Shortly after the Reformation began, in the first few years after
Martin Luther posted the Ninety-Five Theses on the church door at
Wittenberg, he issued some short booklets on a variety of subjects. One
of the most provocative was titled The Babylonian Captivity of the Church.
In this book Luther was looking back to that period of Old Testament
history when Jerusalem was destroyed by the invading armies of Babylon
and the elite of the people were carried off into captivity. Luther in
the sixteenth century took the image of the historic Babylonian
captivity and reapplied it to his era and talked about the new
Babylonian captivity of the Church. He was speaking of Rome as the
modern Babylon that held the Gospel hostage with its rejection of the
biblical understanding of justification. You can understand how fierce
the controversy was, how polemical this title would be in that period by
saying that the Church had not simply erred or strayed, but had fallen —
that it’s actually now Babylonian; it is now in pagan captivity.
I’ve often wondered if Luther were alive today and came to our
culture and looked, not at the liberal church community, but at
evangelical churches, what would he have to say? Of course I can’t
answer that question with any kind of definitive authority, but my guess
is this: If Martin Luther lived today and picked up his pen to write,
the book he would write in our time would be entitled The Pelagian Captivity of the Evangelical Church. Luther saw the doctrine of justification as fueled by a deeper theological problem. He writes about this extensively in The Bondage of the Will.
When we look at the Reformation and we see the solas of the Reformation
— sola Scriptura, sola fide, solus Christus, soli Deo gloria, sola
gratia — Luther was convinced that the real issue of the Reformation was
the issue of grace; and that underlying the doctrine of solo fide,
justification by faith alone, was the prior commitment to sola gratia,
the concept of justification by grace alone. Keep Reading >>>
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