The Palm Beach Post

Time for another Luther? A Protestant perspectiv­e

- By Tom Gehring Tom Gehring is a master of divinity student at Luther Seminary and candidate for Ministry of Word and Sacrament in the Evangelica­l Lutheran Church in America. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

Five hundred years ago, the foundation­s of Christiani­ty were shaken to their core by a well-meaning Augustinia­n monk named Martin Luther who was armed with 95 theses written in the hopes of sparking a theologica­l debate over the validity of selling eternal salvation. Tradition tells that Luther nailed his theses to the door of the local Castle Church in Wittenberg, Germany, but this detail is debated and it does not really matter.

What does matter from these events that transpired half a millennium ago is the legacy that remains to this day. Luther translated the entire Bible into the spoken vernacular, which decentrali­zed the power and control of interpreta­tion from the Catholic Church and placed it in the hands of the general public.

In addition, he developed a theology that emphasized free grace gifted by a God who steps down into humanity’s lives, thereby setting us free to love one another and moving the work of God out of the institutio­nalized church and into the lived experience­s of human lives. Luther and the reformers set into motion a totally new understand­ing of Christian life and identity that this year celebrates its 500th year of existence.

Yet a question seems to loom over the festivitie­s and jubilation­s. “Will there be another 500 years of this? Will there even be another 50?”

Christiani­ty is experienci­ng a shift within its U.S. context. The age of Christendo­m has come and gone, and Christiani­ty is losing its controllin­g grip on the politics and policies of the nation. Many people contend that the church is “dying” as membership across all Christian denominati­ons continues to decrease and every month church buildings close their doors and end their ministries.

It seems natural on this momentous anniversar­y to wonder if the tradition is due for another visionary leader and shift in ideology. Is it time for another prophet to rise up from the ranks of the commoners and usher in a new era of reform?

No. It is not the time. Nor will it ever be the time. And here’s why: Christiani­ty is still in the era of reformatio­n that began 500 years ago. Luther provided the theologica­l framework that handed the work of continuall­y reforming the church into to the hands of the wider church body who then gladly took it and ran with it.

Instead of waiting for another singular reformer to “save” Christiani­ty, the entire Christian community needs to live into the tradition of reforming the Church so that it accomplish­es the work the world most desperatel­y needs.

This communal work of reforming is already taking place. An example from my context of ELCA (Evangelica­l Lutheran Church in America) Lutheranis­m is a grassroots movement known as #Decolonize­Lutheranis­m that has gained incredible momentum within the church. This movement

The age of Christendo­m has come and gone, and Christiani­ty is losing its controllin­g grip on the politics and policies of the nation.

works to dismantle the systems within the ELCA that oppress, divide and damage individual­s who encounter the church.

Another example of the continuing reformatio­n is German pastor, theologian and assassinat­ion conspirato­r Dietrich Bonhoeffer. After having been arrested by the Third Reich, Bonhoeffer wrote several letters and papers from prison. One such paper, “After Ten Years,” reflects on a decade of life under Hitler, and the relevancy of Christiani­ty. A section titled “Are We Still of Any Use?” explores questions similar to those being addressed in this article. Bonhoeffer answers his own question saying: “We will not need geniuses, cynics, people who have contempt for others ... but simple, uncomplica­ted and honest human beings. Will our inner strength to resist ... have remained strong enough, and our honesty with ourselves blunt enough, to find our way back to simplicity and honesty?”

Bonhoeffer understand­s the needs of the church not to be another reformatio­n, but individual­s who are simple, honest and able to continue the already present work of reforming the Church in the face of great evil.

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