Hi Spina,
Thanks for your response and your kind words.
Hi Topper: Great posts you are making! As for your post #784, People will believe what they want to believe. Yet many grew up believing what they were and had been taught so one can’t fault them for that. yes, what you wrote makes much sense and shows how people of the time thought and lived.
I agree. You cannot fault people who have simply believed what they were taught. But somewhere ‘back there’ there was someone who KNEW that what they were teaching, historically, was false. I have a problem with ‘that guy’, the guy who intentionally misrepresented the facts.
Remember most people of that time did not know how to read or write, so relied on those who did. There superstitions galore that many believed due to their not having any education.
Luther himself was extremely superstitious.
Martin Luther did not come from what we would consider to be a ‘well-formed’ Catholic background. His parents were certainly pious and devout Catholics in their own way, but they also held some very pagan beliefs which were fairly common to the peasants of the time, especially those on the fringes of Christianity.
In describing the “religion” in which those of Luther’s class were raised, Roland Bainton makes the following comments:
“Certain elements even of old German paganism were blended with Christian mythology in the beliefs of these untutored folk. For them the woods and winds and water were peopled by elves, gnomes, fairies, mermen and mermaids, spirits and witches. Sinister spirits would release storms, floods, and pestilence, and would seduce mankind to sin and melancholia. Luther’s mother believed that they played such minor pranks as stealing eggs, milk, and butter; and Luther himself was never emancipated from such beliefs. “Many regions are inhabited,” said he, “by devils. Prussia is full of them, and Lapland of witches. In my native country on the top of a high mountain called the Publsberg is a lake into which if a stone is thrown a tempest will arise over the whole region because the waters are the abode of captive demons.” Roland Bainton “Here I Stand”, , pg 26
“Fully as much by bodily hardship the boy’s life was rendered unhappy by spiritual terrors. Demons lurked in the storms, and witches plagued his good mother and threatened to make her children cry themselves to death. God and Christ were conceived as stern and angry judges ready to thrust sinners into hell. “They painted Christ,” says Luther – and such pictures can be still seen in old churches – “sitting on a rainbow with his Mother and John the Baptist on either side as intercessors against his frightful wrath.” Preserved Smith, “The Age of the Reformation”, pg 62
As in many things, we see the ‘results’ of Luther’s beliefs in Protestantism, especially early Protestantism.
According to Harvard Professor and Reformation Scholar Steven Ozment, Protestantism actually increased the superstitions of the people:
“If scholars of popular religion in Reformation England are correct, Protestants success against medieval religion actually brought new and more terrible superstitions to the surface. By destroying the traditional ritual framework for dealing with daily misfortune and worry, the Reformation left those who could not find solace in its message – and there were many – more anxious than before, and especially after its leaders sought by coercion what they discovered could not be gained by persuasion alone. **** Protestant ‘disenchantment’ of the world in this way encouraged new interest in witchcraft and the occult, as the religious heart and mind, denied an outlet in traditional sacramental magic and pilgrimage piety, compensated for new Protestant sobriety and simplicity by embracing superstitions even more socially disruptive than the religious practices set aside by the Reformation……
**The great shortcoming of the Reformation was it’s naïve expectation that the majority of people were capable of radical religious enlightenment and moral transformation, whether by persuasion or by coercion. ** **Such expectation directly contradicted some if its fondest convictions and the original teaching of its founder [Luther of course].
Having begun in protest against allegedly unnatural and unscriptural proscriptions of the medieval church and urged freedom in place of coercion, the reformers brought a strange new burden to bear on the consciences of their followers when they instructed them to resolve the awesome problems of sin, death, and the devil by simple faith in the Bible and ethical service to their neighbors. The brave new man of Protestant faith, ‘subject to none (yet) subject to all’ in Luther’s famous formulation, was expected to bear his finitude and sinfulness with anxiety resolved, secure in the knowledge of a gratuitous salvation, and fearful of neither man, God, or the devil. But how many were capable of such self-understanding?” **Ozment, “The Age of the Reformation”, pg. 436-7
The Reformation was based on Luther’s self confidence in his own abilities and his being ‘led’ by God to rebuke the Church. In justifying his own authority, Luther, at least at first, granted to all the same privileges. How else could he initially justify his own ‘authority’. It was on this ‘confidence’ in the common (and illiterate) man that Sola Scriptura (and thus the Reformation) were established.
The ‘naïve expectation’ that Ozment mentions was actually Luther’s naïve expectation. When he finally realized that the warnings were correct, there were too many cows out of the barn. Even then, rather than returning to the Mother Church, he set out to establish his own.
God Bless You Spina, Topper