Hi Spina,
Thanks for your response.
Hi Topper: The 50 doctrinal issues as to why Luther was excommunicated makes sense as to why Luther was excommunicated.
What baffles me is how people can possibly think that Luther deserved anything but excommunication, or that in reality, he didn’t really excommunicate himself by being SO far outside of accepted Catholic teaching.
Ref your thoughts on Luther vs. Indulgences:
It seems that there is a great deal at stake in Luther’s rejection of Indulgences and also in his criticism of Tetzel. In the same manner, whether Tetzel was correctly preaching Indulgences is also important. After all, if Tetzel was right and Luther was wrong, then it would appear that the Reformation was begun over a misunderstanding by Martin Luther.
German Lutheran Professor of Reformation and Modern Church History Martin Brecht’s massive three volume biography of Martin Luther is correctly known for it’s attention to detail. It is also known for generally accepting Luther’s side of many situations. As such, when Brecht makes comments that show Luther in a negative light, they must be viewed as being credible. Brecht deals with the indulgence controversy in Volume 1, pages 175-221. I will be posting Brecht’s comments in the order that they appear.
The generally accepted story about the Indulgence and Tetzel’s administration of them was that they were solely for the purpose of profit by the Church. Not so. While many people paid on the basis of their status: “**The indigent were to fast and pray.” **(Vol. I, pg. 182) This means that the Church granted the indulgence to the poor even if they could not pay to help build St. Peter’s. Clearly, the Church wanted to have everyone receive the Indulgence regardless of the ability to pay.
The standard Protestant version of John Tetzel is not exactly flattering. He has been pilloried for centuries and was supposedly rude, crude, lewd, and greedy.
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Probably unjustly, he (Tetzel) was usually caricatured as a crude, ignorant, and morally disreputable indulgence preacher. The charges of an immoral life-style, which Luther later repeated about him, appear to have rested on unsubstantiated rumors.
Tetzel was not uneducated. He had studied theology and was for a time not only a preacher in Leipzig, but also the second theological teacher of the order’s school there. In 1518, probably through his superiors in the order, he was granted the doctor of theology degree.” Ibid, pg. 182
Much has been made here of Luther’s understanding of indulgences. Again, if Luther had a poor understanding of the issue, then it would appear that he should not have presumed to have the background necessary to challenge the teachings of the Church in their regard.
“Around Easter 1517, as the Wittenbergers were running like mad to Zerst and to Juterbog (22 miles from Wittenberg), in the territory of the archbishopric of Magdeburg in order to obtain indulgence letters and then amending their lives, he first attempted to set things right through sermons. **He himself was not completely clear about indulgences, but he was convinced that he could do better, that there was something more certain than obtaining indulgence letters.” **Ibid, pg. 184
Here we should remember that with Luther, the key issue was the ‘certainty’ of his Salvation. So, whereas indulgences were not ‘certain’ according to Luther, the doctrine that he ‘found’ in Scripture, Salvation by Faith Alone, provided that certainty. This doctrine had never before been ‘discovered’ in Scripture was really the result of his extreme form of scrupulosity.
**“Again and again he testifies that the demand for complete and perfect confessions caused severe tribulations for him.” **Ibid, pg. 184
Here in this section on Indulgences, Brecht ties in Luther’s extreme scrupulosity, which was obviously the foundation for his ‘problem’ with indulgences, since they were in opposition to where Luther ‘was headed’, Salvation by Faith Alone, even if he didn’t understand it at this point.
**“Around 1514……Luther was already complaining that people were trying to make the way to heaven easy with indulgences, and with minimal demands – a sigh was sufficient – they were making grace cheap.” **Ibid, pg. 185
How ironic is it that Luther complained that indulgences made grace cheap and then went on to invent Salvation by Faith Alone.
In analyzing Luther’s “Treatise on Indulgences” Brecht makes the following comments:
“Luther himself is uncertain about liberation from purgatory. He is also not certain whether God remits through indulgences an imperfect repentance or imperfect love of God. ** Fundamentally indulgences are of value only to those who are contrite. But it is precisely for them that an indulgence is really of no significance. ** Perfect contrition in itself already removes all punishment. Thus indulgences also are unnecessary. Therefore Luther does not know what use indulgences have.” Ibid, pg. 189
Here we see Luther’s ‘uncertainty’ with regards to indulgences, and how the fact of his craving for the certainty of his salvation impacted his ‘problem’ with indulgences. I would suggest that maybe Luther shouldn’t have taken it upon himself to stand Christianity on its ear over a matter on which he lacked understanding. It is also interesting to note that Luther believed that perfect contrition removes all punishment. We know that Luther was terrified by the idea of God’s punishment and here we see how much it drove his probably unconscious agenda to refute indulgences. In seems we need to spend more time studying Luther’s mental health issues.
What was it that was so unique about him that he was able to ‘find’ things in Scripture (like SBFA) that nobody else had noticed prior.
God Bless You Spina, Topper
More from Brecht to follow