Hi Spina,
Thanks for your response.
HI Topper: Great post! My question is what signs did Luther have that he was the authority while everyone else was wrong concerning doctrines and teachings of the CC as well as others like Calvin and Zwingli?
**“Therefore, I now let you know that from now on I shall no longer do you the honor of allowing you - or even an angel from heaven - to judge my teaching or to examine it.
For there has been enough foolish humility now for the third time at Worms, and it has not helped. Instead, I shall let myself be heard and, as St. Peter teaches, give an explanation and defense of my teaching to all the world - I Pet. 3:15. I shall not have it judged by any man, not even by any angel. For since I am certain of it, I shall be your judge and even the angels’ judge through this teaching (as St. Paul says
) so that whoever does not accept my teaching may not be saved - for it is God’s and not mine. Therefore, my judgment is also not mine but God’s.” “Against the Spiritual Estate of the Pope and the Bishops Falsely So-Called”, July 1522.
Now THAT is Authority being demonstrated. Here we see Luther VERY CLEARLY state that those who do not ‘accept his teaching’ - ‘may not be saved’. At least I guess he allows for the
possibility that we Catholics might be (eventually) saved. What would we think today if a Theologian made such a statement?
Maybe Marius answers your question, at least as much as the completely unanswerable can be answered. I say that it is unanswerable because there is no reasonable (meaning based on reason) justification for the kind of personal authority that Luther claimed. In describing Luther denouncing monasticism and Luther’s justification or authority to do so:
(In regards to his vow to become a monk) – “Luther denounced monasticism free from the reproach of enemies that he did not know what he was talking about.** In the attention Satan gave him, Luther had, paradoxically, proof of his divine calling.” **Marius, pg. 311
‘Paradoxically’ seems to be putting it mildly. In fact, even early on, Luther was well aware of how radical his teachings were.
“
Against all the sayings of the Fathers, against all the arts and words of angels, men and devils I set the Scriptures and the Gospel . . . Here I stand and here I defy them . . . The Word of God I count above all else and the Divine Majesty supports me; hence **I should not turn a hair were a thousand Augustines against me, and am certain that the true Church adheres with me to God’s Word.” **(Against Henry VIII, King of England, 1522; in Grisar, Vol. IV, 391 / from Werke [Weimar], Vol X, II, p. 256 ff.)
Here Luther admits that he knew that his teachings were in opposition to the beliefs of the Fathers. He defied them all. The fact that the Fathers were opposed to him, and that there were so many of his own time that were opposed to him somehow proved to him that he was ‘right’. At the very least, that is a very strange ‘justification’.
Lutheran Professor Albrecht Beutel comments on Luther’s perception of his authority:
“Even though at first Luther was most reluctant to pursue the academic career intended for him, it did not take long for him to adjust and **he would refer to his doctoral degree without reservation whenever his authority as a teacher was questioned, be it toward the papal legate Cajetan, the elector Albert of Mainz, or the Pope himself.” ** “Companion”, pg. 7
Luther’s justification of course breaks down where his opponents were his educational equal or better. Obtaining a Doctorate does not mean that you are right and everybody else (including other PhDs) are wrong.
Lutheran Professor Robert Kolb seems to agree:
“Luther’s image of himself centered on his call as teacher of Scripture. **His doctoral oath to teach the Bible faithfully and keep false teaching from bringing offense to the church was determinative in his own mind for the course of his career.” **‘Companion’, pg. 219
Of course Luther’s doctoral oath required that he not teach against the doctrines of the Church. If he had followed the teaching of the Church (and the later teaching of Lutheranism), that it is the Church that determines doctrine, he would not have challenged the teachings of the Church. This is not to mention that once a man, any man, PRESUMES that his education gives him the ‘right’ to condemn the teachings and opinions of people who have the SAME education, and others use that same ‘rational’, doctrinal dissension is inevitable.
Lutheran Professor E. G. Schweibert records Luther as stating:
**“I have a fast hand and rapid memory. As I write the thoughts just naturally come to me, so I do not have to force myself or ponder over my materials.” ** “Luther and His Times”, pg. 439
We know that Luther normally didn’t edit or review what he wrote. A lot of it was written in such an angry mood that he was more interested in getting it to the printer than he was in editing. It would appear that Luther thought that he WAS guided by God to the point that whatever he thought was placed in his mind divinely. What he wrote, what landed on paper HAD to be correct, at least in Luther’s mind.
God Bless You Spina, Topper**