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LUTHERAN THEOLOGICAL REVIEW - Concordia Lutheran Seminary

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LTR XII (Academic Year 1999-2000): 44-55<br />

THE ROOTS OF THE REFORMATION 1<br />

John R. Stephenson<br />

efore we start digging up and analysing roots, we’d better agree<br />

among ourselves which tree in the forest we intend to examine. “The<br />

Reformation” is an omnium gatherum term which refers to a whole<br />

thicket of trees of different size and shape and kind. For the truth of the<br />

matter is that at least six movements which made their mark on the religious<br />

history of the 16 th century are accommodated by historians under the<br />

umbrella commonly dubbed “The Reformation”. Nor do these various trees<br />

happily coexist in the forest of religious pluralism. Their distinct root<br />

systems have caused trees to sprout which compete for room and displace<br />

each other in a process which is far from over. Not all of them can have been<br />

divinely planted, and they do not enjoy equal access to the sun.<br />

Now “reform” was a widespread aspiration at the end of the Middle<br />

Ages, and the first half of the 15 th century saw the rise and eclipse of the star<br />

known as a General Council of the Church Universal. Gather the bishops of<br />

Western Christendom, allow input from the universities and religious orders<br />

and secular rulers, tame the Pope as a meek CEO, and the reform of the<br />

Church in head and members would surely follow. Elected at Constance to<br />

be the tool of the Council held in that city from 1414 to 1418, Martin V<br />

Colonna returned to Rome and promptly repudiated the conciliar theory. Nor<br />

was the Council of Basle able to deliver the desired goods as it sat resisting<br />

papal absolutism from 1431 to 1439.<br />

Another avenue of reform was trodden by those who vested their hopes in<br />

the vigorous exercise of the papal office. Curialism would concentrate all<br />

power in the papal court and trust a godly successor of Peter to use it well.<br />

But the line of Popes who reigned from the middle of the 15 th B<br />

century until<br />

the accession of the transitional pontiff Paul III Farnese in 1534 were grand<br />

Renaissance princes who made it thinkable for half of Europe to break its<br />

age-old bond with the Holy See. Joseph Lortz tells how, at the coronation of<br />

Leo X in 1513, statues of three naked pagan gods depicted the two previous<br />

pontificates and the one just beginning. The image of Venus represented the<br />

time of Alexander VI Borgia (1492-1503) whose conduct in office is best<br />

understood by picturing to oneself the outgoing president of the United<br />

States clad in papal vestments. A likeness of Mars, the god of war,<br />

commemorated Julius II della Rovere (1503-1513), whose military<br />

campaigns on the Italian peninsula prompted Erasmus to pen the satirical<br />

1 This paper was delivered on the website eBiblecommentary.com on 31 October 2000.

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