Martin Luther 1483-1546
Jan 19, 2016
Martin Luther
1483-1546
Background
• Augustinian monk• Taught at the University of Wittenberg in
Saxony
Johann Tetzel
• Was authorized by Pope Leo X to sell indulgences– Payment to reduce ones punishment after death
or a loved one who was already dead• “As soon as a coin in the coffer rings, the soul
from purgatory springs”• Addition revenues were used to pay for St.
Peter’s cathedral in Rome
95 Theses
• October 31, 1517• Luther criticized the selling of indulgences but
went further than others before him by questioning the scriptural authority of the pope to grant indulgences
• Historical dispute about nailing to Wittenberg church door
• The printing press facilitated the spread of Luther’s works
Luther challenges Church
• 95 Theses were first seen by the pope as a disagreement between Augustinian and Dominican monks
• 1518, Luther defied the pope by refusing to stop his crusade– He did not seek to create a new church at first
Debate
• Luther v. Johann Eck• Leipzig in 1520• Luther denied both infallibility of pope and of
general council• Luther claimed that the Church had erred
when it executed Hus• This was point of no return for Luther
v.
Luther’s Reform
• 1520, Luther published his theology of reform• Salvation could be achieved through faith alone– Rejected “good works”
• The Bible is the sole authority• Only two sacraments – baptism and communion• The church consists of a “priesthood of all
believers”• Criticized sale of indulgences
Excommunication
• 1520, Luther was excommunicated by Pope Leo X
Diet of Worms
• 1521• Charles had promised before his election as
HRE that he would not allow anyone in his smpire to be excommunicated w/o fair trail
• Charles demanded the Luther recant his writings, Luther refused– “Here I stand. I can do no other”
Edict of Worms
• Luther outlawed as a heretic by the Holy Roman Empire
• Luther was kidnapped by agents of Frederick III and taken to his castle where he was protected and continued to write
Bible
• 1523, Luther translated the Bible into the vernacular, influencing the development of the modern German language
Confessions of Augsburg
• 1530• Written by Luther’s friend, Philip Melanchthon• Attempted to unite Lutheran and Catholic
princes of HRE• Became traditional statement of the Lutheran
Church– Salvation through faith alone– Bible is the sole authority– “Priesthood of all believers”