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A new emperor,
Charles V, had ascended the throne of Germany, and the emissaries of
Rome hastened to present their congratulations and induce the
monarch to employ his power against the Reformation. On the other
hand, the elector of Saxony, to whom Charles was in great degree
indebted for his crown, entreated him to take no step against Luther
until he should have granted him a hearing. The emperor was thus
placed in a position of great perplexity and embarrassment. The
papists would be satisfied with nothing short of an imperial edict
sentencing Luther to death. The elector had declared firmly that
"neither his imperial majesty nor any other person had shown that
Luther's writings had been refuted;" therefore he requested "that
Dr. Luther should be furnished with a safe-conduct, so that he might
appear before a tribunal of learned, pious, and impartial judges."--D'Aubigne,
b. 6, ch. 11.
The attention of all parties was now
directed to the assembly of the German states which convened at Worms
soon after the accession of Charles to the empire. There were important
political questions and interests to be considered by this national
council; for the first time the princes of Germany were to meet their
youthful monarch in deliberative assembly. From all parts of the
fatherland had come the dignitaries of church and state. Secular lords,
highborn, powerful, and jealous of their hereditary rights; princely
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ecclesiastics, flushed with their
conscious superiority in rank and power; courtly knights and their armed
retainers; and ambassadors from foreign and distant lands,--all gathered
at Worms. Yet in that vast assembly the subject that excited the deepest
interest was the cause of the Saxon Reformer.
Charles had previously directed the
elector to bring Luther with him to the Diet, assuring him of
protection, and promising a free discussion, with competent persons, of
the questions in dispute. Luther was anxious to appear before the
emperor. His health was at this time much impaired; yet he wrote to the
elector: "If I cannot go to Worms in good health, I will be carried
there, sick as I am. For if the emperor calls me, I cannot doubt that it
is the call of God Himself. If they desire to use violence against me,
and that is very probable (for it is not for their instruction that they
order me to appear), I place the matter in the Lord's hands. He still
lives and reigns who preserved the three young men in the burning fiery
furnace. If He will not save me, my life is of little consequence. Let
us only prevent the gospel from being exposed to the scorn of the
wicked, and let us shed our blood for it, for fear they should triumph.
It is not for me to decide whether my life or my death will contribute
most to the salvation of all. . . . You may expect everything from me. .
. except flight and recantation. Fly I cannot, and still less
retract."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 1.
As the news was circulated at Worms
that Luther was to appear before the Diet, a general excitement was
created. Aleander, the papal legate to whom the case had been specially
entrusted, was alarmed and enraged. He saw that the result would be
disastrous to the papal cause. To institute inquiry into a case in which
the pope had already pronounced sentence of condemnation would be to
cast contempt upon the authority of the sovereign pontiff. Furthermore,
he was apprehensive that the eloquent and powerful arguments of this man
might turn away many of the princes from the cause of the pope. He
therefore, in the most
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urgent manner, remonstrated with Charles
against Luther's appearance at Worms. About this time the bull declaring
Luther's excommunication was published; and this, coupled with the
representations of the legate, induced the emperor to yield. He wrote to
the elector that if Luther would not retract, he must remain at
Wittenberg.
Not content with this victory,
Aleander labored with all the power and cunning at his command to secure
Luther's condemnation. With a persistence worthy of a better cause, he
urged the matter upon the attention of princes, prelates, and other
members of the assembly, accusing the Reformer of "sedition, rebellion,
impiety, and blasphemy." But the vehemence and passion manifested by the
legate revealed too plainly the spirit by which he was actuated. "He is
moved by hatred and vengeance," was the general remark, "much more than
by zeal and piety."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 1. The majority of
the Diet were more than ever inclined to regard Luther's cause with
favor.
With redoubled zeal Aleander urged
upon the emperor the duty of executing the papal edicts. But under the
laws of Germany this could not be done without the concurrence of the
princes; and, overcome at last by the legate's importunity, Charles bade
him present his case to the Diet. "It was a proud day for the nuncio.
The assembly was a great one: the cause was even greater. Aleander was
to plead for Rome, . . . the mother and mistress of all churches." He
was to vindicate the princedom of Peter before the assembled
principalities of Christendom. "He had the gift of eloquence, and he
rose to the greatness of the occasion. Providence ordered it that Rome
should appear and plead by the ablest of her orators in the presence of
the most august of tribunals, before she was condemned." --Wylie, b. 6,
ch. 4. With some misgivings those who favored the Reformer looked
forward to the effect of Aleander's speech. The elector of Saxony was
not present, but by his direction some of his councilors attended to
take notes of the nuncio's address.
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With all the power of learning and
eloquence, Aleander set himself to overthrow the truth. Charge after
charge he hurled against Luther as an enemy of the church and the state,
the living and the dead, clergy and laity, councils and private
Christians. "In Luther's errors there is enough," he declared, to
warrant the burning of "a hundred thousand heretics."
In conclusion he endeavored to cast
contempt upon the adherents of the reformed faith: "What are all these
Lutherans? A crew of insolent pedagogues, corrupt priests, dissolute
monks, ignorant lawyers, and degraded nobles, with the common people
whom they have misled and perverted. How far superior to them is the
Catholic party in number, ability, and power! A unanimous decree from
this illustrious assembly will enlighten the simple, warn the imprudent,
decide the waverers, and give strength to the weak." --D'Aubigne, b. 7,
ch. 3.
With such weapons the advocates of
truth in every age have been attacked. The same arguments are still
urged against all who dare to present, in opposition to established
errors, the plain and direct teachings of God's word. "Who are these
preachers of new doctrines?" exclaim those who desire a popular
religion. "They are unlearned, few in numbers, and of the poorer class.
Yet they claim to have the truth, and to be the chosen people of God.
They are ignorant and deceived. How greatly superior in numbers and
influence is our church! How many great and learned men are among us!
How much more power is on our side!" These are the arguments that have a
telling influence upon the world; but they are no more conclusive now
than in the days of the Reformer.
The Reformation did not, as many
suppose, end with Luther. It is to be continued to the close of this
world's history. Luther had a great work to do in reflecting to others
the light which God had permitted to shine upon him; yet he did not
receive all the light which was to be given to the world. From that time
to this, new light has been
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continually shining upon the Scriptures,
and new truths have been constantly unfolding.
The legate's address made a deep
impression upon the Diet. There was no Luther present, with the clear
and convincing truths of God's word, to vanquish the papal champion. No
attempt was made to defend the Reformer. There was manifest a general
disposition not only to condemn him and the doctrines which he taught,
but if possible to uproot the heresy. Rome had enjoyed the most
favorable opportunity to defend her cause. All that she could say in her
own vindication had been said. But the apparent victory was the signal
of defeat. Henceforth the contrast between truth and error would be more
clearly seen, as they should take the field in open warfare. Never from
that day would Rome stand as secure as she had stood.
While most of the members of the Diet
would not have hesitated to yield up Luther to the vengeance of Rome,
many of them saw and deplored the existing depravity in the church, and
desired a suppression of the abuses suffered by the German people in
consequence of the corruption and greed of the hierarchy. The legate had
presented the papal rule in the most favorable light. Now the Lord moved
upon a member of the Diet to give a true delineation of the effects of
papal tyranny. With noble firmness, Duke George of Saxony stood up in
that princely assembly and specified with terrible exactness the
deceptions and abominations of popery, and their dire results. In
closing he said:
"These are some of the abuses that cry
out against Rome. All shame has been put aside, and their only object is
. . . money, money, money, . . . so that the preachers who should teach
the truth, utter nothing but falsehoods, and are not only tolerated, but
rewarded, because the greater their lies, the greater their gain. It is
from this foul spring that such tainted waters flow. Debauchery
stretches out the hand to avarice. . . . Alas, it is the scandal caused
by the clergy that hurls so many poor souls into eternal condemnation. A
general reform must be effected."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 4.
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A more able and forcible denunciation
of the papal abuses could not have been presented by Luther himself; and
the fact that the speaker was a determined enemy of the Reformer's gave
greater influence to his words.
Had the eyes of the assembly been
opened, they would have beheld angels of God in the midst of them,
shedding beams of light athwart the darkness of error and opening minds
and hearts to the reception of truth. It was the power of the God of
truth and wisdom that controlled even the adversaries of the
reformation, and thus prepared the way for the great work about to be
accomplished. Martin Luther was not present; but the voice of One
greater than Luther had been heard in that assembly.
A committee was at once appointed by
the Diet to prepare an enumeration of the papal oppressions that weighed
so heavily on the German people. This list, containing a hundred and one
specifications, was presented to the emperor, with a request that he
would take immediate measures for the correction of these abuses. "What
a loss of Christian souls," said the petitioners, "what depredations,
what extortions, on account of the scandals by which the spiritual head
of Christendom is surrounded! It is our duty to prevent the ruin and
dishonor of our people. For this reason we most humbly but most urgently
entreat you to order a general reformation, and to undertake its
accomplishment."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 4.
The council now demanded the
Reformer's appearance before them. Notwithstanding the entreaties,
protests, and threats of Aleander, the emperor at last consented, and
Luther was summoned to appear before the Diet. With the summons was
issued a safe-conduct, ensuring his return to a place of security. These
were borne to Wittenberg by a herald, who was commissioned to conduct
him to Worms.
The friends of Luther were terrified
and distressed. Knowing the prejudice and enmity against him, they
feared that even his safe-conduct would not be respected, and they
entreated him not to imperil his life. He replied: "The papists do not
desire my coming to Worms, but my
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condemnation and my death. It matters
not. Pray not for me, but for the word of God. . . . Christ will give me
His Spirit to overcome these ministers of error. I despise them during
my life; I shall triumph over them by my death. They are busy at Worms
about compelling me to retract; and this shall be my retraction: I said
formerly that the pope was Christ's vicar; now I assert that he is our
Lord's adversary, and the devil's apostle."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 6.
Luther was not to make his perilous
journey alone. Besides the imperial messenger, three of his firmest
friends determined to accompany him. Melanchthon earnestly desired to
join them. His heart was knit to Luther's, and he yearned to follow him,
if need be, to prison or to death. But his entreaties were denied.
Should Luther perish, the hopes of the Reformation must center upon his
youthful colaborer. Said the Reformer as he parted from Melanchthon: "If
I do not return, and my enemies put me to death, continue to teach, and
stand fast in the truth. Labor in my stead. . . . If you survive, my
death will be of little consequence."--
Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 7. Students and citizens who
had gathered to witness Luther's departure were deeply moved. A
multitude whose hearts had been touched by the gospel, bade him farewell
with weeping. Thus the Reformer and his companions set out from
Wittenberg.
On the journey they saw that the minds
of the people were oppressed by gloomy forebodings. At some towns no
honors were proffered them. As they stopped for the night, a friendly
priest expressed his fears by holding up before Luther the portrait of
an Italian reformer who had suffered martyrdom. The next day they
learned that Luther's writings had been condemned at Worms. Imperial
messengers were proclaiming the emperor's decree and calling upon the
people to bring the proscribed works to the magistrates. The herald,
fearing for Luther's safety at the council, and thinking that already
his resolution might be shaken, asked if he still wished to go forward.
He answered: "Although interdicted in every city, I shall go on."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 7.
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At Erfurt, Luther was received with
honor. Surrounded by admiring crowds, he passed through the streets that
he had often traversed with his beggar's wallet. He visited his convent
cell, and thought upon the struggles through which the light now
flooding Germany had been shed upon his soul. He was urged to preach.
This he had been forbidden to do, but the herald granted him permission,
and the friar who had once been made the drudge of the convent, now
entered the pulpit.
To a crowded assembly he spoke from
the words of Christ, "Peace be unto you." "Philosophers, doctors, and
writers," he said, "have endeavored to teach men the way to obtain
everlasting life, and they have not succeeded. I will now tell it to
you: . . . God has raised one Man from the dead, the Lord Jesus Christ,
that He might destroy death, extirpate sin, and shut the gates of hell.
This is the work of salvation. . . . Christ has vanquished! this is the
joyful news; and we are saved by His work, and not by our own. . . . Our
Lord Jesus Christ said, 'Peace be unto you; behold My hands;' that is to
say, Behold, O man! it is I, I alone, who have taken away thy sin, and
ransomed thee; and now thou hast peace, saith the Lord."
He continued, showing that true faith
will be manifested by a holy life. "Since God has saved us, let us so
order our works that they may be acceptable to Him. Art thou rich? let
thy goods administer to the necessities of the poor. Art thou poor? let
thy services be acceptable to the rich. If thy labor is useful to
thyself alone, the service that thou pretendest to render unto God is a
lie."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 7.
The people listened as if spellbound.
The bread of life was broken to those starving souls. Christ was lifted
up before them as above popes, legates, emperors, and kings. Luther made
no reference to his own perilous position. He did not seek to make
himself the object of thought or sympathy. In the contemplation of
Christ he had lost sight of self. He hid behind the Man of Calvary,
seeking only to present Jesus as the sinner's Redeemer.
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As the Reformer proceeded on his
journey, he was everywhere regarded with great interest. An eager
multitude thronged about him, and friendly voices warned him of the
purpose of the Romanists. "They will burn you," said some, "and reduce
your body to ashes, as they did with John Huss." Luther answered,
"Though they should kindle a fire all the way from Worms to Wittenberg,
the flames of which reached to heaven, I would walk through it in the
name of the Lord; I would appear before them; I would enter the jaws of
this behemoth, and break his teeth, confessing the Lord Jesus Christ."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 7.
The news of his approach to Worms
created great commotion. His friends trembled for his safety; his
enemies feared for the success of their cause. Strenuous efforts were
made to dissuade him from entering the city. At the instigation of the
papists he was urged to repair to the castle of a friendly knight,
where, it was declared, all difficulties could be amicably adjusted.
Friends endeavored to excite his fears by describing the dangers that
threatened him. All their efforts failed. Luther, still unshaken,
declared: "Even should there be as many devils in Worms as tiles on the
housetops, still I would enter it."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 7.
Upon his arrival at Worms, a vast
crowd flocked to the gates to welcome him. So great a concourse had not
assembled to greet the emperor himself. The excitement was intense, and
from the midst of the throng a shrill and plaintive voice chanted a
funeral dirge as a warning to Luther of the fate that awaited him. "God
will be my defense," said he, as he alighted from his carriage.
The papists had not believed that
Luther would really venture to appear at Worms, and his arrival filled
them with consternation. The emperor immediately summoned his councilors
to consider what course should be pursued. One of the bishops, a rigid
papist, declared: "We have long consulted on this matter. Let your
imperial majesty get rid of this man at once. Did not Sigismund cause
John Huss to be burnt? We are not bound either to give or to
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observe the safe-conduct of a heretic."
"No," said the emperor, "we must keep our promise."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 8. It was
therefore decided that the Reformer should be heard.
All the city were eager to see this
remarkable man, and a throng of visitors soon filled his lodgings.
Luther had scarcely recovered from his recent illness; he was wearied
from the journey, which had occupied two full weeks; he must prepare to
meet the momentous events of the morrow, and he needed quiet and repose.
But so great was the desire to see him that he had enjoyed only a few
hours' rest when noblemen, knights, priests, and citizens gathered
eagerly about him. Among these were many of the nobles who had so boldly
demanded of the emperor a reform of ecclesiastical abuses and who, says
Luther, "had all been freed by my gospel."--Martyn, page 393. Enemies,
as well as friends, came to look upon the dauntless monk; but he
received them with unshaken calmness, replying to all with dignity and
wisdom. His bearing was firm and courageous. His pale, thin face, marked
with the traces of toil and illness, wore a kindly and even joyous
expression. The solemnity and deep earnestness of his words gave him a
power that even his enemies could not wholly withstand. Both friends and
foes were filled with wonder. Some were convinced that a divine
influence attended him; others declared, as had the Pharisees concerning
Christ: "He hath a devil."
On the following day Luther was
summoned to attend the Diet. An imperial officer was appointed to
conduct him to the hall of audience; yet it was with difficulty that he
reached the place. Every avenue was crowded with spectators eager to
look upon the monk who had dared resist the authority of the pope.
As he was about to enter the presence
of his judges, an old general, the hero of many battles, said to him
kindly: "Poor monk, poor monk, thou art now going to make a nobler stand
than I or any other captains have ever made in the bloodiest of our
battles. But if thy cause is just, and thou art sure of it, go forward
in God's name, and fear
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nothing. God will not forsake
thee."--D'Aubigne, b. 7, ch. 8.
At length Luther stood before the
council. The emperor occupied the throne. He was surrounded by the most
illustrious personages in the empire. Never had any man appeared in the
presence of a more imposing assembly than that before which Martin
Luther was to answer for his faith. "This appearance was of itself a
signal victory over the papacy. The pope had condemned the man, and he
was now standing before a tribunal which, by this very act, set itself
above the pope. The pope had laid him under an interdict, and cut him
off from all human society; and yet he was summoned in respectful
language, and received before the most august assembly in the world. The
pope had condemned him to perpetual silence, and he was now about to
speak before thousands of attentive hearers drawn together from the
farthest parts of Christendom. An immense revolution had thus been
effected by Luther's instrumentality. Rome was already descending from
her throne, and it was the voice of a monk that caused this
humiliation."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 8.
In the presence of that powerful and
titled assembly the lowly born Reformer seemed awed and embarrassed.
Several of the princes, observing his emotion, approached him, and one
of them whispered: "Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able
to kill the soul." Another said: "When ye shall be brought before
governors and kings for My sake, it shall be given you, by the Spirit of
your Father, what ye shall say." Thus the words of Christ were brought
by the world's great men to strengthen His servant in the hour of trial.
Luther was conducted to a position
directly in front of the emperor's throne. A deep silence fell upon the
crowded assembly. Then an imperial officer arose and, pointing to a
collection of Luther's writings, demanded that the Reformer answer two
questions--whether he acknowledged them as his, and whether he proposed
to retract the opinions which he had therein advanced. The titles of the
books having
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been read, Luther replied that as to the
first question, he acknowledged the books to be his. "As to the second,"
he said, "seeing that it is a question which concerns faith and the
salvation of souls, and in which the word of God, the greatest and most
precious treasure either in heaven or earth, is involved, I should act
imprudently were I to reply without reflection. I might affirm less than
the circumstance demands, or more than truth requires, and so sin
against this saying of Christ: 'Whosoever shall deny Me before men, him
will I also deny before My Father which is in heaven.' [Matthew 10:33.]
For this reason I entreat your imperial majesty, with all humility, to
allow me time, that I may answer without offending against the word of
God."-- D'Aubigne, b. 7, ch. 8.
In making this request, Luther moved
wisely. His course convinced the assembly that he did not act from
passion or impulse. Such calmness and self-command, unexpected in one
who had shown himself bold and uncompromising, added to his power, and
enabled him afterward to answer with a prudence, decision, wisdom, and
dignity that surprised and disappointed his adversaries, and rebuked
their insolence and pride.
The next day he was to appear to
render his final answer. For a time his heart sank within him as he
contemplated the forces that were combined against the truth. His faith
faltered; fearfulness and trembling came upon him, and horror
overwhelmed him. Dangers multiplied before him; his enemies seemed about
to triumph, and the powers of darkness to prevail. Clouds gathered about
him and seemed to separate him from God. He longed for the assurance
that the Lord of hosts would be with him. In anguish of spirit he threw
himself with his face upon the earth and poured out those broken,
heart-rending cries, which none but God can fully understand.
"O almighty and everlasting God," he
pleaded, "how terrible is this world! Behold, it openeth its mouth to
swallow me up, and I have so little trust in Thee. . . . If it is
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only in the strength of this world that I
must put my trust, all is over. . . . My last hour is come, my
condemnation has been pronounced. . . . O God, do Thou help me against
all the wisdom of the world. Do this, . . . Thou alone; . . . for this
is not my work, but Thine. I have nothing to do here, nothing to contend
for with these great ones of the world. . . . But the cause is Thine, .
. . and it is a righteous and eternal cause. O Lord, help me! Faithful
and unchangeable God, in no man do I place my trust. . . . All that is
of man is uncertain; all that cometh of man fails. . . . Thou hast
chosen me for this work. . . . Stand at my side, for the sake of Thy
well-beloved Jesus Christ, who is my defense, my shield, and my strong
tower."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 8.
An all-wise Providence had permitted
Luther to realize his peril, that he might not trust to his own strength
and rush presumptuously into danger. Yet it was not the fear of personal
suffering, a dread of torture or death, which seemed immediately
impending, that overwhelmed him with its terror. He had come to the
crisis, and he felt his insufficiency to meet it. Through his weakness
the cause of truth might suffer loss. Not for his own safety, but for
the triumph of the gospel did he wrestle with God. Like Israel's, in
that night struggle beside the lonely stream, was the anguish and
conflict of his soul. Like Israel, he prevailed with God. In his utter
helplessness his faith fastened upon Christ, the mighty Deliverer. He
was strengthened with the assurance that he would not appear alone
before the council. Peace returned to his soul, and he rejoiced that he
was permitted to uplift the word of God before the rulers of the
nations.
With his mind stayed upon God, Luther
prepared for the struggle before him. He thought upon the plan of his
answer, examined passages in his own writings, and drew from the Holy
Scriptures suitable proofs to sustain his positions. Then, laying his
left hand on the Sacred Volume, which was open before him, he lifted his
right hand to heaven and vowed "to remain faithful to the gospel, and
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freely to confess his faith, even should
he seal his testimony with his blood."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 8.
When he was again ushered into the
presence of the Diet, his countenance bore no trace of fear or
embarrassment. Calm and peaceful, yet grandly brave and noble, he stood
as God's witness among the great ones of the earth. The imperial officer
now demanded his decision as to whether he desired to retract his
doctrines. Luther made his answer in a subdued and humble tone, without
violence or passion. His demeanor was diffident and respectful; yet he
manifested a confidence and joy that surprised the assembly.
"Most serene emperor, illustrious
princes, gracious lords," said Luther, "I appear before you this day, in
conformity with the order given me yesterday, and by God's mercies I
conjure your majesty and your august highnesses to listen graciously to
the defense of a cause which I am assured is just and true. If, through
ignorance, I should transgress the usages and proprieties of courts, I
entreat you to pardon me; for I was not brought up in the palaces of
kings, but in the seclusion of a convent."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 8.
Then, proceeding to the question, he
stated that his published works were not all of the same character. In
some he had treated of faith and good works, and even his enemies
declared them not only harmless but profitable. To retract these would
be to condemn truths which all parties confessed. The second class
consisted of writings exposing the corruptions and abuses of the papacy.
To revoke these works would strengthen the tyranny of Rome and open a
wider door to many and great impieties. In the third class of his books
he had attacked individuals who had defended existing evils. Concerning
these he freely confessed that he had been more violent than was
becoming. He did not claim to be free from fault; but even these books
he could not revoke, for such a course would embolden the enemies of
truth, and they would then take occasion to crush God's people with
still greater cruelty.
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"Yet I am but a mere man, and not
God," he continued; "I shall therefore defend myself as Christ did: 'If
I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil.' . . . By the mercy of
God, I conjure you, most serene emperor, and you, most illustrious
princes, and all men of every degree, to prove from the writings of the
prophets and apostles that I have erred. As soon as I am convinced of
this, I will retract every error, and be the first to lay hold of my
books and throw them into the fire.
"What I have just said plainly shows,
I hope, that I have carefully weighed and considered the dangers to
which I expose myself; but far from being dismayed, I rejoice to see
that the gospel is now, as in former times, a cause of trouble and
dissension. This is the character, this is the destiny, of the word of
God. 'I came not to send peace on earth, but a sword,' said Jesus
Christ. God is wonderful and terrible in His counsels; beware lest, by
presuming to quench dissensions, you should persecute the holy word of
God, and draw down upon yourselves a frightful deluge of insurmountable
dangers, of present disasters, and eternal desolation. . . . I might
quote many examples from the oracles of God. I might speak of the
Pharaohs, the kings of Babylon, and those of Israel, whose labors never
more effectually contributed to their own destruction than when they
sought by counsels, to all appearance most wise, to strengthen their
dominion. 'God removeth mountains, and they know it not.'"--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 8.
Luther had spoken in German; he was
now requested to repeat the same words in Latin. Though exhausted by the
previous effort, he complied, and again delivered his speech, with the
same clearness and energy as at the first. God's providence directed in
this matter. The minds of many of the princes were so blinded by error
and superstition that at the first delivery they did not see the force
of Luther's reasoning; but the repetition enabled them to perceive
clearly the points presented.
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Those who stubbornly closed their eyes
to the light, and determined not to be convinced of the truth, were
enraged at the power of Luther's words. As he ceased speaking, the
spokesman of the Diet said angrily: "You have not answered the question
put to you. . . . You are required to give a clear and precise answer. .
. . Will you, or will you not, retract?"
The Reformer answered: "Since your
most serene majesty and your high mightinesses require from me a clear,
simple, and precise answer, I will give you one, and it is this: I
cannot submit my faith either to the pope or to the councils, because it
is clear as the day that they have frequently erred and contradicted
each other. Unless therefore I am convinced by the testimony of
Scripture or by the clearest reasoning, unless I am persuaded by means
of the passages I have quoted, and unless they thus render my conscience
bound by the word of God, I
cannot and I will not retract,
for it is unsafe for a Christian to speak
against his conscience. Here I stand, I can do no other; may God help
me. Amen." -- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 8.
Thus stood this righteous man upon the
sure foundation of the word of God. The light of heaven illuminated his
countenance. His greatness and purity of character, his peace and joy of
heart, were manifest to all as he testified against the power of error
and witnessed to the superiority of that faith that overcomes the world.
The whole assembly were for a time
speechless with amazement. At his first answer Luther had spoken in a
low tone, with a respectful, almost submissive bearing. The Romanists
had interpreted this as evidence that his courage was beginning to fail.
They regarded the request for delay as merely the prelude to his
recantation. Charles himself, noting, half contemptuously, the monk's
worn frame, his plain attire, and the simplicity of his address, had
declared: "This monk will never make a heretic of me." The courage and
firmness which he now displayed, as well as the power and clearness of
his reasoning, filled all parties with surprise.
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The emperor, moved to admiration,
exclaimed: "This monk speaks with an intrepid heart and unshaken
courage." Many of the German princes looked with pride and joy upon this
representative of their nation.
The partisans of Rome had been
worsted; their cause appeared in a most unfavorable light. They sought
to maintain their power, not be appealing to the Scriptures, but by a
resort to threats, Rome's unfailing argument. Said the spokesman of the
Diet: "If you do not retract, the emperor and the states of the empire
will consult what course to adopt against an incorrigible heretic."
Luther's friend, who had with great
joy listened to his noble defense, trembled at these words; but the
doctor himself said calmly: "May God be my helper, for I can retract
nothing."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 8.
He was directed to withdraw from the
Diet while the princes consulted together. It was felt that a great
crisis had come. Luther's persistent refusal to submit might affect the
history of the church for ages. It was decided to give him one more
opportunity to retract. For the last time he was brought into the
assembly. Again the question was put, whether he would renounce his
doctrines. "I have no other reply to make," he said, "than that which I
have already made." It was evident that he could not be induced, either
by promises or threats, to yield to the mandate of Rome.
The papal leaders were chagrined that
their power, which had caused kings and nobles to tremble, should be
thus despised by a humble monk; they longed to make him feel their wrath
by torturing his life away. But Luther, understanding his danger, had
spoken to all with Christian dignity and calmness. His words had been
free from pride, passion, and misrepresentation. He had lost sight of
himself, and the great men surrounding him, and felt only that he was in
the presence of One infinitely superior to popes, prelates, kings, and
emperors. Christ had spoken through Luther's testimony with a power and
grandeur that for the
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time inspired both friends and foes with
awe and wonder. The Spirit of God had been present in that council,
impressing the hearts of the chiefs of the empire. Several of the
princes boldly acknowledged the justice of Luther's cause. Many were
convinced of the truth; but with some the impressions received were not
lasting. There was another class who did not at the time express their
convictions, but who, having searched the Scriptures for themselves, at
a future time became fearless supporters of the Reformation.
The elector Frederick had looked
forward anxiously to Luther's appearance before the Diet, and with deep
emotion he listened to his speech. With joy and pride he witnessed the
doctor's courage, firmness, and self-possession, and determined to stand
more firmly in his defense. He contrasted the parties in contest, and
saw that the wisdom of popes, kings, and prelates had been brought to
nought by the power of truth. The papacy had sustained a defeat which
would be felt among all nations and in all ages.
As the legate perceived the effect
produced by Luther's speech, he feared, as never before, for the
security of the Romish power, and resolved to employ every means at his
command to effect the Reformer's overthrow. With all the eloquence and
diplomatic skill for which he was so eminently distinguished, he
represented to the youthful emperor the folly and danger of sacrificing,
in the cause of an insignificant monk, the friendship and support of the
powerful see of Rome.
His words were not without effect. On
the day following Luther's answer, Charles caused a message to be
presented to the Diet, announcing his determination to carry out the
policy of his predecessors to maintain and protect the Catholic
religion. Since Luther had refused to renounce his errors, the most
vigorous measures should be employed against him and the heresies he
taught. "A single monk, misled by his own folly, has risen against the
faith of Christendom. To stay such impiety, I will sacrifice my
kingdoms, my treasures,
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my friends, my body, my blood, my soul,
and my life. I am about to dismiss the Augustine Luther, forbidding him
to cause the least disorder among the people; I shall then proceed
against him and his adherents as contumacious heretics, by
excommunication, by interdict, and by every means calculated to destroy
them. I call on the members of the states to behave like faithful
Christians."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 9. Nevertheless the emperor
declared that Luther's safe-conduct must be respected, and that before
proceedings against him could be instituted, he must be allowed to reach
his home in safety.
Two conflicting opinions were now
urged by the members of the Diet. The emissaries and representatives of
the pope again demanded that the Reformer's safe-conduct should be
disregarded. "The Rhine," they said, "should receive his ashes, as it
had received those of John Huss a century ago."--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 9. But
princes of Germany, though themselves papists and avowed enemies to
Luther, protested against such a breach of public faith, as a stain upon
the honor of the nation. They pointed to the calamities which had
followed the death of Huss, and declared that they dared not call down
upon Germany, and upon the head of their youthful emperor, a repetition
of those terrible evils.
Charles himself, in answer to the base
proposal, said: "Though honor and faith should be banished from all the
world, they ought to find a refuge in the hearts of princes." --
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 9. He was
still further urged by the most bitter of Luther's papal enemies to deal
with the Reformer as Sigismund had dealt with Huss--abandon him to the
mercies of the church; but recalling the scene when Huss in public
assembly had pointed to his chains and reminded the monarch of his
plighted faith, Charles V declared: "I should not like to blush like
Sigismund."--Lenfant, vol. 1, p. 422.
Yet Charles had deliberately rejected
the truths presented by Luther. "I am firmly resolved to imitate the
example of my ancestors," wrote the monarch.--D'Aubigne, b. 7, ch. 9. He
had decided that he would not step out of the path of
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custom, even to walk in the ways of truth
and righteousness. Because his fathers did, he would uphold the papacy,
with all its cruelty and corruption. Thus he took his position, refusing
to accept any light in advance of what his fathers had received, or to
perform any duty that they had not performed.
There are many at the present day thus
clinging to the customs and traditions of their fathers. When the Lord
sends them additional light, they refuse to accept it, because, not
having been granted to their fathers, it was not received by them. We
are not placed where our fathers were; consequently our duties and
responsibilities are not the same as theirs. We shall not be approved of
God in looking to the example of our fathers to determine our duty
instead of searching the word of truth for ourselves. Our responsibility
is greater than was that of our ancestors. We are accountable for the
light which they received, and which was handed down as an inheritance
for us, and we are accountable also for the additional light which is
now shining upon us from the word of God.
Said Christ of the unbelieving Jews:
"If I had not come and spoken unto them, they had not had sin: but now
they have no cloak for their sin." John 15:22. The same divine power had
spoken through Luther to the emperor and princes of Germany. And as the
light shone forth from God's word, His Spirit pleaded for the last time
with many in that assembly. As Pilate, centuries before, permitted pride
and popularity to close his heart against the world's Redeemer; as the
trembling Felix bade the messenger of truth, "Go thy way for this time;
when I have a convenient season, I will call for thee;" as the proud
Agrippa confessed, "Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian" (Acts
24:25; 26:28), yet turned away from the Heaven-sent message--so had
Charles V, yielding to the dictates of worldly pride and policy, decided
to reject the light of truth.
Rumors of the designs against Luther
were widely circulated, causing great excitement throughout the city.
The
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Reformer had made many friends, who,
knowing the treacherous cruelty of Rome toward all who dared expose her
corruptions, resolved that he should not be sacrificed. Hundreds of
nobles pledged themselves to protect him. Not a few openly denounced the
royal message of evincing a weak submission to the controlling power of
Rome. On the gates of houses and in public places, placards were posted,
some condemning and others sustaining Luther. On one of these were
written merely the significant words of the wise man: "Woe to thee, O
land, when thy king is a child." Ecclesiastes 10:16. The popular
enthusiasm in Luther's favor throughout all Germany convinced both the
emperor and the Diet that any injustice shown him would endanger the
peace of the empire and even the stability of the throne.
Frederick of Saxony maintained a
studied reserve, carefully concealing his real feelings toward the
Reformer, while at the same time he guarded him with tireless vigilance,
watching all his movements and all those of his enemies. But there were
many who made no attempt to conceal their sympathy with Luther. He was
visited by princes, counts, barons, and other persons of distinction,
both lay and ecclesiastical. "The doctor's little room," wrote Spalatin,
"could not contain all the visitors who presented themselves."-- Martyn,
vol. 1, p. 404. The people gazed upon him as if he were more than human.
Even those who had no faith in his doctrines could not but admire that
lofty integrity which led him to brave death rather than violate his
conscience.
Earnest efforts were made to obtain
Luther's consent to a compromise with Rome. Nobles and princes
represented to him that if he persisted in setting up his own judgment
against that of the church and the councils he would soon be banished
from the empire and would have no defense. To this appeal Luther
answered: "The gospel of Christ cannot be preached without offense. . .
. Why then should the fear or apprehension of danger separate me from
the Lord, and from that divine word which alone is truth? No; I
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would rather give up my body, my blood,
and my life."-- D'Aubigne, b. 7, ch. 10.
Again he was urged to submit to the
judgment of the emperor, and then he would have nothing to fear. "I
consent," said he in reply, "with all my heart, that the emperor, the
princes, and even the meanest Christian, should examine and judge my
works; but on one condition, that they take the word of God for their
standard. Men have nothing to do but to obey it. Do not offer violence
to my conscience, which is bound and chained up with the Holy
Scriptures."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 10.
To another appeal he said: "I consent
to renounce my safe-conduct. I place my person and my life in the
emperor's hands, but the word of God--never!"--
Ibid., b. 7, ch. 10. He stated
his willingness to submit to the decision of a general council, but only
on condition that the council be required to decide according to the
Scriptures. "In what concerns the word of God and the faith," he added,
"every Christian is as good a judge as the pope, though supported by a
million councils, can be for him."--Martyn, vol. 1, p. 410. Both friends
and foes were at last convinced that further effort for reconciliation
would be useless.
Had the Reformer yielded a single
point, Satan and his hosts would have gained the victory. But his
unwavering firmness was the means of emancipating the church, and
beginning a new and better era. The influence of this one man, who dared
to think and act for himself in religious matters, was to affect the
church and the world, not only in his own time, but in all future
generations. His firmness and fidelity would strengthen all, to the
close of time, who should pass through a similar experience. The power
and majesty of God stood forth above the counsel of men, above the
mighty power of Satan.
Luther was soon commanded by the
authority of the emperor to return home, and he knew that this notice
would be speedily followed by his condemnation. Threatening clouds
overhung his path; but as he departed from Worms, his
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heart was filled with joy and praise.
"The devil himself," said he, "guarded the pope's citadel; but Christ
has made a wide breach in it, and Satan was constrained to confess that
the Lord is mightier than he."--D'Aubigne, b. 7, ch. 11.
After his departure, still desirous
that his firmness should not be mistaken for rebellion, Luther wrote to
the emperor. "God, who is the searcher of hearts, is my witness," he
said, "that I am ready most earnestly to obey your majesty, in honor or
in dishonor, in life or in death, and with no exception save the word of
God, by which man lives. In all the affairs of this present life, my
fidelity shall be unshaken, for here to lose or to gain is of no
consequence to salvation. But when eternal interests are concerned, God
wills not that man should submit unto man. For such submission in
spiritual matters is a real worship, and ought to be rendered solely to
the Creator."-- Ibid.,
b. 7, ch. 11.
On the journey from Worms, Luther's
reception was even more flattering than during his progress thither.
Princely ecclesiastics welcomed the excommunicated monk, and civil
rulers honored the man whom the emperor had denounced. He was urged to
preach, and, notwithstanding the imperial prohibition, he again entered
the pulpit. "I never pledged myself to chain up the word of God," he
said, "nor will I." --Martyn, vol. 1, p. 420.
He had not been long absent from
Worms, when the papists prevailed upon the emperor to issue an edict
against him. In this decree Luther was denounced as "Satan himself under
the form of a man and dressed in a monk's frock."-- D'Aubigne, b. 7, ch.
11. It was commanded that as soon as his safe-conduct should expire,
measures be taken to stop his work. All persons were forbidden to harbor
him, to give him food or drink, or by word or act, in public or private,
to aid or abet him. He was to be seized wherever he might be, and
delivered to the authorities. His adherents also were to be imprisoned
and their property confiscated. His writings were to be destroyed, and,
finally, all who should dare to act contrary to this decree were
included in its condemnation.
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The elector of Saxony and the princes
most friendly to Luther had left Worms soon after his departure, and the
emperor's decree received the sanction of the Diet. Now the Romanists
were jubilant. They considered the fate of the Reformation sealed.
God had provided a way of escape for
His servant in this hour of peril. A vigilant eye had followed Luther's
movements, and a true and noble heart had resolved upon his rescue. It
was plain that Rome would be satisfied with nothing short of his death;
only by concealment could he be preserved from the jaws of the lion. God
gave wisdom to Frederick of Saxony to devise a plan for the Reformer's
preservation. With the co-operation of true friends the elector's
purpose was carried out, and Luther was effectually hidden from friends
and foes. Upon his homeward journey he was seized, separated from his
attendants, and hurriedly conveyed through the forest to the castle of
Wartburg, an isolated mountain fortress. Both his seizure and his
concealment were so involved in mystery that even Frederick himself for
a long time knew not whither he had been conducted. This ignorance was
not without design; so long as the elector knew nothing of Luther's
whereabouts, he could reveal nothing. He satisfied himself that the
Reformer was safe, and with this knowledge he was content.
Spring, summer, and autumn passed, and
winter came, and Luther still remained a prisoner. Aleander and his
partisans exulted as the light of the gospel seemed about to be
extinguished. But instead of this, the Reformer was filling his lamp
from the storehouse of truth; and its light was to shine forth with
brighter radiance.
In the friendly security of the
Wartburg, Luther for a time rejoiced in his release from the heat and
turmoil of battle. But he could not long find satisfaction in quiet and
repose. Accustomed to a life of activity and stern conflict, he could
ill endure to remain inactive. In those solitary days the condition of
the church rose up before him, and
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he cried in despair. "Alas! there is no
one in this latter day of His anger, to stand like a wall before the
Lord, and save Israel!"--
Ibid., b. 9, ch. 2. Again, his
thoughts returned to himself, and he feared being charged with cowardice
in withdrawing from the contest. Then he reproached himself for his
indolence and self-indulgence. Yet at the same time he was daily
accomplishing more than it seemed possible for one man to do. His pen
was never idle. While his enemies flattered themselves that he was
silenced, they were astonished and confused by tangible proof that he
was still active. A host of tracts, issuing from his pen, circulated
throughout Germany. He also performed a most important service for his
countrymen by translating the New Testament into the German tongue. From
his rocky Patmos he continued for nearly a whole year to proclaim the
gospel and rebuke the sins and errors of the times.
But it was not merely to preserve
Luther from the wrath of his enemies, nor even to afford him a season of
quiet for these important labors, that God had withdrawn His servant
from the stage of public life. There were results more precious than
these to be secured. In the solitude and obscurity of his mountain
retreat, Luther was removed from earthly supports and shut out from
human praise. He was thus saved from the pride and self-confidence that
are so often caused by success. By suffering and humiliation he was
prepared again to walk safely upon the dizzy heights to which he had
been so suddenly exalted.
As men rejoice in the freedom which
the truth brings them, they are inclined to extol those whom God has
employed to break the chains of error and superstition. Satan seeks to
divert men's thoughts and affections from God, and to fix them upon
human agencies; he leads them to honor the mere instrument and to ignore
the Hand that directs all the events of providence. Too often religious
leaders who are thus praised and reverenced lose sight of their
dependence upon God and are led to trust in themselves. As
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a result they seek to control the minds
and consciences of the people, who are disposed to look to them for
guidance instead of looking to the word of God. The work of reform is
often retarded because of this spirit indulged by its supporters. From
this danger, God would guard the cause of the Reformation. He desired
that work to receive, not the impress of man, but that of God. The eyes
of men had been turned to Luther as the expounder of the truth; he was
removed that all eyes might be directed to the eternal Author of truth.
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