October 31 isn鈥檛 just , it鈥檚 also 鈥攖he anniversary of nailing his 95 Theses to the door of the Wittenberg Castle church in Germany in 1517. His theses challenged the authority of the Catholic Church, and sparked the historic split in Christianity known as the . But 500 years later, scholars that the most dramatic part of the tale is true.
The new consensus is that he his theses to an archbishop on October 31, but he probably didn鈥檛 nail them to the door to drive the point home.
The reason this is such a big deal is because the image of Luther nailing his 95 Theses to a church door is one of the main historical events people associate with the Reformation. Yet in a recently published book, 1517: Martin Luther and the Invention of the Reformation, Reformation historian that Luther probably didn鈥檛 deliver his theses so theatrically. And according to Joan Acocella鈥檚 on Martin Luther鈥檚 influence, much of the latest scholarship agrees that the event likely didn鈥檛 happen.
鈥淣ot only were there no eyewitnesses; Luther himself, ordinarily an enthusiastic self-dramatizer, was vague on what had happened,鈥 Acocella . 鈥淗e remembered drawing up a list of ninety-five theses around the date in question, but, as for what he did with it, all he was sure of was that he sent it to the local archbishop.鈥
The fact that he might鈥檝e mailed his theses rather than nailing them to the church door, while perhaps a bit disappointing, doesn鈥檛 change their impact. In the theses, Luther condemned the church鈥檚 selling of 鈥渋ndulgences,鈥 which was based on the the idea that people could buy forgiveness for their sins. Instead, he argued that humans could only reach salvation through faith, and that the Bible, not the clergy, was the foremost religious authority.
These ideas shaped a new branch of Christianity, called Protestantism. Broadly defined, Protestants make up 37 percent of the world鈥檚 2.18 billion Christians, to the Pew Research Center.
True or not, the iconic image of Luther defiantly nailing his theses to a church door continues to reverberate as a symbol of religious freedom. In 1966, , its symbolic power by placing a list of his demands on the door of the Chicago City Hall. It鈥檚 even become something of a meme: The Simpsons once aired a Halloween episode in which Lisa accidentally creates a functioning society in a petri dish, and excitedly that 鈥渙ne of them is nailing something to the door of the cathedral.鈥
The delivery method of the 95 Theses is not the only aspect of Luther鈥檚 life that scholars are reexamining. Historians have also been delving into his brutal anti-Semitism. In addition to the theses, Luther wrote a book called On the Jews and Their Lies, in which he posited that Jews were a menace to Germany. Scholar , whose new book explores Luther鈥檚 anti-Semitism, Public Radio International that Luther advocated burning Jewish synagogues and homes, confiscating Jewish money, forcing Jewish people into servitude, and expelling Jewish people from Germany.
Many of his fellow Protestants rejected these ideas at the time, but in the early 20th century, the would use them to demonstrate that anti-Semitism had a long history in Germany. Speaking on the 500th anniversary of the Reformation, German Chancellor Angela Merkel argued that Luther鈥檚 anti-Semitism is part of his theological legacy, and should never be glossed over, the Times of Israel.
鈥淭hat is, for me,鈥 Merkel said, 鈥渢he comprehensive historical reckoning that we need.鈥