Analysis Of Martin Luther's 1546 Copy Of The New Testament

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The frontispiece of Martin Luther’s 1546 copy of the New Testament displays many of his key virtues of Lutheranism and causes of the Protestant Reformation. Martin Luther’s spiritual uneasiness influenced him to examine the Bible and find faults with the Catholic religion. Traditionally, the Bible had been written in strictly Latin, yet in this copy all is written in German, demonstrating the vernacular spread of Christianity through Lutheranism. Luther decided to write The 95 Theses to express his controversy of the popes proponing the selling of indulgences and the idea of justification solely through faith, and posted it on the church door of Wittenberg University: the setting of this Bible (Palmer 80). Martin Luther’s perceptions of Christianity and the political stances in Europe drove Catholics to convert to Lutheranism, leading the Protestant Reformation. …show more content…

This instigated Luther to believe that there is no authority in Christianity, that everyone could interpret the Bible for himself or herself, making the vernacular a necessity (Palmer 80). This spread Lutheranism because of the Bible’s accessibility to the common people who were priorly viewed as too unsophisticated to decipher the text, provoking the spread of Protestantism through not only elites of society. Martin Luther concluded that because all commoners could interpret the bible for themselves all men were priests (Pickering, Emily). In this cover of the New Testament Luther seems to be dressed in draped robes, as an average monk would, something similar to typical priest attire. Therefore, symbolizing his idea that all men could legitimately interpret the bible for

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