(navigation image)
Home American Libraries | Canadian Libraries | Universal Library | Community Texts | Project Gutenberg | Children's Library | Biodiversity Heritage Library | Additional Collections
Search: Advanced Search
Anonymous User (login or join us) Upload
See other formats

Full text of "The life and letters of Martin Luther"



_i /■*» o 

■SGC 



CORNELL 

UNIVERSITY 

LIBRARY 




GOLDWIN SMITH LIBRARY 



Cornell University Library 
BR 325.S65 1914 



The life and letters of Martin Luther. 




3 1924 014 611 978 




The original of this book is in 
the Cornell University Library. 

There are no known copyright restrictions in 
the United States on the use of the text. 



http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924014611978 




1/ }/L+t Avwvf JU^v 



THE LIFE AND LETTEBS OF 

MARTIN LUTHER 

BY 

PRESERVED SMITH, Ph.D. 

WITH ILLUSTRATIONS 



" Nothing extenuate, 
Nor set down aught in malice." 




BOSTON AND NEW YORK 

HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY 

(£f>e ftiberp'ibe gnp$ Cambribge 



Q.S.4A. 
52LS 



COPYRIGHT, I9IJ, BY PRESERVED SMITH 
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 



&S.30SI 



TO MY PARENTS 



PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION 

The last word on a live subject is never said. As an immense 
volume of work on Luther continues to pour from the press, I 
propose, in the immediately following pages, to give some ac- 
count of the most important and pertinent literature produced 
since this biography first went to press. 

The most striking recent contribution to the subject, both on 
account of its size and of the altercation it has aroused, is the 
biography, in three volumes and 2500 lexicon-octavo pages, by 
Professor Hartmann Grisar, S.J. As his interest centers in the 
character of the Reformer and the moral effect of his work, the 
Catholic scholar, assuming the role of prosecuting attorney, 
labors, with much learning and a real intention of doing justice, 
to prove that both were bad. Whereas the specialist may learn 
much from Grisar, his whole point of view, as well as that taken 
by most of his Protestant critics, is foreign to the impartial 
investigator. 

More than a dozen volumes, many of them bringing fresh light, 
have been added to the Weimar edition of Luther's works. Per- 
haps the most interesting are those devoted to the table-talk. 
Much new material, not inferior in value to that already known, 
has been discovered, and bears out the opinion of Froude that 
the table-talk is " one of the most brilliant books in the world 
... as full of matter as Shakespeare's plays." In order to 
make these newly published conversations of Luther accessible 
to the English-speaking public, a translation of them is now 
being executed and may be expected shortly to appear. 

Three more volumes of the letters in the Enders-Kawerau 
edition have come out. An English version of the correspond- 
ence, containing also letters by Luther's contemporaries on him 
and his movement, is now in course of publication. 1 

1 Luther's Correspondence and Other Contemporary Letters, translated and edited 
by Preserved Smith, vol. i, 1507-1521, Philadelphia, 1913. The second and third 
volumes, completing the whole, may be expected before the centenary of 1917. 



viii PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION 

Of Luther's early life and development prior to 1517 I have 
now arrived at a somewhat different conception from that set 
forth in the present biography. 1 Sturdy as was the Saxon's 
constitution, a neurotic vein may be detected in his violence of 
language, in his obsession by the devil, and, one is tempted to 
add, in that conception of God as a cruel and capricious tyrant, 
which he himself confessed was repugnant to natural feeling. 2 
By the application of Sigismund Freud's psycho analytic 
method, much of this diathesis may be explained as rooted in 
Luther's heredity and childish experiences. A pathological exag- 
geration is also exhibited in the struggle, during the first ten 
years in the friary, with what he himself called " the invincible 
concupiscence " of the flesh. Regarding not only overt acts of 
unchastity, but also natural desire itself, as wicked, and finding 
that by no means eould he rid himself of this desire, he came 
to that conclusion as to the total impotence and bondage of the 
will, which lay at the basis of his most famous doctrine. His 
insight into the worthkssness of man's own efforts, and par- 
ticularly of the righteousness of works prescribed by the Church, 
was sharpened by a brisk quarrel with the " observants," i.e., 
that faction of his own order which laid most stress on the 
punctilio of the cloister. For a long time, however, he despaired 
of finding the true road to salvation, and believed himself rep- 
robate. The answer to his search, suggested by the German 
mystics, came to him about 1515 s with such force that he be- 

1 " Luther's Development in the Light of Psycho-Analysis, " American Journal 
of Psychology, July, 1913. "Luther's Development of the Doctrine of Justifica- 
tion hy Faith only," Harvard Theological Review, October, 1913. The first article 
has been criticized in the Historische Zeitschrift and in the Archivfur Reformations- 
geschichte, bnt the legitimacy of the psycho-analytic method is now recognized in 
certain theological quarters. Cf. J. H. Schulz in Theologische Literaturzeitung, 
1914, p. 36 : " Fur die Erforschung einzelner religionspsychologisch oder historisch 
bedeutsamer Erscheinungen oder Personlichkeiten kann die psychoanalytische 
Betrachtungsweise anreprend wirken." 

2 Infra, p. 208, and Tischreden, Weimar, i, no. 1193 : " Erasmus' thought is the 
greatest and subtlest of all temptations, the belief, namely, that God is unjust." 
He called it " Erasmus' thought " because Erasmus had said that if God were such 
as Luther represented him, damning men for acts they could not help, he would 
be unjust. 

8 Not in 1508, as stated below, p. 15. The best recent works on this subject, 
besides Grisar, are : 0. Scheel: Dokumente zu Luthers Entwicklung, 1911 ; K. A. 



PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION ix 

lieved it to be a direct revelation of the Holy Ghost. Its essence 
was that a man could be saved only by perfect self-surrender, 
by pure passivity in God's hands, by an entire reliance on him ; 
for this, more than mere belief, constituted the " faith," justifi- 
cation by which has always been counted the cardinal doctrine 
of Protestants. 

The effect of this discovery iu his own life was almost instan- 
taneous. Forthwith he commenced purging his order and his uni- 
versity, and presently protested against the abuses of the Church 
so vigorously as to bring himself into collision with her repre- 
sentatives, and soon to cause him to be summoned before the 
Diet at Worms. The importance of this crisis in European 
politics has been put in strong light by two recent books. 1 
Schubert has shown that the Pope offered Frederic of Saxony 
the imperial crown in exchange for the surrender of Luther — 
an insufficient bribe. When Charles of Spain was elected, his 
agents swore to a capitulation, drawn up, July 3, 1519, with 
Luther in mind, that no German should be condemned unheard ; 
and, in fact, on the very day on which Charles decided to hold 
his first Diet he agreed to allow the accused heretic to appear 
before it. When he actually did come to the bar of this high tri- 
bunal, his condemnation (as is set forth by Kalkoff) had already 
been drafted by Aleander as early as December, 1520, and, 
under the name of the " Edict of Worms," was forced through 
the Diet by intrigue and imperial influence against the wishes 
of the majority of its members. 

Forced by the ban into hiding at the Wartburg, Luther began 
his greatest work, the translation of the Bible. It has recently 
been asserted that this was but a revision of previous German 
versions, 2 but the reasons given for this opinion are not convinc- 
ing. In the New Testament, at least, if he leaned too heavily 

Meiasinger: Luthers Exegese in der Fruhzeit, 1911; A. Humbert : Les Origines de 
latMologie moderns, 1911; W. Kohler: " Luther bis 1521," in Pflugk-Harttung's 
Im Morgenrot der Reformation, 1912. 

1 H. v. Schubert : Die Vorgesckichte der Berufung Luther s avf den Reichstag zu 
Worms (Sitzungsberichte d. heidelberger Akademie, 1912, yi) ; P. Kalkoff : Die 
Entstehung des Wormser Edihts, 1913. 

2 Vedder : The German Reformation, 1914 ; W. W. Florer : Luther's Use qfpre- 
Lutheran Versions of the Bible, Anne Arbor, 1913. 



x PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION 

on the authority of any predecessor, it was on the Latin trans- 
lation pubished by Erasmus in the second edition of the Greek 
text (1519). The sole evidence of the use of earlier versions is 
found in the slight resemblances between them and Luther's 
Bible. There is no direct testimony that the Reformer knew 
previous translations, and this is the more remarkable now that 
the minutes of the proceedings of his commission for revising 
his first edition have been published. 1 They put in a stronger 
light than ever the extreme care with which he worked, and 
also the ineradicable subjectivity of his attitude. He knew no 
interpretation, no exegesis whatever, unconditioned by prac- 
tical interests, the chief of which was the confutation of his 
opponents. 

On one point there is no difference of opinion, the remarkable 
and immediate success of the work. A wide examination 2 of 
contemporary literature has shown that by 1526, three fourths 
of the quotations from the New Testament in German were from 
Luther's version. The Catholics paid it the sincere compliment 
of plagiarism — for the rapidly executed version of Emser was 
but a light revision of his opponent's work. Only the Zwing- 
lians for a time stood aloof. 

Luther's inconsistency in claiming for the Bible an infallible 
authority, and at the same time in criticizing and rejecting 
parts of it himself, has been noted below (p. 267y.). For the 
former, from his own day to this, Luther has been praised and 
followed ; for the latter he has frequently been blamed. And 
yet there is no doubt that the second position is the rational 
and progressive one ; whereas the first has been responsible for 
much with which Protestantism may justly be blamed. Not only 
in rejecting certain texts was he inconsistent, but in relying 
solely on tradition in defending usages, such as the observance 
of Sunday instead of Saturday, and infant baptism, for which 
no support can be found in Scripture. But his self-contradic- 
tions hurt him less than his consistencies ; for it was on the au- 

1 Deutsche Bibel, Weimar, ill, 1911. There were three revisions, 1531, 1534, 
and 1539, not one, as stated below, p. 264. 

3 H. Zeiener: Studien uber das beyinnende JSindringen der lutherischen Bibeh 
Sbertetzung in die deutsche Literatw, 1911. 



PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION xi 

thority of the Bible that he opposed the scientific work of other 
men, and also justified two or three immoral principles. Coper- 
nicus he called a great big fool for thinking he knew more than 
the inspired writers about the revolutions of the heavenly bodies. 
Erasmus he charged with atheism for applying sound critical 
principles to the elucidation of the Greek Testament. Polygamy 
and even concubinage 1 he tolerated on the ground that they 
were practiced by the patriarchs and not forbidden by the apos- 
tles. Lying in a pious cause he claimed was sanctioned by the 
example of Christ. 2 For the horrible cruelties of persecution, he, 
and still more his followers, found ample warrant in the wars 
of the Israelites. 

All this should serve to remind us that it is a momentous 
error to suppose that Luther and we have lived in the same era 
of civilization. 8 Here, as so often, our thought has been the 
slave of an outworn terminology. Because it has for long been 
the fashion to divide the history of the world since the fall of 
Rome into two epochs, " mediaeval " and " modern," we perforce 
assume that if Luther was not mediaeval he must have been 
almost contemporary with us; or, on the other hand, if it is 
shown that he differed widely from twentieth-century standards, 
that he must have lived, intellectually, in the dark ages. It is 
truer to see in the last five hundred years two distinct eras, 
differing as much from each other as the former differed from 
the Middle Ages proper. It would be well if we had some con- 
venient name, such as the "Age of Transition," for the period 
of Renaissance and Reformation, covering roughly the fifteenth, 
sixteenth, and seventeenth centuries, and reserved the term 
" modern " exclusively for the last two hundred years, heralded 
by the " enlightenment " of the " philosophers " and the eman- 
cipation of the American and French Revolutions. Let us 

1 On polygamy of . infra, index. On concnbinage, Luther's " Sermon on Mar- 
riage," 1522, Weimar, X, part ii, p. 290 : " Will die Fran nicht [die eheliche Pflicht 
zahlen] so komme die Mag-d.' ' 

2 Infra, p. 383, n. 4. 

8 On Luther's place in history and thought, recent works are : E. Troeltsch : 
Protestantism and Progress, 1912 ; H. S. Chamberlain : Foundations of the Nine- 
teenth Century, 1911 (in parts) ; A. V. Miiller : Lathers theologische Quellen, 1912 ; 
A. C. McGifEerf. Protestant Thought before Kant, 1911. 



xii PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION 

examine briefly the points in which Luther and his world dif- 
fered, first, from modern times, and, secondly, from the Middle 
Ages. 

In the first place the Reformation did not claim to be an 
appeal to reason, or in any sense a progressive movement. "We 
know," said the Beformer, " that Eeason is the Devil's harlot, 
who can do nothing but slander and harm all that God says and 
does." 1 Protestant and Catholic alike have been consistently 
opposed to the march of improvement, be it scientific or social. 
Indeed, the direct influence of the Protestant revolt was at first 
disastrous to the dawn of enlightenment. We cannot quite agree 
with Nietzsche that " the Reformation was a reaction of spirits 
behind the times, against the Italian Renaissance," 2 but we 
must recognize that the two movements were antagonistic in as 
many points as those in which they were united, and that the 
spirit of the Renaissance passed rather into the Church of Rome 
than into those of Wittenberg and Geneva. 3 If modern Pro- 
testantism has shown greater hospitality to science and philoso- 
phy than has Catholicism, the reverse was true of the earlier 
centuries. In short, " Luther's most regrettable limitation was 
that he neither absorbed the cultural elements offered by his 
time, nor recognized the right and duty of free research." 4 

Gibbon observed long ago that if a " philosopher " studied 
the dogmas of the Reformed Churches, he would be astonished 
not by what they rejected, but by the amount they kept. Even 
the existence of a personal, ethical God, and of a future life, 
though still commonly believed, can no longer be postulated as 
they were by the Reformers. But further than this, they took 
almost entire the body of Catholic dogma, the Trinity, the 
miracles and resurrection of Christ, the atonement, and many 
other mysteries. The one trenchant reform made by Luther in 
the field of pure dogma, that of the sacramental system of the 
Church, was not due to his special enlightenment, but " because 

1 Weimar, xviii, 164. Cf . Weimar, xlyii, 474. 

2 Menchliches, Allzumencldichee, 1878, p. 200. 

- E. Troeltseh: "Renaissance und Reformation," Historische Zeitschrift, ex, 

mff, iei3. 

4 A. Harnaok : Dogmengeschickte*, iii, 1910, p. 816. 



PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION xin 

of his inner experience that where ' grace ' does not endow the 
soul with God, the sacraments are an illusion." 1 

In harmony with this dogmatic conservatism, Luther took over 
almost unchanged the prevalent conception of society, which with 
him, as with the Middle Ages, remained essentially that of an 
authoritative ecclesiastical civilization. His famous pamphlet 
on The Liberty of a Christian Man sets forth an idea of free- 
dom remote from our own. With us liberty means not only the 
relaxation of external restraint upon the conscience, but the 
right to range untrammeled through all fields of culture, and 
the joy in doing so. With Luther a Christian was " the most 
free lord of all " simply because no amount of force could com- 
pel him to renounce his faith ; his liberty was, like that of the 
Stoic, mere indifference to the world. 

For political equality and for social reform as such Luther 
never cared at all. When in 1525 the serfs demanded their 
enfranchisement, the Reformer followed St. Paul (1 Cor. vn, 
20y.) in denying them this right. His hatred and distrust of 
the common people were such that, notwithstanding his opinion 
of princes as usually " the biggest fools and worst rascals on 
earth," he preferred despotism to democracy. " The princes of 
the world," he once said, " are gods ; the common people are 
Satan." 2 Again he remarked that he would sooner bear with a 
government which did wrong than with a people which did right. 3 
In fact the "divine right of kings" found a strong support 
in Lutheranism. Popular government first arose in England and 
America under Calvinism, and in France under Catholicism. 

The Wittenberg professor never doubted the right and duty 
of the State to persecute for heresy. While still fighting for 
the opportunity to express his own opinions, indeed, he took a 
liberal view, and one of his early propositions condemned by 
the bull Exsurge Domine, was that it was contrary to the will of 
the Holy Spirit to put heretics to death. Again in 1525 he said: 
" The government shall not interfere ; a man may teach and 
believe what he likes, be it gospel or lies." * But a very few years 

1 A. Harnack: What is Christianity t p. 279. 

s Tischreden, Weimar, i, 171. 

8 Werke, Erlangen, vol. 50, p. 294. * Weimar, xviii, 298/. 



xiv PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION 

of success convinced him and Melanchthon of the untenability 
of this attitude. In 1529, with the consent of the Elector John 
and of Melanchthon, who were present, an imperial edict was 
passed at Spires condemning Anabaptists to death. In pursu- 
ance of this law, a regular inquisition was established in Saxony, 
with the "gentle " Melanchthon at its head, and a hideous per- 
secution began. 1 In a short time several of the poor noncon- 
formists were put to death, and many others imprisoned for long 
terms. Melanchthon wrote a paper to justify this course ; this 
he did by asking, " Why should we pity such men more than 
does God ? " who, it was believed, sent them to eternal torment 
for their opinions. Luther signed this document, 2 with a post- 
script showing that he was a little sorry for the poor people ; 
about the same time, in a commentary on the Eighty-second 
Psalm, 8 he expressed equally intolerant ideas. According to 
this the government should put to death: 1. All heretics who are 
seditious, anarchical, or who preach against private property. 
2. " Those who teach against a manifest article of the faith, 
clearly grounded in Scripture, and believed throughout Chris- 
tendom, like the articles children learn in the creed ; as, for ex- 
ample, if any one should teach that Christ was not God but a 
mere man. . . . They should not be tolerated but punished as 
public blasphemers." 3. If there are two sects within one state, 
one should yield to the other to avoid conflict. Luther says he 
would advise his own followers to yield to the Catholics in such 
a case, but conversely, if Catholics in a Lutheran state refused 
to be convinced, they should be chastized. The Reformer contin- 
ues that a Papist cannot be sure of his faith, and therefore must 
be punished by those who are certain he errs, just as a murderer 
should be punished even if he believed that murder was right. 
Later he said that Jews should be prohibited from the exercise 
of their religion on pain of death. 

It is no wonder that some authorities have seen in the Ref-^ 
ormation an actually retrograde movement in this regard, and 
have thought that the fanaticism it aroused really sharpened 

1 P. Wappler : Die Stdlung Kursachsens und Philipps von Hessen zur Tduferbe- 
tcegung, 1910. 

2 Eiiders, xiv, 129 (1531). » Weimar, xxxi, part i, 208/ 



PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION xv 

[the persecuting spirit. 1 It seems truer to say, however, that 
(the schism created rather fresh opportunity than an increased 
\desire to persecute. When nearly every one conformed there 
was small possibility of active intolerance, and throughout the 
Middle Ages the Church had a thousand times exhibited her 
ruthless cruelty. What made the Reformers peculiarly inexcus- 
able was that they denied to others the very right for which 
they themselves were fighting. 

Turning now to the new in Luther, we must first of all be 
on our guard against measuring him too exclusively by our 
contemporary standards. Nothing is more unhistorical than 
the method, now quite common, of searching the past with the 
sole idea of unearthing some anticipation of modern thought. 
Whether sympathetic to us or not, Luther gave to the prob- 
lems of his time the accepted and therefore the historically 
valid answer. Less enlightened than Erasmus, and with less 
of the truly evangelic spirit, he was, because more suited to 
his time and otherwise more effective, historically greater. And 
his services to mankind were solid and important. 

The greatest of these was undoubtedly that he broke the 
strongest tyranny and dissolved the worst monopoly that the 
world has ever known, that of the Roman Church. Whether 
the various companies into which the Standard Religion Trust 
resolved itself were intrinsically better than the original corpo- 
ration was' far less important than the fact that these smaller 
bodies did effectually, and even in a cut-throat spirit, compete. 
The pretensions of a single authority to infallibility are plausi- 
ble ; but two or more churches, each claiming to be the sole 
purveyor of salvation, and mutually giving each other the lie, 
must by their very existence arouse skepticism. 

Again the Reformation was really a progressive movement, 
and not, as it claimed to be, mainly the return to an earlier 
standpoint. Crying " Back ! " the Reformers really went for- 
ward, simply because they could not, with all their efforts, grasp 

1 On the subject in general : G. L. Burr : " Anent the Middle Ages," American 
Historical Review, 1913, pp. 710-26 ; N. Fanlus : Protestantismus und Toleranz, 
1911; K. Volker: Toleranz und Intoleranz im Zeitalter der Reformation, 1912 ; 
F. Knffini : Religious Liberty, 1912 ; R. Lewin : Luthers Stellung zu den Juden, 1911. 



xvi PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION 

the primitive ideas of the Gospel. Protestantism is remote in 
spirit from the early Church, because the sixteenth century is 
remote in time from the first. In almost all points Catholicism 
is nearer to the New Testament than is Protestantism. 1 Even 
the famous " sola fide " is less Pauline than Luther supposed, 
because its main corollary, the antithesis to the sacramental 
system, would not have occurred to the Tarsian. Another ex- 
ample is the progressive history of the eucharist. Recent 
research has abundantly shown that the theophagy of the New 
Testament was understood by the early Christians in a far 
more literal sense than it has ever been since. Transubstan- 
tiation was not, as generally represented, the gross invention of a 
superstitious age, interpreting too literally the words : " Take, 
eat ; this is my body "; rather it was the first attempt to ration- 
alize that language. In substituting the closely related theory 
of consubsantiation, Luther took another step in the same direc- 
tion, not because he intentionally consulted his senses, — this he 
passionately deprecated, — but because, without the historical 
knowledge and imagination to put himself in Paul's place, any 
movement whatever on his part was bound to be conditioned by 
the atmosphere of contemporary thought. The final step was 
taken by Zwingli, in which the original mystery, founded in a 
forgotten and almost primeval culture, was turned into a simple 
commemorative rite. 

So in other things, Luther was, contrary to his own intention, 
the father of modern undogmatic Christianity, and through that, 
to a degree, of modern rationalism. Emerson quite rightly 
stated that had Luther known his Theses would lead to Boston 
Unitarianism he would rather have cut off his hand than have 
posted them. But once the avalanche was started, he was im- 
potent to stop it. Having pushed men but a little way from the 
unstable equilibrium of ideal Catholic faith, he put them in a 
condition necessitating further motion. Indeed, not only was 
he the spiritual ancestor of many Christian sects which he would 
have anathematized, but even, to a certain extent, of infidelity. 
There is a measure of truth in Nietzsche's assertion that the great 

1 So Kirsopp Lake, in The Harvard Theological Review, 1914, pp. 429, 431 ; 
G. Santayana: Reason and Religion, 1905, 114-24. 



PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION xvu 

Saxon first began to teach the Germans to be un-Christian. On 
the other hand, it must be recognized that Protestantism has in 
some cases acted as a vaccination against free thought ; the small 
dose seasonably administered inoculates against a more for- 
midable infection, later. Thus Catholic France and Italy have 
become more skeptical than Protestant Germany, England, and 
America. 

As in Church so in State, Luther was a secularist in spite of 
himself. In freeing society from the heavy burden of monas- 
ticism, with its attendant evils of unproductive idleness and 
sterility, he restored to the world energies previously devoted 
to religion. In declaring that all laymen were priests, he really 
reduced all priests, with their divine and magical powers, to the 
rank of laymen. In this also, this unconscious secularization of 
the ideal, Wittenberg stood farther from Galilee than did Rome. 
It is the Founder of Christianity who bids us hate father and 
mother, wife and child for his sake; who points the way to celi- 
bacy by his example and his approbation of men " who have made 
themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake"; who 
finds the poor blessed and the rich unable to enter God's king- 
dom ; who inculcates humility and lives rather for contempla- 
tion and prayer than for active life and learning. In all this 
it is St. Francis who is his truest disciple, and the monastic ideal 
which is like that of Jesus, unworldly, disenchanted, ascetic. 
Luther and his followers, on the contrary, are convinced of 
the importance of success and prosperity ; they abominate the 
disreputable ; think of contemplation as idleness, of solitude 
as selfishness, and of poverty as a punishment. Married and 
industrial life is typically godly. Calvinism furnished the moral 
sanction for capitalism ; the Protestant theologian Richard Bax- 
ter declared that in neglecting the opportunity to make money 
a man was guilty of a sin. This position may be defended on 
many grounds, as common sense or as conducive to the best 
interests of society ; but it is not the ethics of the Gospel. Just 
as on the intellectual side Protestantism approaches a pious 
skepticism, so on the ethical side it has been reduced to the 
sanctimonious authorization for an extremely materialistic civi- 
lization. 



xviii PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION 

After all, Luther's strongest appeal to us is his own person- 
ality. His true originality is his character, his greatest work 
his life, his most remarkable achievement himself. 

P. S. 

Mokrisviixe, Vebmoht, July 22, 1914. 



PREFACE 

It can hardly be denied that the men who have most changed 
history have been the great religious leaders. " Priest, Teacher," 
says Carlyle, "whatsoever we can fancy to reside in man, em- 
bodies itself here, to command over us, to furnish us with con- 
stant practical teaching, to tell us for the day and hour what we 
are to do." Among the great prophets, and, with the possible 
exception of Calvin, the last of world-wide importance, Martin 
Luther has taken his place. His career marks the beginning of 
the present epoch, for it is safe to say that every man in western 
Europe and in America is leading a different life to-day from 
what he would have led, and is another person altogether from 
what he would have been, had Martin Luther not lived. For the 
most important fact in modern history is undoubtedly the great 
schism of which he was the author, the consequences of which are 
still unfolding and will continue to unfold for many a century to 
come. In saying this we do not attribute to him the sole re- 
sponsibility for the revolt from Rome. The study of history, as 
of evolution in other forms, has shown that there are no abrupt 
changes, — appearances to the contrary, — and that one epoch 
follows another as naturally and with as gradual a development 
as one season follows another in the year. In a sense the Pro- 
testant revolt, and the larger movement of which it was but 
the chief symptom, the expansion of the human mind, was inevit- 
able. In another sense, equally true, it was the courage and 
genius of a great man which made it possible. If some such 
crisis was inevitable, he at least determined its time and to a 
large extent its direction. Granting, as axiomatic, that essential 
factors of the movement are to be found in the social, political, 
and cultural conditions of the age, and in the work of prede- 
cessors and followers, in short, in the environment which alone 
made Luther's lifework possible, there must still remain a very 
large element due directly and solely to his personality. 



XX 



PREFACE 



The present work aims to explain that personality; to show 
him in the setting of his age ; to indicate what part of his work 
is to be attributed to his inheritance and to the events of the 
time, but especially to reveal that part of the man which seems, 
at least, to be explicable by neither heredity nor environment, 
and to be more important than either, the character, or individ- 
, uality. 

A new biography of Luther, however, requires more apology 
than is to be found merely in the intrinsic interest of the sub- 
ject. A glance at the catalogue of almost any great library — 
that of the British Museum for instance — will show that more 
has been written about Luther than about any man, save one, 
who ever lived. Why bring another coal to this Newcastle ? 

One main reason is to be found in the extraordinarily rapid 
advance of recent research, which, within the last ten, and still 
more, of course, within the last twenty years, has greatly 
changed our knowledge of the man. For example, the publica- 
tion, in 1908, of the long lost Commentary on the Epistle to 
the Romans has revolutionized our conception of the Reformer's 
early development; the opening of the Vatican Archives by the 
late Pope, by which many important documents were first 
(1904) brought to light, has at last revealed the true history of 
the legal process taken against the heretic by the Curia ; the 
researches of Dr. Kroker have but lately (1906) enabled us to 
speak with precision of the early life of Catharine von Bora; 
those of Dr. Rockwell (1904) have performed a similar service 
for an important incident in Luther's life. Again, the great 
edition of Luther's Works published at Weimar, and of the 
letters by Dr. Enders and Professor Kawerau, both of which 
are still in progress, have now made possible a more scientific 
study of his most important works. A few random instances, 
however, can give no adequate idea of the number of details, 
not to mention larger matters, which have first been revealed 
within the last decade. I have aimed to gather up, correlate, 
and present the results of recent research now scattered through 
a host of monographs. This has seemed to me the most pressing 
need of the present, and I have, therefore, only to a limited 
extent used unpublished material. In several points, however, 



PREFACE xxi 

my own studies have led me to different conclusions from those 
commonly held, and I venture to hope that this feature of the 
book will not be without value to specialists. 

In another respect the present work undertakes to present 
Luther to English readers from a standpoint different to that 
from which he is usually approached. I have endeavored to re- 
veal him as a great character rather than as a great theologian. 
In order to do this I have given copious extracts from his table- 
talk and letters, those pregnant documents in which he unlocks 
his heart. No such self-revelation as is found in them exists else- 
where. Neither Pepys, nor Cellini, nor Rousseau has told us as 
much about his real self as has Luther about himself. Every 
trait of character is revealed : the indomitable will, " and cour- 
age never to submit or yield," the loyalty to conscience, the 
warm heart, the overflowing humor, the wonderful gift of 
seeing the essence of things and of expressing what he saw, and 
also the vehement temper and occasional coarseness of a rugged 
peasant nature. In the tremulous tone of the first epistles is 
reflected the anguish of a soul tortured by doubt and despair ; 
later the writer tells with graphic force of the momentous 
debate at Leipsic ; again, in the same hour in which he stood 
before the Emperor and Diet at Worms, asked to recant and 
expecting death if he did not, he writes a friend that he will 
never take back one jot or tittle. The letters from the Wart- 
burg and Feste Coburg breathe the author's fresh, almost idyl- 
lic communion with nature ; in the table-talk it is now the warm 
family affection which charms, now the irrepressible, rollicking 
joviality which bursts forth. The man's faults, too, stand in his 
unconscious autobiography, neither dissembled nor attenuated. 
Two blunders, his incitement to bloody reprisals against the re- 
bellious peasants and his acquiescence in the bigamy of Philip 
of Hesse, blunders which his enemies called crimes, are frankly 
told in all the hideousness of their conception and consequences/ 
It is, moreover, plain to the reader of the letters and table-talk 
that Luther was often in language and sometimes in thought the 
child of a coarse age; But of him it is especially true that to 
understand all is to pardon all. Through all his mistakes, and 
worse, he emerges a good and conscientious as well as a very 



xxii PREFACE 

great man : a son of thunder calling down fire from heaven ; a 
Titan hurling Pelion upon Ossa against the hostile gods. 

It is a pleasure to acknowledge the help I have received from 
many quarters. Professor Adolph Harnack has personally as- 
sisted nty researches in the Berlin Eoyal Library. To Dr. Cowley 
and Professor Reginald Lane Poole I am indebted for special 
facilities in the use of the Bodleian Library at Oxford. Dr. 
Ernest Kroker, of Leipsic, has given me several valuable sug- 
gestions. Principal J. Estlin Carpenter, of Manchester College, 
Oxford, has kindly placed at my disposal the excellent collection 
of Lutherana made by the late Dr. Beard, whose History of the 
Reformation to the Diet of Worms, unfortunately left unfinished 
at his death (1888), is a well-known contribution to the subject. 
My friend Dr. David Saville Muzzy, of New York, has kindly 
revised the chapter on the Peasants' Revolt ; Professor R. L. 
Poole, and Mr. Percy S. Allen, .Fellow of Merton College, Ox- 
ford, have done the same for the chapter on Luther and 
Henry VIII as it originally appeared in the .English Historical 
Review. My friend, Professor Herbert P. Gallinger, of Amherst, 
has read the proofs. I feel under especial obligations to Professor 
Gustav Kawerau, of Berlin, who, during my long stay at the 
Prussian capital, with the greatest possible kindness placed at 
my disposal his rare books and manuscripts and his more valu- 
able time. To all these gentlemen I tender my warmest thanks. 
Last, but not least in love, I must acknowledge the help received 
in my own family. My father, the Rev. Dr. Henry Preserved 
Smith, has read the whole manuscript, and thus given me the 
benefit of his lifelong studies in divinity and experience as a 
writer. My sister, Miss Winifred Smith, and my wife have also 
aided me with criticism and suggestion. 

P. S. 

Paris, May 16, 1910. 



LIST OF LIBRARIES AND ARCHIVES USED 
IN THE PREPARATION OF THIS WORK 

ENGLAND 

London : British Museum, and Dr. Williams's Library. 
Oxford : Bodleian Library. 

GERMANY 

Berlin : Eonigliche Bibliothek, Universitatsbibliothek, and private 

library of Professor Gustav Kawerau. 
Leipsic : Universitatsbibliothek and Stadtbibliothek. 
Marburg : State Archives and Universitatsbibliothek. 

FRANCE 

Paris: Bibliotheque Nationale, Bibliotheque de Sainte-Genevieve, 
Bibliotheque Mazarine, Bibliotheque de la Sorbonne, Bibliotheque 
de la Faculty Frotestante. 

UNITED STATES 
Boston : Public Library. 
Cambridge : Harvard University Library. 
New York : Columbia University, Union Seminary, Astor and Lenox 

Libraries. 
Washington : Congressional Library. 



CONTENTS 

I. Childhood and Student Life. 1483-1505 1 

II. The Monk. 1505-1512 8 

III. The Journey to Rome. October, 1510-February, 1511 16 

IV. The Professor. 1512-1517 20 

V. The Indulgence Controversy. 1517-1519 36 

VI. The Leifsic Debate. 1519 58 

VII. The Patriot. 1519-1520 69 

VIII. The Address to the German Nobility, The Babylon- 
ian Captivity of the Church, and The Freedom 

of a Christian Man. 1520 76 

IX. The Burning of the Canon Law and of the Pope's 

Bull. 1520 95 

X. The Diet of Worms. 1521 103 

XI. The Wartburg. May 4, 1521-March 1, 1522 .... 121 
XII. The Wittenberg Revolution and the Return from 

the Wartburg. 1521-1522 135 

XIII. Carlstadt and Mdnzer. 1522-1525 147 

*XIV. The Peasants' Revolt. 1525 .......... 157 

XV. Catharine von Bora 168 

XVI. Private Life. 1522-1531 182 

XVII. Henry VIII 192 

XVIII. Erasmus 199 

XIX. German Politics. 1522-1529 214 

XX. Church Building 229 

XXI. Ulrich Zwingli ... 238 

XXII. Festk Coburg and the Diet of Augsburg. 1530 . . 247 



xxvi CONTENTS 

« XXIII. The German Bible 263 

XXIV. The Religious Peace of Nuremberg. 1532 . , .271 

XXV. The Church Militant 279 

XXVI. The Wittenberg Agreement. 1536 288 

XXVII. Relations with France, England, Mayence and 

Albertine Saxony 296 

XXVIII. The League of Schmalkalden. 1535-1539 .... 303 

XXIX. Character and Habits 316 

XXX. At Wore 331 

XXXI. Religion and Culture 336 

XXXII. The Luther Family 351 

'XXXIII. Domestic Economy 363 

• XXXIV. The Bigamy of Philip of Hesse. 1540 373 

XXXV. Catholic and Protestant. 1539-1546 387 

XXXVI. Lutheran and Sacramentarian. 1539-1546 . . . 402 
XXXVII. Death 409 

EPILOGUE.. The Last Years and Death of Luther's Wife . 424 

APPENDIX 

I. Chronological Tables 429 

II. Bibliography, with References 433 

III. Documents 471 

INDEX 477 



ILLUSTRATIONS 



Luther in 1526. Photogravure Frontispiece 

From the painting by Cranaeh, in possession of Frau Geheimregierungsrat 
Richard von Kauf maim, in Berlin. Autograph from a letter to George 
Spalatin, 1524. In possession of the Pennsylvania Historical Society. 

Frederic the Wise, Elector of Saxony, 1524 34 

After an etching by Albrecht Diirer. 

Luther as Monk 64 

After an etching by Cranaeh, 1520. 

Luther in March, 1521 , 118 

After an etching by Cranaeh. 

The Wartburg 122 

Luther as Junker Georg ( 136 

From the painting by Cranaeh, December, 1521, in the Stadtbibliothek 
at Leipsic. 

Catharine Luther in 1526 176 

From the painting by Cranaeh, in possession of Frau Geheimregierangsrat 
Richard von Kauf mann, in Berlin. 

Erasmus , 200 

From a painting by Holbein, at Basle. 

Ulrich Zwingli 238 

After a painting by Hans Asper, now at Zurich. 

Marburg 242 

From a print of 1544. 

Facsimile Signatures of the Marburg Articles 244 

Now in the archives at Marburg. 

Feste Coburg 248 

Melanchthon 286 

After an etching by Albrecht Diirer. 



xxvni ILLUSTRATIONS 

Luther's House at Wittenberg, the Black Cloister .... 364 

Philip of Hesse 374 

After the portrait by M. Muller, at Cassel. 

The Emperor Charles V 388 

After the painting by Titian. 

Engraved by Rubens ; in the Bibliotheque Nationale at Paris. 

Castle Church at Wittenberg, where Luther is buried . , 422 



THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF 
MARTIN LUTHER 



THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF 
MARTIN LUTHER 

CHAPTER I 

CHILDHOOD AND STUDENT LIFE. 1483-1505 

The hills and forests of Thuringia, in the very heart of 
Germany, unite great natural loveliness with the romantic 
attractions of ancient historical association. If the traveller 
stopping at Eisenach, the tiny metropolis of this favored region, 
will walk south for about fifteen miles through the fairy forest, 
he may visit the hamlet of Mohra, famous as the home of the 
Luther family, still flourishing here in several branches. Here 
lived Martin Luther's great-grandfather and grandfather as 
peasants — for it is with them that the family pedigree begins. 
Attempts to connect the name with that of the Emperor Lo- 
thaire, as well as with other noble though less remote person- 
ages, have failed. 

In the old days when Columbus was meditating his moment- 
ous voyage, and Richard III was about to murder his nephews 
in the Tower, Hans Luther married Margaret Ziegler of Eise- 
nach. Following the ancient peasant custom, by which the 
older sons were sent out into the world to make their way, 
while the youngest inherited the farm, Hans was forced to take 
his wife away from home. He was attracted to the county of 
Mansfeld, about sixty miles northeast of Eisenach, then as 
now a mining district. 

The first stop of the young couple was at Eisleben, and here, 
on November 10, 1483, their oldest son was born, and the next 
day baptized by the parish priest, Bartholomew Rennebrecher, 
with the name Martin, after the saint whose day it was. The 
little room under the tower of the church of St. Peter and St. 
Paul where the baptism took place is shown, with part of the 



2 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

antique font, exactly as it was then ; the house exhibited as 
the birthplace is not, on the other hand, well authenticated. 

While Martin was still a wee baby, the Luthers moved to 
the town of Mansfeld near by, where they were to spend the 
rest of their days. It is a pretty little village in the midst of 
its hills, on one of which stands the red sandstone castle of the 
Counts of Mansfeld. 

The boy's life here was one of grinding, squalid poverty. 
The comely little cottage going by the name bf the Luther 
house was bought or built by his father long after Martin had 
left home. 

Hans Luther was a sturdy, frugal, hardworking man ; that 
admirable type of character, who, having small natural gifts 
and no advantages, by sheer industry and will-power makes his 
way in the world. Starting as a stranger and a common miner, 
he gradually won a small competence and a place of honor 
among his fellow citizens, who eventually elected him to the 
highest office in the town. A man of natural shrewdness, his 
pointed and pithy sayings more than once made a lasting im- 
pression upon his son. He was ambitious to give this promising 
child the education he himself had lacked, and but for the 
wisdom and self-sacrifice with which he pursued this aim, Mar- 
tin's career would have been impossible. 

The mother, Margaret, was a quiet woman, bowed a little by 
poverty and toil. The son remembered seeing her carry on her 
back wood gathered from the forest. Both parents were strict, 
and even harsh. " My father," Luther said many years later, 
" once whipped me so severely that I fled from him, and it was 
hard for him to win me back. . . „ My mother once beat me 
until the blood flowed, for having stolen a miserable nut. It 
was this strict discipline which finally forced me into the mon- 
astery, although they meant heartily well by it." 

Martin had at least one brother and three sisters. He rarely 
saw them and never wrote to them after he left home, at the age 
of thirteen. Late in life his relations with them were disturbed 
by a quarrel about the division of his father's estate; but this 
was smoothed over, and the Reformer did his duty by the family 
nobly in caring for several of his orphan nephews and nieces. 



CHILDHOOD AND STUDENT LIFE 3 

The natural question, "What were the first religious influences 
experienced by Martin Luther? can be briefly answered. He 
was taught a few simple prayers and hymns at his mother's 
knee. God the Father and Jesus were represented to him as 
stern, nay, cruel judges, to appease whose just wrath the inter- 
cession of the saints must be secured. No doubt was entertained 
by the humble peasants of the effectiveness of the ministrations 
of the Church; the ecclesiastical hierarchy, and especially the 
Pope, were regarded with reverent awe. 

One prominent element of the popular religion of the time 
was superstition. The gloomy old Northern mythology, full of 
witches and kobolds, good spirits and evil spirits, survived from 
heathen times. It is hard to imagine now how gross and vivid 
was the belief in the supernatural in Hans Luther's house. 
Martin never freed himself from it, and many are his reminis- 
cences of the witches who plagued his mother. Even his bare- 
legged rambles through the hills were haunted by the dread of 
surrounding demons. " In my native country," he once said, 
" there is a high hill called the Pubelsberg, on top of which is 
a lake ; if one throws a stone into the water a great tempest 
will arise over the whole region, for it is the habitation of 
captive devils. Prussia is full of them, and Lapland full of 
witches." 

The boy's education began very early in the village school, 
which may still be seen by the traveller. Latin was the prin- 
cipal subject taught ; the boys were required to speak as well as 
read it. Martin's recollections of the ignorance and brutality 
of his first teachers were very unhappy indeed. He was flogged 
repeatedly on the same morning for faltering in a declension. 
" Ah ! " he exclaims, " what a time we had with the lupus 1 and 
Donatus ! 2 My teachers made us parse everything, and made 
obscene jokes. The examination was like a trial for murder." 

When Luther was only thirteen years old, he was sent to the 
school of a religious brotherhood — the " Nullbriider " — at 

1 The lupus, or wolf, was the monitor who punished the pupils for speaking 
German. 

2 The Latin grammar then and long after in use ; Luther once said it was the 
best. 



4 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Magdeburg. Here he began to contribute to his own support by 
begging, in those days one of the recognized means by which a 
poor lad might get an education. No more stigma attached to it 
than attaches to the acceptance of a scholarship by a student 
nowadays. One of the few things known of this year is that the 
miserable life brought on a fever, which might have proved fatal 
had not the patient drunk some water in disobedience to the 
doctor's orders. 

It may have been at Magdeburg that Martin's thoughts first 
turned in the direction of the monastic life. Erasmus, who 
attended one of the schools of the same order, relates graphic- 
ally how hard the brothers tried to guide their pupils into the 
cloister. 1 One incident, at any rate, made so deep an impression 
on Luther's mind, that thirty-five years later he wrote of it 
thus : 2 

When, in my fourteenth year, I went to school at Magdeburg, I saw 
with my own eyes a prince of Anhalt . . . who went in a friar's cowl 
on the highways to beg bread, and carried a sack like a donkey, so 
heavy that he bent under it, but his companion walked by him without 
a burden ; this prince alone might serve as an example of the grisly, 
shorn holiness of the world. They had so stunned him that he did all 
the works of the cloister like any other brother, and he had so fasted, 
'watched, and mortified his flesh that he looked like a death's head, 
mere skin and bones ; indeed he soon after died, for he could not long 
bear such a severe life. In short, whoever looked at him had to gasp 
for pity and must needs be ashamed of his own worldly position. 

After one year at Magdeburg, Martin was transferred to Eis- 
enach to attend the school of St. George the dragon-killer. His 
mother had, in this her native town, a relative named Conrad 
Hutter 3 on whose help she counted for her son. Hutter was sex- 
ton of St. Nicholas' Church, and it may have been through him 
that Luther learned to know and love the parish priest, John 
Braun. It was not with his kinsman that he lodged, however, 
but with a certain family identified by most biographers with 
the Cottas. Luther sometimes speaks in later years of "his 

1 Erasmi opera, ed. Clericus, Leyden, 1701, vol. Hi, col. 1822. 

2 Defence before Duke George, 1533, Erlangen edition, xxxi, 239 ff. 
* O. Clemen : Beitrage zur BeformationsgescMchte, ii, 1. 



CHILDHOOD AND STUDENT LIFE 5 

hostess of Eisenach," hut never by name, assuming her to have 
been well known to his audience. She took him in, according to 
tradition, " for his hearty singing," and under her charitable and 
pious roof the boy for the first time tasted modest comfort. 
Frau Cotta was by birth a Schalbe ; this wealthy family had 
founded a little Franciscan monastery at the foot of the Wart- 
burg, 1 with whose inmates young Luther, serious and pious 
beyond his years, became friendly. So priestly indeed was his 
circle of friends that he heard with astonishment from his host- 
ess a little verse to the effect that nothing was dearer on earth 
than the love of woman to him who could win it. 

The promise of the industrious, bright boy induced his father, 
whose circumstances, though not easy, were improving, to con- 
tinue his liberal education. Accordingly at the beginning of the 
summer semester (about May, 1501) "Martinus Ludher ex 
Mansfeld" matriculated at the old and famous University of 
Erfurt. It was the custom of students who did not board with 
one of the professors to live at a " Burse," a combination of 
dormitory and eating-club. Luther lived at the " Burse " of St. 
George, which once stood on Lehmann's bridge, but is now no 
longer in existence. 

The course of studies began with logic, dialectic, grammar, 
and rhetoric, followed by arithmetic, various natural sciences, 
ethics, and metaphysics. All the studies were sicklied o'er 
with a pale cast of scholasticism. Mediaeval thought had pro- 
gressed little, if at all, beyond Aristotle, who was regarded as 
an inerrant authority, but it had elaborated his rules of argu- 
mentation into fantastic extremes, at once dry and ridiculous. 
The two most celebrated professors at Erfurt in the early six- 
teenth century, Trutvetter and Usingen, were entirely under the 
sway of the Stagirite, and one may well believe Melanchthon's 
testimony " that a particularly thorny kind of dialectic " pre- 
vailed there. The natural sciences were studied absolutely 
without experiment or original research, in perfect reliance on 
Aristotle's ancient works. The philosophy, too, was founded 

1 Not now preserved ; probably it was on or near the Barf iisser Strasse. The 
bouse shown as the Luther house, i. e., Fran Cotta's, is of very doubtful authen* 
ticity. 



fl THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

on his essays, though in this case some changes in his system 
had been made by the great thinkers of the Middle Ages in 
their endeavors to harmonize it with Christianity. The great 
question which agitated mediaeval thought was whether the in- 
dividual or the class was the reality ; e. g., in the word " horse," 
is the essential thing each particular horse, or the abstract of 
all the qualities which make up the conception ? The realists, 
who decided in favor of the latter, flourished in the heyday of 
scholasticism, but the nominalists, who maintained the former, 
had now supplanted them, and Erfurt philosophy was therefore 
of this school. 

The universities in the sixteenth century were undergoing 
a change somewhat similar to that which they are experiencing 
in the twentieth. The old mediaeval course, which has just been 
sketched, no longer prevailed without opposition. Some rays of 
the " new learning," the glorious rebirth of classical antiquity, 
had penetrated Erfurt. Indeed there were several courses in the 
classics, and a circle of students devoted to the humanities. 
The inclinations of the miner's son, however, did not lead him 
that way. His serious, religious mind preferred the rough road 
of scholasticism to the primrose path of poetry and oratory. He 
later regretted that he had read no more history and poems, and 
added that the study of scholastic philosophy prevented his 
reading any verse except Baptista Mantuan, 1 Ovid's Heroides, 
and Virgil. 

Of the student's life little is known. That it was pure and 
godly may be inferred from the fact that his enemies never 
found any reproach in it and because of the absence of self- 
accusation. He sometimes suffered from ill-health and depres- 
sion. One day he found a Bible in the library, and began to 
read the passage about Hannah and Samuel, but a lecture 
called him away, and he apparently did not pursue his reading 
farther at this time. 2 

After taking, with high rank, the degrees of bachelor of arts 

1 This late poet (1448-1516), Shakespeare's " good old Mantuan," was a great 
favorite of the Renaissance. 

2 Kroker: Rbrers Tischreden, in Archiv. f. Reformationsgeschichte, no. 20 
(1908), p. 346. 



CHILDHOOD AND STUDENT LIFE 7 

in 1502 and of master in 1505, Luther just began the study of 
jurisprudence. This was in accordance with the wishes of his 
ambitious father, who bought him an expensive Corpus Juris. 
He had worked in law only two months, however, when he 
abruptly decided to enter the monastery. 



CHAPTER H 

THE MONK. 1508-1512 

Various reasons have been assigned for the sudden decision 
of Luther to become a monk. The real cause lay in a torturing 
sense of sin and a longing for reconciliation with God, experi- 
enced by many deeply spiritual Christians at one time or an- 
other in their lives." The cloister had been the refuge of such 
persons for a thousand years; to it the Saxon student naturally 
turned to find rest for his soul. After all, the seemingly abrupt 
vow is only the natural culmination of previous experiences. 
The strict discipline of a stern and pious home, the terrible 
vision of the begging prince, the priestly circle of friends at 
Eisenach, had all pointed the boy to tbe career then regarded 
as the perfection of Christianity. 

The influences in the same direction at Erfurt were also 
very strong. This flourishing but by no means large town 
boasted twenty cloisters, twenty-three churches, thirty-fcix 
chapels, and in all more than one hundred buildings devoted to 
religious uses. Among the numerous orders represented by 
chapters at " little Rome," as the devout city was called, the 
strongest were those of the begging friars, the Franciscans, 
Dominicans, and Augustinians. 

This last order could not claim, like the others, a great saint 
as founder, for Augustine had not written their rule. Since 
their first incorporation by Innocent IV in 1243, confirmed by 
Alexander IV in 1256, the Augustinian Hermits, as they were 
officially called, flourished mightily. By the middle of the 
fifteenth century, there were two thousand chapters, and the 
order, like most of the older ones, had begun to show some 
signs of degeneracy. A reform had been carried through many 
of the chapters by Proles, for the last quarter of the fifteenth 
century Vicar of the German province. Erfurt had joined 
" the congregation of the observants," as the reform movement 



THE MONK 9 

was called, in 1475. What made Luther choose this monastery 
cannot be certainly told ; perhaps some personal ties and the 
good fame of the Hermits attracted him. 

The spring and early summer of 1505 was a terrible time at 
Erfurt. The plague broke out, some of the students died of it, 
and most of the others left town in a panic. It is at such times 
that men's thoughts turn to the other world, and Luther, who had 
already been asking himself the question, " When will you be 
righteous and do enough to win a gracious God ? " seriously 
considered abandoning a worldly for a spiritual calling. The 
faculty of law began lecturing on May 19, but the young 
student had hardly attended their courses for a month before 
he became thoroughly disgusted with a profession which, to his 
mind, had no relish of salvation in it. Towards the last of 
June he returned to his father's house, perhaps to get permis- 
sion to drop his juristic studies. 

As he was coming back to the university, on July 2, he was 
overtaken at Stotterheim, near Erfurt, by a terrible thunder- 
storm, and, in a fright, vowed to St. Anna to be a monk. If it 
may seem strange that a young man of twenty-two should be 
panic-stricken by a clap of thunder, it must be remembered 
that the miner's son regarded such phenomena as frequently 
occasioned by the direct interposition of the devil. Moreover, 
it has been shown that he probably had the more than half- 
formed intention already in his mind. He later speaks of 
being warned to enter the cloister by a heavenly vision. What 
this was, whether connected with the storm or not, is entirely 
unknown. 

Old Hans Luther was bitterly opposed to his son's step, 
which he believed destroyed all chance of a successful career. 
Martin also cast some longing, lingering looks behind, but 
dared not turn back, and hastened the day of his entrance to 
shorten this temptation. On July 16 he invited some friends, 
including "honorable matrons and maidens," to a farewell 
supper. The evening was spent in music and good cheer ; the 
next day he entered the monastery. 

The reception of a would-be brother was a solemn occasion. 
The young man fell down before the feet of the prior and was 



10 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

asked what he wanted, to which he replied, " God's mercy 
and yours." The superior instructed him in the hardships, the 
duties, the sacrifices, and also in the blessedness of the life 
he had chosen. He was then put under the care of an older 
brother, and obliged to fulfil a year of probation. During this 
period he not only learned the rules of the order — such as the 
prayers five times a day — but he was instructed in the higher 
spiritual life. At the same time he was obliged to do the hum- 
blest menial service, such as sweeping and cleaning. Luther's 
novitiate ended in September, 1506, when he took the irre- 
vocable vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience, through which 
he was supposed to die to the world and be " rebaptized " to a 
higher life. 

Brother Martin was ordained priest in February, 1507. Thi 
celebration of the first mass was a great occasion, to which he 
invited his father, his kinsman Conrad Hutter of Eisenach, and 
the parish priest of that town, whom he had learned to love 
while at school. Luther's first extant letter is the invitation to 
this friend to attend the mass : — 

TO JOHN BKAUN AT EISENACH 

Erfurt, April 22, 1507. 

. . . God, glorious and holy in all his works, has deigned to exalt 
me, wretched and unworthy sinner, and to call me into his sublime 
ministry only for his mercy's sake. I ought to be thankful for the glory 
of such divine goodness (as much as dust may be) and to fulfil the 
duty laid upon me. 

Wherefore the fathers have set aside Sunday, May 2, for my first 
mass, God willing. That day I shall officiate before God for the first 
time, the day being chosen for the convenience of my father. . . . 
Dearest father, as you are in age and care forme, master in merit and 
brother in religion, if private business will permit you, deign to come 
and help me with your gracious presence and prayers, that my sacrifice 
may be acceptable in God's sight. . . . 

Whether Braun accepted the invitation is not known. Lu- 
ther's father, however, who seems to have been partially recon- 
ciled, came, bringing a number of friends, and gave his son a 
handsome present. The two had an earnest talk, the son urging 



THE MONK 11 

that he was warned to become a monk by a terrible heavenly 
vision, to which his father replied that he hoped it was not an 
apparition of the devil. Again, when Martin tried to justify 
himself, and gently reproached his father for his anger, the old 
man replied, " Have you never heard that a man should honor 
his parents ? " 

Luther's studies were not long interrupted by his vow. On 
the contrary, he continued philosophy and took up divinity, a 
nearly allied science. He applied himself with such zeal and 
success that about eighteen months after his first mass he was 
called to the recently founded University of Wittenberg to teach 
Aristotle's Ethics. He spent a year in this position, at the same 
time continuing his own studies. He took his first theological 
degree (baccalaureus ad biblia) on March 9, 1509, about the 
same time writing his second extant letter to Braun, apologizing 
for leaving Erfurt without bidding him farewell. The letter, 
which is hastily written, and somewhat faltering, has one 
extremely interesting passage : — 

Now I am at Wittenberg, by God's command or permission. If you 
wish to know my condition I am well, thank God, but my studies are 
very severe, especially philosophy, which from the first I would will- 
ingly have changed for theology, I mean that theology which searches 
out the meat of the nut, the kernel of the grain and the marrow of the 
bones. But God is God ; man is often, if not always, at fault in his 
judgment. He is our God, he will sweetly govern us forever. 

In the fall of 1509 Luther was sent back to Erfurt " because 
he had not satisfied the Wittenberg faculty." This sentence in 
the Dean's book, with Luther's own later addition, "because he 
had no means : — Erfurt must pay," is usually taken to mean 
that he had not the money to pay the academic fees. It is also 
probable that there was some trouble about the lectures he was 
to give ; he wishing to discontinue philosophy and take up the 
Bible. It was the academic rule that before lecturing on the 
Scriptures a young professor should devote three semesters to 
expounding Peter Lombard's Sentences, the common textbook 
in theology. This Luther did at Erfurt, where he remained for 
about twenty-ope months, until he was called back to a perman- 



12 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

ent position at Wittenberg in the summer of 1511. This stay 
at Erfurt was interrupted by the journey to Rome. 

Such is the bare history of the outward events of the seven 
years in the cloister. Far more interesting, though more difficult 
to trace, is the record of his inward life during the same time. 
What did the young monk experience which fitted him for the 
great duties which lay before him ? What, in short, was his 
development ? 

Instead of finding peace within the monastic cell, at first 
doubt and despair only increased. His table-talk, taken down 
late in life, is full of statements of the utter depth of the suffer- 
ings of the doubter of his own salvation. God appeared to him 
as a cruel judge ; he felt that he could never do enough to win 
his favor and deserve free pardon. Though there is some reason 
to believe that in looking back he painted his past even darker 
than it really was, there can be no doubt that he went through 
agonies before he attained strength and peace of mind. His 
course of thought can be followed by studying the books he 
read, with his own notes on them. 

The theologians he read belonged to what was then called 
" the modern " school — " the modernists " of the sixteenth 
century. Thomas Aquinas, perhaps the greatest of the school- 
men, was not much regarded ; he belonged to the old-fashioned, 
superseded faction. The philosopher most studied was William 
Occam ; next to him Gabriel Biel, the Parisian doctors Ailly 
and Gerson, Bernard of Clairvaux, Bonaventura, John Mau- 
burn, and Gerhard of Ziitphen. The fundamental thesis of the 
Occamists was that man can do anything he will — fulfil the 
Ten Commandments to the letter or persuade his reason that 
white is black. The cloister adopted this view and held that by 
a man's own acts, asceticism, prayer, and meditation, he could 
prepare his soul for union with God. Biel especially emphasized 
the possibility and duty of a man hating his own sins ; — fear, 
said he, is not enough to make repentance acceptable to God. 

Luther took this all in and tried to act accordingly. He 
fulfilled all the monastic duties with punctuality ; he buffeted 
his body with zeal to keep it under ; he froze in his unheated 
cell, he starved himself until he was a skeleton " so that one 



THE MONK 19 

could almost count his bones," he underwent such austerities 
that he was found fainting by his brothers. But all this did not 
bring him peace. After each access of devotion came a fresh 
access of despair. 

A second doctrine that Luther imbibed from the theologians 
was that God is pure, arbitrary wil l. He had created the world 
solely for his own pleasure ; his will made right and wrong ; and 
finally his arbitrary choice alone conditioned man's salvation. 
But in this latter particular, having promised to consider certain 
actions as meritorious, he has put in each man's power to obtain 
his favor by performing these acts, and his acceptance of man 
is sealed by the sacraments of the Church. The young monk 
could not bring himself to love a God like that -, he feared, he 
even hated him. " When I looked for Christ," he said, " it 
seemed to me as if I saw the devil." 

Luther's development is largely a history of his enfranchise- 
ment from the Occamist theology^ But even after he had freed 
himself from the oppressive doctrines he bore lasting marks of 
the apprenticeship in Occam's school. In 1515 we find him call- 
ing these scholastics the " hog-doctors," but throughout life he 
carried certain of their teachings with him. Occam — the 
" modernist " — was the sharpest critic of the mediaeval Church, 
and especially of the hierarchy. He said flatly that popes and 
councils could err, and remembering this doubtless made the 
break with Borne easier for Luther. 

But taken as a whole the reading of scholastic philosophy 
only deepened his perplexity and anguish of soul. He had to 
win his own way to light, which came at last. Several of his 
fellow monks helped him with counsel and comfort, especially 
his spiritual director who sought to combat his doubts by giving 
him orthodox literature. Of this man Luther speaks long after- 
wards : — 

I remember with what ardor, and pleasure I read Atlianasius' dia- 
logue on the Trinity during my first year in the cloister when my 
monastic pedagogue at Erfurt, an excellent man and a true Christian 
under the cursed cowl, gave me a copy of it made by himself. 

This same wise old man pointed out to him that God was not 



14 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

angry with him, but he with God, and emphasized the duty of 
believing in the forgiveness of sins. This was the first comfort 
he received. 

Most of all he was helped by John Staupitz, since 1503 the 
Vicar of the German province of Augustinians, and dean of the 
faculty of theology at Wittenberg. With statesmanlike breadth 
combining energy and tact, he constantly sought to purify, con- 
solidate, and enlarge his order, but while prosecuting these com- 
prehensive plans never forgot small chapters and young brothers 
in need of help. His relations with Luther were so special that 
some have proposed to regard his influence as the decisive 
factor in the Reformer's development, but this view is hardly 
justified by the known facts. With many expressions of grati- 
tude from the young man to the elder we have his own sorrow- 
ful statement that even Staupitz did not rightly understand 
him. His superior, a mystic in doctrine, helped him not so much 
by teaching as by loving him. The vicar was a man who under' 
stood men, and it was due to his recommendation that Luther- 
received the call to Wittenberg. 

The young monk was chiefly illumined by the perusal of the 
Bible. The book was a very common one, there having been no 
less than one hundred editions of the Latin Vulgate published 
before 1500, as well as a number of German translations. The 
rule of the Augustinians prescribed diligent reading of the 
Scriptures, and Luther obeyed this regulation with joyous zeal, 
in spite of the astonishment of Staupitz and discouragement on 
the part of Dr. Usingen. 

Next to the Bible, St. Augustine was the most helpful of all 
the writers read by Luther. He began to know him at latest in 
1508 ; a recent find has given us the very copy of Augustine's 
works that he used, with the margins crammed full of notes. 
According to these indications what impressed him most was 
the saint's mysticism — his philosophy of God, the world, the 
soul, the worthlessness of earthly life and the blessedness of the 
life hid with God. These thoughts so cheered him that at times 
he felt as if he was " among choirs of angels." 

With all the helps that he received, it was years before he 
found even the key of his solution. The letter toBraun of 1507 



THE MONK 15 

witnesses the downcast, trembling posture of his soul. At the 
first mass he experienced torturing doubts: "When I came to 
the words ' thee, most merciful Father,' " he says, " the thought 
that I had to speak to God without a mediator almost made me 
flee like another Judas." 

It was one day at Wittenberg in 1508 01' 1509, as he was sit- 
ting in his cell in a little tower, that his life message came to 
him, and with it the first assurance of permanent comfort and 
peace. He was reading Paul's Epistle to the Romans, and came 
to the verse (i, 17) " The just shall live by faith." Ponder- 
ing this, it came to him that it was not, as he had been taught, 
by man's own works that he was redeemed, but by faith in 
God and the Saviour. Justification by faith has been rightly 
selected as the cardinal doctrine of the Lutheran theology ; he 
himself recognized in it the corner-stone of his whole life. 

Of course Luther's development was not completed at once. 
Even after the master-key had been found, the long struggle 
continued, and other factors entered in to modify and enrich his 
character. He entered the monastery to save his soul, and the 
struggle for peace took twelve long years before the monk was 
ripe for the great deeds he was called on to perform. No one 
can get even an idea of what the struggle cost him save by read- 
ing after him the folios and quartos he perused, and trying to fol- 
low him in all that tangled labyrinth. And yet his development 
was perfectly normal and even. That his health suffered some- 
what from asceticism is undoubtedly true, but there were no 
morbid symptoms in his conversion. Comparing it to that of 
other famous Christians, there were no visions such as Loyola 
saw, and no moral breakdown such as that of Augustine. In 
those years of hardship, meditation, study, and thought, he laid 
the foundations of that adamantine character which stood un- 
shaken amidst a tempest that rocked Europe to its base. 



CHAPTER III 

THE JOURNEY TO ROME. OCTOBER, 1510-FEBRUARY, 1511 

Work at Erfurt was interrupted by one of the most import- 
ant and interesting events in Luther's early career, the journey 
to Rome. As nearly all known about this trip comes from re- 
miniscences, of many years afterwards, there is a good deal that 
is obscure. Scholars are divided on a number of points con- 
nected with the event, among others on the time at which it 
took place. The probability points to the date given at the head 
of this chapter, but this is far from certain ; many students 
think the trip to Rome was at the same season a year later, and 
a few find still other dates. The Reformer in his table-talk places 
it now in one year, now in another, though the majority of re- 
ferences give 1510. Many other points are also unsettled ; the 
account in this chapter follows what seems to me the greatest 
probability and the best authority. 

The cause of the trip is connected with the history of the 
Augustinian order. As previously stated, when Proles carried 
through his reform of 1473-1475 all the cloisters did not 
adhere to the movement. Staupitz was anxious to complete 
the work of his predecessor by uniting all the chapters again, 
and some years after he was elected vicar of the Augustinian 
Observants in 1503, the opportunity arrived. Securing the 
interest of the general of the order at Rome, and of the Curia, 
on June 26, 1510, he was appointed provincial of the whole 
Saxon province, with authority to force the non-observant clois- 
ters into the reformed congregation. Several of these chapters, 
who felt themselves aggrieved, decided to appeal to Rome, and 
their motion was supported by some of the cloisters under 
Staupitz's jurisdiction, including Erfurt. The disaffected chose 
as their agent John von Mecheln of Nuremberg, and with him 
went Martin Luther. 

It is probable that the latter had little or nothing to do with 



THE JOURNEY TO ROME 17 

the business in hand. At any rate he never mentions it. More- 
over, his warm relations with Staupitz make it unlikely that he 
would be willing to take a decided part against him. The laws 
of the order required that the brothers should always travel ' 
two and two, and he was simply the socius itinerarius of John 
von Mecheln. He grasped eagerly at the opportunity to visit 
the Eternal City ; indeed, he once stated that the purpose of 
his going was to make a general confession of all his sins and 
to receive absolution. 

The brothers set out in October, not cheerfully talking side 
by side, but walking silently in single file. Their itinerary is 
not known ; there were various routes used by pilgrims, and it 
is impossible to judge much from Luther's own vague mention 
of places. When they arrived in Italy, they discovered the in- 
sidious quality of the climate, as the following incident re- 
lates : — 

On the journey to Rome the brother with whom I was travelling 
and I were very tired one night and slept with open windows until 
about six o'clock. When we awoke, our heads were full of vapors, so 
that we could only go four or five miles that day, tormented by thirst 
and yet sickened by the wine and desiring only the water which is 
deadly there. At length we were refreshed by two pomegranates with 
which excellent fruit God saved our lives. 

The journey took the brothers through Florence, rich then 
as now with the art treasures which are the delight and wonder 
of the world. It is characteristic of Luther, who says very little 
about the painting and sculpture he saw, that he should have 
carefully visited the hospitals. The principal one was the Spe- 
dale di Santa Maria Nuova, just back of the cathedral, founded 
by Portinari, the father of Dante's Beatrice. Not far from it is 
the foundling hospital, the Spedale degli Innocenti, founded in 
the fifteenth century and richly decorated with medallions by 
Andrea della Kobbia. The pilgrim related his experience 
thus : — 

The hospitals of the Italians are built like the palaces, supplied with 
the best food and drink, and tended by diligent servants and skilful 
physicians. The painted bedsteads are covered with clean linen. When 



18 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

a patient is brought in, his clothes are taken off and given to a notary to 
keep honestly. Then they put a white bed-gown on him and lay him be- 
tween the clean sheets of the beautifully painted bed, and two physi- 
cians are brought at once. Servants fetch food and drink in clean 
glass vessels, and do not touch the food even with a finger, but offer 
it to the patient on a tray. Honorable matrons, veiled, serve the poor 
all day long without making their names known, and at evening re- 
turn home. These carefully tended hospitals I saw at Florence. They 
also have foundling asylums, where children are well sheltered and 
nourished and taught ; they are all dressed in uniform and most pater- 
nally provided for. 

Continuing the trip south, the brothers finally caught sight 
of Rome. The emotions of the young man were overpowering; 
he fell on his face and cried : " Hail, holy Rome ! " 

The month of December was spent here. While his com- 
panion did the business of the order, Luther spent the time 
seeing the sights. There was then a guide-book, the so-called 
Mirabilia Romae, which had been published as a block-book 
before the days of movable types. That Luther used it is prob- 
able from parallels found in the table-talk, and Professor 
Hausrath has constructed his whole visit from this hint, just 
as one might imagine what a modern tourist saw by consulting 
/ Baedeker. What impressed him most of all the sights were 
the remains of classical antiquity, the Coliseum, the baths, the 
Pantheon. He also speaks of the catacombs of Calixtus and of 
some of the churches. 

" I was a foolish pilgrim," says he, " and believed all that 
I was told." He visited all the shrines to take advantage of the 
indulgences granted to pious worshippers, and even went so 
far as to wish that his parents were dead that he might get 
their souls out of purgatory, for which charitable work so 
many opportunities offered. One of the most celebrated shrines 
of the Holy City is the chapel Sancta Sanctorum at the eastern 
end of the Piazza di San Giovanni, in which was, and still is, 
the flight of twenty-eight steps, taken, as the Romans fabled, 
from the judgment hall of Pilate in Jerusalem. Leo IV had 
granted an indulgence of nine years for every step climbed by 
the pilgrim on his knees while saying the appointed prayers. 



THE JOURNEY TO ROME 19 

If one may trust the story which Luther's son Paul remem- 
bered hearing his father tell, 1 he started climbing these stairs 
and praying, but suddenly remembered the verse in Romans, 
"The just shall live by faith," arose and descended. 

Luther could not fail to be shocked by many things he saw. 
At the time they did not shake his faith in the Church, nor his 
allegiance to the Pope, but when the breach came in after 
years his heart was hardened by the remembrance of the visit. 
He could never have attacked Rome so vigorously and suc-\ 
cessfully in 1520 had it not been for what he saw in 1510. He ' 
often refers to it in words like these : — 

Borne is a harlot. I would not take a thousand gulden not to 
have seen it, for I never would have believed the true state of affairs 
from what other people told me, had I not seen it myself. The 
Italians mocked us for being pious monks, for they hold Christians 
fools. They say six or seven masses in the time it takes me to say 
one, for they take money for it and I do not. The only crime in 
Italy is poverty. They still punish homicide and theft a little, for 
they have to, but no other sin is too gross for them. . . . 

So great and bold is Roman impiety that neither God nor man, 
neither sin nor shame, is feared. All good men who have seen Rome 
bear witness to this ; all bad ones come back worse than before. 

The return journey took about seven weeks. Passing through 
Milan, Luther was surprised to find priests who claimed not 
to acknowledge the supremacy of the Pope, for they followed 
St. Ambrose. His eyes were open to the beauty and fertility 
of the Lombard plains. He arrived at Erfurt in February. 

It is not without interest to note another trip, though one 
of infinitely less importance than the Italian journey, taken by 
Luther in his monastic days. This was to Cologne, where he 
saw the relics of the three kings. He never forgot the wine 
he d rank in this city, which he said was the best he ever tasted. 2 

1 This celebrated story was first published in its original .form in 1903. Kost- 
lin-Kawerau, i, 749. Paul was only eleven years old when the story was told (in 
1544) and he wrote it down thirty-eight years later. 

3 Weimar edition, xzziv, i, 22, and note at end of volume. 



CHAPTER IV 

THE PROFESSOR. 1512-1517 

Wittenberg is situated on the banks of the Elbe about 
halfway between Leipsic and Berlin. The broad and winding 
river is not at this point navigable. The country is flat, the 
soil sandy and poor. Toward the end of the fifteenth century 
Wittenberg was a mere hamlet, containing about three hun- 
dred and fifty low, ugly wooden houses, with an old church 
and a town hall. To explain its rise to prominence as a uni- 
versity town and military post a short digression on contem- 
porary history is necessary — an explanation which will also 
serve to clear up the matter of the two Saxonys, a standing 
puzzle to foreigners who read German history. 

The treaty of Leipsic, August, 1485, divided the lands of the 
house of Wettin forever into two parts. The so-called " Elect- 
oral District " (Kurkreis) of which Wittenberg was the centre, 
together with some territory to the southward including Eise- 
nach, Weimar, and Coburg, was given to the elder brother, 
Ernest, with the title of Elector of Saxony. The younger, 
Albert, who was called Duke of Saxony, obtained the smaller 
but better portion of the land, including the two cities of 
Leipsic and Dresden with the surrounding country. 

Frederic, surnamed the Wise, who became Elector of Saxony 
in 1486, at once started to replenish his diminished resources. 
He chose Wittenberg as a sort of capital of his northern terri- 
tory — usually himself residing at Altenburg in the south. He 
began immediately to ornament the town with public build- 
ings, including a castle and a church, for the decoration of 
which he employed Albert Diirer, the Nuremberg painter. In 
1502 he founded a university, in order that his subjects might 
not have to go to Leipsic, belonging to his cousin, or to Erfurt, 
under the jurisdiction of the Elector of Mayence. He ap- 
pointed Staupitz first dean of the faculty of theology, intending 



THE PRbFESSOR 21 

that most of the professors should be monks of the Augustinian 
order, which had a chapter at Wittenberg. Staupitz entered 
into the work with zeal ; he rebuilt and enlarged the Black 
Cloister (as the monastery was called, from the popular name 
of the Augustinians as Black Monks), began to lecture on the 
Bible, and gathered around him some young men whom he in- 
tended to train to fill positions as teachers. 

The one in whom he had most confidence was Martin Luther. 
It was at his recommendation that the young brother had been 
made instructor in philosophy during the year 1508-09, and it 
was also at his recommendation that Martin was again called 
in the summer of 1511 to be professor of divinity. The vicar 
was anxious to retire and wished the younger man to take his 
own place. In order to do this a degree of doctor was consid- 
ered necessary, to which, at first, Luther was averse. Many 
years later he told the following story, so characteristic of the 
vicar's gentle humor : — 

Dr. Staupitz said to me one day as we were sitting under the pear- 
tree still standing in the court, " You should take the degree of doctor 
so as to have something to do." ... I objected that my strength was 
already used up, and that I could not long survive the duties imposed 
on me by a professorship. He answered : " Do you not know that the 
Lord has a great deal of business to attend to, in which he needs the 
assistance of clever people ? If you should die, you might be his coun- 
sellor." 

Such argument could not be withstood, and accordingly 
October 18, 1512, was set aside for Luther to take the highest 
degree in theology, that of doctor in divinity. His invitation 
to his brothers at Erfurt to attend the ceremony is interesting, 
both because of the matter it contains, and because of its per- 
fect self-possession in contrast to the previous letters. 

TO THE PKIOR ANDREW LOHB AND THE CONVENT OF 
AUGUSTINIANS AT ERFURT 

Wittenberg, September 22, 1512. 
Greeting in the Lord ! Keverend, venerable and dear Fathers ! Be- 
hold the day of St. Luke is at hand, on which, in obedience to you 
and to our reverend Vicar Staupitz, I shall take my examination in 



28 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

theology in the hall of the university. ... I do not now accuse my- 
self of un worthiness, lest I should seem to seek praise and honor by 
my humility; God and my conscience know how worthy and how 
grateful I am for this public honor. ... I beg that you will deign to 
come and be present at the celebration, if convenient, for the glory 
and honor of religion and especially of our chapter. . . . 

After taking the degree, to which he seems to have been 
thoroughly reconciled, Luther began to lecture on the Bible, a 
practice which he kept up all his life. The recent publication 
of the marginal notes (1509-10) in some of the books he used, 
and of his lectures on the Psalms (1513-15), on the Epistle 
to the Romans (1515-16), and on the Book of Judges (1516), 
together with the Commentary on Galatians, printed by Luther 
himself in 1519 (from lectures given in 1516-17), gives us a 
deep insight into his methods and results. 

Glancing first at the more external qualities, these lectures 
and notes evince extreme thoroughness — not a bad quality in 
a professor, and one for which German professors have ever 
been justly famous. He not only turned the pages of his books, 
he read, marked, learned, and inwardly digested them. He 
criticised his authors and with such acumen that two works 
attributed to Augustine, the genuineness of which he first 
disputed, have been proved by modern criticism to be spurious. 
He sought diligently for the best authorities and the most 
recent books. In his Commentary on the Psalms he used the 
edition of the French humanist LefSvre d'Etaples, published 
in 1509. This author, "a little Luther," as Michelet called 
him, is a chief guide in the exegesis of the text. Next to him, 
or perhaps one should say, ahead of him, the influence of Au- 
gustine, and through him of the Neoplatonic school, is the most 
important element. Comparing these lectures with the notes on 
Lombard (1509-10), a considerable advance in freedom and 
power is noticeable. The early work is stiff, formal, and timid ; 
in the later, though the text and authorities are still followed 
fairly closely, there is more freedom of treatment and more of 
the subjective element. The new religious ideas, especially that 
-of justification by faith, can be plainly made out, and several 
opinions which could find uo room in the Catholic Church come 



THE PROFESSOR 23 

forward. In fact, as far as we can judge, it was in these lee- 
tures, his first on the Bible, that Luther began to formulate 
his peculiar theology. 

In the summer semester of 1515, about May, Luther began 
to lecture on Romans, continuing the course for about three 
semesters. His principal guide, at first, was again the humanist 
Lefdvre, whose text of St. Paul's epistles had appeared in 
1512. While Luther was still lecturing, in March, 1516, Eras- 
mus' edition of the New Testament with a new Latin transla- 
tion and notes came out, and was immediately procured by the 
Wittenberg professor. From this time on, beginning, namely, 
with the ninth chapter of Romans, Erasmus took the lead as 
an exegetical authority. Not that the lecturer follows him 
slavishly; he balances authorities, and occasionally disagrees 
with all of them. Nevertheless we can hardly overestimate the 
importance of the Greek Testament on the Reformer's thought ; 
from this time on almost all of his important theological work 
is founded on it, and of course on the material supplied by its 
editor. 

The Commentary on Romans is a great human document, 
priceless for its biographical interest. So important is it in the 
history of the author's thought that Father Denifle, who first 
called attention to it, 1 was inclined to date the commencement 
of the Reformation from it. Though we cannot agree with him 
in this, for, according to our reading of the sources, Luther had 
attained his fundamental convictions in previous years, we must 
assign immense importance to these lectures for the develop- 
ment and perfection of these ideas. The care with which he 
prepared the lectures is plain ; he laboriously annotated almost 
every word of the text, and then wrote out, in a fair, legible 
copy, the whole discourse. There is still some remnant of 
medievalism in the manner in which he explains the text in two 
or three different ways, but through the old dress the modern 
spirit shines forth. Luther was one of the first to show what 

1 He knew it in some notes taken by students now in the Vatican archives. 
The original manuscript, long supposed to be lost, was discovered but a few years 
ago in the show-cases of the Royal Library at Berlin, and first published in 1908. 
I hare read a portion of it in manuscript. 



21 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Paul really felt, thought, and taught, though some others, like 

jLefdvre and Colet, had preceded him by a few years in apply- 

I ing the new learning to the elucidation of Scripture. These 

commentaries were and are valuable contributions to exegesis. 

But they are far more ; they are living epistles from Brother 
Martin's heart. His lofty ideas are taking shape, and what an 
insight into his deep ponderings do such sentences as these 
give : " We are partly sinners and partly just, but nothing if 
not penitent, for repentance is the mean between sin and 
- righteousness " ; and again, " We are not called to ease but to 
labor against our passions." Throughout the whole, the theo- 
logical, practical, and moral interest is the dominant one. The 
lecturer is even more interested in his own day than in Paul's. 
With what solemn words does he arraign the princes and pre- 
lates who oppress the poor and live only for luxury and pride ! 
How often does he refer to the events of the day, the Eeuchlin 
trial, the wars of Pope Julius, or of Duke George, or of the 
Bishop of Brandenburg ! Again, in words which have a double 
meaning for us who know their sequel, he blames the sellers 
of indulgences who deceive the poor people, and " are cruel 
beyond all cruelty, not freeing souls for charity, though they do 
for money." 

,In this commentary can first be seen how far Luther is from 
the doctrine taught him by his professors Trutvetter and Usin- 
gen, the old philosophy of Aristotle and the schoolmen. Of 
them he says : — 

Wherefore it is mere madness for them to say that a man of his 
own powers is able to love God above all things and to do the works 
ju-of tbe law in substance, if not literally, without grace. Fools ! Theo- 
logians for swine ! According to them grace would not be necessary 
save for a new requirement above the law. For if the law is fulfilled 
by our own powers, as they say, then grace would not be necessary 
for the fulfilment of the law, but only for a new exaction beyond the 
law. Who can bear these sacrilegious opinions ? 

It is from this high opinion of the function of grace that 
Luther deduced the doctrine of determinism, which he carried 
to the utmost lengths of logic. 

These lectures also give a vivid idea of the author's reading 



THF PROFESSOR 96 

at the time. The humanists, especially Erasmus, are his favor- 
ites. He often quotes, however, from the Fathers, either directly 
or as he had learned to know them through textbooks and 
compendiums. Moreover, he is interesting. Similes, illustra- 
tions, examples from current events, apt translation into Ger- 
man, with careful summaries at the end of each subject, made 
the lectures a wide departure from the ordinary. The students 
flocked to them with enthusiasm. 

Luther's work at the university was so successful that within 
a few years he was able to carry through a complete reform of 
the whole curriculum. The bondage of the old-fashioned pro- 
fessors to Aristotle has already been described in connection 
with Martin's education at Erfurt. The humanists, eager for 
the cultivation of the classics, rebelled against the reign of the 
Stagirite, and had been partly successful in dethroning him. 
Luther was in thorough sympathy with them, but his motive 
was different ; he objected to the study of that " cursed heathen " 
(verdammter Heide), because his ethics were not Christian and 
his philosophy not Pauline. This dislike, noticeable as early as 
1510, grew until, on September 4, 1517, Luther published 
ninety-seven theses calling into question the value of Aristotle's 
works as textbooks. Every one is familiar with the Ninety-five 
Theses against indulgences published the following month, but 
only specialists know of this Disputation against Scholastic 
Theology. And yet Luther, who did not think the theses on 
indulgences worth publishing, printed this protest against Aris- 
totle and his followers, and sent it around to numerous friends 
for opinions. Among the theses the forty-first calls Aristotle's 
Ethics bad and inimical to grace, the fifty-first expresses the 
well-founded suspicion that the Latin translations used in the 
university do not give his exact sense, and the fifty-second 
states that it would be a good thing if he who first started the 
question of nominalism and realism had never been born. 
Luther was especially anxious to have his opinions known to 
his old professors at Erfurt, who were strong adherents of the 
Greek philosopher, and accordingly sent the theses with this 
letter. 



26 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 



TO JOHN LANG AT EEFTJRT 

Wittenberg, February 8, 1517. 
Greeting. I enclose a letter, dear Father, for the excellent Trufc 
vetter, containing propositions directed against logic, philosophy, and 
theology, i. e., slander and malediction of Aristotle, Porphyry, 1 and 
the Sentences, the wretched studies of our age. The men who interpret 
them are bound to keep silence, not for five years, as did the Pythago- 
reans, but for ever and ever, like the dead ; 2 they must believe all, 
obey always ; nor may they ever, even for practice in argument, skir- 
mish with their master, nor mutter a syllable against him. What will 
they not believe who have credited that ridiculous and injurious 
blasphemer Aristotle ? His propositions are so absurd that an ass or 
a stone would cry out at them. . . . My soul longs for nothing so 
ardently as to expose and publicly shame that Greek buffoon, who like 
a spectre has befooled the Church. ... If Aristotle had not lived in 
the flesh I should not hesitate to call him a devil. The greatest part of 
my cross is to be forced to see brothers with brilliant minds, born for 
useful studies, compelled to spend their lives and waste their labor in 
these follies. The universities do not cease to condemn good books and 
publish bad ones, or rather talk in their sleep about those already 

published. . . . 

Brother Martin Luther, Augustinian. 

The professor's efforts to rid his own university of Aristotle 
were completely successful, as on May 18, 1517, he wrote 
Lang : — 

Our theology and St. Augustine prosper and reign here, by God's 
help. Aristotle is gradually tottering to a fall from which he will 
hardly rise again, and the lectures on the Sentences are wonderfully 
disrelished. No professor can hope for students unless he offers courses 
in the new theology, that is on the Bible or St. Augustine or some other 
ecclesiastical authority. 

While teaching, Luther continued his own studies. Hehrew 
be had already begun to learn at Erfurt, with the help of 

1 Porphyry, born 233 a.d., started the debate on the reality of individuals and 
speeiea which divided the Middle Ages. Cf . p. 6. 

2 An oath never to contradict Aristotle was actually administered in the Italian 
universities. P. Monnier : Le Quattrocento (Paris, 1908), ii, 76. 



THE PROFESSOR 27 

Reuchlin's new grammar-dictionary. There were no courses in 
Greek at either Erfurt or Wittenberg, but he began to study 
it under the private tuition of his friend Lang, who taught at 
Wittenberg for three years from 1513 to 1516. Besides these 
linguistic pursuits he continued his reading in mediaeval theo- 
logians, — Bernard of Clairvaux, Bonaventura, Gerson, and 
Gerhard Zerbolt of Ziitphen. 

Toward the end of 1515 or early in 1516 he became ac- 
quainted with a school of German mystics which had an import- 
ant influence on his development. The leader of this movement 
had been Tauler, whose sermons, in an edition of 1508, Luther 
bought and annotated in his own careful way. He was still more 
impressed by a manuscript of one of this school known as " the 
Frankfurter," a work to which the young professor gave the 
name of " A German Theology," when he edited it in an incom- 
plete form in 1516 (his first publication) and fully in 1518. In 
the preface he says there is no better book, after the Bible and 
Augustine, and none in which one may better learn the nature 
of " God, Christ, man, and all things." He warns the reader not 
to be repelled by the archaic German, and the influence of this 
rough, but pure old speech, has been noted on his own style. 

What attracted Luther to the mystics was their doctrine of 1] 
the necessity of a spiritual rebirth of anguish and despair before W 
a man could approach the felicity of union with GodJTust as 
Christ had gone through pain to blessedness, so, they taught, 
man must experience woe before he can appreciate happiness. 
A person who seeks God with all his heart is left by him for a 
time in doubt and distraction, that God may thereby teach him 
his absolute dependence on him. This was balm to the soul of 
one who had been at a loss to explain the long period of suffer- 
ing through which he had just come ; now he felt sure that he 
had not gone astray, but that even in profundis God had loved 
and watched over him. 

The young professor's work was not confined to the class- 
room. Soon after his transfer to Wittenberg he began to preach, 
at first to the brothers in the convent, and then in the tiny, barn- 
like chapel at that time standing near the cloister. He was at 
first very timid about it, but gradually developed a wonderful 



28 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

homiletic gift. Even his earliest addresses are full of fresh 
earnestness and have some touches of uncommon power. The 
first extant sermon, probably preached on Whitsunday, 1514, 
takes the text from the golden rule (Matthew vii, 12). The 
preacher begins by classifying goods as wholly external, — such 
as money, houses, and wives; partly external and partly in- 
ternal, — health and beauty; and wholly internal, — wisdom, 
virtue, charity, and faith. He then shows how a man may help 
or hurt his neighbor in any of these goods. He asks if it is 
enough to abstain from hurting our fellow men, and answers by 
inquiring if we should be satisfied if all that they ever did for 
us was to let us alone. We must give to others, teach them, 
incite them, and help them to do right even as we want them to 
do unto us. Christ judged the wicked servant, not for wasting 
his talent, but for letting it lie idle ; he condemned the persons 
at his tribunal, not for despoiling him, but because when he 
was hungry they gave him no meat. Thus it will be with us if 
we do not help each other to the utmost of our ability. 

So I might go on with other sermons, and show how simple, 
direct, interesting, moral, and saintly they are. They reveal the 
heart of young Luther striving with all his might to be the best 
and do the best that was in him. What flashes of revelation there 
are now and then, as in the comment on John iii, 16 (God so 
loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son) — " There 
is a wonderful emphasis and propriety in these words, as is the 
-wont of the Holy Spirit ! " 

\ In both sermons and lectures many a trenchant word against 
/'spiritual wickedness in high places remind one that the monk 
jwas already a reformer. Many of the abuses he later attacked 
are scored or glanced at in these early years. He says, for 
example, that the Canon Law needs a thorough cleansing; he 
speaks against fasts, ceremonies, and pilgrimages. He criticizes 
the hardness and tyranny of the princes, the coarseness of the 
priests, the arrogance of the monks, the ignorance of indulgence- 
preachers, the superstition of religious foundations, the laziness 
of workmen, and the irreligion and greed of lawyers. Sometimes 
he rebukes by name or clearly indicates persons in high stations, 
among them the late Pope Julius II, the Bishop of Strassburg, 



THE PROFESSOR 29 

Duke George of Albertine Saxony, and his own sovereign, the 
Elector. 

Of more than common interest, as showing Luther's general 
attitude toward the Church, is his opinion on a cause celebre of 
that day, the trial for heresy of John Eeuchlin. This learned 
man's refusal to participate in the scheme of a converted Jew 
to burn all Hebrew books except the Old Testament was made 
the ground of an action against him by the Dominicans of Co- 
logne, among whom the most conspicuous was Hochstratten, 
aided by the humanist Ortuin Grratius. The trial, which lasted 
from 1510 to 1516, excited the interest of the whole of Europe. 
The monks and obscurantists sided with the inquisitors, the 
humanists, all but Ortuin, with Eeuchlin. The contest was car- 
ried on by a hundred pens, and gave rise to a great satire 
— the Epistles of Obscure Men. This work, most of which 
was written by Crotus Bubeanus, in the form of a series of letters 
addressed to Ortuin Gratius by poor monks, ridicules the bad 
Latin, ignorance, gullibility, and superstition of the theologians. 

Luther, though a monk, sided with the progressive party 
against the inquisitors. His letters on the subject are written to 
a man who was, throughout life, one of his best friends, George 
Burkhardt of Spalt. Spalatin, as he was always called, was of the 
same age as his friend, whom he probably came to know first 
in 1512, when he was tutor to some young princes at Wittenberg. 
About 1514 he was appointed chaplain and private secretary to 
Frederic the Wise, after which he was rarely at Wittenberg. 
Of the voluminous correspondence of the two friends about' four 
hundred and fifty of Luther's letters to him have survived. 
Among the first of these are two on the Eeuchlin trial : — 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBURG 

Wittenberg (February, 1514). 
Peace be with you, reverend Spalatin! Brother John Lang has 
asked me what I think of the innocent and learned Reuchlin and 
whether he is, as his prosecutors of Cologne allege, in danger of 
heresy. You know that I greatly esteem and like the man, and per- 
haps my judgment will therefore he suspected, but my opinion is that 
in all his writings there is absolutely nothing dangerous. 



30 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

I greatly wonder at the men of Cologne ferreting out such an ob- 
scure point, worse tangled than the Gordian knot, though the case is 
really as plain as day. . . . What shall I say? That they are. trying 
to cast out Beelzebub but not by the finger of God. I often regret and 
deplore that we Christians are wise abroad and fools at home. A 
hundred times worse blasphemies than this exist in the very streets of 
Jerusalem, and the high places are filled with spiritual idols. We 
ought to show our superabundant zeal in removing these offences, 
which are our real, intestine enemies, instead of abandoning all that is 
really urgent and turning to foreign matters, under the inspiration of 
the devil, who intends that we shall neglect our own business without 

helping others. . . . 

Tour brother, 

Martin Luther. 
to geoege spalatin at altenburg 

Wittenberg, August 5, 1514. 

Greeting. Hitherto, most learned Spalatin, I considered that poet- 
aster of Cologne, Ortuin Gratius, simply an ass. But you see he has 
turned out a dog, or rather a ravening wolf in sheep's clothing, if not 
indeed a crocodile, as you quite properly suggest. I really believe he 
has felt his own' asininity (if you allow the word) since our Reuchlin 
has pointed it out, but that he thinks he can shake it off and put 
on the lion's majesty. The change is too much for him ; presto ! he 
remains a wolf or crocodile, for to turn into a lion is beyond his 
power. 

Good Heavens ! How can I express my feelings ? From the ex- 
ample of this fellow alone we may form the truest, sanest, and justest 
estimate possible of all who have ever written or now write, or will 
write from envy. The most insane of all passions is that envy which 
ardently desires to hurt but has not the power. ... 

This little Ortuin gets together a lot of ridiculous, contradictory, 
painful, pitiful propositions, twisting the words and meaning of in- 
nocent Reuchlin, only to increase the penalty of his own blindness and 
obstinacy of heart. . . . 

In addition to preaching and teaching, Luther had numerous 
duties connected with his order, in which he was rapidly rising 
to a leading position. In May, 1515, he was elected vicar of 
the district, a responsible position involving the superintend- 
ence of eleven cloisters. How seriously he took his duties is 



THE PROFESSOR 31 

shown by his letters to priors of monasteries under his charge. 
Two of them especially reveal the writer's deep spiritual life 
at the time when he was most under the influence of the mys- 
tics. The first is conceived in the spirit of Paul's epistle to 
Philemon. 

TO JOHN BERCKENT, AUGUSTINIAN PEIOK AT MAYENCE 

Dresden, May 1, 1516. 

Greeting in the Lord ! Kevereiid and excellent Father Prior ! — I 
am grieved to learn that there is with your Reverence one of my 
brothers, a certain George Baumgartner, of our convent at Dresden, 
and that, alas ! he sought refuge with you in a shameful manner, and 
for a shameful cause. I thank your faith and duty for receiving him 
and thus bringing his shame to an end. That lost sheep is mine, he 
belongs to me ; it is mine to seek him, and, if it please the Lord Jesus, 
to bring him back. "Wherefore I pray your Reverence, by our com- 
mon faith in Christ and by our common Augustinian vow, to send 
him to me in dutiful charity either at Dresden or at Wittenberg, or 
rather to persuade him lovingly and gently to come of his own ac- 
cord. I shall receive him with open arms ; only let him come ; he has 
no cause to fear my displeasure. 

I know, I know that scandals must arise. It is no miracle that 
a man should fall, but it is a miracle that he should rise and stand. 
Peter fell, that he might know that he was a man ; to-day the cedars 
of Lebanon, touching the sky with their tops, fall down. Wonder of 
wonders, even an angel fell from heaven and man in paradise ! What 
wonder is it, then, that a reed be shaken by the wind and a smoking 
flax be quenched ? May the Lord Jesus teach you and use you and 
perfect you in every good work. Amen. Farewell. 

Brother Martin Luther, 
Professor of theology and Augustinian Vicar of the 
district of Meissen and Thuringia. 

TO MICHAEL DRESSEL, AUGUSTINIAN PRIOR AT NEUSTADT 

Wittenberg, June 22, 1516. 

. . . You seek peace and ensue it, but in the wrong way, for you look 

to what the world gives, not to what Christ gives. Know you not, dear 

Father, that God is so wonderful among his people that he has placed 

his peace in the midst of no peace, that is, in the midst of all trial, as 



32 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

he says : Rule thou in the midst of thine enemies ? It is not that 
man, therefore, whom no one disturbs, who has peace, — which is, 
indeed, the peace of the world, — but he whom all men and all things 
harass and who yet bears all quietly with joy. You say with Israel : 
" Peace, peace," and there is no peace ; say rather with Christ, "Cross, 
cross," and there is no cross. For the cross ceases to be a cross 
as soon as you say joyfully : " Blessed cross, there is no tree like 
you." ..." 

Seek peace and you will find it, but seek only to bear trials with 
joy as if they were holy relics. . . . 

It may be imagined that such varied occupations kept Luther 
busy. Of his work he gives a lively account in a letter to his 
recent colleague and instructor in Greek : — 

TO JOHN LANG AT ERFURT 

(Wittenberg,) October 26, 1516. , 
Greeting. I need a couple of amanuenses or secretaries, as I do 
almost nothing the live-long day but write letters. I do not know 
whether on that account I am always repeating myself, but you can 
judge. I am convent preacher, the reader at meals, am asked to de- 
liver a sermon daily in the parish church, am district vicar (that is 
eleven times prior), business manager of our fish-farm at Litzkau, 
attorney in our case versus the Herzbergers now pending at Torgau, 1 
lecturer on St. Paul, assistant lecturer on the Psalter, besides having 
my correspondence, which, as I said, occupies most of my time. I 
seldom have leisure to discharge the canonical services, to say nothing 
of attending to my own temptations with the world, the flesh and the 
devil. You see how idle I am ! 

I think you must already have my answer about Brother John 
Metzel, but I will see what I can do. How in the world do you think 
I can get places for your epicures and sybarites ? If you have brought 
them up in this pernicious way of life you ought to support them in 
the same pernicious style. I have enough useless brothers on all sides 
— if, indeed, any can be called useless to a patient soul. I have per- 
suaded myself that the useless are the most useful of all — so you can 
have them a while longer. . . . 

You write me that yesterday you began to lecture on the second 

1 On the incorporation of the parish church at Heraberg with the local Augus- 
tinian chapter. 



THE PROFESSOR 83 

book of Sentences. I begin to-morrow to lecture on Galatians, though 
I fear the plague will not allow me to finish the course. The plague 
takes off two or at most three in one day, and that not every day. A 
son of the smith who lives opposite was well yesterday and is buried 
to-day, and another son lies ill. The epidemic began rather severely 
and suddenly in the latter part of the summer. You would per- 
suade Bernhardi and me to flee to you, but shall I flee ? I hope the 
world will not come to an end when Brother Martin does. I shall 
send the brothers away if the plague gets worse ; I am stationed here 
and may not flee_ because of my vow of obedience, until the same 
authority which now commands me to stay shall command me to go. 
Not that I do not fear the plague (for I am not the Apostle Paul, but 
only a lecturer on him), but I hope the Lord will deliver me from my 
fear. 

How great is the contrast between this letter and that writ- 
ten ten years before ! The shy boy has become a man of un- 
usual power, universally respected and trusted. Indeed, he had 
already attracted the notice of his sovereign, the Elector Fred- 
eric. This prince, who enjoyed a great and deserved reputa- 
tion for wisdom, was a pious man according to mediaeval 
standards. He had made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and 
brought back a large collection of relics to which he kept adding 
from time to time. He built the Castle Church at Wittenberg, 
1493-1499, to keep these sacred objects of which by 1505 he 
had accumulated 5005, graced •with enormous indulgences, 
reckoned, according to the scale of measurement adopted, as 
equivalent to 1443 years of purgatory. In addition to this pro- 
vision for his future life, Frederic had ten thousand masses said 
yearly in Saxon churches for the benefit of his soul. 

Luther had now come to regard such things as superfluous 
and wrong, and consequently judged his sovereign severely for 
superstition, as is shown in the next letter written to answer 
Spalatin's request for his advice about the proposed appoint- 
ment of Staupitz to a bishopric : — 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBURG 

Wittenberg, June 8, 1516. 
. . . I by no means wish that the reverend father should receive the 
appointment simply because it pleases the Elector to give it him. Many 



34 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

things please your elector, and appear glorious in his eyes, which dis- 
please God and are base. I do not deny that the Prince is of all most 
wise in worldly matters, but in those which pertain to God and salva- 
tion I think he is seven times blind, as is your friend Pf effinger. 1 I do 
not say this privily as a slanderer, nor do I wish that you should in 
any way conceal it ; when the opportunity comes I am ready to say it 
to both of them. 

Dear Spalatin, these are not such happy times that it is blessed, or 
even not most miserable to be a bishop — that is to carouse and prac- 
tise the vices of Sodom and Eome. You will clearly understand this 
if you compare the bishops of our age with those of ancient times. 
The best of modern prelates wage foreign wars with all the power of 
artillery, or build up their private fortunes, a hell of avarice. And al- 
though Staupitz is most averse from such wickedness, yet would you, 
with your confidence in him, force him to become involved in the 
whirlpools and racking tempests of episcopal cares, when chance, or 
rather fate, urges him on any way ? . . . 

Staupitz did not get the appointment, and about a year later 
fell into such disfavor with his sovereign that Luther had to 
intercede for him. The letter in which he does so has an uncom- 
mon interest as indicating how free the Wittenberg professor 
felt to remonstrate with his prince on matters of state : — 

TO THE ELECTOR FREDERIC OF SAXONY AT ALTENBURG 

Wittenberg, November, 1517. 

Most gracious Lord and Prince ! As your Grace promised me a 
gown some time ago, I beg to remind your Grace of the same. Please 
let Pfeffinger settle it with a deed and not with promises — he can 
spin mighty good yarns but no cloth comes from them. 

I have learned that your Grace is offended at Dr. Staupitz, our 
dear and worthy father, for some reason or other. When he was here 
on the way to see your Grace atTorgau, I talked with him and showed 
him that I was sorry your Grace should take umbrage, and after a 
long conversation could only find that he held your Grace in his heart. 
. . . Wherefore, most gracious Lord, I beg you, as he several times 
asked me to do, that you would consider all the love and loyalty you 
have so often found in him. 

My gracious Lord, let me now show my devotion to you and deserve 

1 State treasurer and receiver-general of taxes. 




CHRISTO • SACRVM. 



LLe -Dei verbo jvulgna. pietate • favebaT - 

•FERPETVA-DIGMVS-POSl'ERiTATE-r.OLL. 

• D • FRIDR- DVCI SAXON • S • R- JAVP 
• ARCHIM.- ELECTOR!- 

A LBERTVS ■ BVRER. • NvR- FAC] EBAT • 

• B'vW-F -V- V • 
: A\ ■ D • XXIIII • 



=J1 



FREDERIC THE WISE, ELECTOR OF SAXONY, 1524 
After an etching by Albrecht Dfirer 



THE PROFESSOR 35 

my new gown. I have heard that at the expiration of the present im- 
post your Grace intends to collect another and perhaps a heavier one. 
Tf you will not despise the prayer of a poor beggar, I ask you for 
God's sake not to do this. For it heartily distresses me and many who 
love you, that this tax has of late robbed you of much good fame and 
favor. God has blessed you with high intelligence in these matters, to 
see further than I or perhaps any of your subjects, but it may well be 
that God ordains it so that at times a great mind may be directed by 
a lesser one, so that no one may trust himself but only God our Lord. 
May he keep your Grace in health to govern us well and afterwards 
may he grant your soul salvation. Amen. 

Your Grace's obedient chaplain, 

Da. Martin Luther. 



CHAPTER V 

THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY. 1517-1519 , 

Notwithstanding Luther's severe criticism of the Elector 
for venerating relics, and notwithstanding his despondent esti- 
mate of spiritual wickedness in high places, he was, as yet, a 
true son of the Church. In attacking a flagrant ecclesiastical 
.buse, the indulgence trade, he did not intend to raise the 
tandard of revolt, nor did he do so until forced, gradually if 
■apidly, by the authorities of the Church herself, into irrecon- 
ilable opposition. In order to understand his protest against 
indulgences, it is necessary to glance at the history of this 
institution. 

According to the theory of the Roman Catholic Church, for- 
giveness is imparted to sinners in absolution after confession, 
by which the penitent is freed from guilt and eternal punish- 
ment in hell, but still remains liable to a milder punishment to 
be undergone in this life as penance, or in purgatory. The prac- 
tice had arisen in the early Church of commuting this penance 
(not the pains of purgatory) in consideration of a good work 
such as a pilgrimage or a contribution to pious purpose. This 
was the seed of the indulgence which would never have grown 
to its later enormous proportions had it not been for the cru- 
sades. Mohammed promised his followers paradise if they fell in 
battle against unbelievers, but Christian warriors were at first 
without this comforting assurance. Their faith was not long left 
in doubt, however, for as early as 855 Leo IV promised heaven 
to the Franks who died fighting the Moslems. A quarter of a 
century later John VIII proclaimed absolution for all sins and 
remission of all penalties to soldiers in the holy war, and from 
this time on the " crusade indulgence " became a regular means 
of recruiting, used, for example, by Leo IX in 1052 and by 
Urban II in 1095. By this time the practice had grown up of 
regarding an indulgence as a remission not only of penance 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 37 

but of the pains of purgatory. The means which had proved 
successful in getting soldiers for the crusade were first used in 
1145 or 1146 to get money for the same end — pardon being 
assured to those who gave enough to fit out one soldier on the 
same terms as if they had gone themselves. 

When the crusades ceased, in the thirteenth century, in- 
dulgences did not fall into desuetude. At the jubilee of Pope 
Boniface VIII in 1300 a plenary indulgence was granted to all 
who made a pilgrimage to Rome. The Pope reaped such an 
enormous harvest from the gifts of these pilgrims that he saw 
fit to employ similar means at frequent intervals, and soon ex- 
tended the same privileges as were granted to pilgrims to all 
who contributed for some pious purpose at their own homes. 
Agents were sent out to sell these pardons, and were given 
power to confess and absolve, so that by 1393 Boniface IX was 
able to announce complete remission of both guilt and penalty 
to the purchasers of his letters. 

Having assumed the right to free living men from future 
punishment, it was but a step for the popes to proclaim that they 
had the power to deliver the souls of the dead from purgatory. 
The existence of this power was an open question until decided 
by Calixtus III in 1457, but full use of the faculty was not 
made until twenty years later, after which it became of all 
branches of the indulgence trade the most profitable. 
r'The practice of the Church had become well established 
v bef ore a theory was framed to justify it. This was done most 
successfully by Alexander of Hales in the thirteenth century, 
who discovered the treasury of the Church (thesaurus meritorum 
or thesaurus indulgentiarum) consisting of the merits of Christ 
and the saints which the Pope, as head of the Church, could 
apply as a sort of a credit to whom he chose. This doctrine, so 
far as it applied to living men, received the sanction of Clem- 
ent VI in 1343 and became a part of the Canon Law, but the 
popes usually claimed to free the souls of the dead from purga- 
tory simply by prayer. The mere dictum of the Supreme 
Pontiff did not at that time absolutely establish a dogma. A 
powerful party in the Church held that a council was the su- 
preme authority in matters of faith, and it will be remembered 



38 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

that the infallibility of the Pope was not made a dogma until 
1870. Luther was therefore not accused of heresy for his asser- 
tions regarding indulgences for the dead. 
y It was not so much the theory of the Church that excited his 
indignation as it was the practices of some of her agents. They 
encouraged the common man to believe that the purchase of 
a papal pardon would assure him impunity without any real re- 
pentance on his part. Moreover, whatever the theoretical worth 
'of indulgences, the motive of their sale was notoriously the 
.greed of unscrupulous ecclesiastics. The " holy trade " as it was 
called had become so thoroughly commercialized by 1500 that 
/ a banking house, the Fuggers of Augsburg, were the direct 
\ agents of the Curia in Germany. In return for their services in 
forwarding the Pope's bulls, and in hiring sellers of pardons, 
this wealthy house made a secret agreement in 1507 by which 
it received one third of the total profits of the trade, and in 1514 
formally took over the whole management of the business in 
return for the modest commission of one half the net receipts. 
Naturally not a word was said by the preachers to the people 
as to the destination of so large a portion of their money, but 
enough was known to make many men regard indulgences as an 
open scandal. 

The history of the particular trade attacked by Luther is one 
of special infamy. Albert of Brandenburg, a prince of the en^ 
terprising house of Hohenzollern, was bred to the Church and 
rapidly rose by political influence to the highest ecclesiastical 
position in Germany. In 1513 he was elected, at the age of 
twenty-three, Archbishop of Magdeburg and administrator of 
the bishopric of Halberstadt, — an uncanonical accumulation 
of sees confirmed by the Pope in return for a large payment. 
Hardly had Albert paid this before he was elected Archbishop 
and Elector of Mayence and Primate of Germany (March 9, 
1514). Ashe was not yet of canonical age to possess even one 
bishopric, not to mention three of the greatest in the Empire, 
the Pope refused to confirm his nomination except for an 
enormous sum. The Curia at first demanded twelve thousand 
ducats for the twelve apostles, Albert offered seven for the seven 
deadly sins. The average between apostles and sins was struck 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 39 

at ten thousand ducats, or fifty thousand dollars, a sum equal 
in purchasing power to near a million to-day. Albert borrowed 
this, too, from the Fuggers, and was accordingly confirmed on 
August 15, 1514. 

In order to allow the new prelate to recoup himself, Leo 
obligingly declared an indulgence for the benefit of St. Peter's 
Church, to run eight years from March 31, 1515. By this trans- 
action, one of the most disgraceful in the history of the papacy, 
as well as in that of the house of Brandenburg, the Curia made 
a vast sum. Albert did not come off so well. First, a number of 
princes, including the rulers of both Saxonys, forbade the trade 
in their dominions, and the profits of what remained were deeply 
cut by the unexpected attack of a young monk. 
/ Albert did his best to put his holy wares in the most attract- 
ive light. A short quotation from his public advertisement will 
substantiate what has just been said about the popular repre- 
sentation of the indulgence as an easy road to atonement : — 

" The first grace is a plenary remission of all sins, than which one 
might say no grace could be greater, because a sinner deprived of 
grace through it achieves perfect remission of sin and the grace of God 
anew. By which grace . . . the pains of purgatory are completely- 
wiped out.'' The second grace for sale is a confessional letter allowing 
the penitent to choose his own confessor ; the third is the participation 
in the merits of the saints. The fourth grace is for the souls in purga- 
tory, a plenary remission of all sins. . . . Nor is it necessary for those 
who contribute to the fund for this purpose to be contrite or to con- 
fess. 

Albert's principal agent was a certain Dominican named 
Tetzel, a bold, popular preacher already expert in the business. 
He did alWri his power to impress the people with the value of 
his commodities. When he entered a town, there was a solemn 
procession, bells were rung, and everything possible done to 
attract attention. Some of his sermons have survived, painting 
in the most' lively colors the agonies of purgatory and the ease 
with which any one might free himself or his dead relatives 
from the torturing flames by the simple payment of a gulden. 

Though forbidden to enter Saxony, Tetzel approached suf- 
ficiently near her borders to attract a number of her people. In 



40 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

January, 1517, he was at Eisleben, and in the spring came to 
Juterbog, so near Wittenberg that Luther could see the bad 
effects of indulgences in his own parish. After preaching against 
the abuse several times in 1516 and 1517, the earnest monk 
finally decided to bring matters to a head by holding a debate 
on the subject. He announced his intention in a rather dramatic 
way. On the Feast of All Saints (November 1), the Elector's 
relics kept in the Castle Church were solemnly displayed and 
the special graces attached to them publicly announced. This 
festival drew crowds to Wittenberg, both from curiosity and 
from desire to participate in the spiritual benefits then obtain- 
able. It was to give notice to these people that on October 31, 
1517, Martin Luther posted up on the door of the church an 
announcement of his intention to hold a debate on the value of 
indulgences, " for the love and zeal for elucidating the truth," 
ninety-five theses or heads for debate being proposed. 

The Theses are a good specimen of much of Luther's work. 
Their chief defect is lack of perfect logical order. They evince 
a tolerably deep acquaintance with mediaeval theology, but their 
main interest is not theoretical but practical. Each proposition 
is a blow at some popular error or some flagrant abuse. Though 
occasionally qualifying, they deal trenchantly with the nature of 
repentance, the power of the Pope to release souls from purga- 
tory, the virtue of indulgences for living sinners, the outrageous 
practices of the preachers of pardons, the treasury of the Church, 
and other matters. 

The first thesis cannot be understood without a slight know- 
ledge of Latin. This language, singularly enough, has but one 
word (penitentia) for the two very distinct ideas of penance 
and penitence. Consequently the words of Christ translated 
in the Vulgate " Penitentiam agite " might equally well mean, 
" Repent ye," or " Do penance." They were taken in the latter 
sense by the average priest, but Erasmus in his Paraphrases to 
the New Testament had seen the real significance of the words, 
and so had some other doctors known to Luther. Accordingly, 
in the first two theses he says : — 

1. Oar Lord and master Jesus Christ in saying " Penitentiam agite " 
meant that the whole life of the faithful should be repentance. 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 41 

2. And these words cannot refer to penance that is confession and 

satisfaction. 

Among the other propositions the following are the most 
important : — 

5. The Pope does not wish, nor is he able, to remit any penalty 
except what he or the Canon Law has imposed. 

6. The Pope is not able to remit guilt except by declaring it for- 
given by God — or in cases reserved to himself. . . . 

11. The erroneous opinion that canonical penance and punishment 
in purgatory are the same assuredly seems to be a tare sown while the 
bishops were asleep. 

21. Therefore those preachers of indulgences err who say that a 
papal pardon frees a man from all penalty and assures his salvation. 

22. The greater part of the people will be deceived by this undis- 
tinguishing and pretentious promise of pardon which cannot be ful- 
filled. 

26. The Pope does well to say that he frees souls from purgatory 
not by the power of the keys (for he has no such power) but by the 
method of prayer. 

28. It is certain that avarice is fostered by the money chinking in 
the chest, but to answer the prayers of the Church is in the power of 
God alone. 

29. Who knows whether all the souls in purgatory want to be 
freed? . . . 

30. None is sure of the sincerity of his contrition, much less of his 
full pardon. 

31. They who believe themselves made sure of salvation by papal 
letters will be eternally damned along with their teachers. 

33. One should beware of them who say that those pardons are an 
inestimable gift of the Pope by which man is reconciled to God. 

36. Every Christian truly repentant has full remission of guilt and 
penalty even without letters of pardon. 

37. Every true Christian, alive or dead, participates in all the goods 
of Christ and the Church without letters of pardon. . . . 

38. Nevertheless papal pardons are not to be despised. 

40. True contrition seeks and loves punishment, and makes relaxa- 
tions of it hateful, at least at times. 

- 43. Christians are to be taught that he who gives to the poor or 
lends to one in need does better than he who buys indulgences. 

50. Christians are to be taught that if the Pope knew the exactions of 



42 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

the preachers of indulgences he would rather have St. Peter's church 
in ashes than have it built with the flesh and bones of his sheep. 

' 60. The treasury of the Church is the power of the keys given by 
Christ's merit. 

62. The true treasure of the Church is the holy gospel of the glory 
and grace of God. 

71. Who speaks against the apostolic truth of indulgences, let him 
be anathema. 

72. But who opposes the lust and license of the preachers of par- 
dons, let him be blessed. 

The scandalous practices of those preachers will induce the 
laity to ask inconvenient questions, as : — 

82. Why does not the Pope empty purgatory from charity ? 

92. Let all those prophets depart who say to the people of Christ, 
Peace, peace, where there is no peace. 

93. But all those prophets do well who say to the people of Christ, 
Cross, cross, and there is no cross. 

*C)n the same day that he posted his Theses Luther wrote a 
letter of remonstrance to the prelate under whose sanction the 
indulgences had appeared, which still further explains his 
position. 

TO ALBERT, AHCHBISHOP OF MATENCE 

Wittbnbbkg, October 31, 1517. 

Grace and the mercy of God and whatever else may be and is ! 

Forgive me, Very Reverend Father in Christ, and illustrious Lord, 
that I, the offscouring of men, have the temerity to think of a letter 
to your high mightiness. . . . 

Papal indulgences for the building of St. Peter's are hawked about 
under your illustrious sanction. I do not now accuse the sermons of 
the preachers who advertise them, for I have not seen the same, but I 
regret that the people have conceived about them the most erroneous 
ideas. Forsooth these unhappy souls believe that if they buy letters of 
pardon they are sure of their salvation ; likewise that souls fly out 
of purgatory as soon as money is cast into the chest ; in short, that the 
grace conferred is so great that there is no sin whatever which cannot 
be absolved thereby, even if, as they say, taking an impossible example, 
a man should violate the mother of God. They also believe that in- 
dulgences free them from all penalty and guilt. 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 43 

My God ! thus are the souls committed, Father, to your charge, 
instructed unto death, for which you have a fearful and growing reck- 
oning to pay. . . . 

What else could I do, excellent Bishop and illustrious Prince, ex- 
cept pray your Reverence for the sake of the Lord Jesus Christ to 
take away your Instructions to the Commissioners altogether and im- 
pose some other form of preaching on the proclaimed of pardons, lest 
perchance some one should at length arise and confute them and their 
Instructions publicly, to the great blame of your Highness. This I 
vehemently deprecate, yet I fear it may happen unless the grievance 
is quickly redressed. . . . 

Your unworthy son, 

Maktin Luthek, Augustinian, Dr. Theol. 

On receipt of this letter, with the Theses enclosed, Albert be- 
gan an "inhibitory process " against the " presumptuous monk," 
which was soon dropped on account of the action taken at Rome. 
The archbishop promptly sent an account of the matter, with 
several of the Wittenberg professor's works, to the Curia. 

The attack on indulgences was like a match touched to gun- 
powder. Every one had been thinking what Luther alone was 
bold and clear-sighted enough to say, and almost every one 
applauded him to the echo. Certain persons wrote exhorting 
him to stand fast and congratulating him on what he had done. 
The Theses had an immediate and enormous popularity. Luther 
himself was astonished at their reception, and before he knew 
it they were printed at Nuremberg both in Latin and German. 
The circle of humanists in this wealthy town received them 
warmly, the famous painter, Albert Diirer, sending the author 
a present of his own wood-cuts as a token of appreciation. These 
were forwarded to him by his friend Scheurl, who enclosed 
copies of the printed Theses. The answer explains the writer's 
position: — 

TO CHRISTOPHER SCHEURL AT NUREMBERG 

Wittenberg, March 5, 1518. 
Greeting. I received both your German and Latin letters, good and 
learned Scheurl, together with the distinguished Albert Dttrer's gift, 
and my Theses in the original and in the vernacular. As you are sur- 



ii THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

prised that I did not send them to you, I reply that my purpose was not 
to publish them, but first to consult a few of my neighbors about them, 
that thus I might either destroy them if condemned or edit them with 
the approbation of others. But now that they are printed and circu- 
lated far beyond my expectation, I feel anxious about what they may 
bring forth ; not that I am unfavorable to spreading known truth abroad 
— rather this is what I seek — but because this method is not that best 
adapted to instruct the public. I have certain doubts about them my- 
self, and should have spoken far differently and more distinctly had I 
known what was going to happen. I have learned from their publica- 
tion what is the general opinion about indulgences entertained every, 
where by all, although they conceal it " for fear of the Jews." I have 
felt it necessary to write a defence of my Theses which I have not yet 
been able to print because my Lord Bishop of Brandenburg, to whom I 
referred it, has long kept me waiting for his opinion. If the Lord give 
me leisure I should like to publish a work in German on the virtue of 
indulgences to supersede my desultory Theses. For I have no doubt 
that people are deceived not by indulgences but by the use made of 
them. . . . 

The defence of which Luther has just spoken was returned to 
him by the Bishop of Brandenburg with the advice not to print 
it. He did so, however, but the slowness of the printers prevented 
the appearance of the Resolutions, as the book was called, until 
September. In this he takes up the Theses one by one, explains 
and supports them by argument — in the case of the first, for 
example, citing the Greek to prove his statement. He dedicated 
the work to Pope Leo X in a letter written about the last of 
May, in which, while speaking as a submissive son of the Church, 
he shows his opinions have only been confirmed by the attacks 
of enemies. The letter is well adapted to the man to whom it is 
addressed, a humanist, perhaps a freethinker, who would de- 
spise the writer more as an uncultured German than condemn 
him as a heretic. There is a fine irony in the words about the 
wonderful literary attainments of the age. 

TO POPE LEO x 

(Wittenberg, May 30?) 1518. 
I have heard a very evil report of myself, Most Blessed Father, by 
which I understand that certain persons have made my name loathsome 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 45 

to you and yours, saying that I have tried to diminish the power of the 
keys and the authority of the Supreme Pontiff, and therefore accusing 
me of being a heretic, an apostate and a traitor, besides branding me 
with an hundred other calumnious epithets. My ears are horrified and 
my eyes amazed, but my conscience, sole bulwark of confidence, re- 
mains innocent and at peace. . . . 

In these latter days a jubilee of papal indulgences began to be 
preached, and the preachers, thinking everything allowed them under 
the protection of your name, dared to teach impiety and heresy openly, 
to the grave scandal and mockery of ecclesiastical powers, totally dis- 
regarding the provisions of the Canon Law about the misconduct of 
officials. . . . They met with great success, the people were sucked 
dry on false pretences . . . but the oppressors lived on the fat and 
sweetness of the land. They avoided scandals only by the terror of 
your name, the threat of the stake and the brand of heresy ... if, 
indeed, this can be called avoiding scandals and not rather exciting 
schisms and revolt by crass tyranny : . . . 

I privately warned some of the dignitaries of the Church. By some 
the admonition was well received, by others ridiculed, by others treated 
in various ways, for the terror of your name and the dread of censure 
are strong. At length, when I could do nothing else, I determined to 
stop their mad career if only for a moment ; I resolved to call their 
assertions in question. So I published some propositions for debate, 
inviting only the more learned to discuss them with me, as ought to 
be plain to my opponents from the preface to my Theses. Yet this is 
the flame with which they seek to set the world on fire ! . . . 

Now what shall I do ? I cannot recall my Theses and yet I see that 
great hatred is kindled against me by their popularity. I come unwill- 
ingly before the precarious and divided judgment of the public, I, 
who am untaught, stupid and destitute of learning, before an age so 
fertile in literary genius that it would force into a corner even Cicero, 
no mean follower of fame and popularity in his day. 

So in order to fulfil the desire of many and appease my opponents, 
I am now publishing a little treatise to explain my Theses. To pro- 
tect myself, I publish it under the guardianship of your name and the 
shadow of your protection. . . . 

And now, Most Blessed Father, I cast myself and all my posses- 
sions at your feet ; raise me up or slay me, summon me hither or 
thither, approve me or reprove me as you please. I shall recognize 
your words as the words of Christ, speaking in you. If I have de- 
served death, I shall not refuse to die. For the earth is the Lord's and 



46 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

the fulness thereof ; blessed be he forever. Amen. May he always 
preserve you. Amen. 

Long before this letter was published, energetic steps had 
been taken against Luther in Home. As previously stated, the 
Archbishop of Mayence, early in December, 1517, had forwarded 
to the Pope the monk's Theses on Indulgences, those on schol- 
astic philosophy, with other documents. Leo read the Theses, 
which he judged clever though animated by envy. At another 
time he professed to think they had been composed by a drunken 
German who would see the error of his ways when sober. It 
was, therefore, with no great apprehension that he ordered 
Gabriel della Volta, General of the Augustinians, " to quiet 
that man, for newly kindled flames are easily quenched." 

Accordingly Volta instructed Staupitz to force the presumptu- 
ous brother to recant. The matter was brought before the gen- 
eral chapter of the Saxon province, held at Heidelberg, April 
and May, 1518. Luther refused to recant, but resigned his 
office of district vicar, to which his friend Lang was elected, 
Staupitz being again chosen provincial vicar. Far from recant- 
ing, the heretic expounded his fundamental ideas in a public 
debate on justification by faith and free will. " The doctors," 
he writes Spalatin on May 18, " willingly heard my disputation 
and rebutted it with such moderation that I felt much obliged 
to them. My theology, indeed, seemed foreign to them, yet they 
skirmished with it effectively and courteously, all except one 
young doctor who moved the laughter of the audience by say- 
ing, ' If the peasants heard you they would stone you to death.' " 
Among the converts won by the new leader at this time was 
Martin Bucer, later one of the most prominent of the Protestant 
divines. 

While at Heidelberg, Luther was received by the brother of 
the Elector Palatine in the splendid old castle, and shown all 
the armor and precious objects there collected. 1 

1 The castle, which Luther describes as " almost royal," was imposing. Some 
authorities believe that it is reproduced, as it was about 1495, in the background 
of a picture of Frederic Count Palatine, sometimes attributed to Dttrer. Repro- 
duced in Mrs. H. Oust : Gentlemen Errant (London, 1909), p. 248. Klassiker der 
Kiirut, iv. Diirer (Stuttgart and Leipsic, 1908), p. 87. Cf. note, p. 396. 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 47 

Soon after his return to Wittenberg, Luther wrote the letter 
to the Pope last translated, which may have been forwarded to 
his Holiness by Staupitz. 

In the mean time the Dominicans, wounded in the person of 
Tetzel, sent urgent denunciations of the Wittenberg monk for 
heresy to the fiscal procurator (we should say attorney-general) 
of the Curia. Leo waited to see what would be the result of the 
efforts of Volta, but when it was known that these had entirely 
failed, he empowered the procurator to begin a formal action 
" for suspicion of heresy." At the desire of this official, Perusco 
by name, the general auditor (supreme justice of the Curia), 
Jerome Ghinnucci, was charged with the conduct of the process, 
and Silvester Prierias, Master of the Sacred Palace, was re- 
quested to give an expert opinion on the Theses. As a Domini- 
can and a Thomist he discharged his task thoroughly. His 
memorial, which he proudly printed with the title The Dialogue, 
takes the strongest ground of papal supremacy, and asserts that 
whoever denies that/the infallible Church has a right to do 
what she actually does is a heretic. On this advice Ghinnucci 
summoned Luther to appear at Borne within sixty days, send- 
ing the citation together with the Dialogue, which were received 
by the professor early in August. He answered the latter by a 
pamphlet asserting that both popes and councils could err, and 
this he sent to Prierias with a scornful letter : — 

Your refutation seemed so trifling [he wrote] that I have answered 
it ex tempore, whatever came uppermost in my mind. If you wish to 
hit back, be careful to bring your Aquinas better armed into the arena, 
lest you be not treated so gently again. 

Before Luther had time to decide whether to obey the sum- 
mons to Rome or not, the Curia suddenly altered the method 
of procedure. On August 23 the Pope wrote his agent in Ger- 
many, Cardinal Thomas de Vio of Gaeta, thence called Caje- 
tan, to cite Luther to Augsburg at once, hear him, and if he 
did not recant, send him bound to Borne, or failing that to put 
him and his followers under the ban. This step was so surpris- ' 
ing that many Germans believed it a breach of the Canon 
Law, which provides a much slower process against a suspected 



48 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

heretic. Such, however, was not the case. The Pope's action in 
expediting matters was due to Cajetan himself. This nuncio 
had been sent to Germany to attend the Diet of Augsburg 
(1518) and urge the cause of the Turkish war on the Empire. 
From this vantage-point he had observed the immense commo- 
tion caused by the Theses and Resolutions, and was still more 
unfavorably impressed by a sermon on the ban published by 
the Wittenberg professor. Bans, said he, flew about like bats, 
and were not much more to be regarded than those blind little 
pests. Cajetan thought he would teach the scoffing preacher 
what a terrible thing a ban really was, and wrote to Home warn- 
ing Leo of the danger of allowing Luther at large any longer, 
and pointing out the advantage of dealing with him at once at 
Augsburg. His letter was enforced by one from the Emperor 
Maximilian, — who disliked and feared the Elector Frederic, — 
promising his help in quelling the schismatic. 

These missives had their desired effect. Ghinnucci, especially 
shocked by the flippant reference to the apostolic thunders as 
"bats," concluded that Luther was already a notorious heretic, 
and that he was justified in using the summary process pro- 
vided by the Canon Law against criminals of this class. The 
moment seemed favorable for a decisive blow, for Maximilian 
had promised his help. Consequently the letter of August 23 
written to Cajetan, and accompanied by one from Volta to the 
Augustinian Provincial of South Germany, Hecker, urging him 
to cooperate in securing the heretic's arrest. 

At this critical juncture Luther was not left in the lurch by 
his powerful friends. The Elector of SaxOny refused to allow 
him to appear without a safe-conduct from the Emperor, which 
was secured late and with difficulty. Staupitz and Link also 
went to Augsburg, where the interview was held, in order to 
use their influence against the employment of force. Fortified 
by this support, Luther went to Augsburg, where he arrived 
on October 7, but waited three days until the safe-conduct of 
Maximilian had reached him. During the interval he had a 
visit from an Italian, Urban de Serralonga, with whom he had 
the following conversation : — 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 49 

Urban — Tour business here may be summed up in one word of six 
letters : Recant ! 

Luther — But may I not defend my position, or at least be in- 
structed on it ? 

Urban — Do you think this is a game of running in a ring ? Don't 
you know that it is all right to deceive the people a little — as you 
say the preachers of indulgence do — to get their money ? Do you 
think the Elector Frederic will take arms to protect you ? 

Luther — I hope not. 

Urban — If not, where will you live ? 

Luther — Under heaven. 

Urban — What would you do if you had the Pope and cardinals 
in your power ? 

Luther — I would show them all reverence and honor. 

Urban — (with a scornful gesture) Hem ! 

Luther had three separate interviews with Cajetan, on Octo- 
ber 12, 13, and 14 respectively. On the first day, having studied 
the etiquette of the occasion, he fell down on his face before 
his judge. Much pleased with this humility, the legate com- 
plimented him on his learning and bade him recant his errors. 
Asked what errors he meant, the prelate, who had been study- 
ing theology for two months, named two : first, the statement in 
the Theses that the treasury of the Church consisted not of the 
merits of Christ but of the power of the keys, and second, the 
assertion in the Resolutions that the efficacy of the sacrament 
depended on the faith of the recipient. The selection was a 
clever one, both because on these two points there was most 
unanimity at Rome, and also because it was supposed that the 
accused would more readily retract these purely speculative 
points than others of a more practical bearing. That Luther 
did not recant, however, and that the altercation with his judge 
at times became hot and furious, he himself tells, in his own 
vivid way, in a letter to a friend at court : — 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN 

Auqsbubg, October 14, 1518. 
Greeting. As I do not care to write directly to the Elector, dear 
Spalatin, do you, as his intimate friend, communicate the purport of 



50 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

my letter to him. This is now the fourth day that my lord the legate 
negotiates with me, or rather against me. He fairly promises, indeed, 
that he will do all mercifully and paternally, for the sake of the most 
illustrious Elector, but in reality he wishes to carry all before him 
with mere stubborn brute force. He would neither allow me to answer 
him in a public debate nor would he dispute with me privately. The 
one thing which he repeated over and over was : " Recant. Admit 
your error ; the Pope wishes it so, and not otherwise ; you must willy, 
nilly," with other words to the same effect. He drew his most power- 
ful argument against me from the decretal of Clement VI Unigeni- 
tus. 1 " Here," said he, " here you see that the Pope decides that the 
merits of Christ are the treasury of the Church ; do you believe or do 
you not believe ? " He allowed no statement nor answer, but tried to 
carry his point with force of words and with clamor. 

At length he was with difficulty persuaded by the prayers of many 
to allow me to present a written argument. This I have done to-day, 
having taken with me Philip von Feilitzsch to represent the Elector, of 
whose request he again reminded the legate. After some time he threw 
aside my paper with contempt, and again clamored for recantation. 
With a long and wordy argument, drawn from the foolish books of 
Aquinas, he thought to have conquered and put me to silence. I tried 
to speak nine or ten times, but every time he thundered at me, and 
continued the monologue. At length I, too, began to shout, saying that 
if he could show me that that decretal asserted that the merits of Christ 
was the treasury of the Church, I would recant as he wished. Good 
Heavens, what gesticulation and rude laughter this remark caused ! 
He suddenly seized the book, read from it with breathless rapidity, 
until he came to the place where it is written that Christ by his passion 
acquired a treasure. Then I : " most reverend Father, consider this 
word ' acquire.' If Christ by his merits acquired a treasure, then his 
merits are not the treasure, but that which the merits merited, namely, 
the keys of the Church, are the treasure. Therefore my conclusion 8 
was correct." At this he was suddenly confused, but not wishing to ap- 
pear so, suddenly jumped to another place, thinking it prudent not to 
notice what I had said. But I was hot and burst forth, certainly with- 
out much reverence : " Do not think, most reverend Father, that we 
Germans understand no grammar ; it is a different thing to acquire a 

1 Canon Law, Extravagant, lib. 5, tit. 9, cap. 6. Not to be confused with the 
bull Unigenitus of Clement XI. 

2 In the Fifty-eighth Thesis, to the effect that the power of the keys is the 
treasury of the Church. 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 51 

treasure and to be a treasure." Having thus broken his self-confidence, 
as he still clamored for recantation, I went away. He said : " Do not 
return to me again unless you wish to recant." 

But lo ! as soon as he had finished dinner he called our reverend 
vicar, Father Staupitz, and used his blandishments on him to try to 
get him to persuade me to recant. The legate even asserted, as I was 
absent, that I had no better friend than he. When Staupitz answered 
that he had always advised me, and still did so, to submit humbly to 
the Church, and that I had declared publicly that I would do so, 
Cajetan even confessed that he was, in his own opinion, inferior to 
me in theological learning and in talent, but that, as the represent- 
ative of the Pope and of the prelates, it was his duty to persuade me 
to recant. At length they agreed that he should suggest articles for 
me to revoke. 

Thus the business stands. I have no hope nor confidence in him. 
I am preparing an appeal, resolved not to recant a syllable. If he 
proceeds as he has begun, by force, I shall publish my answer to him, 
that he may be confounded throughout the whole world. 
Farewell in haste, 

Brother Martin Luther, Augustinian. 

As indicated in this letter, Staupitz and Link were far more 
amenable to pressure than was Luther. They hoped that all 
might be settled peaceably, in a way which would satisfy the 
legate without compromising their brother. Finding that he 
was immovable, Staupitz absolved him from the vow of obedi- 
ence, partly to relieve himself from responsibility, and partly, 
no doubt, to guard him against molestation from Hecker and 
Volta. Staupitz and Link then judged it best to retire from the 
city without giving the nuncio notice of their intention. 

On October 16, Luther drew up an appeal from the Pope 
badly informed to the Pope to be better informed, and the next 
day wrote Cajetan a courteous but firm letter. Notwithstanding 
all precautions, the accused man stood in considerable danger, 
for safe-conducts to heretics had been broken before. The 
moment was almost as decisive as the later one at Worms, and 
here, as there, the heroic monk stood like iron against the threats 
of foes and the supplication of friends alike, resolved to do 
nothing against his conscience. 



53 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 



TO CARDINAL CAJETAN AT ATJGSBUKG 

(Augsbubo, October 17, 1518.) 

Very Reverend Father in Christ, I come again, not personally but 
in writing ; deign to hear me mercifully. 

My reverend and beloved father in Christ, our Vicar John Staupitz, 
has pleaded with me to think humbly of my own opinion and to sub- 
mit, and has persuaded me that your Reverence is favorably disposed 
towards me. . . . So that my fear has gradually passed away, or rather 
changed into a singular love and true, filial veneration for your Rever- 
ence. 

Now, Most Reverend Father in Christ, I confess, as I have before 
confessed, that I was assuredly unwise and too bitter, and too irrever- 
ent to the name of the Pope. And although I had the greatest provo- 
cation, I know I should have acted with more moderation and humility, 
and not have answered a fool according to his folly. For so doing I am 
most sincerely sorry, and ask pardon, and will say so from the pulpit, 
as I have already done several times, and I shall take care in future to 
act differently and speak otherwise by God's mercy. Moreover I am 
quite ready to promise never to speak of indulgences again and to main- 
tain silence, provided only the same rule, either of speaking or of keep- 
ing silence, be imposed on those men who have led me into this tragic 
business. 

For tbe rest, most reverend and now beloved Father in Christ, as to 
the truth of my opinion, I would most readily recant, both by your 
command and the advice of my vicar, if my conscience in any way 
allowed it. But I know that neither the command nor the advice nor 
the influence of any one ought to make me do anything against con- 
science or can do so. For the arguments [you cite] from Aquinas and 
others are not convincing to me, although I have read them over in 
preparation for my debates and have thoroughly understood them. I 
do not think their conclusions are drawn from correct premises. The 
only thing left is to overcome me with better reasons, in which I may 
hear the voice of the Bride which is also the voice of the Bridegroom. 

I humbly implore your Reverence to deign to refer this case to our 
Most Holy Lord Leo X, that these doubts may be settled by the 
Church, so that he may either compel a just withdrawal of my propo- 
sitions or else their just affirmation. I wish only to follow the Church, 
and I know not what effect my recantation of doubtful and unsettled 
opinions might hare, but I fear that I might be reproached, and with 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 63 

reason, for not knowing either what I asserted or what I withdrew. 
May your Reverence deign to receive my humble and suppliant peti- 
tion, and to treat me with mercy as a son. 

Your Reverence's devoted son, 

Brother Martin Luther, Augustinian. 

After waiting in vain for three days for an answer, Luther 
left Augsburg secretly at night and returned to Wittenberg. 
The first thing he did there was to write out the account of the 
interview of which he had spoken to Spalatin, and to publish it 
as the Acta Augustana. In the preface to the reader he says : — 

They vexed Reuchlin a long time for some advice he gave them, now 
they vex me for proposing questions for debate. Who is safe from the 
teeth of this Behemoth ? . . . 

I see that books are published and various rumors scattered abroad 
about what I did at Augsburg, although truly I did nothing there but 
lose the time and expense of the journey . . . for I was instructed 
there that to teach the truth is the same as to disturb the Church, but 
to flatter men and deny Christ is considered the same as pacifying and 
exalting the Church of Christ. 

Foiled of his purpose, Cajetan wrote the Elector Frederic 
asking him to arrest Luther and send him to Rome. The peace- 
loving prince may have wavered for an instant. According to 
the story he summoned his counsellors and asked their advice. 
One of them, Fabian von Feilitzsch, related the fable of the 
sheep, who, at the advice of the wolves, sent away the watch- 
dogs. If we give up Luther, he concluded, we shall have no one 
to write in our defence, but they will accuse us all of being 
heretics. It is probable that Frederic never seriously considered 
the surrender of his subject, but he did ponder a plan to hide 
him in a castle, as he later did in the Wartburg. Early in De- 
cember Spalatin and Luther had a meeting at Lichtenberg to 
discuss this project, which was not adopted. On December 8 the 
Elector wrote a diplomatic letter to the cardinal, saying that he 
was not convinced that the accused was a heretic, but had rather 
been informed by learned men that his doctrines were only 
objectionable to those whose pecuniary interests were involved. 
He wished only to act as a Christian prince, but could not com- 



54 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

promise his university by sending an uncondemned man to 
Rome. 

Cajetan had been convinced by his interview that it would be 
difficult to convict Luther of heresy. He therefore requested 
Leo to settle the points in dispute once for all by an ex cathedra 
declaration. This was done in a bull of November 9, which, 
without mentioning names, condemned the errors of certain 
monks on indulgences and other points. The claim could now 
no longer be made that the matters in question were not decided 
authoritatively. 

Immediately upon the failure of Cajetan to arrest the heretic, 
the Pope dispatched a special nuncio to Germany for this pur- 
pose, Charles von Miltitz. Hoping to win the Elector to his 
side, Leo sent him a long-coveted honor, the anointed golden 
rose, with flattering letters both to him and to his principal 
counsellors. On the other hand, Miltitz was furnished with a 
ban against Luther and power to declare the interdict (i. e., 
suspension of all ministrations of the Church except baptism 
and supreme unction) against Saxony. Cajetan had not thought 
it wise to excommunicate a man whom he had not been able 
to convict, but now it was felt that there would be no more 
excuse for delay, and that the disturber of the Church's peace 
would be brought to terms at once. 

The plan of Rome was wrecked partly by the resistance of 
Frederic, partly by the conduct of Miltitz, a Saxon by birth, 
and a vain, frivolous person, who forgot his instructions as 
soon as he arrived in Germany, hoping that instead of using 
force he could set everything right by gentle means. He ac- 
cordingly arranged for a personal interview with the Augustin- 
ian friar, whom he expected to cajole into recantation ; this 
took place at Altenburg, the capital of Electoral Saxony, early 
in January, 1519. The result of the first day's negotiations is 
thus related in a letter : — 

TO FREDERIC, ELECTOR OF SAXONY 

(Altbnbubs, January 5 or 6, 1519.) 
Most serene, highborn Prince, most gracious Lord ! It overwhelms 
me to think how far your Grace has been drawn into my affairs, but 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY «5 

as necessity and God so dispose it, I beg your Grace to be favorable 
still. 

Charles von Miltitz yesterday pointed out with care the crimes I 
had committed against the Roman Church, and I humbly promised 
to make what amends I could. I beg your Grace to attend to the plan 
I proposed, for by it I meant to please your Grace. 

First, I agreed to let the matter alone henceforth, until it bleeds to 
death of itself, provided my opponents also keep silence. . . . 

Secondly, I agreed to write to his Holiness the Pope, humbly sub- 
mitting and recognizing that I had been too hot and hasty, though I 
never meant to do aught against the Holy Soman Church, but only 
as her true son to attack the scandalous preaching whereby she is 
made a mockery, a byword, a stumbling-block, and an offence to the 
people. 

Thirdly, I promised to send out a paper admonishing every one to 
follow the Roman Church, obey and honor her, and explaining that 
my writings were not to be understood in a sense damaging to 
her. . . . 

Fourthly, Spalatin proposed, on the recommendation of Fabian von 
Feilitzsch, to leave the case to the Archbishop of Salzburg. 1 I should 
abide by his judgment, with that of other learned and impartial men, 
or else return to my appeal. Or perhaps the matter might remain un- 
decided and things be allowed to take their natural course. But I fear 
the Pope will allow no other judge but himself, nor can I tolerate his 
judgment ; if the present plan fails, we shall have to go through the 
farce of the Pope writing a text and my writing the commentary. 
That would do no good. 

Miltitz thinks my propositions unsatisfactory, but does not demand 
recantation. . . . 

Your Grace's obedient chaplain, 

Doctor Maktin. 

In accordance with this plan Luther drew up a very humble 
letter to the Pope, but as it did not satisfy Miltitz he never 
sent it. On the second day of the conference for the agreement 
here proposed there was substituted a much simpler one. 

1 Mathew Lang, at this time coadjutor, though soon after Archbishop of Salz- 
burg, is meant. He was a close friend of Staupitz. 



56 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

TO FREDERIC, ELECTOR OF SAXONY 

(Altenburg, January 6 or 7, 1519.) 
Serene, highborn Prince, gracious Lord! Let me humbly inform 
your Grace that Charles von Miltitz and I have at last come to an 
agreement, and concluded our negotiations with two articles. 

1. Both sides shall be inhibited from preaching, writing, and acting 
further in the matter. 

2. Miltitz will write the Pope at once, informing him how things 
stand, and asking him to recommend the matter to some learned 
bishop, who will hear me and point out the errors I am to recant. 
For when I have learned my mistakes, I will gladly withdraw them, 
and do nothing to impair the honor and power of the Roman Church. 

The letter of Miltitz to the Pope was couched in somewhat 
too sanguine terms. He represented that Luther was ready 
to recant everything. Leo was so pleased to hear it that he 
dispatched a right friendly missive to the Wittenberg monk 
(March 29, 1519) inviting him to Rome to make his confession, 
and even offering him money for the journey. 

That he was able to take no further action for a time was 
clue to the political situation. In January, 1519, the Emperor 
Maximilian died. Among the candidates for the position were 
King Charles of Spain, King Francis of France, and the 
Elector Frederic. The interest of the papacy in this election 
overshadowed all other matters for a time, and the cautious 
policy necessary prevented too much pressure being brought to 
bear on Frederic. The process for heresy was consequently 
suspended during fourteen months. 

If Miltitz had been satisfied with his interview, Luther was 
not. When they parted with the kiss of peace he felt that it was 
a Judas kiss and that the envoy's tears were crocodile's tears. 
He tried, nevertheless, to live up to the spirit of the agreement. 
In fulfilment of the third proposition in the first day's inter- 
view, he published An Instruction on Certain Articles. In this 
he explains his position on a number of points. Prayers for 
the dead in purgatory he thinks are allowable. Of indulgences 
it is enough for the common man to know that indulgence is a 
relaxation of the satisfaction for sin, but is a much smaller thing 



THE INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 57 

than a work of charity, for it is free ; no one sins in not buying 
a papal pardon, but if he buys one instead of giving to the poor 
or helping his neighbor, he sins, mocking himself and God. The 
Church's commands, he says, are to be obeyed, yet one should 
place God's commands higher. " Of good works I have said, 
and still say, that no one is good nor can any one do right, 
unless God's grace first makes him just ; wherefore no one ia 
justified by works, but good works come naturally from him 
who is just." In conclusion he adds that there is no doubt that 
God has honored the Roman Church above all others. 

The first article of the agreement, that both sides should main- 
tain silence, came to nothing, for neither party observed the truce, 
and the whole controversy was soon given an even wider pub- 
licity than it had yet attained, by an event of the first import- 
ance, the great debate with John Eck at Leipsic. 



CHAPTEK VI 

THE LEIPSIC DEBATE. 1519. 

The ablest and most persistent opponent Luther ever bad 
was John Eck. From 1517 to 1543 this champion of the Church 
met him at every turn and did everything in his. power to foil 
the great heresiarch. Like the Wittenberger, Eck was a peasant 
by extraction and a monk by profession, a theologian of no 
mean ability and a man of energy and resource. Before 1517 
he had distinguished himself in debates at Vienna and else- 
where, and burned to make himself still more famous in this 
line. Just before Luther crossed his path, he charged Erasmus 
— the foremost scholar of the day — with something very like 
heresy because the latter had said that the Grreek of the New 
Testament was not as good as that of Demosthenes. 1 

The publication of the Ninety-five Theses gave him a more 
substantial object to attack, and he at once assailed them in a 
pamphlet called Obelisks (literally the small daggers with which 
notes are marked). Of it Luther wrote, on March 24, 1518, to 
his friend John Silvius Egranus of Zwickau : — 

A man of signal and talented learning and of learned talent has 
recently written a book against my Theses. I mean John Eck, doctor 
of theology, chancellor of the university of Ingolstadt, canon of Eich- 
statt and preacher at Augsburg, a man already famous and widely 
known as an author. What cuts me most is that we had recently 
formed a great friendship. Did I not already know the machinations 
of Satan, I should be astonished at the fury with which Eck has 
broken that sweet amity without warning or letter of farewell. 

In his Obelisks he calls me a fanatic Hussite, heretical, seditious, 
insolent and rash, not to mention such slight abuse as that I am 
dreaming, clumsy, unlearned, and a despiser of the Pope. In short the 
book is nothing but the foulest abuse, expressly mentioning my name 
and directed against my Theses. It is nothing less than the malice and 

1 Erasmi opera. Leyden, 1703, vol. iii, no. 303, February 2, 1518, 



THE LEIPSIC DEBATE 59 

envy of a maniac. I would have swallowed this sop for Cerberus, 1 but 
my friends compelled me to answer it. 

The answer was a pamphlet entitled Asterisks, circulated in 
manuscript. 

Before the altercation had progressed any further, it was 
taken out of Luther's hands by another Wittenberg professor, 
John Bod en stein of Carlstadt, a man destined to play an im- 
portant part in the Protestant revolt. Though careful to incur 
no great danger, he was by nature a revolutionary, and longed 
to out-Luther Luther. While the latter was away at Heidelberg 
in the spring of 1518, Carlstadt came forward with a set of 
theses against Eck on free will and the authority of Scripture. 
The Ingolstadt professor answered these with some counter- 
theses, in which an extreme view of the papal supremacy was 
maintained. Carlstadt, who held a benefice directly from the 
Pope, was not prepared to answer this point, but Luther had no 
such scruples, and towards the end of the year he published 
twelve propositions directed against Eck. Of these the most 
important was the twelfth : — 

The assertion that the Roman Church is superior to all other 
Churches is proved only by weak and vain (frigidis) papal decrees of 
the last four hundred years, against which militate the accredited 
history of eleven hundred years, the Bible, and the decree of the 
Nicene Council, the holiest of all councils. 

This unheard-of attack on the power of the Roman See made 
an immense sensation. Eck could not leave it unnoticed, nor 
did he wish to, and therefore arranged that he should debate 
with both Wittenberg professors. A letter — according to 
modern notions a very rude one — written during the course 
of negotiations, is illuminating : 2 — 

TO JOHN ECK AT INGOLSTADT 

Wittenbbbo, February 18, 1519. 
I wish you salutation and that you may stop seducing Christian 
souls. I regret, Eck, to find so many reasons to believe that your pro- 

1 As Burke would have said, " this honeyed opiate compounded of treason and 
murder." 

2 Enders, v, 6. 



60 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

fessed friendship for me is hypocritical. You boast that you seek 
God's glory, the truth, the salvation of souls, the increase of the faith, 
and that you teach of indulgences and pardons for the same reasons. 
You have such a thick head and cloudy brain that, as the apostle says, 
you know not what you say. . . . 

I wish you would fix the date for the disputation or tell me if you 
wish me to fix it. More then. Farewell. 

Leipsic was finally chosen as the ground for the debate. 
The faculty of that university made some difficulties, fearing 
to become involved, but Duke George of Albertine Saxony, 
maintaining that the advancement of Christian truth was the 
chief end of the university, forced them to yield. During the 
next six months Luther's principal occupation was the prepara- 
tion for the battle, for which he plunged eagerly into the study 
of Church history and especially of the Canon Law. The re- 
sults of these researches, which left a lasting influence on his 
mind, are brilliantly portrayed in two letters written on the 
same day to his best friend : — 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBUEG 

(Wittenberg, about February 24, 1519. Letter no. 1.) 
Greeting. I beseech you, dear Spalatin, be not fearful nor let your 
heart be downcast with human cares. You know that if Christ did not 
rule me, I should have perished long ago, either at the first contro- 
versy about indulgences, or when my sermon on them was published, 
or when I promulgated my Resolutions, or when I answered Prierias, 
or recently in the interview at Augsburg, especially as I went thither. 
What mortal man was there who did not either fear or hope that I 
would cause my death by one of these things ? In fact Olsnitzer re- 
cently wrote from Rome to our honorary chancellor, the Duke of Po- 
merania, that my Resolutions and Answer to Prierias had so perturbed 
the Roman Church that they were at a loss how to suppress them, but 
that they intended to attack me not by law, but by Italian subtility 
— these were his very words. I understand this to mean poison or 
assassination. 

I repress much for the sake of the Elector and university which 
otherwise I should pour out against that spoiler of the Bible and the 
Church, Rome, or rather Babylon. For the truth of the Scripture and 
of the Church cannot be spoken, dear Spalatin, without offending that 



THE LEIPSIC DEBATE 61 

beast. Do not therefore hope that I shall be quiet or safe in future 
unless you wish me to give up theology altogether. Let my friends 
think me mad. For the thing will not be ended (if it be of God) even 
should all my friends desert me as all Christ's disciples and friends 
deserted him, and the truth be left alone to save herself by her own 
might, not by mine nor by yours nor by any man's. I have expected 
this hour from the first. 

My twelfth proposition was extorted from me by Eck, but, as the 
Pope has defenders enough, I do not think they ought to take it ill 
unless they forget the freedom of debate. At all events, even should I 
perish, nothing will be lost to the world. For my friends at Wittenberg 
have now progressed so far, by God's grace, that they do not need me 
at all. What will you ? I fear I am not worthy to suffer and die for 
such a cause. That will be the blessed lot of better men, not of so foul 
a sinner. . . . 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBUKG 

(Wittenberg, about February 24, 1519. Letter no. 2.) 
Greeting. I had just finished my last letter, dear Spalatin, when 
Carlstadt gave me the letter which you sent him, full of such com- 
plaints that I was almost moved to anger. You urge me to tell my 
plan. I am not unwilling for you to know what I intend, but I know 
the best way to defeat a plan is to tell it, especially if the matter be of 
God, who does not like his plans to be laid bare before they are ful- 
filled. ... 

You know that I have to do with a crafty, arrogant, slippery, loud- 
mouthed sophist, whose one aim is to traduce me publicly and hand 
me over to the Pope devoted to all the furies. You will understand 
his iniquitous snares if you read his twelfth proposition. 1 Wherefore, 
considering his craft, and seeing that I was about to be ruined by his 
arts, I carefully prepared my twelfth proposition, that he may imagine 
that he has most certainly triumphed, and while singing a psean of 
joy, shall forthwith expose himself to the scorn of all, God willing. 
For I know that at this stage of the debate he will burst forth pas- 
sionately gesticulating and shouting that I cannot prove my assertion, 
but have made a mistake in reckoning time (as you also think), and 
that it is much more than four hundred years ago, more than a thou- 
sand, ever since the time of Pope Julius I, directly after the Nicene 

1 Asserting the universal supremacy of the Pope, opposed to Luther's twelfth 
proposition quoted above. 



68 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Council, that the Roman Church published decrees asserting that she 
was the superior of all and that no council could be called without her 
assent. Relying on these statements he will even laugh, I hope, at my 
incredible folly and rashness. 

Then I shall say that these decrees were not then received, and that 
if Gregory IX, the first collector of the decretals (who in the time of 
Frederick II canonized St. Francis, St. Dominic, and our own St. 
Elizabeth, i. e., is not yet dead four hundred years), and if Boniface 
VIII, author of the sixth book of decretals, and Clement V, author of 
the Clementines, had not collected these decretals and published them, 
Germany would doubtless never have known them. 1 Therefore it is 
to be attributed to these three popes that the decretals of the Roman 
pontiffs were spread abroad and the Roman tyranny was established. 

To what conclusion do these arguments lead ? I deny that the Roman 
Church is superior to all Churches, but not that she is our superior, as 
she now is de facto. How will Eck prove that the Church of Constan- 
tinople, or any Greek Church, or that of Antioch or Alexandria or 
Africa or Egypt, was ever under the Roman Church or received 
bishops confirmed by her? . . . 

We Germans established the authority of the popes as much as we 
could when the Empire was transferred to us, and in return we have 
borne them as a punishment of the furies, headsmen and tormentors 
and blood-suckers of archbishoprics and bishoprics. 

I call the decretals " vain " because they twist scriptural texts to 
their own purposes, texts which speak nothing of government but 
only of spiritual food and faith. . . . 

I count the papal power as a thing indifferent, like wealth or health 
or other temporal goods, and am very sorry that so much is made of 
temporal matters, which are insisted on as if by the command of God, 
though he always teaches that they should be despised. How can I bear 
with equanimity this perverse interpretation of God's Word and that 
wrong opinion, even if I allow the power of the Roman Church as a 
thing con venient ? 

Farewell. 

Brother Martin Luther, Augustinian. 

1 The Canon Law is composed of several parts. The first, the Vecretum of Gra- 
tian is a collection of ancient canons made in the twelfth century. To this Greg- 
ory IX added five books of decretals (literoe decretales 1243), and Boniface VIII 
a sixth hook (liber sextus, 1298) . Other additions, the Clementines and Exlravagantei, 
were made at various times later until 1484. Many of the decretals in the Canon 
Law are forgeries, as Luther says. 



THE LEIPSIC DEBATE 68 

Of the sojourn in Leipsic (June 27-July 18), the reception 
there and the debate itself, the best account is given by Luther 
in the letter next translated. The encounter was held in a richly 
decorated hall of the Pleissenburg, a castle only recently torn 
down to make way for the new Rathaus. A large and dis- 
tinguished audience had gathered, including Duke George, later 
one of the most determined opponents of the new doctrine. 

An eye-witness has left us the first description of Luther as 
he appeared on this occasion, and one which agrees well with 
Cranach's earliest portrait of him, the wood-cut of 1520. He 
was of middle height, so emaciated that one could almost count 
his bones, yet he seemed in the vigor of manhood. His voice was 
clear and distinct. Polite and cheerful in society, he affected no 
stoicism, but gave each hour its due. His serene countenance 
was never disturbed. The richness and fluency of his Latin 
diction was noticed, as was his careful preparation of the ma- 
terial. 

Only contemporaries could appreciate the ability of the speak- 1 
ers in this debate, full notes of which have been preserved. In 
learning and force of argument the honors seem to be about 
equal. Eck manoeuvred skilfully to make Luther's opinions 
appear identical with those of Huss. The latter took up the chal- 
lenge, and on the second day of the combat boldly asserted : 
" It is certain that among the articles of John Huss and the 
Bohemians there are many which are most Christian and evan- 
gelic, which the universal Church is not able to condemn." 
These words sent a thrill through the audience : Duke George 
put his arms akimbo, shook his head, and said loudly, "That's 
the plague." 

Eck had accomplished his point in driving Luther to a posi- 
tion of universally acknowledged heresy. He played his ad- 
vantage with great skill, taxing his opponent over and over with 
being a Hussite, Luther often interrupting him with " It is 
false," or, " He lies impudently." 

After the question of the papal supremacy was put aside for 
other points, the debate, which continued until July 14, was 
comparatively tame. Let us now hear what Luther has to say 
about it : — 



64 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 



TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBUEG 

(WitteSbebg,) July 20, 1519. 

... I should have written long ago about this famous debate of 
ours, but I had neither time nor place to do it. Certain men of Leipsic, 
neither candidly nor justly, triumph with Eck and babble of his fame, 
but you can judge of it from my account. 

Almost the instant that we came, before we had descended from our 
wagons, the Inhibition l of the Bishop of Merseburg was fixed to the 
doors of the churches, alleging against the debate some new points, 
declaratory and other. This was disregarded, and he who had posted 
the notice was thrown into chains by the Town Council because he had 
done it without their knowledge. 

Accomplishing nothing by this trick, they resorted to another. Hav- 
ing called Carlstadt aside, they urged him (at Eck's desire) to agree 
that the debate should not be reported in writing, for he hoped to get 
the better of us by shouting and gesticulating, in which points indeed 
he is our superior. Carlstadt said that the agreement had already been 
made and must be adhered to, and that the debate should be reported. 
At length, to obtain this point at all, he was forced to consent that the 
report of the debate should not be published prior to the decision of 
the judges. Then a new dispute arose about choosing them. At length 
they forced him to consent that the judges should be chosen after the 
disputation was finished, otherwise they would not debate at all. Thus 
they put us on the horns of a dilemma, so that in either case we should 
have the worst of it, whether we refused to debate on these terms, or 
recognized the necessity of submitting to unjust judges. See how plain 
is their guile by which they would filch the freedom we had agreed 
upon ! For we know that the universities and the Pope will either never 
decide or will decide against us, which is just what they desire. 

The next day they called me aside and proposed the same thing. I 
refused their conditions, fearing the Pope. Then they proposed the 
universities as judges without the Pope. I asked that the conditions 
agreed upon be observed, and when they refused I withdrew and de- 
clined to debate. At once an uncontradicted report went abroad that 
I dared not, and what was worse would allow no judges. The affair 
was bandied about and interpreted in the most odious and malignant 
light, so that they even won over our best friends and prepared a last- 

1 The bishop thought the matter of the debate had already been decided by the 
bull of November 9, 1518, mentioned above, p. 54. 




AeTHERNA IPSE JVAE MENTIS SIMVLACHRA LVTHEFVS 
E>CPFLW1TATWXTVS CERA LVCAE OCCIDVOJ 

MDXX 



LUTHER AS MONK 
After an etching by Cranach, 1520 



THE LEIPSIC DEBATE 66 

ing shame for our university. So I went to them with conciliatory 
friends, and accepted their conditions, even though indignant at them. 
But I reserved my power of appeal and excluded the Roman Curia, so 
that there might he no prejudice to my case. 

Eck and Carlstadt debated a week on free will. Carlstadt with 
God's help advanced splendid and copious arguments and citations and 
brought books to prove his points. A chance was thus given Eck to 
oppose Carlstadt ; he refused to debate unless the books were left at 
home, because by them Carlstadt could prove the correctness of his 
own quotations from the Bible and the Fathers and the inaccuracy of 
Eck's. So another tumult arose. At length it was decided for Eck that 
the books should be left at home, but who cannot see that when a ques- 
tion of truth is at stake it is desirable to have the books at hand? 
Never did hatred and ambition show themselves more impudently 
than here. 

At last the man of guile conceded all that Carlstadt argued for, 
although he had violently opposed it, and agreed with him in all, boast- 
ing that he had brought Carlstadt over to his opinion. He abandoned 
Scotus and the Scotists, Capreolus and the Thomists, saying that the 
schoolmen had thought and taught the same as Carlstadt. Then and 
there fell Scotus and Capreolus with their respective schools ! 

The next week he debated with me — at first sharply about the 
primacy of the Pope. His strength lay in the words, " thou art Peter," 
" feed my sheep," " follow thou me," and " strengthen thy brethren," 
together with a lot of quotations from the Fathers. (You will soon see 
what I answered.) Then, resting his whole weight on the Council of 
Constance, which had condemned the assertion of Hoss that the papacy 
was dependent on the Emperor, he went to the extreme length of say- 
ing that it bore sway by divine right. Thereupon, as if entering the 
arena, he cast the Bohemians in my teeth, and charged me with being 
an open heretic and an ally of the Hussites. For the sophist is no less 
insolent than rash. These charges tickled the Leipsic audience more 
than the debate itself. 

In rebuttal I pointed to the Greeks for a thousand years, and to the 
ancient Fathers who had not been under the sway of the Roman pon- 
tiff to whom I did not deny a precedence in honor. Then I discussed 
the authority of a council. I said openly that some articles had been 
wrongly condemned [sc. by the Council of Constance], as they had been 
taught in the plainest words by Paul, Augustine, and even Christ him- 
self. At this point the reptile swelled up, painted my crime in the 
darkest colors, and almost drove the audience wild with his rhetoric. 



66 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

At length I proved from the words of that council that not all the 
articles there condemned were heretical and erroneous, so that his 
mode of proof accomplished nothing. And thus the matter rested. 

The third week we debated penance, purgatory, indulgences, and the 
power of a priest to absolve. For he did not care about his dispute with 
Carlstadt, but only that with me. Indulgences fell through completely 
and he agreed to almost all I said, so that their use was turned to 
scorn and mockery. He hoped this would be the subject of a future 
debate with me, as he said in public, that people might understand 
that he made no great matter of indulgences. He is said to have 
granted that had I not disputed the power of the Pope he would have 
agreed with me easily on all points. He even confessed to Carlstadt : 
" If I could only agree with Luther as much as I do with you, I 
would go home with him at once." The man is fickle and subtle, ready 
to do anything. He who once said to Carlstadt that the schoolmen 
taught the same as he, said to me that Gregory of Rimini was the only 
one who supported me against all others. Thus he thinks it no fault to 
assert and deny the same thing at different times. Nor do the men of 
Leipsic grasp this, so great is their stupidity. And what is still more 
monstrous, he asserts one thing in the academy and another in the 
church to the people. Asked by Carlstadt why he did this, the man 
shamelessly replied that the people ought not to be taught points on 
which there was doubt. 

My part thus ended, he debated the last three days with Carlstadt, 
agreeing to and yielding all : that spontaneous action is sin ; that free 
will without grace can do nothing but sin ; that there is sin in every 
[natural] good work ; that it is only grace which enables a man to do 
what he can for the Disposer of grace ; — all of which the schoolmen 
deny. So in the whole debate he treated nothing as it deserved except 
my thirteenth 1 proposition. In the mean time he congratulates him- 
self, triumphs, and reigns, but only until we shall have published our 
side. As the debate turned out badly, I shall draw up additional pro- 
positions. 

The citizens of Leipsic never greeted us nor visited us, but acted 
like the bitterest enemies ; but Eck they followed and clung to and 
invited to dinners in their houses and gave him a robe and a chamois- 
hair gown. They escorted him around on horseback ; in fact they 
tried everything they could think of to insult us. Moreover, they per- 
suaded Csesar Pflug and Duke George to let these things pass. They 

1 That about the supremacy of the Pope quoted above as the twelfth. The 
Dumber had been changed by the interpolation of an additional proposition, 



THE LEIPSIC DEBATE 67 

did give ns one thing, the customary present of wine, which perhaps it 
would not have been safe for them to omit. The few who favored us 
came to us clandestinely, but Dr. Stromer of Auerbach, a man of up- 
right mind, invited us and so did Professor Pistorius. Duke George 
himself invited three of us together. Likewise the most illustrious Duke 
summoned me by myself and talked much with me about my writings, 
especially that on the Lord's Prayer, and mentioned that the Huss- 
ites expected much from me, and that I had raised doubts in many 
consciences about the Lord's Prayer, so that many complained that 
they would not be able to say one paternoster in four days if they 
thought they ought to believe me, and much else to the same effect. Nor 
was I so stupid as not to know the difference between a fife and a f — ; I 
regretted that the excellent and pious prinoe should represent and com- 
ply with the feelings of others when I saw he was so clever in speaking 
like a prince about his own. 

The last exhibition of hatred was this : when on the day of St. Peter 
and St. Paul [June 29] I was asked by our rector, the Duke of Pomer- 
ania, to read the gospel in the chapel of the castle, suddenly the 
report of my preaching filled the city, and such a vast concourse of 
men and women came to hear me that I was compelled to preach in 
the debating-hall, with all the professors and other hostile listeners 
sitting around. The gospel for the day [Matthew xvi, 13-19] clearly 
takes in the subject of both debates, and so I was forced to expound 
the substance of the disputations to all, to the great annoyance of 
Leipsic. 

Stirred up by this, Eck preached four times thereafter in different 
churches, reviling me and attacking all I had said. Thus those would- 
be theologians bade him do. But / was not allowed to preach again, 
although many asked it. I was only to be accused and criminated with- 
out a chance to defend myself. They acted on the same principle 'in 
the debate,' so that Eck, although in the negative, had the last word, 
which I could not refute. 

When Caesar Pflug heard that I had preached (for he was not then' 
present), he said, "I wish Dr. Luther would save his sermons for 
"Wittenberg." In short, I have known hatred before, but never more 
shameless nor more impudent. 

Here you have the whole tragedy. Dr. Plariitz will tell you the rest, 
for he was present in person. Because Eck and Leipsic sought their 
own glory and not the truth, it is no wonder that they began badly and 
ended worse. For whereas we hoped to make peace between "Witten- 
berg and Leipsic, they acted so odiously that I fear it will rather seem 



68 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

/that discord and mutual dislike are now firstborn. I, who try to bridle 
my impetuosity, am not able to banish all dislike of them, because I 
am flesh and their impudent hatred and malignant injustice were over- 
shearing in so sacred and divine a cause. 

Farewell and commend me to the most illustrious Elector. . . . 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 

It is plain from this letter that the writer was smarting under 
the sense of outrage. If he had not been defeated, he had been 
out-manoeuvred. Such debates, of course, decide nothing. Each 
party remained strengthened in its own opinion. In this case, 
too, the universities, to whom the decision was submitted, put 
off giving it for one reason or another. 

Yet the disputation at Leipsic was a turning-point. It showed 
that the Wittenberg monk was no longer in a position where 
reconciliation with the Church was possible. In the train of the 
combat followed a cloud of polemics, half the Germans who 
could write taking sides against the new leader, and the other 
half for him. As this bickering — for that is what most of it 
was — left little permanent result, it need not find a large place 
in the biography of Luther, even though he took an active part 
in the controversy. 

As he has spoken in a recent letter of the danger of assassina- 
tion, it is interesting to see what foundations his suspicions 
had. The peril was probably very slight, but was given some 
color by the visit of suspicious strangers, one of whom he de- 
scribed, many years later, as follows : — 

A man came to me in 1519, with whom I shook hands, and whom 
I took home with me. He said : " Dear Doctor, it surprises me that 
you so readily shake hands with strangers ; are you not afraid of being 
shot ? I am alone with you." I replied : " If you killed me, you would 
die, too." " In that case," said he, " the Pope would make me a saint 
and you a heretic." When I heard that, I called in Sieberger [the 
monastery servant], after which he soon left town. 



CHAPTER VII 

THE PATRIOT. 1519-20 

The revolt from Rome was by no means a purely religious 
phenomenon. Its enormous and immediate success can only be , 
explained by the great variety of motives to which it appealed. 
It promised to the Christian a purer faith ; to the patriotic Ger- 
man a stronger country freed from the foreign yoke ; to the 
lower classes a millennium of universal brotherhood, equality 
and freedom. The hopes of all parties were not destined to be 
realized, some of them suffered a bitter disappointment ; but all 
were willing to join in the common movement for their special 
ends, and it was this union and interaction of forces which pro- 
duced that great revolution, usually known as the Reformation. 
And of these stirring times Luther was the heart and soul. 
During the years 1519-1523 especially, it almost seemed as 
if he were lifted above himself and transcended the limits of 
his own personality. Of this time Professor Harnack has well 
said : — 

For a period — it was only for a few years — it seemed as if his 
spirit would attract to itself and mould into a wonderful unity all that 
the time had of living vigor in it; as if to him, as to no one hefore, the 
power had been given to make his personality the spiritual centre 
of the nation, and to summon his century into the lists, armed with 
every weapon. 

Luther himself was astonished at the almost universal re- 
sponse to his appeal. The course of events reacted on him, 
hurrying him along from a position of humble protest to the 
leadership of all the revolutionary forces of the time. Every 
occurrence carried him on like a wave and left him far in ad- 
vance of his previous station. Each book he read, each friend 
he made, offered a powerful stimulus to his development. His 
progress, accurately traceable in his letters and other writings, 
is a study of absorbing interest. 



70 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

His best friend and ablest lieutenant, at this time as later, 
was Philip Melanchthon, whom he first learned to know in the 
summer of 1518. When called in this year to teach Greek at 
the University of Wittenberg, Melanchthon was not yet twenty- 
one. The precocious youth, who had entered Heidelberg at 
thirteen and had taken the degree of bachelor at fifteen, and 
of master one year later, began at once to lecture on and to edit 
the classics. These studies were his passion, though he later 
won greater distinction in the field of divinity. He was a per- 
fect contrast to Luther, a scholar and pedagogue rather than a 
man of action, a peacemaker rather than a warrior. The rela- 
tions of the two men were always uncommonly close. Though 
the younger occasionally found the support given him by the 
elder and more robust irksome, he leaned upon it, and more than 
once found that when deprived of it he was unable to stand 
alone. Melanchthon was the disciple whom Luther loved, and, 
as can be seen from this extract of a letter to Spalatin written 
a few days after the young scholar's advent (August 31, 1518), 
loved at first sight : — 

Doubt not that we have done all and shall do all you recommend 
about Philip Melanchthon. He delivered an oration the fourth day 
after he came, in the purest and most learned style, by which he won 
the thanks and admiration of all, so that you need not worry about 
commending him to us. "We have quickly abandoned the opinion 
we formed from his small stature and homeliness, and now rejoice 
and wonder at his real worth, and thank our most illustrious Elector 
and your good offices, too, for giving him to us. Indeed, it is you 
who must rather study to put his merits in a proper light to our sover- 
eign. While Philip is alive, I desire no other Greek teacher. I only 
fear that perhaps his delicate health cannot well endure the life in 
our parts, and besides, I hear that his salary is so small that the boast- 
ful University of Leipsic hopes to get him away from us soon. Indeed 
he was called by them before he came to us. I suspect (and not I 
alone) that Pf effinger ' will prove true to his custom in this matter 
also, and be too faithful a guardian of the Elector's purse. And so, 
dear Spalatin, if I may speak frankly, as with a good friend, take 
care not to despise Melanchthon for his looks and his tender age, for 
the man is worthy of all honor. I would not have our university want- 
1 The treasurer of Electoral Saxony : cf . supra, p. 34. 



THE PATRIOT 71 

ing in those humane studies, the lack of which gives our rivals some 
excuse for making us a byword. 

From this time on Luther's letters are full of allusions to 
him " who has almost every virtue known to man and yet is 
my dear and intimate friend." Shortly after the Leipsic debate 
Melanchthon published some theses denying the doctrine of 
transubstantiation — an important contribution to the thought 
of Luther, who speaks of them and their author in a letter to 
Staupitz, October 3, 1519 : — 

You have seen Philip's theses by this time — somewhat bold, to be 
sure, but true. His solution of the problem naturally would excite our 
admiration as it has. If Christ please, Melanchthon will make many 
Luthers and a most powerful enemy of the devil and of scholasticism, 
for he knows both the trumpery of the world and the rock of Christ, 
therefore shall he be mighty. 

Melanchtbon's fundamental ideas were drawn from Luther's 
inexhaustible mine of thought, but he developed, clarified, and 
systematized them, and thus repaid the debt he had contracted. 
Another powerful influence towards the formation of the new 
system of theology in Luther's mind was found in the writings 
of John Huss. The German reformer had read one of them 
during the first years in the cloister, and had wondered how a 
heretic could speak so Christianly, but thinking that the par- 
ticular book must have been composed before the apostasy, he 
shut it up and forgot it. Later in preparing for the Leipsic 
debate, he had read enough of the history of the Council of 
Constance, where Huss was condemned, to believe that many 
of the latter's propositions were evangelic and orthodox, and he 
had flatly declared his conviction of this at the encounter with 
Eck. Several Hussites, having formed hopes in the new re- 
former destined to be realized, had gathered at this great event, 
and two of the most distinguished of them had written him and 
sent one of Huss's works. Luther did not have time to read 
it until early in 1520. He then first recognized that in many 
things the Bohemian had been his predecessor, and he did notj 
hesitate to proclaim himself the condemned heretic's disciple; 
How deep and fervent was his admiration can best be gathered 
from his own words : — 



72 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

TO GEOKGB SPALATIN AT ALTENBUKG 

(Wittenberg, February, 1520. 1 ) 
. • • Having consulted with friends about the Elector's advice, I find 
I cannot, without peril to my conscience, offer peace of my own ac- 
cord. I have done enough that way hitherto, and met no response to 
my efforts ; I am always treated with force when it comes to negotia- 
tion, and cannot relax my whole strength as long as Eck is clamoring : 
I am obliged to commend the cause to God and follow him loyally, 
having committed my ship to the winds and waves. I can only pray 
for God's mercy. I have an idea that a revolution is about to take 
place unless God withhold Satan. I have seen the devil's artful plans 
for my perdition and for that of many. "What will you ? The Word 
of God can never be advanced without whirlwind, tumult, and danger. 
The Word is of infinite majesty, it is wonderful in the heights and in 
the depths ; as the prophet says : " It slew the fattest of them and 
smote down the chosen men of Israel." One must either despair of 
peace and tranquillity or else deny the Word. War is of the Lord who 
did not come to send peace. Take care not to hope that the cause of 
Christ can be advanced in the world peacefully and sweetly, since you 
see the battle has been waged with his own blood and that of the 
martyrs. I have hitherto taught and held all the opinions of John 
Huss unawares ; so did John Staupitz ; in short, we are all Hussites 
without knowing it. Paul and Augustine are Hussites to a word. Be- 
hold the horror which I have discovered without any Bohemian teacher 
or leader : I know not what to think for astonishment when I see such 
terrible judgments of God on mankind that the plain gospel truth has 
been publicly burned and considered damnable for a hundred years, 
and no one to assert it ! Woe to the land ! 

Farewell. 

Marten - Luther. 

Next to his studies in Huss and in the Canon Law, Luther's 
eyes were opened to the iniquities of Rome by a work of 
Lorenzo Valla, one of the most brilliant of the fifteenth cen- 
tury humanists, the proof that the Donation of Constantino was 
a forgery. This celebrated document, composed in the ninth 
century, purported to be a deed drawn up by the Emperor 

1 For this date, cf . Enders, ii, 345. Kohler argues for a later date ; cf. Luther 
unci die Kirchengeschichte (Erlangen, 1900), i, 198. 



THE PATRIOT T3 

Constantine in the fourth century, presenting the Pope with 
central Italy, and giving him a general overlordship of the 
Western world. The forgery had been received for six uncritical 
centuries as authentic and had become one of the corner-stones 
of the papal pretensions, and of the Canon Law. Luther wrote of 
it, February 24, 1520, to his friend Spalatin as follows : — 

I have at hand Lorenzo Valla's proof (edited by Hutten) that the 
Donation of Constantine is a forgery. Good heavens ! what darkness 
and wickedness is at Borne ! You wonder at the judgment of God 
that such unauthentic, crass, impudent lies not only lived but prevailed 
for so many centuries, that they were incorporated in the Canon Law, 
and (that no degree of horror might be wanting) that they became as 
articles of faith. I am in such a passion that I scarcely doubt that the 
Pope is the Antichrist expected by the world, so closely do their acts, 
lives, sayings, and laws, agree. But more of this when I see you. If 
you have not yet seen the book, I shall take care that you read it. 

Ulrich von Hutten, first mentioned by Luther in the last 
letter, was soon to become one of his strongest supporters and 
allies. A knight of old Franconian family, combining consid- 
erable literary ability with fiery ambition, he devoted his life 
to the cause of patriotism and the resistance of ecclesiastical 
oppression. He and his friend Franz von Sickingen, whose large 
resources and wide connections made him feared even by the 
greater princes, were the leaders of the party of the knights 
whose programme was the restoration of German national pre- 
stige under the leadership of their order. At first the national- 
ists regarded Luther merely as a squabbling monk, but by 
1520 they read the sign of the times more plainly, and saw 
what an immense impulse would be given to the cause of Ger- 
man freedom by uniting it with the cause of spiritual emancipa- 
tion. Hutten had only one fear — that Luther would compromise 
with or else be crushed by the foreign oppressor, and wrote 
urging him to stand fast and promising support : — 

ULRICH VON HUTTEN TO LUTHER AT WITTENBERG 

Mayence, Jane 4, 1520. 
Long live liberty ! If anything hinders you from completing what 
you have begun I shall mourn as a spiritual kinsman and friend. 



74 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Christ be with us, as we bring his teachings again to light, you more 
happily, but I at least according to my powers. May all be like-minded 
with us or soon return to the right way. It is said that you are under 
the ban of the Church. If this is so, how great are you, Luther, how 
great ! . . . But beware ! You see that if you fall it will be a great 
injury to the State, but I know from your actions that you are resolved 
to die rather than merely live. ... Be strong ! But why should I 
admonish you when I have no need ? In any event you have a sup- 
porter in me and may confide your plans to me. Let us defend the 
common freedom and liberty of our long enslaved fatherland ! We 
have God on our side ; if he be for us, who can be against us ? . . . 
Your letters will reach me in Brabant. Write me there and farewell 
in Christ. Salute Melanchthon and Fach and all our friends, and fare- 
well again. 

Shortly after the arrival of this letter came one from an- 
other leader of the party, Sylvester von Schaumburg, offering 
protection in case of need. It seemed to Luther that this sup- 
port came in the nick of time. Hutten had been correctly in- 
formed that the bull against the heresiarch had been drawn up 
at Rome. Cardinal Riario, a friend of Erasmus and a moderate, 
had written the Elector from that city on May 20, urging him 
as he valued his safety to " make that man recant." The letter 
only reached the Elector on July 6, and was promptly forwarded 
to Wittenberg. Luther's answer is eloquent of his attitude : — 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBUKG 

Wittenberg, July 10, 1520. 

... I almost wish that famous bull would come from Rome to 
rage against my doctrine. . . . 

I send the letter of the Franconian knight, Sylvester von Schaum- 
burg, and unless it is too much trouble I wish the Elector would com- 
municate its contents to Cardinal Riario, that they may know in Rome 
that even if they thrust me out of Wittenberg with their furies they 
will only make matters worse, since there are now some not only in 
Bohemia but in the heart of Germany who are able and willing to re- 
ceive me in spite of the thunders of the hostile Curia. 

In this lies their danger ; for were I saved by those protectors I 
should grow more terrible to the Romanists than I am now while 
publicly teaching under the Elector's government. Doubtless this will 



THE PATRIOT 75 

happen unless God interpose. For hitherto I have given in on many 
points, even when enraged, out of respect to my sovereign, but then 
there would surely be no need to consult his wishes. So let them know 
that they owe it neither to my moderation nor to the success of their 
own tyranny, but to the name and authority of the Elector, and to my 
respect for the University of Wittenberg, that I have proceeded no 
further against them. 

My die is cast ; I despise the fury and favor of Rome ; I will never 
be reconciled to them nor commune with them. Let them condemn 
and burn my books. On my side, unless all the fire goes out, I will 
condemn and publicly burn the whole papal law, that slough of 
heresies. The humility I have hitherto shown all in vain shall have an 
end, lest it still further puff up the enemies of the Gospel. 

The more I think of Cardinal Riario's letter the more I despise it. 
I see they write with cowardly fear and a bad conscience, trying to 
put on a ferocious mien with the last gasp. They try to protect their 
folly by force, but they fear they will not succeed as happily as they 
have in times past. But I doubt not that the Lord will accomplish 
his purpose through me (though I am a foul sinner) or through an- 
other. 

Farewell. 

Mabtin Luther, Augustinian. 



CHAPTER VIII 

THE ADDRESS TO THE GERMAN NOBILITY, THE BABYLONIAN 

CAPTIVITY OP THE CHURCH, AND THE FREEDOM OP 

A CHRISTIAN MAN. 1520. 

The art of printing with movable types was invented about 
1450 at Mayence, and spread with such marvellous rapidity 
that before the end of the century every European country 
from Ireland to Turkey, east and west, and from Norway to 
Italy, north and south, had its own presses. The powerful 
stimulus to progress furnished by this discovery has often been 
pointed out ; this mighty engine for disseminating truth made 
accessible to almost all what had before been the property of 
comparatively few. The success of the Eeformation, as of all 
subsequent democratic and progressive movements, may be 
largely attributed to it. 

It is safe to say that Martin Luther was the first man to 
make full use of the press as an agent for appealing to public 
opinion. By means of it he won the support of a majority of his 
countrymen as well as of many foreigners who could read Latin. 
There were, of course, no newspapers, or other periodicals, but 
to supply their want quantities of short pamphlets, and even of 
letters, were poured forth from the printing-houses and eagerly 
bought and read. A vast number of these were written by 
Luther, a born pamphleteer, who may be said with some truth 
to have created the German book trade, for before he began to 
write, a majority of books printed in Germany were Latin, but 
soon afterwards the scale turned rapidly and. decisively in favor 
of German. The exact figures will bring home the vivifying 
effect of the new spirit. In 1518 there were only 150 German 
works published, in 1519 the number rose to 260, in 1520 to 
570, in 1521 to 620, in 1522 to 680, in 1523 to 935, and in 1524 
to 990. In five years the output increased more than sixfold. 

Luther was an extremely prolific author. His works, in num- 



LITERARY WORK 77 

/ber more than four hundred, fill more than a hundred volumes. 

vHe was also an extremely popular author. On February 14, 
1519, Froben, the great Basel publisher, wrote him that his 
works were already exported to France, Spain, Italy, the Low 
Countries, and England, as well as to all parts of the Empire. 
The number of the editions was legion. The letters of the 
time are full of references to the latest publications of the 
Keformer. On November 1, 1520, for example, Glarean writes 
Zwingli from Paris that no books are bought more quickly than 
Luther's, and that at the last Frankfort fair (the great book 
mart of Germany held in the spriEg of every year) fourteen 
hundred copies of his works had been sold. This was before 
Luther had written any of his greatest works. 

At first, as we have seen, the Wittenberg professor devoted 
himself chiefly to commentaries on Scriptures, of which the 
lectures on Romans and Galatians have already been noticed. 
During the years 1519-21 he again took up the Psalms and pub- 
lished in several parts a stout commentary on the first twenty- 
one. These Operationes in Psalmos, as they were called, won 
the admiration of Erasmus. They did not satisfy the author, 
however, who feared that being in Latin they would not edify 
the common people. While he was lecturing on them he wrote 
a letter on the subject, from which, as it is almost unknown, 
even to scholars, we will translate a portion, including the 
observations on Melanchthon's work : 1 — 

TO GEKAJRD LISTBIUS AT ZWOLLE 

Wittenberg, July 30 (1520). 
. . . Philip is theologizing most happily, lecturing, as a first attempt, 
and yet with incredible success to almost five hundred auditors on 
Paul's Epistle to the Romans. . . . I do not think that for a thousand 
years Holy Scripture has been treated with the same simplicity and 
clearness, for his talent is next that of the apostolic age. ... I lose 
these years of mine in unhappy wars and would like all my works to 
perish, lest they should become obstacles to pure theology and better 
geniuses, although to-day I expound my philosophy without slaughter 
and blood. It is my fate that all evil beasts attack me alone, all seek- 
1 For text of this letter see Appendix hi. 



78 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

ing to win the laurel and palm from me. God grant that I may be 
David pouring out blood, but that Melanchthon may be Solomon reign- 
ing in peace. Amen. ... 

I have completed my bulky commentary on the Psalms to the 
xvrnth, and have almost begun to be sorry for doing it, not on ac- 
count of the labor, but because these works are so little popular and do 
not capture many, nor have I yet decided whether to publish any more 
(for it is the food of the perfect), and not rather treatises more, easy 
to be understood. . . . 

Luther's sermons were often published shortly after their 
delivery, especially if they had to do with some question of the 
day. Such was the sermon on the ban already mentioned (1518), 
and such was the sermon on the Lord's Supper advocating the 
participation of the laity in the cup. This excited an outcry 
from the preacher's enemies, especially Duke George and the 
Bishop of Merseburg. Consequently Luther published an ex- 
planation, which was considerably more radical than the original 
homily : — 

I published a sermon on the venerable sacrament of the altar [he 
begins], in which I said that it seemed good that both bread and wine 
should be given to any one that desired it. Here upon my dear friends, 
who thirsted after my blood, thought they had me in a sack, and 
bawled out : " We have won ! " 

Another work of 1519 was the Tesseradecas, or Fourteen, 
written to console the sick elector. The author classifies all 
goods and ills in seven most original categories : those which 
are over, under, before, behind, on the right, on the left, and 
within one. 

Not many months after completing this, Luther set his hand 
to a little treatise on ethics, entitled Good Works. These are 
taken up in the order of the Ten Commandments, the first and 
greatest duty being faith. 

Of all Luther's works the most eminent, next to his transla- 
tion of the Bible, are three pamphlets written in the latter half 
of 1520 : To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation on 
the Improvement of the Christian Estate, A Prelude on the 
Babylonian Captivity of the Church, and The Freedom of a 
Christian. 



TO THE GERMAN NOBILITY 79 

The first of these is a rousing appeal to his countrymen to 
right the many wrongs under which Germany suffers, especially 
such as she endures from Roman tyranny. It was written under 
the influence of the patriots, with whom the Reformer now made 
common cause. The inspiration to write came largely from them, 
and the sources of much in the work are found in the writings 
of Hutten and Crotus Rubeanus, as well as in Erasmus' Dia- 
logue of St. Peter and Julius II. 1 Many things were also taken 
from private letters and personal conversations with friends 
who had been in Rome, especially a Dr. John Ton Wick, who 
stopped at Wittenberg in June, 1520, on his way from Italy to 
Hamburg. A far more important source is found in the Griev- 
ances of the German Nation presented at the Diet of Augsburg 
in 1518. But what Luther borrowed he made his own. He did 
not need Hutten to make him a patriot nor the Grievances to 
tell him what was rotten in the Empire. The book, like its 
author's character, in which so many influences had been at 
work, was not a mere aggregate of certain external elements, 
but something new and original, fused by genius into a living 
organism. It is a work of world-wide importance, at once pro- 
phesying and moulding the future. 

Luther dedicated the book to his colleague in the university, 
Nicholas von Amsdorf, in a stirring preface dated June 23, 
1520: — 

God's grace and peace. Honorable, worthy, dear friend ! The time 
to keep silence is past and the time to speak has come, as Ecclesiastes 
says. I have, according to our plan, brought together some proposi- 
tions on the improvement of the Christian estate, and have addressed 
them to the Christian Nobility of the German Nation, to see whether 
God will help his Church through the laity, since the clergy, to whom 
such matters rather belong, has become entirely heedless of them. I am 
sending them to you, worthy sir, to correct, and, at need, to improve. 
I am well aware that people will not let me escape unblamed for hav- 
ing esteemed myself too highly, in that I, a poor, despised man, dare 
to address such great and noble persons on such important affairs, as 
though there were no one in the world except Dr. Luther who could 

1 Mentioned as a source of Knaake (Weimar), vi, 393, but wrongly attributed 
to Fanstus Andrelinns. Cf . F. M. Nichols : The Epistles of Erasmus (London. 
1901-1904), ii, 446. 



80 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

take on himself the care of the Christian estate, and give counsel to 
such high and mighty persons. I do not excuse myself : let him blame 
me who will. Perhaps I owe my God and the world some folly, which 
I have now undertaken, as far as in me lies, to pay honestly, even if 
it be to become court fool. If I cannot pay it, at least no one will dare 
buy me a fool's cap or cut my comb, for he who fastens bells on his 
neighbor keeps some for himself. I must fulfil the proverb that when- 
ever the world has some work to be done, a monk must do it even if he 
be ground to pieces by it. In times past fools have often spoken wisely 
and the wise have often been great fools, as St. Paul says : If any man 
would be wise, let him become a fool. As I am not only a fool, but a 
doctor sworn to defend Holy Scripture, I am glad that I now have a 
chance to discharge my oath, even if I do it in a foolish way. Please 
excuse me to those who have moderate understanding, for I know not 
how to deserve the favor of those who are wise beyond measure : I 
have often tried to do it with great pains, but from henceforth will not 
try nor care what they think. God help us to seek not our own but his 
glory. Amen. 

After this dedication the author commences with a compli- 
ment to "the noble young blood Charles " and an appeal to him 
to reform the grievances which weigh so heavily on all men. He 
then goes on to show why it is that the laity have never been 
able to bring the clergy to account : — 

"The Romanists have built three walls about themselves with 
great dexterity, with which they have hitherto protected themselves so 
that no one has been able to reform them, and the whole of Christen- 
dom has consequently declined. The first wall is that if the civil au- 
thority presses them, they affirm that civil government has no rights 
over them, but contrariwise spiritual over temporal. Secondly, if one 
would punish them by the Bible, they oppose it by saying that no one 
has a right to interpret the Bible except the Pope. Thirdly, if they are 
threatened with a general council, they pretend that only the Pope has 
the right to summon a council. So they have privily stolen three rods 
from us, to remain unpunished, and they have entrenched themselves 
in these three walls to do all rascality and evil. . . . May God now 
give us one of the trumpets by which the walls of Jericho were thrown 
down. ... 

" The first wall consists in the discovery that the Pope, bishops, 
priests, and monks are the spiritual estate, whereas princes, lords, la- 



TO THE GERMAN NOBILITY 81 

borers, and peasants are of the temporal estate. . . . But all Christians 
are really of the spiritual estate and there is no difference except of 
office, . . . for we were all made priests by baptism ... a higher 
consecration than any that Pope or bishop gives. But handling God's 
Word and the sacrament is simply the work of the priest, bishop and 
Pope, as bearing the sword and punishing evil is the work of the civil 
magistrate. Even so cobblers, smiths and peasants — though conse- 
crated priests and bishops — have their own work. Each one should 
help his neighbor's body and soul as the members of the body serve 
one another. 

" Now one may see how Christian is their law that the temporal au- 
thority has no right to punish the spiritual. That is as much as to say 
that when the eye is suffering, the hand should do nothing for it. . . . 
Wherefore the temporal powers of Christendom should freely exercise 
their office, not regarding whether it is Pope, bishop, or priest that they 
punish, but only that the guilty suffer. 

" The second wall is still frailer and poorer, the claim, namely, that 
they alone are masters of the Bible. Although their whole life long 
they learn nothing in it, yet they presume to say that they alone un- 
derstand it, and juggle with such words as that the Pope cannot err : 
be he bad or good, one cannot teach him a letter ! It is for this reason 
that so many heretical and unchristian, yes, unnatural laws stand in 
the Canon Law. . . . 

" The third wall falls of itself when the first two are down, for when 
the Pope acts against Scripture, we are bound by Scripture to punish 
and compel him." There is no Scriptural proof that the Pope only can 
call a council : to assert this is like saying " if a fire break out in a city 
every one should stand still and let it go on and burn as it pleases, 
because the private citizens have not the power of the mayor, or be- 
cause the fire started in the mayor's house. . . . No one in Christen- 
dom has the right to do harm." 

Now we will examine the articles which should properly be treated 
by a council. If the Pope and bishops loved Christ, they would busy 
themselves with them day and night, but as they do not love Christ, let 
the temporal power attend to them, not regarding the bans and thun- 
ders of the clergy, for one unjust ban is better than ten just absolu- 
tions and one unjust absolution worse than ten just bans. . . . 

1. It is horrible and terrible that the Primate of all Christendom, 
who boasts he is Christ's Vicar and St. Peter's follower, should live in 
more worldly pomp than any king or emperor, and that he who is 
called "most holy and spiritual" is really more worldly than the. 



82 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

world itself. The Pope should therefore be forced to lire more 
simply. 

" 2. What is the nse of that people in Christendom who are called 
cardinals ? I will tell you. Italy and Germany have many rich clois- 
ters, foundations, livings, and benefices which people do not know how 
' to turn to the profit of Rome better than by making cardinals and 
giving them abbacies and bishoprics, though in so doing they trample 
God's service under foot. ... I advise that the cardinals be reduced 
in number, or else that the Pope support them from his own purse. 
Twelve would be enough, with one thousand gulden * a year." 

3. The papal court should be reduced to one hundredth part of its 
present size. Germany gives more to the Pope than to the Emperor. 
The annates (one half the income of one year payable by all ap- 
pointees of benefices) should be abolished, as well as raising money 
by the Pope under pretext of the Turkish war. The numerous reserva- 
tions of the Pope to appointments in certain months and to certain 
livings should be curtailed. Falls should no longer be Bold to arch- 
bishops, and the habit of appointing old and sickly men to offices in 
order to have a fresh vacancy soon should be stopped. Another crying 
abuse is plurality ; Luther has heard of one man in Rome who holds 
twenty-two livings, seven provostships and forty-four canonries. Simony 
and the transfer of appointments under the fraudulent pretext of a 
" mental reservation " on the part of the Pope is a sin and a shame. 
In short, at Rome, " there is a buying and selling, a change and ex- 
change, a crying and lying, fraud, robbery, theft, luxury, whoredom, 
rascality, and despite of God in every way, so that it would not be 
possible for Antichrist to outdo Rome in iniquity." There all things 
are sold and all laws can be abrogated for money. " Let no one think 
I exaggerate : it is public ; they cannot deny it." If I want to fight 
the Turks, the worst Turks are those in Italy. 

" Now, though I am too little to propose articles for the reformation 
of such things, yet will I sing my fool's game to the end and say, as 
much as my reason is able, what might and should be done by the 
temporal power or a general council." 

1. Each prince should forbid annates. 

2. No foreigners should be allowed to take benefices. 

3. An imperial law should be made that no ecclesiastic should go to 
Rome to get any dignity and that whoever appealed to Rome should 
lose his office. 

1 Five hundred dollars; in purchasing power worth about twenty times as 
much. 



TO THE GERMAN NOBILITY 83 

4. No legal cause should be appealed to Rome. 1 

5. There should be no more papal reservations. 

6. There should be no more " casus reservati." (Legal actions 
which could only be heard in Rome.) 

7. The Pope should abolish most offices and support the rest himself. 

8. Bishops should be invested by the civil magistrate as in 
France and not obliged to swear allegiance to the Pope. 

9. The Pope should claim no authority over the Emperor, whom he 
should crown only as a bishop does a king. It is ridiculous for the 
Pope to claim that when the Empire is vacant he inherits it. The 
Donation of Gonstantine is an unexampled lie. 

10. The Pope should give up his pretensions to Naples and Sicily. 

11. Kissing the Pope's foot and other silly signs of respect should 
be abolished. 

12. There should be no more pilgrimages to Rome, especially in the 
years of jubilee. No one should undertake any pilgrimage without 
the consent of his pastor. 

13. The begging friars are a curse. Many monasteries should be 
suppressed and no more founded. It would be an excellent thing if 
the inmates were allowed to leave when they pleased " as in the time 
of the apostles and long after." 

" 14. We see how it has happened that many a poor priest is bur- 
dened with wife and child and wounded in his conscience and yet no 
one does aught to help him. ... I advise that it be left free to every 
man to marry or not as he chooses. . . . Those who live together as 
man and wife are surely married before God." 

15. It is a shame that in the cloisters abbots and abbesses make 
their brothers and sisters confess their secret sins and then persuade 
them that they are going to hell. 

16. Vigils and private masses should be abolished or reduced in 
number. 

" 17. Certain pains and penalties provided by the Canon Law must 
be done away, especially the interdict which was doubtless invented 
by the evil spirit. For is it not the devil's work to mend a sin by doing 
greater sin ? And is it not an enormous sin to stop all divine services ? " 

18. All saints' days and holidays should be done away except Sun- 
days, for now they are only spent in drunkenness, gaming, and idle- 
ness. 

19. Marriages between distant relations should be allowed, as their 

1 Compare these provisions with the English statutes of Provisors and Prse- 



84 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

prohibition is only a means of the Pope getting money. Fasts should 
be left free. 

20. Shrines and chapels in fields and woods should be taken down. 
Pilgrimages to them cause all kinds of disorders. It makes no difference 
if miracles are performed at these shrines, " for were there no other 
sign that these are not of God, this would be enough, that men flock 
to them like cattle without reason." If the authorities refuse to abate 
these nuisances let every man resolve not to be deceived by them. 

21. One of the greatest needs is that begging should be prohibited 
throughout Christendom. Each city should take care of its own poor, 
and nothing should be given to sturdy pilgrims, and friars. " There is 
no other trade in which there is so much rascality and cheating as 
mendicancy." 

22. Foundations and canonries should be reduced to a small number 
in the cathedrals which would serve to support children of the nobility. 
Pluralities should be forbidden. 

23. Religious brotherhoods and such things should be abolished. 
Papal commissaries ought to be chased out of the country. 

24. It is high time that some effort be made to heal the Bohemian 
schism. It should be granted that Huss and Jerome of Prague were 
wrongly burned. " If I knew that the Beghards had no other error 
about the sacrament of the altar except the belief that it was natural 
bread and wine, though the flesh of Christ were in it, I would not cast 
them out, but let them live under the Bishop of Prague, for it is not an 
article of faith to believe that natural bread and wine are not in the 
sacrament — which is a delusion of Aquinas and the Pope — but 
merely to believe that true and natural flesh and blood are in the bread 
and wine. ..." 

" 25. The universities need a good, stiff reform ; I must say it, let it 
offend whom it may. ... It is my advice that the books of Aristotle, 
— Physics, Metaphysics, The Soul, and Ethics, — which have hitherto 
been esteemed the best, be entirely removed from the curriculum, 
together with all others which boast that they teach natural science, 
although from them one learns neither natural nor spiritual things. 
No one has ever understood Aristotle's meaning, and yet this study 
is kept up to waste time and burden the soul. I venture to think that 
a potter has more natural science than is contained in all those books. 
It is a sorrow to my heart that that cursed (verdammte), arrogant, 
rascally heathen has made fools of so many of the best Christians. God 
has plagued us thus for our sins. In his best book, On the Soul, Aris- 
totle teaches that the soul dies with the body. . . . There is no worse 



TO THE GERMAN NOBILITY 85 

book than his Ethics, which goes directly counter to God's grace and 
Christian virtue. . . . But I would gladly allow Aristotle's books on 
Logic, Rhetoric, and Poetics to be kept, at least in an abbreviated form 
without elaborate commentaries. . . . Besides these studies I recom- 
mend Latin, Greek, Hebrew, mathematics, and history. . . . 

" The schools of medicine I will allow to reform themselves, but 
take the schools of law and theology to myself. To the former I say 
that it were good that the whole Canon Law, from the first to the last 
letter, especially the Decretals, were eradicated. More than enough 
law is to be found in the Bible. . . . And moreover the law of the 
Church nowadays is not what is written in the books, but whatever the 
Pope or his followers want. . , . God help us ! What a wilderness 
the Civil Law has become ! Although it is much better and wiser than 
the Canon Law — in which, except God's name, there is nothing good 
— yet there is far too much of it. . . . It seems to me that the laws 
of each State of the Empire should have precedence over the Imperial 
law, which should only be used in case of need. "Would to God that 
each land had its own short law as each has its special nature and 

gifts.;' 

In the schools of divinity the Bible should be supreme, and other 
works be duly subordinated. 

/ Each city should have schools for boys and girls, where the gospel 
should be read to them either in Latin or German. 

26. It should no more be taught that the Pope, having transferred 
the Empire to the Germans, has superiority over the Emperor. 1 

27. It is now time to speak of some things amiss in the civil polity, 
having thoroughly treated the abuses of the Church. 

Sumptuary laws should be passed restraining extravagance in dress. 
" But the greatest misfortune to Germany is usury. ... A bridle 
should be put in the mouth of the Fuggers and such companies, who 
make from twenty to one hundred per cent on their money annu- 
ally." It would be better to increase agriculture and diminish com- 
merce. 

It is shameful that Christians should allow brothels. The chief 
sinners in these places are the clergy. No man should therefore be 
allowed to vow celibacy before thirty. 

This brief analysis of Luther's greatest work can give but \ 
a faint idea of the cause of its tremendous and immediate pop- ' 

1 This article, which repeats the substance of the ninth, was not in the first 
edition. 



86 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

ular success. This lay in the seasonableness of the strong words, 
which expressed what every one was thinking and what all 
desired. In timeliness and popularity it might be compared 
with Uncle Tom's Cabin, though in dignity of treatment and 
creative thought it is far above that excellent novel. 

Luther's vehemence offended some even of his best friends. 
Lang went so far as suggesting that the work be recalled a few 
days after its appearance, early in August. His letter met with 
the following response : — 

TO JOHN LANG AT EBFUKT 

Wittebberg, August 18, 1520. 

Greeting. Dear Father, is my pamphlet, which you term a trumpet- 
blast, really so fierce and cruel as you and all others seem to think ? 
I confess it is free and aggressive, and yet it pleases many and does 
not even much displease our court. I am not able to determine my 
own place in the present movement ; perhaps I am the harbinger of 
Melanchthon, for whom I shall, like Elias, prepare a way in spirit 
and in power, troubling Israel and the followers of Ahab.' But to 
return to my book — good or bad it is no longer in my power to recall 
it. Four thousand copies have already been printed and sent away, 
nor could I cause Lotther, the publisher, the loss he would sustain in 
recalling these. If I have sinned, we must remedy it by prayer. 

We are here persuaded that the papacy is the seat of the true and 
genuine Antichrist, against whose deceit and iniquity we think all 
things are lawful unto us for the salvation of souls. For myself, I do 
not admit that I owe any obedience to the Pope, unless I also owe it 
to the Antichrist. Think of these things, do not judge us rashly, for 
we have reason for our opinion. 

Melanchthon is going to marry Catharine Erapp, for which people 
blame me ; I do the best I can for the man, nothing moved by the 
clamor of all ; may God make all turn out well. 

From my heart I hate that man of sin and son of perdition, with 
all his kingdom, which is nothing but sin and hypocrisy. 

Yours, 

Brother Martin Luther. 

A letter, written the next day to another friend, is interest- 
ing, as giving Luther's justification for the vehemence of his 



TO THE GERMAN NOBILITY 87 

language, which has given offence not only in his own day but 
later. 1 

TO WENZEL LINK AT NUREMBERG 

(WlTTENBEKG,) August 19, 1520. 

Greeting. I do not do it [speak violently], dear Father, to get praise 
and honor by my books and writings, for almost all condemn my acri- 
mony ; but I agree with you that perhaps God exposes the impostures 
of men in this way. I see that whatever is treated mildly in our age 
soon falls into oblivion, for no one minds it. But the womb of Rebecca 
must bear strife and infants contending with each other. The present 
judges badly; posterity will judge better. Even Paul calls his ad- 
versaries now dogs, now the concision, now babblers, false workers of 
miracles, ministers of Satan, and things of that sort, and curses a whited 
wall to his face. What prophet does not use the bitterest invective ? 
Such language becomes so trite that it ceases to move. Our Reverend 
Father Vicar 8 wrote me yesterday from Erfurt asking me not to pub- 
lish my work on the Improvement of the Christian Estate ; I know 
not on what ground complaint was made to him, at any rate his letter 
came too late, after the book had appeared ; pray try and appease 
him when you see him. Who knows if it be not the Spirit who moves 
me with this ardor, since it is certain that I am not carried away by 

1 It is instructive to compare Luther's defence with that made by Milton more 
than a century later, on the same charge. " If therefore the question were one of 
oratory, whether the vehement throwing out of scorn and indignation upon an 
object that merits it, were among the aptest ideas of speech to be allowed, it were 
my work, and that an easy one, to make clear both by the rales of the best rhet- 
oricians and the f amonsest examples of Greek and Roman orators. But since the 
religion of it is disputed and not the art ..." many examples of such language 
may be cited from the Bible. " Yet that ye may not think inspiration the only 
warrant thereof, but that it is as any other virtue, of moral and general observa- 
tion, the example of Luther may stand for all . . . who writ so vehemently 
against the chief defenders of the old untruths in the Romish Church, that his 
own friends and favorers were offended with the fierceness of his spirit." Milton 
goes on to show that when Luther betook himself to moderation he got only 
despite from Cajetan and Eck, " and herewithal how useful and available God 
made this tart rhetoric in the Church's cause, he often found by his own experi- 
ence. . . . And this I shall easily aver, though it may seem a hard saying, that 
the Spirit of God, who is purity itself, when he would reprove any fault severely, 
or bnt relate things said or done with indignation by others, abstains not from 
some words not civil at other times to be spoken." Various citations of indecent , 
expressions used by God are given, among others, 1 Kings xiv, 10. Cf. Apology 
for Smectymnuus. 
1 Lang, who had been elected Vicar in Staupitz's place, 1520. 



88 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

love of glory or of money or of pleasure, much less by vindictiveness ? 
I do not wish to stir up rebellion but only to assert the freedom of a 
general council. 

Farewell in the Lord. Your brother, 

Martin Lutheb. 

Luther's second great reforming pamphlet, The Prelude to 
the Babylonian Captivity of the Church, followed hard on the 
first, appearing early in October. The former tract had been 
directed against the practical abuses of the Church ; this was 
a blow at the base of her theology, the sacramental system. 
The thoughts expressed in i^were old ones to the writer, but 
were put with fresh force, energy, and comprehensiveness. The 
Address to the Nobility had been written in German as an ap- 
peal to the mass of that nation ; the Babylonian Captivity was 
composed in Latin, and translated against its author's will, for 
it was meant primarily for theologians and scholars. A brief 
analysis of its ninety pages, as nearly as possible in the original 
words, will give the best idea of its contents : — 

"Willy nilly, I am daily forced to become more learned, with so 
many and such able teachers pressing me on and giving me exercises. 
I wrote of indulgences two years ago, 1 but in such a way that I now 
greatly repent having published that book. For at that time I stuck 
in a sort of superstitious reverence for the tyranny of Rome, wherefore 
I did not think that indulgences should be altogether reprobated, since 
they were approved by the common opinion of mankind. It was no 
wonder that I thought so, for I alone rolled this rock away. But later, 
by the kindness of Prierias and his brothers, who strenuously defended 
indulgences, I understood that they were nothing but a mere imposture 
of the Pope's flatterers, alike destructive to men's faith and fortunes. 
"Would that I could persuade all booksellers and all who have read 
my books on them to burn what I then wrote and substitute this pro- 
position : — 

INDULGENCES ARE THE TNIQUITIES' OF THE POPE'S FLATTERERS 

After this, Eck and Emser with their allies forced me to learn 
the nature of the Pope's primacy. Not to be ungrateful to such learned 
men, I acknowledge that their books have moved me a great war 

1 The Resolutions. 



THE BABYLONIAN CAPTIVITY 89 

forward. For previously, while denying that the papacy was of divine 
right, I admitted it as a thing of human law. But now that I have 
read the most subtle subtilties of those little coxcombs (Trossuli) by 
which they ingeniously forged their idol, not being unteachable in such 
matters I have learned and am certain that the papacy is the kingdom 
of Babylon and the power of Nimrod the mighty hunter. "Wherefore 
in this case also I beg all my booksellers and readers that having 
burned what I have hitherto written on this matter they should hold 
to this proposition : — 

THE PAPACY IS THE MIGHTY HUNTING OF THE EOMAN BISHOP 

Giving the cup to the laity at communion is enjoined by the Bible 
and forbidden by the Pope ; wherefore I shall proceed to show that 
they are wicked who deny the sacrament in both kinds to laymen. In 
order to do this more conveniently, I shall sing a prelude on the 
captivity of the Roman Church. 

In the first place I deny that the sacraments are seven in num- 
ber, and assert that there are only three, baptism, penance, and the 
Lord's Supper, and that all these three have been bound by the Roman 
Curia in a miserable captivity and that the Church has been deprived 
of all her freedom. Howbeit, should I wish to speak according to the 
usage of Scripture, I should say that there was only one sacrament 
and three sacramental signs. . . . 

Before summarizing Luther's criticisms of the Roman sacra- 
mental system, it may conduce to clearness to give the briefest 
possible account of that system. Sacramentum in Latin means 
a sacred thing and by the early fathers was applied to a num- 
ber of holy objects, for example, the cross of Christ. It soon 
came to have the more special meaning that it now bears, that 
of a rite of the Church to which a spiritual meaning is attached, 
the two distinguishing characteristics of a sacrament being an 
outward sign and a promise. Thus the rite of distributing the 
bread and wine, with the promise of forgiveness, constituted 
the eucharist, the immersion or sprinkling with water, with 
the promise of salvation (Mark xvi, 16), is baptism. In like 
manner confession and forgiveness (James v, 16) were made 
the sacrament of penance, and the anointing of the sick with 
oil for his recovery and forgiveness (James v, 14 and 15) be- 
came the sacrament of supreme unction. Confirmation and 



80 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

orders had the same sign, the laying on of hands, but with a 
different purpose, the first to strengthen a layman in his faith, 
the other to impart the spiritual character to a priest (Acts vi, 
6 ; xiii, 3 ; 1 Tim. iv, 14 ; 2 Tim. i, 6). Finally marriage was 
made a sacrament for two peculiar reasons. Peter Lombard, 
who first formulated the doctrine (circa 1100), was, like many 
ancient and mediaeval philosophers, much under the obsession 
of sacred numbers. Having as yet but six sacraments, he wished 
to complete the sacred seven by the addition of another, and , 
hit upon matrimony, which is not a specially Christian institu- 
tion at all, but one common to all mankind. St. Paul compares f 
the union of man and wife with that of Christ and the Church, r 
which, says he, is a great mystery (i. e., holy secret), a Greek 
word translated in the Latin Yulgate sacramentum (Eph. v, 
31 and 32). It was this misunderstanding of Paul's meaning 
that induced Lombard to include wedlock among the holy rites 
of the Church. It is not necessary to go deeply into Luther's 
criticisms of this theology, but a brief summary of his most 
interesting remarks is valuable for the insight it gives into his 
doctrine : — 

Eucharist. The first " captivity " (i. e., abuse) of this sacra- 
ment is the denial of the cup to the laity. The second is the 
doctrine of transubstantiation. (On Luther's nearly allied 
theory " consubstantiation," compare above in the Address to 
the Nobility, article 24, and below, chapter XXI.) The third 
abuse is the theory that the mass is a good work, whereas it is 
really a commemoration. 

Baptism. God has preserved this rite from abuse, but the 
glory of the freedom whereunto we are baptized has been cap- 
tured by the Roman Church. All other vows are a disparage- 
ment of the baptismal vow. 
, Penance. The first and capital abuse of this sacrament is 
they have entirely abolished it (i. e., repentance), denying that 
faith is necessary. 

Luther adds that " strictly speaking " penance is not a sacra- 
ment, there being only two. The remaining four he thinks have 
no right to be considered sacraments in any sense. In discuss- 
ing matrimony he makes several digressions, some of which are 



THE LIBERTY OF A CHRISTIAN MAN 91 < 

rather shocking to our ears. For example, he proposes that 
a woman married to an impotent man be allowed, under certain 
conditions, to cohabit with another. Again : " I so detest di- 
vorce that I prefer bigamy, but whether divorce is ever allow- 
able or not I dare not say." More will be said of this peculiar 
view when on later occasions Luther advised two sovereigns to 
take second wives rather than put away their first ones. 

Such is the second of the three great pamphlets, which, like 
its predecessor, created an enormous stir. Erasmus judged that 
it precluded all possibility of peace, and Henry VIII of Eng- 
land, as well as a host of less distinguished persons, answered it. 
On the other hand, the mass of the people welcomed it eagerly, 
and the doctrines it taught have become fundamental to all the 
reformed systems of theology. 

The Address to the Nobility and the Babylonian Captivity 
had treated of external abuses, the one in the State, the other 
in the Church ; the third pamphlet, On the Liberty of a Christ- 
ian Man (or, in the first Latin edition, On Christian Liberty), 
went far deeper to the inner life of the spirit. The occasion for 
writing this work was an earnest request of the officious peace- 
maker, Charles von Miltitz, for Luther to send a letter to the 
Pope saying that " he had never meant to twit him personally." 
The Reformer complied ; a few extracts from this missive, com- 
posed in the latter half of October, are interesting : — 

Of your person, excellent Leo, I have heard only what is honorable 
and good . . . but of the Roman See, as you and all men must know, 
it is more scandalous and shameful than any Sodom or Babylon, and, 
as far as I can see, its wickedness is beyond all counsel and help, hav- 
ing become desperate and abysmal. It made me sick at heart to see 
that under your name and that of the Roman Church, the poor people 
in all the world are cheated and injured, against which thing I have 
set myself and will set myself as long as I have life, not that I hope 
to reform that horrible Roman Sodom, but that I know I am the 
debtor and servant of all Christians, and that it is my duty to counsel 
and warn them. . . . 

Finally, that I come not before your Holiness without a gift, I 
offer you this little treatise, dedicated to you as an augury of peace 
and good hope ; by this book you may see how fruitfully I might em 



92 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

ploy my time, as I should prefer to, if only those impious flatterers of 
yours would let me. It is a little book as respects size, but if I mis- 
take not, the whole sum of a Christian life is set down therein, in 
respect to contents. I am poor and have nothing else to send you, nor 
do you stand in need of any but my spiritual gifts. 

The little pamphlet of thirty pages, published early in No- 
vember in both Latin and German, begins with a paradox : — 

" A Christian man is the most free lord of all, subject to none. 

" A Christian man is the dutiful servant of all, subject to every one. 

" These statements seem to conflict, but when they are found to 
agree they will edify us. For both are contained in that saying of 
Paul's (1 Cor. ix, 19), ' For though I be free from all men, yet have 
I made myself servant unto all.' You owe nothing but to love one an- 
other, for true love, by its nature, is dutiful and obedient to what it 
loves. Thus also Christ, although Lord of all, yet was made a man 
under the law, free and a servant, at the same time in the form of 
God and in that of a slave." 

A man consists of a double nature, spiritual and corporal ; and 
these two are contrary, the spirit fighting the flesh and the flesh the 
spirit. " But it is clear that external things have no effect on Christ- 
ian liberty. . . . For what can it profit the soul if the body is well, 
free and lively, eats, drinks, and does what it pleases, since even the 
wickedest slaves of all vice often have these advantages ? Again, how 
can ill health or captivity or hunger or thirst hurt the soul, since the 
best men and those of the purest conscience often suffer these things ? 
. . . Nor does it profit the soul to have the body clad in priestly gar- 
ments, nor hurt her to have it clothed as a layman. . . . 

'.' One thing onlyisnggdfuLia a good life and Christian liberty, the 
gospel of Christ?"? . . Perhaps you ask : What is this Word of God 
and how is it. to be used, since there are many words of God ? . . ." 
Faith is the sole salutary and efficacious use of God's Word, for the 
Word is not to be grasped or nourished with any works, but with faith 
only. One incomparable grace of faith is that it joins the soul to 
Christ as the bride to the bridegroom, by which mystery, as the 
apostle teaches, Christ and the soul are made one flesh. Who is able 
to prize this royal marriage enough, or comprehend the riches of this 
grace ? 

Not only are we most free kings of all, but we are priests forever, 
by which priesthood we can appear before God, pray for one another 
and teach one another. " Here you ask, ' If all Christians are priests, 



THE LIBERTY OF A CHRISTIAN MAN 93 

by what name shall we distinguish those whom we call clergy from the 
laity ? ' I answer : By those words ' priest,' ' clergyman,' ' spiritual,' 
' ecclesiastic ' an injury is done, since they are transferred from all 
Christians to a few. Scripture makes no distinction hut to call them 
ministers, servants, and stewards, who now boast that they are popes, 
bishops, and lords. But although it is true that all are priests, all are 
not equally able to teach publicly, nor ought all who are able so 
to do. . . ." 

Now let us turn to the second part and see how the master of all 
must become the ministering servant to all. "When the soul has been 
purified by faith, she greatly desires to purify all things and espe- 
cially her own body, and thus naturally brings forth the good works 
by which without faith she could not be justified. " Good works do 
not make a good man, but a good man produces good works, and so 
with bad works." Let us not despise good works, but rather teach and 
encourage them, only guarding against the false opinion that they 
make a man just. We conclude, therefore, that a Christian does not 
live to himself, but to Christ and his neighbor, to Christ by faith, to his 
neighbor by love. By faith he is snatched above himself to God ; by 
love he falls below himself to his neighbor, yet always dwelling in 
God and his love. 

This is properly the close of the work, but a postscript is 
added on the course a Christian should pursue in regard to cere- 
monies. The rule is first obedience to God's command and then 
charity to his neighbor. He should take a middle course, not 
tolerating any real abuse but not over-hasty to do away with 
ceremonies innocent in themselves. 

The three great reforming pamphlets not only had a great 
influence in their own day, rallying the whole of Germany to 
their author's side at the time of trial, but they have a lasting 
importance in literature and thought. In them the whole 
Lutheran movement is epitomized : the first in relation to the 
State, the second as bearing on the Church, and the third, 
the most fundamental of all, as laying down the new rule 
for the guidance of the individual. 

Before closing this chapter it is interesting to note an item 
in the Reformer's personal life, recalled long afterwards : — 
In 1520 our Lord God tore me forcibly from saying the canonical 



94 THE LIFE ANt) LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

prayers, for I wrote so much that I often missed them for a week to- 
gether, and on Saturday frequently made up for lost time by saying 
them one after another, so that I could neither eat nor drink the 
whole day. Thus I weakened myself so that I could not sleep, and 
Dr. Esch had to give me a sleeping-powder, the effects of which I still 
feel in my head. 



CHAPTER IX 

THE BURNING OF THE CANON LAW AND OF THE POPE'S 
BULL. 1520 

The action against Luther for heresy at Rome had been al- 
lowed to sleep since the beginning of 1519 on account of the \ 
exigencies of politics. The death of the Emperor Maximilian 
in January of that year made necessary the election of a suc- 
cessor. Of the three principal candidates Leo X preferred 
the Elector of Saxony, who, it was thought, would make both the 
weakest and most docile Emperor. Frederic was so highly 
esteemed for his personal qualities that he might have stood a 
good chance of the election, but feeling that the position would 
be too great for his resources, he did not press his own cause, 
but threw his great weight into the scale for the Hapsburg can- 
didate against the Yalois. It was, perhaps, largely due to his 
efforts that on June 28, 1519, Charles of Spain was chosen. 

After this event had wrecked the hopes of the Curia, and 
especially after the Leipsic debate had brought Luther's heresy 
into a stronger light than ever before, the process against the 
Saxon was renewed. Another effort was made to induce the 
Elector to give him up ; indeed Saxony was threatened with the 
interdict in case he did not comply, though later events showed 
that the Pope hardly dared to use such a drastic measure. The 
threat did not succeed ; Frederic replied in his usual courteous 
and procrastinating style that Miltitz had undertaken to bring 
Luther's case before the Archbishop of Trier for judgment, and 
that the Curia had no right to threaten the ban and interdict 
before the result of this attempt at reconciliation was known. 

This letter worked like a declaration of war. A consistory 
was held at Rome on January 9, 1520, in which Ghinnucci, who 
had charge of Luther's case, thundered against the peaceful, 
pious prince as a raging tyrant, the enemy not only of the clergy 
but of the whole Christian religion. 



86 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

The Pope at once appointed a commission, consisting of 
Cajetan, Accolti, the general and procurators of the Dominican 
and Franciscan orders, and others, to draw up a bull against 
the heretic. Except the first two they were all but poor theo- 
logians, but making up in zeal what they lacked in knowledge, 
they proceeded in short order to damn all Luther's propositions 
as rank heresy. Leo, being advised by the wiser heads among; 
the cardinals that such a sweeping position would be untenable, - 
dissolved the first commission in February and appointed & 
second, consisting of Cajetan, Accolti, the generals of the orders, 
and some of the best theologians in Rome. This body, proceed- 
ing more cautiously, drew up a report carefully distinguishing 
a number of propositions as " partly heretical, partly scandalous, 
and partly offensive to pious ears." They recommended that 
a bull be drawn up condemning these propositions without men- 
tioning Luther's name, and that a final summons be sent him 
to come to Rome and recant. In other words, they held that 
a peaceful solution of the problem was still possible. Following 
their advice, Leo commanded Volta to write to Staupitz asking 
him to force his brother to recant. Whether Staupitz tried to 
obey this letter of March 15, 1520, is not known ; but in the 
following August he resigned his office in the order and shortly 
after secured a dispensation to become a Dominican. 

Towards the end of March a sudden and decisive change in 
the papal policy was caused by the arrival of Eck. Since the 
great debate this zealous Catholic had been busy going around 
to the universities trying to get them to decide in his favor and 
condemn Luther ; two of them, Cologne and Louvain, did so. 
Eck then turned his steps to Rome, where he painted his enemy's 
heresy in such black colors that Leo decided there was nothing 
left but to condemn him, and accordingly appointed a third 
commission, of Cajetan, Eck, Accolti, and the Spanish Augus- 
tinian Johannes, with orders to draft a bull for this purpose. 
Accolti was the draftsman for the committee; the theological 
material was largely supplied by Eck from the condemnation of 
Luther's doctrines by the University of Louvain. 

The bull was presented for ratification before a consistory 
held on May 21, which decided, before promulgating the docu- 



THE BURNING OF THE POPE'S BULL 07 

ment, to hear the theologians who had drawn it up. This was 
done in three sittings of May 23, May 25, and June 1. No 
record of debates in these consistories has been published, but 
the fact is recorded that there were long arguments before the 
bull received the assent of the College of Cardinals. It is pos- 
sible that a peace party was against the use of force even at 
this late stage, but it is more probable that the opposition came 
from a Spanish cardinal, Carvajal, who belonged to the con- 
ciliar party in the Church and was offended by the designation 
of Luther's appeal to a council as heretical. Whatever opposi- 
tion there was, however, was finally overcome, the bull was 
ratified and signed by Leo at his hunting-lodge at Magliana on 
June 15. 

According to the provision of the Canon Law, that before a 
heretic is finally condemned he must be given a fatherly warn- 
ing, this bull, Exsurge Domine, does not excommunicate Luther, 
but only threatens this penalty in case he does not recant within 
sixty days after its publication in Germany. Beginning with 
the words : "Arise, Lord, plead thine own cause, arise and pro- 
tect the vineyard thou gavest Peter from the wild beast who is 
devouring it," the bull sets forth some of the professor's opinions, 
quoted apart from their context, designates them as "either 
heretical, or false, or scandalous, or offensive to pious ears, or 
misleading to the simple," and condemns them. If, after all 
the Pope's fatherly care and admonition, Luther does not recant 
within sixty days after the posting of the bull in Germany, he 
is to be declared a stiff-necked, notorious, damned heretic, and 
must expect the penalties due to his crime. 

Before this document was ratified, Cardinal Raphael Riario 
had written the Elector, May 20, urging him to force the heretic 
to recant or expect the consequences. The letter only arrived on 
July 6, and, as we have seen (p. 74), made a great impression 
upon the Wittenberg professor. Frederic answered it quite 
promptly, enclosing An Offer or Protestation (Oblatio sive 
Protestatio), drawn up by Luther, proposing to leave his doc- 
trine to the arbitrament of impartial judges. This arrived in 
Rome by the end of July. 

Eck, who had been so instrumental in drawing up the bull, 



OS THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

was commissioned to post it in Germany. Before he had done 
so, however, the document had been published there (August) 
by Ulrich von Hutten, who judged that it would injure the 
Church more than her enemy. Eck posted it officially at 
Meissen, Merseburg, and Brandenburg near the end of Septem- 
ber. He also tried to force it on the universities of Germany, 
many of whom declined to receive it on technical grounds. At 
Wittenberg the faculty would have nothing to do with it, and 
at Erfurt the students seized all the printed copies and threw 
them into the river. 

Having threatened the heretic with excommunication, Borne 
left no stone unturned to secure his condemnation by the Empire. 
Charles was coming from Spain to be crowned in October, 1520, 
and to hold his first diet at Worms early in 1521. To him and 
to the nation Leo dispatched two nuncios, Aleander and 
Caracciola. Leaving Borne on July 27, 1520, Aleander arrived 
in Cologne, where he published the bull on September 22. Four 
days later he was in Antwerp, and on September 28, he had 
an audience with Charles and secured from him the first decree 
against Luther and his followers in the Netherlands. On Octo- 
ber 8, the indefatigable legate published the bull at Louvain 
and solemnly burned the condemned books, at the same time 
making a speech violently attacking Erasmus, who lived there, 
for supporting the heretic. For this Aleander was scored in a 
bitter anonymous satire — the Acta Academise Lovaniensis — 
which may have come from the pen of the great humanist. On 
October 17, the nuncio did at LiSge what he had done at 
Louvain. 

Charles was crowned Emperor at Aix-la-Chapelle on Octo- 
ber 23. The plague breaking out in the overcrowded town, the 
royal suite, including the legate, was forced to leave soon after, 
and went to Cologne, where they arrived on October 28. Here 
they found the Elector Frederic, who, having started to attend 
the coronation, had been detained by an attack of gout. He 
had posted up Luther's Offer and Protestation, and had with 
him a letter from the monk to the Emperor, written abont 
August 31. It is a humble appeal : — 



THE BURNING OF THE POPE'S BULL 99 

That I dare to approach your Most Serene Majesty with a letter, 
most excellent Emperor Charles, will rightly cause wonder to all. A 
single flea dares to address the king of kings. But the wonder will 
be less if the greatness of the cause is considered, for as truth is 
worthy to approach the cause of celestial Majesty, it cannot be un- 
worthy to appear before an earthly prince. It is a fair thing for 
earthly princes, as images of the heavenly Prince, to imitate him, as 
they also sit on high, but must have respect for the humble things of 
the earth and raise up the poor and needy from the mire. Therefore 
I, poor and needy, the unworthy representative of a most worthy 
cause, prostrate myself before the feet of your Most Serene Majesty. 

I have published certain books, which have kindled the hatred and in- 
dignation of great men against me, but I ought to be protected by you 
for two reasons : first, because I come unwillingly before the public, and 
only wrote when provoked by the violence and fraud of others, seeking 
nothing more earnestly than to hide in a corner, and secondly, be- 
cause, as my conscience and the judgment of excellent men will 
testify, I studied only to proclaim the gospel truth against the super- 
stitious traditions of men. Almost three years have elapsed, during 
which I have suffered infinite wrath, contumely, danger, and whatever 
injuries they can contrive against me. In vain I seek respite, in vain 
I offer silence, in vain propose conditions of peace, in vain beg to be 
better instructed ; the only thing that will satisfy them is for me to 
perish utterly with the whole gospel. 

"When I had attempted all in vain, I hoped to follow the precedent 
of Athanasius and appeal to the Emperor. ... So I commend my- 
self, so I trust, so I hope in your Most Sacred Majesty, whom may 
our Lord Jesus preserve to us and magnify for the eternal glory of 
his gospel. Amen. 

Again on October 3, 1520, Luther had written Spalatin : — 

Many think I should ask the Elector to obtain an imperial edict in 
my favor, declaring that I should not be condemned nor my books 
prohibited except by warrant of Scripture. Please find out what is in- 
tended ; I care little either way, because I rather dislike having my 
books so widely spread, and should prefer to have them all fall into 
oblivion together, for they are desultory and unpolished, and yet I do 
want the matters they treat of known to all. But not all can separate 
the gold from the dross in my works, nor is it necessary, since better 
books and Bibles are easily obtainable. 



100 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

It was in accordance with the plan here indicated that on 
October 31 the Elector had a conference with the Emperor in 
the sacristy of the cathedral, and the latter promised that he 
would allow Luther the way of the law which the professor 
himself had proposed. 

On Sunday, November 4, the legates also obtained an audi- 
ence with Frederic. Aleander handed him a letter certifying 
that he was commissioned by the Pope, and demanded, first, 
that the heretic's books be burned, and second, that he be 
either punished by Frederic or delivered up bound. The next 
day the Elector sent for Erasmus, who happened to be in the 
city, and asked him if Luther had erred. For answer he re- 
ceived the winged word, which flew to the farthest ends of 
Germany : " Yes. He has erred in two points, in attacking the 
crown of the Pope and the bellies of the monks." The learned 
humanist drew up twenty-two short propositions which he 
called Axioms, stating the best solution of the difficulty would 
be for the Pope to recommend the decision of the matter to a 
tribunal of learned and impartial men. On a second interview 
with the nuncios on November 6, Frederic refused their re- 
quests and insisted on such a court as Erasmus had recom- 
mended. 

The time given Luther to recant expired on one of the last 
days of November. Instead of doing so, however, he hit back 
at his oppressors with his usual spirit. He first published two 
short manifestoes, Against the New Bull forged by Eck, — for 
like Erasmus he doubted the genuineness of the document, — 
and Against the Execrable Bull of Antichrist. But his most 
dramatic answer was solemnly to burn the bull along with the 
whole Canon Law. The notice to the students, drawn up and 
posted by Melanchthon on the early morning of December 10, 
reads as follows : — 

Let whosoever adheres to the truth of the gospel be present at nine 
o'clock at the church of the Holy Cross outside the walls, where the 
impious books of papal decrees and scholastic theology will be burnt 
according to ancient and apostolic usage, inasmuch as the boldness of 
the enemies of the gospel has waxed so great that they daily burn the 



THE BURNING OF THE POPE'S BULL 101 

evangelic books of Luther. Come, pious and zealous youth, to this 
pious and religious spectacle, for perchance now is the time when the 
Antichrist must be revealed ! 

At the set time a large crowd gathered just outside the Elstei 
gate, near the Black Cloister, but beyond the walls; the stud- 
ents built a pyre, a certain " master," probably Melanchthon, 
lighted it, and Luther threw on the whole Canon Law with the 
last bull of Leo X, whom he apostrophized in these solemn 
words: "Because thou hast brought down the truth of God, he 
also brings thee down unto this fire to-day. Amen." 1 Others 
threw on works of the schoolmen and some of Eck and Eraser. 
After the professors had gone home, the students sang funeral 
songs and disported themselves at the Pope's expense. 

Luther now justified his act by publishing an Assertion of 
All the Articles Condemned by the Last Bull of Antichrist, which 
appeared in Latin in December, 1520, and in German in March, 
1521. In this he states that his positions have not been refuted 
by Scripture in the bull — whether that document is genuine or 
not. But if one cannot found his creed on the Bible now, he 
adds, why did Augustine have the right to do it eleven hundred 
years ago ? He then takes up, one by one, the forty-one articles 
condemned and proves that they are right. In view of later de- 
velopments the most interesting of these proofs is that of the 
36th article, on free will. Since the fall of man, says the Wit-\ 
tenberg professor, free will is simply a name ; when a man does ' 
what is in him he sins mortally. He cites Augustine to the effect/ 
that free will without grace is able to do nothing but sin. He 
quotes many texts of the Bible to prove this point and argues it 
at length. 

Nothing was now left to the Church but to excommunicate 
the rebel and fulfil the threat of the Exsurge Domine. The 
" holy curse " was drawn up and signed at Rome on January 3, 
1521, and sent to Aleandef to publish in Germany. It banned 
not only Luther but Hutten, Pirkheimer, and Spengler, and 
denounced the Elector Frederic. The wise legate received the 
terrible document at the Diet of Worms, and rightly fearing 

1 Quonian tu conturbasti veritatem dei, contnrbat et te hodie in ignem istum, 
amen. — Cf . Joshua yii, 25. 



102 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

that in this form " it would prove destructive to the cause of 
the Church," sent it back with a recommendation to modify it. 
This was done ; in its final form the bull Decet Pontifieem 
Komanum confined itself to excommunicating the heresiarch, 
and was then, May 6, published at Worms, three weeks after 
he had already been heard by the Diet. 



CHAPTER X 

THE DIET OF WORMS. 1521 

From Cologne Charles V proceeded to Mayence and thence 
to Worms, where he was about to open his first diet. The varied 
programme of the national assembly included the drafting of 
a constitution for the Empire and the formulation of griev- 
ances against the tyranny of the Roman hierarchy. It could 
hardly hope to avoid the religious question then agitating the 
whole nation, but the unprecedented course of summoning 
the heretic to answer before the representatives of his nation 
was not decided on until after the estates had been sitting for 
a month. 

Luther himself, in appealing to the Emperor, did not expect 
to be called before the Diet ; he hoped to be allowed to defend ' 
his doctrines before a specially appointed tribunal of able and 
impartial theologians. This plan was pressed quietly but vigor- 
ously by Erasmus, the foremost living man of letters. Besides 
his action in urging Frederic to insist on such a trial for his sub- 
ject, the great humanist had, at Cologne, handed to the coun- 
sellors of the Emperor a short memorial, Advice of One heartily 
wishing the Peace of the Church, proposing the appointment 
of such a commission. He partly won over the Emperor's con- 
fessor, Glapion, but Chievres and Gattinara, the real powers be- 
hind the imperial throne, remained in opposition. A little later 
at Worms, John Faber, a Dominican friar, came forward with 
a similar plan, composed with the help of Erasmus. 

Such a solution of the difficulty would have been most dis- 
tasteful to the Curia. Regarding the Wittenberg professor's 
opinions as res adjudicatce, the Romanists saw no reason for 
giving him a chance to defend them, and wished only to punish 
the man already condemned. This course was urged by Alean- 
der, an extremely able and unscrupulous diplomat. His chief 
support was the young emperor, whose formal, backward mind 



104 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

failed to comprehend and even detested any variation from the 
faith in which he had been brought up. Though by no means 
a fool, he was a dull man, slow to learn and slow to forget, but 
possessed of two extremely valuable qualities, moderation and 
persistence. Of the Lutheran affair he had no understanding 
whatever. Not being able to speak German, he was unable to 
sympathize with even the nationalist side of the formidable 
movement. On May 12, 1520, Manuel, his ambassador at Borne, 
suggested that he use Luther as a lever to wring concessions 
from the Pope, but the idea found no root in his mind ; from 
the first his opposition to the schismatic was a foregone con- 
clusion. 

Aleander worked with admirable diligence and consummate 
ability to win powerful supporters among the electors and great 
men of Germany. By skilful negotiation and concession he 
secured the adhesion of Joachim I of Brandenburg, for many 
years the leader of the Catholic party in Germany. He tried 
hard to get the unqualified backing of Albert of Mayence by 
the same means, but failed, partly because of the counter nego- 
tiations of Erasmus and his friend Capito. The Elector of 
Mayence therefore represented a mediating policy. 

Aleander's strongest opponent was Frederic of Saxony, 
"that fox and basilisk," as he called him, a crafty states- 
man who knew well how to protect his obnoxious subject 
without too deeply involving himself. Among the other mem- 
bers of the college, the Elector Palatine was not unfavorable 
to Luther. ^ 

The common people were strongly in favor of Luther. " Nine 
tenths of the Germans," wrote Aleander, " shout ' Long live 
Luther,' and the other tenth 'Death to Rome.'" Foremost 
among his adherents was Hutten, who with his followers hung 
like a cloud near Worms, threatening to burst and sweep 
away the Papists should any harm come to the bold monk of 
Saxony. 

When the alternative plan of Aleander to summon Luther, 
not before an impartial tribunal to discuss his doctrines, but 
before the estates to recant, was announced to him in Witten- 
berg he wrote as follows : — 



THE DIET OF WORMS 105 

TO GEOBGE SPALATIN AT ALLSTEDT 

Wittenberg, December 21, 1520. 

Greeting. To-day I received copies of your letter from Allstedt 
and also of that from Kindelbriick asking me what I would do were 
I summoned before the Emperor Charles as my enemies wish, in case 
I could go without danger to the gospel and the public safety. 

If I am summoned I will go if I possibly can ; I will go ill if I 
cannot go well. For it is not right to doubt if I am summoned 
by the Emperor I am summoned by the Lord. He lives and reigns 
who saved the three Hebrew children in the furnace of the king 
of Babylon. If he does not wish to save me, my life is a little thing 
compared to that of Christ, who was slain in the most shameful way, 
to the scandal of all and the ruin of many. Here is no place to weigh 
risk and safety ; rather we should take care not to abandon the gospel 
which we have begun to preach to be mocked by the wicked, lest 
we give cause to our enemies of boasting that we dare not confess 
what we teach and shed our blood for it. May Christ the merciful 
prevent such cowardice on our part and such a triumph on theirs. 
Amen. . . . 

It is certainly not for us to determine how much danger to the 
gospel will accrue by my death. . . . 

One duty is left for us : to pray that the Empire be saved from 
impiety and that Charles may not stain the first year of his reign 
with my blood or with that of any other. I should prefer, as I have 
quite often said, to perish only at the hands of the Romanists so that 
the Emperor may not be involved in my cause. You know what 
nemesis dogged Sigismund after the execution of Huss ; he had no 
success after that and he died without heirs, for his daughter's son 
Ladislaus perished, so that his name was wiped out in one generation 
and moreover his queen Barbara became infamous as you know, to- 
gether with the other misfortunes which befel him. Yet if it be the 
Lord's will that I must perish at the hands not of the priests but of 
the civil authorities, may his will be done. Amen. 

Now you have my plan and purpose. You may expect me to do 
anything but flee or recant ; I will not flee, much less will I recant. 
May the Lord Jesus strengthen me in this. For I can do neither with- 
out peril to religion and to the salvation of many. . . . 

In similar tone Luther wrote a month later to his best 
patron. 



106 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 



TO THE ELECTOB FREDERIC OF SAXONY AT WORMS 

Wittenberg, January 25, 1521. 

Most serene, highborn Prince, most gracious Lord ! My poor prayers 
and humble obedience are always at your Grace's service. 

I have received with humble thankfulness and pleasure your Grace's 
information about his Imperial and Royal Majesty's intentions regard- 
ing my affair, and I humbly thank his Imperial Majesty and your 
Grace for your favor. I rejoice from my heart that his Imperial Maj- 
esty proposes to take up this business, which is rather God's, Christen- 
dom's, and the German Nation's than mine or that of any individual. 

I am humbly ready, as I always have been, and as I have often 
said I would be (especially in a pamphlet recently published of which 
I am sending your Grace a copy), to do and allow all that may be done 
with God and Christian honor, or all which I shall be convinced by 
honorable, Christian, and sufficient reasons of Holy Writ that I ought 
to do or allow. 

Therefore I humbly pray your Grace to pray his Imperial Majesty 
to provide me with sufficient protection and a free safe-conduct for all 
emergencies, and that his Imperial Majesty should command the busi- 
ness "to 'be >recommended to pious, learned, impartial Christian men, 
both clerical .and lay, who are well grounded in the Bible, and have 
understanding of the difference between human laws and ordinances. 
Let such men try me, and, for God's sake, use no force against me 
until I am proved unchristian and wrong. Let his Majesty, as the 
temporal head of Christendom, in the mean time restrain my adversa- 
ries, the papists, from accomplishing their raging, unchristian plans 
against me, such as burning my books and grimly laying snares for 
my body, honor, well-being, life, and Salvation, although I am unheard 
and unconvicted. And if I, more for the protection of the divine, evan- 
gelic truth, than for the sake of my own little and unworthy person, 
have done aught against them, or shall be compelled to do aught, may 
his Majesty graciously excuse my necessary means of protection, and 
keep me in his gracious care to save the Divine Word. I now con- 
fidently commit myself to the virtue and grace of his Majesty, and of 
' your Grace and all Christian princes, as to my most gracious lords. 

And so I am, in humble obedience, ready, in case I obtain sufficient 
surety and a safe-conduct, to appear before the next Diet at Worms and 
before learned, pious, and impartial judges, to answer to them with the 
help of the Almighty, that all men may know in truth that I have hitherto 



THE DIET OF WORMS 10? 

done nothing from criminal, reckless, disordered motives, for the sake of 
worldly honor and profit, but that all which I have written and taught 
has been according to my conscience and sworn duty as a teacher of 
the Holy Bible, for the praise of God and for the profit and salvation 
of all Christendom and the advantage of the German nation, in order 
to extirpate dangerous abuses and superstitions and to free Christen- 
dom from so great, infinite, unchristian, damnable, tyrannical injury, 
molestation, and blasphemy. 

Your Grace and his Majesty will have an eye and a care to the 
much troubled state of all Christendom ; as your Grace's chaplain I 
am humbly and dutifully bound to pray God for bis mercy and favor 
on you and his Imperial Majesty at all times. 

Your Grace's obedient, humble chaplain, 

Martin Luther. 
/ 

Now, if ever, Luther's plain heroism showed itself. Daily 
expecting an awful crisis not only in his own life but in all that 
he held dearer, he went quietly about his business, teaching, 
preaching, and doing whatever his hand found to do. While 
writing polemics " against ten hydras " his deeply untroubled 
spiritual life found expression in a tract on the Magnificat, in 
which Mary's canticle became again the song of the triumph of 
the lowly and the meek. His determination to stand fast never 
wavered ; he often quoted Christ's words that whoso denied his 
Lord before men would be denied by him before his Heavenly 
Father. While so firm himself, he was much saddened by the 
irresolution of some of his friends, especially of his still beloved 
and revered Staupitz. /After laying down his office as Vicar of 
the Augustinians, the old man had retired to distant Salzburg, 
where the learned and orthodox archbishop, Cardinal Lang, 
received him warmly. But even here he could not escape the 
tumult of the battle ; for Lang tried hard to get him to denounce 
Luther openly. On January 4, 1521, Staupitz wrote pathetic- 
ally to Link, acknowledging that " Martin has undertaken a 
hard task and acts with great courage illuminated by God ; I 
stammer and am a child needing milk." Nevertheless but a 
little later he wrote an open letter submitting himself to the 
judgment of the Pope, a document intended as a compromise 
and as non-committal, but one which was generally taken as a 



108 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

renunciation of the reformed teaching. On seeing the declara- 
tion, Luther wrote Staupitz a letter equally solemn and gentle ; 
he does not judge his old friend, but it is impossible not to feel 
all the more strongly the contrast between the irresolution of 
the one man and the unyielding courage of the other. 

TO JOHN STAUPITZ AT SALZBURG 

Wittbhbbrg, February 9, 1521. 

Greeting. I wonder, reverend Father, that my letters and pamphlets 
have not reached you, as I gather from your letter to Link that they 
have not. Intercourse with men takes so much of my time that preach- 
ing unto others I have myself become a castaway. . . . 

At Worms they have as yet done nothing against me, although the 
papists contrive harm with extraordinary fury. Yet Spalatin writes 
the Evangelic cause has so much favor there that he does not expect 
I shall be condemned unheard. . . . 

I have heard with no great pain that you are attacked by Pope Leo, 
for thus the cross you have preached to others you may exemplify 
yourself. I hope that wolf, for you honor him too much to call him 
a Lion (Leo), will not be satisfied with your declaration, which will be 
interpreted to mean that you deny me and mine, inasmuch as you 
submit to the Pope's judgment. 

If Christ love you he will make you revoke that declaration, since 
the Pope's bull must condemn all you have hitherto taught and believed 
about the mercy of God. As you knew this would be the case, it seems 
to me that you offend Christ in proposing Leo for a judge, whom you 
see to be an enemy of Christ running wild (debacchari) against the 
Word of his grace. You should have stood up for Christ and have con- 
tradicted the Pope's impiety. This is not the time to tremble but to cry 
aloud, while our Lord Jesus is being condemned, burned, and blas- 
phemed. "Wherefore as much as you exhort me to humility I exhort you 
to pride. You are too yielding, I am too stiff-necked. 

Indeed it is a solemn matter. We see Christ suffer. Should we keep 
silence and humble ourselves ? Now that our dearest Saviour, who gave 
himself for us, is made a mock in the world, should we not fight and 
offer our lives for him ? Dear father, the present crisis is graver than 
many think. Now applies the gospel text : " Whosoever shall confess 
me before men, him shall the Son of man also confess before the angels 
of God, but whosoever shall be ashamed of me and my words, of him 
shall the Son of man be ashamed when he shall come in his glory." 



THE DIET OF WORMS 109 

May I be found guilty of pride, avarice, adultery, murder, opposition 
to the Pope, and all other sins rather than be silent when the Lord 
suffers and says : " I looked on my right hand and beheld, but there 
was no man that would know me : refuge failed me ; no man cared 
for my soul." By confessing him I hope to be absolved from all my 
sins. Wherefore I have raised my horns with confidence against the 
Roman idol, and the true Antichrist. The word of Christ is not the 
word of peace but the word of the sword. But why should I, a fool, 
teach a wise man ? 

I write this more confidently because I fear you will take a middle 
course between Christ and the Pope, who are now, you see, in bitter 
strife. But let us pray that the Lord Jesus with the breath of his 
mouth will destroy this son of perdition. If you do not wish to, at least 
let me go and be bound. With Christ's aid I will not keep still about 
this monster's crimes before his face. 

Truly your submission has saddened me not a little, and has shown 
me that you are different from that Staupitz who was the herald of 
grace and of the cross. If you had said what you did, before you knew 
of the bull and of the shame of Christ, you would not have saddened 
me. 

Hutten and many others write strongly for me and daily those songs 
are sung which delight not that Babylon. Out elector acts as con- 
stantly as prudently and faithfully, and at his command I am publish- 
ing my Defence 1 in both languages. . . . 

In the mean time Luther's enemies were not idle. Aleander 
addressed the Diet on February 18, painting the new heresy in 
the blackest colors, touching lightly on the points with which 
the Germans would sympathize, but bearing his whole weight 
on certain opinions relative to the sacrament which would shock 
most of them, and demanding, in conclusion, that proper steps 
be taken to extirpate the impending schism and its author. 
After a stormy debate the Estates decided to summon Luther to 
recant the objectionable heresies, and to be questioned on cer- 
tain other points, those, namely, relative to the power of the 
Pope and the grievances of the German nation. The Emperor 
accordingly drew up a formal summons, addressing the excom- 
municated man as " honorable, dear, and pious," giving as the 

1 The Articles Wrongly Condemned by the Bull appeared in Latin in January 
and in German in March. 



110 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OR MARTIN LUTHER 

purpose of the citation " to obtain information about certain 
doctrines originating with you and certain books written by you," 
and assuring certain safe-conduct to and from the Diet. Charles 
also endeavored to get the Diet to pass a decree for the burning 
of the heretic's books, but failing in this, he issued a mandate 
on his own responsibility directing that they be delivered up to 
the magistrate and no more copies be printed. 

Even now an attempt was made by the party of mediation to 
obtain a declaration from Luther which would obviate the neces- 
sity of his appearance before the Diet. Glapion, the Emperor's 
confessor, possibly acting at the suggestion of Erasmus, held a 
friendly interview with Spalatin in which he pointed out that 
all might be amicably settled if Luther would repudiate a few 
articles. These he had drawn from the Assertion of all the 
Articles Wrongly Condemned, and from the Babylonian Captiv- 
ity ; the latter he thought might be the more easily given up, as 
the book had appeared anonymously. When these articles were 
forwarded by Spalatin, the Wittenberg professor replied as 
follows : — 

TO 6E0KGE SPALATIN AT WORMS 

Wittenberg, March 19, 1521. 
Greeting. I have received the articles they ask me to recant, with 
the list of things they want me to do. Doubt not that I shall recant 
nothing, as I see that they rely on no other argument than that I have 
written (as they pretend) against the usages and customs of the Church. 
I shall answer the Emperor Charles that if I am summoned solely for 
the sake of recantation I shall not come, seeing that it is all the same 
as if I had gone thither and returned here. For I can recant just as 
well here if that is their only business. But if he wishes to summon 
me to my death, holding me an enemy of the Empire, I shall offer to 
go. I will not flee, Christ helping me, nor abandon his Word in the 
battle. I am assuredly convinced that those bloody men will never rest 
until they slay me. I wish if it were possible that only the Pope's fol- 
lowers should be guilty of my blood. We are turned heathen again as 
we were before Christ, so firmly does Antichrist hold the kingdoms 
of this world captive in his hand. The Lord's will be done. Use your 
influence, where you can, not to take part in this council of the 
ungodly. . . . 

Martin Luther, Augustinian. 



THE DIET OF WORMS 111 

The expected summons and safe-conduct reached Luther on 
March 26. After quietly finishing some literary work, he set 
out, on April 2, accompanied by his colleague Amsdorf, a bro- 
ther monk, and a talented young student named Swaven. Horses 
and wagon were provided by the town, and the university voted 
twenty gulden to cover the necessary expenses. The journey 
was a triumphal progress ; the people thronged to see the bold 
asserter of the rights of conscience. At Erfurt, where Luther 
preached, he was given a rousing reception by the students and 
their professor, the humanist Eoban Hess. Notwithstanding 
popular sympathy, there was considerable danger in going to 
Worms : in spite of an imperial safe-conduct, Huss had been 
burned. When Spalatin wrote reminding his friend of this pre- 
cedent, he received the following answer : — 

TO GEOBGE SPALATIN AT WOKMS 

Fhamkfobt on the Main (April 14), 1521. 

I am coming, dear Spalatin, even *if Satan tries to prevent me by 
a worse disease than that from which I am now suffering, for I have 
been ill all the way from Eisenach, and am yet ill, in a way I have not 
hitherto experienced. 

I know that the mandate of Charles has been published to terrify me. 
Truly Christ lives and I shall enter Worms in the face of the gates of 
hell and the princes of the air. I send copies of the Emperor's sum- 
mons. I think better not to write more until I can see on the spot 
what is to be done, lest perchance I should puff up Satan, whom I 
propose rather to terrify and despise. Therefore prepare a lodging. 

Martin Lutheb. 1 

Finding that Luther was not to be intimidated, the CatlA 
olics, who were more frightened than he was, tried by a strata- 
gem to prevent his appearance or at least to delay it until the ) 
time granted had expired. The Emperor's confessor, Glapion,' 

1 Spalatin says in his Annalen (edition of Cyprian, 1718, p. 38) that Luther 
wrote him from Oppenheim, where he arrived April 15, that he would enter 
Worms if there were as many devils there as tiles on the roofs. It is probable that 
Spalatin was thinking of this letter, or some expression used at another time (cf. 
Tischreden, ed. by Forstemann and Bindseil, iv, 348), as it is almost inconceivable 
that he, who preserved so many of his friend's letters, should have lost this im- 
portant one. 



112 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

in an interview with Sickingen, Hutten, and Bucer, assumed a 
friendly attitude, and proposed that instead of exposing himself 
to the danger of an appearance the heretic should hold a private 
conference with himself in a neighboring castle. Bucer was 
dispatched with this proposition. Luther knew no way but the 
direct one, however, and proceeded. 

On the morning of April 16 he arrived at his destination, 
greeted by a vast concourse of people, and took up his abode in 
the hostel of the Knights of St. John. He was summoned to the 
Diet the next day at four o'clock, though he was not admitted 
until nearly six. 

Few moments in history have been at once so dramatic and 
so decisive as that in which Luther appeared before the Emperor 
and Diet at Worms. In the greatness of the tribunal, of the ac- 
cused, and of the issues involved, nothing is lacking to impress 
a thoughtful mind. In the foreground of the assembly sat the 
young Emperor, on whose brows were united the vast, if shad- 
owy, pretensions to Eoman dominion and the weight of actual 
sovereignty over a large congeries of powerful states. Around 
him were the great princes of the realm, spiritual and temporal, 
and the representatives of the Free Cities of Germany. The 
nuncios, representing the supreme power of the Church, were 
conspicuous by their absence ; the Pope would not even hear the 
rebel in his own defence. 

The son of peasants now stood before the son of Caesars : the 
poor and till lately obscure monk before a body professing to 
represent the official voice of united Christendom. To challenge 
an infamous death was the least part of his courage : to set up 
his own individual belief and conscience against the deliberate, 
ancient, almost universal opinion of mankind required an audac- 
ity no less than sublime. 

And how much depended on his answer ! The stake he played 
for was not his own life, nor even the triumph of this religion 
or of that : it was the cause of human progress. The system 
against which he protested had become the enemy of progress 
and of reason : the Church had become hopelessly corrupt and 
had sought to bind the human mind in fetters, stamping out in 
blood all struggles for freedom and light. Hitherto her efforts 



THE DIET OF WORMS 113 

had been successful : the Waldenses had perished ; Wicliffe had 
spoken and Huss had died in vain. But now the times were ripe 
for a revolution ; men only needed the leader to show them the 
way. 

The proceedings were short and simple. An officer first warned 
the prisoner at the bar that he must say nothing except in 
answer to the questions asked him. Then John Eck, Official of 
Trier (not to be confounded with the debater of the same name), 
asked him if the books lying on the table were his and whether 
he wished to hold to all that he had said in them or to recant 
some part. At this point Jerome Schurf, a jurist friendly to 
the Wittenberg monk, cried out : "Let the titles of the books 
be read." When this had been done, Luther replied: — 

His Imperial Majesty asks me two things, first, whether these books 
are mine, and secondly, whether I will stand by them or recant part of 
what I have published. First, the books are mine, I deny none of them. 
The second question, whether I will reassert all or recant what is said 
to have been written without warrant of Scripture, concerns faith and 
the salvation of souls and the Divine Word, than which nothing is 
greater in heaven or on earth, and which we all ought to reverence ; 
therefore it would be rash and dangerous to say anything without 
due consideration, since I might say more than the thing demands or 
less than the truth, either of which would bring me in danger of the 
sentence of Christ. " Whoso shall deny me before men, him will I also 
deny before my Father in heaven." Wherefore I humbly beg your 
Imperial Majesty to grant me time for deliberation, that I may answer 
without injury to the Divine Word or peril to my soul. 

After consulting the Emperor and his advisers, Eck replied : 

Although, Martin, you knew from the imperial mandate why you 
were summoned, and therefore do not deserve to have a longer time 
given you, yet his Imperial Majesty of his great clemency grants you 
one day more, commanding that you appear to-morrow at this time and 
deliver your answer orally and not in writing. 

Though Luther knew the general reason of his summons, he 
had been surprised by the form in which the question was put 
to him. He had expected that certain articles would be brought 
forward and that he would have an opportunity to state the 



114 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

reasons why he held them and to defend them in debate. When 
he was required to recant point-blank, without any chance to 
present his case and without hearing what particular things he 
was to recant, he was taken unprepared. Seeing how necessary 
it was to have his answer in exact form, he had only done the 
wisest thing. Some, however, inferred from his request and from 
the low tone in which it was uttered, that his spirit was broken. 
How little this was the case may be seen by a letter written the 
same evening to an imperial counsellor and humanist at Vienna* 
John Cuspinian. After leaving the assembly hall, Luther went 
to his lodgings, where he was visited by nobles and others who 
wished him well. Among them was George Cuspinian, a canon 
of Wiirzburg, who had followed his bishop to the Diet. He gave 
such warm assurances of good-will from his cousin, the more 
noted John, that the Reformer found time to acknowledge 
them : — 

TO JOHN CUSPINIAN AT VIENNA 1 

Wokms, April 17, 1521. 

Greeting. Your brother, 3 most famous Cuspinian, has easily per- 
suaded me to write to you from the midst of this tumult, since I have 
long wished to become personally acquainted with you on account of 
your celebrity. Take me, therefore, into the register of your friends, 
that I may prove the truth of what your brother, has so generously 
told me of you. 

This hour I have stood before the Emperor and Diet, asked whether 
I would revoke iny books. To which I answered that the books were 
indeed mine, but that I would give them my reply about recanting 
to-morrow, having asked and obtained no longer time for considera- 
tion. Truly, with Christ's aid, I shall never recant one jot or tittle. 
Farewell, my dear Cuspinian. 

1 The text of this letter is full of mistakes in all the printed editions, includ- 
ing Enders, iii, 122. A facsimile of the original in the archives of Vienna was 
published by T. Haase in the Leipziger Iltustrierte Zeitung for August 31, 1889, 
and the text printed by me in American Journal of Theology, April, 1910. 

2 Frater carnis tuae. I follow Haase in identifying this brother with Cus- 
pinian's cousin. Professor Q. Kawerau suggested to me in conversation that 
Luther's words would naturally mean ' ' brother-in-law." Cuspinian had a brother- 
in-law (brother of his first wife) named Ulrioh Putch, and a brother, Niklas 
Spiessheimer. Cf . H. Ankwicz : " Das Tagebuch Cuspinians," Archiv fur Baler- 
reichische Geschichtsforschung, xxx (1909), 304 and 325. 



THE DIET OF WORMS 115 

The following day he appeared at the same hour before the 
august assembly. Eck addressed him in an oration of which 
the following summary is given by one present, probably 
Spalatin : — 

His Imperial Majesty has assigned this time to you, Martin 
Luther, to answer for the books which you yesterday openly acknow- 
ledged to be yours. You asked time to deliberate on the question 
whether you would take back part of what you had said or would 
stand by all of it. You did not deserve this respite, which has now 
come to an end, for you knew long before, why you were summoned. 
And every one — especially a professor of theology — ought to be so 
certain of his faith that whenever questioned about it he can give 
a sure and positive answer. Now at last reply to the demand of his 
Majesty, whose clemency you have experienced in obtaining time to 
deliberate. Do you wish to defend all of your books or to retract part 
of them ? 

Luther, now certain of what to say, made a great oration, at 
first in German and then in Latin, the substance of which, as 
written down by himself immediately afterwards, is here trans- 
lated : — 

Most Serene Emperor, Most Illustrious Princes, Most Clement Lords I 
At the time fixed yesterday I obediently appear, begging for th'e 
mercy of God, that your Most Serene Majesty and your Illustrious 
Lordships may deign to hear this cause,, which I hope may be called 
the cause of justice and truth, with clemency ; and if, by my inex- 
perience, I should fail to give any one the titles due him, or should 
sin against the etiquette of the court, please forgive me, as a man who 
has lived not in courts but in monastic nooks, one who can say nothing 
for himself but that he has hitherto tried to teach and to write with 
a sincere mind and single eye to the glory of God and the edification 
of Christians. 

Most Serene Emperor, Most Illustrious Princes! Two questions 
were asked me yesterday. To the first, whether I would recognize 
that the books published under my name were mine, I gave a plain 
answer, to which I hold and will hold forever, namely, that the books 
are mine, as I published them, unless perchance it may have happened 
that the guile or meddlesome wisdom of my opponents has changed 
something in them. For I only recognize what has been written by 
myself alone, and not the interpretation added by another. 



116 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

In reply to the second question I beg your Most Sacred Majesty 
and your lordships to be pleased to consider that all my books are not 
of the same kind. 

In some I have treated piety, faith, and morals so simply and ev- 
angelically that my adversaries themselves are forced to confess that 
these books are useful, innocent, and worthy to be read by Christians. 
Even the bull, though fierce and cruel, states that some things in my 
books are harmless, although it condemns them by a judgment simply 
monstrous. If, therefore, I should undertake to recant these, would it 
not happen that I alone of all men should damn the truth which all, 
friends and enemies alike, confess ? 

The second class of my works inveighs against the papacy as 
against that which both by precept and example has laid waste all 
Christendom, body and soul. No one can deny or dissemble this fact, 
since general complaints witness that the consciences of all believers 
are snared, harassed, and tormented by the laws of the Pope and the 
doctrines of men, and especially that the goods of this famous Ger- 
man nation have been and are devoured in numerous and ignoble 
ways. Yet the Canon Law provides (e. g., distinctions ix and xxv, 
quaestiones 1 and 2) that the laws and doctrines of the Pope contrary 
to the Gospel and the Fathers are to be held erroneous and rejected. 
If, therefore, I should withdraw these books, I would add strength to 
tyranny and open windows and doors to their impiety, which would 
then flourish and burgeon more freely than it ever dared before. It 
would come to pass that their wickedness would go unpunished, and 
therefore would become more licentious on account of my recantation, 
and their government of the people, thus confirmed and established, 
would become intolerable, especially if they could boast that I had 
recanted with the full authority of your Sacred and Most Serene 
Majesty and of the whole Roman Empire. Good God ! In that case 
I would be the tool of iniquity and tyranny. 

In a third sort of books I have written against some private indi- 
viduals who tried to defend the Roman tyranny and tear down my 
pious doctrine. In these I confess I was more bitter than is becoming 
to a minister of religion. For I do not pose as a saint, nor do I dis- 
cuss my life but the doctrine of Christ. Yet neither is it right for me 
to recant what I have said in these, for then tyranny and impiety 
would rage and reign against the people of God more violently than 
ever by reason of my acquiescence. 

As I am a man and not God, I wish to claim no other defence for 
my doctrine than that which the Lord Jesus put forward when he was 



THE DIET OF WORMS 117 

questioned before Annas and smitten by a servant : he then said : If 
I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil. If the Lord himself, who 
knew that he could not err, did not scorn to hear testimony against 
his doctrine from a miserable servant, how much more should I, the 
dregs of men, who can do nothing but err, seek and hope that some 
one should bear witness against my doctrine. I therefore beg by ' 
God's mercy that if your Majesty or your illustrious Lordships, from 
the highest to the lowest, can do it, you should bear witness and con- 
vict me of error and conquer me by proofs drawn from the gospels or 
the prophets, for I am most ready to be instructed and when convinced 
will be the first to throw my books into the fire. 

From this I think it is sufficiently clear that I have carefully con- 
sidered and weighed the discords, perils, emulation, and dissension ex- 
cited by my teaching, concerning which I was gravely and urgently 
admonished yesterday. To me the happiest side of the whole affair is 
that the Word of God is made the object of emulation and dissent. 
For this is the course, the fate, and the result of the Word of God, as 
Christ says : " I am come not to send peace but a sword, to set a man 
against his father and a daughter against her mother." We must con- 
sider that our God is wonderful and terrible in his counsels. If we 
should begin to heal our dissensions by damning the Word of God, we 
should only turn loose an intolerable deluge of woes. Let us take care 
that the rule of this excellent youth, Prince Charles ( in whom, next 
God, there is much hope), does not begin inauspiciously. For I could 
show by many examples drawn from Scripture that when Pharaoh and 
the king of Babylon and the kings of Israel thought to pacify and 
strengthen their kingdoms by their own wisdom, they really only 
ruined themselves. For he taketh the wise in their own craftiness and 
removeth mountains and they know it not. We must fear God. I do 
not say this as though your lordships needed either my teaching or 
my admonition, but because I could not shirk the duty I owed Ger- 
many. With these words I commend myself to your Majesty and your 
Lordships, humbly begging that you will not let my enemies make me 
hateful to you without cause. I have spoken. 

Eck replied with threatening mien : — 

Luther, you have not answered to the point. You ought not to call 
in question what has been decided and condemned by councils. There- 
fore I beg you to give a simple, unsophisticated answer without horns 
(non cornutum). Will you recant or not ? 



118 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Luther retorted : — 

Since your Majesty and your Lordships ask for a plain answer, 
I will give you one without either horns or teeth. 1 Unless I am 
convicted by Scripture or by right reason ( for I trust neither in popes 
nor in councils, since they have often erred and contradicted them- 
selves) —(unless I am thus convinced, I am bound by the texts of the 
Bible, my conscience is captive to the Word of God, I neither can 
nor will recant anything, since it is neither right nor safe to act 
against conscience. God help me. Amen. J 

The Spaniards in the audience broke into groans and hisses, 
the Germans into applause, and Luther was conducted from 
the hall amid an incipient tumult. When he reached his lodg- 
ings, he joyfully exclaimed : " I am through ! I am through ! " 
He had indeed done the great deed he had set out to do and 
spoken the words which will ring through ages. 

But his business at Worms was not yet over. The moderate 
Catholics, hoping that something could yet be accomplished, 
held a series of conferences with him. Their representatives 
were Cochlseus, later one of the bitterest enemies of the Evan- 
gelic Church, Dr. Vehus, chancellor of the Margrave of Baden, 
and the Archbishop Elector of Trier. But nothing came of these 
negotiations. Luther hardened himself, as one of his opponents 
expressed it, like a rock. 

On April 26 he left Worms. Two days later he reached 
Frankfort where he wrote an interesting letter to Lucas Cranach, 
his warm friend, the Wittenberg artist. In 1520 the monk had 
stood godfather to the painter's little daughter, and in return 
Cranach made two woodcuts of him, the one in 1520, the other 
in March, 1521. 2 This last, giving so plain an impression of 
iron will and strength of character that all who run may read, 
is perhaps the best portrait of the Reformer in existence. 

1 Neque cornutum neque dentatum. These words, which have puzzled historians 
from the day they were said till the present, have been the subject of a very thor- 
ough investigation by R. Meissner. He comes to the conclusion that the dentatum 
was suggested by the cornutum (without sophistry) of the official, but had no 
special sense, being merely an " overtrumping," or improvement on his meta- 
phor. 

2 Referred to by Luther in a letter to Spalatin March 7. Enders, iii, 106. On 
Luther's portraits see Appendix, pp. 453, 454. 




TvCAE* OPNKo EFFIGIES' (HAEO ESTl' AVDBTTVRA I IVTHER.I 
ArTHERJiAA\« MENTIS. EXFPJMIT! 1RSE « iVA.d l 
A\ D XXI 



LUTHER IN MARCH, 1521 
After an etching by Cranach 



THE DIET OF WORMS 119 

TO LUCAS CRANACH AT WITTENBERG 

Frankfort on the Main, April 28, 1521. 

My service to you, dear friend Lucas. I bless and commend you to 
God. I am going somewhere to hide, though I myself do not yet know 
where. I should indeed suffer death at the hands of the tyrants, 
especially at those of furious Duke George, but I must not despise the 
advice of good men nor die before the Lord's time. 

They did not expect me to come to Worms, and what my safe-con- 
duct was worth you all know from the mandate that went out against 
me. I thought his Majesty the Emperor would have brought together 
some fifty doctors to refute the monk in argument, but in fact all they 
said was : " Are these books yours ? " — " Yes." — " Will you re- 
cant ? " — " No !" — " Then get out." O we blind Germans, we act so 
childishly and let ourselves be fooled by the Romanists. 

Give my friend your wife my greeting and say that I hope she is 
well. 

The Jews must needs sing at times in triumph, " Ho, ho, ho ! " 
But Easter will come to us, too, and then we shall sing Hallelujah. 
We must suffer and keep silence a little time. A little while and ye 
shall not see me, and again a little while and ye shall see me. At 
least I hope so, but God's will, which is best, be done, as in heaven, 
so on earth. Amen. 

Greet Christian Daring and his wife. Please thank the town council 
for providing the carriage. You must get Amsdorf to preach, as he 
would be glad to do, if John Doltsch is not enough. Good-bye ! God 
bless you and keep your mind and faith in Christ against the Roman 
wolves and serpents and their adherents. Amen. 

Dr. Martin Ltjther. 

On May 1 he reached Hersfeld, where he was royally wel- 
comed by the abbot of the Benedictine monastery and where he 
preached. On May 2 he entered his dear old Eisenach, where" 
he also delivered a sermon the next day. On the third he drove 
through the beautiful forests to Mohra, his father's early home, 
and visited his uncle Heinz Luther. On the morning of May 4 
he preached in the open air, and after dinner set out in the 
direction of Schloss Altenstein with Amsdorf and a brother 
monk. In the heart of the forest, in a place now marked by 
a monument, according to a preconcerted plan some masked 
riders appeared, captured the banned heretic, and rode with him 



120 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

back in the direction of Eisenach to the Wartburg, the castle 
in which the Elector had decided to keep him. 

In the mean time great events were happening at Worms. 
Charles had been sincerely shocked at the audacity of the rebel 
monk. The usually reserved young man immediately drew up 
a paper, perhaps the one frank and spontaneous action of his 
whole career, stating that he had resolved to stake life, lands, 
and all on the maintenance of the Catholic faith of his fathers. 
Aleander, thinking that all was settled, was delighted. After 
waiting until the Elector of Saxony and other supporters of the 
new leader had left Worms, Charles drafted an edict, submitted 
it for approval to four electors and a few remaining members of 
, the Diet, and signed it May 26 — although it was officially dated 
May 8. The Edict of Worms described Luther's doctrine in the 
strongest terms as a cesspool of heresies old and new, put him 
under the ban of the Empire, forbade any to shelter him and 
commanded all, under strong penalties, to give him up to the 
authorities. It was also forbidden to print, sell, or read his 
books. 

When the news of Luther's disappearance spread throughout 
Europe a cry of dismay arose from all who had his cause at 
heart. Albert Diirer, the painter of Nuremberg, an ardent 
admirer of the Reformer, then on a visit to Antwerp, heard the 
news on May 17. 

I know not whether he yet lives or is murdered [wrote he in his 
diary], but in any case he has suffered for the Christian truth. . . . 
If we lose this man who has written more clearly than any one who 
has lived for one hundred and forty years, may God grant his spirit 
to another. . . . His books are to be held in great honor and not 
burned as the Emperor commands, but rather the books of his ene- 
mies. O God, if Luther is dead, who will henceforth expound to us 
the gospel ? What might he not have written for us in the next ten or 



s 



twenty years i 

Another glimpse of the temper of the people is given in an 
obscure letter of Albert Burer, at Kemberg, near Wittenberg, 
to Basil Amorbach, written June 30, 1521. The rustics, he says, 
if they meet others on the road, inquire of them : " Bistu gutt 
Marteiniscb ? " and beat any one who answers in the negative. 



CHAPTER XI 

THE WARTBURG. MAY i, 1521 — MARCH 1, 1522 

The Wartburg, about a mile south of Eisenach, is one of the 
finest old Gothic castles in Germany. Majestically crowning a 
steep hill, it commands a superb view of the lovely Thuringian 
forest. Surrounded by a moat and guarded by drawbridge and 
portcullis, the several buildings which unite to make up the 
pile are grouped around two courts. The largest hall, already 
old in Luther's day, is famous as having been, in the twelfth 
century, the meeting-place where the German bards, since 
immortalized in Wagner's opera, met to contend the palm. The 
fortress had been for generations the abode of the powerful, 
ostentatious landgraves of Thuringia, and was hallowed by the 
memory of St. Elizabeth of Marburg, the wife of one of them. 

In this charming spot Luther remained hidden almost a 
year, obeying the command of his wary sovereign. The room 
assigned him was not in the main building, but in a small one. 
It was reached by a narrow flight of stairs which led im- 
mediately from the entrance to the chamber. It has been pre- 
served as it was in his day, with the old stove, bedstead, table, 
and stump which served as a stool. As he sat by the leaded 
glass window, his eye swept the wild landscape for many miles 
towards the west. 

Shortly after his arrival, he wrote Spalatin a long and inter- 
esting letter describing his journey, his capture, and his life 
, and work. The two former have been related in the last chap- 
ter, but some other interesting items may well be given in his 
own words : — 

TO GEOKGE SPALATIN AT WORMS 

The Mountain, May 14, 1521. 
Greeting. I received your letter, dear Spalatin, and those of Gerbel 
and Sapidas last Sunday, but have not written before for fear lest the 
notoriety of my recent capture should cause some one to intercept the 



122 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

letters. Various opinions of my disappearance are held in this region, 
the most popular being that I was captured by friends from 
Franconia. 

To-morrow the Emperor's safe-conduct expires. I regret what you 
write about their savage edict 1 for trying consciences, not so much 
for my own sake as because they are inviting evil on their own heads 
and will only succeed in making themselves odious. Such indecent 
violence will only arouse deep hatred. But let it pass, perhaps the 
time of their visitation is at hand. . . . We see that the people are 
neither able nor willing — as Erasmus also wrote in his Advice 2 — to 
bear the yoke of the Pope and the papists ; therefore let us not cease 
to press upon it and to pull it down, especially as we have already 
lost name and fame by so doing. Now the light reveals all things and 
their show of piety is no longer valuable and cannot rule as hitherto. 
We have grown by violence and driven them back by violence ; we 
must see if they can be driven back any more. 

I sit here lazy and drunken the whole day. 

I am reading the Greek and Hebrew Bible. . . . 

Now I have put off my old garments and dress like a knight, let- 
ting hair and beard grow so that you would not know me — indeed I 
have hardly become acquainted with myself. Now I am in Christian 
liberty, free from all tyrannical laws, though I should have preferred 
that that Dresden hog 8 had killed me publicly while preaching, had 
God pleased that I should suffer for his Word. The Lord's will be 
done ! Farewell and pray for me. Salute all the court. 

Maktin Luther. 

Life at the castle was indeed a change from the routine of 
Wittenberg. The disguised prisoner was attended by two pages 
of gentle blood and by an armed guard. The warden, John von 
Berlepsch, entertained him with distinguished courtesy. The 
strict incognito did not prevent constant intercourse with friends, 
not only by letters privately forwarded but by personal visits 
also. He strolled through the woods searching for strawberries 
and even hunted a little. Pity for the poor animals is an unex- 

1 On April .30 the Emperor called the electors and princes together to consult 
about an edict against Luther, which was not, however, signed until May 26. 

2 Luther is probably referring to the Consilium cujusdam ex ammo cupientis, 
etc., though such strong views as these ore hardly expressed therein. 

8 Duke George of Albertine Saxony. Both here and in the letter to Cranach, 
Luther does him wrong, for he advised observing the safe-conduct. 




« 

& 
oq 
H 
M 
«! 

W 
H 



THE WARTBURG 123 

pected and amiable trait in the sturdy peasant; it is a matter of 
course that St. Francis of Assisi should save a hare from the 
trap, 1 but it is almost surprising that Luther should do the same. 
Most of his time, however, was spent in the little cell studying 
the Bible and writing. His letters are full of his experiences, 
and it is perhaps some of those translated below of which Cole- 
ridge was thinking when he said he could hardly imagine a more 
delightful book than Luther's letters, especially those written 
from the Wartburg. 2 His metaphysical tastes, however, may 
have led him to prefer the discussions of knotty points in theo- 
logy. His references to "the hearty mother tongue of the orig- 
inal " and (in his table-talk) to " the racy old German " are 
hardly happy, as most of the epistles are written in Latin : — 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT COBUEG 

Isle of Patmos, June 10, 1521. 

. . . lam both very idle and very busy here, I study Hebrew and Greek 
and write without cessation. The warden treats me far better than I 
deserve. The trouble with which I suffered at Worms has not left me 
but increased, for I am more constipated than I ever was and despair 
of a remedy. The Lord thus visits me, that I may never be without 
a relic of the cross. Blessed be he. Amen. 

I wonder that the imperial edict is so delayed. In my retreat I 
have read the letters against me sent to the estates of the Empire, but 
I find them faulty. 

It is rumored that Ghievres 8 has died and left Charles a million 
gulden. How brave is Christ not to fear these mountains of gold ! 
Would that they might learn once for all that he is the Lord our God. 

I have not yet answered the young prince 4 for fear of revealing my 
hiding-place, nor, for the same reason, do I think it expedient to do 
so now. 

Pray for me diligently. This is all I need, as other things abound. 
Now that I am at rest I care not what they do with me in public. 
Farewell in the Lord and greet all those whom you think it safe to greet. 

Hekbicus Nesicus. 6 

1 Sabatier: Vie de St. Franqoia d' Assise, 9th ed., Paris, 1894, p. 204. 

2 S. T. Coleridge : The Friend. 

8 Guillaume de Croy, Senor de Chievres, one of the Emperor's counsellors. 
* John Frederic, nephew of the Elector and later Elector. 
6 This signature is an unexplained bit of humor. 



124 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBUEG 

(Wartburg,) August 15, 1521. 

Greeting. Dear Spalatin, I have received the second and third parts 
of my Sermon on Confession from you and the first part from Me- 
lanchthon. I cannot say how sorry and disgusted I am with the print- 
ing. I wish I had sent nothing in German, because they print it so 
poorly, carelessly, and confusedly, to say. nothing of bad types and 
paper. John the printer is always the same old Johnny. Please do 
not let him print any of my German Homilies, but return them for me 
to send elsewhere. What is the use of my working so hard if the errors 
in the printed books give occasion to other publishers to make them 
still worse ? I would not sin so against the gospels and epistles ; better 
let them remain hidden than bring them out in such form. Therefore I 
send you nothing now, although I have a good deal of manuscript ready. 
I shall forward no more until I learn that these sordid mercenaries care 
less for their profits than for the public. Such printers seem to think : 
"It is enough for me to get the money ; let the readers look out for the 
matter." . . . 

Do not be anxious about my exile. It makes no difference to me 
where I am. But I fear I may at length become burdensome to the 
men here. I wish to cause expense to no one. I think I am living at 
the bounty of the Elector, and could not stay another hour if I thought 
I was consuming the substance of the warden, who serves me in all 
things cheerfully and freely. You know if any one's wealth must he 
wasted it should be that of a prince, for to be a prince and not a robber 
is hardly possible, and the greater the prince the harder it is. Please 
inform me on this point. I cannot understand this gentleman's liberality 
unless he supports me from the Elector's purse. It is my nature to be 
afraid of burdening people when perchance I do not, but such a scruple 
becomes an honorable man. 

Last week I hunted two days to see what that bitter-sweet * pleas- 
ure of heroes was like. We took two hares and a few poor partridges 
— a worthy occupation indeed for men with nothing to do. I even 
moralized among the snares and dogs, and the superficial pleasure I 
may have derived from the hunt was equalled by the pity and pain 
which are a necessary part of it. It is an image of the devil hunting 
innocent little creatures with his gins and his hounds, the impious 

1 " y\vidwiKpoi> " one of the Greek words inserted as the author progressed in 
his study of that language. 



THE WARTBURG 125 

magistrates, bishops and theologians. I deeply felt this parable of the 
simple and faithful soul. A still more cruel parable followed. With 
great pains I saved a little live rabbit, and rolled it up in the sleeve of 
my cloak, but when I left it and went a little way off the dogs found the 
poor rabbit and killed it by biting its right leg and throat through the 
cloth. Thus do the Pope and Satan rage to kill souls and are not 
stopped by my labor. I am sick of this kind of hunting and prefer to 
chase bears, wolves, foxes, and that sort of wicked magistrate with 
spear and arrow. It consoles me to think that the mystery of salva- 
tion is near, when hares and innocent creatures will be captured rather 
by men than by bears, wolves, and hawks, i. e., the bishops and theo- 
logians. I mean that now they are snared into hell, then they will be 
captured for heaven. Thus I joke with you. You know that your 
nobles would be beasts of prey even in paradise. Even Christ the 
greatest hunter conld hardly capture and keep them. I jest with you 
because I know you like hunting. 

I have changed my mind and have decided to send the rest of the 
Homilies, thinking that as they are begun they had better be fin- 
ished. . . . 

The writer's ill health was due partly to the rich fare and 
generally sedentary life, and partly, perhaps, to a reaction after 
the terrible strain of the preceding weeks. It caused the tempta- 
tions and especially the depression of which he often speaks. 
Some have thought that it was also at the bottom of those 
visions of the devil which are popularly supposed to have been 
frequent at the Wartburg. The fact is, however, that not only 
the legend of the inkstand hurled at the fiend, but every other 
story about such visions receives not a particle of support from 
contemporary sources. In all his letters from the Wartburg, 
Luther never once mentions any supernatural experience, nor 
even in his work On the Abuse of the Mass, where he makes 
special mention of such apparitions in general, does he say one 
word of his ever having seen any himself. That he occasionally 
spoke of them long afterwards is due rather to an hallucination 
of memory than of the senses at the time. He heard some noises 
in the old spooky castle, so slight that he hardly noticed them, 
but they gradually grew in memory, so that he could say, just 
ten years later: — 



126 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Satan has often vexed me with visions, especially at the Wartburg. 
One night while I was there he took some walnuts from the table and 
kept snapping them at the ceiling all night. 

As he told this story over and over, it gradually expanded 
with the years, until, in its final form, it assumed enormous 
proportions. It is a striking illustration of the fallibility of 
human memory and of the origin of ghost-stories, and demon- 
strates once for all the worthlessness of the table-talk as an 
historical source for events of long antecedent date. Indeed 
only as an illustration of these points the story has interest. 
It is so hopelessly confused, either by Luther or by the note- 
taker, that John von Berlepsch, a bachelor, is given a wife, and 
two rooms are spoken of, where there was, in reality, but one. 
This was at the head of one flight of stairs, with no other 
chamber near by. Thus it is that the story appears twenty-five 
years after the visions it records : — 

When I left Worms in 1521, 1 was captured near Eisenach, and 
dwelt in the Wartburg, my Patmos. I was far from people, in a room 
where no one could come to me but two boys of good family, who 
brought me food and drink twice a day. Once they brought me a sack 
of hazel nuts, which I ate from time to time. I kept them in a box. 
When it was bedtime, I undressed in my study, put out the light, 
went into my chamber, and lay down in bed. Then the hazel nuts 
began, rose up one after another, hit the rafters hard and rattled on 
the bed, but I did nothing. If I only began to drop off to sleep such 
a noise started on the steps as if some one were rolling sixty barrels 
down the stairs, yet I knew that the steps were closed with iron bars 
so that no one could get to them. I got up, went to the stairs to see 
what the matter was, and there they were locked up ! . . . 

Later the wife of John von Berlepsch, who had heard that I was in 
the castle, wanted to see me, came, but they would not let her see me. 
But they took me to another room and the lady slept in my chamber. 
There she heard such a racket in the room hard-by that she thought 
a thousand devils were in it. The best way to drive out the fiend is 
to despise him and call on Christ, for he cannot bear that. You should 
say to him : *' If you are lord over Christ, so be it ! " That is what I 
said at Eisenach. 

Whatever may have been at the base of this astonishing tale, 



THE WARTBURG 127 

<\t is certain that at the Wartburg apparitions from the next 
world did not interfere with an active participation in the busi- 
ness of the present one. A lively interest in public affairs was 
maintained by means of letters forwarded by Spalatin. Luther 
did not feel called upon to set all the wrongs in the world right, 
but he was strongly inclined to intervene when he heard of the 
deeds of his old enemy, Albert of Mayence. During the summer 
following the Diet of Worms, Carlstadt had carried on reform 
measures at Wittenberg, especially insisting that the clergy 
should take wives. Luther soon wrote in favor of this, but even 
before his tract was published a number of priests accepted 
Carlstadt's invitation to marry. Some of them in the jurisdic- 
tion of Mayence were arrested by Archbishop Albert, though 
that notoriously immoral prelate did not scruple to derive an 
income from licenses to the clergy to keep concubines. At the 
same time, thinking that there was no longer any danger, he 
ventured to recommence the trade in indulgences in his capital, 
Halle. When the Reformer heard of these things he wrote 
a fierce and reckless tract, Against the Idol of Halle, which he 
sent Spalatin to have printed. The Elector refused to allow 
its publication for reasons of state, and after an angry protest, 
Luther was forced to agree to postpone printing the obnoxious 
tract until he had remonstrated privately with the offending 
prelate : — , 

TO ALBERT, ARCHBISHOP AND ELECTOR OF MAYENCE 

(Tee Wartburg,) December 1, 1521. 
My humble service to your Electoral Grace, my honorable and gra- 
cious Lord. Your Grace doubtless remembers vividly that I have 
written you twice before, the first time at the beginning of the indulg- 
ence fraud 1 protected by your Grace's name. In that letter I faith- 
fully warned your Grace and from Christian love set myself against 
those deceitful, seducing, greedy preachers thereof, and against their 
heretical, infidel books. Had I not preferred to act with moderation 
I might have driven the whole storm on your Grace as the one who 
aided and abetted the traders, and I might have written expressly 
against their heretical books, but instead I spared your Grace and the 
house of Brandenburg, thinking that your Grace might have acted 
1 October 31, 1517, p. 42. 



128 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

through ignorance, led astray by false whisperers, so I only attacked 
them, and with how much trouble and danger your Grace knows. 

But as this my true admonition was mocked by your Grace, ob- 
taining ingratitude instead of thanks, I wrote you a second time, 1 
humbly asking for information. To this I got a hard, improper, un- 
episcopal, unchristian answer, 2 referring me to higher powers for 
information. As these two letters did no good, I am now sending your 
Grace a third warning, according to the gospel, this time in German, 
hoping that such admonition and prayer, which ought to be superfluous 
and unnecessary, may help. 

Your Grace has again erected at Halle that idol which robs poor 
simple Christians of their money and their souls. You have thus shown 
that the criminal blunder for which Tetzel was blamed was not due to 
him alone, but also to the Archbishop of Mayence, who, not regarding 
my gentleness to him, insists on taking all the blame on himself. 
Perhaps your Grace thinks I am no more to be reckoned with, but 
am looking out for my own safety, and that his Imperial Majesty has 
extinguished the poor monk. On the contrary, I wish your Grace to 
know that I will do what Christian love demands without fearing the 
gates of hell, much less unlearned popes, bishops, and cardinals. I will 
not suffer it nor keep silence when the Archbishop of Mayence gives 
out that it is none of his business to give information to a poor man 
who asks for it. The truth is that your ignorance is wilful, as long 
as the thing ignored brings you in money. I am not to blame, but your 
own conduct. 

I humbly pray your Grace, therefore, to leave poor people unde- 
ceived and unrobbed, and show yourself a bishop rather than a wolf. 
It has been made clear enough that indulgences are only knavery and 
fraud, and that only Christ should be preached to the people, so that 
your Grace has not the excuse of ignorance. Your Grace will please 
remember the beginning, and what a terrible fire was kindled from a 
little despised spark, and how all the world was surely of the opinion 
that a single poor beggar was immeasurably too weak for the Pope, 
and was undertaking an impossible task. But God willed to give the 
Pope and his followers more than enough to do, and to play a game 
contrary to the expectation of the world and in spite of it, so that the 
Pope will hardly recover, growing daily worse and one may see God's 
work therein. Let no one doubt that the, same God yet lives and 
knows how to withstand a cardinal of Mayence even if four emperors 
support him. . . . 

1 February 4, 1520. " February 26, 1520. 



THE WARTBUKG 129 

Wherefore I write to tell your Grace that if the idol is not taken 
down, my duty to godly doctrine and Christian salvation will abso- 
lutely force me to attack your Grace publicly as I did the Pope, and 
oppose your undertaking, and lay all the odium which Tetzel once had 
on the Archbishop of Mayence, and show all the world the difference 
between a bishop and a wolf. . . . 

Moreover I beg your Grace to leave in peace the priests who, to 
avoid unchastity, have betaken themselves to marriage. Do not deprive 
them of their God-given rights. Your Grace has no authority, reason, 
nor right to persecute them, and arbitrary crime does not become a 
bishop. ... So your Grace can see that if you do not take care, the 
Evangelic party will raise an outcry and point out that it would be- 
come a bishop first to cast the beam out of his own eye and put away 
his harlots before he separates pious wives from their husbands. . . . 

I will not keep silence, for, though I do not expect it, I hope to 
make the bishops leave off singing their lively little song. . . . 

I beg and expect a right speedy answer from your Grace within 
the next fortnight, for at the expiration of that time my pamphlet 
against the Idol of Halle will be published unless a proper answer 
comes. And if this letter is received by your Grace's secretaries and 
does not come into your own hands, I will not hold off for that reason. 
Secretaries should be true and a bishop should so order his court that 
that reaches him which should reach him. God give your Grace his 
grace unto a right mind and will. 

Your Grace's obedient, humble servant, 

Martin Luther. 

The desired answer came. It is a proof of the great power 
wielded by Luther, that, after the presentation of an ultima- 
tum, the primate of all Germany should reply with abject 
submission to the outlawed heretic. Albert was, indeed, in a 
difficult situation, for, notwithstanding a rather non-committal 
attitude at Worms he had been accused of having had Luther 
assassinated, and stood in mortal terror of popular vengeance. 
Both now and later, moreover, the Macchiavellian prelate sought 
to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds. "While continu- 
ing to cultivate the friendship of Rome he anxiously avoided 
a breach with Wittenberg. He accordingly induced Capito, a 
humanist in his employ, to intercede with the Reformer, to whom 
he himself indited this astonishing missive : — 



ISO THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

TO MAKTIN LUTHEK, IN CARE OF SPALATIN 

Halle, December 21, 1521. 
My dear doctor, I have received your letter and I take it in good 
part and graciously, and will see to it that the thing that moved you 
so be done away, and I will act, God willing, as becomes a pious, 
spiritual, and Christian prince, as far as God gives me grace and 
strength, for which I earnestly pray and have prayers said for me, for 
I can do nothing of myself and know well that without God's grace 
there is no good in me, but that I am as much foul mud as any other, 
if not more.- I do not wish to conceal this, for I am more than willing 
to show you grace and favor for Christ's sake, and I can well bear 
fraternal and Christian punishment. I hope the merciful, kind God 
will give me herein more grace, strength and patience to live in this 
matter and in others by his will. 

Albert, with his own hand. 

No wonder that the recipient was nonplussed by this letter, 
doubting whether it showed more godly contrition or devilish 
hypocrisy. The soft answer turned away his wrath, or rather 
suspended it for a year, when the polemic against the Idol of 
Halle came out in a revised form under the title, Against the 
Estate of the Pope and Bishops falsely called Spiritual. This 
bitter pamphlet attacks the " idol-worship " and vices of the 
higher clergy without mercy. 

Luther accomplished an enormous amount of literary work 
during his year of hiding. One of his largest tasks was the 
composition of the Postilla, or homilies on the gospel and 
epistle for each Sunday. 

More important in abiding results was the work on the celi- 
bacy of the clergy. Wien Carlstadt, the Wittenberg radical, 
came forward as the champion of marriage of priests, monks, 
and nuns, Luther was by no means clear in his own mind about 
the expediency of this practice. On August 6, 1521, he wrote 
Spalatin : — 

I have received Carlstadt's pamphlets. Good Heavens ! will our 
Wittenbergers give wives even to monks ? They won't force one on 
me. . . . Farewell, pray for me and take care not to get married 
for fear of tribulation of the flesh. 



THE WARTBURG 131 

And again on August 15 : — 

How I wish that Garlstadt in attacking sacerdotal celibacy would 
quote more applicable texts. I fear he will excite a prejudice against 
it. . . . It is a noble cause he has taken up, I wish he were more 
equal to it. For you see how clear and cogent we are forced to be on 
account of our enemies, who calumniate even what is most perspicuous 
and convincing in our arguments. Wherefore we, who are a spectacle 
to the world, must take care that our words be above reproach, as Paul 
teaches. Perhaps I am meddling with matters which are none of my 
business, and yet they are my business, especially if he succeeds. For 
what is more dangerous than to invite so many monks and nuns to 
marry and urge it with unconvincing texts of Scripture, by complying 
with which invitation the consciences of the parties may be burdened 
with an eternal cross worse than they now bear. I wish that celibacy 
might be left free, as the gospel requires, but how to add to that prin- 
ciple I know not. But my warnings are in vain ; Carlstadt's career 
will not be checked and therefore must be endured. 

Having convinced himself that the cause was noble, Luther 
undertook to find adequate arguments in support of it. His 
first essay in this direction was a mere sketch (Themata de votis), 
a series of propositions on vows sent to Wittenberg for debate. 
The thesis here presented is that all that is not done by faith is 
sin, and that monastic vows are taken in reliance on good 
works and not on faith, and therefore are wrong. Indeed it is 
tantamount to vowing a life of impiety, and moreover it destroys, 
Christian liberty. 

These thoughts took form in a treatise On Monastic Vows, 
which the author dedicated to his father in the following 
letter : — 

TO HANS LUTHER AT MANSFELD 

The Wilderness, November 21, 1521. 

This book, dear father, I wish to dedicate to you, not to make your 
name famous in the world, for fame puffeth up the flesh, according to 
the doctrine of St. Paul, but that I might have occasion in a short 
preface as it were between you and me to point out to the Christian 
reader the argument and contents of the book, together with an illus- 
trative example. . . . 

It is now sixteen years since I became a monk, having taken the 



132 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

vow without your knowledge and against your will. You were anxious 
and fearful about my weakness, beeause I was a young blood of 
twenty-two, that is, to use St. Augustine's words, it was still hot youth 
with me, and you had learned from numerous examples that monkery 
made many unblessed and so were determined to marry me honorably 
and tie me down. This fear, this anxiety, this non-consent of yours 
were for a time simply irreconcilable 

And indeed, my vow was not worth a fig, since it was taken with- 
out the consent of the parents God gave me. Moreover it was a 
godless vow both because taken against your will and without my 
whole heart. In short, it was simple doctrine of men, that is of the 
spiritual estate of hypocrites, a doctrine not commanded by God. . . . 

Dear father, will you still take me out of the cloister ? If so, do not 
boast of it, for God has anticipated you and taken me out himself. 
What difference does it make whether I retain or lay aside the cowl 
and the tonsure. Do they make the monk? . . . My conscience is 
free and redeemed ; therefore I am still a monk but not a monk, and 
a new creature not of the Pope but of Christ, for the Pope also has 
creatures and is a creator of puppets and idols and masks and straw 
men, of which I was formerly one, but now have escaped by the 
Word. . . . 

The Pope may strangle me and condemn me and bid me go to hell, 
but he will not be able to rouse me after death to strangle me again. 
To be banned and damned is according to my own heart and will. 
May he never absolve me more ! I hope the great day is at hand 
when the kingdom of abomination and horror will be broken and 
thrust down. Would to God that I had been worthy to be burned by 
the Pope ! . . . 

The Lord bless you, dear father, with mother, your Margaret, and 
all our family. Farewell in the Lord Christ. 

The work itself is an elaborate inquiry into the nature of 
monasticism. Some vows are allowed, but one must distinguish 
between the good and the bad, for the more holy a thing is the 
more likely it is to be perverted. " What is more holy than 
worship which is the first commandment? But what is more 
common than superstition, that is, false and perverted wor- 
ship ? " No vow is to be taken except according to the Bible, 
— the very opposite of monastic rules. If the Bible allows vir- 
ginity it rather deters men from it than invites them to it. Sec- 



THE WARTBURG 1S3 

ondly, vows are the enemies of faith, for monastic life is a good 
work, and hence outside of faith, without faith and sinful. 
Thirdly, vows are hostile to Christian liberty. Fourthly, they 
are repugnant to God's commands. If there have been saints 
in the cloister, it has not been because of the cloister. Monks 
forget that they are Christians in remembering that they are 
Dominicans, Franciscans, or Benedictines. Vows-are also hostile 
to charity. Finally, they are inimical to reason. 

This book, which the author himself judged to be among his 
most important, had an enormous sale and great influence in 
its own day. Needless to say, for us it has only an historical 
interest, though, indeed, an eminent Catholic scholar thought 
it necessary, only a few years ago, to refute it point by point. 
But most of us will concur in the judgment of Erasmus when 
it came out that "it is very garrulous." 

Far greater than this treatise was the work next undertaken 
by the Reformer, namely, the translation of the Bible, which 
from this time on was the constant labor of his life. He began 
with the New Testament, of which he speaks in the letter next 
given : — 

TO JOHN LANG AT EEFURT 

The Whdekness, December 18, 1521. 
I do not approve of that tumultuous exodus from the cloister, for 
the monks should have separated peaceably and in charity. At the 
next general chapter you must defend and cherish the Evangelic cause, 
for I shall lie hidden until Easter. In the mean time I shall continue 
to write my Homilies and shall translate the New Testament into 
German, a thing which my friends demand and at which I hear that 
you also labor. Would that every town had its interpreter, and that 
this book alone might be on the tongues and in the hands, the eyes, 
the ears, and the hearts of all men. Ask for other news at Wittenberg. 
I am well in body and well cared for, but am buffeted with sin and 
temptation. Pray for me and farewell. 

Martin Luther. 

The work, though carefully done, was prosecuted with such 
zeal that it was completed within three months. Of the methods, 
results, and peculiarities of this translation more will be said in 
a separate chapter. Suffice it here to note that Luther used the 



134 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Greek text edited by Erasmus in 1516 and supplied with a new 
Latin translation in parallel columns. It is possible that he also 
had by him one or more of the older German translations, of 
which there were at least fourteen, but the great originality 
of his work would suggest that he used them but little. 



CHAPTEE XII 

THE WITTENBERG REVOLUTION AND THE RETURN FROM 
THE WARTBURG. 1521-1522 

While Luther was in retirement at the beautiful old castle 
near Eisenach, the movement started by him was carried on 
with accelerated velocity at Wittenberg. Carlstadt's attack on 
sacerdotal celibacy was only the first step in a revolution. In 
this movement two distinct factors combined, the one of con- 
structive reform, the other of popular tumult; the best ele- 
ments of the first were due to Luther, who, while absent, kept 
up a constant correspondence with Wittenberg ; for the second 
element other leaders were responsible, Carlstadt, Zwilling, and 
the Zwickau prophets. 

The constructive reform was embodied in two city ordinances 1 , 
the first of November, 1521, the second of January 24, 1522. 
The earlier bit of legislation provided for " a common purse," 
that is, for the public care of the worthy poor, on new prin- 
ciples, deduced from the Address to the Nobility and the larger 
Sermon on Usury. It will be remembered how in his great 
pamphlet the author proposes that begging be prohibited. This 
was now done by the town of Wittenberg, while the deserving 
poor, i. e., those who could not support themselves, were provided 
for from funds voluntarily contributed to the parish church. 
That not only the ideas but the form of this ordinance proceeded 
from Luther has been proved from a first draft of the docu- 
ment in his hand recently discovered. 

The second decree passed by the town council two months 
after the first was an extension of the other on more radical lines, 
doubtless due to the active influence of Zwilling and Carlstadt. 
It provided that to the common fund should be applied the 
income from the property of the twenty-one resident brother- 
hoods, and especially from endowed masses, now regarded as an 
abomination. The expenses of the common treasury were also 



136 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

greatly enlarged ; orphans were to be cared for, students at the 
schools and university to be helped, poor girls to be supplied 
with dowries, and workmen loaned capital at four per cent. 
The laws against begging were reenaeted with additional penal- 
ties. A police charged with the surveillance of morals and espe- 
cially with the suppression of houses of ill fame was instituted. 
Finally, a new form of divine service was introduced, by which 
all pictures and superfluous altars were to be torn down, com- 
munion was to be administered in both kinds, and the govern, 
ment bound itself to see that ministers preached only the pure 
gospel. All the provisions of this comprehensive decree, except 
the last on public worship, were suggested by Luther. 

These reforms, for the most part salutary, were accompanied 
by others, which, even when unobjectionable in themselves, 
were carried through with mob violence. The riots began 
about the first of October, when Gabriel Zwilling, an Augns- 
tinian monk, began to preach against the mass and the canon- 
ical hours. At his instance these services were stopped by the 
monks on October 6 or 7 ; he then began a campaign against 
the monastic life itself, not only leaving it free to his brothers 
to quit the cloister, but forcing them to do so with insults and 
threats. 

Carlstadt now began to attack the mass and with such suc- 
cess that the priests celebrating it in the parish church on 
December 3 were stoned, and the day following an altar in 
the Franciscan convent was destroyed by the students. The 
arrest of the offenders was the occasion of a worse riot on 
December 12, when the mob went to the town officers and de- 
manded their release. 

The agitation spread. The monks at Erfurt left the cloister 
tumultuously. A plan was hatched to stop all masses, not only 
at Wittenberg, but throughout the surrounding country, on 
January 1, 1522. At Eilenberg a rectory was plundered. 
On All Saints' Day (November 1) the citizens of Wittenberg 
demonstrated in force against the Elector's relics in the Castle 
Church. 

Much disturbed by the progress of innovation, Luther made 
a secret visit to his city early in December, lodging with Me- 




LUTHER AS JUNKER GEORG 

From the painting by Cranach, December, 1521, in the Stadtbibliothek at Leipsic 



THE WITTENBERG REVOLUTION 137 

lanchthon and privately interviewing other friends, among them 
Lucas Cranach, who painted his picture. He was rather reas » 
sured than otherwise by this visit, deciding not to take toe 
tragically a disturbance in the monastery and a few student 
riots. He accordingly contented himself with remaining a few 
days, leaving behind him a Warning to all Christians to keep 
from Uproar and Sedition. This manuscript he also sent to 
Spalatin, who, however, prudently refused to have it printed 
until three months later. 

In this year [says Luther] by God's grace the holy light of Christ- 
ian truth., formei"ly suppressed by the Pope and his followers, has been 
rekindled, by which their manifold and noxious corruption and tyranny 
has been laid bare and scotched. So that it looks as if tumults would 
arise, and parsons, monks, bishops, and the whole spiritual estate 
hunted out and smitten unless they apply themselves earnestly to their 
improvement. For the common man, agitated and disgusted with the 
harm done to his property, body and soul, means to do something, and 
vows that he will never suffer such things more, and has reasons at his 
tongue's end and threatens to smite with flail and cudgel. 

The author adds that though the intimidation of the clergy 
is a good thing, nevertheless tumult is the work of the devil, 
and all Christians should keep aloof from it and labor only by 
word of mouth. It may be doubted whether this pamphlet was 
expressed in really prudent terms, and whether it would not be 
more likely to excite discontent than to allay it. Nevertheless 
things might have quieted down had it not been for the pow- 
erful reenforcement received by the party of revolution on 
December 27 in the advent of the Zwickau prophets. 

Among the cloth weavers of this little Saxon town Thomas 
Miinzer, a fanatic, had formed a sect animated with the desire 
to renovate both State and Church by the readiest and roughest 
means. When the civil authorities, fearing the openly threat- 
ened revolt, imprisoned some of the agitators, Miinzer escaped 
to Bohemia, and three of his followers, Nicholas Storch, Mark 
Thomas Stiibner, and Thomae Drechsel, went to Wittenberg. 
They proclaimed themselves prophets who talked familiarly 
with God and foresaw the future, revelation coming to them 
directly from the Spirit. Their mystic quietism was strangely 



138 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

mingled with an anarchist programme for overturning the civil 
government and extirpating the priests. The most harmless of 
the dogmas of the new sect, and the one from which they were 
to derive the name of Anabaptists, was opposition to infant 
baptism and insistence on rebaptizing their proselytes. 

At Wittenberg the prophets, or " ranters," as they were also 
«jalled, found a soil prepared for the seed of their doctrine. Ac- 
cording to their suggestions learning was discouraged, dreams 
were cultivated, and a systematic propaganda of anarchy organ- 
ized. 

The Wittenberg leaders either succumbed to the ascendancy 
of the prophets or actively joined them. Carlstadt met them 
more than halfway : he married, retired to a farm, affected to 
dress like a laborer, and courted popularity by extolling the 
revelation vouchsafed to babes and sucklings while disparaging 
the wisdom of the wise. Other Lutherans, like Amsdorf , though 
they heartily disapproved of the course things were taking, 
were powerless to stem the tide. 

The most responsible and gifted of all the professors left at 
Wittenberg was Philip Melanchthon. Luther's admiration for 
this pious and precociously learned young man was so great 
that he felt perfectly safe in leaving the guidance of the new 
cause in the latter's hands. " They will not need me, dear bro- 
ther," he said on departing for Worms, " while you still live." 
When he first heard of the new prophets he modestly opined that 
Melanchthon would be better able to deal with them than he 
would be. In this he was destined to disappointment. With 
much delicacy and refinement, Melanchthon possessed the de- 
fects of his qualities in a certain want of robustness. Both now, 
and still more later, at the crises when he was deprived of the 
other's strong influence, his life was made miserable and his 
fame tarnished by the exigencies of a situation too large for 
his powers. In the present instance he wavered, was inclined to 
believe the arguments against infant baptism, was impressed by 
the pretensions of the prophets, and hoped his friend Storch 
might meet his friend Luther. The latter's directions to him 
how to act, are interesting not only for their connection with the 
prophets, but also as a revelation of the writer's inner life : — 



THE WITTENBERG REVOLUTION 139 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON AT WITTENBERG 

(Wabtbubq,) January IS, 1522. 

Greeting. Had the letter of the Archbishop of Mayence come alone 
it would have satisfied me, but now that Capito's letter is added it is 
evident that there is some plot. I am greatly disappointed in Capito. I 
wished to put a stop to that impious trade, but he pleads for it like an 
attorney, and by teaching the archbishop to confess his private sina 
thinks to impose on Luther beautifully. I shall restrain myself and not 
treat the man as he deserves, yet I shall show him that I am alive. 

Coming now to the " prophets " let me first say that I do not ap- 
prove your irresolution, especially as you are more richly endowed 
with the spirit and with learning than I am. In the first place, those 
who bear witness of themselves are not to be believed, but spirits must 
be proved. You act on Gamaliel's contrary advice. Hitherto I have 
heard of nothing said or done by them which Satan could not emulate. 
Do you, in my place, search out whether they approve their calling. 
For God never sent any one who was not either called by men or 
attested by miracles, not even his own son. . . . Do not receive them 
if they assert that they come by mere revelation. . . . 

Fray search their innermost spirit and see whether they have ex- 
perienced those spiritual straightenings, that divine birth, death and 
infernal torture. If you find their experiences have been smooth, bland, 
devout (as they say) and ceremonious, do not approve them, though 
they claim to have been snatched up to the third heaven. . . . Divine 
Majesty does not speak directly ; rather no man shall see him and live. 
Nature bears no small stars and no insignificant words of God. . . , 
Try not to see even Jesus in glory until you have seen him crucified. 
(Here follows a long argument in favor of infant baptism.) 

Keep my book against the Archbishop of Mayence to come out and 
rebuke others when they go mad. Prepare me a lodging because my 
translation of the Bible will require me to return to you, and pray the 
Lord that I may do so in accordance with his will. I wish to keep hid- 
den as long as may be ; in the mean time I shall proceed with what I 
have begun. Farewell. 

Yours, 
^ Martin Luther. 

But Melanchthon was not the man to cope with the situation. 
Feeling his own weakness he besought the Elector to allow his 
friend to return and quiet the disturbances, but the cautious 



1'40 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

prince, fearing openly to acknowledge the outlaw, positively 
refused to do so. 

The tumults continued. On January 11 the Augustinians 
solemnly burned all their pictures. On January 24 Carlstadt 
forced the town council against their will to pass the ordinance 
above mentioned. They disapproved in it especially of two 
things : first, the illegal appropriation of the endowments of 
masses, and secondly, the abolition of all images in the 
churches, though the innovators described the making of im- 
ages as worse than theft, murder, and adultery, because it was 
forbidden in the first commandment, while the other sins were 
relegated to the following ones. 

The disorders attracted the attention of neighboring princes. 
Duke George of Albertine Saxony made representations to his 
cousin and also laid a complaint before the Imperial Executive 
Council (Reichsregiment) at Nuremberg, on January 20. For a 
moment it looked as if not only sedition but civil war threatened 
Germany. 

On February 1 there was another riot. The government at 
last took action. Carlstadt was politely requested not to preach 
and Zwilling judged it best to leave town. The situation was 
still extremely delicate, however, and, fearing another outbreak, 
on February 20 the town council, without consulting the Elector, 
sent an urgent request directly to Luther imploring him to re- 
turn to his place at Wittenberg. 

This letter was probably the earliest intimation the Reformer 
had had of the continuation of rioting. His first idea was to send 
another warning to the people, but the more he thought about 
it the more certain he became that his presence was necessary. 
He intimated his intention of returning in a letter to his 
sovereign, ironically referring to the doings at Wittenberg as 
a cross which would be a valuable addition to Frederic's famous 
collection of relics. The mild and pious prince answered at once 
in a letter to John Oswald, one of his officers at Eisenach, 
bidding him have a personal interview with the Reformer and 
communicate the contents of the missive. This relates the 
course of events at Wittenberg, but also emphasizes the com- 
plaints already made against them by Duke George and the 



THE WITTENBERG REVOLUTION 141 

danger of a new process against Luther, whom he advises to have 
patience and wait at least until after the next diet, to be called 
about the middle of Lent. The cross Frederic says he is willing 
to bear. 

This letter arrived on February 28 and its contents were 
communicated to the refugee just as he had made all preparations 
to depart. Unhindered by it, he did so the next day, making 
the dangerous journey alone on horseback Reaching Jena on 
March 3, he chanced to meet two Swiss students, John Kessler 
and Spengler, on their way to Wittenberg to study. One of 
them has left us, in an account of the evening at the Great Bear 
inn, a vivid picture of the Reformer and a little drama as well. 
The scene is the public room of the hostel, heated with the 
large German tile stove and lighted by candles. At a table sits 
a stalwart man, no longer thin and not yet stout ; his beard, red 
cap, jerkin and hose, and a long sword, proclaim him a knight. 
Before him is a glass of beer ; one hand rests on the hilt of his 
weapon, in the other he holds an open book. Enter two youths, 
who on account of their muddy boots sit down near the door. 

Luther — Good evening, friends. Draw nearer and have a drink to 
warm you up. I see you are Swiss ; from what part do you come and 
whither are you going ? 

Kessler — We come from St. Gall, sir, and we are going to Witten- 
herg. 

Luther — To Wittenberg ? Well, you will find good compatriots of 
yours there, the brothers Jerome and Augustine Schurf. 

Kessler — We have letters to them. Can you tell us, sir, whether 
Luther is now at Wittenberg, or where he may be ? 

Luther — I have authentic information that he is not at Witten- 
berg, but that he will soon return. But Philip Melanchthon is there to 
teach Greek, and Aurogallus to teach you Hebrew, both of which 
languages you should study if you wish to understand the Bible. 

Kessler — Thank God that Luther will soon be back ; if God 
grant us life we will not rest until we see and hear that man. For it 
is on account of him that we are going there. We have heard that he 
wishes to overturn the priesthood and the mass, and as our parents 
have brought us up to be priests, we want to hear what he can tell 
us and on what authority he acts. 

Luther Where have you studied formerly ? 



142 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Kessler — At Basel. 

Luther — How goes it at Basel ? Is Erasmus there and what is he 
loing ? 

Kessler — Erasmus is there, sir, but what he does no man knows, 
tor he keeps it a secret. (Aside to his companion as Luther takes a 
drink) I never knew a knight before who used so much Latin, nor one 
who understood Greek and Hebrew as this one seems to. 

Luther — Friends, what do they think of Luther in Switzerland ? 

Kessler — There are various opinions there, sir, as everywhere. 
Some cannot extol him enough, and thank God for having revealed 
truth and discovered error by him ; others, especially the clergy, con- 
demn him as an intolerable heretic. 

Luther — One might expect as much from the preachers. 

Spongier — (Raising book which he sees is a Hebrew Psalter) I 
would give a finger to understand this tongue. 

Luther — You must work hard to learn it. I also am learning it, 
and practise some every day. 

(It is getting dark. Host bustles up, lights more candles, stops before 
table.) 

Host — I overheard you, gentlemen, talking of Luther. Pity you were 
not all here two days ago ; he was here then at this table, sitting right 
there (points). 

Spengler — If this cursed weather had not hindered us we should 
have been here then and should have seen him. Is it not a pity ? 

Kessler — At least we ought to be thankful that we are in the same 
house that he was and at the very table where he sat. (Host laughs, 
goes toward door ; when out of sight of Luther turns and beckons 
Kessler, who rises anxiously thinking that he has done something amiss 
and goes to host.) 

Host (aside to Kessler) — Now that I see that you really want 
to hear and see Luther, I may tell you that the man at your table 
is he. 

Kessler — You're just gulling me because you think I want to see 
Luther. 

Host — No, it is positively he, but don't let on that you know him. 
(Kessler returns to table, where Luther has begun to read again.) 

Kessler (whispering to his companion) — The host tells me this man 
is Luther. 

Spengler — What on earth? Perhaps he said "Hutten"; the two 
names sound alike, and he certainly looks more like a knight than a 
monk. 



THE WITTENBERG REVOLUTION MS 

(Enter two merchants, who take off their cloaks. One of them lays 
a book on the table.) 

Luther — May I ask, friend, what you are reading ? 

Merchant — Doctor Luther's sermons, just out ; have you not seen 
them? 

Luther — I shall soon, at any Tate. 

Host — Sit down, gentlemen, sit down ; it is supper-time now. 

Luther — Come here, gentlemen ; I will stand treat. (The merchants 
sit down and supper is served.) These are bad times, gentlemen. I 
heard only recently of the princes and lords assembling at Nuremberg 
to settle the religious question and remedy the grievances of the 
German nation. "What do they do ? Nothing but waste their time in 
tournaments and all kinds of wicked diversions. They ought to pray 
earnestly to God. Fine princes they are ! Let us hope that our children 
and posterity will be less poisoned by papal errors and more given to 
the truth than their parents, in whom error is so firmly implanted that 
it is hard to root out. 

First Merchant — I am a plain, blunt man, look you, who understand 
little of this business, but I say to myself, as far as I can see, Luther 
must be either an angel from heaven or a devil from hell. I would give 
ten gulden to have the chance to confess to him ; I believe he could 
give me good counsel for my conscience. (The merchants get up and 
go out to feed their horses.) 

Host (to students) — You owe me nothing ; Luther has paid it all. 

Kessler — Thank you, sir, shall I say Hutten? 

Luther — No, I am not he; (to host) I am made a noble to-night, 
for these Switzers take me for Ulrich von Hutten. 

Host — You are not Hutten, but Martin Luther. 

Luther (laughing) — They think I am Hutten ; you that I am 
Luther; soon I'll be Prester John. (Raising his glass) Friends, I drink 
your health (putting down his glass), but wait a moment; host, bring 
us a measure of wine ; the beer is not so good for me, as I am more 
accustomed to wine. (They drink.) 

Luther (rising to say good-night and offering them his hand) — 
When you get to Wittenberg, remember me to Jerome Schurf . 

Kessler — Whom shall we remember, sir? 

Luther — Say only that he that will soon come sends his greetings. 
(Exit.) 

The next morning Luther departed early. At Borna, where 
he arrived on March 5, he wrote his sovereign to apologize for 



144 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

his reference to the latter's hobby of relic-collecting, and to 
point out why he must go to Wittenberg even if Frederic could 
no longer protect him there : — 

TO FREDERIC, ELECTOR OP SAXONY, AT LOCHAU 

Boena, March 5, 1522. 

Favor and peace from God our Father and from the Lord Jesus 
Christ, and my humble service. 

Most serene, highborn Prince, most gracious Lord ! Your Grace's 
kind letter reached me Friday evening as I was about to depart the 
next day. I need not say that I know your Grace meant the best 
for me, for I am certain of it as far as a man can be of anything. 
Indeed my conviction of it is almost superhuman, but that makes no 
difference. 

I take the liberty of supposing from your Grace's tone that my let- 
ter hurt you a little, but your Grace is wise enough to understand how 
I write. I have confidence that your Grace knows my heart better than 
to suppose I would insult your Grace's famous wisdom by unseemly 
words. I assure you with all my heart that I have always had a per- 
fect and unaffected love for your Grace above all other princes and 
rulers. What I wrote was from anxiety to reassure your Grace, not 
for my own sake (of that I had no thought), but for the sake of the 
untoward movement at Wittenberg carried on by our friends to the 
detriment of the Evangelic cause. I feared that your Grace would 
suffer great inconvenience from it. The calamity also bore hard on 
me, so that, had I not been certain we had the pure gospel, I should 
have despaired. To my sorrow the movement has made a mockery of 
all the good that has been done and has brought it to naught. I would 
willingly buy the good cause with my life could I do so. Things are 
now done for which we can answer neither to God nor to man. They 
hang around my neck and offend the gospel and sadden my heart. 
My letter, most gracious Lord, was for those men, and not for my- 
self, that your Grace might see the devil in the drama now enacting 
at Wittenberg. Although the admonition was unnecessary to your 
Grace, yet it was needful for me to write. As for myself, most gra- 
cious Lord, I answer thus : Your Grace knows (or, if you do not, I 
now inform you of the fact) that I have received my gospel not from 
men but from Heaven only, by our Lord Jesus Christ, so that I 
might well be able to boast and call myself a minister and evangel- 
ist, as I shall do in future. I offered to be tried and judged, not 



THE WITTENBERG REVOLUTION 145 

because I had doubts myself, but to convince others and from sheer 
humility. But now I see that my too great humility abases the gospel, 
and that if I yield a span the devil will take all. So I am consci- 
entiously compelled to resist. I have obeyed your Grace this year [by 
staying at Wartburg] to please you. The devil knows I did not hide 
from cowardice, for he saw my heart when I entered Worms. Had 
I then believed that there were as many devils as tiles on the roof, I 
would have leaped into their midst with joy. Now Duke George is still 
far from being the equal of one devil. Since the Father of infinite 
mercy has by the gospel made us happy lords of all devils and of 
death, and has given us rich confidence to call him dearest Father, 
your Grace can see for yourself that it would be a deep insult to such 
a Father not to trust him, and that we are lords even of Duke George's 
wrath. I am fully persuaded that had I been called to Leipsic instead 
of Wittenberg, I should have gone there, even if (your Grace will ex- 
cuse my foolish words) it had rained Duke Georges nine days and 
every duke nine times as furious as this one. He esteems my Lord 
Christ a man of straw, but my Lord and I can suffer that for a while. 
I will not conceal from your Grace that I have more than once wept 
and prayed for Duke George that God might enlighten him. I will 
pray and weep once more and then cease for ever. Will your Grace 
please pray, and have prayers said by others, that we may turn from him 
the judgment that (God knows) is always in wait for him. I could slay 
him with a single word. 

I have written this to your Grace to inform you that I am going to 
Wittenberg under a far higher protection than that of the Elector. I 
do not intend to ask your Grace's protection. Indeed I think I shall 
protect you rather than you me. If I thought your Grace could and 
would defend me by force, I would not come. The sword ought not 
and cannot decide a matter of this kind. God alone must rule it with- 
out human care and cobperation. He who believes the most can protect 
the most, and as I see your Grace is yet weak in faith, I can by no 
means regard you as the man to protect and save me. 

As your Grace desires to know what to do in this matter, and thinks 
you have done too little, I humbly answer that you have done too 
much and should do nothing. God will not and cannot suffer your 
interference nor mine. He wishes it left to himself ; I say no more, 
your Grace can decide. If your Grace believes, you will be safe and 
have peace ; if you do not believe, I do, and must leave your Grace's 
unbelief to its own torturing anxiety such as all unbelievers have to 
suffer. As I do not follow your advice and remain hidden, your Grace 



146 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

is excused before God if I am captured or put to death. Before men 
your Grace should act as a prince of the Empire and be obedient to 
your sovereign, and let his Imperial Majesty rule in your cities over 
both life and property, as is his right by the Imperial Constitution, 
and you should not offer any resistance in case be captures and puts 
me to death. No one should oppose authority save he who ordained it, 
otherwise it is rebellion and displeasing to God. But I hope they will 
have the good sense to recognize your Grace's lofty position and so not 
become my executioners themselves. If your Grace leaves them an 
open door and free passes, when they come you will have done enough 
for obedience. They can ask nothing more of your Grace than to in- 
quire if Luther be with you, which will not put your Grace in peril 
or trouble. Christ has not taught me to be a Christian to injure others. 
If they are so unreasonable as to ask your Grace to lay hands upon me, 
I shall then tell your Grace what to do, always keeping your Grace 
safe from injury and peril in body, soul, or estate, as far as in me is — 
your Grace may then act as I advise or not as you please. . . . 
Your Grace's humble subject, 

Martin Lutheb. 

Frederic answered this letter on March 7 with one to the 
Wittenberg jurist Schurf , bidding him request Luther to draw 
up a statement that he had only returned to quiet the tumults. 
The Reformer did as requested on March 9 j the Elector was 
not quite satisfied and a new memorial was accordingly drawn 
up by Luther on March 12, which the Prince might submit to 
the Diet soon to assemble at Nuremberg. The reasons here 
given, and above all the immediate subsidence of tumult, com- 
pletely satisfied that august body and prevented any measures 
being taken against the banned heretic or his protector. 



CHAPTER XIII 

CARLSTADT AND MtfNZKR. 1522-1525 

Eveet revolution has its extremists against whose unwise 
fanaticism the true reformer has to guard as carefully as he 
resists the abuses of hopeless reactionaries. Some revolutions 
fall under the sway of the radical party — Jacobins and Com- 
munists — and thus plunge into excesses which every true friend 
of progress must regret. The Reformation was no exception to 
the general rule ; it had its extreme left, — Anabaptists and 
ranters as they were then called, — and had it not been for the 
master brain in control, any one of several revolutionary parties 
claiming alliance with the Reformation might have obtained the 
ascendancy and swept it along to the ruin which overtook each 
in turn. Luther's insight, courage, and genius shone brighter in 
steering his ship clear of these rocks and shoals than they had 
when he first cut the ropes and set sail. 

His task now was to restore order at Wittenberg. Arriv- 
ing late on the afternoon of Thursday, March 6, he spent 
two days looking about and getting his bearings. The im- 
pression he made is faithfully recorded in a contemporary 
letter from Albert Burer to Beatus Rhenanus, Wittenberg, 
March 29 : — 

Martin Luther returned to restore order clad as a knight and in 
the company of knights. . . . He is a man in whose face one may 
read benevolence, charity, and cheerfulness ; his voice is mild and mel- 
low ; his delivery very graceful. "Whoever has heard him once will 
desire to hear him again. 

Luther lost no time in starting a vigorous campaign against 
the agitation. In eight sermons, on eight successive days, from 
March 9 to 16, risking his popularity as freely as he had his 
life, he exhorted the people to good sense, moderation, and' 
above all to charity. In the first address, on the text, " All 



148 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

things are lawful unto me but all things are not expedient," he 
shows how much better it is to tolerate some usages which we 
regard as superfluous and unnecessary, for the sake of our 
brothers who are not so far advanced. Reform must begin with! 
milk for babes, the pure doctrine of charity and faith, after 
which may come the strong meat of drastic law. True Christ- J 
ian liberty is not evinced by boasting how free we are from all 
law, but by showing how ready we are to serve our neighbors 
in love. On the second day he enunciated one of his fundamental 
principles with distinctness : — 

Compel or force any one with power I will not, for faith must be 
gentle and unforced. Take an example by me. I opposed indulgences 
and all the papists, but not with force ; I only wrote, preached, and 
used God's Word, and nothing else. That Word, while I slept and 
drank beer with Melanchthon and Amsdorf , has broken the papacy 
more than any king or emperor ever broke it. Had I wished it, I 
might have brought Germany to civil war. Yes, at Worms I might 
have started a game which would not have been safe for the Emperor, 
but it would have been a fool's game. So I did nothing, but only let 
the Word act. 

Having laid down his general principles, that mob violence 
is not the way to reform the Church, that sedition, even when 
provoked, is always wrong, and that the people in presuming 
to regulate spiritual matters usurp an office which does not be- 
long to them, the preacher goes on in the following sermons to 
take up one by one the matters which have so much exercised 
the community — images, the monastic life, taking the sacra- 
ment in both kinds — and applies these principles to them. 
The eight sermons must be given a high place in the oratory 
not only of the pulpit but of the forum. They are filled with 
the spirit of the statesman as well as of the priest. They were 
completely successful. The lowering clouds before which his 
colleagues had stood gaping or which they had helped to raise 
vanished almost in a moment. Luther mentioned no names, but 
the leaders of the opposition were thoroughly discredited and 
left without a follower. Carlstadt sulked at home ; the prophets 
beat a hasty retreat. ^ 

On the day after his last sermon the Reformer wrote a letter 



CARLSTADT AND MUNZER 149 

to the parish priest at Zwickau, one of his most devoted fol- 
lowers, expounding his method of action clearly and concisely. 
The epistle is conceived in the spirit of Paul's advice to the 
Corinthians (1 Corinthians, viii) : 

TO NICHOLAS HAUSMANN AT ZWICKAU 

Wittenberg, March 17, 1522. 

Greeting. Dear Nicholas, although I am variously occupied by our 
great disturbances, I cannot omit writing to you. Your Zwickau 
prophets were about to bring forth monsters, which if born would have 
done no little damage. Their spirit is fair-seeming and very wily, but 
the Lord be with you. Amen. 

Satan has attempted much evil here in my fold, and in such a man- 
ner that it is hard to oppose him without scandal. Be on your guard 
against all innovations made by public decree or popular agitation. 
What our friends attempt by force and violence must be resisted by 
word only, overcome by word and destroyed by word. It is Satan 
who urges us to extreme measures. 

I condemn masses held as sacrifices and good works, but I would not 
lay hands on those who are unwilling to give them up or on those who 
are doubtful about them, nor would I prevent them by force. I con- 
demn by word onlyl whoso believes, let him believe and follow, whoso 
does not believe, let him not believe and depart. No one is to be com- 
pelled to the faith or to the things that are of faith, but to be drawn by 
word that he may believe and come of his own accord. I condemn 
images, but only by word, saying not that they should be burned, but 
that faith should not be placed in them, as hitherto has been done and 
is yet done. They will fall of themselves when the instructed people 
learn that they are nothing before God. In like manner I condemn 
the Pope's laws about confession, communion, prayer and fasting, but 
by word, that I may free consciences from them. While their con- 
sciences are freed, they may use such things for the sake of the weaker 
brethren who are entangled in them, and then may cease to use them 
as they wax strong, so that charity may be the rule in external usages 
and laws. 

Nothing vexes me more than this multitude, which abandons Scrip- 
ture, faith, and charity, and boasts that it is Christian only because in 
the presence of weaker brethren it is able to eat flesh on Fridays, 
commune in both kinds, and stop fasting and prayer. . . . But all 
things are to be proved by Scripture and hearts are to be helped little 



150 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

by little like Jacob's sheep, that they may first receive the word of 
their own accord and afterwards grow stronger. . . . 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 

Early in April Luther consented to hear the prophets in their 
own defence, of which he later gave the following report : — 

In 1522 ' Mark Storch 2 came to me with sweet, seductive words to 
lay his doctrine before me. As he presumed to teach things not in 
Scripture I said to him : " I will not agree with that part of your doc- 
trine unsupported by Scripture unless you work miracles to prove it." 
. . . He said : " You shall see miracles in seven years." (These words 
were from Satan who soon after instigated the Feasants' Revolt.) He 
presumptuously continued : " God will not take away my power. I can 
tell whether a man will be saved or not." — But Satan cannot remain 
hidden: his speech bewrayeth him. Storch had wonderful phrases, "illu- 
mination, quietism," and the like. 8 I asked him what he meant by 
these words, but he said he would not preach to inept disciples. I asked 
him how he knew the inept from the apt. He replied : " I can tell what 
sort of a talent a man has." I asked : " My dear Mark, what sort of a 
talent have I ? " He answered : " You are in the first degree of mobil- 
ity, but you will soon be in the first degree of immobility," — in which 
I am. 

After pacifying Wittenberg, Luther visited Weimar, Erfurt, 
and other neighboring places, preaching with great success 
against fanaticism and sedition. 

But the battle was not to be so easily won. The ranters, 
driven from the neighborhood of Wittenberg, fled to other 
places, where they propagated the same doctrines. Thomas 
Miinzer, the great original agitator, after his expulsion from 

1 Text 1521 (Bindseil, ii, 21). This is a mistake. The prophets did not arrive 
in Wittenberg until December 27, 1521. Cf. Endera, iii, 381. 

2 The names of the prophets are confused : Nicholas Storch and Mark Thomae 
Stiibner. 

8 Langweiligkeit, translated quietism, refers to the doctrine of the mystics that 
the way to know God was to wait for him in absolute vacancy of thought. These 
phrases of the mystics recall Sir Thomas Browne's description of the mystic 
doctrine in Urn-Burial : " Christian annihilation, extasis, ezolution, liquefaction, 
transformation, the kisse of the Spouse, gustation of God, and ingression into the 
divine shadow." 



CAKLSTADT AND MUNZER 151 

Zwickau and visit to Bohemia, settled in the little Saxon town 
of Allstedt, where he soon won followers. Images were broken 
down, infant baptism abolished, dreams systematically culti- 
vated as a means of communication with God, laws reducing 
the interest and providing for the periodical repudiation of the 
principal of debt were passed and the right to hold private pro- 
perty was questioned. Worse yet, a campaign of fire and sword 
against the " godless," including papists and Lutherans alike, 
was preached with all the violence of fanaticism. The peasants 
streamed in from the surrounding country, armed and on the 
verge of rebellionySeeing that an appeal to reason could no 
longer be made, Lutjher wrote the following letter to the Elector 
and his brother, who were hesitating whether to attack the wolf 
of rebellion masquerading under the sheeps' clothing of relig- 
ious reform : — 

TO THE ELECTOR FREDERIC AND DUKE JOHN OF SAXONY 

(Wittenbekg, July,) 1524. 
Grace and peace in Christ Jesus our Saviour. God's holy Word, 
when it arises, always has the good fortune to excite Satan with all 
his might against itself. At first the devil rages with his fist and wicked 
power, then, if that does no good, he attacks with false tongues and ex- 
travagant spirits and doctrines, so that what he could not crush with 
power be may suffocate with venomous lies. . . . Now Satan knows 
that the rage of Pope and Emperor will accomplish nothing against 
us ; yea, he feels that, as is the way with God's Word, the more 
it is pressed down the more it spreads and grows, and therefore he 
now attacks it with false spirits and sects. We must therefore con- 
sider and not err, for it must be so, as Paul says to the Corinthians; 
"There must also be heresies among you that they which are ap- 
proved may be made manifest." And so, as Satan driven out has now 
wandered two or three years through dry places, seeking rest and find- 
ing none, he has at last settled in your Graces' electorate, and made 
himself a nest at Allstedt, and thinks under our peace, protection, 
and guardianship to fight against us. For Duke George's principal- 
ity, although it is our next neighbor, is, as they themselves boast, too 
favorable and gentle for such a bold and dauntless spirit, so that 
the sectaries cannot there show their courage and confidence, where- 
fore the bad spirit cries out and complains terribly that he must suffer 



152 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

much, although no one has yet attacked him with sword or tongue 
or pen, and they only dream that they are bearing a cross. So frivol- 
ously and causelessly must Satan lie, though he can thereby deceive 
no one. 

Now it is an especial joy that our followers did not begin this 
heresy, as the sectaries themselves boast that they did not learn it from 
us, but directly from Heaven and that they hear God speak to them 
immediately as to the angels. It is a simple fact that at Wittenberg 
only faith, love, and the cross of Christ are taught. God's voice, they 
say, you must hear yourself, and suffer and feel God's work in you to 
know your own weight ; aye, they make nothing of the Scripture, which 
they call " Bible-bubble-Babel." To judge by what they say their cross 
and passion is greater than Christ's and more to be prized. . . . 

The sole reason for my inditing this letter to your Graces is that I 
have gathered from the writings of these people, that this same spirit 
will not be satisfied to make converts by word only, but intends to be- 
take himself to arms and set himself with power against the govern- 
ment, and forthwith raise a riot. Here Satan lets the cat out of the 
bag, that is, makes public too much. What will this spirit do, when he 
has won the support of the mob ? Truly here at Wittenberg I have 
heard from the same spirit that his business must be carried through 
with the sword. I then marked that their plans would come out, 
namely, to overturn the civil government and themselves become lords 
of the world. But Christ says his kingdom is not of this world, and 
teaches the apostles not to be as the rulers of the earth. So although I 
am aware that your Graces will understand how to act in this matter 
better than I can advise you, nevertheless it is my humble duty to do 
my part, and humbly to pray and warn your Graces to fulfil your duty 
as civil governors by preventing mischief and by forestalling rebellion. 
Your Graces may rest assured in your consciences that your power 
and rule was given and commended to you by God, that you might 
preserve the peace and punish those who break it, as St. Paul teaches 
in Romans. Therefore your Graces should neither sleep nor be idle, 
for God will demand an answer and reckoning from you for a care- 
less or spiritless use of the sword. Moreover your Graces could not 
excuse yourselves before the people and the world if you allowed re- 
bellion and crimes of violence to make headway. 

If they give out, as they are wont to do with their swelling words, 
that the spirit drives them on to attempt force, then I answer thus : 
It is a bad spirit which shows no other fruit than burning churches, 
cloisters, and images, for the worst rascals on earth can do as much. 



CARLSTADT AND MUNZER 153 

. . . Secondly . . . that it is a bad spirit which dares not give an an- 
swer. . . . for I, poor, miserable man, did not so act in my doctrine. 
... I went to Leipsic to debate before a hostile audience. At Augs- 
burg I appeared without safe-conduct before my worst enemy. I went 
to Worms to answer to the Emperor and Diet, although I well knew 
that they had broken my safe-conduct, and planned all manner of 
evil against me. . . . 

If they will do more than propagate their doctrines by word, if they 
attempt force, your Graces should say : "We gladly allow any one to 
teach by word, that the right doctrine may be preserved ; but draw 
not the sword, which is ours ; if you do, you must leave the country. . . . 

Now I will close for this time, having humbly prayed your Graces 
to act vigorously against their storming and ranting, that God's king- 
dom may be advanced by word only, as becomes Christians, and that 
all cause of sedition be taken from the multitude (Herr Omnes) which 
is more than enough inclined to it already. For they are not Christ- 
ians who would go beyond the word and appeal to force, even if 
they boast that they are full of holy spirits. God's mercy eternally 
strengthen and preserve your Graces. Amen. 
Yours Graces' obedient, 

Dr. Martin Luther. 

This letter " against the Satan of Allstedt," as Luther called 
him, was published, and Miinzer summoned by the Elector to 
a conference with its author at Weimar. The fanatic feared 
to obey, and fled to the city of Miihlhausen, continuing, always 
and everywhere, his revolutionary agitation, and breathing out 
slaughter and reviling against " that archheathen, archrascal, 
Wittenberg pope, snake, and basilisk." 

Carlstadt, too, continued his iconoclastic career. Unable to 
bear the peaceful atmosphere of Wittenberg, he had himself 
elected to the church at Orlamiinde. Here he advanced ideas 
similar to those of Miinzer, except that he refused to appeal to 
arms, thereby winning the opinion of that ranter that he was a 
coward and a reprobate. His reforms included the introduction 
of polygamy and the advocacy of a new doctrine of the sacra- 
ment. Luther, who was inclined to condone the former, as not 
forbidden by the Bible, vehemently objected to the latter as 
heretical. Discussion of this doctrine is reserved for a later 
chapter. 



154 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

/ Notwithstanding Carlstadt's errors, the Reformer was not 
\ ready to break with him as soon as he had with Miinzer. On 
August 22, 1524, the two had a conference at Jena, and parted 
with a friendly agreement to differ. "The more ably you 
attack me," said Luther, " the better I shall like it," and gave 
his old colleague a gold gulden as a sign that he was free to 
advance what opinions he liked so long as they were supported 
by argument only and not by violence. In accordance with this 
invitation, the pastor of Orlamiinde began a work on the sac- 
rament, but soon the order came to him, September 18, to leave 
Saxony. He went to Basel, and early in November published 
several pamphlets against Luther, defending his doctrine of 
the sacrament, denying the expediency of infant, baptism, 
asserting that he had direct communications from God, and 
charging his opponent with having been responsible for his 
exile. These tracts excited a good deal of attention. Zwingli, 
a far abler head than Carlstadt, adopted his doctrine of the 
eucharist, and Capito, a reformer of Strassburg, wrote a pam- 
phlet trying to harmonize the two opponents, which was the 
cause of Luther's letter to the Christians of that city, warning 
them against false doctrine. His animus against his old col- 
league was increased both by his pamphlets and by an experi- 
ence at Orlamiinde described in this epistle : — 

TO THE CHRISTIANS OF STRASSBURG 

(Wittenberg, December 14, 1524.) 
. . . Certain of your clergy have written about the outcry made by 
Dr. Carlstadt with his ranting about images and the sacrament and 
baptism, and that he reviles me with having driven him from Saxony. 
Now, dear friends, I am not your preacher and no one is bound to 
believe me . . . but I hope you have seen in my writings how simply 
and certainly I treat the gospel, the grace of Christ, the law, faith, 
love, the cross, doctrines of men, the Pope, and monastic vows. . . - 
Of these main articles of faith Carlstadt has not rightly set forth one, 
nor can he. Now that I look into his writings I am simply shocked to 
find out, what I did not before suspect, that the man is still in such 
deep darkness. It looks to me as if he thought the whole of Christ- 
ianity lay in breaking images and hindering the sacrament. ... I 
might stand his raging iconoclasm, for I have been more iconoclastic 



CARLSTADT AND MUNZER 155 

by my writing than he by his raging, but what is not to be borne is his 
imputation that all who do not do as he bids are not Christians. . . . 

I can bear the charge of Garlstadt that I drove him out of the land. 
Were it true I could answer to God for it. . . . 

He himself persuaded me at Jena not to confound his spirit with 
the seditious, murderous spirit of Allstedt. But when, at the Elector's 
behest, I went to his " Christians " at Orlamttnde, I saw what seed he 
had sown and was glad to escape safe, being driven away with stones 
and mud, the inhabitants giving me their blessing with the words : 
" Go hence in the name of a thousand devils, lest you have your neck 
broken before you leave." . . . 

I beg your preachers, dear brethren, to leave Luther and Carlstadt 
and point only to Christ, and not as Carlstadt does only to the work 
of Christ, and the example of Christ, which was the least part of his 
mission, in which he was like other saints, but to Christ as the gift of 
God, or, as Paul says, the strength of God, wisdom, righteousness, sanc- 
tification, and redemption, given to us, which these " prophets " have 
not tasted nor understood. They juggle with " their living voice from 
Heaven," and their " ecstasy, illumination, mortification," and such 
bombastic words which they do not understand themselves, though by 
them they make consciences heavy while men wonder at their great 
art and forget Christ. . . . 

Shortly after writing this letter Luther published a compre- 
hensive work Against the Heavenly Prophets of Images and 
the Sacrament, the first part of which appeared late in Decem- 
ber, the second half early in January, 1525. In the first part 
he says : — 

We should be very careful to distinguish and widely to separate 
fundamentals concerning the conscience and things indifferent con- 
cerning outward works. . . . These ambitious prophets do nothing 
but smash images, break into churches, lord it over the sacrament, 
and seek new ways of mortification, that is, of self-inflicted death 
of the flesh. They have not yet learned nor preached the doctrine of 
faith and how to rule the conscience, which is the principal and most 
necessary Christian doctrine. Suppose that they succeeded in leaving 
no more images and no churches standing, and suppose that they per- 
suaded every one in all the world not to believe that Christ's flesh 
and blood were in the sacrament, and suppose all dressed in gray, 
peasants' clothes, what would they gain by all this ? . . . Would 



156 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

they be Christians thereby ? Where would be faith and love ? — 
Pictures are defended as a help to the faith of the ignorant. 

Luther denies Carlstadt's charge that he has been at the 
bottom of the latter's exile. He brings against him the counter- 
charges, first, of neglecting the duties of a professor for which 
he was paid, and secondly, of exciting sedition, for either of 
which he might justly have been sent away .7" These prophets 
teach that the reform of Christendom should start with a 
slaughter of the godless, that they themselves may be lords of 
the earth. I myself have heard this from them, and Dr. Carl- 
stadt knows that they are ranting and murderous spirits. . . . 
'Tor those who preach murder can have no other origin than 
the devil himself, even if they have all wisdom and know the 
Bible, for the devil also knows the Bible well. Is it not a 
plague that people should be moved by such spirits before the 
princes know aught of it, and that the populace is thereby 
made presumptuous and turbulent 1/ 

The second part is on the doctrine of the Lord's Supper, 
Carlstadt's arguments being answered one by one. 

The work had great notoriety but little success. The Strass- 
burgers were rather alienated by it and inclined to side with 
the exile. Public attention was soon drawn from the quarrel 
of Luther and the prophets to a far larger movement in which 
it was swallowed up, the Peasants' Revolt. 

Before describing that important event, let us glance at the 
latter end of Carlstadt. The death of Miinzer and other agitat- 
ors, in the defeat of the peasants, made him fear for his life. 
Not knowing where to turn, he went back to Wittenberg and 
besought a refuge with the Reformer. From near the first of 
July till late in September he was sheltered by his old col- 
league and opponent, who wrote a letter to the Elector, on Sep- 
tember 12, asking him to allow Carlstadt to live peaceably at 
Kemberg. This petition was refused ; the fanatic had to leave, 
and wandered long from place to place, until at last he became 
professor in the University of Basel. He had learned his lesson 
and never more was a political agitator. 



CHAPTER XIV 

THE PEASANTS' REVOLT. 1525 

Peasant risings were not uncommon in Europe for more 
than a millennium. Such an insurrection had taken place in 
Gaul in Roman times. Such were the Jacquerie in France 
in 1358 and the gigantic strike of English laborers in 1381. 
The struggle for Swiss freedom also may be viewed as a social 
as well as a national conflict. The fifteenth and early sixteenth 
centuries saw many local revolts. To the old standing grievances 
of the lords' tyranny, the heavy taxes and tithes, the game 
laws, the corvee and serfdom, common causes of all these ris- 
ings alike, new motives were added to make this last the most 
terrible, among them the prevalent intellectual unrest and the 
powerful leaven of the new religious teaching. 

Luther, indeed, could honestly say that he had consistently 
preached the duty of obedience and the wickedness of sedition, 
nevertheless his democratic message of the brotherhood of man 
and the excellence of the humblest Christian worked in many 
ways undreamed of by himself. Moreover, he had mightily 
championed the cause of the oppressed commoner against his 
masters. " The people neither can nor will endure your tyranny 
any longer," said he to the nobles ; " God will not endure it ; 
the world is not what it once was when you drove and hunted 
men like wild beasts." Other preachers, among whom Carl- 
stadt and Miinzer were two conspicuous examples, took up the 
word and carried it to the wildest conclusions of communism 
and anarchy. 

Beginning in the autumn of 1524, in the highlands between 
the sources of the Rhine and the Danube, the rebellion swept 
north through Franconia and Swabia. The demands of the 
insurgents were embodied in the Twelve Articles, drawn up 
not later than February, 1525, by a Swabian, Sebastian Lotzer, 
and tacitly adopted as the official programme by most of the 



158 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

bands of rustics. The fundamental principle of this document 
is the entire assimilation of civil and divine law ; all claims are 
supported by an appeal to the gospel, under which rule the 
insurgents declare their, intention to live. The articles propose 
the free election by each parish of its pastor, the reduction of 
taxes and tithes, the abolition of serfdom, freedom to hunt, fish, 
and cut wood in the forests, less forced labor, reopening of 
commons to the public, substitution of the old (German) for 
the new (Roman) law, and abolition of the heriot. 

Continuing to spread, the insurrection reached Thuringia 
and Saxony about April, 1525. In this region all eyes were 
turned to Luther, the man of the people. In one pamphlet, 
dated March 7, the peasants requested him, together with 
Melanchthon, Bugenhagen, and the Elector Frederic to act as 
arbitrators between them and the lords. As yet Luther had 
not heard of the atrocities committed by some of the rebels, 
But there was danger in the air. At the invitation of his old 
lord, Count Albert of Mansfeld, he journeyed to Eisleben to 
investigate the situation. Here, while the guest of Chancellor 
Diirr, on April 19 and 20, he composed An Exhortation to 
Peace on the Twelve Articles of the Swabian Peasants. By 
this warning, which he states is written in answer to the request 
of the insurgents for instruction, he hoped to bring both sides 
to reason and prevent the effusion of blood. He addresses each 
party by turns, the lords and the commoners. To the former 
he says : — 

" We need thank no one on earth for this foolish rebellion but you, 
my lords, and especially you blind bishops, parsons and monks, for yon, 
even yet hardened, cease not to rage against the holy gospel, although 
you know that our cause is right and you cannot controvert it. Besides 
this, in civil government you do nothing but oppress and tax to main- 
tain your pomp and pride, until the poor common man neither can 
nor will bear it any longer. The sword is at your throat, and yet you 
still think you sit so firm in the saddle that no one can hoist you out. 
You will find out that by such hardened presumption you will break 
your necks. ... If these peasants don't do it, others will ; God will 
appoint others, for he intends to smite you and will smite you." 

Some say the rebellion has been caused by Luther's doctrine, but he 



THE PEASANTS' REVOLT 1S9 

avers that he has always taught obedience to the powers that be. 
" But the prophets of murder are hostile to you as to me, and they 
have gone among the people these three years and no one has with- 
stood them but I." 

Some of the peasants' articles are right, as the demand to choose 
their own pastors and the repudiation of the heriot. 

To the peasantry he says : — 

" It is my friendly and fraternal prayer, dearest brothers, to be 
very careful what you do. Believe not all spirits' and preachers." 
Those who take the sword shall perish by the sword and every soul 
should be subject to the powers that be, in fear and honor. " If the 
government is bad and intolerable, that is no excuse for riot and insur- 
rection, for to punish evil belongs not to every one, but to the civil 
authority which bears the sword.f' Suffering tyranny is a cross given 
by God. Luther will pray for them. 

Coming to a consideration of the Twelve Articles he says 
that even if they were all just, the peasants would have no right 
to put them through by force. The first article, for the right to 
elect pastors, is right. The second demand, that the tithes be 
divided between the priest and the poor, is simple robbery, for 
the tithes belong to the government. The third, for the aboli- 
tion of serfdom on the ground that Christ has freed all, makes 
Christian freedom a carnal thing and is therefore unjustified. 
The other eight articles (that on the heriot having been already 
approved) are referred to the lawyers. 

The pamphlet closes with a solemn charge to each side to 
strive not for its own gain, but for the right, and a warning 
to keep the peace. 

Excellent as were Luther's intentions, his exhortation was 
imprudently expressed. In any case, however, interference came 
too late. Already on April 16, the rebel bands had stormed 
Weinsberg and massacred the inhabitants; within the next 
two weeks cloisters and castles were burned to the ground, 
while violence, anarchy, and rapine followed with all the 
ferocity characteristic of class warfare. The nobles made what 
terms they could ; the towns either capitulated or joined the 
rising in full force. At Miihlhausen, Miinzer, thinking the 



160 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

hour of triumph had come, urged the divine duty of ruthless 
slaughter. 

The princes were entirely unprepared. Old Frederic was 
lying mortally ill at his castle of Lochau. Without troops and 
unnerved by disease, he wrote his brother John that if it was 
God's will that the common man should rule he would not re- 
sist it. John,' too, was without hope : " There are thirty-five 
thousand men in the field against us," he wrote ; " we are but 
lost princes." 

For one awful moment it looked as if the insurgents would 
•carry all before them. Luther saw the whole of Germany 
threatened with anarchy, and the Evangelic cause with extinc- 
tion. Never found wanting in the hour of danger, he continued 
his journey through the disaffected districts, preaching against 
the rising. According to the somewhat unreliable table-talk 
he met with a hostile reception at some places ; at any rate his 
intervention did no good. He found himself, on May 4, at See- 
burg, in Mansfeld. Not a single blow had yet been struck in 
the cause of order. SLuther saw that the only means left to re- 
store peace was force\and accordingly wrote the following stern 
letter to one of the councillors of the Count of Mansfeld : — 

TO JOHN EUHEL AT MANSFELD 

Seeburg, May 4, 1525. 

Grace and peace in Christ. Honored and dear doctor and friend ! 
I have been intending to answer your last tidings, recently shown me, 
here on my journey. First of all I beg you not to make our gracious 
lord, Count Albert, weak in this matter, bat let him go on as he has 
begun, though it will only make the devil still angrier, so that he will 
rage more than ever through those limbs of Satan he has possessed. 
We have God's Word, which lies not but says, " He beareth not the 
sword in vain, etc.," so there is no doubt that his lordship has been 
ordained and commanded of God. His Grace will need the sword to 
punish the wicked as long as there are such sores in the body politic 
as now exist. Should the sword be struck out of his Grace's hand by 
force, we must suffer it, and give it back to God, who first gave it and 
can take it back how and when he will. 

May his Grace also have a good conscience in case he should have 
to die for God's Word, for God has so ordered it, if he permits it ; no 



THE PEASANTS' REVOLT 161 ' 

one should leave off the good work until he is prevented by force, 
just as in battle no one should forego an advantage or leave off fight- 
ing until he is overcome. 

If there were thousands more peasants than there are they would 
all be robbers and murderers, who take the sword with criminal in- 
tent to drive out lords, princes, and all else, and make a new order in 
the world for which they have from God neither command, right, 
power, nor injunction, as the lords now have to suppress them. They 
are faithless and perjured, and still worse they bring the Divine Word 
and gospel to shame and dishonor, a most horrible sin. If God in his 
wrath really lets them accomplish their purpose, for which he has 
given them no command nor right, we must suffer it as we do other 
wickedness, but not acquiesce in it as if they did right. 

I hope they will have no success nor staying power, although God 
at times plagues the world with desperate men as he has done and yet 
does with the Turks. It is the devil's mockery that the peasants give 
out that they will hurt no one and do no harm. No harm to drive out 
and kill their masters ? If they mean no harm, why do they gather in 
hordes and demand that others surrender to them ? To do no harm 
and yet to take all — that is what the devil, too, knows how to do. If 
we let him do what he likes, forsooth he harms no one. 

Their only reason for driving out their lords is pure wickedness. 
Look at the government they have set up, the worst that ever was, 
without order or discipline in it but only pillage. If God wishes to 
chastize us in his wrath, he can find no fitter instrument than these 
enemies of his, criminals, robbers, murderers, faithless, perjured peas- 
ants. If it be God's will, let us suffer it and call them lords as the Scrip- 
ture calls the devil prince and lord. May God keep all good Christians 
from honoring and worshipping them as the devil tried to make Christ 
worship him. Let us withstand them by word and deed as long as ever 
we can and then die for it in God's name. 

They purpose to hurt no one if only we yield to them ; and so we 
should yield to them, should we ? Must we indeed acknowledge as our 
rulers these faithless, perjured, blasphemous robbers, who have no 
right from God, but only the support of the prince of this world, as he 
boasts in Matthew, -chapter four, that he has dominion and honor over 
all the world to give it to whom he will ? That is true enough when 
God punishes and does not protect. 

This matter concerns me deeply, for the devil wishes to kill me. 
I see that he is angry that hitherto he has been able to accomplish 
nothing either by fraud or force ; he thinks that if he were only free of 



162 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

me he could do as he liked and confound the whole world together, so 
I almost believe that I am the cause that the devil can do such things 
in the world, whereby God punishes it. "Well, if I ever get home I will 
meet my death with God's aid, and await my new masters, the mur- 
derers and robbers who tell me they will harm no one. Highway rob- 
bers always say the same : " I will do you no harm, but give me all 
you have or you shall die." Beautiful innocence ! How fairly the devil 
decks himself and his murderers ! Before I would yield and say what 
they want, I would lose my head a hundred times, God granting me 
his grace. If I can do it before I die, I will yet take my Katie to wife 
to spite the devil, when I hear that they are after me. I hope they 
will not take away my joy and good spirits. 

Some say the insurgents are not followers of Milnzer — that let their 
own god believe, for no one else will. 

I write to strengthen you to strengthen others, especially my gracious 
lord Count Albert. Encourage his Grace to go forth with good spirit, 
and may God grant him success, and let him fulfil the divine injunc- 
tion to bear the sword as long as ever he can ; conscience at least is 
safe in case he fall. If God permit the peasants to extirpate the princes 
to fulfil his wrath, he will give them hell fire for it as a reward. The 
just judge will come shortly to judge both them and us — us with 
grace, as we have suffered by their crimes of violence, them with wrath, 
for they who take the sword must perish by the sword as Christ said. 
Their work and success cannot long stand. 

Greet your dear wife for me. 

Db. Martin Lother. 

Very soon after writing this letter, Luther published a short 
tract Against the Thievish, Murderous Hordes of Peasants, 
expressed in much the same tone : — 

" In my former book " (Exhortation to Peace) he writes, " I dared 
not judge the peasants, since they asked" to be instructed, and Christ 
says Judge not. But before I could look around they forget their re- 
quest and betake themselves to violence, — rob, rage, and act like mad 
dogs, whereby one may see what they had in their false minds, and 
that their pretence to speak in the name of the gospel in the Twelve 
Articles was a simple lie. They do mere devil's work, especially that 
Satan of Mtihlhausen does nothing but rob, murder, and pour out 
blood." 

The peasants have deserved death for three reasons : (1) because they 



THE PEASANTS' REVOLT 168 

have broken their oath of fealty ; (2) for rioting and plundering ; and 
(3) for having covered their terrible sins with the name of the gospel 
'• Wherefore, my lords, free, save, help, and pity the poor people ; stab, 
smite, and slay, all ye that can. If you die in battle you could never 
have a more blessed end, for you die obedient to God's Word in Bo- 
mans 13, and in the service of love to free your neighbor from the 
bands of hell and the devil. I implore every one who can to avoid the 
peasants as he would the devil himself. I pray God will enlighten 
them and turn their hearts. But if they do not turn, I wish them no 
happiness for ever more. . . . Let none think this too hard who con- 
siders how intolerable is rebellion." 

Almost as Luther was writing, steps were taken to suppress 
the insurgents. On May 5 the Count of Mansfeld, with a few 
personal retainers, scattered a small band near Osterhausen, a 
success insignificant in itself but important as the first blow 
struck for order in central Germany. 

The decisive battle followed not long after. Philip of Hesse, 
the ablest of the Evangelic princes after Frederic the Wise, 
having come to terms with his own peasants by negotiation, 
gathered an army and marched, in cooperation with other 
lords, against eight thousand rebels at Frankenhausen. Hoping 
to come to a peaceful agreement, Philip found the peasants 
ready to negotiate until on May 12 Miinzer arrived with rein- 
forcements from Miihlhausen and roused the poor men by his 
baleful eloquence to such a pitch of fanaticism, that, in reliance 
on divine help, they refused all terms. When the troops at- 
tacked them on May 15, the raw countrymen fled in the wildest 
panic, more than half of them perishing on the field. Miinzer 
was captured and put to death. 

Biihel sent the tidings to Luther on May 21, and received 
the following answer : — 

TO JOHN RUHEL AT MANSFELD 

Wittenberg, May 23, 1525. 
God's grace and peace. I thank you, honored and dear sir, for your 
news. I am especially pleased at the fall of Thomas Miinzer. Please 
let me have further details of his capture and of how he acted, for it 
is important to know how that proud spirit bore itself. 



184 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

It is pitiful that we have to he so cruel to the poor people, but what 
can we do ? It is necessary and God wills it that fear may be brought 
on the people. Otherwise Satan brings forth mischief. God said : Who 
hath taken the sword shall perish by the sword. It is gratifying that 
their spirit be at last so plainly revealed, so that henceforth the peas- 
ants will know how wrong they were and perhaps leave off rioting, or 
at least do it less. Do not be troubled about the severity of their sup- 
pression, for it will profit many souls. . . . 

After the lords had the upper hand the insurrection was 
put down with the utmost cruelty. At Frankenhausen and else- 
where the soldiers far outdid the peasants in acts of violence 
and blood. It is estimated that one hundred thousand of the 
poor rustics perished, and the rest sank back into a more 
wretched state than before. 

The danger past and the pity of the public aroused, Luther's 
enemies raised a great outcry against him, accusing him of be- 
traying his allies and the men whom his teaching had mis- 
guided, and most of all for the cruelty of his pamphlet. What- 
ever foundation these charges may have, there is absolutely none 
in the accusation that he sided with the insurgents while they 
seemed likely to win and then turned to curry favor with the 
princes when they had triumphed. The direct opposite was 
the truth, and Luther, excited by these widespread charges, 
defends himself with spirit in a letter to an old colleague. 

TO NICHOLAS AMSDORF AT MAGDEBURG 

Wittenberg, May 30, 1525. 

Grace and peace. You write of a new honor for me, dear Amsdorf, 
namely that I am called the toady of the princes ; Satan has conferred 
many such honors upon me during the past years. . • . 

My opinion is that it is better that all the peasants be killed than 
that the princes and magistrates perish, because the rustics took the 
sword without divine authority. The only possible consequence of 
their satanic wickedness would be the diabolic devastation of the 
kingdom of God. Even if the princes abuse their power, yet they have 
it of God, and under their rule the kingdom of God at least has a 
chance to exist. Wherefore no pity, no tolerance should be shown to 
the peasants, but the fury and wrath of God should be visited upon 
those men who did not heed warning nor yield when just terms were 



THE PEASANTS' REVOLT 16B 

offered them, but continued with satanic fury to confound every- 
thing. ... To justify, pity, or favor them is to deny, blaspheme, and 
try to pull God from heaven. . . . 

Thus also, in a note inviting John Riihel to his wedding 
feast, the Reformer says (June 15, 1526) : " What an outcry of 
Harrow has been caused by my pamphlet against the peasants. 
All is now forgotten that God has done for the world through 
me. Now lords, priests, and peasants are all against me and 
threaten my death." 

^ Riihel accepted the invitation and brought with him a letter 
from the Chancellor Caspar Miiller suggesting that the Reformer 
should defend himself against the attacks made upon him. In 
answer to this Luther published in July an open letter to 
Miiller, under the title: On the Hard Pamphlet against the 
Peasants. In this he has nothing to retract. "One cannot 
answer a rebel with reason," he argues, " but the best answer is 
to hit him with the fist until blood flows from his nose." (Mit 
der faust mus man solchen meulern antworten, das der scbweys 
zur nasen ausgehe.) He never meant to urge slaughter after 
battle, " but neither did I undertake to instruct those mad, rag- 
ing, insane tyrants, who even after combat cannot satiate their 
thirst for blood and never in their whole life long ask after 
Christ, for it is all the same to such bloodhounds whether they 
are guilty or innocent, or whether they please God or the devil. 
They use the sword to satisfy their passions, so I leave them to 
their master the devil." 

That Luther really pitied the poor people after their defeat 
is shown by an intercessory letter : — 

TO ALBERT, ARCHBISHOP AND ELECTOR OF MAYENCE 

(Wittenberg,) July 21, 1525. 
Grace and peace in Jesus Christ. Most venerable Father in God, 
most serene, highborn Prince, most gracious Lord. I am informed 
that one Asmus Giinthel, the son of a citizen of Eisleben, has been 
arrested by your Grace on the charge of having stormed a barricade. 
His father is sore distressed and tells me he did not take part in the 
storming, but only ate and drank there at the time, and as he begged 
me piteously to intercede for his life I could not refuse him. I humbly 



166 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

pray your Grace to consider that this insurrection has been put down 
not by the hand of man but by the grace of God who pities us all, and 
especially those in authority, and that accordingly you treat the poor 
people graciously and mercifully as becomes a spiritual lord even more 
than a temporal one. . . . 

Alas ! there are too many who treat the people horribly and so act 
unthankfully to God as if they would recklessly awaken the wrath of 
Heaven and of the people again and provoke a new and worse rebel- 
lion. God has decreed that those who show no mercy should also perish 
without mercy. 

It is not good for a lord to raise displeasure, ill-will and hostility 
among his subjects, and it is likewise foolish to do so. It is right to 
show sternness when the commonalty are seditious and stubborn, but 
now that they are beaten down they are a different people, worthy that 
mercy be shown them in judgment. Putting too much in a bag bursts 
it. Moderation is good in all things, and, as St. James says, mercy 
rejoiceth against judgment. I hope your Grace will act as a Christian 
in this matter. God bless you. Amen. 

Your Grace's obedient servant, 

Mabtin Luthek. 

The Peasants' War was the hardest storm weathered by the 
new Church. Had not an iron hand been at the helm it might 
well have foundered the ship of reform and scattered all that 
was hopeful and good in it in a thousand fragments. As it was, the 
cause suffered heavily, and the reputation of its leader suffered 
still more. In steering too far from the dread whirlpool which 
would have engulfed all his cause, he sailed too close to the Scylla 
on the other side and lost men thereby. From his own day to 
the present he has been reproached with cruelty to the poor 
people who^vere partly misguided by what they believed to be 
his voice. And yet, much as the admirers of Luther must and 
do regret his terrible violence of expression, the impartial his- 
torian can hardly doubt that in substance he was right. No 
government in the world could have allowed rebellion to go 
unpunished; no sane man could believe that any argument but 
arms would have availed. Luther first tried the way of peace, 
he then risked his life preaching against the rising ; finally he 
urged the use of the sword as the ultima ratio. He was right 
to do so, though he put himself in the wrong by his immoderate 



THE PEASANTS' REVOLT 167 

zeal. It would have been more becoming for Luther, the peas- 
ant and the hero of the peasants, had he shown greater sym- 
pathy with their cause and more mercy. Had he done so his 
name would have escaped the charge of cruelty with which it is 
now stained. 



CHAPTER XV 

CATHARINE VON BORA 

From fierce war Luther's thoughts were turned to faithful, if 
unromantic love. Although convinced while still at the Wart- 
burg of the nullity of vows of celibacy, it was a long time, as 
Erasmus sneered, before he made use of the liberty he preached 
to others. After all the brothers save one, Brisger, had departed 
to take up a worldly career, he continued to reside at the Black 
Cloister, as the Augustinian monastery was called, not from its 
own color, a brick red, but from the popular designation of its 
dark-robed inmates as black monks. Having laid aside their 
cowls and assumed the simple garb of laymen, the two like- 
minded men dwelt here with one servant, a student of theology 
named Sieberger. The building was large, but as the revenues 
had been dissipated by the custom of giving a handsome pre- 
sent to each departing brother, the two remaining inhabitants 
dwelt in poverty, for the professor had a salary of but one hun- 
dred gulden. One of his reminiscences of this period paints a 
speaking picture of his manner of life : — 

Before I was married, the bed was not made up for a whole year 
and became foul with sweat. But I worked all day and was so tired at 
night that I fell into bed without knowing that anything was amiss. 

When at last he decided to marry, it was something of an 
accident that his choice fell upon Catharine von Bora. She had 
been born, on January 29, 1499, at Lippendorf, a hamlet some 
twenty miles south of Leipsic. The name Bora (cognate in form 
and meaning with our word^/w-) is, like that of Staupitz and 
other aristocratic families of the region, of Wendish or Slavonic 
origin, but the family, deriving its name from the village of 
Bora, was Teutonic. Catharine's father, Hans von Bora, held 
modest estates, a portion of which, the farm of Zulsdorf, later 
passed by purchase to his famous son-in-law. The mother, 



CATHARINE VON BORA 169 

Catharine von Haugwitz, died shortly after the birth of her 
little girl, and Hans, marrying again, sent his five-year-old 
daughter to the convent school of the Benedictine nuns near 
Brehna. About four years later he transferred her to a Cister- 
cian cloister at Nimbschen near Grimma, intending that in due 
time she should become a nun. Nimbschen was a wealthy foun- 
dation in which the education of the girls and their taking of 
the veil were gratuitous ; it was therefore largely patronized by 
gentlemen like Bora of more influence than means. At the time 
of her entrance, one of her relatives was abbess, and another, 
Auntie Lena, as she afterwards came to be known at Witten- 
berg, was a sister. 

The quiet years at Nimbschen, hardly broken by Catharine's 
consecration as a nun at the age of sixteen (October 8, 1515), 
were spent in the round of devotion, learning and teaching, 
prayer and charity, which form the routine of monastic life. 
■^ The girl was well educated ; besides the elementary accomplish- 
ments of reading and writing her own tongue (not so common 
then as now), she knew some Latin. The cloister had large es- 
tates, tilled under the direct supervision of the nuns, so that she 
may have here gained that knowledge of practical farming which 
she later turned to good account. 

In almost any other age and country, Catharine would have 
finished her life in the convent as quietly as she had begun it. 
But she lived in stirring times. Luther's proclamation of mon- 
astic emancipation was promptly followed by a general evacua- 
tion of the cloisters, especially those of his own order, one of 
which was situated at Grimma. Inspired by the example of these 
monks several of the sisters at Nimbschen tried to follow it. One 
who was caught writing to Luther was severely disciplined. 
This did not prevent the others from doing the same, and it was 
at his advice that, after vainly applying to their relatives to re- 
ceive them, twelve of the younger nuns secured the aid of Leon- 
ard Coppe, a wealthy and honorable burger of Torgau who had 
long stood in business relations with Nimbschen. Though the 
attempt was not without danger, for the abduction of a nun 
was a capital offence, he, with the assistance of his nephew and 
another young man, helped them to escape on the night of April 



170 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

4-5, 1523. Three of them went to their own homes, the other nine 
were conveyed by Coppe first to Torgau and then to Wittenberg. 
The Reformer, who at once took up their cause, defending them 
in a publication, announces their arrival in these words : — 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBUEG 

Wittenberg, April 10, 1523. 

Grace and peace. Nine fugitive nuns, a wretched crowd, have been 
brought to me by honest citizens of Torgau. I mean Leonard Coppe 
and his nephew Wolf Tomitzsch ; there is therefore no cause for sus- 
picion. I pity them much, but most of all the others who are dying 
everywhere in such numbers in their cursed and impure celibacy. This 
sex so very, very weak, joined by nature or rather by God to the other, 
perishes when cruelly separated. tyrants ! O cruel parents and kins- 
men in Germany ! O Pope and bishops, who can curse you enough ? 
Who can sufficiently execrate the blind fury which has taught and en- 
forced such things ? But this is not the place to do it. 

You ask what I shall do with them ? First I shall inform their re- 
latives and ask them to support the girls ; if they will not I shall have 
the girls otherwise provided for. Some of the families have already 
promised me to take them ; for some I shall get husbands if I can. 
Their names are : Magdalene von Staupitz, 1 Elsa von Ganitz, Ave Gross, 
Ave von Schanfeld and her sister Margaret, Laneta von Goltz, Mar- 
garet and Catharine Zeschau and Catharine von Bora. Here are they, 
who serve Christ, in need of true pity. They have escaped from the 
cloister in miserable condition. I pray you also to do the work of 
charity and beg some money for me from your rich courtiers, by which 
I can support the girls a week or two until their kinsmen or others 
provide for them. For my Capernaans have no wealth but that of the 
Word, so that I myself could not find the loan of ten gulden, for a poor 
citizen the other day. The poor, who would willingly give, have nothing ; 
the rich either refuse or give so reluctantly that they lose the credit of 
the gift with God and take up my time begging from them. Nothing 
is too much for the world and its way. Of my annual salary I have only 
ten or fifteen gulden left, besides which not a penny has been given 
me by my brothers or by the city. But I ask them for nothing, to em- 
ulate the boast of Paul, despoiling other churches to serve my Corinth- 
ians free. . . . Farewell and pray for me. 

Martin Luthbk. 

1 A sister of Luther's friend John von Staupitz, but much younger than her 
brother. 



CATHARINE VON BORA 171 

Luther was as good as his word in providing for the fugi- 
tives. For Staupitz's sister he interceded so effectually with the 
clergy of Griuima that a little house was presented her in that 
town in remembrance of her brother. For another nun the Re- 
former secured the position of teacher, while most of the rest 
returned to their relatives or married. The three who remained 
longest at Wittenberg were Ave and Margaret von Schonfeld 
and Catharine von Bora. For Ave Luther felt a certain attrac- 
tion, even love, but she, too, as well as her sister, married, and 
of all the Nimbschen runaways, Catharine, whose father was 
now dead, was left alone. She had been taken into the house 
of the rich and honorable Reichenbach, who at times held the 
office of burgomaster at Wittenberg. Here the girl lived about 
two years, during which time she learned housekeeping, and 
a marvellously apt pupil she was, to judge by her later manage. 

What a contrast was Wittenberg to Nimbschen ! A good 
deal of the world could be seen in this little town, with its 
students from all parts of Germany and from foreign lands, 
too. Here Catharine learned to know many a great man, Lucas 
Cranach, the artist, and Philip Melanchthon, the preceptor of 
the fatherland. In October, 1523, she was presented to King 
Christian II of Denmark, on his visit to Wittenberg, and was 
given a gold ring by the lavish monarch. In all her new ex- 
periences the girl's piety and modesty, or perhaps something 
in her looks, won her the nickname of St. Catharine of 
Siena. 

Then she had an unhappy love-affair. Jerome Baumgartner, 
a promising youth who had graduated from the university in 
1521, in the autumn of 1523 made a long visit to Melanchthon. 
When he returned to his native Nuremberg there was an un- 
derstanding, though not a formal engagement, that he should 
come back and marry Katie. The young man, though his later 
career was highly honorable, was unable in this case to fulfil 
his intentions, and his failure to return was so taken to heart 
by the poor girl that she actually became ill over it. About 
a year after Baumgartner's departure, Luther wrote him : " If 
you want your Katie you had best act quickly before she is 
given to some one else who wants her. She has not yet con- 



172 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

quered her love for you and I would willingly see you married 
to each other." (October 12, 1524.) 

Jerome, however, stayed away and in January his betrothal to 
a rich girl was announced. 

The suitor who wanted Katie was a certain Dr. Glatz. The 
Reformer himself had no intention of marriage : " Not that I 
lack the feelings of a man," as he wrote Spalatin on November 
30, " for I am neither wood nor stone, but my mind is averse 
to matrimony because I daily expect the death decreed to the 
heretic." 

But a little more than a month after this, Luther preached 
and published his sermon on marriage, highly extolling that 
estate as the one honored by all the patriarchs and prophets, 
and pointing out the duties both of those who wished to marry 
and of husbands and wives. A little later he issued a regular 
manifesto in the form of an open letter to a friend who was 
considering wedlock. One can easily see that the arguments 
here given apply equally well to the writer's position : — 

TO WOLFGANG EEISSENBUSCH AT LICHTENBEKG 

Wittenberg, March 27, 1525. 

God's grace and peace in Christ. Honored Sir ! I am moved by 
good friends and by the esteem I bear you to write you this epistle on 
the estate of matrimony, as I have noticed you would like to marry, 
or rather are forced to do so by God himself, who gave you a nature 
requiring it. 

I dp not think you should be hindered by the rule of the Order or 
by a vow, for no vow can bind or be valid except under two condi- 
tions. First, a vow must be possible of performance, for who would 
vow an impossible thing, or who would demand it ? . . . Now chastity 
is not in our power, as little as are God's other wonders and graces, 
but we are made for marriage as the Scripture says : It is not good 
for man to be alone : I will make an help meet for him. 

Who, therefore, considers himself a man, should hear what God 
decrees for him. . . . This is the Word of God, through whose power 
seed is created in man's body and the burning desire for the woman 
kindled and kept alight which cannot be restrained by vows nor 
laws. . . . 

Secondly, that a vow may be valid it must not be against God and 



CATHARINE VON BORA 173 

the Christian faith, and everything is against that which relies on 
works and not on God's grace. . . . 

It would be a fine, noble example if you married, that would help 
many feeble ones and give them more scope, so that they might escape 
the dangers of the flesh. What harm is it if people say: "So the 
Lichtenberg professor has taken a wife, has he ? " Is it not a great 
glory that you should thereby become an example to others to do the 
same ? Christ was an example to us all how to bear reproach for con- 
science' sake. Do I say reproach ? Only fools and fanatics think mar- 
riage a reproach, men who do not mind fornication but forbid what 
God has commanded. If it is a shame to take a wife, why is it not a 
shame to eat and drink, for we have equal need of both and God wills 
both? ... 

Friend, let us not fly higher nor try to be better than Abraham, 
David, Isaiah, Peter, Paul, and all the patriarchs, prophets, and apos- 
tles, as well as many holy martyrs and bishops, who knew that God 
had made them men and were not ashamed to be and to be thought so 
and therefore considered that they should not remain alone. . . . 

Luther was evidently intending to marry. In casting about 
for an eligible wife, his first choice did not fall upon Katie but 
one of the other nuns. In 1538 he spoke of this inclination in 
rather a tasteless and rather a heartless way : — 

Had I wished to marry fourteen years ago, I should have chosen 
Ave von Sch6nfeld, now wife of Basil Axt. I never loved my wife 
but suspected her of being proud (as she is), but God willed me to take 
pity on the poor abandoned girl and he has made my marriage turn 
out most happily. 

For another girl, perhaps Ave Alemann of Magdeburg, 
Luther also had a certain liking, but this yielded to circum- 
stances and Katie became the sole object of his attentions. When 
he had tried to marry her to Dr. Glatz, Baumgartner's rival, 
she absolutely refused, saying that she would take Amsdorf or 
Luther himself but Glatz never. This naturally brought her to 
the Eeformer's attention. He speaks of his various love-affairs 
in a jocose letter to his confidant : — 



174 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

TO GEOKGE SPALATIN AT LOCHAU 1 

(Wittenbebq,) April 16, 1525. 
I have commended everything to friend Cranach and have asked 
him to be sure to send a hundred copies of my letter to Beissenbusch. 

You write me about my marriage. Do not be surprised if I, so fam- 
ous a lover, do not wed, though it is re'ally wonderful that I who write 
so much about marriage and have so much intercourse with women 
should not turn into a woman, let alone marry one. If you wish for my 
example you already have it. For I have had three wives at once and 
loved them so hard that I drove two away to get other husbands. On 
the third I have a precarious hold, but she, too, may soon be torn from 
me. It is really you who are the timid lover, not daring to marry even 
one. But take care, lest I, the old bachelor, should get ahead of lusty 
young bridegrooms like you, for God is accustomed to do what we least 
expect. I say this seriously to encourage you. Farewell, dear Spalatin. 

Maetdt Luthbk. 

On the same day on which he wrote this letter Luther started 
on his trip to Mansfeld to preach against the peasants' rising. 
His already half-formed purpose of taking the frank nun at her 
word was increased by his father, whom he saw at this time and 
who urged him to marry. His first announcement of his inten- 
tion is in the letter to Ruhel of May 4, where he says he will 
take "his Katie" to wife "to spite the devil." The formal be- 
trothal followed soon after, and the wedding, hastened on by 
malicious gossip about the pair, took place very privately at the 
Black Cloister on the evening of June 13. Owing to its sud- 
denness the customary festivities had to be put off until two 
weeks later, June 27. Among the invitations sent far and wide, 
the following have an especial interest: — 

TO JOHN RUHEL, JOHN THUR AND CASPAR MULLER AT MANSFEI.D 

Wittenberg, June 15, 1525. 
Grace and peace in Christ. What an outcry of Harrow, my dear 
sirs, has been caused by my pamphlet against the peasants ! All is now 
forgotten that God has done for the world through me. Now lords, 
parsons, and peasants are all against me and threaten my death. 
1 Spalatin was now here with his dying master. 



CATHARINE VON BORA 175 

Well, since they are so silly and foolish, I shall take care that at my 
end I shall he found in the state for which God created me with nothing 
of my previous papal life about me. I will do my part even if they act 
still more foolishly up to the last farewell. 

So now, according to the wish of my dear father, I have married. I 
did it quickly lest those praters should stop it. Thursday week, June 
27, it is my intention to have a little celebration and house-warming, 
to which I beg that you will come and give your blessings. The land 
is in such a state that I hardly dare ask you to undertake the journey; 
however, if you can do so, pray come, along with my dear father and 
mother, for it would be a special pleasure to me. Bring any friends. 
If possible let me know beforehand, though I do' not ask this if incon- 
venient. 

I would have written my gracious lords Counts Gebhard and Albert 
- of Mansf eld, but did not risk it, knowing that their Graces have other 
things to attend to. Please let me know if you think I ought to invite 
them. God bless you. Amen. 

Martin Lxjthbb. 

TO GEOBGE SPALATTN 

Wittenbbbg, June 16, 1525. 

Grace and peace. Dear Spalatin, I have stopped the mouths of my 
calumniators with Catharine von Bora. If we have a banquet to cele- 
brate the wedding we wish you not only to be present but to help us 
in case we need game. Meantime give us your blessing and pray for us. 

I have made myself so cheap and despised by this marriage that I 
expect the angels laugh and the devils weep thereat. The world and 
its wise men have not yet seen how pious and sacred is marriage, but 
they consider it impious and devilish in me. It pleases me, however, to 
have my marriage condemned by those who are ignorant of God. Fare- 
well and pray for me. 

Martin Luther. 

To Katie's old acquaintance and rescuer he wrote, June 21: 

God has suddenly and unexpectedly caught me in the bond of 
holy matrimony. I intend to celebrate with a wedding breakfast on 
Thursday. That my parents and all good friends may be merry, my 
Lord Catharine and I kindly beg you to send us, at my cost and as 
quickly as possible, a barrel of the best Torgau beer. 

To Amsdorf the bridegroom confides that " I married to grat- 



fl7S THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

ify my father, who asked me to marry and leave him descend- 
\ ants. ... I was not carried away by passion, for I do not love 
my wife that way, but esteem her as a friend. (Non amo sed 
diligo)." 

The proudest of the many guests on the great day were 
assuredly old Hans and Margaret Luther. Among the wedding 
presents the most prized came from the town, the university, 
the Elector, and Cranach. Biihel brought a surprise in the way 
of twenty gulden from Albert of Mayence, who was thinking of 
becoming Lutheran in order to turn his electorate into a tem- 
poral fief as his cousin Albert had done with Prussia. The 
bridegroom wanted to return this gift, but the thrifty bride 
managed to keep it. 

At this time Martin and Katie sat for their pictures to the 
celebrated Lucas Cranach. The bridegroom is forty-two, well 
built and very pale. His face is at once good-humored and 
strong. And yet who can be satisfied with this picture ? Diirer's 
criticism that the Wittenberg artist could depict the features 
but not the soul is extremely just. 

The portrait of Katie does not bear out the conjecture of 
Erasmus that the monk had been led astray by a wonderfully 
charming girl (mire venusta). She was of a type not uncommon 
among Germans, in whose features shrewdness, good sense, and 
kindliness often give a pleasant expression to homely persons 
— though even this can hardly be seen in Cranach's picture. 
Her scant reddish hair is combed back over a high forehead ; 
the brows over her dark blue eyes slant up from a rather flat 
nose ; her ears and cheek-bones are prominent. 

Katie was sometimes reproached with pride and avarice. But 
that an orphan, without friends, money, or beauty should have 
any pride left is rather a subject for praise than blame, and 
what is sometimes called her greed of money was only the nec- 
essary parsimony of a housewife in narrow circumstances whose 
husband was uncommonly generous. Without marked spiritu- 
ality, she was a Martha busied with many things rather than a 
Mary sitting in devotion at her master's feet. If there was little 
passion and no romance in the courtship, there was deep devo- 
tion and friendship in the twenty years following marriage. Of 




CATHARINE LUTHER IN 1526 

From the painting by Cranach in possession of Frau Geheimregierungsrat Richard 
von Kaufmann, in Berlin 



CATHARINE VON BORA 177 

his own thoughts, and his wife's affection during their first year 
together, the Reformer once spoke thus : — 

In the first year of marriage one has strange thoughts. At table he 
thinks : " Formerly I was alone, now I am with some one. In bed 
when he wakes, he sees beside him a pair of pigtails which he did not 
see before. The first year after our marriage Katie sat beside me when 
I studied, and once, when she could think of nothing else to say, asked 
me : ' Doctor, is the Grand Master of Prussia the Margrave's 
brother ? ' " 1 

A still more intimate view of the relations of man and wife 
is given in the next letter to Spalatin. Luther lived in a time 
when it was considered not at all indelicate to speak of what 
few refined men, not to say pious preachers, would mention in 
these days. Spalatin had now retired from his position at court, 
married, and taken the incumbency of the first church at Alten- 
burg. Here he remained the trusted counsellor of Frederic's 
successor, John the Steadfast. Though the new elector was an 
open convert to the Evangelic faith, as his brother had not 
been, nevertheless there was a party at court so hostile to Luther, 
whom they regarded as the real author of the peasants' rising, 
that when Spalatin invited the Wittenberg professor to attend 
his wedding, the latter felt unable to do it. 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBUEG 

Wittenberg, December 6, 1525. 
I wish you grace and peace in the Lord, and also joy with your 
sweetest little wife, also in the Lord. Tour marriage is as pleasing to 
me as it is displeasing to those priests of Baal. 2 Indeed God has given 
me no greater happiness, except the Gospel, than to see you married, 
though this, too, is a gift of the Gospel, and no small fruit of our 
Evangelic teaching. Why I am absent, and wherefore I could not come 
to your most pleasing wedding, Brisger 8 will tell you. All things are 
changed under the new elector, who right nobly confesses the Evan- 
gelic faith. I am less safe on the road than I was under an elector who 
dissimulated his faith, but now where one hopes for citadels of refuge 

1 The Grand Master was the Margrave ! 

3 The canons of Altenburg, with whom Luther had had a hard fight. 
8 The brother who had hitherto lived with Luther ; he was the bearer of this 
letter to Altenburg, where he was soon to become pastor. 



178 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

one is forced to fear dens of robbers and traitors. I wish you great 
happiness and children, with Christ's blessing. Believe me, my mind 
exults in your marriage no less than yours did in mine. Poor as I am 
I would have sent you that Portuguese gold-piece x which you gave 
my wife, did I not fear that it would offend you. So I am sending you 
what is left over from my wedding, not knowing whether it will als<? 
be left over from yours or not. . . . Greet your wife kindly from me. 
When you have your Catharine in bed, sweetly embracing and kissing 
her, think : Lo this being, the best little creation of God, has been given 
me by Christ, to whom be glory and honor. I will guess the day on 
which you will receive this letter and that night my wife and I will 
particularly think of you. 2 My rib and I send greetings to you and 

your rib. Grace be with you. Amen. 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 

Luther's marriage excited the interest of all Europe. Henry 
VIII of England and many other enemies taunted him with it 
as if it were a crime. Erasmus sneered that what he had taken 
to be a tragedy had turned out a comedy. Even Melanchthon 
disliked the step. To his best pupil, Camerarius, he wrote a 
letter on June 16 in Greek, at that time almost a cipher, 
saying : — 

On June 13 Luther unexpectedly married Mistress von Bora, hav- 
ing announced his intention to none of his friends, but in the evening 
only inviting Bugenhagen, Cranach, and Apel to supper, after which he 
completed the usual ceremonies. You may perhaps be surprised that 
at this unhappy time, when all good gentlemen are suffering, Luther 
does not sympathize with them, but, as it seems, prefers a life of pleas- 
ure and to lower his dignity, though Germany has now the greatest 
need of his wisdom and strength. I think it came about in this way. 
The man is very facile and the nuns tried every plan to inveigle him. 
Perhaps the much intercourse with the nuns softened and inflamed him, 
noble and magnanimous as he is. ... I hope this manner of life will 
make him more reverend and especially that he will cast away the 
scurrility with which we have often reproached him. 

The marriage did indeed turn out happily. After his hard 
experiences in the monastery, Luther's whole nature blossomed 

1 Portugaliensis, a coin worth about seven dollars. 

a Ea noete simili opere meam [uxorem] amabo in tui memoriam, et tibi par pari 
leferam. 



CATHARINE VON BORA 179 

out in response to the warm sun of domestic life. A. true instinct 
for the best side of the man has made artists love to portray him 
surrounded by wife and children. 

Katie was a woman of enormous energy — the morning star 
of Wittenberg as her husband called her with reference to her 
early rising. Her superintendence of a large household and 
growing estate was masterly. She faithfully cared for her hus- ' 
band on the numerous occasions when he was ill, and of course 
much of her time was taken up with the children whom she 
nursed and tended in the unabashed publicity of her crowded 
home. She took a lively interest in her husband's affairs and 
was confided in by him. Her piety is more a matter of infer- 
ence than record ; Martin probably appealed to her weaker side 
when he offered her a large sum to read the Bible through. 
That her studies in this book were successful may be inferred 
from her husband's remark that " Katie understands the Bible 
better than any papists did twenty years ago." Her picture, like 
that of her husband, is drawn to the life in the table-talk. 
Among many sayings taken down during the last fifteen years 
of Luther's life (1531-1546) the following give a charming 
picture of his conjugal felicity: — 

I would not change my Katie for France and Venice, because God 
has given hev to me, and other women have much worse faults, and 
she is true to me and a good mother to my children. If a husband 
always kept such things in mind he would easily conquer the tempta- 
tion to discord which Satan sows between married people. 

The greatest happiness is to have a wife to whom you can trust your 
business and who is a good mother to your children. Katie, you have 
a husband who loves you ; many an empress is not so well off. 

I am rich, God has given me my nun and three children : what 
care I if I am in debt, Katie pays the bills. 

Luther loved to poke good-natured fun at his wife, but she 
was usually able to hold her own : — 

Luther : We shall yet see the day when a man will take several 
wives. 

Katie : The devil thinks so. 

Luther : The reason, dear Katie, is that a woman can have only 
one child a year, whereas a man can beget several. 



180 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Katie: Paul says, "Let each man have his own wife." 

Ltit/ier : Aye, his own wife, but not only one ; that is not in Paul. 
Thus the doctor joked a long time until Katie said : " Before I would 
stand that I would go back to the convent and leave you and your 
children." 

Something struck Katie in the side and she cried out, "Ave Maria/" 
The doctor said : " Why don't you finish your prayer ? Would it not 
be a comfort to say ' Jesus Christ ' too ? " 

Speaking jocosely of Katie's loquacity he said : " Will you not pre- 
face your long sermons with a prayer ? If you do, your prayer will 
doubtless be long enough to prevent' your preaching at all." 

While he was talking in an inspired way during dinner, his wife 
said : " Why do you keep talking all the time instead of eating? " He 
replied : " I must again wish that women would pray before they 
preach. Say the Lord's prayer before you speak." 

" Women's sermons only make one tired. They are so tedious that 
one forgets what they are saying before tliey finish." By this name he 
called the long speeches of his wife with which she was always inter- 
rupting his best sayings. 

November 4 (1538) a learned Englishman who did not know Ger- 
man came to table. Luther said : " I will let my wife be your teacher. 
She knows the tongue so thoroughly that she completely beats tne. But 
eloquence is not to be praised in women ; it becomes them better to 
stammer and lisp." 

While Luther gladly devolved upon Katie the care of the 
household and property — tasks for which he had neither time, 
aptitude, nor inclination — he had no idea of letting himself be 
ruled by her — indulgence to wives he once described as "the 
vice of the age." At other times he said: — 

My wife can persuade me anything she pleases, for she has the gov- 
ernment of the house in her hands alone. I willingly yield the direction 
of domestic affairs, but wish my rights to be respected. Women's rule 
never did any good. 

The inferior ought not to glory over the superior, but the superior 
over the inferior. Katie can rule the servants but not me. David gloried 
in his own righteousness before men, not before God. 

George Karg has taken a rich wife and sold his freedom. I am luck- 
ier, for when Katie gets saucy she gets nothing but a box on the ear. 

This is the only time corporal chastisement of the wife is ever 



CATHARINE VON BORA 181 

mentioned in respect to Katie, though the practice was not 
unknown to the best society of the day. In spite of a little blus- 
tering it is probable that Luther gave in as often as not : — 

As we were sitting in the garden, Jonas remarked that the women 
were becoming our masters, to which the town-councillor of Torgau 
added that it was indeed, alas ! true. Luther said : " But we have to 
give in, otherwise we would have no peace." 

A priest came to Luther complaining of misery and want. Melanch- 
thon, who was present, said : " You have vowed poverty, obedience, 
and chastity, now practise them " ; and Luther added : " I, too, have 
to be obedient to my wife and all kinds of desperate fools and knaves 
and ingrates." 

" I must have patience with the Pope, ranters, insolent nobles, my 
household and Katie von Bora, so that my whole life is nothing else 
but mere patience." 

In general Katie seems to have enjoyed good health. In the 
winter of 1539-40, however, she had a terrible illness resulting 
from a miscarriage. For weeks she was prostrate. When the 
crisis was past her energy returned faster than her strength, and 
one of the most realistic accounts of her tells how she crawled 
around the house with the aid of her hands before she was able 
to walk upright. Her excellent constitution stood her in good 
stead, however, and she recovered rapidly and thoroughly. Her 
husband's piety attributed this to the prayers offered for her. 



CHAPTER XVI 

PRIVATE LIFE. 1522-31 

One of Luther's oldest and best friends was his vicar, John 
von Staupitz. Though it is probable that the two never agreed 
as closely as is usually thought, there can be no doubt of the 
great debt of the younger man to the elder and of the sorrow 
he felt at their gradual estrangement, and at the death of his 
" father." Luther was sensible of the coming division as early 
as the Leipsic debate ; not long after this (October 3, 1519), 
he wrote : — 

I have been most sad for you to-day as a weaned child for its 
mother. . . . Last night I dreamed that you were leaving me while I 
wept bitterly, but you waved to me and bade me cease weeping, for 
you would come back to me. 

But the elder man did not come back. Notwithstanding great 
spiritual insight and devotion, his character lacked something 
of the firmness required by the times. His attempt to avoid 
taking sides by entering the Benedictine order, his public sub- 
mission to the Pope, and the solemn letter Luther wrote him on 
that occasion, just before the Diet of Worms, on the duty of 
standing by Christ in the hour of danger, have already been 
described. 1 

Staupitz was more than ever alienated from the new teaching 
by the innovations of the Wittenberg mob while Martin was at 
the Wartburg. Three months after his return, June 27, 1522, 
the younger man wrote an earnest defence of his doctrine to 
the elder : " I pray you by the bowels of Christ not to believe 
our detractors ; all that I have done is to publish the pure 
Word without tumult : it is not our fault if good and bad alike 
take it up." 

Staupitz did not answer this letter, but a year later, Septem- 
ber 17, 1523, the Wittenberger wrote him to ask a favor for a 
1 Letter of February 9, 1521, p. 107 f . 



PRIVATE LIFE 183 

fugitive monk. " Reverend Father in Christ," he remonstrated, 
" your silence is most unjust, and you know what we are obliged 
to think of it. But even if you are no longer pleased with me, 
it is not fitting that I should forget you, who first made the 
light of the gospel shine in my heart." 

The answer to this, dated Salzburg April 1, 1524, is a remark- 
able tribute to the personality of the younger man. " My love to 
you," protests the writer, " is most constant, passing the love 
of women, always unbroken. . . . But as I do not grasp all 
your ideas, I keep silence about them. ... It seems to me 
that you condemn many things which are merely indifferent 
. . . but we owe much to you, Martin, for having led us back 
from the husks which the swine did eat to the pastures of life 
and the words of salvation." The letter closes with a request 
that the bearer of it be given the degree of master at Witten- 
berg, which was promptly complied with. No other epistles 
were exchanged between the two friends, the elder of whom 
died of a stroke of apoplexy on December 28 of this same year. 
This disease was commonly regarded as a special visitation from 
Heaven, and Luther once opined that God had thus punished 
the vicar for entering the Benedictine order, but added that he 
was a noble-minded man. 

The work of teaching in the university, interrupted by the 
momentous events of 1521, was taken up again in 1522, and 
continued, with a few short breaks, for the rest of the pro- 
fessor's life. During his absence Melanchthon had consented, 
rather against his will, to lecture on the Bible, and his work 
proved such a success that his friend begged him to continue 
it. Luther met his colleague's plea that he was paid to teach 
Greek by writing to the Elector Frederic, saying : — 

Your Grace doubtless knows that there are fine youths here, 
hungry for the wholesome Word, coming from abroad and enduring 
poverty to study. . . . Now I have proposed that Melanchthon lecture 
on the Bible, for which he is more richly endowed by God's grace 
than am I. . . . Bnt he alleges that he is appointed to teach Greek. 
. . . Wherefore I beg your Grace to see fit to pay him his salary for 
lecturing on the Bible, as there are plenty of young men who can 
teach Greek. 



184 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Frederic's answer, if lie wrote any, is not extant : he was 
soon to be too much preoccupied with the rising of the rustics 
to be able to attend to his once cherished seat of learning. This 
civil war had a disastrous effect on the university : not only did 
funds run very short, but the number of students fell from 
five or six hundred to forty in the summer semester of 1525. 
Seriously alarmed at this state of affairs, Luther wrote, shortly 
after the death of Frederic, to his successor John, and to the 
latter's son : — 

TO JOHN FREDERIC OF SAXONY 

Wittenberg, May 20; 1525. 
I have previously written my gracious Lord, your Grace's father, 
about putting the university in order and appointing some one to take 
charge of it. It is true that your Grace is very busy about other 
things, but here, too, delay is dangerous, as the matter has hung fire 
long enough and become tangled ; moreover, men whose places we 
cannot easily fill have left us, so that our neighbors are rejoicing as if 
it were already up with Wittenberg. If we are to have a university 
here at all we must act betimes. It would be a shame that such a 
university as this, from which the gospel has gone out over the whole 
world, should perish. We need men everywhere and must take the 
necessary means to train them. I humbly beg your Grace to act 
quickly and not be held back by the courtiers who speak scornfully of 
book learning. For your Grace knows that the world cannot be ruled 
by force alone, but that there must be learned men to help with God's 
work and keep a hold on the people with teaching and preaching, for 
if there were no teachers or preachers the civil power would not long 
stand, not to mention the fact that the kingdom of God would entirely 
leave us. . . . 

Your Grace's obedient, 

Martin Luther. 

These appeals were effective. Spalatin was sent to reorganize - 
the university. The professors' salaries were raised — Luther's 
from one to two hundred gulden — from funds provided by the 
appropriation of the income of the endowed masses of the Castle 
Church, which Frederic had been too conservative to touch. 
The curriculum, too, was reformed, according to the ideas ex- 
pressed in the Address to the German Nobility. A professor of 



PRIVATE LIFE 185 

Hebrew had been secured from Louvain in 1519, but soon 
proved unsatisfactory, and his place was taken by another^ 
Aurogallus, who was a great help in the translation of the Old 
Testament now under way. 

1 Luther's own lectures on the Bible were soon resumed and 
steadily continued ; on 2 Peter, Jude, and Genesis, 1523-1524 ; 
on Deuteronomy, 1523-1525. In his commentary on the Minor 
Prophets, 1524-1526, he perhaps reached the height of his ex- 
egetical ability. He showed a real historical sense, expounding 
the messages of the prophets with reference to the circumstances 
of their own days. One can see that his translation of the Bible 
into German is always in his mind, for he is continually search- 
ing for apt German words and phrases. These lectures, com- 
pared even with those on Romans and Galatians, show that he 
had almost entirely emancipated himself from the old commen- 
taries of Lyra and the scholastics. It is noticeable that he took 
Jonah, whale and all, literally. That even here, however, his 
historical sense and his humor were not dormant may be gath- 
ered from the remark, made at another time, that if Jonah 
were not in the Bible he would laugh at it. 

He next took up Ecclesiastes, which he called " the hardest 
of all books." He noticed the peculiarities of the vocabulary 
and explained them by saying: "Solomon tried to be more 
elegant than his father David." Simultaneously he was lectur- 
ing on 1 John, which he called " a noble epistle, having John's 
style and manner, able to raise up afflicted hearts, so fairly and 
sweetly does it depict Christ for us." Courses on Titus, Phile- 
mon, and Isaiah were given in the years 1527-1529. 

Luther's work for the education of his people did not stop 
with his own university. He perpetually and strenuously urged 
the extension and reformation of the schools. During the first 
quarter of the sixteenth century learning had fallen into con- 
tempt for a variety of causes. The principal reason was that 
the learning itself was contemptible; the age had long out- 
grown the lore of the schools which passed for erudition ; the 
satire levelled against the sophistry of the monks by the Letters 
of the Obscure Men, had brought into disrepute all pretensions 
to any education whatever. Then came Carlstadt and the 



186 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

mystics, who taught that as God had revealed to babes and 
sucklings what he had concealed from the wise and prudent, it 
was better to preserve innocence and ignorance together. Lastly 
the time was, like our own, one of marked materialistic tend- 
ency, fostered by the rapid expansion of commerce and in- 
dustry. 

Luther stemmed the ebbing tide. Early in 1524 he produced 
a Letter to the Aldermen and Cities of Germany on the Erec- 
tion and Maintenance of Christian Schools. Ranke says : " This 
work has the same significance for the development of learning 
as the Address to the German Nobility for the temporal estate 
in general." The book had a great success, and, followed up as 
it was by unremitting efforts in the same direction, it undoubt- 
edly had an incalculable effect in popularizing and raising the 
standard of education in Germany. 

" Now we learn," says the author, " that throughout all Germany 
the schools are declining, the universities becoming weak, and the 
cloisters are ruined. Such grass dries up, and the flowers fall, as 
Isaiah says, when God does not move upon them by his Word. . . . 
For the carnal multitude sees that they cannot turn their sons and 
daughters out of house and home to live in cloisters and therefore they 
will not let them study any more. ' For,' say they, ' why should any 
one study who is not going to be a priest, monk, or nun ? Rather let 
them learn a trade to support themselves.' "... 

■Now I beg all my dear friends not to think of this matter so con- 
temptuously as many do who do not see what the prince of this 
world intends. It is an earnest and great matter, deeply concerning 
Christ and all the world, that we should help and counsel the young 
people. 

The principal reason for education is, of course, in the writ- 
er's opinion, that men may read the Word of God. But other 
reasons are adduced, the example of Rome being cited, " for 
the Romans brought up their children so that by the time they 
were fifteen, eighteen, or twenty they knew marvellously well 
Latin, Greek, and all the liberal arts, so that they were straight- 
way fitted for war or government, and were brilliant, reasoning, 
able persons, polished in all the arts and sciences." Men must be 
trained to govern, for ignorant governors are as bad as wolves. 



PRIVATE LIFE 187 

The chief subjects taught should be Latin, Greek, and He- 
brew, the last two for the sake of reading the Bible in the orig- 
inal, for the mistakes of all the fathers were due to their ignor- 
ance of these tongues. The people are congratulated on the 
introduction of humaner methods of instilling knowledge : — 

Now by God's grace it has come to pass that children may learn 
with pleasure, be it a language or some other art or science or history. 
Our schools are no more the hell and purgatory in which we were 
martyred by declension and conjugation, although we learned nothing 
of value with all our whipping, trembling, anguish, and crying. If 
people now take so much time teaching their children to play cards and 
dance, why should they not take an equal amount to teach them to read 
and learn other things while they are young, idle, and curious ? For 
my part, if I had children they would have to learn not only the lan- 
guages and history but also singing, music, and the whole mathematics. 
... It is a sorrow to me that I was not taught to read more poetry 
and history. 

Children should therefore go to school an hour or two every 
day, learning a trade at home the rest of the time. Girls should 
be sent to school as well as boys. Public libraries in each town, 
like those of the monasteries, but with better books, are recom- 
mended. 

Notwithstanding his other occupations, Luther found time to 
preach constantly ; indeed, during the frequent and long absences 
of Bugenhagen, the parish priest of Wittenberg, the Reformer 
regularly took his place in the pulpit. He often took up one 
book of the Bible and preached on it for long periods together. 
Thus during the years 1524-1527, he went through Exodus. 
The following may serve as a specimen of his homiletic 
style : — 

But the miracle of the manna helped the children of Israel little, 
for it became common and they did not regard it. So the sun rising 
daily on us, though a great miracle, has become so customary that we 
think it cannot be otherwise. Likewise we esteem it no wonder that 
corn and wine grow yearly, yet by these and other daily miracles — 
for the growth of corn from the seed is as great a miracle as the 
manna — our faith ought to be strengthened. 

Luther did not confine himself to any strict order, however ; 



188 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

he often took other texts, and in these cases his sermons per- 
haps show more of his thought. For example, one Sunday in 
1527, a terrible year of affliction, he preached on Matthew xi, 
28 : " Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and 
I will give you rest." 

Ah, what a rare invitation is this (he comments). Why does he 
not call the strong, rich, well, learned, kings and lords ? Why does 
he want the sorrowful and laden ? Only because it pleases him to do 
so, and where else can one go with his unbelief, hunger, poverty, 
shame, and trouble ? 

These busy and generally happy years were not entirely free 
from ill health. There are some indications that Luther suffered 
j from ,a malady of the nerves even as a student at Erfurt and as 
' a monk. By 1523 this took a more pronounced form, causing 
ringing in the ears, faintness, depression, and irritability. Indi- 
gestion with various complications had set in at the Wartburg, 
and in 1526 were discovered the first symptoms of the then 
common disease of the bladder and kidneys, known as the stone. 
These complaints were not allowed as a rule to interfere with 
work, but in the summer of 1527 a terrible attack of nervous 
prostration for a time interrupted the almost unexampled toil 
of the .Reformer's life. On July 6, feeling unwell, he arose from 
the table and started to go to the bedroom next the dining- 
hall, but before he reached the door he fainted and fell. Though 
only two days in bed, the patient suffered from weakness and 
depression for months afterward. " Satan rages against me with 
his whole might," he wrote Agricola on August 21, " and the 
Lord has put me in his power like another Job. The devil 
tempts me with great infirmity of spirit." 

Before he had recovered, the plague broke out at Witten- 
berg. The university moved to Jena and most of the clergy 
followed. Luther, while admitting that in some cases it was 
justifiable for them to do so, declined to imitate them himself, 
saying that a good shepherd laid down his life for his sheep, 
and only the hireling fled. One of the two who stayed with him, 
the young and talented deacon Rb'rer, who for several years 
had been a literary help to the Reformer, paid heavily for his 



PRIVATE LIFE 189 

fidelity in the loss of his wife. Katie was in a situation caus- 
ing anxiety, and her baby Hans fell ill. In the midst of these 
fightings without and fears within he wrote as follows : — 

TO JUSTUS' JONAS, AT NORDHAUSEN 

(Wittenberg, November 11 ? 1527.) 

Grace and peace in the Lord Jesus our Saviour. I thank you, dear 
Jonas, for your prayers and occasional letters. I suppose my letter of 
day before yesterday reached you. I have not yet read Erasmus. or 
the sacramentarians except about three quarters of Zwingli's book. 
Judases as they are they do well to stamp on my wretched self, making 
me feel as did Christ when he said : " He persecuted the poor and 
needy man, that he might even slay the broken in heart." I bear God's 
wrath because I have sinned against him. Pope, emperor, princes, 
bishops, and the whole world hate and persecute me, nor is this enough, 
but my brothers, too, must add to my sorrows, and my sins and death 
and Satan with his angels rage without ceasing. What could save and 
console me if even Christ should desert me on whose account they all 
hate me ? But he will not leave the poor sinner at the end, though I 
believe that I am the least of all men. Would that Erasmus and the 
sacramentarians might feel the anguish of my heart for a quarter of 
an hour ; I can safely say that they would be converted and saved 
thereby. . . . 

I am anxious about the delivery of my wife, so much has the ex- 
ample of Rarer's wife terrified me. . . . My little Hans cannot send 
his greetings to you on account of illness, but he looks for your prayers 
for him. It is twelve days since he has eaten any solid food, but now 
he begins to eat a little. It is wonderful to see how the baby tries to 
be strong and happy as usual, but cannot because he is so weak. 

Margaret Moch was operated on yesterday, and having thus at last 
thrown off the plague begins to convalesce. She is lodged in our usual 
winter room ; we live in the lecture hall ; little Hans has my bedroom 
and Schurf's wife his room. We hope the pestilence is passing. Good- 
b3 r e, with a kiss to your little daughter and warm greetings to her 
mother. . . . 

I am sorry Rome tfas sacked, for it is a great portent. I hope it 
may yet be inhabited and have its pontiff before we die. . . . 

Martin Luthek, Christi lutum. 1 

1 Christ's mad ; one of Luther's frequent puns on his own name. 



190 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

The terrible year passed, and the habitual round of work and 
domestic joys and sorrows was resumed. Among the latter the 
heaviest that Luther was called upon to bear was the death of 
his parents. In February, 1530, his brother James wrote him 
of their father's Serious illness. Feeling unable to go to his 
parent's bedside, the Reformer wrote him a long, hearty letter. 
" I would have come to you personally with the greatest readi- 
ness," he says, " but good friends persuaded me not to, and I my- 
self thought it best not to temptXxod by putting myself in peril, 
for you know how lords and peasants feel towards me." After 
a long exhortation and much ghostly comfort drawn from Scrip- 
ture, he closes: — 

I hope that your pastor will point out such things to you faithfully, 
so that you will not need what I say at all, but yet I write to ask for- 
giveness for my bodily absence, which, God knows, causes me heart- 
felt sorrow. My Katie, little Hans and Magdalene and Aunt Lena 
and all my household send you greetings and pray for you faithfully. 
Greet my mother and all dear friends. God's grace and strength be 
and abide with you forever. Amen. 

Tour loving son, 

Martin Luther. , 

The writer of this letter was fond of telling how, when the 
Mansfeld pastor read it to old Hans, and asked him if he be- 
lieved all that it contained, the latter replied : " Aye ; he would 
be a knave who did not." 

The aged miner died on May 29. His son was then at the 
castle known as Feste Coburg. When he heard the sad news 
he wrote Wenzel Link, June 5, 1530 : " Now I am sorrowful, 
for I have received tidings of the death of my father, that dear 
and gentle old man whose name I bear, and although I am glad 
for his sake that his journey to Christ was so easy and pious and 
that, freed from the monsters of this world he rests in peace, 
nevertheless my heart is moved to sorrow. For under God I 
owe my life and bringing up to him." 

A year, a month and a day after the demise of her husband 
Margaret Luther followed him into the grave. At this time, 
too, Martin felt unable to attend his dying parent, although the 



PRIVATE LIFE 191 

trip to Mansfeld was only fifty miles. Instead he again wrote 
a Scriptural letter recalling Jesus' words, " I have overcome 
the world." He closes, " All my children and Katie pray for 
you. Some cry, some say while eating, ' Grandmother is very 
ill.'" 



CHAPTER XVII 

HENKY VIII 

One of the most curious incidents in Luther's career was his 
intercourse with Henry VIII of England. Although perhaps 
it had little influence on the Reformer's career, it is worth trac- 
ing on account of its intrinsic interest, especially to English 
readers. 

Within little more than a year after the posting of the 
Theses, Luther's works had been exported to England, and that 
they attracted the attention of the government may be inferred 
from a letter of Erasmus, who says that but for his intervention 
they would have been burned. It was from this " vigilant per- 
son " that Henry got his first definite impression of the Reformer. 
When he came to Calais in the summer of 1520 the humanist 
visited him, and they talked of Luther. Erasmus especially 
wished to get the cooperation of his powerful patron in a plan 
he had of making peace by referring the question of heresy to 
a board of impartial and learned judges. 

It was Cardinal Wolsey, ambitious for the highest place in 
the Roman Church, who urged his master to take a decided 
part against the German monk. He burned the heretic's books 
(May 12, 1521), induced Henry to write to the Emperor in the 
interests of the Catholic Church (May 30, 1521), and, procur- 
ing a copy of the Babylonian Captivity, gave it to his master, 
who was proud of his attainments, with a suggestion that it 
would be a worthy act for him to refute it. Henry complied, and 
produced, in the summer of 1521, An Assertion of the Seven 
Sacraments, dedicated to Pope Leo, from whom it won for its 
author the title Defender of the Faith. 

In tone the work is as violent as most of the invective of the 
day : " What pest so pernicious as Luther has ever attacked the 
flock of Christ ? . . . What a wolf of hell is he ! What a limb 
of Satan ! How rotten is his mind ! How execrable his purpose ! " 



HENRY VIII 193 

In point of logic the polemic is occasionally faulty. For in- 
stance Luther had denied that the mass is a good work in the 
sense in which the Catholic Church always considered it a mer- 
itorious act on the part of all participating. Henry replies that 
he who makes an image out of wood does a work ; Christ in 
making his flesh out of bread does a work ; but what Christ 
does is good ; therefore the mass is a good work ! 

Luther answered in July, 1522. In tone he is as angry as 
" that king of lies, King Heinz, by God's ungrace King of Eng- 
land." Henry has acted so little like a king that he does not 
think he need treat him like one : " For since with malice afore- 
thought that damnable and rotten worm has lied against my 
king in heaven, it is right for me to bespatter this English 
monarch with his own filth and trample his blasphemous crown 
under feet." As to the arguments advanced, he ridicules them, 
feeling that God has smitten the papists with blindness so that 
the more he cries out " the gospel and Christ " the more they 
answer, " the fathers, customs, statutes." Little ability as the 
work shows, it is plain that Henry did not write it, but " Lee x or 
one of those snivelling, drivelling sophists bred by the Thomist 
swine." 

When Henry heard of the unquelled violence of his opponent 
he moved every lever to revenge his royal honor. First he wrote 
to Frederic, John and George, Dukes of Saxony, whom he evi- 
dently thought of as ruling over the same territory. From the 
first two he received a diplomatic but evasive answer ; George 
replied more satisfactorily, but was able to do nothing. 

Then the King moved a number of theologians to attack 
Luther ; the two prominent English scholars, Fisher, Bishop of 
Eochester, and Sir Thomas More did so, as well as Murner, 
and, most important of all, Erasmus. 

If these efforts, diplomatic and literary, failed to crush his 
opponent, a few years later Henry had an extremely good chance 
to humiliate him. In the spring of 1525 King Christian II of 
Denmark, a personal friend of Luther, gave him the somewhat 

1 Edward Lee, prominent as an opponent of Erasmus. The spirit of the work 
was Henry's, but he probably received much help from Fisher and other learned 
divines. 



194 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

premature information that England was becoming favorable 
to the Evangelic faith. In May, therefore, the Reformer com- 
j)osed a letter to the King, which he sent to Spalatin for advice. 
This friend wisely advised him to keep silence, but Luther 
could not let slip the opportunity of winning so powerful an 
adherent, especially, perhaps, as he felt his position somewhat 
weakened by the Peasants' Eevolt and the death of the Elector 
Frederic, and therefore on September 1 he dispatched the fol- 
lowing missive : — 

TO HENRY Vni OF ENGLAND 

Wittenberg, September 1, 1525. 

Grace and peace in Christ, our Lord and Saviour. Amen. Indeed, 
Most Serene and Illustrious King, I ought greatly to fear to address 
your Majesty in a letter, as I am fully aware that your Majesty is 
deeply offended at my pamphlet, which I published foolishly and pre- 
cipitately, not of my own motion but at the hest of certain men who 
are not your Majesty's friends. But daily seeing your royal clemency, 
I take hope and courage ; I will not believe that a mortal can 
cherish immortal hatred. I have learned from credible authority that 
the book published over your Majesty's name was not written by your 
Majesty, but by crafty men of guile who abused your name, especially 
by that monster detested of God and man, that pest of your kingdom, 
Cardinal Wolsey. They did not see the danger of humiliating their 
king. I am ashamed to raise my eyes to your Majesty because I al- 
lowed myself to be moved by this despicable work of malignant in- 
triguers, especially as I am the offscouring of the world, a mere worm 
who ought only to live in contemptuous neglect. 

What impels me to write, abject as I am, is that your Majesty has 
begun to favor the Evangelic cause and to feel disgust at the aban- 
doned men who oppose us. This news was a true gospel — i. e., tidings 
of great joy — to my heart. ... If your Serene Majesty wishes me 
to recant publicly and write in honor of your Majesty, will you gra- 
ciously signify your wish to me and I will gladly do so. . . . 
Your Majesty's most devoted, 

Martin Luther, with his own hand. 

This letter naturally did no good. Indeed, though Luther was 
certainly sincere in his desire to conciliate, he never displayed 
greater lack of tact than in dispraising the King's book and 



HENEY Vm 195 

favorite minister. After a long delay, Henry replied in a fiercer 
work than before, printing Luther's missive with mocking 
comments, and taunting him with having caused the Peasants' 
Revolt and with living in wantonness with a nun. 

The King sent his epistle, which reached the proportions of a 
small book, to Duke George, and it was prbmptly published in 
Germany at his instigation under the title, Luther's Offer to 
Recant in a letter to the King of England. This twisting of his 
apology into a recantation excited the Reformer's ire again and 
he replied with a pamphlet, Against the Title of the King of 
England's Libel. In this he asserts that he will not recant his 
doctrine : " No, no, no, not while I live, let it irk king, prince, 
emperor, devil, and whom it may." He has tried hard to keep 
the peace both with Erasmus and with Henry : " but I am a 
sheep and must remain a sheep to think that I can pacify such 
men." 

Henry did not continue the altercation further, but revenged 
himself by stamping out the Evangelic faith in England and by 
giving a play, representing " the heretic Luther like a party 
friar in russet damask and black taffety, and his wife like a frow 
of Almayn in red silk," St. Martin's Eve, November 9, 1527. 

The rancor borne by the haughty monarch did not prevent 
his seeking the aid of his enemy when the latter might become 
useful to him. It is not necessary here to resume the history of 
Henry's separation from Catharine of Aragon nor to probe his 
strangely mingled motives. After a long but vain effort to get 
from the Pope a divorce on the ground that the union with a 
brother's widow was forbidden by Leviticus xx, 21, the monarch 
decided to take matters into his own hands, and, in order to re- 
assure both himself and his subjects, began, in 1529, to solicit 
the opinions of foreign universities and " strange doctors." 

As early as 1529 he threatened to appeal from the Catholics 
to the Lutherans, introduced some Evangelic books into his 
court, and even praised the once hated heretic to Chapuys, the 
imperial ambassador. It is possible that he applied to the re- 
formers in 1530 ; it is certain that he did so in 1531. Simon 
Grynaeus was the agent employed to deal with the Swiss and 
with Melanchthon, but a special messenger was sent to Luther. 



196 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

This man, whose name is not mentioned in the sources, applied 
first to Eobert Barnes, who, having been forced to flee from 
England on account of his faith, in 1528, had made his way to 
Wittenberg and in time became a warm friend of Luther and 
a guest at his house. The agent then went to Philip of Hesse 
and urged him to write the Reformer for an opinion on Henry's 
divorce, a request with which the Landgrave complied. 

Luther gave his answer to Barnes in a long letter dated 
September 3, 1531. Emphatically denying the legitimacy of 
the divorce, he writes : — 

1 do not now question what a papal dispensation in such matters is 
worth, but I say that even if the King sinned in marrying his brother's 
widow it would be a much greater sin cruelly to put her away now. 
Bather let him take another queen, following the example of the 
patriarchs, who had many wives even before the law of Moses sanc- 
tioned the practice, but let him not thrust his present wife from her 
royal position. I pray with all my heart that Christ may prevent this 
divorce. 

The proposal to commit bigamy, rather than to divorce, shocks 
an age accustomed to regard the latter as the preferable alter- 
native. The general opinion of the sixteenth century was ex- 
actly opposite to that of the twentieth on this point, for the 
simple reason that polygamy, practised in the Old Testament, 
was never expressly forbidden by the New, which discounten- 
ances divorce. Luther's good conscience in giving this advice 
is shown by its disinterestedness — for by complying with the 
King's wish for divorce he might have won a powerful convert — 
as well as by the previous statement in the Babylonian Captivity 
of the same opinion. That his views were shared by a large 
number of his contemporary divines, both Protestant and Cath- 
olic, has been demonstrated in a very careful study by Doctor 
Rockwell. 

Barnes left Wittenberg the day after this letter was written, 
and hastened, via Magdeburg and Liibeck, to London, where 
he was received by his royal master in December. The monarch 
was naturally displeased with his message and dismissed him 
"with much ill will." 

Nevertheless the very next year he sent Paget to Germany to 



HENRY Vni 197 

persuade the Protestant doctors to write for the divorce. The 
emissary reached Wittenberg, August 12, 1532, but got no 
more satisfaction than had Barnes. On this occasion Luther 
says : " I advised the King that it would be better for him to 
take a concubine 1 than to ruin his people; nevertheless he 
craftily put away his queen." 

In 1533 the King made another attempt to get a favorable 
opinion from the Wittenbergers, but presumably with the same 
result. 

Undeterred by these rebuffs he dispatched Barnes, in March, 
1535, on the same errand. Hardly had the ambassador returned 
before Henry heard that Francis I of France was seeking the 
alliance of the Schmalkaldic League, and, to counteract this 
move of his rival, he again sent Barnes posthaste with a gift 
of five hundred gulden to Melanchthon and an invitation to 
visit London, and with a smaller present of fifty gulden to Lu- 
ther. In a letter of September 12, 1535, Luther strongly urged 
his government to 'allow Melanchthon to accept the invitation, 
and in the same letter adds : " Concerning the King's marriage 
it is agreed that the other ambassador shall treat with us. . . . 
I am curious to learn why they want to be so well satisfied on 
this point." This curiosity will be shared by others. The per- 
sistent efforts of the King remind one of Wolsey's saying that 
what he once took into his head no one could ever get out. 

The expected ambassador — or rather two of them — arrived 
in December. They were no less personages than Edward Fox, 
Bishop of Hereford, and Archdeacon Nicholas Heath. Their 
special mission with Luther, apart from diplomatic business 
with the Elector, was to secure a favorable opinion of the divorce. 
For a time they had hopes of success, but their importunity 
finally wearied Luther, and when they returned they took with 
them a polite letter from the Reformer to Cromwell but an un- 
favorable judgment. According to this the Wittenberg theo- 
logians decided that though divine and moral law prohibit 
marriage with a brother's wife, after marriage had taken place 
no divorce is permissible. 

1 Luther uses this word to designate a second legitimate but subordinate wife. 
Cf. De Wette-Seidemann, vi, 276. 



198 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Soon after the return of the .embassy to England, Henry ex- 
ecuted Anne (May 19, 1536) and the next day married his third 
wife, Jane Seymour. He naturally did not apply to Luther any 
more. The Reformer was apprised of his act by a letter from 
Alesius, a Scotch Lutheran, and calls it " a monstrous tragedy." 
He seems, however, to have approved of the execution of his 
two old enemies, More and Fisher. 

Intercourse with England was brisk during the next years, 
for it was the policy of Thomas Cromwell, the English minister, 
to ally himself to the Schmalkaldic League. In May, 1538, an ' 
Englishman came to Wittenberg and gave an interesting ac- 
count of the visitation of the monasteries and of the images 
which were made to move by machinery. At the same time the 
German Protestants sent as envoys to Britain the Vice-Chan- 
cellor Burkhardt and the theologian Myconius. With them 
Luther sent a kind letter to Bishop Fox. 

The alliance culminated in the marriage of Henry with 
Anne of Cleves, January, 1540. In the following July, however, 
she was divorced, and Cromwell paid with his life the penalty 
for the failure of his policy. A violent reaction against Luther- 
anism followed ; among its martyrs was Robert Barnes. The 
Reformer edited his English friend's confession of faith, drawn 
up just before his death, with a preface stating that he is for- 
ever done with Henry and such devils. Melanchthon only 
wished that God would free the world from such a monster at 
the hand of an able tyrannicide. Luther, though he never went 
so far as this, expressed his opinion with sufficient vigor: 
" This king wants to be God; he founds articles of faith which 
even the Pope never did. ... I believe him to be an incarnate 
devil." 



CHAPTER XVHI 

ERASMUS 

Before Luther's fame had eclipsed that of all his contem- 
poraries, the greatest figure in the republic of letters was 
Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam, who had attained to an 
acknowledged sovereignty like that later accorded to Voltaire. 
He combined great learning with a wonderful mastery of style, 
especially of the lighter kind, sparkling with wit. He was, 
moreover, inspired with a serious purpose of reform, in the 
service of which he used all his great and various talents. In 
his Praise of Folly (1511) he had written a cutting satire on 
the least admirable aspects of the mediaeval Church, and by his 
edition of the Greek Testament (1516) he had given an im- 
mense stimulus along with necessary means to a fruitful study 
of the Bible. He was the deadly enemy of superstition and ob- 
scurantism, and the bold champion of sound learning and free 
thought. His true greatness would be proved, if by nothing 
else, by the fact that two such opposite and such large men as 
Martin Luther and Francois Rabelais 1 derived much of their 
inspiration from him. 

Erasmus' idea of a reformation differed from that of Luther 
partly in aim but more in method. The humanist had a strong 
love of peace and a sincere horror of the " tumult." He judged 
that strong measures were always inexpedient, and, had he 
judged otherwise, he would not, by his own confession, have 
had the courage to adopt them. 

The Wittenberg professor, who keenly sought the best and 
most recent books on divinity, learned to know many of Eras- 
mus' commentaries and used them freely, along with the new 
edition of the Greek Testament, in preparing his lectures. 
With his usual independence of judgment he did not acquiesce 

1 L. Thnasne : Audes sur Rabelais, Paris, 1904, pp. 27 ff. Forstemann und 
GHnther : Briefejin Erasmus, Leipsie, 1904, p. 216. 



200 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

in all the conclusions of the great scholar. On October 19, 
1516, he wrote Spalatin that he had detected an unsound ex- 
egesis in the humanist's commentary on Romans, and begged 
his friend to communicate the objection to the author. Spalatin 
complied but received no answer. Luther continued to read Eras- 
mus, and in the Commentary on Galatians referred with apprecia- 
tion to his predecessor's work in this field. Indeed the first of the 
Ninety-five Theses may have been suggested by Erasmus' trans- 
lation of Mark i, 15. That the monk also read the lighter 
works of the man of letters is proved by his reference in an 
epistle of November, 1517, to the Dialogue between Peter and 
Julius II: " It is written," said he, "so merrily, so learnedly and 
so ingeniously, — that is so, Erasmianly, — that it makes one 
laugh at the vices and miseries of the Church, at which every 
Christian ought rather to weep." Nevertheless he at one time 
had the intention of translating it into German, but gave it up, 
fearing that he could not do it justice. 

That the young reformer expected to find an ally in the elder 
was perfectly natural. It was probably the influence of Me- 
lanchthon that first induced his friend to approach the great 
scholar definitely with this end. The first letter, somewhat con- 
densed, is as follows : — 

TO DESIDEKIUS ERASMUS AT LOUVADf 

Wittenberg, March 28, 1519. 

Greeting. I chat much with you and you with me, O Erasmus, our 
glory and hope! — but yet we are not acquainted. Is not that monstrous? 
No, it is not monstrous, but a thing we see daily. Foi£who is there whose 
innermost parts Erasmus has not penetrated, whom Erasmus does not 
teach and in whom he does not reign ? I mean of those who love letters, 
for among the other gifts of Christ to you, this also must be mentioned, 
that you displease many, by which criterion I am wont to know what 
God gives in mercy from what he gives in wrath. I therefore congrat- 
ulate you, that while you please good men to the last degree, you 
mo less displease those who wish only to be highest and to please 
most. . . . 

Now that I have learned from Fabritius Capito that my name is 
known to you on account of my little treatise on indulgences, and as 
Z also learn from your preface to the new edition of your Handbook of 




ERASMUS 
From a painting by Holbein ; at Basle 



ERASMUS 201 

the Christian Knight, that my ideas are not only known to you but 
approved by you,|J am compelled to acknowledge my debt to you as 
the enricher of my mindl even if I should have to do so in a barbar- 
ous style. ... ~ 

J^A.nd so, dear Erasmus, if it please you, learn to know this little 
brother in Christ also : he is assuredly your very zealous friend, but 
Otherwise deserves, on account of his ignorance, only to be buried in 
a corner, unknown even to your climate and sun. . . . 

Erasmus, who had already praised the Theses (though he 
denied the reference to them in the preface to the Handbook), 
replied to this letter in a friendly way, assuring his correspondent 
that he had many friends in the Netherlands and in England, 
commending his Commentaries on the Psalms, but warning him 
to guard against violence (May 30, 1519). About the same time 
the humanist wrote to Frederic the Wise and to Melanchthon, 
testifying his high esteem for the Saxon monk. 

The letter of May 30, which the author had intended to be 
private, was shortly printed at Leipsic. Partly to guard against 
misapprehension, and partly to help the cause of reform, Eras- 
mus wrote in November to Albert of Mayence, praising Luther's 
character and urging that he be not condemned unheard, add- 
ing : " He wrote me a right Christian letter, to my own mind, 
which I answered by warning him not to write anything seditious 
or irreverent to the Pope or arrogantly or in anger. . . ._ I said 
that thus could he conciliate the opinion of those who favor 
him, which some have foolishly interpreted to mean that I 
favor him." This letter, entrusted to the impetuous Ulrich von 
Hutten, was by him forthwith published, with "Luther" 
changed into " our Luther." 

This indiscretion, to call it by its mildest name, was intended 
to make Erasmus declare for the reform at once, but it had 
rather the opposite effect. The humanist was already at swords' 
points with the Dominicans, and now an enormous buzz arose 
from this quarter that he of Rotterdam was in straight alliance 
with him of Wittenberg and helped him to compose his 
works. The theologians of Louvain, where Erasmus then lived, 
published a condemnation of the heretic's doctrine ; the man 
attacked struck back (1520), saying, " They have condemned 



202 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

not only me, but Occam, Mirandola, Valla, Reuchlin, Wesel, 
Lef e vre d'Etaples, and Erasmus, that ram caught by the horns 
in the bushes." The humanist wrote in March to Melanchthon, 
saying that the Answer to the Condemnation of Louvain pleased 
him wonderfully, but at the same time wrote to the author a 
letter (now lost), probably asking him not to mention his name 
any more, to which Luther replied (if we may conjecture from 
other indications, for his letter, too, is lost) that he would not 
do so. 

Throughout the year 1520 Erasmus did his best to secure the 
accused heretic a fair hearing. " They find it easier to burn his 
books than to refute them," he said, and set about writing and 
speaking, to Frederic the Wise, to Henry VIII of England, to 
Albert of Mayence, even to the Pope and cardinals, urging them 
not to proceed by force. When Aleander came to Louvain, on 
October 8, 1520, published the bull and burned Luther's books, 
Erasmus, who was attacked by him, replied in an anonymous 
polemic, The Acts of Louvain, discrediting the legate and de- 
claring his belief that the bull was forged. His interview with 
the Elector of Saxony at Cologne on November 5, in which he 
urged him to insist that his subject have an impartial trial, has 
already been mentioned, as has his Counsel of One desiring the 
Peace of the Church, a memorial at this time pressed upon the 
Emperor's advisers, and the plan of arbitration composed by 
Erasmus and presented by Faber at the Diet of Worms. 

Although these efforts immensely helped the Eeformer, they 
did not accomplish all that the humanist hoped. Moreover he 
began, about 1521, to be alienated by the other's violence. The 
Babylonian Captivity he thought prevented the possibility of 
reconciliation, and he was especially incensed by the charge that 
this work, first published anonymously, was written by him. 

When the news spread abroad of Luther's disappearance 
after the Diet of Worms, many expected that the humanist 
would take up the banner of reform. Albert Diirer, then travel- 
ling in the Netherlands where he had learned to know the great 
scholar, wrote in his diary: "O Erasmus of Rotterdam, where 
wilt thou abide? . . . O thou knight of Christ, seize the 
martyr's crown ! . . . " But this was an honor the great scholar 



ERASMUS eos 

did not aspire to. A few days later he wrote Face that the 
Germans were alienating him by trying to force him to declare 
for Luther, but that he feared, were a tumult to arise, that he 
would follow the example of Peter and deny his Lord. 

Nevertheless he sought to remain neutral, although by so do- 
ing he brought on himself the suspicion of favoring the heretic. 
In numerous letters to his patrons and friends he excused him- 
self from this charge. Some of these letters were published, and 
so Luther was kept posted on his quondam ally's change of atti- 
tude. In June, 1523, he wrote to CEcolanipadius : — 

I note the pricks that Erasmus gives me now and then, hut as he 
does it without openly declaring himself my foe, I act as though I 
were unaware of his sly attacks, although I understand him better 
than he thinks. He has done what he was called to do ; he has brought 
us from godless studies to a knowledge of the tongues ; perhaps he will 
die in the land of Moab, for to enter the promised land he is unable. 

That Erasmus finally came out as the opponent of the 
man he had once supported was due not only to the urging of 
his friends and patrons but also to the provocation given by 
the reformers. In the letter to CEcolampadius, Luther spoke 
slightingly of the humanist's theology, and this letter was 
shown Erasmus, who had, since 1521, removed from Louvain 
to Basel. 

The fiery Hutten, who could bear no indecision, precip- 
itated hostilities by publishing in June, 1523, an Expostulation 
with Erasmus, roundly rating him for duplicity and cowardice. 
Erasmus defended himself in the Sponge (August), in which 
he incidentally blames Luther for disturbing the peace, for 
scurrility, and especially for his recent unmeasured attack on 
Henry VIII. In a dedicatory letter to Zwingli he mentions as 
the chief errors of the Wittenberg professor: (1) Designation of 
all good works as mortal sin ; (2) denial of free will ; (3) justi- 
fication by faith alone. Erasmus may have taken the idea from 
the letter of Henry VIII to Duke George (January 20, 1523), 
which mentioned these as the fundamental errors of the heretic. 
This letter with the Duke's answer was printed, and Erasmus 
read them both. 



204 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

The reasons for Erasmus' choice of this subject, the freedom 
of the will, on which to attack Luther, have been much dis- 
cussed. It has often been said that he chose the subject with 
the least practical interest, hoping in the first place not to put 
an obstacle in the way of reforms of which he really approved, 
and secondly not to antagonize the Reformer whose person he 
spared while criticising his doctrine. This motive probably had 
its weight with the humanist, but not the decisive weight. The 
matter was " in the air." Lorenzo Valla, always admired by 
Erasmus, had written a work on the freedom of the will in 
1440, which had recently been edited by Vadian, 1518. The 
English Bishop Fisher had chosen this subject in his attack on 
Luther, the Refutation of Luther's Assertion, being a rebuttal 
of the Assertion of All the Articles Wrongly Condemned by 
the Last Bull of Leo X, in which, as we have seen (cf. supra, 
p. 101), Luther argues at length, in the thirty-sixth article, for 
his opinion that free will is but a name. The Reformer himself 
had selected this as the foundation of all his theology, being, 
in fact, no more than another form of the famous doctrine of 
justification by faith alone. His position was emphasized and 
clarified in Melanchthon's Common Places of Theology, ap- 
pearing December, 1521. 

The Diatribe on the Free Will was first mentioned by its 
author in a letter to Henry VIII of September 4, 1523, and it 
is possible that a first draft of it followed in this year. Finding 
that the printers at Basel were unwilling to publish anything 
against the popular hero of Germany, Erasmus had some 
thoughts of going to Rome to publish it. 

The news of the impending attack soon spread. Luther him- 
self, judging that the best way to prevent it was to threaten 
reprisals, wrote the following letter : — 

TO DESIDEBIUS ERASMUS AT BASEL 

Wittenberg (about April 15), 1524. 

Grace and peace from our Lord Jesus Christ. 1 have been silent 

long enough, excellent Erasmus, having waited for you, as the greater 

and elder man, to speak first; but as you refuse to do so, I think that 

charity itself now compels me to begin. I say nothing about your 



ERASMUS 205 

estrangement from us, by which yon were made safer against my 
enemies the papists. Nor do I especially resent your action, intended 
to gain their favor or mitigate their hostility, in censuring and attack- 
ing us in various books. For since we see that the Lord has not given 
you courage or sense to assail those monsters openly and confidently 
with us, we are not the men to exact what is beyond your power and 
measure. Bather we have tolerated and even respected the mediocrity 
of God's gift in you. The whole world knows your services to letters 
and how you have made them flourish and thus prepared a path for 
the direct study of the Bible. For this glorious and splendid gift in 
you we ought to thank God. I for one have never wished you to leave 
your little sphere to join our camp, for although you might have pro- 
fited the cause much by your ability, genius, and eloquence, yet as you 
had not the courage it was safer for you to work at home. We only 
fear that you might be induced by our enemies to fall upon our doc- 
trine with some publication, in which case we should be obliged' to 
resist you to your face. We have restrained some who would have 
drawn you into the arena, and have even suppressed books already 
written against you. We should have preferred that Hutten's Expos- 
tulation had not been written, and still more that your Sponge had 
not seen the light. Incidentally I may remark, that, unless I mistake, 
when you wrote that book you felt how easy it is to write about mod- 
eration and blame Luther's excesses, but how hard or rather impos- 
sible it is to practise what you preach except by a special gift of the 
Spirit. Believe it or not as you like, but Christ is witness that I 
heartily regret that such zeal and hatred should be roused against 
you. I cannot believe that you remain unmoved by it, for your forti- 
tude is human and unequal to such trials. Perhaps a righteous zeal 
moved them and they thought that you had provoked them in various 
ways. Since they are admittedly too weak to bear your caustic but 
dissembled sarcasm (which you would have pass for prudent modera- 
tion), they surely have a just cause for indignation, whereas if they 
were stronger they would have none. I, too, am irritable, and quite 
frequently am moved to write caustically, though I have only done 
so against hardened men proof against milder forms of admonition. 
Otherwise I think my gentleness and clemency toward sinners, no 
matter how far they are gone in iniquity, is witnessed not only by my 
own conscience but by the experience of many. Hitherto, accordingly, 
I have controlled my pen as often as you prick me, and have written 
in letters to friends which you have seen that I would control it until 
you publish something openly. For although you will not side with 



206 THK LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

us and although you injure or make sceptical many pious persons by 
your impiety and hypocrisy, yet I cannot and do not accuse you of 
wilful obstinacy. What can I do ? Each side is greatly exasperated. 
Could my good offices prevail, I would wish my friends to cease 
attacking you with so much animus and to allow your old age a peace- 
ful death in the Lord. I think they would do so if they were reasonable 
and considered your weakness and the greatness of the cause which 
has long since outgrown your littleness, especially as the cause has now 
progressed so far that it has little to fear from the might — or rather 
, the sting and bite — of Erasmus. You on your side, Erasmus, ought 
to consider their infirmity and abstain from making them the butt of 
your witty rhetoric. Even if you cannot and dare not declare for us, 
yet at least you might leave us alone and mind your own business. If 
they suffer from your bites, you certainly will confess that human 
weakness has cause to fear the name and fame of Erasmus and that 
it is a very much graver matter to be snapped at by you than to be 
ground to pieces by all the papists together. I say this, excellent Eras- 
mus, as an evidence of my candid moderation, wishing that the Lord 
might give you a spirit worthy of your reputation, but if he delays 
doing so I beg that meanwhile if you can do nothing else you will re- 
main a spectator of the conflict and not join our enemies, and especially 
that you publish no book against me, as I shall write none against you. 
Remember that the men who are called Lutherans are human beings 
like ourselves, whom you ought to spare and forgive as Paul says : 
' " Bear ye one another's burdens." We have fought long enough, we 
must take care not to eat each other up. This would be a terrible 
catastrophe, as neither one of us really wishes harm to religion, and 
without judging each other both may do good. Pardon my poor style 
and farewell in the Lord. . . . 

Maetdt Ltjthee. 

Erasmus' answer, dated May 8, asserts that he is not less 
zealous for the cause of religion than others who arrogate to 
themselves the name " evangelic," and that he has at, yet writ- 
ten nothing against Luther, though had he done so he would 
have won the applause of the great ones of the world. \ 

Very soon after this he finished the Diatribe on tlie Free 
Will. On account of its pure Latinity, its moderation, wit, and 
brevity, this work is still very readable. It is also distinguished 
by the absence of scurrility ; indeed it hardly makes the impres- 



ERASMUS 807 

sion of a polemic at all, but rather of a conversation on the in- 
tellectual movement of the times, addressed to a wide audience. 
The author expresses his perfect readiness to appeal only to 
reason and to Scripture, as these are the only grounds recognized 
by Luther. He defines free will as the power to apply one's self 
to the things leading to salvation, and appeals to the universal 
opinion of mankind that each one has such a power. His strong- 
est argument is that it would be unjust for God to damn a 
man for doing what he could not help. He devotes long sections 
to explanations of Scriptural passages, such as " God hardened 
Pharaoh's heart," which would seem to militate against free 
will, and he refutes point by point Luther's arguments in the 
Assertion of All the Articles Condemned by the Bull — a part 
of the work in which he borrows much without acknowledgment 
from Bishop Fisher. Finally he sums up : " Those please me 
who attribute something to free will but much to grace." Both 
must cooperate to save a man, one may assign as small a part 
as one likes to the former factor, only it must be some part. 

The Diatribe was published in September, 1524, and promptly 
sent to the author's patrons and friends, most of whom it had 
the good fortune to please. Even MelaDchthon liked the moder- 
ation of tone and the reasonableness of the argument. Luther 
himself confessed that of all his opponents Erasmus only had 
gone to the root of the matter and instead of threatening him 
with ban and stake had undertaken to refute him by reasons. 
He once said that of all the books written against him, the Dia- 
tribe was the only one he read through, but even this made him 
feel like throwing it under the bench and heartily disgusted 
him. He did not answer it for more than a year, a delay partly 
accounted for by his preoccupations with the " heavenly pro- 
phets," the Peasants' War, and his marriage, and partly by the 
unusual care with which he prepared his reply. His book on 
the Unf ree Will (JDe servo arbitrw) at last appeared in Decem- 
ber, 1525. 

This bulky volume has been acclaimed by most Protestant 
biographers of Luther as his ablest polemic and a work of ex- 
traordinary power. It is needless to remark that much of this 
ability is wasted on a generation for which the question, then 



208 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

so passionately disputed, has sunk almost into oblivion. In 
point of earnestness he is a striking contrast to Erasmus. What 
for the latter is the subject of an interesting discussion is to 
him matter of life and death. It is in this sense that he attrib- 
utes eloquence and mastery of speech to his opponent, but to 
himself substance and real understanding of the issue. 

Luther takes his former stand for extreme predestinarianism. 
His determinism is not founded, as that of a modern philoso- 
pher might be, on any conception of the immutability of natural 
law, but is simply and solely the logical deduction from his 
doctrine of justification by faith alone, or, as it is technically 
called, of the monergism of grace. Man is a simple instrument 
in God's hands, and the Almighty arbitrarily saves whom he 
wills and damns whom he wills. The extreme form in which 
Luther put this doctrine, which is certainly revolting to our 
ideas, can only be realized by a few quotations of his own 
words : — 

The human will is like a beast of burden. If God mounts it, it wishes 
and goes as God wills ; if Satan mounts it, it wishes and goes as Satan 
wills. Nor can it choose the rider it would prefer, nor betake itself to 
him, but it is the riders who contend for its possession. . . . 

This is the acme of faith, to believe that God who saves so few and 
condemns so many is merciful ; that he is just who at his own pleasure 
has made us necessarily doomed to damnation, so that, as Erasmus 
says, he seems to delight in the tortures of the wretched, and to be more 
deserving of hatred than of love. If by any effort of reason I could 
conceive how God, who shows so much anger and iniquity, could be 
merciful and just, there would be no need of faith. . . . 

God foreknows nothing subject to contingencies, but he foresees, 
foreordains, and accomplishes all things by an unchanging, eternal, 
and efficacious will. By this thunderbolt free will sinks shattered in 
the dust. 

Besides defending his main thesis Luther here puts forward 
his doctrine of infallibility of the Scripture. He is enraged at the 
assertion of his opponent that there seem to be contradictions 
in the Bible. According to Luther every text must be taken 
literally, and yet all must be made to agree, for as the whole 
is plenarily inspired by divine wisdom there can be no diversity 



ERASMUS 809 

of doctrine. Moreover lie apologizes for his whole theology, espe- 
cially replying to the charge that tumult followed it by assert- 
ing that uproar always follows the preaching of God's Word. 

He sent a copy of the work, with a letter asserting his con- 
viction of its truth, to his opponent, but the messenger was 
delayed and Erasmus did not receive it until April. In the 
mean time a friend in Leipsic (Duke George ?) had sent him 
a copy, which he received on February 10. He commenced his 
reply at once, spending only twelve days in answering it so as 
to have the reply ready to be sold at the Frankfort Fair. He 
was astonished by the violence of Luther's invective of which 
he complained to the Elector of Saxony. To Luther himself he 
wrote as follows : — 

DESIDERIUS ERASMUS TO MAETIN LTJTHEK AT WITTENBERG 

Basel, April 11, 1526. 
Tour letter was delivered to me too late and had it come in time it 
would not have moved me. . . . The whole world knows your nature, 
according to which you have guided your pen against no one more 
bitterly and, what is more detestable, more maliciously than against me. 
. . . The same admirable ferocity which you formerly used against 
Fisher and against Cochlaeus, who provoked it by reviling you, you 
now use against my book in spite of its courtesy. How do your scur- 
rilous charges that I am an atheist, an Epicurean, and a sceptic, help 
the argument ? ... It terribly pains me, as it must all good men, that 
your arrogant, insolent, rebellious nature has set the world in arms. . . . 
You treat the Evangelic cause so as to confound together all things 
sacred and profane, as if it were your chief aim to prevent the tempest 
from ever becoming calm, while it is my greatest desire that it should 
die down. . . . 

The Hyperaspistes, Part I, is a work three times as large as 
the Diatribe, of which it is a defence, and is moreover a general f 
attack on all points of Luther's doctrine. In it the question of 
free will recedes behind the other question of the excellence of 
the Lutheran movement. Erasmus cannot convince himself that 
the Reformer is really inspired with the spirit of the gospel, as 
he has not learned to avoid giving offence. He attacks Luther's 
person and the results of his doctrine, among which are included 



210 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

the Peasants' War. As the book is written in such haste, he 
promises a continuation of it later with fuller consideration of 
the main argument. 

After his first heat had cooled down, Erasmus put off this 
promised work for eighteen months. That he wrote it at all 
was again the work of Henry VIII. This monarch's answer to 
Luther, published in the early part of 1527, contains some refer- 
ences to free will which made the Reformer suspect Erasmus' 
hand in its composition. This charge, coupled with the violence 
of the Wittenberg reformer, which alienated many persons be- 
sides Erasmus, induced him to reply. This he did in a book 
six times the size of the Diatribe, which appeared about Sep- 
tember 1, 1527, and was called Hyperaspistes, Part II. 

Now at last the fundamental difference between Erasmus 
and Luther is revealed, the opposite trend of the two natures. 
The humanist reacts against Luther's absolutism ; he cannot 
abide hard-and-fast rules admitting no exception. Of himself 
he said, " I am prone to those things like nature ; I abhor por- 
tents " ; of his antagonist, " He never recoils from extremes." 
For the dogmatic reformer there is one absolute right and one 
absolute wrong ; for the classic scholar men and things cannot be 
divided into such uncompromising categories ; there are shades 
and degrees. Luther is a logician ; from premises impeccable, 
because directly revealed in the Bible, he draws conclusions of 
mathematical precision ; Erasmus is an evolutionist and a 
rationalist, to whom all truth does not come through the Bible, 
but much from reason. He believes, moreover, that men have 
a natural trend to the good. At the close of this comprehensive 
work he tries to hedge and make peace again. After all, the 
strife is mainly one of words, and man should remember that 
salvation is God's work, but damnation that of sin. Just as 
the Hyperaspistes, Part II, appeared, its author wrote Duke 
George that Luther's spirit was neither a wholly good nor an 
entirely bad one. 

x The work was received by the Evangelic party as might 
have been expected. Justus Jonas, a quondam Erasmian, now 
at Wittenberg, referred to his former beloved master as a toad. 
Melanchthon, indeed, who resembled Erasmus in many ways, 



ERASMUS 211 

was half-convinced that determinism would be bad for the 
morals of the common man, for who would try to be good if 
he was convinced it was no use ? Luther himself punned on 
the double meaning of aspis, which in Greek means both shield 
and viper (Hyperaspistes, a soldier), calling the work " super- 
viperean." He never deigned to answer it for reasons explained 
to Montanus in a letter of May 28, 1529 : — 

Erasmus writes nothing in which he does not show the impotence 
of his mind or rather the pain of the wounds he has received. I de- 
spise him, nor shall I honor the fellow by arguing with him any more. 
... In future I shall only refer to him as some alien, rather con- 
demning than refuting his ideas. He is a light-minded man, mocking 
all religion as his dear Lucian does, and serious about nothing but 
calumny and slander. 

But the last word was not yet said. In 1533 George Witzel, 
a liberal Catholic and an admirer of Erasmus, begged "that 
Solon" to draw up a plan for pacifying the Church. The old 
scholar, who, in the mean time, had been forced to withdraw 
from Basel, now too Protestant for him, to Freiburg, flattered 
by the request, published a reasonable and irenic pamphlet," 
On Mending the Peace of the Church, advising that each 
side tolerate the other in non-essential matters, that all contro- 
versial writings be forbidden, and that a general council take 
measures with the civil authorities for restoring unity and 
healing the schism. 

The anger of the reformers was roused afresh by this appar- 
ently inoffensive essay towards compromise. Corvinus an- 
swered it in full, Luther writing a preface for his work, proving 
that there could be no peace between Christ and Belial. At the 
same time he expressed himself more fully in a long printed 
letter to Amsdorf, written about March 11, 1534, calling 
Erasmus by the somewhat contradictory names of heretic, 
atheist, blasphemer, and Arian, and, worst of all, one who 
makes jokes of serious things and serious business of jokes. 

Erasmus answered with A Justification against the Intem- 
perate Letter of Luther, denying all the accusations point by 
point. Two years later he died, in the opinion of his adversary 
" without light, without the cross, and without God." 



212 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

The table-talk (1531-46) is full of the most rancorous ex- 
pressions about the great scholar : — 

In writing his Folly, Erasmus begot a daughter worthy of himself. 
He turns, twists, and bites like an awl, but yet shows himself a true 
fool. 

On my death-bed I shall forbid my sons to read his Colloquies. . . . 
He is much worse than Lucian, mocking all things under the guise of 
holiness. 

He goes so far as to compare our Lord to the god Friapus. . . . 

In his New Testament he is ambiguous and cavilling . . . trying to 
perplex the reader and make him think the doctrine doubtful. He 
reviles all Christians, making no exception of Faul or any pious man. 

The battle between Luther and Erasmus was a real tragedy. 1 
The humanist had set himself, as his life task, a peaceful re- 
formation of the Church ; abuses, he thought, would fade away 
before gentle sarcasm and the cultivation of good letters and 
the sacred texts. The boisterous attack of the Wittenberg 
monk, said he sadly, destroyed all hope of this. He lived to see 
his ideal of peace shattered in war, the followers trained to 
carry on his work reft from him by one side or the other, and 
his own name spat upon by almost all. 

For Luther the loss was hardly less. He saw the man in 
whom he confidently expected the most valuable of all allies 
gradually draw back from his side and become not only a 
neutral but an enemy, to the great scandal of his own followers 
and to the hurt of the Evangelic Church. In his anger and dis- 
appointment he more and more expressed himself in unmeas- 
ured terms, and more and more forgot the good in Erasmus 
and the services he had done the world. But those who regret 
his one-sidedness and especially his violence should not blame 
him too hastily. Every great leader of a new and struggling 
movement must feel that he who is not with him is against him 
and that he who gathereth not scattereth. The citizen who re- 
fuses to take arms in wartime is a public enemy. His scruples 
may be honorable, but one can hardly blame the general for 
expelling him from the ranks. In the American civil war no 
character was so much detested as the " Copperhead," the 
Northern man who refused to fight for the Union. 



ERASMUS 213 

The Reformation is still a living issue. A reflecting mind 
must have an opinion on its merits. Some judge it as a great 
step forward, others as a blow to human progress. A few are 
still Erasmians, approving the principle of the Eeformation, 
they think it might have been accomplished without rending 
the peace of the world. But the mass of mankind are not led in 
that way. To reform any institution it is not sufficient to secure 
the intellectual adherence of a few choice spirits, the whole soul 
of a people must be aroused. One may estimate the Reforma- 
tion as one pleases, but to think of it without Luther is as un- 
historical as to fancy that Christianity might have grown up 
without its great Founder, or that Islam could have been born 
in the deserts of Arabia without the Prophet. 



CHAPTER XIX 

QEKMAN POLITICS. 1522-1S29 

When Martin Luther returned from the Wartburg in March, 
1522, he found the state of affairs very different, not only at 
Wittenberg, but in the whole of Germany, from that which he 
had left a year before. He was no longer a lone man fighting 
single-handed against the official representatives of the universal 
Church; he was now at the head of a movement which grad- 
ually swept into its vortex the greater part not only of his 
countrymen but of all civilized Europe north of the Alps and 
the Pyrenees. By far the greater part of this revolution lies 
entirely beyond the ken of a biographer of Luther. He cared 
little or nothing for politics in themselves, partly because of his 
direct reliance on God, partly because he felt himself ill quali- 
fied to advise on such matters. Nevertheless in some phases of 
public affairs he was forced by his position to interfere. 

Leo X died in December, 1521. His successor, Adrian VI, 
a pious man and a sincere Catholic, fought both the corruption 
within the Church and the schism without. His particularly 
close relations with the Emperor,, to whom he had once been 
tutor, foreboded danger to the new cause, though as a matter of 
fact his short pontificate enabled him to do little. To the Diet 
called at Nuremberg in 1522 he sent an injunction to stamp out 
heresy in the Empire. Before this body also came the com- 
plaints of Duke George of Albertine Saxony against the fanat- 
ical programme of the prophets at Wittenberg. In defence of 
his subject, Frederic the Wise, now as always his best sup- 
porter, submitted the letter drawn up by Luther immediately 
after his return. 1 This, together with the restoration of order at 
Wittenberg^ impressed the members of the Diet so favorably 
that they declined to take any decisive action against the out- 
lawed heretic. 

1 Cf . mpra, p. 146. 



GERMAN POLITICS 215 

Nevertheless Ms position and that of bis protector was very 
delicate. The Imperial Edict of Worms was still in force. Fred- 
eric had on this account been much opposed to his coming out 
of hiding, fearing that the electorate would become embroiled 
with the central government. In the letter of March 5, 1522, 1 
Luther had answered his lord's question as to bow far he, Fred- 
eric, was bound to obey the higher power in case it demanded 
the execution of the edict, by saying that it would be sufficient 
to allow the imperial officers a free hand, but that resistance to 
them would be rebellion and therefore forbidden by God. This 
disinterested advice was partly determined by the riots at Wit- 
tenberg ; while the Reformer was preaching earnestly against 
these disturbers of the peace, he could hardly request his sover- 
eign to defend him against the Emperor by arms. The letter 
gives the key-note to Luther's attitude toward the government 
for the next ten years ; he consistently maintained that opposi- 
tion to it should be confined to neglecting to execute its decrees, 
but that all armed resistance must be discountenanced as tanta- 
mount to treason. These principles were thoroughly worked out 
in a thoughtful little pamphlet, published in March, 1523, en- 
titled : Of Civil Authority and how far Obedience is due 
to it. 

Formerly, he begins, I wrote a book to the German Nobility, to 
point out their office and Christian work. Every one sees how well 
they have done their duty. But now I must carefully advise them what 
to leave undone, hoping that these men, who have hitherto striven to 
be Christians before they were princes, will now let themselves be 
guided by me. God Almighty has made our princes foolish, so that 
they think that they can command their subjects whatever they please, 
and the subjects likewise think they are bound to obey every command. 
. . . Indeed the civil authorities presume to sit in God's seat, master- 
ing consciences and faith, and they try to teach the Holy Ghost. . . . 
Now since the fools rage to extirpate Christ's faith, to deny his Word, 
and to blaspheme his Majesty, I neither will nor can any longer 
acquiesce in their doings. 

Nevertheless, he continues, we must not err on account of 
the spiritual tyranny of the lords. The powers that be are 

1 Supra, p. 144. 



216 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

ordained of God and have been given a divine right from the 
beginning. 

The world is divided into two parts, the Kingdom of God and 
that of the world ; it is against the latter that the temporal 
power must bear the sword, but of the former that Christ spoke 
when he bade us turn the other cheek. In a somewhat labored 
argument Luther even proves that bearing the sword is an office 
of love, because it enables one to protect his neighbor from 
wrong. 

In the second part of his treatise, the author considers the 
limitations of the secular power. The civil magistrate is not en- 
titled to punish heretics or to force the faith of any one. Lords 
are no judges of such matters, " for since the foundation of the 
world a wise prince has been a rare bird and a just one much 
rarer. They are generally the biggest fools and worst knaves on 
earth, wherefore one must always expect the worst of them and 
not much good, especially in divine matters which concern the 
soul. They are only God's gaolers and hangmen." This harsh 
judgment of hereditary magistrates is the more surprising -in a 
work dedicated to Duke John, the Elector's brother. In no case, 
the writer emphatically sums up, may the temporal power de- 
cide spiritual things nor even guard against plain false doctrine. 

In conclusion he points out the duties of a Christian prince, 
of which the first and foremost is to attend to the weal of his 
subjects. 

In summing up Luther's " political theory," Professor Dun- 
ning says that two doctrines can be deduced from his various 
writings on the subject : " first, the absolute distinction in kind 
between spiritual and secular interests and authority, and sec- 
ond, the Christian duty of passive submission to the established 
social and political order." 

Both these doctrines were later modified by the course of 
events. When the political situation seemed to make it necessary 
for the Protestants to fight for their faith, the Reformer under 
a rather casuistical plea gave his consent to this course, which, 
however, was happily avoided. In a meeting of the jurists and 
theologians to discuss this point at Torgan in 1531, Luther let 
himself be convinced that resistance would in some cases be 



GERMAN POLITICS 217 

legal, justifying himself in a letter (dated February 15, 1531) 
to Lazarus Spengler who accused him of " recanting his former 
opinion that resistance to the Emperor was wrong." 

I am not conscious of any inconsistency (he writes) . . . The jurists 
first alleged the maxim that force might be repelled with force, which 
did not satisfy me ; then they pointed out that it was a positive im- 
perial law that " in cases of notorious injustice the government might 
be resisted by force," to which I merely replied that I did not know 
whether this was the law or not, but that if the Emperor had thus 
limited himself we might let him remain so . . . and, as the law com- 
mands, resist him by force. 

The proposition that one might resist the Emperor only when 
and because he himself commanded it, is not really quite so ab- 
surd as it seems when thus baldly stated. The sixteenth century 
had no word for the idea " constitution," so familiar to us. Had 
Luther written four hundred years later, he would have said that 
the imperial laws might be resisted when they were unconstitu- 
tional, for it must be remembered that the Holy Roman Empire 
had a constitution, mostly unwritten, like that of England, but 
consisting partly of ancient charters like the Golden Bull. 

On his first doctrine, that in no case the civil power has the 
right to interfere in matters of faith, the Reformer was also 
forced to weaken. The fanatical innovations of Miinzer and the 
prophets, with their sequel in the Peasants' War, taught him 
the danger of allowing men to teach what they pleased under 
the guise of religion. Moreover, when, in 1525, an avowed Lu- 
theran ascended the electoral throne, willing to support the till 
then struggling religion with powerful laws, the Reformer's ideas 
of the proper sphere of government considerably widened, so 
that he became almost, though not quite, an Erastian. Not that 
he ever allowed the right of the magistrate to compel faith, but 
he insisted on the duty of the government to enforce uniformity 
in religious externals. Thus, on November 11, 1525, he wrote 
Spalatin : " Our government does not force belief in the Evan- 
gelic faith, but only suppresses external abominations [such as 
masses and all forms of public worship save the Lutheran]. . . . 
For even our opponents confess that the government should put 
down crimes like blasphemy." 



218 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

In the same tenor he wrote Joseph Levin Metsch, August 26, 
1529: — 

No one is to be compelled to profess the faith, but no one must be 
allowed to injure it. Let our opponents give their objections and hear 
our answers. If they are thus converted, well and good ; if not let them 
hold their tongues and believe what they please. ... In order to 
avoid trouble we should not, if possible, suffer contrary teachings in 
the same state. Even unbelievers should be forced to obey the Ten 
Commandments, attend church, and outwardly conform. 

It is easily seen that all real freedom of conscience vanishes 
when the distinction between the suppression of heresy and the 
enforcement of conformity by the civil power is drawn so fine. 
If Luther's tolerance was far short of modern standards, in one 
respect he was greatly superior to his contemporaries, all of 
whom, Catholic princes, Henry VIII, Zwingli and Calvin, put 
dissenters to death. The man of Wittenberg, in this as in other 
things, following Augustine, who punished heretics with banish- 
ment, consistently refused to do this, for reasons presented in 
a letter to Wenzel Link, written July 14, 1528 : — 

You ask whether the government may put false prophets to death. 
I hesitate to give capital punishment even when it is evidently deserved, 
so much am I terrified to think what happened when the papists and 
the Jews punished with death, . . . for in the course of time it has 
always come to pass that none but the most holy and innocent prophets 
were slain. . . . "Wherefore it is sufficient to banish false teachers. 

Returning from this digression on Luther's political theories 
to the course of history in the years following the Diet of 
Worms, we find that the Eeformer's confidence, fostered by his 
continued immunity from persecution, that all would work 
together for good without the interference of man was not 
shared by his sovereign. On October 12, 1523, the professor 
wrote Spalatin : — 

Now, almost two years since my return from the "Wartburg you see 
that, contrary to the expectation of all, the Elector is not only safe 
but feels the rage of the other princes much less than he did a year 
ago. - . . If I knew any way of keeping him safe without discredit- 
ing the gospel, I would act accordingly even at the expense of my 



GERMAN POLITICS 219 

life. ... I wish he possessed more equanimity, and power to dis- 
simulate for a while. His way of acting does not please me, for it 
savors of I know not what unbelief and courtly infirmity of soul, 
preferring temporal to spiritual things. 

This criticism of the Elector's policy was hardly justified by 
events. While he was procrastinating and gaining time the Evan- 
gelic faith won many powerful converts throughout the Empire. 
The cause was threatened for a moment by the rebellion and 
fall of the party of the knights under Sickingen, which claimed 
alliance with Wittenberg. True to his principles of obedience, 
the Reformer gave no countenance to the movement, designated 
by Melanchthon as brigandage, and when it was crushed in May, 
1523, largely by the energy of the Evangelic Philip of Hesse, 
the recoil was not felt by the growing Church. Among the 
many gains made during these years the most important was 
that of Prussia, till 1523 a fief of the religious order of Teu- 
tonic Knights, whose grand master, Albert of Brandenburg, 
adopting the new faith, turned it into a temporal realm. 

On September 14 of this same eventful year Adrian VI 
died. In his place was elected a Medici, Clement VII, whose 
main object was to restore the elegant humanism and corrupt 
privileges of the Curia enjoyed by the courtiers of his kinsman, 
Leo X. He wished, however, to stamp out the dangerous 
schism, and therefore sent to the Diet, summoned at Nurem- 
berg January, 1524, Campeggio, an able legate, with strong 
representations urging the execution of the Edict of Worms. 
This appenl met with no success ; the nuncio was obliged to 
speak very moderately to get a hearing at all, while thousands 
of persons, among them many members of the Diet, and even 
a sister of the Emperor, flouted the Pope and Campeggio by 
taking communion in both kinds from the hand of the Lu- 
theran pastor, Osiander. All that could be wrung from the 
Estates was a resolution to enforce the edict as far as they were 
able, a nullifying qualification. In return they demanded an 
immediate calling of. a free council of the Church to meet at 
Spires to compose the religious differences. 

The year 1525 was the hardest through which the young 
movement had to go. The Peasants' War alienated many of 



220 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 1 

the nobles from the fermenting doctrine, and the Reform- 
er's harshness to the poor rebels shook his popularity with 
the people. In the very midst of the tumult, on May 5, the 
Elector Frederic died. He was buried in his favorite church 
at Wittenberg by the famous subject with whom he had never 
spoken and whom he rarely saw. On May 23, Luther writes 
to Riihel : — 

My gracious lord departed this life in the enjoyment of his full 
reason, taking the sacrament in both kinds and without supreme 
unction. We buried him without masses or vigils, but yet in a fine 
noble manner. Several stones were found in his lungs and three (won- 
derful to relate) in his gall, in fact he died of the stone. . . . The 
signs of his death were a rainbow which Melanchthon and I saw one 
night last winter over Lochau, and a child born here at Wittenberg 
without a head, and another with feet turned around. 

Though Frederic's talents were not of the dazzling order, he 
had certainly shown consummate ability in protecting the Wit- 
tenberg monk during the crucial early years. Though he was too 
prudent to flaunt his advanced views in the face of the world, 
there can be no doubt that at heart he was a convinced dis- 
ciple of the new teaching. His subject recognized and often 
spoke highly of his first patron : — 

When the genius of a financier, a statesman, and a hero concur in 
the same prince, it is a gift of God. Such an one was Frederic. 

He was, indeed, very wise. He took care of the administration him- 
self and did not leave everything to a pack of fools, for he said: 
" While I am alive I will be ruler." 

He was succeeded by his brother John the Steadfast, a less 
able but more open devotee of the Evangelic faith. With his 
accession the Lutheran Church became the dominant one. 
Spalatin, on the death of his master, retired from the chap- 
laincy of the court and was appointed to the pastorate of the 
first church at the capital, Altenburg. He remained the con- 
fidant and adviser of the new elector, and did invaluable service 
to the cause by representing the Reformer's ideas at court. 
There still existed a strong Catholic opposition, composed 
mostly of nobles who feared the new doctrines, that they re- 



GERMAN POLITICS 221 

garded as subversive. Indeed Luther feared to come to his 
friend Spalatin's wedding at Altenburg on account "of the 
ignoble crowd of nobles raging against me." He even said that 
he felt safer under the old elector who did not openly profess 
the gospel than under the new one who did. 

The first Diet after John's accession, that of Augsburg, 1525, 
proved small and abortive, but that which met at Spires in 
June, 1526, was described by Spalatin as the boldest and freest 
ever held. Many innovations were suggested by the liberal 
majority, which Ferdinand, the Emperor's brother and lieuten- 
ant, vainly tried to obstruct. The Estates passed a decree 
(known as the Recess of Spires), providing that in matters of 
faith each state should act as it could answer to God and the 
Emperor. This was in effect a declaration of entire religious 
liberty, not indeed for each individual, but for each state of 
the Empire. 

The division of Saxony between the Ernestine and Albertine 
branches of the house of Wettin has already been described. 
As the strongest support for the Lutherans came from the 
former, so the most determined opposition to them came from 
the latter during the lifetime of Duke George the Bearded. 
This prince had heard the Leipsic debate in 1519, and had been 
shocked by the Wittenberger's open avowal of a position re- 
garded as heretical ; for the next twenty years, until his death 
in 1539, he was the ablest and most active of the Reformer's 
opponents. Though both a moral and a sincere man, not bigoted 
according to the standards of the age, Luther regarded him, 
on account of his refusal to accept the " gospel," as the very 
instrument of Satan. The prince greatly provoked him in 1522 
. by sending a complaint to the Imperial Council, and by exclud- 
ing the German New Testament from his lands. In March of 
this year the Reformer wrote a good friend, Hartmuth von 
Kronberg, alluding to " the straw and paper tyranny " of cer- 
tain persons otherwise designated as " bladders." Hartmuth 
promptly published the letter, filling in the blank with the 
name of the duke. To a polite inquiry from George about the 
authorship of the obnoxious pamphlet, the writer thought fit to 
return the following insulting response : — 



222 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

TO DUKE GEORGE OP SAXONY AT DRESDEN 

Wittenberg, January 3, 1523. 
Instead of greeting I wish you would stop raging and roaring 
against God and against his Christ. Ungracious Prince and Lord ! 
I received your Disgrace's letter with the pamphlet or letter I wrote 
Hartmuth von Kronberg, and have had read to me with especial 
care the part of which your Disgrace complains as injurious to your 
soul, honor, and reputation. The epistle has been printed at Witten- 
berg and elsewhere. As your Disgrace desires to know what position 
I take in it, I briefly answer that as far as your Disgrace is concerned, 
it is the same to me whether- my position is standing, lying down, 
sitting or running. For when I act or speak against your Disgrace, be 
it secretly or openly, I intend it as right, and (God willing) will have 
it taken so. God Will find the needful power. For if your Disgrace 
were in earnest, and did not so ignobly lie about my coming too near 
your soul, honor, and reputation, you would not so shamefully hurt 
and persecute Christian truth. This is not the first time that I am 
belied and evilly entreated by your Disgrace, so that I have more 
cause than you to complain of injuries to soul, honor, and reputation. 
But I pass over all that, for Christ commands me to do good even to 
my enemies, which I have hitherto done with my poor prayers to 
God for your Disgrace. I offer to serve your Disgrace in anything I 
can, save in what is wrong. If you despise my offer I can do no more, 
and shall not tremble for a mere bladder, God willing. May he lighten 
your Disgrace's eyes and heart and please to make me a gracious, 
kind prince of you. Amen. 

Martin Luther, 
by the grace of God Evangelist at Wittenberg. 

Duke George, naturally still more antagonized by such a let- 
ter, endeavored by making strong diplomatic representations to 
his cousins to force the author to apologize. For a long time 
Luther steadily refused to do this, but about three years later 
he thought that the time was propitious for a reconciliation, 
and accordingly wrote his old enemy with that view. What 
decided him to do so is not clear ; perhaps a sense of his weak- 
ened position at this time made him more conciliatory : — 



GERMAN POLITICS 223 



TO DUKE GEOBGE OF SAXONY AT DEESDEN 

(Wittenberg,) December 21, 1525. 

... As I observe that your Grace does not turn from your dis- 
favor, I am minded once more to approach your Grace, perhaps for 
the last time, with this humble, affectionate letter. It looks to me as 
if God would soon take one of us away, and so makes it desirable 
that Duke George and Luther should speedily become friends. . . . 

I fall at your Grace's feet and beg you in utter humility to leave 
off persecuting my doctrine. Not that much harm can come to me 
through your Grace's persecution, for I have little to lose but my poor 
body. . . Truly I have a greater enemy than you, namely, the devil 
and his angels. . . . Persecution has greatly helped me and I thank 
my enemies for it. If your Grace's misfortunes were pleasant to me, 
which they are not, I would irritate you still more and provoke you 
to persecute me more. ... Of my doctrine I can only say that it 
speaks for itself and does not need my exhortation to recommend it. 
. . . Let not your Grace despise my humble person, for God once 
spoke through an ass. . . . 

Except by preaching my doctrine I beg to know how I have inad- 
vertently hurt your Grace. I forgive from my heart what your Grace 
has done to hurt me, and I will pray the Lord to forgive you what you 
have done against his Word. . . . Let me inform your Grace that I 
have always hitherto prayed for your Grace, and now write this letter 
in hopes of avoiding the necessity of praying against your Grace, for 
although we are a poor little flock, yet should we pray against you 
... we know that nothing good would happen to you. , . . Your 
Grace might then learn that it is a different thing to fight against 
Luther from fighting against Mtinzer. . . . 

Your Grace's humble, devoted servant, 

Martin Luther. 

This missive reached its destination on Christmas and was 
answered on December 28 "for a New Year's gift." The Duke 
recalls the Kronberg episode, with the letter of 1523, and re- 
bukes the Eeformer for " reviling us with slippery words, the 
like of which yon will not find in the Bible, by which example 
you justify yourself." Moreover, " We heard you debate, and 
when accused by Eck of being a patron of the Hussites, blus- 
teringly deny the charge, although you asserted that certain 



£24 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

articles of Huss, for which he was condemned, were right 
Christian. Then, acting as a friend, we had a private interview 
with you." In conclusion : " My dear Luther, keep the gospel 
you have drawn from under the bushel, we will stand by the 
gospel of Christ as the Church holds it, so help us God ! " 

The hostility of Duke George to the new faith was more than 
balanced by the adherence of his son-in-law. After the death of 
Frederic of Saxony, the ablest champion of Lutheranism was 
Philip, Landgrave of Hesse. His enterprise and ambition made 
him a great contrast to the cautious, diplomatic elector. Early 
left fatherless, he had been declared of age by his guardian, 
the Emperor Maximilian, at thirteen. Four years later he had 
met Luther at the Diet of Worms, and, attracted by the monk's 
courage, had wished him godspeed. In spite of the alliance with 
Duke George, whose daughter Christina he married in 1523, 
he heartily embraced the new faith and entered into the league 
of Torgau, with Electoral Saxony and other states, for its sup- 
port. The suppression of the successive revolts of the knights 
and of the peasants having been largely due to his ability, he 
had conceived high ambitions for extending his religion and for 
his personal aggrandizement. 

In 1528 a plot almost precipitated a general war, to which, 
perhaps, he would not have been averse as a means to these 
ends. Such a conflict he may have regarded as inevitable ; at 
any rate he became convinced that there was an understanding 
between the supporters of the old faith to suppress the new 
heresy and expropriate himself and the Elector of Saxony. His 
suspicions were confirmed by an ex-counsellor of Duke George, 
Dr. Otto von Pack, who brought the Landgrave a document 
purporting to be a treaty between Ferdinand and a number of 
Catholic princes to extirpate Luther and his followers, and if 
necessary eject Philip and John the Steadfast from their re- 
spective domains. Though a forgery, this document concurred 
so aptly with the Landgrave's suspicions that, never doubting it, 
he at once communicated its contents to the equally unsuspect- 
ing Elector and Luther. Hesse armed forthwith and began a 
campaign against one of the bishops named in the treaty, and 
forced him to pay an indemnity. Philip urged John to do the 



GERMAN POLITICS 225 

same, but at Luther's advice the Elector first consulted the 
Imperial Executive Council and questioned Duke George. Ex- 
planations were simultaneously offered from all sides that no- 
thing was known of the treaty. Philip,' who has sometimes been 
charged with being the instigator of the whole affair, gave up 
his suspicions with the utmost reluctance. Neither was the 
Reformer ever convinced by the official dementis, but believed 
to his dying day that, treaty or no treaty, the conspiracy had 
actually existed. Of it he wrote : — 

TO WENZEL LINK AT NUREMBERG 

(Wittenberg,) Juno 14, 1528. 
Grace and peace. You know more news than I can tell you. You 
see what a commotion this confederacy of wicked princes has caused. 
They deny it, to be sure, but I consider Duke George's extremely 
cool denial as equivalent to a confession. Let them protest as they 
please, I know what I know ; that confederacy is no mere chimsera, 
though it is a most monstrous monster. . . . May God confound that 
worst of fools [Duke George] who, like Moab, boasts more than he 
can do and waxes proud beyond his power. We shall pray against 
those homicides ; hitherto we have spared them, but if they try any- 
thing again we shall pray God and exhort our princes to make them 
perish without quarter, inasmuch as those insatiable blood-suckers will 
not rest until they make Germany reek with gore. . . . 

This letter was indiscreetly shown by Link to friends, one of 
whom sent a copy of it to Duke George. The insulted prince 
wrote imperiously to Luther, asking him if he had sent the ob- 
noxious missive to Link. The Reformer replied on October 31, 
saying that he would answer neither yes nor no, and begging that 
in future he be left untroubled by such communications. The 
Duke complained to the Elector, and answered in a printed 
letter of November. In reply to this, Luther published, in 
December, an article On Secret and Stolen Letters, vehemently 
accusing his adversary of theft of the mails, and bidding him 
find out from the man who sent him the letter what he wanted 
to know about it. George answered again, in January, 1529, 
but the altercation was carried on no further until a new cause 
kindled the old hatred. 



£26 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

Though the Recess of Spires certainly did not intend to 
legalize the Reformation, nevertheless it was a considerable 
gain to the Evangelic party, giving them the possibility of a 
wide interpretation, at their own risk, of the course of action 
for which they would be answerable to God and the Emperor. 
Charles had strictly forbidden the Estates to meddle with the 
religious question, and after passing the Recess they had sent 
him a humble petition for more liberty. Had he been able to 
enforce the Edict of Worms and stamp out the heresy at once, 
he would certainly have done so, but he was for many years too 
much entangled with foreign wars to venture strong measures 
against powerful subjects. When, by the victoiy of Pavia, 
February 24, 1525, he had defeated the rival Valois, and by 
the sack of Rome, May, 1527, he had temporarily mastered the 
Pope, he still had an arduous task before him in the conflict 
with the Turks. At Mohacs, in August, 1526, Sultan Suliman 
had routed the Hungarian army, and slain its king. The im- 
minent danger of an invasion of Germany was not averted 
until the Turks were repulsed at Vienna, in October, 1529. 
For a moment it looked as if the mutual animosities of the 
Christians would be buried in their fear and detestation of the 
common foe. Luther was strongly in favor of such a course and 
took pains to clear himself of the imputation that he shared the 
views of those Anabaptists who, like the later Quakers, taught 
that all war was wrong. This he did, first in a tract entitled 
Whether Soldiers can be in a State of Grace (1526), in which 
he says : — 

What people now write and say about war being such a curse is 
true. But we should remember how much greater a curse may some- 
times be avoided by war. 

Men should not, indeed, he continues, fight in a cause they 
know to be wrong, but when in doubt they are bound to follow 
their sovereign, on whom God places all the responsibility. 
This pamphlet he followed up by another On the Turkish 
War, which he dedicated to Philip of Hesse, in a letter dated 
October 9, 1528. In it he says : — 

Certain persons have been begging me for the past five years to 



GERMAN POLITICS 227 

stir up our people against the Turk, and now as he is actually ap- 
proaching they have compelled me to fulfil this duty. I regret to leara 
that some mistaken preachers in Germany instruct the people not to 
fight against the Turk ; some are so silly as to say it does not become 
a Christian to bear arms, and some say that the Germans are such a 
wild and wicked folk, half devil and half man, that they need the 
Turk to rule them. All the blame for such wicked nonsense is put 
upon Luther and upon my Evangelic doctrine, just as I had to bear 
the blame of the Peasants' War, and of all the rest of the evil in the 
world, although my accusers know that their charges are false. . . . 
I dedicate this book to your Grace as a powerful, famous prince, 
both to make it more widely read and to give it greater influence 
with other princes if it comes to a campaign against the infidel. . . . 

Philip was not, however, convinced by the arguments of the 
Reformer. He was one of the first to suggest that pressure be 
brought to bear on the Emperor by refusal of supplies for this 
war. If anything could justify such an attitude it was the hard 
position in which the Evangelic leaders found themselves at the 
Diet of Spires in 1529. The Catholic majority here passed a de- 
cree, called a Recess, most unfavorable to the reformers. All 
Catholic States were commanded to execute the persecuting 
Edict of Worms, although toleration for adherents of the old faith 
was demanded from Lutheran States. The governments" of both 
religions were to refuse toleration to any new doctrine, a pro- 
vision aimed both at Zwingli and the Anabaptists ; finally no 
prince should take another's subjects under his protection. The 
/Recess as a whole was intended to prevent further growth of the 
I Lutheran Church and all toleration of other reformed sects. It 
called forth from the minority of the Estates the celebrated Pro- 
test from which the name Protestant is derived. In this pro- 
clamation the Lutheran princes and cities declared that they 
could not in conscience abide by the provisions of the Recess 
and appealed to the Emperor to annul them. 

As Charles was far from inclined to accede to their wishes, 
the question soon came up in a practical form whether it were 
lawful to resist him by force. To decide this point a congress of 
the protesting princes was held at Nuremberg in January, 1530. 
Luther's opinion had been previously asked and given to the 



228 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

effect that armed resistance of the Emperor by individual states 
was tantamount to rebellion. Philip of Hesse was too ambitious 
to be content with this answer: he voted not only to resist the 
Emperor but to call in the national enemy Trance ; failing this 
he proposed as next best to refuse Charles military aid against 
the Turks. He tried to get Luther's support in this measure, but 
with little success. The reply he received shows how little polit- 
ical were the Reformer's thoughts ; nay, what a dislike, almost 
contempt, he entertained for temporal means of religious pro- 
paganda : — 

TO PHILIP, LANDGRAVE OF HESSE 

(Wittenbebg,) December 16, 1529. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Serene, highborn Prince, gracious Lord. 
The messenger has just brought your Grace's letter, informing me what 
unrighteous plots are brewed by the priests and the Emperor. I trust in 
God, who boasts in the Psalter that he makes nought the plans of god- 
less princes and peoples, that he will hear us now and' make these plans, 
too, come to nought. My hope is confident, because those priests boast 
loudly and rely on the Emperor and on human help and do not call on 
'God nor ask after him. May God guard us from relying on our wis- 
dom and strength and make us desire his help and wait on it ; then 
it will certainly come. Your Grace asks me to advise my sovereign not 
to give the Emperor help against the Turks until a general peace is 
made. I do not know, and have never cared to inquire what was done 
at Spires and at Schmalkalden, and so at this time I am unable to an- 
swer you ; hut if my advice is asked, I will, with God's aid, give it 
to the best of my ability, and pray God that in this matter of binding 
consciences his will and not that of the princes may be done. Amen. 
I commend your Grace to Christ. Amen. 

Martin Luther. 



CHAPTEK XX 

CHURCH BUILDING 

Persecution of the Lutherans was first felt in the Netherlands. 
It was bitter to the founder of the new Church to hear that two 
of his followers arrested for heresy had recanted. On June 27, 
1522, he wrote Staupitzthat one of them, James Probst, deserved 
to lose his life on account of his damnable recantation. But the 
inquisitors soon found men of sterner stuff, and on July 1, 1523, 
they burned two young men at Brussels for their faith. When 
the Wittenberg reformer heard of their fate tears started to his 
eyes and he murmured that he had not been found worthy to 
suffer for Christ. This mood yielded to one of spiritual joy which 
found rich expression in a hymn describing the heroic death of 
the martyrs and in a letter to their countrymen : — 

TO THE CHRISTIANS OF HOLLAND, BRABANT, AND FLANDERS 

(Wittenberg, July ? 1523.) 
Praise and thanks be to the Father of all mercy, who at this time 
lets us see his wonderful light, hitherto hidden on account of our sins 
while we were compelled to submit to the terrible power of Antichrist. 
But now the time has come when the voice of the turtle is heard in the 
land, and flowers appear on the earth. Of what joy, dear friends, have 
you been participants, you who have been the first to witness unto us. 
For it has been given unto you before all the world not only to hear 
the gospel and to know Christ but to be the first to suffer, for Christ's 
sake, shame and injury, wrong and distress, imprisonment and death. 
Now you have become full of fruit and so strong that you have watered 
the cause with your blood. For among you those two precious jewels of 
Christ, Henry and John, have held their lives of no account for Christ's 
Word. Oh how miserably were those two souls condemned, but how 
gloriously with eternal joy will they meet Christ and justly condemn 
those by whom they were unjustly condemned ! . . . How welcome 
was that fire which helped them from this sinful life to eternity, from 
this ignominy to everlasting dominion ! . . . And although our ad- 



230 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

versaries will cry out that those saints were Hussites, Wiclifites, and 
Lutherans, we should not wonder but rather let this strengthen us the 
more, for Christ, too, had a cross and slanderers. Our judge is not far 
off, who will give another judgment ; of that we are certain. . . . 

While animating his cohorts to the fray, the captain was 
straining every nerve to supply an organization and discipline 
adequate to their needs. On returning from the Wartburg he 
had found things in great confusion and his first task was to 
restore order. The old form of service with slight alterations 
was reestablished in the parish church. Communion was admin- 
istered in one or in both kinds according to the preference of 
the recipient ; and the only change in the mass was the omission 
of the words purporting to change the elements into Christ's 
body and blood, an alteration made easy, as the Reformer re- 
marked, by the fact that the parishioners did not know Latin 
and hence could not perceive it. A like moderation was used in 
respect to images ; believers were discouraged from praying to 
the saints, but the heads of neither the images nor their vener- 
ators were broken as under the Carlstadt regime. 

But with time a new and improved service was introduced. 
An important change, made as early as 1524, was the use of 
the vernacular instead of the learned language in the house 
of God. In 1526, under the name of German Mass, Luther 
published an Evangelic plan for public worship, consisting of the 
Lord's Prayer, the Creed, the singing of hymns, the reading of 
the Bible, and a sermon. In the preface he carefully guards 
against the danger of having this service turned into a universal 
law ; he is moved to write it by the general demand for such 
a work, but he leaves it free to any one to alter or improve as 
he will. 

The material for this service was largely furnished by Luther. 
In translating the Bible — of which more will be said in a sep- 
arate chapter — the foundation for the exposition of the Scrip- 
ture in the vernacular was laid. More extraordinary is the fact 
that seeing the need of good German hymns the Eeformer should 
have written them himself. It is one of the most surprising 
phenomena in literary history that a man of forty should sud- 
denly develop considerable poetic talent in response to a definite 



CHURCH BUILDING 231 

practical requirement. Yet such is the case. In the last days of 
1523 he began to collect hymns, to write them himself, and to 
urge his friends to do the like. The next year the fruit of his 
efforts appeared in a book of Spiritual Songs for which the 
tunes were supplied or adapted from older ones, by a local com- 
poser, John Walther. This contained twenty-four hymns, of 
which eighteen are by Luther. After this remarkable outburst 
the songs came more slowly but never ceased. A second hymn- 
book, printed probably in February, 1528, contained four new 
ones by Luther including Ein, Feste Burg, composed during 
the dark days of illness and trial in the preceding year. From 
time to time new hymns by the same author are known to 
have been introduced into the Wittenberg service, and in 1543 
another book was printed with several recently composed. In all 
there are extant forty-two hymns from the Reformer's pen, and 
fifteen other bits of versification, including an epitaph for bis 
daughter, some verses on his housekeeping, and several lam- 
poons. 

It must be owned that much of this verse is almost without 
poetic inspiration. The Ten Commandments and the Creed are 
hardly happy subjects for this treatment, especially when the 
writer's object is to make his verse as literal, that is, as near 
prose, as possible. Most of the hymns are based on Psalms or 
other portions of Scripture ; others are paraphrases of old Latin 
hymns. Little of the Gothic grandeur of these latter is pre- 
served in the German version, the language of which is highly 
popular. In the instructions sent to Spalatin for hymn-writing, 
early in 1524, the author reveals his own principles. " Please 
omit all new-fangled court expressions," he says, " for to win 
popularity a song must be in the most simple and common lan- 
guage, although the words should be good and apt, and the 
meaning plain and as nearly like the original as possible. The 
translation may be free ; only keep to the sense, changing the 
words where convenient. I have not as much talent in this 
direction as I wish I had, but I will do my best." 

In applying these principles Luther took for his model the 
ballad poetry so popular in his own day, and many of his songs 
vividly recall these verses. The sing-song meter, the common- 



832 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

place expressions, the rough rhymes often succeed in vulgariz- 
ing religion rather than in making it poetical. But this is not 
the case in all instances. Poetry is the language of strong feel- 
ing, and when moved to the depths of his deep nature Luther 
produced an immortal lyric. Several of his efforts are good ; 
one is really great ; the battle hymn of the Evangelic Church, 
the Marseillaise, as Heine called it, of the Reformation : — 

AIn feste burg ist wiser Gott, 
ain gutte wor un waffen, 
Er hilfft una frey aus aller not, 
Die una yetzt hat betroff en. 

Der alt bose f eynd, 

mitt ernst era yetzt meint, 

gross macht un vil list 

sein grausam riistung ist, 

auff erd ist nicht seins gleichen. 1 

Not without a struggle was the improved form of public 
worship introduced. The chief opposition came from the vested 
interests of priests holding endowed masses. There were a large 
number of these in the Castle Church at Wittenberg and also 
in one of the churches at Altenburg, the capital of Ernestine 
Saxony. From 1523-26 the Reformer's letters are full of fierce 
denunciation of these " priests of Baal," whom, however, he was 
unable to oust on account of Frederic's settled policy of laissez- 
faire in religious matters. In a published letter to Bartholomew 
von Starenberg, of September 1, 1523, after consoling him for the 
loss of his wife he earnestly warns him against having masses 
or vigils said for her soul, " for they are unchristian things 
greatly angering God. Any one can see that there is no serious 
faith in them but only useless mumbling. We must pray differ- 
ently to be heard by God, for such services are a mockery of 
him . . . instituted by priests for the sake of lucre." 

1 God is to us a fortress strong, 
A weapon never failing, 
He helps us freely in the throng 
Of mortal ills prevailing. 

Our ancient foe accurst 
Now means to do his worst, 
Great craft and power are his 
And armed with them he is 

On earth without an equal. 



CHURCH BUILDING 233 

The victory for the reformed faith was not entirely won until 
the accession of John the Steadfast, in May, 1525, brought 
Ernestine Saxony under an avowed convert. From this time 
forth the Evangelic Church was the dominant religious body 
within that territory ; to insure its supremacy laws were passed 
abolishing the objectionable rites and enforcing uniformity in 
the churches. Some form of church government had to be estab- 
lished, and this came in the institution of a system of visitation, 
first suggested by John Frederic in 1524, but not undertaken 
until 1527. Able and educated men, among them Luther and 
Melanchthon, were sent around to the various parishes to see that 
the incumbents were competent, to arrange for the finances, and 
to institute the reformed services. The result of the first tour 
of inspection was disheartening ; many of the priests were still 
attached to the old Church ; most of them were very ignorant, one 
or two not even knowing the Ten Commandments or the Lord's 
Prayer, and some were immoral. The people, too, were sunk in 
abject superstition and ignorance. To give method to the plan 
of visitation an Instruction was drawn up in 1528 by Melanch- 
thon and Luther. The supervisors were to instruct the priests 
in doctrine, with especial emphasis upon repentance ; the Ten 
Commandments were to be diligently preached ; of free will the ' 
people were to be told that a man had the power of choice to do 
good or evil, but that this power availed nothing to salvation. 
The sacraments and services of the Church were explained. 
Above all the preachers were to exhort parents to send their 
children to school, and a proper curriculum was suggested. The 
first class was to learn to read from primers with the alphabet, 
the creed and certain prayers in them ; next they should be taught 
to write, and Latin from the grammar of Donatus and the Dis- 
ticha Moralia of Dionysius Cato, and the elements of music. 
The second class was to continue music and to read JEsop's 
Fables in Latin, and selections from Erasmus' Colloquies. The 
method was to be that recommended by Milton a century later ; 
the teacher was to read, translate, and explain a certain por- 
tion of the text one day for the class to recite the next. Some 
poetry was to be learned by heart. Proper instruction in re- 
ligion was to be given. The older children were to follow up 



234 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

this programme with Virgil, Ovid, Cicero, music, and more 
religion. 

On education Luther relied the most. What is the use of 
forcing through reforms which the people are too ignorant to 
appreciate or even to want ? It was with the object of training 
men and women in his ideas that early in 1529 he published two 
of his most influential works, the Long and Short Catechisms. 
The former came out in April under the title German Cate- 
chism, and was intended to supplement the German Mass. A few 
weeks later appeared the Enchiridion, or Short Catechism, which 
was merely an abbreviation and simplification of the previous 
work. 

Luther's purpose was so practical, and his sources so obvi- 
ous, that it is almost needless to seek for precedents for his 
catechisms. Nevertheless it is interesting to know that he 
had examples in the instruction given to catechumens in the 
mediaeval Church. Characteristics of his work are: 1. There is 
no system of dogma set forth in technical terms, and no argu- 
mentation whatever. 2. There is no polemic against Rome or 
against the sacramentarians, a contrast to the contemporary 
and subsequent catechisms of other Churches and leaders. 
3. Theology is rescued from its old, stiff forms and made really 
simple and easy of comprehension. 

In the preface to the smaller work the author begins : " The 
lamentable, miserable need which I saw when I visited the par- 
ishes has induced me x to compose this summary of Christian 
doctrine in short, easy form." Good Heavens ! how little the 
people, and even the pastors know! The object of the work is 
partly to introduce a uniform teaching of the Creed, Paternoster, 
and sacraments so as not to confuse the common man, but it 
must not be regarded as an irrevocable law. The people are free 
to choose another form if they prefer, only they must keep to it 
once chosen. The longer book begins with an earnest exhorta- 
tion to a thorough study of its contents. Let not any one think 
that a single reading is sufficient, but let him con it by heart 
and read it every day. " For I do the same," says the author ; 
" like a child I study it every day, and each morning that I have 
time I say the Decalogue, the Creed, the Lord's Prayer, and 



CHURCH BUILDING 2SS 

some Psalms." The priests are exhorted (in the Short Cate- 
chism) to explain the contents to the people, see that they learn 
it and insist that they attend communion at least four times a 
year. 

The Ten Commandments, the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer 
are set forth and explained clause by clause. In expounding 
the third commandment (as he numbers it), "Eemember the 
Sabbath day to keep it holy," the Reformer says that this cere- 
monial law was only given to the Jews and that Christians are 
free from it ; nevertheless it is useful to rest on one day in the 
week for natural reasons and for the cultivation of the spiritual 
life. The sacraments of baptism and the Lord's Supper are 
explained. In a later edition of the Short Catechism, of 1531, 
a similar explanation of penance was inserted, with a form of 
private confession. The use of this, however, is left to in- 
dividual judgment ; if a man does not know that he has com- 
mitted any of the sins mentioned, which is stated to be hardly 
possible, he may receive absolution after the general confession 
in church. 

Forms of family prayer and religious instruction are given, 
with blessing and grace for meal-times. Certain sayings from 
Scripture on the respective duties of pastors, husbands, wives, 
parents, children, masters, servants, and widows are set forth. 

To the Small Catechism was added a marriage service, a 
baptismal service and form of private confession with instruc- 
tions to the priest as to how to treat the penitent. Luther re- 
garded marriage more as a civil contract than as a religious 
matter, and expressly states that each country may follow its 
own customs in the matter. According to his service a portion 
of the ceremony took place in the evening, the couple were 
then led to the bride bed, and the blessing on their union took 
place the following morning. In this Luther but followed the 
custom of his day. The baptismal service is strikingly different 
from that in use in most churches now. The evil spirit was 
first exorcised from the child, who was then asked' a number of 
questions on its religious attitude, answered by the sponsors, 
of whom there were a considerable number. 

The Catechism, many editions of which were printed and 



236 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

rapidly used up, exerted an enormous influence, and is still the 
spiritual pabulum of the majority of Germans as well as of 
Lutherans in other lands. Its author had a justifiable pride in 
his work. He once declared that he would be willing for all 
his books to perish save the Catechism and the Unfree Will. 
During the Diet of Augsburg, in the summer of 1530, he wrote 
the Elector that thanks to this simple instruction the youth of 
Saxony now understood the Bible better than monks and nuns 
had done under the old regime. He sums up the position to 
which he assigned it in the words : " It is a right Bible for the 
laity." 

The Evangelic faith spread from Saxony to neighboring 
lands, the first of which was Hesse. Philip, the young land- 
grave, set about the conversion of his subjects with character- 
istic promptness, drawing up an ordinance in 1526 commanding 
the adoption of the Saxon service and system and church 
visitation. This he submitted to the Wittenberg professor. 
The answer is highly characteristic of the Reformer. He had 
introduced his system as gradually as possible in his own 
country, and distrusted the rapid methods of Philip. The letter 
which he wrote in answer to the Landgrave's request for an 
opinion, is. worthy, in its statesmanship, of Burke. 

TO PHILIP, LANDGKAVE OF HESSE 

Wittenbeeg, January 7, 1527. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Serene, highborn Prince, gracious Lord. 
To. the request which your Grace makes for an opinion of your Ordin- 
ance, I answer unwillingly, inasmuch as many blame us, as if we of 
Wittenberg would force every one to do as we do, although we know 
that God wills otherwise and that others can do well without our aid. 
But to oblige your Grace, and since the Ordinance might raise an 
outcry if published withont my consent, I humbly and faithfully 
advise you not to allow it to be printed at this time, for I have never 
had, and have not now, sufficient courage to pass so many radical 
laws at once. In my opinion we should act as did Moses, who only 
wrote down his laws after they had been put in practice among the 
people. Your Grace should provide the schools with good teachers 
and the parishes with good pastors, and begin by oral command and 



CHURCH BUILDING 237 

private instruction and let the innovations be gradual and proceed farther 
when things get started and are going of themselves. Then the Ordin- 
ance could be published and all priests commanded to obey it; I 
know well and have learned that laws passed prematurely are seldom 
well obeyed, as the people are not used to them nor ready for them, 
as those legislators who sit apart devising laws may think. Making 
laws and enforcing them are vastly different things. By this Ordin- 
ance you would change much arbitrarily. But when some of the 
reforms have been already put into practice it will be easy to pass 
the law. Legislation is a great, noble, comprehensive thing, and can- 
not be successful without the spirit of God, for which we must humbly 
pray. Moderation is necessary ; after customs are rooted, laws will 
follow of themselves. This necessity has been experienced by the 
greatest law-givers ; Moses, Christ, the Romans, and the Pope. . . . 

Your Grace's devoted, 

Maktin Luther. 



CHAPTER XXI 

ULEICH ZWINGLI 

The tendency of Protestantism to split up into manifold sects 
has often been noticed and explained. When once individual 
judgment is set up against authority, all the revolting leader's 
followers will claim the same privilege against him. Even be- 
fore the revolting Church had made its position secure against 
Rome, it divided into many sects. Most of these were small, and, 
though holding the most diverse and even opposite opinions, 
were classed together under the name of Anabaptist ; but besides 
the Lutheran community there was one other of great import- 
ance. Its leader was Ulrich Zwingli; the doctrinal difference 
of the two Churches was on the eucharist. 

The theory of the Roman Catholic Church, at least for sev- 
eral centuries, had been that the bread and wine in the Lord's 
Supper were actually turned into the body and blood of Jesus, 
though without a corresponding change in the accidents of taste, 
appearance, and so forth ; this is transubstantiation. Luther's 
theory, known as consubstantiation, is nearly allied to it, namely, 
that though there was no actual change, yet the body of the 
Saviour was present with the natural bread and wine as fire is in 
red-hot iron, or a sword in a sheath, and that it was so truly 
present that it was " bitten by the teeth " of the communicant. 
The belief adopted by Zwingli and most of the other Reformed 
Churches was that the rite was merely commemorative and that 
the body and blood of Christ were partaken of in a purely figur- 
ative and spiritual sense. 

This doctrine came to Luther's attention soon after his return 
from the Wartburg (if not before) in the writings of a certain 
Honius, in those of the Bohemian Brethren, and in the pam- 
phlets of Carlstadt, who taught it, along with his other advanced 
tenets, while Luther was away. The Reformer speaks of it in his 
letter to the Christians of Strassburg, of December 14, 1524, as 
follows: — 






B\"M PATRlC CtVJtKO $£& DOGMA 

ItyGRATO PATRlArfi^.SVS_AB £N$k CAPO 




TILEICH ZWINGLI 

After a painting by Hans Asper ; now at Zurich 



ULRICH ZWINGLI 239 

I freely confess that if Carlstadt or any other could have convinced 
me five years ago that there was nothing in the sacrament hut mere 
bread and wine, he would have done me a great service. I was sorely 
tempted on this point and wrestled with myself and tried to believe 
that it was so, for I saw that I could thereby give the hardest rap to the 
papacy. I read treatises by two men who wrote more ably in defence of 
the theory than has Dr. Carlstadt and who did not so torture the Word 
to their own imaginations. But I am bound ; I cannot believe as they 
do ; the text is too powerful for me and will not let itself be wrenched 
from the plain sense by argument. 

And if any one could prove to-day that the sacrament were mere 
bread and wine, he would not much anger me if he was only reason- 
able. (Alas I am too much inclined that way myself when I feel the old 
Adam !) But Dr. Carlstadt's ranting only confirms me in the opposite 
opinion. 

Luther's work Against the Heavenly Prophets of Images and 
the Sacrament has been noticed in a previous chapter. The 
second half of it, appearing January, 1525, was entirely on the 
subject of the sacrament. This work was not particularly suc- 
cessful ; in fact it seemed rather to alienate some men who were 
hesitating between the two dogmas. 

The controversy might have fallen into oblivion, especially 
after the disgrace of Carlstadt and Miinzer in the Peasants' 
Revolt, had it not been taken up by one of the ablest men of 
the generation, Ulrich Zwingli. 

Born at Wildhaus, Switzerland, January 1, 1484, he had re- 
ceived a humanistic education and entered the Church in 1506. 
After varied experiences as an army chaplain and parish priest, 
he was called to Zurich in December,. 1519, and here, quite inde- 
pendently of the Wittenberg movement, he began a similar re- 
formation. He at once protested against the sale of indulgences 
and with success ; he then proceeded to other reforms, especially 
on lines suggested by the writings of Erasmus, whose ardent 
admirer he was. He soon rose to the leading position in the city, 
and, carrying his reform further than had Luther, was able, in 
April, 1525, to abolish the mass and substitute for it a simple 
communion service. ' 

The wide difference between the personal experiences and 



240 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

careers of the two reformers is chiefly accountable for the di- 
vergence of their opinions. The German had gone through a 
rebirth of spiritual anguish which made the forgiveness of sin 
the central point of his theology as of his life ; the Swiss had 
never felt this need so strongly ; the central idea of his theo- 
logy was that of Christian fellowship fostered by the analogy 
of the republican freedom of the canton. Again, Luther was at 
bottom a monk, reasoning with the depth, and also with some- 
thing of the limitations, of scholastic philosophy ; Zwingli was 
a humanist, anxious only to get at the exact meaning of the 
Greek Testament. 

It is possible that the two men might have agreed on this 
point, at least better than they did, had it not been for the 
unfortunate manner in which Zwingli first crossed Luther's 
horizon, as a supporter of Carlstadt and " the ranters." When 
the division of the two became recognized, it was deepened 
by the proud consciousness, on the part of each leader, of the 
independence of his own movement. How bitterly Luther felt 
against men whom he regarded as rebels and traitors may be 
seen in a letter : — 

TO NICHOLAS HAUSMANN AT ZWICKAU 

, (Wittenbeko,) January 20, 1526. 

Grace and peace in the Lord. I wrote Duke George 1 with good 
hope, but am deceived. I have lost my humility and shall not write 
him another word. Indeed I am not moved by his lies and his curses. 
Why should I not bear with him who am compelled to hear with 
these sons of my body, my Absaloms, who withstand me so furiously ? 
They are scourges of the sacrament compared with whose madness 
the papists are mild. I never understood before how evil a spirit is 
Satan, nor did I comprehend Paul's words about spiritual wickedness. 
But Christ lives. Now Theobald Billican, pastor at Nardlingen, writes 
against Zwingli, Carlstadt, and CEcolampadius. God raises up the 
faithful remnant against the new heretics ; we greatly hope that 
Christ will bless the undertaking. I would write against them if I had 
time, but first I wish to see what Billican does. 

I am glad that my book on the Unf ree Will pleased you, but I 
expect the same or worse from Erasmus as from Duke George. 
1 December, 1525, cf . p. 223. 



ULRICH ZWINGLI 241 

That reptile will feel himself taken by the throat and will not be 
moved by my moderation. God grant that I be mistaken, but I know 
the man's nature ; he is an instrument of Satan unless God change 
him. I have no other news. Farewell and pray for me. 

Maktin Lother. 

In a similar strain the Reformer says in his Answer to the 
King of England's Libel (1527) : " Hitherto I have suffered in 
all ways. But not until now did my Absalom, my dear son, 
hunt and shame his father David. My Judas [Zwingli] had 
not yet shamed the disciples and betrayed his master ; but now 
he has done his worst on me." 

The new " Judas " had simply published, in February, 1526, 
a pamphlet entitled True and False Religion, and followed it 
up soon after with A Clear Explanation of Christ's Supper. 
Along with cogent argument in support of his position that the 
elements were mere bread and wine, the author alleges that the 
truth of his opinion has been revealed to him in a dream. This 
method of proof unfortunately impressed Luther still more 
deeply with the idea that Zwingli's " spirit " was akin to that 
of Miinzer and the prophets who had cultivated dreams with 
such disastrous results. His works had considerable success, 
however ; so many of the South German pastors came over to 
the Swiss opinion that the leader was able to prophesy that 
within three years all Christendom would be converted. 

Luther replied in a comprehensive treatise, entitled That 
these Words of Christ, " This is my Body," still stand against 
the Ranting Spirits (March, 1527). The greater part of this 
book is a proof from Scripture that the words quoted in the 
title are to be taken literacy. The theory of the opposite party, 
that Christ's body cannot be in the bread because it is in 
heaven, is rebutted by showing, from mediaeval philosophy, that 
it may be extended through space, and is, in fact, omnipresent. 
Again, a careful exegesis of John vi, 63, " The flesh profiteth 
nothing," is devoted to proving that Christ's flesh is not meant, 
as supposed by the Swiss. Further proofs are adduced from 
other passages of Scripture and from the fathers. The last 
part of the book is devoted to a practical exposition of the use, 
necessity, and significance of the sacrament, which last, in 



242 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Luther's opinion, would be entirely destroyed if the consecrat- 
ing words were not taken literally. 

While Luther was writing this, Zwingli had composed two 
treatises, A Friendly Exegesis of Christ's Words, and A 
Friendly Appeasement and Rebuttal, the former in Latin, the 
latter in the vernacular (Friintliche verglimpfung und abley- 
nung), both of which he sent to his opponent with a letter of 
April 1. His tone was pastoral, not to say pedagogical; he 
seemed to instruct Luther in calm superiority ; though perhaps 
he intended to be conciliatory he was in fact extremely irritat- 
ing to the older man, to whom he said : " You have produced 
nothing on this subject worthy either of yourself or of the 
Christian religion, and yet your ferocity daily increases." Lu- 
ther wrote on May 4 to Wenzel Link : " Zwingli has sent me 
his foolish book and a letter written in his own hand worthy 
of his haughty spirit. So gentle was he, raging, foaming, and 
threatening, that he seems to me incurable and condemned by 
manifest truth. — And my comprehensive book has profited 
many." 

In the mean time the Swiss received the last-named work of 
the Wittenberg professor. They were greatly exasperated by 
its violent tone ; Zwingli writing Vadian on May 4 " that its 
whole contents were npthing but lies, slander, sycophancy, and 
suspicion." 

A reply, composed by Zwingli and GEcolampadius, was pub- 
lished in June under the title That these Words of Christ, 
" This is my Body," still have the same old Sense. It was dedi- 
cated to John, Elector of Saxony. 

Luther was too ill to read it at once. His answer, a huge 
Confession on Christ's Supper, appeared in February, 1528. He 
is glad, he declares, that his words have so greatly angered 
Satan, by which sign he knows that they have done much good. 
He goes over the old arguments with more thoroughness than 
before, refuting first Zwingli's philosophy and then his exegesis 
of Scripture, showing that he contradicts the Bible, the fathers, 
and himself. 

The book only increased the rage without shaking the con- 
victions of the sacramentarians. Capito wrote that Luther had 




M ° 
pq -a 

si e 



ULRICH ZWINGLI 243 

hurt himself by it ; Zwingli judged that it was " a denial of 
what Luther had said before, and a fog through which Christ's 
mystery could not be discerned." He, and CEcolampadius, pub- 
lished in one book Two Answers to Martin Luther's Book. It 
was dedicated, in a letter dated July 1, 1528, to the Elector 
John and the Landgrave Philip of Hesse, whom Zwingli re- 
fused to salute with the customary titles "highborn" and 
" serene," " because," as he explained to them, " you are only 
highborn in comparison to the world and the flesh, but before 
God you are mean ; and serene [German Durchlaucht, liter- 
ally transparent] is a word which is only applicable to glass 
windows." 

That one, at least, of the princes thus addressed did not take 
the letter ill, is shown by the attempt of Philip of Hesse to recon- 
cile the opposing sections of the Reformed Church. His main 
motive was political, for he saw that in union was strength and 
he wished to make an alliance between the German Protestant 
states and the Swiss cantons. He was, however, something of a 
theologian himself ; he had a clearer comprehension of Zwingli's 
opinion than had Luther and was, perhaps, inclined to adopt it 
himself. Hoping to bring about an understanding that would 
enable both parties to present a united front to the common 
enemy, he invited the reformers and other distinguished theo- 
logians to a conference at his capital, Marburg. After some 
negotiation the consent of all concerned was secured and during 
the last days of September, 1529, the famous divines gathered 
in the pretty Hessian town on the banks of the Lahn., All were 
received right royally by the host, of whom Luther many years 
afterwards related the following characteristic bit : — 

At Marburg Philip went around like a stable-boy, concealing his 
deep thoughts with small talk as great men do. He said to Melanch- 
thon : " Shall I suffer the Archbishop of Mayence to take away my 
clergy by force ? " To which the latter replied ; " Yes, if they are 
under the jurisdiction of that see." Then the Landgrave said : " I have 
asked your advice on this, but I won't take it." 

The public discussion was preceded by private conferences 
of the leaders. At these, or perhaps at the main discussion, 



244 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

Luther was annoyed by the display of humanistic learning made 
by his opponent. Long afterwards he spoke of him in these 
terms : — 

People always want to seem more learned than they are. When 
we were at Marburg, Zwingli wanted to speak Greek. Once, when he 
was absent, I said : '' Why is n't he ashamed to speak Greek in the 
presence of so many learned classicists — CEcolampadius, Melanchthon, 
Osiander, and Brent ? They know Greek." These words were carried 
to him, wherefore the next day he excused himself in the presence 
of the Landgrave by saying : " Illustrious Lord, I speak Greek because 
I have read the New Testament for thirteen years." No indeed ! It is 
more than reading the New Testament, it is vainglory that blinds 
people. When Zwingli spoke German he wanted every one to adopt 
the Swiss dialect. Oh, how I hate people who use so many languages 
as did Zwingli : at Marburg he spoke Greek and Hebrew from the 
pulpit. 

The great colloquy took place on October 2 and 3, in the 
large, darkly wainscotted hall of a noble castle, the battlements 
of which, crowning the steep hill in the centre of the town, seem 
rather to protect than to overawe the smiling region round- 
about. Here, before an audience of some fifty or sixty notables, 
Luther debated, for some hours, those autumn days, with Zwingli 
and CEcolampadius. The speaking was temperate, the arguments 
in the main the old familiar ones. Though it can hardly be 
denied that the German showed himself the better debater, 
the result was indecisive, all persons retaining their former 
opinions. 

Although nothing, or next to nothing had been accomplished, 
the Landgrave was anxious to have some tangible result to show 
for all his trouble. He therefore induced his guests to draw up 
a statement of their common beliefs, known as the Marburg 
Articles. Fourteen of these articles were on points agreed to by 
both sides ; the fifteenth defined the eucharist and stated that 
the subscribers were unable to agree " on the bodily presence 
of the body and blood " in the elements, with a prayer for 
enlightenment. The principal divines present signed this con- 
fession, but when Philip requested them to give each other the 
right hand of fellowship, Luther refused with the remark, es- 









Tf^ 



FACSIMILE SIGNATURES OF THE MARBURG ARTICLES 

Now in the archives at Marburg 



ULRICH ZWINGLI 245 

pecially unfortunate on account of its previous connotations, 
that the Swiss had a different spirit from his own. His idea of 
what had been accomplished is given in the two letters next 
translated, the former being especially interesting as his first 
known letter to Katie. It shows that he confided his deepest in- 
terests to her, though it appears that part of the letter, written 
in Latin never used elsewhere by Martin in addressing his wife, 
was intended rather for Bugenhagen than for her. 

TO CATHARINE LTJTHER AT WITTENBERG 

(Maebckg,) October 4, 1529. 

Grace and peace in Christ. Dear Lord Katie, know that our 
friendly conference at Marburg is now at an end and that we are in 
perfect union in all points except that our opponents insist that there 
is simply bread and wine in the Lord's Supper, and that Christ is only 
in it in a spiritual sense. To-day the Landgrave did his best to make 
us united, hoping that even though we disagreed yet we should hold 
each other as brothers and members of Christ. He worked hard for 
it, but we would not call them brothers or members of Christ, althongh 
we wish them well and desire to remain at peace. I think to-morrow 
or day after we shall depart to go and see the Elector at Schleitz 
in Vogtland, whither he has summoned us. 

Tell Bugenhagen that Zwingli's best argument was that a body 
could not exist without occupying space and therefore Christ's body 
was not in the bread, and that CEcolampadius' best argument was 
that the sacrament is only the sign of Christ's body. I think God 
blinded them that they could not get beyond these points. I have 
much to do and the messenger is in a hurry. Say good-night to all 
and pray for me. We are all sound and well and live like princes. 
Kiss little Lena and Hans for me. 

Tour humble servant, 

Martin Lutheb. 

TO NICHOLAS GERBEL AT STRASSBURG 

Mabbubg, October 4, 1529. 
Grace and peace in Christ. You will know, my dear Gerbel, how 
far we attained harmony at Marburg, partly by the verbal report 
of your representatives, partly by the Articles they are taking with 
them. We defended ourselves strongly and they conceded much, but 
as they were firm in this one article of the sacrament of the altar we 



246 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

dismissed them in peace, fearing that further argument would draw 
blood. We ought to have charity and peace even with our foes, and 
so we plainly told them, that unless they grow wiser on this point 
they may indeed have our charity, but cannot by us be considered as 
brothers and members of Christ. You will judge how much fruit 
has come of this conference ; it seems to me that no small scandal 
has been removed, since there will be no further occasion for dis- 
putation, which is more than we had hoped for. Would that the 
little difference still remaining might be taken away by Christ. Fare- 
well, brother, and pray for me. 

Tours, 

Martin Luther. 



CHAPTER XXn 

PESTE COBURG AND THE DIET OF AUGSBURG. 1530 

That the Edict of Worms remained a dead letter was due to 
the excessive decentralization of the Empire, Since Charles had 
left Germany after the memorable visit of 1520-21, three im- 
portant diets, one held at Nuremberg (1524) and two at Spires 
(1526 and 1529) had dealt with the religious question without 
being able to enforce any consistent policy. The Emperor himself 
had been too busy in his other dominions and with his French 
and Turkish wars even to attempt to suppress the German her- 
esy. Toward the end of 1529, however, the success of his arms 
in other quarters enabled him to turn his attention northward. 
Fully bent on settling the religious dispute for his subjects, he 
summoned a diet to meet at Augsburg in 1530, announcing his 
intention of being present at it himself. 

Early in April of this year Luther, Melanchthon, and other 
theologians set out from Wittenberg with the intention of ap- 
pearing at the Diet. At Coburg, the most southern town of 
Ernestine Saxony, they met the Elector, and waited for an 
imperial safe-conduct before proceeding further. About the 
middle of the month an urgent summons from Charles V to the 
Elector John arrived, together with safe-conducts for himself 
and others of his party, but none for Luther, who was still, 
be it remembered, under the ban of both the Church and the 
Empire. In these circumstances it was impossible for the out- 
law to attend the meetings of the Estates, and accordingly when 
John set out with the other theologians on April 22, he was 
consigned to the castle near the town where he spent nearly six 
months. 

Feste Coburg, as the fortress is called, crowns a small emin- 
ence, the only one in the region, and, like a little city built 
on a hill, dominates the whole surrounding country. Within its 
ample walls, picturesque towers, and rambling battlements, a 



248 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

garrison might well be maintained. Without the austere grand- 
eur of the Wartburg, with less of the romantic attraction of 
Marburg, Feste Coburg surpasses both these castles in size and 
situation. 

With Luther were his amanuensis Veit Dietrich, his nephew 
Cyriac Kaufmann, and some thirty retainers of the Elector. 
From his retreat the Reformer kept up a lively correspondence 
with his friends at Augsburg as well as with those left at Witten- 
berg ; there are extant almost as many letters written from the 
castle as days he spent there. Among these epistles are many of 
the finest he ever penned ; in some the depths of his religious faith 
are sounded, in others the chinks and crannies of his deep love 
are searched. Whatever he wrote is full of humor, of fancy, of 
an idyllic love of nature and a childlike trust in God. 

On the very day on which he moved into his new quarters 
the Reformer tells of them thus : — 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON (AT NUREMBERG?) 

The Realm of the Birds at three p.m. (April 23, 1530). 

Grace and peace in the Lord Jesus. I have come to my Sinai, dear- 
est Philip, but I shall soon make it a Zion and build three tabernacles, 
one for the Psalter, one for the Prophets, and one for iEsop — I speak 
after the manner of men. It is indeed a very pleasant place and con- 
venient for study, save that your absence saddens it. 

I am beginning to be stirred up against the Turk and Mohammed, 
even passionately when I see the intolerable fury of Satan waxing 
proud against body and soul. I shall therefore pray and weep nor 
cease until I know that my clamor has been heard in heaven. You 
are more affected by the home-bred monsters of the Empire. We are 
those to whom these last woes were predestined, to feel and suffer the 
furious impetus of the final assault. But the attack itself is a witness 
and prophecy of its own end and of our redemption. 

I pray Christ to give you sleep and to free your heart from the 
cares which are the fiery arrows of Satan. Amen. I write this at leis- 
ure, not yet having received my books and papers. Neither have I 
yet seen either of the castle wardens. I lack nothing ; this huge build- 
ing crowning the hill is all mine ; the keys of all the rooms are given 
to me. Thirty men are said to take their meals here, among them 
twelve night guards and two scouts who keep watch from the towers. 



FESTE COBURG AND THE DIET OF AUGSBURG 249 

Why should I write all this ? Because I have nothing else to do. By 
evening I hope the post will arrive and then I shall hear some news. 
The grace of God be with you. Amen. Give my remembrances to Dr. 
Caspar Lindemann and Spalatin. I shall ask Jonas to greet Agiicola 
and Adler for me. 

Martin Luther. 

To Wittenberg Luther also wrote of his new life. His large 
household had not been entirely depleted. The guests who re- 
mained wrote him a common letter giving the domestic news, 
and he promptly answered them in this delightful epistle : — 

TO HIS TABLE COMPANIONS 

At the Diet of the Grain Turks, April 28, 1530. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Dear gentlemen and friends, I have re- 
ceived the letter which you all sent me and so have learned how every- 
thing is. And that you may also learn how things are with us, I would 
have you know that we, namely, Veit Dietrich, Cyriac Kaufmann, and 
I, did not press on to the Diet of Augsburg, but stopped to attend an- 
other diet here. There is a coppice directly under our windows, like a 
little forest, where the daws and crows are holding a diet ; they fly to 
and fro at such a rate and make such a racket day and night that they 
all seem drunk, soused and silly. I wonder how their breath holds out 
to bicker so. Pray tell me have you sent any delegates to these noble 
estates ? For I think they must have assembled from all the world. I 
have not yet seen their emperor, but nobles and soldier lads fly and 
gad about, inexpensively clothed in one color ; all alike black, all alike 
gray-eyed, all alike with the same song, sung in different tones of big 
and little, old and young. They care not for a large palace to meet in, 
for their hall is roofed with the vault of the sky, its floor is the carpet 
of green grass, and its walls are as far as the ends of the world. They 
do not ask for horses and trappings, having winged chariots to escape 
snares and keep out of the way of man's wrath. They are great and 
puissant lords, but I have not yet learned what they have decided upon. 
As far as I can gather from an interpreter, however, they are for a 
vigorous campaign against wheat, barley, oats, and all kinds of corn 
and grain, a war in which many a knight will do great deeds. 
So we sit here in the diet and spend time agreeably seeing and hear- 
ing how the estates of the realm make merry and sing. It is pleasant 
to see how soldierly they discourse and wipe their bills and arm them- 



250 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

selves for victory against the grain. I wish them good luck — to be all 
spitted on a skewer together. I believe they are in no wise different 
from the sophists and papists who go for me with their sermons and 
books all at once ; I see by the example of the harsh-voiced daws 
what a profitable people they are, devouring everything on earth and 
chattering loud and long in return. 

To-day we heard the first nightingale, who could hardly believe that 
it was April. The weather has been splendid, with no rain except a 
little yesterday. Perhaps you are not so fortunate in this respect. God 
bless you all. Keep house well. 

Martin Lutheb. 

With his dear wife, too, he kept up regular correspondence. 
Just after his father's death she sent him a picture of their year- 
old baby Magdalene, a pair of needed spectacles, and a box of 
home comforts, for which he thanks her : — 

TO CATHARINE LUTHER AT WITTENBERG 

(Fbste Cobubg,) June 5, 1530. 
'Grace and peace in Christ. Dear -Katie, I believe I have received 
all your letters. This is my fourth to you since John left me for Wit- 
tenberg. I have Lena's picture and the box you sent. At first I did 
not know the little hussy, she seemed so dark. I think it would be a 
first rate thing if you weaned her ; do it little by little as Argula von 
Grumbach who has been here tells me she did with her son George. 
John Reinecke of Mansfeld has also been to see me and so has George 
Romer ; in fact I shall soon have to go elsewhere if the pilgrimage 
hither continues. 

Tell Christian Daring that I have never in my life had worse spec- 
tacles than those that came with his letter ; I could not see a line 
through them. I did not receive the note sent in care of Conrad Vater, 
as I am not at Coburg, but I shall try to get it. You can send your 
letters care of the superintendent, who will forward them to me. 

Our friends at Nuremberg and Augsburg are beginning to doubt 
whether anything will happen at the Diet, for the Emperor still tarries 
at Innsbruck. The prelates have some infernal plot, God grant the 
devil foul them. Amen. Let Bugenhagen read the copy of my letter to 
Link. I must hurry, as the messenger will not wait. Greet, kiss, hug, 
and be kind to each according to his degree. 

Martin Luther. 



FESTE COBUB.G AND THE DIET OF AUGSBURG 251 

Katie was not entirely dependent for information on the let- 
ters of her husband. One to her from Veit Dietrich is too 
characteristic of that interesting person and too good of its 
kind to omit. The writer, now twenty-three years old, had come 
to Wittenberg to study medicine, but abandoned that vocation 
for theology when he came under the influence of Luther. He 
became the professor's amanuensis in 1527 and was taken into 
his house in 1529. His unbounded idolatry of the great man 
led him to treasure all he wrote and all he said ; much of the 
table-talk he noted down, as well as the letter given below, is 
worthy of Boswell. 

VEIT DIETRICH TO MISTRESS CATHARINE LUTHER AT 
WITTENBERG 

Feste Coeueg, June 19, 1530. 

Grace and peace in God. Kind, gracious, dear lady ! Know that 
your husband and we are hale and hearty by God's grace. May God 
also bless you and the children. You did a mighty good stroke of 
work in sending the doctor the picture, for it makes him entirely for- 
get his cares. He has hung it on the wall opposite the table in the 
Elector's apartment where we eat. When he first saw it he did not 
recognize it for a long time. " Dear me," said he, " Lena is so dark ! " 
Bat now it pleases him well, and the more he looks at it the better he 
sees it is Lena. She looks extraordinarily like Hans in the mouth, 
eyes, and nose, in fact in the whole face, and she will grow more like 
him. I just had to write you this ! 

Dear lady, pray don't worry about the doctor ; he is, thank God, 

hale and hearty, and, although his father's death was very bitter to 

him, he ceased mourning for it after two days. When he read Kei- 

necke's letter he said to me, " My father is dead." And then he took 

his Psalter and went to his room and wept so much that for two days 

he could n't work. Since then he has not given way to grief any more. 

Saturday, June 3, the town clerk was our guest for the evening, and 

the doctor told us, among other things, how he had dreamed the night 

before that he lost a tooth so large that it astonished him beyond 

measure, and the next day came the news of his father's death ! I 

thought you ought to know this, so pray take it with my serviee. May 

God bless Hans and Lena and the whole household. My friend 

George will give you three gulden, which please accept until I can 

get more. 

Veit Dietkich of Nuremberg. 



252 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

What a picture of the man these chatty letters give ! As at 
the Wartburg he dressed in laymen's clothes and grew a thick 
beard. He had grown stouter and aged a little since then, more 
with toil and illness than with his forty-seven years. Sometimes 
he rambled about the wide-flung battlements, gazing with a 
smile at the busy birds in the tree-tops, or lost in thought and 
wonder at the mysteries of nature, the clouds, the rainbow, 
and the stars. 

Most of the time he spent in his little wooden room with the 
narrow window, poring over the Hebrew prophets and the 
Psalter, or adapting an old German translation of ^sop to 
the needs of his own day, or writing letters. His first task was 
the composition of A Warning to the Prelates at Augsburg which 
was printed in May and sent to the Diet in June. He solemnly 
begs the clergy there assembled not to make the session vain 
and not to induce " the noble blood Charles " to damn him and 
his doctrine. He insists that he is not responsible for the tu- 
mults which have shaken Germany ; rather he alone withstood 
the turbulent spirits "so that I might truly say that I was your 
protector." He reminds them of his moderation at Worms and 
recounts the history of his attacks on indulgences, confession, 
penance, private masses, and monastic vows. If they ask what 
good has come of the new teaching, he replies rather what good 
has remained with his opponents ? Have they not perverted all 
God's laws? Have they not abused the ban, the sacrament, 
which ought to be administered in both kinds, and vows of 
celibacy which ought to be left free? But they talk only of 
these and similar things indifferent, whereas they should first 
concern themselves with the primary things, the law, the gospel, 
sin, grace, the gifts of the spirit, right repentance, Christian 
freedom, faith, free will, and love, and next to these practical 
reforms such as the erection of schools, hospitals, and the reg- 
ulation of poor-relief. 

Just after he had finished this, he had one of his old nervous 
break-downs, partly due to overwork, partly to the unaccustomed 
richness of the fare. Thus he writes : — 



FESTE COBURG AND THE DIET OF AUGSBURG 253 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON AT AUGSBURG 

Feste Cobubo, May 12, 1530. 

Grace and peace in the Lord. Dear Philip, I began to answer your 
letter from Nuremberg on May 8, but business interfered to prevent 
me finishing my reply. I have completed my Warning to the Pre- 
lates and sent it off to the Wittenberg press. I have also translated 
the two chapters of Ezekiel about Gog and have written a preface to 
them, so that they can be printed at the same time. Then I took the 
Prophets in hand and attacked the labor with such ardor that I hope 
to finish it before Pentecost and after that turn to iEsop and other 
things. But the old outer man cannot keep up with the ardor of the 
new inner man ; my head has begun to suffer from ringing or rather 
thundering, and this has forced me to stop work. Yesterday and the 
day before when I tried to work, I narrowly escaped fainting, and this 
is the third day on which I am unable even to look at a letter of the 
alphabet. I get worse as the years go by. My head (caput) is now a 
mere heading (capitulum) or chapter, soon it will be a paragraph, and 
then a bare sentence. I can do nothing but idle ... so now you know 
why I am slow in answering your letter. On the day that it came 
Satan was busy occupying my attention with an embassy. I was alone, 
Dietrich and Cyriac were away, and Satan conquered me so far that 
he forced me to leave my room and seek the society of men. I hardly 
expected to see the day when that spirit would have so much power 
and simply divine majesty. 

Such is our domestic news ; other news comes from abroad, such 
as that you mention about the strife between Eck and Billican. What 
is happening at the Diet ? What do those blockish asses think of the 
cause of the Church and how are they disposed ? But let them be. 

Camerarius has sent me some dainties 1 consisting of fine grapes 1 
and sack x and has written me two Greek letters. When I feel better 
I shall write him in Turkish, that he too may have to read what he 
does not understand. Why should he write me in Greek ? 

I must stop now lest my head, still sensitive, go bad again. I pray ; 
do you pray also. I would most willingly write, as you suggest, to the 
Landgrave of Hesse and to the Elector and to all of you, but I must 
take my own time. The Lord be with you. Give heed to my example 
and be sure not to lose your head as I have done. I command you 
and all my friends to keep regular habits for the sake of your health. 
Do not kill yourself and then pretend you did it in God's service. 
1 These three words are in the rare Greek used by Camerarins. 



254 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

For God is just as well served, if not better, by resting, wherefore he 
commanded the Sabbath to be rigidly kept. Do not despise this warn- 
ing, for it is the word of God. 

Martin Luthek. 

When the Elector heard of Luther's sufferings he sent him 
a kind message not to worry about his enforced idleness, and at 
the same time expressing some anxiety on his own part at the 
dark outlook of the Protestants in the present crisis. The 
answer encourages him in turn : — 

TO JOHN, ELECTOR OF SAXONT, AT AUGSBURG 

(Fbste Cobdbq,) May 20, 1530. 

Grace and peace in Christ our Lord and Saviour. Amen. Most 
Serene, Highborn Prince, most Gracious Lord ! I have delayed 
answering your Grace's first letter from Augsburg, kindly written to 
tell me the news and express your hope that time was not hanging 
heavy on my hands. Truly your Grace need not worry about me in 
the kindness of your heart, although I am anxious about you and 
pray God for you. The time does not seem long to me ; I live like a 
lord and the weeks scarcely seem three days to me. It is your Grace 
who is really in the tedious place. . . . 

Consider that God shows himself merciful to you in making the 
Word fruitful in your Grace's land. Verily Electoral Saxony has 
the greatest number and best ministers and preachers of all the world, 
men who teach pure, true, and peaceable doctrine. Now the tender 
youth of both sexes are growing up so well instructed in the Catechism 
and in the Bible that it does my heart good to see how the boys and 
girls can pray and believe and speak more of God and Christ than 
formerly any religious foundation, cloister, or school could or yet can. 
Such young people in your Grace's land are a fair paradise, the 
like of which is not to be found in all the rest of the world. It is 
planted by God in your Grace's land as a true sign of favor to you, 
just as if he should say : " Well, dear Prince John, I commend to 
you my most precious treasure, my pleasant paradise ; you shall be 
father in it, for I put it under your protection and rule and give you 
the honor of being my gardener and care-taker." ... It is just as if 
God himself were your daily guest and ward, as he makes his gospel 
and his children your guests and wards. On the other hand, consider 
what terrible harm the other princes have done, and yet do to their 
youth, making the paradise of God a sinful, worthless, foul slough 



FESTE COBUB.G AND THE DIET OP AUGSBURG 255 

of Satan, destroying all and inviting the genuine old devil to be their 
guest. . . . 

May your Grace be pleased with my letter ; God knows I speak 
the truth and do not flatter, for it is a sorrow to me that Satan can 
still trouble and disturb your heart. I know him somewhat myself, 
for he is accustomed to play with me. He is a gloomy, sour spirit who 
cannot suffer a heart to be glad or have peace, and especially the 
heart of your Grace, for he knows how much depends on you, not 
only for us but for the world, and I can truly say for heaven itself. 
. . . Wherefore we are bound loyally to pray for and encourage 
your Grace, for if you are happy we live, if you are in trouble we 
sicken. . . . 

Your Grace's subject, 

Martin Luther. 

The Diet, though summoned to meet on April 8, did not 
really open until June 20, a few days after the arrival of the 
Emperor. Charles was now at the height of his power. The 
earnest boy who had heard the heretic at Worms nine years 
before had become a grave man of thirty. Though without 
brilliant talents he had by persistence and application made 
himself the most powerful monarch in Europe. He had repulsed 
the Turk, he had sacked Borne, he had beaten France. The 
fruits of the last victory, that of Pavia, in February, 1525, had 
been torn from him, for the concessions made by Francis and 
ratified by an oath and a pledge of his knightly honor, were 
forgotten as soon as the Pope, as the Lord's Vicar, absolved the 
French King from his oath and made with him the "holy" 
league of Cognac. By 1530 Charles had made peace again with 
these two powers, a state of things from which some augured 
ill for the Protestant cause. Luther, however, suspected, and 
rightly, that the present peace was not much more stable than 
the former one, as the following very witty letter to a magis- 
trate in Wittenberg shows : — 

TO CASPAR VON TEUTLEBEN AT WITTENBERG 

The Wh-debness, (Feste Cobubg,) June 19, 1530. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Honorable, learned doctor and dear 
friend ! I am heartily glad to hear that you and your dear Sophie are 
well. I have no news for you from Augsburg, as our tongue-tied 



256 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

friends there write me nothing, which pains me not a little. I know 
your brother-in-law Nicolas von Amsdorf would be immoderately 
angry with them if he knew how reticent they were, especially at 
this time. He shall yet be their judge. 

I have learned from hearsay that Venice has sent the Emperor a 
present of many hundred thousand gulden and that Florence offers 
him five barrels of gold, but that the Emperor won't take anything 
for the sake of the Pope, who has promised to stand by him with 
body and estate, just as Francis once did with his "par mafoi " and 
the Pope with his " in nomine Domini," and that there is a precious 
holy league — all that we don't believe. But I have heard from Dr. 
Martin Luther himself that he will forfeit an eye and an ear if 
Venice, the Pope, and Francis turn true Emperor's men ; they are 
three persons of one nature, namely, of an inconceivable wrath and 
hatred against the Emperor with all hypocrisy, lies, and fraud, and 
will remain so until they either go to the wall — may God help them to 
it — or bring pious, noble young Charles to need. For my Lord Par- 
ma-foi cannot forget the disgrace at Pavia; my Lord In-nomine- 
Domini is first, a low Italian — which is too much — secondly, a 
Florentine — which is worse — and third, the son of a harlot — which 
is the devil himself, and moreover he is ill at ease over the sack of 
Rome. Likewise the Venetians are nothing but Venetians, which is 
enough said, and they excuse their wickedness by pretending to take 
vengeance for Maximilian — all these things we firmly believe. But 
God will help pious Charles, who is like a sheep among wolves. 
Amen. Remember me to your dear Sophie. God bless you. Amen. 

Martin Ltjtheb. 

The silence of which Luther complains was at last broken by 
Melanchthon, who wrote on June 13 begging him to write at 
once to Philip of Hesse. This prince seemed likely to desert 
the Lutheran for the Zwinglian party, and was accordingly 
warned of the danger of doing so in the desired letter by the 
head of the former faction. This epistle is mainly a long argu- 
ment against the theological errors of the sacramentarians, 
closing with the words, often turned against their writer by the 
Romanists : — 

O God ! it is no joke nor jest to teach new doctrine ! Darkness, 
arbitrary opinion, and uncertain arguments must not move us to it, but 
only clear, powerful texts, such as the Zwinglians have not yet found. 



FESTE COBURG AND THE DIET OP AUGSBURG 237 

Truly I have suffered great pain and danger for the sake of my doc- 
trine and hope it will not all be in vain. I do not oppose them from 
hate or pride, for God knows I would long ago have adopted their 
doctrine if they could only prove it. But I cannot satisfy my con- 
science with their reasons. 

When at last the Diet began to sit, on June 20, it decided to 
take up the religious question first. Melanchthon, as the active 
leader of the Protestants, had drawn up an official statement 
of their doctrine to be presented to the Estates, the so-called 
Augsburg Confession. This document had been submitted to 
Luther and approved by him, but after this Melanchthon had 
somewhat altered it, hoping to make its wording more accept- 
able to the Catholics and to show that the Protestants were 
the real defenders of the old faith against novel abuses. For 
example, the article on the sacrament was put into language 
which good Catholics could have subscribed to, had they not 
known that declarations on transubstantiation and on the mass 
as an offering had been intentionally omitted. Again, private 
masses were gently deprecated instead of being described as a 
horror in the style of the previous confession. In spite of these 
concessions Melanchthon was fearful that they might not 
satisfy his opponents, and when he wrote to Luther again on 
June 20, he made gloomy prognostications as to the outlook 
for the cause, and complained bitterly of the cares which were 
devouring him. 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON AT AUGSBURG 

The Wilderness (Feste Cobubg), June 27, 1530. 

Grace and peace in Christ — in Christ, I say, not in the world. 
Amen. I shall write again, dear Philip, about the apology you make 
for your silence. This courier has come unexpectedly and suddenly 
from Wittenberg and is going to leave at once for Nuremberg, so I 
must wait to write more fully for another post. 

Those great cares by which you say you are consumed I vehemently 
hate ; they rule your heart not on account of the greatness of the 
cause but by reason of the greatness of your unbelief. John Huss and 
many others have waged harder battles than we do. If our cause is 
great, its author and champion is great also, for it is not ours. Why 
are you therefore always tormenting yourself ? If our cause is false, 



258 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

let us recant ; if it is true, why should we make him a liar who com. 
matids us to be of untroubled heart ? Cast your burden on the Lord, 
he says. The Lord is nigh unto all them that call upon him with a 
broken heart. Does he speak in vain or to beasts ? I, too, am quite 
often smitten, but not all the time. It is not your theology which 
makes you anxious, but your philosophy, the same which has been 
gnawing at your friend Camerarius. What good can you do by your 
vain anxiety ? What can the devil do more than slay us ? What after 
that ? I beg you, so pugnacious in all else, fight against yourself, your 
own worst enemy, who furnish Satan with arms against yourself. 
Christ died once for sinners, and will not die again for truth and 
justice, but will live and reign. If he be true, what fear is there for 
the truth ? Will he be prostrated by God's wrath ? rather let us 
prostrate ourselves before it. He who is our father will also be the 
father of our children. I pray for you earnestly and am deeply pained 
that you keep sucking up cares like a leech and thus rendering my 
prayers vain. Christ knows whether it is stupidity or bravery, but 
I am not much disturbed, rather of better courage than I had hoped. 
God who is able to raise the dead is also able to uphold a falling 
cause, or to raise a fallen one and make it strong. If we are not 
worthy instruments to accomplish his purpose, he will find others. If 
we are not strengthened by his promises, to whom else in all the world 
can they pertain ? But saying more would be pouring water into the 
sea. 

I forwarded your letters to Wittenberg, both that written before 
and that written after the arrival of the Emperor. For at home they 
are also troubled at your silence, as you will learn from Bugenhagen's 
letter, though the fault of their not hearing from you is not, as Jonas 
says, the messenger's, but yours, and yours alone. May Christ com- 
fort, strengthen, and teach you by his spirit. Amen. If I hear that 
things are going badly or that the cause is in danger, I shall hardly be 
able to restrain myself from flying to Augsburg, to see what the Bible 
calls the terrible teeth of Satan roundabout. I shall write again soon ; 
in the mean time give my greetings to all my friends. 

MAKTIN LtJTHER. 

The Confession was read before the Diet, though only in a 
secret session. Luther regarded this as a great triumph for the 
cause, for which he alone had stood nine years before, as he 
writes to a friend and ardent supporter : — 



FESTE COBURG AND THE DIET OP AUGSBURG 259 

TO CONRAD COEDATUS AT ZWICKAU 

The Wtldebness, July 6, 1530. 
. . . Jonas writes me that he was present during the session when 
the Confession was read before the Diet and supported in a two-hour 
oration by Dr. Beier, and that he will tell me later what he gathered 
from the faces of the audience. . . . Our enemies certainly did their 
best to prevent the Emperor allowing it to be read, and they did suc- 
ceed in preventing its being read in the public hall before all the peo- 
ple. But the Emperor heard it before the princes and estates of the 
Empire. I am overjoyed to be living at this hour, when Christ is openly 
confessed by so many in a great public assembly and with so good a 
confession. . . . Do not cease to pray for the good young Emperor, 
worthy of the love of God and of men and for the not less excellent 
elector who bears the cross and for Melanchthon who tortures himself 
with care. . . . 

The reading of the Confession was only the beginning of 
negotiation, which, dragging along week after week, sorely tried 
the patience and firmness of the Protestant minority. In these 
dark days, when the sun was hidden and the way seemed lost, 
Luther, though absent, the heart and soul of his party, encour- 
aged and revived their fainting spirits. One of the most wonder- 
ful letters he ever wrote is the following to the chancellor, or, 
as we might say, prime minister of Electoral Saxony. 

TO DR. GREGORY BRUCK AT AUGSBURG 

The Wilderness, August 5, 1530. 

... I have recently seen two miracles. The first was, that as I looked 
out of my window, I saw the stars and the sky and the whole vault of 
heaven, with no pillars to support it ; and yet the sky did not fall and 
the vault remained fast. But there are some who want to see the pillars. 
and would like to clasp and feel them. And when they are unable to 
do so they fidget and tremble as if the sky would certainly fall in, 
simply because they cannot feel and see the pillars under it. If they 
could only do this, they would be satisfied that the sky would remain 
fast. 

Again I saw great, thick clouds roll above us, so heavy that they 
looked like great seas, and I saw no ground on which they could rest 
nor any barrels to hold them and yet they fell not on us, but threatened 



2S0 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

us and floated on. When they had passed by, the rainbow shone forth, 
the rainbow which was the floor that held them up. It is such a weak 
thin little floor and roof that it was almost lost in the clouds and looked 
more like a ray coming through a stained glass window than like a 
strong floor, so that it was as marvellous as the weight of the clouds. 
For it actually happened that this seemingly frail shadow held up the 
weight of water and protected us. But some people look at the thick- 
ness of the clouds and the thinness of the ray and they fear and worry. 
They would like to feel how strong the rainbow is, and when they can- 
not do so they think the clouds will bring on another deluge. 

I permit myself such pleasantries with your Honor, although I write 
with earnest purpose. ... I hope we can keep the peace politically, 
but God's thoughts are above our thoughts. ... If he should hear our 
prayers now and grant us peace, perhaps it would turn out worse than 
we hoped, and God would get less glory than the Emperor. ... I do 
not mean to despise the Emperor, and only hope and pray that he may 
do nothing against God and the imperial constitution. If, however, he 
does this, we as faithful subjects are bound to believe that it is not the 
Emperor himself who is so doing, but tyrannical advisers usurping his 
authority, and we should make a distinction between the acts of our 
sovereign and those of his wicked counsellors. . . . 

While Luther was writing these lines bad news was on the 
way. A Refutation of the Confession, prepared by his old enemy 
Eck and others, was read before the Diet on August 3. Charles 
refused to allow the Protestants a copy of this, which they 
desired in order to frame a reply. Thereupon Philip of Hesse, 
thinking all was over, suddenly and secretly left Augsburg, 
August 6. Just a week before he had, in spite of Luther's warn- 
ing to beware of the sacramentarians, entered into an alliance 
with Zurich and Constance. The Wittenberg professor did not 
hear of this for some time, and when he did judged the ambi- 
tious chief severely for a step likely to bring on a war between 
Lutherans and Swiss. 

But negotiations were still continued by the Protestants who 
stood fast and by a Catholic peace party headed by Albert of 
Mayence. Crafty Eck had appointed a committee of six consist- 
ing of himself, four other Catholics, and Melanchthon. The 
one reformer in this body had not the stamina to withstand 
a hostile majority and made such concessions on all points save 



PESTE COBURG AND THE DIET OF AUGSBURG 261 

marriage of the clergy, the dispensation of the sacrament in both 
kinds and the abolition of private masses, that an agreement was 
almost reached. It must be remembered, however, that when 
articles of faith were expressed in purposely ambiguous terms 
acceptable to both parties, the interpretation of these words was 
diametrically opposite. In return for the Protestant agreement 
to call the mass an offering, if the word were qualified with the 
term commemorative, the Catholics conceded that communion 
might be administered in both kinds if it were taught that this 
was a matter of convenience and not of principle. One of the 
most dangerous points yielded by Melanchthon was that the 
bishops should be restored to their ancient jurisdictions, a meas- 
ure justified by him as a blow to turbulent sectaries. 

Negotiations continued, to the increasing prejudice of the 
Protestants, throughout most of August and September. Me- 
lanchthon, whose humanistic training gave him a broader out- 
look than that of many of his contemporaries, animated by 
a sincere love of peace, yielded on matters which to him 
were indifferent, but to his co-religionists vital. Justus Jonas, 
also a humanist by education, sided with him, but most of 
the other Protestant leaders raised an outcry that he was a 
greater enemy to the faith than any Catholic and appealed 
over his head to Luther. The numerous letters written by him 
to his friends at Augsburg, though they sometimes show 
perplexity as to what was actually being done, are consistently 
and energetically opposed to all compromise. To Melanchthon 
he wrote, August 26, that he was even sorry that Eck had told 
such a lie as to say that he believed in justification by faith ; 
communion in both kinds must be insisted on as necessary in all 
cases, and there was great danger of civil war in restoring the 
bishops to their old power. " In short, all treaty about harmon- 
izing our doctrines displeases me, for I know it is impossible 
unless the Pope will simply abolish the papacy." On September 
20 he wrote : " If we yield a single one of their conditions, be 
it that on the Canon or on private masses, we deny our whole 
doctrine and confirm theirs. ... I would not yield an inch to 
those proud men, seeing how they play upon our weakness. 
... I am almost bursting with anger and indignation. Pray 



262 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

break off all transactions at once and return hither. They have 
our Confession and they have the Gospel ; if they wish let them 
hear those witnesses, if not let them depart to their own place. If 
war follows it will follow ; we have prayed and done enough." 

Luther has often been blamed for his uncompromising spirit 
and for his narrowness on this occasion. An age which has 
ceased to regard many points then hotly disputed as vital or 
even as interesting can hardly appreciate the opinion of a man 
who made so much of them. Nevertheless, while Melanchthon's 
conciliatory breadth is far more congenial to our modern spirit, 
I believe that in this case Luther was right. The problem be- 
fore a statesman is not what is the best possible policy in per- 
fect conditions, but what is the best practical course to pursue 
under given limitations. The question for the Protestants of 
1530 was not what line might be safely followed in an enlight- 
ened, tolerant age, but what measures were necessary, in the face 
of an exigent and perilous situation. It was a plain fact that 
however much they might juggle with words their differences 
were far too fundamental to be composed by any treaty. Luther 
saw this, Melanchthon did not. 

The Catholics also saw it. Notwithstanding the immense con- 
cessions wrung from their opponents, they voted, on September 
22, that the Confession had been refuted and rejected, and that 
consequently the Protestants were bound to recant. The Diet, 
in this Recess, gave the heretics until April 15, while the Em- 
peror was to use his influence with the Pope to call a general 
council for the decision of still doubtful points ; after that re- 
spite they were to be coerced. 

Luther was deeply disappointed at this result. " I think the 
Becess is worldly wisdom," he wrote on October 1, "but let us 
believe that Christ is yet strong enough to rule all fools and 
babblers who condemn him." A day or two later the whole 
Saxon delegation returned to Coburg, which the Reformer left 
on the fourth, arriving home on the thirteenth. 



CHAPTER XXIII 

THE GERMAN BIBLE 

Luther's greatest monument is the German Bible. The old 
error of supposing that his was the first German version and 
that before his time the book had been much neglected has 
been often exposed ; jet it remains true that his translation, by 
its superior scholarship and wonderful style, marks an era in 
both religion and literature. 

Begun at the Wartburg in the latter part of 1521, the work 
was prosecuted with such energy that the New Testament was 
completed by the time that Luther returned to Wittenberg in 
March, 1522. It was published the following September in a 
handsome quarto with woodcuts from Cranach's workshop, — 
some of them after Diirer's famous Apocalypse series, — a de- 
scription of the Holy Land by Melanchthon, marginal explan- 
atory notes and introductions to the whole and to the separate 
books by Luther. 

Work on the Old Testament was begun at once with the 
help of Melanchthon, Aurogallus, and Borer. The first part 
appeared in the summer of 1523 and the second in December 
of that year. Of the work taken up next, Luther writes, on 
February 23, 1524, to Spalatin : — 

We have so much trouble translating Job, on account of the grand- 
eur of his sublime style, that he seems to be much more impatient of 
our efforts to turn him into German than he was of the consolations 
of his friends. Either he always wishes to sit upon his dunghill, or 
else he is jealous of the translator who would share with him the 
credit of writing his book. 

The third part of the Old Testament, however, containing 
this difficult book, appeared in September or October, 1524. 
There still remained the Prophets, and labor on them had to 
be postponed for some years by the controversies with Erasmus, 



261 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

the Heavenly Prophets, and Zwingli. When they were taken 
up again, in 1528, the Reformer wrote Wenzel Link, on June 
14: — 

I am now at work translating the Prophets. Good Heavens ! how 
hard it is to make the Hebrew writers speak German ! They with- 
stand our efforts, not wishing to give up their native tongue for a bar- 
barous idiom, just as the nightingale would not change her sweet 
song to imitate the cuckoo whose monotonous note she abhors. 

In the same year Isaiah was finished, after which some por. 
tions of the Apocrypha were taken up. At Feste Coburg the 
Prophets were almost completed, though it was not until March 
16, 1532, that the last portion of the Old Testament came out. 
This was shortly followed by the Apocrypha. In 15 (J9 a care- 
ful revision was undertaken by a " Sanhedrim " as Mathesius 
calls it, consisting of Melanchthon the Grecian, Cruciger with 
the Chaldean paraphrase, Bugenhagen skilful in the Latin ver- 
sion, Jonas the rhetorician, Aurogallus professor of Hebrew, 
Borer the proof-reader, and Luther the president and inspiring 
spirit of the whole. He took a legitimate pride in his own work, 
of which he said : — 

I do not wish to praise myself, but the work speaks for itself. The 
German Bible is so good and precious that it surpasses all the Greek 
and Latin versions, and more is found in it than in all the commenta- 
ries, for we clear the sticks and stones out of the way that others may 
read without hindrance. 

In point of scholarship Luther's version was far superior to 
all that had preceded it. They had been made from the Latin 
Vulgate, adding to the errors of their original others of their 
own. The basis of Eiuther's translation was the original tongues : 
the Hebrew Massoretic text of the Old Testament published by 
Gerson Ben Mosheh at Brescia in 1494 and the Greek New 
Testament of Erasmus in the edition of 1519. Modern critics 
have been able to improve on the work of Erasmus, nevertheless 
his text was better than anything which had preceded it and was 
in some points, as for example in omitting 1 John v, 7, superior 
to that from which our King James versiop was made. 

Other helps were of course much scantier than they are to- 



THE GERMAN BIBLE 265 

day. For example a diligent search failed to secure a map of 
the Holy Land. Luther undoubtedly used the Latin and even 
the older German versions as aids, though in no sense did he 
copy them. The work was indeed done with astounding rapid- 
ity, but the manuscripts show how carefully he polished and 
revised, and the success of the work testifies to its excellence. 

Luther's principles, indeed, were not strictly scientific, but 
rather apologetic. The protocols laid down for the revision of 
1539 indicate this, and so does the following saying of 1540 : — 

Dr. Forster and Ziegler conferred with us about our version and 
gave us much help. I gave them three rules : 1. The Bible speaks 
and teaches of God's works, of this there is no doubt. But these works 
are divided into three classes : the home, the State, and the Church. If 
a saying does not fit the Church, let us place it in whichever of the 
other classes it best suits. 2. When there is doubt about the words or 
construction, we must choose the sense — saving the grammar — which 
agrees with the New Testament. 3. If a sentence is repugnant to the 
whole of Scripture, we must simply throw it away, for the rabbis 
have corrupted the whole text with their notes, trying to make it 
appear that the Messiah will come to give us meat and drink and after- 
ward will die. That is a horror and we must simply throw it away. I 
took many a questionable sentence to Forster ; if he said, " But the 
rabbis understand it so and so," I replied, " But could you not write 
the vowel points differently and construe so as to agree with the New 
Testament? " In case his reply was affirmative I would say that it should 
then be so construed. That sometimes surprised them, and they said 
that they would not have thought of that sense their whole life long. 

Such a saying gives a rather unfavorable idea of the probable 
accuracy of the version; nevertheless as a matter of fact 
Luther's scholarship was far sounder than that of his prede- 
cessors. But it was less remarkable for this excellence than for 
the superiority of its style. The English Bible has also become 
a classic, but hardly attains the exalted position of the German 
in this respect. Luther's influence, exerted chiefly through this 
work, has been so enormous on the literature of his people that 
it is sometimes said that he created the modern written language. 
Other scholars are inclined to see in him rather the culmina- 
tion of a literary activity which began some centuries before. 



«66 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

It is certain that there existed before him a common German 
apart from the numerous local dialects, spoken at the court 
first of the Luxemburg and then of the Hapsburg emperors. 1 
Luther himself recognized this : — 

I talk a common, standard German rather than a particular dialect, 
and thus I can be understood in both Upper and Lower Germany. 
I speak according to the usage of the Saxon chancery, the form used 
by the German princes in addressing one another. Maximilian and 
Frederic the Wise brought the whole Empire to a sort of common 
speech by combining all the dialects in one. 

Whatever may be thought of Luther's speech, whether he 
merely gave currency to " the ugly dialect of the Luxemburg 
emperors," or created a strong and flexible literary language, 
it is certain that his writings were for a long time the standard 
of good form and that they gave an immense impetus to Ger- 
man thought. 

His own principles, which conduced to great freedom of treat- 
ment, are well set forth by himself: — 

It is not possible to reproduce a foreign idiom in one's native 
tongue. The proper method of translation is to seek a vocabulary 
neither too free nor too literal, but to select the most fitting terms 
according to the usage of the language adopted. 

To translate properly is to render the spirit of a foreign language 
into our own idiom. I do this with such care in translating Moses that 
the Jews accuse me of rendering only the sense and not the precise 
words. For example when the Hebrew says, " the mouth of the sword " 
I translate " the edge of the sword, 1 ' though in this case it might be 
objected that the word " mouth " is a figurative allusion to preachers 
who destroy by word of mouth. 

I try to speak as men do in the market-place. Didactic, philosophic, 
and sententious books are, therefore, hard to translate, but narrative 
easy. In rendering Moses I make him so German that no one would 
know that he was a Jew. 

No Englishing of Luther's German can give any conception 

1 It is interesting to compare the formation of the common dialect in Germany 
and Italy. As Luther claims to speak the tongue of the cultivated introduced by 
the Emperor Maximilian (as he thinks), so Dante (De vulgari eloquio) states that 
he wrote not the Tuscan dialect but a common Italian, originating, as he believed, 
at the court of Frederic II. 



THE GERMAN BIBLE 207 

of the peculiar flavor of his version, which, to be appreciated, 
must be read in the original. One or two examples, however, 
may serve to point out the extreme freedom of the rendering. 
The word " church " (Kirche) is never used, but for it " con- 
gregation " (Gemeinde), as more consistent with the original 
idea. Again " Repent ye " (Matt, iii, 2; iv, 17 ; Mark i, 15) is 
not " tut Busse " as in the older versions, but " bessert euch," 
" improve yourselves." In Eomans iii, 28, " Therefore we con- 
clude that a man is justified by faith without works of the law," 
Luther added "alone" after "faith," to bring out what he 
believed to be the meaning of the apostle. He was violently 
attacked for this alteration by his enemies, and defended him- 
self in an angry Letter on Translation in 1530. 

It is my testament and my translation [he bursts out] and if I have 
made any mistakes (though I never falsified intentionally) I will not 
let the papists judge me. . . . As to Romans iii, 28, if the word 
" alone " is not found in the Latin or Greek texts, yet the passage has 
that meaning and must be rendered so in order to make it clear and 
strong in German. 

Luther's attitude to the Bible contains one striking contra- 
diction. He insisted that it should be taken as a whole and 
literally as God's inerrant Word ; and at the same time he was 
himself the freest of " higher critics." In his works against the 
Heavenly Prophets (1524) and against Erasmus (1525) he 
introduces long arguments to show that the Bible is consistent 
and binding in the literal interpretation of each text. In a 
work of 1530 he says : " Let no one think he can master the 
articles of faith by reason. . . . What Christ says must be so 
whether I or any other man can understand it." In his book 
Against the Papacy at Eome (1545) he says : " This writer 
would have done better to leave his reason at home or to 
ground it on texts of Scripture, rather than ridiculously and 
crazily to found faith and the divine law on mere reason." 
These and many another saying lend substance to the charge, 
often brought against Luther, of having merely substituted an 
infallible book for an infallible Church, or as a recent writer 
has expressed it, "of having set up Bibliolatry in place of 
ecclesiolatry." 



,268 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

But Luther was not the man to be bound by his own rule ; 
few of his followers have ever interpreted, commented on, and 
criticised the Bible with the freedom habitual to him. The 
books he judged according as they appealed to his own subject- 
ive nature, or according to his spiritual needs. He often exer- 
cised his reason in determining the respective worth of the 
several books of the Bible, and in a way which has been con- 
firmed to a surprising degree by subsequent researches. He 
denied the Mosaic authorship of part of the Pentateuch ; he 
declared Job to be an allegory ; Jonah was so childish that he 
was almost inclined to laugh at it ; the books of Kings were 
" a thousand paces ahead of Chronicles and more to be be- 
lieved." " Ecclesiastes has neither boots nor spurs, but rides in 
socks, as I did when I was in the cloister." 

The Psalter was prized highly : " It should be dear to us," 
he said in his preface to it, " if only because it so clearly pro- 
mises Christ's death and resurrection and prefigures his king- 
dom with the estate and nature of all Christendom, so that it 
may well be called a small Bible wherein all that stands in 
Scripture is most fairly and briefly comprehended." 

But we must not make Luther more in advance of his time 
than he really was. He naively accepted all the miracles of the 
Bible, as illustrated by the following : — 

I would give the world to have the stories of the antediluvian 
patriarchs also, that we might see how they lived, preached, and suf- 
fered. ... I have taught and suffered, too, but only fifteen, twenty, 
or thirty years ; they lived seven or eight hundred and how they must 
have suffered ! 

Like freedom was used in judging the books of the New 
Testament. In the preface of 1545 he says : " St. John's Gos- 
pel and his first epistle, St. Paul's epistles, and especially 
Eomans, Galatians and Ephesians, and St. Peter's first epistle 
are the books which teach all that is necessary for salvation, 
even if you read no other books. In comparison with them, 
James is a right straw epistle, for it has no evangelic manner 
about it." 

In the introduction to Eomans (1522), he says : " This epis- 



THE GERMAN BIBLE 269 

tie is the kernel of the New Testament and the clearest of all 
gospels, worthy and worth that a Christian man should not 
only know the words by heart, but should converse with them 
continually as the daily bread of the soul. It can never be too 
much read nor considered, but the more it is used the more 
precious it becomes." Then, by way of explaining the apostolic 
use of such words as law, sin, grace, faith, justification, fiesb, 
and spirit, he gives an excellent summary of his own doctrine. 

Kevelation he holds neither apostolic nor prophetic, for 
Christ is neither taught nor recognized in it. 

Again, when he was asked what were the best books of the 
Bible, he said the Psalms, St. John's and St. Paul's epistles for 
those who had to fight heretics, but for the common man and 
young people the first three gospels. 

The often quoted condemnation of James as an epistle of 
straw is far better known than the more drastic things he said 
about it to his table companions : — 

Many sweat to reconcile St. Paul and St. James, as does Melanch- 
thon in his Apology, but in vain. " Faith justifies " and " faith does 
not justify " contradict each other flatly. If any one can harmonize 
them I will give him my doctor's hood and let him call me a fool. 

Let us banish this epistle from the university, for it is worthless. It 
has no syllable about Christ, not even naming him except once at 
the beginning. I think it was written by some Jew who had heard 
of the Christians but not joined them. James had learned that the 
Christians insisted strongly on faith in Christ and so he said to him- 
self : " "Well, you must take issue with them and speak only of works," 
and so he does. He says not a word of the passion and resurrection 
of Christ, the text of all the other apostles. Moreover, he has no order 
nor method. He speaks now of clothes, now of wrath, jumping from 
one topic to another. He has this simile : " For as the body without 
the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also." Mary, mother 
of God ! He compares faith to the body when it should rather be 
compared to the soul ! The ancients saw all this and did not consider 
the epistle canonical. 

i\ Luther's marginal notes in one of his own Bibles are equally 
trenchant. To James i, 6 (But let him ask in faith, nothing 
wavering), he remarks : " That is the only good place in the 



270 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

whole epistle"; to i, 21 (Receive with meekness the engrafted 
word), "Others engrafted it, not this James"; to ii, 12 ff., 
" What a chaos ! " and to ii, 24 (Ye see then that by works 
a man is justified, and not by faith only), " That is false." 



CHAPTER XXIV 

THE RELIGIOUS PEACE OF NUREMBERG. 1532. 

The Recess of Augsburg was published in an imperial edict 
of November 19, 1530, declaring that the Emperor and Estates 
had resolved to remain in the ancient communion, that the 
Protestants must therefore renounce their errors before the 
fifteenth of the following April, that the Emperor would use 
his influence with the Pope for the calling of the general coun- 
cil to which the final settlement of the religious difficulties was 
referred, and that in the mean time the bishops should be re- 
stored to their former jurisdictions and no further innovations 
allowed. Shortly after promulgating the edict, Charles sum- 
moned the imperial electors to meet at Cologne for the purpose 
of making his brother Ferdinand King of the Romans — the 
title regularly assumed by the Emperor's destined successor. 
By this means he hoped to constitute a strong, permanent 
authority in Germany from which he himself was generally 
obliged to be absent. 

To meet the exigencies of the situation thus presented, the 
Protestant princes and delegates from the cities assembled at 
Schmalkalden, a little town just outside the borders of Elect- 
oral Saxony. Here, in December, 1530, they formed for mutual 
help and protection an alliance, soon to become, under the 
name of the League of Schmalkalden, one of the great powers 
of Europe. They then debated what means should be used to 
withstand the Emperor — legal or military. Some pressure 
might be brought to bear upon the central government by con- 
stitutional means ; an obvious opportunity to do so occurred in 
the election of Ferdinand, 

Writing to Luther for advice as to the proper course to pur- 
sue, his sovereign received the following answer : — 



272 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

TO JOHN THE STEADFAST, ELECTOR OF SAXONY, AT 
SCHMALKALDEN 

(Wittenberg,) December 12, 1530. 

Grace and peace in Christ. Most serene, highborn Prince, most gra- 
cious Lord ! My dear friend, Chancellor Brflck, has spoken privately 
to me, by your Grace's command, asking my opinion in the present 
contingency, namely, the election of the King of the Romans, at 
which the Emperor has asked your presence in your official capacity. 
Although in my lowly station I cannot advise nor even know much 
about such important affairs — for I have not the advantage of seeing 
all things, as does your Grace, from the inside, but only from the out- 
side and from afar — yet will I humbly give your Grace my thoughts. 

I hope your Grace will not abandon your intention of taking part 
in the election, for if you do, the enemy will find cause to take away 
your vote. But if your Grace assists at this election, you will be 
thereby confirmed in your vote and your fief, and their crafty strata- 
gem to ruin your Grace will be frustrated. . . . 

Let your Grace be assured that it is no sin to vote for a political 
enemy of the Evangelic faith, for your Grace alone could not hinder 
his election which would take place anyway,' so that you will be 
obliged, under any circumstances, to obey an Emperor who rejects 
the Gospel. Moreover, it might happen that if your Grace were ab- 
sent, your vote would be given to Duke George of Albertine Saxony 
or to some one else. . . . 

Your Grace must know that the Landgrave of Hesse has spontane- 
ously caused himself to be inscribed a citizen of Zurich, 1 which causes 
me little pleasure ; for unless God help and protect us war must come 
from that alliance. Your Grace knows that in such a war the Swiss 
will protect the sacramentarian heresy, if not force it upon us, which 
God forbid. For they have not yet recanted ; they fight not because 
it is necessary but to uphold their error. O God ! in these worldly 
matters I am too childish simple ! I pray and will pray God to guard 
and guide your Grace as heretofore ; or, if worst comes to worst, that 
he will give us his grace and a blessed end. Amen. Your Grace will 
take my simple talk in good part. I speak as I understand. . . . 

Your Grace's subject, 

Martin Luthbe. 

1 For the alliance of Hesse, Zurich, and Constance, formed July 30, 1530, see 
above, p. 260. 



THE RELIGIOUS PEACE OF NUREMBERG 273 

The " simple talk " failed to convince John, who sent his 
son, John Frederic, to protest against the election. As Luther 
predicted, the action of Saxony did not prevent the choice of 
Ferdinand by the six other princes (January 5, 1531), and it 
was also made the excuse for a proposal to deprive the absent 
member of his vote. 

While advising against extra-legal means of resisting the 
Catholics, Luther continued the warfare with his pen. The Re- 
cess of Augsburg, together with the Refutation of the Protestant 
Confession, was printed early in 1531. The Wittenberg pro- 
fessor answered at once in two pamphlets : A Commentary on 
the Putative Imperial Edict, and A Warning to his dear Ger- 
mans. In the former he protests that he would not have what 
he now says understood of the pious Emperor or against any 
authority, but only against the wicked advisers who usurped 
their lord's power. He refutes their refutation point by point, 
and designates their claim to have conquered him by Scripture 
as a plain lie. In the second pamphlet he recalls his Warning 
to the Clergy at Augsburg, in which he had so heartily begged 
for peace but they had despised his prayer. Now they accuse 
him of sedition and rebellion. He defends the Protestants from 
this charge, by making a distinction between those who resist 
authority simply to become masters themselves and those who 
merely defend their rights. The former is wrong, the latter 
justifiable. 

These pamphlets were at once denounced by the Catholics as 
seditious and libellous. Duke George especially sent a remon- 
strance to his cousin John of Ernestine Saxony, who in turn re- 
quested his subject to refrain from violence in future. 

Luther replied with the following indignant protest : — 

TO JOHN THE STEADFAST, ELECTOR OF SAXONY 

(WlTTENBEBG,) April 16, 1531. 

Grace and peace in Christ. Most serene, highborn Prince, most gra- 
cious Lord ! The esteemed and learned Dr. Gregory Briick has sent 
me your Grace's letter forbidding me to publish sharp or violent books, 
of which I have recently written two with the purpose of preventing 
injustice. . • • 



274 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

First, I can show that in these two sharp books I have said nothing 
turbulent nor incited any man to sedition ; this I will maintain against 
every one, God willing. 

Secondly, it is clear that in these books I have highly praised and 
celebrated the Emperor ; in short I have proposed nothing except that 
Christians should judge conscientiously and discover the bad practices 
and abuses perpetrated in the Emperor's name, so that pious hearts 
may remain untroubled and unseduced. 

Thirdly, I think that your Grace should remember how your party 
worked against the edict at Augsburg, thereby acting in a Christian, 
upright way, letting every one know that you protested against it. 

But yet they incontinently condemned our Confession, without letting 
us have their Refutation to answer it, and they did not hear our prayers 
for peace, but passed a menacing, atrocious, bloodthirsty, false edict, 
thereby, if truth be spoken, drawing the sword against your Grace and 
our party, and setting the whole Empire at odds — for one cannot 
mince words in such matters. Moreover your Grace and our party 
have kept silence for more than six months, showing abundant and 
perilous patience without accomplishing anything thereby, for it has 
only made our antagonists more proud, confident, and arbitrary ; where- 
fore I was obliged to speak for fear they would not be checked until 
they had ruined us. If your Grace and the other leaders of our party 
wish to suffer in eternal silence, nevertheless I have not the patience, 
especially as the cause is originally and chiefly mine. If I should fin- 
ally acquiesce in this public condemnation of my teaching, it would be 
tantamount to abandoning or denying it ; sooner than do this I would 
incur the wrath of all the world and of all devils, not to mention his 
Imperial Majesty's advisers. 

Certain persons have represented to your Grace that my books are 
sharp and vehement. This, indeed, is true, for I can write nothing on 
this subject soft and mild. I am only sorry that what I write on this 
subject is not still more cutting and violent, for compared to the sharp- 
ness of their actions my speech is not sharp at all. It is no mild, gen- 
tle act to publish such an edict against your Grace and your friends, 
not allowing you to speak in your own defence, but drawing the sword 
of wrath and trying to fill Germany with blood and with widows and 
orphans. 

When did the Catholics ever punish the scurrilous writings published 
against us ? . . . Your Grace may see that these people think it right 
and fine for a hundred thousand authors to write against us, every sheet 
of whose voluminous works is full of poison and gall. . . . But if I, 



THE RELIGIOUS PEACE OF NUREMBERG 275 

poor man, alone ciy out against these monsters, then no one lias written 
sharply but only Luther ! ... In short, whatever I do or say is wrong, 
even if I should raise the dead ; whatever they do is right, even if they 
should drench Germany with innocent blood ! Yet one must fight these 
people with cotton wool, bow to them and say : " Gracious sirs, how 
pious and fair you are ! " . . . 

Your Grace's obedient subject, 

Mabtin Luther. 

The day set for the final recantation of the Protestants 
— April 15, 1531 — passed without any attempt being made to 
coerce them. On the contrary negotiations still continued and 
a new diet was summoned to meet at Ratisbon in January, 
1532. Luther had little hopes of any agreement ; as he wrote 
Amsdorf on August 26, 1531 : — 

Whether there will be a diet or not I cannot say. I know, however, 
that whether there is one or not, agreement is impossible ; for who can 
reconcile Christ and Belial, or how can the Pope concede that faith 
alone justifies and that the works of popery are damnable, or how can 
he withdraw and let Luther reign ? 

The Estates met as appointed, but it was not here that nego- 
tiations were carried on but at Nuremberg. The Catholics were 
represented by the Electors of Mayence and of the Palatinate, 
to whom Ferdinand delegated plenary powers, and the Protest- 
ants by the Elector of Saxony. As a result of the conference 
a treaty, known as the Religious Peace of Nuremberg, binding 
each party to respect the faith of the other until an oecumenie 
council should be called to decide all religious questions, was 
signed by the delegates on July 23 and received the sanction of 
the Emperor and Estates on August 2. The result was a diplo- 
matic victory for the Lutherans, giving them time in which to 
grow and for an indefinite period a recognized legal status in the 
Empire. 

The Elector John did not long live to enjoy the fruits of this 
triumph. He died on August 16 and was buried in the Castle 
Church at Wittenberg two days later. In officiating at the fu- 
neral the Reformer wept unaffectedly for his departed sovereign. 
On the day of the interment he spoke as follows at dinner : — 



276 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

The bells sound differently when we know they ring for a dead 
friend. ... In John we saw the greatest clemency, in Frederic the 
greatest wisdom ; had the two princes been united it would have been 
a miracle. . . . How great a prince has now died, and how lonely, for 
no son, cousin, nor friend was with him. The physicians say that a con- 
vulsion killed him. 

Four days after this, Luther said to the new elector, John 
Frederic, as they were dining together at Wittenberg : — 

The death of a prince is a much more pitiful thing than that of a 
peasant. A prince must be left by all his friends and nobles and at 
last strive alone with the devil, for no one will remind him that he 
has lived like a prince. 

John Frederic the Magnanimous was twenty-nine when he 
succeeded his father. Like Philip of Hesse he belonged to a gen- 
eration more susceptible to the influence of the new teaching. 
Brought up by Spalatin in a strongly Lutheran atmosphere, he 
was a yet more ardent disciple of the Ref ormer than his father 
had been. The Wittenberg professor at first had some doubts of 
the youth : — 

With the Elector Frederic, wisdom died, with the Elector John, 
piety. Now the nobles will reign and piety will vanish. They know 
that my young lord has a mind of his own and that he does not care 
for learning, and that pleases them much. The nobles preach opinion 
to him. Let them look to it that they do not put the land through 
a sweat bath and then lay the people on the pavement to cool off. If 
the Elector only had his uncle's wisdom and his father's piety I would 
like also his insistence on having his own way and wish him success 
with it. 

In this case, however, familiarity bred respect, for Luther 
came to have an increasingly high opinion of his prince. About 
1540 he said : — 

"We certainly have a prince adorned with many gifts. He has a 
reverend tongue and listens to no base or blasphemous word. He 
loves the Bible, schools and churches ; he upholds a heavy weight and 
alone keeps the faith. He would gladly attend to everything, but he 
cannot. His only vice is that he drinks too much with his friends 
and perhaps he also builds too much. But he works like a donkey. 
If we did not pray earnestly for him we should not do right. 



THE RELIGIOUS PEACE OP NUREMBERG 277 

After the peace of Nuremberg languid negotiations looking 
to a more definite settlement still continued. The main question 
was the calling of a council. Pope Clement, who desired nothing 
less than such an assembly, procrastinated. In June, 1533, am- 
bassadors from him and the Emperor came to treat with John 
Frederic on the subject. The Elector took them to Wittenberg 
to consult Luther. A letter from the latter to an old friend 

partly explains why the conference was futile: — 

^_ 

TO NICHOLAS HAUSMANN AT DESSAU 

(Wittenberg,) June 16, 1633. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Dear Nicholas, I have not leisure to 
write at length on account of the presence of the Most Illustrious 
Elector, before whom I daily preach, and with whom I have to confer 
on the answer to be given to the papal and imperial ambassadors. 
The Pope has sent them to propose to us certain articles about calling 
a council, in which he intends that all shall be done according to his 
pleasure ; that is, that we should be condemned and burned ; but 
he conceals his purpose with slippery words worthy of himself. We 
shall return an answer worthy both of himself and of ourselves. 
They are rascals to the core and will remain so. The ambassa- 
dors are treated most honorably, not on account of the Pope but 
on account of the Emperor, whose name we reverence while despis- 
ing that of the Pope. The ambassadors have spoken to neither 
me nor to Melanchthon nor to any of our theologians. Why indeed 
should the servants of our despoilers and murderers hear us? More 
at another time. At present farewell in the Lord and pray for me. 

Dr. Martin Luther. 

What could not be obtained by peaceful means was some- 
times wrested by force. Of the numerous gains made by the 
Protestants in the early thirties, the most important was the 
conquest of Wiirttemberg by Philip of Hesse in May, 1534. The 
tyrannical Duke Ulrich had been expropriated some fifteen years 
previous by the Swabian League and the territory given by the 
new emperor to his brother Ferdinand. After many unsuccess- 
ful attempts to reconquer his dominions, Ulrich at last found an 
opportunity, by embracing the Protestant religion, to secure 
the military support of their ablest statesman. The campaign 
was, however, undertaken contrary to the advice of the reformers^ 



278 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

true to their pacific principles. Their meeting with Philip at 
Weimar, in January, 1533, as well as the result of the cam- 
paign, is described by Luther in a saying recorded some seven 
years later : — 

Philip of Hesse undertakes much and accomplishes much. Great was 
his audacity to oppose the bishops, 1 but greater to restore the Duke 
of Wtirttemberg and expel Ferdinand. Melanchthon and I dissuaded 
him from doing this with all our powers at Weimar, thinking that he 
would bring shame on the Evangelic cause and disturb the peace. 
He got all hot and red, though he is usually pale. ... So he kept on 
and did what he said he would and fired three hundred and fifty shots 
into the city and castle 2 and waited for an answer at Cadan. Duke 
George said to Ferdinand : " If you could only raise an army in two 
or three days, I would not advise peace, but as you can't you must 
come to terms." 

1 Of Bamberg and Wiirzburg at the time of the Pack affair, 1528. Cf. supra, 
p. 224. 

2 Asperg, June 1 and 2, 1534. 



CHAPTER XXV 

THE CHURCH MILITANT 

The philosopher, says a great historian, may indulge in the 
pleasing task of portraying Religion as she descended white- 
robed from Heaven ; it is the melancholy duty of the historian 
to show how she has been maltreated by men, and her immacu- 
late garments torn and spotted by human passion. The early 
annals of the Protestant, as of the Apostolic Church, are full of 
difficulty and dissension. After the peace of Nuremberg had 
given the Protestants a firm position against the Roman Catho- 
lics, the main energies of the reformers were applied to fighting 
each other and dealing with the numerous contrarieties which 
arose in their own folds. 

A main problem with all associations as with all individuals 
is the financial one. This chronic difficulty is thus spoken of 
in a letter from Luther to John Sutel of Gottingen, March 1, 
1531: — 

I see your friends are worried for fear they will have to pay their 
ministers a little more. . . . Formerly the people gave thousands of 
guldens to every impostor that came along, whereas now they won't 
give any man a hundred. Let them go to. It is better for them to serve 
the Pope and be subject to the devil than to lord it over Christ and 
trample on his "Word. Many such cases come up elsewhere, but the 
Lord knows his own. They imagine that we must flatter them and 
could not do without them. This is not to seek the gospel earnestly. 

About the time that Luther was writing this discouraged 
note a perfect tempest was brewing at Zwickau — a tempest in 
a teapot, to be sure, but one which occupies more space in the 
Reformer's correspondence and table-talk, than do the Diet of 
Worms and the Peasants' Revolt put together. The cause 
of the disturbance was the expulsion of a clergyman, Lawrence 
Soranus, early in 1531, by the town council. The accused se- 



280 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

cured the interest of the government and of Luther, who wrote 
the following vigorous letter to one of the principal citizens : — 

TO STEPHEN BOTH AT ZWICKAU 

(WiTtenbebg), March 4, 1531. 
Grace and peace in the Lord. Among many sorrows undergone in 
the ministry of God's Word, I feel keenly, my dear Stephen, that you 
and your fellow citizens show such overbearing contempt for God and 
his ministers. You have cast out Lawrence Soranus with ignominy, 
branded with a public punishment, though not convicted of crime nor 
even heard in his own defence, and every one cries out that you, Both, 
were the author and perpetrator of this crime. Excuse yourself as 
much as you like, you will never clear yourself of this arbitrary, or 
rather presumptuous act, done without the knowledge and consent of 
your excellent pastor Hausmann, who had every right to know and 
participate in the proceedings. Do you really think, my dear young 
fellows, that you can domineer in the Church, appropriate and steal 
revenues which you have not given, and can distribute them to whom 
you wish as if you were lords over the Church ? I am minded to write 
a book to humble you and those beasts of Zwickau and to make a pub- 
lic example of your iniquity, as the Lord lives. This is the thanks that 
you give us, friends, for our sweat and agony in the service of God's 
"Word. I wish you and yours excluded from the communion of my 
Lord Jesus Christ so that you and all may see how safe you are in 
your pride. May the Lord Jesus confound the undertakings of you all. 
Amen. Martin Luther. 

Both and the town council replied, standing by their former 
action, and expressing surprise at Luther's hasty judgment. 
The other local preachers, Hausmann and Cordatus, encouraged 
by support from headquarters, took the part of Soranus, and 
the quarrel soon made their position as untenable as his. Cor- 
datus, a man of passionate temper, was the first to be obliged 
to go. He would have preferred to stay even at some personal 
risk, but his chief, more gentle in deed than in word, advised 
him " to leave that Babylon and give place to wrath." Cordatus 
accordingly came to Wittenberg, where he was for ten months 
the guest of the Black Cloister, during which time he made a 
collection of his host's table-talk, naturally recording the many 
violent denunciations of "that cursed, recalcitrant city." 



THE CHURCH MILITANT 281 

In hopes of composing the quarrel a meeting was arranged 
between Luther, Jonas, Hausmann, and Cordatus, and some 
representatives of Zwickau, headed by the burgomaster Miihl- 
pfort, to whom in happier times the Reformer had dedicated his 
work on the Liberty of a Christian Man. As the altercation 
waxed hot, Miihlpfort said, " Doctor, you will never bring us 
under another Pope : we have learned too much for that " ; to 
which Luther replied, " Is it not a curse on me that I have 
made others so learned and yet know nothing myself ? " 

The attempt came to nothing, and Hausmann was eventually 
forced to follow Cordatus. On November 22 his leader invited 
him thus : — 

I write again to beg you for Christ's sake to come to me as soon as 
possible. There is a little new room waiting for you. Think not that 
you will be a burden to me, but rather a support and a solace. 

Hausmann accepted the invitation. In the autumn of 1532 
he found employment as court preacher to the princes of Anhalt 
at Dessau, and in 1538 accepted a call to his native town Frei- 
berg. His death on October 17 of that year was a great blow to 
Luther, who burst into tears upon hearing of it. 

Before the storm at Zwickau had been laid, another dissension 
arose at Nuremberg. Osiander, a reformed priest who had 
taken a prominent part in the Diet held here in 1523, endeavored, 
about ten years later, to abolish the practice of private con- 
fession. The stricter party, headed by Link, opposed this step, 
referred the question to Wittenberg, and received an answer, 
dated April 18, 1533, from Luther and Melanchthon, to the 
effect that public and private confession might well be contin- 
ued at the same time. Osiander refused to bow to the decision, 
and for a long time harbored resentment against the other 
clergymen. Luther treated the matter in a large and conciliatory 
spirit, writing Link on October 8 : — 

I pray you for Christ's sake not to close the eyes of mercy, but 
consider how far the man is captured and sick with his own opinion, 
and therefore try not to confound or condemn him publicly, lest from 
this spark a conflagration should arise. Endeavor rather to free and 



282 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

heal him by the exercise of moderation, patience, and prudence, study- 
ing only how to profit his soul. 

The threatened breach happily yielded to this gentle treat- 
ment, and Luther was able to write Osiander an affectionate 
letter styling him the true partner of his faith. 1 

Far different was the result of another schism, which tore 
the very heart of the Evangelic Church before it was quelled. 
The leader of the Antinomian heresy — so the new sect was 
denominated — was John Agricola, a native of Eisleben, about 
ten years younger than his great compatriot. His ambition was 
not satisfied with the humble position of village schoolmaster, 
and he several times brought himself into prominence, notably 
by an attack on Melanchthon during the church visitation of 
1527. His abilities and his personal friendship for Luther 
moved the latter to nominate him for a position in the univers- 
ity. During the Reformer's absence at Schmalkalden in the 
early part of 1537, Agricola and his family were guests at the 
Black Cloister, while he assisted in supplying the vacancy caused 
by his host's absence, taking some of the professorial and pas- 
toral duties. 

It was now first noticed that his theology was not free from 
the taint of false doctrine ; he was accused of teaching justifica- 
tion by faith to the disparagement of morality, asserting, it was 
charged, that as long as a believer was in a state of grace it 
made little difference what he did or what sins he might com- 
mit. On his return Luther felt obliged to preach against this 
doctrine, and the Elector prohibited Agricola from the pulpit. 
In December the Reformer issued a series of propositions, con- 
taining the gist of the Antinomian doctrine, intending to de- 
bate them with its leader. The man against whom they were 
directed declined the challenge, and, in January, 1538, gave 
such quieting assurances that he was again allowed to preach. 
Hardly had he been forgiven, however, before he gave new 
offence. He issued a stronger statement of his previous posi- 
tion, defending it by quotations from the Reformer's own works. 
Luther was irritated both by the contents and the manner of 
the apology ; he saw that Agricola's doctrine was dangerous to 
1 June 3, 1545. Burkhardt : Luther's Brief wechsel. 



THE CHURCH MILITANT 283 

morality and proposed to suppress it whether supported by 
former expressions of his own or not. He accordingly issued 
a pamphlet against the Antinomian9 early in 1539, to which 
Agricola promptly responded with a list of rather enigmatical 
theses, thus explained by one of the reporters of the table- 
talk : — 

January 31, 1539, Dr. Martin Luther read Agricola's propositions 
for debate. They were all about Jonathan and Saul. ... At last he 
understood the deceit of Agricola, who played with allegories and 
double meanings, and yet exposed himself in all his thoughts. . . . 
His meaning was that Jonathan was himself, who ate honey, that is, 
preached the gospel, but that Saul was Luther, who forbade the use 
of this honey in the Church. When the doctor had at last fathomed 
this meaning he exclaimed : " Agricola, are you such a man ? May 
God forgive you for being so bitter and thinking that I am your 
enemy. God is witness that I loved you and yet do. Why don't you 
come out openly and not fight so treacherously ? " 

During the long controversy the poison had spread to other 
parts. When Melanchthon went to the Congress of Frankfort 
in February, 1539, he wrote accounts of other Antinomians 
who had made themselves known. At the same time Luther 
heard that the heresy was being taught at Saalfeld and other 
places, as he wrote his friend on March 2. On the same day, 
probably, he said: — 

Satan, like a furious harlot, rages in the Antinomians, as Melanch- 
thon writes from Frankfort. The devil will do much harm through 
them and cause infinite and vexatious evils. If they carry their law- 
less principles into the State as well as the Church, the magistrate will 
say : I am a Christian, therefore the law does not pertain to me. 
Even a Christian hangman would repudiate the law. If they teach 
only free grace, infinite licence will follow and all discipline will be 
at an end. 

The strain between the two protagonists at Wittenberg con- 
tinued without coming to an open breach. Indeed, sundry 
attempts were made to bring about a reconciliation, and on one 
occasion, apparently in January or February, 1540, 1 Luther 

1 The date is doubtful. The story was noted by one of the guests, Spangen- 
berg of Kordhansen, in his Bible, and taken from him by Aurifaber into his col- 



284 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

invited his opponent with other theologians to a banquet at his 
house. 

When they had eaten and made merry Dr. Martin Luther took a 
glass which had three rings around it marking divisions. Pledging his 
guests in this he said to Agricola : " Friend Agricola, note this glass ; 
the first division is the Ten Commandments, the second the Creed, 
the third the Lord's Prayer ; the glass itself which contains them is 
the Catechism." Then he drank all the wine in the glass, and filling 
it again gave it to Agricola. But he could only drink the upper 
division, nay, he was obliged to set the glass down and could not bear 
even to look at it again. Then said Luther : " I knew well that Agri- 
cola could drink the Ten Commandments, but that he would leave the 
Creed, the Lord's Prayer, and the Catechism alone." 

In March Agricola laid a complaint against Luther before 
the Elector, saying that he had been trampled on for three 
years by his enemy and had never taught the doctrine of which 
he was accused. Before the committee of theologians appointed 
to investigate the merits of the case had come to a conclusion, 
Agricola had the opportunity to leave Wittenberg to accept 
a position in Brandenburg. He eagerly embraced this offer, in 
June, 1540. Even here, however, he found that the friendship of 
the Wittenbergers was desirable. 

Luther, however, steadily refused to forgive him unless he 
recanted in the following formula : " I was a fool and wronged 
the Wittenberg divines ; they teach aright and I wronged them 
much. I repent from my heart and beg for God's sake that 
they will forgive me." The breach was therefore never healed. 
The Antinomian played in the religious history of the time 
a chequered part which gave some color to Luther's designation 
of him as a chameleon. 

The most important follower of the Antinomian was James 
Schenk of Freiberg. Notwithstanding some complaints against 
him he was called to be court preacher to the Elector in July, 
1538. While on a visit to Lochau, September 10 and 11, 
Luther heard Schenk preach and afterwards invited him to a 

lection of table-talk (Forstemann-Bindseil, ii, 144) where the date 1540 is given. 
Many of the dates in Aurifaber are incorrect, bnt if this is right it seems likely 
that the banquet took place before Agricola's complaint to the Elector in March. 



THE CHURCH MILITANT 285 

meal for the purpose of coming to an understanding. Schenk, 
when accused of teaching false doctrine, said : " I must speak 
as I do for the sake of Christ's blood and precious passion ; the 
great pain of my conscience forces me to it. ... I have a God 
as well as you." After some vain expostulation Luther replied : 
"If you are so badly torn the devil must mend you. Poor 
Freiberg will never get over it, but God will destroy him who 
has violated the temple. The proverb says ' Bad mind, bad 
heart.' A desperate bad fellow." To this Schenk only retorted : 
" If I make the court as pious as you have made the world, it 
will be all up." 

He soon lost his position with the orthodox sovereign, and, 
failing to find another, wandered around for some years in deep 
poverty, until, about 1545, he died, apparently either of starv- 
ation or by his own hand. On Luther, who in his later years 
occasionally spoke of " Grickel and Jackel " (Agricola and 
James Schenk) as lost men, the unhappy altercation left an 
abiding and melancholy impression. 

Other fierce, if petty, quarrels broke out in Luther's im- 
mediate circle. By a bit of dramatic irony the centre of these 
storms was the peace-loving Melanchthon. This highly gifted 
teacher and writer by his very wish to please all men laid 
himself open to the charge of holding the faith and the in- 
terests of his Church too lightly. While Luther was absent 
at the Wartburg, the fatal weakness of Philip's character had 
been revealed in his dealings with the Zwickau prophets. A 
few years later he had been attacked by Agricola for his sup- 
posed backsliding to Catholicism. In 1530 at Augsburg he 
had drawn down upon himself the cutting animadversions of 
more resolute if less talented Protestants by his concessions 
to the enemy. In 1536 again Cordatus scented heresy in 
Melanchthon's teaching. The quarrel was suspended during the 
absence and illness of Luther at Schmalkalden, but later was 
renewed with greater violence, Cordatus calling his younger 
but more noted antagonist " a crab crawling on the cross." 
James Schenk, too, of Antinomian notoriety, in his orthodox 
days attacked Melanchthon with almost equal fierceness. 

At times it seemed as if the relations of the two leading 



£86 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

reformers of Wittenberg would become strained. Luther took 
very ill the approaches made by Melanchthon to his opponents, 
whether papist or sacramentarian. He was angry when, in 
Return for a good sum of money, his friend dedicated a book 
to Albert of Mayence ; he disliked the action of his colleague 
and of Bucer when, in the reformation at Cologne, they 
seemed to slur over the doctrine of the sacrament for the sake 
of unity. 

On the other side, too, the younger man often felt the influ- 
ence of his older friend dictatorial and overbearing. Once or 
twice it seemed that he tried to free himself from it, but always 
anxiously avoided an open quarrel. His wife, moreover, was 
jealous of Katie, for according to the rule of academic etiquette, 
the doctor's wife preceded the master's. 

But fortunately the mutual strain never came to an open 
breach. The pair had too much respect and affection to allow 
that. Luther was greatly impressed by his friend's intellectual 
excellence and splendid services to the common cause. Not 
only in his writings but by his active participation in politics, 
Melanchthon did a great deal for the Protestant cause. After 
the Diet of Augsburg he was the most active, though not the 
most powerful, theologian of the reformed faith. He was almost 
always present at the diets and 'conferences from which Luther 
was kept by his health, and it was Melanchthon rather than 
his friend who was invited by the kings of France and England 
to visit their capitals. Katie may have felt some jealousy now 
and then, but her magnanimous husband was never tired of 
celebrating his friend. Among many testimonies of his affec- 
tion and respect, the following are important. 

August 1, 1537, Luther wrote on his table : — - 

Deeds and words, Melanchthon, 
Words without deeds, Erasmus, 
Deeds without words, Luther, 
Neither words nor deeds, Carlstadt. 

While he was writing, Melanchthon and Basil Monner entered 
by chance. Melanchthon said that Luther had spoken truly of 
Erasmus and Carlstadt, but that he had spoken too highly 
of him and that Luther also had words. 




| VIVENTIS P OTVIT-DVREREVS- ORA-PHI LIPPI 
tVYeNTEAVNON -POTVIT-PiNGERE-DOCTA 
iWANVS 



MELANCHTHON 

After an etching by Albrecht Diirer 



THE CHURCH MILITANT 287 

No one has done so much as Melanchthon in logic in a thousand 
years. I knew the rules before, but Philip has taught me the thing 
itself. 

The little man is pious ; when he does wrong it is not with malice 
prepense. In his way he has accomplished much, but he has often 
been unfortunate in the dedications of his books. 1 To judge by results 
I should say that my way was the better, to speak out and hit like 
a boy. Blunt wedges rive hard knots. 1 

1 Melanchthon had dedicated works to Albert of Mayenoe and Henry VIII. 

2 Malo nodo mains cuneus, a proverb several times quoted by Lather. My rend* 
ering is borrowed from Troilus and Cressida. 



CHAPTEE XXVI 

THE WITTENBERG AGREEMENT. 1536 

A previous chapter 1 has traced the history of the schism 
of the two great reformed Churches as far as the unsuccessful 
attempt to reconcile them at the Marburg colloquy of October, 
1529. To the Diet of Augsburg in the following year Zwingli 
sent a confession of faith in which he designated the Lutherans 
as men who longed after the flesh pots of the old Egypt. Still 
another confession, more irenic in tone, was brought by the 
German Zwinglians. Their representative, Martin Bucer of 
Strassburg, since 1518 a friend and admirer of the Wittenberg 
reformer, visited Teste Coburg in hopes of bringing about a 
union. He succeeded in convincing Luther of the good inten- 
tions of the South German cities, and, wishing to push his 
advantage, sent to him, not long after the close of the Diet, 
a very conciliatory creed, for which he received the following 
acknowledgment : — 

TO MARTIN BUCER AT STRASSBURG 

Wittenberg, January 22, 1531. 

Grace and peace in Christ. I have received the confession sent by 
you, dear Bucer ; I approve it and thank God that we are united in 
confessing, as you write, that the body and blood of the Lord is truly 
in the supper, and is dispensed by the consecrating words as food for 
the soul. I am surprised that you say that Zwingli and OEcolampa- 
dius believe this too, but I speak not to them but to you. [Here fol- 
lows an exposition of the minute differences in the belief of Luther 
and of Bucer.] 

I cannot, therefore, admit a full, solid peace with you without vio- 
lating my conscience, for did I make peace on these terms I should 
only sow the seeds of far greater theological disagreement and more 
atrocious discord between us in future. . . . Let us rather bear a little 

1 Chapter xxi 



THE WITTENBERG AGREEMENT 289 

discord with an imperfect peace, than, by trying to cure this, create 
a more tragic schism and tumult. Please believe what I told you at 
Coburg, that I would like to heal this breach between us at the cost of 
my life three times over, for I see how needful is your fellowship to 
us and what damage our disunion has done the gospel. I am certain 
that, were we but united, all the gates of hell and all the papacy and 
all the Turks and all the world and all the flesh and whatever evil 
there is could not hurt us. Please impute it not to obstinacy but to 
conscience that I decline the union you propose. After our conference 
at Coburg I had high hopes, but as yet they have not proved well 
founded. May the Lord Jesus illumine us and make us more perfectly 
at one. .. . . 

How insistent Luther was that all with whom he claimed 
Christian fellowship should believe exactly as he did, and how 
sensitive he was lest it be thought that he had changed an iota 
of his opinion, is set forth in a letter to John Frosch, a minister 
of Augsburg, dated March 28, 1531 : — 

I have heard of the boasting of your Zwinglians that peace is made 
between us and that we have gone over entirely to your opinion. But, 
my dear Frosch, you must know that we have yielded nothing. Mar- 
tin Bucer, indeed, seems to be thoroughly convinced that we believe 
and teach the same doctrine, and of him personally I therefore enter- 
tain some hopes. Of the others I know nothing certain, but if they 
desire peace I should wish to indulge them little by little, tolerating 
their opinion for a time while holding fast to our own as heretofore. 
This much charity demands. 

Luther not only condemned the Swiss theology, but he enter- 
tained a deep, and as it proved, a well-founded distrust of the 
political aspirations of their leader. From the alliance of Hesse, 
Zurich, and Constance ' he predicted disaster. 

His gloomy prognostications were strikingly confirmed by 
the battle of Cappel, October 11, 1531, in which the Protestant 
cantons were defeated by the Catholic ; Zwingli lost his life 
and the Swiss allies of Hesse were rendered powerless. As in 
the destruction of Miinzer and the prophets six years before, 
the radical wing of the Protestant party was cut off and the 
leadership left to the conservative Lutheran branch. The Re- 
1 See letter to Elector John, December 12, 1530, p. 272. 



290 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

former regarded both events as providential judgments on 
error. Far from being moved by the heroic death of his rival, 
he was, if possible, more confirmed than ever in his unfavor- 
able estimate of his opinions and character. When he first 
heard of Cappel, he exclaimed : — 

God knows the counsels of the heart, and it is therefore a good 
thing that Zwingli, Carlstadt, and Pellican lie prostrate, for other- 
wise we could not hare withstood them and Strassburg and Hesse 
altogether. What a triumph for us it is that they have thus stultified 
themselves ! 

Again, when he learned of the death of CEcolampadius, 
which followed a few weeks later, he said : — 

Erasmus, CEcolampadius, Zwingli, and Carlstadt all relied on their 
own wisdom and were therefore confounded. But I know that God 
knows more than I do and I thank him for it. . . . Who would 
have believed ten years ago that we should have been so successful ? 

Regarding the heresy of Zwingli as so poisonous, Luther 
naturally continued to combat it vigorously. Not long after his 
rival's death he wrote a letter to one of the earliest converts to 
his faith, expressing his views with a freedom deeply resented 
by the Swiss. The unkindest cut was the juxtaposition of the 
name they revered with those of the ranters, for Luther ob- 
stinately persisted in confounding them : — 

TO DUKE ALBERT OP PRUSSIA 

{Wittenberg, February or beginning of March, 1532.) 
Grace and peace in Christ our Lord and Saviour. Serene, highborn 
Prince. I have received your Grace's letter on the sacrament and the 
sixth chapter of John. [Here follows a long exposition of this and 
other pertinent texts.] 

Such counsel of the Holy Ghost we must not despise, nor turn our- 
selves to others' boasting, but avoid them. " He who has counselled us 
will turn their boasting to shame, as he has already begun to do. For 
we saw what he did to Mtlnzer and his company, making them a hor- 
rible example to all ranters. For they boasted of the spirit and de- 
spised the sacrament, but they found out thoroughly what kind of a 
spirit it was. In like manner God has chased Carlstadt to and fro 
ever since he began his game and has left him no country for bis 



THE WITTENBERG AGREEMENT 291 

body and no rest for his heart, but has made him a true Cain, branded 
and cursed with fear and trembling. And recently God has notably 
punished the poor people of Switzerland, Zwingli and his followers, 
for they were hardened and perverted, condemned of themselves, as 
St. Paul says. They will all experience the same. 

Although neither Miinzerites nor Zwinglians will admit that they 
are punished by God, but give out that they are martyrs, neverthe- 
less we, who know that they have gravely erred in the sacrament and 
other articles, recognize God's punishment and beware of it ourselves. 
Not that we rejoice in their misfortune, which is and always has been 
a sorrow to our hearts, but we cannot let the witness of God pass 
unnoticed. We hope from the bottom of our hearts that they are 
saved, as it is not impossible for God to convert a man in a moment 
at his death ; but to call them martyrs implies that they died for a 
certain divine faith, which they did not. We do not send criminals 
whom we execute to hell, but we do not for that reason make martyrs 
of them. 

It astonishes me that the surviving Miinzerites and Zwinglians do 
not become converted by the rod of God ; they not only remain 
hardened in their former error, but give out that they are mar- 
tyrs. . . . 

It is true that the victory of the Catholic Swiss over Zwingli is not 
at all happy, nor does it win the victors great glory, inasmuch as they 
let the Zwinglian faith (as they call it) stand undisturbed by their 
treaty, and do not condemn this error, but let it pass, as they say, 
along with the rest of their old, indubitable faith ; this, perhaps, will 
only confirm the sacramentarians. We must believe that this is a 
chastisement of God, of which they cannot boast, for by it he has 
closed their mouths against their enemies and all godless papists, and 
has given the latter cause to boast, which I fear will finally bring down 
a judgment of God on both parties. . . . 

Wherefore I warn your Grace, and beg that you will avoid such peo- 
ple and not suffer them in your land. Your Grace must think that if you 
tolerate such ranters in your dominions when you can prevent it, you 
will terribly burden your conscience, so that perhaps you can never 
quiet it again ; you would be troubled not only for the sake of your 
soul, which would be damned thereby, but for the sake of the whole 
Christian Church, for if you allow any to teach against the long and 
unanimously held doctrine of the Church when you can prevent it, it 
may well be called an unbearable burden to conscience. I should 
rather have not only all ranters, but all powerful, wise emperors, 



292 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

kings, and princes testify against me than let one jot of the holy 
Christian Church hear or see anything against me. For we must not 
trifle with the articles of faith so long and unanimously held by 
Christendom, as we can with papal or imperial law or the human 
traditions of the fathers and the councils. 

This is my brief, humble, and Christian answer to your Grace. May 
Christ our Saviour richly enlighten and strengthen you to believe and 
act according to his holy Word. Amen. 

Your Grace's devoted 

M.ABTIN LUTHEB. 

Some months after writing the above missive Luther ex- 
pressed himself as to the probability of his enemies' salvation 
as follows : — 

It is much better and easier to pronounce Zwingli and CEcolampa- 
dius damned than saved, even if tbey did die for their faith. It is 
profitable to do this to deter others, both those now living and posterity, 
from their errors, for to call them saints and martyrs hurts many and 
confirms the sectaries in their opinions. 

Zwingli took the sword and received his reward, for Christ says : 
Whoso draweth the sjsvord shall perish by the sword. If God has 
saved his soul he has done it extra regulam. 

The blow to Protestantism in Switzerland made it all the 
more advisable that German Lutherans and Zwinglians should 
unite, and the danger of sacramentarian leadership being averted 
removed the obstacle to doing so on the part of Wittenberg. 
Philip of Hesse was again the mediator. Judging that better 
results would follow from a conference at which Luther was 
not present, he invited Melanchthon to meet Bucer at Cassel in 
December 1534, to discuss terms of agreement. Fearing that his 
friend would yield too much, Luther sent with him a written 
statement of his opinion in the strongest form, namely, that the 
body of the Lord was bitten by the teeth of the communicant. 
The meeting was, however, successful ; Bucer admitted the ab- 
sent reformer's contentions in such away as to convince the lattei 
that the Church of Upper Germany, at least, was on the right 
road. Thus he wrote to Philip of Hesse, January 30, 1535 : — 

I have now arrived at the point, thank God, where I can confidently 
hope that the ministers of Upper Germany heartily and earnestly be- 



THE WITTENBERG AGREEMENT 293 

lieve what they say. But inasmuch as neither side has completely as- 
certained the opinion of the other, it seems to me that we have done 
enough for the present until God helps us to a real, thorough union. 
A long standing and deep difference cannot come to an end suddenly. 

Nevertheless he wrote to Gerbel 1 November 27, 1535 : — 

What more joyful could happen to me, now that I have discharged 
the duties of life, used up with labor and sorrow and overtaken with 
old age, than that before my death I should see an unexpected peace ? 
... I say this that you may not doubt that I am heartily desirous of 
an agreement whatever may seem to interfere with one. If you will 
mediate I am willing to do and suffer all. I wish to be found a faith- 
ful servant of Christ in the Church even if I am not a very wise one. 

With such a spirit of eagerness on one side and of willing- 
ness on the other, it was natural that a still closer approach to 
unity should be made. Free correspondence between the leaders 
of both parties impressed on them the belief that all that was 
needed for perfect mutual understanding was a personal inter- 
view. The Upper Germans appealed to Luther to fix the time 
and place for such an assembly and he in turn consulted the 
Elector in a letter of January 25, 1536 : — 

The ministers of Strassburg and Augsburg are anxious for a meet- 
ing, for having thoroughly canvassed the subject, we are convinced 
that nothing remains but to draw up an agreement. There is no need, 
as they themselves acknowledge, of a great concourse, among whom 
some might be restless and recalcitrant and thus spoil our peaceful in- 
tentions. I therefore humbly beg your Grace to state what city would 
be best. 

The Elector at first assigned Eisenach as the place of meeting, 

but this was later changed, on account of Luther's health, to 

Wittenberg. A small number of the leading clergy of Upper 

Germany arrived on May 21, and the next day the conference 

began at the Black Cloister. After a week's deliberation Luther 

was finally convinced that the men present believed and taught 

the orthodox doctrine of the sacrament, namely, that the body 

and blood are really present in the elements of the eucharist 

When he announced that he regarded them all as brothers 
< 

1 Enders, zi, 126. On dating, see note, ibid. 128. 



294 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

tears sprang to the eyes of many. The conference was closed 
Saturday, May 27. The day following, one of the visiting di- 
vines, Alber, preached in the morning, Bucer at noon, and Lu- 
ther in the afternoon. The same evening Bucer and others were 
guests at the Black Cloister ; of their conversation on that oc- 
casion the following interesting fragment has been recorded : * — 

Luther — I liked your sermon right well, friend Bucer, and yet I 
think mine was better. 

Bucer — I gladly admit your superiority, doctor. 

Luther — I don't mean to boast ; I know my weakness and that I 
am not so acute and learned as you in my sermons. But when I enter 
the pulpit, I consider my audience, mostly poor laymen and Wends, 2 
and preach to them. Like a mother I try to give my children milk, 
and not some fine syrup from the apothecary. You preach over their 
heads, floating around in the clouds and in the " shpirit." ' 

In the mean time Melanchthon had drawn up a formula em- 
bodying the results of the conference, the Wittenberg Concord, 
as it was called, which was signed by all present, save one, on 
Monday, May 29. The same day the guests departed. With 
them Luther sent several letters on the agreement, one of which 
may be transcribed : — 

TO THE TOWN COUNCIL OF AUGSBURG 

Wittenberg, May 29, 1536. 
-Grace and peace in Christ. Honorable, wise, and dear friends ! I 
have heard both of your preachers, together with others, and have 
done all in my power for them, as they themselves will tell you. At 
last, thank God, we are at one on all things, so far as human power 
can tell ; wherefore I kindly arid humbly beg you, as much as you can, 
to make our union strong and permanent. I have earnestly prayed and 
admonished your ministers to do the same, that we may not only teach 
the same doctrine with our mouths but also trust one another from the 
bottom of our hearts, eradicating all offence as true love is bound to do. 
If our agreement please you and your ministers, kindly inform us, as 

1 Die handschriftliche Geschichte Ratzebergers, edited by Neudecker, 1850, 
pp. 87 f. 

2 The Wends were the remnants of the Slavonic population which had inhab- 
ited Germany before the arrival of the Teutons. 

8 Luther ridicules his guest's pronunciation of " Geist " (spirit) as " Gai$cH." 



THE WITTENBERG AGREEMENT 295 

we shall tell you and others how we are pleased with the union. Then 
we will have it publicly printed, to the praise of God and the hurt of 
the devil and his members. Amen. The Father of all comfort and 
peace strengthen and guide your hearts with us in the right knowledge 
of his dear Son our Lord Jesus Christ, in whom all the riches of wis- 
dom and knowledge are hidden. Amen. 

Your devoted 

M. L. 

Although the Wittenberg Agreement had reunited the 
Lutherans with the German followers of Zwingli the breach 
with the Swiss still remained. Bucer, cheered by the success of 
his last venture, hoped to heal this schism also, and, finding 
the Swiss divines ready to meet him halfway, approached 
Luther. His letter reached the Reformer while he was lying at 
Schmalkalden very ill, and was therefore not answered until 
December 6, 1537. This noncommittal reply left matters as 
they had been. 

In 1538 the Swiss again addressed themselves to Wittenberg. 
On April 15 one of their ministers, Simon Sulzer, visited Saxony 
and was received with friendliness at the Black Cloister. A 
little later Zwingli's successor at Zurich, Henry Bullinger, 
wrote Luther with the same end in view. The Reformer replied 
on May 14 : — 

Of Zwingli I will say freely that when I saw and heard him at Mar- 
burg I judged him an excellent man, as I did CEcolampadius. Their 
fate deeply shocked me, being, as 1 am forced to believe, a retribution 
on their obstinately held errors. 

After this no further efforts at unification were made. 



CHAPTER XXVII 

RELATIONS WITH FRANCE, ENGLAND, MATENCE AND 
ALBERTINE SAXONY 

Br 1535 the League of Schmalkalden had become one of the 
great powers of Europe. The Emperor was forced to treat with 
this combination of his subjects as with a foreign state, and 
the puissant monarchs of France and England sought alliance 
with it to bridle the overbearing dominion of the Hapsburgs. 
Francis, in courting the fellowship of the German Protestants, 
was moved by purely political motives, for there was never any 
serious question of his conversion. So earnest was he, however, 
in soliciting the heretics' support, that he not only sent a 
special embassy to Ernestine Saxony, but invited Melanchthon 
to visit his capital. Little as Luther trusted him he thought the 
invitation should be accepted for reasons explained in a letter. 

TO JOHN FKEDEBIC, ELECTOR OP SAXONY 

(Tobgau ?) August 17, 1535. 
Grace and peace and my poor paternoster. Most serene, highborn 
Prince, most gracious Lord ! I beg your Grace humbly and earnestly 
in God's name to let Philip Melanchthon go to France. I am moved 
to make this petition by the piteous letter of pious, honorable men [in 
France] who have barely escaped being burned. Melanchthon's re- 
ception by the king would bring such slaughter to an end. But if we 
fail these people the bloodhounds will have a pretext to do their worst 
with stake and axe, so that I think Melanchthon can hardly with a 
good conscience leave the men in such need and rob them of their 
desired comfort. Besides which the king might take offence against 
us all if we refused, for he himself graciously wrote the invitation 
and sent an embassy. Your Grace can leave the issue to God's mercy 
while Philip is absent three months. Who knows what God, whose 
thoughts are higher than our thoughts, will do ? . . . 

Dr. Martin Luther. 



ALBERT OF MAYENCE 297 

This letter was without effect, for John Frederic feared the 
acceptance of the invitation would provoke the Emperor, and 
moreover he thought that Melanchthon, whose yielding nature 
was only too well known, might be brought to make concessions 
prejudicial to sound doctrine. 

England, too, was now seeking the aid of the Schmalkaldic ' 
princes. As soon as Henry heard of the act of Francis, he 
dispatched Barnes in post haste with a similar invitation to ; 
Melanchthon to visit London. Luther also advised that this 
be accepted, but it was again denied. 1 

Two Catholic princes nearer home divided Luther's atten- 
tion with the rulers of France and England. Ever since 
1517 he had been in communication with Albert of Mayence. 
At the Diet of Worms, as Capito wrote to the Reformer, this 
ecclesiastic had advised moderation in dealing with the heretic. 
His letter of December 21, 1521, had been the beginning of 
a rapprochement, for Albert toyed with the idea of changing 
his religion and turning his archbishopric into a temporal 
fief. 

At Augsburg the Hohenzoller had again used his influence for 
peace. Shortly after this he drew down Luther's displeasure 
by certain acts hostile to the Evangelic faith, and in 1535 a 
furious quarrel was caused by a tyrannical act of the Macchia- 
vellian prince in the execution of one John Schenitz. 

This artisan had risen from a humble position to be a minion 
of the powerful Elector of Mayence, at whose request he 
was even ennobled by the Emperor in 1532. Two years later 
his power suddenly collapsed. He was accused, perhaps with 
justice, of fraud ; envious courtiers poisoned the mind of their 
lord ; an intrigue of Schenitz with one of Albert's mistresses 
aroused the prelate's jealousy, and finally a scapegoat was 
needed to satisfy the loud complaints of Albert's subjects 
against the extravagance of his administration. So in Septem- 
ber, 1534, he was arrested, and notwithstanding bribes offered 
by his brother Antony and an appeal to the Emperor, he 
was hanged at Giebichenstein in June, 1535. Antony, with 
Lewis Eabe, another courtier, fled to Wittenberg, where they 

1 Cf . chapter xvn on Luther and Henry VIII, p. 197. 



298 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

gave the Reformer their own account of the trial. When Albert 
complained that he misrepresented the facts he received the 
following stern letter from Luther: — 

TO ALBEKT, ABCHBISHOP OF MAYENCE 

Wittenberg, July 31, 1535. 

I wish you repentance and forgiveness of sins, most noble Prince, 
gracious Lord ! I am moved to indite this letter to your Holiness, not 
in the hope that it will do yon any good, but only to satisfy my con- 
science before God and the world and not to connive at your crimes 
by keeping silence. Lewis Babe has read me a letter in which your 
Holiness threatens to call him to account for mentioning John Schenitz 
whom you condemned. As he is my guest and your Holiness doubt- 
less knows that you are doing him wrong and do not speak the truth, 
I am forced to think that you are privily seeking a quarrel with me, 
or are vexed at the honest words of honest men. I can testify con- 
scientiously that Babe sits like a maiden at the table and often speaks 
more good of his infernal cardinal than I can well believe. He does 
not gad about the town but sits still in his room. The whole city was 
full of Schenitz' fate at least two days before either Babe or I heard 
of it, and we could hardly believe this noble deed of your Holiness, 
that Schenitz, so highly favored a minion, should suddenly be hanged 
by his dearest lord. Neither Babe nor I invented the story; the 
cardinal's name was spit upon and damned without our motion. 

If it is your intention to pick a quarrel with me it is my devout 
prayer that your Holiness should not strike at my guests and friends. 
... I hope your Holiness will not hang me as quickly as you did 
Schenitz. I propose to have my thoughts and opinions and also my 
conversations with my friends free and unforbidden by your Holiness, 
just as I must allow you a similar privilege. If I am a little incred- 
ulous about what might be said against Schenitz and for your Holiness 
— though I have not heard anything like that hitherto — it is a sin 
which may be forgiven me without one of your Holiness's indulgences. 
If your Holiness would hang all who speak evil and shame of you in 
this and in other matters, you would not find rope enough in all Ger- 
many. No matter how busily the infernal cardinal plied the hangman's 
trade, some would escape. ... If your Holiness is anxious to know 
what people are saying about you throughout Germany, I can very 
well publish it, and relate everything which stands to the credit of 
such a horrible holy man, clear from the beginning about indulgences 



ALBERT OF MAYENCE 29B 

fifteen years ago. Your Holiness is not well advised to stir up so foul 
a matter nor to raise that bitter enemy Rumor against you. . . . 

In writing this letter to your Holiness for the last time, I must take 
comfort that you cannot hang all your enemies, though it were indeed an 
easy matter to hang all who wish you well. Leave off your attacks on 
God and his Church and let a few live until the infernal torturer gets 
hold of you. Amen. 

Dr. Martest Luther, Preacher at Wittenberg. 

Albert endeavored to appease Luther by turning to their com- 
mon friends John Eiihel and Prince George of Anhalt as 
mediators, but he only succeeded in making him angrier than 
before. About the end of January, 1536, the Reformer wrote 
him another letter in the tone of that last given, threatening a 
book against him charging him with a number of crimes and 
vices as well as with the murder of Schenitz. The archbishop 
applied to his powerful relative the Elector of Brandenburg, 
who, with himself, made diplomatic representations at the court 
of Saxony too strong to be ignored. The chancellor of John 
Frederic, Gregory Briick, writing to Luther on the subject, 
received an answer, dated December 10, 1536, containing the 
following paragraph : — 

You have informed me that my gracious lord, moved thereto by 
letters from the Elector of Brandenburg and his family, has instructed 
you to ask me about my proposed pamphlet against the cardinal of 
Mayence. I give you to know that I intend to write it, but wish the 
Elector of Brandenburg and his relatives nothing but good. . I told 
them at Torgau and elsewhere that I should prefer to see them take 
their noble cousin the cardinal in hand themselves and make him 
cease from evil, for truly I am of the opinion that he has mocked our 
dear Lord Jesus Christ and plagued poor folk enough. If they did so 
it would do more good than for them to complain against my writings. 
My pamphlet will contain little that is new ; I simply mean to uncork 
that prelate's nose, for it is stopped up so tight that he cannot smell 
how he stinks unless he is forced to. 

Business and ill health delayed the publication until Luther 
had cooled off sufficiently to allow himself to be persuaded not 
to write the obnoxious pamphlet at all. He often thought over 
the cardinal's sins, however ; on July 1, 1538, for example, he 



SOO THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

sighed and said : " Dear Lord Jesus Christ, give me life and 
strength and I will shave that parson's head, for he is a wicked 
and crafty mocker of all men." 

Another magnate with whom Luther's relations were chronic- 
ally bad was Duke George of Albertine Saxony. Ever since 
the Leipsic debate the Reformer had hated him as the most con- 
sistent enemy of the gospel. The quarrel which had flamed up 
in 1529 as a sequel to the Pack affair 1 broke out again in 1531, 
when the Duke answered Luther's Warning to his dear Germans, 
and when one of his clergy replied to the Gloss on the Putative 
Imperial Edict. 2 The Reformer received his opponent's work 
before it had been published and replied in a characteristically 
severe pamphlet Against the Assassin of Dresden. This book- 
let was ready for the Leipsic fair of the spring of 1531, for 
notwithstanding the supervision of the Duke many of Luther's 
works found their way to his capital. It may have been as a 
reply to this that in 1532 he passed a law that his subjects 
should take the sacrament once a year at least according to the 
rites of the Catholic Church, making exile the punishment of 
those who refused — exactly the measure of persecution adopted 
against the papists in Ernestine Saxony. Luther was furious 
when he heard of this law against his co-religionists : — 

They say a mad dog lives only nine days, but Duke George has 
been mad nine years. He will be a lunatic soon. He has just exiled 
some of his subjects on account of the sacrament. 

To the Protestants of Albertine Saxony, who wrote Luther 
asking what was their duty at this conjuncture, he answered : — 

TO THE EVANGELIC CHRISTIANS AT LEIPSIC 

Wittenberg, April 11, 1533. 

Grace and peace in Christ, who suffers and is put to death among 
you, but who will certainly rise and reign. 

I have heard, dear friends, that some of you wish to know whether 
they may take the sacrament under one kind with good conscience, 
saying that if they only do that the government will be satisfied. Al- 
though I know none of you nor how your hearts and minds are fixed, 
yet this is my counsel : "Whoso is convinced that God's Word commands 

1 Cf . Chapter XIX. a Chapter XXIV. 



DUKE GEORGE 301 

the sacrament to be dispensed in both kinds should not do anything 
contrary to his conscience, for that would be tantamount to acting 
against God himself. And as Duke George has undertaken to search 
out the secrets of conscience, he will deserve to be deceived, as an 
apostle of the devil, which could easily be done, as he has no right to 
make such an inquiry, but sins against God and the Holy Ghost. And 
yet, as we must not do wrong because others do — though they be 
murderers and brigands — but must only decide what is right for us 
to do, in the circumstances it would be better to say to the murderer 
and brigand openly : " I will not do what you command ; take my 
body and estate, and thereby injure him by whom you will be called 
to strict account, for Peter says, ' Jesus Christ is ready to judge the 
quick and the dead.' "Wherefore, dear brigand, go on as you like ; what 
you will I will not, but what I will, God wills also, as you shall soon 
find out." We must smite the devil in the face with the cross and not 
whistle to bim nor flatter him, so that he will know with whom he has 
to do. May Christ our Lord strengthen you and be with you. Amen. 
Dr. Martin Luther, with his own hand. 

It is hardly surprising that the prince designated as the 
" devil's apostle " should complain that Luther was stirring up 
revolt among his subjects. Peace was made by a meeting of 
diplomats of each branch of the house of Wettin, only to be 
broken the next year when Duke George's son complained 
that Luther was praying against his father. To the Elector's 
inquiries Luther guardedly answered that he did not know 
whether he had done so or not, but at his sovereign's request 
he consented to abstain from public prayers of such a kind in 
future. A truce was thus observed during the five remaining 
years of George's life. The quarrel is not wholly to Luther's 
credit. The Duke was in many ways an estimable character, 
sincerely convinced of his faith, and yet never, like so many 
other princes, staining his hands in the blood of the Protestants. 

The Reformer's opinion of his demerits was only confirmed 
by his peculiarly tragic end. One by one all of his sons died, 
last of all Frederic, an idiot who succumbed to powerful reme- 
dies administered to make him capable of having children. The 
forlorn old duke made a will leaving his domains to his brother 
Henry, known to be a Lutheran, only on condition that he 



S02 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

embraced the Catholic faith ; otherwise he devised his lands to 
King Ferdinand. On his death, April, 1539, Henry the Pious 
succeeded, and, disregarding the will, at once introduced the 
Reformation with the general consent of his subjects, most of 
whom had already become secretly converted. Luther and 
Melanchthon accepted his invitation to visit Leipsic during 
the festival attending the public adoption of the Protestant 
faith. The journey was a triumph contrasting strongly with 
the visit of twenty years before, when, frowned upon by the 
government and hooted by the populace, the Wittenbergers 
had come to debate with Eck. 

Luther was hardly convinced of the sincerity of the con- 
version. When his friend Link was called to fill a position 
in the capital of Albertine Saxony, the Reformer wrote him, 
October 26, 1539 : — 

I would by no means advise you to change your present position 
for one at Leipsic. There they were debating who or what will support 
the ministers of the Word. If the people are well disposed, neverthe- 
less the nobles regard Wittenberg with their old hatred. Duke George 
is not dead there as yet, and it is uncertain whether he will die or 
rather come back again soon. Indeed I hate that sink of usury and 
other wrongs, that Sodom which must be saved for the sake of Lot 
only. The remriant of the city is provided for by a happy introduction 
of the Evangelic Church. 



CHAPTER XXVin 

THE LEAGUE OF SCHMALKALDEN. 1535-1839 

A new phase in the history of the Reformation was ushered in 
by the death, in October, 1534, of Clement VII, and the election 
of Paul III, a man of very different type, whose main interest 
was not to enjoy the temporal benefits of the papacy, but to for- 
ward the cause of the Church and especially to stamp out the 
growing heresy. He hoped to accomplish this by means of an 
oecumenic council, for to such a body the Protestants themselves 
had often appealed for a final settlement of orthodox faith. To 
arrange for the summoning of such an assembly he sent to Ger- 
many as nuncio Vergerio, Bishop of Capo d'Istria. On the way 
from Berlin to Dresden this prelate took the longer road by 
Wittenberg, excusing himself in a letter to a friend for visiting 
this sink of heresy, by saying that he was forced to do it to avoid 
the plague endemic in the smaller villages. At Wittenberg, 
where he arrived November 6, 1535, he was received with cere- 
mony by the bailiff, John von Metsch, and lodged in the elect- 
oral castle. On the very night that he came he invited Luther, 
Bugenhagen, and their English friend Barnes, now here on of- 
ficial business, to " dinner after the bath," according to the then 
polite usage. This was declined, but the following day the Ger- 
mans — not Barnes — accepted a second invitation to the ten 
o'clock lunch which was then the principal repast. Luther's pre- 
parations for this meeting, which, by the way, was on Sunday, 
are recorded by one of the reporters of the table-talk : — 

Luther sent for the barber early to shave him. When he asked why 
he was thus summoned, Luther replied : " I am told that an agent of 
the Holy Father the Pope has come and that I am to speak with him. 
If, therefore, I have a young appearance the legate will think : ' The 
devil ! If Luther who is not yet old has been able to give so much 
trouble, what will he do when he gets on in life ? ' " J 

1 The doctor's desire to appear young was realized; the nuncio wrote that 



SM THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

When shaved, the doctor put on his best clothes and a gold chain 
around his neck. " Professor," said the barber, " you will offend 
them. " Luther replied : " I do it for that very purpose ; they have 
offended us enough and one must deal thus with foxes and serpents." 
The barber : " Go in peace ; the Lord grant that you may convert 
them." Luther : " I shall not do that, but it is possible that they may 
be reproved by me before they are dismissed." 

Luther and Bugenhagen then drove to the castle, where they 
were met by the bailiff, John von Metsch. Here, in a dining- 
room, was enacted the following little drama : 1 — 

Enter John von Metsch with Luther and Bugenhagen. 

Metsch — My Lord, let me present Dr. Luther and our pastor 
Bugenhagen — the best company we have for you in "Wittenberg. 
(Turning to Luther) This is my lord the legate of his Holiness Paul 
III. 

Luther (taking off his cap) 2 — How do you do ? So you come from 
Paul III, do you ? I remember hearing when I was in Rome many 
years ago (smiling sarcastically) , celebrating masses by the bushel, that 
he who is now Pope was better than the average run of priests. 

Vergerio — Let us sit down to table, gentlemen. (They do so ; 
Metsch, who waits on the table himself, pours wine.) 

Luther (taking a sip of wine) — I daresay that before you came 
to Germany you heard that I was drunk most of the time ? 

Vergerio — I did hear some things, professor. — I regret that the 
Englishman was unable to accept my invitation to dinner. Who is he, 
anyway ? 

Luther — Oh, he is King Henry's private secretary sent as special 
ambassador to us. He mentioned that his monarch had just put to 
death a couple of bishops ; * I told him I wished it had been a hun- 
dred. 

Vergerio — How can you praise sufficiently what he has done to 
these two holy men ? 

although fifty he looked only forty. The Italian gentleman, however, ridiculed the 
ex-monk's dress and poor way of living. 

1 For the sources of this see the bibliography at the end of the book. I have 
followed them as accurately as possible, simply turning some indirect into direct 
discourse and supplying a few absolutely necessary jnnctura. 

2 This courtesy was so much less than the legate expected that he found it an 
insult. 

8 Luther means Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, and Sir Thomas More, who was not 
a bishop. 



THE LEAGUE OF SCHMALKALDEN 305 

Luther — It would be hard to do so. (Vergerio gnaws his lips and 
makes a furious gesture.) England is certainly coming over to our 
side and would support the German Protestants against the Catholics. 
Vergerio — Don't be deceived by his arguments and his bribes. We 
should do far better to make common cause against this monster than 
to eat each other up. (Pause.) Speaking of bishops how do you get 
along here without any to ordain your priests ? 

Luther (pointing to Bugenhagen) — There sits the bishop appointed 
for that purpose. 

Bugenhagen (solemnly nodding) — Aye, we ordain them according 
to the method taught by the Apostle Paul. 
Vergerio (sarcastically) — Indeed ! 

Luther (warmly) — You see, my lord, we are compelled to ; and 
men publicly approved are thus ordained. 

Vergerio — What do you mean by " compelled " ? 
Luther (hotly) — Your Roman bishops are too holy for us ; they 
despise us and won't do it, so we have to provide for our own souls, 
and we appoint one of ourselves to take the place of the bishop. 

Vergerio — I suppose these priests think it better to marry than to 
burn ? 

Luther — Aye, they are husbands of one wife. I have an honorable 
nun myself ; we have three boys and two girls. The eldest boy is nine. 1 
I expect he will be a great Evangelic theologian some day to take my 
place. 

Vergerio — Do you teach him to fast and pray ? 
Luther (fiercely) — Not when the Pope orders him to. 
Vergerio — Do you mean to say that you refuse to fast just because 
our Holy Father the Pope commands it ? 

Luther — Precisely ; if it were the Emperor, now, we would ; we 
respect him. 

Vergerio — What you say is really incomprehensible. Don't you 
know that the Emperor himself is a mere creature of the Pope ? Ths 
Supreme Pontiff crowns him and our Holy Mother Church created 
the Empire. But to come to the point. If the Pope, whom you insult, 
were to summon a general council of the Church, would you come 
to it? 

Luther — I think a general, free, Christian council would be an 

extremely useful and necessary thing ; not for us, indeed, for we know 

the truth, but for foreign nations. But you only pretend to call a 

council, not acting sincerely nor really wishing for one. But supposing 

1 Vergerio says Luther said " twelve " ; this is a mistake. 



306 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

you did call a council, you would only discuss useless things, cowls, 
priests' tonsures, food and drink, and such external things as, we 
know, justify no man before God. But of faith, true penitence, just- 
ification and other necessary things, and how those who believe in 
spirit and in truth may live at one — of these things you will not so 
much as make mention. "Wherefore we do not need a council, bvit you, 
miserable men, do need one, for your faith is vain and uncertain. 

Vergerio — Luther, what do you mean ? Beware lest you take too 
much on yourself ; you are a man and can err. Do you think you are 
wiser, more learned, more holy than so many councils, holy fathers, 
and learned men throughout the whole world who confess Christ and 
profess his religion ? It is only your arrogance that rebels. 

Luther (fiercely) — My arrogance ! I tell you, man, my wrath is 
God's wrath ! 

Vergerio — But would you come ? 

Luther — Yes, and lose my head. I will appear, God willing, if 
you burn me for my faith. 

Vergerio — Tell me in what place or city you think the council 
should be called. 

Luther — Mantua, Padua, Florence — it 's all one to me. 

Vergerio — Would you come to Bologna ? 

Luther — To whom does Bologna belong ? 

Vergerio — To the Pope. 

Luther — Good God ! Has the Pope seized that city, too ? Well, I 
will come to you there. 

Vergerio — Neither would the Pope refuse to come to you at Wit- 
tenberg. 

Luther — Let him come, we will receive him cordially. 

Vergerio — If he came armed or in peace ? 

Luther — As he pleases. Only let him come, we will expect and 
await him. (They rise from table, and go outside where Vergerio's 
retinue are awaiting him. Vergerio mounts his horse.) 

Vergerio — Be sure and be ready for the council. 

Luther — Yes, my lord, with my life. 

Of the nuncio's visit Luther wrote on November 10 to 
Jonas : — 

The Pope's legate appeared unexpectedly in this city. He is now 
with the Margrave of Brandenburg ; one would think he rather flew 
than rode. Would that you had been here to see him ! He invited 
Bugenhagen and me to lunch when we had declined his invitation " to 



THE LEAGUE OF SCHMALJCALDEN 807 

dinner after the bath " the night before. I went and ate with him in 
the castle, but what I said is not lawful for a man to write. I played 
Luther in the disagreeablest words, of which I shall tell you when I 
see you. I also had to play the part of Barnes, who was invited but 
did not go as he will inform you. 

On June 2, 1536, the Pope actually summoned the long 
talked of council to meet at Mantua on May 23, 1537. When 
the news reached Wittenberg in December, 1536, Luther said : 

If the Pope cites me I will not go. I spit on his citation because he 
is my adversary. But if the council summons me I will obey, and I 
would like to be welcome and kindly received. But the bull Ccena 
Domini 1 has most horribly damned me and excommunicated all my 
friends. Even you, dear Katie, if you were with me, would be tor- 
tured although you adored the whole papacy. The Lord keep me in 
his "Word ! I have bitter enemies and Vergerio said the Roman See 
had no worse enemy than me. 

Various methods were suggested by which the Protestants 
might meet the invitation of the Pope to take part in the coun- 
cil. John Frederic proposed that they should call a counter- 
council, an act from which Luther dissuaded him, as savoring 
of wilful schism. To decide on a consistent course of action 
the Protestant princes and theologians met in a congress at 
Schmalkalden in February, 1537. In preparation for this 
Luther drew up a confession of faith, known as the Schmal- 
kaldic Articles. In emphasizing the differences of the Protest- 
ants and Catholics the Articles formed a strong contrast 
with the intentionally conciliatory Augsburg Confession. The 
chief points of variance were stated to be the following : 1. That 
men are saved by faith, not by works. 2. That the mass, con- 
sidered as a good work, is a horror and ought to be abolished. 
3. That all foundations for the endowment of perpetual masses 
be abolished. 4. That the Pope is not the head of the universal 
Church but only Bishop of Rome. Melanchthon modified this 
statement by adding that if the Pope left the Protestants to rule 
themselves, they would not interfere with his de facto suprem- 
acy in other parts. Sundry other demands, of subordinate 
importance, were added. 

1 1521. 



308 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

wLuther intended to present his articles to the congress in 
person, but after he arrived a severe attack of the stone pre- 
vented him from taking part in the sittings of the princes. 
Melanchthon was left at the helm, and he induced the Elector to 
substitute for the articles the Augsburg Confession, supple- 
mented by a statement written by himself on the extent of the 
papal power. These documents were accordingly accepted by 
the allies, who decided not to attend the council and sent back 
the Pope's invitation unopened. This was a significant step. 
Hitherto the Protestants had claimed to be a party within the 
old Church, and had repeatedly requested a council to decide on 
the orthodoxy of their claims. Now, however, they boldly pro- 
claimed that their communion was distinct from that of Some. 
All other interests, however, were for the moment over- 
shadowed by Luther's illness ; the chief fears of the allies were 
for his life. It often happened to him that a change of scene 
and diet proved unwholesome, never more so than now. His 
old malady the stone became very acute. His sufferings began 
almost as soon as he arrived ; after February 11 he was obliged 
to keep to his room in the inn. He kept up his good spirits, 
however, as is shown by his letter to a friend at home. 

TO JUSTUS JONAS AT WITTENBERG 

Chalcis 1 (Sohmalkalden), February 14, 1537. 

Grace and peace in Christ. I wrote you yesterday, dear Jonas, that 
is, on St. Valentine's eve ; now I write you on the saint's day, as he 
keeps me here against my will. Last night Valentine a began to make 
me convalescent from the stone ; not indeed that Valentine who is the 
idol of epileptics, but the true and only valiant Valentine who saves 
those that trust in him. I hope that I shall at length be well by his 
grace. This is the eighth day since I stick or rather hang here, sick 
and tired of the place and of the inn and desirous of returning. For I 
am useless here. The princes and estates act differently from what I 
advised regardless of me. 

Dr. Pauli and Dr. Sindringer have become the bitterest enemies of 
the Pope. How they tear him to pieces with his own decrees! I will 

1 Pun on "calculus," the stone. 
' 2 Fuu on the name of the saint as the patron of health, valens. 



THE LEAGUE OF SCHMALKALDEN 309 

tell you of it when I see you. Dr. Held, the Emperor's ambassador, 
arrived yesterday and perhaps spoke before the congress to-day. 

I am a beggar here, eating the bread of the Landgrave of Hesse 
and the Duke of Wttrttemburg (for they have the best loaves and fishes) 
and drinking the wine of Nuremberg ; our own Elector sends me meat 
and fish. You told me heavy bread caused the stone and now I learn 
it by experience, for that is the kind of bread we get here. I have the 
very best trout, but they are cooked in the same way and with the same 
water as the other fish. Oh, it is a merry dish ! I am accustomed to 
ask for them uncooked from " the cooks of the earth," ' and give 
them to the Nuremberg chef to be prepared. Our Elector cares for me 
in all things and orders everything to be supplied to me as carefully 
as possible, but his orders are interfered with by his toadies, moadies, 
noadies, and loadies. I have nothing else to write. Farewell in the 
Lord and pray for me. 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 

After the temporary respite just spoken of, the disease re- 
sumed its course. The patient suffered intense pain, as well as 
great discomfort in other ways. The doctors used all the 
remedies in their power, some of which perhaps did more harm 
than good, but at last despaired of his life. During these days 
his old amanuensis Veit Dietrich, now a Nuremberg clergyman 
attending the congress, was constantly with him and according 
to his old practice again took down his master's sayings. A few 
of these 2 illustrating the bravery of the sick man may be of 
interest : — 

Saturday, February 24, when Melanchthon burst into tears on see- 
ing Luther, the latter said : " John Liiser is accustomed to say that it 
is no credit to drink good beer, but that the real test is drinking bad 
beer ; I have need of the philosophy now. Have we received good at 
the hands of the Lord and shall we not also receive evil ? As the Lord 
willed so it has happened ; blessed be the name of the Lord. In times 
past I have often played a dangerous game with the Pope and with 
the devil, but the Lord marvellously saved and strengthened me ; why 

1 "Cooks of the earth "is an allusion to a joke made by Luther's little son. 
Asked by his father who was the dirtiest (immundus) eook, he replied " a cook of 
the earth (in mundo)." 

2 Taken from Kostlin-Kawerau : Martin Luther, ii, 388, where they are quoted 
from Dietrich's unpublished notes, 



310 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

should I not now bear with equanimity what the Lord inflicts ? My 
death is as nothing compared with that of the Son of God; many 
great and holy men have died before me, whose companions I am not 
worthy to be, but if I wish to be with them I must also die. There- 
fore I pray God with good courage, for our Lord is the Lord of life 
and has us in his hand. 

" How quickly I am changed by disease — Quantum mutatus db 
illo! But lately I wandered through the woods in good health. 
God, we are nothing! I should lite to pray our Lord God — even to 
complain a little — that I might die in my Saxony ; if that cannot be 
I am ready to die when and where he calls me, and I shall die the 
enemy of all the enemies of my Lord Jesus Christ. If I die under the 
ban of the Pope, the Pope will die under the ban of my Lord Christ." 

The next day, after a violent attack of vomiting, he said : " Dear 
Father, take my soul in thy hand. . . . Let me die. If this pain lasts 
longer, I shall go mad and fail to recognize thy goodness. If it were 
not for my faith in Christ I would kill myself. The devil hates me 
and has his claws in me, but do thou, God, avenge me on mine adver- 
sary ; let me die and pay thou the devil as he deserves." 

Long afterwards he said : — 

Oh, how I wanted my wife and children at Schmalkaklen ! I thought 
I wpuld never see them more. How sorrowful that separation made 
me ! I believe that the natural love of husband for wife and parents 
for children is greatest in dying people. But now that I am well again 
by God's grace, I love my wife and children all the more. No one is 
so spiritual as not to feel natural inclination and love, for the union of 
man and wife is a great thing. 

Luther was anxious to leave Schmalkalden so as not to die in 
the vicinity of " that monster " the Pope's legate, and also to 
spend his last hours in Saxony. Melanchthon would have held 
him back on account of the new moon, but Luther was free 
from this form of superstition and insisted on setting out. He 
did so, in company with Bugenhagen, Sturtz, Myconius, and 
Schlaginhaufen, on February 26. The jolting of the carriage on 
the rough road was such torture to him that he cried out: "Would 
that some Turk would fall upon me and kill me ! " At Tambach, 
only two miles away, he was forced to halt. The same night he 
was unexpectedly, as he believed miraculously, relieved. He lost 
no time in dictating the following letters: — 



THE LEAGUE OF SCHMALKALDEN 811 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON AT SCHMALKALDEN 

Tambach, February 27, 1537. 

Dearest Philip: Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus 
Christ, the Father of mercies and of all consolation, who this night at 
two o'clock took pity on me and relieved my sufferings. ... At 
last I was able to pass water. . . . 

I am writing at once. Please tell the news to my dear and gracious 
lords and all others, for I know how gladly they helped me. Let it go 
with me as God wills ; I am ready to live or die, now that I have es- 
caped from the pit into our own Saxony, and have here obtained 
grace. I have written this in haste. Schlaginhaufen will tell you the 
rest. He cannot be kept back but will fly to you. Thank God for 
what has happened and continue to pray that he may perfect his work. 
This is an example of how we should pray and trust in help from 
heaven. May God preserve you all and beat down Satan and all his 
monstrous Roman allies under your feet. Amen. Written at two 
thirty in the night from Tambach, the place of my blessing, which 
is my Phanuel in which God appeared to me. 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 

The next morning as Schlaginhaufen galloped into Schmal- 
kalden with this letter, he saw the Pope's legate looking out of 
the window and shouted to him: "Luther lives." In the mean 
time word had been dispatched 

TO CATHARINE LUTHER AT WITTENBERG 

Tambach, February 27, 1537. 

Grace and peace in Christ. Dear Katie, if you need horses on the 
farm you must hire them a while longer, for the Elector is going to 
keep your horses and send them home with Melanchthon. 

Yesterday I left Schmalkalden in the Elector's private carriage. The 
reason I left was that for three days I have been very unwell, unable 
to pass water the whole time. I could not rest nor sleep at night nor 
•keep anything on my stomach. In short I was dead and commended 
you and the children to God and to my gracious Elector, thinking 
that I would never see you more. My heart was moved for you, for I 
thought I was surely in the grave. But men have prayed hard to God 
and perhaps some have wept before him, so that he has healed me 



312 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

this night. Wherefore thank God and ask the children and Aunt Lena 
to do the same, for you almost lost me. The good Elector did everything 
in his power for me but in vain. Moreover your medicine * did not help 
me. But God wrought a miracle on me this night, and will continue 
to do so at the prayers of pious people. 

I am writing to you because I heard that the Elector ordered his 
bailiff to send you to me so that if I should die on the road you might 
speak with me again. There is no need of this now, as God has helped 
me so much that I expect to come soon and happily. To-day we are 
going to Gotha. I have written you four letters since I left home and 
am surprised that nothing has come from you. 

Martin Luther. 

The crisis was past, but a period of lassitude and weakness 
followed. This was so great that when Luther reached Gotha 
he believed he was going to die after all. The following day he 
accordingly dictated a farewell document usually known as his 
first will, though it is not at all what we understand by a test- 
amentary disposition of property, but rather a few valedictory 
precepts and messages : — 

luther's (first) will 

(Gotha, February 28, 1537.) 

God be praised. I know I did right to attack the papacy, which 
injures the cause of God, Christ, and the gospel. 

Ask my dear Melanchthon, Jonas, and Cruciger to forgive me what 
wrong I have done them. 

Console my Katie that she may bear this, and let her consider that 
she has been happy with me twelve years. She has served me not 
only as a wife but as a servant. May God reward her ! Care for her 
and the children as you can. 

Greet the deacons of my church for me. The pious citizens of Wit- 
tenberg have often served me. 

Say to my Prince the Elector and my Lord the Landgrave not to be 
disturbed by the charges of our enemies who allege that they will 
steal the church property, for they will not seize it as some others 
have done. I see that they rather use the church property to support 
religious undertakings. If there is any surplus, why should it not go 
to them ? It certainly belongs to the princes rather than to papa). 

1 A mixture of garlic and hones' dung-. 



THE LEAGUE OF SCHMALKALDEN 313 

wretches. Bid them act boldly in the Evangelic cause, and do what 
the Holy Spirit may suggest; I do not prescribe the way. May God 
the merciful strengthen them to remain in the sound doctrine, and 
let them give thanks that they are freed from Antichrist. I have 
earnestly commended them to God in prayer, and hope that he will 
preserve them and that they may not relapse into papal impiety. 
Even if they are not pure in all things but sinners in some, let them 
nevertheless confide in God, notwithstanding the calumnies and ac- 
cusations of our adversaries. For their sins are as nothing compared 
to the impiety, blasphemy, hatred, and murders of our antichristian 
enemies. From these sins God has freed our princes. Therefore let 
them be strong and proceed in the Lord's name. 

Now I am prepared to die if the Lord will. But I should like to 
live until Pentecost, that I may more solemnly and publicly accuse 
the Roman Beast and his reign. I will do this if I live ; I shall not 
need spurs. Others will come after me who will deal more rudely 
with that beast, although I, too, if I live, will deal more roughly in 
future. 

Now I commend my soul into the hands of my Lord Jesus Christ, 
whom I have preached and confessed on earth. 

The weakness was not fatal after all, and in five or six days 
Luther was able to move on by slow stages. Jonas met him on 
the road with one of Luther's nieces as nurse, and Katie came 
as far as Altenburg to see her husband. Here she was enter- 
tained by George Spalatin. Luther was soon able to move on 
again and reached home on March 14 ; a week later he was 
able to write this note : — 

TO GEORGE SPALATIN AT ALTENBURG 

( Wittenbebo,) March 21, 1537. 
Grace and peace in Christ. I am able to write again, dear Spala- 
tin, after my long vacation from literary labors. By God's grace I am 
convalescing slowly, and am learning to eat and drink again, although 
my knees and bones sink in and are not able to bear my body stead- 
ily. More of my strength is exhausted than I would have believed 
possible, but I will rest and take care of myself until God makes me 
strong again. My Katie greets you and says that she regrets that she 
brought your daughters no-present, but that she is going to have some 
books bound and send them as a souvenir of her visit. In the mean 



314 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

time she asks to be kindly remembered to you. She often speaks at 
length of your urbane benevolence and benevolent urbanity. Fare- 
well in Christ and pray for me. 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 

In anticipation of the calling of a council, Luther published, 
in March, 1539, an important book On Councils and the 
Church, at which he had worked during the winter of 1536-37 
until interrupted by the events just recorded. The first two 
sections, which the author himself termed " weak and verbose," 
set forth the history of the early councils of the Church for 
the purpose of demolishing their authority, and especially of 
proving that such bodies haye no claim to inerrancy or obedi- 
ence at present. The third section is on the Church, of which 
the writer exclaims :J-' Praise God, every child of seven years old 
knows what it is." Nowadays we speak of many churches, to 
Luther there was only one, " the true," set over against " the 
false church " of the papacy. The true Church he defines as 
the holy community of Christians, and one may recognize it by 
a number of outward signs, of which the following are the 
most important : The Church exists wherever : (1) God's Word 
is preached, (2) baptism is administered, (3) the Lord's Sup- 
per is eaten, (4) the power of the keys (forgiveness and punish- 
ment) is exercised, (5) there is a regular priesthood, (6) public 
prayer, praise, and thanks are offered up, (7) there is the cross 
and persecution. In closing, the Reformer gives a short exposi- 
tion of his ideas of the divine economy, according to which 
the family, the State, and the Church are the three providential 
ordinances for the governance and well-being of mankind. 

It being now clear that the Protestants would not submit to 
a council, to which they had earlier appealed, the Emperor 
continued to treat witj them about other means of settling the 
religious question. For this purpose a conference was arranged 
at Frankfort in the spring of 1539, the Lutheran Church being 
represented by Melanchthon. The Emperor agreed to suspend 
all proceedings against the Protestants for fifteen months, and 
the settlement of the religious question was relegated to a Ger- 
man national synod, called to meet at Spires in June, 1540. 



THE LEAGUE OF SCHMALKALDEN 815 

No mention of a general council was made. That called for 
1537 had been postponed, and did not in fact meet until 1545. 
The treaty of Frankfort, signed April 19, 1539, marks the 
most important advance made by the Lutherans since the peace 
of Nuremberg, seven years before. 



CHAPTER XXIX 

CHARACTER AND HABITS 

There is no good portrait of Lather after his forty-third year, 
but from the numerous inferior pictures painted by Lucas Cran- 
ach's sons and apprentices and from a number of descriptions it 
is possible to get a fairly good idea of his personal appearance. 
The accounts are somewhat contradictory in details, as, for ex- 
ample, his eyes are variously reported to have been black, brown, 
and dark with yellow rings around the pupils. Almost all, how- 
ever, were impressed by the restless fire that flashed from them, 
and by the lion-like mien of the man. In later life his form be- 
came portly, but in spite of illness he retained a look of uncom- 
mon youth and vigor. His hair turned gray but did not become 
sparse. In his last years traces of suffering and irritability ap- 
peared, though when he was forty-two even an enemy found his 
expression pleasant and serene. 1 

In dress Luther's tastes were of the simplest. His ordinary 
habit was the layman's jerkin and hose, which were sometimes 
poor and patched. He occasionally mended his clothes him- 
self; in the first half of 1539 Lauterbach heard Katie complain 
that her husband had cut a piece out of his son's trousers to 
supply his own. He defended himself thus : — 

The hole was so large that I had to have a large patch for it. 
Trousers seldom fit me well, so I have to make them last long. If the 
Electors Frederic and John had not better tailors than I have they 
would mend their own breeches. The Italian tailors are the best. They 
divide the labor, some making coats, some cloaks, and some trousers. 
But in Germany they do it hit or miss, making all trousers according 
to one pattern. "We praise the good old times but we live in the 
present. Think what an eye-sore it is to see a man with trousers like 
a pigeon and a coat so short that one can see his back between it and 
1 Cf . supra, visit of Vergerio, Chapter xxvm. 



CHARACTER AND HABITS 317 

the trousers. There is a proverb that "short-coated Saxons jump 
like magpies." 

On festive occasions and when preaching, Luther wore a gown 
and on gala days a gold chain around his neck, an attempt at 
adornment which a polished and hostile Italian gentleman who 
saw him in 1535 found rather ridiculous. 1 At all times a silver 
ring graced one finger. Luther's standards of cleanliness were 
relatively high. He had a bath-room with tubs in his house ; after 
using it one day he remarked, at dinner : — 

"Why is the water so dirty after bathing ? Ah ! I forgot that the 
body is dirt, as the Bible says, " Thou art dust and ashes." Why art 
thou proud, O man ? 

The day began early, the time of rising varying according to 
the season. The morning was devoted to lecturing and preach- 
ing, though Luther frequently felt headache and dizziness which 
prevented him from doing much work. The principal meal of 
the day came at ten o'clock, after which the long afternoon was 
spent in writing and other business. After supper at five o'clock 
the evening was spent in conversation, reading, or work until 
nine, the regular bedtime. Of his evening devotions he once 
said : — 

I have to hurry all day to get time to pray. It must suffice me if 
I can say the Ten Commandments, the Lord's Prayer, and one or 
two petitions besides, thinking of which I fall asleep. 

Luther's enemies called him a glutton and a wine-bibber. But 
in the monastery he had fasted until he became emaciated, 
and in later life his ill health often made it difficult for him to 
eat. In general he tried to eat, thinking it good for his health 
and spirits, as when he said : — 

This morning the devil had a dispute with me about Zwingli and I 
found a full head better able to withstand the fiend than one weakened 
with fasting. 

And again : — 

We ought to do our part and take care of our bodies ; when we are 
tempted, abstinence is a hundred times worse than eating and drink- 

1 Vergerio. Cf . supra, Chapter xxvni. 



318 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

ing. Had I followed my appetite I should have taken nothing for three 
days, but I do eat though without pleasure. The world sees it and calls 
it drunkenness, but God will judge it rightly. . . . Sleep is also a good 
thing ; when I lie awake the devil comes at once to dispute with me 
until I say : " Devil, go hang, 1 God is not angry with me as you say." 

Of good drink Luther was undoubtedly fond, but his practice 
in this respect must be judged by the standard of his age. No 
one advocated total abstinence, and the greatest licence was 
allowed not only to moderate indulgence but to intemperance. 
Charles V is reported to have taken habitually three quarts of 
wine at dinner — some authorities say more — and he was never 
charged with excess in this respect, as was the Elector John Fred- 
eric. Luther had special reasons for his potations. It is now 
believed that alcohol is little better than poison to one suffering 
as he did from diseases of the nerves or of the kidneys, but four 
centuries ago drink was actually prescribed for these ailments, 
and moreover he took a " strong little potation " at bedtime to 
make himself sleep. Other motives are more questionable, as, 
for example, when he tells Weller that he often drinks freely to 
" spite the devil." 2 

Nevertheless, Luther certainly stopped short of intemperance. 
No one who did the enormous amount of work that he did 
could have been an habitual drunkard. In a sermon to the 
courtiers he tells them that, though constant intemperance is 
not to be borne, an occasional carouse may be overlooked. Did 
he allow himself these occasional carouses? The argument from 
silence is in this case decisive in the negative ; knowing almost 
every act of his private life for fifteen years, we never once 
hear of such an outburst. At times, however, his conviviality 
bordered on the extreme, and that he was always appreciative 
of the merits of good liquor may be gathered from the fact that 
when he is away from home he almost always writes of the 
cheer he is having. For example, while visiting the Princes of 
Anhalt, he sent the following epistle : — 

1 Lather's stronger expression will not bear literal translation. 

2 Letter to Jerome Weller, July, 1530. 



CHARACTER AND HABITS 319 

TO CATHARINE LUTHEK AT WITTENBERG 

(Dessau,) July 29, 1534. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Dear Master Katie, I have nothing to 
write, as Melanchthon and others are going to Wittenberg and will tell 
you all the news. I must stay here for the sake of good Prince Joachim. 
Imagine if you can why I should stay so long or why you ever let me 
go. I think Francis Burkhardt l would be willing to see me depart, as 
I would him. Yesterday I shipped some bad beer for which I had to 
sing out. a There is nothing fit to drink here, for which I am sorry as 
I like it, and think what good wine and beer I have at home, and also 
a fair lady (or should I say lord ?) It would be a good thing for you 
to send me the whole wine-cellar and a bottle of your own beer as 
often as you can. If you don't I shall not come back for the new beer. 
God bless you and the children and household. Amen. 

Tour lover, 

Martin Luther. 

The most damaging evidence, however, has been found in an 
autograph of the Vatican Archives, first published in 1880. The 
content of the epistle is somewhat unguarded, and the signa- 
ture, which is very hard to decipher, was read " Dr. plenus " 3 
and interpreted " Dr. Full," a welcome proof to the Catholic 
publisher of the author's intoxication at the time he wrote. I 
believe, however, that this is not the true reading, and accord- 
ingly give another, with a translation of the most important 
part of the jocose missive : — 

TO CASPAR MULLER, CHANCELLOR OF MANSFELD, AT EISLEBEN 

(Wittenberg,) March 1, 1636. 

. . . Pray tell his Grace of Mansfeld from me to be merry, as in 

the story of the two students and the cook. People begin to say, or 

murmur, that a great deal depends on cheerfulness, and I half believe 

them. I have n't written to his Grace myself for fear that the Buck 

1 The Saxon agent, later -vice-chancellor. 

2 The English slang expression, " to sing out," is given in Grimm's Deutsches 
Worterbuch, x, 1, 1069, as a translation for the German colloquialism here used. 

8 So also in Enders, x, 137. Other readings are " Dr. Hans," " Dr. plures," and 
"Dr. parvus." After a careful comparison with photographs of the original, I 
have adopted the reading of Prof. H. Bobmer (Luther im Lichte der neueren For- 
schung, 2d ed. 1910, p. 116). 



320 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

of Lttbeck 1 would make a fool of me. Yet as I now and then cast an 
inquisitive eye on his Grace, please tell him my opinion. What harm 
does a little jollity do ? The beer is good, the maid fair, the boys young. 
The students are so merry that I am sorry that my health prevents 
me being oftener with them. Understand me like the poor, simple 
sheep you are said to be. I would willingly be good but I fear that I 
can never be as simple as you are. God bless you and greet all good 
friends. Amen. 

Dk. Maetin. 

Db. Lutheb. 

De. Johannes. 
P. S. — My Lord Katie sends her greetings and so does your god- 
son Hans. 

The three signatures are for the three persons who send 
greetings to Miiller, Dr. Martin, " my Lord Katie " as Dr. 
Luther, and nine-year old Hans (Dr. Johannes). 

Occasionally good stories 2 are told as to the quantity Luther 
drank, but that he became intoxicated is never recorded. Of 
the charges brought by his enemies, he once said : " If God can 
forgive me for having crucified him with masses twenty years 
long, he can also bear with me for occasionally taking a good 
drink to honor him. God allows it, the world may take it as it 
pleases." 

Luther has been charged by bis enemies, from his own day to 
the present, with being a profligate as well as a drunkard — the 
two usually going together. This accusation may be summarily 
denied. In the age of Henry VIII, Francis I, and Philip of 
Hesse, the example of the monk of Wittenberg was a striking 
contrast to the prevalent immorality. So light indeed was the 
condemnation visited upon sexual offences in that licentious age 
that one of the Reformer's guests once asked him if simple for- 
nication was a sin at all. He replied by quoting 1 Corinthians, 
vi, 9. At another time he wrote a most uncompromising opinion 
of houses of ill-fame ; the conversion of Freiberg had been ac- 
companied by the abolition of these dens, but it was later pro- 
posed to reinstate them on the customary plea that regulated 
vice was the lesser of two evils. When Weller, now the pastor 

1 Was the Buck of Liibeck, a person, a spirit, or a tavern ? 

* As at the banquet given to Agricola. Cf . Chapter zxv, p. 284. 



CHARACTER AND HABITS 821 

of that town, wrote to his chief to ascertain the stand he should 
take in the matter, he received the following injunctions : — 

TO JEROME WELLER AT FREIBERG 

(Wittenberg,) September 8, 1540. 
Grace and peace. Dear Jerome, have nothing to do with those who 
wish to reintroduce houses of ill-fame. It would have been better never 
to have expelled the devil than to have done so only to bring him back 
again stronger than ever. Let those who favor this course deny the 
name of Christ and become as heathen ignorant of God. We who are 
Christians cannot do so. We have the plain text : " Whoremongers 
and adulterers God will judge," much more, therefore, will he judge 
those who protect and encourage vice. How can the priests preach 
against impurity if the magistrates encourage it ? They allege the 
precedent of Nuremberg, but forget that she is the only town that has 
thus sinned. If the young men cannot contain, let them marry — in- 
deed, what is the use of marriage if we permit vice unpunished ? We 
have learned by experience that regulated vice does not prevent 
adultery and worse sins, but rather encourages them and condones 
them. . . . Let the magistrate punish one as well as the other, and 
if there is then secret vice, at least he is not to blame for it. We can 
neither do nor permit nor tolerate anything against God's command. 
We must do right if the world comes to an end. Farewell in haste. 

Dr. Martin Luther. 

If Luther's life was pure, his words certainly were not so at 
all times. It strikes the modern reader with no less than aston 
ishment, almost with horror, to find the great moralist's private 
talk with his guests and children, his lectures to the students, 
even his sermons, thickly interlarded with words, expressions,! 
and stories, such as to-day are confined to the frequenters of the 
lowest bar-rooms. The only justification for this is to be found 
in the universal practice of the day. Not only was the popular'; 
literature of the time unspeakably filthy, but the conversation 
of the best society had a liberty exceeding that of the men and j 
women of Shakespeare's plays. Shocking stories are told of 
the conversation of England's virgin queen, and Margaret of 
Navarre, one of the most devout and refined women of the six- 
teenth century, wrote a series of stories that no decent woman 
can now read with pleasure. In that day it was thought strange 



822 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

that any one should be forbidden to speak of things of which 
every one knows. 

With all possible excuses allowed in extenuation of the Wit- 
tenberg professor's talk, it is to be regretted that he did not 
rise above the level of his age. If his student Mathesius found 
nothing shameful in his words his friend Melanchthon did. No 
amount of precedent can excuse the disgusting things he some- 
times said about his private relations with Katie. 1 At times it 
seemed as if he allowed himself liberty in this regard as in 
drinking, " to spite the devil " — a strange expression which he 
undoubtedly meant literally. At other times his good humor 
ran away with him. In one letter he seems to condone loose 
talk under certain circumstances : — 

TO PKINCE JOACHIM OF ANHALT 

Wittenberg, May 23, 1534. 

Grace and peace in Christ. Serene Prince, gracious Lord ! Haus- 
mann has told me that your Grace has been a little unwell, but are 
now, thank God, again in good condition. 

It often occurs to me that, as your Grace leads a quiet life, mel- 
ancholy and sad thoughts may be the cause of such indisposition ; 
Wherefore I advise your Grace, as a young man, to be merry, to ride, 
hunt, and keep good company, who can cheer your Grace in a godly 
and honorable way. For loneliness and sadness are simple poison and 
death, especially to a young man. God has often commanded us to be 
joyful before him, and will suffer no sad offering, as Moses often 
wrote, and as it is often written in Ecclesiastes : " Rejoice, young man, 
in thy youth, and let thy heart be of good cheer." No one knows how it 
hurts a young man to avoid happiness and cultivate solitude and mel- 
ancholy. Your Grace has Hausmann and several others with whom to 
be merry. Joy and good humor, in honor and seemliness, is the best 
medicine for a young man, yea for all men. I, who have hitherto 
spent my life in mourning and sadness, now seek and accept joy 
wherever I can find it. We now know, thank God, that we can be 
happy with a good conscience, and can use God's gifts with thankful- 
ness, inasmuch as he has made them for us and is pleased to have us 
enjoy them. 

1 These are quite unquotable, but are sufficiently numerous to be easily found 
in the originals, e. g., Bindseil: Lutheri Colloquia, ii, 299. 



CHARACTER AND HABITS 323 

If I have not hit the cause of your Grace's indisposition and have 
thereby done you a wrong, your Grace will kindly forgive my mistake. 
For truly I thought your Grace might be so foolish as to think it a sin 
to be happy, as I have often done and still do at times. It is true that 
joy in sin is the devil, but joy with good, pious people, in the fear of 
God, and with moderation pleases him, even if an indecent l word or 
two now and then slips in. Your Grace should be happy in all things, 
inwardly in Christ and outwardly in God's gifts ; for he gives them to 
us that we may have pleasure in them and thank him for them. Sor- 
row and melancholy bring on old age and other evils before their time. 
Christ cares for us and will not leave us. I commend your Grace to 
him eternally. Amen. 

De. Martin Luther. 

This letter is characteristic of Luther's naturally joyous tem- 
per. He was, as Mathesius called him, " a joyous, frolicsome 
companion." His good humor bursts forth on all occasions when 
not crushed out by ill health or overwork. Another letter bub- 
bling over with it is to the same good friend : — 

TO PRINCE JOACHIM OF ANHALT AT DESSAU 

(Wittbnbeeo,) June 12, 1534. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Gracious Prince and Lord ! John Beich- 
ling has brought me very good news, namely, that your Grace is very 
merry. For truly I prayed without ceasing (as did my gracious lord, 3 
the cathedral provost), " God, make my prince sound and happy," 
and I expected he would. And as soon as I have fed the printer a lit- 
tle bit 8 so that I can have rest, I will come to you with Pomeranian 

1 Wort oder Zotlein zu viel. Luther's defenders try hard to prove that " Zote "* 
here means nothing more than " idle talk " or " anecdote," and they are supported! 
by the excellent German dictionary of Daniel Sanders (Grimm's monumental lexi- 
con being 1 complete only to the letter S), iii, 1779. Sanders assigns the mean- 
ing of " indecency " to every other use of this word, modern and by Luther 
and his contemporaries, except this place. This is of course arguing in a circle 
from a preconceived notion. The innocent meaning here given, besides being 
otherwise unsupported, would have no sense, for why shonld Luther especially 
excuse what is entirely innocent, or how can a "simple anecdote" be "too 
much"*' 

2 Joachim's brother, Prince George of Anhalt. 

8 With the German Bible now coming out as a whole for the first time. The in- 
tended visit took place in July. Cf . the letter to Katie of July 29, 1534, translated 
just above, p. 319. 



324 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Bugenhagen and his little pomeranians and marmots, so that my gra- 
cious lady your wife may see how like the old dog the puppies are and 
how merry. God bless you. Amen. Your Grace must really look out 
for that marvellous chess-player, Francis Burkhardt, 1 for he is quite 
sure that he can play the game like a professional. I would give a but- 
ton to see him play as well as he thinks he can. He can manage the 
knights, take a castle or two, and fool the peasant-pawns, but the queen 
beats him on account of his weakness for the fair sex, which he cannot 
deny. 

Your Grace's obedient servant, 

Martin Lutheb. 

Luther's constant advice to his friends to cultivate the virtue 
of cheerfulness was made the more emphatic by the fact that he 
himself was often subject to melancholy and depression. His 
letters and table-talk are full of counsel to young friends on the 
subject, the best perhaps being in an epistle written to Jerome 
Weller at Wittenberg while the Reformer was at Feste Coburg 
in the summer of 1530. He says : — 

"Whenever this temptation comes to you beware not to dispute with 
the devil nor allow yourself to dwell on these lethal thoughts, for so 
doing is nothing less than giving place to the devil and so falling. Try 
as hard as you can to despise these thoughts sent by Satan. In this sort 
of temptation and battle contempt is the easiest road to victory ; laugh 
your enemy to scorn and ask to whom you are talking By all means 
flee solitude, for he lies in wait most for those alone. This devil is con- 
quered by despising and mocking him, not by resisting and arguing. 
Therefore, Jerome, joke and play games with my wife and others, in 
which way you will drive out your diabolic thoughts and take cour- 
age. • • • 

Be strong and cheerful and cast out those monstrous thoughts. 
Whenever the devil harasses you thus, seek the company of men or 
drink more, or joke and talk nonsense, or do some other merry thing. 
Sometimes we must drink more, sport, recreate ourselves, aye, and even 
sin a little to spite the devil, so that we leave him no place for troub- 
ling our consciences with trifles. We are conquered if we try too con- 
scientiously not to sin at all. So when the devil says to you : " Do not 
drink," answer him : " I will drink, and right freely, just because 

1 Later vice-chancellor of Electoral Saxony. Luther played a good game of 
chess, himself. 



CHARACTER AND HABITS 823 

yon tell me not to." One must always do what Satan forbids. What 
other cause do you think that I have for drinking so much strong drink, 
talking so freely and making merry so often, except that I wish to 
mock and harass the devil who is wont to mock and harass me. Would 
that I could contrive some great sin to spite the devil, that he might 
understand that I would not even then acknowledge it and that I was 
conscious of no sin whatever. We, whom the devil thus seeks to annoy, 
should remove the whole decalogue from our hearts and minds. 

No picture of Luther would be complete without making his 
humor conspicuous. 1 He was as fond of a joke or a good story 
as was Abraham Lincoln ; his letters and table-talk are as full 
of puns as are Shakespeare's plays. Like all puns they can only 
be appreciated in the original. But of his stories, many of them 
indeed old in his time, some specimens must be given, in order, 
as the old English translation of the table talk-puts it, " to re- 
fresh and recreate the company " : — 

Whatever one does in the world is wrong. It is with me as in the 
fable of the old man, his son, and the ass ; 2 whatever I do is wrong. 
One physician advises me to bathe my feet at bedtime, another 
before dinner, a third in the morning, and a fourth at noon ; whatever 
I do displeases some. So it is in other things ; if I speak I am turbu- 
lent, if I keep silence I spit on the cross. Then Master Wiseacre comes 
along and hits the poor beast on the rump. 

Rustics are not equal to public affairs and spectacles, as is proved 
by the passion play. When a cobbler began to say his lines he could 
only stammer out, "I am ... I am ..." at which the manager re- 
torted, " What are you then ? " He replied, " I am a cobbler," and 
the manager rejoined, " What are you doing here, then ? Go home 
and mend shoes." * 

I am the father of a great people, like Abraham, for I am respon- 
sible for all the children of the monks and nuns who have renounced 
their monastic vows. 

1 Cf . E. Rolffs : Luther's Humor ein Stuck seiner Religion. In Preussische Jahr- 
bucher, 1904, civ, 468-488. 

3 Luther may have read this fable in ^Esop. It is also found in Poggio : Sales 
et Facetiae, 1470, and from him in La Fontaine, -who entitles it, " Le meunier, son 
fih et I'&ne." 

8 The two chief cycles of miracle plays at this time given in Germany were the 
nativity cycle and the resurrection cycle. They were evidently sometimes given 
in the style of Pyramus and Thisbe, played by Bottom the Weaver and company. 



326 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Women wear veils because of the angels ; I wear trousers because of 
the girls. 

Feasants are proudest of wealth and yet uncouth, as can be seen by 
the story of one who could not keep a fly from lighting on his spoon 
and so finally ate it with his food. Another rustic in Mansfeld had 
trouble in keeping a robin from perching on his bowl and so at last 
ate it alive, and when he heard it still chirping in his stomach, said, 
" So you keep on peeping, do you ? " and poured down a schooner of 
beer to drown it. 

A man was burned at Prague for teaching his dog to jump through 
a ring when he said, " Luther." Lord, hew wondrous are thy ways ! 

When I am dead I shall be a ghost to plague bishops and priests 
and godless monks, so that they will have more trouble with one dead 
Luther than with a thousand living. 

A liar must be careful. I sinned against this rule when I was a 
student and said that permission had not been granted to take baths 
on Sunday. An excellent story illustrating the same point is told about 
a man who said he had seen some bees as big as sheep. When asked 
how they could get through the little holes into their hives, he replied, 
" Oh, I let them think of that for themselves-." 

Cannon are the very invention of Satan himself, for here one cannot 
fight with sword or fist and all bravery perishes. Death comes before 
one sees it. If Adam had seen such instruments as his children were 
to make he would have died of sorrow. 

Some of the stories will surprise those who conceive of a re- 
former as a grave and proper curate ; such is the comparison 
of three preachers with the persons of the Trinity : — 

Bugenhagen is Minos, Rarer Aeacus, and CrOdel Bhadamanthus. 
They are one substance in three persons, Bugenhagen the Father, 
Barer the Son, and CrBdel the Holy Ghost. They simply won't let me 
alone, I have to do the Kyrie Eleison for Credel because he gave me 
three or four kegs of beer ; Barer orders me about the gospels and 
collects ; and if Bugenhagen hears of some things I do, I shall have to 
leave. 

Another joke on Bugenhagen, who, notwithstanding his 
dignified position in both the upper and lower worlds, seems to 
have been unable to deliver a palatable sermon, was made about 
the same time as the last : — 



CHARACTER AND HABITS 327 

When a woman put badly cooked food before her husband, he said, 
" Oh, I expected that Bugenhagen would preach to-day." 

Some of Luther's remarks have a humor to us not intended 
by him. Such is his naive opinion of the French mode of ad- 
dress : — 

The question was mooted whether it were a sin to curse a French- 
man, for they themselves have the custom of greeting their best friends 
with a curse, as, " Pest and pox take you, my dear sir." Is it then a 
sin when the mind is free from hatred ? Luther said : " Our words 
should be Yea and Nay, and the name of the Lord is not to be taken 
in vain, but it may well be that their curses are more innocent than 
many a good-morning with us." 

Luther's constant good spirits and joyousness are remarkable 
when it is considered that he was a prey to several torturing 
diseases. Indigestion with painful complications had set in at 
the Wartburg, and occasionally returned. In 1523 he first ex- 
perienced that nervous disease which throughout his life made 
him suffer from dizziness, ringing in the ears, and sleeplessness. 
Stone, at that time a very common disease of kidneys and bladder, 
began in 1526 and became continually worse until the almost 
fatal attack in 1537. Gout, rheumatism, sciatica, ulcers, ab- 
scesses in the ears, toothache, and palpitation of the heart grad- 
ually added their pains to make his life a constant agony. He 
obtained little relief from physicians. He believed alcohol, a 
certain irritant, to be good for the stone and for insomnia. Other 
medicines prescribed undoubtedly made him rather worse than 
better ; such were the disgusting remedies he took at Schmalkal- 
den. 1 His troubles become increasingly prominent in his letters 
and table-talk. He always used what means were available for 
recovery, though, indeed, the medical science of that day was 
barbarous. Once he said : — 

Our burgomaster asked me whether it was against God's will to 
use medicine, for Carlstadt publicly preached that the sick should not 
use drugs, but should only pray to God that his will be done. In reply 
I asked the burgomaster if he ate when he was hungry, and when he 
answered in the affirmative, I said, "You may then use medicine 
1 Cf . letter to Katie, February 27, 1537, p. 312, note. 



828 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

which is God's creature as much as food, drink, and other bodily 

necessities." 

It is no wonder that irritability and world-weariness grew 
upon the afflicted man. To his friend Miiller, Luther writes, 
for example, in a very melancholy way : — 

TO CASPAR MULLEK.AT MANSFELD 

(Wittenbebg,) January 19, 1536. 

Grace and peace. My dear Chancellor, I have long been desirous of 
writing you but have been laid up with a cold and cough. But my 
chief illness is that the sun has shone on me too long, a disease, you know, 
common and fatal to many. It makes some blind, others gray, sallow 
and wrinkled. Perhaps the trouble with your toe is that you stubbed 
it on a piece of mud hardened by the sun, albeit it is not the fault of 
the dear sun that it hardens mud and softens wax, for everything must 
act according to its nature and find its own place at last. 

Of all things I should have liked to take Kegel as a boarder, but as our 
student eating-club is just back from Jena 1 the table is full and I can- 
not turn away old friends. But when a place is vacant, as may happen 
at Easter, I will take him if my Lord Katie is gracious to me. 

Of the English embassy, 2 as you at Mansf eld are so curious, I know 
nothing especial. Queen Catharine has just died, and they say her 
daughter is mortally ill. She lost her cause With all the world except 
with us poor beggars the Wittenberg theologians. "We would have 
kept her in her royal honor as was right. But this is the end and final 
decision. The Pope acted in this matter like the Pope, promulgating 
contradictory bulls and playing such a double game that it served him 
right to be turned out of England, even if the Evangelic teaching did 
not profit thereby. He cheated the king so that I could almost excuse 
his Majesty, though I do not approve all his acts. Friend, let us pray 
that the Pope get a stroke of epilepsy. The Pope's nuncio was here, 
as you know, but I have not time to relate the answer he took back 
to Schmalkalden. My cough prevents me hunting for it ; if I stop 
coughing I will look for it. I think my cough would leave off if 
you would pray for me. . . . 

My Lord Katie greets you and asks, although I am already too much 

1 The university, and with it Luther's student boarders, had removed to Jena 
during the visitation of the plague. 

a On this and on the visit of the Pope's nuncio, Yergerio, cf . chapters xvu and 
xxvni. 



CHARACTER AND HABITS 829 

in the sun, that you won't outshine yourself without shining on me. 
Your godson, master Martin, 1 greets you ; he is getting hig but not 
bad, God keep him ! God bless you. Don't mind my ways, for you 
know that I am so hard and cross, gross, gray, and green, so overladen, 
overcrowded and overstocked with business that once in a while, for 
the sake of my poor carcass, I have to break out to a friend. A man is 
no more than a man save that God can make what he will of one if 
we only let him. Greet all good gentlemen and friends. 

Db. Mabtin Ltjtheb. 

Much the same tone prevails in a letter written two years 
later to Justus Jonas. This true friend had been a student at 
Erfurt when Luther passed through on his way to Worms. He 
left all to follow his hero, first to the memorable diet and then 
back to Wittenberg, where his abilities soon won him a position 
in the university and that of canon and provost of the Castle 
Church. Till 1541, when he left to preach the gospel at Halle, 
he was often a guest at Luther's table. His wife Catharine was 
a great friend of Frau Luther. 2 Jonas was a fine stylist and a 
polished preacher. While he was absent on a visit Luther wrote 
him this letter, in which sadness is mingled with that love of 
nature so often expressed elsewhere : — 

TO JUSTUS JONAS AT BRUNSWICK 

(Wittenberg,) April 8, 1538. 

Grace and peace in Christ. Dear Jonas, I do not wish to contend 
with you in writing letters, and not without reason, first, because you 
surpass me in genius and eloquence even by your hereditary gifts, and 
then because you have much more material to write about, living, as 
you do, among heroes and great deeds. I beg leave to think that the 
armies of Trojans and Greeks would have grown cold before Troy 
had not Homer blown so small a matter big with his immense gift of 
language. 

We confess Christ in quietness and confidence, but sometimes with- 
out much strength. We are oppressed by business, especially Melanch- 
thon and I, on account of your absence, and I am sick of it, for I am 
an old veteran who has served his time and would prefer to spend my 

1 Luther's four-year-old son. Cf. chapter xxxn. 

2 Gf. letter to her, March 26, 1542, and to Jonas, December 25, 1542, and May 
4, 1543. 



880 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

days in the garden enjoying the senile pleasures of watching God's 
wonders in the blooming of the trees, flowers, and grass, and in the 
mating of the birds. I should have merited this pleasure and leisure 
had I not deserved to be deprived of it on account of my past sins. . . . 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 



CHAPTER XXX 

AT WOKK 

After the return from Feste Coburg, Lather continued to 
occupy the Wittenberg pulpit. His pastoral duties were espe- 
cially heavy during the frequent absence of Bugenhagen, the 
parish priest. On December 1, 1530, he wrote Link : — 

I have not time to write to all, as I am not only Luther but Bugen- 
hagen and notary-public and Moses and Jethro and what not ? all in 
all, Jack of all trades and master of none. 

As time went on his style became freer. He preached ex tem- 
pore, no longer writing out his sermons, many of which were 
taken down by Korer. He often alluded in his sermons to ques- 
tions of the day. One thing he especially cultivated was sim- 
plicity, for, as he said : — 

A preacher should bare his breast and give the simple folk milk, 
for every day a new need of first principles arises. He should be dili- 
gent with the catechism and serve out only milk leaving the strong 
wine of high thoughts for private discussion with the wise. In my ser- 
mons I do not think of Bugenhagen, Jonas, and Melanchthon, for they 
know as much as I do, so I preach not to them but to my little Hans 
and Lena and Elsa. 1 It would be a foolish gardener who would attend 
to one flower to the neglect of the great majority. 

Luther's professorial work was also continued till his death. 
An estimate of his contributions to Biblical exegesis has been 
given in previous chapters. Some conception of his methods in 
the classroom may be formed from this saying: — 

Some masters rate the proud youngsters to make them feel what 
they are, but I always praise the arguments of the boys, no matter 
how crude they are, for Melanchthon's strict manner of overturning 
the poor fellows so quickly displeases me. Every one must rise by 
degrees, for no one can attain to excellence suddenly. 

1 Luther's niece, Elsa Kaufmann. 



832 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Luther also exercised a certain supervision over the morals 
of his pupils, warning them against impurity, and endeavoring 
to see justice done when they got into scrapes. An amusing 
letter, written during a summer when a light epidemic of the 
plague swept over Wittenberg, may be translated as showing 
how like were the students of the sixteenth to those of the 
twentieth century : — 

TO JOHN FEEDEBIC, ELECTOR OF SAXONY 

Wittenberg, July 9, 1585. 
Grace and peace in Christ and my poor paternoster. Most serene, 
highborn Prince, most gracious Lord ! Your Grace's chancellor, Dr. 
Briick, has communicated tp me the kind invitation to visit you while 
the plague is here. I humbly thank your Grace for your care, and 
will show myself ready to comply if there is real need. But your 
bailiff, John von Metsch, is a reliable weather-cock ; he has the nose 
of a vulture for the plague, and would smell it five yards under 
ground. As long as he stays I cannot believe that there is any plague 
here. A house or two may be infected, but the air is not tainted. 
There has been neither death nor new case since Tuesday, but as the 
dog-days are near the boys are frightened, so I have given them a 
vacation to quiet them until we see what is going to happen. I observe 
that the said youths rather like the outcry about the plague ; some of 
them get ulcers from their school-satchels, others colic from the books, 
others scurvy from the pens, and others gout from the paper. The 
ink of the rest has dried up, or else they have devoured long letters 
from their mothers and so got homesickness and nostalgia ; indeed 
there are more ailments of this kind than I can well recount. If 
parents and guardians don't speedily cure these maladies it is to be 
feared that an epidemic of them will wipe out all our future preach- 
ers and teachers, so that nothing will be left but swine and dogs, 
which perchance would please the papists. May Christ our Lord give 
your Highness his grace and mercy (and to all Christian rulers) to 
guard against such a plague as this, to the praise and honor of God 
and to the vexation of Satan, that enemy of all decency and learning. 
Amen. God bless you. Amen. 

Your Grace's obedient 

Martin Lttther. 

The most abiding portion of the Eel ormer's work is of course 
contained in his writings. These are voluminous ; an incomplete 



AT WORK 833 

edition fills more than one hundred volumes. During his life- 
time he was often urged to publish a complete edition of them, 
but he disliked the idea, writing Capito that he felt a Saturn- 
ian hunger to devour his offspring rather than a wish to give 
them a new lease of life. To the citizens of Wittenberg and 
Augsburg who made the same request he replied that he would 
prefer that all his writings perish, so that only the Bible might 
be read. He was finally induced, however, to supervise such an 
edition 'undertaken by Rdrer and Cruciger, of which, however, 
only two volumes appeared before his death. 

A number of Luther's letters were also published during his 
lifetime, but not in large collections, as were those of Erasmus. 
Those that saw the light were rather single epistles like pam- 
phlets or newspaper articles of the present day. Nevertheless, 
Luther's secretaries preserved a large number of letters, and 
in 1540 some one told him they would be published. He re- 
plied : — 

Don't believe it ! No one will do it, though, to be sure, nothing has 
given me more thought and trouble. I must often consider my answer 
so as to say neither too much nor too little. . . . My letters are not 
Ciceronian and oratorical like those of Grickel, but at least I have 
substance if not elegant Latin. 

Luther was, perhaps, too conscious of his own imperfect 
Latinity. In 1516, writing to Mutian he apologizes that " this 
barbarian Martin, accustomed only to cry out among geese," 
should venture to address so learned a man, and he rarely fails 
to make similar excuses whenever he writes to a noted human- 
ist. At these times he took especial pains with his diction, and 
was capable of a certain refinement. He always wrote, indeed, 
with correctness, and though he lacks the labored and often 
pedantic Ciceronian style, so carefully cultivated by the schol- 
ars of the Renaissance, he more than makes up for this de- 
ficiency by the freshness and force of his Latin, which he treats 
as if it were a living language. 

In German, as has been pointed out, Luther was one of the 
first authors. His greatest fault, perhaps, is verbosity. His 
works contain endless repetition. He was conscious of this 
defect himself, and regretted that he was unable "to be as 



834 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

concise and perspicuous as Melanchthon and Amsdorf." " I am 
garrulous and rhetorical," he said at another time, and once 
confessed, " Formerly I almost talked the world to death. 
Then I could say more about a feather than now about a farm, 
and yet I do not like verbosity." 

Another quality, nearly allied to this, very obvious in all 
Luther's writings, and felt by him as a lack, is the absence of 
system. The Reformer was no organizer ; he had not the gift 
of ordered presentation. This quality, which he admired so much 
in Melanchthon and would have admired still more in Calvin, 
has sometimes been said to be usually lacking in Germans. 
These deep thinkers, patient searchers after truth, and great 
poets have not the ability, so characteristic of the French, of 
presenting their thought in a clear, systematic form. Even the 
greatest German masterpiece, Faust, with all its sublime poetry 
and profound thought and feeling, has, according to classic 
standards, little unity and at times imperfect coherence. To say 
that Luther and his countrymen are somewhat less gifted in 
this regard is not saying anything against them. The deepest 
thinking is not always the most systematized. It has often been 
charged against Shakespeare that he had no philosophy, and 
Plato has been accused of being inconsistent. 

Among the four hundred and twenty works from Luther's 
pen, none, therefore, is to be found which gives in succinct form 
the essentials of his philosophy. All his commentaries are con- 
cerned with the text alone ; all his tracts are written to meet 
the exigencies of some particular situation. Moreover he habit- 
ually wrote at great speed, often finishing a work while the 
first part was in press. Of his rapidity in composition he once 
observed : — 

I bring forth as soon as I conceive. First, I consider all my argu- 
ments and words diligently from every point of view, so that I have a 
perfect idea of my book before I begin to write. . . . But my enemies 
the papists and others burst forth and bawl whatever comes into their 
heads first. 

Whatever his faults, however, Luther remains one of the 
greatest of writers. His fury and his mirth are alike Titanic; 



AT WORK 835 

his polemics are informed with matchless vigor, and his musings 
over .the cradle of his baby are in the grand style. It is well 
known that Goethe and Lessing and many another great German 
author drank deep of the great river of his inspiration. To 
foreign writers, too, he has been a mighty influence. Thomas 
Carlyle, in his suggestive, impressionistic way, thus hits off his 
qualities : 1 — 

But in no books have I found a more robust, I will say noble, 
faculty of a man than in these of Luther. A rugged honest homeliness, 
simplicity ; a rugged sterling sense and strength. He flashes out illu- 
mination from him ; his smiting idiomatic phrases seem to cleave into 
the very secret of the matter. Good humor, too, nay tender affection, 
nobleness, and depth : this man could have been a poet too ! 

And Michelet, the greater historian of France, thus vividly 
brings him before our eyes : 2 — 

See how Luther appears, sublime and ridiculous (bouffon) musician 
of this divine Yule-tide ; mirthful, angry, and terrible ; an Aristo- 
phanic David, something between Moses and Rabelais. Nay, more 
than all that, the People, or, as he magnificently named the people : 
" My Lord Everybody " (Herr Omncs). This lord is in Luther. 

No English writer of his time can be compared with him. 
Only Burke has equalled him in passion, sometimes degener- 
ating into scurrility. His prose is perhaps nearer that of Milton 
than of any other of our authors. Milton, to be sure, lacks 
Luther's humor ; but they possess in common the long complex 
sentences ; the vocabulary of each has the same taste of origin- 
ality and radicality ; in both there is the same scholarly back- 
ground ; the same vehemence, occasionally the same foul- 
mouthed invective in the interest of piety. In another point, 
not without its influence on style, the pair resembled each other, 
namely, in their fondness for music and relative indifference to 
other arts. 8 

1 Hero and Merth-Worship. The Hero aa Priest. 

2 Histoire de France, x, 108. 

3 Gf. Chapter zzxi, p. 348. Milton had some familiarity with Luther's Latin 
works, though he confesses that he had not " examined through them '" all. Cf . 
supra, p. 87. 



CHAPTER XXXI 

RELIGION AND CULTURE 

The deepest part of Luther's life was his religion. Any 
picture which failed to give a strong idea of this would be like 
Hamlet with the prince left out. To him the relation of the in- 
dividual to God was not only the most serious fact in life, but 
also the most practical, the atmosphere in which he lived and 
moved and had his being. His formal writings are mainly con- 
cerned with religion, his letters are saturated with it, and his 
table-talk reveals the constancy with which his thoughts were 
occupied with this subject. To his contemporaries these sayings 
were mainly interesting as authoritative expositions of dogma, 
to posterity they are hardly less valuable as keys to the heart of 
a great prophet. The dogmatic system of the Evangelic Church 
may be best studied in the treatises of its leader and in those 
of his disciple Melanchthon, but the ethical part, taking the 
word in its broadest sense as that which concerns the man's 
^0os, comes out most strongly in his incidental remarks. Luther 
is greater than his work. His dogmatic system has lost part of 
its hold upon mankind, and seems likely to lose still more, but 
his influence on the ideals and culture of many an age to come 
will remain. 

To Luther himself, however, religion and doctrine were 
nearly allied. The centre of his theology was the idea of just- 
ification by faith in Christ, and the most important part of 
the Saviour's work was the atonement ; indeed he warns his 
followers against regarding Jesus merely as an example for 
imitation. 1 

His faith and childlike trust are strongly painted in the fol- 
lowing fragments of his conversations ; — 

"We must rejoice in the Lord, but such joy will often lead us astray, 
too. David had to endure many a temptation, to murder, adultery, 
l In the letter to the Christians of Strassburg, December 14, 1524, p. 155. 



RELIGION AND CULTURE 837 

and rapine until he turned to the fear of God and remained therein. 
Therefore he says in the Second Psalm, " Serve the Lord with fear and 
rejoice with tremhling." They go together — joy and fear. My little 
son Hans can do it before me, but I cannot do it before God. If I sit 
and write and Hans sings a song over there and plays too noisily, I 
speak to him about it and he sings more quietly with care and rever- 
ence. So God will have us always joyful, but with fear and honor to 
him. 

The principal study of theology is to learn of Christ and know 
him well. As we trust a good friend, knowing that he will show us 
all good will, so we should trust the Lord to be gracious and merciful 
to us. Therefore St. Peter says : " Grow in the knowledge of Christ," 
that is, believe that he is the best, most merciful and kindest Lord, on 
whom alone we should depend and to whom we should cleave. Christ 
also teaches that we know him only in the Holy Scripture, for he says : 
"Search the Scriptures, for they are they which testify of me.'' But 
the devil hinders and greatly darkens this high knowledge in us and 
brings it to pass that we trust a good, human friend more than the 
Lord Christ. 

I have studied diligently, but as yet I do not understand one word 
of the Bible. I have not yet passed the primary class, but I am always 
turning over in my mind what I know, and asking for comprehension 
of the decalogue and the creed. It irks me not a little that I, a doc- 
tor, with all my learning should willy nilly stay in the class with my 
little Hans and Magdalene and go to sahool with them. Who has ever 
understood all the meaning of the words : " Our Father which art in 
heaven " ? By faith in these words we know that the God who made 
heaven and earth is our father, and that we are his children and none 
can hurt us. The Angel Gabriel is my servant, Raphael is my groom, 
and all other angels are ministering spirits to my various needs. Then, 
perhaps, my good Father turns to and has me cast into prison or 
beheaded or drowned, to try whether I have really learned these words, 
or even the one " Father." For the faith in our hearts wavers and our 
weakness suggests a doubt, " How do I know whether this is true ? " 
The hardest word in all Scripture to understand is " thy " in the First 
Commandment. 

No one is able to calculate the wealth God spends feeding the birds, 
even the useless ones. I fancy it costs God more than the revenue of 
the King of France for one year to feed two sparrows. And what 
about the other birds, larger and more rapacious ? 

One night two little birds flew into the room, but were frightened 



838 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

by us and would not let us approach. The doctor said to me : " Schlag- 
inhauf en, these birds lack faith. They do not know how glad I am to 
have them here nor that I would let no harm be done them. Thus do 
we act toward God, who loves us and has given his Son for us." 

Dr. Luther was playing with his dog and said : " The dog is the 
most faithful of animals and would be much esteemed were it not so 
common. Our Lord God has made his greatest gifts the commonest. 
Eyes are the greatest of all gifts to living creatures. Little birds have 
eyes like stars, so that they can see a fly across the room. But we 
fools don't think of these gifts now, though we shall in the next 
life." 

From the first years in the monastery Luther's later life in- 
herited a tinge of melancholy. Though he rarely again felt the 
terrible despair of those days, he often had periods of depres- 
sion. He was therefore very kind in understanding and helping 
younger friends who felt the same trials. At times he said he 
found relief from such thoughts in a good drink, or in other 
pleasures of the senses. To Schlaginhaufen he gave the fol- 
lowing more spiritual advice : — 

The greatest temptation is this, when Satan says, " God hates sin- 
ners and therefore hates you." Some feel this temptation one way, 
some another. The devil always makes me think of my misdeeds, 
as for example that in my youth I celebrated the sacrifice of the mass. 
Thus he attacks some on their past life. But in his syllogism the 
major premise is to be denied, for it is false that God hates sinners. 
If the devil brings up the example of Sodom and such places, we must 
reply by citing the fact that Christ was sent in the flesh. If God 
hated sinners he would certainly not have sent his Son. He hates 
only those who do not wish to be justified, that is, those who think 
they are not sinners. Temptations of this sort are most valuable to 
us ; they are not, I believe, our ruin but our education, and every 
Christian should think that he cannot know Christ but by tempta- 
tion. 

About ten years ago I first felt this despair and fear of divine 
wrath. 1 Afterwards I obtained rest when I married and had good 

1 Luther speaks December 14, 1531. For the moment he is speaking of the 
doubts he entertained when he first broke with the Church of Rome, a subject to 
which he returns later. He next digresses to the old monastery days when he 
felt doubts about his own salvation. 



RELIGION AND CULTURE 389 

days, but later it returned. When I complained to Staupitz he said he 
had never felt such trials, " but as far as I can see," said he, "they are 
more necessary to us than food and drink." Who feel such tempta- 
tions should accustom themselves to bearing them, for so doing is real 
Christianity. If Satan had not tried me thus I could not hate him so 
much, nor do him so much harm, so that my trials seem to me gifts 
of God, for I should have fallen into the abyss of hell through pride 
had it not been for them. God has taught me that they are his free 
gifts, for when it comes to a battle, I cannot single-handed conquer 
one venial sin. 

The papists and Anabaptists teach that if you would know Christ 
you must be alone and not associate with men, like a hermit. This is 
devilish advice. . . . Good-bye to those who say : — 

" Keep to yourself apart. 

" Then you are pure in heart." 

The world does not know the hidden treasures of God. It cannot 
be persuaded that the maid working obediently and the servant faith- 
fully performing his duty, or the woman rearing her children are as 
good as the praying monk who strikes his breast and wrestles with 
his spirit. 

One part of Luther's religion, borrowed from the popular 
superstition of the age, was his belief in a personal devil. The 
anecdote of his throwing his inkstand at the fiend, is, to be 
sure, apocryphal, but it admirably expresses both the vividness 
with which the Reformer objectified his spiritual foe and the 
energy of the means taken against him. He attributed all his 
sufferings, as well as all the misfortunes to the Church or peo- 
ple, to the direct interposition of Satan, and his fury resembled 
a personal hatred more than a philosophic detestation of an 
abstract principle. He was ready to do anything " to spite the 
devil," with whom he talked nightly in the rudest as well as in 
the coarsest manner. To understand the intensity of this con- 
ception, so foreign to our sophisticated century, we must re- 
member that Luther imbibed the superstition from his earliest 
childhood. Throughout life he continued to attribute even 
meteorological phenomena, if at all startling, to supernatural 
agency. A thunderstorm frightened him into his vow to be a 
monk ; of one on December 16, 1536, he said : — 



340 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

It is simply Satanic. I believe the devils were going to hold a de- 
bate and some angel interposed this crash of thunder and tore up 
their propositions. 

Among a great number of stories told by the Reformer about 
Satan, one is especially interesting for its mention of Faust. It 
will be remembered that the historical personage who bore this 
name was a contemporary of Luther's, and may have been 
known to him, as he lived at Wittenberg for a time during the 
third decade of the sixteenth century. The first literary treat- 
ment of the Faust story, that published by Spies at Frankfort 
in 1587, brings its hero into close relations with the Wittenberg 
theology. He is made a student at the university and his fall 
from grace is an apostasy from the Evangelic faith. Many 
things in the work, such as Faust's impression of Home and 
his ideas of the devil, are suggested by passages from Luther's 
table-talk. Through this channel the Reformer is brought into 
direct connection with Marlowe's Dr. Faustus and with the 
greatest masterpiece of German literature. 

They spoke much of Faust, who called the devil his friend and 
talked with him. Luther said : " If I had only reached my hand out to 
Satan he would have destroyed me. But I feared him not and stretched 
forth my hands to God my protector. I believe many use incantations 
against me. At Nordhausen there was a devil named Wildfire, 1 who 
so dazed a peasant that the man wandered about several hours with 
his horse and wagon and at last found himself in a puddle. In like 
manner a devil assumed the garb of a monk, and meeting a peasant 
on the road asked him how much he would charge to let him eat all 
the hay he wanted. The peasant asked a farthing, whereupon the 
monk ate more than half the load of hay, so that the rustic had to 
drive him away by force. Again as a pardoner the fiend pulled off a 
Jew's leg. You see what power Satan has in deluding our external 
senses : what can he not do with our souls ? " 

Luther sometimes gives advice as to the best way of counter- 
acting the incantations of witches and the malice of devils. One 
way to harass those who turned butter and milk sour was to 

1 Wildfeuer : the sense leads us to translate "willo' the wisp," but such a 
meaning is apparently unsupported, the German word for will o' the wisp being 
Irrlicht. 



RELIGION AND CULTUBE 341 

put the articles on ice ; another way, used by Bugenhagen, was 
" to plague them with filth " in a manner which Luther de- 
scribes freely but which will hardly bear repetition after him. 1 
Sometimes Luther's advice was more drastic, as when he advised 
that a boy whom he believed to be a changeling be strangled 
and that a witch at Altenburg be tortured. 2 

Occasionally, the Reformer took a rational view, as when he 
disavowed a belief in astrology, which was Melanchthon's pet 
superstition. Again he often advised those who applied to him 
for advice on how to treat diabolic possession, to be sure that 
they were not deceived. "For," he once admitted, "I have 
found many impostors in my own experience, not to mention 
those I have read about, and have been afterwards much annoyed 
to think of my gullibility." 

One idea which Luther possessed, in common with many 
Christians from the times of the apostles to our own, was that 
of the near approaching end of the world. 

If conduct is three fourths of life, culture is one fourth, and 
in estimating a man this must be taken into account, both for 
its own sake and because even his conduct will be influenced 
by his knowledge of and attitude towards books, art, and .the 
world of beautiful ideas. 

Luther was one of the best read men of his time. Like all 
natures with an abnormally developed religious faculty, he 
found his spiritual ancestry rather in Judea than in Greece, 
even preferring the literature of the Hebrews, an opinion in 
support of which the great English poet-scholar Milton has 
elaborately argued in Paradise Regained. " Compared to the 
wisdom of the Hebrews," said the German professor, " that of 
the Greeks is simply animal, for there can be no true wisdom 
without knowledge of the true God." From the first years in 
the cloister to the day of his death, Luther's chief spiritual 
nourishment was the Bible. 

This does not mean that he was a man of one book, for of 

1 Lauterbach's Tagebuch, p. 121. Disgusting methods of putting the devil to 
flight appear to have been very common. St. Francis recommended Bugenhagen's 
way to his follower Rufinus, and Cellini speaks of similar doing in his Memoirs. 

2 Or put to death ? " Da solde man mit solche ad supplicia eilen.'' Lauter- 
bach's Tagebuch, p. 117. 



842 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

classic, mediaeval, and contemporary writers lie read a great 
deal. Greek lie never knew well enough to enjoy the classical 
authors of that tongue, in which respect he was exactly on a par 
with the most famous humanists of the Italian Renaissance. 1 
True, " he bought a Homer to become a Greek," and a few 
quotations show that he really studied it, but occasional refer- 
ences to other authors, such as Demosthenes and Aristophanes, 
seem to have behind them little more than literary common- 
place. 

With the Latin authors it is different. Luther read them 
quite widely and critically. In college he learned to know 
Yirgil, Ovid, and Baptista Mantuan, a late humanist whose 
eclogues enjoyed a great reputation. Later he studied Terence, 
in whose stories he took great delight, though he entertained 
the theory, not original with himself, that the plays were really 
written by Scipio or Laelius. Cicero he often praised, as, for 
example : — 

Cicero is the best philosopher, for he felt that the soul is immortal. 
He wrote best on natural, moral, and rational philosophy. He is a 
valuable man, reading with judgment and able to express himself well. 
He wrote in earnest and did not fool like the Greeks Plato and Aris- 
totle. I hope God will forgive such men as Cicero their sins. Even if 
he should not be redeemed, he will enjoy a situation in hell several 
degrees higher than that destined for our cardinal of Mayence. 

In the Latin Christian writers Luther's reading was very 
extensive though not exhaustive. His favorite was Augustine ; 
of some others, especially Jerome, he had a poor opinion. His 
knowledge of the later schoolmen was ready to his tongue, as 
his debates at Marburg and Leipsic proved. It would be tedious 
to give a list of the now obsolete authors whom the German 
professor mastered ; suffice it to say that almost the only one 
of the first importance with whom he was unacquainted was 
Thomas Aquinas, who, with the realists, was then regarded as 
the champion of a vanquished theology. 

1 The proof of this statement, which at first may sound paradoxical, is found 
in an article by Dr. L. R. Loomis in the American Historical Review, xiii, 246 
(1908). It is well known how much Petrarch revered a Greek manuscript, and 
how little of it he could construe. 



RELIGION AND CULTURE 348 

Luther studied Church history with considerable thorough- 
ness and much independence of judgment. He was familiar 
with Eusebius and Cassiodorus as well as with the legends of 
the saints, almost all of which he regarded with a justifiable 
suspicion. Sometimes he was biased by preconceived ideas, as 
when he convinced himself that the rise of the papal power 
was to be dated only four centuries before himself, with the 
introduction of the Canon Law. With this great code he was 
thoroughly familiar. 

Among the more recent theologians Luther's special pro- 
clivity to Tauler and the mystics, Staupitz and Gerson, has 
been mentioned. One of his favorite writers was John Huss, 
whom he learned to know early in 1520. In 1536 he edited 
a collection of his great predecessor's letters. Wicliffe is often 
mentioned by Luther, but it is probable that he knew him only 
through the reports of others. 

Of all writers the one whom Luther most relished, at least 
until the Diet of Worms, was Desiderius Erasmus. We get 
a fresh impression of that great scholar's enormous power and 
influence by reading in Luther's correspondence of the eager- 
ness with which his works were looked for and with which they 
were perused. For one reference to any other author in the Re- 
former's letters before 1521 there are at least ten to Erasmus, 
and this does not count the numerous citations from his 
Adages, a book of familiar quotations by which the aspiring 
stylist might add graces to his composition without the trouble 
of reading through the vast body of the classics. Luther's 
indebtedness to Erasmus' edition of the New Testament, both 
for his translation and for his lectures, has been noted. Among 
the other theological works of the Dutch scholar, the Saxon 
speaks of the Apologia ad Fabrem, the Ecclesiastae, the Que- 
rela pacis, the Ratio theologiae, the Enchiridon militis Christi- 
ani, and the Catechismus. The Colloquies and the Praise of 
Folly are frequently alluded to, though generally in a hostile 
tone. Of Erasmus' controversial works the Spongia against 
Hutten, and of course the Diatribe on Free Will, were known 
to Luther. To the older scholar he was indebted for an edition 
of Jerome's Epistles and a translation of Lucian's Dialogues. 



844 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

The satire, Julius exclusus, made such an impression upon the 
Reformer that he thought of translating it, but gave it up 
as too difficult. Erasmus' epistles were bought and devoured as 
soon as published : the Auctarium of 1518, the Farrago nova 
of 1519, and the EpistolaB ad diversos of 1521. 

Other contemporaries were perused only less eagerly. More's 
Utopia and Epigrams were ordered at the Frankfort fair of 
1518. LefSvre d'Etaples was well known and so were the 
Epistoke Obscurorum Virorum, of which, however, Luther, 
like Erasmus, highly disapproved. The writings of Valla and 
Hutten each had their place in the Reformer's library. 

Later in life, Luther developed a great fondness for the 
contemporary German fables, plays, ballads, and satires. The 
characteristics of this literature were intense nationalism, a 
powerful appeal to the common man and strong religious feel- 
ing, with all of which the Wittenberg professor deeply sympa- 
thized. The age loved sententious precept and satire. Indeed 
the most famous works of the time were satires. Erasmus' 
Praise of Folly, Brant's Ship of Fools, and the Letters of 
Obscure Men attest the taste of Luther's contemporaries, a 
predilection which he also shared. This taste was not re- 
fined ; the apotheosis of St. Grobianus, a character invented by 
Brant and often spoken of by Luther, is typical of the least 
pleasant side of the exuberant vitality manifest everywhere. 
Again, the age was one delighting in fables and short moral 
stories, as in Reinecke Fuchs and iEsop and the adventures 
of Till Eulenspiegel. Luther also appreciated and represented 
the intense nationalism of his countrymen — a quality promin- 
ent in the fiery dialogues of Hutten as well as in the works of 
minor men. Luther's fondness for this literature with which he 
has so many points in common, finds appropriate expression in 
a letter — half Latin, half German — to one who dwelt in the 
old poetic city of Nuremberg : — 

TO WENZEL LINK AT NUREMBERG 

(Wittenberg,) March 2, 1535. 
Grace and peace in Christ. As it is now several centuries, dear 
Wenzel, since I have spoken or written Latin, I fear that I have for- 



RELIGION AND CULTURE 845 

gotten it, at least our good old kind ; however, I believe that you are 
in like danger, and I hope that this my faith will justify me to you, 
without works, good or bad, for you are a propitious god to such 
sinners as I, for you need the same indulgence yourself. Amen. 

I have nothing to write, except that I would not let these fair 
Evangelists, Lady Tetzel and her daughters, go from here to Nurem- 
berg without taking you a letter. I would have sent you mountains of 
gold besides, but our Elbe has overflowed this year and washed away 
all the golden sands, leaving us only stones, of which two lodged in 
Jonas's body to reward him for his enmity to our sceptics. I have 
joked enough, ill and well, weak and strong, a sinner and righteous, 
dead and alive in Christ. Do you, who live by rivers of gold and 
silver, send me some poetic dreams or poetic songs of the kind I love. 
You don't understand ? Well then, I will speak German, gracious 
Lord Wenzel. If it is not too hard, nor too much, nor too long, nor 
too wide, nor too high, nor too deep, nor too anything, please have 
some boy collect all the German pictures, rimes, songs, books, lays of 
the Meistersinger, which have this year been painted, composed, 
made, and printed by your German poets, publishers, and printers. I 
have a reason for wanting them. 

We can make Latin books for ourselves, but we wish to learn how 
to make German ones, as we have hitherto made none that please 
anybody. Farewell in Christ and pray for me. The Lord be with you 
and all your household. Greet all our friends. 

Yours, 
Maetin Luthek, as much doctor as you are. 

Of the kind of literature of which he has spoken to Link 
the fables so characteristic of the period especially appealed to 
Luther. At Feste Coburg he had already busied himself with 
JEsop's fables, 1 for which he wrote an introduction. Another 
author whom he was constantly quoting was Dionysius Cato, 
who flourished about the time of Constantine, and wrote a set 
of short moral verses much used in schools. 

He loudly praised JEsop's fables, and said they were worthy of 
being translated and put in their proper topical order, for the book 
was not composed by one man at one time, but by many men in dif- 
ferent ages. . . . Serious anecdotes, sententious and redolent of age, 
useful to the state, should be gathered into the first book, lighter ones 

l Cf . letter to Melanchthon, April 23, 1530, pp. 248, 252. 



846 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

into the second, and the rest into the third. " It is a providential dis- 
pensation that the writings of Cato and iEsop remain in the schools ; 
each is a weighty author. Cato has the most useful words and pre- 
cepts, iEsop the pleasantest conversation and fables. If these moral 
books are used in education the youth profit much. In short, after 
the Bible, these two books please me better than those of all other 
philosophers and jurists, just as Donatus seems to me the best gram- 
mar." 

In contemporary productions Luther took a warm interest. 
One of his humanistic friends was Eoban Hess, who had wel- 
comed him so warmly on his journey to Worms. Hess had 
been called to teach the humanities at the first Protestant uni- 
versity, that of Marburg, founded by Philip of Hesse. Here 
be published a translation of the Psalms in Latin verse, for 
which Luther warmly thanked him in a letter of August 1, 
1537: — 

I confess, he wrote, that I am one of those who are more moved 
and delighted by poems than by the polished orations of even Cicero 
and Demosthenes. This is true even of profane poems, how much 
more of the Psalms. 

Though perhaps the chief means of culture, books are far 
from being the only ones. Luther was a thorough master of 
one of the fine arts — music. The old legend that he composed 
the tunes to his hymns has been exposed, but he both played 
the lute and sang. He had an exalted opinion of the function 
of music in divine service ; indeed it would be difficult to speak 
more strongly than does he in this letter : — 

TO LEWIS SENFEL AT MUNICH 

Gobdbo, October 4, 1530. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Although my name is so hated that 
I must fear, my dear Lewis, that this letter will not be safely received 
and read by you, yet my love of music has overcome my fear, and in 
musical talent I see that God has richly endowed you. It is this that 
makes me hope my letter will bring no danger to you, for who even in 
Turkey would be offended at me for loving art and honoring an artist ? 
Moreover I greatly honor and esteem your two Dukes of Bavaria, al- 



RELIGION AND CULTURE 347 

though they are not very favorable to Me, because I see they love and 
foster music. I doubt not that there are many seeds of virtue in a mind 
touched by music, and I consider those not affected by it as stocks and 
stones. "We know that music is hateful and intolerable to devils. I 
really believe, nor am I ashamed to assert, that next to theology there 
is no art equal to music, for it is the only one, except theology, which 
can give a quiet and happy mind, a manifest proof that the devil, the 
author of racking care and perturbation, flees from the sound of music 
as he does from the exhortation of religion. This is the reason why the 
prophets practised no other art, neither geometry nor arithmetic nor 
astronomy, as if they believed music and divinity nearly allied ; as in- 
deed they declare in their psalms and canticles. Praising music is like 
trying to paint a great subject on a small canvas, which turns out 
merely a daub. But my love for it abounds ; it has often refreshed me 
and freed me from great troubles. 

I pray you and beseech you if you have a copy of the canticle, I will 
lay me down in Peace, to transcribe and send it to me. The tune de- 
lighted me even as a youth and does so more now that I know the 
words. I have never seen it arranged for several voices. I would not 
add to your labor, but if you have it so arranged I would be pleased. 
I hope my life is nearly at an end, for the world hates me and I am 
sick of it. I wish the good and faithful Shepherd would take my soul. 
So I keep humming this canticle, and wishing I had it properly ar- 
ranged. In case you do not know it I send along the air, which you 
can arrange after my death if you like. The Lord Jesus be with you 
always. Amen. Pardon my bold and tedious letter. Give my greetings 
to your whole choir. 

Again he said : — 

" Singing is a fine noble exercise. It has nothing to do with the 
world or business troubles. He who sings drives out care, and that is 
an excellent thing." 

At the house of "Wolfgang Reissenbusch they sang at table. Luther 
said : " Music is a noble gift of God, next to theology. I would not 
change iny little knowledge of music for a great deal. Youths should 
be trained in this art, for it makes fine, clever people." 

The meals at the Black Cloister were enlivened by singings 
of which a lively picture is given in a letter to Jerome 
Weller's brother, who had sent the Reformer one of his own 
compositions : — 



348 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

TO MATTHEW WELLER AT FREIBERG 

(Wittenberg,) January 18, 1535. 

Grace and peace in Christ. I am rather late with my thanks, dear 
friend, for your kindness in sending me the song and the Pomeranian 
apples. But Jerome is my -witness how often I have intended to write, 
but have had no messenger. Please take my intentions kindly, for of 
a truth I believe you are my hearty friend as I am yours, as I shall 
prove when I have a chance. 

We sing your song as well as we can at table and afterwards. If 
we make a few mistakes it is not your fault, but that of our skill, which 
is small enough even after we have sung the song over twice or thrice. 
Virgil says we are not all equal to all things. No matter how well our 
composers do, we are too much for them and sing their songs badly. 
If indeed all the governments of the world were to punish us and if 
God and reason were to write the tunes, nevertheless we would make 
such mince-meat * of them as might be sold at the butcher's and make 
people wish us and our tongues hung as high as church bells. You 
composers must n't mind if we do make howlers of your songs, for 
we insist on trying them whether we fail or not. My dear Katie says 
she hopes you won't take offence at my jokes and she sends you her 
kind regards. God bless you. 

Martin Lutheb. 

Of Luther's appreciation of the other fine arts, it is more 
difficult to speak. If it can be argued that because he rarely 
speaks of painting, sculpture, and architecture, he did not care 
for them, the same must be said of Milton, who, having visited 
Italy in a later age, and with far greater opportunities of see- 
ing her masterpieces, is silent about them in his works, though 
he takes every occasion to praise music both in prose and verse. 2 
When Luther visited Italy in 1510, many of the great works 
both of classical antiquity and of the Renaissance which have 

1 Luther puns on the double meaning of Sau, which means both pig and mis- 
take. 

2 I make this statement on my general familiarity with Milton's works, with- 
out having examined them expressly to ascertain how often he speaks of painting 
and sculpture. Such references are certainly absent in places where one might ex- 
pect them, as, for example, in the description of the glories of Athens in Paradise 
Regained, though here Milton would have had the example of Virgil's tribute to 
Greek art ; nor, again, does the essay on education, while especially recommending 
music, mention the other fine arts. 



RELIGION AND CULTURE 849 

been the delight and study of all subsequent times, were already 
on exhibition. At Rome, at Florence, at Milan, and at many 
other cities, the pilgrim might have learned to know not only 
the great sculptors and painters of Greece and Italy, but those 
of other lands. And yet what a meagre opportunity was one 
month in a whole lifetime to become acquainted with a world 
of art ! Luther's attitude towards the masterpieces that he saw 
is well illustrated by one of his few references to them, namely, 
that it was a shame that the money paid for indulgences should 
go to pay for such things as the Apollo Belvedere. When souls 
were perishing what was it to him that the popes were enrich- 
ing the life of this world by their enlightened patronage of the 
arts ? Even thus Luther was too much alive to all the best in 
life, too cultured, in fact, not to notice the immortal works of 
great artists which he saw in Italy and possibly also in some 
German cities. Though the men who reported the table-talk 
were not particularly interested in this phase of their master's 
personality, they have fortunately preserved one saying which 
indicates that he was not blind to the merit of what he saw : — 

The Italian painters are so able and so full of genius that they can, 
in a masterly way, follow and exactly imitate nature in all their paint- 
ings ; not only do they get the proper color and form in all the mem- 
bers, but they even make them appear as if they lived and moved. 
Flanders follows Italy and imitates her in some measure, for the men 
of the Low Countries, especially the Flemish, are cunning and artful ; 
they quickly and easily learn a foreign language, for they have ready 
tongues. If one sends a Fleming through France or Italy, he soon 
knows the speech. 

Of the German painters on the other hand he has nothing 
to say. Diirer once sent him some of his engravings, of which 
the Reformer expresses no opinion. Cranach's art is only men- 
tioned to blame a certain picture for its indecency. In gen- 
eral, it is fair to say that if Luther was little appreciative 
of the arts appealing to the eye, the fault was rather in his 
limited opportunities than in his nature. 

In many other matters, trifling in themselves, a man's culture,! 
temper, and view of life may be tested. In all these the Wit-* 
tenberg professor showed that he was no narrow fanatic. He j 



850 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

approved of all innocent forms of amusement. He played a 
good game of chess, and speaks of cards as a harmless diversion 
for children. Again, he is delighted when some young people 
make up a party for " fools' bells " (a game I am not able to 
describe), and he warmly recommended outdoor sports to the 
young nobles as a substitute for drinking. Of another form 
of recreation which has fallen under the ban of some of his 
followers, he says : — 

Dances are instituted that courtesy may be learned in company and 
friendship and acquaintance be contracted between young men and 
girls. Here their intercourse may be watched and occasion of honor- 
able meeting given, so that having tried a girl we can afterwards let 
her go about more safely and easily. The Pope formerly condemned 
dances because he was an enemy of marriage. But let all things be 
done decently ! Let honorable men and matrons be invited to see that 
everything is proper. I myself would attend them sometimes, but the 
youth would whirl less giddily if I did. 

Luther approved not only of dances but of the theatre, which 
was, indeed, in that day, a vehicle of religious instruction. When 
George Held of Forscheim asked him, in 1543, whether such 
plays 1 were to be encouraged, intimating that they were dis- 
approved by certain ministers, Luther answered with a strong 
affirmative. 

1 The plays complained against, by the clergy of Magdeburg, were those of 
Joachim Greff. Cf. W. Scherer, Deutsche Studien, Sitzungsberichte derphil. hist. 
Klasse der k. k. Akademie zu Wien. vol. zc (1878 J, pp. 193 ff. Luther's letter, 
De Wette, v, 552. Cf . Burkhardt, Luther'i Brief wechsel, p. 424. 



CHAPTER XXXII 

THE LUTHER FAMILY 

Martin and Katie had six children, of whom four, three 1 
sons and one daughter, survived their parents. The eldest, 
John (Hans), was born on June 7, 1526. On December 10 of 
the following year a little daughter named Elizabeth came, but 
left her parents in less than a year. On August 5, 1528, Luther 
wrote to Hausmann : — 

Little Hans thanks you for the rattle of which he is inordinately 
proud. . . . My little daughter Elizabeth is dead. She has left me 
wonderfully sick at heart and almost womanish, I am so moved by 
pity for her. I could never have believed how a father's heart could 
soften for his child. 

The birth of another daughter, on May 4, 1529, brought 
comfort to the bereaved parent. She was baptized Magdalene, 
after Katie's aunt, who had come from the Nimbschen cloister 
to live with her niece. 

When Hans was four years old, his father, then at Feste 
Goburg, wrote him a letter which has been a children's classic 
from that day to this : — 

TO HANS LUTHEK AT WITTENBERG 

(Feste Coburg, June 19 ? 1530.) 

Grace and peace in Christ, dear little son. I am glad to hear that 
you are studying and saying your prayers. Continue to do so, my son, 
and when I come home I will bring you a pretty present. 

I know a lovely, pleasant garden where many children are ; they 
wear golden jackets and gather nice apples under the trees and pears 
and cherries and purple plums and yellow plums, and sing and run and 
jump and are happy and have pretty little ponies with golden reins and 
silver saddles. I asked the man who owned the garden whose children 
they were. He said : " They are the children who say their prayers 
and study and are good." Then said I : " Dear man, I also have a 
son whose name is Hans Luther ; may he come into the garden and 



852 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

eat the sweet apples and pears and ride a fine pony arid play with 
these children ? " Then the man said : " If he says his prayers and is 
good, he can come into the garden and Phil and Justy 1 too, and when 
they all come they shall have whistles and drums and fifes and dance 
and shoot little cross-bows." Then he showed me a fine large lawn in 
the garden for dancing, where hang real golden whistles and fine sil- 
ver cross-bows. But it was yet early and the children had not finished 
eating and I could not wait to see them dance, so I said to the man : 
" My dear sir, I must go away and write at once to my dear little 
Hans about all this, so that he will say his prayers and study and be 
good, so that he may come into the garden, and he has an Auntie Lena 
whom he must bring with him." Then the man said : " All right, go 
and tell him about it." So, dear little Hans, study and say your 
prayers and tell Phil and Justy to say their prayers and study too, so 
you may all come into the garden together. God bless you. Give 
Auntie Lena my love and a kiss from me. 

Your loving father, 

Martin Luthek. 

Another son was born on November 9, 1531, and named 
after his father, whose birthday was so near his own. Luther, 
who was uncommonly fond of children, said of him, rather 
sublimely : — 

" The youngest children are always the most loved by the parents. 
My little Martin is my dearest treasure. Hans and Lena can now 
speak and do not need so much care, therefore it is that parents always 
love the little infants who need their love the most. What a heart-stab 
it must have been to Abraham when he was commanded to kill his 
only son. Truly I would dispute with God if he bade me do such a 
thing." Then Katie said : " I cannot believe that God would really 
want any one to kill his own child." 

Luther : " God must be kinder to us and speak more gently to us 
than Katie does to her baby. Katie or I would not gouge an eye out 
or knock the head off our own child, and neither will God with his 
children. He gave his only son to make us trust him." 

At other times the moralizing was less lofty if equally human. 
One day when the baby, as is the manner of them, dirtied the 
parental lap on which he was sitting, the father grimly bade 

1 Philip Melanchtlion and Justus Jonas, juniores, both horn 1525. 



THE LUTHER FAMILY 353 

his guests remark that it was symbolic of the way most people 
treated their Father in heaven. Again he said : — 

What cause have you given me to love you so ? How have you de- 
served to be my heir ? By making yourself a general nuisance. And 
why are n't you thankful instead of filling the house with your howls ? 

On January 28, 1533, a third son was born. When the 
iponsors gathered the next day, the proud parent said to 
them : — 

A new Pope has just been born ; you will help the poor fellow to his 
rights. ... I have called him Paul, for St. Paul has given me many 
good sayings and arguments, wherefore I wish to honor him. 

The last child, named Margaret after her father's lately de- 
ceased mother, first saw the light on December 17, 1534j 

The Reformer took a lively interest in the education of his 
children. Hans began to study under the tutorship of a student, 
Jerome Weller, before he was four years old. At seven he ap- 
parently knew some Latin, by no means a dead language but one 
frequently used in conversation by the members of the learned 
classes. At the same time he was enrolled in the university, but 
this was a mere honor usually accorded to sons of professors. 
At nine he was sent away to school, though where is not known. 
One of his father's letters, of January 27, 1537, warns him of 
the curse which God will send upon him if he does not do right. 
Hans was not a very bright boy, and in August, 1542, his father 
sent him to one of the best schools of the day, that conducted 
by Mark Crodel at Torgau. 

About three weeks after he had first entered the school, he 
was called home by the serious illness of his sister Magdalene. 
The little girl, then in her fourteenth year, died on September 
20. Luther's life was so little private that the whole death- 
scene has been preserved from the pen of one of the household 
who happened to be present. Few tragedies are more touching 
than this simple narrative, showing how the great, strong man 
was utterly broken by the affliction : — 

As his daughter lay very ill, Dr. Luther said : " I love her very 
much, but dear God, if it be thy will to take her, I submit to thee." 
Then he said to her as she lay in bed : " Magdalene, my dear little 



354 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

daughter, would you like to stay here with your father, or would you 
willingly go to your Father yonder ? " She answered : " Darling 
father, as God wills." Then said he : " Dearest child, the spirit is will- 
ing but the flesh is weak." Then he turned away and said : " I love 
her very much ; if my flesh is so strong, what can my spirit do ? God 
has given no bishop so great a gift in a thousand years as he has 
given me in her. I am angry with myself that I cannot rejoice in heart 
and be thankful as I ought." 

Now as Magdalene lay in the agony of death, her father fell down 
before the bed on his knees and wept bitterly and prayed that God 
might free her. Then she departed and fell asleep in her father's 
arms. . . . 

As they laid her in the coffin he said : " Darling Lena, you will rise 
and shine like a star, yea, like the sun. ... I am happy in spirit, 
but the flesh is sorrowful and will not be content, the parting grieves 
me beyond measure. ... I have sent a saint to heaven." 

Three days later he wrote to Justus Jonas: — 

I believe that you have already heard that my dearest daughter 
Magdalene has been reborn to the eternal kingdom of Christ ; and al- 
though my wife and I ought only to give thanks and rejoice at such a 
happy pilgrimage and blessed end, whereby she has escaped the power 
of the flesh, the world, the Turk, and the devil, yet so strong is nat- 
ural affection that we must sob and groan in heart under the oppres- 
sion of killing grief. . . . Would that I and all mine might have 
such a death, or rather such a life. She was, as you know, of a sweet, 
gentle and loving nature. 

The other children survived their father. Hans entered the 
university in 1543. Here he continued to study after his father's 
death, taking up the law, although the Schmalkaldic war, 1546- 
1547, interrupted his work. In 1552 the Elector John Frederic 
gave him a position in the government, which he continued to 
serve till his death in 1575. In 1553 he married Elizabeth, 
daughter of Caspar Cruciger. He had but one daughter, who 
died childless. 

Martin studied theology, but never held a position, being 
sickly and perhaps weak-minded. He married, but died child- 
less in 1565. 

Paul became a successful physician. After taking his degree 



THE LUTHER FAMILY 355 

at Wittenberg, in 1557, he taught some time at Jena, and was 
later called to be court physician first to Elector Joachim II of 
Brandenburg and then to Elector August of Albertine Saxony. 
He married in 1553 and had several children, of whom some 
have descendants now living. 

Margaret Luther was but eleven at her father's death. Nine 
years later she married a student at Wittenberg, the rich and 
noble George von Kunheim. She left three children, of whom 
one, her daughter Margaret, has posterity at the present day. 

Besides his own children, Luther brought up no less than ( 
eleven of his orphaned nephews and nieces. With his brother; 
and sisters he had had little to do since his fourteenth year, 
though occasionally one of them is mentioned in a letter or in 
the table-talk. Their relations were strained by the division of ; 
old Hans Luther's estate, but this was amicably adjusted on 
July 10, 1534, when the heirs assembled at Wittenberg, and 
Martin drew up an instrument dividing the estate, reckoned at 
1250 gulden, in five equal parts, one to each child or his heirs. ,' 
The house, which may still be seen at Mansfeld, went to James 
Luther, who paid the other heirs for their share. 

Luther did not always have an easy time with his young re- 
latives. Two of them, George Kauf mann and Hans Polner, were 
given to drink. To the latter he said in 1540 : — 

On account of you I hear an evil report among strangers. My 
enemies examine all that I do ; if I break wind they smell it at Rome. 
If in drink yon should do some harm, do you not know how you would 
brand me and this house and the town and the Evangelic faith ? Other 
men when drunk are happy and mild, as my father was ; they sing 
and joke, but you fall into a fury. Such men ought to flee drink like a 
poison, for it is a deadly poison to such natures. Men of better humor 
may indulge more freely in liquor. 

Polner may have reformed ; at any rate he became a clergy- 
man, and Katie liked him better than the parish minister. 

Like other German professors, Luther took a certain number , 
of students as boarders, though they usually paid for their en- 
tertainment by service, both literary and menial, rather than by 
money. The Black Cloister was filled not only with them and 



356 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

with the poor relatives, but with needy priests, and frequently 
with distinguished visitors. In 1542 George Held described the 
house as " inhabited by a miscellaneous and promiscuous crowd 
of youths, students, girls, widows, old maids and children, and 
very unrestful." 

Among these guests a round dozen took notes of their host's 
conversations — and thus arose the famous table-talk. The first 
to conceive this idea was Conrad Cordatus, a grizzled Austrian 
convert, who, notwithstanding some qualms of conscience and a 
rebuke from Melanehthon, began in the summer of 1531 to 
make entries of his chief's best sayings at table. Veit Dietrich, 
the amanuensis of the Reformer, hastened to follow his example. 
A third reporter was Antony Lauterbach, the most diligent of 
all, whose notes, taken on two visits, the first from September, 
1531, to February, 1533, the second from October, 1536, to 
July, 1539*, fill several small volumes. Lewis Eabe, the coun- 
cillor of Albert of Mayence, who fled to Wittenberg after the 
execution of Schenitz, also took some notes during a former 
visit of 1532. 

Another reporter was John Schlaginhaufen, a student who 
matriculated in 1529. His table-talk, from November, 1531, to 
September, 1532, shows that he was an inmate of the Black 
Cloister during that time. His assiduity in taking notes is illus- 
trated by an amusing incident told by himself : — 

After the doctor had gone to his room for the night, a messenger 
came with a note from the widow of a pastor of Belgern with a request 
for a husband. Luther said to the messenger : " She is of age and must 
look out for herself ; I cannot help her." When the messenger had 
gone, he laughed and said to me : " For Heaven's sake, Schlaginhaufen, 
write that down too. Is n't it a nuisance ? They must think I am a 
matrimonial agent. Fie on you, old world ! Friend, write it down and 
mark it." 

A sixth note-taker was little Hans's tutor, Jerome "Weller. 
He was the guest of the Reformer for many years, and so was 
his brother Peter, who owned a dog of which the doctor once 
said : — 

If I were as devoted to prayer as Peter's dog is to food I could get 



THE LUTHER FAMILY 857 

anything from God. For the beast thinks of nothing the livelong day 
bat licking the platter. 

It was a great occasion when Jerome crowned his years of 
study by taking the doctorate in the fall of 1535. Luther gave 
a banquet to celebrate, sending far and wide for provisions. 
Of this feast Luther wrote to Justus Jonas on September 4, 
1535 : — 

Now our head cook, Lady Katie, begs you to take this thaler and 
buy us all sorts of birds and fowls of the air, and whatever else is 
subject to man's dominion and lawful to eat in the aerial kingdom of 
feathers — but not crows. As to sparrows, God loves them so that we 
would like to eat them all up. If you spend more than this thaler — 
I '11 give it to you. Moreover if you can buy or catch — which would 
cost you nothing — any hares, or such tidbits, send 'em on, for we are 
minded to satisfy your stomachs for once, especially if it can be done 
with malt liquor, as they call it. My Lord Katie has brewed seven 
kegs in which she put thirty-two bushels of malt, hoping to gratify my 
palate. She trusts that the beer will be good, but you and the rest will 
find that out by testing it. . . . We shall certainly live merrily if you 
come to us with all those winged creatures whom we shall force to give 
up their free kingdom of the air and go into a prison pot under the 
watch and ward of a practised cook. My Lord Katie greets you with 
respectful friendship, but the worse for you, for vice versa, if my wife 
salutes you, I salute yours, tit for tat. . . . 

The game arrived and the feast went off well. The next year 
Weller married and set up housekeeping for himself. He 
wanted Luther to give him a wedding banquet, too, but the Re- 
former demurred, remembering the crowd and the bad markets 
of the year before. 

As the older reporters of the table-talk left the hospitable 
house their places were taken by others not less zealous. At the 
head of the younger circle, both in point of time and of im- 
portance, was John Mathesius, a man who attained some little 
fame in his day. His notes fall within 1540. With him were 
George Plato, Caspar Heydenreich, Jerome Besold, and lastly 
John Aurifaber, whose intimacy with Luther began in the last 
years of the latter's life. Aurifaber was the first editor of the 
Reformer's letters and table-talk. 



358 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

Such was the company of disciples who during the last fifteen 
years of their master's life frequented his hospitable home. It 
is easy to imagine what the evening meal must have been like 
in the darkly wainscotted dining-room. If it is winter, a large 
German tile stove diffuses a pleasant warmth. At the head of 
the long table the large form and strong face of the host is 
conspicuous. Near him may be seen the gray hair and irascible 
countenance of Cordatus ; the Englishman opposite is Dr. 
Robert Barnes, struggling with the difficulties of the Teutonic 
tongue, though, indeed, he hardly needs it here, as most of the 
conversation among the men is carried on in Latin. Further 
along the table are gentle Hausmann, Lauterbach, tall and 
blond, and mournful Schlaginhaufen, intent upon his sins. 
Dietrich's boyish face is filled with adoration divided be- 
tween his master and his master's niece ; hard by are the 
Weller brothers with their dog,^ or perhaps Mathesius, with 
other students and guests. At the far end of the table sits 
a capable, plain, motherly woman surrounded by a host of 
children. As the students bend over their note-books, hurry- 
ing to let no gem of wisdom escape them, she laughs and 
says : " Doctor, don't teach them for nothing ; they all get 
a lot that way, but Lauterbach gets the most and the best," 
to which her husband replies, " I have taught and preached 
gratis for thirty years, why should I begin to sell anything in 
my decrepit old age ? " 

These men, indeed, recorded everything they heard, good, 
bad, and indifferent. No experience too sacred for their curi- 
osity, no word too trivial for their indiscriminate veneration. 
Luther at the death-bed of his daughter, and Luther in all the 
freedom of after-dinner expansiveness, telling the idlest and 
coarsest of stories, are revealed with equal frankness. 

The conversations deal with every subject which could pos- 
sibly have come within the range of Luther's experience. He 
discusses his whole system of doctrine and philosophy ; he 
speaks of books, ancient and modern, of history, of his contem- 
poraries, of politics, and of nature. He makes jokes and tells 
many a tale of the world, the devil, and the flesh. Compared 
with his human breadth and refreshing unreserve, how dry and 



THE LUTHER FAMILY . 359 

jejune is the table-talk of Melanchthon 1 or of Coleridge. 2 Only 
in Boswell's life of Johnson have we the same vitality, frank- 
ness, and living interest. 

The conversations are no less interesting and hardly less 
valuable for being very inaccurate as historical sources. Lu- 
ther's information about contemporary events is imperfect and 
his judgment nearly always partisan. Even his own remin- 
iscences, owing to the fallibility of human memory, are often 
demonstrably inaccurate. But if the sayings cannot be used as 
a register of facts and dates, or as a chronicle, they have an 
enormous value for the picture they give of the opinions, the 
reading, the daily life and personal attitude of the Keformer. 
However much the table-talk may distort history, it surely never 
belies psychology. 

It is for this reason that it has enjoyed such enormous pop- 
ularity. The reprints in German are legion, and translations 
have been made into several other languages. The first English 
version was made in 1652 by Henry Bell, a second by Hazlitt, 
son of the well-known essayist, in 1848, and both have been 
often reprinted. Carlyle thinks the table-talk " the most inter- 
esting now of all the books 'proceeding from Luther, with many 
beautiful unconscious displays of the man, and what a nature he 
had." Coleridge devoted much time and thought to them, — 
perhaps a little too much for some tastes, for he read into them 
his own metaphysics and read out of them their own charm. 
Michelet, who stopped his own great work on the history of 
France to write a biography of Luther, has them in mind when 
he says, in his wonderful way : — 

And among these joys Luther had those of the heart, of the man, 
the innocent happiness of the family and home. What family more 
holy, what home more pure ? . . . Holy hospitable table, where I my- 
self, for a long time a guest, have found so many divine fruits on 
which my heart yet lives. . . . Yes, the happy years I spent reading 

1 Partly preserved in Losche, Analecta Lutherana et Melanthonia (Gotha, 1892). 
Its interest is indicated by the history of a dinner at Melanchthon's table, during 
which most of the time was occupied in hearing the children read Greek and 
Latin authors and recite parts of Scripture and of the Catechism. 

2 Coleridge's table-talk is not really table-talk at all, but sundry aphoristic 
observations written down by himself at his study-desk. 



360 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Luther have left me a strength, a vigor (seve), which I hope God will 
preserve to me until death. 

Luther's relations with his servants were usually pleasant. 
Katie was a little parsimonious in her dealings with them, and 
Martin often had to plead hard with her to give a departing 
domestic a tip, as in the case of John Rischmann, a faithful 
youth. The names of several of the servants are known to us 
and thus enjoy the immortality so cheerfully promised by Na- 
poleon to his secretary. The oldest and most devoted was Wolf- 
gang Sieberger, who started as a student of theology, but was 
unable to keep up with the classes, and even before the Re- 
former's marriage became the janitor of the Black Cloister, a 
position which he kept throughout his master's life. Luther 
bought him a little plot of ground next the monastery, which had 
belonged to the ex-prior Brisger. Here Wolf tried the profes- 
sion of fowler, but his unsuccessful efforts only provoked the 
mirth of the Reformer, who to tease him wrote the following 
letter purporting to come from the birds. With the charming 
humor of the composition is mingled that love of nature and 
wild things which always found expression when not crowded 
out by more urgent matters : — 

TO WOLFGANG SIEBERGER AT WITTENBERG 

(WlTTENBEBG, Autumn, 1534.) 

Complaint of the Birds to Luther against Wolfgang. 
We, thrushes, blackbirds, finches, linnets, goldfinches, and all other 
pious, honorable birds, who migrate this autumn over Wittenberg, 
give your kindness to know, that we are credibly informed that one 
Wolfgang Sieberger, your servant, has conceived a great wicked plot 
against us, and has bought some old, rotten nets very dear, to make a 
fowling-net out of anger and hatred to us. He undertakes to rob us 
of the freedom God has given us to fly through the air, and he puts 
our lives in danger, a thing we have not deserved of him. All this, as 
you yourself can imagine, is a great trouble and danger to us poor 
birds, who have neither houses nor barns nor anything else, and so we 
humbly and kindly pray you to restrain your servant, or, if that can- 
not be, at least to cause him to strew corn on the fowling-net in the 
evening and not to get up in the morning before eight, so that we can 
continue our journey over Wittenberg. If he will not do this, but 



THE LUTHER FAMILY 861 

keeps on wickedly seeking our lives, we will pray God to plague him, 
and instead of us to send frogs, locusts, and snails into the fowling-net 
by day and at night to give him mice, fleas, lice, and bugs, so that he 
will forget us and leave us free. Why does he not use his wrath and 
industry against sparrows, swallows, magpies, crows, ravens, mice, and 
rats ? They do you much harm, rob and steal corn, oats, and barley 
even out of the houses, whereas we only eat crumbs and a stray grain 
or two of wheat. We leave our case to right reason whether he hat 
not done us wrong. We hope to God, that as many of our brothers 
and friends escaped from him, we too, who saw his dirty old nets yes- 
terday, may also escape from them. 

Written in our lofty home in the trees with our usual quill and seal. 

Behold the fowls of the air : for they sow not, neither do they reap 
nor gather into barns ; yet your heavenly Father feedeth them. Are 
ye not much better than they ? Matthew vi, 26. 

Luther was not always so fortunate in his servants as in the 
faithful Sieberger. His hospitality was so unbounded that no 
wonder it was sometimes abused. The worst experience he ever 
had, though not the only one, is fully related by himself, with 
a terrible passion of hatred only to be explained by the nervous 
irritability brought on by his torturing illnesses : — 

TO JOHN GOEITZ AT LEIPSIC 

(Wittknbebg,) January 29, 1544. 
Grace and peace. Dear Judge and good friend ! I am informed 
that you have at Leipsic, as a guest, one who calls herself Rosina von 
Truchses, such a shameful liar as I have never seen the equal of. For 
she first came to me with that name, giving herself out to be a poor 
nun of noble family, but on inquiry I found she had deceived me. 
When I asked her about it and inquired who she really was, she con- 
fessed that she was the daughter of a citizen of Minderstadt, in Fran- 
conia, who had been killed in the Peasants' Revolt ; she said she had 
been forced to wander around and was a poor child and begged me to 
forgive her for God's sake and to pity her. I told her henceforth not 
to tell such lies and not to take the name of Truchses. But while I 
took her obedience for granted and thought she did as I bade, she 
played the harlot behind my back and foully deceived every one with 
the name Truchses. I found this out after she had left, and can only 
think she was sent me by the papists as an archwhore, desperate char- 
acter, and sack of lies, who did all sorts of harm to my cellar, kitchen. 



362 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

and rooms, and yet no one can be held accountable for it. Who knows 
what else she planned to do, for I took her into my own house with 
my own children. She had lovers and became pregnant and asked one 
of my maids to jump on her body and kill the unborn child. She 
escaped through the compassion of my Katie ; otherwise she would 
have deceived no more men unless the Elbe ran dry. Wherefore pray 
keep an eye on this Truchses, and make it your duty to inquire where 
?he is, that this cursed harlot, this lying, thievish wretch be not toler- 
ated among you. Protect the Evangelic cause, oblige me, and beware 
of her devilish frauds, thefts, and impostures. I fear that if a strict 
inquiry should be made, she would be found to deserve death more 
than once, as so many witnesses have appeared against her since she 
left. I have written to show you what I know about this case, so that 
my conscience may not be burdened by having kept silence instead of 
having warned you against this damned, lying, thievish harlot. Now do 
what you like ; I am excused. God bless you. Amen. 

Before we leave the Black Cloister one humble inmate must 
not be forgotten, the little dog named Tolpel, or Clownie : — 

One of Luther's children had a dog. The doctor said : " We see 
now the meaning of the text, ' Ye shall rule over the beasts of the 
field,' for the dog bears everything from the child." 

Asked about the restoration of all things and whether there would 
be dogs and other animals in that kingdom, he said : " Certainly there 
will be, for Peter calls that day the time of the restitution of all things. 
Then, as is clearly said elsewhere, he will create a new heaven and a 
new earth. He will also create new Clownies with skin of gold and 
hair of pearls. There and then God will be all in all. No animal will 
eat any other. Snakes and toads and other beasts which are poisonous 
on account of original sin will then be not only innocuous but even 
pleasing and nice to play with. Why is it that we cannot believe that 
all things will happen as the Bible says, even in this article of the 
resurrection ? Original sin is at fault." 



CHAPTER XXXIII 

DOMESTIC ECONOMY 

Wittenbebg lies along the inner curve of the winding, eddy, 
ing Elbe, in the midst of a sandy plain neither fertile nor beau- 
tiful. Frequent floods and poor drainage made the town unwhole- 
some. Prior to the close of the fifteenth century it was a mere 
hamlet, with about three hundred and fifty low, ugly, wooden 
houses and few public buildings. As previously stated, Frederic 
the Wise, anxious to build up a capital equal to Leipsic, adorned 
the town with a new church and a university. The rise of the 
Evangelic teaching made Wittenberg one of the capitals of 
Europe, and its growth and improvement kept pace with its 
more exalted position. 

One of the handsomest buildings was the Black Cloister, a large 
red-brick edifice situated at the extreme southeast ofThe town, 
near the Elster Gate and about ten minutes' walk from the river. 
It was on the main thoroughfare, named College Street, from 
which it was separated by a court, or lawn, on which has since 
been built the Augusteum, a theological seminary. This court 
was surrounded by a brick wall, and contained some trees, includ- 
ing a large pear tree. The house is a long quadrangle, with three 
stories and an attic ; in the middle of the front is a tower with 
a spiral staircase which was the principal approach to the living- 
rooms situated one flight up. The ground floor contained the 
kitchen and some storerooms. Climbing the stairs one comes 
to a large ante-room, a living-room, a chamber now shown as 
Luther's bedroom, and a corner room, which at that time had a 
spiral staircase to the kitchen, all looking north over the court. 
On the south side, facing a small garden, also enclosed with a 
high wall, are three large rooms then used as lecture-halls — for 
Luther held his classes here instead of in the university buildings 
hard by. The rest of the house was used for the numerous guests 
and dependents of the hospitable professor. 



864 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Luther was greatly annoyed for many years by tie fortifica- 
tions built by the electors after 1526. The public works came so 
near his property that he was obliged to make alterations. In 
1532 he complained of them, and nine years later 1 he wrote 
on this subject one of his rudest letters to the inspector of the 
fortifications, Frederic von der Giiine : — 

I command you, for I will not beg one who is my enemy and God's 
and perhaps the secret enemy of the Elector also, that upon receipt of 
this warning to remove the said operations, for, mind you, I won't 
stand them. Likewise you must mend the door of the brewery. ... I 
say nothing of those great lords the ditch-diggers, whom you have set 
over me to drive me from my windows and act as they please. . . . 
God bless you and convert you and make you different ! If you don't 
turn about you will soon be in the abyss of hell. This I do not wish ; 
if I did, I would tell you so frankly. . . . There have been much 
greater tyrants and devils than you and the bailiff, but they have all 
gone and had to leave the sun in the sky. 

/ Besides the changes necessitated by the public works, Luther 
/undertook extensive alterations to adapt the building to his 
convenience. He took down the tower-like passage between 
the main building and an outhouse, and removed his study, 
formerly situated here, to one of the south rooms overlooking 
the garden in the second story. In July, 1532, a cellar he was 
building fell in and would have crushed him had it not been 
for the interposition of an angel, as the student who records 
the incident says. Of his other alterations in the rooms, includ- 
ing the equipment of a bathroom, most of what is known comes 
from his household account. From this document we also learn 
that a building (the so-called new house) was erected directly 
back of the Black Cloister, though what it was used for is 
unknown to me. 

While such extensive alterations were being made, the living- 
rooms gradually assumed a pretty and even rich appearance. 

1 If the date of a letter from him to Griine, published in Burokhardt : Luther's 
Briefvoechsel, p. 403, is right. The editor places it in this year because the Weimar 
archives show that Griine was then at Wittenberg ; Kostlin supposed the saying 
to come from the same time as a saying in the table-talk which can be dated 1532, 
a mistake allowed to stand in the last edition. Cf. Kostlin-Kawerau, i, 690, note 
to p. 491. 




PS 
H 
H 

CO 
M 
O 
iJ 

o 



o 
J 

PS 

m 
X 

H 

55 
PS 

3 

PS 

ja 



o 
w 



PS 

s 

H 
D 
►J 



DOMESTIC ECONOMY S65 

The wainscotting, not so dark then as now, was handsome, and 
the solid furniture in perfect harmony with it. 1 Gold, silver and 
crystal goblets a presented by nobles and cities, adorned the rooms, 
and the walls were covered with pictures. Among these were 
probably Cranach's portraits of Martin and Katie painted at 
the time of their wedding, and possibly one or two others by 
this well-known artist. Others were by the inferior artists of 
his school, many of them representing allegorical subjects, as 
for example, one large painting illustrating the Ten Command- 
ments, and another of the vineyard of the Lord, with Luther 
clearing away the thorns and Melanchthon following after to 
water the seed. On one picture of the Virgin, Luther sweetly 
commented : — 

The child Jesus sleeps on Mary's arm ; should he wake he would ask 
us what we had done and how we had lived. 

His fondness for sententious precepts led him to decorate his 
walls with them — a taste not_unknown at the present day. In 
July, 1543, he wrote with his own hand above the handsome tile 
stove in the living-room these very characteristic words : — 

Whoso is faithful in little things will also be faithful in great things, 
and who is unfaithful in little things will be unrighteous in great 
things. The reason is : Dogs learn to eat by lapping. 

Who is diligent in little will be diligent in much. 

Who esteems not a penny will never have a gulden. 

Who wastes an hour will waste a day. 

Who despises the small will never get the large. 

Who despises the gizzard will not get the hen. . . . 

Who will not learn his letters will never learn anything. 

Who cannot live on a hundred gulden cannot live on a thousand. 

It is probable that flowers often added to the beauty of the 
living-rooms. Luther was very fond of them and had carried a 
bouquet in his hand at the Leipsic debate. One day in the spring 
of 1533 some violets were brought to him. His thoughts on 

1 The furniture now in the Luther house is said to be the original ; this is highly 
improbable, bnt at any rate it may be assumed to be like the original, as it is very 
old. 

2 Two of these in rock crystal chased with gold are to be seen in the Griine 
Gewolbe at Dresden. 



366 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

them, if not too deep for tears, are abundantly worth trans- 
cription : — 

What do we give God for these little flowers ? Beviling, evil, and 
shame. This first summer flower is as blue as the sky. Neither the 
Grand Turk nor the Emperor could pay for them in all the world. 

There were at least two clocks, instruments which interested 
the Reformer almost as much as they did his contemporary, the 
Emperor. Indeed he observed : — 

How wonderful is the invention of the clock ! If it could only speak 
it would be simply human ! 

These things had to be ordered from other cities. Link sent 
Luther several manufactured articles from industrial Nurem- 
berg, and with them a satire on the papacy by Hans Sachs, 
the celebrated dramatist. On May 19, 1527, Luther writes 
him : — 

I have received the planes and the quadrant with the cylinder and 
the wooden clock, for which I thank you. You only forgot one thing, 
to tell me how much money I ought to send you, for I do not suppose 
what I sent you before was enough. I shall not order any more instru- 
ments at present, unless you have a new kind of lathe which will turn 
itself while Sieberger snores and neglects it. I am a past-master of 
clock-work myself, especially when I have to point out the lateness of 
the hour to my drunken Saxons, who look more at the tankards than 
at the clock, and do not mind in the least the course of the sun or of 
the clock or of its owner. 

Previous to his marriage, Luther had a salary of one hun- 
dred gulden. He also had regular presents of clothes from the 
Elector, and of course his lodging in the monastery cost him 
nothing. After 1525 his salary was doubled, but as the endow- 
ment of the monastery was dissipated, he was obliged to buy 
his own provisions. That he found it difficult to do so may be 
inferred from a letter to Brisger, of February 1, 1527, mention- 
ing that he has contracted a debt of one hundred gulden for 
which he has given cups as a pledge. Nevertheless on August 
17, 1529, he wrote the Elector asking him not to send any more 
clothes : " For," said he, " I already have more from your Grace 



DOMESTIC ECONOMY 367 

than I can reconcile with my conscience ; it does not become 
me as a minister to have superfluity, nor do I wish it." 

His salary was raised again in 1532 to three hundred gulden, 
and in 1536 the equivalent of another hundred was added by 
regular donations of wood, grain, and hay. Luther sometimes 
feared that these payments were tampered with by the nobles, 
and wrote an earnest protest to Spalatin, on July 13, 1542 : — 

Although I care but little for the meats and dainties of this life, as 
Paul advises, yet am I married, and therefore, as the same Paul says, 
a debtor to my family, for whoso neglects to care for those of his 
house is worse than an infidel. Wherefore I beg of you to see to it 
that I be not cheated of the Elector's gifts. 

About 1541 Luther's income was further increased by a 
pension from the Elector, to him and his heirs, of fifty gulden 
per annum on a capital of one thousand gulden. In the last 
year of his life a pension on the same terms was granted him 
by the King of Denmark. Again he made a good deal from 
gifts, sometimes in money, oftener in plate and other valuables. 
He mentions a legacy of a hundred gulden left him about 1520, 
and Henry VIII gave him fifty gulden in 1535. 

Luther might greatly have increased his income from two 
sources by which he preferred not to profit. Professors were 
expected to receive something from each student (the honora- 
rium still collected in German universities) in addition to their 
salary. But like Socrates the Reformer wished to make his 
teaching free. Again, the printers offered him four hundred 
gulden per annum for his manuscripts, but desiring to have his 
works as cheap as possible, he refused to take it, though as a 
matter of fact the benefit accrued to the publishers rather than 
to the public. 

Money, of course, is worth just what it will buy, and for that 
reason a comparison of its value in different ages is of all things 
the most difficult. If the comparison is confined to those articles 
which are common to the sixteenth and twentieth centuries it 
will be found that a gulden (intrinsically worth fifty cents or 
two shillings) would then buy twenty times as much of them as it 
will now. Luther's salary of two hundred dollars, for example, 
must be multiplied by twenty or more to get the equivalent 



368 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

I of the stipend of the leading professors in the larger Ameri- 
can universities. Cows were reckoned at an average of three 
gulden apiece. Real estate is somewhat hard to compare, as it 
differs in each individual case. The Black Cloister, with its 
adjoining land and outhouses, fetched 3700 gulden in 1564. 
Shoes sold at thirty-six cents a pair. Wheat varied from three 
groschen to one gulden a Scheffel, or in our money from seven 
tenths of a cent to fourteen cents a bushel. The higher price 
was during a famine, and was so abnormal that Luther pro- 
tested against it in a letter to John Frederic, April 9, 1539. 
The lower limit, though only reached when living " was so cheap 
as never before," was probably nearer the average. 

On the other hand, it may plausibly be argued that a gulden 
now is worth more than a gulden then. Such cheap luxuries as 
coffee, tea, chocolate, and tobacco were unobtainable by Luther. 
Books are rather cheaper now, and of course newspapers and 
photographs were then unknown. Travel was cheaper then, but 
it is infinitely safer, quicker, and more comfortable now. With 
all his passion for music the professor could never hear an 
opera. His secretaries could have no typewriters, his house no 
electricity or gas, and his wife no sewing-machine. 

Luther's expenses were heavy, owing to the generosity with 
which he helped his friends and the almost reckless hospital- 
ity with which he entertained poor students, clergymen, and re- 
latives. That in spite of these drains he should have managed to 
accumulate a considerable property must be largely attributed 
to the business ability of Katie. -She brewed beer in the cloister, 
raised vegetables, kept swine, cattle, and fowls, and as time went 
on farmed a good deal of land. His savings were all invested 
in real estate, though there were other forms of placing money. 
He once declined a present of two shares in a mine offered him 
by the Elector, saying : — 

Satan deludes many in mines, making them think they see great 
store of copper and silver where there is none. If he can bewitch men 
in full daylight above ground, he can do so much more in a subter- 
ranean mine. ... I know I would have no luck in mining, because 
Satan would not favor me with the free gift of God, and I am satisfied 
as it is. 



DOMESTIC ECONOMY 869 

The Black Cloister was legally deeded to Luther on February; 
4, 1532. About the same time he bought a small garden adja-' 
cent, moved by the prayers and tears of Katie. Some time in the/ 
thirties he bought for nine hundred gulden the large house and 
property of Claus Bildenhauer, on the swine market, a little north 
of the Cloister, near the present post-office. The " lazy brook " 
which flowed through it is still to be seen. Katie made a fish- 
pond of it, in which, as her husband said, she took more pleas- 
ure than many a noble in his large preserves. About 1534 Lu- 
ther bought a very small garden for his servant Wolfgang 
Sieberger. In 1541 he purchased for four hundred and thirty 
gulden another cottage and land adjoining the Black Cloister 
which had once belonged to Brisger, who had previously sold it 
to Bruno. In 1544 he bought a hop-garden for three hundred and 
seventy-five gulden. 

All these purchases had been in Wittenberg. About 1540 he 
bought from Katie's brother Hans von Bora, the little farm of 
Zulsdorf, some twenty miles south of Leipsic on the road to Al- 
tenburg. This was Katie's favorite property ; she spent much 
time there cultivating the land, which was richer than that around 
Wittenberg. The price was 610 gulden, of which the Elector 
gave six hundred. 

Besides the property that Katie bought, she also rented a large 
bit of meadow land, the Boos Farm, from the Elector. She had 
a good deal of trouble getting it, on account of the dislike of the 
Chancellor Briick for her husband, but her persistence was at 
length successful. One of the few letters in her hand now extant 
was written on April 28, 1539, to the receiver-general of taxes, 
John von Taubenheim, begging him to let her have the property 
for her growing herd of cows. 

Luther naturally thought at times of what he should leave his 
wife and children. In 1540 he said : — 

I approve Philip Melanchthon's prudence in making a will, but I do 
not know how to do it myself. 

My books are at hand. I leave them to my children. Let them see 
to it that they be wiser than their father. Katie, I make you heir of 
my estate ; you have borne my children and given them suck ; you will 
not mismanage their property. I am averse to guardians, they rarely 
do well. 



S70 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Early in 1542, however, Luther made a testamentary disposi- 
tion of part of his property. His will is a remarkable document 
in two ways ; first, because it does not mention all the property, 
but only that settled on Katie as a widow's portion. The Black 
Cloister, having been conferred on Luther and his wife jointly, 
needed not to be specified. But besides this there were other 
pieces of property, the most important of them being Bilden- 
hauer's house, passed over in silence. Secondly, it is noteworthy 
that Luther's profound dislike of lawyers led him to act with- 
out the help of a notary. As this was requisite, according to 
the law of the time, his will was broken. 

luther's (second) will 

Wittenberg, January 6, 1542. 

I, Martin Luther, recognize with my own hand, that I have given 
to my dear and faithful wife Katie, as her portion, or whatever it may 
be called, for her life, and to use at her pleasure and to her profit, and 
that I give her by this letter now and to-day, the following : — 

The property of Zulsdorf , as I bought it with the improvements, and 
all things as I have had it hitherto. 

Item, Bruno's house, which I bought in the name of my servant 
Wolfgang Sieberger for him to dwell in. 

Item, cups, jewels, rings, chains and gift-coins, which should be 
worth about a thousand gulden. 

I do this, 

First, because she has always been dear, worthy, and fair, as my 
pious, true wedded wife, and has, by God's blessing, borne and brought 
up five children yet living (may God grant them long life). 

Secondly, that she may meet the debt with which I am encumbered 
unless I do it during my lifetime, and pay it ; as far as known it 
amounts to about four hundred and fifty gulden, but may well be 
more. 

Thirdly and chiefly, because I want her not to look to the children 
but the children to her, to hold her in honor and submit to her as 
God has commanded. . . . Moreover I think a mother is the best 
guardian for her children, who will not use her property and portion 
to their injury and disadvantage, as they are her flesh and blood and 
she has carried them under her heart. . , . 

Finally, I beg every one, that as in this bequest I do not use legal 



DOMESTIC ECONOMY 371 

forms and words (for which I have good cause) they will recognize 
me to be what I am in truth, and am publicly known to be in heaven, 
on earth, and in hell, namely, one who has sufficient power and au- 
thority, and who may be trusted and believed more than a notary. . . . 

M. L. 

Witnessed by Melanchthon, Cruciger and Eugenhagen. 

There is extant in Luther's hand a household account, com- 
pleted about the time he made his will, as an inventory of his 
property, debts, income, and expenses. It contains many a curi- 
ous item both about his domestic economy and about the con- 
ditions of family life in his day. Much of the information set 
forth in the present chapter is drawn from it. Were it not so 
long and so technical it would be well worth while translating 
in full, but those who are curious about these matters must 
refer to the original. 1 

Luther estimated his personal property at a thousand gulden. 
At about the time he made his will a tax for the Turkish 
war was levied. The real estate was assessed at nine thousand 
gulden. This was perhaps too high ; the Black Cloister, for ex- 
ample, with its adjoining property, was valued at six thousand 
gulden, though when sold in 1564 to the university it fetched 
only thirty-seven hundred. 

The letter in which Luther informs the wife of Justus Jonas, 
now in Halle, of the property on which he is taxed, is also 
interesting for the evidence it gives of the relative value of 
money and wheat : — 

TO CATHARINE JONAS IN HALLE 

(Wittenberg,) March 26, 1542. 

Grace and peace. Kind, dear Friend ! I humbly beg you to ad- 
monish your husband not to write so many promissory letters, for I 
don't like them and will excuse his promises for the future. His let- 
ters only say : " I will write soon, I will write more, I will write 
something wonderful " ; if he can write nothing but that, or what I 
know already, let him omit it. 

Everything is going well here except that the treasury and taxation 

1 De Wette-Seidemano : Lathers Brief e, vi, 323 ff . 



872 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

has run wild. Otherwise, living is so cheap as never before, a sack of 
corn for three groats. God bless you and yours. My Katie, now lord 
of Zulsdorf, greets you kindly. She lets herself be rated at nine thou- 
sand gulden, including the Black Cloister, although she will not have 
an annual income of one hundred gulden from the property after my 
death. But my gracious lord has kindly given more than I asked. 
God bless you. Amen. 

Dr. Martin Luther. 



CHAPTER XXXIV 

THE BIGAMY OF PHILIP OF HESSE. 1540 

Notwithstanding the signal success of Luther's work, his 
last years were far from happy. He died an embittered, almost 
a disappointed man. The main cause of his increasing irrita- 
bility and sadness is undoubtedly to be found in his torturing 
diseases, which, after their manner, became worse and worse. 
He was also grieved by the death of friends and of his daugh- 
ter. Neither did public matters suit him. In the unstable 
political condition he foresaw, vaguely but uneasily, the storm 
about to burst, as it did just after his death, sweeping back, 
for a moment at least, the dykes and barriers of the Evangelic 
faith. Fierce quarrels within his Church, like that with the 
Antinomians, and that between Cordatus and Melanchthon, at 
times almost made him doubt. Finally, in 1540, a terrible 
scandal crippled the infant Church and made it a reproach to 
its enemies. 

This was the bigamy of Philip the Magnanimous, Landgrave 
of Hesse, for many years the foremost political champion of 
Protestantism. Before he was quite nineteen he had married 
Christina, daughter of Duke George of Albertine Saxony, but, 
a debauchee, like most of the princes and many of the prelates 
of the age, he lived in flagrant immorality, confessing that he 
had broken his marriage-vow within three weeks after the wed- 
ding. Though his conversion to the Evangelic faith did not 
alter his mode of living, his religion was sufficiently real to 
make his sins a burden to conscience. Desiring to reconcile his 
pleasures with his duty, he was attracted by the preaching of 
the Zwickau prophets and other fanatics, who taught that 
polygamy was lawful, and in 1526 wrote Luther for advice. 
Receiving the answer that a Christian might have but one wife, 
he continued living as before, but refrained from going to the 
sacrament save once when he was ill. 



874 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

In 1539 he contracted that terrible disease (the syphilis) then 
first epidemic in Europe. While convalescing at the house of 
his sister, he was attracted by seventeen-year-old Margaret 
von der Saal, and determined, Luther or no Luther, to make her 
his wife. According to the custom of the age, he treated with 
her mother, who insisted that the marriage, if not publicly re- 
cognized, as she preferred, be at least sanctioned by some of the 
leading lights in the Church. Philip easily obtained satisfac- 
tory advice from the obsequious divines of his own court, and, 
with more difficulty, the assent of Martin Bucer, with whom he 
had, for many years, been in correspondence. This not being 
sufficient to satisfy Frau von der Saal, he induced Bucer to go 
to Wittenberg to obtain the assent of Luther and Melanch- 
thon, and also to secure a guarantee of support from the Elector 
John Frederic in case of need, for the Emperor had made 
bigamy a capital crime, and political complications might well 
follow. So determined, however, was the Landgrave to take 
Margaret at any cost that before he heard from Saxony he 
secured the written consent of his first wife- — December 17 — 
and made preparations for. the wedding. 

Bucer arrived "in Wittenberg early on December 9 with a 
missive from the Landgrave, who urged that his wife was dis- 
agreeable to him (though she had borne him many children), 
that his temperament was uncontrollable, and failing lawful 
satisfaction, he must continue to live in sin. He said he wished 
but one wife more ; if the theologians would grant this trifle, he 
■would not trouble them again. He cited precedents from early 
Christian history, as well as Luther's own advice to Henry 
VIII, that it wohld be better for him to take a second wife than 
to divorce a first. Finally, he intimated that if the Protestants 
did not give him what he wanted, he would turn to the Emperor 
and Pope. 

The reformers allowed themselves to be convinced, and that 
very soon. The day after Bucer's arrival Melanchthon drew up 
a dispensation which was signed by himself and Luther (later 
by several other divines). This extraordinary document begins 
by thanking God for having relieved Philip of his recent ill- 
ness ; it then states the general law that in the beginning God 



Ann "■•■-• ffl '■ li w i r^rqcffnA, 

1 : CH ■ ■ .■■'■>, ■■■ EBflfitORfVffil 
WD WUWHHMliMS Ot^tUEA 
UtlWDtH-UlfflflW/t 

| '. tCDffJCVNb- 





^-fff-% 



PHILIP OF HESSE 

After the portrait by M. Muller, at Cassel 



THE BIGAMY OF PHILIP OF HESSE 375 

ordained monogamy and that Christ confirmed this rule, but ! 
that there may be some exceptions. The theologians decline 
Philip's invitation to publish something on the subject, for fear 
that they will be reproached with making polygamy a general 
rule, like the Anabaptists, and they exhort him to continence and 
patience, but finally state that if he finds this impossible, they 
will allow him privately to take another wife, considering that 
bigamy is better than adultery. 

Though unable to get the support of the Elector, Bucer re- 
turned with this dispensation to Hesse, and the Landgrave, with 
it, and especially by the promise of a public wedding, finally 
secured the consent of IVau von der Saal. The marriage took 
place on March 4, 1540, in the presence of Melanchthon, Eucer, 
and other " honorable men." 

The honeymoon was a happy time for Philip, who again felt 
able to take the sacrament. On April 5 he wrote Luther, whom 
he addressed as "brother-in-law" on account of the distant 
relationship between Margaret and Katie, thanking him for the 
dispensation, offering continued support to the Evangelic cause, 
and promising to keep the marriage secret and not act in any 
matter without asking his advice. Luther returned the follow- 
ing answer: x — 

TO PHILIP, LANDGRAVE OF HESSE, AT SCHMALKALDEN 

(Wittenberg,) April 10, 1540. 
Grace and peace. Most serene, noble Prince, gracious Lord! I 
have received your Grace's letter and note that you are pleased with 
our counsel, which we would willingly have kept secret. Melanchthon 
has written me nothing about your Grace, but will certainly do so, or 
tell me about it orally. But we want to keep the business a secret for 
the sake of the example, which every one would follow, even at last the 
coarse peasants. There are also other reasons as great or even greater 
why you should keep it to yourself and not avow it which would make 
us a lot of trouble. Wherefore your Grace will please be secret and 
improve your life as you promised. Our dear Lord be with your Grace. 
Amen. 

Your Grace's obedient servant, 

Maktin Luther. 
1 Lenz : Briefwechsel des landgraf Philipps mit Bucer (1880), i, 362. 



376 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

That Philip's act soon after this became generally known was 
largely his own fault. Notwithstanding his promise to keep the 
matter secret, he had celebrated an almost public wedding at the 
instance of Frau von der Saal, and after that he took less pains 
than his letters would lead one to suppose to conceal the "said 
person," as he called Margaret. A rumor of the bigamy reached 
Antony Lauterbach in May, and when he wrote Luther to 
inquire the truth of the matter he received the following an- 
swer : — 

TO ANTONY LAUTERBACH AT PIKNA 

(Wittenberg,) June 2, 1540. 
Grace and peace. In answer to your question about the Landgrave's 
second marriage, dear Antony, I can say nothing. I have only heard 
that the girl Von der Saal has given birth to a boy, 1 but I know not 
whether it was true. If it is true and he recognizes that he is the 
father and supports the mother and child, it seems that he will do 
right. Perhaps this is the cause of the rumor. I only know that no 
public proofs of the marriage have been shown me. There are heirs 
from the legitimate wife who will not permit — nor will the princes — 
that the children of another wife should become co-heirs, especially if 
the second wife be of inferior rank. Therefore let those rail who wish 
to do so until time show what the monster really is. One must not 
pronounce rashly on insufficient evidence about the doings of princes. 
I will instruct your assistant about the other things. 

Mabtin Luther. 

The public proofs of the marriage came shortly after this in 
a peculiarly forcible way. The Duchess of Bochlitz, Philip's 
sister, was beside herself when she heard of her brother's act, 
and wrote an account of it to both the Saxon courts, to Henry 
the Pious, Christina's uncle, and to John Frederic, whom she 
accused of abetting the Landgrave. The Elector forwarded the 
correspondence to Luther with a request for an explanation. 
The long answer of the Reformer is one of the most interesting 
letters he ever wrote. It shows that he had nothing to take back. 
It also shows that he was extremely angry with Philip for two 

1 The rumor was false ; Margaret's first child was born March 12, 1541. She had 
a number of children. 



THE BIGAMY OF PHILIP OF HESSE 377 

reasons ; first, because the marriage had been so open, and sec- 
ondly, because Philip had concealed from him that at the time 
he asked permission to marry Margaret he was living with 
a mistress, " her of Eschwege," and was therefore no longer 
free to choose. 

TO JOHN FREDERIC, ELECTOR OF SAXONY * 

(Wittehbekg, June 10, 1540.) 
Most serene, highborn Elector, most gracious Lord ! I am sorry to 
learn that your Grace is importuned by the court of Dresden about the 
Landgrave's business. Your Grace asks what answer to give the men 
of Meissen. 3 As the affair was one of the confessional, both Melanch- 
thon and I were unwilling to communicate it even to your Grace, for 
it is right to keep confessional matters secret, both the sin confessed 
and the counsel given, and had the Landgrave not revealed the matter 
and the confessional counsel, there would never need have been all 
this nauseating unpleasantness. 

I still say that if the matter was brought before me to-day, I should 
not be able to give counsel different from what I did. Setting apart 
the fact that I know I am not as wise as they think they are, I need 
conceal nothing, especially as it has already been made known. The 
state of affairs is as follows : Martin Bucer brought a letter and 
pointed out that, on account of certain faults in the Landgrave's wife 
the Landgrave was not able to keep himself chaste and that he had 
hitherto lived in a way which was not good, but that he would like to 
be at one with the principal heads of the Evangelic Church, and he 
declared solemnly before God and his conscience that he could not in 
future avoid such vices unless he were permitted to take another wife. 
We were deeply horrified at this tale and at the offence which must 
follow, and we begged his Grace not to do as he proposed, but we were 
told again that he could not abandon his project, and if he could not 
obtain what he wanted from us, he Would disregard us and turn to the 
Emperor and Pope. To prevent this we humbly begged that if his 
Grace would not, or, as he averred before God and his conscience, 
could not, do otherwise, yet that he could keep it a secret. Though 
necessity compelled him, yet he could not defend his act before the 

1 Letter published, Seidemann : Lauterbach's Tagebuch auf das Jahr 1538, 
p. 196 ff. On dating see Rockwell, p. 137, note 3. 

2 Meissen was the count; in which the capital of Alhertine Saxony, Dresden, 
was situated. 



378 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

world and the imperial laws ; this he promised to do and we accord- 
ingly agreed to help him before God and cover it up as much as pos- 
sible with such examples as that of Abraham. This all happened as 
though in the confessional, and no one can accuse us of having acted 
as we did willingly or voluntarily or with pleasure or joy. It was hard 
enough for our hearts, but we could not prevent it ; we thought to give 
his conscience such counsel as we could. 

I have indeed learned several confessional secrets, both while I was 
still a papist and later, which, if they were revealed, I should have to 
deny or else publish the whole confession. Such things belong not to 
the secular courts nor are they to be published. God has here his own 
judgment and must counsel souls in matters where no worldly law 
nor wisdom can help. My preceptor in the cloister, a fine old man, 
had many such affairs, and once had to say of them, with a sigh : 
" Adas, alas, such things are so perplexed and desperate that no wisdom, 
law, nor reason can avail ; one mast commend them to divine goodness." 
So instructed, I have accordingly in this case also acted agreeably to 
divine goodness. 

But had I known that the Landgrave had long satisfied his desires, 
and could well satisfy them with others, as I have now just learned 
that he did with her of Eschwege, truly no angel would have induced 
me to give such counsel : I gave it only in consideration of his un- 
avoidable necessity and weakness, and to put his conscience out of peril, 
as Bucer represented the case to me. Much less would I ever have 
advised that there should be a public marriage, to which (though he 
told me nothing of this) a young princess and young countess should 
come, which is truly not to be borne and is insufferable to the whole 
Empire. But I understood and hoped, as long as he had to go the com-' 
mon way with sin and shame and weakness of the flesh, that he would 
take some honorable maiden or other in secret marriage, even if the 
relation did not have a legal look before the world. My concession 
was on account of the great need of his conscience — such as has hap- 
pened to other great lords. In like manner I advised certain priests in 
the Catholic lands of Duke George and the bishops secretly to marry 
their cooks. 

This was my confessional counsel about which I would much rather 
have kept silence, but it has been wrung from me and I could do no- 
thing but speak. But the men of Dresden speak as though I had taught 
the same for thirteen years, and yet they give us to understand what 
a friendly heart they have to us, and what great desire for love 
and unity, just as if there were no scandal nor sin in their lives which 



THE BIGAMY OF PHILIP OF HESSE 379 

are ten times worse before God than anything I ever advised. But the • 
world must always smugly rail at the moat in its neighbor's eye and 
forget the beam in its own eye. If I must defend all I have said or 
done in former years, especially at the beginning, I must beg the Pope 
to do the same, for if they defend their former acts (let alone their 
present ones) they would belong to the devil more than to God. 

I am not ashamed of my counsel, even if it should be published in 
all the world, but for the sake of the unpleasantness which would then 
follow, I should prefer, if possible, to have it kept secret. 

Mabtin Ltjthek, with his own hand. 

A few days after writing this letter, Luther excused the 
bigamy to his table companions on much the same grounds : — 

We have suffered greater scandals than this, but the papists excuse 
all their lusts of Sodom by this bigamy. What can we do ? If they 
had only followed my advice ! 1 As it is done, we cannot abandon 
the Church. The scandal will be blamed on me. I believe that he will 
get some one to defend his deed publicly ! They cannot make a rule 
out of it ; it is no precedent. We are under our own jurisdiction and 
follow our own laws as Paul commands. They can't blame us. Well, 
such scandals drive philosophers from public affairs and monks from 
the Church. We must not and cannot yield, let our enemies be as 
impudent as they like ! 

After the conference at Schmalkalden, Melanchthon fell ill 
of a disease something like malaria, then called " tertian fever.'? 
He attributed it to the shame he felt over the Hessian scandal ; 
undoubtedly the worry tended to make him worse. On June 
18 Luther received letters from .Chancellor Briick telling 
him of this, and of the conference at Hagenau, and also from 
the Elector, ordering him to come to Weimar to talk over tbje 
situation. 

When a letter from Chancellor Briick was brought, Luther read it 
and said : " Melanchthon is almost worn away with grief and is falling 
into a tertian fever. But why does the good man torment himself so 
with this matter? He cannot remedy it by worrying about it. I wish 
I were with him, for I know his frailty and the pain the scandal 
causes him. I have grown callous ; I am a peasant and a devilish 
hard Saxon ; I believe I am called to Melanchthon." Some one said : 
" Doctor, perhaps the conference will be interrupted." The doctor' 
1 To keep the marriage secret. 



880 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

"They must wait for us." Then he added with a serene counten. 
ance : " It is fine to have something to do. This gives us food for 
thought, otherwise we should only swill and gorge. How the papists 
will cry out ! But let them cry to their own confusion. For our cause 
is good and our lives are blameless, because they are earnest. If 
Philip of Hesse has sinned, it is not only a sin but a scandal. 1 We 
often give the best and holiest answers, but they will not see our in- 
nocence because they do not want to. Let them go to the devil ! . . . 
Our sins are venial, but those of the papists unforgivable, for they 
despise God and crucify Christ and deny their own blasphemies 
against better knowledge. "What do they expect ? They slay men ; 
we labor to have them born and thus marry several wives," This he 
said with a merry face and not without a great laugh. . . . Rising 
from the table with a happy visage, he said : " I won't pay the devil 
and the papists the compliment of bothering myself about them." 

If Luther cared little for the results of the bigamy, Philip 
soon found himself in a most unpleasant position. The court 
of Dresden arrested his new mother-in-law on June 2, and thus 
obtained most of the documents in the case. Such pressure was 
brought to bear upon the Landgrave that he felt the need of 
more advice, and accordingly invited Luther to Weimar, where 
the Reformer arrived on June 28. There he cheered up 
Melanchthon, whom he found in a desperate state. He himself 
attributed his friend's recovery to prayer, as he writes his wife 
on July 2. The letter is interesting as showing how little the 
scandal apparently weighed upon his mind. Among other 
things he wrote : — 

Dear maiden Katie, gracious lady of Zulsdorf, and whatever else 
you may be. I humbly beg your ladyship to know that I am well, 
eat like a Bohemian and drink like a German, thank God. Amen. 
It is because Melanchthon was dead and has risen again like Lazarus 
from the grave. God the dear Lord hears our prayers ; that we see 
and know, although we never believe it. May no one say Amen to our 
shameful unbelief ! . . . 

God willing, next Sunday we shall go from Weimar to Eisenach 
with Melanchthon. 

The journey to Eisenach was for the purpose of conferring 
with representatives of Hesse about the best way of managing 
1 FoucW : " It is not only a crime but a blunder." 



THE BIGAMY OF PHILIP OF HESSE 381 

the unfortunate affair. Philip was for publicly avowing his 
marriage, wishing above all things that it be not held for an 
illicit amour; this Luther strongly deprecated. On the first 
day of the Conference, July 15, he stated that a public acknow- 
ledgment of the bigamy would create a great scandal, and 
continued : 1 — 

Is it not a good plan to say that the bigamy had been discussed 
and should not Philip say that he had indeed debated the matter, but 
had not yet come to a decision ? All else must be kept quiet. What 
is it, if for the good and sake of the Christian Church, one should tell 
a good, strong lie ? . . . And before he, Luther, would reveal the 
confession which Bucer had made him in the Landgrave's name, or 
let people talk so about a pious prince whom he always wished to 
serve, he would rather say that Luther had gone mad, and take the 
blame on himself. 

Luther further declined to take any responsibility if the 
matter was published ; in that case he saw himself absolved, 
for he had never advised that bigamy be made a general prac- 
tice, and, therefore, he threatened to withdraw and disavow 
his permission completely. This enraged Philip, who wrote 
the professor that it was the most horrible thing he had heard 
for a long time, that such a brave man should threaten to 
recall the dispensation he had given to relieve a needy con- 
science. He added : " I will not lie, because lying is wrong and 
no apostle nor Christian ever taught it ; yea, Christ forbade it 
strictly and commanded people to stand by their yea and nay." 
Luther answered the letter as follows : — 

TO PHILIP, LANDGRAVE OF HESSE 

(Eisenach,) July 24, 1540. 
Grace and peace in Christ. Serene, highborn Prince, gracious 
Lord ! I have received your Grace's letter, which seems to me to 
have been written in a rather angry mood, although I am not aware 
that I have deserved your Grace's ire. For it seems to me that your 
Grace thinks we act in this matter to please ourselves and not, as is 
really the case, to serve your Grace and prevent future trouble for 
you. Wherefore I give your Grace to understand my real reason for 
1 First protocol to the Eisenach conference, Lenz, op. cit., 373. 



882 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

advising and warning against the publication of this confessional 
counsel. Let your Grace not doubt that if all the devils wanted to 
publish this counsel, I could, by God's grace, give them such an an- 
swer that they would not get any satisfaction out of me by doing so. 

For in case you publish it, I have this advantage over your Grace 
and all devils, too, that you must bear me witness, first, that it was 
a secret confessional counsel, and second, that I have always truly 
begged that it be not published, and thirdly, that it will never be 
published by me. As long as I have these three advantages I defy 
the devil himself to move my pen. By God's grace I know well how 
to distinguish between things that should be allowed to consciences 
privately by way of dispensation and those which should be publicly 
preached. I would be sorry to see your Grace get into a war of words 
over this matter, for you have enough else to do. . . . 

If your Grace should publish this marriage, you could not get the 
world to recognize its legality if a hundred Luthers and Melanchthons 
defended it. . . . 

And as to what you say about not wishing your second wife to 
pass for a whore, I do not see why your Grace should mind that, for 
she has had to pass for one hitherto, at least before the world, though 
we three persons and God know that she is a wedded concubine. . . . 

I write these things to your Grace to show you that it is not for 
my own sake that I wish this matter concealed ; for if it came to a 
war of pens, I well know how to draw myself out of it and leave 
your Grace sticking in it ; which, however, I would not do if I could 
avoid it. Nor do I think to abandon your Grace during the present 

crisis as long as my life lasts 

Your Grace should think what an offence it would be were it pub- 
lished, and . . . also whether you could answer for it to the Emperor, 
for the Bible says : " All men are liars," and, " Put not your trust in 
princes." . . . 

Wherefore I advise you to give an ambiguous answer by which you 
could remain. I commend you to God and assure you that I advise 
you to do exactly what I should advise my own soul. 

Your Grace's obedient, 

Dr. Martin Luther. 

Luther returned to Wittenberg early in August and straight- 
way wrote Justus Menius, his host in Eisenach, thanking him 
for the delightful entertainment his wife had given them, and 
adding: "We taught your son to steal nuts to amuse our- 



THE BIGAMY OF PHILIP OP HESSE 383 

selves. It was great fun to watch him ; he was a comedy in 
himself." 

In spite of the attempt to hush the matter up, inquiries kept 
coming in. Luther still insisted that denial was the best an- 
swer : — 

TO PHILIP, LANDGRAVE OP HESSE * 

(Wittenberg,) September 17, 1540. 
Grace and peace. Most serene, highborn Prince, gracious Lord ! It 
pleases me right well that your Grace has given such a reserved an- 
swer to the unnecessary and dangerous questions of the Margrave J 
and Meissen, 8 for, as they wish to be so holy and so friendly, they 
should be before others in hushing up this hue and cry, as, thank 
God, every one else does. The Margrave has also tried to pump me, 
but I will answer him, as I have done others, though perhaps even 
more strongly, and I shall do it with good conscience, as Christ does 
when he says in the gospel, " The Son knoweth not the day," 4 or like 
a pious father confessor, who must say publicly in court that he knows 
nothing of what he has learned in secret confession ; for what one 
knows only in a private capacity one cannot know publicly. So that 
even if such a thing were said openly, one should not believe it. And 
since your Grace does not desire to defend your conduct as a public 
example, but only to use the grace for your conscientious need, it 
seems good that, should they trouble your Grace again, your Grace 
should be a little tart with them. ... I would be unwilling for the 
court of Dresden to get a full acknowledgment from your Grace, by 
which perhaps they might make things more unpleasant than they 
have yet done. It is better to leave them in uncertainty and let them 
stumble around for proof which they can never get, for a mere copy 
of a letter would not be proof and your Grace is not bound to give 
them the originals nor even to acknowledge such originals. God grant 
that they make no trouble with their copies and do not substitute other 
letters they have never had nor seen ! Why don't the coarse, incon- 
siderate people keep quiet when they know we want them to ? God 
bless you. Amen. I have written in haste and keep no copy. If I dare 

1 Lenz, op. cit., p. 389. 

1 The Margrave of Brandenburg. 

* Dnke Henry of Saxony, whose capital was in the county of Meissen. 

4 Mark xiii, 32. Luther believed, as he explained more fully elsewhere, that as 
Christ was omniscient he must have known the day of the last judgment, but that 
be thought it right to avoid inconvenient questions by denying his knowledge. 



384 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MAETIN LUTHER 

ask it, your Grace will return this letter, for I act in this matter as 
confidentially with your Grace as with my own heart. 

Luther's letters tell the truth but not the whole truth. Regret- 
table as is his connection with the bigamy, an impartial student 
can hardly doubt that he acted conscientiously, not out of desire 
to flatter a great prince, but in order to avoid what he believed 
to be a greater moral evil. His statement in the Babylonian 
Captivity that he preferred bigamy to divorce, and his advice 
to Henry VHI in 1531, both exculpate him in this case. More- 
over the careful study of Rockwell has shown that his opinion 
was shared by the great majority of his contemporaries, Catholic 
and Protestant alike. It is perhaps harder to justify his advice 
to get out of the difficulty by a lie. This, however, was certainly 
an inheritance from the scholastic doctrine of the sacredness 
of confession. A priest was bound by Church law to deny all 
that passed in the confessional. Moreover, many of the Church 
Fathers had allowed a lie to be on occasions the lesser of two 
evils. Nevertheless, though these considerations palliate Lu- 
ther's guilt, the incident will always remain, in popular imag- 
ination as well as in historic judgment, the greatest blot on his 
career. 

The last pretence of secrecy was given up when a Hessian 
clergyman under the pseudonym of Neobulus defended the 
bigamy of his sovereign in a pamphlet of 1541. When Luther 
heard of it his anger was aroused to an uncommon degree. 
Still maintaining that all he had allowed was exceptional and 
never intended to sanction bigamy as a common practice, he 
was able to say : — 

If any one shall follow the advice of that wretch, and take more than 
one wife, the devil will prepare him a bath in the abyss of hell. 

This is not the place to go into the political effects of Philip's 
act. In return for personal immunity he made concessions to 
the Emperor which greatly weakened the League of Schmal- 
kalden. In the pact he signed was included his son-in-law, Duke 
Maurice of Saxony, who had succeeded his father, Henry the 
Pious, in August, 1541. The young prince had hardly ascended 
the throne before he almost came to blows with his cousin John 



THE BIGAMY OF PHILIP OF HESSE 365 

Frederic over the bishopric of Wiirzen in which both had 
rights. Philip was anxious to make peace between his allies, 
and asked Luther's cooperation in this. The letter in which the 
Reformer answers is doubly interesting for its opinion of Maurice 
and of Neobulus. 

TO PHILIP, LANDGRAVE OF HESSE 1 

(Wittenberg,) April 10, 1542. 

Grace and peace in Christ our Lord. Serene, highborn Prince, 
gracious Lord. I am very glad to hear that your Grace has hopes of 
making peace in this deplorable and dangerous quarrel. May God 
grant more and sufficient grace, as we earnestly and confidently pray. 
I had not expected that Duke Maurice would act so un thankfully and 
unkindly towards the Elector, for all the world knows he would never 
have been horn, much less would have been so mighty a prince, had 
it not been for the late Elector Frederic. He is working for God's 
wrath, which will come upon him sooner than he thinks unless he 
solemnly repents of the crime he has done for the sake of a dunghill, 
though the misunderstanding could have been set right with one word. 
May God guard the people, that if a campaign is undertaken against 
the Turk, Duke Maurice may not go with them, lest not only the 
Turk but thunder and lightning smite them, on account of this im- 
penitent, stiff-necked bloodhound, cousin-killer, fratricide, friend- 
killer, patricide, and son-killer. I will speak against him to a Lord 
who will be able to cope with him and who sits securely on the right 
hand of God. 

As to the other matter on which your Grace writes, you know how 
loyal I have always been to your Grace, and have borne enough hard- 
ship in it to spare you. But this vile book of Neobulus has made it all 
in vain by stirring up with his silly prattle such noisome filth, an act 
not only unserviceable but also very harmful. It seems to me that 
every one has blamed and mocked your Grace. Otherwise I should 
not mind it. I pray for your Grace and must do so, as the times aTe 
very bad, so that it is necessary to pray for rulers. They act evilly 
and fall into trouble when they should administer justice. God bless 

you. Amen. 

Your Grace's obedient, 

Martin Luther. 

1 M. Lenz : NaMese mm Briefwechsel des Landgrafen Philip mit Luther and 
Melanchthon. In Zeitschrifl f. Kirchengeschichte, iv (Gotha, 1881), 136 ff. The copy- 
in De Wette-Seidemann, vi, 312, is faulty. 



386 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

j Luther feared the scandal that the division of the Protestants 
ivould cause, as he said to Melanchthon : — 

They will say at Rome that we are coming to blows and that we 
will root out our own doctrine. We must listen to such words, but 
God will do what is right. Only pray diligently without doubting and 
God will bring it to pass. I prayed Duke George to death ; we will 
laugh Carlowitz and Pistorius to death. God grant that these authors 
of the treachery end as Judas and Ahithophel did. . . . Duke Maurice 
is a young man with little intelligence ; he trusts his counsellors, but 
he will learn by experience, for no one will trust him in future. 

War was, however, averted hy the efforts of Hesse. Luther's 
estimate of Maurice as a man of little intelligence is hardly 
justified hy his later career. This prince was to rob his cousin 
of the electoral vote and of half his land. 



CHAPTER XXXV 

CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT. 1539-1516 JU 1 *'' 

The treaty of Frankfort, signed in April, 1539, stipulated for 
a truce of fifteen months between Catholic and Protestant ; * / 
before the expiration of which time it was hoped that a German * 
national assembly would meet and settle the religious differ- 
ences. Political exigencies forced the Emperor to deal cautiously 
with his heretical subjects, and so he arranged for a series of 
conferences, at Hagenau, at Worms, and finally and most im- 
portant, at Hatisbon in 1541. 

Charles V and Luther were for so long opponents that it is ' 
interesting to inquire what each thought of the other. The . 
monarch had first seen the " presumptuous monk " at Worms, 
and then felt nothing but horror for his stout defiance of the uni- 
versal Church. According to Charles's most recent biographer 2 
the sincerest and most outspoken utterance of the usually reti- 
cent Hapsburg was his declaration, written by himself immedi- 
ately after hearing Luther, that on supporting the cause of the 
Church against this heretic he " staked all his dominions, his 
friends, his body and blood, his life and his soul." A few years 
later, thinking the heretic might be useful in curbing the Pope,' 
he had said, that " some day or other, perhaps, Luther may 
become a man of worth," 8 .but this cautious utterance never for 
an instant indicated that he entertained the slightest leaning to 
the new faith or the least liking for its leader. 

The Wittenberg professor, on his side, was long inclined to 

1 The truce was to run in all circumstances for six months, till November 1, 
1539 ; but in case the Emperor agreed to the provision that the league of Catholic 
States should receive no addition during fifteen months it was to be valid daring 
that time, :'. e., until August 1, 1540. In case it expired the old basis of the peace 
of Nuremberg (1532) was to be restored. 

2 Edward Armstrong : The Emperor Charles V (London, 1902), i, 70 f. 
» Ibid., p. 162. 



888 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

a much more favorable opinion. In the first stages he had 
hoped much " from the noble young blood Charles," to whom 
he had written an appeal. 1 Long after the Emperor showed his 
disposition by persecuting the Protestants, Luther maintained 
his opinion with an almost naive obstinacy. At the Diet of 
Augsburg in 1530, he had persisted in ascribing the hostilities 
of the Catholics to the counsellors of Charles, who was himself 
"like a sheep among wolves." 8 This reverence can only be ex- 
plained by the magic of the Imperial name. Long after the fall 
of the Latin world-state, Rome was a word to conjure with ; 
throughout the Middle Ages men were awed by the fortune of 
the Eternal City. To a poetical and pious mind like Luther's the 
Caesar of Virgil and of the New Testament was hedged with a 
more than royal divinity. At last, however, facts were too 
strong for him, and in 1540 he expressed the following un- 
favorable, though for him very mild, opinions : — 

Our adversaries are now convinced, and have nothing more on which 
to oppose us. Wherefore the Emperor simply alleges his faith as a 
pretext to confiscate bishoprics to his own profit. (For I am something 
of a prophet and understand the wiles of the devil.) He sees that 
whenever a prince falls away from the popish religion he seizes the 
bishoprics in his territory, as the Duke of Brunswick did Hildesheim. 
Wherefore he acts like a dog named Wimmar at Linz, who used to 
carry meat home from the butcher's. One day, when attacked by other 
dogs which wanted the meat, he at first defended it, and then, when he 
could do so no longer, began to eat it himself. 

The Emperor is a melancholy man and more of a voluptuary than 
a hero. He does not understand our position, although he sometimes 
hears our books read. If he were a Scipio or an Alexander or a Pyrr-hus 
he would burst the pontifical net and bind the Germans to himself. 
He begins much but carries little through. He took Tunis, now he has 
lost it ; he captured the French king and let him go, and the same 
with Borne. He does not persevere. He is remiss in business. Noble 
souls are not so. What shall I say ? Germany lacks a head. Melanch- 
thon has called it a blinded Polyphemus. We are a gigantic mass but 
lack direction. 

The Emperor's brother and successor Ferdinand was also a 

1 Letter of August 31, 1520, p. 99. 

a Letter to Teutleben, June 19, 1530, p. 255. 




THE EMPEROR CHARLES V 
After the painting by Titian, engraved by Rubens ; in the Bibliotheque Nationale at Paris 



CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT 389 

staunch Catholic. His saying that he had had inclinations toward 
Lutheranism but had been deterred from it by the scandal of 
Philip of Hesse's bigamy, does not indicate that his leaning* 
were very strong. For him Luther had no superstitious revef 
ence ; his opinion is more unqualified : — 

Ferdinand is a monk ; he prays seven times a day and neglects the 
business of the state. Faber the Bishop of Vienna will have it so, for 
Ferdinand always listens to him. He neither understands our position 
nor reads our arguments, for the prelates take care not to allow that. 
They know that our theology is convincing. I believe if the King un- 
derstood it, he would boldly drive the Pope from Germany. His errors 
and weaknesses are not such grave wrongs as are the open blasphemies 
of Albert of Mayence and of Duke George, who said, " Their cause is 
just but is not approved by the Church." For this the impious blasphe- 
mer died and went to hell, living a life of groaning under the shades. 1 

As he grew older the Reformer became more decided ; in 
1542 he said : — 

Ferdinand is the plague of Germany. His father Maximilian 2 pre- 
dicted it. He was an astrologer, and when he saw the horoscope of 
his son is reported to have said, " The best ttyng for you will be to 
drown in your baptism." A father's sayings are prophecies. Erasmus 
judged Ferdinand and Charles well, when he said : " These two cubs 
will make Germany smart some day." 

Of the princes of the Empire he said, in 1532 : — 

I hate to see our princes have such an appetite for bishoprics. . . . 
The nobles seek their own profit and devour monasteries which will 
soon turn their stomachs as grass does a dog's. They all try to get 
rich from the monastery's purse, but let them beware lest it be a 
beggar's purse they get. 

These two parties — the Emperor and the princes — thus 
stood face to face in the beginning of 1540. As a general 
council, to which both sides had so long appealed, was no longer 
acceptable to the Protestants, the means chosen to reconcile 
them with the Catholics were the aforementioned religious 

1 Lnther has in mind, "Vitaque cum gemitu fugit indignata sub umbras." 
Virgil, ^Eneid, 11, 831. 

•2 Maximilian was Ferdinand's grandfather; his father Philip was never Env 
peror. 



890 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

conferences. The first of these, originally called at Spires, was 
prorogued to meet at Hagenau in June. In order to decide on 
the proper course of action, tho Protestant leaders held another 
congress at Schmalkalden in March. Luther, remembering his 
former almost fatal visit to that city, was excused from coming, 
but in common with other theologians sent a memorial to the 
effect that in all things his Church should stand by the Augs- 
burg Confession. Melanchthon attended the congress, on the 
way assisting at the Landgrave's second marriage. To him his 
chief wrote as follows : — 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON AT SCHMALKALDEN 

(Wittenberg,) April 8, 1540. 

You write, dear Philip, that the Emperor has promised a private 
audience ; I wonder what he wants. I believe he is uncertain as to the 
best course to pursue. He needs a secret heart, placed as he is among 
so many vipers, so that he cannot openly satisfy either them or us with 
certain promises. In his place it would puzzle me to know what to do, 
especially as I am not well versed in affairs. We must pray God for 
him. It is no small sign from God that he has withheld the Emperor's 
hands for so many years, while the cardinals and popes raged and 
stirred him up and pressed him forward and urged him on, but all in 
vain. Let us thank God for this. For whatever is or shall be, we shall 
effect all things by prayer, the only omnipotent empress of human 
affairs ; by her we shall overrule the decrees of fate, correct mistakes, 
take away what is too bad to mend, conquer all evils, preserve all that 
is good, as we have hitherto done, having proved the power of prayer 
of which the reprobate and baffled papists know nothing — for they 
neither will nor can be wise. The wrath of God has finally come upon 
them who have drenched their hands in the blood of Christ and 
Christians, who, indeed, are totally submerged in the blood of the 
saints. Although we, too, are miserable offenders, in the body of sin, 
yet are we pure from blood ; rather we hate the men of blood and the 
god of blood who possesses and animates them. I have only written 
this to answer your letter, that you may know I received it. Thus are 
we accustomed to talk in private when we touch upon such matters. 
I hope you will receive another letter before your return. 

All is well with us, by God's grace, except that we desire your re- 
turn as soon as possible, or rather at once. I am angry with Grickel, 1 
1 Agricola ; cf . supra, p. 285. 



CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT S91 

whom, with all his virtues, I hope to leave to you before I die. Fare- 
well in the Lord. Salute all friends and tell them their households are 
well. Yesterday there was an eclipse of the sun which we saw sadly 
laboring from five till seven. O Lord, turn the evil upon our enemies 
and save us by thy name ! Amen. My Katie is perfectly restored to 
health. She sends her greeting to you whom she esteems much and 
loves kindly. 

The meeting at Hagenau, June, 1540, came to nothing, and 
another conference was called at Worms in the autumn of the 
same year. Discussion did not actually begin until January 14, 
1541, Melanchthon and Eck having the leading parts. That 
Luther despaired of any result may be gathered from the next 
letter : — 

TO FREDERIC MTCONIUS AT GOTHA 

(Wittenberg,) January 9, 1541. 

Grace and peace. I have received your letter saying that you are 
sick unto death, that is, if you interpret it rightly and blessedly» unto 
life. It is a singular joy to me that you are so unterrified by death, 
that sleep into whieh all good men fall, nay, that you are rather de- 
sirous of being freed and living with Christ. We should have this 
desire not only on the bed of sickness but in the full vigor of life, at 
all times and in all places and circumstances, seeing that we are 
Christians who have risen, revived and ascended into heaven with 
Christ, where we shall judge angels, and the veil and the dark glass 
will be removed. Although I am uncommonly glad that you feel thus, 
yet I pray and beseech the Lord Jesus, our life and salvation, that he 
may not add this calamity to my sorrows, that I should live to see you 
or any of my friends break through the veil to the rest beyond, while 
I am left without among devils, to suffer after your death, seeing that 
I have already suffered so much that I am most worthy of going before 
you. I pray that the Lord will take me in your place, and let me lay 
aside this useless, worn-out, exhausted tabernacle. I am no longer of 
any value. Wherefore please pray the Lord with us to preserve you 
the longer to profit the Church and to despise Satan. You see, and 
God our life sees, how much need his Church has of men and of gifts. 

At last we have received news from Worms, after having waited 
five weeks and almost given up hope ; George ROrer will send you 
some of the letters. Our friends act strongly and wisely in all things ; 
contrariwise our opponents act childishly, foolishly, and inanely, telling 



892 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

gross and silly lies. You see that when the dawn appears Satan be- 
comes impatient of the light and seeks darkness in a thousand ways 
with subterfuge and indirection, but yet clumsily, for it is necessary 
that he who wishes to defend and furbish up an open lie against the 
manifest truth should fail in his impossible task. Why do we doubt ? 
Glory, power, victory, salvation, and honor are due to the Lamb who 
was slain and rose again, and with him to us also, who believe that he 
was slain and rose again. There is no doubt about this. I hope our 
friends will soon return. Farewell, dear Frederic, and may the Lord 
not let me hear that you have died, but may he make you survive me. 
This I pray, this I wish, my will be done (Amen), for it is not for my 
own pleasure but for God's glory that I wish it. Farewell again. I 
pray for you from my soul. My Katie and all my friends send their 
greetings, for they are deeply moved by your illness. 

Tours, 

Martin Luther. 

Before anything definite was accomplished at Worms the 
religious conference was adjourned to meet at Ratisbon where 
the Emperor opened a diet on April 5. Here the most deter- 
mined efforts were made to reunite the Catholics and Protest- 
ants. Bucer drew up a plan of comprehension, thus drawing 
down on himself the severest judgment of Luther, who could 
bear anything better than lukewarmness. 

That little wretch has lost all credit with me. I shall never trust 
him, for he has cheated me too often. He acted badly at the Diet of 
Ratisbon, wishing to be mediator between me and the Pope, saying, 
" It is a pity that so many souls should be lost for the sake of an article 
or two." They look at it from the political standpoint, for political 
matters are temporal and changeable. 

Another mediator was the Landgrave of Hesse, on whom 
Luther expresses a similarly severe judgment in the next letter 
to Melanchthon, written to strengthen the friend suspected of 
not being sufficiently firm himself : — 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON AT RATISBON 

(Wittenberg,) April 4, 1541. 
Grace and peace. Dear Philip, I write this second letter to you, 
hoping that your letter to me is already on the road. I pray the Lord 



CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT 393 

to guide and preserve you from the wiles of Satan and especially from 
that Jason 1 and his ilk. Our good elector yesterday sent me through 
Chancellor Brttck that man's advice about making peace with the 
Emperor and our opponents. I see they think this is a comedy of 
men instead of a tragedy of God and Satan, as it is. Where Satan's 
power waxes that of God grows rusty. But the tragedy will have its 
catastrophe, as such always have had from the beginning, and the 
omnipotent author of the drama will free us at last. I write with rage 
and indignation against those who trifle in such matters. But thus it 
must be, for throughout history the Church has suffered, like St. 
Paul, the dangers of false brethren that the seal of God may be cer- 
tain in us. God knows who are his own. I would write more did I 
not know that you hate such men and measures as much as I. What 
do they mean by saying that we neglect the primary articles of faith 
to dispute about things indifferent ? Is the Word of God and the 
sacrament, in perverting which they tempt, slight, and insult God, a 
thing indifferent ? Peace will be easy " in things indifferent " if, by 
our impenitence, we relegate serious and important matters to this 
category. . . . 

About the time he was writing this, Luther was publishing 
one of his fiercest books: Against Jack Sausage {Hans 
Wurst). The person to whom this sobriquet was applied was 
Duke Henry II of Brunswick. Succeeding to the government 
in 1514, he at once put his brother William in prison and kept 
him there ten years. A little later, with the connivance of the 
Emperor, he seized Hildesheim. With his neighbors he lived in 
constant strife. When the League of Schmalkalden held its 
congress at Brunswick in 1538, he refused passage through his 
territory to the Elector John Frederic and Philip of Hesse, and 
when the latter passed through notwithstanding, he shot at him 
with cannon. He was accused of hiring agents to set fire to 
buildings in Saxony and Hesse, by which three hundred men 
lost their lives. His private life was also scandalous. Outwardly 
professing the Catholic religion, he ventured to mock one of 
its most sacred rites by pretending to have his mistress, Eva 
von Trott, buried, though for years afterwards he kept her 
privately in one of his castles. 

1 Philip of Hesse ; Jason took to wife the daughter of the King of Corinth, 
while Medea, his first wife, was alive. 



894 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

The constant strain between him and his Evangelic neigh- 
bors broke out in a war of pens about 1540. The titles of the 
books, unthinkable nowadays between crowned heads, suffi- 
ciently show the character of this conflict. They are : The true, 
wise, well founded, Christian and right Answer of the Serene 
Prince John Frederic, against the shameless, Calpurnian, 
mendacious Libel of that hard, godless, cursed, damnable 
Slanderer, that wicked Barrabas, Whore-master and Holo- 
phernes of Brunswick who calls himself Henry the Younger ; 
and : The considerable, well grounded, true, godly and Christ- 
ian Reply of the Serene Prince Henry the Younger to the 
false, lying, shameless Libel vomited forth against the said 
Duke by that godless, infamous, hard, heretical, sacrilegious, 
cursed, wicked Antiochus, JVbvatian, Severian, and Pander 
who calls himself John Frederic of Saxony. 

Luther was drawn into the controversy by the taunt of 
Henry that "Frederic's dear Martin Luther calls him Jack 
Sausage." Taking this name to designate his enemy of Bruns- 
wick, the Reformer published his book against him about 
April 1. The nickname, first found in Sebastian Brant's Ship 
of Fools (1494), refers to the custom of the fools at carnival 
time of wearing a huge leather sausage. "This name," says 
Luther, " was not invented by me, but is used by other people 
against coarse clowns who try to be wise, but speak and act 
without rime or reason." The tone of the book is the usual 
violent invective ; the substance is mainly concerned with 
Henry's charge that the Protestants are heretics and rebels. 
The author proves by a history of the schism, from the in- 
dulgence controversy on, that the Evangelic Church has been 
the true one and that the Romanists are the real heretics. He 
closes with a parody of a popular song, " Poor Judas," reviving 
the charge of arson against the Duke of Brunswick : " O wicked 
Heinz, what have you done to slay so many men by fire ? For 
this you will suffer great pain in hell and be Lucifer's com- 
panion forever. Fyrieleisonf" 

The book had an enormous success, three editions being 
called for before the year was ended. John Frederic, a rather 
coarse man, was especially pleased with it, and sent a number 



CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT 395 

of copies around to his friends. Like "Warren Hastings, Luther 
was astonished at his own moderation. A contemporary letter 
alluding to it is also interesting as showing the sufferings which 
the Reformer underwent in his later years: — 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON AT KATISBON 

(Wittenberg,) April 12, 1541. 
... I have re-read my book against that devil of Brunswick and 
wonder how I eould have been so moderate. I attribute it to the suf- 
ferings of my head, which did not permit my mind to display a more 
upright and stronger vehemence. But, if the Lord will, it profits the 
Church that I write thus. My illness has turned the corner. I am 
troubled with that tumor in the head which you predicted. So much 
phlegm, rheum, and matter flows from my neck and nostrils that I 
wonder how my head, broken down with age and labor, could bring 
forth such monsters, and that I was not suddenly taken off with 
apoplexy, vertigo, epilepsy, or something like them. On Palm Sunday 
the tumor reached my ear and attacked not only my head but my 
soul, so that the intolerable anguish forced tears from my eyes 
(though I do not easily nor often weep), and I said to the Lord: 
" May these pains cease or may I die." I could not have borne that 
terrible fight with nature two full days, but on the second day the 
tumor broke. . . . Now the winds of all the seas and of all the for- 
ests blow through my head, so that I can hear nothing unless it is 
shouted at me. . . . At least I have the advantage of being able to 
read and write even if I cannot sleep as I used to. . . . 

This letter reached Melanchthon still engaged in negotiations 
at Ratisbon. A committee of three Catholics and three Protest- 
ants, Eck, Pflug, and Grropper against Melanchthon, Bucer, 
and Pistorius, had reached a semblance of harmony on some of 
the chief points at issue. For example, justification by faith 
was conceded by the Catholics with the proviso that faith meant 
operati ve faith. Even on the articles where both sides agreed to 
the samefdrmula, it must be remembered that their interpreta- 
tion of the words was very different, and moreover there were 
some points, such as that on the primacy of the Pope, on which 
no harmony whatever could be found. The Emperor finally de- 
cided to publish the articles for which a common statement had 
been drawn up, reserving the others for the arbitrament of a 



896 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

future council and forbidding the publication of polemic books. 
He also promised that adherence to the Augsburg Confession 
should not be made the ground of action against any prince. 
On the whole, the result of the conference, which terminated in 
July, was favorable to the Protestants. 

Their party continued to gain strength by the adhesion or 
conquest of new domains. One of these was Brunswick. Duke 
Henry, in spite of warnings both from the Scbmalkaldic League 
and from Ferdinand, attacked the city of Goslar. The Protest- 
ant princes promptly came to the help of the town and ex- 
pelled Henry not only from it but from his whole territory, 
which was at once converted to the Protestant faith (1542). 

Another acquisition was the bishopric of Naumburg. When 
the bishop died in 1541, the chapter chose Julius Pflug, a good 
Catholic who had been prominent at Eatisbon, but his instal- 
lation was prevented by John Frederic, who occupied the city 
with three hundred cavalry in January, 1542, and compelled 
the election of Nicholas von Amsdorf, Luther's old friend and 
colleague. The Keformer, pleased with the honor bestowed upon 
his faithful follower, went in person to consecrate him. This he 
did on January 20 and defended the act in a pamphlet entitled, 
How to Anoint a Eight Christian Bishop. " We poor here- 
tics," says he, " have committed a great sin against the hellish 
unchristian Church and against the most hellish father the Pope 
by anointing a bishop at Naumburg without ointment, butter, 
suet, bacon, grease, or smoke." 

Still another gain for the Evangelic party was the conversion 
of Halle, a small thing in itself, but particularly dear to the 
Reformer as a personal triumph over his old enemy Archbishop 
Albert of Mayence, whose capital and favorite residence this 
town was. As the Eeformation made way in Halle, Albert at 
first sold the town the right to hold Evangelic services in re- 
turn for a sum of money, but by 1542 his capital became too hot 
to hold him and he was obliged to retire to Mayence, taking 
with him a large collection of relics. As a song of triumph over 
the discomfiture of his opponent, Luther wrote the lampoon 
next translated. The superstitious objects ridiculed, among 
them being a piece of the clay from which Adam was formed 



CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT 897 

and a bit of Noah's ark, had figured in the previous indulgence 
trade at Halle which had brought down Luther's wrath in 
1517 and 1521. 1 In making fun of such relics he was not orig- 
inal ; they had been the butt of wits for centuries. 2 

NEWS FROM THE EHIHE 

(Wittenberg, circa October, 1542.) 
An order has gone out from all the pulpits under the jurisdiction 
of the Archbishop of May ence on the Rhine, saying that the archbishop 
has, for good reasons and the prompting of the Holy Ghost, trans- 
ferred all relics, bless'd and endowed with great Roman indulgences, 
graces, and privileges, which his Reverence formerly had at Halle in 
Saxony to St. Martin's Church in Mayence. There they shall be honored 
with great solemnity every year on the Sunday after Bartholomew's 
day, with public proclamation of the same and of great forgiveness of 
sins, so that the beloved men of the Rhineland may help clothe the 
poor, bare bones with new garments. For the coats they had at Halle 
have been torn, and had they staid longer there they would have been 
frozen. 

There is a persistent rumor that the Elector of Mayence has added 
many new relics to the old ones, and secured a special indulgence for 
them from the Most Holy Father Pope Paul III. Among the new 
relics are : — 

I. A fair piece of Moses' left horn. 

II. Three flames from Moses' burning bush on Mount Sinai. 

III. Two feathers and an egg of the Holy Ghost. 

IV. A whole end of the banner with which Christ harried hell. 

V. A large wisp of Beelzebub's beard which remained' stuck to the 
same banner. 

VI. Half a feather of St. Gabriel the archangel. 

VII. A whole pound of the wind which blew for Elijah in the cave 
on Mount Horeb. 

VIII. Two yards of the tones of the sackbuts on Mount Sinai. 

IX. Thirty notes of the drum of Miriam, Moses' sister, heard on 
the Red Sea. 

1 Cf. letter to Albert of Mayence, December 1, 1521, p. 127. 

3 A similar, though in no particular identical list of relics in Boccaccio : De- 
camerone. Oiornata sesta, Novella decima. Cf. also, the old English play, The 
Four PP. The strangest of all relics, the foreskin of Jesus, is shown at Borne, 
Antwerp, Charost (Berry) and Hildesheim and works miracles in every place. 
Cf. O. Clemen in Archivfur Eulturgeschichte, vii, 2. 



898 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

X. A great big piece of the shout of the children of Israel with 
which they cast down the walls of Jericho. 

XI. Five, fair, clear strings of the harp of David. 

XII. Three locks of Absalom's hair, by which he was caught on 
the oak. "We must remember that this is shown not for holiness but 
for curiosity, as Judas' cord is shown at St. Peter's in Borne. 

A special good friend has privately told me that the Elector of 
Mayence is going to bequeath by will a whole dram of his true, pious 
heart, and half an ounce of his veracious tongue. For these an indulg- 
ence will be secured from the Most Holy Father Pope, so that who- 
ever honors these relics with a gold gulden shall have all his sins 
forgiven up to date, and moreover all the sins he can possibly commit 
during the next ten years shall not be allowed to prejudice his salva- 
tion. This is a great rich grace, never before heard of, which must be 
the source of joy to many. 

The lampoon stung ; Luther rejoiced in the writhing of his 
enemy, " the bride of Mayence," as he now called Albert, and 
wrote this letter to the pastor of Halle, intending it for public 
inspection : — 

TO JUSTUS JONAS AT HALLE 

(Wittenberg,) November 6, 1542. 
Grace and peace in the Lord. My dear doctor, you know that the 
lampoon on his Holiness the Cardinal is mine. The printer knows it, 
so does the university and the town, so that it is quite public and no 
secret at all. The bride of Mayence will also know it well, for I made 
the style easy to be recognized. Whoever reads it and has ever known 
my manner of writing and thinking must say, " That is Luther ! " 
The bride herself will say : " That is the rascal Luther, whose heart, 
well known to me, is especially apparent." Had I wished to keep it 
secret I should have better disguised my style. The bride has no 
power to make me fear her arts, devilish as they are. And if it were 
a notorious libel, which it is not, yet would I have the right, authority, 
and power, against the cardinal, the Pope, the devil, and all their fol- 
lowers to have it not called a libel. Have the ass-ists — I mean jurists 
— not studied their law, that they are so ignorant of its purpose and 
subject ? If I have to teach the guttersnipes I will do it gratis. How 
has fair Moritzburg ' so suddenly become a stable for asses ! If they 
wish to pipe, I wish to dance, and if life is spared me, I will yet tread 
1 Albert's castle, still to be seen at Halle. 



CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT 899 

a measure with the bride of Mayence, for I have a few more sweet 
kisses to press on her rosy red mouth. Help ! jurist, or whatever you 
are that trouble God. Let her spleen boil and bubble, what matters 
it ? I will roast her again, if I live, so that she will wish, for her 
honor, she had never noticed the lampoon. For I do not fancy keep- 
ing silence before that desperate enemy of God, that blasphemer of 
Mayence, whose devilish tyranny does ever worse and worse against 
the blood of Christ. Let them come and go as they please. * I will 
teach them what right and might I have, even to publish a notorious 
libel (if that were possible !) without heeding their wrath and the dis- 
favor of the jurists. For they will sit under God's judgment, not over 
it. I write this letter of my own accord, rather than suffer them to 
let me, an old man, alone. If they will not do so they must take the 
risk. I will let them find me if God will. 

Dr. Martin Luther. 

The battle with Rome never ceased till the day of Luther's 
death. The occasion of his last and fiercest book against her was 
as follows : At the Diet of Spires, which closed June 10, 1544, 
the Emperor, anxious to secure the help of the Protestants in 
the war against France, promised that they should be recognized 
until a free German National Council was called to pass upon 
the religious question. When Pope Paul III heard of this he 
wrote the Emperor a sharp letter (August 24), forbidding him 
to meddle in the affairs of the Church, especially as an oecu- 
menic council had already been called to meet at Trent. The 
Imperial Chancellor Gattinara sent this brief to Luther, who 
also had knowledge of another letter from Pope to Emperor, 
denouncing the summons of a German synod. John Frederic 
asked Luther to write an answer to these epistles, which he did 
in ,the early months of 1545, publishing in March of that year, 
Against the Papacy at Rome, founded by the Devil. 

In the first part, considering the title of the Pope to be 
called head of the Church "over council, Emperor, angels, and 
all," he says : " The most hellish father, St. Paul III, as though 
he were a bishop of the Roman Church, has written two letters 
to our Lord Emperor, showing that he is very wroth, and snarls 
and rants as his predecessors have all done, and says no one has 
a right to call a council, even a national one." He then gives 



400 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

the history of the Council of Constance, which deposed three 
popes, and says : — 

It would be a first-rate thing if the Holy Ghost, that poor heresiarch, 
should come to grace and be let into a holy, free, Christian council. 
If he were not stubborn he might humble himself before that holy 
virgin, St. Paula III, Lady Papess, fall on his knees, kiss her feet and 
recognize, repent, and recant his heresy. He would surely get a free 
indulgence both for himself and for his holy Church. 

" Alas," sighs Luther, after continuing in this jocular vein for 
some time, "I am infinitely too small to mock the Pope, who 
has mocked the world for six hundred years." 

In Part II the author considers the claim of the Pope that 
none can judge him. After painting his vices in lively colors, 
he goes on : — 

So this Sodomite Pope, founder and master of all sins, threatens 
the Emperor Charles with excommunication and accuses him of sin, 
although he knows that his villainous tongue lies herein. These 
damnable rascals persuade the world that they are the heads of the 
Church, the mother of all churches, and masters of faith, although 
even stones and stocks would know that they were desperately lost 
children of the devil, as well as gross, stupid, ignorant asses in the 
Bible. One would like to curse them, so that thunder and lightning 
would smite them, hell fire burn them, the plague, syphilis, epilepsy, 
scurvy, leprosy, carbuncles, and all diseases attack them; but they 
are simple slanderers, and God has anticipated us and cursed them 
with a greater plague, as he curses those who despise him, the plague 
mentioned in Romans i, 26, to wit, that they become so mad that they 
know not whether they are men or women. . . . 

In the third and last part of this violent book Luther again 
takes up the question as to whether the Pope gave the Empire 
to the Germans. If the Pope had done so, he says, it would be 
much like his, Luther's, giving the kingdom of Bohemia to 
Saxony. He proves, however, by relating the history of Charle- 
magne, that in reality the Pope did no such thing. 

A further effort was called forth by the action of the univer- 
sity of Louvain, in publishing, December, 1544, a condemna- 
tion of " the Lutheran, Zwinglian, and Anabaptist heresy." The 
Emperor gave his official approval to these articles in March, 



CATHOLIC AND PROTESTANT 401 

1545. When he heaid of this, Luthetf wrote the following letter 
to his sovereign, in which he speaks rather sceptically of the 
council which had at last really assembled at Trent : — 

TO JOHN FREDERIC, ELECTOR OF SAXONY 

(Wittenberg,) May 7, 1545. 
Grace and peace in the Lord and my poor paternoster. Most 
serene, highborn Prince, gracious Lord ! I return the articles pub- 
lished by Louvain, as I received a printed copy of them a week ago. 
unhappy Emperor, to be the father of such a great, shameful, hor- 
rible whore ! Truly the Pope is silly and foolish from top to toe ; the 
papists know not what they say nor do. No doubt if there is a council 
they will display wisdom superior or equal to that which they have 
just shown. But I think that they, and especially their Holy Ghost, 
Mayence, are wise enough to let the council remain like unripe barley 
in the sheaves, although they are not wise enough to let the "Word 
alone. As to the other bit of news, about the council at Trent, I con- 
sider it a Romish and Mayence-ish chatter and babble, which he 
of Mayence would be very sorry to have come true. God won't have 
it and it won't have itself, either. Let things go of themselves and 
they will come out all right. May our dear God bless, rule over, and 
guard your Grace in his good and perfect will. Amen. 
Your Grace's obedient subject, 

Db. Maktin Lutheb. 



CHAPTER XXXVI 

LUTHERAN AND SACEAMENTAKIAN. 1S39-1B46 

It sometimes seems that Luther hated the other branches of 
the Protestant Church more than he did even Some, and his 
wrath against them, far from being healed with time, became 
more and more bitter until his death. In October, 1540, he 
speaks of his first opponents in the doctrine of the sacrament 
thus : — 

Verily CEcolampadius' curse has .come true, for he wrote, in his 
work against Pirkheimer : "If I act with evil intention, may Jesus 
Christ smite me ! " Good God ! how bold these men are ! And others 
are not frightened by Zwingli's fate ! Verily it is not good to joke 
with Christ ! 

John Calvin, Zwingli's great successor, was born too late 
(1509) to be well known to Luther. The Wittenberg professor 
read one of his books in 1539, liked it, and sent the author his 
greeting. On the other hand, when Calvin wrote him, in Febru- 
ary, 1545, Luther never answered, and in the saying next 
translated he gives a very dubious opinion of the great divine 
of Geneva : — 

(October or November, 1540.) When some one pointed out to 
Luther that Watt had written against Schwenkf eld, he said, " I have 
seen the book but not read it. These books written to refute others 
need refutation themselves. Thus Calvin hides his opinions on the 
sacrament. They are mad and cannot speak out, though the truth is 
simple. Don't read their books to me ! " 

(Spring, 1543.) Against the sacramentarians who complain that we 
sin against the law of charity he said : " They plague us with their 
charity in all their books, saying, ' You of Wittenberg have no char- 
ity.' If you say, ' What is charity ? ' they reply, ' To agree in doc- 
trine. Let us not strive about religion.' Well, what of that ? There 
are two laws, primary and secondary ; charity belongs to the second 
class, although she precedes all works. It is written : ' Fear God and 



LUTHERAN AND SACRAMENTARIAN 403 

obey his Word.' They don't ask about that. ' Whoso has loved father 
or mother more than me,' says Christ, ' is not worthy of me.' You 
must have charity to parents and children ; love, love, be kind to your 
father and mother ! But, ' whoso hath loved them more than me.' 
Where ' me ' begins charity stops. I am willing to be called obstinate, 
proud, headstrong, what they will, but not their fellow. God keep me 
from that ! " 

The old animosity broke out again in the summer of 1544 on 
the occasion of the conversion of Cologne from the Catholic to 
the Protestant faith. Melanchthon and Bucer went to that im- 
portant city, and drew np for it a Plan of Reform, in which, to 
avoid altercation, they minimized the differences of the several 
bodies of reformers on the doctrine of the sacrament. This 
plan was sent to Nicholas von Amsdorf, now Bishop of Naum- 
burg, who forwarded his criticism of it, together with the orig- 
inal document, to Luther. The latter expresses himself on both 
papers as follows : — 

TO CHANCELLOR BEUCK 

(Wittenbekg, end of July or beginning of August, 1544.) 
Honorable, learned Sir, dear Friend. The bishop's ! articles please 
me right well. . . . But the Plan of Reform does not please me. It 
speaks at length about the use, fruit, and honor of the sacrament, but 
mumbles about the substance, so that one cannot gather what it be- 
lieves. ... In short, I am sick and disgusted with the book . . . 
which, besides other objections, is much, much too long, a great tedi- 
ous talk, in which I see traces of that chatterbox, Bucer. I will say 
more at another time. 

Your Honor's devoted, 

Martin Luther. 

The above letter did not make things any easier for Luther's 
friends, and when he announced definitely that he was going 
to write a book expressly against the sacramentarian heresy, 
Melanchthon feared the worst. The treatise, A Short Confes- 
sion on the Holy Sacrament, came out toward the end of Sep- 
tember. It contains these words : " As I am about to descend 
into the grave, I will take this testimony and boast before the 

1 Amsdorf . 



404 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

judgment seat of my Lord, that I have always damned and 
shunned the ranters and enemies of the sacrament, Carlstadt, 
Zwingli, (Ecolampadius, Stenkefeld, 1 and their disciples at 
Zurich and elsewhere, according to the command in Titus iii, 
10." The book did not, however, attack Melanchthon,and caused 
no further schism in the Church ; that it was taken ill by the 
Swiss had been expected. Luther speaks of their answer to 
the work in a letter to Amsdorf : — 

TO NICHOLAS VON AMSDORF AT NAUMBUKG 

(WlTTElTBEBG,) April 14, 1545. 

Grace and peace in the Lord. I thank you, reverend father in 
Christ, for your strongly favorable opinion of my book against the 
papacy. 9 It does not please every one so much. Yet it so pleased the 
Elector that he sent around copies worth twenty gulden. Tou know it 
is not my habit to regard the dislike of the multitude, if what I write 
is only pious and useful and pleasing to a few good persons. Not that 
I think all who dislike this book are wicked, but they do not under- 
stand the substance, quantity, quality, and all the circumstances, kinds, 
manners, properties, differences, and attributes of the papal abomina- 
tion, in short, all its monstrous horrors. For the eloquence and genius 
of none is able to reach them, even though they do not fear the wrath 
of kings. 

The sacramentarians of Zurich have written in Latin and German 
against my Short Confession. As I have so often condemned them 
before, I have not decided whether to answer them. The men are 
fanatic, proud, and yet shirking ; in the beginning of the reformation, 
when I alone sweated to bear the fury of the Pope, they kept resolute 
silence and watched my dangers and my success, but as soon as the 
papacy was somewhat broken they burst forth in triumphant boast- 
ing, saying that they owed nothing to others but all to themselves. 
Thus, thus does one labor and another enjoy the fruit of his labor. 
Now at last they turn and attack me by whom they were freed. They 
are a cowardly swarm of drones, skilful only to filch the honey others 
have made. Their judgment will come upon them. If I see best to 
answer them I shall do it briefly, merely reiterating my condemnatory 

1 That is, Schwenkf eld, on whom see just below. Luther's pun means " Stink- 
field." 

2 Against the Papacy at Rome, the work condemned by Louvain. 



LUTHERAN AND SACRAMENTARIAN 405 

opinion. But I am determined to finish the book against the papacy 
while I have strength. 

The Emperor in Belgium, the French King in France, rage cruelly 
against the Evangelic cause, and Ferdinand is just as bad in Hungary 
and Austria. It is as when Caiphas advised to slay the Son of God 
that the place and the nation might not perish ; they think they can- 
not conquer the Turk unless they drench their lands with the blood of 
the martyrs and brethren of Christ. The wrath of God has come upon 
them at last. May the Lord hasten the day of our redemption. Fare- 
well in him, reverend father. 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 

In the next letter, written a month before his death, Luther 
expresses his final hatred of the sacramentarians : — 

TO JAMES PROBST AT BREMEN 

(Wittenberg,) January 17, 1546. 

Greeting and peace. Dear James, old, decrepit, sluggish, weary, 
worn out, and now one-eyed, I write to you. Now that I am dead — as 
I seem to myself — I expect the rest I have deserved to be given to 
me, but instead I am overwhelmed with writing, speaking, doing, 
transacting business, just as though I had never done, written, said, 
or accomplished anything. But Christ is all in all, able to do and do- 
ing, blessed world without end. Amen. 

I greatly rejoice at what you tell me about the Swiss writing against 
me so vehemently, condemning me as an unhappy man of unhappy 
genius. This is what I sought, this is what I wished my book, so 
offensive to them, to do, namely, to make them publicly testify that 
they are my enemies ; now I have attained this, and, as I have said, 
rejoice at it. The blessing of the Psalm is sufficient for me, the most 
unhappy of all men : " Blessed is the man that walketh not in the 
counsel of the sacramentarians, nor standeth in the way of the Zwing- 
lians, nor sitteth in the seat of the men of Zurich." x You have my 
opinion. . . . 

I have begun to write against Lonvain, according as God gives me 
power ; I am more angry at those brutes than is becoming to an old 
man and a theologian ; but we ought to resist the monsters of Satan, 
even if we expended our last breath in doing so. Farewell. You 

1 Cf . Psalm i, 1. 



406 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

know that you are most dear to me not only on account of our old 
and intimate friendship, but on account of Christ, whom you teach 
as I do. We are sinners, but he, who lives forever, is our righteous- 
ness. Amen. Greet your friends and ours in the name of us all. 

Yours, 

Dr. Martin Luther. 

Besides the Z winglians there wer.e the Anabaptists ; a sect de- 
tested still more, if possible, than the others. It is fair, however, 
to give Luther credit for standing out against the death penalty 
for their belief, contrary to the practice not only of the Catholics 
but of Zwingli and Calvin. 

Some one asked if the Anabaptists were to be put to death. Luther 
replied : " There are two kinds. Those who are openly seditious are 
rightly punished by the Elector with death ; the others who merely 
have fanatic opinions ought in general to be banished." 

One of the lesser religious leaders of the time, usually classed 
as an Anabaptist, though he aspired to found a new sect of his 
own, the "Middle Way," was acertain Silesian gentleman named 
Casper von Schwenkfeld. He had been known to Luther for 
a great many years and detested for his heresy concerning the 
nature of Christ. Submitting his opinions to the theologians 
who met in the Congress of Schmalkalden early in 1540, 
Schwenkfeld was warned of his errors by them, whereupon he 
had the poor judgment to appeal from them to Luther. The 
opinion of the latter, together with his terribly rude answer, are 
recorded by Besold, November 8, 1543 : — 

Schwenkfeld sent the doctor his book on the humanity of Christ, 
entitled Dominion. Luther said : " He is a poor man, without genius 
or talents, smitten like all the ranters. He knows not of what he 
babbles, but his meaning and sense is : ' Creatures are not to be 
adored, as it is written : " Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God and 
him only shalt thou serve." ' Then he argues : ' Christ is created, 
therefore we should not pray to the man Christ.' He makes two 
Christs. He says the created Christ, after his resurrection and glori- 
fication, was transformed into a deity and is therefore to be adored, 
and he foully cheats the people with the lordly name of Christ, saying 
all the while that it is for Christ's glory ! Children go to the heart 
of the doctrine with : ' I believe in Jesus Christ our Lord, conceived 



LUTHERAN AND SACKAMENTARIAN 407 

of the Holy Ghost, etc.,' but this fool will make two Christs, one who 
hung on the cross and the other who ascended into heaven, and says 
I must not pray to the Christ who hung on the cross and walked on 
earth. But he let himself be adored when one fell down before him, 
and he says : ' Whoso believeth in me, believeth in him who sent' me.' 
This maniac has stolen some words out of my book." . . . 

Katie said : " Dear husband, you are too rude." Luther answered : 
" They teach me to be rude." . . . To the messenger he answered : 
" My dear messenger ! Tell your master Schwenkfeld that I have 
received his letter and pamphlet. And would to God he would stop ! 
Formerly he kindled a fire in Silesia which is not yet quenched and 
which will burn him eternally. And he adds to that the heresy of 
Eutychianism on the creation of Christ, and makes the Church err, 
as God has not commanded him to do. The senseless fool, possessed 
of the devil, understands nothing and knows not whereof he babbles. 
But if he will not cease writing, at least let him leave me in peace, 
untroubled by the books of which the devil has purged him, and let 
him take this as my last judgment and answer : The Lord rebuke 
thee, Satan, and may the spirit which called you, and the race you 
run, and all your fellow sacramentarians and Eutychians, go with you 
and your blasphemies to perdition." . . . 

War with Home, war with Zurich, war with the innumerable 
lesser sects ! This is apt to be the thought with which one closes 
the history of Luther's public career. He was, indeed, a born 
fighter. His amazing strength and courage, animated by the 
strongest of all motives, devotion to conscience, and fortified by 
the intolerance of his age, found ample scope in the great load 
of wrong and superstition to be combated. However much some 
of the excesses of his passion may be regretted, it must be re- 
membered that they are the defects of his qualities ; that, had 
he not been such a man, he would not have been the leader of 
the great Revolt. 

And the wars, though the most conspicuous, are not the most 
enduring portion of Luther's work. If Napoleon wished to go 
down to history with his code in his hand, Luther gave posterity 
the German Bible and a great volume of poetry and prose which 
has permanently enriched the world. Luther was, indeed, — the 
point must be repeated, — the founder of a new culture. Like 
other such men, Voltaire for example, he has suffered by the 



408 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

very effectiveness of his own work. Much that he was the first 
to make valid nas become commonplace now; in proportion as 
he raised the standard he is judged by the severer rule. In 
fable, Cadmus is less renowned for inventing the alphabet than 
for sowing the dragon's teeth. So it has been with Luther. The 
new culture, the fresh spirit, the glorious life he imparted to 
Europe has become as commonplace as the alphabet, whereas 
the fierce wars he waged are remembered to his discredit, and 
have made him, especially in recent years, the object of mis- 
understanding and dislike. 



CHAPTER XXXVII 

DEATH 

Increasing ill health made Luther's last years sad and hitter. 
Though he sometimes had cheerful days, they were sufficiently 
uncommon to be remarked, as for example : — 

On Sunday, October 3 (1540), he was happy in mind and joked 
with his friends and with me (Mathesius), and disparaged his own 
learning. "lama fool," said he ; " you are cunning and wiser than 
I in economy and politics. For I do not apply myself to such things, 
but only to the Church and to getting the best of the devil. I believe, 
however, if I did give myself to other business I could master it. But 
as I attend only to what is plain to view any one can overreach me, 
until, indeed, I see that he is a sharper, and then he can't cheat me. 
. . . Don't take it ill of me that I am happy and light-hearted, for 
I heard much bad news to-day, and since then have read a letter of 
the Archbishop of Mayence saying that he had released his subjects 
from prison. The devil makes it go hard with us, but we shall win, 
for God is with us." 

Again in 1542 he said : — 

Nothing is more hurtful than sadness. It eats the marrow of the 
bones, as it is written : " A broken spirit drieth up the bones." A 
young fellow should be merry. There I write for such an one, over 
the table : " sadness slayeth many." 

Such a tone was, however, very exceptional. Luther often 
wished and sometimes thought he was going to die. Once in 
the winter of 1542 to 1543 he felt a pain in his head for several 
days together, and said, at dinner : — 

" Katie, if I am not better to-morrow I will have our Hans brought 
from Torgau, for I would like him to be with me at my end." Katie : 
" Look ye, sir, you imagine it." Luther : " No, Katie, it is not imag- 
ination ; I shall not die suddenly, however, but be stricken down and 
become ill, though not for very long. I am tired of the world and it is 
tired of me, which I do not mind. It thinks if it were only rid of me, 
all would go well. But it is as I have often said. ■ . . We must part. 



410 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

O God I thank thee that thou lettest me be of thy little flock, to suffer 
persecution for thy Word's sake, for I am not persecuted for impurity 
nor for usury, that I know well." 

Like some other old men, Luther was inclined to look back 
on his youth as a better period for the world. With increasing 
frequency and bitterness he judged the immorality of his age. 
His enemies have often taken his words as proof that the new 
teaching bad a disastrous moral effect. Periods of religious fer- 
mentation have often been accompanied by moral retrogression, 
a striking proof of it in the Reformation is the frequency with 
which polygamy was preached and practised by small sects. In 
general the change of standards, the revaluation of moral goods, 
may tend to upset not only bad but good customs, and in indi- 
vidual cases work with detrimental effect. On the other hand, 
evidence seems to show that in places the religious revival was 
accompanied by an ethical uplift, notably in the suppression of 
bouses of ill-fame. The basis of Luther's criticisms must be 
chiefly looked for in subjective conditions ; bow gloomy his out- 
look at times was, is shown by the following records : 1 — 

I (Mathesius) once stood with the doctor in the garden ; he said 
that he was so oppressed and borne down by his own followers that 
he must get the Elector to build a preachers' tower in which such wild 
and troublesome people might be imprisoned, for many of them would 
no longer bear the gospel ; all who had entered the cloister for the 
sake of their bellies and a good time burst out again for the sake of 
carnal freedom, and only a few of them, as far as he could see, had 
left their monasticism behind them in the cloister. 

Again, a little later : 2 — 

Now we have good books and bad scholars, formerly we had bad 
books and good scholars ; then there were golden preachers and 
wooden images, dark churches and bright hearts ; now there are 
wooden preachers and golden images, bright churches and dark 
hearts. 

The same tone is taken in the summer of 1542 : — 

1 Losche : Mathesius Ausgewahlte WerJce, Luther Historien, p. 269. For dating 
see Kroker, Luther's Tischreden, no. 163. 

2 The text of this saying is from Melanchthon's lectures above referred to, 
Corpus Refvrmatorum, xx, col. 575. On dating, see Kroker, op. tit., no. 194. 



DEATH 411 

Paul Knoth once said to me that while a page at court he had 
asked an old priest how it was that there was so much arrogance 
among the nobles. The priest replied : " Don't ask such silly ques- 
tions. There is no noble who wishes well to the peasant, the burgher, 
or even to the prince ; they do not even wish each other well." It is 
true ! There are three kinds of devils : house-devils, court-devils, and 
church-devils. The last are the worst ; when they enter a priest the 
man does not wish another well, and each thinks he is more learned 
than another. Grickel 1 thinks he is more learned than I ; Jeckel * 
thinks he is more learned than Melanchthon. Ah, well-a-day ! 

A letter to the devoted Lauterbach expresses, as strongly as 
it is well-nigh possible, the writer's despair at the moral condi- 
tion of the people : — 

TO ANTONT LAUTERBACH AT PIENA 

(Wittenberg,) November 10, 1541. 
Grace and peace. Although I have nothing to write, dear Antony, 
yet I prefer to write that I have nothing to write rather than leave 
your letter unanswered. May God strengthen Duke Maurice " in the 
true faith and in sound policy. Perhaps you have heard all the news 
of the Turk. I almost despair of Germany since she has received 
within her walls those true Turks or rather those true devils, avarice, 
usury, tyranny, discord, and that whole cesspool of perfidy, malice, and 
iniquity, in the nobles, the palaces, the courts of justice, the towns and 
the villages ; worst of all is contempt of the "Word and unexampled 
ingratitude. With these Turks ruling us savagely and cruelly, what 
success can we hope against the human Turks ? May God have mercy 
upon us and make the light of his countenance to shine upon us. For 
while we pray against our enemies the Turks, it is to be feared that 
the Holy Ghost will understand us to pray against ourselves and 
yet for our good. For I see that it will come to pass that unless 
the tyranny of the Turk terrifies and humbles our nobles, we shall 
have to bear worse tyranny from them than from the Turks. Verily 
the nobles think to put chains on our princes and fetters on the 
burghers and peasants, and most of all on books and authors. Thus 
they avenge the papal slavery by subjecting the people to a new 

1 Agricola, see above, p. 285. 

2 James Schenk, see above, p. 285. 

8 The new Duke of Albertine Saxony ; Luther was soon to form a very bad 
opinion of him. Cf . supra, p. 386. i 



412 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

slavery under the nobles. But enough. My Katie sends her greetings 
to you and to your wife and daughter, as do we all, and we all pray 
and beseech the Lord together to give us the pestilence instead of the 
Turkish scourge, for without the special help of God our arms and 
armies can do nothing. 

Yours, 

Martin Luther. 

The complaints against the general immorality of the age 
sometimes became specific, as in the beginning of 1544, when 
certain students, including a son of Melanchthon and, probably, 
Luther's own nephew, contracted secret engagements to marry. 
One of these students, Caspar Beier, broke his engagement at 
his father's wish, but was condemned by the court of Witten- 
berg for breach of promise. Luther took the matter up with 
passion, seeing that the permission to make secret engagements 
was likely to lead to immorality, or at least to cast a bad name 
on the university. He accordingly wrote : — 

TO JOHN FKEDEKIC, ELECTOR OF SAXONY 

(Wittenberg,) January 22, 1544. 
Grace and peace and my poor paternoster. Most serene> highborn 
Prince, most gracious Lord ! I humbly give your Grace to know that 
the secret engagement is becoming prevalent again. "We have a great 
horde of young men from all countries and the race of girls is getting 
bold, and run after the fellows into their rooms and chambers and 
wherever they can, and offer them their free love ; and I hear that 
many parents have ordered their sons home and others are ordering 
them home now, saying that if they send their children to our univer- 
sity we hang wives around their necks and take their children from 
them, for which cause the university is getting a bad name. But I 
know what every one must know that your Grace has ordered that 
secret engagements are worth nothing, but are null and void. But 
while I remain quiet in this assurance, out goes a judgment from our 
law-court assuming the validity of a secret engagement, so that I was 
shocked and deeply moved and insisted on a stay in execution. The 
next Sunday I preached a strong sermon, telling men to follow the 
common road and manner which had been since the beginning of the 
world, both in the Bible and among all heathen and even in the papacy 
to the present day, namely, that parents should give their children to 



DEATH 418 

each other with prudence and good will, without their own prelimin- 
ary engagement. Such engagements never have been in the world, but 
are an invention of the abominable Pope, suggested to him by the 
devil to destroy and tear down the power of parents given and com- 
mended to them earnestly by God, and to incite disobedience to God's 
command, and to bring consciences into unnumbered entanglements, 
and moreover to rob parents of their children, and give them great 
woe and sorrow of heart instead of the honor owed them by the chil- 
dren according to God's commandment. This would have happened to 
Melanchthon and his wife had it not been for my sermon, which was 
almost too late. They would have been put to scorn by their son, who 
was so led astray by bad fellows that he betrothed himself secretly 
and solemnly, and I had great trouble to turn him, or rather frighten 
him from it. . . . Such a thing almost happened to me in my own 
house. 

Therefore it is certain that secret vows are and can be nothing but 
the. affair of the Pope and the invention of the devil against the will 
of parents, that is against the command given parents by God, and 
they are simply great misery and sorrow of heart (as must be the 
fruit of the devil's acts), from which come all entanglements and 
dangers to consciences. But men can well and happily marry in a 
right and godly way. As the shepherd of the souls of the flock in 
this church, to which God has commended me and for which he will 
hold me to account, I simply neither could nor would bear it and take 
it on my conscience. I brought it up before the eyes of all in the 
pulpit and said : " I, Martin Luther, minister of this church of Christ, 
take you, secret vow, and the paternal consent given to you, together 
with the Pope, whose business you are and the devil who invented 
you, and throw you into the abyss of hell in the name of the Father 
and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen." I said that children 
could not engage themselves, and if they did they were as good as 
not engaged, except that they had committed a great sin in becoming 
engaged. Likewise that no father could consent to such an engagement, 
and if he did his consent would be invalid, for we cannot consent to 
the business of the devil, but should know who is the master and in- 
ventor of such misery. 

Wherefore it is my most humble prayer to your Grace to turn your 
attention to this matter anew for the sake of God and the salvation of 
souls, and maintain the command of God against the Pope and the 
devil as you have hitherto done with great earnestness and zeal. For 
if we have the command of our sovereign, we can more solemnly 



iU THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

drive out and keep out this devil of the secret vow, that cursed, bias? 
phemous, damned business of the Antichrist, and then we can keep 
our children for their poor parents and bring them up and care for 
them safely. But if we allow an engagement in the form suggested 
by the court of justice, namely, " I betroth you subject to the ap- 
proval of my father," then we leave a hole for the devil, and instead 
of preventing secret engagements make them stronger than before. 
For how easily can a child talk over or stun a father into consent, 01 
snatch a word out of his mouth by some hook or crook, although the 
father's heart is not inclined to his son ? . . . 

Your Grace's obedient subject, 

Martin Luther. 

The next letter to the Electress Sybilla of Saxony, during 
the absence of her husband at the Diet of Spires, sums up all 
the world-weariness and disgust with life which has come out 
indirectly in the last letter. 

TO SYBILLA, ELECTRESS OF SAXONY 

(Wittenberg,) March 10, 1544. 

Grace and peace in the Lord. Most serene, highborn Princess, 
most gracious Lady ! I have received your Grace's letter, and humbly 
thank your Grace for asking so particularly and carefully after my 
health, and how it goes with wife and children, and for your good 
wishes. "We are, thank God, well — better than we deserve of God. 
That my head is sometimes weak is no wonder, for it is old, and age 
is senile, frigid, impotent, sick, and weak. But the jug goes to the 
water until it is broken. I have lived long enoughs May God grant 
me a blessed hour before this sluggish, useless body be taken to its 
like under the earth to become a prey to worms. I think, indeed, that 
I have seen the best days I ever shall see on earth. Things look as if 
they were going to the bad. May God help his own. Amen. 

I can well believe what your Grace writes that it is tedious to you 
to have your husband, our gracious lord the Elector, absent. But 
since it is necessary, and his absence is for the advantage and good 
of Christendom and the German nation, we must bear it with patience 
according to the divine will. If the devil could keep peace we should 
have more peace, too, and less to do and especially less to suffer. 
But with it all we have the advantage of having the dear Word of 
God, which comforts and supports us in this life, and promises and 



DEATH 415 

brings us salvation in the world to come. Moreover we have prayer, 
which, as your Grace also writes, we know pleases God and will be 
heard in time. Two such inexpressible treasures neither the devil nor 
the Turk nor the Pope nor their "followers can have, and are there- 
fore much poorer and more wretched than any beggar on earth. . . . 
My Katie humbly offers her poor prayers for your Grace and humbly 
thanks you for thinking of us so kindly. God bless you. Amen. 
Your Grace's obedient subject, 

Db. Mabtin Luther. 

Notwithstanding his bodily afflictions never once did Luther 
relax his enormous energy. The last year of his life saw the 
publication of eleven books or pamphlets, besides sermons and 
lectures at the university. For the same period there are 
extant more than seventy letters, only a part of his correspond- 
ence. Some idea of the variety of his occupations is given 
in an extract from a letter to Lauterbach, dated December 2, 
1544 : — 

You often urge me to write a book on Christian discipline, but you 
do not say where I, a weary, worn old man, can get the leisure and 
health to do it. I am pressed by writing letters without end ; I have 
promised our young princes a sermon on drunkenness ; I have pro- 
mised certain other persons and myself a book on secret engage- 
ments ; to others one against the sacramentarians ; still others beg 
that I shall omit all to write a comprehensive and final commentary 
on the whole Bible. One thing hinders another so that I am able to 
accomplish nothing. Yet I believe that I ought to have rest, as an 
emeritus, to live and die in peace, and quietness, but I am forced 
to live in restless action. I shall do what I can and leave undone what 
I cannot do. 

Some six months after writing this, during his last summer, 
Luther's disgust with life reached a crisis. He had another 
disagreeable experience with a servant, which reminded him of 
that detested impostor Rosina. 1 Throughout the town he saw 
signs of moral corruption, objecting especially to the immodest, 
low-necked dresses of the women. When he could bear it no 
longer he left home, intending never to return, taking with him 
his son Hans and his boarder Ferdinand von Maugis. The party 
l Cf. letter to Goritz, January 29, 1544, p. 361. 



416 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OP MARTIN LUTHER 

travelled the well-known road to Leipsic, and thence to Zeitz, to 
share, at Amsdorf's wish, in settling a dispute between two 
clergymen of the diocese of Naumburg. At Zeitz they found 
Cruciger on the point of returning to Wittenberg. With him 
Luther sent this letter : — 

TO CATHARINE LTJTHER AT WITTENBERG 

(Zeitz,) July 28, 1545. 
Dear Katie, Hans will tell you about our journey, unless, indeed, I 
decide to keep him with us, in which case Cruciger and Ferdinand 
will tell you about it. Ernest von Schonfeld entertained us well at 
Lobnitz, Henry Scherle still better at Leipsic. I should like to arrange 
not to have to go back to Wittenberg. My heart has grown cold so 
that I do not care to live there, but wish you would sell garden and 
the farm, house and buildings, except the big house, which I should 
like to give back to my gracious lord. Your best course would be to go 
to Zulsdorf ; while I am alive you could improve the little estate with 
my salary, for I hope my gracious lord will let my salary go on, at 
least during this last year of my life. After my death the four elements 
will not suffer you to live at Wittenberg, therefore it will be better 
for you to do during my lifetime what you will have to do after my 
death. It looks as if Wittenberg and her government would catch — 
not St. Vitus' dance or St. John's dance, but the beggar's dance and 
Beelzebub's dance ; the women and girls have begun to go bare before 
and behind and there is no one to punish or correct them and God's 
Word is mocked. Away with this Sodom. Our other Rosina x and de- 
ceiver is Leak's 2 dung, and yet not in prison ; do what you can to 
make the wretch stultify himself. I hear more of these scandals in the 
country than I did at Wittenberg, and am therefore tired of that city 
and do not wish to return, God helping me. Day after to-morrow I 
am going to Merseburg, for Prince George 8 has pressed me to do so. 
I will wander around here and eat the bread of charity before I will 
martyr and soil my poor old last days with the disordered life of 
Wittenberg, where I lose all my bitter, costly work. You may tell 
Melanchthon and Bugenhagen this, if you will, and ask the latter to 

1 One MS. reads Rosinus ; at any rate the deceiver this time was a man, as the 
next clause shows. 

2 Leak seems to have been Agricola, who had been at Wittenberg recently, 
particulars of this affair, and his part in it, if he had any, are unknown. 

8 Of Anhalt, Canon of Merseburg. 



DEATH 417 

give Wittenberg my blessing, for I can no longer bear its wrath and 
displeasure. God bless you. Amen. 

Martin Luther. 

When this news reached Wittenberg, consternation followed. 
Melanchthon said that if Luther left he would leave, too. The 
university sent him and Bugenhagen, and the town her burgo- 
master, to persuade Luther to return ; the Elector, too, when he 
heard of it, dispatched his physician to induce the old man to 
change his plan. They met him at Merseburg and found him 
so amenable to reason that by August 16 he was home again. 
Here he continued his usual activities, though feeling that his 
end was drawing near. On November 10 he celebrated his last 
birthday with his friends. On the 11th he gave his last lecture 
at the university, completing his course on the book of Genesis 
with the words : — 

This is dear Genesis ; God grant that others do better with it after 
me ; I can do no more, I am weak. Pray God to grant me a good, 
blessed hour. 

His labors were indeed near their end. Having accomplished 
a great work, he crowned it by dying like a brave man. When 
another call to danger came the worn old warrior went out to 
his last battle — his splendid courage undaunted to the end. It 
is characteristic of Luther that all his bravest and best acts 
were done in the simple course of every-day duty. He never 
seems to have had the thought of achieving fame, which inspired 
so many others — Loyola, for example, confesses to this motive. 
He simply saw the duty before him and did it. In the present 
case he well knew that he would get no advantage or reputation 
by leaving home. 

Nevertheless, when a dispute broke out between the brother 
counts of Mansfeld, to whom, as a native of their dominions, 
Luther always felt especially loyal, and when they asked the 
mediation of the Reformer, without hesitation, with broken 
health, in the bitterest winter weather, he twice left home to 
give them his services. The first journey was to the town of 
Mansfeld, in December, 1545. Christmas was celebrated here, 
but Melanchthon's fraii health forced the party to return home 



415 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

with the work half done. Later it was decided to continue the 
arbitration without Melanchthon's assistance, and the older 
man again left home for Mansf eld — this time for the town of 
Eisleben — attended by his three sons, and his famulus John 
Aurifaber. The party set out on January 23, reaching Halle 
two days later. 

TO CATHARINE LUTHER AT WITTENBERG 

Halle, January 25, 1546. 
Grace and peace in the Lord. Dear Eatie, we arrived at Halle this 
morning at eight o'clock, but have not journeyed on to Eisleben be- 
cause a great lady of the Anabaptist persuasion met us, covering the 
land with waves of water and blocks of ice and threatening to baptize 
us. We could not return on account of the Mulda, and so lie here be- 
tween waters. Not that we venture to drink it, but we take good Tor- 
gau beer and Bbenish wine while the Saale is trying to make us angry. 
All the people, the postillions as well as we ourselves, are timid, and 
so we do not betake ourselves to the water and tempt God ; for the 
devil is furious against us and lives in the water, and is better guarded 
against before than repented of after, and it is unnecessary for us to 
add to the foolish joy of the Pope and his gang. I did not think the 
Saale could make such a broth, which has flooded the embankments. 
No more at present. Fray for us and be good. I think had you been 
here you would have advised me to do as I did, in which case I should 
have taken your advice for once. God bless you. 

Martin Luther. 

On the 28th the party crossed the Saale, and passed on to 
Eisleben with a cavalry guard of honor, through the little village 
of Rixdorf inhabited by the Jews. From Eisleben Luther wrote 
often to his wife, the most beautiful letters he ever penned, full 
of affection, trust, and gentle humor. In spite of his approach- 
ing end his good spirits seem to have come back to him. 

TO CATHARINE LUTHER AT WITTENBERG 

(Eisleben,) February 1, 1546. 
I wish you grace and peace in Christ, and send you my poor, old, 
infirm love. Dear Katie, I was weak on the road to Eisleben, but that 
was my own fault. Had you been with me you would have said it was 



DEATH 419 

the fault of the Jews or of their God. For we had to pass through a 
village hard by Eisleben where many Jews live ; perhaps they blew 
on me too hard. (In the city of Eisleben there are at this hour fifty 
Jewish residents.) As I drove through the village such a cold wind 
blew from behind through my cap on my head that it was like to turn 
my brain to ice. This may have helped my vertigo, but now, thank 
God, I am so well that I am sore tempted by fair women and care not 
how gallant I am. 

When the chief matters are settled, I must devote myself to driving 
out the Jews. Count Albert is hostile to them, and has given them 
their deserts, but no one else has. God willing, I will help Count 
Albert from the pulpit. 

I drink Neunburger beer of just that flavor which you praised so 
much at Mansf eld. It pleases me well and acts as a laxative. 

Your little sons went to Mansfeld day before yesterday, after they 
had humbly begged Jack-an-apes l to take them. I don't know what 
they are doing ; if it were cold they might freeze, but as it is warm 
they may do or suffer what they like. God bless you with all my house- 
hold and remember me to my table companions. 

Your old lover, 

M. L. 

On the same day Luther wrote Melanchthon more fully of 
his ill health and of the progress of negotiations. The two dis- 
putants were the brothers Count Albert and Count Gebhard. 
Among the several questions at issue, the hardest was that of 
the legal rights of each brother in Neustadt Eisleben, recently 
founded by Count Albert. Luther urged mutual concession and 
brotherly love ; he made much progress and, in his own opinion, 
would have made more had it not been for the lawyers. 

1 Hans von Jena ; at Jena under the clock on the tower of the Rathaus is a 
wooden head of a man, which, whenever the clock strikes, opens its mouth and 
snaps at an apple offered him by an angel, but which is always withdrawn before 
he gets it. This is Hans of Jena, though some think that the wooden head was 
made later than the Reformation. At any rate the expression was proverbial and 
is often used by Luther to signify a person who stands aronnd gaping and mind- 
ing other people's business. Cf . Endera, viii, 163. Whom he means here I cannot 
say ; the boys probably visited their uncle James. 



420 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

TO PHILIP MELANCHTHON AT WITTENBERG 

Eislbben, February 1, 1546. 

Grace and peace in the Lord. I thank you, dear Philip, for praying 
for me and I ask you to keep on doing so. You know that I am an old 
man, and that some of the rough work even of my own calling should 
be spared me, whereas now I am involved in a quarrel alien to. my 
interests, beyond my power to cope with and distasteful to my age. I 
should wish that you were with me did not the argument of your health 
rather force me to think that we did well to leave you at home. To- 
day, by God's blessing, we stuck that supernaturally prickly porcupine 
Neustadt, though not without a hard struggle. We hope it will please 
God to make the remaining battles easier. I have offended Dr. Kling ' 
rather deeply, I think, because I am angry at the severity and sharp- 
ness of the law ; but he first offended me by his enormous and ill-con- 
sidered vice of proclaiming victory before the battle. A little learning 
makes lawyers mad. Almost all these men seem to be ignorant of the 
real use of the law, base and venal pettifoggers caring not at all for 
peace, the state of religion about which we care now as always. 

A fainting fit overtook me on the journey and also that disease 
which you are wont to call palpitation of the heart. I went on foot, 
overtaxed my strength and perspired ; later in driving my shirt became 
cold with sweat ; this made my left arm stiff. My age is to blame for 
the heart trouble and the shortness of breath. Now I am quite well 
again, though I do not know for how long. When even youth is not 
safe, age can little be trusted. 

God has hitherto granted that all the counts a of Mansf eld show won- 
derful good-will to each other. Pray that God may increase and con- 
tinue this. Now that we have conquered Enceladus and Typhoeus we 
will proceed to-morrow to pursue the rest among whom we suspect the 
citizen. 8 God lives ; may he conquer. Amen. Parewell in the Lord, 
dear Philip, and give my greetings to all — Pastor Bugenhagen, Cru- 
ciger, and the rest, whom we thank for their prayers, with no small 
faith that God will grant them. 

Dr. Martin Luther. 

Of the progress of negotiations and of his health Luther gives 
constant news. 

1 Professor of law at Wittenberg and Mansf eld counsellor. 

2 It will be remembered that on the continent of Europe all the children of a 
count bear that title. 

* Purherr. I am not sure of the meaning of the word, which I take to be 
Burger. The identity of the person is also unknown to me. 



DEATH 421 

TO CATHARINE LUTHER AT WITTENBERG 

(Eisleben,) February 10, 1546. 

Grace and peace in Christ. Most holy lady doctoress ! I thank you 
kindly for your great anxiety which keeps you awake. Since you began 
to worry we have almost had a fire at the inn, just in front of my door, 
and yesterday, due to your anxiety no doubt, a stone nearly fell on my 
head which would have squeezed it up as a trap does a mouse. For in 
my bedroom lime and cement had dribbled down on my head for two 
days, until I called attention to it, and then the people of the inn 
just touched a stone as big as a bolster and two spans wide, which 
thereupon fell out of the ceiling. For this I thank your anxiety, but 
the dear angels protected me. I fear that unless you stop worrying the 
earth will swallow me up or the elements will persecute me. Do you 
not know the catechism and the creed ? Pray, and let God take thought 
as it is written : " Cast thy burden on the Lord and he shall sustain 
thee," both in Psalm 55 and other places. 

I am, thank God, well and sound, except that the business in hand 
disgusts me, and Jonas takes upon himself to have a bad leg, where 
he hit himself on a trunk ; people are so selfish that this envious man 
would not allow me to have the bad leg. God bless you. I would will- 
ingly be free of this place and return home if God will. Amen. 
Amen. Amen. 

Your holiness's obedient servant, 

Martin Luther. 

to catharine luther at wittenberg 

Eisleben, February 14, 1546. 

Grace and peace in the Lord. Dear Katie, we hope to come home 
this week if God will. God has shown great grace to the lords, who 
have been reconciled in all but two or three points. It still remains to 
make the brothers Count Albert and Count Gebhard real brothers ; 
this I shall undertake to-day and shall invite both to visit me, that 
they may see each other, for hitherto they have not spoken, but have 
embittered each other by writing. But the young lords and the young 
ladies, too, are happy and make parties for fools' bells and skating, 
and have masquerades and are all very jolly, even Count Gebhard's 
son. So we see that God hears prayer. 

I send you the trout given me by the Countess Albert. She is heartily 
happy at this union. 



422 THE LIFE AND LETTERS OF MARTIN LUTHER 

Your little sons are still at Mansf eld. James Luther will take care 
of them. "We eat and drink like lords here and they wait on us so 
well — too well, indeed, for they might make us f oTget you at Witten- 
berg. Moreover I am no more troubled with the stone. Jonas's leg has 
become right bad ; it is looser on the shin-bone, but God will help it 

You may tell Melanchthon and Bugenhagen and Cruciger every- 
thing. 

A report has reached here that Dr. Martin Luther has left for Leipsic 
or Magdeburg. Such tales are invented by those silly wiseacres, your 
countrymen. Some say the Emperor is thirty miles from here, at Soest 
in Westphalia ; some that the French and the Landgrave of Hesse 
are raising troops. Let them say and sing ; we will wait on God. God 
bless you. 

Dr. Martin Luther. 

This was the last letter Luther ever wrote. A treaty between 
the brothers he had reconciled was drawn up on February 16 
and signed by him the day following. On the same day he felt 
faintness and pressure around the breast, but was somewhat re- 
lieved by the application of warm towels and doses of brandy 
before he went to bed. He felt ill in the night, rose and went 
into the next room — the house and apartments may still be 
seen at Eisleben ; it was at that time an inn — where he lay 
down on the couch. This was about two o'clock on the morning 
of February 18. His friends were soon aroused, and with him, 
in this last hour, were Jonas, Aurifaber, and Colius, the Mans- 
feld priest, his two sons Martin and Paul (where Hans was is 
not known), and one of the countesses of Mansfeld. Among his 
last words the following were remembered : — 

Dr. Jonas and Colius and you others, pray for the Lord God and 
his Evangelic Church because the Council of Trent and the wretched 
Pope are wroth with him. 

O Lord God, I am sorrowful. O dear Jonas, I think I shall remain 
at Eisleben where I was born and baptized. 

my heavenly Father, one God and Father of our Lord Jesus 
Christ, thou God of all comfort, thou God of all comfort, I thank thee 
that thou hast given for me thy dear son Jesus Christ, in whom I be- 
lieve, whom I have preached and confessed, loved and praised, whom 
the wicked Pope and all the godless shame, persecute, and blaspheme. 
I pray thee, dear Lord Jesus Christ, let me commend my soul to thee. 




CASTLE CHURCH AT WITTEXBERG, WHERE LUTHER IS BURIED 



DEATH 423 

D heavenly Father, if I leave this body and depart I am certain that 
I will be with thee for ever and can never, never tear myself out of 
thy hands. 

God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son, that 
whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting 
life. (This he said thrice.) 

Father, into thy hands I commend my spirit. Thou hast redeemed 
me, thou true God. 

The immediate cause of Luther's death was apoplexy, which 
deprives the patient of power of speech instantly. The stroke, 
the proof of which was found by the apothecaries who exam- 
ined the body the next day, must have come during a fainting 
spell. As Luther was losing consciousness, Jonas and Colius 
had to speak loud to make him hear: "Reverend father, will 
you stand steadfast by Christ and the doctrine you have 
preached ? " The dying man answered " Yes," the last word he 
spoke distinctly, though the friends around him thought they 
made out one more murmur : " Who hath my word shall never 
see death." 

The body was taken back to Wittenberg, and buried, on 
February 22, in the church where he had long ago nailed his 
theses on indulgences — those words that shook the world. 



EPILOGUE 

THE LAST TEARS AND DEATH OF LUTHER'S WIFE 

When Luther's death hecame known a loud cry of sorrow 
went up from all who had known him. Great men are usually 
deeply loved, and the many letters still extant, mourning the 
death of a "father," prove that he was no exception to the 
rule. A biography may well pass over them all, even that of 
his son Hans to Jonas, hut one, that of his nearest and dearest, 
the wife whose last sad years can hardly fail to interest those 
who have a care for her husband. Several of her letters have 
been preserved, all of a formal kind save this, which rings truer 
and tells more of Katie than anything else. It makes us regret 
that her other letters to her husband and son Hans have all 
perished. The occasion of Katie's writing to her sister was to 
promise her help to her sister's son, Florian von Bora, who was 
enabled to continue his studies at Wittenberg by a pension 
given him by Henry Hilbrand von Einsiedel : — 

CATHARINE LUTHER TO CHRISTINA VON BORA 

Wittenberg, April 2,- 1546. 
Grace and peace in God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. 
Kind, dear sister ! I can easily believe that you have hearty sympathy 
with me and my poor children. "Who would not be sorrowful and 
mourn for so noble a man as was my dear lord, who much served not 
only one city or a single land but the whole world ? Truly I am so 
distressed that I cannot tell my great heart sorrow to any one, and 
hardly know what to think or how I feel. I cannot eat nor drink, 
neither can I sleep. If I had had a principality and an empire, it 
would never have cost me so much pain to lose them as I have now 
that our Lord God has taken from me, and not from me only, but 
from the whole world, this dear and precious man. When I think of 
it, God knows that for sorrow and weeping I can neither speak 'nor 
dictate this letter ; you yourself, dear sister, have experienced a similar 



EPILOGUE 42« 

As to your son, my dear nephew, I will gladly do what I can. If 
he only has the opportunity I fully expect that he will study with all 
diligence and not spend his precious, noble youth uselessly and in 
vain. But if he must spend a little more in his studies, or needs other 
and more books now that he has begun to study law, you must know 
yourself, dear sister, that I cannot buy him such books. And he should 
have a little greater consideration, so that he can return what he re- 
ceives to him, who, as you write, is going to give your son, my nephew, 
a yearly stipend. Thus he could remain at his studies and more easily 
obtain his object. But about what I can do for him I will further con- 
sult and decide when my brother Hans von Bora comes to see me. 
God bless you. 

Catharine von Bora, Dr. Martin Luther's widow. 

In the same year that Luther died the great storm which had 
so often blown over before, burst, and ruined his family, his 
sovereign, and for the moment almost appeared to sweep away 
the Church he had founded. In the Schmalkaldic war, Germany 
first experienced the horrors of a religious conflict. Duke 
Maurice of Saxony, lured on by the bait of the electoral hat 
worn by his cousin, promised him in case of victory, made an 
alliance with the Emperor and attacked the League of Schmal- 
kalden. John Frederic was defeated by Charles V in the battle 
of Miihlberg, April 24, 1547, wounded and captured. Philip of 
Hesse was soon after taken by treachery, and both princes were 
kept in painful durance for five years. The title of elector, with 
Wittenberg and half the lands of John Frederic, were trans- 
ferred to Maurice. 

Our present interest in the war is chiefly as it concerned 
Katie. She fled to Magdeburg in November, 1546, and had 
hardly returned before she was obliged to flee again to Bruns- 
wick, returning to Wittenberg in July, 1547. Although the 
town had been given to Maurice, the inhabitants were left 
undisturbed in their religion. 

Katie's property, much damaged by the war, was completely 
ruined by the lawsuits instituted by the unfriendly Chancellor 
Briick during the captivity of the Elector. Luther had left a 
considerable property, estimated by him at nine thousand gulden 
in real estate and one thousand in personal property, minus a 



426 EPILOGUE 

few hundreds of debt, an estate roughly equivalent to one hun- 
dred thousand dollars to-day. The income from this estate was 
scarcely one hundred gulden per annum, besides which Katie 
might expect another hundred in pensions from the Elector and 
the King of Denmark. The former, however, was unable to pay 
the pension he had given, but even thus Katie might have lived 
well but for the fact that her husband's dislike of lawyers in- 
duced him to dispense with their services in drawing up his will. 
The chancellor was therefore able to break the will and have 
guardians appointed both for Katie and the children. Luther's 
widow was a woman of no common energy and gained all the 
contested points both as to the guardians appointed and as to 
the use made of the property. She did so, however, at the cost 
of what was left of her fortune, and was obliged to earn her own 
bread by taking boarders in the Black Cloister. 

Thus she lived until, in the autumn of 1552, she was again 
obliged to leave Wittenberg, this time on account of the plague. 
The horse shied, and in jumping out of the wagon Katie fell 
heavily in a pool of water. The mishap brought on an illness, of 
which she died, after three months of agony, on December 20. 
She was buried the next day in the church at Torgau far from 
her husband's side. 



APPENDIX 



APPENDIX 

I 

CHRONOLOGICAL TABLES 

I. Luther's Life 

1483 November 10, born at Eisleben. 

1484 to 1497 at Mansfeld where his father is a miner. 

1497 to 1498 at school of the Nullbriider (Brothers of the Common 

Life) at Magdeburg. 
1498-1501 at St. George's school at Eisenach ; with Frau Cotta. 

1501 about May, matriculates at the University of Erfurt. 

1502 takes the degree of bachelor of arts. 
1505 takes the degree of master of arts. 

1505 July 12, enters the Augustinian monastery at Erfurt. 

1507 spring, ordained priest. First mass May 2. 

1508 about November called to teach Aristotle's Ethics at the Uni- 
versity of Wittenberg (founded 1502). 

1509 March 9, takes the degree of baccalaureus ad biblia. 

1509 autumn, called to teach Lombard's Sentences at Erfurt. 

1510 (or 1511) October to 1511 (or 1512) February, journey to 
Rome ; the month of December spent in the city. 

1511, summer, returns to Wittenberg to lecture on the Bible. 
1512 October 18 takes the degree of doctor of theology. 
1515 May, elected district vicar of his order. 

1517 October 31, posts the Ninety-five Theses on indulgences on the 
door of the Castle Church at Wittenberg. 

1518 October 12, 13, and 14, interview with Cardinal Cajetan at 
Augsburg. 

1519 January 4 and 5 (or 5 and 6) interview with Miltitz at Alten- 
burg. 

1519 July 4-14, debate with John Eck at Leipsic. 

1520 June 15, Leo X signs the bull Exsurge Domine threatening to 
excommunicate Luther within 60 days. 

1520 August, publication of The Address to the Christian Nobility 
of the German Nation on the Improvement of the Christian 
Estate. 



430 APPENDIX 

1520 October, publication of the work On the Babylonian Captivity 
of the Church. 

1520 November, publication of the tract On the Freedom of a Christ- 
ian Man. 

1520 December 10, Luther burns the Pope's bull and the Canon 
Law. 

1521 April 17 and 18, Luther appears before the Emperor and Diet 
at "Worms. 

1521 May 4 to 1522 March 1, at the Wartburg in hiding. 
1525 May, writes Against the thievish murderous Hordes of 
Peasants. 

1525 June 13 marries Catharine von Bora (born at Lippendorf, Jan- 
uary 29, 1499 ; enters Nimbschen Cistercian Cloister 1508 (or 
1509) ; takes the veil October 8, 1515 ; leaves the cloister April 
4-5, 1523). 

1526 June 7, Hans Luther born. 

1527 July, severe illness of Luther. 
1527 (?) Ein Feste Burg. 

1527 December 10, Elizabeth Luther born. 

1528 August 3, Elizabeth Luther dies. 

1529 May 4, Magdalene Luther born. 

1529 October 2, conference at Marburg with Zwingli and other 
theologians. 

1530 April 23 to October 4, at Feste Coburg during the Diet of 
Augsburg. 

1530 May 29, Luther's father dies. 

1531 June 30, Luther's mother dies. 

1531 November 9, Martin Luther born. 

1532 February 4, the Black Cloister deeded to Luther and his heirs. 

1532 Completion of the translation of the Bible (begun 1521). 

1533 January 28, Paul Luther born. 

1534 December 17, Margaret Luther born. 

1535 November 7, the papal legate Vergerio comes to Wittenberg and 
has a conference with Luther. 

1536 May 29, the Wittenberg Concordia signed by Luther and the 
leaders of the German Zwinglians. 

1537 February, Luther goes to the Congress of Schmalkalden, but 
becoming very ill with the stone, is forced to leave. 

1537 February 27, Luther's First "Will. 

1539 May, Luther goes to Leipsic to inaugurate the Reformation in 

Albertine Saxony. 
1539 December 10, Luther signs the " Confessional Counsel " giving 

Philip of Hesse permission to take a second wife. 



APPENDIX 431 

1540 January and February, Catharine Luther very ilL 
1540 July, Luther at the conference at Eisenach. 
1542 January 6, Luther's Second Will. 
1542 September 20, Magdalene Luther dies. 
1546 February 18, Luther dies at Eisleben. 
1552 December 20, Catharine Luther dies. 

II. Popes 
1503-1513 Julius EL 
1513-1521 December 1, Leo X. 
1522-1523 September 14, Adrian VI. 
1523-1534 September, Clement VII. 
1534-1549 Paul HI. 

III. Emperors 

1493-1519 January 19, Maximilian. 

1519-1555 Charles V (elected June, 1519 ; crowned October 23, 
1520). 

IV. Electors of Saxony (Ernestine Branch) 

1487-1525 May, Frederic the Wise. 
1525-1532 August, John the Steadfast. 

1532-1547 John Frederic the Magnanimous ; lived as Duke of Sax- 
ony till 1554. 

V. Dukes of Saxony (Albertine Branch) 

1485-1500 Albert. 

1500-1539 April 17, George the Bearded. 

1539-1541 August, Henry the Pious. 

1541-1546 Maurice, made Elector 1546, and lived till 1553. 

VI. Landgrave of Hesse 

1508-1567 Philip the Magnanimous (born 1504, declared of age 
1517). 

VH. Important Events in German History 
1485 August 25, Treaty of Leipsic dividing Saxony into two parts, 

Electoral or Ernestine and Ducal or Albertine. 
1521 Diet of Worms. May 26, Edict of Worms signed, dated 

May 8. 
1523 Bevolt of the Knights under Sickingen, quelled at Landstuhl, 

May 7. 



432 APPENDIX 

1524 Diet of Nuremberg. 

1524-1525 Peasants' War, suppressed in the north at Frankenhausen 
in May. 

1525 Conversion of Prussia. 

1525 Victory of Charles V over Francis I at Pavia, February 24. 

1526 League of Torgau formed between Philip of Hesse and John of 
Saxony, May 4. 

1526 Diet and Recess of Spires, June and July. 

1527 Sack of Rome by imperial troops, May 6. 

1529 Diet of Spires opened February 26. Recess of Spires April 12. 
Protest of the Lutheran princes, April 25. 

1530 Diet of Augsburg. June 15, arrival of Emperor. June 25, 
" Augsburg Confession " read. November 19, publication of 
the Recess of Augsburg in an Imperial Edict. 

1531 Election of Ferdinand as King of tbe Romans, January. 

1531 Battle of Cappel, in which Zurich is defeated and Zwingli slain, 
October 11. 

1532 Diet of Ratisbon. 

1532 July, Peace of Nuremberg between Catholics and Protestants. 

1534 Anabaptist rising in Mtinster. 

1534 Restoration of Duke Ulrich of Wilrttemberg by Philip of 

Hesse. 
1537 Congress of the allies at Schmalkalden, February. 
1539 February to April, Congress of Frankfort, negotiations with the 

Emperor, and Treaty of Frankfort signed April 19. 

1539 Reformation of Ducal Saxony under Henry the Pious, May. 

1540 Religious conference of Hagenau, June. 

1541 Religious conference of Worms, January. 

1541 Diet and religious conference at Ratisbon, April to July. 

1541 Reformation of Halle. 

1542 Diets of Spires and Nuremberg. 

1542 War of the Schmalkaldic League with Brunswick, whose duke, 
Henry, is expelled. 

1543 Diet of Nuremberg. 

1544 Diet of Spires. 

1545 Diet of Worms. 

1545 Opening of Council of Trent. 

1546 Diet of Ratisbon. 

1546 Outbreak of Schmalkaldic War. 

1547 Battle of Mfihlberg April 24; John Frederic captured and 
Maurice of Albertine Saxony given the electorate and some of 
his lands. 



n 

BIBLIOGRAPHY 

General Bibliography 
A complete bibliography of books on Luther would include more 
than two thousand books and perhaps as many articles in periodicals. 
Most of these are now useless. The following bibliography does not 
pretend to anything like completeness. I intend to give only the 
sources in the best editions and the most valuable books on general 
phases of Luther's life and times. 

I. Bibliographies 

Fabritius : Centifolium Lutheranum. 

E. G. Vogel : Bibliotheca biographica Lutherana. 1851. 

British Museum Catalogue. Volume on Luther printed separately. 
1894. 

Hinrich : Bilcherlexicon. Annual, 1750 ff. 

Jahresberichte der Geschichtswissenschaften. Annual. 

Zeitschrif t fur Kirchengeschichte. Gotha. Quarterly bibliographies 
to December, 1909. (With the number March 1910 the bibliographies 
are discontinued.) 

Cambridge Modern History. Vol. ii (London, 1904), pp. 728 ff. 

Catalogues of the Bibliotheca Theologica of the collection of Wm. 
Jackson, issued by Harrasowitz. Leipsic. 1910. 

E. Weller : Repertorium typographicum. Nordlingen. 1864. 1874. 
1885. 

Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Catalogue of 1500 tracts by Luther and 
his contemporaries, 1511-1598. Privately printed. 1903. 

II. Unpublished Sources 

Very little of importance that is known is unpublished. The Col- 
loquia Serotina is a manuscript in the royal library at Gotha, con- 
taining table-talk from Lauterbach's notes, of the years 1536, 1537, 
and 1539. A diplomatically correct copy of this was made by J. K. 
Seidemann, who intended to print it, but died before he could do so. 
I have read his copy, now in the possession of Professor Kawerau of 
Berlin. As some extracts from it had been published by E. Kroker 



434 APPENDIX 

(Luther's Tischreden in der Matliesischen Sammlung, p. 357 if.), 
and as some of the sayings had been taken into Lauterbach's table- 
talk (edited by Bindseil, 1863-66), there was very little new in this 
manuscript. But cf. p. 466. 

I have read a portion of the Commentary on Romans in Luther's 
manuscript ; this, however, has recently been published. 

I have obtained photographs of the original manuscripts of several 
letters (at the Berlin Royal Library and elsewhere). From these fac- 
similes corrections on the originals can often be made ; the most im- 
portant are on Luther's letter of April 17, 1521, for which see 
p. 472. Material on Luther from English libraries hitherto unpub- 
lished is published by me in Zeitschrift fttr Kirchengeschichte. 
February, 1911. 

On the yet unpublished material on Luther, which is coming out in 
the Weimar edition, see : 

Koffmane : Die handschrif tliche Ueberlief erung von "Werken D. M. 
Luthers. Liegnitz. 1907. 

Other documents follow in this Appendix. 

III. Ltjtheb's Works 

Luther's samtliche Werke, kritische Ausgabe. Weimar. 1883 ff. As 
yet have appeared volumes i-ix, x, part i, half i, parts ii and iii, xi-xvi, 
xvii, part i, xviii-xx, xxiii-xxx, xxxii-xxxiv, xxxvi, xxxvii, xli, and 
(unnumbered) Deutsche Bibel, volumes i and ii. This edition, with 
thorough critical work, good introductions, and much new material, 
surpasses all others. It is not, unfortunately, quite complete, even as 
far as it goes, that is to about 1532. The letters, to be edited by 
Professor Kawerau, may be expected to appear when the edition by 
Enders and Kawerau is finished ; the table-talk, which has been en- 
trusted to Dr. E. Kroker, will occupy six volumes, of which the first 
may be expected in 1911. 

Dr. M. Luthers Samtliche Werke. Erlangen. 1826-1886. 

German works, 67 volumes (i-xx and xxiv-xxvi in the second 
edition). 

Latin works, 33 volumes, numbered. 

Commentary on Galatians, 3 volumes. 

Opera latina varii argument!, 7 volumes. 

Luthers Samtliche Werke, herausgegeben von J. G. Walch. Halle. 
1740-1753. The Latin works are here translated into German. A 
second edition of Walch, much improved, has been recently issued by 
the Concordia Verlag of St. Louis. 



APPENDIX 435 

Luthers Werke. Berlin. 1903. 10 volumes. This is a selection ed> 
ited by the best scholars with good text and introductions. 

N. B. I cite from the Weimar edition as far as complete ; after that 
from the Berlin or Erlangen editions. 

Besides the collections of Luther's works, the following supple- 
ments must be used : — 

Drews : Disputationen Dr. M. Luther's. Gettingen. 2 vols. 1895-6. 

Ficker : Luthers Vorlesung liber den ROmerbrief. Strassburg. 
1908. 

Buchwald : Ungedruckte Predigten D. M. Luthers, 1537-1540. 
Leipzig. 1906 (1905). 

Buchwald: Luthers Predigten zu Dessau, Juli 1534. Leipzig. 
1909. 

Very many of Luther's works have been translated into English, as 
may be seen by the catalogue of the British Museum. The most im- 
portant are : — 

De libertate christian!. The Liberty of a Christian Man. Cum 
privilegio regali. Imprynted at the sonne by me John Byddell. (Lon- 
don. Between 1530 and 1544.) 

A Commentarie of Dr. Martin Luther upon the Epistle of S. Paul 
to the Galathians, first collected and gathered word for word out of 
his preaching (1535) and now out of Latine . . . faithfully trans- 
lated into English. T. Vautroullier. London. 1575 (often re- 
printed). 

M. Luther's Preface to the Epistle to the Romans. Translated by 
W. W. Woodcock. (1575-94.) 

Special and chosen sermons of D. M. Luther. Englished by W. 
G. (Gace) T. Vautroullier. London. 1578. (Thirty-four sermons, 
often reprinted.) 

A right comfortable Treatise conteining sundrye pointes of conso- 
lation for them that labour and are laden. . . . Englished by W. 
Gace. T. Vautroullier. London. 1580. (This is a translation of 
Luther's Tesseradecas.) 

Martin Luther's Colloquia Mensalia, or his last Divine Discourses 
at his table. . . . Translated out of the High Dutch by Captain 
Henry Bell. London. 1652 (often reprinted). 

On the Bondage of the Will, by Martin Luther. Translated by 
H. Cole. London. 1823. 

Select Works of Martin Luther, an offering to the Church of God 
in these " last days." Translated by H. Cole. London. 1826. (This 
contains, besides some minor works and selections, versions of The 



4S6 APPENDIX 

Liberty of a Christian Man, The Tesseradecas, On Good Works, 
Commentary on the first Twenty-two Psalms.) 

Luther's Primary Works, together with his shorter and longer 
catechisms, translated by H. Wace and C. A. Buchheim. London. 
1896. (Besides the catechisms this contains : The Ninety-five Theses, 
The Address to the German Nobility on the Improvement of the 
Christian Estate, On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church, and 
The Liberty of a Christian Man.) 

Standard edition of Luther's Works, translated by J. N. Lenker. 
Minneapolis. 1903 ff . As yet have appeared eight volumes containing 
the Church Postil, Epistle Sermons, Commentary on the first twenty- 
two Psalms, Commentary on Jude and Peter, and The Catechetical 
Writings. 

The Letters of Martin Luther. Selected and translated by Margaret 
A. Currie. London. 1908. 

IV. Letters 

(A) To February 1540 

Dr. Martin Luther's Briefwechsel, bearbeitet von Dr. E. L. 
Enders und Dr. G. Kawerau. 12 volumes. 1884-1910. This edition 
of the letters is not complete, even as far as it goes. For supplements, 
see Appendix 11. The German letters are not printed, but only regis- 
tered by Enders and Kawerau, and for their text reference is made to 
the Erlangen edition of the Works (see above), volumes 53-56. 

(B) From February 15Jfi to February IBJfi 

W. M. L. de Wette : Luthers Brief e. 5 volumes. Berlin. 1825-8. 

De Wette-Seidemann : Sixth volume. Berlin. 1856. 

Seidemann: Lutherbriefe. Dresden. 1859. 

C. A. H. Burkhardt : Dr. Martin Luther's Briefwechsel. Leipzig. 
1866. 

M. Lenz : Briefwechsel des Landgraf en Philipp mit Bucer. Vol. i. 
Leipzig. 1880. 

M. Lenz : Nachlese zum Briefwechsel des Landgrafen Philipp mit 
Luther und Melanchthon. Zeitschrif t f ilr Kirchengeschichte, iv (1881), 
133 ff. 

T. Kolde : Analecta Lutherana. Gotha. 1883. 

Tschackert : Zum Luthers Briefwechsel. Zeitschrift f ur Kirchen- 
geschichte, xi (1889), 290 ff. 

F. Gundlach : Nachtrage zum Briefwechsel des Landgrafen Philipp 
mit Luther und Melanchthon. Schriften des Vereins far hessische 
Geschichte, xxviii. Cassel. 1904. 



APPENDIX 437 

C. A. H. Burkhardt : Zum ungedruckten Briefwechsel der Reformat 
toren, besonders Lathers. Archiv fttr Reformationsgeschichte, no. 
xiv. 1907. 

V. Table-Talk 

H. Wrampelmeyer : Tagebuch liber Dr. Martin Luther gef uhret 
von Dr. Conrad Cordatus. Halle. 1885. 

H. Wrampelmeyer : Tischreden Dr. M. Luthers aus einer Samm- 
lung des C. Cordatus. In Festschrift des koniglichen Gymnasiums zu 
Clausthal. 1905. 

J. K. Seidemann, in Sachsische Kirchen- und Schulblatter 1876- 
1877, publishes some of Dietrich's notes. 

"W. Preger : Luthers Tischreden aus den Jahren 1531 und 1532 
nach den Aufzeichnungen von J. Schlaginhaufen. Leipzig. 1888. 

E. Kroker : Luthers Tischreden in der Hathesischen Sammlung. 
Leipzig. 1903. 

E. Kroker : Rorers Handschriftbande und Luthers Tischreden. In 
Archiv fur Reformationsgeschichte. 1908, pp. 337 ff. ; 1910, pp. 56 ff. 

J. K. Seidemann : Lauterbach's Tagebuch auf das Jahr 1538. 
Dresden. 1872. 

H. E. Bindseil : D. Martini Lutheri Colloquia. . . . Lemgoviae 
et Detmoldiae. 3 vols. 1863-1866. 

K. E. Ferstemann und H. E. Bindseil : Luthers Tischreden. 4 
vols. Berlin. 1844-1848. 

Losche : Analecta Lutherana et Melanthonia. Gotha. 1892. 

Corpus Reformatorum, xx, 519-608. 

(The Table-Talk will be published in six volumes in the "Weimar 
edition : the first volume, expected in 1911, will be devoted to Diet- 
rich's notes.) 

The Table-Talk has been twice translated, from Aurifaber. 

H. Bell : Dr. Martin Luther's Colloquia mensalia, or his last Di- 
vine Discourses at his Table. London. 1652. 

W. Hazlitt : Luther's Table Talk. London. 1848. 

VI. Collections of Sources 

Balan : Monumenta reformations Lutheranae. Regensburg. 1884. 

O. Clemen : Flugschriften aus der Ref ormationszeit. Halle. 1904 ff. 

O. Clemen : Brief e aus der Ref ormationszeit. Zeitschrif t f . Kirchen- 
geschichte, xxxi (1910), 1 and 2. 

P. S. Allen: Letters of 1500-1530. English Historical Review, 
xxii (1907), 740 ff. 

W. Friedensburg : Zum Briefwechsel der katholischen Gelehrter. 



438 APPENDIX 

Zeitschrift f . Kirchengeschichte, xviii, 106 ff., 283 ff., 420 ft., 596 ff. ; 
xix, 231 ff., 473 ff . ; xx, 242 ff., 500 ff . ; xxi, 537 ff . ; xxiii, 110 ff., 438 ff. 

Piiper : Primitiae pontificiae. Theologorum neerlandicorum disputa- 
tiones contra Lutherum, ab 1519 usque ad 1526. Hagae-Com. 1905. 

O. Schade : Satiren uud Pasquille aus der Reformationszeit. 3 vols. 
2ded. Hanover. 1863. 

Aleander, see Bibliography to Chapter x. 

Brief wechsel des Beatus Rhenanus, ed. A. Horawitz und K. Hart- 
felder. Leipzig. 1886. 

Brief wechsel der Bruder Ambrosius und Thomas Blaurer. 1509- 
1548. Ed. T. Schiess. 2 vols. Frieburg i. Br. 1908, 1910. 

Briefwechsel Dr. J. Bugenhagen, ed. O. Vogt. 1888. 

Calvini opera, ed. G. Baum, E. Cunitz, E. Reuss, in Corpus Reform- 
atorum. Vols, xxi-lxxxvii. Brunswick and Berlin. 1861—1900. 

J. Cochlaeus : Commentaria de actis et scriptis M. Lutheri 1517-46. 
Apud St. Victorem prope Moguntiam. 1549. (I use copy in Biblio- 
theque Nationale, Paris, D 1447.) 

Albrecht Dttrer's schriftlicher Nachlass, ed. E. Heidrich. Berlin. 
1908. 

Brief e von H. Emser, J. Cochlaeus, J. Mensing und P. Rauch an 
die Filrsten Johann und Georg und die Furstin Margarete von Anhalt. 
Ed. O. Clemen. Mttnster i. W. 1907. 

Erasmus, see bibliography to Chapter xviii. 

Epistolae obscurorum virorum, ed. Stokes. London. 1909. 

Georg Helt's Briefwechsel, ed. O. Clemen. Leipzig. 1907. 

Briefwechsel des Landgrafen Philipps mit Bucer, ed. M. Lenz. 3 
vols. 1880-91. 

Hutten, see bibliography to Chapter VII. 

Briefwechsel des Justus Jonas, ed. G. Kawerau. 2 vols. Halle. 
1884-5. 

J. Kessler : Sabbata. Chronik der Jahre 1523-39, ed. E. Egli und 
SchochSt. Gallen. 1902. 

Hartmuth von Kronbergs Schriften, ed. E. Kiick. Halle. 1899. 

J. Mathesius' Ausgewahlte "Werke, ed. G. LiJsche, Prague. 1896-8. 
Historien von des Ehrwirdigen. . . . M. Luthers Anf ang, Lehr, Leben 
und Sterben. Band iii. 

Melanchthon, see bibliography to Chapter VII. Melanchthon's Vita 
Lutheri, Corpus Reformatorum, vi, 155, and xx, 430. 

Der Briefwechsel des Mutianus Rufus, ed. C. Krause, Kassel. 1885. 

Der Briefwechsel des Conradus Mutianus, ed. K. Gillert. 2 vols. 
Halle. 1890: 

F. Myconius : Historia reformationis 1517-42, ed. Cyprian. Leip- 
zig. 1718. 



APPENDIX 489 

Bilibaldi Pirckheimeri opera, ed. Goldast. Frankfort. 1610. 

K. Rtick : Pirckheimeri De Bello Elvetieo. Munich. 1895 (with 
Pirckheimer's autobiography). 

(Dr. Eeicke of Nuremberg and Dr. Reimann of Berlin are planning 
to edit Pirckheimer's correspondence.) 

Die Handschiftliche Geschichte M. Ratzebergers, ed. C. S. Neu- 
decker. Jena. 1850. 

Reuchlin, see bibliography to Chapters n and IV. 

Brief e an Stephan Roth, ed. Buchwald. Archiv fur Geschichte d. 
deut. Buchhandels. 1893. 

Akten und Briefe zur Kirchenpolitik Herzogs von Sachsen, ed. F. 
Gess. Tome i, 1517-1524. Leipzig. 1905. 

Schwenckfeld, see bibliography to Chapter xxxvil. 

G. Spalatin : Annales reformationis, ed. Cyprian. Leipzig. 1718. 

Spalatins historischer Nachlass, ed. Neudecker und Preller. Vol. i. 
Jena. 1851. 

Spalatiniana, ed. G. Bierbig. Theolog. St. und Kr. 1907, Heft iv ; 
1908, Hefte i, ii. 

Staupitz, see bibliography to Chapters II and IV. 

Christoph Scheurl's Briefbuch, ed. von F. von Soden und J. K. F. 
Knaake. 2 vols. Potsdam. 1867, 1872. 

Vadianische Briefsammlung. 5 parts and 5 supplements, hg. von 
Arbenz und Wartmann. St. Gallen. 1890 ff. 

Zwingli, see bibliography to Chapters xxi and xxn. 

Die symbolichen Biicher der evangelischelutherischen Kirche. Be- 
sorgt von J. T. Miiller und T. Kolde. Guterloh. 1907. 

F. Ktich : Politisches Archiv des Landgrafen Philipps von Hessen. 
(Pablicationen aus k. preus. Staatsarchiven, vols. 78, 85.) Leipzig. 
1904 ff. 2 vols. 

Deutche Reichstagsakten unter Karl V. Herausg. von A. Kluck- 
hohn und A. Wrede. Mttnchen. 1893 ff. 

Nuntiaturberichte aus Deutschland nebst erganzenden aktenstucken, 
herausg. durch die k. preus. hist. Institut zu Rom. Theil I, 1533-59. 
Gotha. 1892 ff. (As yet have appeared 12 volumes.) 

"VTI. Recent Lives of Luther 
J. Kostlin : Martin Luther. 5th edition by G. Kawerau. Berlin. 

1903. 

T. Kolde : Martin Luther. Gotha. 2 vols. 1884-1893. 

A. Hausrath : Luthers Leben. 1904. 

A. E. Berger : Martin Luther in kulturgeschichtlicher Darstellung. 
Berlin. Vol.i (to 1525). 1895. Vol. ii (to 1532). 1898. 
M. Lenz : Martin Luther. 3d edition. Berlin. 1897. 



440 APPENDIX: 

C. Beard : Martin Luther and the Reformation in Germany until 
the close of the Diet of Worms. London. 1889. 

H. 'Denifle : Luther und Lutherthum in der ersten Entwickelung. 
I. Hauptband. I. Abteilung 2d edition. Mainz. 1904. (Concerned 
chiefly ■with Luther's work on Monastic Vows.) II. Abteilung. 2d 
edition by A. M. Weiss. 1906. (Concerned mainly with Luther's 
development till 1517.) I. Erganzungsband. Die abendlandischen 
Schriftausleger bis Luther liber Justitia Dei und Justiflcatio. 1905. 

A. M. Weiss : Luther und Lutherthum. II. Erganzungsband. Ltt- 
therpsychologie. 1906. II. Hauptband. 1909. 

A. C. McGiffert, in the Century Magazine, beginning December, 
1910. 

VIII. Histories of the Time 

Cambridge Modern History. Vol. ii. The Reformation. London. 
1904. 

T. M. Lindsay : A History of the Reformation. Edinburgh. Vol. i, 
Germany. 1906. Vol. ii, Lands beyond Germany. 1907. 

L. Pastor : Geschichte der Papste. Vol. iv (1513-1534), pt. i. ■ 
1906. Pt. ii. 1907. Vol. v (1534-1549). 1909. English translation, 
edited by Ralph Kerr. London. 1908 ff. Vols, vii-x. 

T. Kolde : Friedrich der Weise. 1881. 

G. Mentz : Johann Friedrich. 3 vols. Jena. 1903-1909. 

J. Janssen : Geschichte des deutschen Volkes seit dem Ausgange 
des Mittelalters. Vols, i-iii. 17th and 18th editions by Pastor. 1897 ff. 
English translation. 14 volumes. London. 

L. Hausser : Geschichte des Zeitalters der Reformation. 1517- 
1648. 3d edition. 1903. In Onken's series. 

L. von Ranke : Deutsche Geschichte im Zeitalter der Reformation. 
Vols. i-vi. Leipzig. 1894. 

F. von Bezold: Geschichte der deutschen Reformation. Berlin. 
1890. 

M. Creighton : History of Papacy during period of Reformation. 
5 vols. London. 1887-94 (vols, i, ii, in new ed. 1892). 

P. Schaff : History of the Christian Church. Vol. vi, The German 
Reformation (1517-1530). New York. 1888. 

F. Thudichum : Die deutsche Reformation (1517-1537). 2 vols. 
Leipsic. 1909. (Anabaptist point of view.) 

T. Brieger : Die Reformation. Weltgeschichte, ed. Pflug-Hartung. 
Neuzeit. Vol. i. 1909. 

W. Moller : Lehrbuch der Kirchengeschichte. Vol. iii. Reformation 
und Gegenreformation. 3d ed. Bearbeitet von G. Kawerau. Tubin- 
gen. 1907. English translation of the second edition by J. H. Freese. 
London and New York. 1900. 3 vols. 



APPENDIX 441 

IX. Miscellaneous Works 

H. Bohmer : Luther im Liclite der neueren Forschung. 1st ed. 
Leipzig. 1906. 2d ed. Leipzig. 1910. (Each edition has material not 
in the other.) 

W. Braun : Lutherstudien und ihre Bedeutung fur die Gegenwart. 
Neue kirchliche Zeitung, xx (1909), v, p. 329. 

O. Clemen : Beitrage zur Ref ormationsgeschichte aus der Zwick- 
auer Ratschulbibliothek. 3 parts. Berlin. 1903. 

Eckhart : Luther im Urtheil beruhmter Manner. 1908. 

Hunziger : Lutherstudien. Leipzig. 1906. 

Horst Sephan : Luther in den Wandlungen seiner Kirche. Giessen. 
1907. 

W. Walther : Lutherophilus. Halle. 1893. 

W. Walther: Fur Luther wider Rom. Halle. 1906. 

W. Walther : Zur Werthung der deutschen Reformation. Leipzig. 
1909. 

D. Erdmann : Luther und die Hohenzollern. Breslau. 1883. 

P. Zimmermann : Der Streit Wolf Hornungs mit Kurfurst Joachim 
I von Brandenburg und Luthers Beteiligung an demselben. Ztsch. f. 
preussiche Geschichts- und Landeskunde, xx, 310. 

G. Bayer : Johann Brenz. Stuttgart. 1899. 

Baum : Capito und Butzer. Eberf eld. 1860. 

E. Armstrong: The Emperor Charles V. 2 vols. London. 2d ed. 
1910. 

Flechsig : Cranachstudien, pt. i. Berlin. 1900. 

W. Reindell : Luther, Crotus und Hutten. Marburg. 1890. 

N. Paulus : Die deutschen Dominikaner im Kampf e gegen Luther. 
1518-1563. (Erlauterungen und Erganzungen zu Janssens Ge- 
schichte d. deut. Volkes. hg. von L Pastor.) Freiburg i. B. 1903. 

P. Mosen : H. Emser. 1890. 

G. Kawerau : H. Emser. 1898. 

G. Kawerau : Caspar Guttel. Halle. 1882. 

W. Vogler : Hartmuth von Kronberg. Halle. 1897. 

N. Paulus : Der Augustiner Bartholomaus Arnoldi von Usingen, 
Luthers Lehrer und Gegner. Strassburgische Theolog. Studien. i, 
pt. iii. Strassburg and Freiburg. 1893. 

D. Erdmann : Luther und seine Beziehungen zu Schlesien. 

Bossert : Luther und Wittenberg. Ludwigsburg. 1883. 

X. Works of Reference 
Realencyclopadie filr protestantische Theologie und Kirche, ed. 
Herzog und Hauck. 3d ed. 22 vols. 1896-1909. (Supplementary 
volume announced for 1912.) 



442 APPENDIX 

Kirchenlexicon, ed. Wetzer und Weltes. Freiburg i. B. 1883 ff. 

Dictionnaire de la Theologie Catholique. Paris. 1903 ff. 

Die Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart. HandwOrterbuch in 
Gemeinverstandlicber Darstellung, ed. H. Gunkel, 0. Scheel und 
F. M. Scbiele. Tubingen. 1910 ff. 

Dictionnaire d'Histoire et de GeograpHe Eccl&iastique, ed. Baudril- 
lart. Vpgt et Ronzies. Paris. 1909 ff. 

The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopaedia of Religious Knowledge, ed. 
S. M. Jackson. New York and London. 1908 ff. Vols, i-viii. On 
Luther, vii, 69-79. 

Allgemeine deutsche Biographie. 1844 ff. 

Grimm : Deutsches Wsrterbuch. Complete to " Sprechen," 10 vols. 

D. Sanders : Deutsches Worterbuch. 3 vols. 

Dietz : Worterbuch zu Luthers Schriften, pt. i. 1876. 

Du Cange : Glossarium mediae et infimae latinitatis. Several ediT 
tions. 

SPECIAL BIBLIOGRAPHIES 

Chapter I. Childhood and Student Life. 1483-1505 

Sources : 

Chiefly Luther's table-talk and other reminiscences in his works ; 
e. g., that about his spiritual director in the monastery. Weimar, xxx, 
iii, 530. 

Monographs : 

O. Clemen : Beitrage zu Reformationsgeschichte. Heft. ii. Berlin. 
1903. 

Grossler : Luthers Taufort. Mansfelder Blatter, xvii, 179. 

Kampschulte : Die Universitat Erfurt. 2 vols. Trier. 1858-60. 

Krumhaar: Nullbrtider. Evangel. Kirchenzeitung. 1882. p. 442. 

G. Oergel : Vom jungen Luther. Erfurt. 1899. 

W. Mollenberg : Luthers Vater. Zts. des Harzvereins. xxxix, 169. 
1907. 

E. Schaumkell : Der Kultus der heiligen Anna. Freiburg. 1893. 

Document : 

The following account of the plague at Erfurt in 1505 is taken 
from an excessively rare book in the British Museum Print Room. 
Cf. Panzer : Annales typographic!, vi, 495. 

De Recessu Studentum ex Erphordio tempore pestilentiae. Eobani 
Hessi Francobergii carmen heroicum. Erfurt. 1506. 4°. 



APPENDIX 448 

Tempus eiat iam laeta Ceres adoleverat arris; 

Sole sub ardehti lunata falce Colonas 

Venerat agrestis segetes incidere, vites 

Frondebant, iam silva leves porrexerat umbras, 

Floruit omnis ager, campi sylvaeque potentes 

Et laeti arboreis cantum sparsere volueres 

Frondibus argutum ; repetunt arbusta Cicadae 

Et nova transpicuis arrident gramina rivis. 

Laeta per integrum radierunt gaudia mundum, 

Quidquid erat laetum fuit exultatque per orbem. 

Annus erat post quinque decern quoque saecula quintus 

Postque virginea deus exiit aeditus alvo; 

Tranquilla stetit infoelix Erphordia pace 

Tempore non illo foelix velut esse solebat 

Antea loetiferi quisquis infausta veneni 

Sparsit in egregios flammantia tela Minervae 

Cultores. Stygio pestis suffusa furore 

Iamiam Sesseo totam madefecerat urbem 

Sanguine mortif eras populus effudit et atrox 

Viroso vomit ore faces et corpora diris 

Suspicit hulceribus, virusque effudit in omnes 

Vipereum multi licuit sperare salutem 

Cum semel affixa est lateri laetalis harundo 

Una lege ruunt cuncti iuvenesque senesque 

Innocuam rabies adeo grassatur in urbem 

Laetiferae pestis, Danaos non tanta peremit 

Impietas altae vastantes moenia Troiae 

Dum pater abductam repetit Chriseida Calchas 

Urbs luget tetri sanie polluta veneni 

Ante suos obeunt nati nataeque parentes 

Et patris moriens spectat crudelia natus 

Funera, nee propriam cognoseit filia matrem. 

Exoritur miseranda lues, it rumor ad aedes 

Palladis, et quosdam rabies haec inficit ex hiis 

Quos miseri quondam ad studium misere parentes 

Inficit, et tristi languencia corda veterno 

Obtenebat, ferit incautos, volat ocyor Euro. 

Haec fera nunc illos iaculo nunc percutit illos 

Nee metuit quenquam quantumvi3 doctus ad arma 

Pallados exurgat, furit, aestuat, inficit, aufert 

Corpora, ut esuriens lupus inter ovilia plena 

Imbelles obtruncat oves nee exit ab illis, 

Nee praedae absistit donee non traxerit omnes 

Mortis ad exitium, fera non secus ilia cruentis 

Aestuat hulceribus. Magnae domus alta Minervae 

Moeret, et ingentes morientum sydera planctus 

Aecipiunt ; ipso sedet alti cnlmine Pallas 

Tegminis et peplo f aciem velatur. Nephandas 



444 APPENDIX 

Conqueritur caedes ac tristia fata suorum. 
At Cytharam posuit moestam crinitus Apollo 
Calliopeque, fugit Nyniphis comitata latinis. 
Conquerimur cuncti quos docta Erpbordia quondam 
Fovit et eleotos gremio suscepit aperto, 
Vota precesque deo ferimus juvenesque senesque, 
Aerea vasa sonant; Sanctae qua virginis aedes 
Tres celebres Mariae tollunt ad sydera turres 
Atque aliis quibus hec urbs est celeberrima templis 
Atria clauduntur portae; nigris capita alta Cucullis 1 
Velantur juvenum j superest spes nulla salutis, 
Iamque ubi desperata salus, ubi nulla precantes 
Vota juvant, ubi mors vitae dominatur et omnes 
Lege ruunt Pauli, nee erat mens certa moiandi, 
Effugimus dum quisque potest, dum vita superstes 
Cuique sua est quos preteriit furor ille cruentus; 
Effugimus; iuvat ire prooul, patriosque penates 
Visere, et externas studiis renovarier urbes 
Palladiis, multas quarum iam fama per annos 
Delituit, fugiunt una omnes mente magistri 
Quisque suos repetunt lares, unaque studentes 
Quisque suum sequimur per daevia longa magistrum 
Quorum aliquos memorare libet. 

(Here follows a passage on two of the dead, Laurence Usingen and 
a certain Lupambulus.) 

Paulatim tetros Erpbordia docta furores 
Post multas tandem caedes evasit et aestus. 
Candida mox iterum ventis dare vela paramus 
Assuetam fatis petituri hortantibus urbem. 
Urbs luget commota novae f ormidine famae. 
O quales gemitus nostri peperere recessus, 
Quas lacbrymas quales miserunt lumina fletus, 
Tristia quae nostros abitus odere. . . . 

This brilliant picture of the very plague which drove the students 
into the monastery and to distant parts is followed by another poem 
hardly less interesting : De Fugna Studentium Erphordiensium cum 
quibusdam conjuratis nebulonibus. Eobani Hessi Francobergii Car- 
men. 1506. This tells of a town and gown row which arose from a 
student drinking-bout. It was doubtless just such an affray as Luther 
says he sometimes saw in his student days. Cf . Buchwald : Unge- 
druckte Predigten, p. 521. 

1 The poet got one too many feet in this verse. 



APPENDIX 443 

Chapters II and IV. Luther's Development. 1505-1517 

A. Sources of Luther's thought in the schoolmen and fathers, in 

various editions 

(For the editions used by Luther, cf. "Weimar, ix, 1) 

Augustine (works best known to Luther were : De Trinitate, De 
Civitate Dei). Migne : Patrologia latina, xxxii-xlvii. 

G. Biel : Collectorium super quattuor libris sententiarum. Tubin- 
gen. 1501. 

William of Occam : Super quattuor libris sententiarum annotatio- 
nes. Lyons. 1475. (Id. Ghent. 1495.) 

Id. Political works, ed. Goldast: Monarchia (13 vols. 1614). 
Vol. ii. 

Peter Lombard : Sententiae. 

Gerson et d'Ailli, ed. Ellis Dupin. Antwerp. 1706. 

Monographs : 

J. Altensteig : Lexicon Theologicum. Venice. 1583. 

Prantl : Geschichte der Logik im Abendlande, iii and iv. 

H. Hermelink: Die theologische Facultat in Tubingen vor der 
Reformation. Tubingen. 1906. 

De Wulf : Histoire de la philosophie me'die'vale. Paris. 1905. 

Rashdall : History of the Universities of the Middle Ages. Ox- 
ford. 1895. On Nominalism and Occam, ii, 535 ff.; on Erfurt, ii, 
242 ff. 

B. Mysticism 
Sources : 

Theologia Deutsch. Hg. von L. Mandel (Quellensch. zur Geschichte 
des Protestantismus, Heft 7) . Leipzig. 1907. 

Theologia Teutsch. sine loco. 1526. (Bodleian Library. Tract. 
Luth. 46 (22).) 

Monographs : 

H. Hering: Die Mystik Luthers. Leipzig. 1879. 

Cohrs' articles Tauler and Theologia Deutsch in Realencyclopadie, 

xix. 

C. Luther's early writings 

Marginal notes on Augustine, Lombard's Sentences, Tauler, &c. 
Weimar, ix. 

Dictata super Psalterium, 1513-16. Weimar, iii and iv. 

Luthers Vorlesung tiber den Romerbrief . Hg. von Ficker. Leip- 
zig. 1908, 



44,6 APPENDIX 

Lectures on Judges. Weimar, iv, 529. 
Lectures on Galatians. Weimar, ii, 436. 
Sermons. Weimar, iv, 587. 
Disputatio de theologia scolastica. Weimar, i, 221. 

Monographs : 

K. Benrath : Luther im Kloster 1505-25. Halle. 1905. 

H. Bahmer : Luther im Lichte der neueren Forschung. 2d ed. 
Leipzig. 1910. Chapter i. 

W. Braun : Die Bedeutung der Konkupizenz in Luthers Leben und 
Lehre. Berlin. 1908. 

H. DenifTe: Luther und Lutherthum. Vol. ii. 2d ed. Mainz. 
1906. 

A. W. Hunzinger : Lutherstudien. Heft i. Leipzig. 1906. 

A. Jundt : La DeVeloppement de la pense"e religieuse de Luther 
jusqu'en 1517. Paris. 1907. 

K. Holl : Die Rechtf ertigungslehre in Luthers Vorlesung liber den 
Eamerbrief . Zts. fiir Theologie und Kirche. 1910. Heft iv. 245- 
291. 

H. Mandel : Die scholastische Rechtf ertigungslehre, ihre Bedeutung 
fiir Luthers Entwickelung. Greifswald. 1906. 

W. Stange : Luthers Entwickelung. Neue kirchliche Zts. xvii 
(1906), 661. 

O. Scheel : Die Entwickelung Luthers bis zum Abschluss der Vor- 
lesung iiber den Ramerbrief . Schriften des Vereins f . Reformations- 
geschichte, no. 100. 1910. 

D. Wittenberg 
Sources: 

FBrstemann : Album Academiae Vitebergensis. Leipzig. 1841. 

Id. Liber Decanorum f acultatis theologiae Academiae Vitebergensis. 
1850. 

J. Kastlin : Baccalaurei und Magistri der Wittenberg, phil. Facultat 
4 Hefte. 1887-91. 

Muther : Die Wittenberger Universitats und Facultatsstatuten der 
Jahr 1508. Halle. 1867. 

Monographs : 

Haussleiter : Die Universitat Wittenberg vor dem Eiutritt Luthers. 
Leipzig. 1903. 

J. Kastlin : Friedrich der Weise und die Schlosskirche zu Witten- 
berg. 1892. 

K. Schmidt : Wittenberg unter Friedrich dem Weisen. 1877. 



APPENDIX 447 

2£. The Beuchlin trial 
Epistolae Obscurorum Virorum ed. Becking. Leipzig. 1864-70. 
Epistolae Obscurorum Virorum, ed. Stokes, with an English trans- 
lation. London. 1910. 

Johann Reuchlins Briefwechsel, ed. L. Geiger. Tubingen. 1875. 

Monographs : 

Becking and Stokes, introductions. 

F. The Augustinians and Staupitz 
Sources : 

Staupitzens samtliche Werke, ed. Knaake. Vol. i. 1867. 

Monographs : 

T. Kolde : Die deutschen Augustiner Congregationen und J. von 
Staupitz. Gotha. 1879. 

T. Kolde : Das religiose Leben in Erfurt beim Ausgang des Mittel- 
alters. Sch. d. Vereins fur Reformationgesch. xiv. 1908. 

O. Clemen, Staupitz, in Realencyclop. xviii. 

G. Spalatin. (See general bibliography for sources.) 

G. Bierbig : G. Spalatin und sein Verhaltnis zu Luther bis 1524. 
. . . Halle. 1906. 

Kolde, article on Spalatin in Realencyclop. xviii. 

Chapter III. Rome 

A. Hausrath : M. Luthers Romfahrt. Berlin. 1894. 

Turk : Luthers Romfahrt. Meissen. 1897. 

Th. Elze : Luthers Reise nach Rom. Berlin. 1899. 

N. Paulus, in Historisches Jahrbuch. 1891, 314 ff. ; 1901, p. 110 ff. ; 
1904, p. 72 ff. In Historische-politische Blatter (1909), vol. cxlii, 
p. 738 ff. 

G. Kawerau, in Deutsch-evangel. Blatter. 1901, p. 79 ff. 

O. Clemen : Beitrage zur Reformationsgeschichte, iii, 89. 

K. Todt : in Preussische Jahrbttcher, 117, 479 ff. 

F. M. Nichols : Mirabilia Urbis Romae. London. 1905. 

On the Florentine Hospitals, Baedeker's Northern Italy, and 
P. Monnier : Le Quattrocento (Paris, 1908), ii, 170. 



44S APPENDIX 

Chapters V and IX. The Indulgence Controversy. 1517-20 

A. The Theory of Indulgences 
Sources : 

Alexander of Hales : Summa theologiae, cap. iv. 

Thomas Aquinas : Summa theologiae. Supplementum tertiae partis. 
Quaestiones 25-27. 

Kohler : Documente zum Ablassstreit von 1517. Tubingen. 
1900. 

Albert, Archbishop of Mayence : Instructio summaria pro sub- 
commissariis. Enders : Luthers Briefwechsel, i, 116. (Extracts.) 

Monographs : 

Brieger : Das Wesen des Ablasses am Ausgange des Mittelalters. 
Leipzig. 1897. 

DieckhofE : Der Ablassstreit. Ootha. 1886. 

A. Gottlob : Ereuzablass und Almosenablass. Stuttgart. 1906. 

Id. Ablassentwickelung und Ablassinhalt im elften Jahrhundert. 
Stu]ttgart. 1907. 

G. Kawerau : " Sobald das Geld im Kasten klingt." Barmen, 1890. 

H. C. Lea : A History of Auricular Confession and Indulgence in 
the Latin Church. 3 vols. Philadelphia. 1896. Vol. iii, chapter iii, 
pp. 372-413. 

N. Paulus : Johann Tetzel, der Ablassprediger. Mainz. 1899. 

N. Paulus : Die Anfange des Ablasses. Zts. ftlr katolische Theologie 
1909. Heftii. 

Id. id. Historische Jahrblicher. 1909. Heft i. 

B. Luther's attack on indulgences 
Sources. 

W. Kohler : Luther's 95 Thesen samt deinen Resolutionen, sowie 
die Gegenschriften von Wimpina-Tetzel, Eck und Prierias, und die 
Antworten Luthers darauf . Leipzig. 1903. 

The Ninety-five Theses (with facsimile). Weimar, i, 223. 

Resolutiones disputationis de virtute indulgentiarum. Weimar, i, 
522. 

Acta Augustana. Weimar, ii, 6. 

Unterricht auf etliche Artikel. Weimar, ii, 69. 

A. Corsio : II Cardinale Caetano e la Rif orma. Cividale. 1902. 
Cajetan on Indulgences, p. 215 ; Luther at Augsburg, pp. 291-332. 



APPENDIX 449 

C Process against Luther at Borne 
Sources and monographs: 

Bokmer : Luther im Lichte der neueren Forschung. 2d ed. Leip- 
zig. 1910. Chapter iii. 

B. Fritsche : Die papstliche Politik und die deutsche Kaiserwahl 
in 1519. Burg. 1909. 

P. Kalkoft' : Forschungen zu Luthers romischen Prozess. Bom. 
1905. 

P. Kalkoff : Die Beziehungen der Hohenzollern zur Kurie unter 
dem Einfluss der lutherischen Frage. Rom. 1906. 

P. Kalkoff : Ablass und Reliquienverehrung an der Schlosskirche 
in Wittenberg. Gotha. 1907. 

P. Kalkoff : W. Capito im Dienste des Erzbischof Albrecht von 
Mainz. Berlin. 1907. 

P. Kalkoff: Cardinal Cajetan auf dem Augsburger Reichstage 
1518. Quellen & Forschungen aus Ital. Archiven. x, 226-30. Rome, 
1907. 

Moller-Kawerau : Kirchengeschichte (1907), iii, 15 ff. 

K. Mtiller : Luthers rSmischer Prozess. Zts. f. Kirchengeschichte. 
1903. xxiv, 46. 

L. Pastor : Geschichte der Papste. iv, pt. i (1906), chapters vii 
and viii. 

A. Schulte : Luthers Prozess. Quellen und Forschungen . . . vi, 
pp. 32, 174, 374. 

A. Schulte : Die Fugger in Rom 1495-1523. 2 vols. Leipzig. 1904. 

P. Kalkoff : Zu Luthers rSmischen Prozess. Zeitsch. f. Kirchen- 
ges. xxxi (1910), pp. 48-65, pp. 368-114. 

W. Friedensburg : Eine ungedruckte Depesche Aleanders. (To 
Leo X, September 20-23, 1520.) Quellen und Forschungen aus Ital. 
Archiven, i, 150-3. 

In the Harvard Library there is a collection of Luther tracts of 
the years 1518-20, catalogue number Nor. 2100, # x 64-93. This is 
annotated in a sixteenth century hand, wrongly said to be Luther's, 
but which is really that of one of his contemporaries, as is proved by 
notes referring to the years 1552 and 1556, by two references to a jour- 
ney to Rome in 1516-17, and by many other allusions contradicting 
the known facts of Luther's life. One note, however, is of such interest 
that it may be given here as new evidence on Tetzel's sermons. In 
one of the tracts, Luther's Answer to Prierias, we read these words 
(p. E. iii) : " Dicunt praecones : Si haberes unam tunicam vendere 
deberes, ut venias redimeres, nee hoc potenti suadent, ubi quis neces- 



450 APPENDIX 

sario primo modo non habuerit, turn alicunde mutuet, aut mendicet, 
etiam si sit uxor." In the margin is -written this note : " Verissima 
sunt ista. Namque et ego audivi tales praecones a Jolianni Tizel anno 
domini 1516." 

D. The Bull Exsurge Domine, and its burning. 1520. 

Burning of the bull. "Weimar, vii, 184. 

J. Agricolas neuer Bericht ilber Luthers Verbrennung der Bann- 
bulle. Sitzungsber. d. k. preuss. Akad. d. Wissenschaften. 1907. v, 
1-8. (Cf . O. Clemen, Theolog. St. und Kritiken. 1908. 460-469, and 
1909, p. 158, and G. Kawerau, ibid. 1908, p. 587 f.) 

Der Bericht des H. Scultetus ilber Luthers Verbrennung der Bann- 
bulle. Quellen und Forsehungen aus Italienischen Archiven, i, 320. 
Horn. 1898. 

Luther : Von den neuen Eckischen Bullen und Ltlgen. Weimar, vi, 
579. 

Id. Adversus execrabilem Antichristi bullam. Weimar, vi, 595. 

Assertio omnium articulorum M. Lutheri per bullam Leonis X no- 
vissimam damnatorum. Weimar, vii, 94. 

Oblatio sive Protestatio. Weimar, vi, 474. 

Bulla decimi Leonis contra errores Martini Lutheri et sequacium, 
ed. IHrich von Hutten. s. 1. e. a. (1520). Bodleian Library Quarto B 9 
Th. Seld. (The Bull Exsurge Domine.) 

Bull Exsurge Domine, also edited by J. D. Mansi ; Sacrorum Con- 
ciliorum Nova et Amplissima CoHectio, vol. xxxii (Paris, 1902), 
p. 1049. 

Chapter VI. The Leipsic Debate. 1519. 

The debate. Weimar, ii, 254, with historical introduction. 

O. Seitz : Der authentische Text des Leipziger Gesprachs zwischen 
A. Karlstadt, J. Eck und M. Luther. Berlin. 1903. 

Gess : Akten und Briefe zur Kirchenpolitik Herzog Georgs von 
Sachsen. Leipzig. 1905. Tom. i. 

T. Brieger : Einziges ilber die Leipziger Disputation. Leipzig. 1909. 

Die Leipziger Disputation, " Wartburg," viii, 30 (1908). 

E. Schaf er : Luther als Kirchenhistoriker. Giiterloh. 1897. 

W. Kehler : Luther und die Kirchengeschichte. (To 1521.) Er- 
langen. 1900. 

Mosellanus' account of the Leipsic debate, and of Luther's appear- 
ance, in a letter to J. Pflug, ed. Jortin : Life of Erasmus. 2 vols. Lon- 
don. 1758-1760. Vol. ii, pp. 353-8. 

L. Enders : Luther und Emser. 2 vols. Halle. 1890-92. 

Corpus Reformatorum, i, 87. 



APPENDIX 451 

Chapter VII. The Patriot 

Melanchthon : 

Melanchthon's works and letters, mostly in Corpus Ref ormatorum, 
vols, i-xxviii, ed. by Bretschneider & Bindseil. Halle. 1834 ff. 

Bindseil : Ph. Melanchthonis epistolae &c. quae in Corpore Ref orm- 
atorum desiderantur. 1874. 

Supplementa Melanchthonis. Ed. Clemen, Mtlller & al. Leipzig. 
Vol. i. 1910. Vol. ii. 1911. 

G. Krilger : P. Melanchthon. Leipzig. 1906. 

Article "Melanchthon" in Realencyclopadie, xiii, with authorities. 

R. Seeburg : Die Stellung Melanchthons in der Geschichte der 
Kirche und Wissenschaft. Erlangen. 1897. 

F. Loofs, in Theolog. Stud. u. Kritik. 1897, p. 641. 

G. Kawerau, ibid., p. 668. 

G. Mix : Luther und Melanchthon in ihrer gegenseitigen Beurteil- 
ung. In Theol. Stud. u. Kritik. 1901, p. 449 ff. 

G. Kawerau : Luther und Melanchthon, in Deutsch-evangel. Blat- 
ter, 1903, p. 29, and 1906, p. 179. 

On the influence of Muss : 
Kohler : Luther und die Kirchengeschichte. Erlangen. 1900. 

On Hutten and the Nationalists : 

Meltzer : Luther als deutscher Mann. 1905. 

Strauss : Ulrich von Hutten. 2 vols. 2d edition. Leipzig. 1874. 

Hutten's works, ed. by Becking. 5 vols. Leipsic. 1859-64. 

Szamaltolski : Ulrich von Hutten. Quellen und Forschungen zur 
Sprach- und Kulturgeschichte der Germanischen Velker. Heft 67. 

1891. 

Chapter VIII 

The Address to the German Nobility, The Babylonian Captivity of 
the Church, and The Freedom of a Christian Man 

Operationes in Psalmos, 1519-21. Weimar, v. 

Explanation of Dr. Martin Luther of certain articles in his sermon 
on the sacrament. Weimar, vi, 78. 

Tesseradecas consolatoria. Weimar, vi, 99. 

Of Good Works. Weimar, vi, 203. 

To the Christian Nobility of the German Nation on the Improve- 
ment of the Christian Estate. Weimar, vi, 405 (with historical intro- 
duction, ibid. 381). 

Prelude on the Babylonian Captivity of the Church. Weimar, vi, 497 
(with historical introduction, ibid.). 



452 APPENDIX 

On the Liberty of a Christian Man. Weimar, vii, 49 (with introduc- 
tion, ibid. 1). 

Wace and Buchheim : Luther's Primary Works. London. 1896. 

W. E. Kehler : Luther's Schrift an den christlichen Adel deutscher 
Nation im Spiegel der Kultur- und Zeitgeschichte. Halle. 1895. 

Benrath : "' An den christlichen Adel " yon M. Luther. 1884. 

Chapter X. The Diet of Worms. 1521 

Sources : 

A. Wrede : Deutsche Reichstagsakten unter Karl V. 1896. Luther's 
speeches at Worms, here ii, no. 79 ff., and Weimar, vii, 814 ff. 

Magnum Bullarium Romanum. Luxemburg. 1727. The Bull Decet 
Romanorum Fontificem (commonly called Decet Pontificem Ro- 
manum), i, 614 f. 

T. Brieger : Aleander und Luther, 1521. Gotha. 1884. 

P. Kalkoff : Die Depeschen des Nuntius Aleander vom Wormser 
Reichstage. 1521. 2d ed. Halle. 1897. 

P. Kalkoff : Nachtrag zur Korrespondenz Aleanders wahrend seiner 
ersten Nuntiatur in Deutschland 1520-22. Zt. ftir Kirchengesch. 
xxxv. 1904. 

" Dr. Martin Luther's Passion," ed. Schade : Satiren und Pasquille, 
i, no. 11. 

J. Paquier : Lettres f amilieres de Jer8me Aleandre 1510-40. Paris. 
1909. 

P. Kalkoff : Depeschen und Berichte liber Luther vom Wormser 
Reichstage 1521. Halle. 1898. 

T. Haase : Ein Lutherbrief und ein Lutherbild. Leipziger illustri- 
erte Zeitung, August 31, 1889. P. 220. (Facsimile of Luther's letter 
to Cuspinian. Same printed by Preserved Smith : Notes on Luther's 
Letters, Amer. Journal of Theol. April, 1910.) 

E. Heidrich : Albrecht Dttrers schriftlicher Nachlass. Berlin. 1908. 
pp. 95 ff. 

Holzinger: Ein Uhner Bericht von Luther in Worms. Theolog. 
Stud. u. Kritiken. 1907. pp. 45 ff. 
Monographs : 

A. Hausrath : Aleander und Luther. Berlin. 1897. 

P. Kalkoff : Aleander gegen Luther. Leipzig. 1908. 

P. Kalkoff : W. Capito im Dienste Erzbischof Albrechts von Mainz. 
Berlin. 1907. 

T. Kolde : Der Reichsherold Kaspar Sturm. Ar. Ref-Ges. iv, 117. 
1904. 

P. Meissner : " Ohne Horner und Zahne." Ibid, iii, 321. 1904. 

Schubert : Luther im Worms. Theolog. Rundschau, ii, 369. 



APPENDIX 453 

E. Armstrong: The Emperor Charles V. 2 vols. London. 2d ed. 
1910. 

B. Gebbhardt : Die Gravamina der deut. Nation gegen des rOmi- 
schen Hof. Breslau. 1884. 

E. Gossart : Charles V. Bruxelles. 1910. At Worms, pp. 175-199. 

A. Wrede : Das Datum des Wormser Edicts. Historische Zeit- 
gchrift, Ixxvi. 449. 

Note on the words : " Here I stand, I can do no other, God help 
me." These words, traditionally the close of Luther's speech on April 
18, appear in this form and order first in the Wittenberg edition of 
Luther's works, published under his supervision 1545. In a different 
order they are given in an account printed at Wittenberg while 
Luther was at the Wartburg. In his own account the closing words are 
simply: " God help me. Amen"; and other narratives by eye-witneases 
give similar but not identical words. It is very possible that the tradi- 
tional words are the right ones, as the first account is confessedly 
simply a summary and not an exact reproduction of the speech. But 
after all, it makes little difference in an estimate of Luther whether 
he said them or not ; the fact remains that he did stand there and 
that he could do no other. Cf . Beichstagsakten, pp. 555 f , note, and 
K Muller, in Festschrift far Kleinert. 1908. 

Note on the condemnation of Luther's writings by the University 
of Paris. On July 17, 1520, the Sorbonne received a letter from the 
Elector Frederic asking for an opinion on Luther's doctrines. They 
referred the question to J. Berthelemi and Noel BeVla, who reported 
their judgment at sittings on September 15 and November 17. The 
formal condemnation of the university was dated April 15, 1521. 
(For first edition : Determinatio Facultatis Parisiensis super Doc- 
trina Lutheri, cf. Benouard: Bibliographie des oeuvres de Josse 
Bade Ascensius. 3 vols. Paris. 1908. ii, 402. Eeprinted by Du 
Boulay : Historia Universitatis Parisiensis (1665-73) vi. 116-127). 
On April 22 the Sorbonne considered what answer to give Frederic, 
and drafted letters to him and the Emperor, April 24. The latter was 
submitted to the King, whose adviser, William Petit, defended Luther. 
Cf. L. Delisle : La Facuite" de Theologie a Paris. Notices et Ex- 
traits des MSS de la Bibliotheque Nationale (1899) xxxvi, 325 ff., 
354. 

Note on Luther's pictures. The only good ones are by Lucas 
Cranach; even the death-mask, now at Halle, being altered, and 
therefore unreliable. The only genuine pictures by Lucas Cranach 
the elder are the following : — 

1. Copper engraving of 1520. Luther as monk. 



454 APPENDIX 

2. Copper engraving of March, 1521 (cf. Enders, iii,107). Luther 
as monk, profile. 

3. Oil painting (somewhat damaged) in Leipsic City Library. 
Luther as Junker Jorg. December, 1521. This also in engraving. 

4. Oil painting, original probably in Wittenberg, Luther house. 
Luther at his marriage, June, 1525. 

5. Oil painting of 1526, in private gallery of Frau Richard von 
Kaufmann, Berlin. Probably taken from no. 4. 

The numerous portraits of later years in German and Italian gal- 
leries are by Lucas' son Hans, or the much inferior artists of 
Cranach's large studio. Something of the old, stout, embittered 
Luther may be in them, but they cannot be compared with the pic- 
tures by Lucas. Cf. Flechsig : Cranachstudien. Ft. 1. Berlin. 1900. 
pp. 257 fit. I have myself examined all the genuine Cranachs and 
many other portraits of Luther, and, as far as a layman may, con- 
firmed the expert opinion of Flechsig. 

An opinion has been advanced that Luther was the original of one 
figure in Giorgione's Concert, in which case Giorgione would have 
had to see him during the trip to Italy (1510). So P. Schaff : History 
of the Christian Church, vi, 130. The idea is far-fetched and un- 
tenable. It goes back a long way. The Duke of Shrewsbury wrote 
in his journal November 10, 1701, that in the Prince's apartments at 
Florence he saw " a picture of Calvin and Luther drawn by Giorgione ; 
they have a woman drawn between them, I suppose to laugh at them. 
But it is a good piece. Calvin especially seems to have a sensible, 
thinking countenance." MSS of the Duke of Buccleuch and Queens- 
bury. London. 1903. II, ii, p. 756. Giorgione died in 1511 ; Calvin 
was born 1509. 

Chapteb XL The Wabtbubg 

J. Luther : Die Beziehungen Dr. Martin Luthers zur Wartburg 
und Koburg. Berlin. 1900. 

Postilla. Weimar, x, pt. 1, half i. The continuation of these in 
1525 and 1527 will appear in Weimar, xxi and xxii. 

Bossert in Theolog. Studien und Kritiken, 1897, pp. 271 ff., and 
W. Kohler, in Zeitschrift f. Wissenschaftliche Theologie, 1898, pp. 
588 ff. 

Luther : Wider den f alsch genannten geistlichen Stand. Weimar, 

x, pt. ii, p. 93. 

De Votis Monasticis. Weimar, viii, 564. 

Scheel: "De votis monasticis," in Berlin edition (1903). Supple- 
mentary volumes 1 and 2. 



APPENDIX 455 

Denifle: Luther und Lutherthum. 1 Hauptband, 1 Abteilung. 
Mainz. 1904, passim. 

N. Paulus : Zu Luthers Schrift tiber die Menchsgelttbde, in His- 
torische Jahrbttcher, 1906, p. 487 fE. 

On the New Testament, see chapter on Luther's Bible. 

W. Oncken: Martin Luther in the Wartburg. " Die Wartburg," 
English translation. Berlin. 1907. pp. 263-272. 

Chapters XII and XIII. The Wittenberg Revolution 

G. Kawerau : Luthers Rttckkehr von der Wartburg, Deutsche 
Litteratur-Zeitung. 1893. Col. 1582. 

Von Bezold, in Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte (1900), xx, 168 fE. 

G. Kawerau : Luthers Rttckkehr von der Wartburg. Halle. 1902. 

H. Barge: Andreas Bodenstein von Carlstadt. 2 vols. Leipsic. 
1904, 1905. 

H. Barge, in Historische Zeitschrift, xcix, 256. (1907.) 

H. Barge, in Historische Yierteljahrsschrift, ii, 193 ff. and 296 ff. 
(1908.) 

H. Barge : Gemeindechristenthum in Wittenberg und Orlamiinde. 
Leipsic. 1909. 

K. Mailer : Luther und Karlstadt. Tubingen. 1907. 

N. Mfiller : Die Wittenberger Bewegung von 1521 und 1522. 
Seven articles in Archiv f . Reformationsgeschichte. 1909, pp. 161 ff., 
261 ff., 385 ff. 1910, pp. 133 ff., 233 ff., 353 ff. 1911, pp. 1 ff. 

Luther and the Swiss students at Jena, from 

J. Kessler : Sabbata. Published by the Historische Yerein des St. 
Gallen. (St. Gallen, 1902.) pp. 76 ff. 

P. Wappler : Thomas Mttnzer in Zwickau und die Zwickauer 
Propheten. 1908. 

Luther's Warning to all Christians to keep themselves from Tumult 
Weimar, viii, 670. 

Against the Heavenly Prophets of Images and the Sacrament 
Weimar, xviii,37 ff. 

Eight Sermons in Lent (March 9-16, 1522). Weimar, x, pt. ii, 1 fE. 

H. Lietzmann : Kleine Text fur theologische. . . . Vorlesungen. . . . 
1902 ff. Bonn. No. xxi. Die Wittenberger und Leisniger Kastenord- 
nungen 1522—23. 

Chapter XIV. The Peasants' Revolt. 1525 

This is naturally not a bibliography of the Peasants' War (such 
may be found in Cambridge Modern History, ii (1904), pp. 752 fE. and 
Schapiro, 154 ff-)> but 0I ^7 °* Luther's relation to it. It may be men- 



456 APPENDIX 

tioned, however, that a full collection of sources is to be edited by 
O. Mere in three volumes. (One chapter by this author has appeared 
in Festschrift zum Gedachtniss Philipps des Grossmtttigen. Kassel. 
1904. pp. 259-333.) 

Besides the histories of Janssen, Bezold, Lamprecht, etc., may be 
mentioned the following special works : — 

E. B. Bax : Social Side of the Reformation in Germany. 3 vols. 
London. 1894. 

' Gotze : Die Artikel der Bauern 1525, in Hist. Vierteljahrsschrif t, 
iv (1901) and v (1902). 

Stolze : Der deutsche Bauernkrieg. Halle. 1907. 

J. S. Schapiro : Social Reform and the Reformation (Columbia 
University Studies, xxxiv, no. ii). New York. 1909. 

Lietzmann : Kleine Texte. . . . Bonn. 1902 ff. nos. 1-li. Urkunden 
zur Geschichte des Bauernkrieges und der Wiedertaufer. Ed. . 
Bshmer. 

Exhortation to Peace on the Twelve Articles. Weimar, xviii, 279. 

Letter on the hard Pamphlet against the Peasants. Weimar, xviii, 
375. 

Chapters XV, XXXII. The Luther Family 

Albrecht Thoma : Katharina von Bora. Berlin. 1900. 
E. Kroker : Katharina von Bora. Leipzig. 1906. 
Luther's Sermon on Marriage. Weimar, xvii, 12. 
Letter to Reissenbusch. Weimar, xviii, 270. 
P. A. Kirsch : Melanchthons Brief an Camerarius ttber Luthers 
Heirat vom 16 Juni. 1525 [with incorrect translation]. Mainz. 1900. 

W. Meyer : Lauterbachs und Aurifabers Sammlungen derTischre- 
den Luthers. Abhandlungen d. k. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu 
Gottingen. Phil. Hist. Klasse. N. F. Bd. i, no. ii. 1897. 

Preserved Smith : Luther's Table Talk, a Critical Study. Colum- 
bia University Studies, xxvi, no. ii. New York. 1907. 

Chapter XVI. Private Life. 1522-1530 
On the University : 

G. Bauch: Die Einfflhrung des Hebraischen in Wittenberg, in 
Montaschrift fur Geschichte des Judenthums, Jahrgang 48. p. 22 ff. 

G. Bauch : Wittenberg und die Scholastik, in Neues Archiv fur 
Sachsische Geschichte. 1897. pp. 295 ff. 

E. Haupt : Was unsere Universitaten der Griindung der Universe 
tat Wittenberg danken. Halle. 1902. 



APPENDIX 457 

On Luther's diseases, cf. below, Chapter 



On the Erection and Maintenance of Schools. Weimar, xv, 1 ff. 
Whether one may flee from the Plague. Weimar, xxiii, 323 ff. 
Sermons of 1527. Weimar, xxiii, passage quoted p. 689. 
Sermons of 1528. Weimar, xxvii. 
Sermons of 1528-9. Weimar, xxviii. 
Sermons of 1529-1530. Weimar, xxix. 
Sermons on Exodus. Weimar, xvi ; passage quoted p. 301. 
Sermons on Genesis 1527. Weimar, xxiv. 

Lectures on Titus, Philemon, and Isaiah. Sermons on Leviticus 
and Numbers. Weimar, xxv. 

Lectures on Ecclesiastes. Weimar, xx, 1 ff. 

Sermons of 1526. Weimar, xx, 204 ff. 

Lectures on 1 John. Weimar, xx, 592 ff. 

Lectures on Minor Prophets. Weimar, xiii. 

Lectures on 2 Peter, Jude, Genesis, Deuteronomy. Weimar, xiv. 

Sermons of 1530. Weimar, xxxii. 

Sermons on John 6-8 (October 1530-1532). Weimar, xxxiii. 

Sermons of 1531. Weimar, xxxiv. 

Chapter XVII. Luther and Henry VIII 

J. S. Brewer, J. Gairdner, It. H. Brodie : Letters and papers, 
foreign and domestic, of the reign of Henry VIII. London. 1862. . . . 

Bergenroth, Gayangos and Hume : Calendar of letters, dispatches 
and state papers preserved in the archives of Simancas. . . . London. 
1862 

B. Brown : State papers . . . preserved in the archives of Venica. 
. . . London. 1867. . . . 

Luther : Contra Henricum Angliae regem. Weimar, x, pt. ii, 175. 

Id. Auf den Titel des KSnigs zu Engelland Lasterschrif t. Weimar, 
xxiii, 17. 

Assertio Septem Sacramentorum. I have used an edition without 
year or place, in the Bibliotheque Nationale at Paris, catalogue num- 
ber D 5839. 

Epistola Martini Lutheri ad Henricum VIII . . . et Responsio 
dicti invictissimi Angliae et Franciae regis. . . . Dresden. 1527. 

A copy of the letters wherein the most redoubted . . . Henry VIII 
made answer unto a certain letter of Martin Luther, s. 1. et a. (Ap- 
pendix to More's Apology). Bodleian Library Crynes 863. 

W. W. Rockwell : Die Doppelehe des Landgraf Philip von Hessen. 
Marburg. 1904. pp. 202-309. 



468 APPENDIX 

W. Walther : Heinrich VIII von England und Luther. Rostock. 
1908. 

J. P. Collier : History of English Dramatic Poetry, i, 108 (on the 
revel of November 9, 1527). Cf. J. A. Froude : History of England 
(1875) i, 74-76. 

Preserved Smith : Luther and Henry VIII, English Historical Re- 
view, no. c. October, 1910. 

6. Mentz : Johann Friedrich, ii. Jena. 1908. 

G. Mentz : Die "Wittenberger Artikel von 1536. Leipzig. 1905. 

Assertio Septem Sacramentorum . . . reedited by L. O'Donovan. 
New York. 1908. 

Henrici VIII contra Lutherum ejusque haeresim, epistola ad 
Saxoniae Duces. Spicilegium Romanum (1840), iii, 741-50. 

Cambridge History of English Literature, vol. v, part i (1910), 
p. 114, states that John Ritwise, master of St. Paul's School, was 
responsible for the play of November 9, 1527. 

Better readings of Luther's letter to Cromwell, 1536, together with 
a letter of Jonas to Cromwell of the same date, will be found in my 
article in the Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte, February, 1911. An 
interesting unpublished source, is : Henrici VIII . . . contra Ger- 
manorum opiniones de utraque specie, de missa privata et de conjugio 
sacerdotorum. Collected by Cuthbert Tunstall and revised by Henry, 
apparently in 1536. Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, England, MS 
109,1. 

On the burning of Luther's works at St. Paul's, Sanuto's Diaries, 
xxx, 314 ff., 342. 

Edicts against Luther in England, Wilkins : Concilia Magnae 
Britanniae et Hiberniae (1737), iii, 689, 690, 693, 711, 720, 737. 

Chapter XVIII. Luther and Erasmus 

Erasmi opera omnia, ed. J. Clericus. Lugduni Batavorum. 1703-6. 

Erasmi Axiomata, in Luther's Werke, Erlangen, v, 238 ff . 

Acta Academiae Lovaniensis, ibid, iv, 308. 

Consilium cujusdam . . . , in Zwinglii opera, ed. Schuler & Schult- 
hess, i, 1. 

De libero arbitrio Diatribe sive collatio, Clericus, x, pt. i, 1215. 

Id. ed John von Walther. Quellenschriften zur Geschichte des 
Protestantismus. xxiii. 1909. 

Hyperaspistes . . . Clericus, x, pt. ii. 1249 ff. 

Luther : De servo arbitrio. Weimar, xviii, 551. 

Responsio Lutheriana ad condemnationem doctrinalem per magistros 
Lovanienses et Colonienses. Weimar, vi, 3. 



APPENDIX 459 

Horawitz : Erasmus und Martin Lipsius. Wien. 1882. 

Opus epistolarum Erasmi. The most complete edition is that in 
Clericus, iii ; a better edition is now in course of publication : by 
P. S. Allen, 2 vols., Oxford 1906, 1910, which has as yet only the 
letters before July, 1517. Additional letters in : 

J. Forstemann und 0. Gunther : Brief e an Erasmus. Leipzig. 
1904. 

L. K. Enthoven : Brief e an Erasmus. Strassburg. 1906. 

More light may also be expected from the Bibliotheca Erasmiana, 
now in course of publication at Ghent : Listes sommaires, 1893 ; 
Adagia, 1897 ; Annotationes &c, 1900 ; Apophtegmata, 1901 ; Collo- 
quia, 3 vols. 1903-7. 

An allusion to Erasmus in 1532, in the preface to Bugenhagen's 
edition of Athanasius against Idolatry. Weimar, xxx, iii, 531. 

Besides the lives of Erasmus by R. B. Drummond (1872), Durand 
de Laur (1872), J. A. Froude (1895) and E. Emerton (1900), I have 
consulted the following special treatises : — 

H. Hermelink : Die religiosen Beformbestrebungen des deutschen 
Humanismus. Tubingen. 1907. 

Humbertclaude : Erasme et Luther, leur polemique sur le libre 
arbitre. Paris. 1909. 

P. Kalkoff : W. Capito im Dienste des Erzbishof Albrecht von 
Mainz. Berlin. 1908. 

P. Kalkoff : Die Vermittlungspolitik des Erasmus und sein Anteil 
an den Flugschriften der ersten Beformatipnszeit. Archiv flir Refor- 
mationsgeschichte, i (1903). 

G. Kawerau: Luther und Erasmus. Deutsch-evangel. Blatter. 
1906, p. 12. 

F. Lezius : Zur Characteristik des religiosen Standpunkts des 
Erasmus. Giltersloh. 1895. 

A. Meyer : Etude critique sur les relations d'Erasme et de Luther. 
Paris. 1909. 

M. Richter : Desiderius Erasmus und seine Stellung zu Luther. 
Leipzig. 1907. 

K. Zickendraht : Der Streit zwischen Erasmus und Luther tiber die 
Willensfreiheit. Leipzig. 1909. 

P. Kalkoff : Erasmus, W. Nesen und N. von Herzogenbusch im 
Kampfe mit den Lowener Theologen. Zwingli's Werke, ed. Egli, 
Finsler und Kehler, vol. vii (1910), pp. 402-420. 

Article " Erasmus," by Mark Pattison and P. S. Allen, in Ency- 
clopaedia Britannica, 11th edition (1910-11), ix, 727. 



480 APPENDIX 

Chapters XIX, XXIV. German Politics 

A. Luther's Political Theory 
Sources : 

Luther : Of Civil Authority and how far it is to be obeyed. Weimar, 
xi, 229. 

Luther : Whether Soldiers can be in a state of Grace. Weimar, xix, 
616. 

Monographs : 

N. Paulus: Luther und die Todesstrafe fflr Ketzer. Hist.-pol. 
Blatte. vol. cxlv, pp. 177-189, and 243-255. 

E. Brandenburg : Luthers Anschauen vom Staat und Gesellschaft, 
Schriften d. Vereins f. Ref ormationsgesch. Halle. 1901. 

L. Cardauns : Die Lehre vom Widerstandsrecht des Volkes. 
Bonn. 1903. (Page 125, remarks that Luther followed closely Augus- 
tine : Contra Faustum Manichaeum.) 

P. Drews : Entsprach das Staatskirchenthum dem Ideale Luthers ? 
Tubingen. 1908. 

W. A. Dunning : Political Theory from Luther to Montesquieu. 
New York. 1905. pp. Iff." 

P. Wappler : Inquisition und Ketzerprozess zu Zwickau. Leipzig. 
1908. 

E. Ehrhardt : La notion du droit naturel chez Luther. (Etudes de 
theologie et d'histoire, pp. 285 ff.) Montauban. 1901. 

G. Jager : Politische Ideen Luthers und ihr Einfluss ajif die innere 
Entwickelung Deutschlands. Preussische Jahrbucher. 1903. 

F. G. Ward : Darstellung und Wurdigung der Ansichten Luthers 
vom Staat und seinen Wirtschaftlichen Aufgaben. Conrad's Samm- 
lung nationalokon. Abhandlungen, xxi. Jena. 1898. 

G. von Schulthess-Rechberg : Luther, Zwingli und Calvin in ihren 
Ansichten liber das Verhaltnis von Staat und Eirche. Aarau. 1910. 

L. H. Warren : The Political Theories of Martin Luther. New 
York. 1910. 

Max Weber : two articles in Archiv fflr sociale Gesetzgebung und 
Statistik. 1905. xx, xxi. 

K. Mailer : Eirche, Gemeinde und Obrigkeit nach Luther. 
Tubingen. 1910. 

B. Politics 
Sources : 

A. Wrede: Deutsche Beichstagsakten unter Karl Y. Vol. iii. 
1901. 



APPENDIX 461 

F. Gess : Akten mid Briefe zur Kirchenpolitik Herzog Georgs von 
Sachsen. Bd. i, 1517-24. Leipzig. 1905. 

Luther : Of Secret and Stolen Letters. Weimar, xxx, pt. ii, pp. 
Iff. 

Luther : On the Turkish War. Weimar, ibid., pp. 81 ff. 

Warning to his dear Germans. Weimar xxx, iii, 252. 

Commentary on the putative Imperial Edict. Weimar 
321 ff. 



Cambridge Modern History, ii, chapters 5 and 6. 
Pastor : Geschichte der Papste, iv, pt. ii, pp. 76 ff. 

Monographs : 

R. Kabel: Ein Jahr aus Luthers Leben (1525). 1883. 

T. Brieger : Der Speirer Reichstag von 1526 und die religiose 
Frage der Zeit. Leipzig. 1909 (Review by W. Friedensburg, Arch. f. 
Reformationsgesch. 1910, pp. 93 ff.). 

T. Kolde : Friedrich der Weise und die Anf ange der Reformation. 
Erlangen. 1881. 

A. Krencker : Friedrich der Weise von Sachsen beim Beginn der 
Reformation. 1906. 

J. Becker : Kurf iirst Johann von Sachsen und seine Beziehungen 
zu Luther. Leipzig. 1890, 1905. 2 v. 

G. Mentz : Johann Friedrich der Grossmiltige. Jena. 3 v. 1903, 
1908. (I refer especially to ii, 8 and 27.) 

H. Schwartz : Landgraf Philipp von Hessen und die Packischen 
Handel. 1884. 

Ehses : Landgraf Philipp von Hessen und Otto von Pack. 1886. 

O. Winkelmann : Der Schmalkaldische Band, 1530-2. 1892. 

P. Wappler : Die Stellung Eursachsens und des Landgraf Philipps 
von Hessen zur Tauferbewegung. Mtinster i. W. 1910. 

Chaftek XX. Chttbch Building 
1. Church Building. 

German Mass. Weimar, xix, 44 ff. 

Deutsche Litaner und Latina Litania correcta (1529). Weimar, 
xxx, iii, 1 ff. 

Instruction for the Visitors of Saxony. Weimar, xxvi, 174 ff. 

The Abomination of Private Masses. Weimar, xviii, 8 ff. 

Ein Traublichlein fur die einfaltigen Pfarrherrn (1529). Weimar, 
xxx, iii, 43. 



462 APPENDIX 

Lather: "Von Ordnung Gottesdiensts, Taufbilchlein, Formula 
Missae et communionis. Bonn. 1909. 

K. liieker : Die rechtliche Stellung d. Evangel. Kirche Deutsch- 
lands. Leipzig. 1893. 

E. Sehling : Die evangelischen Kirchenordnungen des 16. Jahrhun- 
derts. Leipzig. 1906 ff. As yet 3 volumes. 

2. Songs. 

Songs, Erlangen, vol. Ivi. Better edited in Lietzmann: Kleine 
Teste, &c. 1902 £E. nos. xxiv, xxv. 

J. Wagener, in Monatschrift f. Gottesdienst und kirchliche Kunst. 
iv (1899), pp. 7 ff. J. Adam : Ein Feste Burg, ibid, xiv (1909), 
pp. 6-9. 

Zelle : Das alteste lutherische Hausgesangbuch. (Gbttingen. 1903.) 

E. Achelis : Die Entstehungszeit von Luthers geistlichen Lieder. 
Marburg. 1883. 

J. Linke: Wann wurde das Lutherlied "Ein Feste Burg" ver- 
fasst? Leipzig. 1886. 

F. Spitta : " Ein Feste Burg ist unser Gott." Gettingen. 1905. 

G. Kawerau : Neue Forschungen ttber Luther's Lieder, in Deutsch- 
evangelischen Blatter, 1906. Heft 5, pp. 314 ff. 

J. Baubenstrauch : Luther und die kirchliche Musik in Sachsen bis 
auf 1610. Leipzig. 1906. 

Dr. Zelle: Die Singweisen der altesten evangel. Lieder. Berlin. 
1899, 1900. 

3. Catechisms. 

Catechisms and catechistical writings. Weimar, xxx, pt. 1. 

F. Cohrs : Die evangelischen Eatechismusversuche vor Luthers 
Enchiridion. 3 Hefte. Berlin. 1901-1907. 

K. Knoke : D. M. Luthers kleiner Katechismus nach den altesten 
Ausgaben in hochdeutscher, niederdeutscher und lateinischer Sprachen. 
Halle. 1904. 

O. Albrecht: Neue Katechismusstudien. In Theolog. Stud. u. 
Kritik. 1909. pp. 592 ff. 

Dictionnaire de Theologie Catholique. (Paris, 1903 ff.) Article 
Catechismes, in vol. ii. 

Der kleine Katechismus D. Martin Luthers nach der Ausgabe von 
Jahre 1536. Facsimile Neudruck von O. Albrecht/ Halle. 1905. 

M. Savoye : Etude historique sur la formation des catechismes de 
Luther. Paris. 1901. 



APPENDIX 463 

Chapters XXI, XXII. Zwingli and the Diet op 
Augsburg 

Ulrichi Zwinglii opera, ed. Schuler und Schulthess. 8 vols. Zurich 
1528-42. Letters, vols, vii, viii. 

Ulrich Zwinglis Werke, ed. Egli, Finster und Kohler. (Corpus 
Reformatorum, vols. 88 ff.) Zurich. 1904 ff. Now out, vols, i, ii, iii. 

Vadianische Briefsammlung, part iv, and Briefwechsel der 
Blaurer, vol. i (see general bibliography). 

Oecolampadii et Zwinglii epistolarum Ubri quattuor. Basle. 1536. 
pp. 24 ff. 

E. Egli : Schweizerische Beformationsgeschichte. Band i. 1519- 
25. Zurich 1910. 

Article on Zwingli by Egli and Stahelin. Realencyclopadie, xxi. 

Eight contemporary accounts of the Marburg Colloquy are pub- 
lished in Weimar, xxx, iii, 94 ff. 

Luther : Dass diese Worte Christi " Das ist mien Leib " noch fest- 
stehen. Weimar, xxiii, 38. 

Luther : Vom Abendmahl Christi (Grosses) Bekenntnis. Weimar, 
xxvi, 241. 

Ft. Grabke : Die Konstruktion der Abendmahlslehre Luthers. 1907. 

Article Abendmahlslehre, in Religion in Geschichte und Gegen- 
wart. i, 2092-2112. 

Schirrmacher : Briefe und Akten zur Geschichte des Religions- 
gespraches zu Marburg 1529 und des Beichstages zu Augsburg. 
1530. Gotha. 1876. 

G. Berbig : Acta Comiciorum Augustae. Halle. 1907. 

H. von Schubert : Bekenntnisbildung und Religionspolitik 1529- 
30. Gotha. 1910. 

Mttller : Die Bekenntnissschriften der reformierten Kirche. Leip- 
zig. 1903. 

Article on Marburg Colloquy by Kolde, Realencyclopadie, xii. 

Tschackert : Die Augsburgische Konfession. Leipzig. 1901. 

Luther : Warming zu den Geistlichen zu Augsburg. Weimar, xxx, 
pt. ii, 237. 

J. Luther : Dr. M. Luthers Beziehungen zur Wartburg und Feste 
Coburg. Berlin. 1900. 

Chapter XXILT. The German Bible 
Weimar edition : Deutsche Bibel, vols, i and ii. 
Preussische Hauptbibelgesellschaft : Luthers Vorrede zur heiligen 
Schrift. Berlin. 1883. 



464 APPENDIX 

W. Walther: Luthers Bibeliibersetzung kein Flagiat. Erlangen 
and Leipsic. 1891. 

G. Keyssner : Die drei Fsalterarbeitungen Luthers von 1524, 1528, 
und 1531. Meiningen. 1890. 

Scheel: Luthers Stellung zur heiligen Schrift. Tubingen and 
Leipsic. 1902. 

Luther's Letter on Translation. Weimar, xxx, p. 632. 

Bealencyclopadie, article Bibeliibersetzung, Deutsch. vol. iii, pp. 
59 £E. 

P. Fietsch : Martin Luther und die hochdeutsche Schrif tsprache. 
1883. 

Das Neue Testament. Facsimile of 1st ed., Sept., 1522, ed. Kcistiin. 
Berlin. 1883. 

O. Bitsche : Dogmengeschichte des Frotestantismus. Vol. i. Leip- 
zig. 1908. Prolegomena. Biblicismus und Traditionalismus in der alt- 
protestantischen Theologie. 

Sir H. H. Howarth: The Biblical Canon according to Luther, 
Zwingli, Lefevre and Calvin. Journal of Theological Studies, ix 
(1908), 188-230. 

Luther's marginal notes on his Bible. Werke. Walch, ix, 1774- 
1821. 

O. Beichert : Martin Luthers deutsche Bibel. Tubingen. 1910. 

Preserved Smith : The Methods of Beformation Interpreters of 
the Bible. In the Biblical World (Chicago). 1911. 

B. Kuhn : Verhaltnis der Decemberbibel zur Septemberbibel. Mit 
einem Anhange uber J. Langes Matthaeusilbersetzung. Dissertation. 
Greifswald. 1901. 

Note. It is impossible to credit the testimony of Carlstadt that 
Luther believed the epistle of James to be a forgery of St. Jerome. 
Barge : Carlstadt (1905), i, 197. 

Chapter XXV. The Church Militant 
E. Fabian : Der Streit Luther mit dem Zwickauer Bate im Jahre 
1531. (Mitteilungen des Altertumsvereins fflr Zwickau, viii.) 1905. 

The Antinornian quarrel : 

G. Kawerau : J. Agricola von Eisleben. Berlin. 1881. 

Disputations against Antinomians, ed. Drews (Leipzig. 1895-96), 
pp. 246 ff., 334 ff., 611 ff. 

On Luther and Melanchthon, cf. supra, Chapter vn. 



APPENDIX m 

Chapter XXVI. The "Wittenberg Agreeement 

Wittenberger Konkordie, article in Realencyc. xxi, 384. 

Vadianische Brief sammlung Part iv and Briefwechsel der Blaurer, 
vol. i. (See general bibliography.) 

G. Anrich: Die Strassburger Reformation nach ihrer religiosen 
Eigenart und ihrer Bedeutung far die Gesamtprotestantismus. Die 
Chi-istliche "Welt. 1905. Nos. xxv, xxvi, xxvii. 

Chapter XXVII. Relations with France, England, etc. 

G. Mentz: Johann Friedrich. (Jena 1903-1908.) Vol. ii, chap- 
ter 4. 

Fr. Hiilsse : Der Streit Kardinal Albrechts mit dem Kuif tirst 
Johann Friedrich von Sachsen um die magdeburgische Burggraf. 
Magdeburg. 1887. 

L. Cardauns : Zur Kirchenpolitik Herzog Georgs von Sachsen. 
Rome. 1907. (Quellen und Forschungen ans Italienischen Archivens) 
Vol. x, pp. 101-51. 

Redlich: Kardinal Albrecht und das Neue Stift. 1900. 

Luther and Albert. Weimar, xxx, iii, 400-1. 

The Sermon against which Duke George's son complained. Wei- 
mar, xxxvii, 577. Nov. 1, 1534. 

Wider den Meuchler zu Dresden. "Weimar, xxx, part iii, pp. 413- 
71. 

Chapter XXVIII. The League of Schmalkalden 

The visit of Vergerio : 

Bindseil : Lutheri Colloquia (Lemgovioe et Detmoldiae. 1863-66). 
Vol. iii, p. 89. 

W. Friedensburg : Nuntiaturberichte aus Deutschland, vol. i 
(Gotha, 1892), p. 538. Vergerio's letter to his friend Ricalcati. 

Corpus Reformatorum, vol. ii, col. 987. 

Luther's Articles on the Donation of Constantine, 1537. In Werke 
(Berlin, 1903), vol. i, p. 182. 

Pastor : Geschichte der Papste, v (1909), 49-50. 

Schmalkalden : 

Luther: Of the Council and Church. Werke (Berlin, 1903), vol. 
ii, p. 1 ff. 

Schmalkaldic Articles, ibid., vol. iii, p. 35 ff. 

K. Thieme : Luther's Testament wider Rom in seinen Schmalkald- 
ischen Artikeln. Leipzig. 1900. 

Pastor, v, 64-65. 



466 APPENDIX 

Chapter XXIX. Character and Hasits 

G. Kawerau : Vom kranken Luther, in Deutsch-evangelische Blat- 
ter, vol. xxix (1904), p. 303 ff. 

W. Ebstein : Martin Luther's Krankheiten. Stuttgart. 1908. 

H. Bohmer : Luther im Lichte der neueren Forschung. 2d ed. 
Leipzig. 1910. Chapter iv. 

H. P. Denifle : Luther und Lutherthum. I. Hauptband. 2d ed. 2 
parts. Mainz. 1905-1906. 

W. Walther : Fttr Luther wider Rom. Halle. 1906. 

H. Grisar : Der " gute Trunk " in den Lutheranklagen. In Histor. 
Jahrbticher, vol. xxvi (1905), p. 479 ff. 

The anecdote on Luther's mending his trousers is taken from the 
unpublished source, Colloquia Serotina, Blatt 103. See above, general 
bibliography. The section is found in somewhat similar form, though 
without the date, in Bindseil, vol. ii, p. 126. 

Chapter XXX. At Work 

Sermons (apart from the Fostilla). Erlangen, vols, xvi-xx. A se- 
lection of edifying passages from the sermons, Berlin, vols, vi and 
vii. 

Luther's Disputationen 1535-1546, edited by Drews. Gsttingen. 
1895-96. 

Bohmer : Luther im Lichte der neueren Forschung. Leipzig. 1910. 
Chapters iv and v. 

Loofs : Luthers Stellung z. Mittelalter u. z. Neuzeit. Halle. 1907. 

P. Kleinert : Luthers Verhaltnis z. Wissenschaft und ihrer Lehre. 
Berlin. 1883. 

Sermons 1533-34. Weimar, xxxvii. 
Sermons 1535-36. Weimar, xli. 

G. Buchwald : M. Luthers Predigten im Juli 1534 zu Dessau, zum 
erstenmal herausgegeben. Leipsic. 1909. 

G. Buchwald: Luthers Predigten 1537-1540. Halle. 1906 (1905). 

Chapter XXXI. Religion and Culture 

O. G. Schmidt : Luthers Bekanntschaft mit den rOmischen Klassik- 
ern. 1883. 

Schafer : Luther als Kirchenhistoriker. 1897. 

W. Kohler : Luther und die Kirchengeschichte. Gtttersloh. 1900. 

Schmidt : Faust und Luther, in Sitzungsberichte d. k. Preuss. Akad. 
d. Wissenschaften zu Berlin. 1896. pp. 568 f£. 



APPENDIX 467 

Xanthippus : Gate alte deutsche Sprtlche, in Preuss. JahrbUcher. 
Vol. lxxxv. July, August, September 1896. pp. 149 ff., 344 ff., 503 fE. 

P. Curtis : Luther's variations in sentence arrangement from the 
modern literary usage. . . . New Haven. 1910. 

A. Gstze : Yolkskundliches bei Luther. Weimar. 1909. 

Note on Luther's Theology. This biography does not aim to deal 
■with Luther's theology per se, any more than a life of Darwin would 
necessarily involve a thorough investigation of evolution. The best 
works on the subject are : 

J. Kostlin : Luthers Theologie in Direr geschichtlichen Entwickelung 
und ihrem inneren Zusammenhang. 2d ed. Stuttgart. 1901. 

W. Herrmann : Der Verkehr des Christen mit Gott im Anschluss an 
Luther dargestellt. 3d ed. Stuttgart. 1896. 

J. Gottschick, articles in Zeitschrift f . Theologie und Kirche, 1897, 
p. 352 ; 1898, p. 406 ; 1903, p. 349 ff . 

K. Thieme : Die sittliche Triebkraft des Glaubens. Eine Untersu- 
chung zu Luthers Theologie. Leipsic. 1895. 

R. A. Lipsius : Luthers Lehre von der Busse. Brunswick. 1892. 

A. Galley: Die Busslehre Luthers. Gtitersloh. 1900. 

E. Fischer: Zur Geschichte der evangel. Beichte. (to 1523). 2 
parts. Leipsic. 1902, 1903. 

K. Jager : Luthers religiOses Interesse an seiner Lehre von der 
Realprasenz. Giessen. 1900. 

Graebke : Die Construction der Abendmahlslehre Luthers. Leipsic. 
1908. 

M. Staub: Das Verhaltnis der menschlichen Willensfreiheit zur 
Gotteslehre bei Luther und Zwingli. Zurich. 1894. 

J. Gettschick : Luthers Anschauungen vom christlichen Gottesdienst 
und seine tatsachliche Reform desselben. Giessen. 1887. 

J. Hans : Der protestantische Kultus. 1890. 

K. Eger : Die Anschauungen Luthers vom Beruf. Giessen. 1900. 

H. Stephan : Luther in den Wandlungen seiner Kirche. Giessen. 
1907. 

O. Ritschl : Dogmengeschichte des Protestantismus. Vol. i. Leipzig. 
1908. 

Loofs: Leitfaden zum Studium der Dogmengeschichte. 4th ed. 
1906. 

A. Harnack : History of Dogma, translated from the third German 
edition by N. Buchanan. Boston. 1900. Vol. vii, pp. 168-274. 

A. Harnack : Dogmengeschichte. 4th edition. Tubingen. 1909-10. 
Vol. iii, chapter v. Die Ausgange des Dogmas in Protestantismus. 
pp. 808-902. 

H. Wace : Principles of the Reformation. London. 1910. 



m APPENDIX 

Paul Lehf eldt : Luthers Verh&ltnis zu Kunst und Kttnstlern. Berlin. 
1892. 

On Luther's copy of Homer (Aldus. 1517) given to Melanchthon in 
1519, cf. my article in Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte, February, 
1911. 

Chapter XXXIII. Domestic Economy 

Note on the price of wheat Luther's statements are so startling that 
they seem to require some support. The average price of wheat in 
England for the half century 1451-1500 was six shillings and two 
pence a quarter, or nine pence half-penny a bushel. (Rogers.) Cf. 
further : — 

Conrad, and Lexis, articles in Conrad's HandwSrterbuch der Staats- 
wissenschaften. Jena. 1900. iv, pp. 277, 323. 

Th. Rogers : A History of Agriculture and Prices in England. Ox- 
ford. 1882. Vol. iii, 1401-1582. 

K. Lamprecht : Deutsches Wirtsshaf tsleben im Mittelalter. 3 vols. 
Leipzig. 1885-86. 

L. Keller: Zur Geschichte der Preisbewegung in Deutschland 
wahrend 1466-1525. Jahrbucher filr Nationalekonomie und Statistik 
xxxiv. 

G. Wiebe : Zur Geschichte der Preisrevolution in xvi and xvir 
Jahrhunderten. Leipzig. 1895. 

J. A. Froude : History of England (1875), i, p. 21. Many inter- 
esting prices. Wheat is said to average 10 pence the bushel in the 
16th century, the lowest price mentioned 2 pence 1 farthing. Froude 
reckons general purchasing power of money as twelve times as great 
then. 

Note on Luther's house. The Black Cloister is still shown at Wit- 
tenberg, the interior preserved as it was in Luther's day. The exterior 
has since been stuccoed ; it was formerly of brick. In front of the 
house, between it and the street, has been built the Augusteum, used 
as a theological seminary. ' 

Chapter XXXIV. The Bigamy of Philip op Hesse 

M. Lenz : Briefwechsel Philipps des Grossmtitigen mit Bucer. 
Vol. i. 1880. 

W. W. Rockwell: Die Doppelehe des Landgrafen Philipp von 
Hessen. Marburg. 1904. 

Brieger : Luther und die Nebenehe des Landgrafen Philipps von 
Hessen. In Preussische Jahrbiicher (1909), pp. 35 ff. 

Brieger : Luther und die Nebenehe des Landgrafen Philipp. 
Zeits. f. Kirchengeschichte, xxix (1908), p. 174 ff. 



APPENDIX 469 

G. Sodeur : Luther und die Luge. Leipzig. 1904. 

F. Kttch: PolitischesArchiv des Landgrafen Philipp von Hessen. 
Vol. i. Leipzig. 1904. Vol. ii. 1910. 

Luthers Briefwechsel, ed. Enders undKawerau, xii, 319-328. 

Philipp der Grossmutige. Beitrage zur Geschichte seines Lebens 
und seiner Zeit. Hg. von Hist Vereinf. d. Grossherzogthum Hessen. 
Marburg. 1904. 

Chapter XXXV. Protestant and Catholic 
Wider Hans Wurst. Berlin, iv, 257 ff. 
Against the Papacy at Eome. Ibid. 122 ff. 

C. Wendeler : M. Luthers Bilderpolemik gegen das Papsthum von 
1545. In Archiv f . Lit.-Geschichte, xiv, p. 17 ff. 

Mitzschke: M. Luther, Naumburg a. S. und die Reformation. 
Naumburg. 1885. 

0. Albrecht, in TheoL Stud. u. Kritiken. 1904. pp. 32 ff. 

F. Both ; Der offizielle Bericht der von den Evangelischen zum 
Regensburger Gesprach Verordneten (1542). A. R. G. Vol. xx, 1908, 
p.378ff. 

S. Cardanus : Zur Geschichte der kirchlichen Unions- u. Ref orm- 
bestrebungen 1538-1542. Rom. 1910. 

K. Bauer : Luther und der Papst. Schriften des Vereins fur 
Reformationsgeschichte, no. c (1910), pp. 231-273. 

Satires against Henry of Brunswick, Schade, op. cit. i, Nr. viii- 
jdii. 

A. Korte : Die Eonzilspolitik Earls V in den Jahren 1538-43. 
Schriften des Vereins fur Reformationsgeschichte, no. lxxxv. 1905. 

Pastor : Geschichte der Papste, v, 253-347. 

Chapter XXXVI. Lutheran and Sacramentarian 

J. Haussleiter : Die geschichtliche Grundlage der letzen Unterredung 
Luthers und Melanchthons im Abendmahlstreit. 1546. Leipsic. 1899. 
This, and the fact that Luther directed Rorer to omit some of his 
sharpest sayings against Zwingli in the first volume of his German 
works (1545), has been made the ground for supposing that he was 
ready to smooth over the old quarrel before his death. The letters 
quoted above disprove this. 

Other sources, Vadianische Brief sammlung, part v, and Briefwechsel 
der Blaurer, vol. ii. (See general bibliography.) 

Schwenckf eld's works are now being edited in the Corpus Schwenck- 
feldianorum, of which one volume has appeared. 



470 APPENDIX 

Disputatio de divinitate et humanitate Christi (Against Schwenck- 
feld). Ed. Drews : Disputationen, p. 585 ff. 

On Luther's attitude to the Anabaptists in general : — 
P. "Wappler : Die Stellung Kursachsens und des Landgraf en 
Philipp von Hessen zur T&uferbewegung. Mflnster. 1910. (Refonna- 
tionsgeschichtliche Studien und Texte, no. xiii-xiv.) 

Chapter XXXVIJ. Death 

Kawerau : Briefwechsel des Justus Jonas (Halle, 1885), vol. ii, 
p. 177 ff. 

F. Roth : Der offizielle Bericht der von den Evangelischen zum 
Regensburger Gesprach Verordneten. In Archiv fur Reformations- 
geschichte, no. xx (1908), pp. 378 ff. 

Cochlaeus : Commentaria de actis et scriptis M. Lutheri. 1549. 
Appendix, account of John Landau, apothecary of Mansf eld. It is on 
this account that the proof of the stroke of apoplexy rests. It seems 
to me that the proof is somewhat doubtful. 

P. Majunke : Luthers Lebensende. Mainz. 1890. 
, M. Honef: Der Selbstmord Luthers geschichthch erwiesen. 
Mttnchen. (No year.) 

G. Claudin : La mort de Luther. Noisy-Le-Sec. 1895. 
N. Paulus : Luthers Lebensende. Freiburg. 1898. 

A contemporary account of Luther's death and burial, written in 
a copy of his Sommerpostille (1554) by an eye-witness, probably 
John Albrecht, in whose house be died, has just been discovered in 
the library of the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Mt. Airy, Penn- 
sylvania. It has been published by A. Spaet, in the Lutheran Church 
Review, April, 1910, vol. xxix, no. ii (Philadelphia, 1910), pp. 313- 
325. 



ra 

DOCUMENTS 

The last edition of Luther's letters, that of Enders and Kawerau, 
complete at present to February, 1540, does not contain all the known 
letters. I have decided to print three which are not easily found, and 
to register the others, as far as known to me, which are missing in 
this edition. 

I. LUTHER TO GERARD LISTRIUS, AT ZWOLLE 1 

Wittenberg, July 30 (1520). 

[H. C. Rogge : Een onuitgegeven Brief van Dr. Martin Luther. 
Archief voor Nederlandsche Kerkgeschiedenis, vii, ii (1898), p. 
204.] 

Martinus Lutherus Augustmiensis Gerardo Listrio, rectori Swollis.- 

Salutem. Accepi literas tuas, vir eruditissime, magna cum volup- 
tate, placuitque pater hie Johannes et quidquid nobiscum contulit, 
atque tales invenisset nos quales et tua et illius opinio praesumpsit. 
Quod ad me attinet scio quam michi curta supellex. Flurimum su- 
perat fama virtutem. Fhilippus vero felicissime theologizat professus 
pro tyrocinio suo Paulum ad Ro. a quingentis fere auditoribus, vero 
incredibile successu. Deus proficiat quod incepit, et hoc vasculo suo 
quod futurum brevi confido, ut theologiam purissimam in fonte suo 
bibat orbis Christianus. 

Arbitror in mille annis sacras literas non ea sinceritate et luce 
fuisse tractatas proximumque esse donum eius apostolico seculo. 
Nostrum erit, ne ingrati simus, Deo rem suam acceptam referre et 
commendare. Ego meos hos annos infelicibus bellis perdidi mallemque 
meos labores in universum interire ne quid obessent puriori theologiae 
vel melioribus ingeniis, quanquam hodie sine cede et sanguine philos- 
ophor, ita me meum fatum rapit, quidquid enim est malarum besti- 
arum me unum petit, omnes ex me lauream querunt et palmam. 

1 On Listrius, rector of the School of the Brethren of the Common Life at 
Zwolle from 1516 to 1521, see Rogge, op. cit. pp. 206-220. 

2 Melanchthon was at this time lecturing on the Romans, the work which after- 
wards became the f onndation of his celebrated Loci Communes. Cf . 0. Clemen : 
Supplements Melanchthooiana, i (1910), 1 ff. 



472 APPENDIX 

Utinam ego fuero David sanguinem fundens, Fhilippus autem Salo- 
mon pace regnans. Amen. 

Ceterum omnia ref eret hie, quern misisti, Johannes, qui si minus 
vestrae expectationi satisfaceret, culpa vestra esto, qui de nobis 
temere super id, quod non nobis est, cogitastis. Roma adhuc spirat 
minas et cedes in me ; sed contempno. Germania enim sapere coepit 
et hipocrisim papistarum intelligit. En queso nomine meo resaluta 
optimos viros omnes, qui per te me salutarunt. Psalterium ad psalmum 
XVIII deduxi virossimo 1 commentario cepitque me penitentia ex- 
plicandi eius non propter laborem, sed quod res iste minime sunt 
vulgares et paucissimorum captui accomode necdum statui ultrum 
mitti oporteat et faciliora tractantia; perfectorum enim cibus est. 
Vale mi Gerarde, in Domino. Wittenberge die 3 Kalendas Augusti. 

II. Lutheb to John Ccspinian, at Vienna 

Worms, April 17, 1521 

(This letter is very badly printed in Enders, iii, 122. A facsimile of the orig- 
inal at Vienna was published by Haase in Leipziger IUustrierte Zeitnng, August 
31, 1889, from which I print it here.) 

Salutem. 2 Frater carnis tuae, Cuspiniane celeberrime, facile mihi 
persuasit, ut e medio isto tumultu ad te auderem scribere, cum antea 
ob nominis tui celebritatem optarim tibi f amiliariter notus esse. Sus- 
cipe ergo me in tuorum album, ut vera esse comprobem quae frater 
tuus mihi de te * tam pleno ore cantavit. 

Hac hora coram Caesare et Senatu * Romano constiti interroga- 
tus, an libros meos revocare vehm. Ubi respondi, libros quidem esse 
meos, caeterum quid de revocatione sentiam, 5 eras dicturum, petita 
et data mihi non amplius spatii et temporis ad deliberandum parte. 
Verum ne apicem quidem revocabo in aeternum,* Christo quidem 
propitio. Vale mi Cuspiniane charissime. Wormatiae, f. 4. p. Quasi- 
modogeniti 7 1521. 

1 Perhaps for " verbosissimo.'' Luther's Operationes in Psalmoa, being his 
lectures on Psalms i-rri, for the year 1519-21, appeared in 1521. Weimar Edi- 
tion, vol. v. 

" Instead of " Salutem. Frater carnis tuae," Enders has " Charitas tua." 

8 Enders omits "de te." 

* Enders: "fratre." 

6 Enders: "statuam." 

• Enders : " iterum." Luther writes the word here according to his custom 
" inaeternum.'' 

7 In his haste Luther makes a mistake in the date. Cf . Enders, iii, 123. 



APPENDIX 473 

III. John Feige, Chancellor of Hesse, to Luther 

(Worms ? April, 1521 ?) 

(This fragment is published by Dr. Gundlach, Festschrift mm Gedachtnis 
Philippe Ton Hessen, Cassel 1904, p. 64, -with the date "perhaps March 3, 1521." 
The concept is in Feige's hand. The date must be too early, as the book men- 
tioned, Ennarationes Epistolarum et Evangeliorum . . . D. M. Lntheri, appeared 
at Wittenberg March 7, 1521 (Enders, iii, 94), and it would have taken some time 
for the letter of Luther to have reached Feige after that. I suggest that Lather 
took some copies of the book with him to Worms, and while there, coming into 
communication with Philipp of Hesse (supra, p. 224), sent his old school friend 
Feige one of them.) 

Gratia domini nostri Jhesu Christ! com omnibus nobis amen. 
Accepi literulas tuas, Martine doctissime, verum qnas scribas te 
misisse enarrationes in S. evangelistas non accepi, interrogatusque 
tabellio se eas non habere respondit, tibi vero non minores habeo 
gratias quum si eas accepissem, tametsi me talibus tuis dignari lucu- 
brationibus opus non fuisset, quum propter laborum multitudinem 
eacris michi Uteris incumbere raro liceat. . . . 

IV. Lutheri Epistola qratulatoria super intentions et edi- 

TIONE LUCUBRATIONUM J. TAULEBI . . . 

(Edited by O. Clemen : Johann Pnpper von Goch. He places it in 1521, but 
it is probably later (1523-1529). Cf. Theolog. Stud, und Eritiken. 1900. p. 135.) 

V. Dr. John Ruhel, Councillor of Mansfeld, to Luther, 
Mat 21, 1525 

(A fragment of this letter is in Enders, y, 177. The whole is published by 
Eawerau, Schriften des Yereins fur Reformationsgesoh, no. c, pp. 338-340.) 

Narrates the captivity of Milnzer, the execution of seven priests 
at Heldrungen, the spoils taken at Frankenhausen. Asks Luther for 
details of the death of Frederic the Wise. Begs him to write to 
Albert of Mayence to induce him to change his spiritual for a tem- 
poral estate. 

VI. Dr. John Euhel to Luther, Mat 26, 1525 

(Fragment in Enders, v, 180; the whole published by Eawerau, ibid. pp. 340- 
342.) 

Sends Mttnzer's recantation. Tells of the surrender of Mublhausen 
May 24, and of Munzer's conveyance thither, and the interview be- 
tween him and Philipp of Hesse. 



474 APPENDIX 

VII. Luther to Lambertus Hemebtus, June 12, 1527 

(Zeits. f. Kircbengescb. zviii, 231.) 

VIII. Phhjpp of Hesse to Chancellor Bruce, and Luther, 

Shortly before September 22, 1531 
(Gundlach, loc. cit., No. 2, p. 64.) 

On the embassy from Henry VIII requesting the opinion of 
Luther on his divorce. (Answered, Enders, is, 105. Further see my 
article, Luther and Henry VIII, English Historical Review, no. c. 
1910.) 

IX. Luther and others to John, Elector of Saxony. End of 

April or beginning of May, 1532 

(Bttrkhardt : Zum Brief wechsel der Kef ormatoren, Archiv fur Reformations- 
gescb. no. xiv (1907), p. 184. Contents only given.) 

X. Luther, Jonas and Melanchthon to John Frederic, 

Elector of Saxony. Beginning of September, 1532 
(Ibid. p. 185.) 

XI. Elector John Frederic to Luther and others. 
October 22, 1533 
(Ibid. p. 186.) 

XII. Elector John Frederic to Luther. November 15, 1533 
(Ibid. p. 186 ff.) 

XIII. Elector John Frederic to Luther. December 21, 1534 

(Mentz: Johann Friedriob. Jena. 3 vols. 1903-1908. Vol. iii, Supplement, 
no. 1.) 

Inquires about a sermon of Luther's (against Duke George) de- 
livered on All Saints Day (November 1). 

XIV. B. Knor to Luther and Jonas. May 22, 1535 

(Burkhardt, loe. cit., p. 188.) 
On Church visitation. 

XV. Luther, Jonas and Bugenhagen to John Frederic. 
April 5, 1536 
(Ibid. p. 190.) 



APPENDIX *T« 

XVI. Luther's and Bugenhagen's cebtificate to J. Pooan. 

Junb 11, 1536 
(Ibid. p. 191.) 

In the Boston Public Library there is a book with what is appar- 
ently an autograph of Luther. Epistolae sancti Hieronymi. (Colo- 
phon) Lugdunum-Jacobus Saccon. 1518. The autograph consists of a 
quotation from Gerson: "In floreno litis non est obolus caritatis. 
Gerson." It is well known that Luther had a low opinion of Jerome. 



INDEX 



INDEX 



Abraham, 173, 325. 362, 378. 

Absalom, 398. 

Acsolti, 96. 

Acta Academics Lovaniensis, 98. 

Acta Augustana, S3. 

Adam, 326, 396. 

Adolph, Bishop of Merseburg, 64, 78. 

Address to the German Nobility on the 

Improvement of the Christian Estate, 

78-88, 91, 133, 215, 429, 451. 
Adler, 249. 

Adrian VI, Pope, 214, 219, 431. 
Adrian, Matthew, 184-5. 
Aeacus, 326. 

^Esop, 233, 248, 252-3, 344-6. 
Africa, 62. 

Against the Assassin of Dresden, 300. 
Against the Estate of the Pope and Bish- 
ops falsely called Spiritual, 130. 
Against the Execrable Bull of Antichrist, 

100. 
Against the Heavenly Prophets of Images 

and the Sacrament, 155-6, 239, 267. 
Against Jack Sausage, 393-5. 
Against the New Bull forged by Eck, 100. 
Against the Papacy at Rome founded by 

the Devil, 267, 399, 404. 
Against the Thievish, Murderous Hordes 

of Peasants, 162-3, 165, 430. 
Against the Title of the King of England's 

Libel, 195, 241. 
Agricola, John, 188, 249, 282-5, 320, 333, 

390, 411, 416. 
Ailly, Peter d\ 12. 
Aix-la-Chapelle, 98. 
Alber, 294. 
Albert, Connt of Mansfeld, 158, 160, 

162-3, 175, 319-20, 417-23. 
Albert, Elector and Archbishop of May- 

enoe, 38-8, 42-3, 46, 104, 127-9, 130, 

139, 165, 176, 201-2, 243, 260, 275, 286- 

7, 297-300, 342, 356, 389, 396-9, 401, 

409, 465, 473. 
Albert, Grand Master and Margrave of 

Prussia, 176-7, 219, 290. 
Albert, Duke of Saxony, 20. 
Aleander, Jerome, 98, 100-4, 109, 120,202. 
Alemann, Are, 173. 



Alesins, Alexander, 198. 

Alexander the Great, 388. 

Alexander IV, Pope, 8. 

Alexander of Hales, 37. 

Alexandria, 62. 

Allstedt, 105, 151, 155. 

Altenburg, 20, 33-4, 54, 60-1, 170, 177, 
220-1, 232, 313, 341, 369. 

Altenstein, 119. 

Ambrose, St., 19. 

Amorbach, Basil, 120. 

Amsdorf, Nicholas von, 79, 111, 119, 138, 
148, 164, 173, 175, 211, 256, 275, 334, 
396, 403-4, 416. 

Anabaptists, 138, 147, 226-7, 238, 375, 
400,406. 

Anhalt, a prince of, 4. 

Anhalt, princes of (see George and Joa- 
chim), 281, 318. 

Anna, St., 9. 

Annates, 82. 

Anne Boleyn, Qneen of England, 198. 

Anne of Cleves, Queen of England, 198. 

Answer to the Condemnation of Louvain, 
201-2. 

Antichrist, 73, 82, 86, 100-1, 109-10, 229, 
313, 414. 

Antinomians, 282-5, 373, 464. 

Antioch, 62. 

Antwerp, 98, 120, 397. 

Apel, John, 178. 

Apocrypha, 264. 

Aquinas, Thomas, 12, 47, 52, 84, 342. 

Arabia, 213. 

Aristophanes, 342. 

Aristotle, 5, 11, 24-6, 84-5, 342, 429. 

Art, 348-9. 

Asperg, 278. 

Assertion of All the Articles Wrongly Con- 
demned by the Last Bull of Antichrist, 
101, 106, 109-10, 204, 207. 

Asterisks, 59. 

Athanasins, 13, 99. 

Anerbach, Henry Stromer of, 67. 

Augsburg, 38, 47-53, 68, 60, 163, 289,293- 
4, 333, 429. 

Augsburg Confession, 257-62, 273-4, 307' 
8, 890, 396. 



480 



INDEX 



Augsburg, Diet of (1518), 48, 79. 
Augsburg, Diet of (1525), 221. 
Augsburg, Diet of (1530), 236, 247-62, 

274, 285-6, 288, 297, 388, 430, 432, 463. 
August, Elector of Saxony, 355. 
Augusteum, 363. 
Augustine, St., 14, 22, 26, 65, 72, 101, 

132, 218, 342. 
Augustinian Hermits, 8-9, 14-«, 21, 30-1, 

136, 140, 168, 429, 447. 
Aurifaber, John, 357, 418, 422. 
Aurogallus, Matthew, 141, 263-4. 
Austria, 405. 
Azt, Basil, 173. 

Babylonian Captivity of the Church, 78, 
88-91, 110, 192, 196, 202, 384, 430, 451. 

Baden, 118. 

Bamberg, 278. 

Ban, 48, 54, 74, 78, 81, 95, 252, 310. 

Baptism, 89-90, 138-9, 151, 154, 235, 314. 

Baptista Manutanus, 6, 342. 

Barbara, Empress, 105. 

Barnes, Robert, 180, 196-8, 297, 303-4, 
307, 358. 

Barnim, Duke of Pomerania, 60, 67. 

Basel, 77, 142, 154, 156, 203-4, 211. 

Baumgartner, George, 31. 

Baumgartner, Jerome, 171-3. 

Begging, 4, 83-4, 135-6. 

Beghards, see Hussites. 

Beichling, John, 323. 

Beier, Caspar, 412. 

Beier, Leonard, 259. 

Belgern, 356. 

Belgium, 405. 

Bell, Henry, 359. 

Benedictines, 119, 133, 169, 182, 183. 

Bercken, 31. 

Berlepsch, John von, 122, 124, 126. 

Berlin, 20, 23, 303. 

Bernard of Clairvaux, 12, 27. 

Bernhardi, Bartholomew, 33. 

Besold, Jerome, 357, 406. 

Bible, 6, 11, 14, 21-4, 26, 59-60, 62, 65, 
72, 77-8, 80-1, 85, 99, 101, 106-7, 113, 
117-8, 122-3, 132-4, 139, 141, 148-52, 
156, 179, 183, 185-7, 205, 207, 208, 210, 
230, 236, 248, 252-4, 263-70, 314, 333, 
337, 341, 407, 415, 429, 430, 463-4. 

Biel, Gabriel, 12. 

Bigamy (see Polygamy), 91, 196-7, 373- 
85. 

Bildenhauer, Glaus, 369. 

Billiean, Theodore, 240, 253. 

Black Cloister, 21, 101, 168, 174, 280, 



282, 293-5, 347, 355-6, 360, 362-5, 368- 

71, 416, 426, 430, 468. 
Boccaccio, 397. 
Bohemia, 74, 151, 400. 
Bohemians, see Hussites. 
Bologna, 306. 
Bonaventura, 12, 27. 
Boniface VIII, Pope, 37, 62. 
Boniface IX, Pope, 37. 
Bora, Catharine von, see Luther, Cath- 
arine. 
Bora, Catharine von Haugwitz von, 169. 
Bora, Christina von, 424-5. 
Bora, Florian von, 424-5. 
Bora, John von (father-in-law), .68-9. 
Bora, John von (brother-in-law), 369, 

425. 
Bora, Magdalene von, 169, 190, 312, 

351-2. 
Borna, 143-4. 
Boswell, James, 251, 359. 
Brabant, 74, 229. 
Brandenburg (see Joachim), 38-9, 98, 127, 

284. 
Brant, Sebastian, 344, 394. 
Braun, John, 4, 10-1, 14. 
Brehna, 169. 
Bremen, 405. 
Brent, 244. 
Brescia, 264. 

Brisger, John, 168, 177, 360, 366, 369. 
Brothels, 85, 136, 320-1. 
Brothers of the Common Life, 3-4, 429 
Brown, Thomas, 150. 
Briick, Gregory, 259, 272-3, 299, 332 

369, 379, 393, 403, 425, 474. 
Bruno, 369-70. 

Brunswick (see Henry), 329, 396, 425. 
Brussels, 229. 
Bncer, Martin, 46, 111, 286, 288-9, 292, 

294-5, 374-5, 377-8, 381, 392, 395, 403. 
Bugenhagen, John, 158, 178, 187, 245, 

250, 258, 264, 303-6, 310, 324, 326-7, 

331, 341, 371, 416-7, 420, 422. 
Bollinger, Henry, 295. 
Burer, Albert, 120, 147. 
Burke, Edmund, 335. 
Burkhardt, Francis, 198, 319, 324. 

Cadan, 278. 

Cajetan, Thomas, 47-54, 87, 96, 429. 

Calais, 192. 

Calixtus IH, Pope, 37. 

Calvin, John, 218, 334, 402, 406, 454. 

Camerarius v Joachim, 178, 253, 258. 

Campeggio, Lorenzo, 219. 



INDEX 



481 



Canitz, Elsa von, 170. 

Canon Law, 28, 37, 41, 45, 47-8, 60, 62, 
72-3, 75, 81, 83, 85, 97, 100-1, 116, 343, 
430. 

Capito, Wolfgang, 104, 129, 139, 154, 200, 
242,297,333. 

Cappel, battle of, 289-91. 

Capreolus, 65. 

Caracoiola, 98. 

Cards, 187. 

Cardinals, 49, 82, 96-7, 202. 

Carlowitz, 386. 

Carlstadt, Andrew Bodenstein yon, 59, 
64-6, 127, 130-1, 135-6, 138, 140, 148, 
153-7, 185, 230, 238, 239-40, 286, 290, 
327,404. 

Caxlyle, Thomas, 335, 359. 

Cassel, 292. 

Cassiodorus, 343. 

Casus reservati, 83. 

Catacombs, 18. 

Catechisms, 234-6, 254, 284, 462. 

Catharine, Queen of England, 195-6, 328. 

Catholics, Roman Catholic Church, 3, 13, 
19, 22, 29, 36-«, 40-1, 44-5, 49-50, 52- 
3, 55-60, 62-3, 68, 74, 79, 87-8, 90-1, 
97-8, 101-2, 110, 112, 192, 199-200, 212, 
214, 217, 221, 224, 227, 233, 238, 247, 273, 
275, 300, 303, 305, 308, 313, 338, 380, 387, 
389-402,406. 

Cato, Dionysius, 233, 345-6. 

Celibacy of the clergy, see Marriage of 
the clergy. 

Cellini, Benvennto, 341. 

Chapuys, Eustach, 195. 

Charlemagne, 400. 

Charles V, Emperor, 56, 80, 95, 98-100, 
103-7, 109-15, 117-20, 122, 128, 146, 148, 
153, 189, 192, 202, 214-5, 217, 226-8, 
247, 250, 252, 255-6, 258-60, 262, 271-5, 
277, 296-7, 314, 318, 366, 374, 377, 382, 
384, 387-90, 393, 395-6, 399-401, 405, 
422, 425, 430-2. 

Charost, 397. 

Chievres, Gnillaume de Croy, Sire de, 
103, 123. 

Christ, see Jesus. 

Christian II of Denmark, 171, 193. 

Christian III, King of Denmark, 367, 426. 

Christina, landgravine of Hesse, 224, 
373-4. 

Chronicles, 268. 

Church (see Catholic, and Protestant), 
291-2. 

Cicero, 45, 234, 342, 346. 

Cistercians, 169. 



Clement V, Pope, 62. 

Clement VI, Pope, 37, 50. 

Clement VII, Pope, 195, 219, 226, 255-6, 

262, 271, 277, 303, 328, 431. 
Clergy, 80-1, 92-3, 137-8, 142, 188, 314. 
Cloister, see Black Cloister, and Monas- 

ticism. 
Coburg (see Feste Cobnrg), 20, 123, 247, 

250, 262. 
Cochlaeus, John, 118, 209. 
Cognac, League of, 255. 
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 123, 359. 
Colet, John, 24. 
Coliseum, 18. 

Colius, Michael, 190, 422-3. 
Cologne, 19, 29, 30, 96, 98, 103, 202, 271, 

286, 403. 
Commentary on the Putative Imperial 

Edict, 273, 300. 
Communion, 78, 89-90, 109, 148-9, 153-6, 

220, 230, 235, 238-46, 252, 261, 288-95, 

300-1, 314, 402-3. 
Confession, 124, 149, 235, 252, 281, 377-9, 

381-4. 
Confession on Christ's Supper, 242. (See 

Short Confession.) 
Confirmation, 89. 
Constance, 260, 289. 
Constance, Council of, 63, 65-6, 71, 400. 
Constantine, Emperor, 72-3, 345. 
Constantinople, 62. 
Coppe, Leonard, 169-70, 175. 
Cordatus, Conrad, 259, 280-1, 285, 356, 

358, 373. 
Corinthians, Paul's Epistles to the, 149, 

151, 170. 
Corpus juris, 7. 
Corvinus, Antony, 211. 
Cotta, Ursula, 4-5, 429. 
Councils of the Church, 13, 37, 81, 82, 97, 

118, 219, 271, 275, 277, 303, 305-8, 314-5. 
Councils and the Church, On, 314. 
Cranach, Lncas, 63, 118-9, 137, 171, 174, 

176, 178, 263, 316, 349, 365, 453. 
Crodel, Mark, 326, 353. 
Cromwell, Thomas, 197-8. 
Crotus Bnbeanus, 29, 79. 
Crnciger, Caspar, 264, 312, 333, 354, 371, 

416, 420, 422. 
Crnciger, Elizabeth, 354. 
Crusades, 36-7. 
Curia (see Papacy, and Home), 38, 43, 47, 

65, 74, 95, 103, 219. 
Cuspinian, John, 114, 472. 

Dancing, 187, 350, 352. 



482 



INDEX 



Dante, 17, 266. 

Danube, 157. 

Da-rid, 173, 185, 335-6, 398. 

Decet Pontijlcem Romanum, 101-2. 

Decretals, see Canon Law. 

Demosthenes, 58, 342, 316. 

Denifle, Father Henry, 23, 133. 

Dessau, 277, 281. 

Determinism, see Free Will. 

Deuteronomy, 185, 187. 

Deril, 9, 11, 13, 71, 111, 125-6, 139, 145, 

149-52, 156, 161-2, 174-5, 179, 188-9, 

208, 221, 223, 232, 240, 248, 253, 255, 258, 

279, 301, 310, 317-8, 324-6, 339-41, 347, 

368, 397, 411-13. 
Dietrich, Veit, 248-9, 251, 253, 309, 356, 

358. 
Dog, 338, 362. 
Doltsch, John, 119. 
Dominic, St., 62. 

Dominicans, 8, 29, 39, 47, 96, 133, 201. 
Donation of Constantine, 72-3, 83. 
Donatus, 3, 233, 346. 
Doring, Christian, 119, 250. 
Drechsel, Thomas, 137. 
Dresden, 20, 31, 222-3, 303, 377-8, 380, 383. 
Dressel, Michael, 31. 
Dunning, Professor William Archibald, 

216. 
Duns Scotus, 65. 
Diirer, Albert, 20, 43, 120, 176, 202, 263, 

349. 
Diirr, 168. 

Ecclesiastes, 79, 185, 268, 322. 

Eck, John, of Ingolstadt, 57-67, 71-2, 

87-8, 96-7, 100-1, 223, 253, 260-1, 302, 

391, 395, 429. 
Eck, John, of Trier, 113, 115, 117. 
Egranus, John Silvius, 58. 
Egypt, 62. 
Eichstatt, 58. 
Eilenberg, 136. 
Eisenach, 1, 4, 8, 20, 111, 119-21, 135, 140, 

293, 380-2, 429. 
Eisleben, 1, 40, 158, 165, 282, 418-9, 429. 
Elbe, 20, 345, 363. 
Elijah, 397. 
Elizabeth, St., 62, 121. 
Elizabeth, Queen of England, 321. 
Elizabeth, Dnchess of Rochlitz, 374, 

376-7. 
Empire, see Germany. 
Emser, Jerome, 88, 101. 
England, 77, 157, 192-8, 201, 217, 296-7, 

305, 328. 



Eoban, see Hess. 

Ephesians, Paul's Epistle to the, 268. 
Epistles of Obscure Men, 29, 185, 344, 
Erasmus, Desiderius, 23, 25, 40, 58, 74, 

77, 79, 91, 98, 100, 103, 104, 110, 122, 

133-4, 142, 168, 176, 178, 189, 192-3, 

199-213, 233, 239-41, 263-4, 267, 286, 

290, 333, 343-4, 389, 458-60. 
Erfurt, town, 8, 9, 11, 19, 21, 32, HI, 150. 
Erfurt, University of, 5, 9, 16, 20, 24, 

26-7, 98, 111, 133, 136, 188, 329, 429, 

442-4. 
Ernest, Elector of Saxony, 20. 
Esch, Dr., 94. 

Esschen, John yon der, 229. 
Eulenspiegel, Till, 344. 
Eusebius, 342. 
Evangelic, see Protestant. 
Exhortation to Peace on the Twelve Ar- 
. tides of the Peasants, 158-9, 162. 
Exsurge Domine, 96-8, 100-1, 108, 116, 

429, 450. 
Ezekiel, 253. 

Faber, John, Dominican monk, 103, 202. 
Faber, John, Bishop of Vienna, 389. 
Fach, 74. 
Faith, 15, 19, 57, 78, 92-3, 149, 152, 154, 

187, 203-4, 208, 252, 261, 267, 275,, 282, 

307, 336-8, 395. 
Fasting, 84. 
Faust, 334, 340. 
Feige, John, 473. 
Feilitzsch, Fabian Ton, 53, 55. 
Feilitzsch, Philip von, 50. 
Ferdinand, King of the Romans, 221, 224, 

271, 273, 275, 277-8, 302, 388-9, 396, 405, 

432. 
Feste Coburg, 190, 247-62, 264, 288-9, 

324, 331, 345, 351, 430. 
Fisher, John, 193, 198, 204, 207, 209, 304. 
Flanders, 229, 349. 
Florence, 17-8, 256, 306, 349. 
Forster, Dr., 265. 
Fox, Edward, 197-8. 
France, 77, 83, 157, 179, 228, 247, 255, 

296, 327, 334, 337, 349, 359, 405, 422. 
Francis of Assisi, St., 62, 123, 341. 
Francis, I, King of France, 56, 95, 197, 

226, 255-6, 286, 296, 320, 388, 405, 431. 
Franciscans, 8, 96, 133. 
Franconia, 73, 122, 157, 361. 
Frankenhausen, 163-4. 
Frankfort on the Main, 77, 111, 118, 209, 

283, 314-5, 340, 344, 387. 
Franks, 36. 



INDEX 



483 



Frederic II, Emperor, 62, 266. 

Frederic the Wise, Elector of Saxony, 
20, 29, 33-6, 40, 48-50, 53-56, 60, 68, 70, 
72, 74-5, 78, 95, 97-101, 103-4, 106-7, 
109, 120, 124, 127, 139-41, 143-6, 151-3, 
155-6, 158, 160, 163, 177, 183-4, 193-4, 
201-2, 214-5, 218-20, 224, 232, 266, 276, 
316, 363, 366, 385, 431, 473. 

Frederic, Duke of Saxony, 301. 

Free Will, 24, 59, 65, 66, 101, 174, 203-4, 
206-8, 233, 252. 

Freedom of a Christian Man, see Libert;/ 
of a Christian Man. 

Freiberg in Albertine Saxony, 281, 284-5, 
320-1, 348. 

Freiburg- in Bresgau, 211. 

Froben, John, 77. 

Frosch, John, 289. 

Fugger, banking-house of, 38-9, 85. 

Gabriel, 337, 397. 

Galatians, Paul's epistle to the, 22, 33, 
77, 200, 268. 

Gattinara, 103, 399. 

Gebhard, Count of Mansfeld, 175, 
418-22. 

Genesis, 185, 417. 

Geneva, 402. 

George, St., 4-5. 

George, Prince of Anhalt, 299, 323, 416. 

George the Bearded, Duke of Saxony, 24, 
29, 60, 63, 66-7, 78, 119, 122, 140, 145, 
151, 193, 195, 203, 209-10, 214, 221-5, 
240, 272-3, 278, 300-2, 373, 378, 386, 389, 
431, 465. 

Gerard of Ziitphen, 12, 27. 

Gerbel, Nicholas, 121, 245, 293. 

German, 27, 76, 123, 124, 231, 263-70, 345. 

Germans, 118-9, 334. 

German Theology, The, 27. 

Germany, 1, 38, 62, 73-4, 77, 79, 82, 83, 85, 
97-8, 101, 103-7, 109, 112, 116-7, 121, 
140, 148, 160, 171, 178, 186, 214, 217, 
219, 225, 227, 241, 247, 248, 252,. 259, 
266, 271, 274-5, 303, 316, 387-9, 400, 411, 
414, 472. 

Gerson, John, 12, 27, 343, 475. 

Gerson, Ben Mosheh, 264. 

Ghinucci, Jerome, 47-8, 95. 

Giebichenstein, 297. 

Giorgione, 454. 

Glapion, John, 103, 110-2. 

Glarean, Henry, 77. 

Glatz, Dr, 172-3. 

Gloss on the Putative Imperial Edict, see 
Commentary on the, etc. 



God, 3, 10-5, 27-8, 31, 34-5, 41-2, 57, 
60-2, 72, 80, 87, 93, 99, 105-7, 117, 132, 
137, 139, 144, 151-2, 154, 161-2, 164, 
166, 183, 186, 189, 207, 208, 228, 232, 
248, 254, 258, 322, 326, 336-8, 352, 366, 
422-3. 

Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, 335. 

Goltz, Laneta von, 170. 

Good Works, 78. 

Goritz, John, 361. 

Goslar, 396. 

Gospel, 42, 85, 99, 105, 116, 120, 144, 154, 
177, 224, 262. 

Gotha, 312, 391. 

Gcittingen, 279. 

Greek, 27, 32, 44, 70, 122-3, 141-2, 178, 
183, 186-7, 244, 253, 341-2. 

Greek Church, 62, 65, 85. 

Graff, Joachim, 350. 

Gregory IX, Pope, 62. 

Gregory of Rimini, 66. 

Grievances of the German Nation, 79. 

Grimma, 169, 171. 

Gropper, 395. 

Gross, Ave, 170. 

Grumbach, Argula von, 250. 

Griine, Frederic von der, 364. 

Grynaeus, Simon, 195. 

Giinthel, Asmus, 165. 

Hagenau, 379, 387, 390-1. 

Halberstadt, 38. 

Halle, 127, 128-9, 130, 329, 371, 396-8, 418. 

Hamburg, 79. 

Hapsburg Emperors, 266. 

Harnack, Professor Adolph, 69. 

Hastings, Warren, 395. 

Hausmann, Nicholas, 149, 240, 277, 280-1, 

322, 351, 358. 
Hausrath, Professor Adolph, 18. 
Hazlitt, William, 359. 
Heath, Nicholas, 197. 
Hebrew, 26, 29, 85, 122, 123, 141-2, 185, 

187, 244, 264, 341. 
Hecker, 48, 51. 
Heidelberg, 46, 59, 70. 
Heine, Heinrich, 232. 
Held, George, 309, 350, 356. 
Hemertus, Lambertus, 474. 
Henry II, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfen- 

biittel, 388, 393-6. 
Henry VHI, King of England, 91, 178, 

192-8, 202-4, 210, 218, 286-7,296-7, 

304-5, 320, 367, 374, 384, 457-8, 474. 
Henry the Pious, Duke of Saxony, 301-2, 

376-7, 383-4, 431. 



484 



INDEX 



Hersfeld, 119. 

Herzbergers, 32. 

Hess, Helius Eoban, 111, 346, 442-4. 

Hesse, 236-7, 289, 393. 

Heydenreich, Caspar, 357. 

Eildesheim, 388, 393, 397. 

Eochstraten, 29. 

Hohenzollern, 38. 

Holidays, 83. 

Holland, 229. 

Holy Ghost, 28, 87, 137, 215, 301, 326, 397, 

400, 411. 
Homer, 329, 342, 468. 
Homilies, see Postilla. 
Honius, 238. 
Hospitals, 17-8, 
How to Anoint a Right Christian Bishop, 

396. 
Humanism, 6, 25, 240. 
Hungary, 226, 405. 
Huss, John, 63, 65, 71-2, 84, 105, 111, 113, 

224, 257, 343, 451. 
Hussites, 58, 65, 67, 71, 84, 223, 230, 238. 
Hutten, Ulrich von, 73, 79, 98, 101, 104, 

109, 111, 142-3, 201, 203, 205, 344, 451. 
Hutter, Conrad, 4, 10. 
Hymns, 229-32, 462. 

Images, 136, 140, 148-9, 151, 154-6, 230. 
Indulgences, 18, 24, 28, 33, 36-57, 60, 66, 

88, 127-9, 148, 239, 252, 298, 397-8, 423, 

448. 
Ingolstadt, 58. 
Innocent IV, Pope, 8. 
Innsbruck, 250. 

Instruction on Certain Articles, 56-7. 
Interdict, 54, 83,95. 
Ireland, 76. 

Isabella of Hapsburg, 219. 
Isaiah, 173, 186, 186, 264. 
Islam, 213. 
Italy, 17, 19, 73, 76-7, 79, 82, 266, 316, 

348-9, 454. 

James, St., 166, 268-70. 

Jena, 141, 154-5, 188, 328, 355, 419. 

Jericho, 80, 398. 

Jerome, St., 342-3, 475. 

Jerome of Prague, 84. 

Jerusalem, 18, 30. 

Jesus, 3, 13, 15, 28, 31-2, 40, 45, '49-50, 
52-3, 61, 65, 71, 81, 90, 92-3, 105, 107- 
10, 113, 116-7, 123, 125-6, 132, 139, 144, 
146, 152, 155, 185-6, 188-9, 193, 212-3, 
229, 237-8, 258-9, 262, 269, 310, 326, 
336-8, 365, 383, 397, 403, 406-7. 



Jews, 29, 266, 418-9. 

Joachim, Prince of Anhalt, 319, 322-3. 

Joachim I, Elector of Brandenburg, 104. 

Joachim II, Elector of Brandenburg, 299, 
306, 355, 383. 

Job, 188, 263, 268. 

Johannes, 96. 

John, St., 28, 185, 268-9. 

John VIII, Pope, 36. 

John the Steadfast, Elector of Saxony, 
151-3, 160, 176-7, 184, 193, 209, 216-7, 
220-1, 224-5 228, 233, 236, 242-3, 245, 
247, 253-4, 259, 271-6, 316, 366, 431, 474. 

John Frederic the Magnanimous, Elector 
of Saxony, 123, 184, 197, 233, 273, 276-7, 
282, 284, 293, 296-7, 299, 307-9, 311-2, 
318, 332, 354, 364, 367-9, 372, 374-7, 
379, 384^6, 393-4, 396, 399, 401, 404, 
406, 410, 412, 414, 416-7, 425-6, 431, 
474. 

Johnson, Samuel, 359. 

Jonah, 185, 268. 

Jonas, Catharine, 329, 371. 

Jonas, Justus, 181, 189, 210, 249, 258-9, 
261, 264, 281, 306, 308, 312-3, 329, 331, 
345, 354, 357, 371, 398, 421-3, 424, 474. 

Jonas, Justus, junior, 352. 

Jude, Epistle of, 185. 

Judges, Book of, 22. 

Julius I, Pope, 61. 

Julius II, Pope, 24, 28, 431. 

Jurisprudence, 7, 9, 85, 158. 

Justification, see Faith. 

Jiiterbog, 40. 

Karg, George, 180. 

Kaufmann, Cyriac, 248-9, 253. 

Kaufmann, Elsa, 331. 

Kaufmann, George, 355. 

Kawerau, Professor Gustav, 114, 433-4. 

Kegel, 328. 

Kemberg, 120, 156. 

Kessler, John, 141-3. 

Kings, Books of, 268. 

Kling, 420. 

Knor, B., 474. 

Knoth, Paul, 411. 

Kronberg, Hartmuth Ton, 221-3. 

Kunheim, George von, 355. 

Ladislaus, 105. 

Laelius, 342. 

Lang, John, 26-7, 29, 32, 46, 86, 87, 133. 

Lang, Matthew, 55, 107. 

Lapland, 3. 

Latin, 3, 40, 63, 76, 85, 123, 142, 169, 186, 



INDEX 



485 



1*}7, 230, 233, 245, 333, 342, 344-5, 353, 

3E8. 
Lanterbach, Antony, 316, 356, 358, 376, 

411, 415. 
Law see Jurisprudence, and Canon 

Lav. 
Lee, Edward, 193. 
Lefevre, d'Etaples, James, 22-4, 202, 

344. 
Leipsie, 20, 60, 63-8, 70, 145, 153, 168, 

182, 201, 209, 221, 300, 302, 342, 361, 

363, 365, 369, 416, 422, 450. 
Leo IV, Pope, 18, 36. 
Leo IX, Pope, 36. 
LeoX, Pope, 38-9, 44-7, 51-2, 54-6, 91, 

95-8, 100-1, 104, 107-9, 182, 192, 202, 

214, 219, 429, 431. 
Lessing, Gotthold Ephraim, 335. 
Letter on Translation, 267. 
Leviticua, 195. 

Lewis, King of Hungary, 226. 
Lewis, Elector Palatine, 46, 104, 275. 
Liberty of a Christian Man, 78, 91-3, 

281, 430, 451. 
Liehtenberg, 53, 172-3. 
Liege, 98. 

Lincoln, Abraham, 325. 
Lindemann, Caspar, 249. 
Link, Wenzel, 48, 51, 87, 107-8, 190, 218, 

225, 242, 250, 264, 281, 302, 331, 344, 

366. 
Lippendorf , 168. 
Listrras, Gerard, 77, 471. 
Litzkan, 32. 
Lobnitz, 416. 

Lochau, 144, 160, 174, 220, 284. 
Lohr, Andrew, 21. 
Lombardy, 19. 
London, 196-7, 297. 
Lord's Supper, see Communion. 
Loser, John, 309. 
Lothaire, Emperor, 1. 
Lotther, Melchior, 86. 
Lotzer, Sebastian, 157. 
Lonvain, 96-8, 185, 200, 202-3, 400, 405. 
Loyola, Ignatius, 15, 417. 
Liibeck, 196, 320. 
Lucian 211-12, 343. 
Luf t, John, 124. 
Lupus, 3. 
Luther, Catharine von Bora, 162, 168-81, 

189-91, 195,245, 250-1,286, 305,307, 310- 

13, 316, 319-20, 324, 328-9,348, 351, 355, 

357-8, 360, 362, 365, 368-72, 375, 380, 

391-2, 407, 409, 412, 415-26, 430, 456. 
Luther, Elizabeth, 351. 



Luther, Heinz, 119. 

Luther, James, 2, 190, 355, 419, 422. 

Luther, John (father), 1-3, 7, 9-11, 18, 

131-2, 174-6, 190, 250-1, 355, 429-30. 
Luther, John (son), 189-90, 245, 251, 305, 

309, 316, 320, 331, 337, 351-4, 409, 415- 

16, 422, 424, 430. 
Luther, Magdalene, 190, 231, 245, 250-1, 

331, 337, 351-4, 373, 430. 
Luther, Margaret (mother), 132, 175-6, 

190-1, 353, 430. 
Luther, Margaret (daughter), 353-4, 430. 
Luther, Martin, passim, see table of con- 
tents. 

Appearance, 63, 118, 147, 176, 303-4, 
316-17, 453-4. 

Assassination, danger of, 60, 68, 129. 

Health, 15, 46-8, 93-4, 123, 179, 188-9, 
252-3, 308-13, 318, 327-30, 373, 395, 
409, 420-3, 466. 

Letters, 32, 69, 123, 279, 325, 333, 336, 
415, 434, 436, 471-4. 

Political theory, 215-8. 

Preaching, 27-8, 32, 67, 78, 187-8, 294, 
317, 331. 

Process against, for heresy, 95-8. 

Table-talk, 12, 16; 126, 279, 281, 309, 
325, 336, 356-9, 434, 437. 

Teaching, 11, 20-35, 185-7, 317, 331-2. 

Violence of language, 86-8, 205, 273-5. 

Will (First), 312-3, (Second) 369-71, 426. 

Writings, 76-7, 99, 332-6, 407, 415, 434. 
Luther, Martin, Junior, 329, 352,354, 422, 

430. 
Luther, Paul, 19, 353-4, 422, 430. 
Luxemburg Emperors, 266. 
Lyra, Nicholas de, 185. 

Magdeburg, 4, 38, 164, 173, 196, 422, 425, 

429. 
Magliana, 97. 
Magnificat, 107. 
Mansfeld, county, 1, 160, 174, 319, 326, 

417-8. 
Mansfeld, town, 2, 131, 190-1, 328, 355, 

417, 419, 422, 429. 
Mantua, 306-7. 
Manuel, 104. 
Manuscripts, 23, 319, 433-4, 449-50, 458, 

466, 475. 
Marburg, 121, 243-6, 248, 288, 295, 342, 

346, 430. 
Margaret, Queen of Navarre, 321. 
Marlowe, Christopher, 340. 
Marriage (see Luther, Catharine), 90, 

172-3, 235. 



486 



INDEX 



Marriage of the clergy, 83, 85, 127, 129, 
130-3, 135, 252, 261, 378. 

Mary, mother of Jesus, 42, 365. 

Mary, Queen of England, 328. 

Mass, 10, 83, 125, 135, 136, 140, 149, 184. 
193, 230, 232-3, 239, 252, 261, 304, 307, 
320. 

Mathesius, John, 264, 322-3, 357-8, 409- 
10. 

Maugis, Ferdinand von, 415-6. 

Maurice, Dnke of Saxony, 384-6, 411, 
425, 431. 

Maximilian I, Emperor, 48, 56, 95, 224, 
256, 266, 389, 431. 

Mayence (seeAlbert), 20, 31, 38, 76, 103, 
397. 

Mecheln, John Ton, 16-7. 

Meissen, 31, 98, 377. 

Meistersinger, 121, 345. 

Melanchthon, Catharine Krapp, 86, 286. 

Melanchthon, Philip, 5, 70-1, 74, 77, 86, 
100-1, 136-9, 141, 148, 158, 171, 178, 
181, 183, 195, 197-8, 200-2, 204, 207, 
210, 219-20, 233, 243-4, 247-8, 253, 256- 
64, 269, 277-8, 281-3, 285-7, 292, 294, 
296-7, 302, 307-12, 314, 319, 322, 329, 
331, 334, 336, 341, 356, 358, 365, 369, 
371, 373-5, 379-80, 388, 390-2, 403-4, 
411-13, 416-7, 419-20, 422, 451, 471-2. 

Melanchthon, Philip, junior, 352. 

Menius, Justus, 382. 

Merseburg (see Adolph), 98, 416-7. 

Metzel, John, 32. 

Metzsch, John von, 303, 332, 364. 

Metzsch, Joseph Levin, 218. 

Michelet, Jules, 22, 335, 359. 

Milan, 19, 349. 

Miltitz, Charles von, 54-6, 91,95, 429. 

Milton, John, 87, 233, 335, 341, 348. 

Minderstadt, 361. 

Minor Prophets, Commentary on the, 185. 

Minos, 326. 

Mirandola, Pico della, 202. 

Moch, Margaret, 189. 

Mohacs, 226. 

Mohammed, 36, 213, 248. 

Mobra, 1, 119. 

Monastic Vows, 151-3. 

Monasticism, 4, 8-15, 83-4, 132, 148, 169, 
252, 325. 

Monks, 28. 

Monner, Basil, 286. 

Montanus, Philip, 211. 

More, Thomas, 193, 198, 304, 344. 

Moritzburg, 398. 

Mosellanus (Philip Schade), 63. 



Moses, 196, 236-7, 266, 268, 322, 335,/397. 
Moslems, 36. j 

Miihlberg, 425. j 

Muhlhausen, 153, 159, 163. 
Miihlpfort, 281. j 

Mulda, 418. / 

Miiller, Caspar, 165, 174, 319, 328.' 
Munich, 346. 
Mttnzer, Thomas, 137, 150, 153-7, 159-60, 

162-3, 217, 223, 239, 241, 289-91, 473. 
Murner, Thomas, 193. 
Music, 9, 187, 233-4, 346-8. 
Mutian, Conrad, 333. 
Myconius, Frederic, 198, 310, 391. 
Mysticism, 14, 27, 31, 150, 343, 445. 

Naples, 83. 

Napoleon, 360, 407. 

Naumburg, 396, 403, 416. 

Neobulus (Ulrich Lening), 384-5. 

Neoplatonism, 22. 

Netherlands, 77, 98, 201-2, 229. 

Neustadt, 31. 

New Testament, 23, 40, 58, 132-4, 199, 

212, 221, 240, 244, 263-5, 268, 343, 388. 
Nicene Council, 61-2. 
Nimbschen, 169, 171. 
Nimrod, 89. 
Ninety-Jive Theses, 40^5, 47, 58,200-1, 

429. 
Noah, 397. 
Nordhausen, 340. 
Nordlingen, 240. 
Norway, 76. 
Nullbriider, see Brothers of the Common 

Life. 
Nuremberg, 16, 20, 43, 120, 143, 146, 171, 

214, 219, 225, 227, 247, 250, 253, 257, 

275, 277, 279, 281-2, 309, 315, 321, 344- 

5, 366, 432. 

Obelisks, 58. 

Occam, William of, 12-3, 202. 

CEcolampadius, 203, 240, 242-5, 288, 

290-1, 292, 295, 402, 404. 
Offer and Protestation, 97-8. 
Old Testament, 185, 263-4. 
Olsnitzer, 60. 
Oppenheim, 111. 
Orders, Priests', 90. 
Orlamiinde, 153-5. 
Ortuin Gratius, 29-30. 
Osiander, Andrew, 219, 244, 281-2. 
Osterhausen, 163. 
Oswald, John, 140. 
Ovid, 6, 234, 342. 



INDEX 



487 



Pace, Richard, 203. 

Pack, Otto von, 224-5, 278, 300. 

Padua, 306. 

Paget, 197. 

Palatinate, see Lewis. 

Palls, 82. 

Pantheon, 18. 

Papacy, Pope, 3, 13, 19, 37-8, 40-2, 45, 

49, 52, 58-9, 61-5, 73, 80-5, 88-9, 109- 

10, 116, 118,122, 125, 128, 129, 132, 137, 

149, 151, 170, 181, 189, 201, 237, 239. 

261, 275, 279, 289, 305, 307-10, 343, 350, 

395, 399-400, 415. 
Paris (see Sorbonne), 77. 
Paul, St., 15, 23-5, 32-3, 65, 72, 80, 87, 

90, 92, 131, 149-151, 155, 170, 173, 180, 

206, 212, 240, 268-9, 305, 353, 367, 379, 

393. 
Paul III, Pope, 303-4, 306-7, 377, 397- 

400,431. 
Pauli, Benedict, 308. 
Pavia, 226, 255-6, 432. 
Peasants' Revolt, 150, 156-7, 174, 177, 

184, 194, 195, 210, 217, 219, 227, 239, 

279, 361, 432, 455-6. 
Pellican, 290. 

Penance, 36, 41, 89-90, 235, 252. 
Pentateuch, 268. 
Perusco, 47. 
Peter, St., 31, 65, 97, 173, 203, 263, 337, 

362. 
Peter, Epistle of, 185. 
Peter Lombard, 11, 22, 90, 429. 
Pfeffinger, Degenhard, 34, 70. 
Pflug, Caesar, 66-7. 
Pflug, Julius, 395-6. 
Philemon. Paul's Epistle to, 185. 
Philip, Landgrave of Hesse, 163, 196, 

219, 224-8, 236-7, 243-5, 253, 256, 260, 

272, 276-8, 292, 309, 312, 320, 346, 373- 

85, 389, 392-3, 422, 425, 430-1, 468-9, 

473-4. 
Pilate, Pontius, 18. 
Pilgrimages, 28, 33, 37, 83, 84. 
Pirckheimer, Wilibald, 101, 402. 
Pirna, 376. 

Pistorins, Simon, 67, 386, 395. 
Planitz, John von, 67. 
Plague, 33, 188-9, 328, 426, 443-4. 
Plato, 334, 343. 
Plato, George, 357. 
Pleissenburg, 63. 
Polner, John, 355. 
Polygamy (see Bigamy), 153, 179-80, 

373. 
Pomerania, see Barnim. 



Pope, see Papacy, Leo X, Adrian VI, 
Clement VII, Paul HI. 

Porphyry, 26. 

Postilla, 124, 130, 133, 143, 473. 

Prague, 326. 

Priapus, 212. 

Prierias, Sylvester, 47, 60, 88, 449. 

Printing, 76, 124, 367. 

Probst, James, 229, 405. 

Proles, Andrew, 8, 16. 

Protestants, 118, 166, 194-5, 212, 216, 219, 
220, 226-7, 229-37, 238, 243, 254, 259- 
62, 271, 273, 275, 277, 279-87, 300, 302- 
3, 305, 307-8, 314-5, 336, 373-4, 377, 
379, 381, 386-402, 422. 

Prussia, 3, 219, 432. 

Psalms, 22, 32, 77-8, 142, 201, 231, 248, 
251-2, 268, 269, 346, 472. 

Pubelsberg, 3. 

Purgatory, 18, 33, 36-7, 39-42, 56, 66. 

Pyrrhus, 388. 

Pythagoreans, 26. 

Quakers, 226. 

Rabe, Lewis, 297-8, 356. 

Rabelais, Francois, 199, 335. 

Ranke, Leopold von, 186. 

Raphael, Angel, 337. 

Ratisbon, 275, 387, 392, 395-6. 

Rhadamanthus, 326. 

Reformation, 23, 69, 76, 93, 147, 199, 

212-3, 226, 303, 410. 
Reichenbach, Philip, 171. 
Reinecke Fuchs, 344. 
Reinecke, John, 250-1. 
Reissenbusch, Wolfgang, 172-3, 174, 347. 
Relics, 19, 33, 36, 40, 136, 140, 144, 396-8. 
Rennebrecher, Bartholomew, 1. 
Resolutions, 44-5, 49, 60, 88. 
Reuchlin, John, 24, 20, 29, 30, 53, 202, 

447. 
Revelation, 269. 
Rhenanus, Beatus, 147. 
Rhine, 157, 397. 
Riario, Raphael, 74, 97. 
Richard, Archbishop Elector of Trier, 

95. 
Rischmann, 360. 
Robbia, Andrea della, 17. 
Rochlitz, see Elizabeth. 
Rockwell, Professor W. W., 196, 384. 
Romans, Paul's Epistle to the, 15, 22-3, 

77, 185, 200, 268. 
Rome, 12, 16-9, 34, 37, 43, 47, 53-4, 56, 74- 

5, 79, 82-3, 95-8, 101, 104, 109, 186, 189, 



488 



INDEX 



204, 226, 234, 237, 238, 255-6, 304, 307, 

308, 340, ,349, 355, 386, 388, 397, 402, 

407, 432, 447, 449, 472. 
Bomer, George, 250. 
Borer, George, 188-9, 263-4, 326, 331, 333, 

391. 
Both, Stephen, 280. 
Buhel, John, 160, 163, 165, 174, 176, 220, 

299, 473. 

Saal, Frau von der, 374-6, 380. 

Saal, Margaret yon der, 374, 376-7, 382. 

Saale, 418. 

Saalfeld, 283. 

Sachs, Hans, 366. 

Sacramentarians, 189, 234, 256, 272, 402- 

8,469. 
Sacraments (see Communion}, 13, 81, 88- 

91, 192, 233. 
St. GaU, 141. 

St. Peter's Church at Borne, 39, 42, 398. 
Salzburg, 107, 183. 
Samuel, 6. 

Sancta Sanctorum, chapel of, 18. 
Sapidus, 121. 
Satan, see Devil. 
Saxony, Albertine or Ducal, 20, 39, 158, 

221, 300, 302, 431. 
Saxony, Ernestine or Electoral, 20, , 33, 

39, 54, 95, 221, 224, 233, 236, 254, 259, 

295, 296, 300, 310-1, 431. 
Schalbe Foundation, 5. 
Schaumburg, Silvester von, 74. 
Schenitz, Antony, 297-8. 
Schenitz, John, 297-8, 356. 
Schenk, James, 284-5, 411. 
Soherle, Henry, 416. 
Scheurl, Christopher, 43. 
Schlaginhauffen, John, 310-1, 338, 356, 

358. 
Schleitz, 245. 
Sohmalkalden, 228, 282, 285, 295, 307-11, 

328, 379, 390, 406, 
Schmalkaldic League, 197-8, 271, 296, 

303-12, 384, 393, 396. 
Scholasticism, 5-6, 13, 24-6, 66, 71, 101, 

185, 240-1, 342. 
Schonfeld, Ave von, 170-1, 173. 
Schonfeld, Ernest von, 416. 
Schonfeld, Margaret von, 170-1. 
Sehools, 3, 85, 185-7, 233-4, 236. 
Schurf, Augustine, 141, 189. 
Schurf , Jerome, 113, 141-3, 146. 
Schwenkfeld, Caspar von, 402, 404, 406-7. 
Scipio, 342, 388. 
Sootus, see Duns. 



Scripture, see Bible. 

Scultetus, Jerome, 24. 44. 

Secret and Stolen Letters, 225. 

Seeburg, 160. 

Senf el, Lewis, 346. 

Sentences, 11, 26, 33. 

Sermon on the Lord's Prayer, 67. 

Sermon on Usury, 135. 

Serralonga, Urban de, 48-9. 

Seymour, Jane, 198. 

Shakespeare, William, 6, 321, 325, 334. 

Short Confession on the Holy Sacrament, 

403-4. 
Sicily, 83. 

Sickingen, Franz von, 73, 112, 219, 431. 
Sieberger, Wolfgang, 68, 168, 360-1, 366, 

369-70. 
Sigismund, Emperor, 105. 
Silesia, 406-7. 
Sindringer, 308. 
Socrates, 367. 
Sodom, 34, 91, 379. 
Soest, 422. 
Solomon, 185. 

Soranus, Lawrence, 279-80. 
Sorbonne (see Paris), 453. 
Spain, 77, 98. 
Spalatin, Catharine, 178. 
Spalatin, George, 29-30, 33-4, 46, 49, 53, 

55, 60-1, 64, 70, 73, 99, 105, 108, 110-1, 

121, 123-4, 127, 130, 137, 170, 172, 174-5. 

177, 184, 194, 200, 217-8, 220-1, 249, 263, 

276, 313, 367. 
Spaniards, 118. 
Spengler, Lazarus, 101, 217. 
Spengler, Swiss student, 141-3. 
Spies, 340. 
Spires, 219, 221, 226-8, 247, 314, 390, 399, 

432. 
Starenberg, Bartholomew von, 232. 
Staupitz, John von, 14, 16, 17, 20, 33-4, 

46-8, 51-2, 72, 87, 96, 107-8, 170, 182, 

183, 229, 339, 343, 447. 
Staupitz, Magdalene von, 170-1. 
Storoh, Nicholas, 137-8, 150. 
Stotterheim, 9. 
Strassburg, 28, 164-6, 238, 245, 288, 290, 

293. 
Stiibner, Mark Thomae, 150. 
Sturtz, 310. 
Suliman, Sultan, 226. 
Sulzer, Simon, 295. 
Sunday, 83, 254. 

Superstition, 3, 339-41. (See Devil.) 
Supreme unction, 89, 220. 
Sntel, John, 279. 



INDEX 



489 



Swabia, 157. 

Swabian League, 277. 

Swaven, Peter, 1H. 

Swiss, 195, 241, 260, 272, 295. (SeeZwin- 

glians.) 
Switzerland, 141-2, 157, 243. 
Sybilla, Eleetress of Saxony, 414. 

Tambaoh, 310-1. 

Taubenbeim, John von, 369. 

Tauler, John, 27, 343, 473. 

Terence, 342. 

Tesseradecas, 78. 

Tetzel, John, 39-40, 47, 128-9, 449-50. 

Tetzel, Lady, 345. 

Teutleben, Caspar von, 255. 

That these Words " This is my Body " 

stand fast against the Banting Spirits, 

141-2. 
Theatre, 325, 350. 
Thur, John, 174. 
Thuringia, 1, 31, 121, 158. 
Titns, Paul's epistle to, 185. 
Tomitzsch, Wolf, 170. 
Torgau, 32, 34, 169-70, 181, 216, 224, 299, 

353, 409, 426. 
Thomists, 65. 

Transubstantiation, 71, 84, 90, 238. 
Trent, Council of, 399, 401, 422. 
Trier, see Richard. 
Trott, Eva von, 393. 
Truchses, Eosina von, 361-2, 415-6. 
Trutvetter, Jodocus, 5, 24, 26. 
Tunis, 388. 
Turkey, 76, 346. 
Turkish, 253. 

Turkish War, On the, 226-7. 
Turks, 48, 82, 161, 226, 227-8, 247, 248, 

255, 289, 310, 371, 385, 405, 411, 415. 
Twelve Articles of the Peasants, 157-9, 

162. 

Ulrich, Duke of Wiirttemburg, 277, 

309. 
Uncle Tom's Cabin, 86. 
Unfree Will, 207-3, 236, 240. 
Universities, 6, 84-5, 96, 98. 
Urban II, Pope, 36. 
Usingen, Bartholomew Arnoldi of, 5, 14, 

24. 
Usury, 85. 

Vadian, 204, 242, 402. 
Valentine, St., 308. 
Valla Lorenzo, 72-3, 202, 204, 344. 
Vater, Conrad, 250. 



Vatican, 23, 319. 
Vehus, Dr., 118. 
Venice, 179, 256. 
Vergerio, Paolo, 303-7, 316-7, 328, 430, 

465. 
Vienna, 58, 114, 226. 
Virgil, 6, 234, 388-9. 
Vogtland, 245. 

Volta, Gabriel della, 46, 48, 51, 96. 
Voltaire, 199, 407. 
Vos, Henry, 229. 
Vulgate, 14, 40, 90, 264. 

Wagner, Eiohard, 121. 

Waldenses, 113. 

Walther, John, 231. 

Warning to all Christians to keep from 
Uproar and Sedition, 137. 

Warning to his dear Germans, 273, 300. 

Warning to the Prelates at Augsburg, 
252-3, 273. 

Wartburg, 5, 53, 120-35, 145, 168. 182, 
188, 214, 218, 230, 238, 248, 252, 263. 
285, 327, 430, 454-5. 

Watt, see Vadian. 

Weimar, 20, 150, 153, 278, 379-80. 

Weinsberg, 159. 

Weller, Jerome, 320-1, 324, 347-«, 353, 
356-7, 358. 

Weller, Matthew, 348. 

Weller, Peter, 356, 358. 

Wesel, 202. 

Westphalia, 422. 

Wettin, see Saxony. 

Whether Soldiers can be in a State of 
Grace, 226. 

Wick, John von, 79. 

Wicliffe, John, 113. 

Wiclifites, 230. 

Will, see Free Will. 

William, Duke of Brunswick- Wolfen- 
buttel, 393. 

Wittenberg, town, 20-1, 31-3, 40, 47, 53. 
61, 74, 79, 111, 120, 122, 133, 135-8, 
140-1, 144, 147, 150, 152, 156, 170-1, 176, 
182, 187-8, 196-8, 214, 222, 232, 247-9, 
253, 255,257-8, 262-3, 275, 277, 280, 293, 
295, 302, 306, 312, 319, 329, 331, 332-3, 
340, 355-6, 360, 363, 369, 374, 382, 412, 
415-7, 423, 425-6, 429. 

Wittenberg, University of, 11-2, 14-5, 
27, 29, 54, 60, 65, 70, 75, 98, 100, 111, 
141, 171, 176, 183-5, 188, 220, 303-4, 
328-9, 332, 353, 355, 363, 412, 417, 429, 
446,456. 

Witzel, George, 211. 



480 



INDEX 



Wolsey, Thomas, 192, 194, 197. 
Worms, Conference of (1540), 387, 391-2. 
Worms, Diet of (1521), 51, 98, 101-21, 

123, 127, 145, 148, 153, 182, 202, 218, 

224, 262, 255, 279, 297, 329, 343, 346, 

387,430,431,452-3,472. 
Worms, Edict of, 120, 122-3, 215, 219, 

226-7, 247, 431. 
Wiirttemhurg (see Ulrich), 277-8. 
Wiirzburg, Bishop of, 224, 278. 
Wiirzen, 385. 

Zeitz, 416. 

Zeschau, Catharine) 170. 



Zeschau, Margaret, 170. 

Ziegler, 265. 

Zulsdorf, 168, 369, 370, 372, 380, 416. 

Zurich, 239, 260, 272, 289, 295, 404-5, 407, 

432. 
Zwickau, 149-51, 259, 279-81. 
Zwickau prophets, 135, 137-9, 148-9,214, 

264, 267, 285, 373. 
Zwilling, Gabriel, 135-6, 140. 
Zwingli, Ulrich, tl, 154, 189, 203, 218, 

227, 238-46, 264, 288-92, 295, 317, 402, 

404-5, 406, 430, 432, 463. 
Zwinglians, 256, 295, 400. 
Zwolle, 77, 471.