The Protestant Reformation
Arise, O Lord, and judge Thy cause. A wild boar has invaded
Thy vineyard. Arise, O Peter, and consider the case of the Holy Roman Church,
the mother of all churches, consecrated by thy blood. Arise, O Paul, who by thy
teaching and death hast illumined and dost illumine
the Church. Arise all ye saints, and the whole universal Church, whose
interpretations of Scripture has been assailed. (papal
bull of Pope Leo X, 1520)
It truly seems to me that if this fury of the Romanists
should continue, there is no remedy except that the emperor, kings, and
princes, girded with force and arms, should resolve to attack this plague of
all the earth no longer with words but with the sword. . . . If we punish
thieves with the allows, robbers with the sword, and heretics with fire, why do
we not all the more fling ourselves with all our weapons upon these masters of
perdition, these cardinals, these popes, and all this sink of Roman sodomy that
ceaselessly corrupts the church of God and wash our hands in their blood so
that we may free ourselves and all who belong to us from this most dangerous
fire? (Martin Luther, 1521)
Young people have lost that deference to their elders on
which the social order depends; they reject all correction. Sexual offenses,
rapes, adulteries, incests and seductions are more
common than ever before. How monstrous that the world should have been
overthrown by such dense clouds for the last three or four centuries, so that
it could not see clearly how to obey Christ's commandment to love our enemies.
Everything is in shameful confusion; everywhere I see only cruelty, plots,
frauds, violence, injustice, shamelessness while the
poor groan under the oppression and the innocent are arrogantly and
outrageously harassed. God must be asleep. (John Calvin)
The 16th century in
But the 16th century was more than just the story of the
Renaissance. The century witnessed the growth of royal power, the appearance of
centralized monarchies and the discovery of new lands. During the great age of
exploration, massive quantities of gold and silver flood
Despite all of these things, and there are more things to be
considered, especially in the area of literature and the arts, the greatest
event of the 16th century -- indeed, the most revolutionary event -- was the
Protestant Reformation. It was the Reformation that forced people to make a
choice -- to be Catholic or Protestant. This was an important choice, and a
choice had to be made. There was no real alternative. In the context of the
religious wars of the 16th and 17th centuries, one could live or die based on
such a choice.
We have to ask why something like the Reformation took place
when it did. In general, dissatisfaction with the Church could be found at all
levels of European society. First, it can be said that many devout Christians
were finding the Church's growing emphasis on rituals unhelpful in their quest
for personal salvation. Indeed, what we are witnessing is the shift from
salvation of whole groups of people, to something more personal and individual.
The sacraments had become forms of ritualized behavior that no longer
"spoke" to the people of
These abuses called for two major responses. On the one
hand, there was a general tendency toward anti-clericalism, that is, a general
but distinct distrust and dislike of the clergy. Some people began to argue
that the layperson was just as good as the priest, an argument already advanced
by the Waldensians of the 12th century (see also my
Heretics, Heresies and the Church). On the other hand, there were calls for
reform. These two responses created fertile ground for conflict of all kinds,
and that conflict would be both personal and social.
The deepest source of conflict was personal and spiritual.
The Church had grown more formal in its organization, which is hardly
unsurprising since it was now sixteen centuries old. The Church had its own
elaborate canon law as well as a dogmatic theology. All of this had been
created at the Fourth Lateran Council of 1215. That Council also established
the importance of the sacraments as well as the role of the priest in
administering the sacraments. 1215 also marks the year that the Church further
elaborated its position on Purgatory (see Purgatory: Fact or Fantasy). Above
all, the Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 established the important doctrine that
salvation could only be won through good works -- fasting, chastity, abstinence
and asceticism.
The common people, meanwhile, sought a more personal,
spiritual and immediate kind of religion -- something that would touch them
directly, in the heart. The rituals of the Church now meant very little to them
-- they needed some kind of guarantee that they were doing the right thing –
that they would indeed be saved. The Church gave little thought to reforming
itself. People yearned for something more while the Church seemed to promise
less. What seemed to be needed was a general reform of Christianity itself.
Only such a major transformation would effect the changes reflected in the
spiritual desires of the people.
Throughout the 14th and 15th centuries the Church was faced
with numerous direct challenges.
Heretics had been assaulting the Church since the 12th
century. The heretics were Christians who deviated from Christian dogma. Many
did not believe in Christian baptism -- the majority felt left out of the
Church.
There were also numerous mystics who desired a direct and emotional
divine illumination. They claimed they had been illuminated by an inner light
that assured them of salvation.
There was an influential philosophical movement called nominalism that stressed the reality of anything concrete
and real, thus doubting faith.
Renaissance humanism rejected the Christian matrix almost
completely and instead turned to the Classical World, the true source of virtue
and wisdom.
The breakdown of feudalism and the discovery and
exploitation of the
The Church was also challenged by an increasing awareness of
ethnicity and nationalism, e.g. Joan of Arc and the 100 Years' War.
Merchants and skilled workers living in cities were growing
wealthy and influential as they began to supply
European kings consolidated their power over their nobility.
There was an awareness, thanks to
the age of discovery, that there was a pagan world outside the world of
The Reformation was dominated by the figure of MARTIN LUTHER
(1483-1546). Luther was the son of Hans Luther, a copper miner from the
district of Saxony. Hans was a self-made man. As a youth he worked menial jobs
in copper mines -- but by the time Martin was born at Eisleben,
he had risen to prominence and owned several mines. Hans Luther wanted his son
to do even more with his life so while Martin was in his teens, it was decided
that he would study law. So, after his preliminary education was complete, at
the age of 17 young Martin Luther entered the
But at this point, Luther rejected the world. He was
twenty-one at the time. In 1505, Luther tells us that he experienced the
"first great event" of his life. In that year he experienced some
kind of conversion after having been struck by a bolt of lightning. He cried
out, "Help, St. Anne, I will become a monk." He was struck by the
hand of God and felt that God was in everything. He felt doubt within himself –
he simply could not reconcile his faith with his worldly ambitions. And so,
Luther was plagued by an overwhelming sense of guilt, fear and terror. To
relieve his anxiety he joined the Order of the Hermits of St. Augustine. There
he would be shielded from worldly distractions. There he would find the true
path to heaven. He fasted, prayed and scourged himself relentlessly. But he
still felt doubts. One day, as he sat in his cell, he through his Bible on the
table and pointed at a passage at random. The passage was from the Epistles of
St. Paul: "For the justice of God is revealed from faith to faith in that
it is written, for the just shall live by faith." (Romans 1:17)
By 1508, Luther had been ordained a priest and was
transferred from the monastery at
In 1512, he returned to
The storm broke on October 31, the eve of All Saints Day. On
that day Luther nailed a copy of the NINETY-FIVE THESES to the door of the
The particular indulgence which attracted Luther's attention
was being sold throughout
Luther also attacked indulgences in general, and he voiced
his objections to the sale of indulgences in his LETTER to the Archbishop of
Mainz in 1517. According to the Church, indulgences took their existence from
the surplus grace that had accumulated through the lives of Christ, the saints
and martyrs. The purchase of an indulgence put the buyer in touch with this
grace and freed him from the earthly penance of a particular sin, but not the
sin itself. But Tetzel's sales pitch implied that the
buyer was freed from the sin as well as the penance attached to it. Tetzel also sold people on the idea that an indulgence
could be purchased for a relative in Purgatory – this meant the relative's soul
would now fly to Heaven. For Tetzel: "As soon as
pennies in the money chest ring, the souls out of their Purgatory do
spring." Luther answered (Theses 28) in the following way: "It is
certain that when the money rattles in the chest, avarice and gain may be
increased, but the Suffrage of the Church depends on the will of God
alone." (my emphasis).
Luther claimed that it was not only Tetzel
but the papacy itself which spread the false doctrine of the indulgence. By
attacking the issue of the indulgences, Luther was really attacking the entire
theology and structure of the Church. By making salvation dependent on the
individual's faith, Luther abolished the need for sacraments as well as a
clergy to administer them. For Luther, faith alone, without the necessity of
good works, would bring salvation. This was obviously heretical thinking. Of
course, Luther couched his notion of "justification by faith alone"
within a scheme of predestination. That is, only God knows who will be saved
and will be damned. Good works did not guarantee salvation. Faith did not
guarantee salvation. God alone grants salvation or damnation.
This discussion all begs the question: why did people follow
Luther? It is simply amazing that within a relatively brief period of time,
that so many people turned their back on the Roman Church, and followed Luther.
For the wealthy, becoming a Lutheran was one way to keep their wealth yet still
be given a chance for salvation without paying homage to Rome. In other words,
it can be said that the wealthy followed Luther as a form of protest against
the Church. For the very poor, Luther offered individual dignity and respect.
Not good works or servitude to
JOHN CALVIN (1509-1564) represents the second wave of the
Protestant Reformation. Although Luther and Calvin were more less
contemporaries of one another, Calvin was an entirely different man. John
Calvin acquired his early education in
On All Saints Day in 1533, Calvin delivered an address at
Calvin came to
Calvin urged -- actually forced -- all citizens of
Of course, foundation of Calvinism was clearly the doctrine
of predestination, that is, the idea that all of mankind is assigned to either
Heaven or Hell at birth. There is nothing you can do that would change or
destiny since it was an hands of all-powerful God.
Such an opinion logically leads to anxiety -- after all, no one knew just what
to do. While Calvin would not argue, as did the Church, that good works were
one needed to go to Heaven, he did admit that good works served a purpose. Good
works, then, became a divine sign, a sign that the individual was making the
best of their life here on earth. It was, however, still no guarantee.
Calvin also introduced his concept of the
"calling." Some men and women seemed ill-fitted for life on earth.
They were avaricious, slothful, amoral. However, there
were others who seemed to work happily in their lifetime, accomplishing much
and in the right spirit. In other words, they had been "called" to do
a certain thing here on earth.
Of course, we wake up early, work at your calling, are
thrifty, sober and abstain from frivolity, there is an unintended consequence.
That consequence was the acquisition of wealth. So, while Calvin did not invent
free enterprise, nor did he invent capitalism, or the desire for wealth, he did
rationalize that desire by arguing that certain men are imbued with the spirit
of acquisition, the correct spirit. That spirit has often been called the
Protestant Work Ethic. In The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
(1904), the German sociologist Max Weber (1864-1920) asked why it is that the
world's most wealthy men were of Protestant origin. His answer was that it was
these men who were also Calvinists, men who had internalized the religious code
set down first by Calvin and then by the Puritans of 17th century England. In
other words, the ethic says to work hard, save what you have made, and reinvest
any profit in order to increase wealth. That is capitalism in a nutshell.
Calvin does not invent this idea, he simply rationalizes it by ascribing a
certain spirit or calling to certain men of his own age, all of whom just
happened to be Calvinists. Of course, such a scheme could and did lead to
tension, conflict and anxiety. How much of a calling was a good thing? When did
one know when enough was enough? Anxiety and its sister guilt, then, seemed to
become one of the guiding principles of Calvinism.
While Lutheranism spread widely in