Luther Attempts to Calm a Storm

On his visit to Wittenberg in December 1521, Junker Jörg had a chance to speak with and overhear conversations between everyday Germans. What he learned disturbed him greatly. He sensed anger against the Church and her abuses and general unease among common people. He likely read several of the extreme pamphlets, some threatening violence and rebellion.

For months he had been haunted by the possibility that events could get out of hand. The Electoral Saxon Court was also worried. Not entirely successfully, the Elector forbid the changes being made by Luther’s followers and university students for the time being. Yet many of the changes being made by impatient reformers were ideas he himself had advanced. The end to private masses, distribution of both elements in the Lord’s Supper and an end to monastic celibacy were among these reforms. He vowed to write and discourage the former while encouraging the latter.

In the summer of 1521, from the safety of the Wartburg, Luther wrote a treatise De abroganda missa privata Martini Lutheri sententia (The Misuse Of The Mass [AE 36:129ff]) to help those engaged in beginning to reform the Mass. He explained his chief objections and the reasons why he opposed them so that reformers would have good arguments to employ. He argued for the distribution of the Lord’s Supper in both kinds and the end of private masses, said to accumulate merit for souls in purgatory, He concluded that these practices rested on several false doctrines, that the priesthood is a separate and superior class of Christians and that their work is primarily about sacrifice. Instead, all Christians are priests, the work of the priesthood is preaching, not sacrifice and that the mass itself is not a sacrifice at all, but a promise given by Christ to be received in faith. He sent the work to George Spalatin, Elector Frederick’s secretary, who decided not to publish it. In the meantime, Luther worked from notes to prepare a German version, Uom Missbrauch der Messen When Luther found out the book hadn’t been published, he demanded the publication of Misuse of the Mass under threat to write something more inflammatory. Both versions were first published in January of 1522.  

He also sent Spalatin a book to urge his followers not to resort to insurrection. The work, Treue Vermahnung zu allen Christen (A Sincere Admonition by Martin Luther to All Christians to Guard Against Insurrection and Rebellion) appeared in early 1522. In the book, Luther argued that insurrection was forbidden by God. He had given authority to punish and compel reform to the government and it must remain with them. It is the role of the common man to point out where reform is needed, pray for it and urge their rulers to enact it and not to participate in abuses. They ought to trust God to act on their behalf. In the conclusion to this work, Luther asks that his followers not call themselves Lutheran. “What is Luther? After all, the teaching is not mine. Neither was I crucified for anyone.… How then should I—poor stinking maggot-fodder that I am—come to have men call the children of Christ by my wretched name?” (Martin Brecht, Martin Luther: Shaping and Defining the Reformation, 1521–1532, trans. James L. Schaaf (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1994), 32.)

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