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Lindsay r^ m 

Ijuthex and the German reform- 



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Luther and the German reform- 
ation 




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THE WORLD'S EPOCH-MAKERS 



EDITED BY 

OLIPHANT SMEATON 



Luther and 

The German Reformation 

By Thomas M. Lindsay, D.D. 



THE WORLD'S EPOCH-MAKERS 



Luther and 

The German 

Reformation 



By 
Thomas M. Lindsay, D.D. 

Principal and Professor of Church History, United Free Church College 
Glasgow 



Edinburgh. T. & T. Clark 



Printed rgoo 

Reprinted . . sqoS and igt-t 



Printed & MORRISON & GIBB LIMITKD, 



To 

James Campbell, Esq. 

of Tullichewan 

In Token of a Quarter of a Century's 
Kindness and Friendship 



PREFACE 



ALTHOUGH Luther's life has been written scores of 
times, it has always seemed to me that there is room 
for another for one which will be careful to set 
Luther in the environment of the common social life 
of his time. For it is often forgotten that the sixteenth 
century, in which he was the most outstanding figure, 
saw the beginnings of our present social life in almost 
everything, from our way of looking at politics and 
our modes of trade to our underclothing. To show 
what that life was, and to show Luther in it, would, it 
seems to me, bring him nearer us than has yet been 
done. 

I do not for a moment pretend that this little 
book is even a sketch of the Reformer's life written 
in this way. That needed far more space than waa 
permitted. Yet I have had the thought before me in 
writing, and for that reason have been careful to make 
as much use as possible of contemporary evidence. 

The book has not been weighted with continual 
references to authorities. Instead of that a list of. 



viii PREFACE 

a large number of works consulted lias been placed 
in the appendix, and their position there is, I 
trust, sufficient acknowledgment o the debt owed to 
them. One set of authorities I have been obliged to 
omit from this list the numerous letters, records of 
conversations, extracts from diaries, all belonging to 
the times of Luther, which have been printed during 
the last twenty-five years in such journals as the 
Studien und Kritiken, the Zeitschrift fur die histor- 
ische Theologie, etc. The last edition of Kostlin's 
Martin Luther : sein Leben und seine Sckriften, with 
its admirable notes and references, deserves a special 
mention. No one can write about Luther without 
acknowledging the debt he owes to it. 

THOMAS M. LINDSAY. 
GLASGOW, IZfh April 1900* 



CONTENTS 



PjRBFAOE 



INTRODUCTION 



The Reformation Epocli can be looked at from various Points of 
ViewThe Religious The PoliticalThe IntellectualThe 
Moral The Economic Luther's Relation to these . , 



CHAPTER I 
LUTHER'S CHILDHOOD AND EDUCATION, 1483-1505 

Born at Eisleben His Parents Earliest Home Life Christian 
Training Gorman Peasant Life Its Toils Its Amusements 
Need for Parental Severity School at Mansfeld Mediaeval 
Schools The Wandering Students Thomas Platter's Auto- 
biography School at Magdeburg Eisenach Jrau Cotta 
"the Holy Elizabeth The University of Erfurt Humanism 
Luther's inner Life at Erfurt absolutely unknown Sudden 
Entrance into the Convent Facta and Legends ... 8 

CHAPTER II 
THE YEARS OF PREPARATION, 1505-1517 

Entrance into the Convent Life Training as Novice What sent 
Luther there Soul Struggles Staupitz "The Righteous- 
ness of God " Peace found Still a Devout Member of the 
Modifloval Church Ordination University of "Wittenberg 
-Luther, Professor of Philosophy Yisit to Kome Made 
Doctor of Theology 1 Preaching, Lectures on Now and on 
Old Testament Superintendent of Convents 81 



CONTENTS 

CHAPTER III 

CONTROVERSY, 1517-1519 



PAQB 

Albert of Mainz farms an Indulgence His Statements of its 
Efficacy Not Efficacious for Smugglers of Alum Myconius 
gets a "Papal Letter" for nothing " Papal Letters" bought 
by Wittenberg People Luther's Perplexity "St. Ursula's 
Schiffiein " A possible Evangelical Meaning in Indulgences 
The Ninety-five Theses Luther and Mediaeval Teaching 
The Mediaeval "Dead-lock" How Luther solved it How 
solved by Indulgence The Gist of the Theses How received 
by Friends and Foes Augustinian Chapter at Heidelberg 
Dr. John Eck Luther summoned to Rome The Emperor 
and the Elector insist on a Trial in Germany Luther at 
Augsburg Appeals to a General Council Embassy of von 
Miltitz The Leipzig Disputation Its Effects on Luther's 
Position Duke George of Saxony Luther's Use of the Print- 
ing-Press , ..... ... 53 



CHAPTER IV 
THE THREE GREAT REFORMATION TREATISES, 1520 

On Christian Liberty Its Pathetic Origin Its Main Theme, the 
Priesthood of all Believers The Babylonian Ga/ptivtiy of the 
Church A Criticism of the Romanist Sacramental Theory 
The Threefold Bondage of the Eucharist- Romanist Dis- 
pensations denounced Priests should be allowed to Marry 
To the Christian Nobility of the German N"ation t respecting 
the Reformation of the Christian JSstate An Indictment of the 
Roman Treatment of Germany The Three Walls of the 
Papacy Remedies Suggested Papal Bull against Luther 
Luther Burns the BullWhat the Students did . . 93 



CHAPTER V 
AT THE DIET OP WORMS, 1621 

Death of the Emperor Maximilian Rival Candidates for the 
Throne State of Germany Throne offered to the Elector of 
Saxony Charles v. Elected The "Holy Roman Empire" 
Political Condition of Germany Charles's Dream Middle 
Ages and Modern Times meet at the Diet of Worms The 
Papal Legato, Aleandor The Missioned Ghristi tt Antichri$ti 
The Safe-Conduct On the Road to Worms Before the 
Diet Excitement among the People -Emperor completes Ills 
Bargain with the PopeThe Ban against Luther . . .11$ 



CONTENTS xl 

OHAPTEK VI 
IK THE WABTBiraa. From 4th. May 1521 to 3rd March 1522 

PAGE 

Journey back from the Diet Luther seized on the Eoad In the 
Wartburg Memories of Song and Saintship Letter to Albert 
of Mainz Tract on Monastic Vows Translation of New 
Testament Anxieties about Wittenberg How John Kessler 
saw Dr. Martin dressed as a Man-at-Arms .... 136 

OHAPTEE YII 

THE PROGRESS OP THE REFORMATION, 1522-1525 

Luther back in Wittenberg Preaches Patience and Charity 
Makes Preaching Tours through Electoral Saxony The 
" Imperial Council " and its Difficulties Pope Adrian Appeals 
to it to enforce the Edict of Worms "The Hundred Griev- 
ances" How the Reformation Spread quietly George of 
Brandenburg Albert, the Grand Master The First Martyrs 150 

CHAPTER VIII 

POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLTS, 1522-1525 

The Social and Economic Condition of Germany Franz von 
Sickingen The Rising of the Nobles Luther and Sicldngen 
The "Peasants' War" The Religious Reformation and the 
Social Revolution Condition of Peasants and Artisans 
Propaganda of the Revolt Mattock John Foundation of the 
''Evangelical Brotherhood" The Swabian League "The 
Twelve Articles" Swift Spreading of the Terror Sudden 
Collapse and Bloody Repression Luther's Connection with 
the Rising Disastrous Effects on the Reformation , .161 

CHAPTER IX 
MAIIEIAGE, FAMILY AKB PUBLIC LIFE 

The Conception of "Marriage" in the Reformation Movement 
Luther's Personal Disinclination for the Married Life The 
Nine Nuns Catherine von Bora Luther Marries her The 
Au<mstinian Convent a Family Home How his Wife helped 
Luther- The Plaguo in Wittenberg The Lutlier Household 
The Liber Tagatorum Luther's Devotion to his Wife 
His Letters to her Delight in his Children "Lena" Luther 
Sayings in the Famuy Circle The Emperor determined 
to Crush the Reformation "Not Head off, dear Prince" 
Luther at Colmrg The " Augsburg Confession" The Storm 
Qlouds pass away , . , , , , . .1-90 



xii CONTENTS 

CHAPTER X 

LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE EVANGELICAL CHTTBOH 

PAGE 

Luther's earlier Hopes that the Evangelical Doctrine would spread 
without many External Changes The Visible Catholic 
Church Depended on a Succession of Pious Generations 
from the Apostles, not on an Historical Succession of Bishops 
The Work the Church had to do The "Visitations" 
The "Circle" of Wittenberg The Short and the Larger 
Catechisms Luther's Zeal for "Common Schools" The 
Reformation Movement and Education Luther and the Swiss 
The Sacramental Question . . . . , . .219 

CHAPTEB XI 

THE LAST YEARS OF LTJTHEH'S LIFE 

Unceasing Labours and Continual Ill-health Intimacy with John 
Frederic With Sibylla, the Electress With other German 
Princes With the Electress of Brandenburg The Bigamy of 
Philip of Hesse Luther's part in it Attempts at a General 
Union of all Protestants Luther's Journey to Mansfeld 
Last Letter to his Wife Death Burial Luther and his Age 246 

CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 267 

LIST OF BOOKS CONSULTED ....... 293 

INDEX .,,.,,,,. 297 



LUTHER AND THE GERMAN 
REFORMATION 

INTRODUCTION 

THE epoch In European History which is called the 
Reformation may be looked at from many different 
points of view, but when Luther is taken as the central 
figure, one the religious must dominate all the 
others, and the various intricate intermingled move- 
ments must be regarded as the environment of this one 
central impulse. We are compelled to look on it as 
the time of a great revival of heart religion perhaps 
the greatest which the world has ever seen, whether 
its magnitude be measured by intensity of religious 
conviction, by clearness of consecrated vision into those 
intellectual meanings of spiritual facts, and into those 
laws of spiritual events which we call dogmatic theo- 
logy, or by its almost unique effects in fields remote 
from religious and ecclesiastical life, in the narrower 
meaning of these words. But this great revival was set 
In a picturesque framework of human impulses, political, 
intellectual, moral, social, and economic, such as the 
world has seldom seen before or since. History, with 



2 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

its warp and woof of " When " and " Where," of Time 
and Place, so wove and interwove all these impulses 
together that it is both possible and legitimate to de- 
scribe the Reformation from many different standpoints, 
all of which are true. 

Professor Leopold von Kanke may be taken as the 
most illustrious example of historians who have taught 
us to regard the Reformation as a great political force 
working political transformations not yet ended. It 
overthrew completely Medievalism, and started the 
modern conditions of political life on their career. It 
destroyed the mediaeval ideal of a Christendom made 
visibly one by a supreme civil governor who ruled over 
the bodies of all men, by a supreme ecclesiastical chief 
who ruled their souls, and by a dominant scholastic 
which kept their minds in due submission, and " red 
the marches" between sanctified wisdom and unholy lore. 
The two and a half centuries before the Reformation 
are full of revolts against this Medievalism. They 
saw the birth of modern European nations with con- 
flicting interests, and the strong feelings of independent 
national life overthrew the mediaeval ideas of govern- 
ment, both secular and ecclesiastical. The authority of 
emperor and pope had been defied by almost every 
European nation long before the times of our epoch ; 
but the failure of Charles v, to restore the medieval 
empire in Germany may be taken as the dato at which 
the old ideas of government passed away for ever. 

The Reformation may be regarded a$ an intellectual 
movement, and then Erasmus will be its central figure. 
The siege and pillage of Constantinople by the Ottoman 
Turks in 1453 had dispersed the scholars o that rich 
and cultured city over Western Europe. Manuscripts 



THE NEW LEARNING 3 

and objects of art, hastily secured by trembling fugi- 
tives, sufficed to stock the rest of Christendom, and 
western nations again began to study the authors of a 
forgotten classical antiquity. A whole world of new 
thoughts in poetry, philosophy, and statesmanship 
opened on the vision of the men of the dawn of the 
Reformation period. In the earlier days of the first 
Renascence, the " New Learning " had been confined to a 
few daring . thinkers, but the invention of printing, 
almost contemporaneous with the second Renascence, 
made the " New Learning " common property, and the 
new thoughts acted on men in masses, and began to 
move the multitude. The old barriers raised by medi- 
aeval scholasticism were broken down, and men were 
brought to see that there was more in religion than the 
mediaeval Church had taught, more in social life than 
the empire had promised, and that knowledge was a 
manifold unknown to the schoolmen. All this is true, 
and the Reformation may be studied, though scarcely 
explained, from this point of view. 

Others again point out that the Reformation epoch 
was " the modern birth-time of the individual soul " 
the beginning of that assertion of the supreme right of 
individual revolt against every custom, law, or theory 
which would subordinate the man to the caste or class 
a revolt which finally flamed out in the French Rev- 
olution. The Swiss peasantry began it when they 
made pikes by tying their scythes on their alpen-stocks, 
and, standing shoulder to shoulder at Morgarten and 
Sempach, broke the fiercest charges of mediaeval knight- 
hood. They proved that, man for man, the peasant was 
as good as the noble, and individual manhood, asserted 
in this rude and bodily fashion, soon began to express 



LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 



itself mentally and morally. The invention of 
powder and firearms completed what the pike had begun, 
and mediaeval knighthood perished when the princes 
battered down with cannon the strong new fortifica- 
tions of Landstuhl, and Francis von Sickingen, " the 
last of the knights," was slain when in fancied security. 
This intense individuality was fed by the events of the 
time. The invention of the mariner's compass, the dis- 
covery of America by Columbus, and of the sea route to 
the East by Vasco de Qama, not only revolutionised trade 
and commerce, they also fired the imaginations of men. 
The prevailing character of the thoughts and speech of 
the period show that men felt that they were on the 
eve of great events, that it was a time of universal 
expectation and of widespread individual assertion. 

It is not the less true that the epoch was a time of 
economic revolution which bore heavily on the poorer 
classes, and scourged them into revolt. Below the whole 
mediaeval system lay the idea, that land was the only 
economic basis of wealth; and in the earlier Middle 
Ages, where each little district produced almost all 
required for its own wants, and where the economic 
function of the towns was to be corporations of arti- 
sans, exchanging the fruits of their industry for the 
surplus of farm produce which the peasants brought 
to their market-places, this was undoubtedly tho case, 
But the increasing commerce of the towns gradually 
introduced another source of wealth, and this commerce 
made great strides after tho Crusades had opened up 
the East to European traders. The gradual result of this 
was to make the lesser nobles and tho citizens implacable 
enemies. Tho nobles waylaid and pillaged tho merchant 
trains, and the cities formed offensive and dofoiuuve 



THE NOBLES AND THE PEASANTRY 5 

leagues, and persuaded the larger territorial magnates 
fco combine with them to secure the peace of the country 
and keep the roads safe. The combination of princes 
and cities against the lesser nobility drove the nobles 
into a position utterly repugnant to their pride. Already 
thrust from the position of defenders of society by the 
introduction of infantry and artillery as the most im- 
portant factors in warfare, they saw themselves distanced 
by the burghers in the means of living ostentatiously ; 
and while they despised the " pepper-sacks/' as they 
called the merchants, they felt themselves degraded 
unless they could vie with them in dress and adorn- 
ment at the occasions of public display so dear to the 
mediaeval mind. Their only mode of direct revenge, 
to attack the merchant trains of goods or to make 
their " horses bite off the purses of travellers," had been 
made somewhat dangerous by the combinations of 
princes and towns, and the only remaining thing 
for them to do was to squeeze their unfortunate 
peasants. For the peasant was the pariah of medieval 
society. He stood apart from noble, burgher, and 
ecclesiastical power. He was the unprotected class 
whom all might spoil and whom all did oppress. He 
had memories transmitted from generation to genera- 
tion of common lands, of free village communes, and of 
the inalienable rights of the tillers of the soil ; but the 
introduction of Koman law, primarily and chiefly by 
ecclesiastical proprietors, which did not recognise these 
old rights, and looked upon the peasant as serfs, de- 
prived them of the law's protection, and left them no 
power of resistance save revolt or flight to the towns, 
where they swelled the class of poorer citizens who 
remained outside the guild privileges. 



6 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

The higher commercial opportunities offered by the 
opening of a sea passage to the East Indies by the dis- 
coveries of Vasco de Gama led to a disintegration of the 
Mediaeval Town Corporations ; for the wealthier mer- 
chants formed themselves into trading companies out- 
side the old guilds, and amassed great wealth. A war 
of classes ensued ; the trading companies and capital- 
ists against the guilds, the poorer classes against the 
wealthier, the peasants against the nobles, and the 
nobles against the towns and the princes. 

This seething discontent was stirred to its depths by 
sudden and mysterious rises in prices, affecting first the 
articles of foreign produce, to which all the wealthier 
classes were greatly addicted, and at last the ordinary 
necessaries of life. The cause, it is now believed, was 
not the debasing of the coinage, for that affected a 
narrow circle only, nor was it the importation of the 
precious metals from America, for that came later, but 
the larger output of the mines at home. Whatever the 
caxise, the thing was an irritating mystery, and each 
class in society was disposed to blame the others for 
the evil. 

We have thus, at the beginning of the epoch, a rest- 
less and disturbed state of society, caused by mysterious 
economic causes which no one understood, but which 
drove wedges into the old social structure, bereaving it 
of all power of cohesion. 

It was into this mass of seething social discontent that 
the spark of religious protest foil the one thing wanted 
to fire the train and kindle the social conflagration. 

With all those aides o tho Reformation epoch we 
have to do only casually. They arc tho environment 
of tho religious movement of which we must speak 



THE PEASANTS' WAR 7 

when we take Luther as the central figure of the time. 
Still, we must remember that they are all there ; and 
we should greatly mistake the period to be studied 
if we thought that the religious protest was every- 
thing. All these various movements combine to make 
the period what it was ; and if the religious impulse 
gave life to the political agitation, moral depth to 
the intellectual and social impulses, and gave to the 
economic protests a character that is more mediaeval 
than modern, we must remember that these various 
currents lent their strength to the religious movement 
and gave it an impetus and an importance which it 
would not otherwise have had. The Peasants' War, 
as it is called, was the parting of the ways; up to 
1525 the Lutheran Reformation absorbed all the 
various streams of dissatisfaction ; after that the 
revolution and the Reformation pursue separate paths, 
and the revolution gathered round it the more radical 
elements of the religious revolt, which are summed up 
under the word AnaJbaptism a name which included 
a great variety of conflicting opinions. 

Luther had some real connection with all these sides 
of the great movement of his days. 

He had the fullest sympathy with the patriotic 
aspiration of Germany for the Germans it is the 
central thought in his Address to the Nobility of the 
German Nation ; but although disclaiming any place 
as a politician, he soon came to see that the times were 
not ripe for a national centralisation, and that central- 
isation under the rule of the great territorial mag- 
nates gave the only hope of the fulfilment of national 
aspirations. 

Ho never classed himself among the Humanists, but 



8 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

he had very great sympathy with many sides of the 
Humanist movement ; he made full use of the learned 
labours of Erasmus, and was recognised as a leader by 
most of the German Humanists ; but his absorbing aim 
was the reformation of the ecclesiastical and religious 
life, and that to an extent deprecated by some of the 
more distinguished Humanist leaders. 

No man was a more distinguished exponent of the 
rights of the individual human soul ; he stood at Worms 
another " Athanasius contra mundum"; but this inalien- 
able right was for him the incapacity to believe incredi- 
bilities, to adopt solemn shams, or to live under the 
rule of religious falsehoods. 

He was a peasant's son, and voiced over and over 
again the wrongs of the class from which he had 
sprung ; but he was " modern " enough to see that there 
are two ways by which wrongs can be set right the 
way of war and the way of peace and that the way 
of peace is the only sure path in the long-run. He 
held by this firmly, and risked his life among the 
infuriated peasants as readily as when he stood before 
the Emperor and the Diet at Worms. 

He was a religious reformer first and foremost, and 
was content to be that and nothing else, and yet his 
large spiritual personality shared in all the movements 
and aspirations of his time. Hence it is that among 
his contemporaries men of such different circles of 
thought as the Elector Frederic and Franz von Sickin- 
gen, Ulric von llutten and Philip Melanchtlion, liana 
Sachs and Ecuchlin, Albert Durer arid Lucas Cranach, 
believed him to bo the greatest man in Germany, and 
that wo, living so many centuries later, may litly take 
him as the representative man of his epoch. 



CHAPTEE I 

LUTHER'S CHILDHOOD AND EDUCATION 
1. BIRTH PARENTS 

THE little town of Eisleben, with its narrow streets 
and high-roofed, red-tiled houses, climbs slowly up the 
side of one of the great billowy plains which are the 
feature of this centre of the German Fatherland. All 
round it lie signs of the copper and silver mines tall 
chimneys, heaps of refuse, and great holes and rifts in 
the sides of the slopes. The miners throng the town, 
a short, sturdy race, with curious rolling gait. At one 
end of a narrow street, " at a meeting of three streets, 
with a little bit of garden beside it, as became the place 
they say it was an inn stands the house where 
Luther was born. Over the door is a head of him in 
stone, with 

c Christi Wort ist Luther's Lehr, 
Drum vergeht sie nimmermehr ' 

(* Christ's own word is Luther's lore, 
So it lives for evermore') 

carved round it. You enter the first room to the left, 
and stand where he was born. It is a largish room 
day and night room it was, one would think, in the inn- 
time. You can fancy the quiet thankful mother, with 



10 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

the grave face, high cheekbones, and full mouth, lying 
there and listening, as she told Melanchthon she did, 
while the clock strikes twelve, when all was over, and 
laying the very hour up, with many other things about 
this babe, in her heart with faith and prayer. You can 
fancy the firmly-set undersized man, with the piercing 
eyes and fine, decided lips, sitting by the fire, vowing 
that if head can plan and hands can labour, this lad 
of his shall be spared the grinding toil he has known, 
shall enjoy the splendid advantages he has missed, shall 
be a great man and a scholar. Next morning you sco 
Frau Wirthin and him going up the narrow 'Gasse' 
to St. Peter's, much enjoined and directed by the 
anxious Margarethe, carrying the little stranger to 
get his name and blessing from the saint of the day, 
Martinus." 1 

Hans and Margarethe Luther had come from Mohra 
(Muirtown), a little peasant township lying in the north- 
west corner of the Thuringen Wald, and a few miles 
to the south of Eisenach. 

This was the original home of the Luther family; 
old records tell us that a very large number of the 
inhabitants bore that name; there arc still several 
families of Luthers in the village, and the distinctive 
Luther features arc still observable. Luther himself 
now stands in bronze in the village square, near the 
ancient well, opening the Bible to his fellow-villagers. 
On the front is carved "Unsorm Luther in seinem 
Stammort" The old traditional family house stands 
opposite, doubtless much patched during the centuries, 
but with the old walls greeu with roae-bushoH and other 
climbing plants, 

1 Letters from tlw Mnd of LutJwr, by .Robert Ikrbour, 



PARENTAGE OF THE REFORMER n 

It was the custom In these old days among the 
Thuringian peasants that only one son, and that gener- 
ally the youngest, remained to inherit the family house 
and croft. The others went out into the world fur- 
nished with something from the family saving-box. 
The mining industry, away northwards in the Mansf eld 
region, attracted these Mohra peasants, and Hans and 
Margarethe Luther only followed a common custom 
when they left the old village and sought a new abid- 
ing place for the family that was to come among the 
mines of Eisleben and Mansf eld. This was why the' 
mother-pangs came on Margarethe Luther on that 
bleak 10th of November in 1483, so far away from 
kith and kin. 

Six months after the birth of his eldest son, Hans 
Luther settled in the village of Mansf eld, a miner and 
then a smelter of copper ore. The Counts of Mansf eld, 
who owned all the region, and who had many years 
before started the mining industry, had the habit of 
building small furnaces for smelting the ore, and of 
letting them out on lease to miners who desired to 
better their condition, and who were trustworthy per- 
sons. Hans Luther soon leased one and then three 
of these furnaces. He early won the respect of his 
neighbours, for he became in 1491 one of the four 
members of the village council. 

The family life, however, in the earlier years was 
one of grinding poverty, and Luther himself often recalls 
the struggles of father and mother. Of his mother he 
says that he has often seen her carrying the wood for 
the family fire, gathered in the pine forest, on her own 
shoulders. It was a hard struggle to find food and 
clothing for the seven children, to provide for the edu- 



12 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

cation of the eldest, to pay the yearly rent of the fur- 
nace, to lay by in the family strong-box the money to 
be afterwards spent on the "plenishing" when the 
young burghers, Kaufmana, Polner, and Mackenrod 
carried off the three daughters to new homes, 

Luther's home-life should be lingered over, for it was 
the making of him, and the ideal he had before him in 
his famous days had its birth in the family house at 
Mansfeld. The old home can still be seen, with its 
double square windows, its solid substantial walls, and, 
inside, its window seats, where Mother Margarethe could 
watch her seven young ones going to school or playing 
in the street, 

Father and mother were both spare, short, and dark- 
complexioned (brawrilicht), says the Swiss Kessler ; the 
father of good plain peasant stock. " I am a peasant's 
son," said Luther ; " my father, grandfather, and groat- 
grandfather were all genuine peasants." The mother, 
Margarethe Ziegler, came of the bargher class, for Hans 
Luther had married above his rank. Luther always 
mentions his father with great reverence; he recalls 
how he had pinched himself in his poverty to give him 
an education ; how he owed all to him, both birth and 
upbringing. The old man used to thank God that Ho 
had made him tough in body and in soul ; a man of 
clear understanding, and not afraid to contradict, two 
qualities which the Augustinian monks observed in the 
son when they sent him up to Rome on the business of 
the Order, mostly silent, but with a gift of pregnant, 
pithy expression, a gift which the son inherited. He 
was a man of quiet, deep piety, but one who thought 
that God coxikl be best served in the common citm k n j a 
life, and who heartily despised monks, men < full of cant 



CHILDHOOD AND EARLY YEARS 13 

and hypocrisy/' lie said. He had a strong sense of 
parental rights, and was a hard disciplinarian. 

Luther was specially his mother's child. Spalatinhas 
recorded that when he saw her first he was struck with 
the strong likeness of son to mother in face and build 
of body. He got from her, besides his mysticism, those 
strange streaks of superstition which characterised him, 
the vein of poetry which ran through him, his wit, his 
love of hymns and of proverbial sayings. Melanch- 
thon was devoted to the mother, and we can fancy the 
two talking about the famous son when the friend, in 
quest of biographical notes, spent some days in the old 
family house at Mansf eld. She could tell him the day 
on which Martin was born, and the hour, for she 
remembered lying in bed and counting the minutes till 
the clock struck twelve, but she could not be sure of 
the year, and the biographer had to content himself 
with brother James' statement that the family had 
always believed that Martin was born in 1483. Mel- 
anchthon calls her a model of all womanly worth, and 
says that she was noted for chastity, reverence for God, 
and prayer. The parents taught their children the 
Ten Commandments, the Creed, and the Lord's Prayer 
the teaching which Luther afterwards made possible 
for all German children by his Catechism. They taught 
them that pardon comes from the free grace of God. 
The truth which Luther afterwards preached to all men 
he learned in the home circle at Mansfeld, adding 
nothing essential. This evangelical faith and teaching 
was sot and quite naturally it seemed then in the 
framework of the usages of the mediaeval Church. St. 
George was the patron saint of the Mansfeld miners, 
and St. Anna was their beloved protectress. Her name 



14 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

was on the church bells, and every pull at the ropes in 
the belfry was an invocation. 

It is in such families we are to see the roots of the 
great Reformation which was on the eve of coming. 
The spiritual forebears of the Reformation leaders are 
not to be sought in dubious Waldenses or in still more 
questionable Albigenses, but in pious Christians like 
Hans and Margarethe Luther, who taught the boy 
within the family circle the evangelical truths he was 
afterwards to thunder forth from the Wittenburg pulpit. 
For if we look into the matter, the Reformation did not 
bring to light many truths which were absolutely 
unknown in the mediaeval Church* The spiritual life 
of the mediaeval Christian was fed on the same divine 
thoughts which are the basis of the Reformation theo- 
logy. They can scarcely be found, however, in the 
volumes of mediseval theologians. They are embedded 
in the hymns and in the prayers of the Church of the 
Middle Ages, sometimes in the sermons of her great 
revivalist preachers, always in the quiet parental 
instruction in pious homes. These truths are all 
there, as poetic thoughts, earnest supplication and 
confession, fervent exhortation, or motherly teaching. 
When the mediaeval Christian knelt in prayer, stood 
to sing his Redeemer's praises, spoke as a dying 
man to dying men, or as a mother to the children 
about her knees, the words and thoughts that came 
were what Luther and Zwingli and Calvin wove into 
Reformation creeds and expanded in Reformation ser- 
mons. This Reformation which Luther led was the 
outcome of tho old family piety which had flowered 
during all the previous centuries, heedless of tho fact 
that it had much in it which had little in common with 



THE GERMAN PEASANTRY 15 

the ecclesiastical system and professional theology 
which it accepted without question. The Mansfeld 
home made Luther what he became, its teaching was 
the seed of his theology ; and from the thousands of 
homes like his the great Reformation sprang. 

2. PEASANT LIFE 

Luther came from the peasants of Germany. The 
German peasant life in the end of the fifteenth and 
beginning of the sixteenth centuries surrounded Luther 
in his childhood. Few have cared to study it. Yet from 
rescued collections of laws governing the peasant com- 
munes (the Weisthumer), from stray folk-songs and 
Fassnachtspiele, from a few references in chroniclers, 
and from the old engravings of the time, we can, in 
part at least, reconstruct the old peasant life and its 
surroundings. Only it must be remembered that the 
life differed, not only in different parts of Germany, but 
in the same districts and decades under different pro- 
prietors ; for the German peasant was so dependent on 
his over-lord that the character of the proprietor counted 
for much in the condition of the people. 

The larger hamlets were usually surrounded by a 
stout fence, made with strong stakes and interlaced 
branches, and having gates; and within this stood, 
almost always among the houses, a small church, a 
public-house, a house or a room where the village 
council met and where justice was dispensed, and near 
it always the " stocks/' and sometimes a gallows. The 
houses were wooden frames, filled in with sun-dried 
bricks; cattle, fodder, and the family were sheltered 
under the one large roof. The timber for building and 



1 6 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

repairs was got from the forest under regulations set 
down in the Weisthumer, and the peasants had leave 
to collect the fallen branches for firewood, the women 
collecting and carrying and the men cutting and stack- 
ing under the eaves. All breaches of the forest laws were 

o 

severely punished ; so were the moving of landmarks 
for wood and soil were precious. Most houses had 
small gardens, in which grew cabbages, lettuces, parsley 
and peas, poppies and hemp, apples, cherries and plums, 
as well as other things whose medieval German names 
are not translatable by me. 

There might have been a rude plenty in their lives 
had it not been for the endless exactions of many of their 
lords and the continual robberies to which they were 
exposed from bands of sturdy rogues which swarmed 
through the country, and from companies of soldiers who 
thought nothing of carrying off the peasant's cows, slay- 
ing his swine, and even firing his house. They had their 
diversions, none too seemly. They clung to the festi- 
vals of the Church as holidays, which they spent eating 
and drinking at the public-house, and dancing in front 
of it. Hans Sachs makes us see the scene. The girls 
and the pipers waiting at the dancing-place, and the 
men and lads in the public-house, eating calf's head, 
tripe, liver, black puddings and roast pork, and drinking 
sour milk and the country wine, till some sank under 
the benches, and there was such a jostling, scratching, 
shoving, bawling, and singing that not a word could bo 
heard, Then three young men came to the dancing- 
place ; his sweetheart had a garland ready for one of 
them, and the dancing began ; other couples joined, and 
at last sixteen pairs of feet were in motion. Hough 
jests, gestures, and caresses went round. The men 



THE GERMAN PEASANTRY 17 

whirled their partners off their feet, and spun them 
round and round, or seized them Iby the waist, and 
tossed them as high as they could ; while they them- 
selves leapt and threw out their feet, till Hans Sachs 
thought they would all fall down. The scenes were 
even coarser at the night-dances, which often followed 
the labours and jokes of the spinning house. For it 
was the custom in most German villages that the young 
women resorted to a large room in the mill or in the 
village public-house, and brought their wool, their 
distaffs and spindles, some of them old heirlooms and 
richly ornamented, to spin all evening. The lads came 
too, for the ostensible purpose of picking the fluff off 
the lasses' clothes, or holding the small beaker of water 
into which they dipped their fingers as they span. On 
festival evenings, and especially at carnival time, the 
lads treated their sweethearts to a late supper and 
dance, and went home with them, carrying their dis- 
taffs and spindles. All the old German love folk-songs 
are full of allusions to this peasant courtship. 

Such were the toilsome, lewd, grimy surroundings of 
that peasant life out of which Luther came ; and they 
must be taken into account when we read of the harsh 
training and severe family life of which Luther and 
some other reformers who came from the peasant class 
had painful recollections. Pious parents of this class 
and there must have been thousands of them felt that 
they could scarcely be too severe in order to keep their 
children unstained by the evil life abounding all round 
them. The more deeply one studies the social life of 
the times, and especially of that stratum of the people 
whence Luther sprang, the more one can see how very 
much Luther owed to the wise severity of his parents. 



i g LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

It must be remembered also that those peasant people 
were grossly superstitious, and that many of their most 
reprehensible social usages were the inheritance of the 
old pagan times, many a trace of which remained un- 
effaced by the teachings of the mediaeval Church. The 
peasants came to the little village churches on the fore- 
noons of the Sundays and festival days, but their every- 
day worship consisted of small offerings to kobolds and 
sprites of all kinds each variety excelling the others 
in the power of working mischief on poultry, swine, 
cattle, crops, and the bodies of men and women, and 
therefore needing to be propitiated. For the position 
of the Christian Church in mediaeval Germany was, as 
some one has said, not unlike that of settlers in a virgin 
country. Little clearances had been made and home- 
steads built, but the great, dark, unsubdued forest, full 
of ferocious beasts and creeping things, remained en- 
closing and threatening, 

3. EDUCATION SCHOOLS UNIVERSITY 

Young Martin Luther was sent to school at Mansf old ; 
for Mansfeld, small mining town as it was, had its school. 
Germany in the fifteenth and the beginning of the six- 
teenth centuries was well provided with schools of a kind* 
Most of the small parish priests belonged to the peasant 
class, and the singi i ig in the service in the parish churches 
had to be done by the village boys ; and as the services 
were in Latin, education was needed for priests and 
choristers. Everywhere over Europe the " song-schools 1 ' 
for the boys o the parish choir had become schools for 
the children of the village or small town. 

The education given was not very good, and the 



ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS 19 

method of imparting it still worse. The children were 
taught to read and to write and to do a little ciphering ; 
and they were also drilled in the Latin declensions and 
conjugations. From the old engravings of Burgmaier 
and others we can see what the schools were like. A 
small bare room, with a large box-like desk, in which 
the master sat, with birch in one hand and the other 
upon a book; the children sitting below him on the 
floor, and holding out their hands when they thought 
that they could answer his questions. Books were 
scarce ; the master himself well furnished if he had an 
old copy of Donatus' Grammar and a Terence, or a bit 
of Cicero ; the younger scholars had small blackboards 
on which they learned to make letters and sentences ; 
the older ones carried an inkhorn, a long case for pens, 
and a satchel. The schoolmasters were a poor set of 
creatures, and their scholars experienced more of the 
pains than of the pleasures of learning. Luther said 
that his master treated the boys as the public execu- 
tioner did thieves ; he himself was flogged fifteen times 
one morning because he could not repeat declensions 
which he had never been taught. John Butzbach says 
that his schoolmaster was continually flogging the boys, 
and that when one was being scourged the others had 
to stand round and sing a hymn. 

The country schools did not satisfy the craving for edu- 
cation which displayed itself all over Europe in those 
days. It laid hold on the burgher class especially ; and 
the townspeople of many a German city founded superior 
high schools, and paid scholars out of the city revenues 
to be teachers and rectors. Many of the German towns 
entered into a generous rivalry in the matter of edu- 
cation, and had several high schools. Breslau, that 



20 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

" paradise of students" as it was called, had no less 
than seven. Such towns attracted students from great 
distances, and the town's authorities built student 
hostels, where the strangers found shelter and some- 
times firing, but seldom food. The townspeople in 
many cases added a students' hospital for those who 
fell sick. All these possibilities of learning attracted 
great numbers of boys and young men from all parts 
of Germany and Switzerland, and added a new class to 
the vagrants who thronged the roads of Germany 
during the later Middle Ages. The wandering student 
was a feature and not always a reputable one during 
the epoch. Children of ten and eleven years of ago 
left their country villages in charge of an older student, 
and set off to join some famous high school; but these 
older students were often nothing but vagrants, with 
just enough of learning to impose on the simple peas- 
antry, from whom they took gifts for charms against 
toothache or other troubles, or bogged or stole. Tho 
small unfortunates entrusted to their charge were 
treated in the cruellest fashion, and often died by the 
roadside. We have two or three autobiographies 
written by " wandering students," of which the most 
interesting is that of Thomas Platter, from which 
Frcy tag has made long extracts ; another is by Johann 
Butzbach ; both cover the period of Luther's student 
time. 

Thomas Platter was born in the Valais in Switzer- 
land, lie wished to go to school and college in order to 
become a priest. When ho was in doubt what to do, a 
cousin o his, who had been at Him and Munich, returned 
to spend a few days in his native valley, and offered to 
take charge of Platter. The child had not gone far 



"WANDERING STUDENTS" 21 

when he discovered that cousin Paulus was a merciless 
tyrant, who had got possession of the boy to make him 
"beg for him on the road and in the towns. He treated 
him very cruelly. When the poor boy could not keep 
up with the older lads for the two were soon joined 
"by other 'bacchantes with their soutanes (for so the 
older and the younger scholars were called) "my 
cousin Paulus came behind me with a rod, or little 
stick, and switched me on my bare legs, for I had no 
stockings and very bad shoes.' 1 Platter wandered over 
a great part of Germany with this ruffian, and could 
not escape from his clutches, although he tried hard 
to get away more than once. He was a small boy, with 
a fair, pitiful face, and made a capital beggar, bringing 
in more food than the others did, and was thus a valu- 
able property. The elders made the small boys steal 
fowls and all kinds of vegetables. They did not care 
to carry cooking utensils with them on their journeys, 
and stole an iron pot for their evening meal. When 
they camped, the older students generally sought out 
some quiet spot near a small stream ; the big fellows 
lopped off branches, made a hut, and kindled a fire. 
The fowls brought in by the youngsters were plucked, 
and their legs, heads, and giblets were thrown into the 
pot with shred vegetables, and the flesh was roasted on 
wooden spits. They supped the stew with the spoons 
they carried in their belts, and they ate the roast when 
it became brown, along with sliced turnips. Platter 
spent a long time in Breslau ; but his tyrant did not 
allow him to study much, if at all. He tells us that 
Breslau was divided into seven parishes, each with its 
high school, and that each scholar could beg only within 
the parish of the school to which he belonged; if an 



22 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

unfortunate youth got beyond the bounds of his school 
parish, he found himself among enemies, who, crying 
" ad idem, ad idem," rushed at him, flinging stones and 
beating him. He spent most of the morning in begging 
for food, and the people were very kind to him, he says, 
" because he was so small and was a Swiss ; for the Bres- 
lauers were very fond of the Swiss"; and he often 
brought to his bacchant enough for six meals. In the 
evenings he went round the public-houses and begged 
and sang for beer, and they gave him so much that the 
poor boy was often the worse for it He fell ill at 
Breslau, and was taken to the students' hospital, where 
he had a good doctor, and was well nursed in a good 
bed, but the vermin were so many and so large that he 
wished he were out of it 

The wandering student occurs frequently in the 
Fastnachtspiele, or popular comedies of the carnival 
time, and he is always a beggar, and generally a rogue, 
It is not to be wondered at that Luther, with his 
memory full of those wandering students, denounced 
the system in which men spent twenty, even forty, 
years in student life, and in the end knew neither 
Latin nor German, "to say nothing of the shameful 
and vicious life by which our worthy youth have been 
so miserably corrupted." 

Luther's parents looked after him too well to allow 
him to go off with one of the wandering bacchants ; but 
as they were not fortunate enough to live in a town 
which possessed a high school, they selected Magdeburg, 
perhaps because it contained an institution founded by 
the disciples of Gerard (3 root, the great Flemish educa- 
tionalist, in whose schools so many of the great men of 
the fifteenth century were trained. We know little or 



AT SCHOOL AT MAGDEBURG 23 

nothing about his life there. He fell ill of fever, and was 
at death's door. He saw two things which made his 
whole religious sensibilities tingle, and which he never 
forgot one, a prince of Anhalt, who for his soul's 
safety had become a barefooted friar, carried the 
begging sack on his bent shoulders through the town, 
and was worn to skin and bones by his fastings, scourg- 
ings, and prayers; and the other, an altar-piece in a 
church, the picture of a ship, " wherein was no layman, 
not even a king nor a prince ; there were none but the 
pope, with his cardinals and bishops, at the prow, with 
the Holy Ghost hovering over them, the priests and the 
monks with their oars by the sides; and thus they 
went sailing heavenward. The laymen were swimming 
along in the water around the ship. Some of them 
were drowning, some were drawing themselves up to 
the ship by ropes which the monks, moved by pity and 
making over their own good works, cast out to them, 
to keep them from drowning, and to enable them to 
cleave to the vessel and go with it to heaven. There 
was no cardinal nor bishop nor monk nor piiest in the 
water, but laymen only." Those two visions sank 
deeply into his heart. That is about all we know of 
Luther at Magdeburg. 

The following year the boy was sent to Eisenach to 
the high school in the parish of St. George. His fever 
at Magdeburg had doubtless alarmed the mother, and 
as she had relations in Eisenach, which lay near the 
Luther home of Mohra, she thought her delicate lad 
would be better looked after. We do not hear that 
Luther lived with any of these relations. He probably 
got a share of a room at the scholars' hostel, and, 
like other poor students, he sang in the streets, begging 



24 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

for bread. Luther tells us about it in his " Sermon OD 
the Duty of Sending Children to School." " Do not/' 
he says, " despise the boys who beg from door to door, 
saying, < A little bread for the love of God ' ; and when 
groups of poor people sing before your house, think 
that ye hear great princes and lords. I myself have 
been such a beggar pupil, and have sung for bread 
before houses, especially in the dear town of Eisenach, 
though afterwards my beloved father supported me at 
the University of Erfurt, with all love and self-sacri- 
fice, and by the sweat of his brow helped me to the 
position which I now occupy. Still for a time I was 
a ' poverty student/ and I have risen by the pen to a 
position which I would not exchange for that of the 
Sultan of Turkey, taking his wealth and giving up my 
learning." 

The little town of Eisenach lies in a valley, sur- 
rounded then, as now, with rich woods, and above the 
closely packed peaked-roofed houses rises the hill, 
crowned by the Wartburg, where St. Elizabeth of 
Hungary, the holy Landgravine of Thuringen, spent the 
happier part of her life, and where Luther, three hun- 
dred years afterwards, was to be sent for safety. The 
boys of the high school, the small Luther among them, 
sang in the choir of St. George's Church, and a great 
part of the interior remains still as it was in his days. 
It was in Eisenach that, according to MathesiuB, the 
poor boy, bogging and singing, attracted the attention 
of a lady of gentle birth, and that she and her husband 
took him into their IIOUHO, and made him one of the 
family. Historians make out that she wan Frau Gotta, 
and belonged to a noble burgher family. Luther never 
names her ; but he refers often to hiB dear wirfMn m 



AT EISENACH 25 

Eisenach, and he more than once quotes sayings of hers. 
Once, in his Cowwnenta/ry on the Boole of Proverbs, 
xxx. 10, he quotes her, saying, " There is nothing on 
earth more lovely than the love of husband and wife 
when it is in the fear of the Lord." The entrance into 
this family must have opened a new world to Luther. 
It was a richer life than was possible in his hard 
peasant home, and full of fine human feelings. It was 
probably the best part of his education in Eisenach. 
Yet the master of the St. George's high school was a 
distinguished man. He was that Trebonius who never 
entered his classroom without bowing to his pupils, 
unkempt lads as most of them must have been, because 
he used to say, "Future burgomasters, chancellors, 
doctors, and magistrates are among those boys." 

We have some few indications of the lad's quiet, 
pious tendencies while at Eisenach. The whole reli- 
gious feeling of the town was under the spell of the 
holy Elizabeth ; the place contained no less than nine 
monasteries and nunneries, many of them dating back 
to the times of the pious Landgravine, and some of 
them devoted to that practical charity which was her 
ruling characteristic. 

Who knows what thoughts went through the mind 
of the "boy as he gazed on the picture, over the altar in 
St. George's Church, of the holy Landgravine who 
had given up family life and children to earn a medi- 
aeval saintship, and saw the setting sun blazon her 
good deeds painted on the glass windows ? Was it not 
enough to lead him, with his poetic imagination and 
his brooding mysticism and melancholy, away from the 
hard homely piety of his peasant parents, and from the 
more cultured family religion of his new friends iu 



26 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Eisenach, to that convent life for which Elizabeth had, 
three hundred years before, given up so much? We 
can fancy him, with that reverence for noble woman- 
hood which has always lain deep in the heart of the 
best type of German boy and man, seeing in the holy 
Elizabeth a glorified Mother Luther and Frau Gotta. 
But if such thoughts came, they were only precious 
secrets, not to be revealed to anyone ; and, so far as his 
outside life was concerned, he was still the obedient 
son, advancing in school and college towards the trained 
lawyer which his father destined him to become. 

When school-days were over, Luther was sent by his 
father to the University of Erfurt. A measure of pro- 
sperity was crowning the hard labours of Hans and 
Margarethe Luther, and they could now pay for their 
boy's support when he was away from home. Luther 
quitted the ranks of the " poor students," and was able 
to give his whole time to his studies. 

The old tile-roofed town has not altered much since 
Luther came to it in the summer of 1501, and entered 
his name in the university album in letters which can 
still be read, "Martinus Ludher ex Mansfelt"; the 
Gera still crosses and recrosses the streets, and goes 
round the old fortifications ; and there is still the care- 
ful cultivation which won the old name, " The Kitchen 
Garden Town." 

Tho university was one of the oldest in Germany, 
and, when Luther entered it, the most renowned. " He 
who would study well must go to Erfurt," \vaa a com- 
mon saying. The great man of the place was Johan 
Trudwettex", the " Erfurt Doctor," whoso fame and 
genius, all good Germans thought, had made Erfurt as 
well known as Paris. The teaching and course of study 



ERFURT STUDIES 27 

was thoroughly mediaeval, but on what was esteemed to 
be the advanced side of mediaeval thought. The faculty 
of philosophy prepared the way for the study of law 
and theology ; it began with logic, and went through 
dialectic, rhetoric, and music, to physics, astronomy, 
etc. The commentators followed belonged to the 
Nominalist School, and Luther learned there to call 
William of Occam his " dear master." Humanism had 
found entrance before Luther matriculated, and lectures 
on the purely classical authors had become part of the 
faculty of philosophy. The new Humanism did not 
attack the older course of study, openly at least, at 
Erfurt. The young Humanists affected to be poets, 
wrote Latin verses sometimes in praise of their 
older colleagues, and were content to veil their 
eclectic theosophy from their gaze. Their leaders, 
Mutianus and Crotus, delighted to reveal to a 
band of admiring, half-terrified juveniles that there 
was but one God and one Goddess, taking the various 
names Jupiter, Mars, Jesus, and Juno, Diana, Mary; 
but those things were not supposed to go further than 
the walls of the room. In short, the Humanists affected 
to make a select and secret society, writing Latin 
verses to each other, and corresponding after the manner 
of the ancients. Spalatin, afterwards court preacher 
to the Elector of Saxony, and one of Luther's warmest 
friends, belonged to this select circle. 

As for Luther himself, we have no very clear account 
of what he did and how he fared in the university 
town. We have to piece together a picture of his 
student-life from references in correspondence, recol- 
lections of his fellow-students, and scattered sayings 
of his gwn in after-life. They all reveal a self -c 



28 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

tained young man, resolved to profit to the uttermost 
by the advantages of the place for acquiring know- 
ledge, and so to justify the self-sacrifices of his parents. 
He worked hard at the prescribed studies, and though 
he did not care much for the mediaeval course, he was 
quick to see what was its real use. " Dialectic speaks 
simply, straightforward, and plainly, as when I say, 
' Give me something to drink' But rhetoric adorns the 
matter, saying, ' Give me of the acceptable juice in the 
cellar, which finely froths and makes people merry/ 
Dialectic declares a thing distinctly and significantly in 
brief words. Rhetoric counsels and advises, persuades 
and dissuades; she has her place and fountainhead, 
whence a thing is taken ; as this is good, honest, profit- 
able, easy, necessary, etc. These two arts St. Paul 
briefly taught when he says, ' That he may be able by 
sound doctrine, both to exhort and to convince gain- 
sayers.' " He took much more delight in the classical 
studies, but not in the genuine Humanist fashion. He 
cared much more for the thoughts than the language, 
and delighted in the glimpses of the now world which 
the classical writers revealed to him. But when ho 
found that those studies were drawing him away from 
his prescribed tasks, he had sufficient mastery over 
his desires to curb his classical tastes. He had a very 
modest estimate of his powers as a Latinisfc. He called 
himself a "peasant Corydon," and thought that his 
speech was too rough for him to excel as a fine writer ; 
and it is almost amusing to note how careful ho ia to 
try, not always successfully, to write a finer latinity 
than usual when he corresponds with his Humanist 
friends. Upon the whole, one gets the icloa of a very 
levol-lieaded man, with a strong souse of the practical 



INNER LIFE AT ERFURT 29 

side of his studies, respected by his professors, and 
refusing to be carried away into any excess of Human- 
ism on the one hand, or of sensuality on the other. 
He did not look back with any great delight to his 
student-days at Erfurt; perhaps he thought that he 
had been forced to spend too much time on useless 
studies; perhaps he was undergoing, almost uncon- 
sciously, the inward struggles which were soon to 
become only too apparent to himself. 

The singular thing is, that we know very little about 
the inner religious life of Luther during those student- 
years. No great man has ever made himself so well 
known as Luther afterwards did. His correspondence, 
his sermons, his commentaries, and all his books reveal 
the man himself, and are full of little autobiographical 
details; but all that comes after the great conflict 
had been fought and won. His inner life during his 
student-days is a sealed book for us. There was unrest, 
there was an inward war there must have been ; but 
it is revealed in one or two exclamations only, and we 
can scarcely be sure that those discover it. It would 
almost appear that during the later years of his stay 
at the university, Luther was leading a double life. In 
the one he was the bright, hard-working, practical 
student, taking his various degrees in an unexpectedly 
short time his bachelor's degree in October 1502 and 
his master's in 1505, when he stood second among the 
seventeen successful candidates. Melanchthon tells 
us that his conspicuous ability had become the wonder 
of the whole university. The other life was that in- 
ward hidden struggle which he seems to have been only 
half -conscious of, and to which he can scarcely be said 
to have referred in after-life. 



30 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

He had finished, with almost unique distinction, 
his Arts course, and was about to begin the study of 
law, when he suddenly plunged into the Erfurt Convent. 
So sudden and unexpected was the plunge that his 
friends felt bound to account for it somehow ; and their 
interjectional explanations have been woven into later 
legends. There seems to be little doubt that he had a 
severe illness at the close of the philosophy course ; and 
this, it is said, brought him to the decision. An old 
tradition, which there is no reason to disbelieve, states 
that on July 2, 1505, fourteen days before he entered the 
convent, he was returning from a visit to his parents, 
and had already reached the village of Stotterheim, close 
to Erfurt, when he suddenly found himself in a great 
thunderstorm, and that in fear he cried out, " Help me, 
St. Anna, and I will become a monk " ; and this, it is 
said, was the crisis. His friend Crotus has declared that 
he believed that Luther was as suddenly called to enter 
the convent as Saul was called on the Damascxia road. 
There is also the statement he made to his father, that 
he was called by a voice from heaven ; the assertion of 
Mathesius and Melanchthon that he had suddenly lost 
by death a clear friend ; and the fact that he entered 
the convent on St. Alexius day. A later tradition has 
woven all these separate things into the well-known 
story of the journey with Alexius, the thunderstorm, 
Alexius struck dead by lightning, the voico which 
sounded in Luther's ears, " What shall it profit a man 
if ho gain the whole world and lose his own soul?" 
Btit this is later tradition. We have no certain account 
of the conflict of 8<>ul which ended in the au<Ulon resolve 
(Luther himself tells us that it was sudden) to save his 
soul within the quiet of the cloister walla. 



CHAPTEE II 

THE YEARS OF PREPARATION 1 

1. IN THE CONVENT 

LUTHER had entered the convent. He had floated 
down the stream of school-day and student life, feel- 
ing, almost imperceptibly, eddies and currents, and now 
they had swept him to the sea, and there was no jump- 
ing ashore. He had gone to the convent of the Augus- 
tinian monks. The prior had put the usual question, 
" What seekest thou, my son ? " and Luther had made 
the well-known answer, " I seek the mercy of God and 
your fellowship." He had been received ; he had donned 
the novice's garb ; and for one whole year a year to 
be spent in learning what lay before him as a monk 
he was invisible to the world beyond the convent gate. 
The grief in the old home at Mansf eld can scarcely be 
described. Was it for this that Margarethe had borne 
the mother-pangs so far away from all kith and kin, 
and had bent her poor back to gather and carry sticks 
for the cottage fire ? Was it for this that the father 
had pinched and saved, and denied himself and his all 
manner of small comforts, that his boy should become 
a great lawyer and be the making of them all ? To 
become a monk, to add one to the overflowing crowd of 



32 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

"rogues and hypocrites," as the sturdy old peasant 
called them ? 

Meanwhile the young novice was learning how to 
become a monk. He was to live under rules and usages 
which regulated every hour of his life rules which ex- 
hausted the whole religious life in certain definite and 
prescribed forms. He had to spend so many hours of 
the day and the night in hearing the chanting of the 
services, in prayers recited standing, in hearing masses 
said, in fasting, He had to learn the minutiae of all 
these services how he was to stand or sit or kneel, 
how he was to move his feet and his hands and his head 
in the different parts of the service. When he had 
been thus drilled for a year he was supposed to be lit 
for reception into the Order. The day came at last. 
The church of the Augustinians was crowded with 
townspeople and students from the university. After 
the usual services th novice Martin, kneeling down 
before the prior, Wienand of Diedenhofen, made the 
irrevocable vow: "I, Brother Martin, do make profes- 
sion and promise obedience unto Almighty God, unto 
Mary the Virgin, and unto thce, my brother, Prior of 
this cloister, in the name and stead of the General Prior 
of the Eremites of St. Augustine, tho Bishop, and his 
regular successors, to live in poverty and chastity 
tinder the rule of the said St. Augustine until death.'* 
He was robed in the black frock and hood of his Order, 
the long white scapulary or scarf was thrown over 
him, and hung down before and behind, a lighted taper 
was placed in his hands, to signify the newly-enlight- 
ened conscience; the prior whispered the prayer over him 
kneeling, the choir Hang tho "Veni Creator Spiritua"; 
he was led up tho altar stops, the monks welcomed him 



IN THE CONVENT 33 

witli the kiss of peace, and in their midst he slowly 
marched behind the screen no longer a man in the 
world, but a monk in the cloister. Many an old stu- 
dent friend, and some of his former professors, watched 
the black-robed figure slowly disappear behind the 
convent door, and went home to curse the monks who 
had robbed the university of its most distinguished 
student, and the world of one who was expected to play 
a great part in it. 

What made him do it ? What made so many noble 
men and women, all down the stream of medieval his- 
tory, think that it was not possible to serve God to the 
uttermost except inside the walls of a convent, unless 
they abandoned family, friends, and life for others and 
among others in the world which Christ came to save ? 

To answer this question involves the history of the 
practical piety of the pre-mediseval and mediaeval 
Church, the history of the old penitential services, the 
history and growth of asceticism, and many kindred sub- 
jects. The more one studies the whole subject, the more 
the conviction comes that there was scarcely one single 
act in the long interwoven series but had in its due 
time and place some salutary use, and which was not 
the genuine outcome of an honest human soul striving 
to humble itself before God in an agony of genuine 
sense of sin. The evil came when spontaneous acts of 
repentance and honest endeavour after new obedience 
became stereotyped customs, then prescribed regula- 
tions, and lost all the bloom of fresh and spontaneous 
action. But however the delusion arose, that the best 
way to serve God was to abandon home and family 
and the world for which Christ died, Luther had it. 
Two pictures had taken hold of his childish mind at 
3 



34 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Magdeburg the one was the sight of the young prince 
of Anhalt, who, to save his soul, had become a bare- 
footed friar, and the other the altar-piece in a church at 
Magdeburg (p. 23). Pictures like these might well efface 
the pious teaching of father and mother; and when 
intense conviction of sin came, and the consequent dis- 
satisfaction with his surroundings, we easily conceive 
how the young man surrendered himself to the thought 
that he had to get rid of everything to which he was 
accustomed ere he could be in a position to find the 
salvation he longed for. At all events he went into 
the convent in good faith, and for years, till he was 
in the midst of the controversy about Indulgences, he 
was thoroughly persuaded that he had done the only 
thing he could do, and was perfectly sure of his voca- 
tion to be a monk. He threw himself with ardour 
into the new conventual life ; he went through all the 
observances he had been taught with careful assiduity. 
He practised obedience, he fasted, he prayed, ho kept 
his body under with scourgings and want of sleep. 
He once at least spent three whole days without eat- 
ing or drinking ; he was onco missed from the services, 
and was found fainting on the floor of his cell. " If 
ever a monk could win heaven by monkery, I must 
have reached it," said Luther long afterwards. Yet ho 
felt no nearer God ; he had no sense of pardon, no feel- 
ing of the upspringing of a new spiritual life, 

The prior of the Augustinians, John Staupitz, was a 
wise and large-hearted man. lie had the root of evan- 
gelical faith in him, just as Luther's father and mother 
had. In after years ho sympathised with most of 
Luther's doctrines, and yet lie never left the Koman 
Catholic Church. Such a man was resolved to make 



BIBLE STUDY 35 

the best of the monastic life which he shared, and to 
do the best for the monks under his charge. He in- 
sisted that every monk who was fit for it should read 
theology, and every convent was provided with a Latin 
Bible, which the monks were instructed to study. 
Luther tells us how the monks showed him the great 
Bible, bound in red leather, and how the first thing he 
read was the story of Hannah and Samuel, and how it 
made him think of his mother and himself. He was 
set to study the scholastic theology; he tells us how 
he read and read till he could repeat from memory the 
great folios of William of Occam ; how he pored over 
the works of John Gerson and Bonaventura and Diony- 
sius. He spoke slightingly of these studies in after 
years. Yet he knew that the study did him good, 
though not in the way he most longed for. " I still * 
keep those books which tormented me," he said. 
"Scotus wrote very well on the Master of the Sen- 
tences, and diligently essayed to teach upon these mat- 
ters. Occam was an able and sensible man." Occam 
made him know the fallibility of popes, and Gerson 
showed him the ecclesiastical value of General Councils. 
The study of the Bible did not bring him much con- 
solation at first. In the mood of mind in which he 
was, the passages which spoke of the jealous and 
righteous God, the God who punishes sin, burned them- 
selves into him. The slightest unconscious deviation 
from the minutest conventual regulation of posture or 
position of hands or feet was a sin which tortured him. 
Staupitz told him almost roughly once to cease con- 
fessing till he had some real sin to confess. An aged 
monk asked him to recite the Creed, and made him stop 
when he came to the clause, " I believe in the forgive- 



36 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

ness of sin." " Do you believe that ? " he said. " Then 
put the word ' my * in ; say * I believe in the forgive- 
ness of my sins/ " Pardon comes in the appropriation 
of the promise. That comforted the storm-tossed soul, 
but only for a moment. Then came the thought : 
pardon follows contrition, confession, and penance ; 
how can I know that my contrition has gone deep 
enough ? How can I be sure that my confession has 
included every sinful thought, word, and deed ? Then 
followed again the old weary round of torturing self- 
examination. It was the thought of the "righteous- 
ness of God " which troubled him most, and seemed a 
very wall raised to prevent his approaching God. At 
last his spiritual advisers, and especially Staupitz, began 
to see more clearly what his real difficulties were, and 
tried to explain to him that the righteousness of God for 
everyone who trusts in Christ is on the sinner's side, 
and not against him. This sent Luther to tho Bible 
again with new hopes. He began tho study of the 
Epistle to tho Romans over again. But lot us toll the 
story in his own words : 

" I sought day and night to make out tho meaning 
o Paul ; and at last I catno to apprehend it thus : 
Through tho gospel is revealed tho righteousness which 
availeth with God a righteousness by which Qod, 
in His mercy and compassion, justifieth us; as it is 
written, 'Tho just shall livo by faith/ Straightway 1 
felt as if I wcro born anew. It wns as if I had found 
tho door of Paradise thrown wido open. Now I saw 
tho Scriptures altogether in a now light I run through 
their whole contents an far as my memory would servo, 
and compared them, and found that this righteousness 
was really that by which Qod makes us righteous, 



THE WAY OF PEACE 37 

because everything else in Scripture agreed thereunto 
so well. The expression, 'the righteousness of God/ 
which I so much hated before, now became dear and 
precious my darling and comforting word. That 
passage of Paul was to me the true door of Paradise." 

So Luther found the peace he had so long sought in 
the old, old way, which is always new by simply taking 
God at His word, by trusting in His promise. He had 
not needed to come to the convent to find his new life ; 
but his going there had not hindered him from finding 
it. There were the promises of God, and there was a 
man trusting them ; and all that righteousness, justice, 
and almighty power were now behind him and beneath 
him, binding him to God, not barring him out from 
Him. But it is not to be thought that this new and 
blessed change made Luther then and there a reformer 
of abuses in the ecclesiastical life. He was still a monk, 
and believed in his monastic vocation. He was still a 
faithful son of the mediaeval Church, with its pope and 
cardinals, its bishops and monks, its masses, its pil- 
grimages, and its indulgences. All these external 
things remained unchanged. The thing that was 
changed was the relation in which one human, soul 
stood to his God. His conversion (if one likes to call 
it by that name), his vision and appropriation of the 
pardoning grace of God revealed in Jesus Christ, and 
the assurance he had of that, was simply one funda- 
mental fact on which he, a single human soul, could take 
his stand as on a foundation of rock. He could now 
enjoy his monastic life and all the duties which it gave 
him to do ; there was something real in them and in 
the religion which they expressed. The very fact that 
his salvation had come to him within the convent only 



38 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

made Mm the surer that he had done right In taking 
the monastic vows, and he felt convinced that now 
even his father would approve of what he had done. 

2. IN THE CONVENT OBDAINED 

Meanwhile he was to be ordained, and an ordination, 
then as now, was a sort of gala occasion ; old friends 
assembled, and it was customary that the father of the 
candidate brought some small money gift to the son. 
Old Hans Luther came, with no great good- will, only 
he did not wish to shame his oldest son. He brought 
a company of Mansfeld friends, who rode to the con- 
vent door "on twenty horses." He handed over the 
usual present of twenty gulden, and sat at the ordina- 
tion dinner. This did not suffice for the ardent young 
priest; he had to justify himself for leaving the life 
his father had marked out for him, and ho longed to 
hear that his father accepted the justification. Ho 
began (he has told us the story himself) : " Dear father, 
why have you been so sot against mo, so wrathful; 
why is it that you are still perhaps unwilling to see mo 
a monk ? It is such a peaceful, pleasant, and godly 
life/' The old man glanced round the table, at which 
sat professors, masters, as well as monks, and said: 
" Did you never hear that a son must obey his parents ? 
and you learned men, have you never road in the Holy 
Scriptures that a man should honour his father and Ida 
mother?" No arguments from the company about 
the beauties of the monastic II fo wore of any avail; 
and when at last Luther insisted that ho had only fol- 
lowed the divine call, the sturdy old peasant replied : 
11 God grant that it may not prove a delusion of the 



ORDINATION 39 

devil." No man would convince him that the monk's 
life was better or more godly than the life lived amid 
wife and children by the fireside, and in the world of 
everyday work. Luther did not believe him at the 
time; but the days came when his father's words 
seemed to be the text for many a fiery oration against 
monkery. He delighted to dedicate his tract On the 
Monastic Vow to his father. The dedication said: 
" You were right, dear father, after all." But that was 
in the future. 

Luther was now a priest ; and he, who took every- 
thing belonging to the spiritual world with such 
earnestness, was oppressed beyond measure when he 
thought of what he was called upon to do. For it 
was now his office to perform the sacrifice of the 
Mass ; it was in his power, he thought, in virtue of his 
ordination, to bring the Lord Jesus Christ down from 
heaven to earth. He, by his prayer of consecration, 
could change bread and wine in such a way that they 
were no longer what they seemed to be, but the actual 
body of Christ which had hung on the Cross, and the 
actual blood which had gushed forth at the thrust of 
the Roman soldier's spear; and with the body and 
blood he could bring the human soul of the Saviour, 
that soul which had exclaimed, " My God, My God, why 
hast Thou forsaken Me!" and with the human soul 
that ineffable and eternal Godhead which in virtue of 
the Incarnation dwelt for evermore within. He trembled 
before this holy mystery, as he conceived it to be. He 
quaked with fear when he was called on to say Mass ; 
he shuddered at the carelessness of his fellow-priests, 
at the light way in which they spoke of this awful 
mystery, of this miraculous power placed in the hands 



40 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

of weak men by God. In these early days, after his con- 
version, he had no doubt about the Romanist doctrine 
of Transubstantiation ; he accepted it and trembled. 

He had to hear confession and to pronounce absolution. 
But here he was on more familiar ground. His own 
experience had taught him that man could never for- 
give sin; that God alone could do that; that the 
priest's function was much more human. He could be 
the spiritual guide of those who came to confess ; he 
could warn against false grounds of confidence ; he 
could declare that God pardoned all who truly con- 
fessed and were sorry for their sins. Yet he never in 
these early days proposed to do away with the con- 
fessional or to reform its practice. He simply set tho 
evangelical truth in the framework of mediaeval prac- 
tice, like a soul in a somewhat ungainly body. Tho 
practice of confession was for him what it was in our 
old Columban Church a "soul-friendship" wherein 
one brother could help another out of his Christian 
experience ; and the absolution was simply the privilege 
of proclaiming the fact that God had pardoned tho 
humble and trusting penitent. Ho still prescribed 
penances, for he thought that commanded in tho Biblo. 
Where tho Greek word which wo translate "repent" 
occurred, tho Vulgate or Latin Bible, which Luther had, 
read "do penance." Years afterwards Molanchfchon 
showed him that tho real scriptural word meant 
"change your mind/* 

3. AT WlTTKNITEttO 

All tho while Luther was beginning to show him- 
self a good man of business, with an eye for tho heart 



PROFESSOR AT WITTENBERG 41 

of things. He became the confidant of the heads of 
Ms community, and was entrusted with many delicate 
commissions, and sent on some embassies on behalf of 
his Order. In 1508 he was called to a wider sphere 
of work. Frederic the Elector of Saxony had long 
meditated on having a university within his dominions, 
and in 1502 had begun one in the town of Wittenberg. 
Staupitz and Dr. Pollich, who accompanied the Elector 
on his pilgrimage to the Holy Land, were his two chief 
advisers. There was not much money to spare at the 
Electoral Court, and everything was done in the most 
frugal German fashion. The money got from the sale 
of indulgences years before money which the Elector 
would not allow to leave the country served to make 
a beginning. Some parishes were united to the Castle 
Church, the Church of All Saints its ecclesiastical 
name, and the tithes furnished the stipends of the 
professors, who were to be prebendaries of the Church. 
Staupitz suggested that the professors in theology 
and philosophy might be furnished by the Augustinian 
Order, and as monks they did not need salary. The 
town of Wittenberg was of some official importance in 
Electoral Saxony; but it was small (only 356 rateable 
houses in 1513) and mean-looking; the houses were old 
and poor-looking structures of wood; the surrounding 
country stony, with stretches of barren heath; the 
people rough and boorish, much inclined to beer-drink- 
ing. 1 It must have been a strange little place, full of con- 
trasts; the Elector's palace, the great Castle Church, 
full of the relics which the Elector had brought home 
from the Holy Land ; the new Augustinian Cloister, 
and one or two more fine buildings; and then the 
1 There were no fewer than 170 brewing houses. 



42 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

wretched little houses of wood, plastered with mud and 
thatched with straw, while the broad rushing Elbe 
flowed past between its banks of heath. This was to 
be the cradle of the German Reformation, and thither 
came Luther in 1508, transferred from Erfurt to be 
Professor of Philosophy in the small university. 

Staupitz had early recognised the power lying latent 
in the young monk. It had been Luther's duty, since 
his ordination, to take his turn of preaching to his 
fellow -monks. At "Wittenberg his earliest sermons 
were delivered in an old chapel, thirty feet long 
and twenty wide, of wood plastered with clay, which 
stood near the new cloister, and which had been given 
to the monks to be a convent chapel. It was there that 
Luther began his evangelical sermons, delivered at first 
to a handful of monks and professors. "That monk 
has deep eyes and wonderful fancies," said Dr. Pollich, 
who was amongst his earliest hearers. 

In 1511 his work at Wittenberg was interrupted 
by a command to go to Rome on the business of his 
Order. Staupitz, who was at the head of a number of 
reformed convents of the Augustinian Order, wished 
to bring several other Augustinian convents under tho 
same regulations, and indeed had been authorised by 
tho Pope to do so. Some of these unrof orruod convents 
had protested and appealed to Rome, and Staupitz 
wished Luther and a fellow-monk, John of Mcchlen, to 
represent him before tho papal court. Thus Luther, 
who had aeon monastic life from the inside, was des- 
tined to make a personal acquaintance with Rome itself. 

He started with ten gold florins in his purse, Tho 
journey was to bo made on foot ; food and lodging were 
to be got in friendly monasteries. The two Augustiniany 



JOURNEY TO ROME 43 

went by Switzerland. Luther admired the fertile valley 
of the Po, lying between the Alps and the Apennines ; 
he praised the patient agriculture of the Italians, the 
vines, the olives, the oranges, and the figs. He says 
nothing of the Art collections of Florence, but he 
praises the wonderful hospitals which the benevolence 
of the people had erected for the suffering sick, and in 
which honourable ladies waited on the poor. He con- 
trasted the sobriety of the Italians with the drunken- 
ness of the Germans ; and he thankfully acknowledged 
the wonderful hospitality extended to the two stranger 
German monks. But the luxury of the larger monas- 
teries pained him ; the monks feasted on fast days in a 
way that Germans would not have done on festivals ; 
the people were dishonest and crafty, and seemed to 
care little for spiritual things. This journey was for 
Luther and his companion a pilgrimage also. They 
meant to visit all the holy places, and pay due rever- 
ence to the shrines of the martyrs. They approached 
the imperial city with the liveliest expectation. When 
they first came in sight of its walls, Luther raised his 
hands in an ecstasy, exclaiming, "I greet thee, thou 
Holy Rome ! " He felt like a Jewish pilgrim at the first 
glimpse of Jerusalem. 

His official business did not cost very much time ; 
the dispute seems to have been amicably settled by 
a compromise. His business done, he set himself to 
see the city with the devotion of a pilgrim and 
with the thoroughness of a German. He visited all 
the oldest churches, swallowed wholesale, he says, 
all the legends his guides repeated to him; studied 
the ruins of ancient Rome ; marvelled at the Colos- 
seum and at the Baths of Diocletian. Only once did 



44 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

his evangelical faith rebel against all this supersti- 
tion. There was and is in Rome a great staircase, 
its steps worn with the pressure of thousands of 
pilgrims the Holy Staircase, which was said to have 
once formed part of Pilate's house. An indulgence 
from penance for a thousand years is promised to 
those pilgrims who climb it on their knees. Luther 
began the ascent, repeating the usual prayers, but 
when he got half-way up, he remembered the text 
" The just shall live by his faith " ; he rose from his 
knees, stood for a moment erect, and then slowly 
walked down again. 

But if Luther was still unemancipatcd from medi- 
aeval superstitions, his sturdy German piety and his 
plain Christian morality turned his reverence for 
Kome into loathing The city, which he had greeted 
as holy, was a sink of iniquity ; its very priests wore 
openly infidel, and scoffed at the services they per- 
formed; the papal courtiers were men of the most 
shameless lives; ho was accustomed to repeat the 
[talian proverb, "If there is a hell, Rome is built 
over it." It was much for him in after days that he 
had seen Rome for that month which he had spent 
in the papal capital. 

4. IN THE CONVENT PBOFESSOK AND DOCTOB 
03? THEOLOGY 

Luther was back, at Wittenberg in the early 
summer oE 1512. Ills professorial duties seem to 
have been laid aside for some monthn, and ho was 

busily engaged on various duties connected with the 
convent The vicar-general, Dr. Staupitz, had, how- 



DOCTOR OF THEOLOGY 45 

ever, designed him for higher work. Luther had taken 
the opportunity while at Rome to learn something 
of Hebrew from a Jewish Rabbi, and to get lessons 
in Greek from a refugee from Constantinople, and 
Staupitz wished him to become Doctor in Theology 
and the chief theological professor at Wittenberg. 
Luther long resisted, and yielded not to persuasion 
but to commands. Very unhappy about it all, he 
was sent to the Erfurt convent to prepare for gradua- 
tion. Had he premonitions, dim or clear, of what 
lay before him, when he so strenuously resisted the 
persuasions of his superior? Had his studies in 
mediaeval theology, and his new found liberty in ex- 
pounding the Scriptures, taught him that there was a 
long fierce fight before him ? He must have had some 
misgivings ; but the future was as dark to him as it 
is to all of us. " No good work comes about by our own 
wisdom; it begins in dire necessity; I was forced 
into mine ; but had I known then what I know now, 
ten wild horses would not have drawn me into it." 
That is what Luther said about this very introduc- 
tion to theological teaching. 

To become a doctor of theology in these days in- 
volved a lengthy ceremony. It began with a thesis 
proposed by the graduate-to-be a proposition whose 
truth he was to defend against all-jcomers. Next day 
at early morning the bells of the churches were set 
a-ringing as on a great festival. The university 
authorities, with students and strangers and townsmen, 
marched through the streets, the newly created doctor 
in their midst. In the hall the candidate delivered a 
short address ; he took the Wittenberg University 
vow, " I swear to defend evangelical truth vigorously " 



46 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

(virttiter) ; the doctor's cap was placed on his head ; 
and the great gold ring, with its silver boss carved 
with three intertwined circles symbolising the 
mysteries of theology, was placed on his finger. He 
was now Dr. Martin Luther, sworn to defend the 
truth of the gospel as God made that known to him. 
Three days later he became a member of the Senate 
of the university, and some weeks after, Staupitz, who 
had now seen his favourite in what he believed to be 
his true position, resigned his chair, and Luther took 
his place as regent of the university. He had already 
become sub-prior of his convent, and the Elector, who 
had heard him preach sometimes in the little chapel, 
had defrayed the expenses of his graduation. 

Then began that wonderful series of expositions 
which gradually drew to the small, poor, and remote 
University of Wittenberg students from all parts of 
Germany, and then from all parts of Europe. 

He began with the Psalms, which he used to call 
the Bible within the Bible. There is preserved in 
the Wolfenblittel Library two fragments of these 
early lectures of Luther. His text was the Latin 
Version, and his notes from which he delivered the 
lectures are written on the wide margins and between 
the lines of print. He selected the Epistle to the 
Romans for his New Testament subject, and this led 
him to dwell on the thought of justification. Then 
came lectures on the Epistle to the Galatians. These 
lectures were like a revelation of the Bible to the 
Wittenberg students; the townspeople heard about 
them, and grave burghers enrolled themselves as 
students in order to listen to the new and living ex- 
planations of the Word of God. 



LECTURES ON THE BIBLE 47 

To have the scene before us, we must imagine the 
professor sitting at his desk with his book and his 
notes, the students on hard benches or on the floor 
without books, writing both text and comment on 
sheets of paper, or following all and storing all up 
in their memories and transcribing when they got 
home to their lodgings. The multiplication of books 
and the cheapening of paper has made a wonderful 
revolution. Luther used a Latin Bible. He had 
begun to study both Hebrew and Greek in the Erfurt 
monastery, and he had improved his visit to Rome 
by trying to learn something more about these 
biblical languages; but with all this he knew that 
he was weak in languages, and there was little 
Greek or Hebrew known in the Wittenberg Univer- 
sity until three years later, when Melanchthon was 
brought from Erfurt. Luther had few commen- 
taries to assist him. He did not trust very much to 
mediaeval explanations of the sacred text, but he did 
not disdain any help that he got from De Lyra and 
others. 

All these early years of his professorial work he was 
studying hard. Augustine was his favourite theo- 
logian, and he prized him not so much for his formal 
theology as for his deep acquaintance with the human 
heart. He must have been reading the sermons of 
John Tauler, the great German mystic, about this time ; 
and a little later he became acquainted with a little 
book called The German Theology, the work of an un- 
known mystic of the earlier part of the fifteenth 
century. Luther tells us that he learned more about 
heart religion from this little book than from anything 
else save the Bible. He published a portion of it in 



48 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

the end of 1516 in order to show people how they 
ought to pray; and In 1518 he published the whole 
book, with a preface explaining his indebtedness to it. 
All his former doubts and fears had fled. His Chris- 
tianity was now of the most joyous kind. " Taste and 
see how good the Lord is " is the burden of many a 
private letter. 

In these earlier years of his professoriate he under- 
took the duties of preacher in the town church of 
Wittenberg. He did so apparently because the pastor 
was unable to do his work from ill-health ; indeed, he 
seems to have gradually slid into this position. In the 
convent chapel he had preached to persons who could 
perhaps appreciate learned discourses, but he had now 
to do with the common rude man, with " raw Saxons " 
as he said, and he knew that the first merit in a sermon 
is that it can be understood. The people had no Bibles, 
but most of them knew the Lord's Prayer and the Ten 
Commandments. "The common people heard him 
gladly." He spoke in plain nervous German. He 
gathered collections of German proverbs and country 
sayings, and used them as illustrations. He noted that 
our Lord used the homeliest illustrations, talking of 
tilling the ground, of mustard seed, of sparrows and 
sheep and fish ; and he went and did likewise. It is 
impossible to misunderstand Luther's sermons, Above 
all, he had a way of making the Bible living, of show- 
ing that it was full of histories of men and women 
who had lived and talked and eaten and slept and 
married and given in marriage. All this was new. 
No matter what the text was, the sermon was sure to 
come round in the end to that doctrine of grace which 
he had first learned by the hearing of the ear at his 



SUPERINTENDENT OF CONVENTS 49 

mother's knees, then cast behind him in his student 
days, and finally got hold of again after sore conflict 
in Erfurt monastery, the doctrine of the radical dis- 
tinction between the law and the gospel, the doctrine 
that the divine righteousness is not mere punitive 
justice, but saving merit made over once for all to 
every believer in Christ, the doctrine that faith is 
not belief in propositions, but a trust in, and a per- 
sonal fellowship with, a crucified Lord. The town's 
church where those sermons were preached is a great 
roomy building with two towers, standing near the 
market-place in Wittenberg. The old pulpit lies in 
fragments in the Luther House ; but the font, a hep- 
tagon with the apostles engraved on the faces, a 
beautiful work in bronze by that exquisite artist 
Peter Vischer of Nlirnberg, remains where it stood 
when Luther bent over it to sprinkle little children in 
the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost. 
As you stand there it is not difficult to recall the 
church filled with an eager audience, to see the wan 
wild face with the high cheek-bones and traces of the 
convent fasts and struggles and the deep-set gleaming 
eyes, and to hear the clear musical voice launching 
forth proverb-like sentences in the vigorous mother 
tongue for Luther's words were " half -battles/' 

In 1516 he had additional duties laid upon him; he 
was made a superintendent of a circle of eleven Augus- 
tinian convents, among them of his old convent at 
Erfurt. He had to make regular visitations, to preach 
to the monks, to discuss with them theological diffi- 
culties, to explain the rules of the Order, to discipline 
erring brethren, and to give solemn decisions on dozens 
of trifling questions, such as: "On what occasions 
4 



50 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

certain brethren were to wear their white scapularies " ; 
" who ought to clean out certain fish ponds," and " who 
ought to carry the fish from the ponds to the monas- 
tery ? " He tells us all about this in his correspond- 
ence, and has a glance at everything humorous which 
passes. Here is how he relates how full of work he is 
(he is writing to John Lange, prior of Erfurt): "I 
have need of two secretaries, and do almost nothing 
all clay long but write letters; ... I am convent 
preacher; reader at meals; I am required to preach 
every day in the parish church; I am director of 
studies ; ... I am vicar of the Order, i.e. prior eleven 
times over; I have to superintend the Leitzkau fish 
pond ; I have charge of our people of Herzberg at 
Torgau ; I lecture on St. Paul, and collate the Psalms." 
Besides all this, he was already watching John Tetzel, 
still at a distance from Wittenberg, and his In- 
dulgence-selling. Yet he can find time for letters like 
the following : " Learn, dear brother, Christ and Him 
crucified ; learn to sing to Him, and doubting thyself 
to say to Him : ' Thou, Lord Jesus, art my righteous- 
ness while I am Thy sin; what is mine Thou hast 
taken upon Thyself, and what is Thine Thou hast given 
to me/ Beware of aspiring to such purity that thou 
shalfc no longer seem to thyself a sinner; for Christ 
does not dwell except in sinners . . . For if by our 
labours and afflictions we could attain peace of con- 
science, why did He die ? Therefore, only in Him, by 
a believing self-despair both of thyself and of thy 
works, wilt thou find peace." 

In 1516 the plague came to Wittenberg. Most of 
the inhabitants who could do so fled from the town, 
and his Erfurt brethren asked Luther to come there 



THE PLAGUE AT WITTENBERG 51 

for a time. Here is part of his answer : " Why should 
I flee ? I hope the world would not collapse if Brother 
Martin fell. If the pestilence spreads I will indeed 
disperse the monks throughout the land. As for me, I 
have been placed here. My obedience &s a monk does 
not suffer me to fly; since what that obedience once 
required it demands still. Not that I do not fear death 
(I am not the Apostle Paul, but only the lecturer on 
the Apostle Paul), but I hope the Lord will deliver me 
from my fear." 

Luther could scarcely expect to avoid all opposition 
to his new mode of teaching; but he did not fear 
it. He was a teacher of theology, and he could not 
avoid knowing that he taught somewhat differently 
from most teachers. He comforted himself with the 
thought that while others were doctors of theology he 
always claimed to be a doctor of the Holy Scripture, 
and that it was therefore his business to expound the 
Scriptures above all other portions of theological study. 
His whole life and work rested on one fundamental 
thought, that God of His own free grace pardoned sin 
for the sake of our Lord Jesus Christ, and that no 
man, however saintly, could work out his own salva- 
tion. Every hope that man had rested on that. The 
thought was his foundation of rock. This and the 
theology based on it he believed to be scriptural, and 
the only scriptural theology. It was the doctrine 
which the great Augustine had taught; and Luther 
called it Augustinian, not Lutheran. But it was not the 
theology taught in the common theological classes at 
Erfurt or Leipzig. There, professors lectured on and 
expounded the Sentences of Peter of Lombardy and of 
his manifold commentators the books which had tor- 



52 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

merited Luther while he was at Erfurt. He not merely 
felt that this theology was useless, he distrusted it 
altogether. He found that it was more pagan than 
Christian; that it was based much more upon the 
great pagan philosopher Aristotle than on the Epistles 
of St. Paul. Yet it was sanctioned by the authority of 
the weightiest names of the mediaeval Church. A 
collision was inevitable at some time or other. Luther 
did not shirk it; he rather invited it. Privately and 
publicly, it may even be said formally and officially, he 
insisted that the sole test of theological verity was the 
Holy Scripture, and that if this were acknowledged as 
it ought to be, the Augustinian theology would every- 
where displace the scholastic. 

This was the condition of affairs at Wittenberg when 
Luther became involved in the controversy about In- 
dulgences, 



CHAPTER III 

INDULGENCE CONTROVERSY 

1. THE INDULGENCE 

LUTHER began his work of reformation in an 
attack on what was called an Indulgence proclaimed 
by Pope Leo x., farmed by Albert, archbishop of 
Mainz, whose commissary was John Tetzel, a notorious 
Dominican monk. So far as the common people 
were concerned, this Indulgence meant that on the 
payment of certain specified sums of money, spiritual 
privileges, including the forgiveness of sins, could be 
obtained by the purchasers. The Pope proclaimed 
this Indulgence to be a great boon, and as such 
the majority of the common people received it. 
They were encouraged to look upon it in this light 
by most of the clergy, and by all who wished to 
stand well with the higher ecclesiastical powers. Of 
course many persons thought ill of these Indulgences. 
Most secular princes felt that their poor territories 
were being drained of money to enrich the papal 
court, grave burghers saw that all manner of evil 
living followed the trail of the Indulgence-seller, and 
good parish priests felt the same. Pope Julius had 
proclaimed an Indulgence in 1501, and the Elector 



54 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Frederic had not allowed the money raised in his 
dominions to leave the country. It had been levied 
for the ostensible purpose of assisting to pay for a 
war against the Turks and in defence of Christendom ; 
and Frederic declared that he meant to keep the 
money until the war began. He actually used it to 
found the University of Wittenberg. John Wessel 
had openly protested against that earlier Indulgence, 
and had died in the prison of a Dominican monastery 
in consequence. Those earlier objectors had never 
reached the heart of the matter, the conscience of the 
people had never been touched, and upon the whole 
the multitude were ready to accept the Indulgence 
for the boon which the Pope declared it to be. 

The money raised was to be devoted to the build- 
ing of St. Peter's Church in Rome, and to serve the 
pious purpose, so the Pope said, of raising a worthy 
tomb over the bones of the great apostle, which 
were asserted to have been laid in a Roman grave. 
People were a little sceptical about the destination 
of the money; but the buyers had their Indulgence 
tickets, and it did not matter much to them what 
became of the funds after the money had left their 
pockets. So the Indulgence-seller had generally a 
brilliant welcome when he entered a German town. 
Myconius, who at the time was a schoolboy of 
thirteen, and was one of the crowd at Annaberg in 
East Saxony, tells us that when " the Commissary 
or Indulgence-seller approached a town, the Bull 
(announcing the Indulgence) was carried before him 
on a cloth of velvet or gold, and all the priests 
and monks, the council, the schoolmasters and the 
the scholars, a/11 the men and women went out to 



THE INDULGENCE 55 

meet him with, banners and candles and songs, form- 
ing a grand procession ; then, all the bells ringing and 
all the organs playing, they accompanied him to the 
principal church; a red cross was set up in the midst of 
the church, and the Pope's banner was displayed; in short, 
one might think they were receiving God Himself/' 

Albert of Brandenberg, who had been archbishop 
of Magdeburg and was then archbishop of Mainz, 
thought that he could gain some advantage out of 
all this enthusiasm for the Indulgence. He was a 
comparatively young man, fond of display, a patron 
of learning, affecting Humanist sympathies, and full 
of expensive tastes for pictures, cameos, etc. He had 
spent large sums of money in order to gain his 
dignities, and had promised his clergy that he would 
himself pay for his second archiepiscopal pallium. 
He was deeply in debt to the great Augsburg bank- 
ing house, the Fuggers, and in desperate straits for 
money. He persuaded the Pope to allow him to farm 
the Indulgence for the greater part of Germany, and 
hired John Tetzel, who had previously acted as the 
papal under-commissary, to be his commissary. The 
archbishop himself drew up, to attract buyers, a 
statement of the benefits coming to all who pur- 
chased Indulgences, and Tetzel used this statement as 
a text on which he could enlarge. 

The Indulgence, according to the archbishop, pos 
sessed the following inestimable efficacies : It ensured 
to those who bought the tickets complete forgiveness 
of sins, participation in the grace of God, and freedom 
from purgatory; it gave them a ticket or letter, 
stamped with the Pope's seal, which allowed them to 
select a confessor, whom they pleased, who would 



56 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

absolve them from all crimes and punishments, and 
would permit them to exchange any vows they had 
taken upon themselves for some other more agreeable 
good works; it made them sharers in all the good 
works of the universal Church, in all the benefits of 
prayers, pilgrimages, and other ecclesiastical good 
works performed by all the members of the whole 
Church; and it provided a full remission of sins to 
all departed persons then in purgatory. Tetzel went 
far beyond the letter of his instructions. He shouted, 
" The soul flies out of purgatory as soon as the money 
rattles in the box " ; " the red cross of the Indulgence 
is of equal power with the cross of Christ " ; " the 
'Papal Letters' have such power that they would 
absolve a man who had violated the Mother of God." 
But his blasphemies did not display more sordid 
money-getting than did the papal Commission itself. 
It declared that certain sins were outside the power of 
the Indulgence to remove. They were as follows : 
"Except the crimes of conspiracy against the person 
of the supreme Pontiff, of the murder of bishops, or 
of other superior prelates, and the laying violent 
hands upon them or other prelates, the forging of 
apostolic letters, or conveying of arms and other 
prohibited things into heathen countries, and the 
sentences and censures incurred on occasion of the 
importation of the ahoms of apostolic Tolfa from 
heathen countries contrary to the apostolic prohibi- 
tion" The meaning of the words italicised is that all 
persons who imported alum into Christendom were 
guilty of an unpardonable sin ; and although no reason 
is given it is not far to seek. A certain Giovanni di 
Castro discovered alum stone in the mountains of 



SMUGGLERS OF ALUM 57 

Tolf a, not far from Civita Vecchia and within the papal 
dominions. This was a mine of wealth for the Holy 
See. Di Castro made sure of his discovery by calcin- 
ing the stone. He then appeared before the Pope and 
said: "I announce to you a victory over the Turk. 
He draws yearly from the Christians above 300,000 
pieces of gold, paid to him for the alum with which 
we dye wool of various colours, because none is found 
here, but a little at Ischia ... I have found seven 
hills so abundant in it that they might supply seven 
worlds. If you will send for workmen and cause 
furnaces to be made and the stones to be calcined, 
you may furnish alum to all Europe, and that again 
which the Turk used to acquire by this article will 
be thrown into your hands." The Holy See made 
haste to work its newly found treasures, and in order 
to secure the whole profit to itself, it made it a sin 
to import any alum into Europe. The money to be 
obtained from the Indulgence was not to be allowed 
to interfere with the papal revenue from its alum 
mines ; and so the importation of alum was declared 
to be a sin unpardonable by any Indulgence. 

Myconius tells us how Tetzel's sermons and the 
conversations of the monks about the Indulgence, 
made him believe in the efficacy of the pardon tickets. 
He had come from a pious home. His parents had 
taught him the Ten Commandments, the Creed, and 
the Lord's Prayer. His father had often expounded 
them to him, and he had told him over and over 
again that he must continually pray to God to pardon 
his sins, that God alone could pardon, and that He 
grants pardon to those who sincerely seek it and that 
of His free grace. But when the boy (he was only 



$8 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

thirteen years of age) heard the monks insist that 
Tetzel was right, and that pardon could be reached 
through the " papal letters " that were being sold, he 
thought that his father must have been wrong, and he 
was anxious to get an Indulgence ticket for himself. 
He could not believe, however, that God's pardon 
could be bought for money. That part of his father's 
teaching stuck fast to him. One day he chanced to 
hear that the pardon tickets could be got by the 
poor for nothing ; he saw a proclamation, and observed 
that this was really written on it pauperilus dentur 
grati. Boylike he thought that this reconciled his 
father's teaching and that of the priests, and he 
resolved he would do his best to get one of the 
precious tickets. One day (it was Whitsuntide, 1516) 
Tetzel announced that the sales were getting fewer, 
and that he would be compelled to take down the red 
cross and "close the door of heaven"; he advised 
everyone to buy at. once, for if they omitted the 
chance now given them to secure the "papal letter,' 1 
no priest could absolve them for certain sins; he 
concluded by saying that during the few remaining 
days of sale the prices would be reduced. Myconius 
tells us that he could not believe that the "papal 
letter" would do him any good unless he got it for 
nothing. Then and not till then it really represented 
to him the free grace of God ; and he recounts the 
strenuous endeavours he made to get an Indulgence 
ticket without paying for it. The priests, who acted 
as Tetzel's salesmen, were so wearied out with his 
importunities, that they offered to give him the 
money in order to buy the ticket in the usual 
, so as m>t to create an inconvenient precedent. 



TETZEL AND LUTHER 59 

Tetzel shouted at him more than once that he could 
not get the ticket. The priests, however, more 
anxious than the commissary to keep faith, at last let 
him have what he had so earnestly desired, and on his 
own terms. His story brings the scenes surrounding 
the Indulgence-selling very vividly before us. 

Tetzel, early in 1516, had been selling his Indulgences 
in the Meissen district, not very far from Wittenberg, 
and Luther had watched his progress and his practices. 
He preached at least one sermon on the subject ; and 
both sermon and private correspondence reveal a very 
perturbed mind. The strongest thing that he said was 
that the Indulgence was a very mischievous instrument 
In the hands of avarice. Meanwhile Tetzel, going from 
place to place in the end of 1516 and in the earlier 
months of 1517, was approaching Wittenberg. People 
went from Wittenberg to Jtiterbog and Zerbst and 
other places where Tetzel had " set up the red cross " 
and opened a sale of Indulgences. Some of Luther's 
own people, parishioners of his, men and women who 
came regularly to him for confession, had bought the 
"papal letters/' had shown them to him, and had 
demanded priestly absolution in due form without 
either confession of sin or showing any signs of real 
sorrow. He could and did refuse to acknowledge their 
" letters " ; they had complained to Tetzel, and the com- 
missary had uttered threats. Luther found himself 
wading in deep waters. The Indulgence, he knew, 
was doing great harm to poor souls ; he got the letter 
of instructions given to Tetzel by his employer, the 
archbishop, and his heart waxed wroth against it. But 
still at the basis of the Indulgence, bad as it was, there 
lay the great truth, Luther thought, that it is the 



60 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

business of the Church to declare the free and sove- 
reign grace of God. Besides, even in the form which 
the Indulgence took, as a theory at least, it belonged 
to a class of things and institutions from which many 
pious souls found help to holy living, and it was rooted 
in doctrines in which Luther, if he did not earnestly 
believe, was at least prepared to acquiesce. A large 
number of the pious associations of the later Middle 
Ages were founded on ideas which lay at the basis 
of the practice of giving Indulgences. However 
near to 'their Lord, God's Word, the Sacraments and 
prayer brought faithful Christian men and women, the 
machinery of the Catholic Church, which lay all around 
them and in which they had a place, was accepted by 
them as unquestionably and quietly as a law of nature. 
This machinery included among other things the count- 
less treasure of good works, prayers, fastings, mortifica- 
tions of all kinds, which holy men and women of 
old had done, and which were available for others 
if the Pope could be persuaded to transfer them, 
When men and women united in a pious confraternity, 
the Pope, it was believed, could transfer to the com- 
munity a surplus of prayers and masses and other 
ecclesiastical good deeds, and this became for pious 
living what a good bank account is to a man starting 
in business, Freytag gives us, as an example of this, 
an account of St. Ursula's Schifflein or the Brotherhood 
of the Eleven Thousand Virgins, a pious association, 
which had Frederic, the Elector of Saxony, for one of 
its founders and directors. It was really a brother- 
hood of poor and pious people who wished to assist each 
other by mutual prayer, and had a charter from the 
Pope highly approving of its objects. To encourage 



ST. URSULA'S SCHIFFLEIN 61 

them the Pope made over to them by statute a 
collection of spiritual treasures which are as carefully 
enumerated as the assets of a business firm, 6455 
Masses, 3500 Psalters (i.e. repetitions of the 150 
Psalms), 200,000 Eosaries (i.e. repetitions of the 
prayers which went to make a complete rosary), 
200,000 Te Deums, 1600 Glorias in Excelsis, 11,000 
prayers for the Patroness, St. Ursula, 630 times 11,000 
Paternosters and Ave Marias. The whole redeeming 
power of these good works was handed over by the Pope 
for the spiritual benefit of the members of the brother- 
hood. A layman was entitled to become a brother if 
he could show that he had repeated in his lifetime 
11,000 Paternosters, and it was pointed out that this 
condition was not a very hard one, because the 11,000 
could be accomplished in a year at the rate of 32 per 
day. Many such brotherhoods bought their spiritual 
treasures from the Pope with money, and sold them in 
the shape of entrance fees, etc., to the members. There 
was neither buying nor selling about St. Ursula's 
SchiffLein, which was a genuine attempt to encourage 
a prayerful life by means of mutual example and 
encouragement. The machinery of the Church, how- 
ever, secured this encouragement, that, if by any 
accident members failed in praying as they had pro- 
mised, they had always this spiritual treasure to 
count upon. There is no list of members of this 
association, so far as I know, in existence: but, if 
there were, it is most probable that it would include 
some of Luther's strongest admirers in the town of 
Wittenberg. What difference in principle could be 
found between the Pope transferring a mass of spiritual 
benefits to a pious brotherhood, and his handing 



62 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

over an indefinite amount to Archbishop Albert to dis- 
pose of as he thought fit, through Tetzel or otherwise ? 
The theory of Indulgence could also be justified from 
another side. From the earliest times the Church of 
Christ, while proclaiming the free pardoning grace of 
God revealed in the Person and Work of Christ, had 
always insisted that the pardon was for those who 
were truly penitent, and who had a real resolve to try 
at least to live the life of new obedience to which 
Christ has called His people. When penitents professed 
sorrow for sins, they were required to show their 
sorrow in some open sign of repentance. The Church 
from a very early period preferred that these signs of 
sorrow should take the form of prayers or gifts of 
charity or some form of practical benevolence such as 
the manumission of slaves. Suggestions of this kind 
are apt to become prescriptions, and ecclesiastical pre- 
scriptions tend to become stereotyped and conventional. 
When the ecclesiastical praxis of sorrow, confession, 
and pardon became fixed in the so-called " sacrament 
of penance," there were already attached to it stereo- 
typed signs of sorrow required by the Church, and 
these were called satisfaction and latterly penance. 
In the ordinary practice of the Church they were 
required before pardon could be pronounced by the 
mouth of the priest in absolution ; and although they 
had an evangelical origin, and could always be ex- 
plained with an evangelical meaning, the common 
effect they produced was to obscure the freely given 
pardon of God. Indulgence could be explained and 
justified on the ground that the Church was able to 
dispense with those signs of sorrow which were her 
own prescription; and it was possible to say that there 



LUTHER RESOLVES TO ATTACK 63 

was a right use of Indulgence when the Church pro- 
claimed pardon apart from the signs of sorrow, for 
that was a manifestation, that, after all, pardon did 
not depend on the due manifestation of prescribed 
signs of contrition, but on the free grace of God. 

To attack the Indulgence was to make an assault 
upon part at least of the machinery of the great 
mediaeval Church, and Luther believed with his whole 
heart that he was a devout and obedient son of that 
Church. Besides, he had a profound contempt for men 
who believe that they are born to set the world right. 
He compared them to a player at ninepins who thinks 
that he cannot fail to knock down twelve when there 
are only nine pins standing. "I am but a young 
doctor," he said, in reply to some exhortation to stand 
forward, " fresh from the foundry, hot and happy in 
the Word of God." Tetzel was no business of his; 
and yet his poor people, souls whom God had given 
him in charge ! At length, after much hesitation 
and deep distress of mind, he felt compelled to interfere, 
and, as was usual when his mind was made up, he went 
unflinchingly to the root of the matter in the most 
direct and dauntless fashion. 

It was characteristic of the man that he resolved to 
bear the whole responsibility by himself. He wrote 
to the three persons most concerned; to the arch- 
bishop of Mainz, who farmed the Indulgence, and 
according to whose instructions the "papal letters " 
were sold ; to Tetzel, the archbishop's commissary, who 
had charge of the sales ; and to the man who was his 
own ecclesiastical superior, Bishop Scultetus, who was 
set over the church in which Luther preached and the 
university in which he taught. He seems, however, 



64 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

to have taken care that none of these persons could 
interfere with him, for his letter to the archbishop is 
dated on the eve of the day on which he acted. All 
his personal friends were kept in complete ignorance 
of what he was about to do. He did this, he after- 
wards declared, that no one, and especially not the 
Elector, might be involved by his action. 

He took the best way of publishing his opinions 
widely that occurred to him. The Castle Church at 
Wittenberg had always been closely connected with 
the university, and the doors of the church had, since 
the foundation of the university, been used by its 
officials as a university board on which to publish 
important documents. The day of the year which 
drew the largest concourse of strangers to the church 
was the first of November, All Saints' Day. It was 
the anniversary of the foundation and consecration of 
the church, and was also commemorated by a prolonged 
series of services. In accordance with a common 
custom, the Pope had solemnly promised an Indulgence 
of some kind to all who took part in the yearly com- 
memorative services. There could be no more con- 
venient time or place. At noon on the day in question 
Luther nailed his Ninety-five Theses to the door of 
the church. It was a strictly academic proceeding. 
A doctor in theology offered a "Disputation," for so 
he called it, " for the purpose of explaining the efficacy 
in the Indulgence." The explanation had ninety-five 
heads, all of which "Doctor Martin Luther, theologian," 
was prepared to make good against all comers. The 
strict academic etiquette was thoroughly preserved, and 
the document was of course written in Latin. 

The "document" differed from most academic dis- 



LUTHER'S THESES 65 

putations in this that everyone wished to read it. 
Luther had made a duplicate in German. Copies in 
the two languages were sent to the University Printing- 
Press, which could not throw them off fast enough to 
keep pace with the demands which came from all parts 
of Germany. The theses had the effect of a torch 
thrown among dry fuel. The first to protest was 
Tetzel, who wrote counter-theses, which the students 
burnt. Other protests followed; but the great mass 
of pious German people saw in these theses what they 
had always believed. 

2. THE EFFECT OF THE THESES 

The question arises: Did Luther in these famous 
theses break away from the thought and feeling of the 
mediaeval Church, or did he only give expression to 
its deepest and most devout thoughts on sin and on 
pardon ? It has always appeared to me, with reverence 
be it spoken, that the relation of the Reformation 
theology, and therefore of Luther, to the teaching of 
the mediaeval Church can be compared with the relation 
between the teaching o our Lord and the Mosaic Law. 
He came to fulfil it, and not to destroy it. He showed 
the real moral depths in it. He stripped it of the tem- 
poral and accidental elements which had gathered round 
it. He fulfilled it by making visible what it really 
was. So Luther's teaching fulfils the best instruction 
of the mediaeval Church and carries on its noblest 
work. For when we think of it, there is scarcely a 
thought of Luther's that is not to be found in the 
hymns, prayers, and most evangelical preaching of the 
Middle Ages. The difference between Reformation 
5 



66 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

and medieval theology is that the former solves an 
antinomy which the latter contains ; for we may say 
with Dr. Wace, that mediaeval theology had resulted 
in a " dead-lock," and that Luther solved the 
antinomy and dissolved the dead-lock. The task to 
which the mediaeval Church had to set itself was 
to tame, civilise, and evangelise the fierce Teutonic 
tribes which had submerged the ancient world. It set 
itself to that task with an energy and a self-devotion 
seldom equalled and never surpassed. We are apt to 
forget in our criticisms of that mediaeval Church the 
conditions amid which it fulfilled its mission. A Boni- 
face or an Augustine spoke to men as savage and 
bloodthirsty as Chaka's Zulu warriors, and who had 
scarcely more developed morals. They spoke as a 
wise and advanced civilisation speaks to savages; as 
heavenly wisdom speaks to sinful folly. The necessity 
of speaking from above, and the humble acquiescence 
of those spoken to, easily grows into infallible utter- 
ance on the one side and a belief that implicit obedience 
is the proper attitude of mind on the other. Can we 
measure the action and reaction of teachers and taught, 
or say how much the barbarian readiness to receive 
the vulgarly supernatural is responsible for magical 
theories of the sacraments and of the expiative power 
of self-torture ? Have we marked how many tribal 
customs worked their way into the canon law, say 
of marriage? But when all criticisms are made, the 
mediaeval Church was a stern school of religious and 
moral discipline. It preached the "divine righteous- 
ness and its inexorable demands." It taught, and 
elevated its convert nations by teaching, that sin is sin 
altogether apart from extenuating circumstances, by 



MESSAGE OF MEDLEVAL CHURCH 67 

placing before them Ideals of saintly and ineffable 
purity. "The glorious cathedrals which arose in the 
best period of the Middle Ages/' says Dr. Wace, " are 
but the visible types of those splendid structures of 
ideal virtues which a monk like St. Bernard, or a 
schoolman like St. Thomas Aquinas, piled up by 
laborious thought and painful asceticism. Such men 
felt themselves at all times surrounded by a spiritual 
world at once more glorious in its beauty and more 
awful in its terrors than either the pleasures or the 
miseries of this world could adequately represent. The 
great poet of the Middle Ages affords perhaps the most 
vivid representation of their character in this respect. 
The horrible images of the Inferno, the keen sufferings 
of purification in the Purgatorio, form the terrible 
foreground behind which the Paradiso rises. Those 
visions of terror and dread and suffering had stamped 
themselves on the imagination of the mediaeval world, 
and lay at the root of the power with which the 
Church overshadowed it. In their origin they em- 
bodied a profound and noble truth. It was a high 
and divine conception that the moral and spiritual 
world with which we are encompassed has greater 
heights and lower depths than are generally appre- 
hended in the visible experience of this life; and 
Dante has been felt to be in a unique degree the poet 
of righteousness." 

The mission of the mediaeval Church was to be a 
stern preacher of righteousness, and Luther was a true 
child of that Church. Its message had been received 
by him, and had sunk into his soul. He was such a 
true son of his Church that he felt more deeply than 
most the point where the message, of its formal theology 



68 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

at least, failed. It contrasted the divine righteousness 
and man's sin and weakness. It insisted on the in- 
exorable demands of the law of God, while it uttered 
despairingly that man could never fulfil them. It 
brought the human soul to a dead-lock. The man who 
could show some way of extrication which would not 
abate one jot the demands of the law of God, nor 
lower the standard of divine righteousness, was no 
rebel against his Church, but rather the exponent of its 
deepest teaching. He solved the antinomy by showing 
that, as it had been caused by setting over against each 
other the righteousness of God and the sin of man, and 
keeping the two sides distinct and separate, and that God 
must be brought over to man's side, so that His righteous- 
ness could become man's ; or, in other words, that there 
must be a direct and intimate fellowship between man 
and God. But all fellowship implies trust ; and trust, 
the personal trust of man in a personal God, gives him 
that fellowship with God through which the things 
which belong to God can become his. Without this 
personal trust all divine things, the Incarnation, the 
Passion, the Word, the Sacraments, however true as 
matters of fact, are outside the man, and cannot be 
truly possessed. But when man trusts in God, and 
when the fellowship which trust always creates is 
established, then they can always be shared in by the 
man who trusts. This is what is meant by saying that 
the "just shall live by faith." 

It was from this view of a personal relation between 
God and man, created by personal trust in the fatherly 
promises of God, that Luther had learned to regard 
all things which concerned God and His faithful people, 
and this had its effect on the way in which he looked 



LUTHER AND MEDIAEVAL CHURCH 69 

at contrition and at pardon for sin. The sorrow for 
sin which must be experienced by the man who feels 
himself to be in fellowship with God through his sense 
of trust cannot be removed by any sentence of absolu- 
tion, but must continue lifelong, for it is fed by the 
very love to God which the fellowship, with its sense 
of abiding unworthiness, evokes. The constraint to 
obedience based on fear of punishment gives place to 
the higher and stronger motive of a glad response to 
the wishes of One who is loved. For Justification by 
Faith does not mean that one trusts in God and gets 
off; but that one trusts in God and goes on through 
life, drawn, instead of driven, into all holy living. 
It also follows that the man who desires and enjoys 
fellowship with God must think much more of God's 
personal forgiveness than of the mere remission of the 
consequences of sin ; the loss of the former strikes at 
the sense of fellowship itself, while the sense of fellow- 
ship renders the latter bearable even when most bur- 
densome, for it teaches man to accept all manner of 
trials and adversities, all God's judgments and disci- 
pline, in perfect peace of soul, because none of them 
can really separate him from his God. 

In all this Luther felt himself to be, and was the ex- 
ponent of the deepest and truest religious teaching of the 
mediaeval Church, and the heir to all that preaching of 
righteousness which makes Dante's great poem appear 
to be the soul of the Middle Ages. He solved the 
antinomy of the Church's teaching without letting go 
either of the truths represented. But what Dr. Wace 
and others, who have pointed out this clearly, have 
failed to recognise is, that Luther's solution was familiar 
to the simple piety, although unknown to the academic 



70 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

theology of the Middle Ages ; and that Luther taught 
little more than he and Myconius and thousands of 
others had been taught at their mothers' knees, for the 
theology of the heart is always far in advance of that 
of the schools. 

The opponents of Luther, on the other hand, could 
not represent the deepest thoughts of mediaeval theo- 
logy. When face to face with the dead-lock indicated 
above, they could not avoid tampering with the require- 
ments of divine righteousness in order to assist human 
weakness. They distinguished between the command- 
ments of the divine law and the counsels of perfection ; 
they invented a dispensing authority which could 
modify the requirements of divine justice; they pro- 
ceeded step by step, in half -acknowledged ways, to get 
rid of the severity of those rules of moral life and 
those ideals of moral purity which it was the duty 
of the Church to sustain in all their force, until at 
last they had lowered themselves to the depth of 
degradation which the Indulgence, as worked by Tetzel, 
exhibited. 

When we turn to the Ninety-five Theses of Luther 
we can notice at least three main thoughts. He draws 
a strong distinction between what belongs absolutely 
to God and what he admits may be within the power 
of the Pope, or what is ecclesiastical machinery. The 
personal forgiveness of sin, which with Luther is the 
one thing of overwhelming moment, is in the hands of 
God, and of God alone. But all those external and 
conventional signs of sorrow which have been ordered 
by the Church are in the hands of the Pope, to be dis- 
pensed with if he orders it. "Every Christian, who 
feels true compunction, has, of right, plenary remission 



POPULARITY OF THE THESES 71 

of pain and guilt, even without letters of pardon." "We 
must beware of those who say that these pardons from 
the Pope are that inestimable gift of God by which 
man is reconciled to God." " The Pope has neither the 
will nor the power to remit any penalties, except those 
which he has imposed by his own authority or by that of 
the canons." He rings the changes on this main theme. 
He denounces, in quoting, all the assertions of Tetzel 
which go to obscure the difference, such as that the red 
cross of the Indulgence has equal power with the Cross 
of Christ. He insists that the law of the Christian life 
must be a continuous repentance, and that this evan- 
gelical repentance is something quite different from the 
confession and satisfaction which are performed under 
the ministry of priests. He proclaims that ecclesias- 
tical good works, which can be remitted by the Pope, 
are by no means so valuable as those spontaneous 
offerings of charity which show the heartfelt thanks 
and humility of the soul whom God has pardoned. 

The theses are not a reasoned treatise ; they are the 
work of a man who wishes to drive his meaning into 
the minds of his readers by repeated blows. They are 
ninety- five sledge-hammer strokes delivered at the 
grossest ecclesiastical abuse of the age. They are 
written in such plain, nervous language, that no one 
could fail to understand what they meant, although 
it might not be so easy to comprehend all that they 
implied. 

The theses made a great impression far and wide. 
The speed with which they got into circulation was, 
for the age, unprecedented. They were read and known 
over the great part of Germany within a fortnight 
after they were published ; and Myconius tells us that 



72 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

they had gone far beyond Germany in four weeks, 
They were discussed privately by people of all ranks 
and classes. This was no doubt due, as Luther said, 
to the dislike that so many people had for the Indul- 
gence. But the boldness of the thoughts, and the clear, 
trenchant language, which Luther knew s0 well how 
to use, had their effect. So effective were they that 
the sales of " Papal Letters " declined rapidly, to the 
great disgust of Archbishop Albert and his commis- 
sary Tetzel. But Luther was disappointed that no 
one came forward to dispute the questions he had 
raised ; and he was hurt that his friends were very 
silent about the matter. The common opinion among 
those most friendly was that while he had spoken 
what was true, he had done a very rash thing, and that 
he could not fail to suffer for it. Luther's bishop told 
him that he found nothing heretical in his theses, but 
advised him to be content with what he had done, and 
publish nothing further upon the matter. 

On the other hand, Archbishop Albert was as much 
dissatisfied with the part he was forced to play. He 
wished to begin an ecclesiastical process against Luther 
at once, but was dissuaded from doing so by his ad- 
visers, and had to content himself with writing to the 
Pope. Tetzel, with his usual audacity, wrote and pub- 
lished counter-theses, and another Dominican monk, 
Conrad Wimpina, did the same. These controversialists 
contented themselves, however, with sheltering them- 
selves behind the omnipotence of the Pope in all mat- 
ters belonging to faith and morals ; they did not enter 
into the deep moral and theological questions raised 
by Luther. The students of Wittenberg, who were 
enthusiastically on the side of Luther, succeeded in 



LUTHER AT HEIDELBERG 73 

buying and stealing some eight hundred copies of 
Tetzel's counter - theses, and burning them in the 
market-place of that town. This act of violence did not 
do the cause of their hero any good. Luther, debarred 
by his bishop from publicly answering his opponents, 
contented himself with quietly preaching sermons in 
which he explained the moral questions involved in 
the sinner's relations to God and the pardon and free 
grace offered in the gospel. 

In April 1518 the Augustinian monks held their 
usual chapter or General Assembly at Heidelberg, and 
Luther went there in spite of many warnings from 
his friends that it was dangerous for him to leave 
Wittenberg. The Elector Frederic, although he did 
not approve of Luther's views on the Indulgence 
question, evidently did what he could to secure the 
safety of one whom he declared to be a " pious man." 
At these general chapters of the Augustinian Order 
a large amount of time was spent on theological 
discussions, and Luther had the consolation, hitherto 
denied him, of defending his theses publicly in the 
presence of theological opponents ; and in spite of the 
fact that he found much more opposition than he 
had expected, he returned to his work at Wittenberg 
very much strengthened and comforted in mind. 

Meanwhile one theologian, John Eck, formerly a 
personal friend of Luther's, a theological professor 
in Ingolstadt, had been carefully studying the theses, 
and with increasing dislike. Eck was by far the 
ablest opponent of Luther that Germany produced: 
a clear-sighted and learned man, and a forcible and 
ready debater. He saw that the theses were 
based on principles which would justify the opinions 



74 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

of John Huss, or, as they were commonly called, " the 
Bohemian Heresy," and that if carried out they 
would destroy the whole mediaeval conception of the 
supernatural powers of the clergy, and the dominion 
over the laity which the gifts supposed to be bestowed 
in ordination gave them. He made his first attack 
on Luther in a book of annotations on the theses, 
which he called Obelisks] and from this time forward 
two men, both the sons of peasants, stood forward as 
the champions, the one of the Komish hierarchy and 
the other of evangelical liberty. 

3. LUTHER AND LEO X 

When Luther came back from Heidelberg, he pre- 
pared for final publication an elaborate defence of 
his theses. He called it Resolutiones, and it is 
perhaps the most carefully prepared of all Luther's 
writings. It was rewritten several times, and long 
meditated over. It was dedicated to the Bishop of 
Brandenburg ; it was also sent to the Pope, accompanied 
by a letter to His Holiness, in which Luther, in the 
strongest language, professed himself to be a loyal 
and obedient son of the Church and of the Pope; 
he went so far as to say that he would "re- 
cognise in the Pope's voice the voice of Christ"; 
and that he had the greatest confidence in the Pope's 
personal character. In the Eesolutiones he went over 
the ground taken in the theses, and explained at 
length the relation of the priest to the sinner in 
priestly absolution, what lie meant by the absolute 
authority of Scripture, and what he understood by 
the "power of the keys." 



SUMMONED TO ROME 75 

Pope Leo x. was not a man to take any doctrinal 
matters very seriously. His one intention was to 
enjoy the papacy. He was rather anxious about the 
state of Germany, for the aged Emperor, Maximilian, 
was anxious to have his grandson nominated to be his 
successor ; and the election of such a powerful prince 
to the imperial throne did not promise an easy 
pontificate. He had heard a good deal about Luther 
before the monk addressed him,, and he had 
written confidentially to the general of the Augus- 
tinians that he was to do his best to keep things 
quiet, and calm down any excitement that had arisen. 
There was, however, at Eome, and in a place of 
authority, a very violent opponent of Luther. This was 
Silvester Mazzolini, called Prierias, from his birth- 
place, Prierio. He was a Dominican, was papal censor 
for the Roman Province, and an Inquisitor. He had 
written against the theses, and urged the Pope to 
do something, and that speedily, to end the heresy, 
for so he thought it, of the German monk. The 
Pope consented, and on the 7th of April Luther 
received a summons to present himself at Rome within 
sixteen days. The sudden summons to appear before 
the Inquisitorial office at Rome could be represented 
as an insult to the University of Wittenberg, of which 
Luther was the official head. To obey the summons 
was to invite destruction. Luther wrote to Spalatin, 
and suggested that the German princes ought to 
defend the rights of German universities attacked in 
his person. Spalatin wrote to the Elector and to the 
Emperor, both of whom were at Augsburg at the 
Diet. They were willing enough to insist on a trial 
on German soil. Frederic was anxious to maintain 



76 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

the dignity of his university, and had a high regard 
for Luther, although he did not yet share his opinions. 
The Emperor's keen political vision discerned a useful 
although, obscure ally in the young German theologian. 
He wished to secure Frederic's interest for his pro- 
posal to have his grandson nominated to be his 
successor, and he had long meditated on the need for 
notable reforms in the Church. "Luther is sure to 
begin a game with the priests," he said to Pfeffinger, 
Frederic's secretary; "the Elector should take good 
care of that monk, for he will be of use to us some 
day." The Pope was urged to grant a trial on 
German soil, and as he was no less anxious than the 
Emperor to secure to his side the support of Frederic, 
he at once consented. It was accordingly arranged 
that instead of going to Home, Luther should present 
himself before the papal legate at Augsburg, 

Luther at once set out in obedience to the mandate, 
although some faint-hearted friends tried to hold him 
back. The Elector gave him twenty gulden for the 
expenses of the journey, and when he reached Augsburg 
provided him with a jurist who could advise him on 
points of law. Travelling on foot, he got to Augsburg 
on the 8th of October 1518, and after some days' 
waiting, had an audience of the legate, the Cardinal 
Cajetan. Luther found the Cardinal willing to 
discuss the questions raised by the theses, and 
learned that there were two points to which he 
specially objected: first, that Luther denied, by 
implication at least, the existence of a "treasury of 
merits," which could be dispensed by the Pope to 
the faithful, as in the Indulgence ; and secondly, that 
lie seemed to hold that the sacraments were not 



APPEAL TO A GENERAL COUNCIL 77 

efficacious apart from faith in the receiver. He 
indicated that if Luther would unconditionally recant 
these two propositions, the rest might be condoned. 
Indeed, Luther received the impression that if he 
would admit the existence of the " treasury of merits " 
and assent to the use made of it in the Indulgences, 
nothing further would be said; "for I saw/' said 
Luther, "that it was money, and not doctrine, that 
they cared for at Rome/' Luther would have yielded 
almost anything, except the truth that the just 
shall live by his faith; a truth on which these two 
propositions were founded which the legate required 
him to recant. On this he could not yield, and the 
legate dismissed him with threats. His friends at 
Augsburg were so alarmed for his safety that they 
smuggled him out of the city, and he went off riding 
on such a sorry horse that it would have been much 
less fatiguing to have walked. 

The legate, highly indignant at Luther's refusal 
to recant, wrote to the Elector warning him against 
sheltering a heretic, to which Frederic replied that 
he could not deem a man to be a heretic whom no theo- 
logian in Germany had hitherto succeeded in showing 
to be in the wrong. 

Before leaving Augsburg, Luther had prepared a 
protest against the legate's decision, and had appended 
an appeal to a General Council. It is probable that 
he had been thinking about this before he left 
Wittenberg; for it is recorded that he had said that 
the papists believed that the Church was in the Pope 
and the representation in the Cardinals, while he thought 
that the Church was in Christ and the representation 
in a General Council. At all events this appeal was a 



78 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

masterstroke of policy. For one thing, it made use 
of a well-known and legitimate weapon of defence 
against papal tyranny. No one could accuse the 
great University of Paris of heresy, and yet not more 
than sis months earlier (in March 1518) its theologians 
had appealed to a General Council against a decision 
of the Pope, which they believed was an infringe- 
ment of the ecclesiastial liberties of the Church of 
France. It enabled the Elector and the Emperor to 
protect the reformer until his appeal had been heard 
and decided upon. It was besides an offer to the Emperor 
and the German princes of the most effectual means 
of wringing from the papal court ecclesiastical 
reforms for which all Germany was crying out. In 
Luther's hands, however, old weapons acquired new 
powers, and this was soon to be apparent with regard 
to the time-honoured appeal to a General Council. 
For as the effect of the appeal came to be recognised, 
Luther published the three great Creeds of Western 
Christendom the Apostles', the Nicene, and the 
Athanasian as his Confession of Faith; and in his 
preface he said: "I have caused these three Creeds 
or Confessions to be published together in German, 
Confessions which have hitherto been held through- 
out the whole Church ; and by these publications 
I testify once for all that I adhere to the true 
Church of Christ, which up till now has maintained 
these Confessions, but not to that false, pretentious 
Church, which is the worst enemy of the true 
Church, and which has surreptitiously introduced 
much idolatry alongside of those beautiful Confessions." 
The result of the publication of the appeal and of 
the Creeds was that people were able to see that 



MILTITZ ANI> LUTHER 79 

even Western Christendom was wider than the 
papacy, that it had a Creed which tested orthodoxy, 
and that it had a Court of Appeal which preserved 
its discipline, and that one might be an orthodox 
Catholic Christian, although the Pope and the papal 
Curia had thrust him from their communion. The 
publication of the Creeds in German was much later 
than the first issuing of the appeal; but it is 
well to see now all that Luther had in his mind 
when on his return to Wittenberg from Augsburg 
he carefully redrafted and published this appeal to 
a General Council. 

The political condition of affairs in Germany was 
too delicate, and the need for conciliating the political 
support of the Elector Frederic was too important, 
for tjie Pope to proceed rashly in the condemnation 
of Luther, which had been pronounced at Augsburg 
by the papal legate. With its habitual caution, the 
papal court resolved to refrain from hasty action. 
The Pope determined to send a special delegate to 
Germany to find out and report upon the condition 
of matters there. He selected his chamberlain, Charles 
von Miltitz, belonging to a noble Saxon family, 
members of which were in the service of the Elector, 
a man whom the Elector had used as his agent 
at the Court of Rome. No selection could be more 
acceptable to Frederic. The Pope did more to gain 
over Luther's protector. It was well known that 
Frederic was a devout man in the common mediaeval 
sense of the term; he had made a pilgrimage to 
Palestine, and had brought home a great store of 
relics, all of which are fully set forth in Lucas Cranach's 
book Wittemberc/er Heiligenthums Such von 1509 j 



8o LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

those relics were shown to the faithful on high 
festivals, and Frederic had procured from the Pope 
an Indulgence for the pilgrims who came to see 
and adore. He thought himself entitled to receive 
that mark of the Pope's friendship which was called 
the " Golden Rose/' and had privately asked for it 
through Miltitz himself. The "Golden Rose" was 
now sent with a gracious letter. 1 

Miltitz was armed with several letters from the 
Pope to Frederic, in which Luther was called a " child 
of the Devil/' to the Saxon Councillor Pf effinger, and 
to other magnates in Germany. He had full powers 
to do the best he could to calm things down, and 
was only fettered by the instructions to conclude 
nothing without taking the legate along with him. 

Miltitz set to work very cautiously. He was not 
able to confer with the legate, who had gone to Austria, 
nor could he persuade Teteel to come to meet him. 
The Indulgence-preacher declared that he dared not 
travel, being in fear of his life, so much had Luther 
stirred the authorities against him, not only in all 
parts of Germany, but also in Hungary, Bohemia, and 
Poland. Miltitz soon discovered that any high-handed 
proceedings against Luther would bring about an ex- 



"Golden Rose" is an artificial rose made in filigree work of 
gold. About two ounces weight of gold is employed for the purpose. 
On the first Sunday in Lent the Golden Rose was solemnly blessed 
by the Pope. After service, when the Pope left the church with his 
clergy, he carried the Eose in his hand. It was afterwards sent to the 
sovereign or prince on whom the Pope wished to bestow a special 
mark of personal friendship. It is now usually sent to ladies. The Queen 
of Spain got it to console lier for tlie troubles inflicted in the war 
with the United States ; and the mother of baby Boris to comfort her 
when, in spite of all her exertions, the baby was baptized according 
to the rites of the Greek Church, 



THE LEIPZIG DISPUTATION 81 

plosion of wrath, in Germany. Nearly half the men he 
met with were on Luther's side. He therefore resolved 
to meet Luther in as friendly a way as possible, and 
had interviews with him in Spalatin's presence at 
Altenberg. There Luther was persuaded to write a 
conciliatory letter to the Pope, and pledged himself to 
keep silence on religious matters in dispute, provided 
Jiis opponents did the same] and Miltitz prevailed 
upon the Pope to write to Luther, and address him as 
his "dear son." Miltitz then went to Tetzel, and 
having discovered the character of the man, he got 
the Dominican authorities to confine the former com- 
missary for Indulgences to the monastery of his Order 
in Leipzig. The poor man died not long afterwards 
in disgrace, abandoned by his party. It was charac- 
teristic of Luther that when he heard of Tetzel's 
disgrace and illness he sent him a comforting letter. 
Luther had promised to keep silent until the matters 
in dispute had been referred for investigation to two 
honoured German prelates, the Archbishop of Trier 
(Treves) and the Bishop of Wtirzburg, but only on 
condition that his opponents refrained from attacking 
him. He faithfully adhered to the pact. But his 
opponents refused to let him alone ; and he was prac- 
tically forced by Dr. Eck to take part in the great 
theological discussion at Leipzig. 

4. THE LEIPZIG DISPUTATION AND ITS RESULTS 

The Leipzig Disputation, as it is called, is one of the 
most important episodes in the history of the Reforma- 
tion. It brought the two German champions face to 
face. Eck so forced the discussion that it became 
6 



82 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

plain that Luther's Augustinian theology led him 
much further than he had at first believed, and really 
Involved much more than a protest against some pro- 
minent abuses in the mediaeval Church. 

It is needless to enter into the details of the negotia- 
tion which led up to this famous Disputation. Duke 
George of Saxony, afterwards one of Luther's bitterest 
enemies, was keen to have such an important Disputa- 
tion held in the presence of his university. Matters 
were so arranged by his opponents that Luther was 
forced to vindicate his own honour, bitterly attacked 
by Dr. John Eck, and the reputation of the University 
of Wittenberg, by consenting to take part in the 
discussion. 

Luther and Carlstadt left Wittenberg on the 24th 
of June 1520, in two common country carts, Carl- 
stadt by himself in the first, and Luther with his 
friend Melanchthon, who since August 1518 had 
joined the teaching staff of Wittenberg, in the second. 
They were accompanied by the young Duke Barnim 
of Pomerania, who was the rector of their university, 
and by some of the Wittenberg lecturers, among whom 
were Nicholas Amsdorf and Johann Lange of Erfurt. 
About two hundred students, armed with spears and 
halberts, walked beside the carts, partly to honour and 
partly to protect their professors. The Wittenbergers 
had come among a people little friendly. "In the 
hotels where the Wittenberg students lodged, the land- 
lord kept a man standing with a halbert near the table 
to keep the peace while the Leipzig and the Witten- 
berg students disputed with each other. I have seen 
the same myself in the house of Herbipolis, a book- 
seller; where I went to dine . , . for there was at table 



THE LEIPZIG DISPUTATION 83 

a Magister Baumgarten . . . who was so hob against 
the Wittenbergers that the host Herbipolis had to 
restrain him with a halbert to make him keep the 
peace so long as the Wittenbergers were in the house 
and sat and ate at the table with him." Dr. Eck had 
come to the town a few days previously, and went 
about with great ostentation. The 26th was spent in 
settling the terms of the debate, and the Disputation 
was begun with all fitting solemnities on the 27th of 
June. The university did not contain any room large 
enough to hold the company assembled to hear the 
discussion, and Duke George gave the use of the great 
hall in his castle of Pleisenburg, and had it appro- 
priately furnished two great chairs being placed for 
the disputants. But let Master Froschel, who was 
present, speak: "When we got to the church . . . 
they sang a Mass with twelve voices which had never 
been heard before. After Mass we went to the Castle, 
where we found a guard of burghers in their armour 
with their best weapons and their banners ; they were 
ordered to be there twice a day, from seven to nine 
o'clock in the morning and from two to five o'clock in 
the afternoon, to keep the peace while the Disputation 
lasted. When we got to the Castle, Peter Mosellanus 
stepped forward and delivered a Latin oration, and then 
we all went to lunch. The Disputation was to begin 
at two o'clock in the afternoon, and there appeared 
George Ehau the precentor, with his choir and with 
the town pipers, and they began to sing and to blow 
the Veni Sancte Spiritus; thereafter the Disputation 
began, first Dr. Carlstadt with Dr. Eck." 

The disputation between Carlstadt and Eck lasted 
five days, and it was generally conceded that Eck had 



84 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

the best of the argument. Then came Luther's turn. 
He had been treated very discourteously during the 
days that had passed; when he went to church to 
worship, the priests took away the elements from the 
altars lest they should be polluted by the approach of 
a heretic. He was made to feel that he was an out- 
cast, while his opponent was honoured in every way. 
At last, on the 4th of July, the two theologians, both 
peasants' sons, faced each other. Young Mosellanus 
has given us a striking picture of the two men. 
" Martin is of medium height ; his body is slender, 
emaciated by cares and study; one can count almost 
all the bones ; he stands in the prime of his age ; his 
voice sounds clear and distinct." Mosellanus further 
tells us that Luther was remarkably courteous and 
friendly in his intercourse with all ; however hard his 
enemies pressed him, he maintained his calmness and 
his good nature, though in debate he was somewhat 
bitter. It was cause of general remark that he carried 
a bunch of flowers in his hand, and often looked at it 
and smelt it, especially when the discussion got hot. 
To Mosellanus the whole aspect of the man, in the 
peculiarly trying circumstances in which he was placed, 
almost assured him that Luther could not be what he 
was without having the assurance of the presence of 
God with him. 

Of Eck he says : " He has a huge square body, a full 
strong voice coming from his chest, fit for a tragic 
actor or a town crier, and more harsh than distinct ; 
his mouth, eyes, and whole aspect give one the idea of 
a butcher or a rude soldier rather than of a theologian." 
Mosellanus also tells us that Eck gave one the idea of 
striving to overcome rather than to win a victory for 



THE LEIPZIG DISPUTATION 85 

the truth, and that there was as much sophistry as 
good reasoning in his arguments. Besides, he was 
continually misquoting his opponent's words or trying 
to give them a meaning which they were not intended 
to convey. Eck evidently impressed him hadly. 

The debate, which lasted five days, was confined 
almost exclusively to the questions relating to the 
supremacy of the Pope over the Catholic Church of 
Christ. When we compare the incidents of the discus- 
sion with Dr. Eck's first attack on Luther in his 
Obelisks, it becomes evident that the intention of the 
papal champion was to force Luther to make admis- 
sions which would bear out Eek's accusation that 
Luther's theses on Indulgences were really an attack 
on those hierarchical and priestly conceptions of the 
Christian ministry, on which the external organisation 
of the mediaeval Church was based. In this he was 
eminently successful. He compelled Luther, step by 
step, to avow that the Church is not the hierarchy and 
those dependent on it, but the whole company of faith- 
ful believers ruled by ministers who are the " servants " 
of the community. Eck had declared in his Obe- 
lisks that Luther's theses contained implicitly the 
" Bohemian Heresy," and he tried to force this out at 
Leipzig. The exciting moment in the discussion came 
when this was made evident. "One thing I must 
tell," to quote our eye-witness, Master Froschel, " which 
I myself heard in the Disputation, and which took 
place in the presence of Duke George, who came often 
to the Disputation and listened most attentively ; once 
Dr. Martin spoke these words to Dr. Eck when hard 
pressed about John Huss: 'Dear .Doctor, the Hussite 
opinions are not all wrong.' Thereupon, said Duke 



86 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

George, so loudly that the whole audience heard, ' God 
help us, the pestilence ! ' (' Das wait, die Sucht '), and he 
wagged his head and placed his arms akimbo. That 
I myself heard and saw, for I sat almost between his 
feet and those of Duke Barnim of Pomerania, who was 
then the Rector of Wittenberg." 

Poor Duke George ! What would he have thought 
had it been told him that he would be chiefly known 
because of a saying of the pestilential Luther ? " Dare 
not go to Leipzig," said Luther once. "If I had 
business there I would go, though it rained Duke 
Georges nine days running!" He was a stately, 
magnificent man; the handsomest, wealthiest, and 
most learned of all the German princes. His con- 
temporaries called him George the Rich, George the 
Learned (he had written a history of his father's 
exploits in Latin), and George the Bearded from his 
magnificent flowing beard. The old prints of the time 
let us see a stately gentleman, with aristocratic 
features and high forehead, his breast blazing with 
jewels where the beard allows them to be seen. He 
was always strong for the old religion, and wrote, 
schemed, and conspired on its behalf. His life was 
full of troubles. Of his large family of ten children 
not a son remained to inherit his lands, and his 
brothers all took the Lutheran side. When he felt old 
and frail, near death, he wrote to his brother, the next 
heir, then very poor, that he would hand over every- 
thing to him at once lands, palace, and possessions 
provided only he vowed to remain faithful to the 
old religion. The brother honourably declined. Then 
Duke George made a will that his successor in his 
dukedom must be a Roman Catholic, and asked his 



THE LEIPZIG DISPUTATION 87 

Estates to ratify it. The Estates respectfully refused. 
This second refusal proved too much for the old man. 
He took to bed, and never rose again. Carlyle tells a 
pathetic story of his end. " A reverend Pater was 
endeavouring to strengthen him by assurances about 
his good works, about the favour of the saints and 
suchlike, when Dr. Kothe, the Crypto - Protestant 
medical gentleman, ventured to suggest in the extreme 
moment, ' Gracious Lord, you were often wont to say, 
" Straightforward is the best runner ! " Do that your- 
self ; go straight to the blessed Saviour and Eternal 
Son of God, who bore our sins, and leave the dead 
saints alone ! ' ' Ay then, Help me then/ George 
groaned out in low sad murmur, ' true Saviour, Jesus 
Christ ; take pity on me, and save me by Thy bitter 
sorrows and death!' and yielded up his soul in this 
manner." 

Dr. Eck was delighted at the success of his tactics, 
and he and his friends had no doubt whatever that he 
remained the victor in the .controversy ; while Luther, 
on the other hand, returned to Wittenberg in great 
depression of spirit, to bury himself in his professorial 
and pastoral work there. He took care, however, to 
prepare the Disputation for publication, and to com- 
plete his argument on the position of the Pope in the 
Church. According to Eck and his friends, the battle 
had been won. Luther had been forced to declare 
himself, and that in such a way that there only 
remained room for a papal Bull declaring him an 
excommunicated heretic, and delivering him over to 
the civil authorities for punishment. 

What Eck did not see was that some defeats are 
victories; and while he was congratulating himself 



88 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

that he had at last thrust Luther outside the pale of 
the medieval Church, he did not perceive that this was 
exactly what would give Luther an immense accession 
of outside strength. He showed that Luther was an 
unyielding opponent of Rome, and almost all Germany 
was at that time looking for such a champion. Eck 
had effected what the clear-sighted politician Miltitz 
dreaded: that Luther should be forced into such a 
position that, whether he liked it or not, he would 
become the rallying centre for all those who were 
longing to see a " Germany for the Germans." 

This Leipzig Disputation was therefore perhaps the 
most important episode in the whole course of Luther's 
career. It made him for a few years at least the 
"man of Germany" with almost every German. 
Leipzig made Luther see clearly for the first time what 
lay in his opposition to Indulgences; and it made 
others see it also. He and other men now saw that 
the principles laid down in the theses struck at the 
whole round of mediaeval ecclesiastical life. The 
noblest teaching of the Middle Ages, which announced 
an awful divine righteousness with its inexorable 
demands, made it impossible for any man or woman to 
live such a perfectly pure and holy life in the sight of 
God, that he could accumulate a store of merits so 
abundant that part could be handed over to less 
impeccable mortals. This thought destroyed the basis 
on which were founded the worship of saints, the 
reverence of relics, and the religious uses of pil- 
grimages. On the other hand, the proclamation of the 
free pardoning grace of God made monastic life, with 
its vigils, its fasts, its scourgings and mortification of 
all earthly and family affections, a useless thing. All 



THE LEIPZIG DISPUTATION 89 

these things were apt to be hindrances rather than 
helps to that true life of the soul which it lived in 
communion with God, and which was produced by 
trust on Him and on His promises. After this Leipzig 
Disputation Luther found out his true religious 
position in a way that he had never previously 
done. The effects were soon visible in the sermons 
and tracts in German which his tireless pen produced, 
and which the printing-press sent broadcast over 
Germany. This teaching found its freest expression 
in the two treatises, On the Liberty of the Christian 
Man, and On the Babylonian Captivity of the Church 
of God. 

The Leipzig Disputation had besides given Luther, 
all unconsciously to himself, a position- in the eyes of 
men who had cared very little for his stand about 
Indulgences. The German patriot, when he read the 
account of what took place at Leipzig, saw a man 
defying Kome, and asserting in the face of that oldest 
of despotisms the principles of individual and national 
liberty. To his mind the one thing that prevented 
Germany from being a free and united nation like 
England, France, or even Spain, was the thraldom in 
which the land was held by the Pope and the Koman 
Curia. The German Emperor had to be crowned by 
the Roman pontiff, the title of the king of the Germans 
was the king of the Eomans ; the legates of the Pope 
and of the Curia took advantage of the divided state of 
the country to set one province against another, and 
rule over all by fomenting the quarrels which other- 
wise might easily have been ended. The exactions of 
the Pope and the Curia impoverished the bishops, the 
nobles, and the cities, and this impoverishment reacted 



90 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

on the artisans and peasant classes, and increased the 
hardships of their lives. The one supreme duty of 
every patriotic German as men like Ulrich von Hutten 
thought was to deliver their country from the political 
degradation caused by its political bondage to the 
Roman Curia. It is after the Leipzig Disputation 
that we hear of Ulrich von Hutten and Franz von 
Sickingen in the latter's castle of Ebernburg, spending 
some time every day after dinner in reading over 
carefully and then discussing Luther's writings, till 
Sickingen could say, "And does anyone dare try to 
undermine Luther's doctrines or think that he can if 
he tries ? " Scenes like this in the castle of Ebernburg 
were happening all over Germany, and Luther's cor- 
respondence grew to be burdensome in consequence, 
and he was encouraged to take all Germany into his 
confidence in his Address to the Nobility of the German 
Nation. To such length had the attack on Indulgences 
led him. 

The Leipzig Disputation taught Luther that both 
Church and State needed a reformation, and that 
reform meant separation from the Roman Curia as its 
first step. It became clear to him also that such a 
reform and reconstruction could only be effected by a 
movement which combined the whole population of 
Germany, and that it ought to be carried out, not by 
fire and sword, but by the spread of the principles 
of genuine religion through the whole population. 
His weapon was the printing-press, and few under- 
stand how unweariedly and how uniquely Luther ruade 
use of it. One might almost say that Luther was the 
man who started the trade in books printed in German. 
Dr. Burkhardt, archivist at Weimar, has given us the 



LUTHER'S LITERARY ACTIVITY 91 

following remarkable facts. 1 He tells us that the 
number of books which were issued from the printing- 
presses in the German language and within Germany, 
from 1480 to 1490, did not exceed 40 a year ; that the 
numbers issued during the first ten years of the 
sixteenth century were not greater ; and then he gives 
the exact numbers for individual years. In the year 
1513 the number of books in the German language 
issued from German presses was 35 ; in 1514 it 
was 47; in 1515, 46; in 1516, 55; and in 1517, 37. 
Then Luther's printed appeals to the German people 
began to appear in the shape of sermons, addresses, 
short tracts, etc., and the German publications of the 
year 1518 were 71, no less than 20 of which were from 
Luther's pen; in 1519 the total number of German 
published books was 111, of which 50 were Luther's; 
in 1520 the number of printed German books rose to 
208, of which 133 were Luther's; while in 1523 the 
whole number of German books had risen to 498, of 
which no less than 183 were from Luther's pen. 
These facts not merely show us the incredible and 
restless activity of the man, they also prove that 
almost all Germany was eager to read whatever he 
printed. Eye-witnesses describe how crowds waited 
at the doors of the printing-house when any specially 
important sermon or booklet was almost ready, to get 
the earliest copies ; that men could not wait till they 
got home to read it; that readers were surrounded 
by eager crowds, who insisted on the booklets being 
read aloud to them in the streets and market-places. 
Perhaps no one has ever had such a power over his 

1 Zetisch. /. Tiist. TheoL, 1862, p. 456 ; cf. also Eanke, Deutsche 
@eschwhte im Zeitaller der Reformation, ii. p. 56, 6th ed. 



92 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

contemporaries as Luther exercised. His writings 
were not merely printed books giving information; 
they came as the voice of a brother-man from the 
depths of his heart, speaking in ringing, inspirit- 
ing tones, and using language that all could under- 
stand. He seemed able to say what others were only 
thinking, and he dared to speak aloud what others 
only whispered to their own hearts. The accusation 
which Eck hurled against him that he was repeating 
the words of John Huss, a condemned and burned 
heretic, only seemed to give his utterances more 
power. These old words could not be hushed, it was 
seen ; they had risen again from the dead, and there- 
fore they were felt to be endowed with an eternal life, 
" No one," said Melanchthon, " comes near Dr. Luther, 
and Indeed the heart of the whole nation hangs on 
him. Who stirs the heart of Germany of nobles, 
peasants, princes, women, children as he does with his 
noble, faithful words f ** 



CHAPTEE IV 

THE THEEE GREAT REFORMATION TREATISES 

1. " CHRISTIAN LIBERTY " AND " THE CAPTIYITY OF 
THE CHURCH" 

IN 1520 Luther published the three writings which 
contain the principles of his reformation. They 
appeared in the following order: To the Christian 
Nobility of the German Nation, respecting the Re- 
formation of the Christian Estate, probably in the 
beginning of August ; The Babylonian Captivity of 
the Church, probably before the end of September; 
and Concerning Christian Liberty, early in October. 
These three books are commonly called in Germany 
the " Three Great Reformation Treatises/' and the title 
befits them well. Luther wrote and published them 
after three years of controversy, following upon the 
publication of the theses, had made his position per- 
fectly clear to himself, and at a time when he knew 
that he had to expect nothing from Borne but a sentence 
of excommunication. However the details of his teach- 
ing may have afterwards changed, it remained in all 
essential positions unaltered from what we find it in 
these three books. 1 

1 These three treatises, exhibiting the principles of the Lutheran Re- 

03 



94 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

The short tractate on " Christian Liberty" had a some- 
what pathetic history. The good Miltitz still hoped 
that the final breach between Luther and the papacy 
might be avoided ; and he earnestly counselled Luther 
to write a friendly letter to the Pope, and send His 
Holiness a short, simple statement of what his inmost 
religious beliefs were. Luther did so ; and this booklet 
was the result. It has for its preface the letter to Pope 
Leo, which concludes thus : " I, in my poverty, have no 
other present to make you, nor do you need anything 
else than to be enriched by a spiritual gift. I com- 
mend myself to your paternity and blessedness, whom 
may the Lord Jesus preserve for ever. Amen." 

The short treatise is a brief statement, free from all 
theological subtleties, of the priesthood of all believers, 
which is the result of justification by faith. Luther 
begins by an antithesis : " A Christian man is the most 
free lord of all, and subject to none; a Christian man 
is the most dutiful servant of all, and subject to every- 
one " ; or, as St. Paul puts it, " Though I be free from 
all men, yet have I made myself servant of all." He 
expounds this by showing that no outward things have 
any influence in producing Christian righteousness or 
liberty; neither eating, drinking, or anything of the 
kind, neither hunger nor thirst, have to do with the 
liberty or the slavery of the soul. It does not profit 
the soul to wear sacred vestments or to dwell in sacred 

formation, together with the theses against Indulgences and Luther's 
Short and Greater Catechisms, have been translated and published in 
English, with two explanatory Essays one on the " Primary Principles 
of Luther's Life and Teaching," by Prebendary Waco, and the other on 
the "Political Course of the Reformation in Germany (1517-1546)," 
by Professor Bucheim. London : Hodder & Stoughton, 1896. I hava 
taken the translation of the extracts quoted from this volume* 



-THE TRACT ON CHRISTIAN LIBERTY 95 

places, nor does it harm the soul to be clothed in 
worldly raiment, and to eat and drink in the ordinary 
fashion. The soul can do without everything except 
the Word of God, and this Word of God is the gospel 
of God concerning His Son, incarnate, suffering, risen, 
and glorified, through the Spirit the Sanctifier. " To 
preach Christ is to feed the soul, to justify it, to set it 
free, to save it, if it believes the preaching ; for faith 
alone and the efficacious use of the Word of God bring 
salvation." It is faith that incorporates Christ with the 
believer, and in this way " the soul, through faith alone, 
without works, is, from the Word of God, justified, 
sanctified, endued with truth, peace, liberty, and filled 
full with every good thing, and is truly made the child 
of God." For faith brings the soul and the Word to- 
gether, and the soul is acted upon by the Word, as iron 
exposed to fire glows like fire, because of its union with 
the fire. Faith honours and reveres Him in whom it 
trusts, and cleaves to His promises, never doubting but 
that He overrules all for the best. Faith unites the 
soul to Christ, so that " Christ and the soul become 
one flesh." " Thus the believing soul, by the pledge of 
its faith in Christ, becomes free from all sin, fearless of 
death, safe from hell, and endowed with the eternal 
righteousness, life, and salvation of its husband Christ." 
This gives the liberty of the Christian man ; no dangers 
can really harm him, no sorrows utterly overwhelm 
him, for he is always accompanied by the Christ to 
whom he is united by faith. 

" Here you will ask," says Luther, " c If all who are in 
the Church are priests, by what character are those 
whom we now call priests to be distinguished from the 
laity ? ' I reply, By the use of these words, c priest/ 



96 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

'clergy,' 'spiritual person/ 'ecclesiastic/ an injustice 
has been done, since they have been transferred from 
the remaining body of Christians to those few who are 
now, by a hurtful custom, called ecclesiastics. For 
Holy Scripture makes no distinction between them, 
except that those who are now boastfully called Popes, 
bishops, and lords, it calls ministers, servants, and 
stewards, who are to serve the rest in the ministry of the 
Word, for teaching the faith of Christ and the liberty 
of believers. For though it is true that we are all 
equally priests, yet we cannot, nor ought we, if we could, 
all to minister and teach publicly." 

The first part of the treatise shows that everything 
which a Christian man has goes back in the end to his 
faith ; if he has this he has all ; if he has it not, nothing 
.else suffices him. In the same way the second part 
shows that everything that a Christian man does must 
come from his faith. It may be necessary to fast and 
keep the body under ; it will be necessary to make use 
of all the ceremonies of divine service which have been 
found effectual for the spiritual education of man. The 
thing to remember is that these are not good works in 
themselves or in the sense of making a man good; they 
are all rather the signs of his faith, and are to be done 
with joy, because they are done to the God to whom 
faith unites us. 

This brief description of what Luther called a 
"summary of the Christian life" will give an idea 
of the little book which perhaps most clearly mani- 
fests that combination of revolutionary daring and 
wise conservatism which was the most outstanding 
feature in Luther's character. It maintains that cere- 
monies, or what may be called the whole machinery 



THE PRIESTHOOD OF ALL BELIEVERS 97 

of the Church, are most valuable, and Indeed indis- 
pensable, provided they are looked at from the right 
point of view, and are kept in their proper place; 
while, on the other hand, they may become harmful to, 
and indeed almost destructive of, the true religious 
life, if they are considered in any other sense than as 
means to an end. It therefore follows that, if through 
human corruption and neglect of the plain precepts 
of the Word of God, those ceremonies instead of 
aiding the true growth of the soul are hindering it, 
they ought to be changed or done away with ; and the 
fact that the soul of man, in the last resource, needs 
absolutely nothing but the Word of God dwelling in 
it, gives men courage and tranquillity in demanding 
their reformation. It is the assertion of this principle, 
at once simple and profound, which places Luther in 
the forefront of all reformers of religion, and which 
marks him off from all previous witnesses for the 
truth, however courageously they may have testified 
against the ecclesiastical abuses of their days. The 
principle itself is the doctrine of Justification by Faith 
stripped of theological accessories, and stated in the 
simple language of everyday life. 

The immediate application of this principle which 
Luther made, to define by it the relative positions of 
the clergy and the laity, was so important that it may 
be called a second principle. It is the assertion of the 
spiritual priesthood of all believers. He declared that 
men and women living lives in the family, in the 
workshop, and in the civic world, held their position 
there, not by a kind of indirect permission wrung 
from God out of His compassion for human frailties, 
but by as direct a vocation as that which called men to 
7 



98 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

what by a mistake had been deemed the only religious 
life. The principle of the spiritual priesthood of all 
believers was able to deliver the laity from the vague 
fear of the clergy which enthralled them, and was also 
a potent spur to incite them to undertake a reforma- 
tion of the Church which was so sorely needed. 

These principles Luther at once applied in his two 
longer treatises on the Church and on the Christian 
Estate or Commonwealth, 

In the Babylonian Captivity of the Church Luther 
declares that everything must be brought to the one 
test of the authority of the Word of God. This 
shows us how Luther thought that his principle of 
Christian liberty is to be applied, and what limita- 
tions were to be placed on its exercise. The essence of 
the liberty of a Christian man is the faith which he 
possesses, and faith is not mere abstract sentiment, but 
a personal trust in a personal Saviour who has given 
promises to be trusted in and messages to be accepted. 
These promises and messages are given us in the Word 
of God, which is a tissue of promises and prayers, and 
thus exhibits the union and communion of the be- 
lieving man and the Saviour God. The promises may 
be simple promises, or they may be promises wrapt in 
a visible sign, or they may be contained in pictures of 
the life of a believing man or nation in communion 
with God. However they are given, they are con- 
tained in the Word of God, which is therefore the rule 
both of the exercise and of the limitations of our 
Christian freedom. He applies this to a criticism of 
the elaborate sacramental system of the Roman Church, 
and the result of the application is to convince him 
that the Roman Curia has held the Church of God 



CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE 99 

In bondage to human traditions and commandments of 
men, which run counter to the plain messages and 
promises of the Word of God. The ideas which guide 
him throughout the book are brought together at the 
close ; and there we learn that while Luther considers 
it possible to apply the word " sacrament " to all those 
things to which a divine promise has been made, such 
as prayer, the Word, the cross, yet it is best to limit 
the use of the word to those promises which have 
visibly and divinely appointed signs attached. The 
result is that there are only two sacraments, Baptism 
and the Lord's Supper, or the Bread as Luther calls 
it, and that the other so-called sacraments are but 
ceremonies of human institution, salutary or otherwise. 

It is unnecessary to describe the contents of this 
book at any length, but it may be interesting to notice 
briefly what Luther has to say on the one topic of 
Christian marriage. 

Nothing in the whole round of Romish interfer- 
ences with scriptural commands and messages excited 
Luther's indignation like the way in which it had 
degraded the whole conception of Christian marriage. 
" What shall we say of those impious human laws by 
which this divinely appointed manner of life has been 
entangled and tossed up and down? Good God! it 
is horrible to look upon the temerity of the tyrants 
of Rome, who thus, according to their caprices, at one 
time annul marriages and at another time enforce 
them. Is the human race given over to their caprice 
for nothing but to be mocked and abused in every 
way, and that these men may do what they please 
with it for the sake of their own fatal gains. . . . 
And what do they sell? The shame of men and 



ioo LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

women, a merchandise worthy of these traffickers, who 
surpass all that is most sordid and most disgusting in 
their avarice and impiety." Luther points out that 
there is a clear and scriptural law on the degrees 
within which marriage is unlawful, and that no human 
regulations ought to forbid marriages outside these 
degrees or permit it within them. He declares him- 
self in favour of the marriage of priests, and says that 
there is nothing in Scripture or in the usages of the 
early Church forbidding it. He says that personally 
he detests the thought of divorce, " and even prefers 
bigamy to it"; but that it is clearly permitted by 
Christ in certain cases, and that the Roman Curia, now 
forbidding and now permitting, have defied all laws 
human and divine for the sake of money-making. 

The justness of Luther's indignation at the scandals 
of the Koman Curia in relation to the Church's matri- 
monial legislation can only be appreciated by those 
who have studied the havoc it made in the family life 
of palace, castle, and burgher's home in the fifteenth 
and sixteenth centuries. 

2. THE REFORMATION OF THE CHRISTIAN ESTATE 

In his address To the Nobility of the German Nation, 
respecting the Reformation of the Christian Estate, 
Luther applied the principles laid down in his treatise 
on Christian Liberty to the reformation of the 
political Commonwealth. No writing coming from 
Luther's pen produced such an instantaneous, wide- 
spread, and powerful effect as this treatise did. It 
was issued from the printing-press some time in the 
beginning of August (the exact date is unknown), and 



ADDRESS TO THE NOBILITY 101 

before the 18th of the month four thousand copies 
were in circulation throughout Germany, and the 
presses could not print fast enough for the demand. 
Such a circulation was extraordinary for the times, 
and was quite unprecedented. The treatise was a 
thoroughgoing antidote to the Bull of excommunica- 
tion which was soon to be published in Germany. It 
was the political and social manifesto of the Reforma- 
tion, and its effects were seen at the two Diets held at 
Niirnberg in 1522 and 1524, where its indictment of 
the Roman Curia was practically adopted by the Diet. 
It owed its power to the spiritual insight, the moral 
energy, and the tact which, in spite of occasional 
violence of language, it displayed throughout. The 
spiritual insight is to be seen in the way in which it 
lays down the principle of the independence of the 
human soul of all merely human powers and arrange- 
ments, in which it insists on the equal spiritual rights 
and responsibilities of layman and cleric, and in which 
it asserts the true sanctity and spirituality of all 
natural relationships of family, home, trade, and pro- 
fession, of noble, burgher, artisan, and peasant. The 
moral energy is displayed in the way in which one 
abuse after another is brought forward in swift 
irresistible succession, and the veil of legal chicanery 
is stripped from one monstrous exaction after another, 
and in the boldness with which the author points to 
plague-spots which were due to the vices of the people 
themselves. Its wonderful tact is disclosed in the 
modest beginning: "It is not out of mere arrogance 
and perversity that I, an individual poor man, have 
taken upon me to address your lordships." It appears 
IB the courteous address to the young Emperor, 



102 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Charles v., from whom German patriots were expect- 
ing so much, and in whom they were soon to be sadly 
disappointed : " God has given us a young and noble 
sovereign, and by this has roused great hopes in many 
hearts ; now it is right that we too should do what we 
can, and make good use of time and grace." It is 
seen in the deft omission from the title of all reference 
to the Holy Eoman Empire and the delicate suggestion 
thereby of a "Germany for the Germans"; in the 
appeal to the nobles who were, with the Emperor, the 
legal representatives of the German nation, and on 
whose shoulders the author lays the responsibilities 
for the good government of the realm ; and in the use 
of the German language, which makes the address an 
appeal to the whole German people nobles, burghers, 
and peasants. 

The great source of the clamant evils which oppress 
the German people is, according to Luther, the Pope 
and the Eoman Curia, and the reason why the nation 
has been slow to deliver itself from the evils which 
overwhelm it is because its arch-enemy has entrenched 
itself behind a triple fortification believed to be im- 
pregnable. The first thing to do is to tear down these 
defences, which are: (1) that the Temporal Power 
has no jurisdiction over the Spiritual ; (2) that they 
cannot be admonished from Scripture, since no one 
may interpret Scripture but the Pope ; (3) that they 
cannot be called in question by a Council, because no 
one can call a Council but the Pope. These are their 
defences, and Luther proceeds to demolish them. 

The Romanists assert that the Pope, bishops, priests, 
and monks are the spiritual estate, while princes, lords, 
artificers, and peasants are the temporal estate ; but 



INDICTMENT OF THE PAPACY 103 

this is simply an hypocritical device. All Christians 
are of the spiritual estate, and there is no differ- 
ence between them save that of office and of work 
given to do. Every man has work given him to do 
for the commonwealth, and he may be restrained and 
punished if he does not do it properly, whether he be 
Pope, bishop, priest, monk, tailor, mason, or cobbler. 

As for the statement that the Pope alone can inter- 
pret Scripture if that were true, what is the need for 
the Holy Scriptures ? " Let us burn them, and content 
ourselves with the unlearned gentlemen at Rome, in 
whom the Holy Ghost dwells, who, however, can dwell 
in pious souls only. If I had not read it, I could never 
have believed that the devil should have put forth such 
follies at Rome and find a following." 

The third "wall" falls of itself with the other two; 
for we are plainly taught in Scripture that if our 
brother offends we are to tell it to the Church, and 
if the Pope offends, as he often does, we can only 
obey the Word of God by calling a Council ; and this 
the Emperors used to do. 

Then comes the indictment. There is in Rome one 
who calls himself the Vicar of Christ, and who lives 
in a singular state of resemblance to our Lord and 
St. Peter, His apostle; for this man wears a triple 
crown (a single one does not content him), and keeps 
up such a state that he requires a larger personal 
revenue than the Emperor. He has surrounding him 
a number of men, called cardinals, whose only apparent 
use is that they serve to draw to themselves the 
revenues of the richest convents, fiefs, endowments, 
and benefices, and spend the money thus got in keep- 
ing up the state of a wealthy sovereign in Rome. 



104 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

When it Is impossible to seize upon the whole revenue 
of an ecclesiastical benefice, the Curia joins some ten 
or twenty together, and mulcts each in a good round 
annual sum for the benefit of a cardinal. Thus the 
priory of Wiirzburg gives one thousand gulden yearly, 
and Bamberg, Mainz, and Trier pay their quotas. The 
papal court is enormous three thousand papal secre- 
taries and hangers-on innumerable, and all waiting 
for German benefices, whose duties they never fulfil, 
as wolves wait for a flock of sheep. In this way 
Germany pays to Rome a sum of three hundred 
thousand gulden annually more than it pays to its 
own Emperor. " Do we still wonder why princes, 
noblemen, cities, foundations, convents, and people 
grow poor ? We should rather wonder that we have 
anything left to eat." Then look at the way in which 
Rome robs the German land. Long ago the Emperor 
permitted a Pope to take the half of the first year's 
income from every benefice the annates for the 
special purpose of providing money for a war against 
the Turk. This money was never spent for the pur- 
pose destined ; yet it has actually been regularly paid 
for a hundred years, and the Pope regards it as a 
regular and legitimate tax, and employs it to pay 
posts and offices at Rome. " Whenever there is any 
pretence of fighting the Turk, they send out commis- 
sions for collecting money, and often send out Indul- 
gences under the same pretext . . . They think that 
we Germans will always remain such great and in- 
veterate fools that we will go on giving money to 
satisfy their unspeakable greed, though we see plainly 
that neither annates, nor absolution money, nor any 
other thing not one farthing goes against the Turks, 



INDICTMENT OF THK PAPACY 105 

but all goes Into their bottomless sack . . , and all 
this is done in the holy name of Christ and St. Peter." 
He then enumerates the ways, many of them mere 
legal chicanery, by which the Pope gets the right to 
appoint to German benefices. He exposes the gross 
exactions connected with the bestowal of the pallium 
on German prelates; the trafficking in benefices, in 
all manner of exemptions and permissions to evade 
ecclesiastical laws and restrictions, the most shame- 
less instances being those connected with marriage; 
and describes the Curial Court as a place " where vows 
are annulled; where a monk gets leave to quit his 
Order ; where priests can enter married life for money ; 
where bastards can become legitimate ; and dishonour 
and shame may arrive at high honours ; all evil repute 
and disgrace is knighted and ennobled ; where a mar- 
riage is suffered that is in a forbidden degree, or has 
some other defect. . . . There is a buying and a selling, 
a changing, blustering and bargaining, cheating and 
lying, robbing and stealing, debauchery and villainy, 
and all kinds of contempt of God that Antichrist could 
not reign worse." 

Luther, lastly, proceeds to give some suggestion for 
amending matters twenty-seven in number. The 
first eight and the seventeenth are such that if carried 
into effect they would have the result of creating a 
German National Church with an ecclesiastical Council, 
to be the highest court of ecclesiastical appeal, and to 
represent the German Church as the Diet did the 
German State. Suggestions nine, ten, eleven, and 
twenty-six aim at the complete abolition of the 
supremacy of the Pope over the State. In most of 
the others he deals with ecclesiastical abuses which 



106 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

do not spring from the supremacy and greed of Koine, 
but which are productive of much religious and social 
evil. Luther would check the multitude of pilgrim* 
ages, which he thinks do not tend to good morals, and 
lead men to pursue a life of wandering beggary. For 
the same reason he would limit or suppress the mendi- 
cant orders. " It is of much more importance to con- 
sider what is necessary for the salvation of the common 
people, than what St. Francis, or St. Dominic, or St. 
Augustine, or any other man, laid down, especially 
since things have not turned out as they expected." 
He would bring some daylight into the convents both 
for men and women, and believes that everyone who 
wishes to leave the convent ought to be allowed to do 
so, since God will accept voluntary service only. He 
thinks that there are too many saints 3 days and 
ecclesiastical festivals, which are only seasons of glut- 
tony, drunkenness, and debauchery, and would retain 
the Sunday only. He also considers that it is time 
that the German Church came to some terms with the 
Bohemians, who, whatever their sins, did nothing so 
bad as deliberately break a solemnly given safe- 
conduct. In one of his suggestions (fourteenth), he 
deals with the terribly sad condition of the German 
country parish priests, and he does this in a tender 
and sympathetic way. " We see also how the priest- 
hood is fallen, and how many a poor priest is encum- 
bered with a woman and children, and burdened in his 
conscience, and no one does anything to help him, 
though he might very well be helped." Luther's 
sympathy goes out to the man ; ours goes forth more 
to the woman. The priest's concubine, the PfafPs 
Frau is the common butt of the medieval rustic 



SOCIAL EVILS IN GERMANY 107 

poetry; and she is accused of all manner of things 
in the coarse wit of the times. Even Hans Sachs has 
his gibe at her : 

" ISTacli dem der Messner von Hirscliau, 
Der tanzet mit des Pfarrliemi Fran 
Von Budenheim, die hat er lieb, 
Viel Scherzens am Tanz mit ihr trieb." 

" I will not conceal," says Luther, " my honest counsel, 
nor withhold comfort from that unhappy crowd, who 
now live in trouble with wife and children, and remain 
in shame, with a heavy conscience, hearing their wife 
called a priest's harlot, and the children bastards. . . . 
I say that these two (who are minded in their hearts 
to live together always in conjugal fidelity) are surely 
married before God." 

His remaining paragraphs treat briefly of social 
evils which cannot be called ecclesiastical. He refers 
to the rampant beggary which disgraces Germany and 
which comes both from the mendicant monks and from 
the numerous vagrants. He calculates how much a town 
of ordinary size actually taxes itself when it supports 
by casual almsgiving the troops of sturdy rogues who 
wander through it. His remedy for the disease is that 
each town should support its own poor in a charitable 
fashion. He has also some solemn words addressed to 
the luxury and the licensed immorality of the cities ; 
and with these words of warning he closes the address. 

This call to the Nobility of the German Nation 
appealed to all Germans, and produced a great effect 
on the very class to which it was directly addressed. 
Apart from its immediate effect on Luther's relation to 
his contemporaries, it ought to be remembered that it 
is really the first definite announcement that Germans 



108 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

ought to work all together for a united Germany, and 
was the first practical step taken in the movement to 
create a German nationality which has made such an 
advance in our own generation, and whose end is not 
yet. 

Meanwhile at Rome the Bull condemning Luther 
had been prepared, and was published there in the 
middle of the month of June. It seems to have been 
drafted by Eck, Cajetan, and Prierias, and the work- 
manship was mainly Eck's. It is a very curious 
document. It begins pathetically : " Arise, Lord, 
plead Thine own cause ; remember how the foolish man 
reproacheth Thee daily; the foxes are wasting Thy 
vineyard which Thou hast given to Thy Vicar Peter ; 
the boar out of the wood doth waste it, and the wild 
beast of the field doth devour it." St. Peter is then 
invoked, and the Pope's distressful state at hearing the 
news of Luther's misdeeds is described at length. The 
Bull then cites forty -one propositions, said to be Luther's, 
and condemns them. It is worthy of notice that there 
is no condemnation of Luther's evangelical principles, 
but of the objections to Romish practices which flowed 
from these principles. All Luther's writings, whenever 
and wherever found, are ordered to be burnt. The 
Pope details his many "fatherly dealings" with his 
rebellious son, and adds that even yet, if he will only 
recant, he is prepared to welcome him back to the fold ; 
if he remains obstinate there is nothing before him but 
the fate of a heretic. 

This Bull was published, by Eck and by the Roman 
legate Aleander, in some parts of Germany. When 
it reached Wittenberg both the Elector and the univer- 
sity took no notice of it, notwithstanding threats that 



THE PAPAL BULL 109 

the privileges of tlie university would be withdrawn. 
The Elector, some time later, asked Spalatin to find out 
what effect the Bull was having on the students and 
citizens, and the chaplain reported that there were 
nearly six hundred students in Melanchthon's classes 
and over four hundred in Luther's, while the crowds of 
people attending Luther's preaching were so great that 
the churches could scarcely contain them. The Bull 
had not caused the people of Wittenberg to shun 
Luther. The legate was determined to make a personal 
appeal to the Elector ; he waylaid him at Cologne as 
he was returning from the coronation of the young 
Emperor, and demanded that he should publish the 
Bull in his dominions, publicly burn Luther's writings, 
and deliver up Luther himself to the Pope as a heretic. 
He added the curious threat that if this was not done, 
the Pope would withdraw the title of Holy Eoman 
Empire from Germany and treat the land as Constan- 
tinople and the Eastern Empire had been treated. 
Upon this Frederic secretly consulted Erasmus. The 
cautious Dutchman told him " that Luther had sinned 
in two points ; he had touched the crown of the Pope and 
the bellies of the monks " ; while in an interview with 
Spalatin the great humanist declared that the attacks 
upon Luther came from ignorance enraged at science 
and from tyrannical presumption. Thus fortified, the 
Elector replied to the legate that he had never made 
common cause with Luther, nor would he protect him 
if he attacked the Pope, but that as matters stood 
Luther must have a fair trial. His Elector therefore 
protected Luther, and the Reformer was able to go on 
preaching, teaching, and writing in peace. 

The Bull was proclaimed in some parts of Germany, 



no LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

and copies of Luther's writings were seized and burnt ; 
but the curious Documenta Lutherana, published a 
few years ago by the Vatican, reveal that this was 
done with increasing difficulty, and that the excite- . 
ment caused by burning Luther's books was so great 
that the legate sometimes trembled for his life. 

Meanwhile Luther worked on indefatigably with 
his pen. Attacks on the Bull and its authors in Latin 
and in German flowed from the Wittenberg press, and 
among others an elaborate defence and explanation of 
the forty-one propositions cited in the Bull. Luther 
also solemnly renewed his appeal to a General Council, 
and published it in Latin and in German. 

When tidings came to him that his writings had 
been burnt in several parts of Germany, he resolved 
on the momentous step of burning the Book of 
Decretals, that part of the Canon Law in which the 
papal supremacy is supported by many a fictitious 
document, and with them the Bull itself. So on the 
10th of December 1520 he posted a notice inviting the 
students of Wittenberg to witness the burning of 
the " Antichristian Decretals" at nine o'clock in the 
morning. A great multitude of students, burghers, and 
professors collected in the open space before the Elster 
Gate, where a great bonfire had been built. One of the 
masters kindled the pyre; Luther laid the Books of 
Decretals on the glowing mass, and they caught the 
flames; then in solemn silence Luther placed a copy 
of the Bull in the flames, saying in Latin : " As thou 
hast wasted with anxiety the Holy One of God, so may 
the eternal flames waste thee " (" Quia tu conturbasti 
Sanctum Domini, ideoque te contubernet ignis aeternus"). 
He waited till the flames had consumed the paper and 



LUTHER BURNS THE BULL in 

then with his fellow-professors and other friends slowly 
re-entered the town and went back to the university. 

The opportunity was too good a one to be lost by 
the students. The solemnity of the occasion at first 
impressed them, and some hundreds standing round the 
flames sang the " Te Deum." Then the spirit of mis- 
chief seized them, and they began to sing funeral dirges 
in honour of the burnt Decretals. Thereafter they 
got a large peasant cart, erected a pole in it, and hung 
on it a banner six feet long emblazoned with a copy of 
the Bull. They piled the cart with the works of Eek, 
Emser, and other Romish controversialists, hauled it 
through the town and through the Elster Gate, and 
tumbling Bull and books on the still glowing embers 
of the bonfire, they burnt them together. Then sobered 
again they sang the " Te Deum " and separated. 

It is scarcely possible for us in the nineteenth cen- 
tury to understand the thrill that went through all 
Germany, and indeed all Europe, when the news sped 
that a poor monk had burnt the Pope's Bull. It was 
not the first time that a Bull had been burnt, but the 
burners had been great monarchs, with trained armies 
and a devoted people behind them, while in this case 
it was a monk with nothing but his manhood to back 
him. It meant that a new world had come into being, 
and that the individual human soul had found its own 
worth. It is as impossible to date epochs as it is to 
trace the real f ountainhead of rivers. In the one case 
a guess is made and some event is fixed on as the 
beginning of the new period, and in the other some 
nameless rill is selected as the source. But it is easy 
to see the river when it begins to roll in volume of 
water, and to discern the epoch when some utterly 



Ii2 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

unlooked-for event startles mankind. So this burning 
Pope Leo's Bull showed that modern history had begun. 
An oak tree now stands between the Elster Gate 
and the Elbe River, planted long ago to mark the spot 
where the Bull was burnt. 



CHAPTER V 

AT THE DIET OF WORMS 

l. THE ELECTION OF THE RULER OF THE HOLY 
EOMAN EMPIRE 

WHILE Luther and Eck were debating at Leipzig, the 
eyes of Europe were turned to another corner of 
Germany to the venerable town of Frankfort-on- 
the-Maine where, according to ancient custom, the 
Electors met to choose the ruler of the Holy Roman 
Empire. Old Kaiser Max had died very unexpectedly 
on the 12th of January 1519, and the intervening five 
months had been spent in ceaseless intrigues by the 
partisans of Francis I. of France, and of Charles, the 
young King of Spain and grandson of the late 
Emperor. Francis was then at the height of his 
power and fame. His kingdom was the most compact 
in Europe, his home position secure, and his foreign 
policy had hitherto been successful. Charles was an 
unknown youth of nineteen, the fruit of an unhappy 
marriage, the child of poor Joanna of Spain, whose 
early melancholy had turned to incurable madness 
after the death of her husband, and whose gloomy 
temperament he seemed to have inherited. 1 His 

1 Cf. Portrait No. 464 in Hirth's CuZtsergescMcMZiches Bilderbuch, 
vol. i. (Bartsch, App. 41 ; Passavant, No. 334), a delicate, lacka- 
daisical-looking youth with, a strong chin, 
8 



114 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

political insight, his patient industry, his wide ambi- 
tion were all to be developed in the future, and were 
still unknown. Perhaps the very brilliancy and 
powers of Francis were against him; the German 
princes did not want a masterful overlord, and the 
princes on the Rhine feared the absorption of their 
territories into France. Long before the day of 
election arrived the French party had melted away ; 
everyone seemed ashamed to be thought to belong to it. 
This did not mean that the Electors were satisfied 
with the other candidate. We can see from the 
matters discussed at the later Diets under Maximilian, 
and from the political literature of the time, that the 
German people were longing for some firm central 
power which could check the encroachments of the 
Roman Curia* Then there was a clamant need for a 
strong central Government to put down that curse of 
Germany, the right of "Private War," practised not 
merely by the greater princes, but claimed by all the 
free nobles of the Empire ; and for a central court of 
appeal strong enough to enforce its decisions, where all 
disputes could be settled by just arbitration. The 
cities, the traders, the peasants, and all peace-loving 
citizens longed for something like this. It was uni- 
versally felt also that it was high time that Germany 
should be considered as a nation with one national 
language, common national usages, and national laws 
which should preserve individual rights and liberties 
unknown to the Roman law which was superseding the 
old usages. This thought was especially dear to the 
leaders of the peasants, for the Roman law did not 
recognise the free peasant at all. There were also two 
strong under and counter currents which were to 



ELECTION OF EMPEROR 115 

make themselves felt some years later, wliich repre- 
sented the aristocratic and the democratic revolu- 
tionary spirit, and which, curiously enough, seemed to 
express themselves in the one political formula, " God 
and the Emperor." 

It is needless to say that those revolutionary ideas 
did not find any sympathy within the electoral college, 
but they contributed to the feeling of the gravity of 
the situation, and made the Electors the more sensible 
that the ecclesiastical abuses and the disorders arising 
from private war should, if possible, be put an end to, 
and that it was their duty to select an Emperor who 
had a knowledge of German affairs and power to 
enforce reforms. Their first thought was to elect a 
purely German Emperor, and they turned instinctively 
to the Elector of Saxony, the most venerated prince in 
Germany. He was privately offered the crown on the 
day before the official election. But he did not think 
himself able to undertake " the burden of the empire." 
He had no personal ambition. He was too old, too 
cautious, too well acquainted with the troubles that 
lay before the ruler of Germany to think of accepting 
office. He felt especially that a stronger hand than 
his was necessary to knead into a unity of subordina- 
tion the unruly and restless factions of Germany. 
Perhaps, too, he may have cherished the idea that the 
young Emperor would follow the advice of one to 
whom he owed the Imperial crown, and that in the 
near future at least the sagacity and experience of 
Frederic might guide the stronger hand of Charles. 
He refused the crown, and urged the election of the 
King of Spain, and after this there was no more to be 
said. 



n6 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

So on the 28th of June 1519, when, according to the 
ancient custom, the Alarm Bell of Frankfort gave the 
signal, and the Electors, in their scarlet robes of State, 
came together in the dim, narrow little chapel of the 
Church of St. Bartholomew where the conclave was 
always held, the Electors had already made up their 
minds, and Charles was unanimously chosen to be the 
head of the Holy Roman Empire and the ruler of the 
Mediaeval State. 

Charles was at Barcelona when the news reached 
him, and the affairs of his Spanish and then of his 
Netherlands States prevented his coming to be 
crowned until 20th Octoher 1520. When the German 
princes assembled at Aachen (Aix-la-Chapelle), for 
there since the beginning of the Empire the corona- 
tion took place, they saw a young man of twenty, who 
sat his horse and managed his lance as well as his 
neighbours, but who looked in weak health, whose 
face, though good-natured enough, showed signs of 
weary melancholy, and who seemed to leave all busi- 
ness to his ministers. There was not a trace of that 
masterful ambition which was soon to show itself. 
He came to Worms in December, called together hia 
first Diet, and the nobles of Germany with the repre- 
sentatives of the free cities crowded the town to meet 
their new master. 

Before describing the business, and especially the 
ecclesiastical affairs, which were presented to this 
famous Assembly, it may be well to glance at the 
political condition of Germany at the accession of 
Charles v. to the Imperial throne. For it is to be 
remembered that at the Diet of Worms the past and 
future confronted each other in two men the Emperor 



CHARLES V 117 

Charles and the monk Martin Luther, The young 
Emperor, with his melancholy, listless expression, con- 
cealed in his brain the vast and, as he was in the end 
to learn, the impossible design of setting back the 
clock of European history two centuries at least, and 
of reproducing again the Holy Eoman Empire of the 
earlier Middle Ages. Luther represented in great part 
forces invisible to the Emperor, which were to wreck 
all his schemes, send himself into a convent, and afc 
least inaugurate a new Europe. The conditions of 
Germany, political, social, and religious, were the con- 
ditions on which both forces acted, and by which both 
were modified and sent into channels not of their own 
choosing. 

Charles was elected to be head of the Holy Eoman 
Empire, as his grandfather Maximilian had been ; and 
some idea of what underlay the expression may be 
conceived when one reads across Albert Dlirer's 
portrait of the latter, " Imperator Caesar Divus Maxi- 
milianus Pius Felix Augustus," just as if he had been 
Trajan or Constantine. The phrase and the thought 
it conveys carries us back to the times when the 
Teutonic tribes swept down on the old Eoman lands of 
Western Europe and took possession of them. They 
were rude barbarians, and tried to adopt and assimilate 
the wider civilisation of the conquered, with its system 
of jurisprudence and its modes of government. They 
crept into the shell of the old Empire of the Caesars, 
and lived more or less uncomfortably within it. One 
main thing to be noted was the increased political 
influence of the Church, for Churchmen had been, 
trained in and had not forgotten the traditions of the 
old imperialism, and taught them to their barbarian 



n8 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

conquerors. Hence in the Middle Ages it came to 
pass, as Mr. Freeman says, that "The two great 
powers in Western Europe were the Church and the 
Empire (and that the centre of each, in imagination at 
least, was Rome). Both of these went on through the 
settlements of the German nations, and both in a 
manner drew new powers from the change of things. 
Men believed more than ever that Rome was the 
lawful and natural centre of the world. For it was 
held that there were of divine right two Vicars of 
God upon earth, the Roman Emperor, His Vicar in 
temporal things, and the Roman Bishop, His Vicar in 
spiritual things. This belief did not interfere with 
the existence either of separate commonwealths and 
principalities or of national Churches. But it was 
held that the Roman Emperor, who was Lord of the 
World, was of right the head of all temporal States, and 
that the Roman Bishop, the Pope, was the head of all 
Churches. Now this part of the theory was never 
carried out, if only because so large a part of Christen- 
dom, all the Churches and nations of the East, refused 
to acknowledge either the Emperor or the Bishop of 
old Rome. But it was much more nearly carried out 
in the case of the Roman Bishop than it was in the 
case of the Roman Emperor. For the Popes did really 
make themselves spiritual heads of the whole West, 
while the temporal headship of the Emperors was 
never acknowledged by a large part even of the 
West." As the modern nations of Europe came 
gradually into being, the real headship of the Emperor 
became more and more shadowy. But both headships 
contrived to prevent the national consolidation of the 
countries in which the possessors dwelt. Machia- 



POLITICAL CONDITION OF GERMANY 119 

velli says : " We owe to Rome that we are become 
divided and factious, which must of necessity be our 
ruin, for no nation was ever happy or united unless 
under the rule of one commonwealth or prince, as 
France and Spain are at this time." And the shadowy 
Empire kept the Germans separate, and filled her 
princes and nobles with ideas which stood In the way 
of all national union. For the theory was that all 
princes directly under the Emperor were sovereign, 
and Germany was full of small sovereign kinglets who 
clung tenaciously to their kingship, even when it 
could only be exhibited in that form of war which we 
should now call highway robbery. 

The political condition of Germany was something 
like this. The Empire was elective, and it had been 
settled, by the "Golden Bull" of 1356, that the election 
was to be in the hands of seven prince electors, four of 
them on the Rhine and three on the Elbe. Three were 
ecclesiastical princes, the Archbishops of Mainz, Trier, 
and Koln; and four were laymen, the Electors of 
Saxony and Brandenburg, the King of Bohemia, and 
the Count Palatine of the Rhine. During an inter- 
regnum the management of affairs was in the hands of 
the Count Palatine and the Elector of Saxony. The 
internal affairs of Germany were managed, under the 
Emperor, by a national Council called the Diet, a feudal 
and not a representative assembly, which met and voted 
in three Chambers the Electors (excepting the King 
of Bohemia, who had no place in the Diet), the Princes 
or great territorial magnates lay and ecclesiastical, and 
the free Imperial cities, i.e. those cities who had got 
their charters directly from the Emperor, But nothing 
could be even submitted to the Chamber of the cities 



120 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

until it had first passed through the other two Chambers. 
The Diet had very little real power, and was of use 
chiefly for providing public discussion, for it could 
not enforce its own decrees. Power in Germany had 
been for long coming into the hands of the great 
territorial magnates, and the cities were all armed and 
independent republics. The power of the Emperor 
depended on the amount of force he could bring to 
bear upon Germany from his own hereditary dominions. 
The disorganised nation had not even the semblance of 
common government. Ranke says that when Charles 
met the Diet at Worms in 1521 everything was in con- 
fusion: "No form of central government had been 
established, no finance system nor army organisation 
were in existence; there was no Supreme Court of 
Justice, and private war had not been put down. Be- 
sides this, the various classes within the Empire were 
at variance with each other the nobles with the 
princes, the knights with the cities, the clergy with 
the laity, and the upper and middle classes with the 
peasants. Added to all this a comprehensive religious 
movement had sprung up from the depths of the national 
consciousness which had within the last months openly 
defied the supreme ecclesiastical authority." All 
these difficulties confronted the young Emperor at 
Worms. It may be added that he was the subject of 
the most extravagant hopes, and that his presence in 
Germany was looked to with enthusiasm. Nor was the 
exaltation of feeling to be wondered at. No one man 
for centuries had been in possession of the power which 
belonged to Charles. He had inherited the hereditary 
lands of Austria and had added to them the over-lord- 
ships of Hungary and Bohemia, making his Austrian 



CHARLES V 121 

possessions almost as extensive as the modern Austrian 
Empire. He was master of the Netherlands, the richest 
part of Europe in trade and manufactures, with cities 
which more than rivalled the past glories of the Italian 
towns. He was King of Spain, with all the Spanish 
possessions in Italy and the wealth of the newly dis- 
covered continent at its command. Men did not pause 
to think that the world had been growing much more 
complicated, and that these large dominions meant a 
variety of conflicting interests which it was beyond 
the power of man to harmonise in one homogeneous 
government. They saw the outside power, they recog- 
nised the opportunity, and when Charles devoted him- 
self to none of their projects the disappointment was 
all the more bitter. The young Emperor had his 
dream also, and a most natural one then, though 
strange enough to us now. He had the highest idea 
of his Imperial rank, and his dream was to restore the 
mediaeval Empire and establish it in a splendour un- 
known even to Frederic n., whom his contemporaries 
called the " Wonder of the World." He had only to 
humble France, to make Italy his own, to set the Pope 
back into his place as chief pastor of Christendom, to 
organise Germany and the Empire would be restored 
to its old position. That was his policy from the very 
first ; every calculated step he took was towards this 
end. Everything encouraged him. All Europe except 
England was under a jurisprudence which spoke of 
one Christendom under one Imperial rule. The keenest 
intellects of the day drew their inspiration from the 
literature of old Imperial Rome, and those Imperialist 
ideas were their political atmosphere. It had been for 
centuries the tradition of Europe that only a strong 



122 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Emperor could hold In check'a tyrannical and rapacious 
pontiff. And the peasants knew that a strong central 
power saved them from oppression. Charles understood 
all these things ; but one thing he did not understand 
and could never be made to understand, and that waa 
the power of a deep-seated religious conviction when 
once it had embedded itself in the hearts of the people. 
He never could see in the movement which Luther 
represented anything more than a band of men who 
were to be diplomatically caressed if the Pope became 
too exacting, to be bribed if they became troublesome, 
or to be crushed underfoot if they refused to move out 
of the path of his State policy. 

It is not easy to say when the Middle Ages begin or 
when they end ; the phrase is only a convenient way of 
speaking. But that a man in the position of Charles 
should conceive the ambition of restoring the Empire 
of the Hohenstaufens, and that his contemporaries 
should think it a most natural and feasible project, 
shows the Middle Ages had not yet departed. That a 
movement like Luther's, preaching the indestructible 
liberty of the individual human soul, should prove 
itself stronger than this most powerful of monarchs, 
and should in the end utterly wreck his scheme, is 
proof that the Middle Ages had gone. The time is an 
epoch, and Luther was the epoch-maker. 

2. LUTHER AT THE DIET 

The general business of the Diet need not concern 
us. It was arranged that there should be a Council 
of Regency to manage the affairs of the Empire when 
Charles was absent in Spain. An Imperial Court of 



LUTHER AT THE DIET 123 

Justice was also established, and an impost sanctioned 
to defray its expenses. The two Courts were excellent 
things, but were rendered useless by the fact that no 
real powers were given to them. All felt that the 
important business was the settlement of the disputes 
between the ecclesiastical and the civil powers, and 
that this involved the discussion ,of the excommuni- 
cation of Luther. 

One day while a tournament was beginning, and the 
Imperial standard had just been hoisted to authorise 
the sports, the members of the Diet were hastily 
summoned to the Emperor's presence to hear him read 
a letter from the Pope. It asked the Emperor to put 
into execution the Bull of excommunication against 
Luther, and reminded him that as head of the Holy 
Roman Empire the unity of the Church must be as 
precious to him as it had been to former Emperors. It 
is probable that Charles had made up his mind about 
Luther before he came to Worms, and that he was 
very much less influenced by his confessor and others 
than has been supposed. He had a bargain to make 
with the Pope. For one thing, the Pope had been 
interfering with the Inquisition in Spain, and trying 
to soften its severity ; and Charles, like his maternal 
grandfather Ferdinand of Arragon, believed that the 
Inquisition was a great help in curbing the freedom- 
loving people of Spain, and had no wish to see his 
instrument of punishment meddled with. For another, 
it was evident that Francis I. was about to invade 
Italy, and Charles wished the Pope to take his side. 
If the Pope gave him his way on both these points 
then he was ready to treat Luther as a heretic, if not 
he might follow the advice of his Spanish secretary : 



124 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

"Your Majesty should show some favour to a certain 
Martin Luther, who Is to be found at the Court of 
Saxony, and is a cause of some anxiety to the Court of 
Rome from the things which he preaches." 

The papal legate was Aleander, selected because he 
was believed to be acceptable to Charles, and his 
letters are curious reading. According to his own 
account, he had got Luther's books burnt in the 
Netherlands without the Emperor or his councillors 
knowing what writings they had condemned to the 
flames. He had surrounded Charles with spies, by 
bribing one of his secretaries with fifty gulden and his 
doorkeepers and others with smaller sums. He ex- 
plains that these Imperial councillors and secretaries, 
however much they hate the papacy, " can be made to 
dance to the Pope's piping as soon as they see his 
gold." It is probable that all this fuss amounted to 
very little. Charles was already a cool diplomatist, 
who knew exactly what he wanted and the price he 
was willing to give for it. It must have been a grim 
pleasure to him to explain to the legate that the 
Pope's letter could not be acted upon until the Electors 
at least had discussed it. It was read to the Electors 
and the princes, and Aleander tried to convince them 
in a nine hours' speech that Luther ought to be placed 
under the ban without further hearing. But the 
German princes, however little they cared for Luther's 
evangelical doctrines, were very much in earnest to 
get rid of the exactions of the papal Curia ; and re- 
solved that before coming to any decision about the 
excommunication they should appoint a committee to 
draft their grievances against Rome. When the list 
was read to them they remembered wha,t a valuable 



LUTHER AT WORMS 125 

ally Luther was, and they insisted that it did not con- 
sist with the dignity of the Emperor to condemn a 
man unheard. They suggested that Luther should get 
a safe-conduct, and be summoned to appear before the 
Diet to defend himself. The Emperor consented, and 
the safe-conduct and the summons were sent off to 
Wittenberg on the 6th of March. 

As for Luther, he was eager to go to Worms, and 
would have gone even had no safe-conduct been sent 
him. He was burning to testify before the Diet, and 
was firmly resolved not to recant. While the Diet 
was deliberating whether he was to be heard or not, 
Luther, in conjunction with his intimate friend the 
painter, Lucas Cranach, the elder, had published a 
little book called Passional ckristi und antichristi. 
It is a series of pairs of engravings contrasting the 
lives of our Lord and the Pope, so arranged that wher- 
ever the book was opened two contrasting pictures 
could be seen at the same time. Below the scenes 
from our Lord's life were appropriate texts, and below 
those representing the Pope, texts from the Canon Law. 
The contrasts were : Christ washing the disciples' 
feet and the Pope holding out his toe to be kissed ; 
Christ healing the sick and the Pope presiding at a 
tournament ; Christ bending under His cross and the 
Pope carried in state on men's shoulders; Christ 
driving the money-changers out of the temple and the 
Pope and his servants turning a church into an In- 
dulgence mart, and sitting surrounded with piles of 
money and strong boxes ; and so on. " It was a good 
book for the laity," Luther said. 

Kaspar Strum, the Imperial herald, reached Witten- 
berg and delivered the citation and the safe-conduct to 



126 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Luther on the 26th of March 1521, and Luther found 
that he was ordered to appear at Worms not later than 
the 16th of April He calmly finished some expository 
writing, and on the 2nd of April he left Wittenberg for 
the Diet. The town of Wittenberg provided him with 
a large cart with a canvas covering to protect him 
from the sun and the rain. Luther took with him a 
companion-brother of his Order, John Petzensteiner, his 
old friend Nicholas Amsdorf , and a young Pomeranian 
noble, Peter Staven, who was a student at Wittenberg. 
The four sat in the hay at the bottom of the cart. 
Just before starting Luther wrote to his friend Link : 
" I know, and am certain, that our Lord Jesus Christ 
still lives and rules. Upon this knowledge and assur- 
ance I rely, and therefore I will not fear ten thousand 
Popes; for He who is with me is greater than he 
who is in the world." And to Melanehthon, who was 
broken-hearted at the parting, he said: "My dear 
brother, if I do not come back, if my enemies put me 
to death, you will go on teaching and standing fast 
in the truth ; if you live, my death will matter little." 
He stepped into the covered cart, and the little pro- 
cession started amid the tears and ejaculations of the 
citizens, the herald with the square yellow banner, 
blazoned with the black two-headed Imperial eagle, 
hanging over his bridle arm, blowing his trumpet, riding 
before. The road led past Leipzig, then through 
Thuringia by Naumburg, Weimar, Erfurt, Gotha, 
Eisenach, Hersfeld, Grtinberg, Friedberg, Frankfort, 
and Oppenheim to Worms. The journey was full of 
incidents; it seemed, the indignant papists said, like 
a royal progress; crowds came to see and bless the 
man who had stood up for Germany against the 



LUTHER AT WORMS 127 

papacy, and who was going to his death for it. At Erfurt 
forty members of the university, with their rector at 
their head, rode out to meet Luther, and escorted him 
to the old familiar monastery, where he lodged and 
spent the Sunday. He preached to an immense crowd 
from the text, " Peace be unto you ; and when He had 
so said, He shewed unto them His hands and His side." 
It was from the gospel for the day (John xx. 19-23), 
and the sermon has come down to us. He preached 
also in the Augustinian Convent churches at Gotha 
and at Eisenach. The excitement of the journey, the 
worship of the crowds, the numberless fatigues began 
to tell upon him. He was ill at Eisenach ; he wrote to 
Spalatin from Frankfort that he was in great bodily 
weakness ; but his courage and clearness of vision 
never faltered. 

The papal party at Worms began to feel alarmed at 
the demonstrations on the journey, and thought it 
might be advisable to prevent him reaching the town. 
They hinted at a compromise, and Glapio, the 
Emperor's confessor, went to Sickingen to propose 
a private interview with Luther at the Ebernberg. 
But Luther would have none of it. He could see 
Glapio at Worms ; he would obey the Imperial citation, 
come what might. Even the Elector grew alarmed. 
Spalatin wrote to Luther reminding him of the fate of 
John Huss, who had been burnt at the Council of 
Constance in spite of the Imperial safe-conduct. The 
message reached Luther at the last stage of the journey 
at Oppenheim, and he replied " that he would go to 
Worms if there were as many devils there as tiles on 
the roofs ; if Huss had been burnt, the truth had not 
been burnt with, him." 



128 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

In the early forenoon the watcher on the lookout 
tower blew" his trumpet to announce that the herald 
with Luther in charge was in sight. The princes 
sent out six knights with some men-at-arms to 
escort him into the town ; the people were at their 
forenoon meal, but when the news reached them all 
rushed out into the streets, to see the monk sitting 
in his cart clad in the habits of his Order, with a 
curious travelling cap on his head. 1 The escort 
made their way with difficulty through the excited, 
gaping, jostling mobs, and brought Luther to the 
doors of the house of the Knights of St. John, 
where he was to live in safe proximity to his 
Elector. 

Next day, late in the afternoon, he was summoned 
before the Diet. The Emperor presided ; below him 
sat the six Electors; the princes, lay and clerical, 
filled the hall. On a table there was a pile of books 
Luther's writings. He had never been in such a 
presence before; his voice seemed to fail him; men 
thought that his spirit was broken at last. He was 
asked whether these books the titles were read over 
to him were his; and if so, whether he stood by 
what he had written, or whether he would recant. 
He begged for time to consider his answer. It was 
granted till the following day, and he went back to 
his lodging. 

The evening and night was a time of terrible de- 
pression, conflict, despair, and prayer. Before the day 
broke the victory had been won, and he felt in a great 
calm. 

1 Of. Picture by Daniel Hopper in Hirta's Gultsergesch* MZderbucb, 
L No, 37. 



LUTHER AT WORMS 129 

He was summoned on the following evening (18th 
April); the streets were so thronged, even the roofs 
crowded with people to gaze on him, that the officials 
had to take him by side streets and lanes to reach 
the Diet. He had to wait two hours before he was 
received. The throng of members was so great that 
the Electors had found it difficult to get to their 
places ; the darkness had fallen, and the hall was 
lit with flaring torches. There was the same table 
with the same pile of books. This time Luther was 
ready with his answer; his voice had recovered its 
clear musical note, and his demeanour was calm and 
fearless. An old tradition tells us that as he was 
entering the hall, old General Frundsberg, the most 
famous of German warriors, who was to be the 
conqueror at Pavia and to lead an army of Germans 
to the sack of Rome, clapped him on the shoulder and 
said : " My poor monk ! my poor monk ! thou art on 
thy way to make such a stand as I and many of my 
knights have never done in our toughest battles. If 
thou art sure of the justice of thy cause, then forward 
in the name of God, and be of good courage; God 
will not forsake thee." John Eck, the " orator " of the 
Archbishop of Trier, not to be confounded, as he often 
is, with the other John Eck who was professor at 
Ingolstadt, conducted the proceedings as on the 
previous day. He asked Luther whether, having 
acknowledged the books to be his, he was prepared 
to defend them, or to disavow some of them. Luther 
replied at some length, a two hours' speech, it was 
said, but the substance of it was that his books were 
not all of the same kind ; in some he had treated of 
faith and morals in a way approved by all, and he 
9 



130 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

could not retract what friends and foes alike com- 
mended ; other of his books were against the papacy, 
whose doctrine and example were ruining Christendom, 
body and soul, and to retract these would be but to 
strengthen its odious tyranny; in a third class he 
had written against those who had upheld the Roman 
tyranny, and he was quite prepared to admit that 
he might have been more vehement in his charges 
than became a Christian, and yet he was not prepared 
to retract them either ; but he was ready to listen to 
anyone who could show him that he had erred. He 
spoke in German. 

When he had done, the Emperor, who did not 
understand German, asked him to repeat what he had 
said in Lartin, which Luther did. Then the Emperor, 
through Eck, told Luther that he was not there to 
question matters which had been discussed and settled 
in General Councils long ago, and that he must give 
a plain answer, " without horns/' whether he would 
retract all that he had said contradicting the decisions 
of the Council of Constance; if so, then he would 
be dealt with leniently with regard to what else he 
had written. Luther replied: "Since your Imperial 
Majesty requires a plain answer I will give one with- 
out horns or hoof 1 It is this : that I must be 
convinced either by the testimony of Scripture or by 
clear arguments. I cannot trust the Pope or Councils 
by themselves, since it is as clear as daylight that 
they have not only erred but contradicted themselves. 
I am bound by the Scriptxires which I have quoted; 
my conscience is thirled to the Word of God. I may 
not and will not recant, because to act against 
conscience is neither honest nor safe," This he said 



LUTHER AT WORMS 131 

both in German and Latin, Then after a pause he 
added in German: "I can do nothing else; here I 
stand ; so help me God 1 Amen." The Emperor asked 
him, through Eck, whether he really declared that 
Councils could errl Luther "^hardened himself like 
a hard rock," and answered that it was manifest that 
Councils had erred often ; that the Council of Constance 
had given decisions against the clearest passages of 
Holy Scripture, and Holy Scripture compelled him 
to say that Councils had erred. " It cannot be shown 
that any General Council has erred," said Eck. 
Luther answered that it could, and in many a place. 
Here the Emperor interfered. He had heard quite 
enough, and the audience was restless and noisy. 
He dismissed the Diet, and Luther was sent back to 
his lodgings, escorted by guards. The excitement, the 
crowd, the speaking, had worn him out ; his face was 
wet. When the multitudes in the streets saw him 
on the threshold escorted by guards, they began to 
cry that he was being taken to prison, and there was 
danger of a riot. But Luther calmed them by calling 
out that the guards were taking him to his lodging. 
With great difficulty a passage was forced, and Luther 
reached his door, where friends had already gathered. 
When he got among them he stretched out his 
hands, crying out, "I am through! I am through I" 
While they were talking together excitedly a message 
came to Spalatin from the Elector. The good old 
prince only wanted to say to his chaplain how de- 
lighted he had been with Luther's appearance before 
the Emperor : " How excellently Father Martin spoke 
both in Latin and in German before the Emperor 
and the Estates ; he is too bold for me." The Germans, 



132 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

friends and foes, were proud of the stand he made, 
and praised his speeches. The Emperor, however, 
had not been much impressed. " He will never 
make a heretic of me," he said. The Spaniards and 
Italians were only moved to rage. Next day the 
Emperor proposed formally that Luther should be 
condemned, but the Germans pressed for delay, and 
suggested that a commission should be appointed to 
confer with him. The negotiations with the Pope 
were not yet ended, and the Emperor consented 
The commission, with the Archbishop of Trier at the 
head of it, had several meetings with Luther, and 
the archbishop showed himself most conciliatory ; but 
the conference always broke down at the point that 
Luther refused to submit himself to any authority 
except the Holy Scriptures. 

Luther had written out his account of the proceed- 
ings at the Diet, and had summarised his answers ; the 
printers sent the sheets all over Germany. The excite- 
ment of the common people rose to a white heat. He 
was their champion, who, for the sake of the Father- 
land, had faced both Pope and Emperor. They grew 
impatient, thinking that their hero was still in Worms, 
and still in the clutches of the Emperor and of his 
Spaniards. The confidential agents of the various 
Powers noticed the tremendous popularity of Luther. 
The English envoy wrote to Wolsey: "The Germans 
everywhere are so addicted to Luther that rather than 
that he shall be oppressed by the Pope's authority a 
hundred thousand of the people will sacrifice their 
lives." The Spanish envoy, evidently ignorant of his 
master's negotiations with the Pope, wrote : <e Here you 
ha\ 7 e. as some think, an end of this tragedy, but I am 



LUTHER AT WORMS 133 

persuaded that it is only the beginning of it. I see 
that the minds of the Germans are greatly enraged 
against the Koman See, and they do not seem to care 
for the Emperor's edicts ; for Luther's books are sold 
openly at every step and corner of the market-place 
and streets. From this you will easily guess what 
will happen when the Emperor leaves. This evil 
might have been cured with the greatest benefit to the 
Christian commonwealth, had not the Pope refused a 
General Council, had he preferred the public good to 
his own private interests. But while he insists that 
Luther shall be condemned and burnt, I see the whole 
Christian commonwealth hurried to destruction unless 
God help us." German princes came to Luther's lodg- 
ings to congratulate him; among them young Philip of 
Hesse ; he grasped Luther by the hand, saying, " You 
were in the right, Doctor ; may God keep you." Franz 
von Sickingen threatened to attack the town in spite 
of the Emperor's presence if Luther came to any harm. 
A placard was found posted up on the walls of the 
town hall, declaring that four hundred knights, with 
eight hundred men-at-arms, had bound themselves to 
take vengeance on the Romanists if Luther was 
harmed. It was unsigned, but beneath it were 
written the ominous words, " Bundschuh ! Bundschuh ! 
Bundschuh I " the old watchword of peasant revolt. 
At last Luther got leave of the Emperor to quit 
the town and return to Wittenberg. Meanwhile 
the legate was urging the unconditional condemna- 
tion of Luther, when a conversation with Charles's 
confidential minister made him see the state of 
matters. "If your Pope/' said the minister, "is 
going to throw our affairs into confusion, we will 



134 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

make such an entanglement for him that he will 
not easily get free from it." " Your Pope," thought 
the legate, and hastened to complete the bargain 
Charles wanted to make. The Pope pledged him- 
self to interfere no more with the Inquisition in 
Spain, and to support Charles against Francis in 
Italy. Then at last the Emperor set himself to sup- 
press Luther. 

But it was not so easy to do this. Some of the 
German princes had no desire for it, and one of them, 
the good Elector, was sure to withstand it. So 
Charles waited for some days to get rid of them. 
Then the Emperor, after formally closing the Diet, 
requested the princes to remain a day or two longer 
to finish some unimportant matters. They met on the 
25th May, not in their hall, but in the Emperor's 
apartments. He produced the ban against Luther, 
and, after some objections, it was agreed upon. Next 
day, a Sunday, the legate brought the official document 
to Charles, who signed it. The Emperor, however, 
dated it the 8th of May, the day on which he had 
made his bargain with the Pope, to make people 
believe that it had been issued formally after discus- 
sion, and perhaps also to remind the Pope that there 
was a bargain. 

The ban of the Empire, thus fraudulently obtained, 
granted Luther twenty days' safe-conduct after his 
departure from Worms ; after this twenty days after 
the 26th of April everyone was forbidden, under 
severe penalties, " to give the aforesaid Luther house 
or home, food, drink, or shelter, by words or by deeds." 
It only remained to secure Luther's person and burn 
him as a heretic. Luther had suddenly disappeared, 



LUTHER DISAPPEARS 135 

however, and no one knew where he was, and the 
wildest conjectures were started. Aleander came 
nearest the truth when he said that he helieved that 
"the old fox," meaning the Elector of Saxony, had 
hidden him somewhere. 



CHAPTER VI 

IN THE WAKTBUBG 

LUTHEK left Worms In the covered cart which had 
brought him there, with the same travelling com- 
panions and some friends who accompanied him on 
horseback, among them Jerome Schurf,the Wittenberg 
jurist who had acted as his legal adviser at the Diet. 
The little company wished to shun observation as 
much as possible, and the herald rode far behind. 
They returned by the way they had come. When 
they came to Hersf eld, Abbot Crato, the head of the 
Benedictine monastery there, received them with all 
respect, lodged them for the night, and insisted on 
Luther preaching before he started next day. Luther 
preached at five o'clock in the morning. They reached 
Eisenach, Luther's "dear town," on Wednesday, and 
stopped there for the night. Next day the little 
company separated, the majority taking the straight 
road to Gotha, while Luther, Amsdorf, and the com- 
panion Augustinian monk, leaving Eisenach in the 
afternoon, turned south to let Luther visit his kinsfolk 
at Mohra. Heinz Luther, who lived in the old family 
house, welcomed and lodged his nephew, and Luther 
preached in the parish church early in the forenoon 



IN THE WARTBURG 137 

of Saturday (4th May). In the afternoon the three 
companions left Mohra, making for Gotha by Schwelna 
and the Castle of Altenstein, a group of Luther's 
relations accompanying them on foot as far as the 
castle. About two miles to the east of Castle Alten- 
stein the road begins to wind through wooded slopes, 
and a hill stream runs alongside. When the cart 
reached the ruins of a wayside chapel the spot is 
still shown, and is now marked by a monument to the 
reformer two knights and some horsemen dashed at 
the cart from the ambush of the wood ; the driver was 
ordered to stop; Luther was dragged from the cart, 
his grey felt travelling cap falling off in the rush and 
left upon the road. The band rode eastwards for a 
short distance, then took a woodland path. Luther 
was set on horseback, and the raiders set off along a 
winding track in the beech woods to the Wartburg, 
from which they had started. A ride of eight miles 
was before them, through the glades of the dense beech 
wood, the horses over the fetlocks in the dead leaves 
of the last year, and all around the young shoots 
bursting with sap and blossoming into dainty beech 
green, the hares leaping noiselessly into the under- 
wood, and the shy deer watching the riders from 
behind some distant tree-trunk. The troop had to go 
slowly, for in these deep glades round the Wartburg, 
even in the first week of May, the winter's snow, 
crushed into ice, lay in many a hollow that had to be 
crossed, and it was eleven o'clock at night before Luther 
drew rein at the courtyard door, heard the kindly 
welcome of Herr von Berlepsch, the Elector's trusty 
castellan, and was conducted with all honour to the 
rooms which had been got ready for him. This was 



138 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

the hiding-place, the " Patmos " Luther calls it, which 
his Elector had provided for him; and there he 
remained in complete seclusion for ten long months. 
He doffed his monkish habits, and wore the hose and 
doublet of a soldier, with a sword-belt and the sword 
clanking at his heel. He let the hair grow on his 
tonsured head and shaven face. He was no longer 
Dr. Martin but Knight George, a friend of the 
Elector's, who needed shelter for a time. He was free 
to go where he pleased within the castle precincts, and 
a trusty servant man-at-arms accompanied him in his 
walks and rides in the woodjs surrounding. He could 
write to his friends, provided the letters were sent by 
the Elector's own servants to Spalatin. He had his 
books and his pen. Sometimes a friend, provided he 
was a very trustworthy person, was allowed to see him ; 
but that did not happen very often. Lucas Cranach 
got himself smuggled in to paint the portrait of 
" Junker George," and let future ages see what Luther 
looked like when dressed as a knight. 

The grim stronghold whose dark turrets look down 
on the trees, with its memories of courage and justice, 
of song and of saintship, represented all that was best in 
mediaeval Germany, and was the fitter casket to hold 
the most precious life that the Fatherland had then 
produced. But the stout old Landgraves who ruled 
there centuries ago, and who rode up and. down the 
steep causeway, with their weapons clanking behind 
them, have all faded out of recollection, and the 
memories of song and saintship alone survive. It was 
to the Wartburg that there came in 1207 all the most 
famous of the Minnesanger to prove their gifts and 
win the crown of minstrelsy, when the boy Walther 



IN THE WARTBURG 139 

von der Vogelweicle sang the praises of spring, and 
the grey-haired Eeniar der Zwete chanted the charms 
of autumn, while Heinrich of Osterdingen chose winter 
as his theme, and Wolfram of Eschenbach carried off 
the crown by his lay of the summer-time. It was in 
Wartburg that St. Elizabeth lived the happiest part of 
her life with husband and children, where she fed the 
hungry, clothed the naked, housed the homeless, and 
nursed the sick, where she founded almshouses in 
which Luther saw the brothers doing deeds of mercy 
three hundred years afterwards. 

The guest who was now hidden away in the old 
fortress combined the memories of both minstrelsy and 
piety. His songs and hymns are the property of the 
German people, and he taught them that saintship did 
not mean, what it did to poor Elizabeth, the sacrifice of 
all family affections and giving up the honest work of 
daily life in the world. 

The rooms Luther inhabited in the Wartburg 
remain in the state in which he used them. The 
visitor can see his bed, his table, his bookcase, his 
chair, and his footstool. 1 The great window beside 
which he wrote is still there, and the descendants of 
the rooks he delighted in still fc hold Diets " in the tree- 
tops far below the panes. The view is magnificent 
away down to Cassel in billow on billow of wooded 
hills, where the dark pines, the lighter larches, the 
beeches and the birches, and the oaks, make a sea of 
many coloured green. He complained of idleness and 

1 The ink-stain on the wall made by Luther flinging his ink-bottle at 
the deYil is comparatively modern, and was unknown for many a decade 
after his death. A similar stain made in the same way, it was said, was 
long shown in the Castle of Coburg. 



140 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

soft living. He took walks in the woods, and 
delighted to find wild strawberries. He once or twice 
took part in the hunt, and saw hares and partridges 
taken with nets and dogs " an occupation for idle 
men/' he says. Restless at being caged up while others 
were bearing the brunt of attack, he was also dis- 
turbed by noises which he attributed to the devil. But 
he loyally obeyed his Elector's wishes, until the troubles 
in Wittenberg compelled him to leave his " Patmos." 

What he called idleness most men would count hard 
work : a multifarious correspondence, answers to the 
theological faculty of Paris, attacks on the Bull, a 
series of sermons on the Epistles and Gospels for the 
day, tracts on celibacy and monastic vows, and, above 
all, the translation of the New Testament into German 
from the original Greek. This is what he calls, 
writing to Spalatin, sitting the whole day at leisure 
reading the Greek and Hebrew Bibles. 

Luther's stay in the Wartburg will, however, always 
be noted for three things especially his tussle with 
the Archbishop of Mainz, his tract on Monastic 
Vows, and his translation of the New Testament. 

Albert, archbishop of Mainz, the old patron of 
Tetzel, and now a cardinal, being as sadly in need of 
money as ever, had bethought himself of a new ex- 
pedient to raise funds. He published that he had added 
several wonderful relics to his collection in his church at 
Halle. There was part of the body of the patriarch 
Isaac, some pieces of the manna which had fallen in 
the desert, a few twigs of the burning bush which 
Moses had seen, some thorns from the crown of our 
Lord, and some of the water that He had changed into 
wine at the wedding at Cana ! All these, with others 



LUTHER ON MONASTIC VOWS 141 

to the number of nine thousand, were to be exhibited 
in the collegiate church at Halle, and all pilgrims 
who came to see and adore would receive an Indulgence 
when they contributed alms to that foundation. This 
proclamation roused all Luther's righteous wrath. He 
composed a pamphlet on The New Idol (Abgott) at 
Halle, and told Spalatin that he meant to attack the 
cardinal. The Elector, who was anxious that no more 
should be done to disturb the peace of the realm, sent 
word to Spalatin that Luther's pamphlet must not 
appear, and the court chaplain quietly suppressed it. 
Luther, however, without consulting anyone, wrote a 
letter to the archbishop telling him that Luther was 
not dead ; that the God who had protected him against 
the Emperor lived still, and could gainsay an Elector of 
Mainz with four Emperors to back him, and that if the 
new sale of Indulgences were not stopped, he, Luther, 
would testify. The man's power was so great that 
Albert replied in a letter so abject that Luther could 
not believe it to be written seriously, and the new 
attempt to introduce Indulgences was abandoned. 
Scarcely stronger evidence could be given of the 
influence and power which the prisoner of the Wart- 
burg had suddenly attained by his appearance and 
behaviour at Worms. 

The bold declaration of Luther about the marriage of 
priests in his Address to the Nobility of the German 
Nation had produced its natural effects, and some 
parish priests had married wives. This led to reflec- 
tions about the lawfulness of monastic vows, and to 
the violent disruption of the convent life in some 
places, and Luther was anxious to publish his thoughts 
on the subject. It was all the more needful because 



142 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

one of his former allies, Archdeacon Carlstadt, had 
begun to teach that the married state was the only 
lawful one, and that none but married men should be 
set apart for office in the Church. Luther's views, 
put shortly, were that the married state is honourable 
and natural, that the marriage* of priests was clearly 
sanctioned in the Word of God, and that the chastity 
required of monks and nuns by their vow of celibacy 
was only possible when the man and woman possessed 
the special gift of continence spoken of by St. Paul 
(1 Cor. vii. 7). Besides, monastic vows and others of the 
same kind were the fruit of a work-righteousness, and 
were therefore denials of faith rather than marks of a 
real Christian life. Nevertheless there should be no 
compulsion in the mattter, for God was not served 
by force but by voluntary service. His letters and 
treatises really solved the question for Saxony. At a 
chapter of the Augustinian Order held at Wittenberg 
under the presidency of Vicar-General Link, it was 
resolved that all monks had free permission to leave 
their convents if they desired to do so ; and that those 
who voluntarily remained must keep the rule strictly, 
and exert themselves either in preaching or in manual 
labour for the support of the community. This became 
in time the general usage all over Electoral Saxony, 
and might have continued long had not the horrors of 
the Peasants' War destroyed what remained of the 
convent life in Saxony. 

Luther's greatest gift to Germany from the Wart- 
burg was his translation of the New Testament. It 
was priceless religiously, but its benefit to Germany 
did not stop there. Other translations of the Bible 
into the German language had been made long before 



TRANSLATION OF THE BIBLE 143 

Luther began his work, Janssen, the learned Roman 
Catholic, author of the History of the German People 
from the close of the Middle Ages, tells us that no fewer 
than fourteen complete versions of the whole Bible in 
High German and five in Low German had appeared 
before 1518. For it is a mistake to believe that the 
mediaeval Church attempted to keep the Bible from the 
people. That was reserved for the Roman Catholic 
Church, which was founded at the Council of Trent. 
But these translations, made from the Latin Version, 
were mostly uncouth, and not very easily understood 
by the common people. Luther may almost be said to 
have created the German language as a vehicle of 
literary expression. Ulrich von Hutten, for example, 
was made to see what the German language could 
express from his study of Luther's German writings. 
Besides, Luther, a Thuringian born, was brought up on 
the boundary between the two German languages, and 
used neither High German nor Low German, but a 
third, which united the two. His Bible in this way 
gave Germany a common language. This new intel- 
lectual possession preserved the unity of the German 
people through times of political and ecclesiastical 
division in a way that no Emperor ever did or could 
have done. He resolved that his translation should be 
a book for the " common man." " One has to ask," he 
says, "the mother in her home, the children in the 
street, the common man in the market-place, and to 
look at their mouths to see how they speak, and thence 
interpret it to oneself, and so to make them understand. 
I have often laboured to do this, but have not always 
succeeded or hit off the meaning." He took incredible 
pains with his work. Some MS. of his translations 



144 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

survive, and we find that he has struck out passages as 
often as fifteen times in the endeavour to find exactly 
the right expression. Many versions are much more 
literally accurate, but none takes the reader so directly 
into the heart of the original as his does. It took the 
exclusive interpretation of the Bible out of the hands 
of the ecclesiastics, and made man feel God speaking 
to him face to face. Every German with reverence 
enough for it could now stand beside Moses on the 
Mount. The translation finished by Luther in the 
Wartburg was revised by Melanchthon and others at 
Wittenberg. Three printing-presses were then set to 
work, and on 21st September 1522 the first edition 
of the New Testament in German was published. It 
was speedily exhausted, and a second was ready in 
December. The book was illustrated by Lucas 
Cranach ; it was published without date or name of 
printer or translator; the price was 1J- gulden. 

The translation of the Old Testament was not begun 
In the Wartburg. Luther felt that he required help 
for such a great task. After he was back in Witten- 
berg, a band of scholars set themselves to the work, 
and it was slowly accomplished and published in 
Instalments. In 1534 the first complete edition ap- 
peared entitled, JBiblia, das ist die ganze heilige 
Schrift, Deudsch. Martin Luih. Wittenberg. 
MDXXXIV. By this time no less than sixteen revised 
editions of the New Testament had been issued, and 
more tjian fifty reimpressions. 

Amid his multitudinous studies, correspondence, and 
writing of every kind, Luther's great heart was being 
fretted and worn by the news which came to him from 
time to time from his own town of Wittenberg. His 



LUTHER'S DREAMS 145 

comforting sermons published in pamphlet form, his 
cautions and exhortations by letter, seemed to produce 
no effect. He had dreamed of a renovated Germany, 
with a school in every parish, high schools in con- 
venient centres, and libraries, all provided out of the 
worse than useless wealthy convent endowments; of 
children taught at home and in school the "funda- 
mentals " which to his mind, true to the memories of 
his own home training, were the Lord's Prayer, the 
Apostles' Creed, and the Ten Commandments; of an 
evangelical pastorate of married parish priests, free 
from the vices and hypocrisy of the old clergy, pro- 
claiming the full grace of God, and warning against 
the soul-destroying error of work-righteousness; of 
the limitation of the power of the clergy, and the 
transference of the direction of the social duties to the 
magistracy and the community all being brought 
about gradually by the quiet working of the Word of 
God on heart and conscience, and nothing done in undue 
haste or by compulsion. Events were advancing at a 
rate neither he nor anyone had thought of only a few 
months before. His Theses, his Leipzig Disputation, 
and above all his appearance before the Diet, had 
kindled a train which had long been laid. What this 
was, must be told when we come to the double flare up 
of the combustible elements in Germany, in the brief 
revolt of the knights and the prolonged conflagration 
of the Peasants' War. The ecclesiastical events alone 
need concern us now. 

One question was solving itself quietly ; more than 
one parish priest, after obtaining the consent of his 
congregation, had married ; this conduct obtained 
Luther's approval. But many were demanding the 

JO 



146 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

abolition of all monastic vows by ordinance to be 
enforced by violence. Although this question had 
been solved by the timely decision of the Augustinian 
Order assembled in full chapter, the populace were 
subjecting the monks, who refused to quit the cloister 
and who appeared in the streets in their monastic 
dress, to all manner of petty insults. 

Changes in worship were also hotly demanded, the 
celebration of the Eucharist in both kinds, new modes 
of receiving the elements to bring out the primitive 
idea of a supper, the abolition of the sacrifice of the 
Mass, and the abolition of the use of vestments. The 
populace riotously disturbed the service of the Mass, 
stormed into the churches to tear down images and 
pictures, and made many such unseemly tumults. 

Then there appeared a strange movement., headed by 
Archdeacon Carlstadt, which repudiated all human 
learning, disorganised the university, and persuaded 
the schoolmaster to send the boys home to their 
parents. Carlstadt himself, in order to carry out his 
idea of "simplifying himself," assumed the peasant's 
dress, and worked on his father-in-law's farm. All 
these things were aggravated by the presence in the 
town of certain men who came from Zwickau, famed 
for its weaving industry, Nicolas S torch and Mark 
Sttibner, men who were called the " heavenly prophets," 
and who preached a thorough and radical reconstruc- 
tion of all the public religious life. 

Luther had been so anxious about all these things 
that he had gone to Wittenburg secretly, remaining hid 
in Amsdorf s house, to satisfy himself about the actual 
state of matters, and he had returned to the Wartburg 
in great depression of spirit. When be heard that the 



KESSLER AND LUTHER 147 

Council of the Regency, on complaint of Duke George 
of Saxony, the head of the Albertine line and a strong 
opponent of the Reformation, had called upon the 
Elector to put down by force all the innovations intro- 
duced into the town, he could restrain himself no 
longer. He wrote to the Elector that he must leave 
his place of refuge, and asked him to do nothing to 
protect him should the Imperial officials seize him 
according to the decree of the Diet. 

We get a glimpse of him on the road from the 
Wartburg to Wittenburg from the pen of John 
Kessler, a young Swiss student, who was travelling 
with a companion to enrol himself in the university. 

Kessler relates that at the town of Jena they 
entered the "Black Bear" Hotel to lodge for the 
night. "There we found a man sitting alone at the 
table, and before him lay a little book. He greeted us 
kindly, asked us to draw near and place ourselves by 
him at the table, for our shoes were so covered with 
mud and dirt that we were ashamed to enter boldly 
into the chamber, and had seated ourselves on a little 
bench in a corner near the door. * . . We thought 
nothing else but that he was a trooper, as he sat there 
according to the custom of the country, in hose and 
tunic, without armour, a sword by his side, his right 
hand on the pommel, and his left grasping its hilt. 
His eyes were black and deep, flashing and beaming 
like a star, so that they could not well be looked 
upon." Then they talked about Switzerland, their 
studies, their earnest desire to see Luther, and so on. 
"With such conversation we grew quite confidential, 
so that my companion took up the little book that lay 
before him, and looked at it. It was a Hebrew Psalter* 



148 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Then he laid it quickly down again, and the trooper 
drew it to himself. And my companion said, ' I would 
give a finger from my hand to understand that 
language/ He answered, l You will soon comprehend 
it if you are diligent ; I also desire to understand it 
better, and practise myself daily in it/ Meanwhile 
the day declined, and it became quite dark, when the 
host came to the table. When he understood our 
fervent desire and longing to see Martin Luther, lie 
said, e Good friends, if you had been here two days ago 
you would have had your wish, for he sat here at table, 
and in that place/ " After some more conversation the 
host called Kessler apart, and informed him that he 
believed the stranger to be Martin Luther, and Kessler 
managed to whisper the news to his companion, but 
neither could believe that Luther could be dressed in 
such a way, and concluded that the host must have 
meant Ulrich von Hutten. When the meal came in 
they wished to be excused from partaking, but the 
stranger invited them to seat themselves as he meant 
to pay their score. Then two merchants came in, and 
having removed their cloaks and spurs, sat down at 
the table, and one of them produced an unbound book, 
which proved to be a copy of Luther's Commentary on 
the Epistle to the Galatians. The merchant asked 
Luther whether he had seen it, and he replied that it 
would be sent to him. " During the meal Martin said 
many pious and friendly words, so that the merchants 
and we were dumb before him, and heeded his dis- 
course far more than our food. Among other things, 
he complained with a sigh how the princes and nobles 
were gathered at the Diet of Niirnberg on account of 
God's Word, many difficult matters, and the oppressiou 



KESSLER AND LUTHER 149 

of the German nation, and yet seemed to have no 
purpose but to bring about better times by means of 
tourneys, sleigh-rides, and all kinds of vain courtly 
pleasures; whereas the fear of God and Christian 
prayer would accomplish so much more. . . . After 
this the merchants gave their opinion, and the elder of 
them said, c I am a simple, unlearned layman, and have 
no special understanding of these things ; but as I look 
at the matter I say, Luther must either be an angel 
from heaven or a devil from hell. I would gladly give 
ten florins to be confessed by him, for I believe that 
he could and would enlighten my conscience/" . . . 
"On Saturday (they had got to Wittenberg by this 
time) we went to Dr. Jerome Schurf to deliver our 
letters of introduction. When we were called into the 
room, lo and behold ! there we found the trooper 
Martin, as before at Jena ; and with him were Philip 
Melanchthon, Justus Jonas, Nicolas Amsdorf, and Dr. 
Augustin Schurf, who were relating to him what had 
happened at Wittenberg during his absence. He greeted 
us, and laughing, pointed with his finger and said, 
' This is Philip Melanchthon of whom I spoke to you/ " 



CHAPTER VII 

THE PROGRESS OF THE EJEFOBMATION 
1522-1525 

LUTHER got back to Wittenberg on a Thursday, and 
spent the next two days in learning all about the 
condition of affairs in the town. On the Sunday his 
familiar face appeared in the pulpit, and for eight 
successive days he preached to his people. He en- 
forced the need of charity and forbearance even in 
essentials, he counselled his audience against all 
violence, he made no personal references, and in the 
end he was master of the situation. In his exhorta- 
tions against all violent action,, especially in matters of 
religion, he says : " The Word created heaven and 
earth and all things ; the same Word will also create 
now, and not we poor sinners. Bumma summarum, 
I will preach it, I will talk of it, I will write about it, 
but I will not use force or compulsion with anyone; 
for faith must be of free will and unconstrained, and 
must be accepted without compulsion. To marry, to 
do away with images, to become monks or nuns, for 
monks or nuns to leave their convents, to eat meat on 
Friday or not to eat it, and other like things, all 
these things are open questions, and should not be 



PROGRESS OF THE REFORMATION 151 

forbidden by any man." " It Is His "Word that must 
act, and not we. And wherefore do you say ? Because 
I do not hold the hearts of men in my hand as the 
potter holds the clay In his. Our work is to speak. 
God will act. Let us preach. The rest belongs to 
Him. If I employ force, what do I gain ? Changes in 
demeanour, outward shows, grimaces, shams, hypo- 
crisies. But what becomes of the sincerity of the 
heart, of faith, of Christian love? All is wanting 
where these are lacking ; and for the rest I would not 
give the stalk of a pear. What we want is the heart, 
and to win that we must preach the gospel. Then the 
word will drop to-day into one heart, to-morrow into 
another, and so will work that each will forsake the 
Mass. God effects more than you and I and the whole 
world combined could attempt. He secures the heart ; 
and when that is won all is won." 

By Luther's advice the old methods of performing 
service were restored, the clergy wore vestments again, 
the Eucharist was given in the old way, but for those 
who wished it a separate altar was placed where com- 
municants could partake of the cup as well as the bread, 
and gradually all went to that altar, and the change 
came about peaceably. Luther himself went back to 
the Augustinian convent and resumed his monk's 
dress. The university classes were again crowded, 
and the boys were again sent to school, the master 
having recovered from his momentary aberration. 

As soon as Wittenberg was pacified, Luther was 
asked to make preaching tours through towns mostly 
in Electoral Saxony 1 to Zwickau, the town of 

1 Saxony in tlie time of the Eeformation was divided most irregularly 
as territories were concerned, for they wound out and in through each 



152 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

weavers, where it is said twenty-five thousand persons 
assembled to hear him, to Altenberg, the old princely 
residence of Saxony ere the grand division of lands 
was made, to Dorna, to Weimar (at the invitation of 
Duke John, the Elector's brother), and to Erfurt. 
When at home he was chiefly busied with his Bible 
translation, but composed one notable short treatise, 
foreseeing, no doubt, that something on the subject 
would soon be required. This was entitled, On the 
Secular Power, and how far Obedience is due to it. 
The intention of the tract was to show that the secular 
power was as much an ordinance of God, and as much 
meant by Him for the good of man, as the ecclesiastical 
power, which proclaimed itself to be divine. His posi- 
tion is that the commands of our Lord forbid Chris- 
tians taking vengeance for personal wrongs, that it 
is necessary for the general good that wrong-doing 
should be punished, and to this end our Lord has 
assigned the sword to the secular power. Princes and 
magistrates are as much set apart by God for this good 
end as Churchmen for the service of the Church, and 
they as truly command our veneration and obedience. 
There is a limit to this obedience. The secular power 

other, into the two divisions of Electoral Saxony, with "Wittenberg as 
capital and university town, and Ducal Saxony with Leipzig as capital 
and university town. Electoral Saxony was held by the Ernestine line 
and Ducal Saxony by the Albertine line. Luther's Elector was the son 
of Ernest, and Duke George the son of Albert, the boy-heroes of the 
Prince-Stealing Raid, the theme of many a Fastnacht spiel, and still 
commemorated by local celebrations in the Altenberg region. The 
younger or Alberfcme line ousted the eldor or Ernestine line from the 
Electorship in the person of Maurice of Saxony, Duke George's nephew 
and successor. It is now represented by the King of Saxony. The 
elder line split into many small dukedoms, and is represented by the 
Duke of Saxe-Ooburg-Gotha, our Queen's second son. 



PROGRESS OF THE REFORMATION 153 

has no divine rule over the human conscience, and it 
has nothing to do with testing doctrines. That belongs 
to bishops and not to princes. 

During the months which had elapsed since the Diet 
of Worms, and while the fever of the reform move- 
ment was spreading itself over the land, Germany 
had been watching with much patience the gradual 
establishment of what was called a Reichsregiment or 
permanent Imperial Council, meant to govern Ger- 
many during the absence of the Emperor, and perhaps 
to act as some restraint on Imperial despotism. This 
had long been an aspiration, and now seemed in the 
way of becoming an established fact. 

Once started on their work, one can discern that if 
the times had not been so difficult, if the warring in- 
terests had not been so utterly conflicting, or even 
with all these if they had got a fair backing from the 
Emperor, whose work they were doing, the Council 
might have made something of the terribly distracted 
Germany, They were almost at the beginning called 
upon to face the economic problems which were perplex- 
ing the land, and the sketch plan which they produced 
shows that this Council had in their minds a united 
Germany, whose various territories and classes of men 
were to support each other against all outsiders. They 
drafted a great customs union, which, was to include all 
German lands, and some lands that were not German 
(for they included the Netherlands) which had laid 
hold on the sea approaches of the Rhine. The very 
plan which almost within the present generation was 
the forerunner of a united Germany. 

They were soon forced to give some attention to the 
religious question. Duke George of Saxony was deeply 



154 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

concerned that so many religious tumults should have 
taken place in his cousin's university town of Witten- 
berg, much afraid that they might extend further, 
perhaps into his own Ducal Saxony. Early in 1522, 
therefore, he brought forward a proposal that the 
Council should commission the three bishops of Naum- 
berg, Meissen, and Merseberg to visit Wittenberg and 
other places where disorders had occurred, and restore, 
by pains and penalties if need be, the public worship 
to the old use and wont. Luther had returned to his 
post, and had mastered the situation not a day too 
soon. As it was, the representative of the Elector 
could remind the Council and Duke George that the 
work of the Commission had already been done ; the 
disorders had been put down, and most of the old uses 
had been restored in public worship. As for the other 
things, they were trifles. What if the Eucharist was 
celebrated in both kinds, what if one or two parish 
priests "had married, or a pair of monks had left their 
convent ? Those things were not heresies against the 
faith, but mere evasions of some recent commands of 
Popes, which were not of much consequence. It was 
in vain that Duke George declared that Luther's 
presence in Wittenberg was an insult to the Empire. 
He was informed that the Council were able to judge 
when the Empire was insulted, and when they saw 
any insult would punish it. 

When the summer of 1522 came round, it was the 
turn of the Elector of Saxony to take his place in the 
Council, and the thorny question of the religious com- 
motions began to be treated in his wise, tolerant fashion. 
W T hat benefit might have come to unfortunate Germany 
if he had not refused the Imperial throne on that 



PROGRESS OF THE REFORMATION 155 

evening in the end of July 1519 ! Readers are familiar 
with his portrait by Albert Dlirer, which shows us a 
corpulent, benevolent, elderly gentleman " looking out 
from under his electoral cap, with a fine, placid, honest, 
and yet vigilant and sagacious aspect." He belonged 
to the band of old princes who had suggested the 
Council. He had taken a personal part in its institu- 
tion. He had been frequently consulted on points of 
official procedure. His placid nature, his wide experi- 
ence, the veneration in which he was held from his 
sagacity and talent for business, all gave him a position 
of unusual authority. " It might be said/' says Ranke, 
" that at this period he ruled the Empire, so far as it 
was possible to speak of ruling it" 

It was to this Council that Pope Adrian VI. sent a 
letter and a legate about the religious matters in Ger- 
many. The new Pope was a very different man from 
Leo. He had been a Dominican monk and the tutor 
of Charles V. He was a pious man according to his 
lights, and was deeply sensible of the evils which were 
corrupting the Church. He was not afraid to confess 
them, and to promise honestly to do what in him lay 
to end them. But he was a firm believer in the schol- 
astic theology of the Middle Ages, and he had all the 
Dominican feeling that obedience to ecclesiastical and 
papal authority must be enforced. He accordingly 
demanded the enforcement of the Bull of his prede- 
cessor and of the Edict of Worms against Luther. The 
legate brought his requests before the Diet which met 
at Ntirnberg at the close of 1522. The Diet was in no 
mood to grant his demands. Germany had abundant 
grievances against Rome, and Luther had voiced these 
more effectually than any other person. They could 



1 56 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

not burn him and then proceed to demand the very 
thing for which he had been condemned. Besides, the 
princes felt sure that the land would be plunged into 
civil war if the Edict of Worms was carried out. Even 
Albert of Mainz had forbidden the Franciscans to 
preach against Luther, from dread of popular dis- 
turbances. All the members of the Diet knew some- 
thing of the state of popular unrest arising from many 
causes, among which the exactions of the Church were 
not the least. These only required occasion to flame 
out into popular revolt against all constituted autho- 
rities. The Diet determined to come to no decision 
about the Pope's demand until they had received some 
definite answer from Rome to a statement of their eccle- 
siastical grievances. They drafted the famous " Hundred 
Grievances " of Germany against Rome, and gave that 
to the legate for their answer. This done, they debated 
how to deal with the religious question at home. 
They held long discussions over it, and at last came to 
a conclusion which was the outcome of many a com- 
promise. It was to the effect that nothing should be 
preached in Germany but the true, pure, sincere, and 
holy gospel, in accordance with the teaching and inter- 
pretation of well-known works approved by the Church. 
Almost every word in the decision represents a com- 
promise ; and what made it valuable was that it repre- 
sented the way in which Germany, if left to itself and 
apart from the foreign policy of the young Emperor, 
would have treated the Reformation movement. The 
one permanent result of it was that it gave a legal 
standing to the reformed religion in those parts of 
the country where that was making progress. Luther 
had published his opinion that it was lawful and scrip- 



PROGRESS OF THE REFORMATION 157 

tural for communities, who were of the evangelical 
faith, to choose for themselves pastors, and gather 
round them in worship. He had seen that the decision 
of the Nttrnberg Diet gave a quasi-legal authorisation 
for changes in worship, and had accordingly published 
a Wittenberg Order of Public Worship, an Order of 
Baptism, and an evangelical Hymn-book containing 
eight hymns. All these publications of his went far 
and wide, and no doubt helped to encourage the minds 
of those who looked to him for guidance in many parts 
of Germany. The Hymn-book especially, which was 
enlarged during the course of the year, aided the 
work more than anything else. We find, after this 
Diet of 1523, a silent, widespreading movement going 
on all over Germany. There was no concerted action, 
no plan of operation, no active incitement, but every- 
where evangelical preachers appeared and congrega- 
tions were formed. These preachers were for the most 
part monks who had left the cloister Augustinians in 
largest number, but also Benedictines, Franciscans, and 
even Dominicans. Sometimes parish priests called 
their parishioners together, and explained that they 
had accepted the teaching of Luther, and for the most 
part their congregations were glad to follow them. 
Sometimes the priest explained that he could no longer 
conscientiously conduct the service in the old fashion, 
and that, as his superiors would not allow him to use 
the church, he would preach to them in the fields. 
The people followed him, and after they saw that no 
use was being made of the church, they insisted on 
going back there and worshipping in the reformed 
fashion. One pastor preached to his people under the 
trees in the churchyard, and the congregation came 



158 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

armed to protect him, and found that they had no need 
to bring their weapons. Sometimes evangelical com- 
munities formed themselves, and had no pastors ; then 
they wrote to Luther to send them one. Thus Witten- 
berg became a sort of evangelical metropolis, and 
Luther an unconscious metropolitan. The movement 
was so universal in all German - speaking lands, so 
silent, so natural, that Ranke can compare it to nothing 
else save the warm rays of the spring sun quickening 
and making sprout the seed which has lain "happed" 
in a tilled and sown field. 

Some princes came forward as open supporters of 
the movement, foremost among whom, to Luther's 
great delight, were the Counts of Mansfeld in his 
native Thuringia. The free cities also ranked them- 
selves on the evangelical side Niirnberg, Ulm, Stras- 
burg, Frankfurt-on-the-Main, Breslau, and others. The 
more important towns in Electoral Saxony Zwickau, 
the town of weavers, Altenberg, Eisenach, and others 
had their reformed pastors. 

German notables, perplexed by the strenuous wishes 
of their people, came to consult Luther. The towns- 
people in the Culmbach region, for example, urged 
thereto by Niirnberg, the great city near them, began 
to feel impatient that they had still to endure the 
Romish services, and wished to make a clean sweep of 
them all. Their superior, George, Margrave of Anspach, 
and cousin to the Archbishop Elector of Mainz himself, 
rode off to Wittenberg "with six attendants only/ 5 
alighted at Luther's door, had long, earnest conversa- 
tion with him, and rode back again, all his doubts 
removed, to be a loyal supporter of the evangelical 
cause to the day of his death. His brother too, Albert 



PROGRESS OF THE REFORMATION 159 

of Brandenburg, Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights 
in East Prussia, in desperate trouble between the King 
of Poland on the one hand and his German coin- 
manderies and th Diet on the other, took the same 
road more than once (June 1523, again in 1524), and 
got the emphatic advice that the Order had become 
a thing serviceable neither to God nor to man ; that 
the best thing he could do was to throw off his Grand 
Master's cloak, dress as a plain German noble, marry, 
and make East Prussia an evangelical principality. 
All of which Albert did, and East Prussia became the 
first principality to adopt the evangelical faith officially 
and completely. 

So the Eef ormation spread through Germany far and 
near in simple, natural f ashion., without any attempt at 
preconcerted action, or any design to impose a new form 
of Church government, or a new and uniform order of 
public worship. Luther was not without hope that the 
great ecclesiastical principalities would become secular 
lordships, that the bishops would assume the lead in 
ecclesiastical reform, and that there would be a national 
Church in Germany, altered in externals as little as 
possible, enough only to permit free scope to evangelical 
preaching and teaching. It is true that before the year 
1524 had ended the Pope's legate managed to bring 
together the princes of Austria and Bavaria, and the 
ecclesiastical States in South Germany, in a Convention 
at Eatisbon, and there to induce them to agree that, 
provided the sales of Indulgences and various ecclesi- 
astical extortions were put an end to, no further con- 
cessions should be made in doctrine, and that any 
pretence of favouring new theological ideas should be 
firmly checked. It is true that the Emperor had set 



160 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

himself firmly against the whole Reformation move- 
ment, and that in his hereditary dominions of the 
Netherlands he had sent the first martyrs for the faith 
to the flames. It is true that there were not lacking 
symptoms of restlessness and discontent over wide 
areas of Germany. Still, all these things did not pre- 
vent such a skilled and wary statesman as the old 
Elector from confidently expecting a peaceful, and, so 
far as Germany was concerned, a unanimous and hearty 
solution of the religious difficulty. The storm burst 
suddenly which was to shatter all these optimistic 
expectations, and to change fundamentally Luther's 
conception of what was to be expected from the 
"common man" in Germany. 
This was the Peasants' War. 



CHAPTER VIII 

POLITICAL AND SOCIAL REVOLTS 

1. THE REVOLT OF THE NOBLES 

Two sudden risings, significant of the social and 
economic troubles of the time, materially affected the 
course of the religious movement which centred round 
Luther. These were the " Revolt of the Nobles " under 
Franz von Sickingen and that terrible conflagration 
which has been called " The Peasants' War." 

We have alluded to the economic changes which 
were affecting society everywhere, but especially in 
Germany, during our epoch (pp. 4-6), and seen that 
they bore most heavily on two classes in the society of 
the Middle Ages the lesser nobility and the peasants 
with the lower classes in the towns ; and it was from 
these two oppressed classes that the risings came. 

The lesser nobility, the FreiJierrn or free nobles of 
the Empire, had once held a commanding position in 
the social life of the Middle Ages. They had been the 
warrior caste, and had possessed the position in life 
which naturally falls to the men who do the fighting. 
The feudal structure of society gave them a real inde- 
pendence, and when land was the one great source of 
wealth their position as an aristocracy was unchal- 



1 62 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

lenged. The Swiss peasant revolte- had proved the 
superiority of trained infantry over the clumsy chivalry 
of knights and squires. The great landowners, who 
could afford to maintain small armies of paid soldiers, 
made the free nobles feel themselves reduced to a 
position of galling inferiority. The commerce of the 
towns had furnished a new source of wealth, to which 
the free nobles had no legitimate access, and in which 
they could only share, either by taxing heavily the 
merchant trains as they passed under the cliffs on 
which their castles were perched or laboriously forded 
some rushing and unbridged stream within their terri- 
torial domains, or else by rushing down from their 
eyrie-like towers and capturing both traders and mer- 
chandise. The very names of the two Imperial houses 
now ruling in Germany (Hohenzollern or Upper Tolls 
and Hapsburg or Gled's Tower) show the aristocratic 
methods of money-getting in the Middle Ages. But 
the sturdy German burghers did their best to put this 
highway robbery down by Hanse Leagues among them- 
selves and Swabian Leagues with the princes. The 
German free nobles were discontentedly feeling them- 
selves reduced to a very inferior position in a society 
in which they claimed a first rank. Some of them 
accommodated themselves to the new style of things 
by becoming the followers of the greater landowners, 
and gained a comparative security while losing their 
independence. Others levied black-mail in districts 
where quiet people gladly paid for some rude protec- 
tion. A third class gathered round them bands of 
trained mercenaries, and rivalled the Italian Condot- 
tieri in their exploits as mercenary leaders, selling their 
swords to the highest bidder. 



REVOLT OF THE NOBLES 163 

Foremost among the last class was Franz von Sick- 
ingen, commonly, but rather Inappropriately, called 
" the last flower of German chivalry/' He was much 
liker a premature Wallensteln or one of those Italian 
soldiers of fortune of "the latter Renaissance period, such 
as Giovanni dei Medici of the Black Bands, save that 
being a German he possessed a fund of natural morality 
and piety lacking to the great Italian soldier, and had 
Ulrich von Hutten and not a Pietro Aretino for his 
confidential friend. He began life by serving under 
various princes, and having gradually made his way, 
amassed wealth by attacking and ransoming cities 
instead of wayfarers. He had three castles strongly 
fortified and placed in strategic positions, and he kept 
up a greater state than most princes. He was the 
patron of Humanists and men of learning. He had 
been attracted by Luther's teaching, and we have 
already seen (p. 90) Ulrich von Hutten expounding the 
evangelical faith to his patron in the afternoons at 
Ebernburg. His wife, Hedwig von Flesshaim, was a 
pious lady much given to good works, and his castle was 
a well-ordered household. He had espoused Charles's 
side in the election, had even lent him money for his 
canvas; and he was powerful enough for Charles to 
ask him to make war in a district in France when the 
Emperor wished to embarrass his rival. His portrait 
by Hopper shows a high square forehead, a close-packed 
brain, firm nose, mouth, and chin, a face full of courage 
and craft, humour and decision of character, and, in 
addition, curiously " modern " looking. 

This was the man to whom the knights turned in 
their extremity, and he was willing enough to be their 
champion. The free nobles of the Upper Rhine met 



1 64 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

at Landau on the 13th of August 1522 and signed a 
" Brotherly Agreement " in which they declared their 
wrongs. They protested against the Swabian League, 
which acted as accuser, judge, and executioner all in 
one ; against the Imperial Privy Council, which sought 
out and punished the weaker offenders and let the 
powerful ones go unscathed ; and against the grasping 
greed of the princes, who were ruining the free nobles 
with their new-fangled Courts of Justice, the admin- 
istration of their feudalities, and their increasingly 
severe feudal dues. They claimed their old independ- 
ence, and refused to be tried by other than their peers. 
Franz was named Hauptmann, and was expected to 
redress their wrongs. 

The aim of the nobles was, like the dream of Charles, 
to return to a state of society that had for ever fled. 
It is difficult to believe that the brain behind that 
" modern "-looking face could have thought the thing 
possible ; still more difficult to understand the medley 
of forces he tried to weld together in his attack on the 
power of the princes. He may have seriously believed 
that he was actually clearing the way for a religious 
reform, for a man's inner religious convictions can make 
strange alliances in most ages. There is no reason to 
doubt the reality of his ecclesiastical aspirations, or to 
think that he was posing for effect when he insisted 
on public worship at Ebernburg being modelled on the 
reformed service at Wittenberg, assisted at the marriage 
of his chaplain, wished the cup given to the laity at 
Holy Communion, banished pictures from his churches, 
and objected to prayers to the saints; but along with 
all these things there was the perception that the eccle- 
siastical principality of Trier would make an excellent 



REVOLT OF THE NOBLES 165 

secular lordship If It could only Tbe won, and that the 
man who secured It would "become an Elector and 
more." He knew that Luther did not believe in attach- 
ing a reformation of religion to an armed rising, and that 
he had told Hutten so frequently. But he also knew 
the wild words that Luther had flung out against the 
ecclesiastical princes, and how loudly they were re- 
echoing in the hearts of the lower clergy and the 
people. We need not be surprised then at the alliance 
he tried to make between his raid on the Archbishop of 
Trier and the evangelical Beform movement. But 
what is difficult to see is how he could ever have hoped 
for an alliance between the nobles and the cities. It is 
true that the burghers wereindignant for the time being 
at the Imperial Council ; that they were feeling the 
position of inferiority In which their delegates were 
placed at its meetings; and at the disproportionate 
weight of Imperial taxation which was laid on their 
shoulders. But no two classes in the Empire had less 
in common than the free nobles and the burghers. It 
was the interest of the burghers to see that the roads 
were kept safe ; it was the free nobles who made the 
roads dangerous for all the law-abiding trading classes. 
What had Frankfort In common with the nobles at a 
time when its own delegate to the Imperial Council, 
worthy Philip Fiirstenburg of the Tailors' Guild, had 
to leave his carriage on the road to be pillaged by law- 
less knights, and make his way on foot by bypaths with 
a trusty journeyman craft-brother to Nlirnberg where 
the Council met ? Yet Franz summoned Frankfort 
to aid him. Hutten, that stormy petrel of the epoch, 
even appealed to the peasants, and compared his patron 
fco Zisca, who had cleared Bohemia of useless priests 



1 66 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

and monks, confiscated their possessions to the common 
good, and ended the robberies of Rome. But the 
peasants knew full well that their most pitiless op- 
pressors were those free nobles whose cause he was 
championing, and were soon to feel that his soldiers 
pillaged peasants' farmyards as well as convents and 
bishops' abodes. 

The very army which Sickingen led showed that a 
restoration of the mediaeval knighthood was a thing of 
the past. It was a body of drilled and paid soldiers, 
and had the usual equipment of artillery. There was 
no appearance of the old mediaeval militia of knights 
and squires. 

Yet his rising was regarded by many as the most 
dangerous thing that had happened or could happen to 
the Empire so difficult is it to see the proportions of 
contemporary events ! He sent the usual feud letter 
to the Archbishop of Trier, and set out on his march in 
the beginning of September 1522, all Germany wonder- 
ing what was to come of this thing. 

The expedition was a complete failure. The arch- 
bishop defended his capital like another Pope Julius n. 
The siege had only lasted a week when the besiegers' 
powder ran out. Sickingen had to withdraw his forces 
and retire to Ebernburg, where he hoped to pass the 
winter. 

The princes, however, were on the alert. The 
Imperial Council had sternly forbidden Sickingen's 
raid, and now they were resolved to punish him and 
his abettors. The Cardinal^Elector of Mainz, who had 
not gone at once to his neighbour's assistance, was 
heavily fined; his chamberlain, Frowen von Hutten, 
a cousin of TJlricIi, was driven from his castle and 



REVOLT OF THE NOBLES 167 

deprived of his estates. In the spring the three 
princes, the Archbishop of Trier, the Count Palatine of 
the Ehine, and the young Landgrave of Hesse, "blockaded 
Sickingen in his castle of Landstuhl, captured the 
messengers he sent out to secure help, and battered 
down his walls with cannon. Franz himself was 
desperately wounded, and the strong place was sur- 
rendered. When the princes entered they found 
Sickingen dying. "What hadst thou against me, 
Franz," said the Archbishop of Trier, " that thou hast 
laid waste me and my poor folk ? " " Or against me 
that thou didst overrun my land in the days of my 
minority?" said the Landgrave. "I have to answer 
to a greater Lord," said the dying man. His chaplain 
asked him if he wished to confess, and Franz answered 
that he had already confessed to God in his heart. 
Then the chaplain gave him absolution. He was 
about to elevate the Host, the princes had uncovered 
their heads and knelt, when Franz expired. The 
princes said the Lord's Prayer over the body and 
departed. 

They none the less determined to stamp out the 
rising. The castles of Sickingen and his allied nobles 
were seized and kept by the princes who had made 
the campaign against him. The wonderful treasures 
of Ebernburg fell to the share of Philip of Hesse. 
The Swabian League thought that the time had come 
to put an end to the Franconian robber knights. 
They held a memorable meeting at Nordlingen, and 
resolved to proceed against all who did not make 
submission. An army was gathered, with George 
Truchsess as general; the towns of Augsburg, Ulm, 
and Niirnberg furnishing artillery. The League began 



1 68 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

by attacking the strongest castle in the whole district 
of Franconia Bocksberg, near the quiet little town 
of Mergentheim, where invalids in these calmer days 
congregate to drink mineral waters. This was taken 
and destroyed. The defenders of the other castles 
were too frightened to make much resistance. The 
grim tower of the Absberg, the castle of the ruffian 
Hans Thomas, who, not content with robbing, used 
to cut off the hands of his victims and occasionally 
send them to the authorities in Nurnberg, was seized, 
and its walls of enormous thickness were blown asunder 
with gunpowder. The work was done very thoroughly ; 
the von Giechs, the von Aufsesses, the von Absbergs, 
the von Brandensteins, and the von Rosenbergs were 
reduced to submission, and highway robbery and 
mutilation by knightly persons was largely suppressed. 
The fall of Landstuhl and the end of Sickingen 
are therefore more than the capture of a castle and 
the death of a warrior. They mark the crowning 
victory of the great magnates over the free nobles, 
and the beginning of the new era of political de- 
velopment which was the feature of the age. Only 
the internal circumstances of Germany prevented a 
national centralisation round a national king, as in 
England, France, and Spain. The centralising prin- 
ciple found expression rather in the concentration of 
authority in the hands of local territorial magnates, 
and in the division of Germany into a number of 
separate and independent principalities; and this 
formed a field which invited the intrigues of the 
Roman Curia, and led to the disastrous Thirty Years' 
War, where the bitterness of contending creeds, the 
fierce rivalries of mutually jealous petty sovereigns, 



THE PEASANTS 1 WAR 169 

and the fiendish desire of France and the Curia to 
bleed Germany to death, prolonged the most ferocious 
internecine struggle that Europe has ever seen. All 
these things came from the economic ferment which 
sent Franz von Sickingen to attack the princes, in 
the hope of restoring their ancient position and 
privileges to the free nobles of the German mediaeval 
Empire. 

Few impartial writers will venture to trace any- 
thing but a remote and indirect connection between 
this revolt of the nobles and the preaching of Luther. 
Sickingen himself may have calculated upon the effects 
of Luther's denunciation of the ecclesiastical princes, 
and Hutten certainly hoped that the rising led by 
his patron would introduce a new era of light and 
intellectual and religious liberty. Both, however, knew 
very well that Luther did not desire their help, and 
that he disapproved of the appeal to arms. Sickingen 
himself was too cool-headed a man to be carried away 
by the violent language of a religious preacher. His 
enterprise rested on political calculations which were 
outside the sphere of Luther's thinking. 

2. THE PEASANTS' WAK 

When we consider the causes which produced the 
Peasants' War, however, it must be acknowledged 
that there was an intimate connection between that 
disastrous outburst and Luther's message to the German 
people. When the voice of a bold and earnest preacher 
sounds over a land, the conviction of the speaker 
awakening an answering conviction in the hearers, 
when it proclaims the old gospel in such a new form 



170 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

as to pierce the sham religion of the age, when It 
comes at a time when all men are restless and most 
men are Intolerably oppressed, when it appeals 
especially to all who feel the yoke galling and the 
burden heavy, it is sure to be followed by far-re- 
sounding reverberations. It awakens responses, some 
of them very unexpected, in the depths of the life 
of the common people, and is able to call into being 
a movement which may last for centuries. The voice 
of Luther in the age of the Eeformation awoke echoes 
whereof he never dreamt, and its effects cannot be 
measured by some changes in doctrines or by a 
reformation of ecclesiastical organisation. It is easy 
to show that the Eeformation of Luther had nothing 
in common with the revolt of the peasants in the 
country districts and with the insurrections of the 
working classes in the towns as easy as to show 
that there was little in common between the " spiritual 
poverty" of Francis of Assisi and the vulgar com- 
munism of the Brethren and Sisters of the Free Life, 
between the doctrines of Wicklif and the gigantic 
labour strike headed by Wat Tyler and priest Ball, 
between the preaching of John Huss and the extreme 
Taborist fanatics. The fact, however, remains that the 
"common man" in each case did appropriate and 
remodel, after his own fashion, the exhortations of 
the religious leaders, and apply them in wholly un- 
expected ways. 

The times of the Eeformation were ripe for revolu- 
tion. The fields had been ploughed, sown, and 
harrowed ; the voice of the Reformer came like the sun 
in the early summer to quicken all the seed into life. 

We have referred to the social and economic con- 



THE PEASANTS 5 WAR 171 

ditions of the time already, but It Is necessary to point 
out again how they were affecting the lot of the 
labouring classes in town and country. The growth 
of commerce, the shifting of the centre of trade 
from Venice to Antwerp, caused by the capture of 
Constantinople and the closing of its port, together 
with the discovery of a sea route to the East, had 
disorganised the old city Guild life, which was still 
further overthrown by the growth of great merchant 
companies whose world-trade required large capital 
The rise of this capitalist order severed the poor from 
the rich, dug a great gulf between them, and created, 
in a sense unknown before, a proletariat class within 
the cities, liable to be swollen by the influx of dis- 
contented or ruined peasants from the country districts. 
The sudden accession of wealth led to diffuse display in 
dress and adornment of houses, in eating and in drink- 
ing, which in turn led to a corruption of morals that 
reached its height in the city life of the first quarter 
of the sixteenth century, and which must have 
intensified the growing hatred between rich burgher 
and poor workman. The territorial magnates, unwill- 
ing to be left behind in the race for luxurious living, 
increased their feudal dues, and oppressed the lesser 
nobles, who in the race for wealth had no recourse but 
to squeeze still further their unfortunate peasants. 
The ferment which this restless competition between 
classes, this unwearied hunting after luxurious living, 
this embittered separation between poor and rich, 
and the envenomed class hatreds resulting therefrom, 
were producing, created great rifts in the social 
structure of mediseval feudalism. Into it all came 
the sudden rise of prices, which intensified every 



i/2 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

economic evil, and swelled all the roads and streets 
with crowds of sturdy beggars, the refuse of all 
classes of society, from the broken knight and the 
disbanded mercenary soldier to the ruined peasant, 
the workman out of employment, the begging friar, 
and the " wandering student." This was the society to 
which Luther spoke, and its discontent was the sound- 
ing-board which made his words reverberate. His 
message was democratic. 1 It destroyed the aristocracy 
of the saints, it levelled the barriers between the 
priest and the layman, it preached the equality of all 
men before God, and the right of every trusting man 
to stand in God's presence whatever might be his rank 
or condition of life. It did not content itself with 
simply preaching sin and repentance and pardon. 
The Reformation voiced the grievances of the people ; 
it attacked the merciless exactions of the Church- 
men, and it had also hard words on occasion for the 
oppressors among the secular princes and the free 
nobles, and for the luxurious and money-getting life 
of the burghers. Luther's Appeal to the Nobility of 
the German Nation touched upon almost all the open 
sores of the time, and seemed to warn against disasters 
not very far off. 

It must be remembered, too, that no other man of 
the great men of the earth, and we place Luther in the 
very front rank, ever flung about wild words in such 
reckless profusion. He had, as all men have, the 
defects of his qualities. He had the gift of strong 
smiting phrases which seemed to cleave to the very 
heart of the subject, of words which lit up the 
matter with the vividness of a lightning flash, and 

1 See Stern, Die Socialisten der Reformatwnszeit* 



THE PEASANTS* WAR 173 

lie had them at command in the utmost profusion. 
Whatever he said or wrote remained stuck fast in the 
memory and the imagination, and he launched letters 
or pamphlets from the press about almost every- 
thing written for the most part on the spur of the 
moment and when the fire burned. His words fell 
into souls full of the fermenting passions of the time, 
readier to remember the incitements than the cautions, 
and longing to translate speech into action. They 
drank in with eagerness the thought that all men were 
equal before God, and that men have divine rights 
which are more important than all human prescrip- 
tions. They refused to believe that such golden ideas 
belonged to the realm of spiritual life only, and that 
the commands and exactions of Popes, Curia, and 
bishops were the only human prescriptions to be 
resisted. The successful revolt of the Swiss peasantry 
and the victories of Zisca, the people's leader in the 
neighbouring Bohemian lands, were illustrations, they 
thought, of how Luther's sledge-hammer words could 
be changed into corresponding deeds. 

Other teachers besides Luther were listened to. 
Many of the Humanists, professed disciples of Plato, 
were accustomed to expound to admiring friends and 
scholars the communistic dreams of the Republic, in 
which the State was all and the individual nothing or 
very little, and to indulge in theories " of the study " 
of which Sir Thomas More's Utopia is the most 
brilliant example. These, listened to in the class- 
rooms by the "wandering students," were expounded 
and illustrated in a manner undreamt of by the 
scholarly Platonist, to peasant audiences and gatherings 
of workmen, and received unexpected applications. 



1/4 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

The missionaries of the movement were innumerable, 
and belonged to all sorts and conditions of men. Poor 
priests exhorted their parishioners. Wandering 
monks who had deserted their convents, students who 
were on their way from one university town to 
another, working men journeying according to the 
German fashion from one centre of their trade to 
another everywhere found eager audiences. They sat 
at the tables of the public-houses in the lower parts 
of the towns, they mingled with, the villagers on the 
village greens under the lime trees, they talked in the 
rude language of the people, and their speech was 
garnished with many a biblical quotation and many a 
trenchant illustration gathered in their wanderings 
in Switzerland or Bohemia. 

The propaganda carried on by means of the printing- 
press must not be forgotten. Luther had discovered 
the power of the printed word in the German 
language, and the exponents of the rights of the 
"common man" made a very effective use of it. 
Small fly-sheets and pamphlets, sometimes with rude 
woodcuts, printed in thick letters on coarse paper, 
passed from hand to hand. They were read to small 
excited audiences, who discussed them eagerly. They 
are full of biblical ideas, if not exact quotations, and 
are stored with the broad, coarse humour of the period, 
which Luther himself did not disdain to use. The 
weapon was a new one, so new that the authorities 
never seemed to notice it, and was never more effect- 
ively employed. The most popular was if Karsthans " or 
"Mattock John," the Reformation equivalent of the 
"Jack Upland" or "Piers Ploughman" of the times 
of the English Lollards, and their most prominent 



THE PEASANTS 1 WAR 175 

characteristic Is their embittered hatred of the clergy 
and of clerical exactions, loose living, and hypocrisy. 
"Jack Upland" describes the fat friar of the earlier 
English days with his dew-lap wagging under his 
chin " like a great goose egg," and contrasts him with 
the poor peasant and his wife going shoeless to work 
along the ice-bound roads, their steps marked with the 
blood which came from their cut feet. "'Mattock 
John " is much more theological, and discusses Luther 
and Eck, and the doctrine of papal authority, etc. 
These pamphlets commonly took the form of dialogues 
between peasants and monks, noblemen and peasants, 
clerics and artisans. They were sold at the markets 
and church festivals, and hawked about in the towns 
and villages. All the burning questions of the day 
were discussed in these popular pamphlets, which found 
their way everywhere, added to the ferment of the 
times, and prepared the way for common action and a 
statement of common principles when the time for 
revolt came. 

It would seem that there was no preparation for 
any organised insurrection throughout all Germany; 
no confederation of leaders or formulation of demands, 
until after the rising had actually begun. The 
Zwickau prophets had preached something very like a 
general revolution. Thomas Miinzer, his mind aflame 
with the wrongs of the commonalty, had made wide 
tours throughout many parts of Germany, and had 
striven to create something like combined action. It 
is very doubtful, however, whether his personal 
influence extended much beyond Thuringia. Common 
distress, the same surface causes producing the evils 
which were felt, the common class hatreds were 



1 76 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

sufficient of themselves to give the outbreak an 
appearance of combined action which it did not really 
possess. 

The first rising, according to the common story, 
came almost accidentally. The Countess of Lupfen 
ordered her husband's peasantry on a holiday to gather 
wild strawberries for the castle table, and to collect 
snail-shells on which she might wind her silk thread. 
It seems a small matter, but it filled up the measure of 
exasperation, and produced the first serious rising. 
Whether this traditional story is correct or not, it is 
certain that this region, the eastern side of the slopes 
of the Black Forest, furrowed by small tributaries of 
the Rhine, where the peasants, looking across the 
river, could almost see and envy their fellow-peasants 
in free Switzerland, gave the signal for the general 
uprising. On 24th August 1524 a body of peasants 
met at the little town of Waldshut, about half-way 
between Basel and Schaffhausen, under the leadership 
of Hans Mtiller, an old mercenary soldier, and pledged 
themselves to rebel against the conditions of their life. 
The peasants, carrying a flag with the Imperial colours 
of red, black, and yellow, fraternised with the towns- 
people, and the formidable c< Evangelical Brotherhood " 
was either then formed or the roots of it were planted. 
The news spread among the peasants and towns of 
Baden. It crossed the Rhine into Elsass, it went up 
the valley of the Mosel. From the south of the Black 
Forest it spread northwards through Franconia and 
Swabia. In its beginnings it took the route marked out 
by Joss Fritz's Bundschuh organisation twelve years 
earlier, and its whispered programme was at first almost 
the same the differences being due to the altered con- 



THE PEASANTS' WAR 177 

dltlons of the times, especially In the religious environ- 
ment. The commonalty wished to make a clean sweep 
of all controlling castes between the peasants, the 
townspeople, and the Emperor. "Their name was 
legion ; not only were there endless numbers of princes, 
bishops, dukes, landgraves, margraves, counts, lords, 
abbots, who exercised sovereignty of one sort or 
another, bnt the old Imperial cities were ruled by 
little oligarchies of old families, who, by close combina- 
tion, possessed as much real sovereignty as any prince. 
The land was thus broken up into numerous States, 
great and small, each entrenched against the other; 
and custom-houses, different coinages, bad roads, 
brigand knights, and bands of robbers divided them 
still more." 1 These ruling classes, it was believed, 
defied and hindered the just rule of an Emperor, and 
prevented all peaceable living. 

The Swabian League, the only Imperial organisa- 
tion which possessed any controlling power in South 
Germany, was thus confronted with the most formid- 
able popular uprising that Germany had yet seen. It 
was compelled to negotiate with the leaders of the 
revolt. Had the demands of the peasants and towns- 
men been met in a fair spirit of compromise, the 
country would have been spared much. All the 
evidence goes to show that the demands of the people^ 
when once formulated, were not unreasonable, and 
that the leaders would have accepted some compromise. 
But the negotiations were begun, on the part of the 
ruling powers, only to gain time, and as soon as forces 
could be collected were shamelessly broken off and 
the insurgents massacred. When the atrocities of the 

1 K. Heath. 
12 



i;8 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

peasants are mentioned, It should be remembered that 
the bloodshed was begun by the ruling classes, after 
having appeared at least to accept the terms proposed 
to bring about peace. It is scarcely to be wondered 
if the insurgent peasants attempted to avenge their 
slaughtered brethren. But even a casual reading of 
the contemporary documents shows that, if we except 
a few outstanding cases which historians always 
enumerate, the Peasants' War stands forth as an 
example of how little bloodthirsty the oppressed 
German peasantry showed themselves during the short 
period of their success. Their moderation in reveng- 
ing wrongs by bloodshed forms a striking contrast 
to the horrible bloodbath into which the conquering 
princes plunged almost every district of Germany 
when the revolt was overcome. The peasants sacked 
and burned castles and monasteries, they filled them- 
selves drunk at nights with the wines they found in 
noble and ecclesiastical wine-cellars, but as a rule they 
did not shed blood wantonly. 

The rising, so sudden, so widespreading, so simul- 
taneous, spread terror among all the ruling classes. 
The flames of insurrection were kindled all over 
Germany. From Swabia and Franconia they spread 
to Thuringia, then through the Tori - Arlberg, the 
Tyrol, Salzburg, and up into the Duchy of Austria. 

Manifestoes were issued, summarising the grievances 
of the peasants and of the working-classes in the 
towns, and also giving the political aspirations of 
more educated leaders, who had wider" outlooks. 1 In 

1 The full test of the famous "Twelve Articles" has been given by 
Dr. Belfort Bax in his Peasants' War, London, 1899, pp. 63-75. This 
book gives by far the hest account of the movement accessible to the 



THE PEASANTS 3 WAR 179 

almost all of them ecclesiastical demands are mingled 
with the political and social requirements. The right 
to choose and dismiss the pastor is one of the 
commonest, and there is frequently a clause added to 
ensure evangelical preaching. The peasant demands 
appeared in several forms, with a varying number of 
articles. They were, however, summed up in the 
famous " Twelve Articles/' which "became the Peasant 
Charter of the rising, although the classic form was 
continually modified in various districts. The peasants 
asked the abolition of villeinage, the withdrawal of all 
or most of the ecclesiastical and feudal exactions, 
freedom to hunt, to fish, and to take wood for fuel 
and building under proper restrictions, the restora- 
tion of the common lands, and a return to their old 
rights and Communal Courts of Justice, for fair rents 
settled by honest valuators, and in some cases for the 
cancelling of the loans which had been granted to 
peasants on the security of their holdings. The towns- 
people asked that the ecclesiastical and conciliar im- 
munities should cease; they demanded improvements 
in the administration of justice, a readjustment of 
local taxation, the popular election of the Council, and 
a better treatment of the poor. The more comprehen- 
sive manifestoes contained demands for a thorough 
reconstruction of the Imperial administration on a 
scheme which involved the destruction of all feudal 
and local Courts of Justice, and contemplated an organ- 
English reader. The curious ideas the author has of the characters of 
Luther and Melanchthon do not seriously interfere with his description 
of the great rising. Dr. Belfort Bax has pilloried a slip of mine, made 
long ago, which was discovered just when it was too late to correct it. 
It has been pointed out and apologised for several times, but litera 
impressa manet. 



i8o LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

ised administration, based on the Communal Courts to 
be revived, and ascending to the Imperial Court of 
Justice. They also called for a unification of coinage, 
weights, and measures throughout the German Empire, 
a confiscation of ecclesiastical endowments for the 
purpose of lessening taxation and for the redemption 
of feudal rights, a uniform rate of taxes and customs 
dues, restraint to be placed on great capitalists, the 
regulation of business and trade by law, and the 
admission of delegates from every class of the com- 
munity into the public administration. In every case 
the Emperor was regarded as the lord-paramount. 
There was also a declaration of the sovereignty of the 
people, made in such a way as to suggest that the 
teachings of Marsilius of Padua had insinuated them- 
selves into the minds of some of the leaders of the 
commons. The main thought with the peasant was 
to secure his fair share of the land ; and when that 
was denied he printed it in burning letters in the 
blaze of castles and monasteries, which reddened the 
midnight sky all over Germany. The main thought 
of the workman was to secure an adequate representa- 
tion on the city council, and he made it emphatic in 
tumults which drove the patrician Council from the 
town hall and installed people's delegates. 

During the earlier months of 1525 the rising carried 
everything before it. The smaller towns made common 
cause with the peasants ; prominent nobles were forced 
to join the " Evangelical " or " Christian Brotherhood " ; 
princes like the Cardinal-Elector of Mainz and the 
Bishop of Wlirzburg had to come to terms with the 
insurgents; a wave of destruction spread over the 
whole land. But the movement had no solidity in it. 



THE PEASANTS' WAR 181 

It produced no creative leader, save in the Tyrol, 
where the wisdom of Gaismayr, aided by the moun- 
tainous nature of the country, enabled the people to 
make a permanent stand, and wring some real con- 
cessions out of the governing classes. Everywhere 
else there were divided counsels. Leaders like the 
bankrupt Duke of Wtirtemberg and the freebooting 
noble Gotz von Berlichingen could only harm any 
movement they joined or were compelled to join. The 
insurgents became demoralised by their drunken revels. 
They refused to obey orders, on the ground that they 
were all brethren, and the whole movement began 
to show signs of dissolution before the princes had 
recovered from their terror and begun to stamp it out 
in bloody massacre. On the side of the ruling classes 
there was at least some unity of purpose. They had 
their mercenaries, who were trained soldiers, armed 
and drilled according to the best ideas of the time. 
They had military experience and skill in the art of 
war. Had it not been that the Italian campaigns of 
Charles V. had drained Germany of the greater part 
of its soldiery, the poorly armed, undisciplined, and 
badly led bands of peasants and artisans would have 
succumbed much earlier. As it was, long before the 
end of 1525 the rising was stamped out, and that with 
atrocious severities. One chronicler asserts that more 
than a hundred thousand fell on the field of battle or 
elsewhere, and Bishop Georg of Speyer has, after 
careful examination, asserted that the number was a 
hundred and fifty thousand. "No attempt was made to 
cure the ills which were at the roots of the rising. 
All counsels to redress the clamant grievances were 
thrown to the winds. The oppression of the peasantry 



1 82 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

was intensified. The last vestiges o local self-govern- 
ment were stamped out, and the unfortunate people 
were doomed for generations to exist in the lowest 
degradation. The few months of terror and paralysis 
gave birth to a fiendish cruelty of suppression. The 
year 1525 was one of the saddest and most terrible in 
the annals of the German Fatherland. 



3. LUTEEB'S RELATION" TO THE REYOLT 

The question meets us: What had Luther to do 
personally with this tragedy which overtook his land 
of Germany ? 

It would not be difficult to show that the Peasants' 
War had no place In the thoughts of Luther for the 
regeneration of Germany. His ideal was always a 
religious Reformation brought about by preaching and 
teaching, and owing nothing to violence in action at 
least. He has expounded this thought over and over 
again. He never had any sympathy with an armed 
rising to effect the most legitimate reforms. But he 
seemed singularly unable to measure the inevitable 
effects of his own sledge-hammer words on minds 
excited by oppression or by passion. He had a 
singular lack of self-control in the use of violent and 
incendiary speech. He saw and pitied the growing 
oppression of the peasantry, and denounced it in his 
own trenchant fashion. He reproved the greed of the 
lords by saying that if a peasant's land produced as 
many coins as ears of corn the profit would go to the 
landlord only. No man had been so outspoken against 
the tyranny of the princes and over-lords as Luther ; 
no one had denounced more strongly the mad race 



THE PEASANTS' WAR 183 

after luxury which was at the root of most of the evils. 
But Luther, rightly or wrongly, was convinced that no 
good could come of armed insurrection, and that any 
lasting good must be patiently worked and waited for. 
He had detected the signs of the coining evils in the 
crowd of beggars which was a moral pest in the begin- 
ning of the sixteenth century all over central Europe, 
and he advised that every town and country district 
should assess themselves to support their own poor. He 
dreaded the revolutionary spirit that betrayed itself 
in the Zwickau prophets and in Miinzer and Carlstadt. 
He felt sure that those guides were leading the poor 
people who followed them to their destruction. Before 
the storm burst he did Ms best to show that no good 
would come from insurrection. After it burst ; he 
risked his life over and over again in the visits he paid 
to the disaffected districts to warn the people of the 
dangers they were running. He did not believe in the 
more ambitious schemes of the leaders of the rising. 
He saw clearly enough that, in the condition in which 
Germany was, the one element of permanent political 
strength which the country possessed was the princes. 
He had sympathy with the demands of the " Twelve 
Articles," and long before they were formulated he 
advocated a return to the old common law of Germany. 
He expressed his approval of the substance of the 
" Twelve Articles," after they were recognised to be the 
" charter " of the German peasant. But, true to the 
principles that had always been his, he declared that 
to press them by armed insurrection was not the way 
to bring them into force. He has been accused of 
sycophancy to the constituted authorities. He has 
beeja censured for "sitting on tjie fence" when 1^ 



1 84 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

blamed both, nobles and peasants in the Exhortation 
to Peace, on the Twelve Articles of the Peasants in 
Swabia. But that " Exhortation " expresses the opin- 
ions he had entertained years before these Swabian 
Articles had been formulated. In this tract he sharply 
rebukes those princes, nobles, and bishops who " tax 
and fleece their subjects, for the advancement of their 
own pomp and pride, until the common people can 
endure it no longer." He praises some of the Articles, 
but warns against attempting to extort agreement to 
them by force of arms. He proposes that "a few 
counts and nobles should be chosen from the nobility 
and a few councillors from the towns, and that matters 
should be adjusted and composed In an amicable 
manner, that so the affair . . . may be arranged 
according to human laws and agreements." The tract 
must have been written about the end of the third 
week in April 1525, while Luther was at Eisleben, 
called there to establish a school in his native town, 
llunzer was then at Milhlhausen, where his intense 
earnestness and sincerity carried all before him. The 
citizens regarded him very much as the Florentines 
looked on Savonarola. For a while the rich fed the 
poor, and he almost established a community of goods. 
The news from South Germany excited him, and he 
appealed madly to arms. He sent out fiery proclama- 
tions to citizens and peasantry : 

"Arise I fight the battle of the Lord ! On! On! On! 
the wicked tremble when they hear of you. On ! On ! On ! 
Be pitiless ! although Esau gives you fair words (Gen. xxxiii.). 
Heed not the groans of the godless ; they will beg, weep, and 
entreat you for pity like children. Show them no mercy, as 
God commanded Moses (Deut. vii.), and as He has revealed the 



THE PEASANTS' WAR 185 

same to us. Bouse up tlie towns and the villages ; above all 
rouse tlie miners. ... On ! On ! On ! while the fire is 
burning ; let not the blood cool on your swords I Smite 
pinkepank on the anvil of Nimrod ! Overturn their towers 
to the foundations ; while one of them lives you will not be 
freed from the fear of man ! While they reign over you it is 
of no use to speak of the fear of God ! On 1 while it is day ! 
God is with you." 

These words were meant to rouse the miners of 
Mansfield, and were intended to bring fire and sword 
into the district where Luther's parents were living. 
If they failed in their original intent, they sent bands 
of insurgents through Thuringia and the Harz, and 
within fourteen days about forty monasteries and 
convents were destroyed and the inmates (many of 
them poor women with no homes to return to) were 
sent adrift. It was then that Luther determined to 
make one last personal effort to bring the misguided 
people to more reasonable courses. He made a tour 
through the disordered districts. He went west from 
Eisleben to Stolberg (21st April); thence to Nord- 
hausen, where Miinzer's sympathisers rang the bells to 
drown his voice, and where he was in great personal 
danger ; south, to Erfurt, which, he must have reached 
before the 28th April, then north again to the fertile 
valley of the Golden Aue and Wallhausen (1st May), 
and south again to Weimar (3rd May). Here news 
reached him that his Elector was on his deathbed, 
which made him hurry home to Wittenberg, which he 
reached on the 6th of May. It was on this journey, or 
shortly after his return, that Luther wrote his 
vehement tract Against the Murderous Thieving 
Hordes of Peasants, He wrote it while his mind was 



186 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

full of Miinzer's calls to slaughter, when the danger was 
at its height, with all the sights and sounds of the 
turmoil and destruction in eye and ear, while it still 
hung in the balance whether the insurgent bands might 
not, after all, carry all before them. 1 In this terrible 
pamphlet Luther hounded on the princes to crush the 
rising. When all is said that can reasonably be said 
in explanation of his action, we cannot help feeling 
that the language of this pamphlet is an ineffaceable 
stain on Luther, which no extenuating circumstances 
can wipe out. It remains the greatest blot on his 
noble life and career. After speaking of the duties of 
the authorities, he proceeds : " In the case of an insur- 
gent, every man is both judge and executioner. 
Therefore, whoever can should knock down, strangle, 
and stab such, publicly or privately, and think nothing 
so venomous, pernicious, and devilish as an insur- 
gent. . . . Such wonderful times are these that a prince 
can merit heaven better with bloodshed than another 
with prayer." To which we may add, " such wonderful 
times " that a preacher of the gospel of Christ thought 
that he could do his Master's work best by hounding 
on men to slay in cold blood these poor misguided 
peasants! "When did the majority of German princes 
need to be told to misuse their commonalty ? 

The thoughts and sayings of the wise old Elector 
were in striking contrast. It adds an additional 

1 It is somewhat difficult to say where Luther went, and on what 
days, during this attempt to calm the people. He had made a journey 
through the same districts in the previous year, and the two are some- 
times confused. But the dates and the places above given may he 
taken as correct. The Thtiringian peasants were defeated at Franken- 
tausen (near which Luther must have passed at least once in this 
journey) on the 15th of May. 



THE PEASANTS' WAR 187 

element of pain to the thought of Luther's action, that 
he must have written his furious pamphlet either 
immediately before or immediately after the death of 
the Elector. Frederic the Wise had "been much dis- 
tressed at the news of the peasant rising in the south. 
He wrote to his brother, Duke John, on the 14th of 
April : " The poor are in many ways burdened by us of 
the secular and ecclesiastical upper classes; it may 
therefore be God's will that the common man should 
reign ; but if that is not His divine will, and if that 
will not be to His glory, it will not happen ; let us pray 
God to forgive us our sins, and let us leave it all to 
Him." He thought that he and his brother should let 
things alone as much as possible. The news of the 
rising among his own subjects troubled him greatly. 
In his last illness, on to his death on the 5th of May, 
he kept hoping that all grounds of complaint might be 
removed by reasonable compromise, and that all the 
negotiations would go on peaceably and have a good 
ending. He wrote anxiously to Luther to come and 
see him before he died. But he passed away ere 
Luther could reach the castle. He was the best loved 
prince in Germany, and was taken away just when his 
counsels would have helped most. It is recorded that 
the children used to watch for him as he rode through 
the streets, to catch his kindly smile, and to greet 
" Our Elector " as they called him. Perhaps the 
thought of the pain that the rising had caused the 
good prince added to the ferocity of Luther's pen ; but 
it is not pleasant to think of the pamphlet coming 
from Luther at the moment of the Elector's death. 

Luther's enemies were quick to make capital out of 
his worse than blunder. Doggerel verses by Emser, 



1 88 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

one o his most persistent opponents, compared Luther 
to Pilate, who washed his hands after having done the 
deed. Luther tried to make some amends. He de- 
clared that he had meant his words to apply only to 
those who were actually engaged in bloodshed and 
rapine; and he publicly asserted that the authorities, 
when they were victorious, ought to extend full pardon 
to the guilty who had been beaten in the fight ; but he 
was to learn that it is much easier to justify wrathful 
passions than to calm them. It is not likely that 
Luther's ferocious words made the sufferings inflicted 
on the peasants any more severe than they would have 
been ; and it does not seem that his recommendations 
to mercy had very much effect. 

The Peasants' War had a lasting and disastrous effect, 
not only on the Reformation, but on Luther himself, 

Up to the tragical year 1525, the Lutheran move- 
ment absorbed all the various elements of discontent in 
Germany, and Luther seemed to have the whole land 
behind him. This year was the parting of the ways. 
The conservative ecclesiastical Reformation, of which 
Luther was the exponent, was rudely separated from 
a large amount of the popular aspirations which had 
given it such an appearance of strength. The political 
destiny of Germany appeared definitely shaping for 
territorial centralisation round the greater princes and 
nobles, and the dream of a united and democratic Ger- 
many was rudely dispelled. The conservative religious 
Reformation followed the political lines of growth, and 
resulted in the formation, not of a National Church of 
Germany, but of territorial churches under the rule and 
protection of such of the territorial magnates as em- 
braced the Reformed faith. The more radical religious 



THE PEASANTS 5 WAR 189 

Reformation broke Into fragments, and appeared in the 
guise of the maligned and persecuted Anabaptists, who 
also, to some extent at least, appropriated the social 
aspirations which had been crashed in the Peasants* 
War. The terrors of that time were eagerly used by 
the servants of the Roman Curia to separate Germany 
into two hostile camps, the one accepting and the 
other rejecting the ecclesiastical Reformation, which In 
this way ceased to be a national movement in any 
real sense of the word. 

As for Luther himself, the Peasants 7 War Imprinted 
in him a deep distrust of the " common man," which 
prevented him from believing In a democratic Church, 
and led him to bind his reformation in the fetters of a 
secular control, to the extent of regarding the secular 
government as having a quasi-episcopal function. He 
did his best within Germany to prevent attempts to 
construct anything like a democratic Church govern- 
ment. His dislike and distrust of the " common man " 
was largely at the basis of his Inability to understand 
or appreciate the heroic Ulrich Zwingli and his fellow- 
Switzers a misunderstanding which worked many an 
evil to the German Reformation, and produced much 
of the disasters of the horrible Thirty Tears' War. 
For years after the publication of his pamphlet against 
the peasants his life was scarcely safe in many of the 
rural districts of Germany. If he sinned, It may be 
said that few men have suffered so severely for it. 



CHAPTER IX 

MARRIAGE, FAMILY LIFE, AND PUBLIC LIFE 

1. MAERIAGE 

THE religious movement which Luther led in the 
sixteenth century contained no thought more startling 
nor impregnated with more far-reaching ethical con- 
sequences than the position which was assigned to 
marriage. It is vain to look for anything like this 
in any of the mediaeval religious revolts. The Refor- 
mation may be distinguished from, all other partial anti- 
cipations by the way in which it dealt with this one ques- 
tion. It destroyed at one blow the amazing blasphemy, 
which in the Middle Ages was received as an unques- 
tioned divine conception, that the order which God 
Himself has established in the world is comparatively 
unholy, and that the union between husband and wife, 
which is hallowed in the Holy Scriptures by comparing 
it with the union between Christ and His Church, is 
one which must sully the lives of Christians who share 
it. It is difficult for us who live so far removed from 
the shadow of -mediaeval religious life to appreciate 
the change of view, nor is it possible to describe it by 
contrasting propositions laid down by mediaeval and 
by evangelical theologians. With regard to this one 

190 



LUTHER'S MARRIAGE 191 

question at least, Luther's teaching changed the whole 
atmosphere of the spirit's life ; and just as all organic 
beings cannot live in one climate, so certain circles of 
thought lose all their convincing power when the 
moral atmosphere is changed. The difference of mode 
of thought went far beyond the Lutheran ecclesiastical 
Reformation. It can be seen working in the argu- 
ments which Romanists now use to defend the reten- 
tion of the celibate life arguments which appeal to 
the new circle of thoughts created at the Reformation, 
and which the mediaeval Church had never occasion 
to use. 

The Reformation worked a revolution in the concep- 
tion of piety and the pious life when it asserted that 
every kind of honourable and honest secular calling 
could be as much a vocation as the call to a monastic 
and celibate life. It made the family hearth as sacred 
as the monastic cell, and saw that the mother who 
spent a sleepless night at the bedside of a sick child 
was holding a vigil as sacred as that of a nun pro- 
strate on the flags of the convent chapel. It made 
the thought possible that the heaven that is about 
us in our infancy is the haven of a pious home. Such 
thoughts might have been in the minds of thousands 
in the Middle Ages. We know that Luther's sturdy 
old father held them. But they formed no part of 
the recognised teaching of the Church, and they did 
not create a moral atmosphere in which the family life 
could be lived and hallowed. The Reformation did 
this, and created religion in common life in conse- 
quence. In doing so its influence went far beyond 
the boundaries of its ecclesiastical reconstruction. 

Within the circle of ecclesiastical reformation the 



192 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

thought worked great changes. The marriage of the 
clergy put an end to the disgraceful concubinage of the 
mediaeval parish priests, which was almost universal in 
the later Middle Ages. The home-life of the Lutheran 
parish priest was generally a model to his rough 
parishioners, and the great numbers of the men fore- 
most in every department o public life in Germany 
who have come from these homes show how the 
clerical and the citizen life have been combined by the 
Lutheran ideal. 

It would have seemed as if the story of the Re- 
formation was incomplete if the voice of the daring 
preacher, who had awakened the conscience of man- 
kind to all these new thoughts, had spoken from a 
hermitage and not from a home. Yet Luther himself 
for long had an instinctive disinclination for a married 
life. He had early in his career become convinced 
that there was no reason why parish priests should 
practise celibacy if they preferred a married life. He 
believed that men and women who had been forced to 
take monastic vows in early years, and without a 
distinct sense of vocation to that life, were at liberty to 
leave their cloisters. He was not at all persuaded, 
however, that men like himself, who had deliberately, 
and without any external constraint, embraced the 
monastic life, and taken its vows of celibacy, ought not 
to keep their oaths. Even when he reached the con- 
clusion that those vows were plainly based on such an 
erroneous idea of righteousness, and were so misleading 
that they ought not to be kept, he did not feel inclined 
to break them in his own ease, and that although he 
had often been urged to marry. He abandoned his 
monastic garb some months after his return to Witten- 



LUTHER'S MARRIAGE 193 

berg from the Wartburg, and wore instead the usual 
dress of the German professor. But he lived on in the 
old convent, deserted by all the monks except himself 
and prior Brisger, without even a lay brother to look 
after them and perform the usual menial services. While 
Mtinzer was sneering at "the soft-living flesh at 
Wittenberg," Luther was often reduced to dine on 
bread and water from lack of any other kind of 
provender. Melanehthon tells us that when he re- 
monstrated with Luther that his bed was damp and 
not been made for days, Luther told him that he had 
been so hard at work all day that when the night 
came he was unable to do more than to tumble down 
on the bed and fall asleep. 

Yet since the spring of 1523 the overworked man 
had been busied with the matrimonial affairs of others. 
From the time that he had made visitation tours in 
the region of Grimma, his writings had found their 
way into the cloisters of the district, and among others 
into a convent of Cistercian nuns at Nimtzch, which 
lay a little to the south of Grimma, and not far from 
Leipzig. Many of the nuns in this convent, which was 
reserved for ladies of noble birth, became convinced of 
the unlawfulness of the vows they had taken, and 
wished to return to their homes. They wrote to their 
relations and asked leave to return home, but none of 
those noble families could brook the disgrace, as it was 
then reckoned, of receiving into their houses a recusant 
nun. Then the ladies wrote to Luther. After some 
correspondence, the matter was entrusted to a worthy 
burgher of Torgau, Leonhard Koppe by name. Tradi- 
tion says that nine of the nuns, all who dared the 
venture, met in f he cell of Catherine von Bora, who 



194 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

had planned the rescue, on the 4th of April 1523, got 
out of the window into the court, and were assisted 
over the wall by Master Koppe, who was waiting for 
them with a large country cart and some empty beer- 
barrels. The nuns were put into the beer-barrels, and 
after three days' journey, part of it through the hostile 
territories of Duke George of Saxony, they reached 
Wittenberg safely, where Luther was able to find 
shelter for them in the houses of some of the most 
respectable citizens of the town. 

This convent-breaking made a great sensation, and 
was vehemently condemned. Luther justified it in a 
telling pamphlet in which he told the history of a poor 
girl, Florentina, of Upper Weimar. She had been im- 
mured in a convent when she was six years old, and at 
the age of eleven had been made to take the veil. 
When she was fourteen years old she felt that she had 
no vocation for a nun's life, and was then told by the 
abbess that she was a nun for life, and had to make the 
best of it. She seems to have heard of Luther, and 
the young girl wrote fco him. Her letter was in- 
tercepted, and she was punished by severe penances. 
She tried to communicate with her relations, and when 
this was discovered she was beaten, chained by the 
foot, and finally condemned to lifelong imprisonment 
in a cell. She escaped, and her story became known. 
Luther published it to let people know what " cloistery " 
was like, and said that he could tell many a similar 
story. 

His letters are full of his successes and failures to 
get the nine nuns married, Catherine among the rest. 
The others seemed for the most part contented with 
the partners proposed to them. Not so Catherine. 



LUTHER'S MARRIAGE 195 

She was a dignified maiden of f our-and-twenty, with a 
high fair forehead and bright black eyes. Her history 
was a type of hundreds. She belonged to a noble but 
impoverished family in the Meissen district, who were 
glad enough to get a daughter provided for by sending 
her to a convent ; had entered Nimtzch when she was 
ten years old, and had taken the veil when she was 
sixteen. It was a "family arrangement," practised 
generation after generation in noble German house- 
holds. Magdalena von Bora had been the victim in the 
previous generation, and Catherine found her aunt an 
inmate of the convent when she went there in 1509. 1 
The young nun found a home at Wittenberg in the 
family of Dr. Reichenbach, the town-clerk. Her 
maidenly dignity of demeanour was universally ob- 
served, and attracted the notice of King Christian of 
Denmark when he was the guest of Lucas Cranach in 
October 1523. Luther himself was a little afraid of 
her, and thought her very proud. 

How Luther and she came together and agreed to 
become man and wife is unknown. Luther said more 
than once that such matters ought to be left in the 
hands of God and the two persons most concerned, and 
he kept his own counsel. The marriage took place 
during the storms of the Peasants' War. On the even- 
ing of the 13th of June 1525, he invited his friends, 
Bugenhagen the parish priest of Wittenberg, Justus 
Jonas the provost of All Saints, Lucas Cranach the 
painter and his wife, Dr. Apel, professor of laws, who 

1 Magdalena von Bora left the convent some time after her niece, and 
was a member of Luther's household ; she is the "Aunt Lene" of the 
Letters and Table Talk. Magdalena, Luther's favourite daughter, waa 
named after her. 



1 96 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

had himself married a nun, to witness the ceremony. 
Bugenhagen officiated, using the common German form 
of matrimony. The pair were asked whether they 
would take one another for man and wife ; they were 
then directed to take each other by the right hand, 
and they were declared " to be joined together in holy 
matrimony, in the name of the Triune God." This 
concluded the ceremony, and Luther and Catherine 
von Bora were man and wife. A few days later the 
wedded pair gave a modest breakfast to their more 
intimate friends, and the magistracy of Wittenberg 
sent formal congratulations through Cranach, and along 
with them a present of wine. A fortnight later, on 
27th June, the wedding was celebrated at a feast, to 
which relations and distant friends were invited. At 
this, to Luther's great joy, his father and mother were 
present, and old Hans Luther at last thoroughly for- 
gave his son his lapse into monasticism. Good Leon- 
hard Koppe from Torgau, whose cart and beer-barrels 
had brought this about, was not forgotten in the 
ceremony. The breakfast and the feast which followed 
were all in accordance with the usual mediaeval wedding 
usages among the Germans only to be distinguished 
from most by the modest frugality displayed. The 
university presented the married pair with a beauti- 
fully chased silver goblet, with the inscription: "The 
Honourable University of the Electoral Town of 
Wittenberg presents this wedding gift to Doctor 
Martin Luther and his wife Kethe von Bora." Luther 
was forty-two and Catherine twenty-six years of age 
when they married. 

The Elector (formerly Duke John, the brother of 
Frederic, whom he succeeded) gave Luther the old 



LUTHER'S MARRIAGE 197 

Augustlnian convent for a house ; and as prior Brisger 
was called to be pastor at Altenburg a few months 
after the wedding, the newly married couple had the 
empty buildings all to themselves. The first year of 
their wedded life was a time of pure happiness to 
Luther ; the second one of great trials. His " Kaethe '* 
was no ordinary woman. She was a good housewife, 
which she had need to be with such a husband, but she 
was much more besides. She took a great share, and 
an increasing share as the years went on, in all her 
husband's work. He liked her to sit with him in his 
study. He consulted her about most of his corre- 
spondence. Her name comes into his letters continually, 
and she becomes one of the circle of inmates who are 
together working out the great Keformation in Ger- 
many. Catherine's biography has yet to be written, 
and the wonderful influence she exerted has to be 
gathered from innumerable minute references to her 
work scattered throughout Luther's huge corre- 
spondence. For one thing, her loving care prolonged 
Luther's life. He had overworked himself recklessly. 
He was subject at times to fits of the gloomiest de- 
pression, which reacted upon his bodily condition. 
Catherine persuaded him to take an interest in his 
garden the old convent garden with the pear-tree 
under which he sat with Staupitz, and was persuaded, 
sorely against his will, to undertake the teaching of 
theology; to dig a well; to write to friend Link to 
send him choice seeds from Ntirnberg seeds of melons, 
cucumbers, and other plants ; to instruct friend Lange 
to send him seeds of the great radishes for which 
Erfurt was famous. These requests come at the end 
of letters in which he is denouncing the iniquities of 



ip8 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Duke George, of Henry VIIL, or of some other emissary 
of Satan sent to buffet him. Why need he mind them 
after all, he says, when the garden and gardening are 
so delightful ? Then comes the birth of his firstborn, 
Hans, named after the old father at Mansfeld; and 
Luther bubbles over with bliss. " His young fawn with 
his doe " thanks Spalatin for his blessing ; " the little 
one" is the lustiest eater and drinker that man can see ; 
he begins to walk and gets into every corner of the 
study; "Hanschen" thanks friend Haussman for a 
rattle, " in which he glories and rejoices wondrously " ; 
and so the tiny thread of life embroiders quaintly the 
grave web of correspondence about the most serious 
business. The year 1527 was a harassing one. 
Luther fell dangerously ill. As he lay near death 
the baby's smile brought comfort the one moment and 
the next sadness, to think that he must leave behind 
him a widow and a fatherless child without means of 
support nothing but a few silver tankards that had 
been presented to him. " Dear Doctor," said Catherine, 
" if it be God's will then I also choose that you be with 
Him rather than with me. It is not so much I and 
my child that need you as the multitude of pious 
Christian people. Take no thought for me." Her 
courage kept him up; her careful nursing drew him 
back from death. But the troubles were not over. 
There followed one of the severest periods of gloom 
and spiritual distress, almost as severe as in the old 
clays in the Erfurt convent. This had scarcely passed 
when the dreaded plague visited Wittenberg. The 
university and the Court left the town to settle for 
a season at Jena, and the Elector entreated, all but 
commanded, Luther to follow. But he would not 



THE PLAGUE 199 

He would be no hireling, he said, to flee when the 
sheep needed him most. He remained in the smitten 
city, and Catherine soon to become a mother again 
and baby Hans stayed with him. The plague began 
in the fishers 3 quarter, and Luther soon counted eighteen 
corpses buried at the Elster Gate, not far from his 
house. It crept up to the centre of the town, where 
the first victim, the burgomaster's wife, died while 
Luther was with her. It attacked his friends. The 
wife of Dr. Schurf was seized, and did not recover until 
the beginning of November ; the wife of the chaplain 
died of it, and Luther insisted on Bugenhagen and his 
family leaving the pestilence-stricken house and coming 
to live with him. It entered his house; Erau von 
Mocha, sister-in-law to Carlstadt, who was living with 
the Luthers, was seized. Catherine's second child, 
Elizabeth, was born, and only her superb coolness and 
courage saved the mother. Little Hans fell ill, but 
not of the plague as it was at first feared. So the 
weary months passed. Then Luther could write : " My 
little boy is well and happy again. Schurf's wife has 
recovered ; Margaret has escaped death in a marvellous 
manner." During this anxious time he was further 
distressed by the news that persecution for the faith 
had begun in South Germany, and that the Bavarian 
pastor Leonard Kaiser had been burnt at the stake. 
His pent-up feelings found expression in the famous 
hymn : 

" A safe stronghold our God is still, 

A trusty sliield and weapon; 
He'll help us clear from all the ill 
That hath us now o'ertaken." 

The plague ceased ; the students and professors re- 



200 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

turned to Wittenberg ; and Luther had his old friends 
about him again. He recovered his health and his 
spirits. 

2. HOME LIFE AND FAMILY CARES 

The empty Augustinian convent which became 
Luther's house was an unfinished building when the 
Reformation began, and required many a repair and 
addition ere it was fit for the household which gradu- 
ally gathered round Luther. It stood with its back 
to the wall of the town, the front windows and door 
opening into the large garden, and the back windows 
looking out over the Elbe. It was a three-storeyed 
building, with the usual high roof covered with red 
tiles* The family latterly consisted of Luther and his 
wife, their three sons and two daughters, Aunt Lene 
or Magdalena von Bora, Catherine's aunt, two orphan 
nieces, Lene and Else Kauf mann, daughters of Luther's 
sister, and another young girl, Anna Strauss, who 
seems to have been a grandniece. Like the other Wit- 
tenberg professors, Luther had students who boarded 
with him, and in his case they were often men of some 
age and distinction, who were glad to have this oppor- 
tunity of intimate intercourse with him. It is from 
the recollections of these boarders that we know some- 
thing of the inner life of Luther's home. They tell us 
that the Reformer was sometimes moody and silent at 
table, brooding over the troubles and difficulties of the 
time, but that he generally led the conversation on all 
manner of interesting subjects. He liked to spend an 
hour or so after dinner in singing or listening to music. 
The children always sang to him; and at this hour 
friends carne to talk with him as he sat in the garden, 



LUTHER'S HOME LIFE 201 

his children and boarders around him. When Luther 
and his wife began to keep house they must have been 
in very straitened circumstances. He had married a por- 
tionless nun ; and on till 1532 his professorial salary was 
only two hundred gulden, or about 160, according to 
the present value of money. He had besides, his house, 
and occasional presents of eatables and wine from the 
town council of Wittenberg when he had to entertain 
distinguished strangers. Then Luther was a man of 
overflowing charity. Wandering students, monks who 
had broken their convents, beggars of all kinds got 
what money he had. If he had no money, he gave 
away silver cups he had received as presents, and must 
have been the despair of his long-suffering wife. It is 
said that on one occasion in these early years he told a 
poor student who came begging that he had no money, 
but that he might take and sell " this " ; and in spite 
of his wife's frowns, he handed over the little silver 
christening cup that had been given to baby Hans. 
Catherine was, however, a notable housewife; she 
made the long-neglected garden profitable; she kept 
pigs and poultry; she planted all manner of fruit 
trees ; she made Luther rent and then buy three other 
gardens, stocked a fish-pond, kept cows, and farmed in 
a small way. She showed Luther that he was getting 
into debt, and proved to him that his indiscriminate 
charity did no good. Luther regarded this last as a 
notable discovery, too good to be kept to himself, and 
he published it in a very daring manner. He got hold 
of a curious old book, the Liber Vagatorwm, which we 
may translate " The Book of Scoundreldona " book 
collectors know the quaint mediaeval cant-German in 
which it is written, and the strange woodcuts with 



202 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

which It is illustrated and he actually published it, 
with a most characteristic preface, in which he says : 
"This little book about the knavery of beggars was 
first printed by one who calls himself 'Expertus in 
Truffis/ i.e. a fellow right well knowing in roguery, 
which the book very well proves. . . . Princes, lords, 
counsellors of State, and everybody should be prudent 
and cautious in dealing with beggars, and should learn 
that, whereas people will not give and help honest 
paupers and needy neighbours as ordained by God, 
they give by the persuasion of the devil, and contrary 
to God's judgment, ten times as much to vagabonds 
and desperate rogues. . . . For this reason every vil- 
lage and town should know their own poor, as written 
down in the register, and assist them. But as to out- 
landish and strange beggars, they ought not to be borne 
with, unless they have proper letters and certificates ; 
for all the great rogueries mentioned in this book are 
done by them. If each town would only keep an eye 
on its own paupers, such knaveries would soon cease. 
I have myself of late years leen cheated and befooled 
by such tramps and liars more than I like to confess!' 
From which it may be seen that after two years Cathe- 
rine had done something with her husband, and that he 
presented to his native land the outline of a " Charity 
Organisation Society." After 1532 the Luther house- 
hold was in much more comfortable circumstances. 
The professorial salary was increased to 240, and there 
were also added payments in kind, corn, wood, malt, 
e c<> which meant a great deal more. Great princes 
made presents, and Lxither was able to buy a small 
property near Leipzig, called Zulsdorf, and to build a 
house on it. Catherine was greatly attached to it, and 



LUTHER'S HOME LIFE 203 

went there so often that the thing would excite our 
wonder, were it not that it seems that the property 
was bought from Catherine's "brother in order to help 
him in some money difficulties. We can understand 
the very peculiar pleasure with which the noble lady, 
who had been cast off by her family, became the pro- 
prietress of part of the old family estate; and how 
Luther would secretly enjoy her absorption in her 
small property, though he never ceased " chaffing " her 
about it. 

This household of wife, family, dependants, and 
guests was a very haven of rest for the storm-tossed 
man. His devotion to his wife was unbounded, and it 
may well have been ; for few wives have done or could 
do so much for such a husband. " I am apt to expect 
more from my Kathe, and from Melanchthon, than I 
do from Christ my Lord. And yet I know that neither 
they nor anyone on earth has suffered or can suffer 
what He has suffered for me." These words belong to 
his earlier married life. "I would not part from my 
Kathe, no not to gain all France and Venice"; he 
declared that if his Kathe died and he were a young 
man nothing would induce him to marry again ; and 
late in life, speaking from his own experience, he says, 
that "next to God's Word, the world has no more 
precious treasure than holy matrimony. God's best 
gift is a pious, cheerful, God-fearing, home-keeping 
wife, with whom you may live peacefully, to whom 
you may entrust your goods, your body, and life." 
Perhaps his profound respect for her and trust in her 
comes out nowhere more strongly than in his " will." 
He bequeathed her everything that he had lands, 
houses, the goblets and jewels he had received in 



204 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

presents, to "be at her sole disposal ; and he did so for 
three reasons (1) because she had been to him "a 
pious, faithful, and dutiful wife, always loving, devoted, 
and beautiful " ; (2) because she alone knew his affairs 
and would have to pay his debts ; and (3) because it 
was more fitting that his children should be dependent 
on their mother than the mother on her children. He 
carried out the principle he had laid down in his Table 
Talk: "Between husband and wife there should be 
no question of meum and tuum. All things should be 
in common between them, without any distinction or 
means of distinguishing." Of course he talked roundly 
of marital supremacy and the impossibility of getting 
a thoroughly obedient wife unless he carved one out of 
stone for himself ; he laughed at his Kathe's command 
of language, and'assured an English guest that he ought 
to take her as his teacher in the German tongue, for she 
knew more about it than he did ; but he had a deep 
desire to spare her any pain. When the country was 
in a disturbed state after the Peasants' War he refused 
to go to a dear friend's wedding " for the tears and 
fears of my Eathe prevent me." There is one letter of 
his to his wife, which is seldom or never quoted, and 
which shows the high opinion which Luther had of her 
judgment even on deep theological matters. He wrote 
it from Marburg, where he was at the conference with 
the Swiss theologians, and where he did not certainly 
show himself at his best. In that letter he gives the 
only fair statement he ever made about the views of 
his Swiss opponents, and seems anxious to persuade 
her that it was not his obstinacy but the prevalence of 
the plague which broke up the negotiations. He tells 
her, what he confessed to no other creature, " that we 



LUTHER'S HOME LIFE 205 

(the Swiss and the Lutherans) are united on all points 
except that our opponents maintain that it is mere 
bread in the Lord's Supper, but acknowledge therein 
the presence of Christ spiritually " ; and he goes on to 
say that everyone is become mad with fear of the 
" sweating sickness " ; " yesterday fifty were taken ill 
of it, and one or two have died." His affectionate play- 
fulness ripples over all his correspondence with her, 
and was no doubt appreciated with due wifely fondness, 
although it must have been trying to have one's letters 
addressed an the outside, "To my dear Master, Frau 
Katharine Luther"; "To my kind and dear Master, 
Frau Katharine v. Bora, Doctoress Lutheress, at Witten- 
berg." In this letter he wrote : " It is an annoyance to 
me to have bad wine to drink, when I remember what 
good wine and beer I have at home, besides a pretty 
wife or shall I say it Master ? " but that was inside. 
Other outside designations are : " To my gracious girl, 
Katharine Luther v. Bora and Zulsdorf , at Wittenberg, 
my darling." This one begins inside : " Grace and 
peace, my dear girl and wife Kathe. Your Grace must 
be informed that we are all here fresh and sound God 
be praised ; we eat like behemoths (yet not much), and 
drink like Germans (yet not much), and are joyous." 
" To the rich lady of Zulsdorf, Frau Doctor Katharine 
Luther, dwelling in the body at Wittenberg and wan^ 
dering in the spirit to Zulsdorf ; to be delivered into 
the hands of my darling ; if absent, to be opened and 
read by D. Pomeran, Pastor " ; " To my heartily beloved 
wife, Katharine Lutjxer, Lady of Zulsdorf, Doctoress, 
Lady of the pig Market, and whatever else she may 
be " ; inside this we find : " Grace and peace in Christ, 
a-nd my poor old love as "before. Dear Kathe, I have 



206 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

been very weak on the road. . . . M. L., your old 
darling." "To my dear wife, Katharine Luther, Doetoress 
and self-tormentor, at Wittenberg ; to the hands and 
feet of my gracious lady"; inside this one we have 
" Dear Kathe, read St. John and the Small Catechism, 
of which you sometimes say, ' All in this book is said 
of me/ For you must needs take [God's cares upon 
you, just as if He were not the Almighty. . . . All the 
letters you have written have come here, and to-day 
the one which you wrote last Friday. ... I mention 
this that you may not be angry." On the outsides of 
other letters we have such epithets as "The deeply 
learned lady," " the saintly, anxious-minded lady," " my 
dear and kind wife." The letters show how much she 
did for him ; she corresponded with ladies who could 
assist her husband (the Electress Sibyl, wife of John 
Frederic, had almost as great a regard for Catherine 
as her husband had for Luther), she looked after the 
printing of Luther's sermons and pamphlets, and saw 
that the printers did not run short of paper, she even 
bought special presents which Luther might give to the 
children when he came home from a journey, and she 
had wonderful tact in soothing people whom Luther's 
roughness had offended. She managed the large house- 
hold with its boarders, and presided at the table in her 
husband's absence. One thing she could not do, and it 
rather worried her anxious mind when she thought of 
the young family and the precarious health of her 
husband ; she could not get Luther to charge any fees 
for lecturing, to take any salary from the town for his 
services as pastor in the town church,, nor take one 
farthing for all the books he wrote. On this last head 
he was stolidly immovable, though his wife showed 



LUTHER'S HOME LIFE 207 

him that he might surely have a share in the profits as 
well as the publishers. She had calculated that if 
Luther only took as much for writing his books as was 
given to scholars by the publishers for translating some 
of them into foreign languages, they might lay past 
nearly four hundred gulden a year. But Luther was 
inexorable. He would take no money for his writings 
a resolution which, as Catherine saw, benefited no 
one but the publishers of his books. 

Luther had the greatest delight in his children. " I 
am sufficiently contented/' he writes, " for I have three 
noble children, which no papist theologian has; and the 
three children are three kingdoms which belong to me 
by inheritance more surely than Ferdinand's Hungary, 
Bohemia, and the Romish Kingdom." When baby 
Elizabeth died (she lived scarcely eight months), Luther 
was broken-hearted. " She has left me," he writes, " a 
strangely sick almost womanly heart, such pity moves 
me for her ; I could never have believed before what 
is the tenderness of a father's heart for his children." 
A second daughter, Magdelena, the " Lenchen " of the 
Letters, was born just a year after her sister's death. 
She was Luther's favourite child, perhaps because she 
came before his grief was spent, perhaps because she 
was the very image of her mother. She grew to be a 
beautiful and charmingly affectionate girl, and died 
when she was a little more than thirteen years old. 
Her death was very peaceful. Her father often asked 
her, " Lenchen, my little daughter, thou wouldst like 
to stay with thy father ; art thou also content to go to 
thy Father yonder?" "Yes, dearest father; as God 
wills," she said. When the end came, Luther fell on his 
kriees a,t her beside, weeping and holding her in his 



20 8 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

arms, prayed that God would receive her. He tried to 
console his wife by saying that they had sent a saint 
to heaven " Yes, a living saint ! May we have such 
a death ! Such a death I would gladly die this very 
hour." When they came back from the grave, he 
said : " My daughter is now provided for in body and 
soul. We Christians have nothing to complain of; 
we know that it must be so. We are more certain of 
eternal life than of anything else ; for God, who has 
promised it to us for His dear Son's sake, cannot lie. 
Two saints of my flesh has our Lord taken." That 
evening he said: "We must take great care of our 
children, and especially of the poor little maidens ; we 
must not leave it to others to care for them. I have 
no compassion on the boys. A lad can maintain him- 
self wherever he is, if he will only work ; and if he 
will not work he is a scamp. But the poor maidenkind 
must have a staff to lean on." All the infinite tender- 
ness in his great heart was called forth in his thoughts 
about his little " Lenchen." His youngest child, Mar- 
garethe, was also a great favourite. He writes that 
she could sing hymns when she was four years old. 
He wrote hymns, words and music, for his children 
to sing. The best known is : 

"From heaven above to earth I come, 
To bear good news to every home; 
Glad tidings of great joy I bring, 
Whereof I now will say and sing." l 

1 Luther's children were 

Hans, born 7th June 1526. He studied at "Wittenberg, became a 
lawyer, was in the service of Duke Albert of Prussia, and died 
a councillor of the Court at Weimar. 
Elizabeth, born 10th December 1527, and died 3rd August 1528. 



LUTHER'S HOME LIFE 209 

The Luther house which contained this happy family 
has been renovated out of all recognition, and the 
room now shown as Luther's study was probably the 
family room it could not have been the study. One 
thing, however, remains very much what it was the 
great arched stone doorway which Catherine planned 
with Master Lucas Cranach as a surprise gift for her 
husband when he was away on one of his many 
journeys. 

"On the one tip of the arch was her Doctor's face, set. 
sn8B 57. On the other (where a lesser soul might have been 
forgiven for putting her own fair face) his own device of arms 
a dark cross on a red heart in a white rose on a blue 
ground in a golden ring. Luther, I think, has an interpreta- 
tion of it for himself mine is ' Christ and Him crucified con- 
tained in a sinner's love, making it flower out into a clear 
conscience and a pure life, with an open heaven above and a 
golden heaven before. 3 Was it not a beautiful thought of 
hers ? something she had lain awake thinking for nights not 
a few something she called Master Lucas Cranach in to 
talk over more than once, before the plans quite pleased her 
something she carried out finally and hastily, with many 
fears lest the work should be caught unfinished, with many 
questions from the children as to what, and how, and why, 
and when, while her Doctor was away on one of these 

Magdalena, born 4th May 1529, and died 20th September 1542. 
Martin, born 9th November 1531. He studied theology, but was 

always delicate. He married the daughter of the burgomeister 

of Wittenberg, and died in his thirty-third year. 
Paul, born 28th January 1533. He studied at "Wittenberg, became 

a physician, and was court physician to the Elector of Saxony 

at Dresden. 
Margarethe, born 17tli December, 1534 ; she married a Prussian 

noble, Adeligen von Kunheim. 



210 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

-worrying visitations something ' brought forth with singing * 
and clapping of hands one fine day, "when the familiar horse- 
hoofs came clattering up the street, and the dear Greatheart, 
her husband, flung heavily out of the saddle, and landed 
right down on the very stones which cried out to him of his 
wife's love. How glorious and noble and perfect such a 
c love in life ' seems ! " l 

We can recall the picture of Luther at the Leipzig 
Disputation, holding a bunch of violets in his hand, 
looking at it, and tasting its perfume, while he 
thundered against Eck, the Pope, and the Councils. 
This home of his, with wife and children and family 
friends, was his bunch of violets in his later life. 
While at Wittenberg the evening talks in his garden, 
where he sat with wife and friends under the pear- 
tree, and the children brought him flowers and were 
taught to distinguish the voices of the birds that were 
singing, were a great refreshment. Of a rose he 
would say: "A man who could make one rose like 
this would be accounted most wonderful; yet God 
scatters countless such flowers around us I His gifts 
are so infinite that we do not see them/* Or seeing a 
little bird gone to roost for the night: "That little 

1 Robert Barbour, Letters from the Land of Luther, pp. 102-105. 
Luther's own explanation of the meaning of his device was : " A black 
cross on a red heart; for, in order to be saved, it is necessary to 
believe with our whole heart in onr crucified Lord, and the cross, though 
bringing pain and self-mortification, does not corrupt the nature, but 
rather keeps the heart alive. The heart should be placed in a white 
rose to show that faith gives joy, comfort, and peace, and because white 
is the colour of the spirits and angels, and the joy is not an earthly 
joy. The rose itself should be set in an azure field, just as this joy is 
already the beginning of heavenly joy and set in heavenly hope, and 
outside, round the field, there should be a golden ring, because heavenly 
happiness is eternal and precious above all possessions," 



LUTHER'S HOME LIFE 211 

bird has chosen his shelter ; above it are the stars and 
the deep heaven of worlds ; yet he is rocking himself 
to sleep without caring for to-morrow's lodging, calmly 
clinging to his little twig, and leaving God to think 
for him" Or when the slow creaking of the mill was 
carried far on the still afternoons : " The heart of man 
is like a millstone in a mill; when you put wheat 
under it, it turns, and grinds and crushes the wheat 
into flour ; if you put no wheat it still grinds on, but 
it grinds itself and wears itself away. So is the 
human heart ; unless it be busied with some employ- 
ment, it leaves space for the devil, who wriggles him- 
self in, and brings with him a whole host of evil 
thoughts, temptations, tribulations, which grind away 
the heart." Or when Catherine sat beside him with 
her distaff and flax, spinning her linen thread : " What 
a martyr the flax is ! When it is ripe it is plucked, 
steeped in water, beaten, dried, carded, spun, and woven 
into linen, which is cut and torn and pierced. ... So 
must good and godly Christians suffer much from the 
ungodly and wicked." Or when he was very ill and 
they brought him proof-sheets: "God has touched 
me sorely. I have been impatient; but God knows 
better than I do whereto it serves. Our Lord God 
is like a printer who sets the letters backwards, 
so that here we cannot read them. When we are 
printed off in the life to come we shall read all 
clearly and straightforward. Meanwhile we must 
have patience." 

" I know few things more touching than those soft breath- 
ings of affection," says Carlyle, " soft as a child's or a mother's, 
in this great wild heart of Lutlxer. So honest, unadulterated 
with any cant; homely rude* in their utterance; pure as 



2t2 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

water welling from the rock. What, in fact, was all that 
downpressed mood of despair and reprobation which we saw 
in his youth, hut the outcome of pre-eminent thoughtful 
gentleness, affections too keen and fine. . . . Luther to a 
slight observer might have seemed a timid, weak man; 
modesty, affectionate shrinking tenderness the chief distinction 
of him. It is a noble valour which is roused in a heart like 
this, once stirred up into defiance, all kindled into a heavenly 
blaze. . . . The common speech, of him has a rugged noble- 
ness, idiomatic, expressive, genuine; gleams here and there 
with beautiful poetic tints. One feels him to be a great 
brother man. His love of music, indeed, is not this, as it 
were, the summary of all these affections in him? Many a 
wild unutterability he spoke forth from him in the tones of 
his flute. The devils fled from his flute, he said. Death- 
defiance on the one hand, and such a love of music on the 
other ; I could call these the two opposite poles of a great 
soul ; between these two all great things had room." 

3. THE EMPEKOR AND LUTHEE 

Things had been going "badly with the Evangelical 
party since the Peasants' War. That mad outbreak 
had been industriously used by the Romanists as a 
proof of what the Evangelical doctrines would lead to 
if tolerated. The Emperor had resolved that the 
Evangelical cause should be crushed, and that his Edict 
of the Diet of Worms should be carried out. He sent 
down orders to Germany that this should be done 
when the Diet met at Speyer in 1526. Political events 
beyond Germany staved off the collision for a while. 
Charles had totally defeated Francis at the battle of 
Pavia. The Pope, afraid of the power of Charles and 
of its effect in Italy, had made a secret alliance with 



THE EMPEROR AND LUTHER 213 

Francis. Charles, determined to resist the Pope, no 
longer cared to crush the Lutherans ; therefore, at the 
Diet of Speyer, it had been resolved that, " Each State 
should, as regards the Edict of Worms, so live, rule, 
and bear itself as it thought it could answer it to God 
and the Emperor." This left each principality and 
Imperial city free to do what it pleased in the matter 
of religion; but it was felt by both sides that the 
truce was but temporary. The Romanist States had 
made a league, and it was felt by many of the Pro- 
testants that they, too, ought to be united. Doctrinal 
differences between the Swiss and some of the Imperial 
cities on the one side, and the followers of Luther on 
the other, stood in the way of a close alliance, and 
young Philip of Hesse had proposed a conference at 
Marburg. The conference had produced a great deal 
of good, but it had been wrecked by the obstinacy of 
Luther, in spite of proved and acknowledged unanimity 
on all points of doctrine but the one of the meaning 
of Christ's presence in the Sacrament of the Supper. 
Meanwhile the Emperor had settled his quarrel with 
the Pope, and was again demanding that the Edict of 
Worms should be carried out in Germany. A second 
Diet at Speyer was held in 1529, the decision of 1526 
was reversed, and the Evangelical States protested. 
Civil war might have ensued had not the Turks 
threatened Tienna, and -had not Luther patriotically 
insisted that all should unite to drive away the danger 
menacing Christendom. 

Charles had now reached the summit of his power. 
He had crushed France, had humbled the Pope and 
compelled him to enter into an alliance, and had 
conquered the Turks. He had only to crush the 



214 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Reformation to attain his scheme of restoring the 
Mediaeval Empire in all its old glory. He came down 
to Germany to hold a Diet at Augsburg, with the 
express design of compelling the Evangelical princes 
to abandon the cause of Luther and of the Reforma- 
tion. With all Charles's keenness of diplomatic vision 
and power of measuring men, he could never under- 
stand spiritual forces. He thought that he had only 
to appear in Germany, and exercise his persuasive 
powers on the German princes, to overthrow the 
Evangelical movement. He had sent messages to the 
Evangelical princes, and had expressed hopes which 
might soon become commands. He entered Augsburg 
in extraordinary state, the flower of all Germany, 
princes evangelical and papal, riding out to meet him 
as far as the bridge of the Lech. In the evening he 
summoned the foremost Evangelical princes to meet 
him, John of Saxony, Philip of Hesse, old George of 
Brandenburg among them. He had told them firmly 
that all the licence hitherto permitted must cease, 
and that to-morrow they must walk with him in the 
Corpus Christi procession. The princes refused, and 
young Philip was about to argue the matter theo- 
logically, but the Emperor sternly refused to hear him. 
Then George of Brandenburg stood forth and told the 
Emperor that he and his fellows could not and would 
not obey. It was a short, rugged speech, though 
eminently respectful, and ended with these words, 
which flew over Germany, kindling hearts as fire lights 
flax : " Before I would deny my God and His Evangel, 
I would rather kneel down here before your Majesty, 
and have my head struck off " and the old man hit 
the side of his neck with the edge of his Jaa&d. " Not 



THE EMPEROR AND LUTHER 215 

head off, dear Prince, not head off/' said Charles in his 
Flemish-German ("Nit Kop ab, lover Forst, nit Kop 
ab ! "). Charles walked in the procession through the 
streets of Augsburg on a blazing hot day, stooping 
under a heavy purple mantle, and with a superfluous 
candle sputtering in his hand; but the Evangelical 
princes remained in their lodgings. 

It had long been felt that this Diet would be a 
critical time for the Evangelical faith, and the Elector 
John had been anxious to have a summary of Evan- 
gelical doctrine prepared for him, to be used when he 
met the Emperor. He had accordingly summoned 
Luther, Melanehthon, and some other theologians to 
meet him at Torgau to prepare Evangelical " Articles of 
Faith"; and Luther, with his companions, had pre- 
sented the Marburg Articles with some additions. It 
was felt, however, that something fuller was needed ; 
and Luther and Melanchthon had been busied at 
Coburg, whither they had gone with the Elector, in 
drafting a " Confession." The work was interrupted 
by a summons from the Emperor asking the Elector to 
meet him at Augsburg at the end of April, and the 
Elector left for the city where the Diet was to be held, 
taking the other theologians with him but leaving 
Luther at Coburg. Luther was worried and anxious, 
feeling like a caged eagle. He knew Melanehthon's 
strong desire for some conciliatory confession with 
which everyone could agree ; he knew that his Elector 
had neither the influence nor the strength of mind of his 
brother ; he feared the impetuosity of young Philip of 
Hesse ; he was left for weeks at a time without any 
news; he was fretting himself ill and longing to be 
back at Wittenberg, where he ccmld at least " teach bis 



216 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

students/' His secretary wrote woeful accounts of him 
to the Wittenberg home circle. Catherine knew how 
a little bit of home would cheer him. She got their 
good friend Lucas Cranach to paint their baby 
Magdalena, then a year old, and the picture was sent 
on to Coburg. Luther hung it up where he could 
always see it from his chair, and the sweet little 
face looking down at him gave him the courage to 
endure during these long months of waiting. The old 
father died at Mansfeld during this enforced stay at 
Coburg (29th May), and Luther could not go to see his 
widowed mother. Posts brought him word that the 
" Confession," completed by Melanchthon, had been read 
in German in the Diet on the 25th of June ; that the 
Romanists were preparing a refutation, and that mean- 
while all manner of conferences were going on ; that 
the Romanist reply was ready on 3rd August; that 
Philip of Hesse had left the Diet abruptly on the 6th, 
to raise troops to fight the Emperor, it was reported ; 
that Melanchthon was being entangled in conferences, 
and was said to be giving up everything. How he 
must have fretted! A man, required to exercise a 
woman's courage the courage to wait on in suspense ! 
The child's face smiling down on him as he sat and 
fretted seemed to give him calm. He wrote to his 
Elector's legal adviser at the Diet, exhorting him to 
remember that God was more powerful than the 
Emperor, and then went on: 

"I have lately seen two wonders; the first as I was 
looking out of my window and saw the stars in heaven and 
all that beautiful vault of God, and yet I saw no pillars on 
which the Architect had fixed this vault ; yet the heaven fell 
not, and all that grand arch stood fast. Now there are some 



THE EMPEROR AND LUTHER 217 

who search for the pillars, and want to touch and grasp them, 
and since they cannot, they wonder and tremble as if the 
heaven must certainly fall, for no other reason but because 
they cannot touch and grasp its pillars. If they could lay 
hold on them then they think the heavens would stand firm 1 
The second wonder was : I saw great clouds rolling over us 
with such a ponderous weight that they seemed like to a 
great ocean, and yet I saw no foundation on which they 
rested nor were based, nor any shore which restrained them ; 
yet they fell not on us, but frowned on us and flowed on. 
But when they had passed by, then there shone forth both 
their floor and our roof which had kept them back the rain- 
bow ! A frail, thin floor and roof, which soon melted into the 
clouds, and was more like a shadowy prism such as we see 
through coloured glass, than a strong and firm foundation, so 
that we might well distrust that feeble rampart which kept 
back that fearful weight of waters. Yet we found that this 
unsubstantial prism was able to bear up the weight of waters, 
and that it guarded us safely ! But there are some who 
look more at the thickness and massy weight of the waters 
and the clouds than at this thin, light, narrow bow of 
promise. They would like to feel the strength of that 
shadowy, vanishing arch, and because they cannot do this, 
they are always fearing that the clouds will bring back the 
Flood." 

The flood was threatening. The Evangelical theo- 
logians did make the needful stand ; " the Romanists," 
said Luther to his wife, " positively desire to have the 
nuns and monks again in the cloister " ; there was no 
hope of a compromise; the Emperor announced that 
he gave the Evangelical princes until the 15th of April 
1531 to make their submission; everything seemed 
making for internecine strife. 

Yet the frowning clouds passed away. Troubles m 



2i 8 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

other parts of his widespreading dominions prevented 
Charles from carrying out his threats. The Evangel- 
ical Church had time to root itself and organise itself. 
The religious war did not break out until Luther had 
passed away from earth. 



CHAPTER X 

LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS OF THE EVANGELICAL 
CHURCH 

1. LUTHER'S IDEA OF THE CHURCH 

THE years 1530 to 1555 are usually described by 
Church historians as the time of laying the founda- 
tions and building the structure of the Evangelical 
Church of Germany. From the year 1526, which saw 
the decision of the Diet of Speyer that in matters of 
religion and with reference to the Edict of Worms 
every State was to live, enact, and maintain itself as it 
trusted to answer to God and to his Imperial Majesty, 
if not from the earlier decision of the Diet of Niirn- 
berg in 1523, Luther, amid his multifarious labours, 
had always regarded this one thing as his supreme 
task. But the very important question at once arises 
What had Luther in view when he set himself to this 
work, and what did he mean to do? There were 
many disturbing elements, all of which tended to 
obscure the main purpose in Luther's mind from con- 
temporaries and from students of history. The pol- 
itical condition of the times, so constantly changing; 
the policy of the Emperor, sometimes plainer, some- 
times obscure, always an object of suspicion ; the 

aid 



220 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

attitude of the German bishops, sometimes conciliatory, 
sometimes resolutely opposed to the Evangelical move- 
ment ; unexpected divisions among those who favoured 
religious reform, which in turn frequently took the 
shape they did from social and political environment ; 
above all, the catastrophe of the Peasants' War and 
what that led to and revealed, all these things give 
an almost kaleidoscopic appearance to Luther's work 
in the establishment of the Evangelical Church of 
Germany. The stream of his purpose was turned now 
the one way now the other as the successive obstacles 
met it, and it took now one now another course, follow- 
ing, though with very distinct limitations, the path of 
least resistance. For Luther was the reverse of doc- 
trinaire. He was, with some interesting reservations, an 
opportunist, in the good sense of this modern word, and 
had the defects of the opportunist character, which 
works rather for the more immediate than for the 
remoter results. 

In the earlier years of Luther's struggle against 
Home, his preaching and teaching had forced their way 
throughout all classes of the population of Germany. 
His popularity was increased by the incessant use he 
had made of the printing-press and by his heroic action 
in presence of the Emperor and the Diet. His friends 
were astonished at his success, his enemies never 
counted on such a speedy and widespread popularity. 
The good Elector always cherished the hope that if the 
gospel was allowed to spread quietly throughout the 
land its truth would gradually permeate all Christen- 
dom, or at least all Germany, and that a peaceful 
victory would be gained without much tumult or even 
much external change. Luther himself had the same 



LUTHER'S IDEA OF THE CHURCH 221 

idea. All lie wanted was room for the preaching of 
the gospel, which declared the true way o pardon. 
This of itself would, he thought, in due time effect 
a peaceful transformation of ecclesiastical life and 
worship. The earlier Diets of Nlirnberg and Speyer 
had provided a field, always enlarging, for exhibiting 
this quiet transformation ; and Luther, with the con- 
currence of his Elector, took advantage of it. He had 
hoped that the greater ecclesiastical princes would, 
with the consent of the Diet, secularise their terri- 
tories, and that the ordinary bishops would continue 
their oversight of the Church. He was as indifferent 
to forms of Church government as John Wesley, and, 
like Wesley, every step he took in providing for a 
separate organisation was forced upon him as a 
practical necessity. He cherished the hope that the 
new wine might be stored in the old bottles as late as 
the Diet of Augsburg in 1530 and the Diet of Speyer 
in 1545. The Augsburg Confession itself (1530) con- 
cludes with : " Our meaning is not to have rule taken 
from the bishops ; but this one thing only is required 
at their hands, that they should suffer the gospel to 
be purely taught, and that they would relax a few 
observances, which cannot be held without sin." 
Meanwhile the common people in Germany were 
remaining uninstructed in the gospel of the grace of 
God, and it was impossible to wait for the tardy 
appreciation by the bishops of the Evangelical move- 
ment, or for the almost vanishing hope that a General 
Council held on German soil would reconcile the 
religious differences. Something had to be done, and 
that at once. 

Jt must be remembered that Luther and all the 



222 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Reformers of the sixteenth century held very strongly 
and clearly that there was a Visible Catholic Church 
of Christ, that the Evangelical movement which they 
headed was the legitimate development of the centuries 
of saintly life within that Visible Catholic Church, 
and within its Western branch especially. They did 
not for a moment suppose that in sharing in this 
movement they were separating themselves from the 
Catholic Church of Christ in its visible sense. It is 
true that they all taught that there was an Invisible 
Catholic Church, and that this Invisible Church was 
based on the predestination of God. But if their ideas 
on this subject be carefully examined, it will be seen 
that they did not take the thought of predestination 
in the sense of the abstract metaphysical category 
which it assumed in the hands of doctrinaire theo- 
logians of the seventeenth century. It was their way 
of showing that the whole of the believer's religious 
life and what it leads to depended in the last resort 
on God and not on man. They opposed the decree of 
God (predestination) to the decrees of man (of Popes 
and Councils). Hence neither Luther nor any of the 
Reformers thought that in making provision for the 
preaching of the Word, the administration of the 
Sacraments, the exercise of discipline, and whatever 
was required for the existence and good government 
of Christian congregations, they were founding a new 
Church, and were going forth from the Visible Catholic 
Church of Christ. They refused to concede the name 
Catholic to their opponents, and in the various confer- 
ences between the two parties, both before the Diet 
of Augsburg and after it, the Roman Catholics were 
always officially designated " the adherents of the old 



LUTHER'S IDEA OF THE CHURCH 223 

religion"; and in the official document which states 
the terms of the Religions Peace of Niirnberg (1532), 
the two parties are respectively called the " adherents 
of the old religion " and the " associates of the Augs- 
burg Confession." 

On the other hand, neither Luther nor any of his 
fellow - Reformers thought that the existence of a 
Catholic Visible Church of Christ depended on what 
has ambiguously been called an apostolic succession 
of bishops, who through conferred gifts of ordination 
create priests, who in turn make Christians out of 
heathen by the Sacraments. His thought of the 
"Freedom of the Christian Man/' or the idea of the 
spiritual priesthood of all believers, as he interpreted 
it, prevented him from imperilling the existence of 
the Church Catholic on an external succession of 
office-bearers. If he had thought that an episcopal 
ordination in the Roman or Anglican sense was es- 
sential, there was a sufficient number of evangelical 
bishops to secure it; but no use was made of them 
in this way. 

The true succession from the apostles lay within 
the Church, in the succession of generations of saintly 
souls, who, with confession of sin and faith on the 
promises of God, had found pardon and impulse to 
lives of new obedience by going directly to God for 
them. Neither communion with Rome nor an histor- 
ical succession of bishops were marks of the Visible 
Catholic Church in his eyes. He had no objections 
to episcopal rule, nor even to a primacy in the See 
of Rome. He respected everything which had be- 
longed to the past, and especially to that mediaeval 
Church into which he had been born. But these 



224 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

things were not required to make the Church. They 
were only modes of exercising the needful disciplinary 
control, and if they failed to conform to the precepts 
of the Word of God and had become full of human 
corruptions, thus degenerating into hindrances rather 
than remaining helps to the furtherance of the true 
religious life of the soul, they ought to be done away 
with, and something else should be put in their place. 
The fact that the human soul needs absolutely nothing 
in the last resort but the Word of God dwelling in it, 
ought to give men courage and calmness in demanding 
the change. The principle of the spiritual priesthood 
of all believers was able to deliver men from all fear 
in demanding such a reformation as the Church re- 
quired to allow it to do the work God has given it in 
charge. 

He had a very clear idea about what the Church 
needed to enable it to do the work for which God 
had called it into being. This is what he says : " The 
Church of Christ requires an honest ministry dili- 
gently and loyally instructed in the Holy Word of 
God after a pure Christian intelligence, and without 
the addition of any false traditions. In and through 
such a ministry it will be made plain what are 
Christ and His Evangel, honest repentance and the 
fear of God, how to attain to the forgiveness of sins, 
and the properties and power of the Keys in the 
Church." In this way the people will learn what 
Christian freedom is, and how the conscience becomes 
free in Christ. There is need of schools that boys and 
maidens may be taught these things and all good 
morals in their youth. There is need also of the 
gift of knowing such languages as Latin, Greek, and 



LUTHER'S IDEA OF THE CHURCH 225 

Hebrew. For all this there must be some real super- 
vision, to see that all these things are done. Bishops, 
in the mediaeval sense of the word, might be super- 
fluous, but their true function, that of oversight, was 
a thing indispensable. 

These were the thoughts in Luther's mind when he 
busied himself about the reconstruction of the Church 
in Germany. His first idea was that much of this 
might be left in the hands of the people, with some 
oversight from the bishops; but this first idea was 
soon abandoned. The Peasants' War slew all his 
trust in the " common man," in Germany at least. 
It was vain also to expect anything from the bishops. 
One or two had declared themselves on the side of 
the Reformation; but the higher ecclesiastics, as a 
class, had become more and more estranged from the 
movement. Even if the bishops had shown them- 
selves sympathetic, Luther soon saw that their dioceses 
were in many respects ill-fitted by territorial arrange- 
ment for the inspection and control of the parishes. 
The only constituted authorities that could do what 
he conceived ought to be done were the secular princes; 
and to them Luther turned. 

The first thing to do was to ascertain exactly the 
state of matters in the country districts of Electoral 
Saxony. This was done by means of "Visitations," 
and the example of the Elector was speedily followed 
by other evangelical princes. Luther persuaded the 
Elector to appoint a regular commission to visit every 
part of his dominions; to report what needed to be 
done; and to give advice about the best means of 
accomplishing it. The commission was a mixed one 
of lawyers and pastors ; the lawyers to examine into 
15 



226 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

and report upon the legal provisions available for the 
support of churches and schools, and for the care of 
the poor ; while the pastors were to inquire into the 
fitness of the country clergy, the spiritual needs of the 
people, and matters of that kind. The visitors re- 
quired some common standard to test the condition of 
matters ; and Melanchthon prepared " Articles of Visi- 
tation/' which, after careful revision, were published 
in March 1528, with a preface written by Luther. 
Luther's preface was the "pastoral epistle" of the 
visitation. 

The necessity was great, and the visitation was held 
simultaneously in several parts of Electoral Saxony. 
The correspondence of Luther during the years 
1525-27 shows how urgent the need of such a visita- 
tion appeared to be to him. He had been up and 
down the country several times. He was a " man of 
the people/' and no one was afraid of speaking to him. 
The parish priests were always ready to lay their 
difficulties before him. In his letters he pictures the 
abounding poverty of those parish priests, a poverty 
increased by the fact that the only application of 
the new views made by many of the people was to 
refuse to pay all clerical dues. This was their idea 
of Reformation. He saw that the "common man" 
respected neither priest nor preacher, that in country 
districts where there was no supervision, the houses 
of the priest and of the parish clerk were fast de- 
caying, and he feared that if things were allowed to 
go on as they were doing there would soon be 
neither priest's house, nor schools, nor scholars. The 
Visitations made it clear that Luther had scarcely 
exaggerated matters. What was discovered was gross 



THE VISITATIONS 227 

ignorance on the part of people and priests alike. The 
district round about Wittenberg was by far the best ; 
but in the outlying districts a very bad state of 
things was disclosed. In a village near Torgau the 
visitors found an old priest who was hardly able to 
repeat the Creed or the Lord's Prayer, but who was 
held in the highest reverence for his power as an 
exorcist, and who derived a good income from the 
exercise of his craft. Priests had to be evicted for gross 
immoralities. Some kept beer-houses and practised 
other worldly callings. Village schools were rarely 
to be found, and the people were grossly ignorant. 
Some of the peasants complained that the Lord's 
Prayer was so long that they could not learn it; 
and in one place the visitors found that not a single 
peasant knew any prayer whatsoever. 

2. THE VISITATION OF WITTENBERG "CIRCLE" 

Perhaps the best way of seeing what this visita- 
tion was like is to take one single district that of 
the " circle " of Wittenberg. The commissioners were 
Martin Luther and Justus Jonas, theologians, with 
Hans Metzsch, Benedict Pauli, and Johann of 
Taubenheim, jurists. They began in October 1528, 
and spent two months at their task. They went 
about it with great energy, holding conferences with 
the priests and with the representatives of the com- 
munity. They questioned the priests about the 
condition of the people, and the people about the 
priests. In towns their conference was with the 
Council or Rath, and in the village with the male 
heads of families. Their common work was to find 



228 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

out what was being done for the "cure of souls," 
the instruction of the youth, and the care of the 
poor. By " cure of souls " (Seelsorge) they meant 
preaching, dispensation of the sacraments, catechetical 
instruction, and the pastoral visitation of the sick. 
It belonged to the theologians to estimate the capa- 
cities of the pastors, and to the jurists to estimate the 
available income, to look into all legal difficulties that 
might arise, and especially to clear the entanglements 
caused by the supposed jurisdiction of convents over 
many of the parishes. They found a good deal of 
confusion. This small district was made up of the 
outlying portions of three dioceses. It had not been 
inspected within the memory of man. At Klebitz 
the peasants had driven away the parish clerk, and 
put the village herd in his house. At Biilzig there 
was neither parsonage nor house for parish clerk, and 
the priest was non-resident. So at Danna; where 
the priest held a benefice at Coswig and was besides 
a chaplain at Wittenberg, and where the clerk lived 
at Zahna. The parsonages were all in a bad state 
of repair, and the local authorities could not be got 
to do anything. Koofs were leaking, walls were 
crumbling, it was believed that the next winter's frost 
would bring some down bodily. At Pratau the priest 
had built all himself parsonage, outhouses, stable 
and byre. All these things were duly noted to be re- 
ported upon. As for the priests, the complaints made 
against them were very few indeed. In one case the 
people said that their priest drank, and was con- 
tinually seen in the public-house. Generally, however, 
the complaints, when there were any, were that the 
priest was too old for his work or was utterly un~ 



THE VISITATIONS 229 

educated, and could do little more than mumble a 
Latin Mass. The priests had dealt very wisely in 
all matters of change. In some parishes they ad- 
ministered the Sacrament of the Supper according 
to the old and also acccording to the new rites, 
and the people seemed to prefer the new. In one 
parish, where there were two churches, the priest 
used the one for the old service and the other for 
the new. At Bleddin the peasants told the visitors 
that their pastor, Christopher Eichter, was a learned 
and pious man who preached regularly on all Sundays 
and festival days, and generally four times a week 
in various parts of the parish. It appeared, however, 
that their admiration for him did not compel them to 
attend his ministrations with very great regularity. The 
energetic pastors were almost all young men who had 
been trained at Wittenberg. The older men, peasants' 
sons all of them, were scarcely better educated than 
their parishioners, and were unable to preach to them. 
The visitors made strict inquiry about the habits 
of the parishioners with respect to attendance at 
church and at the Lord's Table. They found very few 
parishes indeed where three, four, five, or more persons 
were not named to them who never attended church or 
came to the Lord's Table ; in some parishes men came 
regularly to the preaching who never would come to 
the Sacrament. What impressed the visitors most 
was the ignorance, the besotted ignorance, of the 
people. They questioned them directly; found out 
whether they knew the Apostles' Creed, the Ten 
Commandments, and the Lord's Prayer; and then 
questioned them about the meanings of the words. 
" What do you mean by saying that God is Almighty ? " 



230 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

said Luther to a peasant. " I do not know," was the 
answer. " I can well believe that," said Luther ; " the 
most learned theologian must give the same answer." 
But " do you know that God is your Father ? " " No." 
"When you say, 'Our Father which art in heaven,' 
who is the Father?" "I do not know," was the 
answer. Luther came back from the visitation in greatly 
depressed spirits, and expressed his feelings in his 
usual energetic language. He says in his introduction 
to his Small Catechism, a work he began as soon as 
he returned from the visitation: "In .setting forth 
this Catechism or Christian doctrine in such a simple, 
concise, and easy form, I have been compelled and 
driven by the wretched and lamentable state of affairs 
which I discovered lately when I acted as a visitor. 
Merciful God, what misery have I seen, the common 
people knowing nothing at all of Christian doctrine, 
especially in the villages! and unfortunately many 
pastors are well-nigh unskilled and incapable of teach- 
ing ; and although all are called Christians and partake 
of the Holy Sacrament, they know neither the Lord's 
Prayer, nor the Creed, nor the Ten Commandments, but 
live like poor cattle and senseless swine, though, now 
that the gospel is come, they have learnt well enough 
how they may abuse their liberty." 

The visitors found that the pastors never studied 
theology because they had no books, or very few. 
They named the pastor of Schmiedeberg as a notable 
exception ; he had a library of twelve volumes, which 
was a wonderful thing ! It could not be expected that 
such men could preach to much edification; and the 
visitors recommended that copies of Luther's Postils or 
short sermons on the Gospels and Epistles be sent to all 



THE VISITATIONS 231 

the parishes, with orders that they should be read 
by the pastors to the congregations. The aged and 
incapacitated pastors were very gently dealt with. At 
Liesnitz, old Pastor Conrad was quite unable to per- 
form his duties. It was arranged that he should have 
the stipend and parsonage for life, but that he should 
give fourteen gulden to a coadjutor, who was also to act 
as parish clerk, and the proprietor of the place promised 
to feed the coadjutor at his table. The visitors also 
found that schools did not exist in the villages at 
all, and they were disappointed with most of the 
schools they found in the smaller towns. They saw 
nothing for it but that the pastors must become the 
village schoolmasters. The pastors were instructed not 
to forget to warn their people to send their children to 
school, and they were requested to make the catechis- 
ing of the children part of their church services on the 
Sunday. Various proposals were also made for the 
purpose of making the schools in the towns more 
efficient, and the church <c cantor " or precentor was to 
train the children to sing the evangelical hymns. 

In their inquiries about the care taken of the poor 
they found that there was not much need for any- 
thing to be done in the villages; but the case was 
different in the towns. In most of the towns there were 
old foundations meant for the poor, but all manner 
of misuses and misappropriations of the funds were 
discovered. Suggestions were made for replacing 
these on a better foundation. 

This very condensed account of what took place in 
the Wittenberg " circle " shows the work of the visita- 
tions ; a second and a third visitation was needed in 
Electoral Saxony ere things were put right; but in 



232 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

the end good work was done. The Elector refused 
to take any of the confiscated convent lands and 
possessions for civil purposes, and stipends for the 
pastors and salaries for the schoolmasters, with 
provision for the poor, were gradually secured through- 
out Electoral Saxony. 

Visitations somewhat on the Saxon model went on 
all over Germany, and out of them came the various 
ecclesiastical ordinances for the Evangelical States, out 
of which grew by slow stages the present Consistorial 
system of the Lutheran Church. If the whole move- 
ment towards an ecclesiastical organisation be carefully 
studied, it will be seen that it advances by slow stages 
as necessity calls for some new development, and that 
there is no thought of giving the people, because they 
are members of the Church, any share in its organ- 
isation and rule. The shape which it finally took was 
a return to the mediaeval form of Church local control. 
The Consistorial Courts of the Lutheran Church in 
Germany are very like the Consistorial Courts of the 
medieval bishops, only instead of the bishop appoint- 
ing the members of the Courts, and holding them, 
responsible to him, the members are appointed by and 
are responsible to the supreme local civil authority, 
whatever form that assumed. This remains a striking 
distinction between the Evangelical (Lutheran) and the 
Eeformed (Calvinist) types of ecclesiastical organisation. 

One interesting outcome of the Saxon visitations 
was Luther's Catechisms, Short and Large, and a new 
and greatly enlarged Hymn-book. It is more than 
likely that in preparing all three Luther had in view 
his own training as a child in the old Mansf eld home ; 
and that he desiz*ed to give all German children the 



THE CATECHISMS 233 

means of receiving the same evangelical education 
which he had received from his father and mother. The 
Short Catechism is Luther at his best It is difficult to 
think that anyone but himself could have written it ; 
and the preface is as characteristic. He tells the 
pastors who make use of it that they must above all 
things avoid the use of different texts or forms of the 
Ten Commandments and the Lord's Prayer. " If you 
preach to scholars or wise men you may show your 
skill, and vary these articles and twist them as subtly 
as you can. But with the young, always keep to one 
form and teach them . . . word for word, so that they 
may repeat them and learn them by heart." When 
the children know the words perfectly, then the 
teacher may proceed to explanation, and this is to be 
done question by question. The second commandment 
is not to be explained till the first is clearly understood. 
When the Short Catechism is thoroughly understood, 
then the Large one is to be gone through in the same 
way. He closes thus : " Our office has now become a 
different thing from what it was under the Pope; it 
has now become a real and saving office. Therefore it 
is more troublesome and full of labour, and is more 
encompassed with danger and temptation, and, more- 
over, brings little reward and thanks in this world. 
But Christ Himself will be our reward if we work 
faithfully. And so may the Father of all mercies 
help us, to whom be praise and thanks everlasting, 
through Christ our Lord." 

The Short Catechism is divided into six sections 
The Ten Commandments, The Creed, The Lord's 
Prayer, The Sacrament of Holy Baptism, How the 
simple folks should be taught to confess, and The 



234 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Sacrament of the Altar and it lias two Appendices, 
the first of which gives Prayers for private use morn- 
ing and evening, and Grace before and after meals; 
while the second is a selection of pious thoughts, 
mostly in Scripture language. 

One example may suffice to show how Luther wrote 
his Catechism : 

" The Sacrament of the Altar 

" Who, then, are they who receive this Sacrament 
worthily ? 

"Answer. Fasting and bodily preparation are in 
truth a good external discipline, but he is truly worthy 
and prepared who believes the words : ' Given for you 
and shed for the remission of sins.' But he who does 
not believe them is unworthy and not prepared. For 
the words 'for you ' demand truly believing hearts." 

Luther was accustomed to repeat this Catechism, to 
himself every morning. He thought that men whose 
business was theology needed more than others to be 
constantly reminded how simple after all the founda- 
tions and essentials of the faith were. 

The Large Catechism repeats the thoughts of the 
Short one at a sevenfold length. These two Catechisms 
and the tract on the Liberty of the Christian Man 
contain all that is essential and all that is best in 
Luther's teaching. The Short Catechism and the 
Augsburg Confession are the two creeds which every 
Lutheran Church cherishes. 

3. LUTHEE AS AN EDUCATIONAL REFORMEB 

Another result from these visitations was the foun- 
dation of something like a universal common-school 



EDUCATIONAL REFORM 235 

system for all Germany, and especially for the rural 
districts. The education of boys and maidens, not 
merely of the upper and burgher classes, but of the 
whole people, was an end for which Luther strove 
unweariedly. In his Address to the Nobility of the 
German Nation, he proposed that a number of the 
useless convents should be restored to their primary 
use, that of educating boys and girls. His correspond- 
ence is full of desire to see good and sound education 
spreading throughout Germany. In 1524 he wrote his 
celebrated call To the Burgomasters and Councillors 
of Cities in the German Land, urging them to provide 
a large and generous system of education in their 
towns. His first and most earnest desire was that 
every child, no matter how poor the parents were, 
should be trained to read, write, and cipher. If it 
were objected that the parents need their services 
in order to gain a living, he replies that his idea 
is that boys should spend a few hours a day at 
school, and the rest of the day they can be at 
home learning their trade, and thus study and work 
will go hand in hand and mutually help each other. 
The real difficulty, he says, is the absence of any 
earnest desire to educate the young, and thus pro- 
vide accomplished citizens to aid and benefit man- 
kind. Remember, he says, that "the devil much 
prefers blockheads and drones." But while Luther 
pled for a minimum of education for every child, he 
insisted that all children of bright understandings 
should have very much more. He shows how good 
high schools for girls as well as for boys can be 
established by using many needless ecclesiastical 
foundations for the purpose. Then he urges the 



236 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Town Councils to establish good libraries, for they 
give the best education. 

This extensive reorganisation of education which 
took in as one whole the training of the youth of the 
Fatherland from the poorest village schools up to the 
universities was more to Luther than a "devout 
imagination." He produced it in actual life wherever 
he could. He encouraged the Town Council of Witten- 
berg to establish a school for girls, and himself invited 
Else von Kanitz to be the schoolmistress. " You shall 
be in my house," he wrote (2nd May 1527), " and at my 
table, so that you may be free from danger and cares ; 
so I beg you not to refuse me." One result of the 
first Saxon Visitation was a Girls' School at Grimma, 
and Magdalena von Staupitz, sister or niece (I cannot 
make out which) of Luther's old convent superior, 
went there as schoolmistress. Luther received funds 
for the institution of bursaries for poor students from 
well-to-do ladies and gentlemen Frau Dorothea 
Jorger, with her five hundred gulden, being the first. 
The Counts Mansf eld could think of no more pleasing 
present to Luther than the foundation of a high school 
in the town where his parents lived. He went to open 
it just before the Peasants' War broke out. Not to 
multiply proofs, it will be found that in almost every 
one of the numerous ordinances for the organisation 
of the Evangelical Church in Germany which Eichter 
has collected there is distinct and earnest provision 
made for the godly upbringing of the youth in common 
schools, which are regarded as essential to the well- 
being of the Church and of the State. 

For all these reasons Luther has been usually re- 
garded as the founder of the modern school and 



EDUCATIONAL REFORM 237 

university of Germany. Yet many have called in 
question the correctness of the common opinion. The 
growl of Erasmus is well known : " Ubi Lutheranis- 
mus, ibi literarum interitus " ; Dollinger, Janssen, and 
Paulsen all declare that the Reformation movement, 
and with it the influence of Luther, was hostile to 
learning ; they bring forward facts witnessing to the 
existence of high schools in Germany long before 
Luther's time, and to the decay of the high schools and 
universities in the years following 1520. It is un- 
doubted that there were schools and provisions for 
learning during the Middle Ages in Germany. There 
were even a few schools for girls supported by some of 
the larger towns. Frankfort-on-the-Maine and other 
German cities had schools for girls, taught by mis- 
tresses who were not nuns, early in the fifteenth 
century. In some convents the education of girls was 
carried on as far as the state of learning permitted. 
In 1260 the little Saxon convent of Rodoardesdorf, 
afterwards Helfte, was almost a mediaeval "Girton" 
under its bright young abbess, Gertrude of Hackeborn. 
Pages could be filled with the evidence of school and 
student life during the Middle Ages. It is also true 
that in the earlier years of the Reformation movement 
attendance at schools and at many universities was 
sadly diminished. The excitement of the times and 
anxiety for the future easily accounts for this. Noble- 
men who sent their sons to high school and university 
in the expectation of placing them afterwards in some 
wealthy religious foundation, and the richest positions 
were almost all reserved for men of noble birth, 
burghers who looked to place their sons in the same 
way, poor people, peasants, and artisans who had once 



238 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

hoped to get their children off their hands in monastery 
or village parsonage, saw the possibility of all these 
benefices being abolished. These fears kept crowds 
back who some years earlier would have all been 
students. Besides, the Lutheran movement had kindled 
undoubtedly a distaste for the old learning of the 
schoolmen, with its pedantic, long-winded arguments 
about trifles, and Humanism was beginning to descend 
to much trifling also. Motives which appealed to the 
enthusiastic and to the sordid kept men back from 
devoting themselves to a student life. Luther was as 
keenly alive to all this as his future critics. " People 
are saying," he writes, " Why should we educate our 
children if they are not to earn a living by becoming 
priests and monks and nuns ? " He says that he per- 
ceives that schools are deteriorating throughout 
Germany, and that the universities are becoming 
weak. The thing was inevitable. It took place every- 
where. The old incentives were disappearing, and the 
new had not time to root themselves in the minds of 
the people. 

Yet the popular opinion is right after all, and it is 
to Luther that Germany owes its splendid educational 
system in its roots and in its conception. For he was 
the first to plead for a universal education for an 
education of the whole people, without regard to class 
or special life-work. His firmest thought was that no 
village should be without its school. He inspired the 
German people with the desire to give their children 
as good an education as possible, and, after all, the 
creation of a living desire that can grow and make 
itself felt is the root of the matter. Once called into 
being, the desire, strengthened by the feeling that it 



EDUCATIONAL REFORM 239 

was a holy thing, something owed to God, was more 
important to the German land than a scholastic organ- 
isation apart from the desire. The learned authors of 
the exhaustive History of Q-erman Education from its 
Beginnings to our Time, edited by Dr. Schmid, claim 
that Germany owes almost all that is best in its modern 
education to the efforts of Luther. He freed it from 
the crushing weight of scholastic authority. He in- 
sisted on making the lessons interesting, and prepared 
an edition of JUsop's Fables, to be used as a reading 
book ; he invented the art of pictorial illustration, and 
teaching by the eye as well as by the ear ; and he bound 
the whole educational system together, from the lowest 
village schools up to the universities. 

So the foundations of the Evangelical Church were 
laid, and the work of the Reformation was consolidated. 
It was done in face of enormous difficulties, and before 
a definite legal status had been gained. Oversight 
and discipline, two things absolutely required, were 
revived, and that in a much more thoroughgoing 
fashion than the medieval Church in the fifteenth and 
sixteenth centuries had been able to accomplish. The 
progress was slow. It could not but be slow. Sancti- 
fication is always a work, whether in a man or in 
a community. By degrees the rawness of the new 
congregations, the evil habits of the old pastors, the 
carelessness and hostility of the people, the greed of 
the nobles and of the commons, were surmounted, 
and a moral regeneration set in. It is scarcely possible 
to dwell on this, for that would involve a discussion 
and proof of the degrading immoralities which dis- 
graced German life, of noble and burgher alike, in the 
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The subject is not & 



240 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

pleasant one ; but a careful examination of the chron- 
icles of the German towns during the latter half of the 
fifteenth and the first quarter of the sixteenth century 
reveal a state of things which is usually passed over 
by history. All this the Lutheran Church set itself to 
overcome, and it largely succeeded. 

4. LUTHER AND ZWINGLI 

Before passing from this subject it may be well to 
remember that the Lutheran movement did not include 
a large number of those who separated from the Eoman 
Church. Indeed, in the second generation a very 
large portion of the German Reformation abandoned 
the strictly Lutheran type of doctrine and organisation, 
and ranged itself under the Reformed Church. This 
did not take place until after Luther's death. But 
his positive refusal to admit brotherly relations with 
Zwingli and the Swiss was largely responsible for 
it, and it is necessary to say something about the 
dispute. 

What divided Luther from Zwingli was the question 
of the presence of Christ in the Sacrament of the 
Lord's Supper. Looking at the whole controversy 
now, with all the treatises of the controversialists 
before us, we can see that there was nothing contra- 
dictory between the opinions of Zwingli and those of 
Luther. The opposed views were, in fact, comple- 
mentary, and the pronounced ideas of each were im- 
plicitly, though not expressly, held by the other. 
Luther and Zwingli approached the subject from two 
different points of view, and in debate they neither 
understood nor were exactly facing each other. 



LUTHER AND ZWINGLI 241 

The whole Christian Church has found three great 
ideas embodied in the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper 
the thoughts of Proclamation, Commemoration, and 
Communion or Participation, and the rite has always 
been held to have a close relation to the death of Christ 
on the Cross for His people. We proclaim the death 
and what it means, we commemorate the sacrifice, we 
participate in or have communion with the Crucified 
Christ. This last thought of " participation " has 
always carried the mind of the Christian Church, not 
away from the death of Christ, but through it to the 
Living Eisen Saviour, with whom there is fellowship 
through the Holy Spirit. 

The mediaeval Church insisted that this sacramental 
Commemoration and Participation, with all the spiritual 
blessings it involved, was in the hands of the priest- 
hood to give or to withhold. They alone could bring 
the Crucified and Eisen Christ into such a relation 
to the worshippers as made the sacramental Com- 
memoration and Participation possible things. Out 
of this claim there grew the mediaeval theory of 
Transubstantiation, It may also be said that the 
mediaeval Church represented the thoughts of Com- 
memoration and Participation under two distinct uses 
of the sacrament as a Mass, where the priest alone 
communicates, and as the Eucharist, where the faith- 
ful laity join. Or if the expression be too strong it 
may at least be said that the distinction referred 
to in the cultiis gave rise to two separate ways of 
looking at and objecting to the mediaeval doctrine 
each of which connected itself instinctively with the 
two thoughts of Commemoration and Participation. 

Zwmgli approached the mediaeval doctrine by the 
16 



242 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

first and Luther by tlie second of those two separate 
paths. 

What repelled Zwlngli was the fact that the 
mediaeval Church had thrust aside the thought of 
Commemoration and put the thought of Repetition 
In its place. For the mediaeval priest claimed 
that he, in virtue of miraculous powers given in 
ordination, could change the bread and wine before 
him into the actual and physical body and blood of 
Jesus, and when this was done, that he could re- 
produce the agony of the Cross by crushing with his 
teeth. Whenever Zwingli thought of the medieval 
doctrine of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, he saw 
with horror a priest who claimed that he was repeat- 
ing the agony of the Cross by manducating the Host. 
The thing was, to his mind, horribly profane. Besides, 
it dishonoured the one great Sacrifice; and it de- 
parted from the words of Jesus, which imply Com- 
memoration but not Eepetition. The commemoration 
was of the death of Jesus, and the participation- a 
sharing in the Atonement which that death effected. 
But Atonement is appropriated by faith. Thus we 
get Zwingli's second thought, that we receive Christ 
by faith. Commemoration instead of repetition, 
faith instead of eating with the mouth; these are 
Zwingli's two great thoughts. But it must also be 
remembered that Zwingli held that faith always 
meant spiritual union or contact with Christ. Thus 
there is a Real Presence of Christ in the sacrament 
brought about by faith. Then when his theory was 
complete, and not till then, he gave the explanation 
of the words of the Institution, that "is" means 
"signifies/' 



LUTHER AND ZWINGLI 243 

What repelled Luther in the mediaeval doctrine was 
the way in which it trampled upon the scriptural 
thought of the spiritual priesthood of all believers. 
He protested against Transubstantiation and private 
Masses because they were the most flagrant instances 
of that contempt. When he first began to write on 
the subject (1519), it was to insist that the "cup" 
should be given to the laity. In the sermon there 
is an interesting statement, which sheds a light on 
Luther's whole position, to the effect that in the 
sacrament "the communicant is so united to Christ 
and His saints, that Christ's life and sufferings and 
the lives and sufferings of the saints become his." 
No one held more strongly than Luther that the 
Atonement was made by our Lord, and by Him 
alone. Therefore Luther cannot be thinking of the 
Atonement when he speaks of union with our Lord 
and Sis saints. He thinks that the main thing in 
the sacrament is that it gives real companionship 
with Jesus, such fellowship as His disciples and saints 
had. There must be a reference to the death of 
Christ, for apart from the death there is no com- 
panionship possible, but the reference is indirect and 
through the thought of the fellowship. In the sacra- 
ment we touch Christ as His disciples might have 
touched Him when He walked on the earth, and as His 
glorified saints touch Him now. This reference to 
the saints also shows us that Luther saw in the 
sacrament the presence, not of the crucified, but of 
the glorified body of Christ. Luther, then, believed 
that the primary use of the sacrament was to give 
believing communicants a direct and immediate com- 
munion with the Living Risen Christ, such as His 



244. LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

saints have in the life of glory. This required a 
presence (and Luther thought a loccd presence) of 
the glorified body of Christ in the sacrament; the 
communicant must be in contact with it. But com- 
munion with the Living Risen Christ implies the 
appropriation of the death of Christ, and of the 
Atonement won by His death. Finally, the local 
presence of Jesus in the elements need not involve 
any special miracle; for in virtue of the ubiquity of 
the glorified body of Christ it is present every- 
where, and is therefore naturally in the elements. 
This natural Presence becomes a sacramental Presence 
because of the promise of God which is attached 
to the reverent and believing participation of the 
sacrament. 

Each theologian held implicitly what the other 
stated explicitly; Zwingli put the relation to the 
death of Christ in the foreground, but implicitly 
admitted the relation to the Risen Christ ; Luther 
put the fellowship with the Risen Christ in the fore- 
ground, but admitted the reference to the Crucified 
Christ. 

The one had a very shallow exegesis to help him, 
and the other a scholastic theory of space; and 
naturally, but unfortunately, when controversy arose, 
the disputants attacked the weakest part of his 
opponent's theory Luther, Zwingli's exegesis, and 
Zwingli, Luther's scholastic theory of space. 

The most notable attempt to bring about an under- 
standing was made by Philip of Hesse at the 
Marburg Conference in 1529, where Zwingli and 
(Ecolampadius (real name Heusgen, transformed into 
Hausschein or House Lamp, and then turned into 



LUTHER AND ZWINGLI 245 

Greek) represented tlie Swiss and Luther and Mel- 
anchthon the Saxons. The Conference did not "bring 
about agreement on the doctrine of the sacrament, 
but it proved that on all other points of the Christian 
faith the Reformed theologians were completely at 
one. Yet Luther refused to give Zwingli his hand. 
Long afterwards Zwingli's followers accepted (?al\dn's 
theory, which combined the doctrines ; Luther de- 
clared himself satisfied with it, and Calvin signed 
the Augsburg Confession. After Luther's death, his 
followers, more Lutheran than himself, refused the 
compromise, and thus the Reformation was split into 
two. 



CHAPTEE XI 

THE LAST YEABS OF LUTHER'S LIFE 

1. LTJTHEB'S POLITICAL INFLUENCE 

THE last years of Luther's life were spent amid in- 
cessant labours, and amid continual ill-health. He had 
always spent himself when work for the "evangel" 
was to be done, and had it not been for the iron con- 
stitution he had inherited from his parents he could 
never have gone through the labours he thought him- 
self forced to undertake. He was twice at death's 
door. At Schmalkald, where he went in February 1537 
to attend a meeting of theologians to discuss the pro- 
priety of accepting the proposal to convene a General 
Council, he had a terrible attack of "stone." He 
preached nevertheless, and the malady increased. He 
had a week of intense pain, his body swelled, he was 
constantly sick, everyone feared and he hoped for 
death. He was far from wife and children, and was 
anxious about them. The Elector promised to care 
for them " as his own." To make matters worse the 
necessary medical appliances were not to be had at 
Schmalkald, and it was resolved, ill as he was, to 
remove him. The journey was a prolonged torture, 
but the jolting of the carriage seems to have effected 

246 



LAST YEARS OF LUTHER'S LIFE 247 

vhat the doctors had "been unable to do. As soon as 
the pain left him he wrote to his wife, to remove her 
anxieties. The journey was accomplished by slow 
stages. At Weimar, his niece Lena Kaufmann met 
him from Wittenberg ; he got safely back to his Kaethe 
and his home, where good nursing brought him round 
again. In 1541 the terrible malady returned, and his 
life was again despaired of; but careful nursing 
restored him. These attacks occurred at times of very 
trying anxieties. His life was spared, but he was 
constantly an invalid, and the misused body revenged 
itself in continual pain. He told his friends during 
this last illness that his brain was like a knife worn to 
the heft and incapable of cutting. His father had 
died in 1530, when Luther was detained at Coburg; 
his mother lived a year longer, and died on 30th June 
1531. Luther wrote a touching letter to her, which 
she received on her deathbed. It ends: "All your 
children and my Kate pray for you. Some weep ; the 
younger eat and say, ' Grandmother is very ill/ " One 
can see little Hans and baby Lena, wagging their small 
heads, and repeating the words between the mouthf uls, 
It was characteristic of Luther to describe what he 
saw, and to think in pictures. This breaks forth even 
in the most abstract questions. When he discusses the 
doctrine of Christian perfection in the Augsburg Con- 
fession, he has a God-fearing German burgher and a 
barefooted friar in his eye. u Christian perfection," 
he says 3 " is this, to fear God sincerely, and to have 
great faith, and to trust assuredly that God is pacified 
towards us for Christ's sake, to ask and certainly to 
expect help from God in all our affairs according to our 
calling, and outwardly to do good works in our voca- 



248 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

tion. In these things doth true perfection and the 
true worship of God consist. It doth not consist in 
celibacy, in begging, and in wearing dirty clothes." 
When he expounds the meaning of " Give us this day 
our daily bread," he calls up the picture of a well-fed, 
warmly clothed German child trudging to school in a 
stout pair of shoes to keep its small feet dry. His 
thoughts naturally shaped themselves in pictures; and 
he was careful to cultivate this gift. German art had 
been changing since the beginning of the sixteenth 
century. It had begun the change by tracing sketches 
from common life round the margins of its copper- 
plates or woodcuts of Holy Families, or of scenes from 
the Bible and from the lives of the saints. Then, 
emboldened, it had plunged into the delineation of all 
kinds of ordinary, commonplace life. The revolution 
in religion said that all human life, even the most 
commonplace, could be sacred ; and the contemporary 
revolution in art discovered the picturesque in the life 
of the people. We have from Albert Diirer, Hans 
Burgmaier, the brothers Beham, Lucas Oranach, and 
from many another artist, pictures of the life of the 
tioaes, in the castles of the nobles, in the streets of the 
cities, and in the villages of the peasants. Ntirnberg 
was the great centre of this effort to bring art into 
common life. In 1535 we find Luther writing to his 
friend Wencelas Link to collect for him all the pictures 
of the common German life, the rhymes, the ballads, 
and the stories that had been published there, because 
he wished to familiarise himself thoroughly with the 
genuine language and life of the people. 

The last years of Luther's life brought him no new 
tasks; they were ceaselessly occupied in the same 



LAST YEARS OF LUTHER'S LIFE 249 

kind of work which had come upon him after the Diet 
of Augsburg. He was the confidential adviser of a large 
number of the German princes. He was occupied with 
attempts to unite more firmly together the whole 
Evangelical movement. He was also on the watch 
against the attempt of the Koman Curia to recover its 
old power over Germany. 

Luther's intimacy with his own Elector helped to 
give him the place accorded to him by other German 
princes. Luther lived under three Electors of Saxony 
Frederic the Wise, who had been offered the Empire, 
and had declined; John, his brother; and John 
Frederic, son of Elector John and nephew of Elector 
Frederic, Frederic, although he had been Luther's 
protector in all the early stormy times, although he 
lived continually in the same town, frequently heard 
Luther preach, and had corresponded with him, 
never had any personal intercourse with the Eef ormer. 
He sent for Luther, when he was on his deathbed 
during the storm of the Peasants' War, but Luther did 
not reach the castle in time to see the old lord alive. 

His brother John, long before Frederic's death, had 
been much more intimate with Luther, had sent for 
him to preach at Weimar, when he was only Duke 
John, and was fond of consulting him personally. 
After he became Elector, the intimacy between the 
Augustinian convent and the castle was continuous, and 
Luther was constantly summoned to attend the prince 
at distant castles when things of importance were being 
debated. He died in 1532, just after the conclusion of 
the Treaty of the Peace of Niirnberg, which he had 
done so much to bring about. He was a man of 
straightforward piety and of great benevolence. John 



250 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

tlie Stedfast was his name in that age -of sobriquets. 
Poor man ! he grew to be so fat in his latter days that 
his people had to hoist him on the back of his horse 
by a sort of windlass ! 

John Frederic, his son and successor (born in 1503), 
was twenty years younger than Luther, and we can 
see that from his boyhood the Reformer had been 
his hero. He was fourteen years old when Luther 
published the Theses, eighteen when Luther stood 
forth at Worms. The Passional Christi et Anti- 
cliristi had taken great hold on his young mind, and 
he was intensely pleased that he was one of the few 
who knew who the author was. When he became 
Elector, he wished Luther to come and live constantly 
with him in the castle and dine daily at his table. He 
wrote to him continually in terms of the greatest 
familiarity, and could never make enough of him. 
His wife, Sibylla of Cleves, was full of loving admira- 
tion of the household in the Augustinian convent. 
Her portrait by Cranach gives one the idea of a tall 
lady with a clever, demure face, and eyes and mouth 
that are longing to laugh, only that must not be while 
one's portrait is being painted. She was the sister of 
that Anne of Cleves, the rather stout and large German 
lady who was too coarse-looking for such a delicate 
creature as Henry VIIL, and whom he called the 
"Flanders Mare. 3 ' It is curious to think how the 
sisters were separated. The one coming over to 
England to share a throne, and finding instead a quiet 
life in a pleasant English house at Burley-on-the-Hill ; 
the other in the heart of the busiest part of Germany, 
a true and noble wife, sharing her husband's good 
fortunes, counselling wisely him and his, and in the 



LAST YEARS OF LUTHER'S LIFE 251 

evening of his days, when he lost the Electorate and 
almost lost life, sharing in faithfullest fashion every 
hardship he had to undergo. Her letters to Luther 
are full of bright feminine humour and sincere 
womanly piety. 

Next to his own Elector, Luther's most intimate 
friends among the princes were Wolfgang of Anhalt 
and his three nephews, the lords of Anhalt-Dessau. 
The history of the three lads is interesting, if there 
was time to tell it. They had three "bitter supporters 
of the papacy for their guardians, and George, the 
eldest, intended for the Church, had been made a canon 
of Merseberg when he was eleven years old. One 
after another they sought the friendship of Luther, 
and became strong Protestants. They had a visitation 
of their small territories made after the Saxon fashion, 
and George, as a clergyman, insisted on conducting it. 

In 1539 Duke George of Saxony's brother, Henry, 
succeeded to Albertine Saxony, and, with the joyful 
consent of his subjects, pronounced for the Evangelical 
faith. Nothing would content him but that Luther 
should come to Leipzig to preside clerically at such an 
auspicious event. He had even to preach in the great 
hall of the castle, where just twenty years before he 
had stood confronting Eck in the famous Disputation, 
and had heard Duke George declare that his opinions 
were pestilential. In the afternoon he preached in 
one of the town churches, where, on the same occasion, 
the priests had swept the elements off the altar into 
the sacristy, lest the presence of such a heretic would 
profane them. , 

Perhaps the most romantic story belongs to Electoral 
Brandenburg. The Elector, Joachim I., brother of 



252 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

Albert of Mainz, who farmed the Indulgence, was a 
strict supporter of the Emperor and the Edict of 
Worms. He died praying his son, with tears it was 
said, to remain in the old religion the son being then 
committed to the Protestant^, side. His wife, Eliza- 
beth, was secretly inclined to the Evangelical faith. 
She longed to partake of the Lord's Supper according 
to the Evangelical rites, and succeeded, but was not 
able to keep the matter from her husband's knowledge. 
Whereupon he threatened to " wall her up." The poor 
lady managed to escape, and made a desperate flight 
to Saxony, to Torgau first, and then to the Castle of 
Lichtenstein. There she corresponded regularly with 
Luther, and had him to stay with her when he 
travelled that way. But she felt that she must know 
Catherine, for Luther was always speaking about his 
wife, especially to lady friends and correspondents. 
The royal lady, therefore, came to Wittenberg, and 
spent three months with Catherine in the Luther 
household. Her children all sympathised with her, 
the sons at least, and thus Brandenburg, which is 
to-day Prussia, became Protestant. Elizabeth, a king's 
daughter and an Electress, must have enjoyed the 
Luther family household, with all its bustle, or the 
visit would have been somewhat shorter. The young 
Elector, Joachim u., and his brother John had always 
afterwards an immense esteem for Luther. Their 
people, too, had been secretly longing for the Evan- 
gelical worship, and rejoiced at the change. Electress 
Elizabeth went back to Brandenburg after her son's 
accession, and ended her days peacefully at Berlin. 

Princely correspondence was not always pleasant, 
however, even when it came from men who were strong 



THE LANDGRAVE'S BIGAMY 253 

and hearty for the Evangelical faith. Philip of Hesse, 
the brightest, boldest, and by far the most capable of 
all the Evangelical princes, had an unhappy home-life. 
He had married, when barely nineteen, a daughter of 
Duke George of Saxony, and had been, in that age of 
sexual licence, a faithful husband to her, in all out- 
ward respects at least. We have not the lady's story, 
it must be remembered ; but the husband's is that she 
was of morose temper, that she had a disagreeable 
disease, and that she was given to drink. Latterly he 
declared that married life with her was impossible, 
and that the terms on which he was with her prevented 
him going to the Lord's Table and fretted his whole 
inner life. 

It has been suggested that the statements of some of 
the wilder Anabaptists, justifying polygamy from Old 
Testament example, first made him think of the possi- 
bility of taking a second wife. Be had thought of 
divorce ; but he knew that the strong opinions which 
Luther had on the subject of Henry vni.'s divorce 
made it impossible for him to get the Evangelical 
theologians to consent to such a thing. Brooding over 
the whole matter, he convinced himself that there were 
cases in which a man might take two wives, and that 
his was a case in point. He got no encouragement, 
rather dissuasion, at first. He thought himself very 
hardly treated, and declared, truly enough, that had he 
been a B/omanist he could easily have got a dispensa- 
tion to keep a concubine. We have on record the 
yearly sums some bishops made in the beginning of 
the sixteenth century by the granting of such dis- 
pensations. He entrenched himself in the idea that 
polygamy was permitted under the Old Testament, 



254 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

and was not positively forbidden under the New, and 
that matrimony was not part of the ceremonial law of 
the Old Testament, which was manifestly done away 
with by the coming of Christ. 

Matters at last came to a crisis. Philip had fallen 
in love with a young lady, Margarethe von der Saal, 
whom he met when on a visit to his sister, the Duchess 
Elizabeth, at Kochlitz, The young lady, who was 
some distant relation of Luther's wife, very properly 
refused to have anything to do with him unless she 
could be legally married to him ; and her mother's idea 
of a legal marriage was one at which Bucer, the 
renowned Strassburg theologian, Luther, Melanchthon, 
or at least two of them, would be present as witnesses, 
with envoys from John Frederic the Elector, and 
Maurice, now Duke of Saxony. These two princes 
were respectively the second cousin and the nephew of 
Philip's wife. Philip prepared his own case, recapitulat- 
ing the arguments given above, adding some precedents 
he had discovered of princes being allowed to take a 
second wife, and ending with the compliment that the 
lady was a relation of Catherine von Bora, and that 
part of his anticipated joy in the marriage was that it 
would make him a connection of Luther's by marriage. 
He won over Martin Bucer to his side, and indeed the 
blame attaching to the Evangelical theologians must 
be laid most heavily on Bucer's shoulders. There is 
no doubt that this action of Philip was a profound 
grief to Luther. The Landgrave had been bringing 
the matter before him for thirteen years with increas- 
ing insistence. It can scarcely be said that Luther's 
answer to the question placed before him by the 
Landgrave was due to the fear of displeasing a leading 



THE LANDGRAVE'S BIGAMY 255 

Evangelical prince. For it is clear that the proposed 
second marriage must have been, and was, looked upon 
as a personal affront by young Maurice of Saxony, 
whose ability and power everyone recognised. The 
slight put upon his aunt was an insult to himself and 
to the family of which he was the head. Luther also 
knew that his own Elector not only felt that his 
friend's proposal was against the fundamental laws of 
Christian morals, but regarded it as an affront upon 
the House of Saxony. Then Luther, at the very time 
when the question was finally placed before him by the 
Margrave, was deeply anxious about the exaggerated 
reports he had heard of the Anabaptists encouraging 
polygamy, and was very much afraid lest such views 
might spread among the peasantry, who, he said, had 
already very lax ideas about the sanctity of the 
marriage tie. These things ought to be stated, not to 
palliate Luther's conduct, for they rather increase the 
error, but for the purpose of having the whole situa- 
tion before us. 

The official document sent by Luther, Melanchthon, 
and Bucer is very sad reading. It may be summar- 
ised thus : According to the original commandment 
of God, marriage is between one man and one woman, 
and the twain shall become one flesh, and this original 
precept has been confirmed by our Lord ; but sin brought 
it about that first Lamech, then the heathen, and then 
Abraham took more than one wife, and this was per- 
mitted by the law. We are now living under the gospel, 
which does not give prescribed rules for the regulation 
of the external life, and it has not expressly prohibited 
bigamy. The existing law of the land has gone back 
to the original requirement of God, and the plain duty 



256 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

of the pastorate is to insist on that original command- 
ment of God, and to denounce bigamy in every way. 
Nevertheless the pastorate, in individual cases of the 
direst need and to prevent worse, may sanction bigamy 
in a purely exceptional way; such a bigamous mar- 
riage is a true marriage (the necessity being proved) 
in the sight of God and of conscience, but it is not 
a true marriage with reference to public law or 
custom. Therefore such a marriage ought to be kept 
secret, and the dispensation which is given for it 
ought to be kept under the seal of confession. If it 
be made known, the dispensation becomes eo ipso in- 
valid, and the marriage becomes mere concubinage. 
This is a short summary of the document which 
caused the scandal. It may be well to ask whether 
Luther had any principle before him when he drafted 
and signed this extraordinary paper? He had, and 
this paper is the worst instance or outcome of a 
mode of thinking, from which he never completely 
divested himself. With all his reverence for the Word 
of God he could never avoid giving the traditions 
of the Church a certain place beside the Scripture. 
We find this thought coming continually forward, 
sometimes quite unconsciously, in much of his reason- 
ings about institutions and in doctrines. He applied 
that principle here. The medieval Church had been 
accustomed to insist that it possessed a power of dis- 
pensation; and Luther never altogether denied this. 
In this instance, notwithstanding his denunciations 
of the dispensations granted in matrimonial cases by 
the Roman Curia, he declared that the Church did 
possess this power of dispensation even to the length 
of tampering with a fundamental law of Christian 



THE LANDGRAVE'S BIGAMY 257 

society, provided it did not attack a positive scrip- 
tural ordinance to the contrary. If it had been 
pointed out to him that he was acting as the Roman 
Curia had done, he would probably have replied that 
the Curia took money for its dispensations and that 
the Evangelical Church did not, and that this fact 
made the two cases entirely dissimilar. 

However he reasoned with himself, he thoroughly 
repented of his action when it was too late. He was 
not present at the marriage, though Philip by a 
stratagem did secure poor doubting Melanchthon as 
a witness. 

Repentance, however, as Luther had often said, 
does not secure against the consequences of sin, and 
Luther was to feel this. Nor did Philip escape. 
Bigamy was a grave offence against the laws of the 
land. Serious talk arose about bringing Philip up 
before the Imperial Law Courts and punishing him. 
The Emperor ended this by declaring that poor Mar- 
garethe had never been married at all, and was simply 
Philip's concubine. The effect of the formal answer 
of Luther, Melanchthon, and Bucer was simply to 
deceive a poor maiden. The full consequences of the 
sin did not manifest themselves in Luther's lifetime, 
but the beginnings were not lacking. The confeder- 
acy of Protestant princes received a shock from which 
it never recovered; and Maurice of Saxony took his 
revenge on Philip when he suddenly deserted to the 
Emperor's side when the religious war broke out, 
as it did shortly after Luther's death. It must not 
be supposed that Evangelical theologians approved of 
Luther's conduct. Most of them disapproved strongly, 
and the remonstrances of some had the effect of induc- 



2j8 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

ing Melanchthon formally to withdraw his acquies- 
cence in the paper he had signed along with Luther 
and Bucer. Yet the Evangelical cause had to sustain 
the burden brought on it by this strange document. 



2. THE LAST SCENES 

During the last years of Luther's life attempts 
were unceasingly made to bring about a union, or at 
least a common understanding, between the North 
Germans, represented by Luther, and the South Ger- 
mans, at the head of whom stood Bucer of Strasburg. 
All throughout the conferences Luther endeavoured 
to be as friendly as his conscience permitted him ; but 
he would on no account have any personal relations 
with the Swiss. He could not divest his mind of the 
error that Zwingli's views on the Sacrament of the 
Supper were those of his old friend Carlstadt, whom 
he had never forgiven for his share in bringing on 
the deplorable Peasants 3 War. But the heroic death 
of Zwingli at Cappel in October 1531 seems to have 
softened all men's minds towards the Swiss, and plans 
for united action became more possible. The begin- 
nings of those conferences go back to the year 1529, 
when Evangelical princes and theologians met at 
Schmalkald to discuss the situation. The first League 
was formed at the same place in view of the threat 
of the Emperor to suppress the Reformation by force, 
a threat which appeared very real at the Diet of 
Augsburg. In this first League only the stricter 
Lutheran territories were included, notwithstanding 
the entreaties of Bucer that the South Germans 
might be allowed to join. In 1531 happier feel- 



PROTESTANT UNION 259 

ings prevailed, and a mutual defensive alliance 
was made between the members of the Schmalkald 
League and the South German cities, Luther making 
no objection. All the political side of the matter 
Luther contentedly left to the princes, saying that 
such matters did not belong to the province of the 
theologian. 

A few years of political union renewed the desire 
for a still closer approximation. The South German 
pastors pled for an interview with Luther and a dis- 
cussion of the theological situation. The meeting- 
place was to be Eisenach, but Luther was too ill to 
leave home when the time of conference came. All 
the delegates came on to Wittenberg. After some 
little talk, it was found that all were in agreement 
save on one point in the doctrine of the Sacrament 
of the Supper. It was the old story of the corporeal 
and local (the last being the test word) presence of the 
body of Christ in the bread in the Lord's Supper. 
This was a point to which Luther clung with all the 
tenacity of his nature, and that simply because he 
thought that the words of Scripture required him to 
do so. The theory of the local bodily presence had 
no connection in his mind with any sort of priestly 
miracle or sacrificial theory of the Supper. He ex- 
plained the possibility of such a local presence by a 
scholastic theory of corporeal presence, but he did not 
cling to his theory. All that he would not give up 
was the thought that the body of Christ was actually 
in the mouth of the partakers. He always maintained 
in its integrity the thought of the spiritual priesthood 
of all believers, and expressly applied the idea to the 
partaking in the Lord's Supper, "There," he says, 



260 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

" our priest or minister stands before the altar, having 
been duly and publicly called to his priestly function, 
he repeats publicly and distinctly Christ's words of 
the Institution, he takes the bread and the wine, and 
distributes it according to Christ's words, and we all 
kneel beside him and around him, men and women, 
young and old, master and servant, mistress and maid, 
all holy priests together, sanctified by the blood of 
Christ. And we are there in our priestly dignity. . . . 
We do not let the priest proclaim for himself the 
ordinance of Christ, but he is the mouthpiece of us 
all, and we all say it with him in our hearts, and with 
true faith in the Lamb of God, who feeds us with His 
body and blood/' 

The South Germans were able to content Luther so 
far that they agreed to differ on the one very small 
point of doctrine that remained over. This cheered 
Luther immensely. He preached to the little company 
of theologians a sermon of wonderful power and sweet- 
ness. The delegates all partook of the Holy Com- 
munion together, and then separated to their distant 
towns and districts. 

These peaceful conferences and the strength they 
manifested led some of the more spiritually minded 
Eoman Catholic divines to ask whether it was not pos- 
sible for all to come together; and conferences were 
held at various places with this aim. The most in- 
teresting was at Eatisbon, and one has only to read 
the conclusions come to to see how very nearly the 
best and deepest theology of the mediaeval Church 
approaches the Evangelical. The one thing which 
really separated the theologians of the two Confessions 
was the mediaeval theory of the priesthood and of 



THE LAST SCENES 261 

the miraculous powers which were believed to be con- 
ferred on priests in ordination. 

Year by year Luther was growing weaker, his 
attacks of illness became more frequent, and his bodily 
pains more severe and more continuous. One bit of 
work remained for him to do, and do it he would at all 
risks. The Counts of Mansfeld had quarrelled over 
the division of the properties which they had inherited. 
It was the division of the small things that had brought 
about the quarrel some trifling revenues and the pat- 
ronage of some churches. They had agreed to accept 
the mediation of Luther, and he gladly responded. 
" I would cheerfully lay down my bones in the grave 
if I could only reconcile my dear lords," he said. He 
left Wittenberg on the 23rd of January 1546, in 
bitterly cold weather. His wife and the Elector would 
fain have kept him at home. He was very weak and 
ill. Only six days before he started he described him- 
self as " old, spent, worn, weary, and cold, with but one 
eye to see with." His two sons, Martin and Paul, went 
with him, to see the old place where their father had 
been born. He travelled by slow stages, and was 
detained at Halle for three days, for thaw setting in 
had burst the ice on the river Saal, and great floods 
hindered any crossing. His poor wife was very anxious 
about him, and he wrote to her five times in the four- 
teen days, whimsical letters for the most part, but 
always telling her what he had to eat and drink, prob- 
ably in obedience to some wifely command. She must 
have scolded him for attempting the crossing before 
the river was low enough ; for he writes : " Thou must 
needs take the cares of God upon thee, as if He were 
not Almighty, and could not create ten Dr. Martins if 



262 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

one old Dr. Martin were drowned in the Saal," which 
pious reflection was not likely to bring much consola- 
tion to poor Catherine. When he reached Eisleben 
and Mansf eld he found the work harder than he had 
hoped, his chief difficulties being with the lawyers of 
the respective brothers. But at last all was amicably 
settled, and Luther accepted the fees of arbiter in the 
shape of endowments for village schools in the Mans- 
feld region. The young Counts made much of him, 
and on the 14th of February he wrote his last letter to 
his wife. On the outside is : " To my dear kind house- 
wife, Katharin Luther von Bora, at Wittenberg " ; and 
inside : " Grace and peace in the Lord, dear Kaethe ! We 
hope to come home again this week, if God will. . . . 
The young men are all in the best spirits, and make 
sleigh rides every day with fools' bells on their horses ; 
and the young ladies also ; and amuse themselves to- 
gether. ... I send thee some trout which the Countess 
Albrecht has presented to me. . . . Thy sons are still 
at Mansfeld. Jacob Luther will take good care of 
them. ... I have no ailments " a letter which must 
have cheered the anxious wife not a little. 

But he was never to see his Kaethe again. He had 
preached in Eisleben in the Church of St. Andrew on 
the 14th with great power and fervour, when sud- 
denly he said quietly, " This and much more is to 
be said about the gospel ; but I am too weak, and we 
will close here" These were his last words in the 
pulpit. On the 16th and 17th the deeds of the recon- 
ciliation were duly signed, and Luther's work was 
done. He was living in the house of the town-clerk 
of Eisleben a house whose front windows looked 
across the street to the church in which he had 



THE LAST SCENES 263 

been baptized sixty-three years ago. The end came 
somewhat suddenly. He was very ill on the 17th; 
all his friends waited on him that night his two 
boys, Justus Jonas, his host and hostess, and the 
Count and Countess Albrecht of Mansfeld. His suf- 
ferings were great, he uttered many ejaculations, and 
prayed aloud a short beautiful prayer. Jonas said 
early in the morning, stooping down to the ear of the 
dying man, " Eeverend Father, wilt thou stand by 
Christ and the doctrine thou hast preached ? " Luther 
roused himself to say " Yes." It was his last word. 
Twenty minutes later he passed away with a jdeep 
sigh ; poor wife Kaethe doubtless fast asleep at Witten- 
berg, far away, and dreaming of her husband's safe 
return, for he had promised her to be home that week. 
He died on Thursday, 18th February, between two 
and three in the morning, not a hundred yards from 
the place where he first saw the light so many years 
ago. 

The Elector, John Frederic, was resolved that his 
lifelong hero and friend should be laid in the grave at 
Wittenberg, and Catherine wished that also. So the 
Eisleben people had a service in the Church of St. 
Andrew, which lasted two days. On the 20th the 
funeral procession began its long march. The Counts 
of Mansfeld, with their wives, followed as far as the 
gates of Eisleben, with the magistrates and the whole 
population of the town. A troop of fifty light-armed 
horse, commanded by the sons of the Counts of Mans- 
feld, rode in front, and escorted the procession all the 
way to Wittenberg. Delegates from the Elector met 
the procession when it crossed the boundaries between 
Mansfeld and Electoral Saxony. The bells tolled in 



264 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

every village church steeple on the route, and at all 
the cross-roads were groups of weeping peasants. 

They laid him to rest in the Castle Church of 
Wittenberg, near the door, where he had nailed up 
the theses which had kindled such a conflagration. 

Luther is the man of his epoch but what man 
can ever adequately represent an epoch? The age 
is always richer than the greatest individual belonging 
to it, and brings into the world more than any man of 
the time can see, understand, or make his own. His 
epoch had elements of culture which Luther either 
deliberately rejected or was unable to appropriate. 
There were indestructible elements in the culture of 
men like Erasmus and Sir Thomas More which Luther 
could not appreciate. His age was fertile in economic 
suggestions which were a sealed book to Luther. He 
might have learned much even from such fanatics as 
Miinzer or the leaders in the Peasants' War. His in- 
ability to see the promise and potency of life which 
lay in the rude strivings of the " common man " marred 
his reforming work and still paralyses the European 
portions of the Church which bears his name. These 
and other defects may hawi nevertheless aided him in 
doing what he did accomplish. He was not too far 
before his contemporaries to prevent them seeing his 
footprints and following in his steps. Yet, as Harnack 
has remarked: "What an inexhaustible richness his 
personality included ! How it possessed in heroic shape 
all that the time most lacked a wealth of original 
intuition which outweighed all the elements of culture 
in which it was defective ; a certainty and boldness of 
vision which was of more value than any insistence on 



CRITICAL APPRECIATION 265 

free investigation; a power to lay hold on what was 
true and to conserve what would stand the test of time 
compared with which the merely critical faculty is 
pointless and feeble; above all a wonderful ability to 
give expression to strong feeling and true thought, to 
be a seer and a speaker, to persuade by the written 
and spoken word as the prophet must do." 

His conduct towards Zwingli and the Swiss, as also 
the strong language which he used towards opponents, 
reveals to later generations a fund of intolerance which 
is not what one expects from such a great man ; but it 
is manifest that his contemporaries did not and could 
not pass the same judgment. While he lived, he 
held the Protestant forces together in a manner that 
only a man of broad, wise tolerance could have done. 
His sincerity, his wise patience, his power of separat- 
ing what was essential from what was accidental are 
apparent when we think of what occurred after his 
death, when he was no longer there to hold in check 
the petty orthodoxies of the Amsdorfs and Osianders 
among his followers. It is the fate of most of the 
authors of revolutions to be devoured by the move- 
ment which they have called into being. Luther 
occasioned the greatest revolution which Western 
Europe has ever seen, and he ruled it till his death. 
History shows no other man with such kingly power, 

This king among men was also the most human. 
He had his fits of brooding melancholy, his times of 
jovial abandonment when one can hear his great jolly 
laugh and his rich sonorous voice carolling forth songs 
his moods of the softest tenderness with wife and 
children, and his abiding sense of companionship with 
the Eternal. What is especially Luther-like in this 



266 LUTHER AND THE REFORMATION 

last is that he carries this Holy of Holies about with 
him, and that it makes him companionable and not 
solitary. It makes him sympathise with beast and 
bird and tree and plant with the hares in the woods 
about the Wartburg, with the little bird in his garden, 
with the rooks who built their nests far below his 
window in the Coburg Castle, with the rose and the 
flax and the pine trees. The God, who is his closest 
companion, made them all. 

Luther, we may add, is the type of the best German 
manhood, in his patient industry, his enjoyment of 
quiet home-life among wife and bairns, his love of 
music, and his power to kindle when occasion arises 
into that slow-burning fire which consumes opposition. 
Dead these long centuries ago, he is still living in the 
German nation. For, as even Dollinger admits, " he has 
stamped the imperishable seal of his soul alike upon 
the German language and the German mind," so that 
"even those Germans, who abhor him most as the 
powerful heretic and the seducer of the nation, cannot 
escape ; they must discourse with his words, they must 
think with his thoughts," 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



THE HISTORY OF THE REFORMATION 



CHRONOLOGICAL 



Contemporary Events. 


Lutheran Church. 


Eeformed Church. 


1493-1519, Jan. 12, 


1517. Oct. 31, MABTIN LTJTHEB [5. 


ULRICH ZWINGLI : 5. 


Maximilian I. Em- 


1483, Nov. 10, at Eisleben ; 1497, 


1484, Jan. 1, at Wild- 


peror. At his death 


at Latin School at Magdeburg ; 


haus, in Canton of St. 


the Elector Frederick 


1498. at Eisenach (Frau Cotta, d. 


Gallen ; scholar of 


the Wise of Saxony 


1511); 1501, at Erfurt; 1505, 


Henry Wolflm (Lupu- 


(1480-1525), viceroy. 


Master of Arts ; July 17, entered 


lus) at Berne; of 


1499-1535. Elector 


the Augustinian Cloister at Er- 


Thomas Wyttenbach 


Joachim I. (Nestor) 


furt ; 1518, Professor at Witten- 


at Basel ; 1499, student 


of Brandenburg. 
1500 - 1539. Duke 


berg; 1511,' at Borne; 1512, Oct. 
19, Dr. of Theology] nailed 95 


of Joachim Vadianus 
at Vienna; 1506, M. A.; 


George of Saxony. 
1509 - 1547. Henry 


theses against the abuse of in- 
dulgences on the door of the 


1506 - 16, pastor at 
Glarus ; 1516 - 18, 


Yin. of England. 
1515-1547. Francis I. 


Castle Church at Wittenberg. 
Counter - theses of John Tetzel, 


preacher at St. Mary's, 
Jtlinsiedeln. 


of France. 


composed by Conrad Wimpina. 




1518-1567. Philip the 
Magnanimous of 


1518. Silvester Mazzolini of Prierio: 
Dialogus in prcesumptuosas M. 


1518. Zwingli against 
the indulgence preach- 


Hesse (3. 1504), 


L. conclusions depotestate Papce', 
Luther's Resp. ad /Silv. Prier. 


ed by Bernardin Samp- 
son (Guardian of the 




April 26, Luther at Heidelberg 


Franciscan Cloister at 




Disputation. 


Milan). 




Aug. : Cited to appear at Borne. 


Dec. : Zwingli pastor 




Aug. 25, Melanchthon at Wit- 


in the Minster at 




tenberg. 


Zurich. 




Oct. 12-15, Luther at Augsburg 






before Card. Thomas Vio de 






Gaeta ; appeals a papa male in- 
formato ad melius informandum. 






Nov. : Luther, On the Sacra- 






ment of Penance. 




1519. June, Charles 


1519. Jan.: Luther's interview 


1519. Jan. 1, Zwingli 


V. (since 1516 King 


with Charles of Miltitz, papal 


delivers his first ser- 


of Spain) 1556, 


chamberlain at Altenburg ; Truce. 


mon in Zurich ; serniona 


Aug. 27, JUmperor of 


June 27-July 8, DISPUTATION 


on St. Matthew's Gos- 


Germany (d. 1558). 


AT LEIPZIG : (1) between Eck and 
Carlstadt, on the Doctrine of Free 


pel, Acts, and the 
Pauline Epistles; Be- 


1519-1566. Suliman I. 


Will; and (2) between Eck and 


formation sermons, 


Sultan. 


Luther, Deprimatu Papce. 


pointing out a clear 



SUMMARY 



Revolutionary Movements. 



Koman Catholic Church. 



Protestant Theology. 



1513, Max. 11-1521, Dec. 1. 
Leo x. 

1517. The Lateran Council 
grant to the Pope the 
tithes of all church pro- 
perty. 

Indulgence (the fifth be- 
tween 1500 and 1517) for 
the building of St. Peter's 
and for the Pope's private 
needs. 

Three indulgence com- 
missions granted for Ger- 
many, one farmed by 
Elector Archbishop of 
Mainz (consec, 1514), the 
Dominican John Tetzel (d. 
1519), his commissioner. 

Thomas Vio de Gaeta 
(Card. Cajetan): "The 
Catholic Church is the 
bond-slave of the Pope " ; 
asserts papal infallibility 
in the widest sense. 



1519, The Cortes of Aragon 
ask three Briefs (never sent) 
from Leo x. to restrain 
the Inquisition. Similarly 
fruitless applications made 
by the Estates of Aragon, 
Castile, and Catalonia to 
Charles v. in 1516. 



PHILIP MELAKCHTHON (L 1497, 
Feb. 16, at Bretten ; 1509-12, 
at Heidelberg; 1512-14, at 
Tubingen; 1514, M.A., 1514- 
18, teaches in Tiibingen ; 1518, 
Prof, of Greek at Witten- 
berg; Aug. 29, Introductory 
Lecture, De corrigendis 
adolesG&ntice studiis ; 1519, 
Sept. 19, Bach, of Theo- 
logy; d. 1560, April 19). 
Loci communes rerum Tfceo- 
logicarum., sen hypotyposes 
Theologicse, 1521 ; three edi- 
tions in 1521 ; edition of 1525 
modifies absolute predestina- 
tion; edition of 1535 recon- 
structs his theology; edition 
of 1543, Synergism. 



ZWINGLI : Commentarius de vera 
et falsa religion^ 1525 ; Fidei 
ratio ad Oarolum Impera- 
torem, 1530, July 3 ; Sermonis 
depromdentmDei Anamnema. 
1580; Christiana Fidei &x- 
jpositio, 1531. 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 



Lutheran Church. 



Eeformed Church, 



1519-1521 Fernando 
Cortez discovers and 
conquers Mexico. 



1520. Magellan sails 
round the world. 



1521-26. First war 

between Charles v. 

and Francis I. 

1525. Battle of Pavia, 

1526. Peace of Madrid. 



The controversy is no longer 
one about a point in scholastic 
theology; it involves the whole 
round of ecclesiastical principles. 

Break with the Eoman Chris- 
tendom. 

The doctrine of the Priesthood 
of all Believers. 

Christian freedom and the right 
of private judgment. 

Luther's sermons on the Sacra- 
ments of Repentance and Baptism, 
and on Excommunication. 

Demand for the celebration of 
the Lord's Supper under both 
kinds. 



1520. April : Ulrich v. Eutten (6. 
1488, April 21 ; d. 1523, Aug. 29) ; 
Dialogue : Yadiscus or the Roman 
Trinity; June 16, Bull of Excom- 
munication against 41 propositions 
of Luther ; 60 days for recanta- 
tion; Aug.: Luther, "To the 
Christian Nobles of the German 
Nation, on the Bettering of the 
Christian Estate" ; Oct. : De Cap- 
twitate J2cdes. Babylonic.; De 
liberate Christiana(of the freedom 
of a Christian man) ; Dec, 10, 
Papal Bull burnt. 

1521 April 17, 18, Luther at the 
Diet of Worms ; April 26, leaves 
Worms ; at the Wartburg, May 4- 
Mar. 3, 1522. [In Dec. begins 
translation of N.T.j t Tracts: On 
Penance, Against Private Masses, 
Against Clerical and Cloister 
Vows, The German Postffle.] 

May 26, Edict of Worms falsely 
antedated May 8. 

May 28, Imperial decree against 
Luther. 

June: Carlstadt against celi- 
bacy. 

Oct.: The Mass abolished at 



distinction between 
Biblical and Romanist 
Christianity; Humanist 
study of Scripture 
(Pauline Epistles), 



IN FRANCE, spread and 
preaching of Reformed 
doctrines through 
William Bri$onnet, 
Bishop of Meaur from 
1521. With him Le 
Fevre and Farel, 

1521. Cornelius Hoe'n, 
Dutch jurist, writes 
De JSuctwtffistia (The 
Lord's Supper purely 
symbolical) ; the doc- 
trine brought to Wit- 
tenberg and Zurich by 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



271 



Bevolutionary Movements. 


Roman Catholic Church. 


Protestant Theology. 




Romanist Theologians in the 






first period of the Refor- 


(a) Lutheran Theologians, 




mation. 






John Eck, Prof, of Theology 


George Spalatin: 5. 1484 at 




at Ingolstadt since 1510 ; 


Spalt, in the bishopric at 




&. 1486, in the Swabian 


Eichstadt; 1514, court chap- 




village of Eck; d. 1543. 


lain to Frederick the Wise; 






1525, Superintendent at Alten- 






burg; d. 1545. 




Jerome Eraser, court preacher 






to Duke George of Saxony ; 


Justus Jonas : 1. 1493, at Nord- 




d. 1527. 


hausen; 1521, Provost and 






Prof, at Wittenberg ; 1541-46, 






at Halle ; 1551, Superintend- 






ent at Eisfeld ; rf, 1555. 




John Cochlseus (Dobeneck), 






Dean at Frankfort-on- 


Nicholas of Amsdorf : I. 1483 ; 




the-Maine, Canonicus in 


since 1504 at Wittenberg; 




Mainz and Breslau; d. 


1524, at Magdeburg; 1528, at 




1552 ; Commentaria de 


Goslar; 1542-46, Bishop of 




actis et script'is M. Lutheri 


Naumburg; after 1550, at 




(1517-46); 1549, His- 


Eisenach ; d. 1565. 




tories Hussitarum, 








John Bugenhagen: 5. 1485; 




John Faber, 1518, Vicar- 
General at Constance ; 


from 1521 in Wittenberg; 
1522, pastor; 1536, General 




1529, Provost at Ofen; 


Superintendent there. 




1530, Bishop of Vienna; d. 






1561 ; 1523, Malleus hcere- 


Casper Cruciger : 1528-48, when 




ticorum. 


he died, Prof, at Wittenberg. 


1521.-The (Zwickau) 


1521. Henry vni. of Jtoig- 


Fred. Myconius, Franciscan at 


Prophets in Witten- 


lm&:Asserta,tiovii. Saora- 


Annaberg, then pastor in 


berg, Nicholas Storeh, 
Marcus Thomas Stiib- 


mentorum contra Lutherum 
(Defender of the Faith). 


Weimar ; 1524, Court preacher 
atGotha; d. 1546. 


nerj Martin Cellarins, 








April 15, Decree of the 


Paul Speratus : 1521, at Vienna, 


Andrew Bodenstein of 


Sorbonne condemning 


then at Iglau ; 1523, at Witten- 


Carlstadt: 1504, Prof. 


Luther's doctrines. 


berg (1524, "Salvation has 


in Wittenberg ; 1520, 




come to us ") ; 1524, in Konigs- 


at Copenhagen ; 1522, 
riots about images 


May 8, Edict of Charles 
v. (founded on Edict of 


berg ; 1529-51, when he died, 
Bishop of Pomerania in Marien- 


and vestments ; 1523- 


Worms) against the spread 


werder. 


24, in Orlanriinde ; 


of Keformation doctrines 




then excommunicated 


in the Netherlands. [1522, 


John Brcnz, 5. 1491) : 1520, 


in South Germany, 
East Friesland, Swit- 


the Augustinian cloister 
at Antwerp closed for 


Romanist preacher at Heidel- 
berg; 1522-46, Lutheran 


zerland ; d< Basel, 
1541. 


heresy.] 


preacher at Hall in Swabia; 
from 1563, provost at Stutt- 
gart ; d. 1570, Sept. 11. 



272 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 



Lutheran Church. 



Reformed Church. 



1523-33.-Frederick I. 
of Denmark. 

1523 - 60. Gustavus 
Vasa of Sweden. 



Wittenberg "by the Augustinian 
monks (Gabriel Didymus), 

Dec. : Carlstadt's innovations. 

Dec. 25, Lord's Supper in both 
kinds. 

Dec. 27, The Prophets in Wit- 
tenberg. 

1522. Feb.: Eiots in Wittenberg 
against images and pictures. 

Mar. 7, Luther back in Witten- 
berg. 

Mar. 9-16, Sermons against fan- 
aticism. 

July: Qontra Sewricum regem 
Anglice. 

Sept.: Translation of N.T. 
finished (whole Bible in 1534). 

Dec. : Diet at Niirnberg ; The 
Hundred Grievances of the Ger- 
man Estates, in answer to Hadrian 
vi. 's Brief of Nov. 25. 

1522-23. The Eeformation con- 
quers in Pomerania, Livonia, Sil- 
esia, Prussia, Mecklenburg; in 
East Friesland from 1519 ; 1523, 
in Frankfort -on -the -Maine, in 
HallinSwabiaj 1524, Ulm, Stras- 
burg, Bremen, Niirnberg. 

1523. July 1, Eenrjr Voes and 
John Esch (Augustinians), burnt 
at Brussels ; the first martyrs. 

Gustavus Vasa establishes the 
Eeformation in Sweden (Olaf and 
Lorenz Petersen, Lorenz Ander- 
sen). 

May 7, Sickingen slain ; revolt 
of nobles quelled by the princes. 

Luther : Of the Order of Public 
Worship ; Dec. : Formula Misses 
(Lord's Supper sub utrague}. 

1524. The first German Hymn* 
Jiook 

June-May 1525, THE PEASANTS' 
WAE; peasants slaughtered at 
Frankenliausen. 



John Rhodius, Presi- 
dent of the Brother 
House at Utrecht. 



1522.-Aprill6,Zwingli: 
Von Erkiesen und 
Fryheit der Spy sen \ 
Aug. : Apologetics 
Arcfateles, to the 
Bishop of Constance, 
- The Zwinglian theo- 
logy gradually be- 
comes the more power- 
ful in the Netherlands. 



1523. Jan. 29, Disputa- 
tion in Zurich between 
Zwingli and John 
Fabei, the Bishop's 
Vicar-General ; Zwing- 
li's 67 theses. 

Oct. 26, Disputation 
at Zurich about image- 
worship and the Mass. 

Nov. 17, Instruction 
of Zurich Council to 
pastors and preachers. 



1524. Thorough reform 
of church at Zurich; 
pictures taken down ; 
Friars' convents closed. 
Victory of the Ee- 
formation in Berne 
(Berchtholclt Holler, 
Nic. Manuel), Ap- 
penzellj Solothurn ; 
Eomanist League of 
the Forest Cantons at 
Lucerne. 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



273 



Revolutionary Movements. 



Roman Catholic Church. 



Protestant Theology. 



1523. Conrad Grebel, 
Felix Manz, and 
Stiimpf in Zurich, 
against Zwingli's 
State Church. 



1524. Disturbances in 
Stockholm ; Melchior 
Hoffmann. 



1525, Thomas Miinzer 
at Miihlhansen ; exe- 
cuted May 1525. 

Tract: Wider das 
ffeistlone smftlebende 
Meisth zu Witten- 
berg, 1522. 

Jan. : Else of the 
Anabaptiats ; Jiirg 
Blaurock, a monk 
from Chur. 

_ 



1522-23. -Sept. 14, Pope 
Hadrian VL (tutor to 
Charles v., Bishop of 
Utrecht), learned in the 
old learning; aspiration 
after a reform of the clergy 
through the hierarchy. 



In Spain, from 1520, 
circulation of Lutheran 
writings in Spanish trans- 
lations made at Antwerp, 



1523. Juan de Avila, "the 
Apostle of Andalusia," 
suffered persecution for 
Lutheran doctrine. 



1523-31 -Sept. 25, Pope 
Clement vn. (Julius 
Medici, natural son of 
Julian de Medici). 



1524. Cardinal Campeggio, 

Pope's Legate at the Diet 
of Niirnberg. 

League of South Ger- 
man Roman Catholic 
States at Regensburg (Fer- 
dinand of Austria, the 
Dukes of Bavaria, and the 
South German bishops). 
Terms : A certain measure 
of ecclesiastical reform, 
and alliance with the civil 
power ; but no further 
spread of the new doc- 
trines. 



(5) Zwinglian Theologians, 

John CEcolampadius (Heusgen), 
6, 1488 ; 1515, pastor at Basel ; 
1519, in Augsburg; 1522, 
Prof, and preacher at Basel; 
d, 1531, Nov. 21 



Leo Judgeus : 1523, curate in St. 
Peter's at Zurich ; &. 1482; d. 
1542. 



Oswald Myconius (Geisshiisler) : 
5, 1488 at Lucerne; 1532-d 
1552, Oct. 14, Antistes at Basel. 



Conrad Pellican (Ktirsner): 5. 
1478 ; 1493, Franciscan ; _from 
1502, Lector in Franciscan 
Cloister in Basel; 1527, at 
Zurich as Prof, of Hebrew ; d. 
1556. 



(c) Intermediate Theologians, 

Urbanus Khcgius: &. 1490, at 
Argau on the Bodensee ; 1512, 
Prof, at Ingolstadt; 1519, 
Priest at Constance ; 1520-22, 
Preacher in Augsburg; from 
1530, Eeformer in Brunswick, 
in the service of Duke Ernest ; 
, May 23. 



Ambrose Blaurer: &. 1492, at 
Constance ; 1534-38, Beformer 
of Wiirtemberg; to 1548, at 
Constance ; d. at Winterthur, 
1564. (1534, Stuttgart Con- 
cord.) 



274 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 


Lutheran Church. 


Eeformed Church. 


1525,-Albert of Bran- 


1525. Jan, : Luther: Against the 


1525. The Mass abolish- 


denburg (d. 1568); 


Heavenly Prophets. 


ed in Zurich ; public 


last Grand Master of 


May : Exhorts princes and peas- 


worship very simple 


theTeutonicKnights, 
changed the territory 


ants to keep the peace, with com- 
ments on the twelve articles. 


and in German lan- 
guage; Lord's Supper 


of the Order into the 


Then : Against the robber-murder- 


sub utrague. 


Dukedom of Prussia. 


ing Peasants. 


Zwingli's Commen. 




June 13, Marries Catherine von 


tary and first part of 




Bora. 


Zurich translation of 




Conservative tendency of 


Bible. (First complete 




Lutheran Eeformation; separa- 


edition 1531.) 




tion from more revolutionary 






elements, 




1525-32. ElectorJohn 


1525. Dec. : Luther, De Servo 


Zwingli's distinctive con- 


the Constant of Sax- 


Arbitrio against Erasmus, At*rpify 


fessional statement of 


ony (brother of Fred- 


de libero arbitrio, Sept. 1524. 


his doctrine of the 


erick the Wise). 




Lord's Supper. 






[Carlstadt publishes 






his theory of the Lord's 






Supper in South Ger- 


1526. Aug. 29: Lewis, 
king of Hungary and 
Bohemia, falls fight- 
ing at Mohacz against 


1526. May 4: League at Torgau 
between Philip of Hesse and John 
the Constant, joined in June at 
Magdeburg by other evangelical 


many; hixnxSs: This 
My Body, is the Body, 
etc.] 


the Turks, 


princes. 


Zwingli to Matth. Alber 






at Eeutlingen, 1524, 


His successor, 


June 26, League of North Ger- 


Nov. 16, Manducatio 


Ferdinand of Austria 


man Koman Catholic princes at 


spiritualis ; then in 


(Oct., chosen king 


Dessau. 


his commentary. 


of Bohemia) } has to 






make good his claims 




Against Zwingli ; Bugen- 


to Hungary against 




hagen. 


the Turks, 


June and July, DIET AT SPEIER. 






"In matters of religion each State 
shall live, govern, and behave itself, 


For Zwingli ; (Ecolampa- 
dius. 




as it shall answer to God and His 






Imperial Majesty." 


The Syngramma Suevi- 






cum, 1525 (at Hall), 






by Brenz, Schnepf, 






Griebler, etc,, later 




Oct. 20, Synod at Homberg; 
Hessian Church Order by Francis 


Calvin. 




Lambert (b. 1487, at Avignon; 
Franciscan ; fled 1522 to Switzer- 


Luther against Zwingli 
(1) in his preface to 




land; 1527, Prof, in Marburg; 


Agricola's translation 




d. 1530); independence of the 
Christian community, and strictest 


of the Syngramma 
Suevicum;(2)ml527, 




church discipline. 


"That the words. This 






is My Body, etc.'* 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



275 



Revolutionary Movements, 



Roman Catholic Church. 



Protestant Theology. 



Severe persecution. 
of the Anabaptists 
(Manz drowned at 
Zurich, 1527 ; Balth. 
Hubmaier burnt at 
Vienna, 1528 ; Hetzer 
beheaded at Con- 
stance, 1529). 



Mekhior Hofmann : 6, 
at Hall, in Swabia; 
1523j in Livonia ; 
1527, in Holstein; 
1529, at StrasLurg; 
thence to Friesland, 
where he joined the 
Baptists ; then in the 
Netherlands; 1533, 
in Strasburg ;&1540. 
(OrdmaviK Gfottes) : 
a strict milleuarian of 
the more spiritual 
kind ; spreads millen- 
arian views among 
the Baptists, 



1524. Peter Caraffa, Bishop 
of Theate [Pope Paul iv.] 
instituted the Order of 
the Theatini to stay the 
spread of the Reformation. 



1526. May 29: League at 
Cognac against Charles v. 
(the Pope, Francis I., 
Venice, and Milan). 



Martin Bucer: 5. 1491, at 
Schlettstadt ; 1505, Domin- 
ican; from 1524, pastor in 
Strasburg; 1549, under Ed- 
ward YI. in England, and Prof. 
at Cambridge ;d 1551, Feb. 
28. 

Wolfgang Fabricius Capito: 5. 
1478; 1515, in Basel; 1520, in 
Mainz: 1523-& 1541, Dec., 
Provost of St. Thomas, Stras- 
burg, 

(d) Zwinglian Confessions. 

1523. Jan. 29, Zwingli's 67 
Articles. 

Nov. 17, Instructions to the 
Council of Zurich. 



1530. July 3, Fidd Ratio ad 
Carolum V. (Zwingli, assented 
to byCEeolampadius and other 
Reformers). 



1530. Confmio Tetrapolitma 
(Strasburg, Constance, Lindau, 
Memmingen) ; Bucer, Capito, 
Hedio ; during the sitting of 
the Diet at Augsburg. 



1534. Confessio Basilimsis 
(Myconius) accepted by Mtihl- 
hausen in 1537, and called 
Conf. Mtihlfmiana, 



1536. Govfesrn Helvetica Prior 
(Basil, n.) drawn up at Basel 
(Jan. to March) by delegates 
from the Evangelical Cantons, 
and by their theologians, Bui- 
linger, Myconius, Grynjeus, 
Leo Judseus, etc. 



2 7 6 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 



Lutheran Church. 



Reformed Church. 



1527. Sack of Eome. 



1527-29. The second 
war between Charles 
v. and Francis I.; 
Peace of Cambrai, 
Aug. 1529. 

1527. Henry vm. of 

England seeks di- 
vorce from Catharine 
of Aragon (Charles 
v.'s aunt); 1529, 
Wolsey in disgrace ; 
Thomas More, chan- 
cellor. 



1529.-Sept.-Oct. 14, 
Suliman lays siege to 
Vienna, 



Luther. German Mass; Order of 
Public Worship. 



Frederick I. of Denmark adheres to 
the Lutheran doctrine (John 
Tausen in Jutland from 1524). 



1527. The first Visitation of 
Electoral Saxony ; Gustavus Vasa 
proposes the Reformation to the 
Diet at Western's. 

Frederick I. of Denmark, at the 
Diet of Odensee, gives the reformed 
religion the same privileges as the 
Roman Catholic. 



1528. Otto v. Pack's statement of a 
Roman Catholic League formed at 
Breslau, 1527; the Reformation 
spreads in Norway. 



1529.-Feb. 26, Diet at Speier; 

April 12, the decision of Roman 
Catholic majority of Electors and 
Princes, " Whoever has enforced 
the Edict of Worms is to do so 
still ; the others are to allow no 
further innovations ; no one to be 
prevented from celebrating Mass"; 
April 19, agreed to by the cities. 

PHOTEST: April 25, Appeal 
taken to the Emperor and Council 
by Saxony, Hesse, Brandenburg, 
Anhalt, Liineburg, and fourteen 
cities. 



Zwingli's ecclesiastical 
and political church 
principles; his political 
reformation of Switzer- 
land ; political league 
of the Roman Catholic 
Forest Cantons to pre- 
serve their supremacy. 

1526. The Roman Cath- 
olic Cantons attacking 
the Evangelical. 

May : Disputation at 
Baden (Eck and CEcol- 
ampadius. 



1528. The Reformation 
victorious in St. Gallen 
(Joachim Vadianus, 
John Kessler) ; and in 
Berne. 

1529. Reformation con- 
quers in Basel (QScolam- 
padius, Capito, Hedio). 

League of five Forest 
Cantons with the House 
of Hapsburg. 

June 24, Peace of 
Cappel ; the Forest 
Cantons al wind on the 
Hapsburg League and 
recognise liberty of con- 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



27; 



Revolutionary Movements. 


Boman Catholic Church, 


Protestant Theology. 


Caspar Schwerikfdd ; 5, 




(e) Lutheran Confessiona. 


1490, at Ossing, near 






Liegriitz; in the ser- 




1529. Luther's larger and 


vice of the Duke of 




Shorter Catechism in German; 


Liegnitz; 1525, be- 




appeared simultaneously, 


lieved that he had 






found an explanation 






of the words of the 
institution : "Quod 




1530. Confessio Augustana; or, 

Augsburg Confession, framed 


ipse panis fractus 


1527, Process of the Sor- 


oat of (1) the 15 Marburg 


est corpori esurienti, 


bonne against Jacques le 


Articles ; (2) the 17 Schmalkald 


nempe cibus, hoc est 
corpus meum, cibus 


Fevre (d. 1537, on a jour- 
ney to Strasburg, under 


Articles drawn up by Luther ; 
(3} Torgau Articles, compiled 


videlicet esurientium 


the protection of Margaret 


by Luther, Melanchthon, Justus 


animarum" ; hence 
his doctrine of Christ, 
The Inner "Word (De 


of Navarre). 
1527. May 6, Charles of 


Jonas, Bugenhagen, and pre- 
sented to the Elector at Torgau 
in March 1530. The work of 


cursu VerU Dei, ori~ 


Bourbon storms Rome; 


Melaneothon assisted by the 


gine fidei et ratione 
justifmtionis, 1527) ; 


the Pope shut up in St. 
Angelo till June 6 ; Charles 


evangelical theologians assem- 
bled at Augsburg, and revised 


of the Person of 


v.j master of most of the 


by Luther. 


Christ (not made 


States of the Church, pro- 




man, but begotten by 


poses to limit the temporal 




the Divine nature: 


power of the Pope ; the 


Statement of Evangelical 


His flesh. Divine) ; 


Pope appeals to England 


Doctrine, ( ' In qua cerni potest, 


1528, driven from 


and France; a French 


nihil inesse, quod discrepet a 


Silesia ; in Strasburg, 


army equipped by English 


Scripturis vel ab ecclesia 


Augsburg, Sjfeier, 


money marches to his 


catholica vel ab ecclesia 


TJlm, persecuted from 


assistance. 


Eomana, quatenus ex scrip- 


1539 by Lutheran 




toribus nota est. . . . Sed 


theologians ; in many 


1528. June 29 : Peace be- 


dissensus est de qnibusdam 


controversies ; d. 


tween Emperor and Pope 


abusibus, qui sinecertaauctori- 


1561, at Ulm; fol- 
lowers in Silesia ; 


at Barcelona; the Pope 
gets back the States of the 


tate in ecclesiam irrepserunt." 
Philip of Hesse signed with 


since 1730 in Penn- 


Church and Florence ; 


protest against Article X. on 


sylvania, 


Heresy to be extermin- 


the Lord's Supper in the In- 




ated, 


variata. 






Impossible to fix the exact text 






of either the German or the 






Latin editions ; Melanchthon's 






first printed edition, Witten- 






berg, 1530, in 4to, 






The Vwriafa (variations specially 






in Article X.) since 1540, 






The Apology far the Augsburg 






Confession. The prirm de- 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 



Lutheran Church. 



Eef ormed Church. 



1530. Feb. 24, Charles 

V. crowned at Bo- 
logna by the Pope. 
No German princes 
present. 



1531. Ferdinand of 
Austria, king of the 
Romans ; Bavaria 
and Electoral Saxony 
oppose, 



1532. - Aug. - 1547, 
John Frederick the 
Magnanimous, Elec- 
tor of Saxony; d. 
1554. 



Separation between the Lutheran and South German Protest- 
ants ; Luther objects to armed resistance ; Zwingli plans to 
abolish the Papacy and the Mediaeval and Papal Empire ; 
Philip of Hesse tries to bring about union. 

Oct. 1-4, Religious conference at Marburg (Luther, Melanch- 
thon, Zwingli, (Ecolampadius, Justus Jonas, Osiander, 
Brenz, etc.) ; on Oct. 4, union on fourteen articles, division 
on fifteenth Sacrament of Supper. Zwingli : " There are 
none on earth's round I would more gladly be at one with 
than the men of Wittenberg." Luther : " You have another 
Spirit than we." Zwinglfs hand refused. 

Oct. 16, Luther at the Convent of Schwabach ; Nov. 30, at 
Schmalkald ; Saxony breaks away from South German cities. 



1530. Diet at Augsburg: June 
15, entry of Emperor ; fruitless 
negotiations with the Evangelical 
princes to induce them to join the 
Corpus-Christi procession; June 
20, Diet opened ; June 25, Augs. 
Confess, read and given in (Aug. 
3, Confutation read); July 11, 
Confes. Tetrapolitana read) ; Con- 
futation, Oct. 17), and Zwingli's 
Fidei Ratio ; Aug. 16-29, Nego- 
tiations with Melanchthon, in 
which he proves too pliable. 

Nov. 19. Decree of Diet. Pro- 
testants to get till April 15, 1531, 
then suppression by force, 

1531. Schmalkald League of Pro- 
testantsat the head, Hesse and 
Saxony, 



1532. Diet of Niirnberg : Tolera- 
tion till a General Council. 

Dessau receives the Reformation. 



The Roman Catholic 
Cantons do not observe 
the terms of peace. 



1631. May 15, at Aarau 

the Forest Cantons 
are refused provisions, 
Zwingli objecting. 



Oct. 11, Battle of 
Cappel ; Zwingli slain ; 
Second Peace of Cappel. 

Henry Bullinger, 
Zwingli a successor. 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



279 



EevolutionaryMovements. 



Roman Catholic Church. 



Protestant Theology. 



1533. The Kingdom of 
Christ in Miinster. 

Berahard Both- 
maun, Evangelical 
Superintendent in 
Miinster, joins the 
Anabaptists; Henry 
Eoll and theWassen- 
berg preachers from 
Jiilich. 

Summer: Melchio- 
rites in. Miinster. 

Nov. : Jan Matthie- 
sen. 



1534. Lent : Eiot, de- 
struction of images 
and cloisters. 

Easter Eve: Mat- 
thiesen overthrown, 
John of Leyden ai 
the head of the Ana- 
baptists ; Theocracy, 

1535. Eve of St. John 
Miinster taken, 



.530. Eeformed congrega- 
tions in Spain. In Se- 
ville : Rpdrigo de Valero, 
Joh. Egidius, Ponce de la 
Fuente. In Valladolid, 
1555, Augustin Cazalla. 

Francis Enzinas trans- 
lates the N.T. ; 1556 3 new 
translation by Juan Perez. 

All stamped out by 
Philip ii. and the Inquisi- 
tion. 

Italy. -The German Refor- 
mation awakens religious 
life and Augustinian theo- 
logy ; Contarini, Regi- 
nald Pole, Joh. de Merone 
(Archbishop of Modena), 
Peter Paul Vergerius 
(went over to the Refor- 
mation in 1548 ; d. 1565; 

Reformation at Ferrara 
(Renee married, 1527, to 
Hercules n.) ; at Venice ; 
at Naples (Juan Valdez, 
d. 1540; and Bernard 
Ochino) ; at Lucca (Peter 
Martyr), 



1534-49. Paul m. Pojje 
'Farnese); Vergerius his 
legate in Germany. 



lineatio apologies by Melanch- 
thon in Sept. 1530, at Augs- 
burg; fully revised, Nov. 
1530-April 1531 ; first edition, 
April 1531 ; German edition 
by Justus Jonas, Oct. 1531. 



The Schm&lMd Articles, by 
Luther, for the Protestant 
Convention at Schmalkald, 
1557, and with reference to the 
proposed General Council at 
Mantua, [Strictly Lutheran.] 



Controversies in the Lutheran 
Chwrch. 

1548-55. Adiaphoristic : Fla- 
cius, Wigand, Amsdorf, against 
Leipzig Interim. 



1549-66. Osiander : Andrew 
Osiander (at Niirnberg, 1522- 
48; at Kdnigsberg, 1549-d. 
1552) ; 1550, 1)e Justifkatione ; 
1551, De Unico Mediators Jem 
Ghristo; "Justification is a 
participation in the righteous- 
ness of Christ," cujus natura 
divina homni gu<m infan- 
ditw. In connection there 
with his doctrine of the Divine 
image in man. 

In opposition : Francis Stan 
carus from Mantua (1551-55 
in Konigsberg, then in th 



280 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 



Lutheran Church. 



Reformed Church. 



Henry Yin. di- 
vorced by Parlia- 
ment from Catharine 
of Aragon. 

Nov. : Marries 
Anne Boleyn, 



1534. Bestoration of 

DulcelllrichofWtii- 
temberg by Philip of 



1535. Joachim n,, 
Elector of Branden- 
berg. 

1536-38. Third war 
between Charles v. 
and Francis I. 



1538. - Ten years' 
truce at Nice. 



1534. Lutheran Reformation gains 
Wiirtemberg, Anhalt, Augsburg, 
and Pomerania. 



1536. Wittenberg Concord ; Melan- 
clithon and Bucer ; Lord's Supper 
in Lutheran sense only; eating 
of the unworthy, " of the unbeliev- 
ing," avoided ; Baptism ; Absolut- 
tion ; came to nothing ; difficulties 
concealed, not explained. 

Reformation victorious in Den- 
mark. 



1537. Convention at Schmalkald; 
the Schmalkald Articles. 

1538. Boman Catholic League at 
Ntirnbcrg. 

1539. Reformation victorious in 
Ducal Saxony and in Electoral 
Brandenburg. 

1540. June ; Conference at TTagenau. 
Nov. 25-Jan. 14, at Worms 
(Granvella, Mclanchthon, Buuer, 
Capito, Brenz, Calvin, Eclc, Cooh- 
laens). 
Feb.; Begensburg Interim, 



Reformation in French 
Switzerland under 
Oakin, 



William Farel (5. 1489, 
in Dauphin^; 1530, in 
Neufchatel ; 1532, in 
Berne ; d. 1565, in 
Geneva) ; and Peter 



1531-59, at Lausanne ; 
from 1561, at Nismcs 
and Lyons ; d, 1571) ; 
from 1534, Refor- 
mation preachers in 
Geneva, 



1536. JOHN CALVIN at 
Geneva : &. 1509, July 
10, at Noyon ; studied 
at Orleans and Paris ; 
1533, joined Reforma- 
tion in Paris ; at Basel ; 
1536, Institutio CJiris- 
tianseEellgionia jtlien 
iu Ferrara ; strict eccle- 
siastical discipline ; 
Easter, 1538, banished 
from Geneva, goes to 
Stviwburg; recalled 
15dl;cU564,May27. 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



281 



Revolutionary Movements. 


Roman Catholic Church. 


Protestant Theology. 


1536.Jan. 22, John of 




Siebenburgen and in Poland ; 


Leyden, Knipperdoll- 




d. 1574 ; 1562, De Trinitate et 


ing, and Krechting 




Mediators, " Christ our right- 


executed. 




eousness only as regards His 






human nature." 






1551-62. Majorist : George 






Major (d. 1574, Prof, at 






Wittenberg) ; bona opera 






necessaria, ess& ad salutem. 






Against him, Amsdorf; bona 






opera jperniciosa esse ad 






salutem. 


1534. David Joris : b. 


1536. Paul m. summons the 


1556-60. Synergist: Pfeffinger, 


1501, at Delft ; joins 


long-promised Council to 


1555, Promos, de libero arbitrio 


the Anabaptists; 


meet at Mantau ; 1537, 


(in Melanchthon's synergistie 


reforms them; his 


adjourned ; called to meet 


sense) ; against him, Amsdorf 


influence in the 


at Vicenza; again ad- 


(1558, Qonfutct/tio)') andFlacius. 


Netherlands and East 


journed. 




Friesland; 1542, his 




1560. Disputation at Weimar 


Wwiderbuck ; 1544, 




between Tlacius and Strigel, 


in Basel ; a Mystical- 




Flacius : Original Sin is of the 


spiritualistic specula- 
tion with a rationalist 


1542. Antonio Paleario 
(burnt 1570) ; Dd benefido 


substance of man. The Lu- 
theran doctrine overcomes. 


tendency. 


di Gem Christo crocifisso 


Heshusius : de servo arbitrio. 




verso i Christiani, 




The Mennonites. 








1540. Sept. 27, SOCIBTAB 




MonnoSimonis: 5. 1492, 


JBSU constituted by Paul 




at Witmarsum ; 1524, 
priest ; 1536, resigned 
his office, disgusted 
with the persecution 


m.; Don Inigo (Ignatius] 
of Loyola, b, 1491, at the 
Castle Loyolain the Basque 
Provinces; wounded (1521) 


1527-40, and renewed 1556. 
Antinomian: John Agricola, 


of the Minister Ana- 
baptists ; baptized by 
an apostle of Jan 


at Pampelona ; legends of 
the Saints; studies at 
Barcelona; from 1528 in 


b. 1492, at Bisleben ; d. 1566, 
Courtpreacher at Berlin; 1527, 
against Melanchthon ; and 


Matthieaon ; reformed 


Paris. In 1534, with 


1537, against Luther. Contri- 


and organised the 
Anabaptist commun- 
ities in Holland and 


six companions (Francis 
Xavier, Jac. Lainez, Pet. 
Lefevre, etc.), he took the 


tion is taught not by the Law 
but by the Gospel. Eecants 
1540. From 1556 controversy 


Friesland ; d. aj; Olde- 


three monastic vows and 


about " Tertius usus legis." 


wloe in 1559; expelled 


a fourth of absolute obedi- 




theoutlmsiastiefanat- 


ence to the Pope. Loyola, 




ical elements, and in- 
creased the tendency 
towards Donatism, 


d. 1556 ; Lainez, d. 1564. 
' ' To advancetheinterests 


l&ffl.Crypto-Cdvinist : Melan- 
chthon's admissions to Cal- 




of the Eoman Catholic 


vinists in doctrines of Lord's 



2J82 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 


Lutheran Church. 


Reformed Church. 


1541-53.-Duke Mau- 


1541, April 27-May 22, Conference 


Calvin's Ecclesiastical 


rice of Saxony; made 
Elector, 1546, 


at Regensburg (Contarini, Melan- 
chthon, Bucer, Eck), Transubstan- 
tiation the difficulty, 


polity in teew, 
Worship: prayer and 
preaching. Organisa- 


1541.~r>iet at Regens- 




tion : Presbyterian. 1542. 


burg; Suliman con- 




Jan. ; Ordonnances 


querstheEungarians, 




eccUsiastiguesdel'tglise 






de Gentw, Pastors, 


154244. Fourth war 


1542. Nicolas v, Amsdorf Bishop 


doctors,elders,deacons, 


of Charles v. with 


of Naumburg, 


Church discipline. 


Francis L; Peace of 






Crespi, 








1543, Reformation in the Arch- 




1542.~4)iet at Speier; 


bishopric of JColn; Herman v, 


Reformation in France 


union against the 


Wied, the archbishop, advised by 


1559-98. 


Turk. 


Bucer and Melanchthon ; excom- 






municated. 1546 ; abdicates, 1547; 


Earlier: Francis L, Hu- 




d. 1552. 


manist, careless in 




religion, treated the 


1544, Diet at Speier ; recognition of the Protestants ; peace 
all round till a General Council. 


Reformation as a poli- 
tician ; his sister Mar- 
garet, Queen of Navarre 


1545, Refomatio Wittenhrg&nsis. 


(d. 1549), protected the 




Reformers; severe per- 


1546,Second Religious Conference at Regensburg ; Feb. 18, 
Luther dies at Eisleben ; the Protestants do not appear at 


secution of French 
Protestants in spite of 


the Diet. 


alliance with German 




Protestant princes, and 


1546-47,The Schmalkald War ; June 19, league between 


an invitation to Melan- 


Maurice and the Emperor ; July 20, decree against John 


chthon to settle in 


Frederick and Philip ; Oct. 27, Maurice made Elector ; 
April 24, Battle of Miihlberg, John Frederick, prisoner ; 
Philip surrenders at Halle; Emperor breaks faith, and 


France, 1535, 
Henry n. : Anthony of 


keeps the princes in prison. 


Navarre, and his wife 




Joan d'Albret, at the 




head of the Protestants 




in France. 


1547-59, Henry n. 


1548. May 15, Augsburg Interim 


1559,-May 25-29, First 


of France; spouse, 


retains Roman Catholic hier- 


Reformed Synod at 


Catherine da Medici, 


archy, ceremonies, feasts and 


Paris, assembled by a 


<2, 1589, 


fasts; marriage of clergy and 


Parisian pastor, An- 




Lord's Supper sub utraque per- 


thony Chandieu; Conf, 




mitted, 


Gallica, 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



283 



Revolutionary Movements 



Boman Catholic Church. 



Protestant Theology. 



His followers, Men- 
nonnites, tolerated in 
1572 by William of 
Orange in the Nether- 
lands ; also found in 
Emdfin. Hamburg. 
Danzig, Elbing, in 
the Palatinate, and 
in Moravia; moder- 
ated the original 
Anabaptist spirit ; re- 
jected all dogmatic ; 
forbade oatns and 
war ; appealed to the 
letter of Scripture. 



Hierarchy against Protest- 
antism within and with- 
out the Bomish Church.' 1 

Xavier's mission work 
in East Asia, 

Society's Morals : casu- 
istry. 

Its dogmatic : supersti- 
tion systematised. 



1542. Cardinal Caraffa ad- 
vises the reconstruction of 
the Inquisition to crush 
Protestantism in Italy. 



1545. Council of Trent 
opened : First period, Mar. 
if, 1547, at Trent ; April 
21, 1547-Sept. 13, 1549, 
at Bologna, Second period. 
May 1,1551-April 28, 1552, 
at Trent. Third period, 
Jan. 13, 1562-Dec. 4, 1563 
(25 Sessions). Komanist 
doctrinal teaching con- 
cluded and petrified. 



Supper, Christology, and Pre- 
destination. 

From these controversies a 
need for concord in the Lu- 
theran Church ; hence various 
forms of concord, out of all 
which came the Formula Con- 
cordice. 

(1) Swabian Concord of Jac. 
Andreas (from 1562 
Prof, at Tiibingen, d. 
1590) in 1574; 1575, 
Swabian Concord of 
Martin Chemnitz ; 1576, 
Maulbronn Formula of 
Lucas Osiander. 

au Convention with 
the Torgau Book. 

Thence 1577, Formula Oon- 
cordioB. 



(2) Torgj 
tn< 



Tlie principal Lutheran 
tians. 



\fartin Chemnitz : 1554-rf. 1586, 
Superintendent in Brunswick ; 
JJxamen Concilii Trid. ; 1565- 
73, Loei Theologiti. 



Matthew Flaaius: "b. 1520, at 
Albona in Illyria ; 1545, at 
"Wittenberg ; 1548, at Magde- 
burg ; 1557-61, at Jena ; d. 
at Fxaukfort-on-Maine, 1575, 
March 11. 



284 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 



Lutheran Church. 



Reformed Church, 



1547-53, Edward TI. 
&.1537. 



1553-58. - (Bloody) 
Mary of England, 



1554:.- July 9, Maurice 
slain in battle near 
Sievershansen, 
against Albert, Mar- 
grave of Branden- 
burg. 

Ferdinand beaten 
by the Turks in 
Hungary, 



1555-98,-Phffip n. of 

Spain. 



1556-64. 
L, JSmyperw, 



1558-1603. Elizabeth 
of England. 



1559-60. Francis n. 
of France (married 
Mary of Scotland). 

1560-74, Charles ix. 
of France. 



1548. Leipzig Interim (Maurice of 
Saxony and Melanchthon), 



1551. Tenement desire of the 
Emperor that the Protestants 
should submit to the Council of 
Trent ; Secret League of Maurice 
of Saxony with Henry n, of 
France. 

Oct.: Wtirtembnrg ambassadors, 
and Jan. 1552, Saxon ambassa- 
dors at Trent. 



1552. Mar. 20, Maurice breaks 
loose; May 19, seizes Elirenberg 
Castle and Elirenberg Pass, the 
keys of the Tyrol ; the Council 
breaks up; July, Treaty of 
Passau ; John Frederick and 
Philip free. 



1555. Sept. 25 : Religious Peace of 
Augsbwg ; the Lutheran Church 
(Augs. Confcs.)has the same legal 
rights as the Roman Catholic: 
On/jus regio ejus rdiyio ; the H$- 
s&rvatum ecclesiasticum ; the Re- 
formed Church not recognised. 



1558. Disputes between old Luther- 
ans (Gnesiolutherani) and Me- 
laachthon's followers. 



1560. Death of Melanchthon, 
April 19. 

1586-91. Crypto-Calvinist troubles 
in Electoral Saxony ; suppression 
of Calvinism ; execution of Krclls, 
1601, 



1561. Sept.: Eeligions 
Conference at Poissy; 
Theodore Beza, 



1562. Jan.: Protestants 
gain right to worship 
outside the towns ; 
Francis of Guise mas- 
sacres Protestant con- 



1562-63. Huguenot war. 
Anthony of Navarre d. ; 
Francis of Guise shot 
before Orleans. 



1567-68 and 1569-70. 
Huguenot wars, 



1572, Aug. 24, Paris 
massacre on eve of St. 
Bartholomew ; Coligny 
and 20,000 Huguenots 
murdered. 

1574-76. Huguenot war; 
Holy League of the 
Guises. 



1588. Henry and Louis 
of Guise slain. 



3589. -Henry m. mur- 
dered by a League 
fanatic, J, Clement, 
Aug. 1. 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



285 



Anglican Church. 


Roman Catholic Church, 


Protestant Theology, 


England, 1547-1600, 


1564, Professio Fidti Tri- 


Catalogus Testium Verit&tis, 


under Henry vm. : 


dentince: 1566, Qatechis- 


1556 ; JScdesi,. jffist. p&r ali- 


John Frith, William 
Tindal. 


mus Romanes (Leonardo 
Marini, Egidio Foscarari, 


qwt . . , studiosos etpios tiros 
i% wle Magdebwgica, (the 




Muzio Calini). 


Magdeburg Centuries), 13 vols,, 


1534.-Act of Parlia- 
ment about Eoyal 


1548, Philip Neri founds 
the Oratory. 


1560-74 ; Clews Script. Sac,, 
1567; Glossd Compendaria, in 
jRT.T,, 1570, etc. 


supremacy ; the King 






"the only supreme 


1550-64.-Julius in. (del 




head on earth of the 


Monte). 




Church of England " ; 




John Gerhard, i 5. 1582, at 


at the head of the 
Evangelical party, 
Thomas Cranmer 


1551. Foundation of Jesuit 
Collegium Romanum. 


Quedlinburg; 1606, Superin- 
tendent at Heldburg; 1615, 
General Superintendent at 


Q533, Archbishop of 
Canterbury! and 
Thomas Cromwell ; 


1552. Foundation of Col- 
legium G-ermanicum. 


Coburg; 1616-^. 1687, Prof. 
at Jena. Loci Theologici. 1610- 
25; Mcdit. Sac,, etc. 


Translation of the 


1555-59.-Paul IV. (Caraffa) 




Bible, 1538. 


protests against the Peace 






of Augsburg ; Inquisition. 


Leonhard IMter : 1596~<i. 1616, 






Prof, at Wittenberg; Com- 






jpmdiim LOG. Theol. 1610; 
Loci Commun, Theolog., 1619. 


1539.-July 28, Tran- 


1559-65.~-Piua IV, (Medici) 




substantiatioii ; re- 


rules under the influence 




fusal of cup to the 


of his nephew Cardinal 




laity; celibacy of the 


Charles Borromeo, Arch- 




clergy ; Masses for 


bishop of Milan, d, 1584, 




the dead; auricular 






confession, 


1564. Index tiororum pro- 






hibitorum. 




TlieEeformationof 
Henry vm. tlio act of 


1566-72,-Pius v., a zealous 


The confessional writings of the 

Reformed Church universally 


the King, and meant 


Dominican, 


recognised. 


only revolt from the 






mediasval system, 






with the King in the 


1567. Bull of excommuni- 


Catechismw eccfete Gme* 


place of the Pope. 


cation against 79 Angus- 


WMtti] 1541, Fronch; 1545, 




tinian propositions of 


Latin j Calvin. 




Micliaol Baiius (d 1589), 






Chancellor of University 






of Louvain, 


Oonsensio in n sacramn- 






taria ministronwi Tigur, 






'Mcdes. d Joh. Qahmi. . 


Isolation of the 


1568, Breviarium. 




Church of England ; 






no relation to the- 







286 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Eventa. 


Lutheran Church. 


Ref onned Church. 


1660-7ft Mary .Queen 


The, Lutheran Gkurch loses to 


1593. Henry iv. be* 


of ffecots; executed 




comes a Roman Oa- 


15'j7. 


(a) The Koinan Catholic Church. 


tkolic. 


"1564-76. Maximi- 


1558. Bavaria. 


1598. EDICT OP NANTES: 


lian 11,, JZmperor. 


1578. The Austrian Duchy (Ru- 


liberty of conscience ; 




dolph H.). 


right of public wor- 


1574-89. Henry ni. 


1584. The Bishoprics of Wiirzburg, 


ship; Ml civil privi- 


of France. 


Bamberg, Salzburg, Hildesheim, 


leges; cities given to 




etc. 


the Huguenota as 


1576-1612. Rudolph 


1594. Steiermark, Carinthia (Fer- 


pledges. 


II. } Emperor, 


dinand n.). 






1607. Donauwerth. 




1588-1648. Christian 




1620-28. Huguenot re- 


rv., King of Den- 




volts. 


mark. 








(&) The Reformed Church. 


1629. La Rochelle taken. 


1589-1610. Henry iv. 






of France; "became 


1560.-The Palatinate} 1563, Hei- 


Edict of Nismes. 


Roman Catholic, 


delberg Catechism (Reformed 


Ecclesiastical rights 


1593 ; murdered by 


under Frederick in. ; Lutheran 


guaranteed to the Hu- 


Ravaillac, 1610, May 


under Louis vi., 1576-83; Re- 


guenota, 


14. 


formed under Frederick iv., 1583- 






1610. 




1598-1621. Philip nr. 


1568. Bremen. 




of Spain. 


1596. Anhalt (John George, 1587- 






1603); repeal of Consist. Syst. 






and Lutheran Catechism; 1597- 






1628, Calvinist Articles. 





CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



287 



Anglican Church. 


Boman Catholic Church. 


Protestant Theology. 


Papacy; no relation 


1570. Missale Romanum. 


The Heidelberg Catech- 


to the Reformed 
Churches. 

1547. Under Lord Pro- 


1572-85. Gregory xm. ; 
congratulatory letter to 
Charles IX. about Mas- 


ism : 1563, written at the sug- 
gestion of Frederick in. of the 
Palatinate by Zachary Ursinus 
(from 1561 Prof, at Heidel- 


tector Somerset; Peter 


sacre of St. Bartholomew ; 


berg ; d, 1583) and Caspar 


Martyr Vermigli (&. 


Te D&UAU at Home in 


Olevianus (Prof, at Heidel- 


1500, at Florence ; 


honour of event. 


berg; d. 1587). 


1542, in Strasburg; 






d. 1562, in Zurich) 


1582. Reform of Calendar. 


Oon/essio Helvetica Posterior. 


and Bernard Ocliino 




1566, sent by Bullinger to 


(&. 1487) brought to 
Oxford ; Martin Bucer 


1582-1610. Jesuit missions 
in China. 


Frederick Hi. of the Palatinate. 


and Paul Fagius, to 






Cambridge. 








1535-90. Sixtua V. : Vati- 
can Library. 


The Decrees of the Synod of 
Dort: 1619, recognised in the 


The Book of Hom- 




Netherlands, Switzerland, the 


ilies. 


1588. Baronras' JSccl. An- 


Palatinate, and in 1620 in 




nales. 


France ; not universally recog- 






nised. 




1590. Infallible edition of 




1548. The Book of 


the Vulgate. 




Common Prayer : re- 






vised, 1552. 


1592-1605. Clement ra 






1592. -New edition of Vul- 






gate (declared to be the 






edition of Sixtusv,). 


j 



288 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events, 



Lutheran Church. 



Anglican Church. 



The Lutheran Church, loses to the 
Reformed Church 

1605. Hesse-Casselreformed, under 
Landgrave Maurice (1592-1627). 

1613. Dec. 25, Brandenburg re- 
formed under the Elector John 
Sigismund ; 1614, Confessio Mar- 
chica, 



Anti-Trinitarians. 



Michael Serwtus from Aragon : 1530, 
in Basel; 1531, De Trinitukis 
<wwi&tt$ ; 1534, in Lyons ; 1537, 
in Paris ; 1540, in Yienne ; 1553, 
Ghristianismi restitutio ; burnt at 
Geneva, 1553. 



Vakntimts QentHis, from Calabria ; 
beheaded at Berne, 1556. 



LaeKus Sodnus : 6. 1525, at Siena ; 
1546, in Venice ; 15-17, travels in 
Switzerland, Germany, and Po- 
land ; d. 1562 in Zurich, 



1552,-2Yi0 42 Articles. 



[1554. Cardinal Re- 
ginald Pole, Papal Le- 
gate ; 1555-58, Bloody 
persecutions under 
Mary ; 1556, Mar. 21, 
Cranmer burnt at Ox- 
ford,] 



Reformation restored 
under Elizabeth. 

1559. June : Act of 
Uniformity, Matthew 
Parker, Archbishop of 
Canterbury. 



Book of Common 
Prayer revised and re- 
stored. 



23, The 39 
Articles : Calvinist doc- 
trine of Predestination ; 
Doctrine of Lord's Sup- 
per, Calviniut. 



1567. Puritans against 
Uniformity. [Puritan- 
ism ; Reformation from 
within through the 
Church community; in 
England strict accept- 
ance of the spiritual 
priesthood of all bo- 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



289 



Eefonned Church. 



Protestant Theology. 



Scotland. 

1558. -Lords of the 
Congregation ; Pure 
Gospel ; King Ed- 
ward's Prayer-Book. 



1560, Meeting of 
Estates at Edinburgh; 
Scotch Confession ; 
First Book of Disci- 
pline ; Presbyterian 
Government by Gen- 
eral Assemblies, 
Synods, and Kirk- 
Sessions ; Superin- 
tendents. 



John jBTflioaj: 6. 1505, 
at Haddington; from 
1616, preacher in St, 
Andrews ; 1547-49, in 
the galleys; 1553-59. 
at Frankfort and 
Geneva ; 1559 d, 
1572, in Edinburgh. 



1572. Convention of 
Leithj Bishops, but 
without episcopal 
functions j Tulchana, 



1576. Government by 
visitors appointed by 
the Assembly. 



1578. Second Book of 

Discipline. 



The Netherlands. 

1559. Margaret of Parma 
Stadtholder ; Granvella, 
Bp. of Arras. 

Erection of 13 new 
bishoprics ; Inquisition. 



1562. Confessio Belgica ; 
Guido de Bres, Adrien de 
Sayaria, H. Modetus, G. 
Wingen; re vised by Francis 
Junius, 1571. 



1566. -Compromisem favour 
of Protestants. 

Riots about images and 
relics. 



1567-73.-DukeofAlva. 

Council of Blood ; Per- 
secution of Protestants ; 
18,000 slain ; Bgmont and 
Horn in 1568. 



1572. Capture of Brill by 
the Sea-Beggars ; William 
of Orange. 



1570,~Kov, 8, Treaty of 
Ghent. 



JOHN CALVIN: Institutlo Re- 
ligionis Christiana, 1535-36. 
Three editions, each an en- 
largement, 1535, 1539 (-43-45), 
1559 ; Commentaries on O.T. 
and N.T. from 1539 ; De ceter- 
n& Dei ^predestinations, 1552 ; 
Defensio orthodoxm fidei de S. 
Trinitate, 1554, against Ser- 
vetus. 



S&vry Bullinger, Zwingli's suc- 
cessor in Zurich, I. 1504, at 
Bremgarten, d. 1578, Sept. 17 ; 
Commentaries on the whole 
N.T., 1554; Compendium re- 
lig. Christiance; Histoire des 
' lise. 



Theodore Beza: 1. 1519; 1549, in 
Lausanne ; 1558, Professor and 
pastor in Geneva; d, 1605. 
N,T. translation with annota- 
tions, 1565; Ilistoire Mccles. 
des rtjformateurs au royaume 
de France, 1580. 



Rudolph Hospinian* pastor in 
Zurich j d. 1629 ; j)e origin d 
pngres. controv. sacrament* 
arias, etc. 



J, J9f. ffottwycr, Professor in 
Heidelberg and Zurich ; d. 
IWt -, JEKst. Xcd. JT.T, 



290 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



Contemporary Events. 



Lutheran Church. 



Anglican Church. 



Faustus Sodnus : 5. 1539, at Siena ; 
1559, in Lyons ; 1562, in Zurich ; 
at Florence, then Basel, 1574-78 ; 
in Poland, 1579-98 ; d. 1601 e 
Jesu Clvristo s&rvatore ; De Statu 
primi hominis ante Iwpsum, 1578. 



1605. Kacoviau CafcecMsm. 



lievers, and consequent 
objection to clerical 
vestments, cope, and 
surplice,] 

1570. Thomas Cart- 
wright expelled from 
Cambridge. 

1582. Robert Browne, 
chaplain to the Duke 
of Norfolk : no union 
between Church and 
State; each congrega- 
tion an independent 
church. From 1589 in 
England. 



CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY 



291 



Reformed Church. 



Protestant Theology. 



Scotland. 

1580. Government by 
Presbyteries. 



The Netherlands. 

1579. Jan. 23, Utrecht 
Union of Northern Pro- 
vinces; July 26, Declara- 
tion of Independence. 



1584. July 10, William of 
Orange murdered; Maurice 



Foundation of Universities 
Leyden, 1575 ; Franecker, 
1585; Groningen, 1612; 
Utrecht, 1638; Harder- 
wyk, 1648. 



Caspar Suicer, Professor in 
Zurich j d. 1684; Thesaurus 
Jflcclesiasticus. 



J, Dallceus, Prof, at Saumur, d, 
at Paris. 1670 ; Traitt de I'em- 
ploi des S. Peres, 1632. 



A LIST OP SOME OF THE BOOKS BEAD OR 
CONSULTED FOE THIS VOLUME 

Luther's Writings: 

Luther's Sammtliche Werke (in 67 vols.). Erlangen, 1826-57. 
(The Weimar Edition, begun in 1883, has reached the 
fifteenth vol.) 
Luther's IMefe, Sendschreiberi, etc., edited by De Wette, 

5 vols. 1825-28. 

Burchardt, Luther's Brief wechsel. 1866. 
Luther's Letters to Women. Collected by Dr. Zimmermann. 

Translated by Mrs. Malcolm. 1865. 
The following are translations of portions of Luther's 

Writings : 

Wace and Bucheim. Luther's Primary Works. (Trans- 
lation of the Ninety-five Theses, Larger and Short 
Catechism, and the Three Treatises of 1520.) 1896. 
The Prefaces to the Early Editions of Luther's Bible, 

edited by T. A. Bead win, 1863. 
Special and Chosen Sermons. Reprinted from a work 

published in London in the year 1578. 1862-65. 
The Table Talk of Dr. Martin Luther. 1883. 
The Table Talk or Familiar Discourse of Martin Luther. 

Translated by Wm. Hazlitt. 1848. 
Commentary on the Epistle to the G-alatians. 1845. 
Watchwords for the Warfare of Life. Translated and 
arranged by Mrs. Charles. 1869. 

203 



294 BOOKS CONSULTED 

H. E. Bindseil, D. Martini Lutheri Colloquia, Meditation.es, 

etc., 3 vols. 1863-66. 
G. Loesche, Analecta Lutherana et Melanchthoniana, etc. 

1892. 
Passional Christi et Antichristi (edited by W. Scherer). 1885. 

Lives of Luther and Incidents in his Career : 

H. E. Jacobs, Heroes of the Reformation. Martin Luther. 

1899. 
J. Koestlin, Martin Luther ; sein Leben und seine Schrif ten, 

4th ed. 1889. 
J. Koestlin, Martin Luther, der deutsche Reformator. 1883. 

(TMs has numerous illustrations, and was translated 

in 1883.) 

T. Kolde, Martin Luther, Eine Biographie. 1884. 
T. Kolde, Friedrich der Weise und die anfange der Eeforma 

tion. 1881. 

T. Kolde, Analecta Lutherana. 1883. 
Melanchthon, Historia de vita et actis M. Lutheri (Corpus 

Reform, vol. vi). 
J, Mathesius, Historien von...D. M. Luther's Anfang, Lehre, 

Leben, etc. 1573. 
Seckendorf, Lutheranismus. 
Cochlaeus, Historia de actis et scriptis M. Lutheri (Rom. 

Oath.). 1565. 
T. Murner, Yon dem grossen Lutherischen Narren. (Rom. 

Oath.). 1522. 

Dr. DolliBger, Luther, a Succinct View of his Life and Writ- 
ings (Rom, Oath..), 1886. 
G. Freytag, Doktor Luther, Eine Schilderung. 1883- (This 

has been recently translated (in 1897) in America.) 
M. Michelet, M^moires de Luther, Merits par Iui-m6rae, tra- 

duits, etc. 1835. (This has been translated several 

times, and published, sometimes without acktxowledg- 



BOOKS CONSULTED 295 

ment, under the title "Autobiography of Luther "; 

the best English translation is by W. Hazlitt. 

1846.) 

J. Eae, Martin Luther, Student, Monk, and Eeformer. 1884. 
P. Bayne, Martin Luther, his Life and Work. 1887. 
The Chronicles of the Schomberg-Cotta Family, by Mrs. 

Charles. 1882. 
British Museum, Luther Exhibition in 1883. 

F, G. Hofmann, Katharina von Bora. 1884. 

History of the Times of Luther : 

Scebohm, The Era of the Protestant Eevolution. 1877. 
Kanke, Deutsche Geschichte im Zeitalter der Eeformation, 

6th ed. 1882. 
J. Janssen, Geschichte des Deutschen Volkes seit dein Ausgang 

des Mittelalters (Bom. Oath.), 17th ed. 1897-99. 

Social Life in the Times of the Reformation : 

Stem, Die Sozialisten der Eeformationszeit. (I have drawn 
largely from this booklet.) 

G, Freytag, Bilder aus der deutschen Vergangenheit. 1899. 

(An earlier edition was translated by Mrs. Malcolm 

under the title "Pictures of German Life in the 15th- 

17th Centuries." 1862.) 
Alwin Schultz, Deutsches Leben im xiv. und xv. Jahrhun- 

dert. 1892, 

Kriegk, Deutschos Burgerthum im Mittelalter. 1868-71. 
J. Becker, Chronica des fahrenden Schiilers. 1869. 
H. Boos, Thomas und Felix Platter. 1878. 

The Peasants' War : 

W. Zimmormann, Allgemeine Geschichte des Grossen Bauern- 
kriogs. 



296 BOOKS CONSULTED 

Baumann, Quellen zur Geschichte des Bauernkriegs. 1878. 
B. Bax, The Peasants' War. 1899. 

Illustrations of the Times of Luther, Portraits^ etc. : 

G. Hirth, Kulturgeschlichtes Bilderbuch aus drei Jahrhun- 
derten, vols. i. and ii, 2nd ed. 1896. 30s. a volume. 

G. Hirtli, Bilder aus der Lutherzeit. 1883. 2s. 6d. 

Bichard Heath, Article on tlie Portraits of Luther in Cassell 
& Co.'s Magazine of Art for November 1883. 



INDEX 



Address to Nobility of German 
Nation, Luther's, 7, 172. 

Adrian vr., 155. 

Against the Murderous Thieving 
Hordes of Peasants, 185. 

Albert of Brandenberg, 55, 159. 

Albigenses, 14. 

Alum, discovery of, 57. 

Anabaptism, 7. 

Anspacli, Margrave of, 158. 

Aristotle, 52. 

Athanasius, 8. 

Augsburg, 75, 214. 

Augustine, 61, 66. 

Augustinian Order, 12, 32, 34, 52, 
73. 

Augustinian theology, 82. 

Babylonian Captivity of the Churcli, 

93. 

" Ban of the Empire," 134. 
Beggars, troubles with, 201. 
Berlepsch, 137. 
Bible, German Versions of, before 

Luther's, 143, 144. 
Bonaventura, 35, 
Brotherhood, Evangelical, 176. 
Brotherly Agreement, 164. 
Bucer, Martin, 254, 258. 
Bull of Condemnation against 

Luther, 108. 
Bundschuh, 133, 176. 
Butebach, John, 19. 

Cajetan, Cardinal, 76. 
Calvin, 14. 



$97 



Oarlstadt, 82, 146. 

Catechisms, Luther's, 232. 

Catherine von Bora, 193, 195. 197, 
252. 

Celibacy of clergy, 191. 

Charles v., 2, 113, 121, 215. 

Christian Liberty, 93. 

Church, Luther's idea of an Evan- 
gelical, 219, 222, 224. 

Commemoration and Participation, 
Sacramental, 241. 

Consistorial Courts, 232. 

Constantinople, 2. 

Cotta, Frau, 24. 

Council, General, 78. 

Cranach, Lucas, 8, 125, 195, 209. 
248. 

Dominicans, the, 53, 75. 
Dilrer, Albert, 8, 155, 248. 

Eck, John (of Ingolstadt), 73, 84, 87. 
Eck, John (of Trier), 129. 
Educational reform, Luther and, 235. 
Eisenach, 10, 23, 127. 
Eisleben, 9, 11. 
Emperor, election of, 113, 116. 
Empire, Holy Roman, 113, 119. 
Erasmus, 2, 109. 
Erfurt, 24, 26. 

JFasiw ach/xp Lele, 1 5 . 
Francis, St., 170. 
Francis I., 113. 

Frederic, Elector, 54, 73, 75, 77, 
79, 80, 109, 155, 187. 



298 



INDEX 



Freiherrn, 161. 
Frundsberg, General, 129* 
Fuggers, the, 55. 

George, Duke, 85, 86, 155. 

George, Junker, 138. 

Germany, political condition of, 

119. 

Gerson, 35. 
Groot, Gerard, 22. 

" Hundred Grievances" of Germany 

against Rome, 156. 
Humanists, 7, 8, 27, 28, 173. 
Huss, John, 74, 92, 170. 
Hutten, Ulric von, 8, 90, 143, 163, 

165. 
Hymn, Luther's, Ein Feste Burg, 

199. 
Hymn-book, Luther's, 157. 

Indulgences, the, 53, 54, 55, 62, 64. 
Ingolstadt, 73. 
Inquisition, the, 75. 

Jerusalem, 43. 

John, Elector, 196, 215, 249. 
John Frederic, Elector, 249, 250. 
Julius, Pope, 53. 

Kaiser, Leonard, 199. 
M Karsthans,"174. 
Kaufmann, 12. 
Kessler, 12, 147. 
Koppe, Leonhard, 193, 

Landstuhl, 4. 

Leipzig, 81, 85. 

Leipzig Disputation, 82, 87, 88, 90. 

Leo x., 53, 74. 

Liber IFagatorum, 201 

Lombard, Peter, 51. 

Lord's Table, the, 229. 

Lupfen, Countess of, 176. 

Lutheran *o. Reformed (Oalvinist) 

organisations, 2S2. 
Luther, Hans (sen.), 10, 26, 196, 

247. 

Luther, Hans (jun.), 198. 
Luther, Margarethe, 10, 12, 26, 247. 



LUTHEB, MARTIN, 7; birthplace, 
9 ; his parents and home, 12, 
13 ; peasant life, 15 ; education, 
18-29 ; singing boy, 24 ; enters 
convent, and reasons for doing 
so, 30 ; becomes a monk, 33 ; 
studies the Bible and practises 
asceticism, 34, 35 ; his anguish 
and subsequent peace ; 36, 37 ; 
ordained, 38; scruples about 
performing the Mass, 39 ; goes to 
Wittenberg as professor, 40 j 
visit to Rome, 43 ; enthusiasm, 
over the city, 44 ; the incident 
of the Holy Staircase, 44 ; doctor 
of theology, 46 ; lectures on the 
Bible, 47 ; superintendent of 
convents, 50 ; Luther and Tetzel, 
59-66; nails the Ninety-five 
Theses to the door of the Castle 
Church of Wittenberg, 64; 
analysis of the Theses, 71; effect 
of the Theses, 72 ; John Eck's 
attack on the Theses, 74 ; Lu- 
ther's defence, ibid.; summoned 
to Rome, 75 ; refuses to go, 
demands a trial on German soil, 
and obtains his interview with 
Cardinal Cajetan, 76 ; appeal to 
a General Council, 78 ; Pope 
sends special delegate, CharLes 
von Miltitz, 79 ; Luther writes 
to Tetzel when the latter was in 
disgrace, 81 ; Leipzig Disputa- 
tion, 82-86 ; Eek forces Luther 
to declare that the Church is not 
the hierarchy but the whole com- 
pany of faithful believers, 86 ; 
effects of the Leipzig Disputation 
on Luther making him " the man 
o {'Germany," 88; Luther's literary 
activity after the Disputation, 
91 ; writes Throe Great Re- 
formation Treatises, 93 ; advised 
by Miltitz to write a friendly 
letter to the Pope, 94 ; analysis 
of Christian Liberty, 95 ; ditto 
of Babylonian Captivity of the 
C/mrch, 98 ; ditto of Christian, 
Estate, 100 ; Bull of Condemn*. 



INDEX 



299 



tion against, 108 ; burns the Bull, 
111 ; at the Diet of Worms, 113 ; 
his spirited speeches, 131 ; ban 
of the Empire issued, 134 ; lodged 
in the Wartburg, 136 ; " Junker 
George," 138 ; translates New 
Testament into German, 140 j 
tract on 1 Monastic Tows, 140 ; 
Kessler's sketch of Luther ; re- 
form of service, 151 ,* makes tour 
in Electoral Saxony, 151 ; issues 
tract on Obedience to Secular 
Power, 152 ; Pope Adrian de- 
mands the enforcement of Leo's 
Bull against Luther, 155 ; pub- 
lishes Wittenberg Order of Public 
Worship and Evangelical Hymn- 
toofc, 157 ; Luther and the 
Peasants' War, 182 ; writes his 
pamphlet Against the Murderous 
Thieving Hordes of Peasants, 
185 ; marriage and family life, 
190 ; birth of first child, 198 j the 
plague, 199 ; composes Luther's 
hymn, ibid.; letters to his wife, 
205 ; delight in children, 207 ; 
the "Luther house, "209; Diet 
of Augsburg, 214 ; the Emperor 
and Luther, 217 ; the idea of an 
Evangelical Church, 219; the 
Visitations, 227-229 ; the Cate- 
chisms, 232 ; as an educational 
reformer, 235 ; Luther and 
Zwingli, 240-245 i; Christian per- 
fection, 247; love of pictures, 
248 ; political influence, 249 ; 
the Landgrave's bigamy, 255 ; 
its effects, 257 ; Protestant union, 
259 ; last scenes, 263 ; summing 
up, 265, 266. 

Maokenrod, 12. 
Magdeburg, 22. 
Mansfeld, Count of, 158, 261. 
Marburg Articles, 215. 
Marburg Conference, 244. 
Margarethe Luther, 10. 
Mazzolmi Silvester, 75. 
Medievalism, 2. 
Melanchthon, 8, 10, 82, 215. 



Miltitz, Charles von, 79. 
Mohra, 10. 

Monastic Vows, tract on, 140. 
Monks, and principle of Monach- 

ism, 33. 

More, Sir Thomas, 173. 
Morgarten, 3. 
Miiller, Hans, 176. 
Miinzer, Thomas, 175. 
Myconius, 54, 57. 

New Testament, Luther's transla- 
tion of, 140. 
Nobles, revolt of, 166. 
Nominalists, 27. 
Ntirnberg, Diets of, 101, 102. 

Obedience to Secular Power } tract 

on, 152. 
"Obelisks, "74. 
Occam, William of, 27. 
Order of Public Worship, 157. 

Peasants* War, 169. 

"Pepper-sacks," 5. 

Philip of Hesse, Landgrave, 155, 

167, 213, 253. 
Plague in Wittenberg, 199. 
Platter, Thomas, 20. 
Pollich, 41. 
Polner, 12. 
Protestant Union North and 

South Germany, 258. 

Kanke, L. von, 2, 

Keformation, 2, 3, 7, 14, 65, 93, 

101, 151, 156, 159, 170, 182, 

190, 200, 239, 245. 
JReformation of the Christian Estate, 

08. 

Xleichsregiment, 153. 
Kenascence, 3. 
JResotutioneS) Luther's, 74. 
Keuchlin, 8. 

Revolts, political and social, 161. 
Revolution, Irench, 8. 
Righteousness, the Divine, 66. 
Romans, Epistle to the, Luther'a 

lectures on, 46, 
Homo, 43. 



300 



INDEX 



Sachs, Hans, 8, 16. 

Schifflein, St. Ursula's, 61. 

Sempach, 3. 

Service, reform of, 151. 

Sickingen, F. von, 4, 8, 90, 133, 

163, 165, 166. 
Social discontent, 171. 
Spalatin, 27, 75, 109, 127, 140, 

198. 

Speyer, Diets of, 212, 213, 221. 
Spiritual v. Temporal Estate 

Romanist view, 102. 
Spiritual treasures, 61. 
Staupitz, John, 34, 41, 44. 

Tauler, John, 47. 

Tetzel, John, 50, 55, 58, 65, 72, 80. 

Theses, the Ninety-five, 64, 70, 

72, 73. 
Three Great Reformation Treatises, 

93 

Thuringia, 10, 11. 
Transubstantiation, 243. 
Tradwetter, Johan, 26, 



Twelve Articles, the, 179. 
Tyler, Wat, 170. 

Ursula, St., 61. 

Vernacular German, Luther's us* 

of, 174. 
Visitations, the, 227. 

Waldenses, 14. 
Waldshut, 176. 
"Wandering students, 20. 
Wartburg, 24, 137. 
Weisthumer (Communes), 15. 
Weasel, John, 54. 
Wimpina, Conrad, 72. 
Wittenberg, 14, 40, 64, 150, 263. 
Wittenberg Circle, Visitation of, 

227. 
Worms, Diet of, 128. 

Zulsdorf, purchase of, by Luthei 

202. 
Zwingli, 14, 240,, 245, 258, 



THE 



SHORT COURSE SERIES 

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THE BEATITUDES. 

By Rev. ROBERT H. FISHER, D.D., Edinburgh. 

THE LENTEN PSALMS. 

By the Editor. 

THE PSALM OF PSALMS. 

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THE SONG AND THE SOIL. 

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By Rev. Newell D wight Hillis, D.D., Brooklyn. 

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By Rev. D. J. Burrill, D.D., LL.D., New York. 

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By Rev. A. B. Macaulay, M.A., Stirling. 

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By Prof. W. G. Griffith Thomas, D,D M Toronto. 

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By Rev. A. Boyd Scott, B.D,, Glasgow. 

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THE SON OF MAN. 

By Prof. Andrew C. Zenos, D.D., Chicago. 

READINGS IN THE GOSPEL OF ST. LUKE. 

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THE PARABLE OF THE PRODIGAL SON. 

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/Their history is delightfully set forth in Mr. Smeaton's charming pages, which 
give evidence of wide and careful reading, masterly historical analysis, discriminating 
Judgment, and sympathetic handling.' Aberdeen Journal. 



Plato. 

By Prof. D. G. RITCHIE, LL.D. 

'An excellent text-hook for students. It is very well written, and altogether it i 
one of the "best yolumes in the series.' Manchester Guardian. 

Pascal and the Port Royalists. 

By Prof. WM. GLAKK, LL.D. 

1 This Is the best book we know for any one who wishes to study a great man and an 
historic controversy,' London Quarterly .Review. 

Euclid: His Life and System* 

By Prof. THOS. SMITH, LL.D. 

C A hook of fascinating interest to many who would never dream of calling them- 
selves mathematicians.' Westminster Review. 

Hegel and Hegelianlsm. 

By Prof. ROBEKT MACKINTOSH, D.D. 

* Whilst the book ia the work of a careful, penetrating, and exact thinker, it Is 
written in a clear, terse, vivacious style, and ia brightened by felicitous illustrations 
from general literature. It can be confidently commended to all who wish to get 
some understanding of Hegel/ Christian, World, 

David Hume and his Influence on Philo- 
sophy and Theology. 

By Prof. JAMES ORB, D.D. 

' Prof. Orr has made Hume Ms special study. There is no corner of his mind that 
is hidden from him. There is no cause or effect of his philosophy that he has not 
considered. A better choice for this volume could not have been made.' 



Rousseau and Naturalism in Life and 

Thought. 

By Prof. WM. H. HUDSON, M.A. 

' Prof. Hudson has given us an admirable sketch of Rousseau's life, and an equally 
admirable summary and criticism of his writings. This is one of tfe* tost volumes 
of the series.' Critical Meview. 



The Worlffa Epoch-Makers* 



DescarfeSj, Spinoza^ and the New Philo- 
sophy. 

By Principal JAMES IYERACH, D.D. 

'This book constitutes, within a convenient compass, an admirable introduction 
and incentive to what is, intellectually, one of the great periods of human develop- 
ment.' Idterwy World. 

Socrates* 

By Eev. J. T. FORBES, M.A. 

'The author has done a real service to the educated public by issuing a bright, 
sound estimate, biographical and critical, of the charm and limitations attaching to 
the Greek primal path.' Hibbert Journal. 

WyeiifFe and the Lollards. 

By Rev. J. 0. OARRICK, B.D. 
'An able book which we can cordially commend.' Sword and Trowel. 

Cardinal Newman and his Influence on 
Religious Life and Thought. 

By CHARLES SAROLEA, Ph.D., Litt.B. 

'Nowhere could we find a more impartial estimate, not of the man only, but of all 
the facts, mental and emotional, which condition the study of theology/ Spectator. 

Marcus Aurelius and the Later Stoics. 

By Vice-Principal P. W. BtrssELL, B.D. 

*A comprehensive and critical consideration of stoicism, both initu Greek origin 
and its development by the Romans. . . . The student of Stoicism should not, and 
must not, fail to use this inexpensive but scholarly work.' Oxford, Timea, 

Kant and his Philosophical Revolution. 

By Prof. E. M. WENLEY, D.Sc., Litt.D. 

1 A worthy addition to the admirable volumes which have already appeared Jra the 
series. The author has succeeded in, presenting us with a clew and concl&o and, on 
the whole, a comprehensive epitome of the man and his work.' -Glasgow Herald. 



London Jtgontflf SIMPKIH. MABSHAJLL, HJ.AULXOM, KKHT. & CO* 




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