Posted on 04/01/2017 7:10:18 AM PDT by Kaslin
As we approach the 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation, focus will return to the leader of that movement, Martin Luther. What kind of man was he, really? More specifically, what kind of Christian was he?
At a recent conference of R. C. Sprouls Ligonier Ministries, panelists Stephen Nichols and W. Robert Godfrey discussed whether Martin Luther was guilty of anti-Semitism, and there is good reason to raise this question.
As Nichols rightly points out, in 1523, Luther reached out with kindness and humility to the Jewish people, denouncing how the Church had treated them up to now with the hope that many would become Christians. Twenty years later, when that did not happen, and when Luther, now old and sick, had been exposed to some blasphemous, anti-Jesus writings penned by Jews in past generations, he wrote his infamous document Concerning the Jews and Their Lies.
In this mini-book, he told the German princes how to deal with this damned, rejected race of Jews.
First, their synagogues should be set on fire...Secondly, their homes should likewise be broken down and destroyed....Thirdly, they should be deprived of their prayer-books and Talmuds...Fourthly, their rabbis must be forbidden under threat of death to teach any more...Fifthly, passport and traveling privileges should be absolutely for bidden to the Jews....Sixthly, they ought to be stopped from usury [charging interest on loans]....Seventhly, let the young and strong Jews and Jewesses be given the flail, the ax, the hoe, the spade, the distaff, and spindle, and let them earn their bread by the sweat of their noses...We ought to drive the rascally lazy bones out of our system....Therefore away with them....To sum up, dear princes and nobles who have Jews in your domains, if this advice of mine does not suit you, then find a better one so that you and we may all be free of this insufferable devilish burden-the Jews.
Yes, all this came from the pen of Martin Luther. (Brace yourself. Theres more to come.)
Of this despicable document, Nichols said that Luther unleashes his rhetoric against the Jews and is very forceful in his rhetoric. Very forceful? Id call that a gross understatement.
Nichols continues:
Now we need to say that he was an equal opportunity offender. It wasnt just—that rhetoric was not just reserved—for the Jews, he used the same rhetoric for the Papists, for the Anabaptists, for the nominal Christians, that he used for the Jews. But he was wrong. He spoke harshly, and I think he abused his influence that he had in speaking harshly. And so, we need to say that Luther was wrong in that. But this isnt necessarily anti-Semitism, thats really a 20th-century phenomenon.
Once again, I must take exception to these words, which minimize the horror of what Luther wrote.
Tragically, Adolph Hitler thought that Luther was a genius who figured out how dangerous the Jewish people were. And the date that many historians mark as the beginning of the Holocaust, Nov. 9, 1938, was the day that Hitler put Luthers advice into practice, setting on fire and vandalizing Jewish synagogues, shops, and homes.
In that light, I cannot agree with Nichols in saying, I think he abused his influence that he had in speaking harshly. That, again, is a gross understatement, regardless of how ugly Luthers rhetoric was towards other groups and regardless of how coarse the rhetoric of the day might have been. For a Christian leader, such writings must be renounced in the strongest possible terms, even with tears and wails.
Robert Godfrey, the other Ligonier panelist, commented:
Just to add one more thing . . . the one little that should be added is Luther, all his life, longed that Jews should be converted and join the church. Hitler never wanted Jews to join the Nazi party. Thats the difference between anti-Semitic and anti-Jewish. Luther wasnt opposed to the Jews because of their blood. He was opposed to the Jews because of their religion. And he wanted them to join the Christian church. If youre really anti-Semitic, youre against Jews because of their blood and theres nothing Jews can do about that. Theres not change they can make to make a difference. Youre absolutely right, Luthers language should not be defended by us because its violent against the Jews. It was not against an ethnic people, as you said, but against a religion that he reacted so sharply.
Is Godfrey right? Yes and no. On the one hand, the real issue was the Jewish religion (specifically, from Luthers point of view, Jewish unbelief in Jesus) as opposed to being Jewish in and of itself. On the other hand, there was a fine line between the two, as historian Eric W. Gritsch pointed out in his book, Martin Luthers Antisemitism: Against His Better Judgment.
He writes,
There is even a hint of racism in Luther when he commented on the unsubstantiated rumor that Jews killed Christian children. This crime "still shines forth from their eyes and their skin. We are at fault in not slaying them [the Jews]." Such a declaration cannot be limited to a specific historical context. It is timeless and means "death to the Jews," whether it is uttered by Luther or Adolf Hitler. Moreover, Luther himself was willing to kill "a blaspheming Jew": "I would slap his face and, if I could, fling him to the ground and, in my anger, pierce him with my sword.
So wrote Martin Luther. And I find little comfort in the fact that he wrote about others, like the peasants, in similarly dreadful terms: On the obstinate, hardened, blinded peasants, let no one have mercy, but let everyone, as he is able, hew, stab, slay, lay about him as though among mad dogs, . . . . so that peace and safety may be maintained... etc.
Returning to Luther and the Jews, quotes like this make it difficult to separate his theological Jew-hatred from his ethnic Jew-hatred:
A Jew or a Jewish heart is as hard as stone and iron and cannot be moved by any means. . . . In sum, they are the devils children damned to hell . . . . We cannot even convert the majority of Christians and have to be satisfied with a small number; it is therefore even less possible to convert these children of the devil! Although there are many who derive the crazy notion from the 11th chapter of the Epistle to the Romans that all Jews must be converted, this is not so. St. Paul meant something quite different.
As a non-Catholic, Jewish believer in Jesus, I am indebted to Luthers positive contributions and recognize the hellacious battle he fought with corrupt traditions. But I appeal to followers and admirers of Luther today: Please do not minimize the horror of what he wrote (against the Jews and others). Please dont downplay all this as an example of Luther having feet of clay (in the words of Nichols).
There is a lot of blood on those clay feet including Jewish blood.
Lets own it with sadness and grief. To do otherwise is to be less than honest with the memory of Martin Luther.
How long before some SJW notes that he was also a racists?
Wow! Let’s have more papist articles about the leader of the Reformation excommunicated by the pope. Like there already hasn’t been enough in the last five centuries.
I think this is more about replacement theology than antisemitism. Trying to dumb it down and declare it anti Semitism takes away from the true debate of the time. A debate that still exists for good reason. Yawn.
What does your post have to do with mine?
In fact the man who, earlier in the 21st century, was the equivalent of "Catholic Chief Justice" (Card. Raymond Burke, head of the Roman Apostolic Signatura) said she and other public abortion enthusiasts are not to receive Communion because they are not "in" communion. A ruling which, to date, has not been rescinded.
So while Luther may, to some extent, be considered a key exemplar of "Lutheranism," Pelosi cannot be invoked as even poorly "representing" Catholicism.
Although perhaps, like Luther, she would like to either reform it, or, failing that, split it and wreck it.
I was responding to a post about modern day Lutheran heresy I don’t wish to argue with you as I respect you but the popes and “princes of the church” in luthers time were just as antisemitic and racist two wrongs do not make a right all were equally guilty and it still has nothing to do with the reformation
Please note: neither do Catholics.
Yet that anti-semite was trained in the Roman Catholic Church. A case of the fruit not falling far from the tree perhaps?
However, we don't see the worship of Mary, the idols of Mary, indulgences, penance, etc in the NT church which are current practices in the RCC.
Worship those idols with pride vlad...worship them with pride.
Certainly, nothing in Luther’s ugly anti-Semitism gets his ugly anti-Semitic Catholic contemporaries off the hook!
Sorrowfully, Amen to that.
Please note: neither do Catholics.
Oh???
Boniface VIII might disagree with you.
If vlad were merely defending his church I wouldn’t even enter the discussion, but it’s always got to be slagging on Luther, then they turn around and love him the next day, regarding Mary or some other vestige of Luther’s monastic training. It’s a weird sort of love-hate dichotomy with Roman Catholics regarding Luther. I’ve speculated that it has something to do with moon phases, but I honestly can’t say for certain.
It does seem to depend on the discussion with our Catholic friends as to the status of Luther.
That Luther must have hit a sore spot is evidenced by the Counter-Reformation. Hence, there was, and still is, much wrong with the RCC.
Well said, uscga. My Savior’s mercy to me, a hypocrite, is unfathomable.
Yes
Catholic leaders and popes of the time were antisemitic
The nazis added a couple points to their writings and killed 6 million Jews
See how that works?
The nazis are responsible for their atrocities luther and the popes/cardinals of their tone are responsible for their own antisemitism
And that is the one statement we should all agree upon on this, and any other thread.
Christ died for each of us and for us He died.
That should end the discussion.
Excellent words, friend....excellent words.
Read it.
You might learn something.
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