Beacon Lights of History eBook

John Lord
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 360 pages of information about Beacon Lights of History.

Beacon Lights of History eBook

John Lord
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 360 pages of information about Beacon Lights of History.
or are dead, in the absorbing materialism of this Epicurean yet brilliant age?  I know this, that I am true to history when I declare that the glorious Reformation in which we all profess to rejoice, and which is the greatest movement, and the best, of our modern time,—­susceptible of indefinite application, interlinked with the literature and the progress of England and America,—­took its first great spiritual start from the ideas of Luther as to justification.  This was the voice of heaven’s messenger proclaiming aloud, so that the heavens re-echoed to the glorious and triumphant annunciation, and the earth heard and rejoiced with exceeding joy, “Behold, I send tidings of salvation:  it is grace, divine grace, which shall undermine the throne of popes and pagans, and reconcile a fallen world to God!”

Yes, it was a Christian philosopher, a theologian,—­a doctor of divinity, working out in his cell and study, through terrible internal storm and anguish, and against the whole teaching of monks and bishops and popes and universities, from the time of Charlemagne, the same truth which Augustine learned in his wonderful experiences,—­who started the Reformation in the right direction; who became the greatest benefactor of these modern times, because he based his work on everlasting and positive ideas, which had life in them, and hope, and the sanction of divine authority; thus virtually invoking the aid of God Almighty to bring about and restore the true glory of his Church on earth,—­a glory forever to be identified with the death of his Son.  I see no law of progress here, no natural and necessary development of nations; I see only the light and power of individual genius, brushing away the cobwebs and sophistries and frauds of the Middle Ages, and bringing out to the gaze of Europe the vital truth which, with supernatural aid, made in old times the day of Pentecost.  And I think I hear the emancipated people of Saxony exclaim, from the Elector downwards, “If these ideas of Doctor Luther are true, and we feel them to be, then all our penances have been worse than wasted,—­we have been Pagans.  Away with our miserable efforts to scale the heavens!  Let us accept what we cannot buy; let us make our palaces and our cottages alike vocal with the praises of Him whom we now accept as our Deliverer, our King, and our Eternal Lord.”

Thus was born the first great idea of the Reformation, out of Luther’s brain, out of his agonized soul, and sent forth to conquer, and produce changes most marvellous to behold.

It is not my object to discuss the truth or error of this fundamental doctrine.  There are many who deny it, even among Protestants.  I am not a controversialist, or a theologian:  I am simply an historian.  I wish to show what is historically true and clear; and I defy all the scholars and critics of the world to prove that this doctrine is not the basal pillar of the Reformation of Luther.  I wish to make emphatic the statement that justification by faith was, as an historical fact, the great primal idea of Luther; not new, but new to him and to his age.

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Project Gutenberg
Beacon Lights of History from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.