I was thinking about the question in the heading of this thread and it suddenly dawned on me. "Wait a minute, no respectable student of Catholic Theology can get a Doctorate Degree from the Catholic Church without reading Luther’s writings. I remember being in Rome and Luther’s writings being required reading at every Pontifical University from the Gregorian to Santa Cruce and the Angelicum in between. Parts of his writings are read at the Master’s level, as well as the STB which follows the M.Div and then the STD level.
I found them very interesting. There are valid points in his writings. No criticism of the Church is ever without some validity.
Then there are rants, which I found humorous, because it simply made me feel good that I did not live during the only century when people rant and rave about things inside and outside the Church. Sometimes we think that our situation is different from any other situation in history. Then you read someone like Luther and you realize that history is like recycling. What was once a napkin comes back as a cardboard tube.
There were other parts of his writings that actually made us feel sorry for him. It was very obvious that he struggled with scruples to the point of losing it. I truly believe that this prompted his great retreat into scripture. The were corrupt bishops and clerics all around him. Luther was horrified of sin, as we should be. However, if you examine his writings with a psychological eye, you can see obsessive-compulsive behaviors in him. He truly thought that he could be tainted by these corrupt people. It was not enough to simply do the right thing. He had to get away so as not to get dirty. Sola scriptura provided a very safe haven for him, because he did not have to think too much. The chances of being contaminated by this world were significantly reduced, at least in his mind.
He had an almost dualistic approach to life. Everything in the bible was good and everything human was bad. God did not do anything good through human beings, because we are so corrupt that it’s impossible for us to do anything good. From there he concludes that it’s impossible for us to do anything toward our own salvation. He panics. That’s when he grabs on to the one passage that we’re save by faith alone, not by works, completely ignoring the corporal works of mercy that are all over the bible from Genesis to Revelation, the liturgical life of the people, and the communal dimension of the faith. There goes the Communion of Saints, because he completely misses the whole point of the Chosen people of Israel. To him the Jews were evil. He failed to see that the whole message of the Chosen people foreshadows the Church, both in heaven and on earth.
He saw the Church as a fellowship of believers more than as a unified body, because he lost sight of the unitive power of the sacraments, especially Baptism and the Eucharist. When you lose this part, you can’t see the transcendental nature of the Church. That’s how the saints and the veneration of saints get thrown out the window. That part of the Church is alluded to in the Acts of the Apostles and in Paul’s letters and the early Fathers finally clarify it. However, the Early Fathers were not scripture. Unless they were quoting scripture, Luther did not trust them too much. There go Tradition and Magisterium.
His writings show you how he slowly fell into heresy and how conflicted he was about it. He was never truly reconciled even with his own teachings. He always had doubts. This shows up in his writings where he self-corrects non a number of occasions, especially concerning the Eucharist. In the end, he still did not get back to transubstantiation.
His writings show how his scrupulosity did not give him peace of mind. What is most interesting is that to the end, he considers himself a Catholic. He never denies being a Catholic. This would happen later. His followers would separate themselves from what they would begin to refer to as the Roman Catholic Church or the Church of Rome, especially in England and to themselves under several names: Reformed Church, Christians, Evangelicals and eventually Lutherans. Though I believe the Catholics called them that and they adopted the name. I’m not sure about this.
In any case, Luther’s writings are very important in order to understand what happened and why it happened. They are helpful in understanding the other point of view concerning the legitimate complaints and concerns that the reformers on both sides had. If nothing else, they offer a great deal of insight into the mind of a very bright man who had a horrible spiritual crisis that threw him into a spiral from which he never recovered. He was unable to recover. Once you throw out all authority and wait for God to infuse you with knowledge you’re in trouble. Infused knowledge is the privilege of some. Most of us depend on Apostolic Succession for our knowledge about the faith.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF