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<h2> MARTIN LUTHER. </h2>
<p>Reformation Day, as it is called, was celebrated on October 31 throughout
the Protestant part of Germany. Three hundred and seventy-five years have
rolled by since Martin Luther broke from the Roman Catholic Church.
Emperor William went to Wittenberg, with a great array of Evangelical
personages; and, as usual, the Emperor made a speech, which for him was
excellent. "There is no coercion," he said, "in matters of religion. Here
only free conviction of the heart is decisive, and the perception of this
fact is the blissful fruit of the Reformation."</p>
<p>This is a fine-sounding declaration, but it has the misfortune to be
untrue. Liberty of conscience is not the fruit of the Reformation, but an
indirect and unintended result. Nor is liberty of conscience a reality in
any part of the German empire. Christians are allowed to differ among
themselves, but Freethinkers are prosecuted for dissenting alike from
Catholic and Protestant. Since the present Emperor's accession there have
been many blasphemy prosecutions, sometimes for what would be regarded in
other countries as very mild expressions of disbelief. Several men and
women have been sentenced to severe penalties for exercising the right of
free speech, which, in the land of Goethe, Heine, Strauss, and
Schopenhauer, is still confined to professed Christians.</p>
<p>The Reformation, in fact, was a superficial movement. Except for its moral
revolt against the sale of indulgences, it touched no deep and durable
principle. It merely substituted an infallible Bible for an infallible
Church. Differences of opinion crept into the Protestant fold, but that
was an accident, arising from the varied and discordant nature of the
Bible itself. Every new Protestant sect had to fight as strenuously for
its right to exist as ever Martin Luther fought against the Catholic
Church. Protestantism, in short, was one priesthood saying to another
priesthood "We are right and you are wrong." The Catholic Church had an
immense advantage in its central organisation; the Protestant Church could
only operate from different points; hence it was unable to bring about the
same uniformity.</p>
<p>The movement that was not superficial was the scientific and humanist
movement, of which the Reformation was in a certain sense an episode.
Italy and France did more for the world than Germany. Martin Luther was a
great fighter, but not a more heroic one than Giordano Bruno. Melancthon
was not so important a man as Galileo. Rabelais even, with all his dirt
and jesting, was more in the stream of progress than Luther, and far more
than Calvin. In the long run, it is knowledge and idea? that rule the
world. Luther was not great in knowledge, and certainly not great in
ideas. He was a born fighter and a strong character. His proper place is
among the heroic figures of history. He was a man of leading, but scarcely
a man of light.</p>
<p>Luther was violently opposed to the scientific movement. He called
Copernicus an old fool. He would hear nothing against the accepted
Biblical theory of the universe. Genesis was to him, as well as to the
Pope, the beginning and the end of sound science. Nor was he more friendly
to philosophy. Draper truly asserts that the leaders of the Reformation
"were determined to banish philosophy from the Church." Aristotle was
villified by Luther as "truly a devil, a horrid calumniator, a wicked
sycophant, a prince of darkness, a real Apollyon, a beast, a most horrid
impostor on mankind, a public and professed liar, a goat, a complete
epicure, this twice execrable Aristotle." Such was Luther's style in
controversy. We commend it to the attention of Protestants who rail at the
<i>Freethinker</i>.</p>
<p>Liberty of conscience is a principle of which Luther had no conception. He
claimed the right to think against the Pope; he denied the right of others
to think against himself. His attitude towards the Anabaptists was
fiendish. During the Peasants War he urged the authorities to exterminate
the rebels, to "stab, kill, and strangle them without mercy." Melancthon
taught that heretics "ought to be restrained by the sword." Luther
likewise declared that whoever denied even one article of the Protestant
faith should be punished severely. Referring to a false teacher, he
exclaimed, "Drive him away as an apostle of hell; and if he does not flee,
deliver him up as a seditious man to the executioner."</p>
<p>Hallam, Buckle, Lecky, and all reputable historians, agree that the
Protestant party held the same principle of persecution as the Catholics.
It was not disputed that death was the proper punishment of obstinate
heresy. The only dispute was—which were the heretics, and who should
die?</p>
<p>Luther's influence was very great in England, as Calvin's was in Scotland,
and the leaders of the Reformation in our own country had no doubt as to
the justice of killing men for a difference of opinion. Cranmer taught
that heretics were first to be excommunicated; if that made no impression
on them they were to suffer death. It satisfies one sense of the fitness
of things that Cranmer himself perished at the stake. Becon taught that
the duty of magistrates with regard to heretics was to punish them—"yea,
and also to take them out of this life." This same Becon called upon the
temporal rulers to "be no longer the pope's hangmen." He preferred their
being the hangmen of Protestantism. Latimer himself said of the
Anabaptists who were executed, "Well, let them go!" Bishop Jewel, the
great apologist of the Protestant Church of England, in answering Harding
the Jesuit, replies in this way to the charge of being of the brotherhood
of Servetus, David George, and Joan of Kent: "We detected their heresies,
and not you. We arraigned them; we condemned them. We put them to the
execution of the laws. It seemeth very much to call them our brothers,
because we burnt them."</p>
<p>Calvin held the same persecuting doctrine. All who opposed him were dealt
with ruthlessly. He was a veritable Pope of Geneva. His treatment of
Servetus was infamous. But so universal was the principle on which Calvin
acted, that even the mild Melancthon called the cruel roasting of Servetus
at a slow fire "a pious and memorable example for all posterity."</p>
<p>Protestantism boasts of having asserted the right of private judgment. It
never did anything of the kind. Not a single leader of the Reformation
ever asserted such a principle. Erasmus did, though not in decisive
language; but Erasmus never belonged to the Protestant Church, and his
humanity, no less than his philosophy, brought upon him the vituperation
of Luther. The hero of Protestantism did not intend the consequences of
his revolt against Rome. He would have been appalled at the thought of
them. He made a breach, for his own purposes, in the great wall of faith.
He did not anticipate that others would widen it, or that the forces of
reason would march through and occupy post after post. He simply did his
own stroke of work, and we do not judge him by later standards. We only
object to the extravagance of Protestant laudation.</p>
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