Hi Mary,
Like I said, I wanted to have a little time to reflect so I could hopefully respond to your great post. First of all, thank you for your response and your kind comments.
Topper! What an extraordinary post! This is exactly what I was referring to way back when I first mentioned Luther’s mental problems and everyone got so upset with me.
As you have learned, criticizing Martin Luther will draw a certain ‘response’. Luther’s problems and his character have had a direct effect on Christianity. The Truth about Luther tends to cause people to ‘wonder’ about whether he was really teaching God’s Absolute Truth, as well they should. These things are the Truth, and if people get upset with us, maybe they should wonder why they are not upset with Luther instead of with us.
I think it goes back to Harvard’s Steven Ozment quote:
“The Protestant temperament finds nothing more painful than knowing it has believed in vain.” Ozment, “Protestants, The Birth of a Revolution”,
In this particular case, the Facts About Luther cannot possibly NOT cause Protestants and especially Lutherans, to doubt. When Luther doubted, and he doubted a LOT, he attacked the people who caused that doubt. Here we see the same phenomenon.
Especially House was offended and the general consensus was it doesn’t matter whether Luther had this problem or not along with the oft expressed view that “our differences are not so great.”
Mary, can you imagine it NOT being important that the man who developed the foundational doctrines of Protestantism had significant psychological issues? Even before he was excommunicated, he had rejected or reformulated more than 4 dozen important accepted doctrines, and yet, some people, as I have also experienced, don’t seem to WONDER OR CARE WHY? Astonishing! Where is the intellectual integrity? As for the differences not being so great – that is wishful thinking/heads buried in the sand – and it is not helpful to true ecumenism.
Of course that hopeful but inaccurate view is usually put forth by Lutherans but some Catholics hold it as well for unity is not in denying significant problems but bravely facing the challenges they present.
As I have come to learn, this is generally the position of people who consider themselves to be “evangelical catholic” or “Evangelical Catholic”, but not necessarily the position of the leaders of their particular communions. Incidentally, I simply cannot imagine how people who are not Catholic can justify calling themselves Catholic, with a capitol “C”. Someday I would like to have somebody explain it to me. As for bravely facing the challenges, IMHO, facing the actual facts and dealing with them, including Luther’s mental health and his responsibility for SS+PI, AND the ‘results’ of SS+PI – that would be ‘brave’.
Luther’s particular sickness IS a very big deal. Very. Why? well not because of Sola Scriptura, not because of papal primacy, and not because of purgatory or Maccabees. Those are minor resolveable issues compared to the biggest issue- perceptions of sin, forgiveness, and Confession. Luther actually redefined in a most destructive way Christ’s intentions and practices. In other words the significance of sin and how it corresponds to forgiveness and penance and the role of the Confessor are radically different in Lutheranism and even more so to other forms of Protestant faith from the Catholic view.
Mary, I think you are right on the money here, but as serious as your accusation is, I think it goes one step further than that. In redefining man’s relationship with God, Luther was actually redefining God, and with that, as he came to realize only a bit at a time, everything had to change (and little of it for the better).
As always, our Scholars are able to flesh this out, hopefully to provide a possible explanation as to how and why Luther found it necessary to conjure up SS, and worse yet, PI.
“While Luther’s discovery of ‘justification by faith’ was in one sense a sudden awakening, crystallized win his Turmerlebnis, the actual change which came over Luther was much deeper and involved a long period of time. ** Karl Holl states that Luther first had to undergo a complete change in his conception of God.” ** Lutheran Professor E. G. Schweibert, pg. 289
This confirms your comment and it also leaves Protestants and especially Lutherans in a rather sticky position. If Luther’s concept of God was wrong in the beginning then it was with an incorrect understanding of God that he forged his Reformation. If his concept of God was wrong after he began his reformation, then reformation theology is based on an incorrect understanding of God. It’s a pick your poison thing.
Eric Erickson and many others state that Luther saw God as only a vengeful unforgiving being. Roland Bainton, who is among the most ‘generous’ of biographers towards Luther comments that:
“For such a person (Luther) there was no question which mattered much save this: How do I stand before God……The ultimate problem was always God and man’s relationship to god.” Bainton, pg. 214 Richard Marius, the Harvard Scholar who wrote what is possibly the best of all Luther biographies wrote: “….
we know how difficult self-condemnation and submission were for Luther, for we have his witness that he rebelled, that he sometimes hated God and wished God did not exist. **** This sort of rebellion is obviously not the attitude that demonstrates perfect contrition for one’s depraved state.” Marius, pg. 204
Part two to follow