1st Edition

The LIfe and Letters of Martin Luther

By Preserved Smith Copyright 1969
    544 Pages
    by Routledge

    544 Pages
    by Routledge

    First published in 1968. It can hardly be denied that the men who have most changed history have been the great religious leaders. Among the great prophets, and, with the possible exception of Calvin, the last of world-wide importance, Martin Luther has taken his place. His career marks the beginning of the present epoch, for it is safe to say that every man in western Europe and in America is leading a different life to-day from what he would have led and is another person altogether from what he would have been, had Martin Luther not lived. Granting, as axiomatic, that essential factors of the movement are to be found in the social, political, and cultural conditions of the age, and in the work of predecessors and followers, in short, in the environment which alone made Luther's lifework possible, there must still remain a very large element due directly and solely to his personality. The present work aims to explain that personality; to show him in the setting of his age; to indicate what part of his work is to be attributed to his inheritance and to the events of the time, but especially to reveal that part of the man which seems, at least, to be explicable by neither heredity nor environment, and to be more important than either, the character, or individuality.

    Childhood and student life, 1483-1505; the monk, 1505-1512; the journey to Rome, October 1510-February 1511; the professor, 1512-1517; the indulgence controversy, 1517-1519; the Leipsic debate, 1519; the patriot, 1519-1520; the address to the German nobility, the Babylonian captivity of the church, and the freedom of a Christian man, 1520; the burning of the canon law and of the Pope's bull, 1520; the diet of worms, 1521; the Wartburg, May 4, 1521-March 1, 1522; the Wittenberg revolution and the return from the Wartburg, 1521-1522; Carlstadt and Munzer, 1522-1525; the peasants' revolt, 1525; Catharine von Bora; private life, 1522-1531; Henry VIII; Erasmus; German politics, 1522-1529; church building; Ulrich Zwingli; Feste Coburg and the diet of Augsburg, 1530; Luther's house at Wittenberg, the black cloister; Philip of Hesse; the emperor Charles V; castle church at Wittenberg, where Luther is buried.

    Biography

    Perserved Smith