The narrative I got was that it was all about and, almost exclusively so, concerning justification. Nowhere in my education or training was I appraised of the idea that the Reformation was about catholicity. That idea came unofficially from teachers and mentors outside the classroom. At the heart of the Reformation, however, is not simply or solely the issue of justification but even more so the question of whose claim to catholicity was genuine. Justification was part of this and not unrelated to it. This is certainly the contention of the Augsburg Confession (Conclusion of Part One). Catholicity was and remains the main cause of the Reformation. If their concern for justification was Biblical, it must be catholic. If it is catholic, it must be Biblical. That is the perspective of the Lutheran reformers.
Over the course of a few decades or so there has been an explosion of authors and works on just this topic -- the Reformation as a conflict over who deserved to be called catholic. Some are well known tomes from the best seller lists of a few years ago -- from the likes of Steven Ozment, Scott Henrix, and Diarmaid MacCulloch. Others are renewed interest in other authors and works from the likes of Heiko Oberman, Martin Brecht, and, before that, Jaroslav Pelikan. Gone is the hero worship style of biography once practiced within and outside of Lutheranism and in its place are serious reviews of the claim of catholicity. The problem is that I am not so sure that those who call themselves Lutheran are as comfortable with this renewed interest in catholicity. Too many Lutherans are too comfortable with the idea that Lutherans are radicals with the intent upon wholesale renovation of the Church. Despite Luther's over the top rhetoric, his practice was somewhat more careful and conservative.
So the problem before us as Lutherans is which form of Lutheranism is authentic -- the one that loves to live on the radical fringe of Christianity and embrace the excesses of culture or the one that tolerates things liturgical but prefers an Amish style spirituality or the one that fully intends to be catholic in doctrine and practice. The ELCA along with European Lutherans seem to have laid serious claim to the liberal fringe. The evangelical style Lutherans who disdain liturgy, ceremony, and sacramental piety seem to live in various Lutheran denominations -- my own included. The catholic style Lutherans are often characterized as loving worship more than the Gospel itself but they maintain the tie between doctrine and practice. I wish I could say that this has been resolved but it is still being fought out. The out and out worship wars might have been tamed down a bit but the battleground remains. The choice of some Lutherans to engage the culture on matters of sexual desire, gender identity, marriage, family, children, climate, etc., is not yet finished as they continue to follow where the culture wars lead. The whole idea of simple is better than anything too elaborate continues to be held as a balance against those who they feel have gone too far. At some point, however, we will have to decide which Reformation is not only the real one but the one of which we claim to be heirs.

1 comment:
I think that within the ponderous brilliant mind of Martin Luther was a greatly tormented soul who looked around at the corruption of the Catholic Church he loved, and his defiance was never meant as harmful, but instead it was directed at needed reforms. The sale of indulgences, veneration of the saints, corruption of the clergy, and the hierarchy of the Papal system seemed to him as inconsistent with biblical teachings. For the studious Luther, Sola Scriptura was the key. And the grace of God, he discovered, was foundational to his faith. To this troubled and depressed monk the Catholic Church had also became subordinate to works. At the same time, he agreed with the Catholic Church’s teachings on the Trinity, and Baptism, and other principles found in Holy Writ. His defiant stance on the corruptions he saw placed him in the category of the prophets, and few prophets become popular while they are living, though they are often revered after their deaths. We might accurately say that the Reformation rocked the Christian world at that time, yet the Counter Reformation followed, and a continuous round of persecutions, religious wars, and divisive political/religious conflicts marked the years that followed. The Reformation was an opportunity for Catholicism to shed some practices and doctrines which have no part in God’s word, but the Roman church failed to heed what this lonely, depressed, grumpy and coarse German monk was trying to tell them long ago. Soli Deo Gloria
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