Sunday, November 3, 2013

Martin Luther's "formula" for success.

Happy Reformationtide, everyone!


I know most people today commemorate the date of Martin Luther's theological revolution as October 31, 1517:  the posting of the 95 Theses about indulgences on the local church door.  Still, I think the real Reformation didn't officially occur until 1523, in conjunction with the release of his Latin Formula missae.  Here is why.

Lex orandi, lex credendi exemplifies Martin Luther’s concept of reform – the law of the church’s worship is sequentially the law of its confession.  In his time, such a worship gathering would be riddled with what he calls the “three serious abuses”:  the silencing of biblical preaching, the prominence of saintly reverence instead of God-directed praise, and the act of sacrificing Christ’s body and blood as an offering.[1] In publishing his Formula missae of 1523 (hereafter FM), Martin Luther strongly furthered reform in the Protestant church merely by adjusting the liturgical practices.  Specific ways in which this is clearly seen are his inclusions of Scriptural preaching, congregational singing, and omitting the canon of the mass.
At the heart of Luther’s method for the Reformation lied his authoritative precedence toward the Bible over the papacy.  Where the Word openly refuted what the pope decreed, he sided with the Holy Spirit-inspired writings in place of allowing Rome the right to change them.  For example, Jesus replied on the contrary to papal authority when answering the scribes and Pharisees.  “He answered and said to them, ‘Why also do you transgress the commandment of God because of your tradition? For God commanded…’”[2] 
The primary issue with which Luther dealt was pride; over time, the church became increasingly awed by and submissive to the liturgical leaders, being assisted by the political rule they also held.  Where God’s commands and promises interfered with their quest for power, the Roman Catholic church refused to comply.  St. Paul writes to Timothy, “Preach the word!  Be ready in season and out of season.  Convince, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching (emphasis mine).”[3]  Not mere words of Holy Writ are referred to here, but using them as a springboard for discourse and a tool to reach people’s sinful hearts and lives.  He later urges, “Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom, teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts to the Lord.”[4]  The instinctive reaction of the believer to hearing the pastor should include supplementing that with music, since godly lyrics and melody fall under their own special didactic form.  Finally, returning to the very words Christ uses to bless the bread and wine,
…As they were eating, Jesus took bread, blessed it and broke it, and gave it to the disciples and said, “Take, eat; this is My body.”  Then He took the cup, and gave thanks, and gave it to them, saying, “Drink from it, all of you.  For this is My blood of the new covenant, which is shed for many for the remission of sins” (Matthew 26:26-28).
Luther saw that the words of institution were what they were on the simplest level; the only sacrifice occurring here was the Lord kindly offering His body and blood to His disciples as strength and comfort, for them to cling to in assurance of their forgiveness.  By His simple phraseology, “Take…drink,” Jesus’ only intent is that His sin-sick followers go ahead and share in His supper, not give it back as an unbloody payment. 
Basing his new worship order on these solid precepts, Luther furthermore demonstrated his humility before the Lord.  If he sought glory and renown before the people of his day, he would have decided to keep the new revision in compliance with the old, or not tried to change it at all.  On the contrary, the theologian remarks, “One should not plan and order something unless he is certain it is pleasing to God.  One should also not make reason supreme in such matters, for if He our Lord is not the author, nothing good can come of it.”[5]
            In regard to the first point, prior to the Reformation, churches did not hear much individual preaching from the priestly clergy.  Instead, the only preservation they had of the true Gospel was in the historic lectionary readings, set up during the early Christian era and used for centuries.  However, Luther understood that the utilization of a pastor to expound biblical doctrines could also be edifying, and inserted a sermon on one of the texts between the Nicene Creed and the Preface.   In addition to the homiletic portion, Luther additionally advocated the continuation of the daily Psalm readings, as he had practiced in the monastery.  While the essential eight Daily Office hours were reduced to two (Matins and Vespers), the frequently scheduled meditations on the Bible stayed a laudable tradition.  In differentiation to the current usage, Luther wrote, “The reading of the Epistles and Gospels is necessary, too.  Only it is wrong to read them in a language the common people do not understand.”[6] Once again, the Catholic way was permissible as long as it was clarified and not hidden in mystery, to which the early church fathers would have surely disapproved.  “Luther saw his reforms not as the unilaterally instituted ideas of an individual, but rather as a reform within the church catholic that sought to demonstrate whenever possible the continuity between itself and the whole history of Christian worship and piety.”[7] Attempts before this by the Radical reformers to create a new mass setting ended up to be misleading in that they sought to do the opposite of what the Roman church practiced, including alternate vestments and iconoclasm.[8] On its own, the liturgy was not the problem, but the false doctrine mixed in to usurp the truth.
            Secondly, before Luther’s reforms there were limited hymns or other opportunities for the people to sing in a church service.  Rather, the officiant would perform all of the reading, praying and chanting, nearly turning the Sunday morning time of worship into a spectator event.  As Luther realized, this method is not the way to keep the laity engaged or connect their own faith with what was occurring in the service.  He understood that by singing Christians were also teaching themselves the Word, at the same time publicly confessing their faith and engraving Scriptural truth in their hearts via the music.  The more ways in which an individual can learn something, the more deeply he or she remembers it, and in a likewise manner it happens when the Gospel is spoken, heard, read, sung, and taken in all at once.  In the strictest sense, the FM is completely accompanied by the acapella choir, with an active listening part by the congregation.  Yet, Luther indicates that he would “wish for us to have as many vernacular songs as possible that the people could sing during the mass either along with the Gradual or along with the Sanctus and Agnus Dei.”[9] The educated class of the day spoke Latin as their primary language, but where a peasant audience may join in, the German component would be a helpful addition. 
            Lastly, the key difference with the FM as compared to the previous Roman order of worship is the removal of the canon of the mass.  This lengthy, special prayer chanted under the breath of the priest entirely altered the direction of worship, sacrificing once more Jesus’ body and blood rather than receive it graciously as a sacrament.  How close and yet how distant were the clergy; the very elements which God intended to bring them His forgiveness as a means of grace they considered an object of reoffering to appease His anger.  Nevertheless, Luther retained as much as he possibly could of the Catholic mass, even the elevation, which he kept due to the people’s hesitation at the reintroduction.[10]  In reference to the Deutsche Messe, the 1526 German rendering of the FM, Luther states, “The Elevation we do not wish to abolish but to maintain, since it coincides very well with the German Sanctus and signifies that Christ has commanded to remember Him.”[11] In Lutheran practice, this stood for honoring Christ’s death on the cross to pay for the world’s sins, not a misdirected, merit-minded adoration of the host.  Jesus’ words of institution were still chanted during the consecration, and Luther seemed to direct that each form should be served directly after, with the Sanctus, Agnus Dei, or hymns meanwhile sung for spiritual edification.[12]
            There is not a great deal of disparity between the modern Lutheran Divine Service found in many American hymnals and the FM of Wittenberg.  In Luther’s day, the confession and absolution consisted of the Kyrie, found in the sermon, or administered personally by the pastor.[13]  Today, however, the first item spoken in its modern counterpart is the confession, with the forgiveness of sins declared immediately following.  Elevation is generally obsolete due to its Catholic implications, but the church now partakes of both the bread and wine without reluctance.  What is more, the amount of chant versus spoken readings varies between congregations, and post-Vatican II, the Old Testament lesson may now follow the Collect.   Another addition of which Luther would definitely have approved would be the prescribed inclusion of hymns, at least for the opening, before the sermon, and in conclusion.  One of the reasons why he may not have dictated them specifically would be the lack of resources available then in 1523 – the rich selection of Lutheran chorales accessible now were as of then unwritten.  Still, the promotion of godly poetry set to music that the laity could finally utilize to teach themselves is perfectly in line with Luther’s goals. 
The directions for a worship service as laid out in the FM were meant to be a “description, not a prescription.”[14]  If every minute detail of the liturgy would imply something of adiaphora or man’s preference, Luther knew that humanity’s natural leaning would be toward the man-made add-ons, and they could very well overrule the “one thing needful,” namely, faith in Jesus Christ.[15]  On the positive viewpoint, with enough time and distance, the church has progressed through to the point where Luther desired to see it, as outlined in the Wittenberg church orders.  On a Sunday morning, one can readily find a group of Lutherans freely hearing the Word, singing the biblical liturgy and hymns, and eating and drinking the Lord’s Supper as a sacrament, not a sacrifice.   This lies in stark opposition to the disastrous condition of the 16th-century church, attending worship without biblical interpretation, concentrated in the lives of the saints, and centered around the canon of the mass.  All in all, by presenting his Wittenberg congregation the Formula missae in 1523, Martin Luther effected a reformation to orthodoxy that lasts until today.


                                                                                                                                   
Works Cited: 
Forell, George W., Harold J. Grimm, and Theodore Hoelty- Nickel.  Luther and Culture.  Decorah, IA:  Luther College Press, 1960. 
Halter, Carl and Carl Schalk.  A Handbook of Church Music.  St. Louis:  Concordia Publishing House, 1978.
Herl, Joseph.  Worship Wars in Early Lutheranism.  New York:  Oxford University Press, 2004.
Lull, Timothy F., ed.  Martin Luther’s Basic Theological Writings. Minneapolis:  Fortress Press, 1989.
Schalk, Carl.  Music in Early Lutheranism.  St. Louis:  Concordia Academic Press, 2001. 
The Holy Bible, New King James Version.  Nashville:  Thomas Nelson, 1982.



[1] Lull, Timothy F., ed.  Martin Luther’s Basic Theological Writings. Minneapolis:  Fortress Press, 1989, 445.

[2] Matthew 15:3-4.
[3] 2 Timothy 4:2.
[4] Colossians 4:16.
[5] Forell, George W., Harold J. Grimm, and Theodore Hoelty- Nickel.  Luther and Culture.  Decorah, IA:  Luther College Press, 1960, 185. 
[6] Lull, 451.
[7] Schalk, Carl.  Music in Early Lutheranism.  St. Louis:  Concordia Academic Press, 2001, 19.

[8] Halter, Carl and Carl Schalk.  A Handbook of Church Music.  St. Louis:  Concordia Publishing House, 1978, 59. 

[9] Herl, Joseph.  Worship Wars in Early Lutheranism.  New York:  Oxford University Press, 2004, 6. 

[10] Halter and Schalk, 60. 
[11] Forell et. al., 208.
[12] Ibid., 207. 
[13] Halter and Schalk, 207. 
[14] Ibid., 62. 
[15] Luke 10:42.  

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