The Babylonian Captivity of the Church

  • Year 1520
  • Type Treatise
  • Genre ecclesiology
  • Tradition Lutheran
  • Original language Latin

Luther's treatise on the Babylonian captivity of the church emerged in 1520 as the second of his three great reformatory writings, appearing between his Address to the Christian Nobility and his treatise On the Freedom of a Christian. Written in Latin for an educated audience of clergy and theologians, this work responded to the papal bull Exsurge Domine, which threatened Luther with excommunication. Where his earlier German writings had reached the common people, this treatise systematically dismantled the sacramental foundations of medieval Catholicism for those who could engage with sophisticated theological argument.

The work's central argument rests on Luther's conviction that the Roman church has imprisoned the gospel through false teaching about the sacraments. He reduces the traditional seven sacraments to three that can be clearly grounded in Scripture—baptism, penance, and the Lord's Supper—though he expresses doubt even about penance. Most provocatively, Luther attacks the doctrine of transubstantiation, argues that communion should be offered in both kinds to laypeople, and categorically rejects the understanding of the Mass as a sacrifice. He contends that the sacraments have been transformed from promises of God's grace into mechanisms of priestly control, binding Christian consciences through human traditions rather than liberating them through divine word. The treatise systematically exposes how each sacrament has been corrupted by scholastic theology and canon law, turning gifts of grace into instruments of ecclesiastical power.

This treatise marked Luther's definitive break with Rome and established the sacramental theology that would shape Protestant Christianity. Its influence extended far beyond Lutheranism, providing reformers like Calvin and Cranmer with both theological framework and polemical ammunition. The work remains essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the theological heart of the Protestant Reformation and the development of reformed sacramental practice. Readers should approach this as a work of systematic demolition rather than constructive theology—Luther's purpose here is to tear down rather than build up, making it most valuable for those who need to grasp what the reformers rejected and why.

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