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February 1516 A.D. Erasmus
Loaded the Reformation Cannon (198-Howitzer):
Dedicates His Work to Pope Leo X
Erasmus loaded the cannon that Luther fired. The
greatest scholar of his day, Erasmus rammed two shots into the barrel of the
Reformation.
The first shot was a satire
titled, The Praise of Folly, which
poked fun at the errors of Christian Europe. For example, Erasmus
reminded his readers that Peter said to the Lord, "We have left everything
for you." But Folly boasts that, thanks to her influence, "there is
scarcely any kind of people who live more at their ease" than the
successors of the apostles.
The second shot was a Greek New
Testament. For centuries, Jerome's Latin translation, the Vulgate, was the
Bible of the Church. However, Jerome's translation had deficiencies. Erasmus
reconstructed the original New Testament as best he could from Greek texts and
printed it. In a parallel column he provided a new Latin translation. What is
more--and this could have cost him his life--he added over a thousand notes
that pointed out common errors in interpreting the Bible. He attacked Rome's
refusal to let priests marry although some lived openly with mistresses; and he
denied that the popes have all the rights that they claim. The scholar also
challenged practices not taught in scripture: prayers to the saints,
indulgences, and relic-worship.
After years of work, Erasmus was
ready to release his book. He wondered how he could avoid trouble. One way was
to link the New Testament with some great man's name. And so, on this day, February 1, 1516,
Erasmus dedicated his New Testament to Pope Leo X. He had gotten the Pope's
permission the year before. In a soothing letter written to Leo a few months
later, he assured him that he meant no harm. "We do not intend to tear up
the old and commonly accepted edition [the Vulgate], but amend it where it is
corrupt, and make it clear where it is obscure."
Just in case the authorities
should be angry, Erasmus pointed out that the ideas were not new with him. He
quoted the greatest church fathers in support of his corrections. It would be a
lot harder for intolerant factions to argue with dead heroes than with him!
Like Jerome's translation,
Erasmus' New Testament was not completely accurate either. He did not have
access to the best manuscripts. Nonetheless, it was enough of an improvement
over the old that Martin Luther, William Tyndale, and other translators based
their vernacular versions on it. Furthermore, they picked up Erasmus's calls
for reform.
The result was that the
Reformers broke away from the Roman Catholic church. For a time Erasmus and
Luther remained friends. But Luther's words were so violent that Erasmus could
not accept them. When Erasmus did not agree with Luther, the Reformer called
him all sorts of names, such as "secret atheist."
Erasmus, who thought that the
Christian life meant living in the peace of Christ, was hurt. He was in grave
danger from both camps. Protestants said he held onto too much that was
Catholic; the Catholics threatened him because they claimed he was wrecking the
church. Erasmus had to flee from Catholic Louvain to escape being burned to
death at the stake.
Erasmus had such a reputation
for wit that people were willing to wait quietly for him to answer a question.
Frederick the Wise once asked the scholar his opinion of Luther. Erasmus
thought while the king waited silently. Finally he answered, "Two 'crimes'
Luther has committed: he has attacked the tiara of the pope and the bellies of
the monks." Frederick laughed.
We do not often hear of Erasmus.
Yet Anabaptists, Zwinglians, and Lutherans claimed to be his true children. His
Bible and his wit helped bring about the Reformation.
Bibliography:
Allen, John. One Hundred Great Lives. New York:
Journal of Living, 1944.
Bainton, Roland. Erasmus of Christendom. New York:
Scribner, 1969.
Bainton, Roland. Here I Stand. New York : New American
Library, c1950.
"Erasmus." Encyclopedia Americana. Chicago:
Encyclopedia Americana corp., 1956.
Faulkner, John Alfred. Erasmus the Scholar.
Cincinnati: Jennings and Graham, 1907.
Runes, Dagobert D. A Treasury of Philosophy.
New York: Philosophical Library, 1945; p.381.
Russell, Bertrand. Wisdom of the West.
New York: Fawcett, 1964; pp. 230 - 231.
Zweig, Stephan. Erasmus. New York, The Viking Press,
1934.
Last updated May, 2007.
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