Martin Luther
CARL E. KOPPENHAVER
Muhlenberg Press Philadelphia
Copyright, 1953, by Muhlenberg Press
Third Printing Printed in U.S.A. UB736
The Turk was slashing his way up the valley of the Danube into the heart of Europe. God sat far off, not as a loving father but as a vengeful law-court judge inflicting all sorts of misery on mankind. In the forest lurked witches and demons seeking to drag the unwary to destruction.
Into such a world threatened by the sword, ruled by fear, and plagued by superstition, Martin Luther was born on November 10, 1483, in Eisleben, Germany. Within such a world he became a man disdainful of bodily harm, convinced of God’s love and mercy, endowed with abundant common sense—a Christian worthy of study and emulation. Although his station of birth was lowly, greatness sought him out, and the whole world has felt the impact of his life.
The Luther child was baptized in the Church of St. Peter the morning after his birth and was named Martin for the saint of the day. His parents, Hans and Margarethe Luther, were simple, industrious folk. They had moved recently from the farming community of Möhra, home of the Luther family, to Eisleben where Hans hoped to make his fortune in the copper mines.
When Martin was about six months old the family moved to near-by Mansfeld. The first years there were hard and it was with difficulty that Hans scraped together money to send his son to school. By the time Martin was thirteen, however, his father was able to send him to a school conducted by the Brothers of the Common Life at Magdeburg. As was the custom, he earned his board by singing and begging from door to door with one of the school choirs.
He stayed in Magdeburg for only a year and then was sent to the parish school of St. George in Eisenach. While again earning his keep by singing and begging, he became acquainted with Frau Ursula Cotta, a woman of culture and refinement, who took the promising young scholar into her home.
Carl E. Koppenhaver
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CONTENTS
THE MINER’S SON
Eisleben to Erfurt
Into the Cloister
Monk and Priest
THE PROFESSOR
Dr. Luther
The Awakening
COLLISION WITH ROME
The Question of Indulgences
The Ninety-five Theses
Rome Moves to Attack
THE BREACH WIDENS
Pushed into the Arena
The Shadow of Hus
For Such a Time as This
LUTHER EXPLAINS HIMSELF
The Christian Nobility
The Babylonian Captivity
Christian Liberty
The Papal Bull
THE MONK STANDS FIRM
The Diet of Worms
Answer Without Horns
Neither Right nor Safe
DRASTIC CHANGES
Wartburg to Wittenberg
From Freedom to License
Pigtails on the Pillow
The Cloister Becomes a Home
A CHURCH REBORN
The National Conscience
The Augsburg Confession
Back to Eisleben
CHRONOLOGY
Transcriber’s Notes