Thursday, October 28, 2021

Reformation Day, 2021

 

“If the Son makes you free, you will be free indeed.” (John 8:38)

I like to imagine on this 504th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation what it must’ve been like to hear Martin Luther preach. I bet the old boy gave a pretty rousing sermon. With a temperament like his I’ll bet no one fell asleep in church. I picture the Castle Church in Wittenberg—the gentry seated in cushioned pews beneath the soaring arches, the poor working stiffs standing in the back, the air smelling of a mixture of incense, perfume, and b.o. (there being no such thing as deodorant in those days). I see the corpulent, middle-aged professor mounting the steps to the pulpit, adjusting his academic gown, wiping a bit of sweat off his forehead and breathing heavily after his climb (Luther liked his beer and bratwurst. In his post-monastic career he really packed on the pounds!). The church, which was rarely completely silent, suddenly falls still to hear what the great man has to say about the appointed text, John 8:31-38 (Our Reformation Day gospel in the Revised Common Lectionary).

I’m not sure what Luther might’ve said, but I know he’d want to address the questions of slavery and freedom. To what were the people enslaved? Sin, of course. (Well, duh! Aren’t we all?) But he might also like to point out some of the social issues his congregants faced. They were slaves to the social class into which they were born—although that was changing for some of them. Many were slaves to the land they worked. Some worked for themselves, but many were tenant farmers for wealthy landlords. They were slaves to the whims of their local princes and to the Catholic Church—a church which frightened them into submission with horrific visions of a punishing fiery Hell or a few gazillion years in Purgatory. Most of them were simply slaves to ignorance and despair. The Medieval life philosophy was pretty simple: you were born, life sucked for a couple of years, then you died. If you were lucky and good enough, you might get to go to Heaven.

But now the folks who herded themselves into the Castle Church like so many sheep into a pen (because God would be peeved if they didn’t go) were hearing something new. Luther had the audacity to tell the peasants they were beautiful in the eyes of God just as they were, and the work they did was just as holy as that done by their priests and bishops. They had a right and a responsibility to stand up for themselves and demand their landlords treat them fairly—they wouldn’t go to Hell if they questioned the social order as they had been told they would. The Church couldn’t ask them to earn or buy their way into God’s heart—the Son had already secured their place for them when he died on the cross. And, yes, they may be ignorant and unlettered, but they didn’t have to stay that way. Their princes could afford to build schools and hire teachers who would teach their children to read so they could see the Word of God for themselves.

Can you imagine how those sixteenth century folks felt hearing good news like that? I’ll bet church seemed like a pretty exciting place for them. They heard the truth, and it set them free.

So how about us? What’s the truth we need to hear all these centuries later? To what are we in bondage? I wonder how often we’ve sat smugly through a Reformation Day service thinking, “Slaves? We’re Lutherans and have never been slaves to anyone! We have correct doctrine!”

(By the way, I’m always amused by the reaction of the folks in the gospel story when Jesus tells them they are in bondage. The descendants of Abraham had been slaves in Egypt for about 400 years. Then they were defeated and enslaved by the Assyrians and the Babylonians and later became the vassals of the Persians, the Greeks, and sundry little piddly countries and were, at the time of the gospel, occupied by the Romans. Somebody else was always calling the shots for these guys. I think, however, they are saying here that they are direct heirs of the promise God made with Abraham and not proselytes—as if their DNA was the source of their salvation!)

But back to our situation. If Dr. Martin were preaching to us, what do you think he’d call us out on? Our reliance on the metrics of bucks in the plate and butts in the pews as a measure of our ministry? Our devotion to practices and traditions which may no longer serve the gospel? Our current American culture of contempt in which we gorge ourselves on one-sided news so we can feel superior to others? Our sense of burn-out which makes us apathetic to social issues? Or just our vague sense of fear?

If we let Luther preach to us on the Reformation Day, I’m sure he would remind us of three crucial gifts we already possess—God’s Word, God’s grace, and our own faith. These three are the rock we rest on. The scriptures teach us of Christ’s love on the cross and of his resurrection. There can’t be an Easter without a Good Friday. Yes, things will change, times will be frightening, and cultures will shift. Luther’s times were, in some ways similar to our own. Countries were polarized (In fact, if you held the wrong position in the wrong place, you could find yourself tied to a pole and set on fire!), enemies threatened, and diseases closed down churches. Luther himself battled depression. Nevertheless, he always considered despair a great and shameful sin[i].

The Reformation was an unsettling time of major change—just like today. Unsettling times call for boldness and the knowledge that things which change are never as important as those which endure—God’s Word, God’s grace, and our faith.



[i] See his explanation to the sixth petition of the Lord’s Prayer (“Lead us not into temptation”) in the Small Catechism.

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