I love Luther! ############## :date: 2019-11-15T08:09:02 :status: draft :category: computer :tags: review, Luther, Christianity, theology I just finished reading the book “`Luther: finale of the medieval spirituality`_” [Luther - finále středověké zbožnosti] by Jaroslav Vokoun (Karmelitánské nakladatelství, Praha, 2017, ISBN 978-80-7195-890-1, in Czech). The main thesis of the book is relatively simple although rather surprising to many mainstream Protestants: the spirituality of Martin Luther was not so much break from the medieval spirituality but more its continuation. One thing I learned again, that the medieval theology is not uniform thing ruled by Saint Thomas Aquinas as the current Catholics would like us to believe. He was not even the most famous theologian, but more importantly there were many parallel streams of theology, not all of them trying to press living God’s faith into Aristotelian categories. The reason why we have tendency not to believe Luther’s theology is related to the medieval one, is because it is based on the monkish spirituality, a way more practical, meditative, and pastoral, in the opposition to the scholastic (academic) spirituality which dominated the mainline Church then and it dominates the Roman-Catholic Church until recently. Particularly, the author emphasizes the relationship between Martin Luther and St. Berhnard. Author then illustrates this point on couple of main topic which covers the rest of the book. There are chapters dealing with the Lord’s Supper, the mass, the general priesthood of all believers, study of Bible and sources of the theology, understanding of Mary generally and her Magnificat specifically. The last couple of chapters are more metahistory of the later development of the relationship between the Roman-Catholic Church and Martin Luther, which started in the lowest possible point until the recent much more open and accepting (including the discussion of the Lutheran-Catholic commission and declarations they were able to sign together, specifically is mentioned the most important of them “`Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification`_\ ”). I will deal with my review only with two of them: the first and the last. First, on the Lord’s Supper --------------------------- Let me add a bit of introduction. I have been quite surprised how much his explanation followed on my last year discussions about the Holy Trinity, and how much the current Protestant (and especially evangelical and charismatic) church is strongly sliding (in moral more than in pure dogmatic sense of the word) towards Gnosis, Monophysitism, or somewhere in that direction denying material essence of the world and overemphasising spiritual. We get a long discussions about the spiritual world, and the demonic possessions, but everybody is ashamed (and viewed as less spiritual) to suggest material reasons or even a mental malady. Therefore I enjoyed this (translation into English mine): God doesn’t divide material and spiritual: God doesn’t give only something, but he gives himself: Christ is really present in the word, in sacraments, and in faith (in a believing human). Materiality, corporeality, which offended Luther’s adversaries, are in fact the very principle of the God’s dealing with a human. Luther wrote to his adversary Karlstadt: “God deals with us in two ways, once in the external manner, and also the internal one. He deals with us in the external manner when through mouths words of gospel are preached, and also by the material signs, that is through baptism and a sacrament. He deals with us in internal manner through The Holy Spirit, and faith, and all his gifts. However, everything so, that the external must precede. The internal ones only after the external ones and through them.” Elsewhere, he is even more sharp: God uses material things, “but Devil doesn’t have body”. “Spiritual” could be demonic, but corporeal and material can come from God as his word, as his address to a human. “No, my companion, when you talk about God, you have to talk about humanity as well. Neither can be separated and divided.” The question is not whether the God is present in the Lord’s Supper, but that he is present there in the same manner as in any other gift he gives to us. In everything given to us he is present (“All generous giving and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or the slightest hint of change.” James 1:17). We can see, that Luther’s struggle with “spiritual” adversaries (especially Karlstadt, Oecolampadius, and Zwingli) is only new version of the struggle, which was fought by Paul in Corinth with the “spiritual” Christians, who had to be referred in the Christ’s name towards their corporeality and challenged: Therefore glorify God with your body! The relationship between God and materiality, relationship between spirit and body, is the problem of metaphysics. Luther’s adversaries and adherents to “spirituality” want to separate one from another; matter and body is seen as unspiritual and thus unworthy of God. The problem they have with the Lord’s Supper, is the same problem they have in fact with whole gospel, with the whole message, that God acts in nature and in history, because there God must be connected to materiality and corporeality. The fundamental act of the Triune God towards the world and humanity is giving. He gives to us in the creation, in the Incarnation, and in the same manner he gives to us in sacraments. In these gifts we need to distinguish truly good and bad, what Paul sometimes call spiritual and bodily, but it is not accept Church’s fathers (Clement of Alexandria, Origenes) persuasion that the human body is a prison of the soul. The biggest miracles for Luther are not “supernatural” acts like healing or resurrection of dead, but everyday God acts of creation of grain in ears on a field, and birds on trees. After the Sin a man lost an ability to perceive this everyday miracle and he seeks the extraordinary phenomena instead. However, faith opens him eyes for this everyday God’s creative activity in the creation. This all is created by the God’s word and it continues to exist as the God’s word: “Sun, moon, heavens, earth, Peter, Paul, you and me etc., everything are God’s words.” “Every bird and every fish are therefore nothing else than word of the God’s grammar.” And his words speak to us or instead the God himself speaks to us through them. Luther says in one sermon, that if we had good eyes and ears “every grain of cereal would tell us: Rejoice, eat and drink, consume me and serve to your neighbour with me.” Rejoice, eat and drink — this line of thought goes all the way to the bread and wine of the Lord’s Supper. Enjoy, have a good time — even that is joyful trait of the believer’s approach to the world. Author then explains why this approach cannot be mistaken for any kind of pantheism or why Luther was not a big fan of the natural theology (discover God through observing nature), but the principle is obvious, and it is suddenly obvious why Luther never compromised on the point of the real presence of the Christ in the Lord’s Supper. The question is not whether the Christ is present in the Lord’s Supper, which could be partial and not crucial point. It is whether the God himself is present in everything we meet everyday, whether we are just spiritualists as almost every other religious person, or whether we are true Christians who believe in Christ who is “truly God and truly Man”. Also, the consequence of this thinking is that the legendary Luther’s appreciating secular work (“work of shoemaker is as holy as prayers of a monk”) has much deeper roots than expected, all the way in his understanding of the Holy Trinity. Second, on Marian reverence --------------------------- If I was surprised on how well Luther’s understanding of the Lord’s Supper matches with what I considered to be my great discoveries, I was completely floored by Luther’s understanding of the Marian reverence (at least how Vokoun describes it). I always held that the Protestant’s closing of eyes over the presence of Virgin Mary in the Bible is wrong. However, I haven’t expected that some other Protestant, and even less Luther, developed an alternative Mariology which is acceptable and thoroughly biblical. I knew about `Luther’s Marian Theology`_, but I thought it is just a hangover from his Catholic past. On the other hand, I have to wonder how much views described by Vokoun are truly the Luther’s ones, and how much they are pious wishes of the author. The Wikipedia page mentions Luther’s acceptance of the perpetual virginity of Mary, and even possibly her Immaculate Conception, both of which are silently ignored by Vokoun. And yes, the Wikipedia page clearly shows that both doctrines are highly disputed among Lutherans, so that I am not sure what is the authentic Luther’s opinion. $$$ .. _`Luther: finale of the medieval spirituality`: https://ikarmel.cz/produkt/luther-finale-stredoveke-zboznosti .. _`Joint Declaration on the Doctrine of Justification`: http://www.vatican.va/roman_curia/pontifical_councils/chrstuni/documents/rc_pc_chrstuni_doc_31101999_cath-luth-joint-declaration_en.html .. _`Luther’s Marian Theology`: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luther%27s_Marian_theology https://www.biblicaltraining.org/martin-luther/gordon-isaac Martin Luther The life and impact of Martin Luther on the Reformation and beyond. Dr. Gordon Isaac Gordon Conwell Seminary