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Martin Luther and the Reformation
Luther's Seal

While a professor at Wittenberg, Luther devised this seal which he declared was meant to be "expressive of his theology." This explanation is the gist of a letter to his friend, Herr Spengler, town clerk of Nuremberg.

"The first thing expressed in my seal is a cross, black, within the heart, to put me in mind that faith in Christ crucified saved us. 'For with the heart man believes unto righteousness.' Now, although the cross is black, mortified, and intended to cause pain, yet it does not change the color of the heart, does not destroy nature--i.e., does not kill, but keeps alive. 'For the just shall live by faith,' - by faith in the Savior. But this heart is fixed upon the center of a white rose, to show that faith causes joy, consolation and peace. The rose is white, not red, because white is the ideal color of all angels and blessed spirits. This rose, moreover, is fixed in a sky-colored ground, to denote that such joy of faith in the spirit is but an earnest and beginning of heavenly joy to come, as anticipated and held by hope, though not yet revealed. And around this groundbase is a golden ring, to signify that such bliss in heaven is endless, and more precious than all joys and treasures, since gold is the best and most precious metal. Christ, our dear Lord, He will give grace unto eternal life. Amen."

Luther's Halloween Bombshell

Castle Church Door in Wittenberg
Martin Luther's nailing of his 95 theses on the church door is often noted as a pivotal point in the Reformation. The timing and place of Luther's posting was significant - Halloween, October 31, 1517, on the Castle Church in Wittenberg.

Like the Pantheon centuries earlier, the Castle Church held a large collection of supposed relics (the largest outside of Rome). Pieces of bones from saints, locks of hairs from martyrs, a piece of the true cross, a twig from Moses' burning bush, bread from the Last Supper, a veil sprinkled with the blood of Christ - all were venerated and held in holy awe. The relics were kept in special reliquaries, ornamented with gold, silver, and precious stones. They were exhibited on All Saints Day.

By 1518, 17,443 pieces were on display in twelve aisles! The church taught that paying the special fee and viewing the relics would shorten a soul's stay in purgatory by 1,902,202 years and 270 days!

This was one teaching Luther challenged in his 95 theses. On Halloween, the day before All Saints Day when the relics would be specially exhibited, Luther nailed his theses on the church door, challenging scholars to debate the virtue of indulgences, the church's teaching that by certain works a person could hasten his entrance into heaven. Luther publicly professed the free and gratuitous remission of sin, not by relics, papal pardons, or indulgences, but by faith in Jesus Christ.


Martin Luther
Lutheran Christians look to Martin Luther (1483-1546) not as the founder of a new church, but as a reformer and teacher whose work may serve Christ's whole Church.

Martin Luther was born in Saxony, the son of German peasants. He was to become a lawyer or, if that failed, marry a rich widow so that his parents could enjoy old age. Such was the wish of his father, who looked forward to early retirement from overseeing foundries near the Saxon copper mines. But Luther's path to such a future was blocked by a life-changing event that directed him to become a monk, a priest, a biblical theologian, and a reformer of the church.

Like others of his time and place, Luther's Christianity was first shaped by the powerful medieval Roman Catholic Church. As a young man he was deeply affected by the church's teaching about confession. Private confession of sins to a priest, followed by prescribed acts of penance, were said to secure forgiveness and release from punishment after death.

Having gone regularly to confession since the age of seven, Luther still remained troubled by a deep sense of despair. While he was studying law at the University of Erfurt, a friend unexpectedly died. An accidental leg wound brought Luther in contact with sick and dying patients in a primitive hospital. Then, in the summer of 1505, a violent thunderstorm surprised him as he was hiking from his parents' home in Mansfeld back to Erfurt. "Help, St. Anna," cried Luther as lightening struck nearby, "and I will become a monk!"

Fear of death and the vow he had spoken to his family's patron saint led Luther to join the Augustinian Hermits of Erfurt, who were known for their tough training of mind and body. But neither confession nor a rigorous schedule of study and prayer reduced Luther's anxiety about doing enough to avoid divine punishment. Nevertheless, he was an exemplary and dedicated monk, soon to become a leader in his order. By command of his superior, Johann von Staupitz, Luther began study to become a Professor of Holy Scripture at Wittenberg University.

Luther began teaching in 1513. It was through his study and teaching of the Bible that the decisive insight came: Faith in Christ, not one's own ambitious moral or devotional efforts, promised salvation from sin and life with God. Luther felt "born again" when he read "the righteous will live by faith" (Hab. 2:4; Rom. 1:17).

Shepherding a renewal, this insight opened up the meaning of Scripture and decisively changed Luther's attitude toward the church. He began to see clearly that the church of his time stressed human merit rather than trust in God. This was vividly illustrated by the sale of "indulgences"-printed permits or coupons listing the monetary value of a personal confession of sin. Bishop Albrecht of Mainz had authorized the sale of indulgences in order to pay Rome for making him an archbishop. The monies raised were used to assist in building St. Peter's basilica in Rome. The Dominican order, led by John Tetzel, was ordered to sell the idea that buying indulgences would release sinners from divine punishment.

Luther issued a public call for theological debate on the sale indulgences by posting ninety-five these on the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg on the eve of All Saints' Day, October 31, 1517. Printers distributed copies without Luther's knowledge and permission. Within a few weeks, Martin Luther was known everywhere as the voice of renewal.

The reform movement, nicknamed "Lutheran" by opponents, found broad support in Germany and abroad. The nickname bothered Luther, whose intention had been to retain the catholic tradition of 1500 years, while reforming the distortions of the faith. Other reformers, such as Ulrich Zwingli and John Calvin, believed they could return to an imagined church of the first century, and turned away from ancient traditions and their beautiful expression in music and art. These reformers converted Luther's movement into a crusade that would eventually affect all political and social structures of the Western world.

Although Rome wanted to silence Luther, powerful German princes, let by Elector Frederick of Saxony, Luther's benefactor, secured freedom of speech for him. He debated with Cardinal Cajetan and the Dominican John Eck at Augsburg and Leipzig in 1519; he stated his case before Emperor Charles V at Worms in 1521 (where, standing before empire and church he said, "Here I stand. I cannot do otherwise. God help me." and he published numerous proposals for reform from 1520 on. Nevertheless, Luther was excommunicated as a heretic and condemned as a traitor by pope ad emperor in 1521.

But the renewal continued. German Lutheran territories submitted their proposals for reform at the imperial assembly at Augsburg in 1530. The Augsburg Confession affirmed the reformers' adherence to the historic teachings of the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic faith. Luther shepherded the reform movement in Germany, often with a critical eye on other movements that did not retain the catholic substance of the faith expressed in the historic creeds and confessions, or that he judged were not sufficiently shaped by faith in Christ alone. All of Scandinavia had become Lutheran by the 1530's.

Even war did not stop the reform movement. Emperor Carles V agreed to the Peace of Augsburg in 1555, which recognized Lutheran lands by the principle that "whoever rules a region is in charge of its religion." Rome attempted to stem the tide of Lutheranism by creating a "counter-reformation" based on the decisions of the Council of Trent (1545-1563). The Thirty Years' War (1618-1648) changed the map of Europe by granting freedom for Lutheran and protestant territories.

Distinctive teachings Luther found his identity in total trust in Christ, the living Word of God, encountered in the spoken Gospel and made visible in the sacraments of Baptism and Holy Communion. Luther's teachings focus on the essentials of Christianity as taught by the prophets and apostles.

Luther wrote more than 30 hymns, enjoyed married life and six children, and was known for his spicy speech and good humor. His basic teachings were published in about 450 treatises, 3000 sermons, 2600 letters, and 5000 "table talks." His works have been collected in more than 100 over-sized volumes since 1883 in the Weimar Edition. His translation of the Bible from Hebrew and Greek into German was so popular that the basic structure of the modem German language is derived from it.

Luther's basic insights are enduring and helpful for later generations. The most important are these: (1) Humankind is entrapped in the ancient temptation to play God, violating the first of all divine commandments, "You shall have no other gods." (2) Liberation from this original sin comes through faith of at least two people - on who tells another of Christ as the source of freedom from sin, and one who, so addressed, affirms faith in Christ alone. (3) The Christian life is one in which, though we are sinners by nature, we are at the same time saints by God's grace and love. (4) The Christian life is lived in two realms that belong equally to God - Church and society. This calls for Christian commitment to education, fair economic practices, and a life of mission to the ungodly.

And so, the church is born again and again, vigilant against the sin of idolatry (playing God) and confident that trust in Christ alone (justification by faith) is the only source of freedom and salvation. The Christian thus freed is called to serve all God's children in the world.

American Lutheran Publicity Bureau, PO Box 327, Delhi, NY 13573
c. 1994 ALPB.

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