From Here to Forever

Page 80

Chapter 8—Luther Before the Diet A new emperor, Charles V, had ascended the throne of Germany, and the emissaries of Rome hastened to present their congratulations and induce the monarch to employ his power against the Reformation. On the other hand, the elector of Saxony, to whom Charles was in great degree indebted for his crown, entreated him to take no step against Luther until he should have granted him a hearing. The emperor was thus placed in a position of great perplexity and embarrassment. The papists would be satisfied with nothing short of an imperial edict sentencing Luther to death. The elector had declared firmly that “neither his imperial majesty nor any other person had shown that Luther’s writings had been refuted;” therefore he requested “that Dr. Luther should be furnished with a safe-conduct, so that he might appear before a tribunal of learned, pious, and impartial judges.”— D’Aubigne, b. 6, ch. 11. {GC 145.1} The attention of all parties was now directed to the assembly of the German states which convened at Worms soon after the accession of Charles to the empire. There were important political questions and interests to be considered by this national council; for the first time the princes of Germany were to meet their youthful monarch in deliberative assembly. From all parts of the fatherland had come the dignitaries of church and state. Secular lords, highborn, powerful, and jealous of their hereditary rights; princely ecclesiastics, flushed with their conscious superiority in rank and power; courtly knights and their armed retainers; and ambassadors from foreign and distant lands,—all gathered at Worms. Yet in that vast assembly the subject that excited the deepest interest was the cause of the Saxon Reformer. {GC 145.2} Charles had previously directed the elector to bring Luther with him to the Diet, assuring him of protection, and promising a free discussion, with competent persons, of the questions in dispute. Luther was anxious to appear before the emperor. His health was at this time much impaired; yet he wrote to the elector: “If I cannot go to Worms in good health, I will be carried there, sick as I am. For if the emperor calls me, I cannot doubt that it is the call of God Himself. If they desire to use violence against me, and that is very probable (for it is not for their instruction that they order me to appear), I place the matter in the Lord’s hands. He still lives and reigns who preserved the three young men in the burning fiery furnace. If He will not save me, my life is of little consequence. Let us only prevent the gospel from being exposed to the scorn of the wicked, and let us shed our blood for it, for fear they should triumph. It is not for me to decide whether my life or my death will contribute most to the salvation of all.... You may expect everything from me... except flight and recantation. Fly I cannot, and still less retract.”—Ibid., b. 7, ch. 1. {GC 146.1} As the news was circulated at Worms that Luther was to appear before the Diet, a general excitement was created. Aleander, the papal legate to whom the case had been specially entrusted, was alarmed and enraged. He saw that the result would be disastrous to the papal cause. To institute inquiry into a case in which the pope had already pronounced sentence of condemnation would be to cast contempt upon the authority of the sovereign pontiff. Furthermore, he was apprehensive that the eloquent and powerful 79


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Chapter 42 The Controversy Ended

30min
pages 390-399

Chapter 41 Desolation of the Earth

16min
pages 384-389

Chapter 40 Ultimate Deliverance

31min
pages 374-383

Chapter 39 The Time of Trouble

39min
pages 361-373

Chapter 37 Only Spiritual Defense

16min
pages 349-354

Chapter 38 The Final Warning

16min
pages 355-360

Chapter 36 The Impending Conflict

18min
pages 342-348

Chapter 35 Liberty of Conscience Threatened

33min
pages 331-341

Chapter 34 Can Our Dead Speak to Us?

19min
pages 324-330

Chapter 33 The First Great Deception

35min
pages 312-323

Chapter 32 Snares of Satan

22min
pages 304-311

Chapter 29 The Origin of Evil

22min
pages 288-295

Chapter 31 Agency of Evil Spirits

11min
pages 300-303

Chapter 27 Modern Revivals

32min
pages 269-279

Chapter 30 Enmity Between Man and Satan

10min
pages 296-299

Chapter 28 Facing Life’s Record

23min
pages 280-287

Chapter 26 A Work of Reform

17min
pages 263-268

Chapter 25 God’s Law Immutable

31min
pages 252-262

Chapter 23 What is the Sanctuary?

24min
pages 238-245

Chapter 24 In the Holy of Holies

16min
pages 246-251

Chapter 22 Prophecies Fulfilled

32min
pages 227-237

Chapter 21 A Warning Rejected

27min
pages 217-226

Chapter 20 A Great Religious Awakening

35min
pages 205-216

Chapter 19 Light Through Darkness

20min
pages 198-204

Chapter 18 American Reformation

45min
pages 183-197

Chapter 17 Heralds of the Morning

32min
pages 172-182

Chapter 16 The Pilgrim Fathers

17min
pages 166-171

Chapter 15 Behind the French Revolution

41min
pages 152-165

Chapter 12 The French Reformation

46min
pages 119-134

Chapter 14 Later English Reformers

36min
pages 140-151

Chapter 13 The Netherlands and Scandinavia

13min
pages 135-139

Chapter 11 The Protest

24min
pages 110-118

Chapter 10 Progress of Reform in Germany

20min
pages 103-109

Chapter 9 The Swiss Reformer

23min
pages 95-102

Chapter 8 Luther Before the Diet

45min
pages 80-94

Chapter 7 Luther’s Separation From Rome

44min
pages 65-79

Chapter 6 Huss and Jerome

41min
pages 51-64

Chapter 5 Early Reformation

30min
pages 41-50

Chapter 4 The Waldenses

30min
pages 31-40

Chapter 3 An Era of Spiritual Darkness

20min
pages 24-30

Chapter 1 Destiny of the World

37min
pages 5-17

Chapter 2 Scourges in the First Centuries

16min
pages 18-23
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