I
sat in a seminary class and listened as a guest lecturer bashed Martin Luther,
accusing him of “destroying the unity of the church.” I decided I could not
keep silent and so raised my hand.
I told the instructor that I
disagreed with his assumption that the church had “unity” at the time of Luther. What the church
had, I said, was a “uniformity” that was imposed by force. With the merger of
church and state by Constantine in the fourth century, the church gained official, governmental status in the Empire with the power of the state now at its disposal to enforce its doctrines, claims and cause. It became an imperial church!
This is not Unity
Believing the
wrong doctrine became a civil crime known as heresy, and heretics were imprisoned,
tortured, beheaded and burned at the stake, all in the name of unity. One-hundred years before Luther,
the Czeck priest and pastor, John Huss, was found guilty of heresy for
preaching the authority of Scripture and saying that Christ, not the pope, is
the head of the church. He was publicly burned at the stake. That is not unity!
Luther would have suffered
the same fate if it had not been for the protection of the powerful German
prince, Frederick the Wise. Nonetheless, because he too preached the authority
of Scripture and that Christ, not the pope, is the head of the church, he was excommunicated. A warrant was issued for his arrest and Christians were
ordered not to print or read his books, but instead to burn them. That is not unity!
Should Truth be Sacrificed for Unity?
For those who
think Luther destroyed the unity of the Church, my question is this, “Should
Luther have recanted at his heresy trial?” Should he have renounced his
teachings on the authority of Scripture, the priesthood of all believers and
justification by faith? Should he have sacrificed truth for an artificial show of
unity? Is unity our goal even at the expense of truth?
By refusing to
sacrifice truth for an artificial unity, Luther showed himself to be a true
disciple of Jesus Christ. Jesus said in John 8:31-32, If you continue in My word, you are My disciples indeed; and you shall
know the truth and the truth shall make you free. Those who sacrifice truth for a superficial unity are not true disciples of Jesus Christ.
The Real Cause of the Division
No, Luther was not
the cause of the division that took place at the time of the Reformation. The
cause is to be found in the rigid authoritarianism of the Roman Church at the time. Hans
Kung, the most widely read Catholic theologian in the world today, recognizes this.
Referring to the claim of Catholic bishops to be the successors of the
apostles, he wrote, “The decade long, indeed century long, predominately
unapostolic behavior of the bishops was a major cause of the Lutheran
Reformation.”
What Luther
destroyed was not unity, but a uniformity that was imposed on the masses by
force. Yet, he did not set out to do even this. He wanted to see the Roman
Church reformed according to the Scriptures and the glaring abuses, such as the
selling of indulgences, addressed. However, the “unapostolic behavior” of the Roman
bishops, particularly the bishop of Rome, made this impossible.
Here is Real Unity
Instead of
destroying unity, Luther made Biblical unity possible, for there can be no real
unity without diversity. The existence of thousands of Protestant churches
should not be looked upon as a problem, but a possibility. Just as a symphony
orchestra is made up of many different instruments that make many different sounds,
so the true church is made up of a rich diversity of individuals and churches.
What brings unity
in the symphony orchestra is when all the instruments respond to the maestro
and begin playing the same song in the same key and melody. The sound that
comes forth is beautiful and rich because of the blend and harmony of the
different instruments with their different sounds.
In a similar way,
when the many different churches, Catholic and Protestant, stop playing their own song and seeking their own status and power, and begin responding to the true Head of the church--Jesus Christ--and flowing with His Holy Spirit, something beautiful will emerge. God’s power will flow, and the world will see Jesus as they have
never seen Him before.
I have experienced sweet Christian fellowship with Catholics and members of various Protestant denominations around the Lordship of Jesus Christ and a common openness to the Holy Spirit. Thank you, Martin
Luther, for making such Christ-centered, Biblical unity a possibility once again in
the Church of Jesus Christ.
This article was derived from Dr. Eddie Hyatt's latest book, The Charismatic Luther, available from Amazon in both paperback and Kindle and from his website at www.eddiehyatt.com.
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