Nehemiah and
Martin Luther
Part Two:
Saint Augustine and Luther
“Actually, Augustine and Luther were similar
in many ways.
Both achieved fame and influence from the
geographical and political edge of the known civilized world …. Both were self
confident and self reflective at the same time.
Both were well educated and exceptional in
the use of language.
Both enjoyed and even reveled in controversy,
and a good bit of what each wrote was against something or someone.
Both were troubled and sought a sense of
self that would bring a measure of peace”.
Farley
Snell
Farley Snell
thus introduces his paper, “Augustine
and Luther: A Tale of Two Worlds” (2014): https://olliasheville.com/sites/default/files/Instructor_Handouts/SnellFarley/AUGUSTINE%20AND%20LUTHER--A%20TALE%20OF%20TWO%20WORLDS.pdf
Introduction
Augustine
and Luther Compared and Contrasted
Augustine of Hippo
(354-430 CE) and Martin Luther (1484-1546 CE) are not only two of Western
Christianity’s most influential thinkers. Their lives and views provide a
window into the times in which they lived, and an opportunity for us to
embrace, alter or reject what they thought.
Augustine was a
bishop of the Roman Catholic Church in North Africa from 395 until his death in
430. He is most widely remembered for his autobiographical meditation Confessions
in which he tells of his various personal struggles culminating in his
conversion in 386, while in Italy for the only time in his life. What has
attracted the most attention is his sexual struggle (people often quote his
prayer, “Grant me chastity and continence, but not yet”), and what has drawn
the most blame is his consequent view on sex and human nature. His ideas on
sexuality and marriage-- understood by few, and dismissed by many-- have
fomented debate, especially in the modern era.
But his
significance lies beyond this narrow (and even inaccurate) focus. His ideas
have persisted, been debated, altered, rejected by some, affirmed by others.
This is especially true of his own version of the idea of original sin (whereby
all persons are born with a defective moral nature and with guilt). The same
can be said of his ideas on grace and free will, accompanied by his teaching on
predestination, which were reworked over the centuries, and which played a
major role in Reformation thought. When Thomas Aquinas, the great Catholic
thirteenth century theologian, stated that “grace does not destroy nature, but
completes it,” he drew on the newly rediscovered works of Aristotle to discuss
“nature,” and on Augustine to discuss “grace.” 2
Augustine’s understanding of God influenced most
subsequent forms of western mysticism, as well as Anselm’s ontological proof of
the existence of God in the eleventh century.
His treatment of the two “cities” in City of God formed
a basis for western monasticism. It played out in the medieval struggles
between emperor and pope, and to some extent in discussions of church and
state. His discussion of time (Confessions, XI) and his effort at a
Christian philosophy of history in City of God have had continued
influence. His version of the just war theory has been appealed to in many instances,
but considered an oxymoron by many critics.
Luther was an Augustinian monk who taught at a newly
formed university in Wittenberg in what was then Electoral Saxony (part of
present day Germany). In 1517 his criticism of papal indulgences eventually led
to the breakup of western Christianity (eastern and western Christianity parted
ways in 1054), a breakup that had dramatic and continuing political and social
impact on Europe and subsequently the New World.
In popular imagery he is remembered for being the
champion of individual conscience (as a result largely of his “Here I stand”
speech before the imperial Diet at Worms in 1520). He is credited with wresting
authority from the papacy by appealing to Scripture alone (sola scriptura).
In like manner, he is appreciated for having made the Bible available to common
folk (he translated both Testaments into German). His idea of the “priesthood
of all believers” is seen as freeing the individual from the domination of the
clergy. His views of the “two realms” (the distinction between the political
and religious realms) and his words on the peasants’ revolt have been seen as
supporting the totalitarianism of the Third Reich. The holocaust in like manner
has been traced to his anti-Semitism. His central teaching—justification apart
from works of the law—has been embraced by many, but attacked by others.
Actually, Augustine and Luther were similar in many
ways. Both achieved fame and influence from the geographical and political edge
of the known civilized world (Augustine in Hippo in North Africa and Luther in
Wittenberg in Electoral Saxony). Both were self confident and self reflective
at the same time. Both were well educated and exceptional in the use of
language.
Both enjoyed and even reveled in controversy, and a
good bit of what each wrote was against something or someone. Both were
troubled and sought a sense of self that would bring a measure of peace.
Consequently, both—though in distinctive ways—had a negative appraisal of human
effort and championed divine initiative or grace.
One could say that both ended their lives embittered.
All of this within an understanding of scripture and Christian teaching.
But they lived in different worlds. For one thing,
Augustine lived in a time when the Roman Empire sought with some success unity
and stability, and a coherent and unified Christian doctrine and church to be
the foundation of the Empire’s goals. By Luther’s time, what was left of the
old imperial aspiration—in the form of the Holy Roman Empire—was weakened by
external threats from the Ottoman Empire and by disintegration from within. And
the Roman Church was itself beset by forces such as the conciliar movement.
More to the point, however, was that each struggled to
give definition to the self in radically different intellectual settings.
Augustine records his long search (ending in his conversion) in his historic
autobiographical meditation, the Confessions. His experience of being
driven by external satisfactions (what has traditionally been called “lusts the
flesh”) left him unsatisfied, as did his preoccupation with what is partial,
epitomized by the individual. Augustine felt the need, within himself and
within the reality of which he was a part, to discover what is lasting rather
than passing, and what is whole rather than what was partial—and to find his
place within it. (This is one of the meanings of “mysticism.”) This was his
“world.” 3 ….
[End of quote]
Likewise, we read at:
Luther and
Augustine
That Augustine was an
influence on Martin Luther is undeniable; different historians and theologians,
however, vary in opinion as how great this influence actually was. Luther
joined the Order of Saint Augustine at Erfurt in
July 1505, and received a spiritual formation that focused on “Great Father
Augustine” (which also was the title of a hymn then in Augustinian use).
The Order used Augustine’s
thought in the theological preparation given to its candidates. One of
Augustine’s superiors, Johann
von Stauptiz O.S.A. (1468-1524), gave Augustine especial emphasis.
It is certain, therefore, that Luther had read and studied many of Augustine’s
writings, that he memorised passages from Augustine, and that he cited
Augustine more than any other non-Scriptural source.
It is known, for example, that
Luther used a copy of the printed collection of some works by Augustine that
had been published in Strassburg by Martinus Flach in 1489 under the title of Opuscula
plurima, for Luther with his own hand wrote annotations on its margins in
1509. And in 1516 Luther was known to have been studying the eighth volume of
the Opera Omnia (the world's first complete printed collection of
Augustine's works) edited by Johannes Amerbach in eleven volumes in Basel in
1506
Specialist studies of Luther’s
writings have determined the wide range of Augustine’s works that Luther cited.
Luther was one of the first major figures to have readily available to him the
‘entire Augustine’ in the Johann Amerbach printed edition of Augustine’s
Opera omnia ("Complete Works") mentioned above. Luther was not
only trained in a theology that was heavily Augustinian, but also found
resonance in Augustine’s thought for some of the theological issues with which
he himself struggled, e.g., sin, grace, predestination, the interpretation of
Scripture, and faith.
He initially made his own the
basic tenets of Augustine’s theology. This is most evident in his work as a
professor at the University of Wittenberg before the time he posted his
now-famous ninety-five theses on the castle church there on 31st October 1517.
Luther encouraged his fellow professors to read Augustine’s works.
Augustine was the patron saint of the university. With the public eruption of
the Protestant Reformation in 1517, Luther did not abandon Augustine, but used
him selectively and sometimes out of context in an effort to support the
changed direction of his own line of thought.
There became large areas of
thought where Luther diverged from Augustine, e.g., in matters regarding the
authority and magisterium of the Church. Even so, Augustine’s thought was still
frequently used as the base from which Luther’s theology proceeded. As Luther
matured, his theology became increasingly independent of Augustine, but he
continued to praise Augustine. Further historical and theological research
remains to be done on Augustine’s influence on Luther at various stages of the
latter’s life.
In the development of his
theology, Martin Luther turned to the writings and thought of Augustine more
than to any other individual source except the Bible. In Augustine of Hippo
(354-430) there was a firm position on many of the issues that were to become
the focus of controversy during the Protestant Reformation. Indeed, for this
reason Augustine has been regarded as a determinative church source for the
theology that constituted the Protestant Reformation.
….
It has been demonstrated that
Luther began studying Augustine as early as 1509, when he was twenty-six years
of age and in his third year as a member of the Order of Saint Augustine. He
quickly became enthralled by the writings of Augustine. Luther became
thoroughly acquainted with them. This was not merely because he was a member of
the Order of Saint Augustine, but rather because of the intrinsic value and
truth he found in them. Later he wrote, "I do not defend Augustine because
I am an Augustinian. Before I began reading his works he meant nothing to
me." The theology of Augustine was held in great esteem by Luther, and
promoted widely while he was at Wittenberg. Luther even described Augustine as
a leading advocate for reform in the church.
Even so, further specialist study needs to be done on the thought of Luther at various periods of his life, for there were times when he used Augustine's writings possibly only because they were a convenient resource. There are also instances wherein Luther quoted Augustine quite selectively to suit his own purpose, and suggested that Augustine resonated with Lutheran reasoning when the fuller context of Augustine's writing in fact would demonstrate that this was untrue.
As Luther grew older and more
independent in his thought, Luther turned less to Augustine. Even in his early
writings at the time when the Reformation erupted, Luther did not merely
reproduce Augustine's thought. It is true to say that sometimes the germ of
Luther's ideas were already present in Augustine's writings, but it is not
correct to attribute to Augustine more credit for Luther's own thinking than
that. Even in the writing of the most mature Luther, Augustine was often the
starting point, but only that.
….
Link
Was Luther Augustinian?
This blog says that this question is difficult to answer from a historical
perspective because more concrete evidence must be documented to show that
Luther was influenced by Augustine. ….
For Part One of
this series see:
Nehemiah and Martin Luther
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