Martin Luther was an important figure in the Roman Catholic Church who forever altered Christian thought. Martin Luther's contributions to church history will forever be remembered. The purpose of this discussion is to provide a biography of the martin Luther and to explain his importance in reformation and the development of Christian thought.
Biography
Martin Luther was born in the year 1483 in Eislenberg, in the eastern Region of Germany to Marguerite and Han's Luther (Ritter & Riches, 1963). Luther's father Han's was a miner but he wanted his son to get an education and become a lawyer.
To this end, Martin Luther was sent to several different schools including the University of Erfur't (Ritter & Riches, 1963). While at the University he began to excel as a scholar and it seemed that he would become a lawyer.
However, Martin Luther's endeavor to become a lawyer was cut short by a storm that endangered Martin Luther's life in the year 1505. Martin Luther promised God that if he would be saved from the storm, he would become a monk (Ritter & Riches, 1963).
He was saved from the storm and later on that year he became a monk at the Augustinian Monastery in Erfurt (Ritter & Riches, 1963).
Several biographers have asserted that Martin Luther was always vacillating over whether or not he made the right decision by joining the monastery instead of becoming a lawyer (Ritter & Riches, 1963). It has also been asserted that martin Luther was never very secure in his salvation and joining the monastery was one of the ways that he sought to reassure himself. Five years after joining the monastery, Luther was sent to Rome with a group of monks from his monastery (Ritter & Riches, 1963). It was upon visiting Rome that Martin Luther began to question the tenets of the faith. Luther also recognized a great deal of corruption within the Catholic Church.
Eventually Martin Luther left the Monastery in Erfurt and joined another Monastery in Wittenberg. While living in Wittenburg, Luther earned a degree and theology and gained employment as a professor at the University of Wittenburg (Ritter & Riches, 1963). While lecturing at the University, Luther began to form and express some of his opinions concerning salvation (Ritter & Riches, 1963). One of the issues that Martin Luther had with the concept of salvation and the Catholic Church had to do with the concept of grace as opposed to deeds being the justification for salvation (Ritter & Riches, 1963). It was during a series of lecture on Romans that Martin Luther came to the epiphany that Grace was a gift from God.
In 1517 Martin Luther produced one of his most studied works, the Disputation on the Power and Efficacy of Indulgence also referred to as the Ninety-Five Theses. The work called into question the selling of indulgences by the church and it also presented the idea of justification by grace (Ritter & Riches, 1963).
Key to Martin Luther's assertions was the theology of the cross. This theory posits that salvation comes as a result of the grace of god and not as a result of the deeds that one performs, which was the stance of the church (Ritter & Riches, 1963). The theology of the cross presented salvation as a gift that merely has to be accepted as opposed something that has to be earned. Luther asserted that the teachings of the church were leaving people confused and unsure concerning their salvation and that this teaching needed reformation.
A copy of the work was presented to the Archbishop Albrecht of Mainz. The assertions presented in the Theses were viewed as an insult to the church and seen as an attack against the leadership of the church and the belief system of the Church. According to Sobolewski (2001)
Acting according to an evangelical theology that had emerged from his lectures in Bible at Wittenberg since 1513 and reacting to the recent indulgence preaching of John Tetzel, OP, (1465-1519) in Juterborg and Zerbst near Wittenberg, Luther submitted the theses to Archbishop Albrecht of Mainz (1490-1545). The archbishop had authorized this preaching to finance curial fees for the multiple Episcopal offices that made him the most powerful churchman in the Holy Roman Empire.
Intended to begin an academic disputation, Luther's theses, as stated in a companion letter to Albrecht, were to remedy a gross misunderstanding of the Catholic faith among the people that the indulgence-preachers promoted. By that preaching, Luther emoted to Albrecht, "O great God! The souls committed to your care, excellent Father, are thus directed to death (Sobolewski,2001, pg 57-58)."
To present his position to the church, Martin Luther met with the Augustinian Order in Heidelberg (Sobolewski,2001). This became known as the Heidelberg disputation. During this disputation Luther was told that he needed to retract the statements made in the theses. However Martin Luther refused to take back any of the positions that he presented. The catholic authorities were very dismayed by his decision and he was viewed as a traitor and eventually he was excommunicated (Sobolewski,2001).
In addition to being excommunicated Martin Luther was labeled a heretic and criticized severely for the stances that he took. At the time of his assertions and throughout the centuries following his death, Martin Luther was viewed by many as a heretic who had no respect for authority or the teachings of the Catholic Church (Sobolewski,2001). His stance on the aforementioned issues was viewed as a revolt against the Church. Luther was even accused of being possessed with demonic spirits because of his positions on the teachings and practices of the Catholic Church. One author asserted that "His revolt was caused by monkish envy of the Dominican, Tetzel; he lusts after wine and women, is without conscience, and approves any means to gain his end. He thinks only of himself. He is a liar and a hypocrite, cowardly and quarrelsome (Sobolewski, 2001-page 18)."
Importance in reformation and the development of Christian thought
Although Martin Luther was chastised and punished for the theories he had concerning Catholic teachings, he also paved the way for reformation and the development of Christian thought (Ritter & Riches, 1963). The manner in which Martin Luther questioned the long held beliefs of the church led to reformations throughout Christian denominations. Martin Luther has played an essential role in Church history
In fact the theology of the cross is now generally accepted by most Christian denominations. The idea that salvation is a gift and not something that is earned is often a central theme of evangelism and evangelistic movements since the time of Martin Luther. Martin Luther seemed to be instrumental in perpetuating the idea that religious authorities or institutions could and should be questioned, regardless of how solidified their theologies may be (Ritter & Riches, 1963). His willingness to question commonly held beliefs forever changed the trajectory of the Catholic Church and the Christian church in general.
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