[In October/November of 1517, a little more than 500 years ago, Martin Luther published
and distributed his “95 Theses”, enumerating his objections to certain practices, at that
time, of the Roman Catholic Church. The publication of the “95 Theses” is commonly
considered to be the event that sparked the Protestant Reformation. To commemorate its
500
th
anniversary, we reprint here Philip Schaff’s introduction to the history of the
Reformation, from volume six of his excellent work, History of the Christian Church.]
Introduction to the
Protestant Reformation, pt. 3,
by Philip Schaff
“Now the Lord is the Spirit:
and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is liberty.”
(2 Cor. 3:17, KJV)
Section 5.
The Genius and Aim of the Reformation
The spirit and aim of evangelical Protestantism is best expressed by Paul in his anti-
Judaistic Epistle to the Galatians: “For freedom did Christ set us free; stand fast,
therefore, and be not entangled again in a yoke of bondage” (Gal. 5:1). Christian
freedom is so inestimable a blessing that no amount of abuse can justify a relapse
into a state of spiritual despotism and slavery. But only those who have enjoyed it,
can properly appreciate it.
The Reformation was at first a purely religious movement, and furnishes a striking
illustration of the all-pervading power of religion in history. It started from the
question: What must a man do to be saved? How shall a sinner be justified before
God, and attain peace of his troubled conscience? The Reformers were supremely
concerned for the salvation of the soul, for the glory of Christ and the triumph of
his gospel. They thought much more of the future world than of the present, and
made all political, national, and literary interests subordinate and subservient to
religion.
Yet they were not monks, but live men in a live age, not pessimists, but optimists,
men of action as well as of thought, earnest, vigorous, hopeful men, free from
selfish motives and aims, full of faith and the Holy Ghost, equal to any who had
preceded them since the days of the Apostles. From the centre of religion they have
influenced every department of human life and activity, and given a powerful
impulse to political and civil liberty, to progress in theology, philosophy, science,
and literature.
The Reformation removed the obstructions which the papal church had interposed
between Christ and the believer. It opened the door to direct union with him, as the
only Mediator between God and man, and made his gospel accessible to every
reader without the permission of a priest. It was a return to first principles, and for
this very reason also a great advance. It was a revival of primitive Christianity, and
at the same time a deeper apprehension and application of it than had been known
before.
There are three fundamental principles of the Reformation: the supremacy of the
Scriptures over tradition, the supremacy of faith over works, and the supremacy of
the Christian people over an exclusive priesthood. The first may be called the
objective, the second the subjective, the third the social or ecclesiastical principle.
They resolve themselves into the one principle of evangelical freedom, or freedom
in Christ. The ultimate aim of evangelical Protestantism is to bring every man into
living union with Christ as the only and all-sufficient Lord and Saviour from sin
and death.
Section 6.
The Authority of the Scriptures
The objective principle of Protestantism maintains that the Bible, as the inspired
record of revelation, is the only infallible rule of faith and practice; in opposition to
the Roman Catholic coordination of Scripture and ecclesiastical tradition, as the
joint rules of faith.
The teaching of the living church is by no means rejected, but subordinated to the
Word of God; while the opposite theory virtually subordinates the Bible to tradition
by making the latter the sole interpreter of the former and confining interpretation
within the limits of an imaginary consensus patrum. In the application of the Bible
principle there was considerable difference between the more conservative
Lutheran and Anglican Reformation, and the more radical Zwinglian and
Calvinistic Reformation; the former contained many post-scriptural and extra-
scriptural traditions, usages and institutions, which the latter, in its zeal for
primitive purity and simplicity, rejected as useless or dangerous; but all Reformers
opposed what they regarded as anti-scriptural doctrines; and all agreed in the
principle that the church has no right to impose upon the conscience articles of faith
without clear warrant in the Word of God.
Every true progress in church history is conditioned by a new and deeper study of
the Scriptures, which has “first, second, third, infinite draughts.” While the
Humanists went back to the ancient classics and revived the spirit of Greek and
Roman paganism, the Reformers went back to the sacred Scriptures in the original
languages and revived the spirit of apostolic Christianity. They were fired by an
enthusiasm for the gospel, such as had never been known since the days of Paul.
Christ rose from the tomb of human traditions and preached again his words of life
and power. The Bible, heretofore a book of priests only, was now translated anew
and better than ever into the vernacular tongues of Europe, and made a book of the
people. Every Christian man could henceforth go to the fountain-head of
inspiration, and sit at the feet of the Divine Teacher, without priestly permission
and intervention. This achievement of the Reformation was a source of incalculable
blessings for all time to come. In a few years Luther’s version had more readers
among the laity than ever the Latin Vulgate had among priests; and the Protestant
Bible societies circulated more Bibles in one year than were copied during the
fifteen centuries before the Reformation.
We must remember, however, that this wonderful progress was only made possible
by the previous invention of the art of printing and by the subsequent education of
the people. The Catholic Church had preserved the sacred Scriptures through ages
of ignorance and barbarism; the Latin Bible was the first gift of the printing press to
the world; fourteen or more editions of a German version were printed before 1518;
the first two editions of the Greek Testament we owe to the liberality of a Spanish
cardinal (Ximenes), and the enterprise of a Dutch scholar in Basel (Erasmus); and
the latter furnished the text from which, with the aid of Jerome’s Vulgate, the
translations of Luther and Tyndale were made.
The Roman church, while recognizing the divine inspiration and authority of the
Bible, prefers to control the laity by the teaching priesthood, and allows the reading
of the Scriptures in the popular tongues only under certain restrictions and
precautions, from fear of abuse and profanation. Pope Innocent III was of the
opinion that the Scriptures were too deep for the common people, as they
surpassed even the understanding of the wise and learned. Several synods in Gaul,
during the thirteenth century, prohibited the reading of the Romanic translation,
and ordered the copies to be burnt. Archbishop Berthold, of Mainz, in an edict of
January 4th, 1486, threatened with excommunication all who ventured to translate
and to circulate translations of sacred books, especially the Bible, without his
permission. The Council of Constance (1415), which burnt John Hus and Jerome of
Prague, condemned also the writings and the bones of Wycliffe, the first translator
of the whole Bible into the English tongue, to the flames; and Arundel, archbishop
of Canterbury and chancellor of England, denounced him as that “pestilent wretch
of damnable heresy who, as a complement of his wickedness, invented a new
translation of the Scriptures into his mother tongue.” Pope Pius IV (1564), in the
conviction that the indiscriminate reading of Bible versions did more harm than
good (plus detrimenti quam utilitiatis), would not allow laymen to read the sacred
book except by special permission of a bishop or an inquisitor. Clement VIII (1598)
reserved the right to grant this permission to the Congregation of the Index.
Gregory XV (1622), and Clement XI (in the Bull Unigenitus, 1713), repeated the
conditional prohibition. Benedict XIV, one of the liberal popes, extended the
permission to read the Word of God in the vernacular to all the faithful, yet with the
proviso that the translation be approved in Rome and guarded by explanatory
notes from the writings of the fathers and Catholic scholars (1757). This excludes, of
course, all Protestant versions, even the very best. They are regarded as corrupt and
heretical and have often been committed to the flames in Roman Catholic countries,
especially in connection with the counter-Reformation of the Jesuits in Bohemia and
elsewhere. The first edition of Tyndale’s New Testament had to be smuggled into
England and was publicly burnt by order of Tunstall, bishop of London, in St.
Paul’s church-yard near the spot from which Bibles are now sent to all parts of the
globe. The Bible societies have been denounced and condemned by modern popes
as a “pestilence which perverts the gospel of Christ into a gospel of the devil.” The
Papal Syllabus of Pius IX (1864), classes “Societates Biblicae” with Socialism,
Communism, and Secret Societies, calls them “pests frequently rebuked in the
severest terms,” and refers for proof, to several Encyclicals from November 9th,
1846, to August 10th, 1863.
Such fulminations against Protestant Bible societies might be in some measure
excused if the popes favored Catholic Bible societies, which would be the best proof
of zeal for the spread of the Scriptures. But such institutions do not exist.
Fortunately, papal bulls have little effect in modern times, and in spite of official
prohibitions and discouragements, there are zealous advocates of Bible reading
among modern Catholics, as there were among the Greek and Latin fathers. Nor
have the restrictions of the Council of Trent been able to prevent the progress of
Biblical scholarship and exegesis even in the Roman church. E pur si muove. The
Bible, as well as the earth, moves for all that.
Modern Protestant theology is much more just to ecclesiastical tradition than the
Reformers could be in their hot indignation against the prevailing corruptions and
against the papal tyranny of their day. The deeper study of ecclesiastical and
secular history has dispelled the former ignorance on the “dark ages,” so called,
and brought out the merits of the fathers, missionaries, schoolmen, and popes, in
the progress of Christian civilization.
But these results do not diminish the supreme value of the sacred Scripture as an
ultimate tribunal of appeal in matters of faith, nor the importance of its widest
circulation. It is by far the best guide of instruction in holy living and dying. No
matter what theory of the mode and extent of inspiration we may hold, the fact of
inspiration is plain and attested by the universal consent of Christendom. The Bible
is a book of holy men, but just as much a book of God, who made those men
witnesses of truth and sure teachers of the way of salvation.
[This study will continue, D.V., in the next issue.]
This study is taken from: Schaff, Philip. History of the Christian Church, Vol. VI.
New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1904. A PDF file of this book can be
downloaded, free of charge, at:
http://www.ClassicChristianLibrary.com
© 1994-2018, Scott Sperling