It is not erroneous not is it speculation. As for the JDDJ, what authority does it have to pronounce doctrine on anything?
It would appear that you have bought into the false Legend of Luther at least in regards to the quality of his education and probably the quality of his Theology and Scriptural Exegesis. While what you say here is true, what is interesting is that, especially in the beginning ALL of the better educated Theologians and Scriptural Exegetes ALL told him that his beliefs were not in keeping with those of the Church. There is much in the literature which portray Luther as, at best, a mediocre Theologian. After all, how else would you account for all of those pronouncements against the Jews, peasants, Anabaptists (while furiously quoting Scripture) as coming from anything but a poor Christian Theologian.
Given the relatively poor education of the clergy of the day, hat is not exactly a very high (or low as the case may be) bar, but certainly is one which allows Luther to clear it. The circumstances surrounding his ‘assignment’ to Wittenberg do not exactly work in his favor.
While I appreciate your limited agreement, his rebellion actually WAS against against the Church. In an astonishing letter of May 1518, Luther makes it extremely clear that his goal was to uproot the ecclesiastical laws and papal regulations, in essence bringing down the Church by destroying the structure of authority. This was only a few short months after he supposedly posted his 95 Theses.
“Some time during the **early spring of 1518 **Luther had received a letter from his former professor of philosophy at the University of Erfurt, Jodocus Trutfetter, a man whom he deeply respected and who had expected great service to the Church from so able a mind and so strong a personality as Luther. Now Professor Trutfetter solemnly warned his former student against the path he was taking, urging him to turn back before it was too late. On May 9 Luther replied: ‘To speak plainly, my firm belief is that the reform of the Church is impossible unless the ecclesiastical laws, the papal regulations, scholastic theology, philosophy and logic as the at present exist, are thoroughly uprooted.’ Such uprooting, he said, had now become his fixed purpose, ‘a resolution from which neither your authority, although it is certainly of the greatest weight for me, much less than that of any others, can turn me aside.’ Martin Luther, (Carrol quoting Fife, ‘Revolt of Martin Luther’, pg. 267
What this letter shows is that even after only slight (compared to later) opposition, Luther was ready to bring down the Church as it was known in his day.
This is exactly the point. Luther did not see himself as going against the teachings of the Church. For the 16 or so months leading up to the Leipzig Debate, dozens of much better Theologians warned him that his beleifs were outside of Catholic teaching. He continued to claim that – no, HE was right and was correctly representing the teachings of the historic Church. THEY were the ones who were wrong. At Leipzig, Luther came to understand what all of those Theologians already knew, that HE was the one who was out of step with the Church. A ‘good’ Theologian would have known that he was out of step LONG before Luther was finally convinced of that fact.
E. G. Schweibert, Professor of History at Wittenberg College puts it this way:
“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
There is only one way that a Catholic Theologian could possibly be unaware for 13 years of the fact that he was drifting away from the teachings of His Church – and that would be that he didn’t know that teaching very well.
God Bless You guano, Topper