Title: Luther
1Luther the Pietists
- Christian Mysticism
- School of Prayer
- Presented by David Schütz
2Theologia Germanica
- Luthers first published work was Eyn geystlich
edles Buchleynn (1516), a German translation of a
handwritten manuscript that came into his
possession - It was an anonymous work, which, Luther wrote in
his preface almost resembles the style of the
illumined Doctor Tauler of the Preaching Order. - In 1518following the Ninety Five Theses and
the outbreak of the dispute over indulgenceshe
published a fuller version of the same work,
having discovered a more complete manuscript in
the library of the Erfurt Carthusian monastery. - This time he called it Eyn Deutsch Theologia, and
it has become known by its Latin title Theologia
Germanica. - The fuller version actually quoted Tauler, and so
could not have been authored by him, but was
obviously greatly influenced by his mystical
theology and came out of the Friends of God
3Theologia Germanica
- This little book warns all those who wish to
read and understand its message, especially those
of bright intellect and sophisticated reason,
that they should not precipitately rush to swift
judgement only because it appears awkward in its
choice of words or speaks in the way of ordinary
preachers and teachers. Indeed, this book does
not float on top, like foam on water. It has
rather been fetched out of the rock bottom of
Jordan by a true Israelite whose name only God
knows and whoever is informed about it by God.
Be that as it may, here we have the true solid
teaching of Holy Writ. One has to choose between
calling it all a folly and becoming a fool, as
the Apostle Paul indicates in 1 Cor 1 We preach
Christ, a folly to the heathen but to those who
are called, the wisdom of God. - Martin Luther, Preface to Eyn geystlich edles
Buchleynn (1516)
4Theologia Germanica
- This noble little book, poor and unadorned as it
is as far as wording an purely human wisdom are
concerned, is all the richer and abundantly
precious in true knowledge and divine wisdom. And
, if I may speak with biblical foolishness Next
to the Bible and Saint Augustine, no other book
has come to my attention from which I have
learnedand desired to learnmore concerning God,
Christ, man, and what all things are. - Martin Luther, Preface to Eyn Deutsch Theologia
(1518)
5 From the Theologia Germanica
- Even if God would take to himself all humans in
the world and become humanised in them and they
would become divinised in him and this did not
happen in me, my fall and my apostasy would never
be amended. No, it must also occur in me. Ch. 3 - But if our inner being would make a leap into
the Perfect, one would find and taste that the
Perfect is limitlessly, endlessly, insuperably
nobler and better than all imperfect and
incomplete things. That inner being of ours would
also find the Eternal above the transitory and
the wellspring and origin underneath everything
that flows from it and ever will flow from it.
Ch. 6 - It should also be pointed out that eternal bliss
is rooted in God alone and nothing else. And if
man and his soul are to be saved, this one and
only God must be in the soul. Ch. 9
6The Traditional View
- Harold J. Grimm, Introduction to Preface to the
Complete Edition of a German Theology (1518), in
Luthers Works, American Edition (Fortress Press,
1957) - During his formative years, Luther was much
impressed by the writings of the late-medieval
German mystics, particularly by their emphasis
upon the necessity of a spiritual rebirth of
despair before one could be united with God. - Like the mystics, Luther was most concerned
that the sinner should find a way out of sin and
to salvation in communion with God in other
words, that he should annihilate his own
personality and substitute Gods. - Yet one looks in vain in Luther's writings for
doctrines of the mystics. Unlike these, he never
become subjective in his approach, but continue
to emphasize at every step the doctrine which had
resulted from his own experience and study,
namely, justification by faith.
7Hoffmans Revolution
- Thus the general view was that Luther abandoned
the sapientia experimentalis of the German
mystics for a more objective sapientia theologica - Bengt R. Hoffman Luther and the Mystics
(Augsburg, 1976) reissued as Theology of the
Heart The Role of Mysticism in the Theology of
Martin Luther. (Kirk House Publishers, 1998) - Hoffman rejected the rather common supposition
that Luther embraced mystical ideas in his youth,
only to abandon all of them for a supposedly more
evangelical reliance on outer signs and
justification as imputation in his mature
years.
8Hoffmans Revolution
- Hoffman, Introduction, The Theologia Germanica of
Martin Luther The Theologia Germanica, like
many mystical writings in medieval and modern
times, seems to lay little direct stress on
Christs redemption, the for you of salvation.
It is more interested in the other side of
salvation, the Christ in you. - Luther maintained a dialectic between the
internal and the external, between the
experiential and the objective, between Christ
in us Christ for us that was lost by his
later interpreters - Following Hoffman, Scandinavian (especially
Swedish and Finnish) Luther scholars began to
emphasise Luthers Theology of the Heart
9Luther the Mystic?
- Hoffman made use of Nathan Söderbloms
distinction (1975) between personality-mysticism
and infinity-mysticism. - Infinity Mysticism an experience of the
superhuman beyond the vicissitudes of life an
immersion in nature and exercise according to
technical patterns a dissolution of the person
into the impersonal Beyond - Personality Mysticism an experience of God in
the midst of lifes problems an experience of
the human I meeting the divine Thou trust
and forgiveness in this life a relationship to a
personal God - Hoffman equated Eckhart with the former, and
Tauler, the author of the TG, and Luther with the
latter.
10The Fate of the German Theology
- 20 editions in Luthers lifetime
- Popular among the radical reformers Anabaptists
(eg. Schwenkfeldt) and the Schwärmer (eg.
Carlstadt) - Rejected by Calvin For although there are no
outstanding errors in it, it contains
frivolities, conceived by Satans cunning in
order to confuse the whole simplicity of the
gospel. And if you look deeper into it you will
find that it contains a hidden deadly poison
which can poison the church. Therefore, my
brethren, shun like the pest all those who try to
defile you with such impurities.
11The Fate of the German Theology
- Because it was so highly valued by their master,
it was accepted by Luthers 16th Century
disciples despite their strong emphasis on
objective, external, Christ for us
justification, and their suspicion of the
Schwärmer). - Johan Arndt (a proto-Pietist?) issued new edition
by at the beginning of the 17th Century - Thereafter, Lutheranism was split into two camps
- Anti-Theologia Germanica The rationalist,
systematic Orthodoxy which systematised
Lutheranism - Pro-Theologia Germanica The experiential and
personal life of faith emphasis of the German
Pietist movement
12The Fate of the German Theology
- Philipp Jakob Spener, the father of German
pietism spoke warmly of the TG in both his Pia
Desiderata and in the foreword to his edition of
Taulers works. - Louis Bouyer (The Spirit and Forms of
Protestantism 1954) Authentic Lutheranism is
not a theological system. It is wholly a
religious movement, single and wide-ranging,
which follows not always logically but vitally
from a few basic intuitions, or rather from one
intuition viewed from every possible
standpoint, quarried from every angle. Calvinism,
on the other hand, is quite clearly a system as
compact, perhaps more so, as Thomism before it,
or Molinism or Jansenism later.
13Louis Bouyers Thesis
- Although Paul V place the Theologia Germanica on
the Index, its popularity among some Protestants
shows that there is a form of reformation
spirituality which shares a commonality with
Catholic mystical tradition - This fits well with a thesis put forward by Louis
Bouyer in his 1954 work The Spirit and Forms of
Protestantism, which predates but supports
Hoffmans thesis
14Louis Bouyers Thesis
- It is absolutely certain, as a matter of
history, that the intuition of Luther, which we
find to lie at the root of that of Calvin, takes
us back directly to the Rhenish school of
mysticism originated by Eckhart and Tauler. - If Luther had no hesitation in acknowledging his
debt to the Theologia Germanicaif he went so far
as to translate it into German to popularise it,
that shows that he recognised it as one of the
sources of his conception. The God whose very
light is a superessential darkness is the Deus
revelatus, but revelatus as absconditus.
15Louis Bouyers Thesis
- Both the Moravians of Zinzendorf, and even the
first pietists (Luther too, for that matter), had
recourse to the great medieval mystics, notably
of the Rhenish School, as both sources and living
examples of the Reformation and the Christianity
it ought to produce. It is certain that the
entire movement, pietist as well as Weslyan,
which we have described, profited by the vast
mystical trend apparent from the beginning of
Protestantism, sometimes in anarchical forms, but
often at the heart of the most conservative
movements in thought and action.
16Louis Bouyers Thesis
- Bouyer goes on to link together the succession
of German mystics who, in the sixteenth and
seventeenth century Protestantism, continued the
teaching of Tauler, incluidng Sebasian Franck,
Valentin Weigl, and Jacob Boehme - In a sweeping vision, he follows the influence of
these pietists, mystics and revivalists to the
the Low Country Anabaptists, Rembrant, the Quaker
George Fox, the Swedish visionary Swedenborg,
English Evangelical turned Catholic John Henry
Newman, Evangelical Bavarian Pastor Wilhelm Löhe,
Danish Pastor Nicolai Frederick Severin
Grundtvig, and English Archdeacon Frederick
Denison Maurice.
17Johann Arndt (15551621)
- A Lutheran pastor and theologian
- At Wittenberg in 1577 during the
Crypto-Calvinist controversy (he sided with
Melanchthon) - In Strasbourg studied under a strong
anti-Calvinist Lutherans - In Basel studied under a more moderate teacher
who sought to unite Lutherans and Reformed
churches - In Badeborn in 1583 served as a pastor tending
more towards Lutheranism than Calvinism - In 1590 deposed by the Calvinist authorities for
retaining pictures in his church and using the
baptismal exorcism. - Worked in Brunswick, Eisleben, and (until his
death in 1621) Celle as local superintendent
(bishop).
18Johann Arndt (15551621)
- Author of mystical and devotional works inspired
by St Bernard, Johannes Tauler and Thomas Kempis,
including a new edition of the Theologia
Germanica - Wahres Christentum (True Christianity) 1599
published in many translations, becoming a model
of devotion for both Catholics and Protestants. - In it he asserts categorically that the true
faith which justifies is that which bears fruit
in justice and sanctity. (Bouyer) - Arndt stressed in his teaching and preaching the
Christ in us not to the exclusion of but in a
justified reaction against the Christ for us
theology of orthodox Lutherans. He represented a
genuine Lutheran mysticism, orthodox with respect
to pure doctrine, yet a proponent of inner heart
theology. (Hoffman).
19Philip Jakob Spener (1635-1705)
- Although Arndt predated the pietistic movement,
they held him in high regard - Spener is generally regarded as Father of German
Pietism - Bouyer Philip Jacob-Spener, president of the
seminary of Frankfort on the Maine from
1666,while maintaining his allegiance to Luther,
called Arndt the father of the faithful, and
considered him the real founder of pietism,
placing him, for this reason, immediately below
Luther. He declared his conviction that
justification by faith in divine grace was the
main principle, but he set himself against
confusing it with extrinsic justification on the
contrary, he put all the emphasis on its
association with practical sanctity, expressly
including voluntary effort.
20Count Nicholas-Louis of Zinzendorf (1700-1760)
- Bouyer a strange figure, combining pathological
traits with very pure flights of mysticism - Joined efforts with the Moravian Brethren in
1722, giving them property to establish their
quasi-monastic commune, the village of
Herrnhut. - The ecclesiolae, or small churchesancestor
of the small groups or base ecclesial
communties of today - A direct influence on John and Charles Wesley and
Methodism - Herrnhutter commune near Penshurst in Western
Victoria (Dr. William Metcalf and Betty Huf, "In
Search of Utopia - Herrnhut, Australias First
Commune (Melbourne University Press)
21Luthers Spiritual Heritage
- Luther was an Augustinian Monk. St Augustine had
pride of place in his spiritual formation - In 1508 Luther bought an edition of Taulers
sermons which he thoroughly annotated in the
margins - Behind Tauler and the Theologia Germanica was the
influence of the Friends of God movement. - The Friends of God was an international network
of those working for spiritual and moral renewal
in the 14th and 15th centuries. They specifically
opposed the radical movement which called itself
the Brothers and Sisters of the Free Spirit - He rightly supposed the Theologia Germanica came
from this tradition, but wrongly ascribed it to
Tauler himself.
22Luther and Bernard
- Luther, like many of his contemporaries including
Erasmus, was schooled in the studia humanitatis,
the via moderna, and the schola Augustiniana
moderna - He was a life-long anti-scholastic, completely
rejecting Aristotelianism (Philosophy), and
embracing a corresponding nominalism - Thus it is not surprising to find that he was a
keen admirer of St Bernard of Clairvaux, the foe
of Peter Abelard (the pioneer of Scholasticism) - Franz Posset, Bernard of Clairvaux as Luthers
Source, Concordia Theological Quarterly,
1990In Bernards time a new theology influenced
by the ancient pagan philosophy of Aristotle
arose in the form of what today is called
Scholasticism. It was fostered and inspired by
Peter Abelard, Bernards foe.
23Luther and Bernard
- We must be selective because Luthers references
to Bernard amount to more than five hundred, not
counting allusions made in his table-talk and in
his correspondence. - If one compares Luthers allusions to the
representatives of the so-called German
Mysticism (such as Meister Eckhart, Johannes
Tauler, and the anonymous Frankfurter who wrote
the Theologia Germanica), one comes upon some
surprising facts Luther never directly or
indirectly quoted or mentioned Meister Eckhart by
name and, compared with Bernard, Lutehr referred
relatively rarely to Tauler and to the
Frankfurter whose work he had edited. Luthers
often literal quations from, direct references
to, and indirect allusions to Bernard outnumber
these others by the hundreds.
24Luther and Bernard
- Luther said I love Bernard as the one who among
all writers preached Christ most charmingly. I
follow him wherever he preached Christ, and I
pray to Christ in the faith in which he prayed to
Christ. - Posset Luther the preacher was most interested
in Bernard the preacher, that is, the preacher of
the crib and the cross of Christ, nevertheless,
not only the preaching and teaching Bernard made
a great impression on Luther, but also the
praying Bernard. - Still, Posset asserts that the Reformer was
interested in Bernard as a biblical theologian
a preacher of the gospel, not as a mystic in
the sense in which the term is usually understood
today The Reformer alerted his audience
primarily to Bernards christocentric piety, that
is, to meditation on the wounds of Christ, to his
incarnational christology, to his theology of
grace alone faith alone.
25Key themes in Luthers Spirituality
- The dialectic of Law and Gospel
- Sola Gratia, Sola Fide, Sola Scriptura, Solus
Christus - Theologia Crucis (vs. Theologia Gloriae)
- Deus Absconditus, Deus Revelatus and especially
the God revealed in hiddenness - The Incarnation finitum capax infinitum (contra
Calvin who insisted on finitum non capax
infinitum, leading later Lutherans to joke about
the extra-Calvinisticum, the bit of God that
didnt fit into Christ). - Thus a Christocentricity which focused upon the
crib and cross, as Posset puts it.
26Law and Gospel
- Treatise on Christian Liberty (1520)
- Grace gives, faith receives. Thus, since all
salvation is by grace, all salvation is by faith.
- The works of the Law have no part in this.
- In the scriptures, two things are to be
distinguishedthe commands and the promises. If
you desire to fulfil the law and overcome
concupiscence, believe in Jesus Christ, in whom
you are offered grace, justice, peace and
liberty. By faith, you possess all these without
it, you are a stranger to them all. - A Christian is a perfectly free lord of all,
subject to none a Christian is a perfectly
dutiful servant of all, subject to all.
27What is Faith?
- Bouyer summarises the doctrine of sola fide as
follows - The essential thing, for salvation, is to
realise that God is its author that it depends,
not on ones own strength, but on Gods. In this
realisation, where a radical distrust of self is
but the obverse of absolute confidence in God,
consists faith nothing else can possibly replace
it. - Saving faith is fiducia (trust) not just belief
(fides). - Such faith is an affair of the heart, and not of
the mind alone. - In fact, Luthers understanding of faith included
a large measure of what we would call caritas - Cf. the explanation to the First Commandment in
the Small Catechism We are to fear, love and
trust in God
28Grace in Luther
- Again, Bouyer describes the doctrine of sola
gratia in Luthers theology as follows - The point of departure for Luthers whole
conception of grace was the positive certainty
he at last attained that God, not ourselves, is
the prime author of our salvation. Consequently,
we have no call to be despondent at our
powerlessness to save ourselves by our own
exertions for it is just to this powerlessness
that the Gospel gives the answer. What we could
not do, God, in Christ, has done for us. - This is Christ for us, but the experience of
positive certainty points to something internal
also, and not simply external.
29Interior and Exterior in Luther
- The dialectic of the interior and the exterior
justification lies at the heart of Luthers
theology - It is always grace alone that saves us, but
- when engaged in controversy, he stressed
extrinsic justification, without any inward
change to our nature - whereas when speaking pastorally he stressed the
inner experience of grace (referring to his own
conversion experience) and the presence of Christ
in the heart - Bouyer As soon as he speaks as a religious
guide or educator, he becomes anxious simply to
give Christians, learned and unlearned alike, a
statement of living Christianity as conceived and
realised by himself.
30The Theology of the Cross
- Heidelberg Disputation (1518) (more significant
for later Lutheranism than the 95 Theses of 1517) - Thesis 20. "The man who perceives the visible
rear-ward parts of God Ex 3323as seen in
suffering and the crossdoes deserve to be
called a theologian" (Sed qui visibilia et
posteriora Dei per passiones et crucem conspecta
intellgit). - The back and visible things of God are placed
in opposition to the invisible, namely, his human
nature, weakness, foolishness. (1 Cor 125) God
wished to be recognized in suffering, it is not
sufficient for anyone, and it does him no good to
recognize God in his glory and majesty, unless he
recognizes him in the humility and shame of the
cross. Thus God destroys the wisdom of the wise,
as Isa. 4515 says, Truly, thou art a God who
hidest thyself.
31The Theology of the Cross
- Thesis 21 A theologian of glory calls evil good
and good evil. A theologian of the cross calls
the thing what it actually is. - This is clear He who does not know Christ does
not know God hidden in suffering. Therefore he
prefers works to suffering, glory to the cross,
strength to weakness, wisdom to folly, and, in
general, good to evil. God can be found only in
suffering and the cross. - Thus even when God reveals himself, it is in a
hidden way (eg. In the babe in swaddling clothes,
on the cross, in the bread and wine of the
Eucharist)
32Christology of the Crib and Cross
- Luthers Christocentric theology is distinguished
from Calvinism and other forms of Protestantism
primarily because it is profoundly Incarnational - Bouyer It should be clear to anyone that the
God of Calvin is, primarily, the God of Sinai,
the God who makes himself manifest in a splendour
and majesty inaccessible to man. - Luthers God, on the other hand, is the God of
the manger and of the cross, the God who makes
himself accessible to man precisely by hiding
himself in humility. - For Luther, Finitum capax infinitum, but for
Calvin, Finitum NON capax infinitum.
33Luthers Hymns
- A Mighty Fortress Verse 2
- With might of ours can naught be donesoon were
our fall effectedbut for us fights the valiant
onewhom God himself elected.Ask ye Who is
this? Christ Jesus it isof Sabaoth Lord, AND
THERES NONE OTHER GOD.He holds the field for
ever.
34Luthers Hymns
- From Heaven above to Earth I come
- These are the tokens ye shall markthe
swaddling-clothes and manger darkthere shall ye
find the young child laid,by whom the heavens
and earth were made. - Ah, Lord, who hast created all, how weak art
thou, how poor and small,that thou dost choose
thine infant bedwhere ass and ox but lately fed. - Ah, dearest Jesus, holy child,make thee a bed,
soft, undefiled,within my heart, that it may
bea quiet chamber kept for thee.
35Luthers Hymns
- O Jesus Christ, all praise to thee
- He whom the world cannot enclose doth in Marys
arms reposeto be an infant small he deignswho
all things by his power sustains.Hallelujah.
36The Small Catechism
- I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Maker of
heaven and earth. - What does this mean?
- I believe that God has made me and all creatures
that He has given me my body and soul, eyes,
ears, and all my members, my reason and all my
senses, and still takes care of them. He also
gives me clothing and shoes, food and drink,
house and home, wife and children, land, animals,
and all I have. He richly and daily provides me
with all that I need to support this body and
life. He defends me against all danger and guards
and protects me from all evil. All this He does
only out of fatherly, divine goodness and mercy,
without any merit or worthiness in me. For all
this it is my duty to thank and praise, serve and
obey Him. This is most certainly true.
37The Small Catechism
- I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Maker of
heaven and earth. - What does this mean?
- I believe that God has made me and all creatures
that He has given me my body and soul, eyes,
ears, and all my members, my reason and all my
senses, and still takes care of them. He also
gives me clothing and shoes, food and drink,
house and home, wife and children, land, animals,
and all I have. He richly and daily provides me
with all that I need to support this body and
life. He defends me against all danger and guards
and protects me from all evil. All this He does
only out of fatherly, divine goodness and mercy,
without any merit or worthiness in me. For all
this it is my duty to thank and praise, serve and
obey Him. This is most certainly true.
38The Small Catechism
- And in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord, etc.
From thence He will come to judge the living and
the dead. - What does this mean?
- I believe that Jesus Christ, true God, begotten
of the Father from eternity, and also true man,
born of the Virgin Mary, is my Lord, who has
redeemed me, a lost and condemned person,
purchased and won me from all sins, from death,
and from the power of the devil not with gold or
silver, but with His holy, precious blood and
with His innocent suffering and death, that I may
be His own and live under Him in His kingdom and
serve Him in everlasting righteousness,
innocence, and blessedness, just as He is risen
from the dead, lives and reigns to all eternity.
This is most certainly true.
39The Small Catechism
- I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy Christian
church, the communion of saints, the forgiveness
of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the
life everlasting. Amen. - What does this mean?
- I believe that I cannot by my own reason or
strength believe in Jesus Christ, my Lord, or
come to Him but the Holy Spirit has called me by
the Gospel, enlightened me with His gifts,
sanctified and kept me in the true faith. In the
same way He calls, gathers, enlightens, and
sanctifies the whole Christian church on earth,
and keeps it with Jesus Christ in the one true
faith. In this Christian church He daily and
richly forgives all my sins and the sins of all
believers. On the Last Day He will raise me and
all the dead, and give eternal life to me and all
believers in Christ. This is most certainly true.
40The Small Catechism
Hallowed be Thy Name.
- Cyril of Jerusalem
- The Name of God is in its nature holy, whether we
say so or not but since it is sometimes profaned
among sinnerswe pray that in us God's Name may
be hallowed not that it comes to be holy from
not being holy, but because it becomes holy in
us, when we are made holy, and do things worthy
of holiness.
Augustine We ask that His name may be hallowed in
us for holy is it always. but He is always
holy, and His name always holy. It is for
ourselves, not for God, that we pray.
Martin Luther Gods name is certainly holy in
itself, but we pray in this petition that it may
be kept holy among us also.
41The Small Catechism
Thy Kingdom Come
- How does Gods kingdom come?
- Gods kingdom comes when our heavenly Father
gives us His Holy Spirit, so that by His grace we
believe His holy Word and lead godly lives here
in time and there in eternity.
42The Small Catechism
- Posset Bernard of Clairvaux developed the
concept of the three comings of Christ the
first coming is the incarnationad homines,then
there is the parousia, usually called the second
coming, the advent on the day of judgmentcontra
homines. The third advent is the spiritual birth
in the soula mystical advent, in homines. - Luther Christs face is triple firstly, in his
first advent when he was made incarnate who as
Son of God is the face of the Father secondly,
in the spiritual advent whithout which the first
is good for nothingand so one has to recognise
his face through faith thirdly, in the second
and last advent when his face will be fully
visible.
43The Small Catechism
Thy Kingdom Come
- How does Gods kingdom come?
- Gods kingdom comes when our heavenly Father
gives us His Holy Spirit, so that by His grace we
believe His holy Word and lead godly lives here
in time and there in eternity.
44A Simple Way to Pray (1535)
- The Catechism was the basis for one of Luthers
best known works on prayer A Simple Way to Pray
(1535) - Peter Beskendorf, a Wittenberg barber, though a
devout Christian, had killed his son-in-law in a
drunken rage. By Luthers intercession he was
exiled rather than executed. - Peter the Barber asked Luther for help in how to
pray. - Luther responded I will tell you as best I can
what I do personally when I pray. May our dear
Lord grant to you and to everybody to do it
better than I! Amen.
45A Simple Way to Pray (1535)
- Some significant and practical pastoral advice
- when I feel that I have become cool and joyless
in prayer - my roomor where a congregation is assembled
- word-for-word the Ten Commandments, the Creed,
some words of Christ or of Paul. or some psalms - just as a child might do.
- the first business of the morning and the last
at night - Wait a little while. I will pray in an hour
first I must attend to this or that. nothing
comes of prayer for that day. - St. Jerome He who works faithfully prays
twice. Yet we must be careful not to break the
habit of true prayer and imagine other works to
be necessary which, after all, are nothing of the
kind.
46A Simple Way to Pray (1535)
- Luther then provides a series of model
meditations on the Our Father, the Ten
Commandments and the Creedliterally a prayed
catechism. - You should also know that I do not want you to
recite all these words in your prayer. Rather do
I want your heart to be stirred and guided
concerning the thoughts which ought to be
comprehended in the Lords Prayer. These thoughts
may be expressed, if your heart is rightly warmed
and inclined toward prayer, in many different
ways and with more words or fewer. If an
abundance of good thoughts comes to us we ought
to disregard the other petitions, make room for
such thoughts, listen in silence, and under no
circumstances obstruct them. The Holy Spirit
himself preaches here, and one word of his sermon
is far better than a thousand of our prayers.
47A Simple Way to Pray (1535)
- Priests Like the priest who prayed, Deus in
adjutorium meum intende. Farmhand, did you
unhitch the horses? Domine ad adjuvandum me
festina. Maid, go out and milk the cow. Gloria
patri et filio et spiritui sancto. Hurry up, boy,
I wish the ague would take you! - Barbers So, a good and attentive barber keeps
his thoughts. attention, and eyes on the razor
and hair and does not forget how far he has
gotten with his shaving or cutting. If he wants
to engage in too much conversation or let his
mind wander or look somewhere else he is likely
to cut his customers mouth, nose, or even his
throat. Thus if anything is to be done well, it
requires the full attention of all ones senses
and members.How much more does prayer call for
con-centration singleness of heart if it is to
be a good prayer!
48Oratio Meditatio Tentatio (1539)
- In the preface to the first edition of Luthers
works, published in his own life time, Luther
points out a correct way of studying theology
with three steps Oratio, Meditatio, and
Tentatio. - What he describes is in fact a form of Lectio
Divina - This ancient practice, familiar to Luther from
his monastic days, also fitted his sola scriptura
spirituality - John Kleinig "Everything centres around the
practice of meditation, for prayer prepares for
it and its results are confirmed in the
experience of conflict. For Luther, meditation is
the key to the study of theology. No one can
become a true theologian unless he learns
theology through it ie. through meditation."
49Oratio Meditatio Tentatio (1539)
- Oratio
- Prayer, but prayer focused on the Scriptures,
a book which turns the wisdom of all other books
into foolishness (note similar theme in Preface
to TG 1516) - Prayer is the necessary preparation and method
for reading the scriptures Teach me, Lord,
instruct me, lead me, show me the prayer of
an open heart - Reason and understanding are useless and
presumptuous humility and earnestness, with
the gift of the Holy Spirit, are necessary for
enlightenment
50Oratio Meditatio Tentatio (1539)
- Meditatio
- Note the emphasis on meditating not only in your
heart, but also externally, ie. reading the text
aloud (or soto voce) - Luther was a Hebrew scholar and knew that the
word used in Psalm 119 for meditate carried the
inherent notion of speaking or conversing aloud
with someone if that someone was oneself it
meant to ponder - Thus one can hear the spoken Word, even when
alone - For God will not give you his Spirit without the
external Word. This emphasis had grown in
reaction to the radical reformers who emphasised
interior revelation - The necessity of repeated reading, hearing and
speaking of the wordonce or twice is not
sufficient
51Oratio Meditatio Tentatio (1539)
- Tentatio
- But the late-Luther had by no means abandoned the
emphasis of the early-Luther and the German
mystics on the sapientia experimentalis - For Luther the sapientia theologica could not be
attained through oratio and meditatio without
going on to the touchstone of tentatio
(Anfechtung/trial/suffering) - Only this experience was capable of teaching
how right, how true, how sweet, how lovely, how
mighty, how comforting Gods Word is, wisdom
beyond all wisdom. - Here too we can see the constant presence and
life-long emphasis in Luthers spirituality of
the Theology of the Cross and of the God who
reveals himself in Hiddenness