After
the first century church faded away the church began
to become more and more secular and void of the Spirit,
climaxing in the Constantinian Era. Constantine was
the Roman Emperor who after becoming a Christian
in the early 300’s, made Christianity the official
religion of Rome. This ‘legalizing’ of
Christianity became the very thing that ushered Her,
and the world into the Dark Ages
James
Rutz writes, “A funny thing happened on the way
to the Millennium: In the fourth century, the Church’s wheels fell off…Just
after 300 A.D., the church made the biggest blunder
in its history and crashed…the final straw came
in 313, when Emperor Constantine I issued the Edict
of Milan, officially tolerating the Church and ending
persecutions…by 400, just 87 years later, the
Roman Empire had gone from being less than four per
cent Christian to eighty per cent Christian…with
no conversions! All the major problems of the Church
today—other than sin—can be traced back
1700 years, to when the church became an audience.”
[1]
During
the Dark Ages from the late 300’s to the 1300’s
the Church became more and more religious and institutionalized,
out of which sprang the Roman Catholic Church with
its Pope, Mariology and like doctrines and tradition.
The epitome of the Dark Ages was a Church that no longer
resembled in any point that which was exploded onto
the world scene on the Day of Pentecost. “The
newborn church, as vulnerable as any human child, having
neither money, influence nor power in the ordinary
sense, is setting forth joyfully and courageously to
win the pagan world for God through Christ. The young
Church, like all young
creatures, is appealing in its simplicity and single-heartedness.
Here we are seeing the Church in its first youth, valiant
and unspoiled—a
body of ordinary men and women joined in an unconquerable
fellowship never before seen on this earth.”
The Church
of the Dark Ages was no longer the Body of Christ,
but the place of power struggles, politics, oppression,
and financial gain at the expense of the common believer
centering in the following abuses:
Misuse
of the Word
“It
is also unquestionable that a knowledge of the Scriptures
in the vernacular [common language], especially by
uneducated men and women was always deemed a sign of
heretical tendency. ‘The third cause of heresy’,
says an Austrian inquisitor, writing about the end
of the thirteenth century, ‘is that they translate
the Old and New Testaments into the vulgar tongue;
and so they learn and teach. I have heard and seen
a certain clown who repeated the Book of Job word for
word, and several who know the New Testament perfectly.’ A
survey of the evidence seem to lead to the conclusion
that the rulers of the mediaeval Church regarded knowledge
of the vernacular Scriptures with grave suspicion…”
[3]
Misuse
of Power
“Nay
it is you who are mistaken when in supposing that the
Lord sets tyrants over his people to rule them at pleasure,
when He bestowed so much authority on those whom He
sent to promulgate the gospel. Your error lies here,
viz., in no reflecting that their power, before they
were furnished with it, was circumscribed with certain
limits. We admit, therefore, that…pastors are
to be heard just like Christ Himself, but they must
be pastors who execute the office entrusted to them.
And this office, we maintain, is not presumptuously
to introduce whatever their own pleasure has rashly
devise…we maintain that the Roman Pontiff [Pope],
with his whole herd of pseudo-bishops, who have seized
the pastor’s office, are ravenous wolves, whose
only study has hitherto been to scatter and trample
down the kingdom of Christ, filling it with ruin and
devastation. Nor are we the first to make the complaint…for
iniquity has reached its height, and now these shadowy
prelates [church leaders], by whom you think the Church
stands or perishes, and by whom we say she has been
cruelly torn and mutilated, and brought to the very
brink of destruction, can neither bear their vices
nor the cure of them.”
Misuse
of Money
“Under
your most distinguished name, papal indulgences are
offered across the land for the construction of St.
Peter. Now, I do not so much complain about the quacking
of the preachers…but I bewail the gross misunderstanding
among the people which comes from these preachers and
which they spread everywhere among the common men.
Evidently the poor souls believe that when they have
bought indulgence letters they are then assured of
their salvation. They are likewise convinced that souls
escape from purgatory as soon as they have placed a
contribution into the chest. Further, they assume that
the grace obtained through these indulgences is so
completely effective that there is no sin of such magnitude
that it cannot be forgiven—even if (as they say)
someone should rape the Mother of God…finally,
they believe that man is freed from every penalty and
guilt by these indulgences. O great God! The souls
committed to your care, excellent father, are thus
directed to death… This is why I entered the
disputation; that is, I have provoked all the people,
the great, the average, the mediocre, to hate me thoroughly,
at least as much as could be engineered and accomplished by these men who have
such great zeal for money (oh, no, I should have said
for souls!). Since these ‘lovely’ people
cannot refute what I have said, they arm themselves
with the greatest cunning and pretend that I violated
papal authority by my theses.”
“The
preachers, by daily sermons, or hymns, and processions,
urged the people, with extravagant laudations of the
Pope’s bull, to purchase letters of indulgences
for their own benefit, and at the same time played
upon their sympathies for departed relatives and friends
whom they might release from their sufferings in purgatory ‘as
soon as the penny tinkles in the box.’”
“The
confused and vague theology of forgiveness of the late
medieval period lent weight to the suggestion that
it was possible to purchase the forgiveness of sins
and procure the remission of ‘purgatorial penalties’ through
the purchase of indulgences. In other words, the eternal
penalties resulting from sinful actions could be reduced,
if not eliminated, by payment of an appropriate sum
of money to the appropriate ecclesiastical figure.
Thus Cardinal Albrecht of Brandenburg manage to accumulate
a remission of purgatorial penalties reckoned to total
39, 245,120 years…The power and the income of
much of the ecclesiastical establishment and its patrons
were actually linked with the continuance of such practices
and beliefs.”
Misuse
of People
All
of the above leads to the abuse and misuse of the people
in the Church. One of the great rallying cries of the
Reformation was ‘the priesthood of all the believers’ which
taught that it was not only a special class of people
who had access to God, but all those who were believers. “One
has to insult and antagonize the Devil to make him
produce one Scripture passage through which it can
be proven that the ordained clergy alone are called
priests…just as I previously scoffed in my book.”
Martin
Luther
Into
this crooked and internally ‘bent’ system
called Church God sent forth Martin Luther. On October
31, 1517, Martin Luther, a monk himself, nailed 95
theses to his seminary door hoping to initiate dialogue
regarding the issues contained therein. Instead the
First Reformation was ignited centering around the
truth ‘the just shall live by faith’. This
phrase became the rallying cry for the First Reformation
placing into question the system of indulgences and
the various other means that the Catholic Church had
established for people to relate rightly to God.
While
the First Reformation soon became a far-reaching movement
and reality of diverse nature, the primary historical
figures driving it were Martin Luther, John Calvin
and Ulrich Zwingli. Luther was the most outspoken and
spent the majority of his life hiding from legal authorities
as he wrote reformation literature.