Chapter 7
        Luther's Separation From Rome
        Foremost among those who were called to lead the
        church from the darkness of popery into the light of a purer faith,
        stood Martin Luther. Zealous, ardent, and devoted, knowing no fear but
        the fear of God, and acknowledging no foundation for religious faith but
        the Holy Scriptures, Luther was the man for his time; through him God
        accomplished a great work for the reformation of the church and the
        enlightenment of the world.
        Like the first heralds of the gospel, Luther sprang
        from the ranks of poverty. His early years were spent in the humble home
        of a German peasant. By daily toil as a miner his father earned the
        means for his education. He intended him for a lawyer; but God purposed
        to make him a builder in the great temple that was rising so slowly
        through the centuries. Hardship, privation, and severe discipline were
        the school in which Infinite Wisdom prepared Luther for the important
        mission of his life.
        Luther's father was a man of strong and active mind
        and great force of character, honest, resolute, and straightforward. He
        was true to his convictions of duty, let the consequences be what they
        might. His sterling good sense led him to regard the monastic system
        with distrust. He was highly displeased when Luther, without his
        consent, entered a monastery; and it was two years before the father was
        reconciled to his son, and even then his opinions remained the same.
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        Luther's parents bestowed great care upon the
        education and training of their children. They endeavored to instruct
        them in the knowledge of God and the practice of Christian virtues. The
        father's prayer often ascended in the hearing of his son that the child
        might remember the name of the Lord and one day aid in the advancement
        of His truth. Every advantage for moral or intellectual culture which
        their life of toil permitted them to enjoy was eagerly improved by these
        parents. Their efforts were earnest and persevering to prepare their
        children for a life of piety and usefulness. With their firmness and
        strength of character they sometimes exercised too great severity; but
        the Reformer himself, though conscious that in some respects they had
        erred, found in their discipline more to approve than to condemn.
        At school, where he was sent at an early age, Luther
        was treated with harshness and even violence. So great was the poverty
        of his parents that upon going from home to school in another town he
        was for a time obliged to obtain his food by singing from door to door,
        and he often suffered from hunger. The gloomy, superstitious ideas of
        religion then prevailing filled him with fear. He would lie down at
        night with a sorrowful heart, looking forward with trembling to the dark
        future and in constant terror at the thought of God as a stern,
        unrelenting judge, a cruel tyrant, rather than a kind heavenly Father.
        Yet under so many and so great discouragements Luther
        pressed resolutely forward toward the high standard of moral and
        intellectual excellence which attracted his soul. He thirsted for
        knowledge, and the earnest and practical character of his mind led him
        to desire the solid and useful rather than the showy and superficial.
        When, at the age of eighteen, he entered the
        University of Erfurt, his situation was more favorable and his prospects
        were brighter than in his earlier years. His parents having by thrift
        and industry acquired a competence, they were able to render him all
        needed assistance. And the influence of
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        judicious friends had somewhat lessened the gloomy
        effects of his former training. He applied himself to the study of the
        best authors, diligently treasuring their most weighty thoughts and
        making the wisdom of the wise his own. Even under the harsh discipline
        of his former instructors he had early given promise of distinction, and
        with favorable influences his mind rapidly developed. A retentive
        memory, a lively imagination, strong reasoning powers, and untiring
        application soon placed him in the foremost rank among his associates.
        Intellectual discipline ripened his understanding and aroused an
        activity of mind and a keenness of perception that were preparing him
        for the conflicts of his life.
        The fear of the Lord dwelt in the heart of Luther,
        enabling him to maintain his steadfastness of purpose and leading him to
        deep humility before God. He had an abiding sense of his dependence upon
        divine aid, and he did not fail to begin each day with prayer, while his
        heart was continually breathing a petition for guidance and support.
        "To pray well," he often said, "is the better half of
        study."-- D'Aubigne, b. 2, ch. 2.
        While one day examining the books in the library of
        the university, Luther discovered a Latin Bible. Such a book he had
        never before seen. He was ignorant even of its existence. He had heard
        portions of the Gospels and Epistles, which were read to the people at
        public worship, and he supposed that these were the entire Bible. Now,
        for the first time, he looked upon the whole of God's word. With mingled
        awe and wonder he turned the sacred pages; with quickened pulse and
        throbbing heart he read for himself the words of life, pausing now and
        then to exclaim: "O that God would give me such a book for
        myself!"--Ibid., b. 2, ch. 2. Angels of heaven were by his side,
        and rays of light from the throne of God revealed the treasures of truth
        to his understanding. He had ever feared to offend God, but now the deep
        conviction of his condition as a sinner took hold upon him as never
        before.
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        An earnest desire to be free from sin and to find
        peace with God led him at last to enter a cloister and devote himself to
        a monastic life. Here he was required to perform the lowest drudgery and
        to beg from house to house. He was at an age when respect and
        appreciation are most eagerly craved, and these menial offices were
        deeply mortifying to his natural feelings; but he patiently endured this
        humiliation, believing that it was necessary because of his sins.
        Every moment that could be spared from his daily
        duties he employed in study, robbing himself of sleep and grudging even
        the time spent at his scanty meals. Above everything else he delighted
        in the study of God's word. He had found a Bible chained to the convent
        wall, and to this he often repaired. As his convictions of sin deepened,
        he sought by his own works to obtain pardon and peace. He led a most
        rigorous life, endeavoring by fasting, vigils, and scourgings to subdue
        the evils of his nature, from which the monastic life had brought no
        release. He shrank from no sacrifice by which he might attain to that
        purity of heart which would enable him to stand approved before God.
        "I was indeed a pious monk," he afterward said, "and
        followed the rules of my order more strictly than I can express. If ever
        monk could obtain heaven by his monkish works, I should certainly have
        been entitled to it. . . . If it had continued much longer, I should
        have carried my mortifications even to death."--Ibid., b. 2, ch. 3.
        As the result of this painful discipline he lost strength and suffered
        from fainting spasms, from the effects of which he never fully
        recovered. But with all his efforts his burdened soul found no relief.
        He was at last driven to the verge of despair.
        When it appeared to Luther that all was lost, God
        raised up a friend and helper for him. The pious Staupitz opened the
        word of God to Luther's mind and bade him look away from himself, cease
        the contemplation of infinite punishment for the violation of God's law,
        and look to Jesus, his sin-pardoning Saviour. "Instead of torturing
        yourself on
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        account of your sins, throw yourself into the
        Redeemer's arms. Trust in Him, in the righteousness of His life, in the
        atonement of His death. . . . Listen to the Son of God. He became man to
        give you the assurance of divine favor." "Love Him who first
        loved you."--Ibid., b. 2, ch. 4. Thus spoke this messenger of
        mercy. His words made a deep impression upon Luther's mind. After many a
        struggle with long-cherished errors, he was enabled to grasp the truth,
        and peace came to his troubled soul.
        Luther was ordained a priest and was called from the
        cloister to a professorship in the University of Wittenberg. Here he
        applied himself to the study of the Scriptures in the original tongues.
        He began to lecture upon the Bible; and the book of Psalms, the Gospels,
        and the Epistles were opened to the understanding of crowds of delighted
        listeners. Staupitz, his friend and superior, urged him to ascend the
        pulpit and preach the word of God. Luther hesitated, feeling himself
        unworthy to speak to the people in Christ's stead. It was only after a
        long struggle that he yielded to the solicitations of his friends.
        Already he was mighty in the Scriptures, and the grace of God rested
        upon him. His eloquence captivated his hearers, the clearness and power
        with which he presented the truth convinced their understanding, and his
        fervor touched their hearts.
        Luther was still a true son of the papal church and
        had no thought that he would ever be anything else. In the providence of
        God he was led to visit Rome. He pursued his journey on foot, lodging at
        the monasteries on the way. At a convent in Italy he was filled with
        wonder at the wealth, magnificence, and luxury that he witnessed.
        Endowed with a princely revenue, the monks dwelt in splendid apartments,
        attired themselves in the richest and most costly robes, and feasted at
        a sumptuous table. With painful misgivings Luther contrasted this scene
        with the self-denial and hardship of his own life. His mind was becoming
        perplexed.
        At last he beheld in the distance the seven-hilled
        city.
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        With deep emotion he prostrated himself upon the
        earth, exclaiming: "Holy Rome, I salute thee!"--Ibid., b. 2,
        ch. 6. He entered the city, visited the churches, listened to the
        marvelous tales repeated by priests and monks, and performed all the
        ceremonies required. Everywhere he looked upon scenes that filled him
        with astonishment and horror. He saw that iniquity existed among all
        classes of the clergy. He heard indecent jokes from prelates, and was
        filled with horror at their awful profanity, even during mass. As he
        mingled with the monks and citizens he met dissipation, debauchery. Turn
        where he would, in the place of sanctity he found profanation. "No
        one can imagine," he wrote, "what sins and infamous actions
        are committed in Rome; they must be seen and heard to be believed. Thus
        they are in the habit of saying, 'If there is a hell, Rome is built over
        it: it is an abyss whence issues every kind of sin.'"--Ibid., b. 2,
        ch. 6.
        By a recent decretal an indulgence had been promised
        by the pope to all who should ascend upon their knees "Pilate's
        staircase," said to have been descended by our Saviour on leaving
        the Roman judgment hall and to have been miraculously conveyed from
        Jerusalem to Rome. Luther was one day devoutly climbing these steps,
        when suddenly a voice like thunder seemed to say to him: "The just
        shall live by faith." Romans 1:17. He sprang to his feet and
        hastened from the place in shame and horror. That text never lost its
        power upon his soul. From that time he saw more clearly than ever before
        the fallacy of trusting to human works for salvation, and the necessity
        of constant faith in the merits of Christ. His eyes had been opened, and
        were never again to be closed, to the delusions of the papacy. When he
        turned his face from Rome he had turned away also in heart, and from
        that time the separation grew wider, until he severed all connection
        with the papal church.
        After his return from Rome, Luther received at the
        University of Wittenberg the degree of doctor of divinity. Now he was at
        liberty to devote himself, as never before, to the
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        Scriptures that he loved. He had taken a solemn vow
        to study carefully and to preach with fidelity the word of God, not the
        sayings and doctrines of the popes, all the days of his life. He was no
        longer the mere monk or professor, but the authorized herald of the
        Bible. He had been called as a shepherd to feed the flock of God, that
        were hungering and thirsting for the truth. He firmly declared that
        Christians should receive no other doctrines than those which rest on
        the authority of the Sacred Scriptures. These words struck at the very
        foundation of papal supremacy. They contained the vital principle of the
        Reformation.
        Luther saw the danger of exalting human theories
        above the word of God. He fearlessly attacked the speculative infidelity
        of the schoolmen and opposed the philosophy and theology which had so
        long held a controlling influence upon the people. He denounced such
        studies as not only worthless but pernicious, and sought to turn the
        minds of his hearers from the sophistries of philosophers and
        theologians to the eternal truths set forth by prophets and apostles.
        Precious was the message which he bore to the eager
        crowds that hung upon his words. Never before had such teachings fallen
        upon their ears. The glad tidings of a Saviour's love, the assurance of
        pardon and peace through His atoning blood, rejoiced their hearts and
        inspired within them an immortal hope. At Wittenberg a light was kindled
        whose rays should extend to the uttermost parts of the earth, and which
        was to increase in brightness to the close of time.
        But light and darkness cannot harmonize. Between
        truth and error there is an irrepressible conflict. To uphold and defend
        the one is to attack and overthrow the other. Our Saviour Himself
        declared: "I came not to send peace, but a sword." Matthew
        10:34. Said Luther, a few years after the opening of the Reformation:
        "God does not guide me, He pushes me forward. He carries me away. I
        am not master of myself. I desire to live in repose; but I am thrown
        into
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        the midst of tumults and revolutions."--D'Aubigne,
        b. 5, ch. 2. He was now about to be urged into the contest.
        The Roman Church had made merchandise of the grace of
        God. The tables of the money-changers (Matthew 21:12) were set up beside
        her altars, and the air resounded with the shouts of buyers and sellers.
        Under the plea of raising funds for the erection of St. Peter's Church
        at Rome, indulgences for sin were publicly offered for sale by the
        authority of the pope. By the price of crime a temple was to be built up
        for God's worship--the cornerstone laid with the wages of iniquity! But
        the very means adopted for Rome's aggrandizement provoked the deadliest
        blow to her power and greatness. It was this that aroused the most
        determined and successful of the enemies of popery, and led to the
        battle which shook the papal throne and jostled the triple crown upon
        the pontiff's head.
        The official appointed to conduct the sale of
        indulgences in Germany--Tetzel by name--had been convicted of the basest
        offenses against society and against the law of God; but having escaped
        the punishment due for his crimes, he was employed to further the
        mercenary and unscrupulous projects of the pope. With great effrontery
        he repeated the most glaring falsehoods and related marvelous tales to
        deceive an ignorant, credulous, and superstitious people. Had they
        possessed the word of God they would not have been thus deceived. It was
        to keep them under the control of the papacy, in order to swell the
        power and wealth of her ambitious leaders, that the Bible had been
        withheld from them. (See John C. L. Gieseler, A Compendium of
        Ecclesiastical History, per. 4, sec. 1, par. 5.)
        As Tetzel entered a town, a messenger went before
        him, announcing: "The grace of God and of the holy father is at
        your gates."--D'Aubigne, b. 3, ch. 1. And the people welcomed the
        blasphemous pretender as if he were God Himself come down from heaven to
        them. The infamous traffic was set up in the church, and Tetzel,
        ascending the
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        pulpit, extolled the indulgences as the most precious
        gift of God. He declared that by virtue of his certificates of pardon
        all the sins which the purchaser should afterward desire to commit would
        be forgiven him, and that "not even repentance is necessary."--Ibid.,
        b. 3, ch. 1. More than this, he assured his hearers that the indulgences
        had power to save not only the living but the dead; that the very moment
        the money should clink against the bottom of his chest, the soul in
        whose behalf it had been paid would escape from purgatory and make its
        way to heaven. (See K. R. Hagenbach, History of the Reformation, vol. 1,
        p. 96.)
        When Simon Magus offered to purchase of the apostles
        the power to work miracles, Peter answered him: "Thy money perish
        with thee, because thou hast thought that the gift of God may be
        purchased with money." Acts 8:20. But Tetzel's offer was grasped by
        eager thousands. Gold and silver flowed into his treasury. A salvation
        that could be bought with money was more easily obtained than that which
        requires repentance, faith, and diligent effort to resist and overcome
        sin. (See Appendix note for page 59.)
        The doctrine of indulgences had been opposed by men
        of learning and piety in the Roman Church, and there were many who had
        no faith in pretensions so contrary to both reason and revelation. No
        prelate dared lift his voice against this iniquitous traffic; but the
        minds of men were becoming disturbed and uneasy, and many eagerly
        inquired if God would not work through some instrumentality for the
        purification of His church.
        Luther, though still a papist of the straitest sort,
        was filled with horror at the blasphemous assumptions of the indulgence
        mongers. Many of his own congregation had purchased certificates of
        pardon, and they soon began to come to their pastor, confessing their
        various sins, and expecting absolution, not because they were penitent
        and wished to reform, but on the ground of the indulgence. Luther
        refused them absolution, and warned them that unless they should
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        repent and reform their lives, they must perish in
        their sins. In great perplexity they repaired to Tetzel with the
        complaint that their confessor had refused his certificates; and some
        boldly demanded that their money be returned to them. The friar was
        filled with rage. He uttered the most terrible curses, caused fires to
        be lighted in the public squares, and declared that he "had
        received an order from the pope to burn all heretics who presumed to
        oppose his most holy indulgences."--D'Aubigne, b. 3, ch. 4.
        Luther now entered boldly upon his work as a champion
        of the truth. His voice was heard from the pulpit in earnest, solemn
        warning. He set before the people the offensive character of sin, and
        taught them that it is impossible for man, by his own works, to lessen
        its guilt or evade its punishment. Nothing but repentance toward God and
        faith in Christ can save the sinner. The grace of Christ cannot be
        purchased; it is a free gift. He counseled the people not to buy
        indulgences, but to look in faith to a crucified Redeemer. He related
        his own painful experience in vainly seeking by humiliation and penance
        to secure salvation, and assured his hearers that it was by looking away
        from himself and believing in Christ that he found peace and joy.
        As Tetzel continued his traffic and his impious
        pretensions, Luther determined upon a more effectual protest against
        these crying abuses. An occasion soon offered. The castle church of
        Wittenberg possessed many relics, which on certain holy days were
        exhibited to the people, and full remission of sins was granted to all
        who then visited the church and made confession. Accordingly on these
        days the people in great numbers resorted thither. One of the most
        important of these occasions, the festival of All Saints, was
        approaching. On the preceding day, Luther, joining the crowds that were
        already making their way to the church, posted on its door a paper
        containing ninety-five propositions against the doctrine of indulgences.
        He declared his willingness
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        to defend these theses next day at the university,
        against all who should see fit to attack them.
        His propositions attracted universal attention. They
        were read and reread, and repeated in every direction. Great excitement
        was created in the university and in the whole city. By these theses it
        was shown that the power to grant the pardon of sin, and to remit its
        penalty, had never been committed to the pope or to any other man. The
        whole scheme was a farce,--an artifice to extort money by playing upon
        the superstitions of the people,--a device of Satan to destroy the souls
        of all who should trust to its lying pretensions. It was also clearly
        shown that the gospel of Christ is the most valuable treasure of the
        church, and that the grace of God, therein revealed, is freely bestowed
        upon all who seek it by repentance and faith.
        Luther's theses challenged discussion; but no one
        dared accept the challenge. The questions which he proposed had in a few
        days spread through all Germany, and in a few weeks they had sounded
        throughout Christendom. Many devoted Romanists, who had seen and
        lamented the terrible iniquity prevailing in the church, but had not
        known how to arrest its progress, read the propositions with great joy,
        recognizing in them the voice of God. They felt that the Lord had
        graciously set His hand to arrest the rapidly swelling tide of
        corruption that was issuing from the see of Rome. Princes and
        magistrates secretly rejoiced that a check was to be put upon the
        arrogant power which denied the right of appeal from its decisions.
        But the sin-loving and superstitious multitudes were
        terrified as the sophistries that had soothed their fears were swept
        away. Crafty ecclesiastics, interrupted in their work of sanctioning
        crime, and seeing their gains endangered, were enraged, and rallied to
        uphold their pretensions. The Reformer had bitter accusers to meet. Some
        charged him with acting hastily and from impulse. Others accused him of
        presumption, declaring that he was not directed of God, but was acting
        from pride and forwardness. "Who does not
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        know," he responded, "that a man rarely
        puts forth any new idea without having some appearance of pride, and
        without being accused of exciting quarrels? . . . Why were Christ and
        all the martyrs put to death? Because they seemed to be proud contemners
        of the wisdom of the time, and because they advanced novelties without
        having first humbly taken counsel of the oracles of the ancient
        opinions."
        Again he declared: "Whatever I do will be done,
        not by the prudence of men, but by the counsel of God. If the work be of
        God, who shall stop it? if it be not, who can forward it? Not my will,
        nor theirs, nor ours; but Thy will, O holy Father, which art in
        heaven."--Ibid., b. 3, ch. 6.
        Though Luther had been moved by the Spirit of God to
        begin his work, he was not to carry it forward without severe conflicts.
        The reproaches of his enemies, their misrepresentation of his purposes,
        and their unjust and malicious reflections upon his character and
        motives, came in upon him like an overwhelming flood; and they were not
        without effect. He had felt confident that the leaders of the people,
        both in the church and in the schools, would gladly unite with him in
        efforts for reform. Words of encouragement from those in high position
        had inspired him with joy and hope. Already in anticipation he had seen
        a brighter day dawning for the church. But encouragement had changed to
        reproach and condemnation. Many dignitaries, of both church and state,
        were convicted of the truthfulness of his theses; but they soon saw that
        the acceptance of these truths would involve great changes. To enlighten
        and reform the people would be virtually to undermine the authority of
        Rome, to stop thousands of streams now flowing into her treasury, and
        thus greatly to curtail the extravagance and luxury of the papal
        leaders. Furthermore, to teach the people to think and act as
        responsible beings, looking to Christ alone for salvation, would
        overthrow the pontiff's throne and eventually destroy their own
        authority. For this reason they refused the knowledge tendered them of
        God and arrayed
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        themselves against Christ and the truth by their
        opposition to the man whom He had sent to enlighten them.
        Luther trembled as he looked upon himself--one man
        opposed to the mightiest powers of earth. He sometimes doubted whether
        he had indeed been led of God to set himself against the authority of
        the church. "Who was I," he writes, "to oppose the
        majesty of the pope, before whom ... the kings of the earth and the
        whole world trembled? ... No one can know what my heart suffered during
        these first two years, and into what despondency, I may say into what
        despair, I was sunk."--Ibid., b. 3, ch. 6. But he was not left to
        become utterly disheartened. When human support failed, he looked to God
        alone and learned that he could lean in perfect safety upon that all-powerful
        arm.
        To a friend of the Reformation Luther wrote: "We
        cannot attain to the understanding of Scripture either by study or by
        the intellect. Your first duty is to begin by prayer. Entreat the Lord
        to grant you, of His great mercy, the true understanding of His word.
        There is no other interpreter of the word of God than the Author of this
        word, as He Himself has said, 'They shall be all taught of God.' Hope
        for nothing from your own labors, from your own understanding: trust
        solely in God, and in the influence of His Spirit. Believe this on the
        word of a man who has had experience."--Ibid., b. 3, ch. 7. Here is
        a lesson of vital importance to those who feel that God has called them
        to present to others the solemn truths for this time. These truths will
        stir the enmity of Satan and of men who love the fables that he has
        devised. In the conflict with the powers of evil there is need of
        something more than strength of intellect and human wisdom.
        When enemies appealed to custom and tradition, or to
        the assertions and authority of the pope, Luther met them with the Bible
        and the Bible only. Here were arguments which they could not answer;
        therefore the slaves of formalism and superstition clamored for his
        blood, as the Jews had clamored for the blood of Christ. "He is a
        heretic,"
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        cried the Roman zealots. "It is high treason
        against the church to allow so horrible a heretic to live one hour
        longer. Let the scaffold be instantly erected for him!"--Ibid., b.
        3, ch. 9. But Luther did not fall a prey to their fury. God had a work
        for him to do, and angels of heaven were sent to protect him. Many,
        however, who had received from Luther the precious light were made the
        objects of Satan's wrath and for the truth's sake fearlessly suffered
        torture and death.
        Luther's teachings attracted the attention of
        thoughtful minds throughout all Germany. From his sermons and writings
        issued beams of light which awakened and illuminated thousands. A living
        faith was taking the place of the dead formalism in which the church had
        so long been held. The people were daily losing confidence in the
        superstitions of Romanism. The barriers of prejudice were giving way.
        The word of God, by which Luther tested every doctrine and every claim,
        was like a two-edged sword, cutting its way to the hearts of the people.
        Everywhere there was awakening a desire for spiritual progress.
        Everywhere was such a hungering and thirsting after righteousness as had
        not been known for ages. The eyes of the people, so long directed to
        human rites and earthly mediators, were now turning in penitence and
        faith to Christ and Him crucified.
        This widespread interest aroused still further the
        fears of the papal authorities. Luther received a summons to appear at
        Rome to answer to the charge of heresy. The command filled his friends
        with terror. They knew full well the danger that threatened him in that
        corrupt city, already drunk with the blood of the martyrs of Jesus. They
        protested against his going to Rome and requested that he receive his
        examination in Germany.
        This arrangement was finally effected, and the pope's
        legate was appointed to hear the case. In the instructions communicated
        by the pontiff to this official, it was stated that Luther had already
        been declared a heretic. The legate was therefore charged "to
        prosecute and constrain without
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        any delay." If he should remain steadfast, and
        the legate should fail to gain possession of his person, he was
        empowered "to proscribe him in every part of Germany; to banish,
        curse, and excommunicate all those who are attached to him."--Ibid.,
        b. 4, ch. 2. And, further, the pope directed his legate, in order
        entirely to root out the pestilent heresy, to excommunicate all, of
        whatever dignity in church or state, except the emperor, who should
        neglect to seize Luther and his adherents, and deliver them up to the
        vengeance of Rome.
        Here is displayed the true spirit of popery. Not a
        trace of Christian principle, or even of common justice, is to be seen
        in the whole document. Luther was at a great distance from Rome; he had
        had no opportunity to explain or defend his position; yet before his
        case had been investigated, he was summarily pronounced a heretic, and
        in the same day, exhorted, accused, judged, and condemned; and all this
        by the self-styled holy father, the only supreme, infallible authority
        in church or state!
        At this time, when Luther so much needed the sympathy
        and counsel of a true friend, God's providence sent Melanchthon to
        Wittenberg. Young in years, modest and diffident in his manners,
        Melanchthon's sound judgment, extensive knowledge, and winning
        eloquence, combined with the purity and uprightness of his character,
        won universal admiration and esteem. The brilliancy of his talents was
        not more marked than his gentleness of disposition. He soon became an
        earnest disciple of the gospel, and Luther's most trusted friend and
        valued supporter; his gentleness, caution, and exactness serving as a
        complement to Luther's courage and energy. Their union in the work added
        strength to the Reformation and was a source of great encouragement to
        Luther.
        Augsburg had been fixed upon as the place of trial,
        and the Reformer set out on foot to perform the journey thither. Serious
        fears were entertained in his behalf. Threats had been made openly that
        he would be seized and murdered on the way, and his friends begged him
        not to venture. They
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        even entreated him to leave Wittenberg for a time and
        find safety with those who would gladly protect him. But he would not
        leave the position where God had placed him. He must continue faithfully
        to maintain the truth, notwithstanding the storms that were beating upon
        him. His language was: "I am like Jeremiah, a man of strife and
        contention; but the more their threats increase, the more my joy is
        multiplied. . . . They have already destroyed my honor and my
        reputation. One single thing remains; it is my wretched body: let them
        take it; they will thus shorten my life by a few hours. But as for my
        soul, they cannot take that. He who desires to proclaim the word of
        Christ to the world, must expect death at every moment."--Ibid., b.
        4, ch. 4.
        The tidings of Luther's arrival at Augsburg gave
        great satisfaction to the papal legate. The troublesome heretic who was
        exciting the attention of the whole world seemed now in the power of
        Rome, and the legate determined that he should not escape. The Reformer
        had failed to provide himself with a safe-conduct. His friends urged him
        not to appear before the legate without one, and they themselves
        undertook to procure it from the emperor. The legate intended to force
        Luther, if possible, to retract, or, failing in this, to cause him to be
        conveyed to Rome, to share the fate of Huss and Jerome. Therefore
        through his agents he endeavored to induce Luther to appear without a
        safe-conduct, trusting himself to his mercy. This the Reformer firmly
        declined to do. Not until he had received the document pledging him the
        emperor's protection, did he appear in the presence of the papal
        ambassador.
        As a matter of policy, the Romanists had decided to
        attempt to win Luther by an appearance of gentleness. The legate, in his
        interviews with him, professed great friendliness; but he demanded that
        Luther submit implicitly to the authority of the church, and yield every
        point without argument or question. He had not rightly estimated the
        character of the man with whom he had to deal. Luther, in reply,
        expressed his regard for the church, his desire for
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        the truth, his readiness to answer all objections to
        what he had taught, and to submit his doctrines to the decision of
        certain leading universities. But at the same time he protested against
        the cardinal's course in requiring him to retract without having proved
        him in error.
        The only response was: "Retract, retract!"
        The Reformer showed that his position was sustained by the Scriptures
        and firmly declared that he could not renounce the truth. The legate,
        unable to reply to Luther's arguments, overwhelmed him with a storm of
        reproaches, gibes, and flattery, interspersed with quotations from
        tradition and the sayings of the Fathers, granting the Reformer no
        opportunity to speak. Seeing that the conference, thus continued, would
        be utterly futile, Luther finally obtained a reluctant permission to
        present his answer in writing.
        "In so doing," said he, writing to a
        friend, "the oppressed find double gain; first, what is written may
        be submitted to the judgment of others; and second, one has a better
        chance of working on the fears, if not on the conscience, of an arrogant
        and babbling despot, who would otherwise overpower by his imperious
        language."--Martyn, The Life and Times of Luther, pages 271, 272.
        At the next interview, Luther presented a clear,
        concise, and forcible exposition of his views, fully supported by many
        quotations from Scripture. This paper, after reading aloud, he handed to
        the cardinal, who, however, cast it contemptuously aside, declaring it
        to be a mass of idle words and irrelevant quotations. Luther, fully
        aroused, now met the haughty prelate on his own ground--the traditions
        and teachings of the church--and utterly overthrew his assumptions.
        When the prelate saw that Luther's reasoning was
        unanswerable, he lost all self-control, and in a rage cried out:
        "Retract! or I will send you to Rome, there to appear before the
        judges commissioned to take cognizance of your cause. I will
        excommunicate you and all your partisans, and all
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        who shall at any time countenance you, and will cast
        them out of the church." And he finally declared, in a haughty and
        angry tone: "Retract, or return no more."--D'Aubigne, London
        ed., b. 4, ch. 8.
        The Reformer promptly withdrew with his friends, thus
        declaring plainly that no retraction was to be expected from him. This
        was not what the cardinal had purposed. He had flattered himself that by
        violence he could awe Luther to submission. Now, left alone with his
        supporters, he looked from one to another in utter chagrin at the
        unexpected failure of his schemes.
        Luther's efforts on this occasion were not without
        good results. The large assembly present had opportunity to compare the
        two men, and to judge for themselves of the spirit manifested by them,
        as well as of the strength and truthfulness of their positions. How
        marked the contrast! The Reformer, simple, humble, firm, stood up in the
        strength of God, having truth on his side; the pope's representative,
        self-important, overbearing, haughty, and unreasonable, was without a
        single argument from the Scriptures, yet vehemently crying:
        "Retract, or be sent to Rome for punishment."
        Notwithstanding Luther had secured a safe-conduct,
        the Romanists were plotting to seize and imprison him. His friends urged
        that as it was useless for him to prolong his stay, he should return to
        Wittenberg without delay, and that the utmost caution should be observed
        in order to conceal his intentions. He accordingly left Augsburg before
        day-break, on horseback, accompanied only by a guide furnished him by
        the magistrate. With many forebodings he secretly made his way through
        the dark and silent streets of the city. Enemies, vigilant and cruel,
        were plotting his destruction. Would he escape the snares prepared for
        him? Those were moments of anxiety and earnest prayer. He reached a
        small gate in the wall of the city. It was opened for him, and with his
        guide he passed through without hindrance. Once safely outside, the
        fugitives hastened their flight, and before
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        the legate learned of Luther's departure, he was
        beyond the reach of his persecutors. Satan and his emissaries were
        defeated. The man whom they had thought in their power was gone, escaped
        as a bird from the snare of the fowler.
        At the news of Luther's escape the legate was
        overwhelmed with surprise and anger. He had expected to receive great
        honor for his wisdom and firmness in dealing with this disturber of the
        church; but his hope was disappointed. He gave expression to his wrath
        in a letter to Frederick, the elector of Saxony, bitterly denouncing
        Luther and demanding that Frederick send the Reformer to Rome or banish
        him from Saxony.
        In defense, Luther urged that the legate or the pope
        show him his errors from the Scriptures, and pledged himself in the most
        solemn manner to renounce his doctrines if they could be shown to
        contradict the word of God. And he expressed his gratitude to God that
        he had been counted worthy to suffer in so holy a cause.
        The elector had, as yet, little knowledge of the
        reformed doctrines, but he was deeply impressed by the candor, force,
        and clearness of Luther's words; and until the Reformer should be proved
        to be in error, Frederick resolved to stand as his protector. In reply
        to the legate's demand he wrote: "Since Dr. Martin has appeared
        before you at Augsburg, you should be satisfied. We did not expect that
        you would endeavor to make him retract without having convinced him of
        his errors. None of the learned men in our principality have informed me
        that Martin's doctrine is impious, anti-christian, or heretical.' The
        prince refused, moreover, to send Luther to Rome, or to expel him from
        his states."-- D'Aubigne, b. 4, ch. 10.
        The elector saw that there was a general breaking
        down of the moral restraints of society. A great work of reform was
        needed. The complicated and expensive arrangements to restrain and
        punish crime would be unnecessary if men but acknowledged and obeyed the
        requirements of God and the dictates of an enlightened conscience. He
        saw that
        139
        Luther was laboring to secure this object, and he
        secretly rejoiced that a better influence was making itself felt in the
        church.
        He saw also that as a professor in the university
        Luther was eminently successful. Only a year had passed since the
        Reformer posted his theses on the castle church, yet there was already a
        great falling off in the number of pilgrims that visited the church at
        the festival of All Saints. Rome had been deprived of worshipers and
        offerings, but their place was filled by another class, who now came to
        Wittenberg, not pilgrims to adore her relics, but students to fill her
        halls of learning. The writings of Luther had kindled everywhere a new
        interest in the Holy Scriptures, and not only from all parts of Germany,
        but from other lands, students flocked to the university. Young men,
        coming in sight of Wittenberg for the first time, "raised their
        hands to heaven, and praised God for having caused the light of truth to
        shine forth from this city, as from Zion in times of old, and whence it
        spread even to the most distant countries."--Ibid., b. 4, ch. 10.
        Luther was as yet but partially converted from the
        errors of Romanism. But as he compared the Holy Oracles with the papal
        decrees and constitutions, he was filled with wonder. "I am
        reading," he wrote, "the decrees of the pontiffs, and . . . I
        do not know whether the pope is antichrist himself, or his apostle, so
        greatly is Christ misrepresented and crucified in them."--Ibid., b.
        5, ch. 1. Yet at this time Luther was still a supporter of the Roman
        Church, and had no thought that he would ever separate from her
        communion.
        The Reformer's writings and his doctrine were
        extending to every nation in Christendom. The work spread to Switzerland
        and Holland. Copies of his writings found their way to France and Spain.
        In England his teachings were received as the word of life. To Belgium
        and Italy also the truth had extended. Thousands were awakening from
        their deathlike stupor to the joy and hope of a life of faith.
        140
        Rome became more and more exasperated by the attacks
        of Luther, and it was declared by some of his fanatical opponents, even
        by doctors in Catholic universities, that he who should kill the
        rebellious monk would be without sin. One day a stranger, with a pistol
        hidden under his cloak, approached the Reformer and inquired why he went
        thus alone. "I am in God's hands," answered Luther. "He
        is my strength and my shield. What can man do unto me?"--Ibid., b.
        6, ch.
        2. Upon hearing these words, the stranger turned pale
        and
        fled away as from the presence of the angels of
        heaven.
        Rome was bent upon the destruction of Luther; but God
        was his defense. His doctrines were heard everywhere--"in cottages
        and convents, . . . in the castles of the nobles, in the universities,
        and in the palaces of kings;" and noble men were rising on every
        hand to sustain his efforts.--Ibid., b. 6, ch. 2.
        It was about this time that Luther, reading the works
        of Huss, found that the great truth of justification by faith, which he
        himself was seeking to uphold and teach, had been held by the Bohemian
        Reformer. "We have all," said Luther, "Paul, Augustine,
        and myself, been Hussites without knowing it!" "God will
        surely visit it upon the world," he continued, "that the truth
        was preached to it a century ago, and burned!"--Wylie, b. 6. ch. 1
        In an appeal to the emperor and nobility of Germany
        in behalf of the reformation of Christianity, Luther wrote concerning
        the pope: "It is a horrible thing to behold the man who styles
        himself Christ's vicegerent, displaying a magnificence that no emperor
        can equal. Is this being like the poor Jesus, or the humble Peter? He
        is, say they, the lord of the world! But Christ, whose vicar he boasts
        of being, has said, 'My kingdom is not of this world.' Can the dominions
        of a vicar extend beyond those of his superior?"-- D'Aubigne, b. 6,
        ch. 3.
        He wrote thus of the universities: "I am much
        afraid that the universities will prove to be the great gates of hell,
        141
        unless they diligently labor in explaining the Holy
        Scriptures, and engraving them in the hearts of youth. I advise no one
        to place his child where the Scriptures do not reign paramount. Every
        institution in which men are not unceasingly occupied with the word of
        God must become corrupt."-- Ibid., b. 6, ch. 3.
        This appeal was rapidly circulated throughout Germany
        and exerted a powerful influence upon the people. The whole nation was
        stirred, and multitudes were roused to rally around the standard of
        reform. Luther's opponents, burning with a desire for revenge, urged the
        pope to take decisive measures against him. It was decreed that his
        doctrines should be immediately condemned. Sixty days were granted the
        Reformer and his adherents, after which, if they did not recant, they
        were all to be excommunicated.
        That was a terrible crisis for the Reformation. For
        centuries Rome's sentence of excommunication had struck terror to
        powerful monarchs; it had filled mighty empires with woe and desolation.
        Those upon whom its condemnation fell were universally regarded with
        dread and horror; they were cut off from intercourse with their fellows
        and treated as outlaws, to be hunted to extermination. Luther was not
        blind to the tempest about to burst upon him; but he stood firm,
        trusting in Christ to be his support and shield. With a martyr's faith
        and courage he wrote: "What is about to happen I know not, nor do I
        care to know. . . . Let the blow light where it may, I am without fear.
        Not so much as a leaf falls, without the will of our Father. How much
        rather will He care for us! It is a light thing to die for the Word,
        since the Word which was made flesh hath Himself died. If we die with
        Him, we shall live with Him; and passing through that which He has
        passed through before us, we shall be where He is and dwell with Him
        forever."--Ibid.,
        3d London ed., Walther, 1840, b. 6, ch. 9.
        When the papal bull reached Luther, he said: "I
        despise and attack it, as impious, false. . . . It is Christ Himself who
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        is condemned therein. . . . I rejoice in having to
        bear such ills for the best of causes. Already I feel greater liberty in
        my heart; for at last I know that the pope is antichrist, and that his
        throne is that of Satan himself."--D'Aubigne, b. 6, ch. 9.
        Yet the mandate of Rome was not without effect.
        Prison, torture, and sword were weapons potent to enforce obedience. The
        weak and superstitious trembled before the decree of the pope; and while
        there was general sympathy for Luther, many felt that life was too dear
        to be risked in the cause of reform. Everything seemed to indicate that
        the Reformer's work was about to close.
        But Luther was fearless still. Rome had hurled her
        anathemas against him, and the world looked on, nothing doubting that he
        would perish or be forced to yield. But with terrible power he flung
        back upon herself the sentence of condemnation and publicly declared his
        determination to abandon her forever. In the presence of a crowd of
        students, doctors, and citizens of all ranks Luther burned the pope's
        bull, with the canon laws, the decretals, and certain writings
        sustaining the papal power. "My enemies have been able, by burning
        my books," he said, "to injure the cause of truth in the minds
        of the common people, and destroy their souls; for this reason I
        consumed their books in return. A serious struggle has just begun.
        Hitherto I have been only playing with the pope. I began this work in
        God's name; it will be ended without me, and by His might." --Ibid.,
        b. 6, ch. 10.
        To the reproaches of his enemies who taunted him with
        the weakness of his cause, Luther answered: "Who knows if God has
        not chosen and called me, and if they ought not to fear that, by
        despising me, they despise God Himself? Moses was alone at the departure
        from Egypt; Elijah was alone in the reign of King Ahab; Isaiah alone in
        Jerusalem; Ezekiel alone in Babylon. . . . God never selected as a
        prophet either the high priest or any other great personage; but
        ordinarily He chose low and despised men, once even
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        the shepherd Amos. In every age, the saints have had
        to reprove the great, kings, princes, priests, and wise men, at the
        peril of their lives. . . . I do not say that I am a prophet; but I say
        that they ought to fear precisely because I am alone and that they are
        many. I am sure of this, that the word of God is with me, and that it is
        not with them."--Ibid., b. 6, ch. 10.
        Yet it was not without a terrible struggle with
        himself that Luther decided upon a final separation from the church. It
        was about this time that he wrote: "I feel more and more every day
        how difficult it is to lay aside the scruples which one has imbibed in
        childhood. Oh, how much pain it has caused me, though I had the
        Scriptures on my side, to justify it to myself that I should dare to
        make a stand alone against the pope, and hold him forth as antichrist!
        What have the tribulations of my heart not been! How many times have I
        not asked myself with bitterness that question which was so frequent on
        the lips of the papists: 'Art thou alone wise? Can everyone else be
        mistaken? How will it be, if, after all, it is thyself who art wrong,
        and who art involving in thy error so many souls, who will then be
        eternally damned?' 'Twas so I fought with myself and with Satan, till
        Christ, by His own infallible word, fortified my heart against these
        doubts."--Martyn, pages 372, 373.
        The pope had threatened Luther with excommunication
        if he did not recant, and the threat was now fulfilled. A new bull
        appeared, declaring the Reformer's final separation from the Roman
        Church, denouncing him as accursed of Heaven, and including in the same
        condemnation all who should receive his doctrines. The great contest had
        been fully entered upon.
        Opposition is the lot of all whom God employs to
        present truths specially applicable to their time. There was a present
        truth in the days of Luther,--a truth at that time of special
        importance; there is a present truth for the church today.
        144
        He who does all things according to the counsel of
        His will has been pleased to place men under various circumstances and
        to enjoin upon them duties peculiar to the times in which they live and
        the conditions under which they are placed. If they would prize the
        light given them, broader views of truth would be opened before them.
        But truth is no more desired by the majority today than it was by the
        papists who opposed Luther. There is the same disposition to accept the
        theories and traditions of men instead of the word of God as in former
        ages. Those who present the truth for this time should not expect to be
        received with greater favor than were earlier reformers. The great
        controversy between truth and error, between Christ and Satan, is to
        increase in intensity to the close of this world's history.
        Said Jesus to His disciples: "If ye were of the
        world, the world would love his own: but because ye are not of the
        world, but I have chosen you out of the world, therefore the world
        hateth you. Remember the word that I said unto you, The servant is not
        greater than his Lord. If they have persecuted Me, they will also
        persecute you; if they have kept My saying, they will keep yours
        also." John 15:19, 20. And on the other hand our Lord declared
        plainly: "Woe unto you, when all men shall speak well of you! for
        so did their fathers to the false prophets." Luke 6:26. The spirit
        of the world is no more in harmony with the spirit of Christ today than
        in earlier times, and those who preach the word of God in its purity
        will be received with no greater favor now than then. The forms of
        opposition to the truth may change, the enmity may be less open because
        it is more subtle; but the same antagonism still exists and will be
        manifested to the end of time.
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