This year is a big year
for Martin Luther and the Reformation. On Oct. 31, 1517, an Augustinian monk and
professor of theology in Wittenberg, Saxony (eastern Germany) nailed 95
doctrinal theses to the door of the castle church. He couldn’t have picked a
more conspicuous place.
As Lutheran theologian Martin Marty says in the subtitle to his October
31, 1517, it was indeed a day that changed the world.
Numerous books have
been written that detail the beginnings and history of the Protestant
Reformation (and quite a few in the last year alone). But it’s not Marty’s
intent to tell or retell that history. Instead, his essays briefly summarize
that history, look at how the Reformation continues to affect us today, and
consider the issues that remain in any significant move toward ecumenism.
It’s familiar ground,
but Marty brings a keen eye to it. He’s lived many of these issues in countless
meetings that seek to heal the rift between Protestant and Catholic (and
especially Lutheran and Catholic). He knows where strides have been made, and
he knows how wide the remaining gaps are.
He writes much about
penance and repentance. He meditates on justification and penance. He
summarizes half a millennium of conflict. He looks at the sacraments. And he
finally asks the question implied by the subtitle: did that one day change the
world?
His answer: “That this
monk, Martin Luther, acted in the context of long-term debates about whether
God is gracious, and whether God’s grace changes the world, our world, leads to October 31, 1517, to
be regarded as a day of decision.” (The book’s appendix contains all 95 of the
theses for reading and reference.)
Martin Marty |
Marty is Fairfax M. Cone Distinguished Service Professor Emeritus of the
History of Modern Christianity at the University of Chicago and an ordained minister in the
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. He is the author and co-author of numerous works on
religion, faith, and ecumenism, including Martin
Luther; The
Christian World: A Global History;
Lutheran
Questions Lutheran Answers;
The
Mystery of the Child;
WhenFaiths Collide; and many
others written over a 50+-year
career.
Luther wasn’t the
first, Marty says, to question how the church controlled the individual’s theological
practices or beliefs; nor was he the last. But his was the one that struck the
imagination and hearts of his time, and still strikes the imagination and
hearts of our own.
Painting: Martin Luther in 1525 at age 42, by Lucas Cranach
the Elder.
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