Pages

Thursday, October 15, 2009

An Argument Against An Infallible Papacy, Luther Style


Recently Concordia Publishing House released Luther's Works Volume 69. It's a new English translation of Luther's writing not previously available in English. While the volume is primarily a verse by verse commentary of John 17-20, interspersed are some interesting apologetic arguments against Romanism. (A word of caution: if you follow the above link to Concordia Publishing and fill out the form to receive the new volume of Luther's Works, it may arrive at your door in a few days, without paying for it first. The invoice arrived a day before the book showed up at my front door. Only fill out the form if you plan on buying the book).

One such argument concerns the papacy and infallibility. Without anything explicit establishing either Biblically, Roman Catholics read much into such texts like Matthew 16. Without anything explicit, the argument is typically one of inference. For instance, Catholic Answers states, "Whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven" (Matt. 16:19). Here Peter was singled out for the authority that provides for the forgiveness of sins and the making of disciplinary rules." " It was Simon, weak as he was, who was chosen to become the rock and thus the first link in the chain of the papacy." Of course, Luther dealt with similar arguments. The following is his response from Luther's Works, Volume 69, pp. 178- 181. Luther is commenting on John 18:13, concerning Annas and Caiaphas, the Jewish high priests.



But I want to come now to theology and doctrine. We should learn here that no one should place his trust in men, even if he is in an estate ordained by God. But if we are not to believe nor to put our trust in Annas and Caiaphas, how are we to believe or trust the devil, the pope in Rome, the monks in monasteries, or the godless bishops? God so thoroughly forbids putting trust in any man that one should not even trust in those who are in the highest, best, and most secure estates. For no estate on earth has been so gloriously confirmed as was the estate of Annas and Caiaphas. If Annas and Caiaphas became scoundrels in their order and estate, even though it was the most exalted on earth, then you should learn from this not to esteem any man on the basis of his estate or see. The papal jurists exalted their pope and said, "Non est praesumendum, quod tantae altitudinis apex possit errare"- "It is not to be presumed that the pope in such a lofty station can err." Against this claim I set the following: Annas and Caiaphas occupy a loftier position and sit on a greater throne than do the pope and the emperor. Yet they not only err but also are scoundrels and knaves-the worst scoundrels and knaves ever to have lived on earth, for they crucified the Son of God. We know this from the wicked things they did to Christ, so that we hold them in scorn whenever we speak their names. But we should recognize that they were the most exalted people according to Gods ordinance, and their estate was the holiest and highest that ever was. Therefore, I should not hesitate to pull off [anyone else's] mask and say, "I must not put my trust here, even if it is what the pope or a cardinal or the emperor says,for even the most exalted of men can err and go astray."

But if you now say, "Whom, then, are we to trust and believe?" read the First Commandment: "I the Lord your God am a jealous God"[Exod. 20:5]. There it is clearly written whom you are to trust: namely, the Lord God alone. So now if the pope says something, I am not obligated to hold to it unless,to be sure, he brings God's Word. For God says that we are to fear and trust Him only, even if He speaks to us through a donkey [cf. Num. 22:28-30]. For this reason you should say: "Dear pope, you are high, holy, learned. But that you cannot err on that account-that I don't believe." If, indeed, they say, "Do you think the councils can err?" answer them this: "Haven't you read about two men, Annas and Caiaphas by name, who were scoundrels? Now if such eminent people, in such a high, holy estate, ordained and instituted by God, have fallen away even to the point of crucifying God's Son, it follows that other men can also fall and err." Annas and Caiaphas were much more learned and wise, and the obedience due them was much greater than that due the pope. This is evident in that though everyone else among the Jews heard Christ's preaching and saw His miracles, no one dared acknowledge or follow Him publicly [John 12:42]; and when Christ was taken captive, no one dared to make himself known, so great were the respect and obedience accorded the high priest by the whole people.

So note well John's words: "Caiaphas was high priest for the year." And yet that same high priest may be such a scoundrel and knave that he crucifies the Son of God. The office of high priest was, indeed, the highest office and the most glorious title, and yet the worst scoundrels held this office and title. Now, since the high priests have done such things, we should not henceforth believe any man unless he brings with him God's clear, pure Word. St. Paul says in 1 Corinthians 4[:2], "Nothing is more requisite of stewards than that they be found faithful." You should pay close attention to whether such a one is faithful, for all kinds of shortcomings in a preacher or bishop can be tolerated, but unfaithfulness cannot and should not be tolerated in them.... Is it possible for the pope not to err when these two, Annas and Caiaphas, who were instituted in office by God much more gloriously than any pope, not only erred but lapsed so shamefully that they condemned the Son of God to death?

This was the glory of the high priests: that the people had been commanded to accept everything they said [Deut. 17:12].133 The pope does not possess such a glory. Now, if you conclude from this as follows: "The high priest's judgment must be accepted; Annas and Caiaphas are the high priests of the people, and they judge and decide that Christ must be slain; therefore, one must accept this judgment of the high priests"-then you have been deceived already! Therefore, the Holy Spirit put this here to teach the contrary-that Annas and Caiaphas were high priests at the time, and yet Christ was condemned to death by their judgment?so that no one would put his confidence in any human being, no matter how high and holy he may be.

Bishops, cardinals, and the entire papal clergy rest on this foundation: "The Christian Church cannot err; therefore, the pope likewise cannot err since he is the head of the Church." But you, forearm yourself against this and say: "Pope this, pope that! If Caiaphas could err, so also can the pope." And he proves this with his deeds as well. For the pope denies Christ and kills Him, just as those high priests denied Christ and sentenced Him to death. We would not have expected to read that the high priests Annas and Caiaphas crucified Christ. Rather, it should say, "Barabbas crucified Christ." But the evangelist says 'that Christ was led bound, first to Annas, and then to Caiaphas, who was the high priest for the year, in order to indicate this extraordinary and astonishing fact: that the highest and holiest of people on earth are often God's worst enemies. For this reason we should not put our trust in any human being, even if he occupies a high office and a position of great glory.

11 comments:

  1. That is an argument I have not heard before.

    ReplyDelete
  2. If none should put their faith in human beings, then why put faith in scripture, either? For Scripture is the mish-mash product of humans, from the poetry of genesis to the dilirium of revelations. Teasing out anything remotely sensible from this pile of human writing is neigh well impossible, leading of course to the endless sects of protestantism.

    We should trust ourselves and our reason. That is enough.

    ReplyDelete
  3. But, Burk you are a human. Why should I trust what you said? Your argument is incoherent.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi, Andrew-

    I am not asking you to put your faith in me, but in yourself, where it was all along anyhow. There is no authority that comes without that baggage of being human, as every argument you make demonstrates. Even if the perfect truth were to reside in the Koran, as it is supposed to, it is our interpretation of it that we follow. The many schools of interpretation indicate that whatever a writing's original truth or untruth, we are incapable of recognizing it except by our own reasoning and experience. Recognize that, and you are there.

    ReplyDelete
  5. "We should trust ourselves and our reason. That is enough."

    My reason tells me to trust the scripture. What of that?

    ReplyDelete
  6. Right, so how can you trust it if you are spending reams of blog pages deciphering what it means, selecting those portions that mean something to you, and tossing out those that don't? Doesn't sound very trustworthy, but more like an excuse for figuring out what you already were thinking yourself.

    One could just as well "trust" the pope while doing what one wants to do anyhow, which is the customary Catholic practice. With a dollop of guilt.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Disagreement on the meaning of anything, be it the Bible, The Koran, or the directions for the DVD player, is not an argument against the things relability. It is possible to know what the bible means. It takes work, and people will disagree, but words mean things, and they can be understood.
    You are correct in saying that believing what you want and tossing out what you don't is wrong. That, I would assert, is one of the major causes of disagreement. It isn't that the scripture is unclear. It is that people claiming to believe it, don't believe it all. Unfortunatley Christians often are quick to assert "sola scriptura" while neglegting "tota scriptura".

    ReplyDelete
  8. Hi, Andrew-

    If a DVD manual is contradictory, then that would indeed impeach the reliability of our knowledge of the DVD player. The player might be reliable, but what's the point if you don't know what it is supposed to be reliable about, and also don't have any other means of interacting with that DVD player and judging its properties?

    The player, as god, is, after all, quite hidden, not performing miracles, etc. in the present day. So the manual is all you have to go on.

    And scripture is quite unclear. Large amounts have to be tossed out if other parts are going to make sense. Most of the old testament was, ahem, superceded by the new testament, except for the occasional Levitical command for which people still have a warm spot in their hearts. What the heck was god going on about all that time, anyhow? It's a huge mess, and a blanket statement like "It isn't that the scripture is unclear" totally fails to face up to the truth.

    Which is that you are picking and choosing by necessity.

    ReplyDelete
  9. No, there are no contradictions in scripture. Nothing is "tossed out" in order to make sense of the rest. At least, nothing has to be. What you are describing does happen, but it happens when somone clings to a system that is sub-biblical, or when somone hates God and needs a reason to not believe.

    ReplyDelete
  10. "For Scripture is the mish-mash product of humans, from the poetry of genesis to the dilirium of revelations."

    I just want to make sure that I'm correct about the terms of the argument; I take it that you deny the divine inspiration of scripture. Is that that right?

    Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  11. Yes- though it is hardly a question of denying. If I told you that the Harry Potter books were inspired, would you believe me? Or the Homeric poems, for that matter? A claim like that is absurd on its face, for that or any other book or story.

    The reverse is the case that has to be made- why one's chosen book has some super-special knowledge or inspiration which is quite obviously not immediately evident in its own text. (At least not until you get to the King James version, which is inspired!;)

    It never ceases to amaze me how books can claim to be the word of god and be taken seriously by the very same people who wouldn't dream of honoring the very same claim made for other books. What's the diff?

    I can imagine the dialog now:

    But it's based on truth!

    Oh, is Genesis true?

    That's poetic, ... no, I mean the Jesus story!

    So Tacitus is inspired also?

    No, you know what I mean- Jesus is true and also good- he tells us what to do and where we will go after we die.

    Does that mean Scientology is inspired as well?

    Sure- Scientology is also inspired, just not quite as well-inspired as the Bible. Indeed, it may have been inspired by Satan, but I'd have to check my e-meter on that one.

    ReplyDelete

You've gotta ask yourself one question: "Do I feel lucky?"