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A TREATISE CONCERNING THE BLESSED SACRAMENT OF THE HOLY AND TRUE BODY OF CHRIST AND CONCERNING THE BROTHERHOODS
INTRODUCTION
ОглавлениеThis treatise belongs to a series of four which appeared in the latter half of the year 1519, the others treating of the Ban, Penance, and Baptism. The latter two with our treatise form a trilogy which Luther dedicates to the Duchess Margaret of Braunschweig and Lüneburg.
He undertakes the work, as he says, "because there are so many troubled and distressed ones—and I myself have had the experience—who do not know what the holy sacraments, full of all grace, are, nor how to use them, but, alas! presume upon quieting their consciences with their works, instead of seeking peace in God's grace through the holy sacrament; so completely are the holy sacraments obscured and withdrawn from us by the teaching of men."1
In a letter to Spalatin2 of December 18, 1519, he says that no one need expect treatises from him on the other sacraments, since he cannot acknowledge them as such.
A copy from the press of John Grünenberg of Wittenberg reached Duke George of Saxony by December 24, 1519, who on December 27th already entered his protest against it with the Elector Frederick and the Bishops of Meissen and Merseburg3. Duke George took exception particularly to Luther's advocacy of the two kinds in the Communion4. This statement of Luther, however, was but incidental to his broad and rich treatment of the subject of the treatise.
It was Luther's first extended statement of his view of the Lord's Supper. As such it is very significant, not only because of what he says, but also because of what he does not say. There is no reference at all to that which was then distinctive of the Church's doctrine, the sacrifice of the mass. Luther has already abandoned this position, but is either too loyal a church-man to attack it or has not as yet found an evangelical interpretation of the idea of sacrifice in the mass, such as he gives us in the later treatise on the New Testament5. However, already in this treatise he gives us the antidote for the false doctrine of sacrifice in the emphasis laid upon faith, on which all depends6. The object of this faith, however, is not yet stated to be the promise of the forgiveness of sins contained in the Words of Institution, which are a new and eternal testament7.
The treatise shows the influence of the German mystics8 on Luther's thought, but much more of the Scriptures which furnish him with argument and illustration for his mystical conceptions. Christ's natural body is made of less importance than the spiritual body9, the communion of saints; just as in the later treatise on the New Testament the stress is placed on the Words of Institution with their promise of the forgiveness of sins. Luther does not try to explain philosophically what is inexplicable, but is content to accept on faith the act of the presence of Christ in the sacrament, "how and where,—we leave to Him."10
Of interest is the emphasis on the spiritual body, the communion of saints. Luther knows that although excommunication is exclusion from external communion, it is not necessarily exclusion from real spiritual communion with Christ and His saints11. No wonder, then, that he can later treat the papal bull with so much indifference; it cannot exclude him from the communion of saints.
The treatise consists of three main divisions: sections 1 to 3 treating of the outward sign of the sacrament; sections 4 to 16, of the inner significance; sections 17 to 22, of faith. Added to this is the appendix on the subject of the brotherhoods or sodalities, associations of laymen or charitable and devotional purposes. Of these there were many at this time, Wittenberg alone being reported as having twenty-one. Luther objects not only to their immoral conduct, but also to the spiritual pride which they engendered. He finds in the communion of saints the fundamental brotherhood instituted in the holy sacrament, the common brotherhood of all saints.
The modern world needs to have these truths driven home anew, and, barring a few scholastic phrases here and there, cannot find them better expressed than in the remarkably elevated and devotional language of Luther in this treatise.
The text of the treatise is found in the following editions: Weimar Ed., vol. ii, 742; Erlangen Ed., vol. xxvii, 28; Walch Ed., Vol. xix, 522; St. Louis Ed., xix, 426; Clemen, vol. i, 196; Berlin Ed., vol. iii, 259.
Literature besides that mentioned:
Tschackert, Enstehung der lutherischen und reformierten Kirchenlehre, 1910, pp. 174-176.
K. Thieme, Entwicklung und Bedeutung der Sakramentslehre Luthers, Neueu Kirchl. Zeitschrift, XII (1901), Nos. 10 and 11.
F. Graebke, Die Konstruktion der Abendmahlslehre Luthers in ihre Entwicklung dargestellt, Leipzig 1908.
J. J. SCHINDEL.
Allentown, PA.
1
See Clemen, 1, p. 175.
2
Enders, II, no. 254. Smith, Luther's Correspondence, I, no. 206.
3
Gess, Akten und Briefe zur Kirchenpolitik Herzog Georgs von Sachsen, Leipzig, 1905.
4
See below, p. 9.
5
In this edition, Vol. I, pp. 294-336. See especially pp. 312 ff.
6
See below, pp. 19, 25.
7
Treatise on the New Testament, Vol. I, pp. 297 ff.
8
See Köstlin, Luther's Theologie, I, 292 f.; also Hering, Die Mystik Luthers, Leipzig, 1879, pp. 171-174.
9
See below, p. 23.
10
See below, p.20.
11
See Treatise concerning the Ban, below, p. 37.