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(Toronto Journal of
Theology, Spring, 2004)
Oberman, Heiko
Augustinus; The Two Reformations: The
Journey from the Last Days to the
Published posthumously, this book concludes the prolific, always profound
writing of a Reformation historian who had previously produced dozens of books
in four languages: Dutch (his native tongue), German, French and English.
While perhaps appearing anti-climactic in the wake of his prize-winning The
Harvest of Mediaeval Theology and Luther:
Man between God and the Devil (this
earned him the Historischer Sachbuchpreis for what The book consists of ten chapters that illustrate Oberman’s broad expertise concerning the diverse ingredients yielding any event in historical occurrence. Chapter I, “The Gathering Storm”, for instance, probes the manifold aspects of the Fifteenth Century, examining such determinants as the devastating impact of the Black Death, the suppression of Church conciliarism and the simultaneous appearance of political conciliarism, and the role of the Modern Devotion in shifting the common understanding of “religious” life from monasticism to Christian faith. Having begun his career as an intellectual historian at Oxford and Harvard, Oberman moves on, in Chapter II (“Luther and the Via Moderna: The Philosophical Backdrop of the Reformation Breakthrough”) to trace the lodes that are admittedly only one factor in the Reformation but by no means dismissible.
Subsequent chapters discuss, inter
alia, the differences between Luther’s anti-Judaism and Erasmus’
anti-Semitism. Soberly Oberman
concludes that while Luther admitted the baptized Jew to be Christian while
Erasmus did not, Luther’s failure lies not so much in what he did but in what
he failed to do: uniquely positioned at the end of the mediaeval period to
“detoxify the central poison in Christian doctrine” (p. 83) – namely,
supersessionism – Luther instead failed to announce the undeflectability of
the covenant-keeping God with respect to the Jewish people. Thoroughly conversant with the vernacular and classical languages of the Middle Ages and the Reformation, as well as with the most subtle nuances of mediaeval thought and life, Oberman characteristically brought to his métier an appreciation of diverse “locations” and their interconnexion. Here he was ahead of his time for most of his life, maintaining for decades what historians, pressured more recently by social scientists, have come to admit as essential: namely, the matrix of the political, economic, literary, social, intellectual, military, and religious factors that together determine historical developments. Oberman had long known that the isolation or elevation of any one of them rendered the historian’s work one-sided, inaccurate and misleading.
In a moving investigation of the doctrine of predestination, for
instance, and its function with respect to the Reformed understanding of faith,
Oberman sensitively discusses the location of Calvin and his followers as
refugees. Hounded out of
In the same vein Oberman brings to light the role of social location in
the well-known fact that the Jewish people have fared much better in Reformed
lands than elsewhere. Before Calvin,
Luther and Zwingli had adopted the Augustinian notion, pregnant with horrors for
Jewish people throughout the Middle Ages, that Jews wandered refuge-less
inasmuch as God had consigned them to misery on account of their non-recognition
of Jesus. It was only when Calvin
and those he sustained found themselves forever wandering just because of their
recognition of Jesus that they began to re-read scripture and to find in it
the promise that no human violation of the covenant induces God to abandon us.
As a result the Jewish people gained the support of Calvinist Christians
even as the latter gave up a theology whose barbarity, rooted in ages-old
supersessionism, had tormented neighbours wanting only to honour the covenant
forged with Abraham. Pursuing the
same point, Oberman unobtrusively corrects those who maintain that only in
post-revolutionary The book concludes with its longest chapter, “Calvin’s Legacy: Its Greatness and Limitations.” While these fifty-three pages may appear scant satisfaction to Oberman readers hungry for the tome on Calvin he had been working at for fifteen years, they are replete with riches available nowhere else in the literature. Only in Oberman, for instance, do we read that while Calvin is reputed for his mountain peak commentaries on Romans and Hebrews, 2nd Timothy remained his favourite in all of scripture. Rich in substance, the book is redolent with the humble faith of an intellectual giant who cherished Calvin’s strengths, admitted his weaknesses, and was unashamed to say with Luther, “We are beggars” – and then to add himself, “These beggars are kings.” Heiko
Augustinus Oberman
1930—2001 Requiescat
in pace. Victor Shepherd Professor of Systematic and Historical Theology Tyndale Seminary
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