Posted on 10/31/2017 5:45:00 AM PDT by Gamecock
ith the advent of modern psychoanalysis, its become popular to evaluate the psyches of famous historical figures: people like Alexander the Great, Moses, Nero, and others. One of the favorite targets of study is Martin Luther. Erik Erikson, for example, emphasized that Martin Luther was not only neurotic, but psychotic as well. This accusation implies that one of our great heroes of the faith is one whose sanity is seriously questioned.
Why do some thinkers come to the conclusion that Martin Luther was a madman? To be fair, even a cursory glance at the readings of Luther reveal a man of tempestuous spirit, personal intensity, and profound passion. There are certain events in his life that seem not only strange, but at times even bizarre. We can understand, to some degree, why some people think Luther might not have been sane.
We know Luther was preoccupied with a foreboding sense of his own death, having predicted it at least six times falsely. We know also that Luther went through several peculiar episodes, such as his being knocked from his horse by lightning, which led him to become a monk. Some think this episode explains his neurosis or psychosis. We also know the story of his pilgrimage to Rome and his going through emotional turmoil in climbing the stairs of the Scala Sancta on his knees. We know of first experience in celebrating the Mass. When he came to the part when he had to say, Hoc est corpus meum, the words lodged in his throat. There was an awkward silence as his family and friends waited. Luther stood there quivering, unable to complete the saying. He was terrified of the thought that he was holding in his hands the transubstantiated body and blood of Christ. A strange experience indeed for a man of great poise and presencebut not enough to deem him insane.
Luther was also obstinate and single-minded in his debates with Johann Eck and Thomas Cajetan. These debates led to the confrontation at Worms, where Luther dared to defy the church on a major point of doctrine. We know how Hollywood portrays Luthers stance at Worms. When hes called upon to recant, Luther stands with his chest out and says: Unless I am convinced by sacred Scripture or by evident reason, I shall not recant. For my conscience is held captive by the Word of God, and to act against conscience is neither right nor safe. Here I stand, I can do no other. God help me. He then jumps on his horse and rides off to start the Reformation.
Perhaps it happened like that, but have you ever read the prayer Luther wrote the night before that meeting? Do you remember what happened in his first encounter before the princes of the church and of the state? When they asked him to recant, he stood there meekly. He looked at the princes, and he said in a hesitant voice, Could I have twenty-four hours to think it over? They granted him this time. He went back to the privacy of his own chambers, and he composed a prayer. If ever a man was broken before God and experienced a sense of utter helplessness and loneliness against the forces of this world, it was Luther at that moment.
But even that moment isnt why people think he was crazy. The biggest reason for questioning Luthers sanity has to do with his period of intense scrupulosity in the confessional. It was customary and required of the young monks of the monastery to go through daily confession. As a matter of prescribed procedure, the monks would come into the confessional in the morning, and they would confess the sins of the last twenty-four hours, receive the absolution of the priest, and go about the days labors. This would typically take each monk two or three minutes.
Not Luther. He would go into the confessional and recite the previous days sins not for five minutes, but for two hours, three hours, sometimes even four hoursreciting in detail every sin he could remember. Luther felt the imminent wrath and judgment of God. If it was crazy to feel this imminence, then Luther was undoubtedly a crazy man. He would come back from the confessional tormented after spending hours confessing his sins. As soon as he got back to his room, he would remember a sin he had forgotten to confess. This is a neurotic preoccupation with guilt, and so they say Luther was crazy. But was he really?
One of the things about Luther thats often overlooked is that before the episode of his being knocked from his horse, Luther had already distinguished himself as one of the most brilliant students of law in all of Europe. His father was furious when Luther left a promising career in law to waste his life on religion. The keen analytical ability of Luthers mind in understanding the demands of law were applied to Scripture.
Luthers logic worked like this: If the great commandment is to love God with all of your heart, mind, soul, and strength, and your neighbor as much as yourself, then whats the great transgression? The failure to love God with all of your heart, mind, soul, and to love every human being in this world as much as you love yourself. To fail to do that is to commit an act of cosmic treason against the Lord God Almighty. Thats not a peccadillo. Thats enough to send me to hell forever, and so I tremble with every slightest act that transgresses the holiness of God and the sanctity of those who are created in His image.
Logically and theologically then, Luther was the sanest man in Europe. He understood the demands of the law of God, and it seemed to be driving him crazy. That is, until his brilliant mind, in his preparation of lectures for Romans, turned its attention to Romans 3: For by works of the law no human being will be justified in his sight, since through the law comes knowledge of sin. Then Luther read a word that is the most precious word in all of Scripture. Its the gospel in one wordbut: But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law. Then he read the conclusion in verse 28: For we hold that one is justified by faith apart from works of the law.
Luther said, When that message made an impact on my mind and penetrated my understanding, the gates of paradise swung open and I walked in. The just shall live by faith. Luther moved from torment to peace, from neurosis to confidence, from seeming insanity to sanity, giving him the strength and the courage to change the world.
Therefore, I hope that during this significant 500th anniversary of the Reformation, you are sane like Luther. On the one hand, Luther understood the holiness of the law of God, and on the other hand, he understood his utter and complete dependence upon the righteousness of Christ for peace and justification.
Its one thing to understand justification by faith in the head. Its another thing to get it in your bloodstreamto let it flow into the lives of everyone you meet. By this and by Gods grace, we can ensure that this gospel may never be hidden or obscured again.
In a hundred years from now will they be asking if Pope Frankie was insane?
For we hold that one is justified by faith apart from works of the law.
Luther must have stopped reading there, because in the very next verse, v. 29, St. Paul makes it clear what "works of the law" mean in this context: "For is God the God of the Jews only?" So "works of the Law" in Romans 3 is something that pertains to "the Jews only"; that is, the ceremonial law of the Old Testament.
We are indeed "justfied by faith apart" from the ceremonial law of the Old Testament, but no Catholic in Luther's day claimed otherwise.
And the truth comes out.
Historical chrstianity was not against "works;" it was against the Biblical ritual and ceremonial, which it replaced with a post-Biblical ritual and ceremonial that was somehow "superior" because it was post-Biblical. How dare anyone expect internal consistency from opponents of the Torah?
Yes . . . a ritual and ceremonial given by G-d's very Mouth to Moses and Israel was to be replaced by a "superior" one which developed slowly over time based on the pagan calendar and the seasons. And not only that, but the Biblical ceremonial was henceforth forbidden! (You know, kinda like how the old prohibition against homosexuality has been replaced by a new prohibition against "homophobia?") No wonder the world is upside down. The current situation was a long time coming.
As for all you poor saps who grew up believing J*sus "took your place in hell" so you wouldn't have to go there, behold the truth! He died to replace a Divine religion with a human one, the words of G-d with the Julian/Gregorian calendar, tefillin with rosary beads, and the Qorbanot with the "holy sacrifice of the mass!" In other words, he didn't die for your sins; he died to start a new religion!
No wonder Catholics reject the facticity of the Hebrew Bible. They'd have to admit that G-d personally authored the "old law." So now they practice "historical criticism" so they can say that it was a product of long historical evolution just like their own made-up rituals!
Actually in the Old Testament, too.
Elohe Tsadeki (Psalms 4:1) - GOD of My Righteousness
Jehovah Tsidkenu (Jeremiah 23:6) The LORD Our Righteousness
Read more: http://the-many-names-of-god.com/christianity/old-testament-hebrew-names-god/#ixzz4x6LFsc3y
I was always taught that Jesus FULFILLED the Law, and therefore was the only human who was righteous while living and could actually make the required sacrifice. He did not abolish the heart of the Law.
I would be interested in your view of the coming Messhiah.
Insanity of Martin Luther
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-religion/3578559/posts
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yVTtLnWqhbY
Great themes. Does your pastor post his sermons online?
No, he was Spirit-filled and targeted by satan. Quite the battle.
Sounds more like an autistic savant (Asperger's being no bar to high intellect). Autists are very literal if he was taught to confess every sin, then every sin it would be, even if it took four hours and autists are systematizers and systematic in their approach to life. So he enumerated his spiritual conclusions about his questions to the Church. I'm only surprised he stopped at 95 instead of making it a nice round number like 100. But if that wouldn't have been sincere, it would have offended his well-exercised conscience.
It must have been a cultural thing -- ever read Mozart's letters to his wife? "[Poop] well! [Poop] 'til it bursts!"
LOLs!
Communism turns 100 this year. NeoEarthWorship is only around 40 years old. I'm so tired of both of them.
But the Living Water is still refreshing after two millenia!
Why wait?
Possibly
Was he evil?
Yes
LCMS ping!
Remember what Jesus said about loving your enemies?
Yes. Next question?
So why aren’t you obedient to what Jesus said?
I keep asking this and I never get any answer from you other than ‘well, I pray for X!’
So in one breath you pray for someone and in the next breath you curse him.
Choose one or the other, hypocrite.
What in the heck are you talking about?
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