Monday, October 30, 2017

572 - Performance Anxiety, Part 1

Spirituality Column #572
October 31, 2017
Common Christianity / Uncommon Commentary

Performance Anxiety, Part 1
By Bob Walters

Oh, how we Christians stupidly worry if we are good enough for God’s redemption.

How can we prove our faith?  Earn His love?  Glorify His name?  Get into heaven?  Repent of our sin?  Avoid His wrath?  Live a perfect life?

“What am I supposed to do to be redeemed?”

Well, if it makes you feel any better, Martin Luther was worried about all those same things 500 years ago. His answer?  There’s not much we can do; the heavy lifting of human redemption is up to God.  How did Luther know?  The Bible told him so.

Unless one vigorously avoids all contact with church history – and there are people I know and love who think “church history” was a Billy Graham Crusade that came through town 20 years ago – we might be aware that today, October 31, 2017, is the 500th anniversary observance of the game-changing Protestant Reformation spurred by Luther’s plea for Roman Catholic doctrinal clarification in 1517.

The humble but quirky German monk unintentionally turned the Christian world upside down by simply inviting an academic and theological dialog to delineate church, individual, and divine redemptive roles in “working out our salvation” (Philippians 2:12).

And no, it wasn’t an “Occupy Wittenberg” hissy-fit style protest when Luther’s succinct proposal for discussion –his much-heralded Ninety-Five Theses – appeared on the church door at Wittenberg Castle in Germany.  The door was the school’s “bulletin board,” and most likely the notice was pasted, not nailed, to the door by the custodian.

Luther was Wittenberg University’s professor of theology as well as the local pastor and also overseer of several parishes in that region of Saxony.  At issue was the Church’s practice of “indulgences” whereby one could purchase for oneself or one’s deceased relatives – either with money or by visiting collections of holy relics – relief from time in purgatory, the Catholic traditional doctrine of where souls go after death to atone for earthly sins before, leading to redemption and then proceeding on to heaven.

Luther – a clergical rarity in his era in that he actually studied the Bible – had vast theological doubts about this Church interference with God’s plan of redemption.  Luther also knew, having visited Rome just a few years earlier, that the spiritual state of the church was in near shambles due to six consecutive 15th-16th century Popes – Leo X being the latest and last – who had scandalously misled the Church of St. Peter.

While in Rome, Luther also discerned that the central priesthood had descended into a cynical, works-oriented, theologically vacant, biblically empty, say-the-Mass-as-fast-as-you-can-to-get-it-over-with pastoral morass.  It was an awful era in western Church history.

Deeply pious and deeply concerned with his own repentance and redemption, Luther was an academic prodigy and biblical scholar with questions, not a rebel with a torch. Next week we’ll cover a few salient takeaways of how this humble monk’s sincere desire to please God shook and revived the deepest foundations of Christianity.

Walters (rlwcom@aol.com) sides with Luther and the Reformation, but notes the tremendous service the revolt provided in restoring the dignity of the Catholic Church.

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