H
hn160
Guest
This is why Lutherans and Catholics part ways, we have a different understanding what happens in Baptism and the Eucharist and Original Sin.It is understandable that Luther would say this. Remember, he was terrified of making a mistake. His scrupulosity was so serious that he lost confidence even in his own capacity to reason.
The real issue is not transubstantiation. The real issue is the denial of actual grace. When one denies the possibilities in the natural gifts that God has given us, one commits two fatal errors.
First: one denies that we are made in God’s image and likeness. Therefore, we have the capacity to reach truth through reason and God can reach us through reason.
Second: one denies that the through the Incarnation God breaks into human history and makes it part of his history. The unity between the human and the divine in Christ, sanctify the human. Therefore, God can and does act through human effort.
For Luther, this was too dangerous, because he denied the possibility of anything good coming from man. This is where he borders on dualism. The spiritual is good and the human is bad. However, we know that this cannot be true, because humanity is saved by the death of a man. The Second Person of the Trinity is a real man. Therefore, goodness and salvation comes through the unity between humanity and divinity without blending. Redemption is brought to us through the God-Man, not divinity by itself.
Luther is inconsistent in his denial of reason, because he uses his system to fight what had been handed down to the Church. In essence, he was using some kind of reason.
If we believe that Luther says that what is not in scripture is not true, then we make a fool out of him. We know that this was a very intelligent young man. He was not a fool. Therefore, this is not what he is saying. This is the way that he is being interpreted.
A wonderful example of how Luther thought is our judicial system. One is never found innocent. One is simply “not guilty” because the jury or the judge is not convinced beyond the shadow of a doubt. Luther used this same thought process. He was not convinced beyond the shadow of a doubt and scripture did not provide the exact words that he needed to resolve his conflict. He does not say that transubstantiation is false. He says that he couldn’t find it in scripture. The problem was that he was not using exegesis. His approach was very literal. Again, we see him playing it safe. Again, his anxiety about making a mistake cripples him. However, he is using reason, even though he rejects the use of reason.
Unless we see this poor man for what he was, an intelligent man whose scruples led him down a neurotic path of self destruction, we will always do two things, both of which are wrong.
One, some will believe him to be the best theologian in history.
Two, others will condemn him as the most evil man who ever lived.
The truth is that he was neither.
He was a theologian, with a very serious problem that crippled his capacity to trust himself and God. This lack of trust led him into grave error and he took others down that road with him.
Objectively, he is morally responsible for not working to find a solution to his conflicts. Instead, he threw the baby out the window with the water and the bloody tub too.
Subjectively, only God knows the state of his soul when he died. We can only pray for him.
Fraternally,
Br. JR, OSF![]()