The Pensive Prattler
Friday, 25 October 2013
Thursday, 26 September 2013
Martin Luther loved the Blessed Virgin Mary
Found these excerpt from: http://www.catholicbridge.com/catholic/martin_luther_on_mary.php which is a good site to confound Protestants
who don’t know Luther loved Mary.
“There can be no
doubt that the Virgin Mary is in heaven. How it happened we do not know. (In
the same way Ezekial and Elijah were assumed - by God’s power!!) And since the
Holy Spirit has told us nothing about it, (Luther
is wrong) we can make of it no article of faith . . . It is enough to
know that she lives in Christ. (Sermon of August 15, 1522, the last time Martin Luther preached on the
Feast of the Assumption)”
“The veneration of Mary is inscribed in the very depths of the human heart. (Sermon, September 1, 1522)”
“She is the highest woman and the noblest gem in Christianity after Christ . . . She is nobility, wisdom, and holiness personified. We can never honor her enough. (So much for the endless criticisms I hear that she was a sinner.) Still honour and praise must be given to her in such a way as to injure neither Christ nor the Scriptures. (Sermon, Christmas, 1531) [Precisely, say I. And the Catholics do neither! How could loving Jesus’ mother injure Jesus?]
No woman is like you. You are
more than Eve or Sarah, blessed above all nobility, wisdom, and sanctity.
(Sermon, Feast of the Visitation, 1537)
One should honor Mary as she
herself wished and as she expressed it in the Magnificat. She praised God for
his deeds. How then can we praise her? The true honor of Mary is the honor of
God, the praise of God's grace . . . Mary is nothing for the sake of herself,
but for the sake of Christ . . . Mary does not wish that we come to her, but
through her to God. (Explanation
of the Magnificat, 1521) The Magnificat is the central prayer of the Legion of Mary, a RC lay
evangelising movement.
It is a sweet
and pious belief that the infusion of Mary's soul was effected without original
sin; so that in the very infusion of her soul she was also purified from
original sin and adorned with God's gifts, receiving a pure soul infused by
God; thus from the first moment she began to live she was free from all
sin" (Sermon: "On the Day of the Conception of the Mother of God,"
1527)
She is full of grace, proclaimed
to be entirely without sin- something exceedingly great. For God's grace fills
her with everything good and makes her devoid of all evil. (Personal
{"Little"} Prayer Book, 1522)
Luther gives the Blessed Virgin the exalted position of "Spiritual Mother" for Christians:
It is the consolation and the superabundant goodness of God, that man is able to exult in such a treasure. Mary is his true Mother . (Sermon, Christmas, 1522)
Mary is the Mother of Jesus and the Mother of all of us even though it was Christ alone who reposed on her knees . . . If he is ours, we ought to be in his situation; there where he is, we ought also to be and all that he has ought to be ours, and his mother is also our mother. (Sermon, Christmas, 1529)
Martin Luther on Mary's Perpetual
Virginity
Christ, our Savior, was the real
and natural fruit of Mary's virginal womb . . . This was without the
cooperation of a man, and she remained a virgin after that.
{Luther's Works, eds. Jaroslav Pelikan (vols. 1-30)
& Helmut T. Lehmann (vols. 31-55), St. Louis: Concordia Pub. House (vols.
1-30); Philadelphia: Fortress Press (vols. 31-55), 1955, v.22:23 / Sermons on
John, chaps. 1-4 (1539)}
Christ . . . was the only Son of
Mary, and the Virgin Mary bore no children besides Him . . . I am inclined to
agree with those who declare that 'brothers' really mean 'cousins' here, for
Holy Writ and the Jews always call cousins brothers.
{Pelikan, ibid., v.22:214-15 / Sermons on John,
chaps. 1-4 (1539)}
A new lie about me is being
circulated. I am supposed to have preached and written that Mary, the mother of
God, was not a virgin either before or after the birth of Christ . . .
Facebook discussions about Catholicism v Protestantism
Lord Jesus, let
Your prayer of unity for Christians
become a reality, in Your way.
We have absolute confidence
that you can bring your people together,
we give you absolute permission to move.
Amen
I have been at the pc all day. Don't know why I sometimes do this to myself because it is very tiring. I forgot I had pledged to fast from my pc every Thursay!
Below is the result of my labours! Who will read it? Will anyone read it? Will anyone who does read it leave a comment?
Over the years, I have been given an understanding that it
is part of my vocation - which is primarily that of being a wife and mother - to
defend the Church, founded by Christ, against the misunderstandings and
downright lies, of non-Catholics of every other belief and none. By doing this, I am talking about Christ
because I am telling the doubters they will find the full truth about Him
within the Catholic Church which faithfully preserved the copies of the Old
Testament that Jesus and the Apostles used; faithfully preserved the new
writings coming out in the first century by the Apostles,; eventually put all
the books of the Bible together in the format we have it today; and was
super-vigilant to protect new editions of it once the printing press made it
easier to disseminate. This wonderful
institution founded by Our Lord Himself which preaches Christ at every Mass and
in every other possible way has been under demonic attack for two thousand
years, and will always be under attack, but Christ promised it His eternal
protection.
By defending the
Church, I invite others to look into it, to read correct versions of our Bible,
(there are error-filled versions around so one has to know the difference); to
learn about all the Sacraments Jesus gave us, the full knowledge of which was
handed down by the apostles via the Church Fathers; to learn about all the
Sacraments Jesus gave us, the full knowledge of which was handed down by the
apostles via the Church Fathers; to study what are really our doctrines - not
what non-Roman Catholics say are our doctrines; to encourage them to read
interesting books and articles about the Faith; to read about converts to the
Faith, especially the world famous ones; to understand why we venerate Saints,
and so on and so forth. As a point in question: non-Roman Catholic Christians insist we are idolaters who worship Mary and other Saints - because they are parroting what they have been taught through the literature of their own institutions that broke away from the Mother Church of Christianity in the 16th Century. Catholic devotion to the Saints is NOT and NEVER, NEVER has been preached as essential for salvation. NO ROMAN CATHOLIC IS OBLIGED TO VENERATE MARY OR ANY OTHER SAINT. The majority of us do so because we want to. These devotions are inspirational and they keep us close to God. But there are Catholics who are not interested in these devotions.
Protestants today make Marian devotion an issue by using it
as one of many excuses to not actually look at what the Church teaches is
necessary for salvation. Now, on that we
can debate. Interestingly, Luther never
refuted Our Lady’s standing though he refuted the Church’s authority to make it
an article of faith that she was assumed.
Luther’s assumption was that he knew better than the Church, who under
the inspiration of the Holy Spirit had preserved this truth which it received about
Mary’s assumption via the Church Fathers.
Nowhere has the Church taught that venerating Saints, saying
the Rosary, and loving Mary as our spiritual mother is essential to
salvation. I am sorry there are people
who cannot accept this. I always invite
them to please read the Catechism with a trust-worthy Bible in the other
hand. (That means a Bible with the same
books in it that all Christians used up till the time of the so-called
Reformation.)
I personally do have a devotion to the Saints, especially to
Mary. In the Jewish tradition, by the
way, the King’s mother had an equal social standing to the King and ruled in
his stead when he was away. My devotions
consolidate my belief in and my love for Jesus whom I have loved since I was
about five years old. They increase my
desire for the Sacraments of Confession and the Eucharist. I only began to pray the Rosary when I was 46
years old and it was when I began to do this that my desire to read and
understand better the Scriptures developed.
I pretty quickly learned that reading the Scriptures on my own was a
waste of time. I needed an authoritative
teacher, and that had to be the one that preserved and put the Bible together.
A key Protestant misconception about Catholicism came into
the world via a Muslim vizier called Ibn Khazem in Cordoba in the 11th
Century: this is the conviction that the Catholic Church changed the true
teaching of Jesus and the Apostles at the Council of Nicea. Today, Muslims say that Jesus was an Islamist
prophet and His disciples were proto-Muslims.
Before Ibn Khazem, Muslims accepted the historic validity of the Bible
as a holy book of a specific group of people, Christians. They did not accept Christian interpretation
of Christ’s divinity and human nature, but they did not deny the validity of
their books. Centuries afterwards,
Protestants said we added on teachings that were not there before.
What the Council actually did after a fair debate was to
affirm the CORRECT teachings of Christ’s divinity and His human nature, against
the new heresy of a Catholic bishop, Arius, which was gaining ground in the 4th
Century. People like Arius were losing
the Faith! He was dragging the weak and
ignorant after him! Of course the Church
had to do something about that! In fact,
Arianism submerged and destroyed the Church in many areas for years but Christ
was in charge, He had made His promise about protecting the Church and He kept
it. That particular “deluge” served to
strengthen the Church and to clarify the meaning of particular Scriptural
references so that Arius and all future Ariuses were confounded. All such “spiritual deluges” that occur over
the centuries, caused by the weak human beings who are part of the Body of
Christ, eventually strengthen the Church.
Posted later on the same day: I have
been thinking about authority. The big problem within the non-Catholic
Christian community towards Catholicism is a dislike of authority so profound
that it will not even accept that God Himself could have chosen to set up an
authoritative institution here on earth! Despite Matthew 16:18-19 and other
verses.
I am in favour of dialogue, i.e:
ecumenism, because it is important that the Truth is made available to all who
are talking to each other. That does not mean the Catholic Church must deny her
God-given Sacraments, for example, but should be allowed explain to others why
she knows them to be such. Nor does she need to apologise for promoting
veneration of Mary and the Saints since her historical documents show that the
very first Christians had these devotions.
In the first eleven centuries, there
were only Christians. Europe was called Christendom and Christians believed all
the doctrines of the Catholic Church. All accepted all the Sacraments. All had
devotions of one tradition or another to Mary and the Saints. The Arian heresy
of the 4th Century was the first serious shredder of Christ's Body. In the 11th
Century the Schism between eastern Christians and western Christians added to
Its Wounds. Incidentally, the problems of those eastern Christians were not
connected to veneration of Mary and other Saints, or to infant baptism, or to
changes in Scripture, but to the disagreement about the place of the Holy
Spirit within the unity of the Godhead as expressed in the Creed - in other
words a disagreement about the UNDERSTANDING of specific texts about the Holy
Spirit - which became a handy excuse to break away when the geo-political
conflicts became overwhelming.
Here is a partial list of some of
the movements that broke away either from Catholic Chritianity or from one
another, and if you read about them from informed sources you will see how
their reasons conflict one with the other: Arians, Monophisites, Nestorians,
Cathars, Greek and Russian Orthodox, Lutherans, Calvinists, Anglo-Catholics,
Presbyterians, Methodists, Baptists, Free Church, Pentecostals, Unitarians,
Christian Scientists, Christadelphians and so on and so on. Someone did a
computer count of the Christian churches outside the Catholic Church which have
split off from one another and there are apparently more than thirty thousand
and counting. How can every individual pastor be correct in his interpretation
of the Scriptures?
I had a message
from X today, 26th Sept 2013, saying I talk only about the
Church and not about Jesus.
This was my response:
Yes, X, I do talk about
the Church a lot. It is necessary
because I am always being confronted with hostility towards “The Church”. But when my personal contact is listening to
me on the street, I start by talking to him about Jesus, and Jesus’ love for
him. I give him prayer cards to
encourage the start of a prayer life so that he will be drawn to Jesus. I encourage him to buy or borrow a Bible and
to read it, and I give him links to websites to help him understand and think
about what he is reading.
P.S: I know Protestants
who are very sincere Christians within the narrow confines of their
beliefs, but the movement whose followers came to be called Protestants
was an evil heresy which scourged the Body of Christ and divided it, much
as the earlier heresy of Arius had done in the 4th Century. Within a
couple of years of the start of Luther breaking away from the Church,
there were several different groups who disagreed with him as well as
with the Church, and today, there are thousands of "churches"
that have differences of opinion one with the other. The Body of Christ
of which Jesus is the Head is the Catholic Church because Christ's Body
cannot be divided. To think otherwise is to deny Christ's power to
protect it and to deny his prayer, "Father, may they be one."
The response of X to me:
Do you not realize that you are
hostile towards those you call protestants? Do you not realize that you
are always attacking non-Catholics? Many of the things you say about
"protestants" is complete nonsense and comes from pure
ignorance. The more you go on the more I realize how wrong it all is. You
have made me see that. But you know, I am fully confident that the Lord
will one day vindicate those you are always attacking, and that you are
in for a big shock. So I will leave it there, I should have done that
long ago as another wiser person did. May your eyes be opened to see the
truth and may you love and not hate those whom God loves and who belong
to Him and who are His children. The Bible tells us to love the brethren,
you do not.
My reply to X:
Dear X, if you want to tell me that I am
writing "nonsense" you have to specify which sentence or paragraph is
nonsense so that I am given the chance to respond otherwise you are wasting
your time as well as my own. I may be saying things about your belief system
which annoy you but I am not attacking you as an individual. You may be annoyed
with the arguments I raise against your arguments, but in debates that is
permitted. As far as loving one’s brethren goes, your own language does not
suggest love of me or of Catholics generally. Quite the opposite! Please do
“walk away”, and be at peace.
In fairness, though, please remember that on my own FB, and on the FB pages of my real-life RC friends, I am free to post websites and messages that support our beliefs and to defend the Catholic Church against the postings of anyone writes against it. I do not go into your FB to deliberately offend you; I cannot even remember the last time I went onto your Timeline. And you are not obliged to read anything that comes onto your pages with my name on it. If you are tempted, hit the button on the top right of the posting which will delete it. Out of sight, out of mind :-) J. But I will always stand up to anything you write against the True Faith if it comes into my FB via a friend’s FB. God bless you.
In fairness, though, please remember that on my own FB, and on the FB pages of my real-life RC friends, I am free to post websites and messages that support our beliefs and to defend the Catholic Church against the postings of anyone writes against it. I do not go into your FB to deliberately offend you; I cannot even remember the last time I went onto your Timeline. And you are not obliged to read anything that comes onto your pages with my name on it. If you are tempted, hit the button on the top right of the posting which will delete it. Out of sight, out of mind :-) J. But I will always stand up to anything you write against the True Faith if it comes into my FB via a friend’s FB. God bless you.
This was not posted though I was sorely tempted. It is painful to hear the words,
"idolators", "child abusers", "down-treaders of the
poor", and similar insults said to one in encounter after encounter with
the Evangelicals and Pentecostals I meet.
The abuse starts from these particular Christians the moment I tell
them, "Hello. I am a Catholic and I
would like to share my Faith with you."
I never return the rudeness but I try to show them their understanding
of us is wrong. However, they rarely
listen even for a few moments and have a way of talking fast that does not
permit one to interrupt in response to a statement. Time after time, I have to smile and say God
bless you and walk away. I have had gargoyle
faces pulled when I mention my Faith, I have heard the expression
"Ugh! Don't talk to
her/them!" That is hostility.
Posted later on 26th Sept 2013: Thinking about my personal relationship with Christ and why this joyful fact is denied by some Christians who mistakenly think that Roman Catholics cannot have such a relationship with him unless they leave the Church. Even the CCC states that Catholics must have a vital and personal relationship with the living and true God. We simply do not view it as the only way to express Christian faith. What is more personal than to receive Christ's Body and Blood? Only Catholics believe in the Real Presence yet the Bible is explicit that it is gravely sinful to eat and drink the Body and Blood if one is not in a state of grace. ( 1 Cor: 11:27) Why would this matter if they were only bread and wine?
27 Therefore whoever eats the bread or drinks the cup of the Lord unworthily will have to answer for the body and blood of the Lord.
28 That person should examine himself, and so eat the bread and drink the cup.
29 For anyone who eats and drinks without discerning the body, eats and drinks judgment on himself.
30 That is why many among you are ill and infirm, and a considerable number are dying.
31 If we discerned ourselves, we would not be under judgment;
32 but since we are judged by the Lord, we are being disciplined so that we may not be condemned along with the world.
From Wikipedia: As Justin indicated, the word Eucharist is from the Greek word εὐχαριστία (eucharistia), which means thanksgiving. Catholics typically restrict the term 'communion' to the reception of the Body and Blood of Christ by the communicants during the celebration of the Mass and to the communion of saints.
Earlier still, in about 106, Saint Ignatius of Antioch criticized those who "abstain from the Eucharist and the public prayer, because they will not admit that the Eucharist is the self-same Body of our Savior Jesus Christ, which [flesh] suffered for our sins, and which the Father in His goodness raised up again" (Epistle to the Smyrnaeans 6, 7).
Similarly, St. Ambrose of Milan countered objections to the doctrine, writing "You may perhaps say: 'My bread is ordinary.' But that bread is bread before the words of the Sacraments; where the consecration has entered in, the bread becomes the Flesh of Christ" (The Sacraments, 333/339-397 A.D. v.2,1339,1340).
Why did the apostles organise the
distribution of Communion to the sick?
Bread and wine have no miraculous healing powers.
Saturday, 21 September 2013
Some Bible history from "Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Christian."
20th September 2013
I have been browsing again through David B. Currie's book, "Born Fundamentalist, Born Again Catholic" and this time really took on board his section on the history of the Bible. It answers many questions. He mentions the Bible burning which today's Evangelicals and others are so wrathful about - but points out there were other Bibles provided as replacements, Bibles with the correct translation!! We cannot judge the Church of the 16th C by our 21st C horror of burning books. To the churchmen of that time, it was common-sense to burn an error-ridden book such as the Tyndale or the Wycliffe Bible. Serious biblical scholars admit they are not worth tuppence. Today, I thought I would quote from and para-phrase some of the pages in this section of Currie's book.
In view of my experiences doing street contact this year, I wonder how many Pentecostals or Evangelicals and other Sola Scrittura fans know that a Catholic priest, Bede, translated part of the Bible into English in the 8th C. Gutenberg was a Catholic and he printed the first Bible. In 1478, a Bible in Low German was printed! By the end of the 15th C Catholics were printing Bibles in many European languages. I was really delighted to come across these facts the first time I read Currie's book some years ago, because although I was aware the Catholic Church had always spread the Bible wherever it could and as much as it could, until then I did not have solid quotes I could use.
Currie says that he, " like most evangelicals, was totally misinformed about the historical background of what we called the Apocrypha. (Catholics refer to these books as deuterocanonical.) As I explored the issue, I was surprised by what I discovered. Finally, I began again at ground zero by separating out the facts that were not in dispute. These books or portions of the Bible are included in Catholic OT but not in the Protestant."
He adds on p. 104, "...the NT has a separate canonical issue involving the Gnostic (heretical) books. Evangelicals, unlike a small group of liberal Protestants, are in total agreement with Catholics on the NT canon."
He continues, ... "there is no doubt at all that Jesus and his companions used the Septuagint. This was the accepted Bible (written in Greek) of the Palestinian Jews and others around the Mediterranean for over a hundred years before Jesus' time and it continued to be used by Christians after the Ascension. Its canon cannot be doubted and it included the seven books of the Apocrypha on an equal standing with the rest of the inspired OT. Currie says the NT referrs to these apocryphal books over twenty times. Some of the parallels between the referred texts and the originals are even clearer in the Greek than in English translations - eg: James 1:19 "Be quick to listen, slow to speak." In Sirach 5:11, we read, "Be swift in listening, but slow in answering." Apparently, Ronald Knox suggested that Wisdom may have been written by Paul because of the striking similarities between his epistles and Wisdom.
Biblical and apocryphal books are referred to with equal respect by the NT writers. For example, Ezekiel 14:14 & 20 refer to Noah, Job and Daniel. Evangelicals assume that Ezekial was referring to the Noah of Genesis: 5-9, the Job of Job: 1-42, and the Daniel of Daniel 1-12. But this is not true of the Daniel they assume to be the character mentioned because he was only a child in Ezekiel's time! Ezekiel was referring to another character who was so well known to his audience that did not need to give an explanation to his audience. So, where is the second Daniel? He is found in the Apocrypha, Daniel:13-14, and is sometimes spelled Danel. He lived long before Ezekiel and like Noah and Job he was a gentile. [CCC 58.] Ezekiel, writing under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, accessed the Apocrypha in the same way as he accessed the rest of the Scriptures.
Currie says on p. 105: "The early Church Fathers followed the apostles' lead in this matter, peppering their writings with references from the apocryphal books, generally using the Septuagint translation. The Septuagint, with its inclusion of the apocryphal books, was undeniably the Bible of the early Church.
There are lists of the canon of Scripture, including the Apocrypha, from very early times. The first fragment (.....) appears to date from just after the end of the first century. The major early disputes, however, involved the canon of the New Testament. The first fragment of any canonical list appears to date from just after the end of the first century. (.....) The canon of the Old Testament was not in dispute within the early Church.
Beginning with Peter’s sermon at Pentecost, the Christians and the unbelieving Jews locked in battle over whether Jesus was the Jewish Messiah. The Christians made extensive use of OT messianic prophecies. Many of these prophesies were in the seven books that Evangelicals now refer to as apocryphal.
The Jewish leader revised their canon about A.D. 90 to exclude those books not written in Hebrew (2 Maccabees, Wisdom, and Daniel 13 -14) and those books for which the Hebrew original was not extant (Judity, Baruch, Sirach and 1Maccabees, in order to solve much of their apologetical problems with Christians. By excluding those books, they eliminated many of those messianic prophesies. This revision came to be called the Palestine Canon but it was a Jewish canon, developed after many of the apostles were dead and most of the New Testament had already been written. The Christians did not confirm this decision, taken independently by the Jews.
In fact, Christians continued to use these seven books as before. (.........) These are the facts that all the sides can agree on. What do they mean? When I first started to think this issue through, I found myself becoming angry with my Evangelical teachers for the first time! The conclusions followed so easily. It seemed to me that only someone who wilfully ignored the obvious could come to Evangelical conclusions about the Apocrypha. Then I remembered that I too had ignored these facts for most of my life. I cooled down rather quickly.
It is a fact that Jesus, his apostles, the New Testament writers, and the early Church all used a Bible that included the Apocrypha. The Palestine Canon, which excluded these books, had not been ‘invented’ yet. I recognised with a mental thud that the Catholic Church had not added these seven books after the Reformation in order to bolster their theology. (........) The Reformers took these books out of the canon accepted by the early church.”
Why would anyone do this? Currie replies that the reformers did not like the teachings found in these books any more than the Jews did, and for similar reasons - the books clashed with their own ideas. The Jews objected to the messianic prophesies. The reformers objected to the doctrines regarding salvation, prayers for the dead, and purgatory. The reformers approved of the Palestine Canon, which was Jewish, in order to delete those seven books. Some of the reformers, (Currie does not say who they were so will have to try and find out elsewhere) considered printing their Bible with four books from the New Testament relegated to the Index! These were Hebrews, James, Jude and Revelation. However, they realised there was no precedent to permit them to do this. But they never returned the seven apocryphal books to the Old Testament section of their Bible. Fortunately, not all non-Catholic publishers of the Bible concurred. The King James was originally published with the Apocrypha in it, and the Orthodox Church also accepts them. Even John Wesley quoted from them frequently, according to Currie.
Currie continues on p. 107: “Evangelicals have no good, objective explanation for accepting the canon they do accept. Catholics did not change the canon of the early Church or the deposit of faith to make them fit preconceived ideas. The fact that the Reformers did is one of the saddest chapters in all Christendom."
And he ends, on p. 108: “When I realised this, for the first time in my life I was not sure how much I trusted Evangelical scholarship. From the timing of the different canons, it is obvious that Jesus used the Septuagint, with its inclusions of those seven books. The early Church followed suit. Because, during the Reformation, the canon was being challenged, the Church re-affirmed the historic canon of the early Church at the Council of Trent. * (.....) I can’t help smiling when friends ask me if I still read the Bible, now that I am a Catholic. The Bible is what drew me into the Catholic Church. Yes, I do still read it - all of it. So do many of my Catholic friends, every day.” * (My emphasis)
Thursday, 19 September 2013
Franz Xaver Kiefl on Luther: extract
At a later date, when and if I have time, I will post Part Two of James Swan's paper on Luther. I found this extract/quote interesting, from a Catholic scholar who had a kinder view of Luther than earlier writers on the subject had.
B. Criticism of Luther by Kiefl
A. Overview of F.X. Kiefl’s Attitude toward Luther
F. X. Kiefl is credited as the
first Catholic scholar to put forth a new kinder approach to Luther. Kiefl was a
German theologian at the University of Wurzburg. His groundbreaking article on
Luther was Martin Luther’s Religious Psyche as the Root of a New
Philosophical World View.[4] While
Kiefl’s theological predecessors denied that Luther had any bonafide religious
motives, Kiefl speaks of Luther’s “profound piety, his indomitable will, and his
extraordinary literary genius.”[5] Kiefl broke
with his scholarly predecessors: theological motives explain Luther.[6] Leonard Swidler explains, that Kiefl
“…treated the psyche of Luther. However, as the title indicates, he treated
it not as the object of depth psychology, but rather as a religious soul. He
maintained that Luther’s starting point and his main interest were religious. It
was from Luther’s religious psyche, as the “most profound and vital source,”
that “as out of a seed everything later grew.”[7]
Kiefl was quite bold. He rejected
the earlier Catholic approach of attacking Luther for his doctrine of
Justification. Catholic scholar Heinrich Denifle had made popular the notion
that Luther simply invented his doctrine to excuse sinful behavior, thus Denifle
spent considerable time painting Luther as a gross sinner. Kiefl rejects this.
He sees past Denifle’s rhetoric and distorted facts and sees that Luther never
denied good works or holy living. Rather good works are the way in which faith
expresses itself.[8]
Kiefl also evaluated the debate
between Luther and Erasmus and found that Luther understood Christianity on a
much deeper level than did Erasmus. Erasmus was a man of Renaissance learning,
and Kiefl concludes by noting the negative impact of the Renaissance on
Christianity and Luther’s positive impact of being God’s “powerful instrument of Providence”
in the work of Church “purification”:
“Through Luther’s bringing into existence a
spiritual movement which convulsed centuries, Providence has purified the Church
in its inward holiness from the seductions of the culture of the Renaissance and
has through this bitter physic kindled a new, fresh life in the whole organism
of the Church. Luther was the powerful instrument of Providence in this work of
purification, not by discovering a new source under the rubble of abuses but,
with these real abuses affording him an occasion, by pushing a religious
principle (to him quite justified) too far precipitating the Church into a war
that shook its very foundations.”[9]
James Atkinson sums up Kiefl: “Kiefl showed a deep
knowledge of Luther’s works. He appreciated Luther’s profound piety, his
indomitable will, and his literary genius. True, he suggests that Luther’s
spirituality was morbid, but he picks up the powerful phrase from Trent when
Luther was reported as a powerful instrument chosen by Providence to reform the
Church and purify it.”[10]
B. Criticism of Luther by Kiefl
Kiefl criticizes Luther for
taking God’s “almightiness” too far.
Luther’s doctrine of total depravity (leading to a denial of free will) was his
error: “[Kiefl] saw Luther as mastered by God. It was his concept of a God
who acted unilaterally that led Luther to deny free will, to affirm man’s total
depravity, to hold a doctrine of imputed righteousness, and finally to reject a
Church that claimed to mediate salvation…[11] Kiefl
thinks Luther went too far and convulsed the Church in internal strife, but he
does bring Luther back into the religious sphere where he belongs and where he
ought always to have been.”[12]
Kiefl displays sympathy for
Luther, and one will not find the deep hostile polemic that so characterized
earlier Catholic German scholars. Kiefl though at one point gives a passing
glance at Luther’s “abnormal” and “sick” spiritual condition. Another
scholar though has pointed out, “Kiefl has merely recorded an abnormal
condition without explaining it. This is sufficient to give Luther’s theology as
a whole the character, not of a doctrine worked out by a normal Christian man,
but of a remedy invented to relieve a sick soul.”[13]
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