology, which erupted into
outright blasphemy when he protested the use
of indulgences in his 95 Theses.
Indulgences, which were granted
by the pope, forgave individual sinners not
their sins, but the temporal punishment applied
to those sins. These indulgences had become
big business in much the same way pledge drives
have become big business for public television
in modern America. Luther's Theses, which
outlined his theological argument against
the use of indulgences, were based on the
notion that Christianity is fundamentally
a phenomenon of the inner world of human beings
and had little or nothing to do with the outer
world, such as temporal punishments. It is
this fundamental argument, not the controversy
of the indulgences themselves, that most people
in the church disapproved of and that led
to Luther's being hauled into court in 1518
to defend his arguments against the cardinal
Cajetan. When the interview focused on the
spiritual value of "good works,"
that is, the actions that people do in this
world to benefit others and to pay off the
debts they've incurred against God by sinning,
Cajetan lost his temper and demanded that
Luther recant. Luther ran, and his steady
scission from the church was set in motion.
The Northern Humanists, however, embraced
Luther and his ideas.
Luther's first writing was
The Sermon on Good Works, in which he argued
that good works do not benefit the soul; only
faith could do that. Things took a turn for
the worse: Pope Leo declared 41 articles of
Luther's teachings as heretical teachings,
and Luther's books were publicly burned in
Rome. Luther became more passionate in his
effort to reform the church. His treatise,
"Address to the Christian Nobility of
Germany," pressed for the German nation
to use military means to force the church
to discuss grievances and reform; "A
Prelude concerning the Babylonish Captivity
of the Church" literally called for clergy
in the church to openly revolt against Rome.
In 1521, the Holy Roman
Emperor, Charles V, demanded that Luther appear
before the diet of the Holy Roman Empire at
Worms. Luther was asked to explain his views
and Charles ordered him to recant. Luther
refused and he was placed under an imperial
ban as an outlaw. He managed to escape, however,
and he was hidden away in a castle in Wartburg
where he continued to develop his new church.
Martin Luther, The Freedom of a Christian
In a more conciliatory effort,
Luther wrote a letter to Pope Leo explaining
the substance of his ideas, Von der Freiheit
des Christenmenschen , "On the Freedom
of the Christian," from which your readings
have been selected. This conciliation didn't
work (the treatise is not, in fact, very conciliatory,
but somewhat arrogant), and Luther was excommunicated
from the church in 1521. What had started
as a furious attempt to reform the church
overnight turned into a project of building
a new church independent of the Catholic church.
Nevertheless, this small work, "The Freedom
of the Christian," is the theological
and ideological core of Luther's thinking;
the fundamental term of value, that center
around which every other aspect of his thought
rotates, is the concept of Freiheit, "freedom,"
or "liberty." This is not our concept
of freedom, but in the eventual turn of time
it will give rise to the notion of "individual
freedom," and later "political freedom,"
and later "economic freedom." Most
of the European Enlightenment revolves around
freedom and the project of "liberating"
people: liberating them from false beliefs,
from false religion, from arbitrary authority,
etc.--that is, what we will be calling "liberation
discourse." Westerners still participate
in this Enlightenment project today. This
idea of "liberating" people, so
common to the international politics of our
own period, comes out of Luther's idea of
"freedom."
When you read this treatise,
ask yourself the following questions: What
precisely does this freedom consist of? What
is the nature of the individual? What are
the two divisions of a human being? What value
is attached to the "internal" part
of the human being? How is this "internal"
part free? Finally, how do you see this concept
working in the world around you?