Martin Luther The man who rediscovered God and changed the world

Eric Metaxas

Book - 2017

Explores the life of Martin Luther, delving into his life and works, as well as how his ideas had a profound impact on later conceptions of faith, virtue, and freedom.

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
New York, New York : Viking, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC [2017].
Language
English
Main Author
Eric Metaxas (author)
Physical Description
xiii, 480 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, maps, portraits ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 453-464) and index.
ISBN
9781101980019
9780525558224
  • Map
  • Chronology
  • Introduction Pastor, Rebel, Prophet, Monk
  • Chapter 1. Beyond the Myths
  • Chapter 2. Lightning Strikes
  • Chapter 3. The Great Change
  • Chapter 4. A Monk at Wittenberg
  • Chapter 5. The "Cloaca" Experience
  • Chapter 6. The Theses Are Posted
  • Chapter 7. The Diet at Augsburg
  • Chapter 8. The Leipzig Debate
  • Chapter 9. The Bull Against Luther
  • Chapter 10. The Diet of Worms
  • Chapter 11. Enemy of the Empire
  • Chapter 12. The Wartburg
  • Chapter 13. The Revolution Is Near
  • Chapter 14. Luther Returns
  • Chapter 15. Monsters, Nuns, and Martyrs
  • Chapter 16. Fanaticism and Violence
  • Chapter 17. Love and Marriage
  • Chapter 18. Erasmus, Controversy, Music
  • Chapter 19. The Plague and Anfechtungen Return
  • Chapter 20. The Reformation Comes of Age
  • Chapter 21. Confronting Death
  • Chapter 22. "We Are Beggars. This Is True."
  • Epilogue The Man Who Created the Future
  • Acknowledgments
  • Appendix: Frederick's Dream
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by New York Times Review

MARTIN LUTHER: The Man Who Rediscovered God and Changed the World, by Eric Metaxas. (Viking, $30.) Metaxas' effort to make Luther attractive to a wide readership presents its subject as a titanic figure who rescued God from medievalism, invented individual freedom and ushered in modernity. THE STORY OF THE JEWS: Volume 2, Belonging: 1492-1900, by Simon Schama. (Ecco, $39.99.) Schama's panoramic study begins around the time of the Spanish Inquisition and ends with the Dreyfus case, circling around the question of whether the Jews could ever find a safe haven. Across four centuries, that quest seemed never quite attainable yet never definitely out of reach. FURNISHING ETERNITY: A Father, a Son, a Coffin, and a Measure of Life, by David Giffels. (Scribner, $24.) Giffels lovingly but never worshipfully traces the craft of coffin-making, and in so doing lets the essence of himself and his father be revealed through the action of building one together. MEETINGS WITH REMARKABLE MANUSCRIPTS: Twelve Journeys Into the Medieval World, by Christopher de Hamel. (Penguin Press, $45.) A gloriously illustrated introduction to a collection of extraordinary illuminated books, conducted by a supremely learned and cheerfully opinionated guide. WHAT THE QUR'AN MEANT: And Why It Matters, by Garry Wills. (Viking, $25.) When a leading Catholic intellectual reads the Quran, especially one as attuned to language as Wills, the result is a delight. He challenges religious and secular ignorance, yielding an overview that is both elegant and insightful. THE EXODUS, by Richard Elliott Friedman. (HarperOne, $27.99.) Friedman seeks to answer, once and for all: Was there an exodus from Egypt? He insists there was, just not quite the way the Bible describes; his Exodus story is really the tale of how the people we call Levites left Egypt and joined up with the Israelites already in Canaan. WHERE THE WILD COFFEE GROWS: The Untold Story of Coffee From the Cloud Forests of Ethiopia to Your Cup, by Jeff Koehler. (Bloomsbury, $28.) An absorbing, almost Tolkienesque narrative of politics, ecology and economics that documents the spread of (the misnamed) Coffea Arabica. THE BOOK OF SEPARATION: A Memoir, by Tova Mirvis. (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $26.) Mirvis tells an intimate tale of departure - of leaving the Modern Orthodox community that served as the inspiration for her first two novels, and of leaving her marriage too. She movingly conveys the heartache that accompanies the abandonment of one way of life in search of another. SLEEP NO MORE, by P. D. James. (Knopf, $21.) Half a dozen murderous tales from the late great crime fiction writer. The full reviews of these and other recent books are on the web: nytimes.com/books

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [August 30, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Asked on his deathbed if he still affirmed the religious doctrines with which he had transformed Europe, the expiring Martin Luther in his last recorded utterance loudly declared, Ja! In recounting the life culminating in that final affirmation, Metaxas unfolds a story of a personal transformation that triggered a cultural transformation. Readers will indeed marvel at how much of what now defines the Western world emerged as a young monk obsessed with his own guilt and desperate to earn forgiveness from a wrathful God metamorphosed into an incandescent preacher of faith in a beneficent God who redeems sinful and broken souls through unearned grace. In the way that that remarkable monk dared to pit his own conscience-driven reading of scripture against that of established Church authority, Metaxas discerns the decisive transition to the new Protestant understanding of the priesthood of all believers. Though Metaxas focuses chiefly on the religious impact of that understanding as amplified during the Reformation by Luther's theological sophistication and his rhetorical talents readers see how Luther's work remade the political world by letting loose new currents of German nationalism, and reconfigured the secular culture by crystallizing new concepts such as pluralism, egalitarianism, democracy, and freedom. A masterful portrait of a seminal figure.--Christensen, Bryce Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This is a highly readable, fast-paced biography of Luther with some peculiar omissions. Metaxas follows a fairly basic chronological path, starting with Luther's childhood and ending with his death. While Metaxas ostentatiously announces his work as going "beyond the [Luther] myth", there seems to be little new here, and Metaxas's claims to originality are mostly backed by his commentary on the work of previous historians (particularly Erik Erikson) rather than by his own new interpretations of historical material. Metaxas admirably sets the scene for the later convulsions within the church now known as the Protestant Reformation: Luther's rise to prominence in Wittenberg, Germany; his disillusionment with the church; the posting of his theses; the Leipzig debate; and the Diet of Worms. But the book also notably downplays some of the more contentious aspects of Luther's work, including his diatribes against Jews, which are given fewer than 10 pages, and Luther's council to Philip of Hesse regarding his bigamous marriage, which isn't mentioned at all. These blank spaces make it difficult to see Metaxas's work as a critical evaluation of Luther and render this volume of doubtful use to scholars. General readers may enjoy the cheerful tone of Metaxas's writing. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

The 500th anniversary of the Protestant Reformation has spawned a plethora of books, including several biographies of the movement's founder, Martin Luther. In addition, there are several classics such as Roland Bainton's Here I Stand. Metaxas (Bonhoeffer; Amazing Grace) adds to these by attempting to capture the motivations and impact of this larger-than-life figure in a volume that will appeal to general readers. Key to Metaxas's effort is relaying the facts of Luther's life while dispelling some of the myths. Rather than delving too deeply, the author clearly explains the basic theological issues and even some of the political climate behind the theological debates. He sums up Luther's impact by stating "the quintessentially modern idea of the individual...the more recent ideas of pluralism, religious liberty, and self-government all entered history through the door that Luther opened to the future in which we now live." The author shows the human side of Luther by relaying his foibles and emotions but does not examine in depth some of the problem areas, such as his treatment of the Anabaptists and others who disagreed with his theology. VERDICT Anyone interested in religious history will thoroughly enjoy this readable biography. Highly recommended.-Ray Arnett, Anderson, SC © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A meaty autobiography of the Reformation leader.Metaxas (If You Can Keep It: The Forgotten Promise of American Liberty, 2016, etc.) brings his flair for epic biography that was on such impressive display in his 2010 book, Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr, Prophet, Spy. Despite a glut of Luther biographies surrounding the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, Metaxas offers something different and special. As in many other works about Luther, the author follows his life chronologically and covers much familiar ground. However, he manages to concentrate on certain aspects of Luther's life and times that set his work apart. Metaxas expertly introduces the many key players in Luther's saga in ways that make them understandable and unique to lay readers; notably, he realizes that places are often personae, and he treats the places of the Luther story as characters to be understood for the roles they played. The author relies heavily on primary sources, trusting his audience to read along with him in these documents. Unlike many biographers, Metaxas includes the full text of all 95 Theses (the key to the Reformation's birth) in the middle of the book, devoting nine pages to them. Elsewhere, readers find an entire letter to Pope Leo X, who excommunicated Luther, and lengthy excerpts from other key source material. Most importantly, Metaxas shares rarely told stories about his subject, adding depth to an understanding of his life. He spends dozens of pages retelling Luther's decision to marry and the details of his married life, details that are often a mere mention in other biographies. Finally, the Metaxas flair for dramatic language is on full display: "It is indeed as though every medieval mountain were uprooted and the whole Potemkin range of them cast into the heart of the sea.The curtain was whisked back and the papal Oz exposed as a fraud, frantically pulling his ecclesiastical levers." Perfect for lay readers who want something more than a mere introduction to Luther. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

chapter one Beyond the Myths There is no beginning to the story of Martin Luther. This is because in telling the genuinely extraordinary story of a genuinely extraordinary human being, one immediately stumbles over two perfect conundrums, both of which make a clean beginning impossible. One is calendric, and the other is so odd that it can hardly help seeming more than coincidental. The first and calendric conundrum is that-although we now know far more about Martin Luther than about anyone from his era and possess endless corroborative documentation about him-we cannot establish one of the simplest and most foundational facts of all: the year in which he was born. We are sure of the date of his birth, November 10, and we are even sure of the hour, which was just past midnight, according to his mother. But the year, alas, eludes us. Much for this reason, Luther would heap scorn upon astrological prognostications of any kind during his life-especially those of his future co-conspirator Melanchthon, a dedicated devotee of this art. Luther always maintained that he was probably born in 1484, but neither Luther nor even his own mother could be sure, and current reckoning puts it more likely at either 1482 or 1483, with the preponderance of evidence favoring the latter, so that in the course of this book we shall use that year. The second conundrum is of another order entirely. We know that on November 11-the day following his birth-the infant was bundled and trundled a mere hundred yards away from his home to the awe-inspiring majesty of the Church of SS. Peter and Paul, there to be baptized and forever snatched from the gaping maw of everlasting fire and death. Because November 11 was St. Martin's Day-the feast day of Saint Martin of Tours-the child was given the saint's name, a common enough practice at that time. But unbeknownst to Luther's parents, there was a detail of this saint's life that would one day form an eerie and seemingly prophetic parallel with the career of the newborn that day named for him. Saint Martin lived in the fourth century. He was born in what is today Hungary; grew up in what is today Pavia, Italy; and spent most of his adult life in what is today France, all three of which at that time were within the borders of the Roman Empire. He became a Christian at an early age, despite his father's disapproval, and was enlisted in the Roman army. One day while in the Gallic provinces-it was in the town of Borbetomagus, in what is today central Germany-the future saint was ordered to participate in a battle. But in the belief that shedding blood was not consonant with his deep Christian convictions, Martin bravely declared, "I am a soldier of Christ. I cannot fight." For this shocking refusal to submit to this duty assigned him, he was imprisoned and charged with cowardice, but he turned this charge on its head by then volunteering to go to the front lines unarmed, because he did not fear for his life, only that he might take the life of another. In the end, the battle did not take place, and he was released from duty, shortly thereafter becoming a monk. The Roman city called Borbetomagus where this Martin took the death-defying stand for his faith that set him on his path of sainthood would in the future become known as the German city of Worms. Thus, eleven centuries from when this first Martin took his Christian stand against the Roman Empire, the second Martin would take his Christian stand against the Holy Roman Empire-in precisely the same place. So on the second day of his life, Martin Luther was linked with both the distant historic past and his own historic future. The world into which Luther was born was the world that had existed unchanged for many centuries. It was a world separated by an infinite ocean from the vast continents we know now as the Americas. Christopher Columbus was during this time sailing and trading along the West African coast, with no idea that within a decade he would daringly set out across the Atlantic in three caravels. The printing press was in its earliest infancy, having been invented some forty years earlier by Johannes Gutenberg, and although the great schism of 1054 had separated Eastern Christianity from Western, the idea that the vast seamless universe of the Holy Catholic Church led by the pope might be challenged and then riven forever was perfectly nonexistent. Martin Luther was born in the final year of the reign of Pope Sixtus IV, one of a series of six popes at once so comically bungling and tragically scandalous that it was almost as though this sextet had deliberately placed their collective corruptions in a papier-m%chZ monster, hung it from a tree, and begged an Augustinian monk to take a dozen or so good whacks at it. But for the name his parents had given him, there is nothing in the childhood or the upbringing-or even the early adulthood-of Martin Luther to suggest him as a candidate for the extraordinary life that followed. Before we pluck Martin's woven basket from the cattails and proceed further, we should add that Luther's name was originally not Luther at all but Luder or Ludher. Luther changed it at some point later in life, although precisely when and why is unclear. His father and mother eventually incorporated the change to their own names, probably because of their son's increasing fame, and perhaps also because the word Luder had a number of unattractive associations they preferred to leave behind and thereby relegate to the squint-eyed netherworld of historical footnotes. One of the greatest challenges in telling the story of Martin Luther is in distancing him from the endless fables, myths, and tall tales told about him in the last five centuries. The first of these is that he was born into a family of peasants-that his father was but a humble miner and that his mother was of even humbler background and was probably a bathhouse attendant of low morals. It is only because of very recent archaeological discoveries that we can put the persistent untruth about Luther's humble background to sleep. The fact is that Martin's father-his name was Johannes, so he was called Hans-was indeed a man of great intelligence and fire. Although it is often said he was a miner, he was certainly no day laborer, but was in fact an ambitious and ultimately successful entrepreneur in the mining business. He owned several smelting works and moved to Eisleben with his young wife, there to discover and exploit the rich veins of copper that spidered beneath the forested lands of that region. His young wife, Margarethe, was from the local Lindemann family, who were established, prominent, and quite well-to-do burghers in the Eisenach area. In fact, one of them became mayor of the town in 1497. Two of Martin's first cousins-the sons of his mother's eldest brother-made names for themselves: one became a doctor of law and an electoral councillor in Saxony, and the other studied in Leipzig, Frankfurt, and Bologna, becoming a medical doctor who served as the personal physician to Elector Frederick the Wise and sometimes treated Luther. In the last years of his life, he taught medicine at the University of Wittenberg, while Luther lived there. The humble beginnings often attributed to Luther's parents, and especially to his mother, are part of the sometimes misleading hagiographic narrative that sprang into being after his death. We may also assume that the well-to-do Lindemann family lent Hans Luther the substantial amount of money needed for him to get his start in the risky copper-smelting business. Luther's father knew that to make good on the serious investment his in-laws had made in him and his business would be difficult, and that it was. He worked very hard and clearly expected his son Martin to be a part of the larger plan. Because Martin was exceedingly bright, Hans planned an excellent education and a subsequent legal career for him. We may also assume that the Ludhers were no more or less religious than most people of their time and social station, which is to say they took God and the church very seriously. They almost certainly had a shrine in their home to Saint Anne, which not the Bible but Christian tradition declared was the name of Mary's mother, who became the patron saint of miners. The reason for this is that her womb was said to have borne two inestimable jewels. From her own womb had come Mary, and then from Mary's womb had come Jesus. Anyone whose womb had  produced these eternal treasures could hardly be improved upon as a patron saint for those making their livings searching for treasures themselves. Recent Archaeological Discoveries A resounding boon to Luther studies arrived in very recent years via archaeological discoveries in the city of Mansfeld, where Luther lived from the age of six months until he went off to school in Magdeburg. Most remarkable, in an excavation begun in 2003, the small and humble house in Mansfeld where for centuries Luther was said to have been raised was demonstrated to be merely one-third of the actual house in which his family lived. Thus, as we have already stated, Luther's reference to himself in later years as the son of "peasants" and "poor miners" is proven to have been a typically Lutheran admixture of humility and hyperbole. Contrary to the five centuries of myths born of this self-characterization, he was raised in a well-appointed home. The measure of how well can be taken from another (2008) archaeological discovery on the site of that home. It was then that a "previously unknown brick-lined cellar room" from the time of Luther's childhood was discovered, and it was bursting with such a dazzling variety of household waste as to constitute a veritable King Tut's tomb of the late fifteenth-century quotidian. The forensic details that emerge illuminate the day-to-day life of the Luthers during this time. That Martin and his family handled these long-buried objects in the course of their lives five centuries ago is simply remarkable to consider, as is the scale and breadth of the find. The findings confirm the idea that this was not the home of poor or humble people but, on the contrary, the home of a very respectable and established leading family of the city. [AQ: eas? add usage?] Not less than seven thousand animal bones were analyzed, and from these it was determined that 60 percent of the Luther family diet was pork. The porcine fragments came principally from "young, fully grown" animals, whose meat was more expensive than that of older, less flavorful hogs. Thirty percent of the bones were from sheep and goats, and the remaining 10 percent from cattle. More than two thousand bones from domestic fowl were identified, most of them goose, also higher on the price scale than other options. Young chickens were also eaten regularly, "along with the occasional duck or pigeon." Some of the goose bones discovered had been turned into pipes with drilled stops, indicating they had been used as birdcalls, to lure smaller songbirds, which were commonly part of the menu in German homes for many centuries. Finally, the local fishes carefully plucked and identified included freshwater species such as "carp, bream, roach, asp, pike, pike-perch, perch, and eel." There was also a significant presence of imported saltwater fishes, including "herring, cod, and plaice," which would have arrived at the Luther house either dried or salted. But more revealing yet in this 2008 trove were the objects of kitchen life. A number of Grapen were found. These were the earthenware tripod pots put directly into the fire. Some fragments of much rarer metal Grapen pots were discovered too. These were so valuable they are often mentioned in wills from that era. The shards of whimsical IgelgefSsse (hedgehog vessels) were also found, as well as the remnants of "stemmed glasses, knobbed glasses, and ribbed beakers." The knife handles and all else bespeak a household of upper-middle-class prosperity. The archaeologists discovered many of the toys with which Martin and his three brothers likely played. Seven marbles of irregular sizes were recovered, indicating that they were probably made at home and fired in Frau Luther's hearth. The "phalanx bone" of a cow with a drilled hole was also found, and it is believed this hole would have been filled with molten lead and this and similarly weighted bones used as children's bowling pins. The background of Brueghel the Elder's famous painting Children's Games depicts just such an activity. There was also a Pfeifvogel (bird whistle) that "could be filled with water to produce a warbling song." There is even a curious little object that was identified as a miniature replica of the "nut"-part of the trigger mechanism-of a crossbow. It seems this was from a toy crossbow that belonged to Martin and his brothers, and so now, to the many images we have of Luther in our collective cultural memory, we must add this new one of him as a boy mischievously chasing and shooting his brothers with this toy crossbow. To be sure, the son of "poor peasants" would hardly have had access to something so fanciful and expensive. A potentially tantalizing mystery of this great trash heap, however, reveals itself in the variety of valuable objects that are scattered throughout those less valuable. We have no difficulty fathoming why someone would throw away a fishbone, but why brass aglets and buttons, an embroidered purse affixed to a belt, or even some silver coins? One current theory holds that about 1505, immediately after Luther had become a monk against his father's wishes, the plague struck Mansfeld, as it did many times during these centuries. It is believed that two of Martin's brothers perished. According to the medical advice of that time, all of the clothes and bedclothes of someone who had died from the plague would have to be burned. As the rooms of those who had died were cleared out, some more valuable objects could have been mixed in with the others, thus accounting for this otherwise strange and highly revealing find. Luther's Relationship with His Father Another fable that has clung like a burr to Luther's story is the canard of Luther's father being so impossibly strict and perpetually glowering that it resulted in the boy's eventual rebellion against not just his earthly father but his heavenly father too. Whereas no one should doubt that Hans Luther would have clouted his son about the head when the situation demanded it-and what boy would not create situations along these lines from time to time?-such corporal discipline was de rigueur at that time, and not only then but throughout nearly all of the history and cultures of the world. So to attach some significance to it is to embrace an anachronism. If corporal punishment of this kind had anything like the effect so strongly suggested, the world would have been filled with nothing but Luthers throughout the centuries. Luther's upbringing, from all we know, was about as typical as can be, and the only thing that would be worth remarking on, given the ubiquitous practice of physical parental discipline, would be if we had information that Luther's father had indeed spared the rod. Martin's father once disciplined his son so severely that the young Martin withdrew from his father for some time, whether out of fear or anger. But again, this is hardly beyond what we might expect, nor was Herr Luther the only one to be at times severe. In later years, Luther would recall how his dear mother once beat him-"until the blood flowed"-for the terrible crime of having filched a single nut. Excerpted from Martin Luther: The Man Who Rediscovered God and Changed the World by Eric Metaxas All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.