THE NINETY-FIVE THESES
In October 1527 Martin Luther sat down and penned what would become the battle hymn of the Protestant Reformation. Ten years had passed since he had nailed his Ninety-Five theses onto the door of the castle church at Wittenberg. As is often the case, history is keen to remember the definitive events that shaped the world but it can shed comparatively little light on how those events shaped the men behind them. This is true in the case of the Ninety Five Theses. It was one of the most definitive events in the History of the Christian Church and as such, it is extremely well chronicled but there is precious little written about how that one seminal act defined Luther himself.
Luther before the Ninety Five theses was an obscure German monk grappling with his personal salvation and his view of God. The struggle led him on a journey of discovery that gave him the clarity and peace that he so desperately longed for.
Nailing the Ninety Five theses changed his life overnight in more ways than one. It catapulted him into the epicenter of a raging religiopolitical firestorm, the likes of which he had never witnessed in his lifetime.The list of struggles and challenges he faced at every turn is as long as it is grueling.