Book Review - Getting the Reformation Wrong

[amazon 0830838805 thumbnail]

“Hollywood history” is the name given to the movie industry’s presentations of persons and events in history. Implied in this term is the possibility that the “history” presented may or may not be accurate, or have even occurred—just as long as the story makes money for the producers. Sometimes in his attempt to find an illustration, a pastor does the same with Christian history. Payton’s book is an antidote to that kind of abuse and misuse of Reformation history.

He tells the reader:

This book arises from my ongoing fascination with and study of the Reformation. It was borne of a desire to expose, challenge and correct some misrepresentations of the Reformation which have become common. It comes as a call to appreciate, learn from and live out of the Reformation—not the Reformation of our fond imaginations, but the one which exploded on the European scene in the sixteenth century (p. 20).

It is my opinion that he succeeds with only one minor reservation, which I will mention later.

The chapter contents show that he has surveyed every side of the cauldron of events that we call the Reformation: (1) The Medieval Call for Reform, (2) The Renaissance: Friend or Foe?, (3) Carried Along by Misunderstandings, (4) Conflict Among the Reformers, (5) What the Reformers Meant by Sola Fide, (6) What the Reformers Meant by Sola Scriptura, (7) How the Anabaptists Fit In, (8) Reformation in Rome, (9) Changing Direction: From the Reformation to Protestant Scholasticism, (10) Was the Reformation a Success?, (11) Is the Reformation a Norm?, (12) The Reformation as Triumph and Tragedy.

Chapters 10-12 are his assessment of the Reformation. Chapter ten is a very good example of how to historically evaluate any movement. He cautions that as “a historical movement, it need not ‘succeed’ (whatever that might mean): it just was” (p. 211). But he “asks” each reformer what he would have “thought” of his own success. He then analyzes what happened in the second half of the sixteenth century. His answer? “It proved to be a significant but flawed product, often victor over opposition but also victim of its own weaknesses” (p. 233).

Some examples of “getting it wrong” would be Luther and his relationship to humanism and his use of the method of disputation. The Ninety-Five Theses were written out in the format used among the Scholastics. All of Luther’s university schooling was scholastic and this often brought him into conflict with those trained in the humanities. The Scholastics, and Luther too, loved “logomachies” (word wars) (p.64). The Humanists were disgusted with such verbal sparring. As Payton puts it:

The humanists initially did not realize that Luther had been trained entirely in the scholastic mode. They knew that he could not have become a member of a theological faculty without such training, of course: that was the norm in the early sixteenth century. But they assumed that somehow the Saxon professor had embraced their humanist perspectives…By the time it became unquestionably clear—sometime in the early 1520s—that Luther’s orientation was not entirely synchronized with that of Erasmus, many of the younger humanists had been captivated by Luther’s teachings and had become his followers. (pp. 81-82).

Payton also explains why Luther seemed slow in reforming. He was waiting until his congregation understood the doctrine of justification by faith alone. Luther did not want a reversion to the works-righteousness which had enslaved his own soul. “So, out of concern for the weak among the congregation who only slowly grasped the basic Reformation message, changes could only be gradually be introduced” (p. 95). This, of course, slowed change to a snail’s pace in Wittenberg. Luther also assumed that when the people understood the changes to be made, they “would gladly accept the changes and not even consider them as somehow commending them to God or earning righteousness before him” (p. 95). That seems a bit unrealistic, though, given the fact that at any one time a local church will include people at all levels of spiritual maturity.

On the other hand, some reformation advocates, especially those of the so-called Anabaptists, decided that spiritual maturity was necessary for baptism. Payton asserts that some Anabaptists insisted on disciple’s baptism.

To be sure, Anabaptists practiced baptism of adults, rather than infants. Indeed, Anabaptism means ‘baptism again’—a rebaptism which repudiated the baptism received as a child. However, while sixteenth-century Anabaptists rejected paedobaptism, they did not practice believers’ baptism (as it is commonly known today); instead, they practiced disciples’ baptism. The contemporary option of experiencing a conversion in one church service and being baptized in the next, a practice common in many such church circles, was foreign to sixteenth-century Anabaptists. They reserved baptism for committed disciples who had shown by their steadfast faith, self-discipline and wholehearted following of the ideal of the gathered community that they were genuine disciples. (p. 161)

Obviously, disciple’s baptism would contain within it the idea of believer’s baptism.

The only reservation I have about this book is how Payton describes the Reformation as a tragedy (chapter twelve). I found myself agreeing with his dismay over the 26,000 denominations in the USA, but disagreeing with what he says to do. He correctly laments the almost countless denominations that are scattered across the world, but his solution leaves much to be desired. He writes,

Even so, the multitudes of church splits which have ensued in Protestant ranks—beginning in the sixteenth century, and increasing in frequency subsequently and achieving breakneck pace by the early twenty-first century—have unquestionably managed to undermine the integrity of the gospel. (p. 257)

In Payton’s view this “integrity of the gospel” is the fulfillment of Jesus’ prayer for unity in John 17 (p. 251). It appears that Payton’s solution is the ecumenical one—that is, organizational union (p. 258). He writes,

We might find some significant help in this regard by listening to the Protestant Reformers’ recommendation that we look to the ancient church as a pattern to follow. While the Reformers held patristic teaching and practice in high regard in a host of ways, one of the undeniable strengths of Christian antiquity was the unity it manifested. Across the wide expanse of then-known world, in its various cultures and several languages, the ancient church managed to remain one. This unity was not a bland sameness: it allowed room for differences of emphasis, even for strong differences of opinion. But these were ‘family squabbles’ between brothers and sisters in Christ, not occasions for leaving the household and starting another. (p. 258)

Did not the Pope throw Luther out of the Church? Payton’s point seems to be driven by an ecumenical agenda, rather than by historical evaluation, and a historian of Payton’s caliber should know that there may be visible union without any unity.

Apart from the confusion regarding unity, I highly recommend this book. I have read it through three times. It will, no doubt, reward the repeated readings I intend to give to it.

Discussion

Charlie, I read the review and, because I don’t have time for more than this, want to comment on Bredenhof’s view of Anabaptist theology. He demonstrates neither knowledge of nor interest in Anabaptist theology and history, except through the eyes of one opponent. Guido de Bres was a dear believer and faithful martyr of the Christian faith, but using his writings to pass well-reasoned judgment on Anabaptist theology is like asking Keith Olbermann to give an unbiased judgment about Sarah Palin’s politics.

de Bres was the main writer responsible for the Belgic Confession, 1561. It says the following about his group’s view of the Anabaptists: “Whey detest the Anabaptists and other seditious people, and in general all those who reject the higher powers and magistrates and would subvert justice, introduce community of goods, and confound that decency and good order which God has established among men” (Art XXXVI)” Not far from de Bres homeland, Menno Simons (d. 1561) had already organized an expanding movment of Anabaptists in the Netherlands that was pacifist, not seditious. He always taught reverence to authority. de Bres, like many protestants of his day, lumped all Anabaptists together as a spiritual and social menace. He thoroughly misrepresented the Dutch Anabaptists (As well as the South German Anabaptists and the Swiss Anabaptists).

Bredenhof cites Melchior Hoffmann and Menno Simons as proof that the real division between the Anabaptists and the rest of Protestantism (for they really were historically a part of protestantism) was Christology, not baptism. That is a bit of nonsense. If Bredenhof had cared to read the writings of leading theologians of the Anabaptists, he would have found most of them to be quite sound theologically on the subject of Christology. Hoffmann’s views were repudiated by the Swiss Anabaptists before he had done much mission work. His views held sway among the radical branch of the Anabaptists, which was wiped out at Munster in 1535. Menno Simons, who became an Anabpatist in 1537, believed in the true Godhood and manhood of Jesus Christ but was convinced that the humanity of Christ came from heaven, since if it had come from Mary, it would have been tainted with sin. However, though he wrote on the subject, he refused to teach on it, since he felt the origin of Christ’s humanity was a matter too difficult for most Christians to begin to comprehend. Only the Anabaptists in Holland held to his view. It was rejected by the rest of the Anabaptists. After Menno’s death the Dutch Anabaptists dispensed with the doctrine as erroneus.

It is a real stretch to state that the main difference between the Anabaptists and the rest of the Reformers was Christology.

The writings of the Anabaptists, and most historical works about them show plainly that their contentions with the rest of the Reformers had to do with believer’s baptism and the believer’s church. That is a giant subject and I have said enough already.

Jeff Brown

[Charlie] I find your reply somewhat overstated. Mostly, your response is unfair to Bredenhof, especially because you ignore his actual writing and deal with him as a stereotype.
If I had wanted to interact with Bredenhof I would; I didn’t because I had no desire to. I thus don’t deal with him as a stereotype; my post was general, indicating that Bredenhof’s repeats a common line, which I summarized, and then I stated my opinion regarding that position. I don’t really care about Bredenhof per se; the focus of my post was the Muller thesis and its uncritical acceptance by advocates of repristinated confessional Reformed theology. Whether Bredenhof has any serious points about his two examples is moot, partly because I can’t consult Payton, which is another reason I didn’t concern myself with those details. That Bredenhof is a proponent of the Muller Thesis, as I summarized, is obvious, and that was my point of departure. I don’t accept that Payton lacks the corrective Muller provides; he might just disagree with Muller’s thesis, as plenty of people do. I’d be surprised if he is unaware of Muller’s scholarship and, again, without consulting the book, I can’t judge the matter.
[Charlie]

Regarding what you find prima facie absurd, I can say only that I’m not sure you really understand what you are inveighing against.
That’s fine; plenty of others do (I noticed after I wrote my post last night, for example, that Peter Leithart makes the same point on his blog. As I said, I’ve run the reaction by a highly competent historian, and he understood and agreed with my reaction.) If someone doesn’t instantly see a huge difference between Calvin’s and Turretin’s Institutes, for example, I surely won’t argue with them. That’s like trying to argue over the color of an object the parties don’t even agree exists.
[Charlie]

Also, it should be noted that the period of Reformed Orthodoxy brought us some of the most precious, existential texts ever written - Pilgrim’s Progress, A Christian’s Reasonable Service, and The Marrow of Modern Divinity. That period too had its diversity of forms.
Charlie, I confess to being surprised here; you know as well as anyone it’s practically meaningless to talk about what the “period” brought us as if it means Bunyan, for example, a noncomformist Baptist with little formal education was somehow the product of Protestant Scholasticism. As to people like Brakel and Ames, I don’t see how their writings matter to the general point.

I personally have nothing against scholasticism, but I much prefer what I’ve know of the Medieval to what I’ve know of the Protestant scholastics, and I prefer Luther and Calvin to their scholastic epigones. None of that, however, has to do with the historical question about changes in form and content. I’m just noting my own views to make clear my biases. But I don’t have some Barthian reason to drive a wedge between the Protestant Scholastics and the great Reformers; I just think theology changed, a lot, between the two.