October, 2017
To understand how the Reformation changed the world, you
have to understand Martin Luther. Which is why the new biography by Eric Metaxas
is a must read.
October
31st marks
the 500th anniversary
of the event regarded to have started the Protestant Reformation: Martin Luther
nailing his 95 Theses on the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg.
Now,
as my BreakPoint co-host Eric Metaxas writes in his outstanding new
book, Martin Luther: The Man Who
Rediscovered God and Changed the World, Luther’s theses probably weren’t
posted on the church door until two weeks later, and even then, it may not have
been that defiant act it’s often portrayed to be. Still, what did happen on that
date was that Luther sent to the Archbishop of Mainz a letter expressing his
concern about the selling of indulgences.
As
Eric relates, Luther had no idea how that letter and the events that would
follow in its wake would change the world.
Even
today, most people, apart from some historians, fail to fully appreciate the
impact of Luther’s ideas and actions. Protestantism is, as the title of Durham
University’s Alec Ryrie’s book puts it, “The Faith that Made the Modern World,”
and without Luther there’s no Protestant Reformation.
The
problem is that history is too often told in dry and inaccessible ways, at least
to non-academic readers. What’s been needed to appreciate Luther and his legacy
more is a book that takes the history seriously by situating Luther in his
historical and theological context while still being enjoyable, even fun, to
read.
And
that’s where Eric’s book succeeds.
In
many ways, “Luther” is a kind of sequel to Eric’s “Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Martyr,
Prophet, Spy.” Both books are about world-shaping historical Christian figures
who, motivated by their conscience and conviction, took enormous risks against
the most powerful institutions of their time.
And
not coincidentally, both Luther and Bonhoeffer were from eastern Germany, as is
Eric’s mother. I note this fact not in any way to detract from his
accomplishment. On the contrary, Eric’s personal connection is one of the book’s
strengths.
As
is, of course, Eric’s trademark engaging style, full of clever turns of phrase
and humor that makes the incredible story of Luther all the more accessible.
Often, biographical subjects don’t feel human. They are, as was famously said of
Robert E. Lee, “marble men.”
But
not Eric’s Luther. He’s quite human, for better and for worse. Early on, you
practically feel Luther’s anxiety and dread
over his own sinfulness. Which helps to make sense of the terror he felt during
that fateful thunderstorm that ultimately led him to become a monk, abandoning
the legal career his father had mapped out for him.
All
of this is important backdrop to understand why Luther’s study of Romans and the
idea of justification by faith was more than an academic exercise for him. For
Luther, it was more like getting water from a rock in the middle of a
desert.
And
yet throughout Eric’s book, we learn that Luther was far from being an angel, or
for that matter, even pleasant a lot of the time. He was someone who, as a
church historian once put it, never knew a moderate moment in his life. Eric
writes of Luther’s “execrable fireworks” that were not only directed at his
enemies, which included Protestants as well as Catholic prelates, but also at
innocent parties, in particular Germany’s Jewish population.
As
he did telling the story of Bonhoeffer, Eric depicts Luther’s humanity while
simultaneously putting it in its proper historical context, one in which there
was a perfect storm of church corruption, political instability, and
technological change. Eric gives us a feel for both Luther the man and his
world. Both are necessary to understand if we are to see how Luther changed the
world.
Obviously,
Eric’s a personal friend and a BreakPoint colleague. But I promise it’s nowhere
in my contract to promote his latest book! This recommendation is driven only by
the simple facts that Luther is too important a historical figure and Eric tells
the story too well not to recommend this book.
Martin Luther: Eric Metaxas Tells the Story of a Very
Human Man Who Changed the World
Find
out more about the man whose life and work are such a crucial part of our
Christian heritage and biblical understanding. Get a copy of Eric Metaxas’s
“Martin Luther: The Man Who Changed the World.” It’s available at the Colson
Center online bookstore. Breakpoint.