The Luther Reading Challenge

The Luther Reading Challenge April 10, 2015

Some people from the Institute for Ecumenical Research in Strasburg, France, have been teaching Luther and his theology to an international crowd in Wittenberg for the last six years.  They have been amazed at how Luther’s articulation of the Gospel addresses contemporary issues and contemporary religious struggles.

So in conjunction with Lutheran Forum, this group is sponsoring a Luther Reading Challenge.

You can go to this  website to find free readings from Luther.  You can discuss them here and in groups of your own.  The reading project will continue until the 500th anniversary of Luther’s posting of the 95 Theses, which will be on October 31, 2017.

Read about it after the jump and take the Luther Reading Challenge!

From Sarah Hinlicky Wilson, Luther Reading Challenge  | First Things:

In 2009, my colleague Theodor Dieter and I started teaching a two-week course every November on Luther’s theology, for Lutheran pastors from all over the world, in no less venerable a location than Wittenberg itself. We approached the first year with post-Christendom and post-colonial qualms. Did Luther have anything to say to people anymore? Was it pure anachronistic antiquarianism on our part still to love him? Did we have any business inflicting Luther on Africans struggling with malaria and tremendous political violence, or on Asians negotiating a level of religious plurality unimaginable to North Atlantic Christians like ourselves?

Over the past six years, we have been astonished—and certainly relieved—to find that Luther sounds as contemporaneous as ever. The force of the response is the same year after year. Some participants meet afresh a Luther who cuts through the obfuscating fuddle of five centuries of Lutheranism. Others discover a new guide to ancient religious problems that took shape outside the orbit of European culture. Luther’s way of speaking the gospel—of Christ as gift and sacrament before he is example and teacher—transgresses the obstacles of the centuries with astounding ease.

As this experience repeated itself with every passing year, we looked for a way to extend it beyond our wonderful fortnights in autumnal east Germany. We also wanted to deal with the resilient misinformation that continues to cloud our favorite reformer from view. We have heard it all, so many times over. Luther the first modern man, champion of conscience. Luther the proto-Nazi and forefather of the Holocaust. Luther the heresiarch, divider of the church, singlehandedly wrecking the medieval synthesis; or, in diametrical opposition, Luther the repristinator of the lost purity of the apostolic ekklesia. Luther’s commendation of faith turned into the limitless greed of the prosperity gospel, his teaching on the Lord’s Supper erroneously nicknamed “consubstantiation,” his two-kingdoms doctrine condemned as flabby quietism or invoked to defend any number of mutually contradictory political agendas.

Faced with such challenges, what do good Lutherans do? They head ad fontes, back to the sources.

Luckily, we are today in the midst of a social media revolution as dramatic as the pamphleteering racket of Luther’s day. We do love paper, but it has its physical (and financial) limitations, so at risk of bibliographic docetism that we have warmly embraced the gnostic universality of the internet with the launch of the Luther Reading Challenge. Just one month old, the Challenge invites a virtual community to gather in reading and discussing Luther’s seminal writings, from now until October 2017.

Inevitably, the Challenge begins with the beginning of the Reformation itself, namely the Ninety-Five Theses. But as ecumenists we have grown a bit skeptical of the tendency on all sides of this half-millennium-old dispute to focus on the disagreements. It’s not that these are irrelevant, but they do tend to serve a certain agenda justifying ongoing Christian division. And they obscure other, less famous aspects of Luther: the pastor concerned with the care of souls, the exegete, the friend and prolific letter-writer, the husband and father, the hymnist, even—in the words of Cardinal Jan Willebrands—a “doctor communis,” a term Catholics reserve for Thomas Aquinas. Luther fought, but his theology didn’t depend on an enemy to make its case. Its purpose was to witness to the unexpected, unmerited, unequivocal love of God for sinful people. Our choices of texts reflect that alternate vision of Luther.

[Keep reading. . . ]

To take up the challenge and to get the readings posted for free online, go here.

"Dakota, I urge you to show your pastor all that you've written here. If not ..."

Babyboomer Childhood
"Well, I guess I must beg to differ, this last comment sounds a lot more ..."

Beliefs as Status Symbols
"I remember my dad throwing a baseball with me but I was hopeless and invariably ..."

Babyboomer Childhood

Browse Our Archives