An
Excerpt from History of the Christian Church by Philip
Schaff
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From Volumes
7 & 8, The History of the Reformation (A.D. 1517-1648)
The
Peasants' War. 1523-1525.
The ecclesiastical
radicalism at Wittenberg was the prelude of a more dangerous political
and social radicalism, which involved a large portion of Germany
in confusion and blood. Both movements had their roots in crying
abuses; both received a strong impetus from the Reformation, and
pretended to carry out its principles to their legitimate consequences;
but both were ultra- and pseudo-Protestant, fanatical, and revolutionary.
Carlstadt and
Münzer are the connecting links between the two movements,
chiefly the latter. Carlstadt never went so far as Münzer,
and afterwards retraced his steps. Their expulsion from Saxony extended
their influence over Middle and Southern Germany.
Condition
of the Peasants.
The German peasants
were the beasts of burden for society, and in no better condition
than slaves. Work, work, work, without reward, was their daily lot,
even Sunday hardly excepted. They were ground down by taxation,
legal and illegal. The rapid increase of wealth, luxury, and pleasure,
after the discovery of America, made their condition only worse.
The knights and nobles screwed them more cruelly than before, that
they might increase their revenues and means of indulgence.
The peasants
formed, in self-protection, secret leagues among themselves: as
the "Käsebröder" (Cheese-Brothers), in the Netherlands;
and the "Bundschuh," 565 in South Germany. These leagues
served the same purpose as the labor unions of mechanics in our
days.
Long before
the Reformation revolutionary outbreaks took place in various parts
of Germany, - A.D. 1476, 1492, 1493, 1502, 1513, and especially
in 1514, against the lawless tyranny of Duke Ulrich of Würtemberg.
But these rebellions were put down by brute force, and ended in
disastrous failure. 566
In England a communistic insurrection of the peasants and villeins
occurred in 1381, under the lead of Wat Tyler and John Balle, in
connection with a misunderstanding of Wiclif's doctrines.
The Reformation,
with its attacks upon the papal tyranny, its proclamation of the
supremacy of the Bible, of Christian freedom, and the general priesthood
of the laity, gave fresh impulse and new direction to the rebellious
disposition. Traveling preachers and fugitive tracts stirred up
discontent. The peasants mistook spiritual liberty for carnal license.
They appealed to the Bible and to Dr. Luther in support of their
grievances. They looked exclusively at the democratic element in
the New Testament, and turned it against the oppressive rule of
the Romish hierarchy and the feudal aristocracy. They identified
their cause with the restoration of pure Christianity.
Thomas
Münzer.
Thomas Münzer,
one of the Zwickau Prophets, and an eloquent demagogue, was the
apostle and travelling evangelist of the social revolution, and
a forerunner of modern socialism, communism, and anarchism. He presents
a remarkable compound of the discordant elements of radicalism and
mysticism. He was born at Stolberg in the Harz Mountain (1590);
studied theology at Leipzig; embraced some of the doctrines of the
Reformation, and preached them in the chief church at Zwickau; but
carried them to excess, and was deposed.
After the failure
of the revolution in Wittenberg, in which he took part, he labored
as pastor at Altstädt (1523), for the realization of his wild
ideas, in direct opposition to Luther, whom he hated worse than
the Pope. Luther wrote against the "Satan of Altstädt."
Münzer was removed, but continued his agitation in Mühlhausen,
a free city in Thuringia, in Nürnberg, Basel, and again in
Mühlhausen (1525).
He was at enmity
with the whole existing order of society, and imagined himself the
divinely inspired prophet of a new dispensation, a sort of communistic
millennium, in which there should be no priests, no princes, no
nobles, and no private property, but complete democratic equality.
He inflamed the people in fiery harangues from the pulpit, and in
printed tracts to open rebellion against their spiritual and secular
rulers. He signed himself "Münzer with the hammer,"
and "with the sword of Gideon." He advised the killing
of all the ungodly. They had no right to live. Christ brought the
sword, not peace upon earth. "Look not," he said, "on
the sorrow of the ungodly; let not your sword grow cold from blood;
strike hard upon the anvil of Nimrod [the princes]; cast his tower
to the ground, because the day is yours."
The
Program of the Peasants.
At the beginning
of the uprising, the Swabian peasants issued a program of their
demands, a sort of political and religious creed, consisting of
twelve articles.
Professing to
claim nothing inconsistent with Christianity as a religion of justice,
peace, and charity, the peasants claim: 1. The right to elect their
own pastors (conceded by Zwingli, but not by Luther). 2. Freedom
from the small tithe (the great tithe of grain they were willing
to pay). 3. The abolition of bond-service, since all men were redeemed
by the blood of Christ (but they promised to obey the elected rulers
ordained by God, in every thing reasonable and Christian). 4. Freedom
to hunt and fish. 5. A share in the forests for domestic fuel:6.
Restriction of compulsory service. 7. Payment for extra labor above
what the contract requires. 8. Reduction of rents. 9. Cessation
of arbitrary punishments. 10. Restoration of the pastures and fields
which have been taken from the communes. 11. Abolition of the right
of heriot, by which widows and orphans are deprived of their inheritance.
12. All these demands shall be tested by Scripture; and if not found
to agree with it, they are to be withdrawn.
These demands
are moderate and reasonable, especially freedom from feudal oppression,
and the primitive right to elect a pastor. Most of them have since
been satisfied. Had they been granted in 1524, Germany might have
been spared the calamity of bloodshed, and entered upon a career
of prosperity. But the rulers and the peasants were alike blind
to their best interests, and consulted their passion instead of
reason. The peasants did not stick to their own program, split up
in parties, and resorted to brutal violence against their masters.
Another program appeared, which aimed at a democratic reconstruction
of church and state in Germany. Had Charles V. not been taken up
with foreign schemes, he might have utilized the commotion for the
unification and consolidation of Germany in the interest of an imperial
despotism and Romanism. But this would have been a still greater
calamity than the division of Germany.
Progress
of the Insurrection.
The insurrection
broke out in summer, 1524, in Swabia, on the Upper Danube, and the
Upper Rhine along the Swiss frontier, but not on the Swiss side,
where the peasantry were free. In 1525 it extended gradually all
over South-Western and Central Germany. The rebels destroyed the
palaces of the bishops, the castles of the nobility, burned convents
and libraries, and committed other outrages. Erasmus wrote to Polydore
Virgil, from Basel, in the autumn of 1525: "Every day there
are bloody conflicts between the nobles and the peasants, so near
us that we can hear the firing, and almost the groans of the wounded."
In another letter he says: "Every day priests are imprisoned,
tortured, hanged, decapitated, or burnt."
At first the
revolution was successful. Princes, nobles, and cities were forced
to submit to the peasants. If the middle classes, which were the
chief supporters of Protestant doctrines, had taken sides with the
peasants, they would have become irresistible. But the leader of
the Reformation threw the whole weight of his name against the revolution.
Luther
advises a wholesale Suppression of the Rebellion.
The fate of
the peasantry depended upon Luther. Himself the son of a peasant,
he had, at first, considerable sympathy with their cause, and advocated
the removal of their grievances; but he was always opposed to the
use of force, except by the civil magistrate, to whom the sword
was given by God for the punishment of evil-doers. He thought that
revolution was wrong in itself, and contrary to Divine order; that
it was the worst enemy of reformation, and increased the evil complained
of. He trusted in the almighty power of preaching, teaching, and
moral suasion. In the battle of words he allowed himself every license;
but there he stopped. With the heroic courage of a warrior in the
spiritual army of God, he combined the humble obedience of a monk
to the civil authority.
He replied
to the Twelve Articles of the Swabian peasants with an exhortation
to peace (May, 1525). He admitted that most of them were just. He
rebuked the princes and nobles, especially the bishops, for their
oppression of the poor people and their hostility to the gospel,
and urged them to grant some of the petitions, lest a fire should
be kindled all over Germany which no one could extinguish. But he
also warned the peasants against revolution, and reminded them of
the duty of obedience to the ruling powers (Rom
13:1), and of the passage, that "They that take
the sword shall perish with the sword" (Matt
26:52). He advised both parties to submit the quarrel
to a committee of arbitration. But it was too late; he preached
to deaf ears.
When the dark
cloud of war rose up all over Germany, and obscured the pure light
of the Reformation, Luther dipped his pen in blood, and burst out
in a most violent manifesto "against the rapacious and murderous
peasants." He charged them with doing the Devil's work under
pretence of the gospel. He called upon the magistrates to "stab,
kill, and strangle" them like mad dogs. He who dies in defence
of the government dies a blessed death, and is a true martyr before
God. A pious Christian should rather suffer a hundred deaths than
yield a hair of the demands of the peasants.
So fierce were
Luther's words, that he had to defend himself in a public letter
to the chancellor of Mansfeld (June or July, 1525). He did not,
however, retract his position. "My little book," he said,
"shall stand, though the whole world should stumble at it."
He repeated the most offensive passages, even in stronger language,
and declared that it was useless to reason with rebels, except by
the fist and the sword.
Cruel as this
conduct appears to every friend of the poor peasants, it would he
unjust to regard it as an accommodation, and to derive it from selfish
considerations. It was his sincere conviction of duty to the magistrate
in temporal matters, and to the cause of the Reformation which was
threatened with destruction.
Defeat
of the Rebellion.
The advice of
the Reformer was only too well executed by the exasperated princes,
both Protestant and Roman Catholic, who now made common cause against
the common foe. The peasants, badly armed, poorly led, and divided
among themselves, were utterly defeated by the troops of the Landgrave
Philip of Hesse, Duke Henry of Brunswick, the Elector Jolin, and
the Dukes George and John of Saxony. In the decisive battle at Frankenhausen,
May 25, 1525, five thousand slain lay on the field and in the streets;
three hundred were beheaded before the court-house. Münzer
fled, but was taken prisoner, tortured, and executed. The peasants
in South Germany, in the Alsace and Lorraine, met with the same
defeat by the imperial troops and the forces of the electors of
the Palatinate and Treves, and by treachery. In the castle of Zabern,
in the Alsace (May 17), eighteen thousand peasants fell. In the
Tyrol and Salzburg, the rebellion lasted longest, and was put down
in part by arbitration.
The number
of victims of war far exceeded a hundred thousand. The surviving
rebels were beheaded or mutilated. Their widows and orphans were
left destitute. Over a thousand castles and convents lay in ashes,
hundreds of villages were burnt to the ground, the cattle killed,
agricultural implements destroyed, and whole districts turned into
a wilderness. "Never," said Luther, after the end of the
war, "has the aspect of Germany been more deplorable than now."
The Peasants'
War was a complete failure, and the victory of the princes an inglorious
revenge. The reaction made their condition worse than ever. Very
few masters had sufficient humanity and self-denial to loosen the
reins. Most of them followed the maxim of Rehoboam: "My father
chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with scorpions"
(1 Kings 12:14). The real grievances
remained, and the prospect of a remedy was put off to an indefinite
future.
The cause of
the Reformation suffered irreparable injury, and was made responsible
by the Romanists, and even by Erasmus, for all the horrors of the
rebellion. The split of the nation was widened; the defeated peasantry
in Roman Catholic districts were forced back into the old church;
quiet citizens lost their interest in politics and social reform;
every attempt in that direction was frowned down with suspicion.
Luther had once for all committed himself against every kind of
revolution, and in favor of passive obedience to the civil rulers
who gladly accepted it, and appealed again and again to Rom
13:1, as the popes to Matt 16:18,
as if they contained the whole Scripture-teaching on obedience to
authority. Melanchthon and Bucer fully agreed with Luther on this
point; and the Lutheran Church has ever since been strictly conservative
in politics, and indifferent to the progress of civil liberty. It
is only in the nineteenth century that serfdom has been entirely
abolished in Germany and Russia, and negro slavery in America.
The defeat
of the Peasants' War marks the end of the destructive tendencies
of the Reformation, and the beginning of the construction of a new
church on the ruins of the old.
Schaff's History of the Church, Electronic Database Copyright ©
1999 by Biblesoft. |