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With great clarity and insight, James M. Estes illuminates Luther's
call to secular authorities to help with the reform of the church
in this important 1520 treatise. Starting with the Ninety-Five
Theses in 1517, Luther's appeals for reform had been addressed to
the ecclesiastical hierarchy, whose divinely imposed responsibility
for such things he took for granted. By the early months of 1520,
however, Luther had come to the conclusion that nothing could be
expected from Rome but intransigent opposition to reform of any
sort. It was only at this point that he began to write of the need
for secular rulers to intervene with measures that would clear the
way for ecclesiastical reform. Concerned that Christendom was going
to ruin, Luther argued that with such an emergency looming, anyone
who was able to do so should help in whatever way possible. This
volume is excerpted from The Annotated Luther series, Volume 1.
Each volume in the series contains new introductions, annotations,
illustrations, and notes to help shed light on Luther's context and
to interpret his writings for today.
This volume contains the surviving correspondence of Erasmus for
the first seven months of 1529. For nearly eight years he had lived
happily and productively in Basel. In the winter of 1528-9,
however, the Swiss version of the Lutheran Reformation triumphed in
the city, destroying the liberal-reformist atmosphere Erasmus had
found so congenial. Unwilling to live in a place where Catholic
doctrine and practice were officially proscribed, Erasmus resettled
in the quiet, reliably Catholic university town of Freiburg im
Breisgau, Despite the turmoil of moving, Erasmus managed to
complete the new Froben editions of Seneca and St Augustine, both
monumental projects that had been underway for years. He also found
time to engage in controversy with his conservative Catholic
critics, as well as to write a long letter lamenting the execution
for heresy of his friend Louis de Berquin at Paris. Volume 15 of
the Collected Works of Erasmus series.
Many of the letters in this volume, which covers the period August
1530 to March 1531, reflect Erasmus' anxieties over events at the
Diet of Augsburg (June-November 1530), at which the first of many
attempts to achieve a negotiated settlement of the religious
division in Germany came to a rancorous conclusion, thus fostering
the fear that religious controversy would eventually lead to war.
His other chief concerns were the continued attacks on him by
Catholic critics who regarded him as a clandestine Lutheran, and
the insistence of many evangelical reformers that he was their
spiritual father. The literary output of the period covered
includes major works aimed at members of both groups. Volume 17 of
the Collected Works of Erasmus series.
This volume comprises Erasmus' correspondence during the final two
years of his life, June 1534-August 1536. In the public sphere it
was a time of dramatic events: the reconquest of the duchy
Wurttemberg from its Austrian occupiers; the siege and destruction
of the Anabaptist "kingdom" at Munster; Charles V's great victory
at Tunis; and the resumption of the Habsburg-Valois wars in Italy.
In the private sphere, these were years of deteriorating health,
thoughts of impending death, and the loss of close friends
(including Thomas Fisher and Thomas More, both executed by Henry
VIII). At the same time, however, Erasmus managed to publish his
longest book, Ecclesiastes, and to make arrangements, in his final
will, for his considerable wealth to be spent for charitable
purposes after his death.
In the months covered by this volume, Erasmus experienced sharply
deteriorating health and thoughts of approaching death, although he
remained active in the promotion of good causes and the defence of
his good name. The seemingly imminent threat of religious civil war
in Germany affected Erasmus in two ways. First, he made up his mind
to leave Germany and return to his native Brabant. However, the
arrival in 1533 of a formal invitation from Queen Mary, regent of
the Netherlands, coincided with the onset of chronic ill health
that would last until the end of his life. Repeated postponements
eventually led to an abandonment of the journey altogether. Second,
Erasmus did what he could to promote the cause of religious unity.
In On Mending the Peace of the Church he urged rulers to enact
moderate reforms that would satisfy all parties and avoid
confessional division. When Martin Luther responded to this attempt
at a "middle path" between "truth and error" in his Letter
Concerning Erasmus of Rotterdam (1534), denouncing Erasmus as a
skeptic and not a Christian, Erasmus responded indignantly with his
Purgation against the Slanderous Letter of Luther. Erasmus' only
other work published in this period turned out to be one of his
most popular, On Preparing for Death.
At the beginning of this volume, Erasmus leaves Louvain to live in
Basel. Weary from the many controversies reflected in the letters
of the previous volumes, he is also anxious to see the annotations
to his third edition of the New Testament through Johann Froben's
press. Above all he fears that pressure from the imperial court in
the Netherlands will force him to take a public stand against
Luther. Erasmus completes a large number of works in the span of
this volume, including the Paraphrases on Matthew and John, two new
expanded editions of the Colloquies, an edition of De conscribendis
epistolis, two apologiae against his Spanish detractors, and
editions of Arnobius Junior and Hilary of Poitiers. But the
predominant theme of the volume remains 'the sorry business of
Luther.' The harder Erasmus persists in trying to adhere to a
reasonable course between Catholic and reforming zealots, the more
he finds himself 'a heretic to both sides.' His Catholic critics
appear the more dangerous. Among them are the papal nuncio Girolamo
Aleandro, who is bent on discrediting him at both the imperial and
papal courts as a supporter of Luther; the Spaniard Diego L pez Z
iga, who compiles a catalogue of Blasphemies and Impieties of
Erasmus of Rotterdam; and the Carmelite Nicholaas Baechem, who
denounces Erasmus both in public sermons and at private
'drinking-parties.' Erasmus' refusal to counsel severity against
the Lutherans is motivated chiefly by concern for peace and the
common good of Christendom, and not by any tender regard for Luther
and the other reformers. Still, many of the letters in this volume
testify to his growing aversion to the reformers, and we see him
moving perceptibly in the direction of his eventual public breach
with them. A special feature of this volume is the first fully
annotated translation of Erasmus' Catalogues Iucubrationum (Ep 1341
A), an extremely important document for the study of Erasmus' life
and works and of the controversies they aroused. Volume 9 of the
Collected Works of Erasmus series.
This volume includes Erasmus' correspondence for the months April
1532 to April 1533, a period in which he feared a religious civil
war in Germany. In his desire to move somewhere far enough from
Germany to be safe and yet not so far that an old man could not
undertake the journey, Erasmus eventually decided to accept the
invitation from Mary of Hungary, regent of the Netherlands, to
return to his native Brabant. In March 1533, the terms of Erasmus'
return were settled and in July they were formally approved by the
emperor. But by this time Erasmus' fragile health had already
declined to the point that he could not undertake the journey, and
he would never recover sufficiently to do so. The works published
in the months covered by this volume include the eighth,
much-enlarged edition of the Adagia, and the Explanatio symboli,
the catechism that delighted Erasmus' followers but gave Martin
Luther much ammunition for a brutal attack on him in his Epistola
de Erasmo Roterodamo of 1534.
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