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MezzaMorta
11th August 2007, 10:04 PM
I wish to inquire onto the opinions of Lutheran as to this statement written by Martin Luther.


“If I had to baptise a Jew, I would take him to the bridge of the Elbe, hang a stone round his neck and push him over with the words `I baptise thee in the name of Abraham” – Martin Luther'The Facts About Luther, TAN Books, 1987, p. 290. [36] Grisar, “Luther”, Vol. V. pg. 413.'

QuiltAngel
11th August 2007, 10:27 PM
Here is the complete statement:

“In 1541, Doctor Menius asked Doctor Luther, in what manner a Jew should be baptized? The Doctor replied: You must fill a large tub with water, and, having divested the Jew of his clothes, cover him with a while garment. He must then sit down in the tub, and you must baptize him quite under the water. The ancients, when they were baptized, were attired in white, whence the first Sunday after Easter, which was peculiarly consecrated to this ceremony, was called dominica in albis. This garb was rendered the more suitable, from the circumstance that it was, as now, the custom to bury people in a white shroud; and baptism, you know, is an emblem of our death. I have no doubt that when Jesus was baptized in the river Jordon, he was attired in a white robe. If a Jew, not converted at heart, were to ask baptism at my hands, I would take him on to the bridge, tie a stone round his neck, and hurl him into the river; for these wretches are wont to make a jest of our religion. Yet, after all, water and the Divine Word being the essence of baptism, a Jew, or any other, would be none the less validly baptized, that his own feelings and intentions were not the result of faith.”[168]


You may read more about it here: http://www.ntrmin.org/Luther%20and%20the%20Jews%20(Web).htm Scroll down to Appendix 2.

I think the part, "if a Jew, not converted at heart, were to ask baptism at my hands . . " is very important here.

thereselittleflower
11th August 2007, 10:30 PM
As I have said so many times in the past, context is everything.

.

Edial
11th August 2007, 10:43 PM
I wish to inquire onto the opinions of Lutheran as to this statement written by Martin Luther.


“If I had to baptise a Jew, I would take him to the bridge of the Elbe, hang a stone round his neck and push him over with the words `I baptise thee in the name of Abraham” – Martin Luther'The Facts About Luther, TAN Books, 1987, p. 290. [36] Grisar, “Luther”, Vol. V. pg. 413.'
Guess what John the Baptist (you know, the guy from the Bible) said when the unconverted Jews came to him making a political appearance of being baptized ...

MT 3:7 But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees coming to where he was baptizing, he said to them: "You brood of vipers! Who warned you to flee from the coming wrath? 8 Produce fruit in keeping with repentance. 9 And do not think you can say to yourselves, `We have Abraham as our father.' I tell you that out of these stones God can raise up children for Abraham. 10 The ax is already at the root of the trees, and every tree that does not produce good fruit will be cut down and thrown into the fire.

And, ... John the Baptist was also a Jew.

Ed

DaRev
11th August 2007, 11:23 PM
Here is the complete statement:



You may read more about it here: http://www.ntrmin.org/Luther%20and%20the%20Jews%20(Web).htm Scroll down to Appendix 2.

I think the part, "if a Jew, not converted at heart, were to ask baptism at my hands . . " is very important here.

Quilty! I'm impressed! :thumbsup:

PreachersWife2004
11th August 2007, 11:32 PM
Nice try, MM.

What's next?

QuiltAngel
11th August 2007, 11:36 PM
Thanks, DaRev, Can you tell I have had to research this kind of question before?

I wish that if people want to learn about Luther that they read his works. At the very least, find sources who give an unbiased view. I get a little put out when someone posts a quote of his and cites sources like Grisar and O'Hare. Both of whom set about to discredit him and took so many things out of context. Of course, someone in the RCC is going to try to discredit him

MezzaMorta
12th August 2007, 12:14 AM
Here is the complete statement:



You may read more about it here: http://www.ntrmin.org/Luther%20and%20the%20Jews%20(Web).htm (http://www.ntrmin.org/Luther%20and%20the%20Jews%20%28Web%29.htm) Scroll down to Appendix 2.

I think the part, "if a Jew, not converted at heart, were to ask baptism at my hands . . " is very important here.

Thank you for the response, is this the context that Lutheran doctrine puts it in or is this your personal opinion?

I will read the link, perhaps it shall give some greater incite into Luther’s mindset when making this comment.


Do you have similar links, perhaps expanding on the context of his other anti-jewish works, particularly “On the Jews and their Lies”?

QuiltAngel
12th August 2007, 12:26 AM
Seems to me that I gave you links in another thread. Actually, the link I gave above has a section on that particular work.

Go to this link: http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/ and scroll down the right side and you will see lots of links to papers on Luther. I think you will find it all very helpful. James Swan is neither Catholic or Lutheran. He has taken time to study different writings along with the context of the writings as well as the historical and social context.

I am not sure what you are asking when you say, "is this the context that Lutheran doctrine puts it in?"

Melethiel
12th August 2007, 09:41 AM
hank you for the response, is this the context that Lutheran doctrine puts it in or is this your personal opinion?
No, that's the context that Luther wrote it in.

Oh Quilty, you've been quoted in GT. You're a celebrity. :D

Tertiumquid
12th August 2007, 10:27 AM
Mezzamorta got this citation from the online document, "Luther Exposing the Myth (http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Rhodes/3543/matluther.htm)". I know this is the case because of the citation and documentation:

"If I had to baptise a Jew, I would take him to the bridge of the Elbe, hang a stone round his neck and push him over with the words `I baptise thee in the name of Abraham” – Martin Luther'The Facts About Luther, TAN Books, 1987, p. 290. [36] Grisar, “Luther”, Vol. V. pg. 413."

I began reviewing this webpage here (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/search?q=exposing+the+myth). I contacted the author as well, and was told he would take a look at my reviews and get back to me, and he never did.

I just wanted to add something about the quote in question. The documentation provided states, "Martin Luther'The Facts About Luther, TAN Books, 1987, p. 290. [36] Grisar, “Luther”, Vol. V. pg. 413." At the time I wrote my paper on Luther and the Jews (http://www.ntrmin.org/Luther%20and%20the%20Jews%20(Web).htm), I did not have a copy of Grisar, Luther Vol. 5.

Grisar states:

"The fact is, however, that no increase in the number of conversions took place. This disappointing experience, the sight of the growing insolence of the Jews, their pride and usury, not to speak of personal motives, such as certain attempts he suspected them to have made on his life at the instigation of the Papists, brought about a complete change in Luther s opinions in the course of a few years. As early as 1531 or 1532, when a Hebrew baptised at Wittenberg had brought discredit upon him by relapsing into Judaism, he gave vent to the angry threat, that, should he find another pious Jew to baptise he would take him to the bridge over the Elbe, hang a stone round his neck and push him over with the words : I baptise thee in the name of Abraham; for " those scoundrels," so he adds, " scoff at us all and at our religion."

I have not heard this particular story before, and I will look into it. At face value, the quote is more likely strong angry hyperbole than an actual threat. Grisar often missed this in Luther's writings. Also note, this quote from Grisar is said to be from the early 1530's, while the quote I posted in my paper is from a later date.

James Swan
Beggars All: Reformation and Apologetics (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/)

LilLamb219
12th August 2007, 10:45 AM
Very informative, thank you :)

GratiaCorpusChristi
12th August 2007, 03:06 PM
Maybe Mezza, you should also read Luther's The Jesus Christ Was Born a Jew, and the Jewish Encyclopedia's article on Luther which revealed he was personal friends with several local rabbis.

Oh, and this, for fuller context on Lutheranism and the Jewish people:

Disassociation of the ELCA with anti-Semitism and repudiation of Luther's remarks on the subject. (http://www.elca.org/ecumenical/interreligious/jewish/declaration.html)

A similar statement from the LCMS. (http://www.lcms.org/pages/internal.asp?NavID=2166)

Same with the church in Canada. (http://jcrelations.net/en/?id=1004)

Don't worry. I don't actually expect you to read the linked content and stop your attacks. But, for what it's worth, there it is.

KEPLER
12th August 2007, 05:40 PM
Here is the complete statement:

You may read more about it here: http://www.ntrmin.org/Luther%20and%20the%20Jews%20(Web).htm (http://www.ntrmin.org/Luther%20and%20the%20Jews%20%28Web%29.htm) Scroll down to Appendix 2.

I think the part, "if a Jew, not converted at heart, were to ask baptism at my hands . . " is very important here.

Oh, for a thousand reps to give... :thumbsup:

IowaLutheran
12th August 2007, 09:22 PM
I wish to inquire onto the opinions of Lutheran as to this statement written by Martin Luther.


“If I had to baptise a Jew, I would take him to the bridge of the Elbe, hang a stone round his neck and push him over with the words `I baptise thee in the name of Abraham” – Martin Luther'The Facts About Luther, TAN Books, 1987, p. 290. [36] Grisar, “Luther”, Vol. V. pg. 413.'

Grisar and O'Hare (the author of "The Facts About Luther") - these guys have long since been discredited and disowned by Catholic scholars because of the type of intellectual dishonesty displayed by these egregious misquote.

MezzaMorta
13th August 2007, 12:47 AM
Grisar and O'Hare (the author of "The Facts About Luther") - these guys have long since been discredited and disowned by Catholic scholars because of the type of intellectual dishonesty displayed by these egregious misquote.

What is your source for this?

QuiltAngel
13th August 2007, 01:27 AM
Grisar and O'Hare (the author of "The Facts About Luther") - these guys have long since been discredited and disowned by Catholic scholars because of the type of intellectual dishonesty displayed by these egregious misquote.

Really? I would like those resources too for reference as well as reading them now.

Thanks

KEPLER
13th August 2007, 09:29 AM
It's possible that IowaLutheran is referring to the Catholic apologist Dave Armstrong, who (to his credit) removed references to O'Hare's work from his site (Cor ad Cor Loquitur (http://socrates58.blogspot.com/)) after Jim Swann pointed out to him (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2005/12/facts-about-luther-part-one.html)how laughable O'Hare's work actually is.

The (continuing) problem with Dave Armstrong's approach is that he rarely (if ever) quotes from Luther by having read Luther. Armstrong always quotes someone else who is quoting Luther. This is about as unscholarly a method as you can find. We leave that method to hacks and poorly educated and illogical remonstrants.

Real historians, real apologists and real theologians go to the original source, and look at the whole statement in its original context. QuiltAngel's original post was a prime example of such an approach.

IowaLutheran
13th August 2007, 10:45 AM
What is your source for this?

I've read it before in the statements that were the result of the various post-Vatican II Lutheran/RC dialogues. I'll see if I can dig a few out.

Kepler is right - Dave Armstrong has backed off of using these sources AFAIK.

In any event, why are you looking to bash Luther? Your Holy Father doesn't, and as a matter of fact, is well-known to be an admirer of Luther. Here's a snippet from a Catholic blog, http://whispersintheloggia.blogspot.com/2006/11/happy-martini.html

"Last night, a sizable crowd came together in the German town of Erfurt for an ecumenical celebration of the "Martini" -- Martin Luther, who was born on yesterday's date in 1483 and studied in Erfurt, and St Martin of Tours, whose feast is today.

Those who know Ratzingerian thinking couldn't help but wonder if, were he not Pope, the Boss would've been out there as one of the lantern-swinging faithful. Benedict XVI has long maintained a great affinity for Luther; here's a relevant snip from the John Allen archives: (http://www.natcath.com/NCR_Online/archives/091099/091099f.htm)[F]ew figures have exercised greater influence on him than Luther. In a 1966 commentary on Vatican II’s “The Church in the Modern World,” Ratzinger said that the document leaned too heavily on Teilhard de Chardin and not enough on Luther - a remarkable comment in an era with no offical Lutheran-Catholic contact, when many Catholics still branded Luther a heretic. “Ratzinger has been involved in dialogue with Lutherans from way back,” said Br. Jeffrey Gros, ecumenical affairs specialist for the U.S. bishops. “In the 1980s he was even interested in declaring the Augsburg Confession [the first Lutheran declaration of faith] a Catholic document. To think that he wanted to torpedo this [agreement] is a total misread.”

Tertiumquid
13th August 2007, 04:33 PM
What is your source for this?

Enjoy:

The Roman Catholic Perspective of Martin Luther (Part One) (http://www.ntrmin.org/The%20Roman%20Catholic%20Understanding%20of%20Martin%20Luther%201.htm)


Catholic Historian Hartmann Grisar on Luther, and (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2007/02/catholic-historian-hartmann-grisar-on.html)
Catholic Apologist Dave Armstrong on Grisar (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2007/02/catholic-historian-hartmann-grisar-on.html)

*The Facts About Luther (Part One)* (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2005/12/facts-about-luther-part-one.html)

*The Facts About Luther (Part Two)* (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2005/12/facts-about-luther-part-two.html)

*O'Hare's Facts About Luther: Master Index of Outrageous Quotes * (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2005/12/master-index-luther-quotes-from-ohares.html)

Defending O'Hare's Facts About Luther (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2006/04/defending-ohares-facts-about-luther.html)

Defending O'Hare's Facts About Luther (Continued) (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2006/04/defending-ohares-facts-about-luther_29.html)

Catholic Apologist Art Sippo on Father O’Hare’s “Facts About Luther” (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2006/05/catholic-apologist-art-sippo-on-father.html)

Father O'Hare's "Facts About Luther" Revisted (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2006/10/father-ohares-facts-about-luther.html)

Regards,
James Swan
Beggars All: Reformation and Apologetics (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/)

Tertiumquid
13th August 2007, 04:44 PM
It's possible that IowaLutheran is referring to the Catholic apologist Dave Armstrong, who (to his credit) removed references to O'Hare's work from his site (Cor ad Cor Loquitur (http://socrates58.blogspot.com/)) after Jim Swann pointed out to him (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2005/12/facts-about-luther-part-one.html)how laughable O'Hare's work actually is.

Form more on this see, this link (http://beggarsallreformation.blogspot.com/2006/10/father-ohares-facts-about-luther.html).

The (continuing) problem with Dave Armstrong's approach is that he rarely (if ever) quotes from Luther by having read Luther. Armstrong always quotes someone else who is quoting Luther. This is about as unscholarly a method as you can find. We leave that method to hacks and poorly educated and illogical remonstrants.

He's gotten a little better over the years, emphasis on "little".

Real historians, real apologists and real theologians go to the original source, and look at the whole statement in its original context. QuiltAngel's original post was a prime example of such an approach.

Yes, I have challenged Dave often to do this. It would keep him out of trouble.

James Swan

IowaLutheran
13th August 2007, 04:50 PM
Many thanks again, James.

Tertiumquid
13th August 2007, 04:51 PM
Kepler is right - Dave Armstrong has backed off of using these sources AFAIK.

Just to be fair to Mr. Armstrong, he still uses Hartmann Grisar.

Grisar tends to be good with facts, but his interpretation of those facts can sometimes miss reality.

James Swan

Tertiumquid
13th August 2007, 05:18 PM
I have not heard this particular story before, and I will look into it. At face value, the quote is more likely strong angry hyperbole than an actual threat. Grisar often missed this in Luther's writings. Also note, this quote from Grisar is said to be from the early 1530's, while the quote I posted in my paper is from a later date.

Just a quick follow up. The Luther quote in question is from an 1883 edition of the Tabletalk, so it isn't even something Luther wrote. It's the recollection of someone else. Remember: there are various collections of the Tabletalk, and not all of them are reliable.

James Swan

IowaLutheran
13th August 2007, 08:44 PM
Really? I would like those resources too for reference as well as reading them now.

Thanks

I found what I was thinking of in Martin - God's Court Jester - Luther in Retrospect by Eric Gritsch (Fortress Press 1983). Here are the relevant quotes:

From p. 146: "Sigmund Freud's (1856-1939) introduction of psychoanalysis into the field of medicine created a long-distance interest, as it were, in Luther as a 'patient.' Roman Catholic interpreters of Luther, like the Dominican Heinrich Denifle and the Jesuit Hartmann Grisar, used Freudian psychology to arrive at their assessment that Luther was a monk obsessed with the lust of the flesh and a pathological manic depressive personality. Their portraits of Luther were based on Luther's first and most hostile biographer, John Dobenick (1479-1552) who wrote under the pseudonym Cochlaeus and who regarded Luther as a creature of Satan. These polemical portraits were corrected in the 1940s when an ecumenically oriented scholar, Joseph Lortz, rejected Freudian psycho-historical methods in favor of a more objective critical assessment to depict Luther as a faithful priest-professor who had succombed to 'subjectivism.'"

From pp. 204-205: "Influenced by Cochlaeus, many Catholic biographers remained hostile to Luther until the beginning of the twentieth century. . . . The popular and detailed analysis by the Jesuit scholar Hartmann Grisar portrayed Luther as a man who was a victim of stubbornness and pride. Grisar used the newly developed insights of psychology when in 1911 he wrote [Gritsch includes a lengthy Grisar quote which accuses Luther of being a megalomaniac among other things] . . . . It was the German Catholic historian Jospeh Lortz who provided the bridge from destructive criticism of Luther to a more ecumenical assessment of him by using the tools of historical-critical scholarship. He saw Luther as a 'Catholic' who rediscovered the old Catholic doctrine of justification by faith, but saw it 'one-sidedly.' ' Within himself Luther wrestled and overthrew a Catholicism that was not Catholic.' Lortz asserted that, though given to overstatements and thus to 'subjectivism,' Luther nevertheless needs to be seen in the light of the differences of his situation and that of later Catholicism. . . . Lortz and his 'school' put an end to the Catholic vilification of Luther and made it possible for Catholics to join Protestant and other Luther scholars in a common effort to assess the ecumenical significance of the Wittenberg reformer."

And finally, Gritsch on p. 213 includes a quote from a speech by RC Cardinal Willebrands to the Lutheran World Federation:

"Who could deny today [1970] that Martin Luther wa a deeply religious personality who searched with honesty and commitment for the message of the gospel? Who could deny that he kept a significant proportion of the old Catholic faith, even though he pressured the Roman Catholic Church and the Apostolic See - for the sake of truth, one should not be silent about this. Indeed, did not the Second Vatican Council fulfill demands which were also expressed by Martin Luther, the fulillment of which has given several aspects of the Christian faith and life better expression than they did before? Despite all the differences, to say this is reason for great joy and hope."

QuiltAngel
13th August 2007, 09:41 PM
Thanks IowaLutheran. This is what I needed.

Edial
14th August 2007, 02:49 AM
Dear James Swan.

Thank you so much for your research and the time that you put into it.

Interesting part is that you are not a Lutheran.

What made you take up this project?
( I am certain that you have it in your papers someplace, ... but tell it to me live. :):))

Thanks, :)
Ed

A. believer
14th August 2007, 02:08 PM
Dear James Swan.

Thank you so much for your research and the time that you put into it.

Interesting part is that you are not a Lutheran.

What made you take up this project?
( I am certain that you have it in your papers someplace, ... but tell it to me live. :):))

Thanks, :)
Ed

If you really want to hear James telling it live, you can listen to him here. (http://mp3.aomin.org/ISI/20070806ISI.mp3)

Radiata
16th August 2007, 10:17 AM
The (continuing) problem with Dave Armstrong's approach is that he rarely (if ever) quotes from Luther by having read Luther. Armstrong always quotes someone else who is quoting Luther. This is about as unscholarly a method as you can find. We leave that method to hacks and poorly educated and illogical remonstrants.

Real historians, real apologists and real theologians go to the original source, and look at the whole statement in its original context. QuiltAngel's original post was a prime example of such an approach.
Well, that's what I'm going to do at the moment. I have a question for Lutherans where I am going to quote Martin Marty in his book I am currently reading simply titled "Martin Luther".

It's a long quote mind you.
As much as he honored wives, he still did little to counter the inherited understanding that the woman was subordinate to the man and even continued to hold that opinion himself. With so many in his time, he considered that because the husband had a strong sexual drive, he needed to satisfy it by entering his wife, but Luther advocated that rights of both and encouraged both to find pleasure. In two theoretical but drastic situations he counseled first that if a woman persistently denied her man, the husband might then turn to the housemaid or someone else for sexual relations. He balanced that provocative and patriarchal advice with its counterpart: A woman who was wed to an impotent man but who desired to have children or was unable ot remain continent, "with the consent of the man (who is not really her husband, but only a dweller under the same roof with her)," should have intercourse with another, for example her husband's brother. They were to keep this "marriage" secret and ascribe any children to the "so-called putative father." Such a woman would be in a saved state and would not be displeasing God.
P.108
I don’t quite understand why Luther would issue such a statement. He pretty much says that if sinning (adultery) is creating offspring that is being used to benefit the glory of God, than that sin is justified. The ends never justify the means. I have always believed that if good was to come from sin, that good would not be worth the effort.

A. believer
16th August 2007, 10:28 AM
Well, that's what I'm going to do at the moment. I have a question for Lutherans where I am going to quote Martin Marty in his book I am currently reading simply titled "Martin Luther".

It's a long quote mind you.

[COLOR=black]I don’t quite understand why Luther would issue such a statement. He pretty much says that if sinning (adultery) is creating offspring that is being used to benefit the glory of God, than that sin is justified. The ends never justify the means. I have always believed that if good was to come from sin, that good would not be worth the effort.

Quoting Martin Marty isn't quoting from Luther. Does Marty provide a citation for his little nugget? If so, please post that.

Radiata
16th August 2007, 10:48 AM
I know. Shame on me for quoting someone who quoted someone who quoted someone etc. No, Martin Marty does not provide citations. That's the one thing that I don't like about this book. It tells about Luther's life, what he wrote, who he debated with and how, his battle against the papal office.

There is something of a bibilography, I'll attempt to type them in. It's a long list.

Luther scholars, historians of religion and theology, historians and theologians are: Denis Janz, Mark Edwards, Larry Greenfield, Kurt Hendel, Richard E. Koenig, Myron Marty, David McCrea, Jonathan Moore, Linda Lee Nelson, Mark Noll, William Russell, John Witte.

Representing "The priesthood of all scholars," nonprofessionals in this field, but of the sort Luther would have favored, include Mildred and Gene Burger, Jim Foorman, David Heim, F. Dean Lueking, Paul Manz, Harriet J. Marty, Joel Marty, Micah Marty, Peter Marty, Ann Rehfeldt, Pastor Roger Timm, Vicar Paul Elbert, Don Forney, Shirley Jan, Libby Shotola, Beth Smart, Jean Turnmire

Teachers, colleagues, and friends who taught Luther on master's doctoral, and postdoctoratal levels, but did not read this book are, John Dillenberger, Robert H. Fischer, Gerhard Forde, George Forell, Brian Gerrish, Robert Kolb, William H Lazareth, Jaroslav J. Pelikan, Michael Root, Franklin Sherman, Susan Schreiner, Timothy Wengert.

That looks like all the names in the acknowledgments. I doubt it helped at all.

KEPLER
16th August 2007, 11:20 AM
Although I certainly have theological differences with him, Martin Marty is generally a top-notch scholar (although he is generally known for his work on 19th century American christianity...). Thus, I am absolutely gobsmacked at the non-inclusion of citations??!!

Without citations, such a work is useless.

UPDATE: OK, I just looked at the Amazon entry for this book. I for one would not recommend it, for a few reasons.


1) Martin Marty, although an ordained pastor in the ELCA, is not actually a Reformation scholar. His area of expertise is American fundamentalism. When he is in his element, he is fantastic. But what I can tell from the Amazon entry is that he is doing kind of a 19th century analysis of Luther. This is completely inappropriate.
2) The series of biographies of which this book is a part is meant to be "beginner" level. No such analysis as you describe belongs in such a book; to include it is irresponsible on Marty's part.
So, here's what I suggest.

Toss this book.
get a good biography of Luther.
a) The most definitive bio is also the most intimidating, at 3 volumes: that of Martin Brecht.
b) The standard bio is, alas, quite dated: Here I Stand, by Roland Bainton
c) The best combination of current and accessible is James Kittleson's Luther, the Reformer (http://www.amazon.com/Luther-Reformer-Story-Man-Career/dp/0800635973/ref=pd_sim_b_5/104-7379257-8610341?ie=UTF8&qid=1187277405&sr=1-1). Go with this last one, for now.
The best analysis of family life in the sixteenth century is When Fathers Ruled (http://www.amazon.com/When-Fathers-Ruled-Reformation-Cultural/dp/0674951212/ref=pd_bbs_sr_1/104-7379257-8610341?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1187277488&sr=1-1), by Stephen Ozment.
Read Ozment in tandem with Kittleson's bio, and you should get a good picture of Luther's views on family.

Cheers,

Kepler

Radiata
16th August 2007, 11:59 AM
So I should just completely forget what I have read so far in this book?


Huh? It now says MezzaMorta is a Muslim. Did he change that recently? I thought he was Catholic.

KEPLER
16th August 2007, 12:16 PM
So I should just completely forget what I have read so far in this book?


Huh? It now says MezzaMorta is a Muslim. Did he change that recently? I thought he was Catholic.
That user has been permanently banned. No need to worry about him anymore.

As you read more, you can decide what to retain and what to dump from the Marty book.

Radiata
16th August 2007, 12:18 PM
That user has been permanently banned. No need to worry about him anymore.

As you read more, you can decide what to retain and what to dump from the Marty book.
So the truth about Luther is mine to decide the more I read about him? I don't like the sound of that.

KEPLER
16th August 2007, 12:36 PM
Huh?

History is not the same as Theology. Theology strives for propositional truth. History strives for the best possible explanation. What you are doing right now is an exercise in History.

History is not an exact science. Historians sift through the available evidence, and try to form the best construction of past events from that evidence. Unfortunately, no construction is going to be 100% accurate, since no historian has been able to witness, first hand, all of the events in question. What we strive for is the best construction, based on the best available evidence.

In this case, the task is to adequately describe Luther in light of his times. Kittleson does a good job of this. From what I have gathered from reviews of Marty's work (mind you, I have not read it), he analyzes Luther through 19th century lenses. This is called anachronism (literally = outside of the proper time frame). Anachronism never makes for good history. That doesn't mean that Marty won't have an insight here or there. He's not an idiot.

It just means that Kittleson has done a better job of constructing a life of Luther. I knew Jim Kittleson (he was one of my profs when I did my MA in Theology). He was an outstanding scholar, who did the requisite dirty work in German archives. I highly doubt that Marty has done this.

If you read the Kittleson book, you will be able to decide how much of the Marty book "rings true". That's all I'm saying.

Kepler

KEPLER
16th August 2007, 12:44 PM
Let me give you an example of anachronism. Here is a portion of the citation you provided us from Martin Marty:
As much as he honored wives, he still did little to counter the inherited understanding that the woman was subordinate to the man and even continued to hold that opinion himself.
The problem is, until the mid-to-late nineteenth century, virtually no one had thought to "counter the inherited understanding that the woman was subordinate to the man." Marty is passing judgment on Luther using an idea which was not present in Luther's time. The idea of equality for women is "outside of its proper time frame" (anachronistic) when applied to a person in the sixteenth century.

Kepler

A. believer
16th August 2007, 12:48 PM
Let me give you an example of anachronism. Here is a portion of the citation you provided us from Martin Marty:

The problem is, until the mid-to-late nineteenth century, virtually no one had thought to "counter the inherited understanding that the woman was subordinate to the man." Marty is passing judgment on Luther using an idea which was not present in Luther's time. The idea of equality for women is "outside of its proper time frame" (anachronistic) when applied to a person in the sixteenth century.

Kepler


Not to mention the problem with Marty's own assumption that Luther and the rest of the Christian world was wrong about the woman being subordinate to the man in the marital relationship.

KEPLER
16th August 2007, 12:50 PM
Not to mention the problem with Marty's own assumption that Luther and the rest of the Christian world was wrong about the woman being subordinate to the man in the marital relationship.
Yes, but that is a theological issue, not a historical one.

A. believer
16th August 2007, 01:03 PM
Yes, but that is a theological issue, not a historical one.

Yes, but it is revealing.

Radiata
16th August 2007, 01:05 PM
I wish I was smart.:help:

KEPLER
16th August 2007, 01:17 PM
Well, you're asking the same kinds of questions I was asking when I was 19....

DaRev
16th August 2007, 01:53 PM
Well, you're asking the same kinds of questions I was asking when I was 19....

And now Kepler is incessantly banging his head against a wall... ^_^ ^_^ ^_^

Radiata
16th August 2007, 02:00 PM
And now Kepler is incessantly banging his head against a wall... ^_^ ^_^ ^_^
Oh no! Now I don't wanna be smart.:doh: