A
Ani_Ibi
Guest
Luther had left the Church long before he was excommunicated. After the Wittenburg Plague, he succumbed to extreme scrupulosity which saw him whipping himself, starving himself, depriving himself of sleep – instead of attending to his duties.I truly believe that Luther never intended to leave the Church.
When offered pastoral care by his community and by his superiors, he rejected these gestures of Christian charity and, as a result, his condition deteriorated. He became Luther Alone.
He did. His community offered him refuge as a young man from a family so violent that he himself felt that he was within an inch of death when he left them.He loved the Catholic church
Mmmmm, no. It was an afront to his pride; it shamed him.and it broke his heart when his attempts to bring about correction failed.
Um, no. In fact the Church gave him every opportunity to salvage his relationship with his community. He used the rudest language and behaviour possible to reject the Church. He wanted to go his own way. He trusted no one.His starting a “new” church only came about because he was excommunicated.
His response to the Church lacked all proportionality and was, to my eyes, devoid of rationality. This was no mere difference of opinion. This was a displacement of a rage so all consuming it seems unfathomable to me.
The folks back then did not have the knowledge that we do in handling people who go off the edge. Maybe, just maybe, if Luther had lived in the 21C and in the US, he would have gotten the help he needed. That’s my opinion, looking at the circumstances before Luther and his disproportionate response to those circumstances.I don’t believe he would not have left otherwise.
In a few words: he went over the edge; his response was over the top; he threw the baby out with the bathwater; his solution was worse than the problem; his home reno wrecked the house.
Just a thought.