Heroic Reformer—and Still Human
Luther was a heroic reformer—a larger-than-life figure from church history. But he was also human. He wrote to his buddy Spalatin that he wasn’t immune to sexual desires, and in a sermon on Isaac’s marriage to Rebekah at age forty, he remarked—presumably from firsthand knowledge—that “to bear and to overcome [sexual desires] until the age of forty is truly a grievous and great burden.”
Luther may have been the original 40-year-old virgin.
A Bachelor Preaching About Marriage
So why didn’t he want to get married? He certainly urged others to do so. But when Luther got up each morning, he literally didn’t know if it would be his last day on earth. Pursuing a wife would likely mean creating a widow.
Even though he was a bachelor, Luther wrote and preached a lot about marriage. He accused the monasteries of being worse than brothels because of the sin he saw in forcing people to take vows of singleness and celibacy in a legalistic way.
The nuns inside the convents started secretly reading Luther on the importance of marriage. He was urging family and friends to help break them out—an act that could be punishable by death.
An Escape Plan
The nuns at Marienthron wrote a secret letter to Luther, asking for his help. They gave it to Leonhard Koppe, a 59-year-old merchant who delivered barrels of fish to the convent each night. When Luther got the letter, he came up with a plan.In the early morning hours of Easter 1523, Koppe’s team of horses pulled a covered wagon filled with fish barrels through the gate of the convent and he made his delivery. But as his covered wagon pulled away from the convent, no one knew that the apparently empty fish barrels were carrying twelve runaway nuns!
One of them would become Luther’s wife.
Article Source : theresurgence.com
Posted by
0 Comments