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October 2014 A.D. 497th
Reformation Day Governing About 25% of Church History—Remembering Reformation Day
Archivist.
“October 31: Reformation Day.” This Day in Presbyterian History. 31 Oct 2014. http://www.thisday.pcahistory.org/2014/10/october-31/.
Accessed 31 Oct 2014.
October 31: Reformation Day
Remembering October 31
It is
my earnest hope that no reader is going to wonder why this writer
wants them to remember Halloween! October 31st, and
specifically October 31,
1517, is the date of the beginning of the Protestant
Reformation. On this date, an obscure Augustinian monk by the name
of Martin Luther nailed ninety-five theses to the church door in
Wittenburg, because that was the usual custom of advertisement for the people’s
attention. It was the twenty-first century bulletin board.
Luther nailed them up at noon sharp because it was the time of the most
frequent feasts. Professors, students, and the common people would
be coming from all four corners to the church, which was filled up with relics
for transfers of credit.
A lot
of Protestants, while hearing of this incident of the nailing of
ninety-five theses, think that they were ringing endorsements of Protestant
theology. In reality, they were more Roman Catholic than
Protestant. There is no protest against the Pope and the Roman Catholic
church, or any of her doctrines, not even against
indulgences. They were silent about justification by faith
alone. They were primarily opposed to the abuse of indulgences.
But
while the form is Romish, the spirit and aim is Protestant. They
represent a state of transition between twilight and daylight. We must
read between the lines, as the leaders of the Roman Catholic church did in
the sixteenth century. As they did, they saw a logical drift which
sought to undermine the whole fabric of Romanism.
Luther
hoped that there would be a scholarly debate of the abuse of indulgences.
But no one came to debate him. Instead, with the recent invention of the
printing press, the copies of the ninety-five theses were sent all over the
empire. The pope had a copy within two weeks. The common
people read them and rejoiced over them. Luther was the talk of
Germany. There was a trumpet call being sounded for what later on
became the Protestant Reformation.
Words to live by: In
less than five years, in 2017, we will celebrate the five-hundredeth
anniversary of the Protestant Reformation. Will there be a revival of its
themes in your church and more important, in your heart, such as
Scripture alone, Christ alone, Grace Alone, Faith Alone, and Only to the
Glory of God? That sums up what Luther, and Calvin, and Knox
thundered to the masses and the visible church. Reflect on
the story of Martin Luther and the Protestant Reformation in your heart,
home, and church.
What
better reason for remembering this day. No, not Halloween. Rather, October
31st, and specifically October 31, 1517, as it marks the date of
the beginning of the Protestant Reformation. On this date, an obscure
Augustinian monk by the name of Martin Luther nailed ninety-five theses to
the church door in Wittenburg, because that was the usual custom of
advertisement for the people’s attention. It was in effect a public
bulletin board. Luther nailed the document up at noon sharp because that was
the time of the most frequent feasts. Professors, students, and the
common people would be coming from all four corners to the church on “All
Saints Day,” for that was a time when it was filled up with relics for
transfers of credit or “merit” under the Roman Catholic system.
But
while the form is Romish, the spirit and aim is Protestant. They represent a
state of transition between twilight and daylight. We must read between
the lines, as the leaders of the Roman Catholic church did in the sixteenth
century. As they did, they saw a logical drift which sought to undermine
the whole fabric of Romanism.
Luther
hoped that there would be a scholarly debate of the abuse of indulgences. But
no one came to debate him. Instead, with the recent invention of the printing
press, the copies of the ninety-five theses were sent all over the empire. The
pope had a copy within two weeks. The common people read them and rejoiced over
them. Luther was the talk of Germany. His ninety-five theses had gone viral!
There was a trumpet call being sounded for what later on became the Protestant
Reformation.
Words to live by: In less than five years, in
2017, we will celebrate the five-hundredeth anniversary of the Protestant
Reformation. Will there be a revival of its themes in your church and more
important, in your heart, such as Scripture alone,Christ alone, grace alone, faith alone,
and glory to God alone? That sums up what
Luther, and Calvin, and Knox thundered to the masses and the visible
church. Reflect on the story of Martin Luther and the Protestant
Reformation in your heart, home, and church.
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