Alright, I don’t disagree with saying that Martin
Luther had a problem with scrupulosity.
It is now widely accepted that scrupulosity is a form
of OCD = obsessive compulsive disorder. Again,
it is an illness, not a moral fault, in and of itself.
Individuals with this disorder can think that they
have committed the “sin against the Holy Spirit,”
the “unpardonable sin.” They confess and
immediatley think that they need to confess
again. But at no time do they feel relief from
the inner conviction that they have sinned and
may be “lost.” This can lead to great torment of
mind and heart. [Cardinal O’Connor preached
a sermon on scrupulostiy.]
Catholics stress “confess”…people with OCD
say “I have confessed” and I’m still tormented.
They are
exhausted with confessing and can
feel that they are never in a “state of grace.”
[Of course, this can lead to an obsession over
hell, which could certainly be a “live” issue
for those so afflicted.]
Luther provided a way for such individuals
to reach out to Christ…and to achieve release
from torment =“works” theology, as he saw it.
“I have not come for the healthy, but for the sick”
can be thought of in a new way, here.
Prescinding from Luther’s flights of hyperbole…
surely you’re not saying the man seriously
recommeded sinning mightily, even if he jested
about same…hyperbole is just that-hyperbole…
Luther knew that faith was the cardinal point.
He may have jettisoned the epistle of James, but
he could not do the same with the synoptic gospels,
which counseled “works.”
I take his point to be “Be of good cheer, your
sins are forgiven you through your faith in
Jesus.”
For the scrupulous, this *emphasis *is balm and
rest to the heart.
reen12
“Inadequate, and
loving it!”
