[1] John Witte is a well known and accomplished legal historian
and the present volume does not disappoint. His thesis, explicitly
stated in the Introduction is that: "It was the combination of
theological and legal reforms that rendered the Lutheran
Reformation so resolute and resilient" (p. 4). And he argues
against those 20th century historians who would place the
historical divide between the modern and pre-modern worlds
somewhere in the late 18th century, saying that the watershed can
be found in the new institutions grounded in the new Protestant law
of 16th century Germany.
[2] The book begins with a brief, but excellent, summary of the
medieval legal world, especially the canon law administered by the
Church, and shows that even before Luther, many city governments
were reforming their local laws away from custom and the will of
the prince, to embrace the principles of ancient Roman law that had
been rediscovered and newly implemented in much ecclesiastical
jurisprudence. Witte shows that Martin Luther's dramatic rejection
of canon law expressed via the bonfire of 1520 was mostly a
rejection of the abuses resulting from the canon law's
concentration of authority in the person of the pope whose
"tyranny" was the end result of his power to render decisions
according to principles of equity, in the place of law. A society
without any norms was clearly not viable and Luther found himself,
ironically, functioning as the "de facto Protestant pope" (p. 69)
because his opinion was sought as the ultimate authority on matters
both spiritual and temporal.
[3] Although the invisible church in heaven was perfect, the
members of the earthly church needed laws to keep them in line
(since the law found in the Bible could only be fully implemented
in the heavenly kingdom). Thus Roman law and even canon law,
insofar as they were grounded in the law of nature, provided useful
models for the earthly kingdom where law could restrain sinful
impulses, as well as instill in people an awareness of what God
wants and of the human inability to meets these expectations
without divine assistance. While the leaders of the family and the
church also had legitimate authority from God, it was the secular
magistrate who was now "God's vice-regent" (p.111), replacing the
pope who had claimed to be the vicar of Christ.
[4] Witte next sets out several theories of "law, politics, and
society" in some detail (ch. 4). Melanchthon was concerned to show
how the natural law is the basis for all subsequent systems of
positive law. Eisermann introduced a sort of "Lutheran social
contract theory" (p. 143), based on Greco-Roman and Pauline
thought. And Oldendorp had no use at all for canon law, except for
its principles of equity that he said should be employed in every
legal judgment. While Luther himself had emphasized the distinction
between the two kingdoms, the Evangelical jurists emphasized their
cooperation, especially through the role of the Bible and the
Decalogue as sources of law and the expansion of the magistrates'
authority through newly developed Evangelical theories of
equity.
[5] The actual laws of Reformation Germany form the third
section of the book. There were laws regulating religious matters
and public morals that had changed only superficially from their
medieval predecessors. However, the regulation of charity as a
secular, social institution for the aid of only the worthy poor was
an innovation. Education law had also changed a great deal,
providing for some rudimentary education of all members of society,
at civic expense, in order to prepare them for their vocations in a
Christian society. But the most sweeping changes of all came in
marriage legislation, a subject on which Witte has previously
written. No longer a sacrament, but a civic institution, marriage
was now not under church control. There were fewer impediments to
contracting a valid marriage, but mutual consent of the parties was
no longer sufficient for the contract to be binding. As a social
institution, marriage now required parental consent and community
witnesses, but could also be dissolved by the decision of the
magistrate.
[6] Witte also adds that the new public nature of marriage,
education, and charity in the Lutheran Protestant society resulted
in sweeping changes, not only in these central institutions, but
also in such fundamental areas as the role of women in society and
the relationship of state and church. In a world without the
convent as a refuge for intellectual women, the subordinate role of
wife was the only option. And in a world where the state controlled
the ecclesiastical structures, for the first time the concept of a
state established religion was now possible. Our modern struggles
for the freedom and equality of all religions and both sexes, he
says, have their roots in this period.
[7] The only disappointing note is the oddly confessional nature
of the concluding chapter that doesn't seem to fit the tone of the
rest of the book. However, this is a minor complaint.
[8] Overall this is a wonderful book. It is readable, erudite,
and persuasive. The scholarly apparatus are rich and easily used.
The abundance of useful source material found in the footnotes is a
valuable resource that ensures that this work will continue to be
consulted as a major reference for all who are interested in these
questions. And the simple, but inevitable progression to Witte's
conclusion leads the reader to agree, "Well of course he is right!
Now why didn't I ever realize that?"
[9] But this is more than a mere scholarly examination of a
fascinating problem. The popular understanding of canon law is that
it was an ancient system corrupted by evil medieval clerics and
that it was eliminated by the Protestant Reformation. Witte has
demonstrated most convincingly that this understanding is not well
grounded. As Sieghard Mühlmann has pointed out ("Luther und
das Corpus Iuris Canonici bis zum Jahre 1540," Zeitschrift der
Savigny-Stiftung für Rechtsgeschichte, Germanische Abtheilung
58 [1972] 235-405) the final papal decretal of the Corpus Iuris
Canonici dates from 1484, that is, within Luther's lifetime. So to
Martin Luther, these questions of corruption and the canon law were
living and pertinent questions. Witte has taken up the arguments
introduced by such scholars as Kuttner, Tierney, Pelikan, and more
recently Helmholz, and provides a concrete and detailed explanation
of the very real struggle between the desire to reject an unwieldy
and somewhat corrupt canon legal system, and the need to provide
structure and order for the people of Christendom.