"Why Was the Reformation Necessary?
3 Min Read
The
church is always in need of reform. Even in the New Testament, we see Jesus
rebuking Peter, and we see Paul correcting the Corinthians. Since Christians
are always sinners, the church will always need reform. The question for us,
however, is when does the need become an absolute necessity?
The
great Reformers of the sixteenth century concluded that reform was urgent and
necessary in their day. In pursuing reform for the church, they rejected two
extremes. On the one hand, they rejected those who insisted that the church was
essentially sound and needed no fundamental changes. On the other hand, they
rejected those who believed that they could create a perfect church in every
detail. The church needed fundamental reform, but it would also always need to
be reforming itself. The Reformers reached these conclusions from their study
of the Bible.
In
1543, the Reformer of Strasbourg, Martin Bucer, asked John Calvin to write a
defense of the Reformation for presentation to Emperor Charles V at the
imperial diet set to meet at Speyer in 1544. Bucer knew that the Roman Catholic
emperor was surrounded by counselors who were maligning reform efforts in the
church, and he believed that Calvin was the most capable minister to defend the
Protestant cause.
Calvin
rose to the challenge and wrote one of his best works, “The Necessity of
Reforming the Church.” This substantial treatise did not convince the emperor,
but it has come to be regarded by many as the best presentation of the Reformed
cause ever written.
Calvin
begins by observing that everyone agreed that the church had “diseases both
numerous and grievous.” Calvin argues that matters were so serious that
Christians could not abide a “longer delay” for reform or wait for “slow
remedies.” He rejects the contention that the Reformers were guilty of “rash
and impious innovation.” Rather, he insists that “God raised up Luther and
others” to preserve “the truth of our religion.” Calvin saw that the
foundations of Christianity were threatened and that only biblical truth would
renew the church.
Calvin
looks at four great areas in the life of the church that needed reform. These
areas form what he calls the soul and the body of the church. The soul of the
church is composed of the “pure and legitimate worship of God” and “the
salvation of men.” The body of the church is composed of the “use of the
sacraments” and “the government of the church.” For Calvin, these matters were
at the heart of the Reformation debates. They are essential to the life of the
church and can only be rightly understood in light of the teaching of the
Scriptures.
We
might be surprised that Calvin placed the worship of God as the first of the
Reformation issues, but this was a consistent theme of his. Earlier, he had
written to Cardinal Sadoleto: “There is nothing more perilous to our salvation
than a preposterous and perverse worship of God.” Worship is where we meet with
God, and that meeting must be conducted by God’s standards. Our worship shows
whether we truly accept God’s Word as our authority and submit to it.
Self-created worship is both a form of works-righteousness and an expression of
idolatry.
Next,
Calvin turned to what we often think of as the greatest issue of the
Reformation, namely, the doctrine of justification:
We
maintain, that of what description so ever any man’s works may be, he is
regarded as righteous before God, simply on the footing of gratuitous mercy;
because God, without any respect to works, freely adopts him in Christ, by
imputing the righteousness of Christ to him, as if it were his own. This we
call the righteousness of faith, viz., when a man, made void and empty of all
confidence of works, feels convinced that the only ground of his acceptance
with God is a righteousness which is wanting to himself, and is borrowed from Christ.
The point on which the world always goes astray, (for this error has prevailed
in almost every age,) is in imagining that man, however partially defective he
may be, still in some degree merits the favor of God by works.
These
foundational matters that form the soul of the church are supported by the body
of the church: the sacraments and the government of the church. The sacraments
must be restored to the pure and simple meaning and use given in the Bible. The
government of the church must reject all tyranny that binds the consciences of
Christians contrary to the Word of God.
As
we look at the church in our day, we may well conclude that reformation is
needed—indeed, is necessary—in many of the areas about which Calvin was so
concerned. Only the Word and Spirit of God will ultimately reform the church.
But we should pray and work faithfully that such reform will come in our time.
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