The European Union in Prophecy The EU in Prophecy I | Page 146
The European Union in Prophecy
apostles, and unchangeable through all time, gives ample opportunity for every
species of extravagance and corruption to be concealed under the sanctity of the
apostolic commission. The inspiration claimed by Munzer and his associates
proceeded from no higher source than the vagaries of the imagination, and its
influence was subversive of all authority, human or divine. True Christianity receives
the word of God as the great treasure house of inspired truth and the test of all
inspiration.
Upon his return from the Wartburg, Luther completed his translation of the
New Testament, and the gospel was soon after given to the people of Germany in their
own language. This translation was received with great joy by all who loved the truth;
but it was scornfully rejected by those who chose human traditions and the
commandments of men. The priests were alarmed at the thought that the common
people would now be able to discuss with them the precepts of God's word, and that
their own ignorance would thus be exposed. The weapons of their carnal reasoning
were powerless against the sword of the Spirit.
Rome summoned all her authority to prevent the circulation of the Scriptures;
but decrees, anathemas, and tortures were alike in vain. The more she condemned
and prohibited the Bible, the greater was the anxiety of the people to know what it
really taught. All who could read were eager to study the word of God for themselves.
They carried it about with them, and read and reread, and could not be satisfied until
they had committed large portions to memory. Seeing the favor with which the New
Testament was received, Luther immediately began the translation of the Old, and
published it in parts as fast as completed.
Luther's writings were welcomed alike in city and in hamlet. "What Luther and
his friends composed, others circulated. Monks, convinced of the unlawfulness of
monastic obligations, desirous of exchanging a long life of slothfulness for one of active
exertion, but too ignorant to proclaim the word of God, traveled through the provinces,
visiting hamlets and cottages, where they sold the books of Luther and his friends.
Germany soon swarmed with these bold colporteurs." -- Ibid., b. 9, ch. 11. These
writings were studied with deep interest by rich and poor, the learned and the
ignorant. At night the teachers of the village schools read them aloud to little groups
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