28 February 1551 A.D. Mr. (Rev.Dr.Prof.) Martin Bucer Dies
28
February 1551 A.D. Mr.
(Rev.Dr.Prof.) Martin Bucer Dies.
Trinterud, L.J. “Martin Bucer.” Encyclopedia Brittanica. Dec 2, 2013.
http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/82788/Martin-Bucer. Accessed Apr 22, 2014.
Martin Bucer, Bucer also spelled Butzer
(born November 11, 1491, Schlettstadt, Alsace—died February 28, 1551, England), Protestant
Reformer, mediator, and liturgical scholar best known for his ceaseless
attempts to make peace between conflicting reform groups. He influenced not
only the development of Calvinism
but also the liturgical development of the Anglican
Communion.
Bucer entered the Dominican monastic order in 1506. He was sent to study at the University of Heidelberg, Germany, where he became
acquainted with the works of the great humanist scholar Erasmus and of Martin
Luther, the founder of the Protestant Reformation. In 1521 Bucer withdrew from the
Dominicans and entered the service of the count palatine of the Rhine, one of
the seven electors of the Holy Roman emperor. The following year he became
pastor of Landstuhl, where he married a former nun. Excommunicated by the
church in 1523, he made his way to Strasbourg, where his parents’ citizenship assured
him of protection. His personal charm, intellectual abilities, and zeal
eventually gained him a position of leadership in Strasbourg and southern
Germany.
Under the influence of Erasmus,
he had accepted the ideals of Christian humanism and the Renaissance, which called for a rebirth of what the
humanists believed was the true good, the original rightness, in humans and society.
When caught up in the enthusiasm of the Reformation
that was rapidly spreading in central Europe, Bucer became a Protestant
Reformer. He envisioned a renewal of the individual and society that was based
on his earlier humanist views, and he believed that such a renewal would result
from the preaching of the true Gospel and from faithful adherence to the
divinely given pattern of living found in the Bible. This reform through
conversion, piety, and discipline found its fullest expression in the massive
program for the reformation of England that he presented to King Edward VI of England in 1551.
Bucer’s adopted city, Strasbourg, lay between the area influenced by the
most important Swiss Reformer, Huldrych
Zwingli—southern Germany and Switzerland—and the area influenced by
Luther—central and northern Germany. In 1529 Landgrave Philip of Hesse invited Zwingli and Luther, as well as other Reformers, to
Marburg to see if the conflicting opinions about the Lord’s Supper
could be reconciled, which Bucer believed was possible. At the end of the
colloquy, Zwingli and Bucer proffered their hands in fellowship to Luther, who
refused their offering.
Believing that the rift between the two strands of the reform movement
could be bridged, Bucer participated in nearly every meeting on religious
questions held in Germany and Switzerland between 1524 and 1548. In the various
colloquies between Protestants and Catholics or between German Lutheran and Swiss Reform churchmen, Bucer often advocated the use of
obscure language and ambiguous formulas when explicit agreement between the
opposing parties was impossible to attain. His justification for the use of
ambiguity was that he believed that the essential goal was the reform of the
people and the doctrinal issues could be worked out later. At Basel in 1536, Bucer participated in the writing of the First
Helvetic Confession, a document that was considered by many Reformed
theologians to veer too much toward Luther’s views, especially regarding the
Lord’s Supper. At Wittenberg in the same year, Bucer took part in a
conference between Lutheran
and Swiss–South German theologians. Philipp
Melanchthon, a Lutheran theologian to whom he has often been compared, also
attended the conference. It appeared for a time as though Bucer and Melanchthon
were about to achieve their goal of ending the dispute over the Lord’s Supper,
a dispute that had split the Reformation on the Continent into two major groups.
Luther, in satisfaction over the apparent agreement that Bucer and Melanchthon
had helped to bring about, declared, “We are one, and we acknowledge and
receive you as our dear brethren in the Lord.” Bucer is reported to have shed
tears at Luther’s words. Melanchthon subsequently drew up the Wittenberg Concord incorporating the agreement, but, to
Bucer’s and Melanchthon’s disappointment, it failed to effect a lasting union.
The Swiss were unhappy that Bucer had made concessions that leaned toward the
doctrine of the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, and some thought that he should formally recant his
statements as they were incorporated in the Wittenberg Concord.
Even though Bucer was criticized for his evasive approach and concealment
of the issues in the controversies between the adherents of Zwingli and Luther,
the civil authorities in many southern German areas sought his advice and
guidance in arranging compromises based on edicts by local authorities. Since
Bucer regarded these compromises as tailored to local circumstances, he soon
was charged by all parties as having no conviction except that the end justifies
the means. In his defense he claimed that each of these compromises was only a
temporary measure, that he hoped that further changes gradually would be made.
Bucer’s policy of agreement by compromise was seen in a better light when it
was applied to the problem of religious toleration. Under Bucer’s policies
there was less persecution of Anabaptists
and other minority groups in Strasbourg than in most of Europe.
Bucer’s policy of pragmatic solutions of problems proved to be especially
controversial in the case of the bigamy of Philip of Hesse.
Philip, the landgrave of Hesse who had given much support to Luther, Bucer, and
other reformers, had serious marital problems but thought it inadvisable to
divorce his wife. Bucer aided Philip in persuading Luther, Melanchthon, and
others to sanction a second wife for him on the basis of Old Testament plural
marriages. In an effort to keep the scandal of Philip’s bigamy secret, evasive
statements were made, and the matter caused the Reformers’ reputations much
harm.
Apart from promoting intra-Protestant union, Bucer had long dreamed of
healing the Protestant-Catholic rift, and, in an effort to bridge these
differences, he engaged in secret negotiations with certain liberal,
reform-minded Catholics. The Holy Roman emperor Charles V,
for political reasons, pursued similar aims. Fearing a Turkish invasion of
central Europe, he wanted to restore unity between the princes of Germany. He
accordingly called for a colloquy between Catholics and Protestants at
Regensburg in 1541. Charles selected three Catholic and three Protestant
theologians (including Bucer) to discuss an anonymous document called the Regensburg Book, which proposed steps toward
Catholic-Protestant union. When Charles used Bucer’s rather far-reaching
concessions in his secret negotiations with the liberal Catholics as the basis
for an official solution of the controversy over the Reformation, Bucer, taken
by surprise, denied any participation in a scheme for union. Both Catholics and
Protestants rejected the Regensburg Book. Charles settled the matter for a time
by subduing the Protestant powers, which would not accept any religious
compromise, by military force and by enforcing his own compromise scheme, the Augsburg
Interim of 1548.
Although the Augsburg Interim did not concede much more
to Catholicism than had some of his own earlier compromise solutions, Bucer
vigorously opposed its acceptance by Strasbourg. His view was that even a poor
compromise was justified if it made some progress toward reform but that
Strasbourg accepting the Augsburg Interim would be a step backward. The armies
of Charles prevailed, however, and Strasbourg discharged Bucer and several
other Protestant ministers, all of whom were invited to England by the
archbishop of Canterbury, Thomas
Cranmer.
There Bucer supported the offical, cautious reform program of Cranmer and
the scholarly Nicholas Ridley against the more radical reform of the
English church urged by the Zwinglian John Hooper and the Scottish Reformer John Knox. The
First Prayer Book of Edward VI (1549),
the liturgical book of the newly Reformed English church that contained
evidence of Lutheran influence, was submitted for formal criticism to Bucer,
who could not speak English. His assessment, the Censura, delivered to the
Bishop Ely a month before Bucer died, pointed out the vague Lutheranisms of the
prayer book. The
Second Prayer Book of Edward VI (1552), utilizing Bucer’s
criticism, offended the conservatives in the English church and did not satisfy
the more radical Reformers; it remained in force for about eight months.
Bucer’s influence as a mediator, however, continued to have its effect in
subsequent attempts at compromise in the English church in the 16th century.
Comments
Post a Comment