This year Presbyterians celebrate the 500th anniversary of
Martin Luther’s 95 Theses. The theses, which criticized the sale of indulgences
by church officials, are considered the opening salvo in the Protestant
Reformation—a movement that emphasized individual relationships with God and
salvation through faith alone. Luther is also celebrated for a second piece of
writing: his translation of the Bible into German. After Pope Leo X
excommunicated Luther in 1521, the reformer took refuge inside Wartburg Castle.
There he completed his translation of the New Testament, based on Erasmus’s
1516 Bible text. First printed in September 1522, the “September Testament”
does not include Luther’s name on the title page, an elision meant to limit
church reprisals.
The Old Testament translation proved more difficult, owing in
part to Luther’s struggles with Hebrew and his insistence that the text be
accessible to all Germans. “The translator must not be led by the Hebrew
words,” Luther wrote. “He should make sure that he really understands the sense
and ask himself: ‘What would the German say in such-and-such an instance?’” His
editorial philosophy required inventive interpolations. For example, he
replaced the word “chameleon,” which would have been unknown to sixteenth
century Germans, with “weasel.”
It took Luther and a team of fellow scholars
twelve years to translate the Old Testament, which was printed in 1534 together
with Luther’s New Testament. Despite criticism for the way he valued certain
books of the Bible over others and for editing passages to fit his own
theology, Luther’s Bible was an immediate and lasting success; one Wittenberg
publisher alone printed 100,000 copies between 1534 and 1574. Many Germans
regarded it as a work of literary genius, the way English readers would revere
the King James Bible in the century to come.
Reformation
Sunday materials are provided by the Presbyterian
Historical Society.
For more information on the Reformation and PHS, visit us at www.history.pcusa.org/reformation-sunday
425 Lombard Street • Philadelphia, PA 19147 •
215.627.1852 • www.history.pcusa.org
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