The Great Controversy chapter 10

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Progress of Reform in Germany
Luther's mysterious disappearance excited consternation throughout
all Germany. Inquiries concerning him were heard everywhere. The
wildest rumors were circulated, and many believed that he had
been murdered. There was great lamentation, not only by his avowed
friends, but by thousands who had not openly taken their stand
with the Reformation. Many bound themselves by a solemn oath to
avenge his death.
The Romish leaders saw with terror to what a pitch had risen
the feeling against them. Though at first exultant at the supposed
death of Luther, they soon desired to hide from the wrath of the
people. His enemies had not been so troubled by his most daring
acts while among them as they were at his removal. Those who in
their rage had sought to destroy the bold Reformer were filled
with fear now that he had become a helpless captive. "The
only remaining way of saving ourselves," said one, "is
to light torches, and hunt for Luther through the whole world,
to restore him to the nation that is calling for him."--D'Aubigne,
b. 9, ch. 1. The edict of the emperor seemed to fall powerless.
The papal legates were filled with indignation as they saw that
it commanded far less attention than did the fate of Luther.
The tidings that he was safe, though a prisoner, calmed the
fears of the people, while it still further aroused their enthusiasm
in his favor. His writings were read with greater 
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eagerness than ever before. Increasing numbers joined the cause
of the heroic man who had, at such fearful odds, defended the
word of God. The Reformation was constantly gaining in strength.
The seed which Luther had sown sprang up everywhere. His absence
accomplished a work which his presence would have failed to do.
Other laborers felt a new responsibility, now that their great
leader was removed. With new faith and earnestness they pressed
forward to do all in their power, that the work so nobly begun
might not be hindered.
But Satan was not idle. He now attempted what he has attempted
in every other reformatory movement--to deceive and destroy the
people by palming off upon them a counterfeit in place of the
true work. As there were false christs in the first century of
the Christian church, so there arose false prophets in the sixteenth
century.
A few men, deeply affected by the excitement in the religious
world, imagined themselves to have received special revelations
from Heaven, and claimed to have been divinely commissioned to
carry forward to its completion the Reformation which, they declared,
had been but feebly begun by Luther. In truth, they were undoing
the very work which he had accomplished. They rejected the great
principle which was the very foundation of the Reformation--that
the word of God is the all-sufficient rule of faith and practice;
and for that unerring guide they substituted the changeable, uncertain
standard of their own feelings and impressions. By this act of
setting aside the great detector of error and falsehood the way
was opened for Satan to control minds as best pleased himself.
One of these prophets claimed to have been instructed by the
angel Gabriel. A student who united with him forsook his studies,
declaring that he had been endowed by God Himself with wisdom
to expound His word. Others who were naturally inclined to fanaticism
united with them. The proceedings of these enthusiasts created
no little excitement. 
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The preaching of Luther had aroused the people everywhere to
feel the necessity of reform, and now some really honest persons
were misled by the pretensions of the new prophets.
The leaders of the movement proceeded to Wittenberg and urged
their claims upon Melanchthon and his colaborers. Said they: "We
are sent by God to instruct the people. We have held familiar
conversations with the Lord; we know what will happen; in a word,
we are apostles and prophets, and appeal to Dr. Luther."--Ibid.,
b. 9, ch. 7.
The Reformers were astonished and perplexed. This was such
an element as they had never before encountered, and they knew
not what course to pursue. Said Melanchthon: "There are indeed
extraordinary spirits in these men; but what spirits? . . . On
the one hand, let us beware of quenching the Spirit of God, and
on the other, of being led astray by the spirit of Satan."--Ibid.,
b. 9, ch. 7.
The fruit of the new teaching soon became apparent. The people
were led to neglect the Bible or to cast it wholly aside. The
schools were thrown into confusion. Students, spurning all restraint,
abandoned their studies and withdrew from the university. The
men who thought themselves competent to revive and control the
work of the Reformation succeeded only in bringing it to the verge
of ruin. The Romanists now regained their confidence and exclaimed
exultingly: "One last struggle, and all will be ours."--Ibid.,
b. 9, ch. 7.
Luther at the Wartburg, hearing of what had occurred, said
with deep concern: "I always expected that Satan would send
us this plague."--Ibid., b. 9, ch. 7. He perceived the true
character of those pretended prophets and saw the danger that
threatened the cause of truth. The opposition of the pope and
the emperor had not caused him so great perplexity and distress
as he now experienced. From the professed friends of the Reformation
had risen its worst enemies. The very truths which had brought
him so great joy and 
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consolation were being employed to stir up strife and create
confusion in the church.
In the work of reform, Luther had been urged forward by the
Spirit of God, and had been carried beyond himself. He had not
purposed to take such positions as he did, or to make so radical
changes. He had been but the instrument in the hand of Infinite
Power. Yet he often trembled for the result of his work. He had
once said: "If I knew that my doctrine injured one man, one
single man, however lowly and obscure,--which it cannot, for it
is the gospel itself,-- I would rather die ten times than not
retract it."--Ibid., b. 9, ch. 7.
And now Wittenberg itself, the very center of the Reformation,
was fast falling under the power of fanaticism and lawlessness.
This terrible condition had not resulted from the teachings of
Luther; but throughout Germany his enemies were charging it upon
him. In bitterness of soul he sometimes asked: "Can such,
then, be the end of this great work of the Reformation?"--Ibid.,
b. 9, ch. 7. Again, as he wrestled with God in prayer, peace flowed
into his heart. "The work is not mine, but Thine own,"
he said; "Thou wilt not suffer it to be corrupted by superstition
or fanaticism." But the thought of remaining longer from
the conflict in such a crisis, became insupportable. He determined
to return to Wittenberg.
Without delay he set out on his perilous journey. He was under
the ban of the empire. Enemies were at liberty to take his life;
friends were forbidden to aid or shelter him. The imperial government
was adopting the most stringent measures against his adherents.
But he saw that the work of the gospel was imperiled, and in the
name of the Lord he went out fearlessly to battle for the truth.
In a letter to the elector, after stating his purpose to leave
the Wartburg, Luther said: "Be it known to your highness
that I am going to Wittenberg under a protection far higher than
that of princes and electors. I think not of soliciting your highness's
support, and far from desiring your protection, 
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I would rather protect you myself. If I knew that your highness
could or would protect me, I would not go to Wittenberg at all.
There is no sword that can further this cause. God alone must
do everything, without the help or concurrence of man. He who
has the greatest faith is he who is most able to protect."--Ibid.,
b. 9, ch. 8.
In a second letter, written on the way to Wittenberg, Luther
added: "I am ready to incur the displeasure of your highness
and the anger of the whole world. Are not the Wittenbergers my
sheep? Has not God entrusted them to me? And ought I not, if necessary,
to expose myself to death for their sakes? Besides, I fear to
see a terrible outbreak in Germany, by which God will punish our
nation."--Ibid., b. 9, ch. 7.
With great caution and humility, yet with decision and firmness,
he entered upon his work. "By the word," said he, "must
we overthrow and destroy what has been set up by violence. I will
not make use of force against the superstitious and unbelieving.
. . . No one must be constrained. Liberty is the very essence
of faith."--Ibid., b. 9, ch. 8.
It was soon noised through Wittenberg that Luther had returned
and that he was to preach. The people flocked from all directions,
and the church was filled to overflowing. Ascending the pulpit,
he with great wisdom and gentleness instructed, exhorted, and
reproved. Touching the course of some who had resorted to violent
measures in abolishing the mass, he said:
"The mass is a bad thing; God is opposed to it; it ought
to be abolished; and I would that throughout the whole world it
were replaced by the supper of the gospel. But let no one be torn
from it by force. We must leave the matter in God's hands. His
word must act, and not we. And why so? you will ask. Because I
do not hold men's hearts in my hand, as the potter holds the clay.
We have a right to speak: we have not the right to act. Let us
preach; the rest belongs unto God. Were I to employ force, what
should I gain? Grimace, formality, apings, human ordinances, and
hypocrisy. . . . But there would be no sincerity 
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of heart, nor faith, nor charity. Where these three are wanting,
all is wanting, and I would not give a pear stalk for such a result.
. . . God does more by His word alone than you and I and all the
world by our united strength. God lays hold upon the heart; and
when the heart is taken, all is won. . . .
"I will preach, discuss, and write; but I will constrain
none, for faith is a voluntary act. See what I have done. I stood
up against the pope, indulgences, and papists, but without violence
or tumult. I put forward God's word; I preached and wrote--this
was all I did. And yet while I was asleep, . . . the word that
I had preached overthrew popery, so that neither prince nor emperor
has done it so much harm. And yet I did nothing; the word alone
did all. If I had wished to appeal to force, the whole of Germany
would perhaps have been deluged with blood. But what would have
been the result? Ruin and desolation both to body and soul. I
therefore kept quiet, and left the word to run through the world
alone."--Ibid., b. 9, ch. 8.
Day after day, for a whole week, Luther continued to preach
to eager crowds. The word of God broke the spell of fanatical
excitement. The power of the gospel brought back the misguided
people into the way of truth.
Luther had no desire to encounter the fanatics whose course
had been productive of so great evil. He knew them to be men of
unsound judgment and undisciplined passions, who, while claiming
to be specially illuminated from heaven, would not endure the
slightest contradiction or even the kindest reproof or counsel.
Arrogating to themselves supreme authority, they required everyone,
without a question, to acknowledge their claims. But, as they
demanded an interview with him, he consented to meet them; and
so successfully did he expose their pretensions that the impostors
at once departed from Wittenberg.
The fanaticism was checked for a time; but several years later
it broke out with greater violence and more terrible results.
Said Luther, concerning the leaders in this movement: 
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"To them the Holy Scriptures were but a dead letter, and
they all began to cry, 'The Spirit! the Spirit!' But most assuredly
I will not follow where their spirit leads them. May God of His
mercy preserve me from a church in which there are none but saints.
I desire to dwell with the humble, the feeble, the sick, who know
and feel their sins, and who groan and cry continually to God
from the bottom of their hearts to obtain His consolation and
support."--Ibid., b. 10, ch. 10.
Thomas Munzer, the most active of the fanatics, was a man of
considerable ability, which, rightly directed, would have enabled
him to do good; but he had not learned the first principles of
true religion. "He was possessed with a desire of reforming
the world, and forgot, as all enthusiasts do, that the reformation
should begin with himself."--Ibid., b. 9, ch. 8. He was ambitious
to obtain position and influence, and was unwilling to be second,
even to Luther. He declared that the Reformers, in substituting
the authority of Scripture for that of the pope, were only establishing
a different form of popery. He himself, he claimed, had been divinely
commissioned to introduce the true reform. "He who possesses
this spirit," said Munzer, "possesses the true faith,
although he should never see the Scriptures in his life."--Ibid.,
b. 10, ch. 10.
The fanatical teachers gave themselves up to be governed by
impressions, regarding every thought and impulse as the voice
of God; consequently they went to great extremes. Some even burned
their Bibles, exclaiming: "The letter killeth, but the Spirit
giveth life." Munzer's teaching appealed to men's desire
for the marvelous, while it gratified their pride by virtually
placing human ideas and opinions above the word of God. His doctrines
were received by thousands. He soon denounced all order in public
worship, and declared that to obey princes was to attempt to serve
both God and Belial.
The minds of the people, already beginning to throw off the
yoke of the papacy, were also becoming impatient under the restraints
of civil authority. Munzer's revolutionary 
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teachings, claiming divine sanction, led them to break away
from all control and give the rein to their prejudices and passions.
The most terrible scenes of sedition and strife followed, and
the fields of Germany were drenched with blood.
The agony of soul which Luther had so long before experienced
at Erfurt now pressed upon him with redoubled power as he saw
the results of fanaticism charged upon the Reformation. The papist
princes declared--and many were ready to credit the statement--that
the rebellion was the legitimate fruit of Luther's doctrines.
Although this charge was without the slightest foundation, it
could not but cause the Reformer great distress. That the cause
of truth should be thus disgraced by being ranked with the basest
fanaticism, seemed more than he could endure. On the other hand,
the leaders in the revolt hated Luther because he had not only
opposed their doctrines and denied their claims to divine inspiration,
but had pronounced them rebels against the civil authority. In
retaliation they denounced him as a base pretender. He seemed
to have brought upon himself the enmity of both princes and people.
The Romanists exulted, expecting to witness the speedy downfall
of the Reformation; and they blamed Luther, even for the errors
which he had been most earnestly endeavoring to correct. The fanatical
party, by falsely claiming to have been treated with great injustice,
succeeded in gaining the sympathies of a large class of the people,
and, as is often the case with those who take the wrong side,
they came to be regarded as martyrs. Thus the ones who were exerting
every energy in opposition to the Reformation were pitied and
lauded as the victims of cruelty and oppression. This was the
work of Satan, prompted by the same spirit of rebellion which
was first manifested in heaven.
Satan is constantly seeking to deceive men and lead them to
call sin righteousness, and righteousness sin. How successful
has been his work! How often censure and reproach are cast upon
God's faithful servants because they 
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will stand fearlessly in defense of the truth! Men who are
but agents of Satan are praised and flattered, and even looked
upon as martyrs, while those who should be respected and sustained
for their fidelity to God, are left to stand alone, under suspicion
and distrust.
Counterfeit holiness, spurious sanctification, is still doing
its work of deception. Under various forms it exhibits the same
spirit as in the days of Luther, diverting minds from the Scriptures
and leading men to follow their own feelings and impressions rather
than to yield obedience to the law of God. This is one of Satan's
most successful devices to cast reproach upon purity and truth.
Fearlessly did Luther defend the gospel from the attacks which
came from every quarter. The word of God proved itself a weapon
mighty in every conflict. With that word he warred against the
usurped authority of the pope, and the rationalistic philosophy
of the schoolmen, while he stood firm as a rock against the fanaticism
that sought to ally itself with the Reformation.
Each of these opposing elements was in its own way setting
aside the Holy Scriptures and exalting human wisdom as the source
of religious truth and knowledge. Rationalism idolizes reason
and makes this the criterion for religion. Romanism, claiming
for her sovereign pontiff an inspiration descended in unbroken
line from the apostles, and unchangeable through all time, gives
ample opportunity for every species of extravagance and corruption
to be concealed under the sanctity of the apostolic commission.
The inspiration claimed by Munzer and his associates proceeded
from no higher source than the vagaries of the imagination, and
its influence was subversive of all authority, human or divine.
True Christianity receives the word of God as the great treasure
house of inspired truth and the test of all inspiration.
Upon his return from the Wartburg, Luther completed his translation
of the New Testament, and the gospel was soon after given to the
people of Germany in their own 
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language. This translation was received with great joy by all
who loved the truth; but it was scornfully rejected by those who
chose human traditions and the commandments of men.
The priests were alarmed at the thought that the common people
would now be able to discuss with them the precepts of God's word,
and that their own ignorance would thus be exposed. The weapons
of their carnal reasoning were powerless against the sword of
the Spirit. Rome summoned all her authority to prevent the circulation
of the Scriptures; but decrees, anathemas, and tortures were alike
in vain. The more she condemned and prohibited the Bible, the
greater was the anxiety of the people to know what it really taught.
All who could read were eager to study the word of God for themselves.
They carried it about with them, and read and reread, and could
not be satisfied until they had committed large portions to memory.
Seeing the favor with which the New Testament was received, Luther
immediately began the translation of the Old, and published it
in parts as fast as completed.
Luther's writings were welcomed alike in city and in hamlet.
"What Luther and his friends composed, others circulated.
Monks, convinced of the unlawfulness of monastic obligations,
desirous of exchanging a long life of slothfulness for one of
active exertion, but too ignorant to proclaim the word of God,
traveled through the provinces, visiting hamlets and cottages,
where they sold the books of Luther and his friends. Germany soon
swarmed with these bold colporteurs." --Ibid., b. 9, ch.
11.
These writings were studied with deep interest by rich and
poor, the learned and the ignorant. At night the teachers of the
village schools read them aloud to little groups gathered at the
fireside. With every effort some souls would be convicted of the
truth and, receiving the word with gladness, would in their turn
tell the good news to others. 
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The words of Inspiration were verified: "The entrance
of Thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple."
Psalm 119:130. The study of the Scriptures was working a mighty
change in the minds and hearts of the people. The papal rule had
placed upon its subjects an iron yoke which held them in ignorance
and degradation. A superstitious observance of forms had been
scrupulously maintained; but in all their service the heart and
intellect had had little part. The preaching of Luther, setting
forth the plain truths of God's word, and then the word itself,
placed in the hands of the common people, had aroused their dormant
powers, not only purifying and ennobling the spiritual nature,
but imparting new strength and vigor to the intellect.
Persons of all ranks were to be seen with the Bible in their
hands, defending the doctrines of the Reformation. The papists
who had left the study of the Scriptures to the priests and monks
now called upon them to come forward and refute the new teachings.
But, ignorant alike of the Scriptures and of the power of God,
priests and friars were totally defeated by those whom they had
denounced as unlearned and heretical. "Unhappily," said
a Catholic writer, "Luther had persuaded his followers to
put no faith in any other oracle than the Holy Scriptures."--D'Aubigne,
b. 9, ch. 11. Crowds would gather to hear the truth advocated
by men of little education, and even discussed by them with learned
and eloquent theologians. The shameful ignorance of these great
men was made apparent as their arguments were met by the simple
teachings of God's word. Laborers, soldiers, women, and even children,
were better acquainted with the Bible teachings than were the
priests and learned doctors.
The contrast between the disciples of the gospel and the upholders
of popish superstition was no less manifest in the ranks of scholars
than among the common people. "Opposed to the old champions
of the hierarchy, who had neglected 
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the study of languages and the cultivation of literature, .
. . were generous-minded youth, devoted to study, investigating
Scripture, and familiarizing themselves with the masterpieces
of antiquity. Possessing an active mind, an elevated soul, and
intrepid heart, these young men soon acquired such knowledge that
for a long period none could compete with them. . . . Accordingly,
when these youthful defenders of the Reformation met the Romish
doctors in any assembly, they attacked them with such ease and
confidence that these ignorant men hesitated, became embarrassed,
and fell into a contempt merited in the eyes of all."--Ibid.,
b. 9, ch. 11.
As the Romish clergy saw their congregations diminishing, they
invoked the aid of the magistrates, and by every means in their
power endeavored to bring back their hearers. But the people had
found in the new teachings that which supplied the wants of their
souls, and they turned away from those who had so long fed them
with the worthless husks of superstitious rites and human traditions.
When persecution was kindled against the teachers of the truth,
they gave heed to the words of Christ: "When they persecute
you in this city, flee ye into another." Matthew 10:23. The
light penetrated everywhere. The fugitives would find somewhere
a hospitable door opened to them, and there abiding, they would
preach Christ, sometimes in the church, or, if denied that privilege,
in private houses or in the open air. Wherever they could obtain
a hearing was a consecrated temple. The truth, proclaimed with
such energy and assurance, spread with irresistible power.
In vain both ecclesiastical and civil authorities were invoked
to crush the heresy. In vain they resorted to imprisonment, torture,
fire, and sword. Thousands of believers sealed their faith with
their blood, and yet the work went on. Persecution served only
to extend the truth, and the fanaticism which Satan endeavored
to unite with it resulted in making more clear the contrast between
the work of Satan and the work of God.

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