And while Luther admittedly puts less stock in the Fathers than Chemnitz, he does not in any way disregard them all together.
First of all, I see the phrase ‘admittedly puts less stock in the Fathers’ as being more than a slight understatement. Furthermore, I don’t see your comment in total as being very strong in support of Luther. In fact, in terms of his relationship with the Fathers, I don’t think that a strong statement in his defense CAN be made. But to say that he didn’t “disregard them all together” is not exactly setting a very high bar, at all. He didn’t completely disregard them? I agree, but as long as you brought up Luther and, or possibly ‘vs.’ the fathers, it is an interesting subject, one that is very revealing.
First of all, Luther’s knowledge of the Fathers was not exactly ‘extensive’:
“**According to his (Luther’s) knowledge of early Christian literature, there was a sizeable gap in time between the writers of the New Testament and the earliest Church Fathers. Luther regarded Tertullian, who died in 230, as the earliest writer in the church after the apostles………he apparently did not know the writers who later acquired the title “apostolic fathers”. He was therefor, able to invoke the historical and chronological argument in a form no longer available to theologians of the twentieth century.” **Pelikan (Lutheran to EO convert), “Luther the Expositor”, pg. 83-4
This of course means that Luther was unaware of the 17 Early Church Fathers who proceeded Tertullian, or their writings. I find it ironic that Luther thought that Tertullian was the first Early Church Father, and that Tertullian became a heretic, a Montanist.
**
“Along the way Luther admitted that many of not most of the fathers of the church disagreed with his view of the relation of sin and grace and the incapacity of human beings to do any good work. “**And you say, “Do you not believe in the sayings of the Fathers?” I answer, ‘I believe? Who commands that they be believed? Where is the order from God concerning their faith?” Near the end he attacked Thomas Aquinas, whom Latomus had cited: “Now as for Thomas Aquinas, whether he be damned or blessed, I most vehemently doubt. Thomas wrote many heresies and is the author of the reign of Aristotle, the destroyer of pious teaching.” He ended with a caustic demand to his followers back in Wittenberg to get busy at polemics. The foes must be answered. Everyone must do his part. “I have crushed the head of the serpent; can you not stomp on it’s body?
Luther eventually became quite aware that his beliefs ran counter to those of historic Christianity and especially to the writings of the Fathers. Did that deter Him? Not hardly. He charged ahead, continuing to presume that he was “right” with God and everybody else was wrong.
Luther professed an extreme disrespect for the teachings of all who had come before him:
**
“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.)
That is an astonishing degree of self-sufficiency. I think that this Luther quote especially puts your comment about not ‘disregarding them all together’ into perspective.
Because he was not well educated in the teachings of the Fathers, Luther didn’t realize that he was departing from the teachings of the Church. Lutheran Professor E. G. Schweibert goes so far as to state that Luther had begun to stray from Catholic Orthodoxy as much as 11 years before he posted his 95 Theses, **and without realizing it. **
“
He had begun to drift from the pale of the Roman Church as early as 1506, but he did not realize the full extent of his departure until the Leipzig Debate in 1519.” “Luther and His Times”, pg. 282
Luther’s ‘relationship’ with the Early Church Fathers, and his self-sufficiency, are important matters, as you seem to agree Jon.
More to follow on the subject. There is a great deal more to post.