HI Topper:
As a mater of course, at first Luther did not believe that the papal Bull was from the Pope but rather from Eck a sworn enemy of Luther and his doctrines. However, after realizing that the Bull was indeed from the Pope, it seemed have enraged Luther in that he rushed off to have a pamphlet printed An Assertion of All the Articles Wrongly Condemned by the Papal Bull in which he used the most vile language against the Pope and the bull he received. Moreover, it appears that Luther was already or had already decided that the CC was in some way evil especially the Pope calling him the Antichrist.
Hi Spina,
Thanks for your response. You mention that “at first Luther did not believe that the papal Bull was from the Pope”. That is true but it is not the whole truth, which is always a little ‘stickier’.
In regards to the publication of “Exsurge Domine”:
**“Luther, on the other hand, treated the whole proceeding with contempt. He had decided to fight. Two tracts came from his pen in October: the one ‘Eck’s New Bulls’ and Lies; the other, ‘Against the Execrable Bull of the Antichrist’. The language in these was most violent. He pretended that the document which Eck was promulgating was not genuine, even though he admitted in a letter to Spalatin that it was authentic. **He stated that his appeal to a general council and his hearing before the Archbishop of Trier were still pending and that under such circumstances the Pope would not send Eck on such a mission.” Schweibert, pg. 489
In other words, at one point, Luther knew that the bull was genuine, but intentionally misrepresented his understanding of it. This deliberate attempt to mislead the public is ironic when viewed in the light of what he called Eck’s “Lies”, which were in fact, not lies. Thankfully, it is a Lutheran biographer who brings this to light.
**“In the second treatise he censured Leo X if he had permitted his bull to go out under his name. There followed some rather strong, direct language with reference to the seat of the Antichrist”
‘Unless you do this, know that I, with all who worship Christ, will esteem your seat possessed and oppressed by Satan, the damned seat of Antichrist, to which we will not render obedience or be subject, or be united, but will detest and execrate as the chief and supreme enemy of Christ.
We are prepared in behalf of this conviction not only to bear your censures, but even to ask that you may never absolve us and may fulfill your cruel tyranny. For the sake of this conviction we offer ourselves to death and by these writings we proclaim that, if you persist in our fury,** we condemn and deliver you, along with your Bull, and all your Satanic decretals to the destruction of the flesh in order that your spirit may to the destruction of the flesh in order that your spirit may be delivered with us in the day of the Lord.’**** Luther
Luther apparently was reluctant still to admit that the Pope had actually taken such a step. He still hoped that the Pope and the Roman Church might somehow find another solution. On November 17, 1520, he once more appealed to a general council, calling upon the secular authorities named in his former ‘Address” to force the calling of a council.” Schweibert, pg. 489-90
In regards to the Luther’s burning of Exsurge Domine and the Canon Law, Schweibert continues:
On December 10th, 1520, “Philip Melanchthon nailed a significant document on the ‘Schwarze Brett”, the university bulletin board, announcing the long-awaited reaction on the part of Luther to the burning of his books all over Germany**……After the gathering had assembled, one of the masters, probably Agricola, stated the fire……But the principal collection of writings which Luther wanted to destroy was the corpus canonici, that body of Canon Law which gave the Pope all the extravagant powers which Eck, Emser, and others tried to defend. ** One after one the other various tomes were consigned to the flames. Finally, Luther unexpectedly drew a printed copy of the bull copy of the bull “Exsurge Domine” from his gown and threw it into the flames………**Luther, therefore, on this occasion impulsively burned the papal bull which threatened him with excommunication, but he intentionally destroyed the whole basic framework upon which the Roman Church had been built. ………The next day Luther began his lectures to his students with an explanation of the necessity for eradicating all traces of homage to the Papacy from their hearts if they were to be saved. Luther meant that he ‘New Theology’ required a complete rejection of the Canon Law and the whole outward Roman system.” **(Lutheran) Schwiebert, pg. 490-1
Again, it should be noted that not one person on this thread has suggested that Luther should not have been excommunicated. Sometimes you do see this opinion advanced, but apparently not after the actual facts have come out. That Luther wanted, according to a Lutheran biographer, to ‘intentionally destroy the whole basic framework upon which the Roman Church had been built” suggests that the Catholic Church was, if anything, too lenient with Luther and that it waited too long to finally excommunicate him.
God Bless You Spina, Topper