Ib. p. 450.
In the synod at Leipzig the lawyers concluded that secret contractors should be punished with banishment and be disinherited. Whereupon (said Luther) I sent them word that I would not allow thereof, it were too gross a proceeding, &c. But nevertheless I hold it fitting, that those which in such sort do secretly contract themselves, ought sharply to be reproved, yea, also in some measure severely punished.
What a sweet union of prudence and kind nature! Scold them sharply, and perhaps let them smart a while for their indiscretion and disobedience; and then kiss and make it up, remembering that young folks will be young folks, and that love has its own law and logic.
Chap. LIX. p. 481.
The presumption and boldness of the sophists
and School-divines is a
very ungodly thing, which some of the
Fathers also approved of and
extolled; namely of spiritual significations
in the Holy Scripture,
whereby she is pitifully tattered and
torn in pieces. It is an apish
work in such sort to juggle with Holy
Scripture: it is no otherwise
than if I should discourse of physic in
this manner: the fever is a
sickness, rhubarb is the physic.
The fever signified! the sins
—rhubarb is Jesus Christ, &c.
Who seeth not here (said Luther) that such significations are mere juggling tricks? Even so and after the same manner are they deceived that say, Children ought to be baptized again, because they had not faith.
For the life of me, I cannot find the ‘even so’ in this sentence. The watchman cries, ‘half-past three o’clock.’ Even so, and after the same manner, the great Cham of Tartary has a carbuncle on his nose.
Chap. LX. p. 483.
George in the Greek tongue, is called
a ‘builder’, that buildeth
countries and people with justice and
righteousness, &c.
A mistake for a tiller or boor, from ‘Bauer’, ‘bauen’. The latter hath two senses, to build and to bring into cultivation.
Chap. LXX. p. 503.
I am now advertised (said Luther) that a new astrologer is risen, who presumeth to prove that the earth moveth and goeth about, not the firmament, the sun and moon, nor the stars; like as when one who sitteth in a coach or in a ship and is moved, thinketh he sitteth still and resteth, but the earth and the trees go, run, and move themselves. Therefore thus it goeth, when we give up ourselves to our own foolish fancies and conceits. This fool will turn the whole art of astronomy upside-down, but the Scripture sheweth and teacheth him another lesson, when Joshua commanded the sun to stand still, and not the earth.
There is a similar, but still more intolerant and contemptuous anathema of the Copernican system in Sir Thomas Brown, almost two centuries later than Luther.
Though the problem is of no difficult solution for reflecting minds, yet for the reading many it would be a serviceable work, to bring together and exemplify the causes of the extreme and universal credulity that characterizes sundry periods of history (for example, from A.D. 1400 to A.D. 1650): and credulity involves lying and delusion—for by a seeming paradox liars are always credulous, though credulous persons are not always liars; although they most often are.