On the
eve of All Saints' Day in 1517, Martin Luther, a professor
of theology at Wittenberg University in Saxony, posted
ninety-five theses on a church door. Luther's primary
concern was the sale of indulgences--papal grants of reduced
punishment in the afterlife, including releases from
purgatory. First written in Latin, the theses were soon
translated into German and widely distributed. Summoned by
church authorities to explain his writings, Luther became
embroiled in further controversy and in 1520 wrote his three
most famous tracts, in which he attacked the papacy and
exposed church corruption, acknowledged the validity of only
two of the seven sacraments, and argued for the supremacy of
faith over good works. In 1521 Luther was summoned to appear
before Emperor Charles V at the Diet of Worms. Refusing to
recant his writings, he was banned under the Edict of Worms.
Secreted away by the ruler of Saxony, Frederick the Wise,
Luther retreated to the castle of Wartburg, where he worked
on a translation of the New Testament and wrote numerous
religious tracts. Luther's
disagreements with the doctrines of the Roman Catholic
Church set off a chain of events that within a few decades
destroyed Germany's religious unity. Although one of the
most influential figures in German history, Luther was only
one of many who were critical of the Roman Catholic Church.
However, because of the power of his ideas and the enormous
influence of his writings, it is he who is regarded as the
initiator of the Protestant Reformation. Luther quickly
acquired a large following among those disgusted by rampant
church corruption and unfulfilled by mechanistic religious
services. Many warmed to his contention that religion must
be simplified into a close relationship of human beings with
God without the extensive mediation of the Roman Catholic
Church and its accretion of tradition. Luther
magnified the inherent potency of his ideas by articulating
them in a language that was without rival in clarity and
force. He strove to make the Scriptures accessible to
ordinary worshipers by translating them into vernacular
German. This he did with such genius that the German dialect
he used became the written language of all of Germany.
Without Luther's translation of the Bible, Germany might
have come to use a number of mutually incomprehensible
languages, as was the case in the northwestern part of the
Holy Roman Empire, where local dialects evolved into what is
now modern Dutch. Luther also wrote hymns that are still
sung in Christian religious services all over the
world. A less
exalted reason for the wide distribution of Luther's
doctrines was the development of printing with movable type.
The Reformation created a demand for all kinds of religious
writings. The readership was so great that the number of
books printed in Germany increased from about 150 in 1518 to
nearly 1,000 six years later. Luther's
ideas soon coalesced into a body of doctrines called
Lutheranism. Powerful supporters such as princes and free
cities accepted Lutheranism for many reasons, some because
they sincerely supported reform, others out of narrow
self-interest. In some areas, a jurisdiction would adopt
Lutheranism because a large neighboring state had done so.
In other areas, rulers accepted it because they sought to
retain control over their subjects who had embraced it
earlier. Nearly all the imperial cities became Lutheran,
despite the fact that the emperor, to whom they were
subordinate, was hostile to the movement. Historians have
found no single convincing explanation of why one area
became Lutheran and another did not, because so many social,
economic, and religious factors were involved. Given the
revolutionary nature of Lutheranism and the economic and
political tensions of the period, it is not surprising that
the Reformation soon became marked by violence and
extremism. The Knights' War of 1522-23, in which members of
the lower nobility rebelled against the authorities in
southwestern Germany, was quickly crushed. Some of the
rampaging knights were ardent supporters of Luther. The
Peasants' War of 1524-25 was more serious, involving as many
as 300,000 peasants in southwestern and central Germany.
Influenced somewhat by the new religious ideas but
responding mostly to changing economic conditions, the
peasants' rebellion spread quickly, but without
coordination. It also received support from some
dissatisfied city dwellers and from some noblemen of arms
who led its ragged armies. Although the peasants' rebellion
was the largest uprising in German history, it was quickly
suppressed, with about 100,000 casualties. In the 1530s, the
Anabaptists, a radical Christian sect, seized several towns,
their objective being to construct a just society. They were
likewise brutally suppressed by the authorities. Luther
opposed the peasants' cause and wrote an impassioned tract
demanding their quick suppression. However radical his
religious views, Luther was a social and political
conservative. He believed that the end of the world was
imminent and regarded practical affairs as having little
importance compared with the effort to win eternal
salvation. Therefore, he counseled obedience to worldly
authorities if they allowed freedom of worship. Lutheranism
thus became a means of upholding the worldly status quo and
the leaders who adopted the new faith. In contrast to
England, where Protestantism retained a significant radical
social element, German Protestantism became an integral part
of the state. Some historians maintain that this integration
of state and church has deprived Germany of a deeply rooted
tradition of political dissent as found in Britain and the
United States. Protestant
Reformation
<<< Contents
>>> Resistance
to Lutheranism
Library of Congress Country Study Martin
Luther
Library of Congress Country Study
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