Free Essays, Free Research Papers, Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers
Smart Essay Free Essays, Free Research Papers,
Free Book Reports and Free Term Papers

FREE ESSAY ON LUTHER LOVE DISSCUSSION

College Term Papers - Instant Download

(sponsored links)

Martin Luther: Bad Ass?
This paper analyzes Martin Luther's role in Western Civilization, comparing his achievements with other influential historical figures such as Alexander the Great, Jesus, Muhammad and Magellan. -- 1,460 words; MLA

Luther's Break with the Roman Church
In this paper, Martin Luther's reasons for breaking with the Church of Rome are examined. -- 900 words; MLA

Martin Luther: Reformer or Revolutionary
An analysis of the humble beginnings of the Protestant Reformation led by religious reformer, Martin Luther. -- 1,400 words; MLA

Martin Luther King
A biography of Martin Luther King. -- 1,900 words;

Martin Luther King Jr and Malcolm X
A comparative analysis of the philosophies of Martin Luther King Jr and Malcolm X. -- 1,380 words; MLA

Click here for more essays on LUTHER LOVE DISSCUSSION

LUTHER LOVE DISSCUSSION

Eric Pacheco
Love As Ethic and Idea
Rewrite Paper 2
Spring April 2001
Throughout history and especially since the sixteenth century many Roman Catholic's like
Martin Luther, have distinguished ordinary or acquired prayer, even if occurring at a
super conceptual level of love, adoration, and desire for God, from the extraordinary or
absorbed contemplation which is entirely the work of God's special grace. Only the latter
is mystical in a strict sense, according to this view. Other writers, such as
Bonaventure, can apply the terms of mysticism to all communions with God. 
Martin Luther, a fifteen-century monk, questions all that is caritas though three
campaigns. The first campaign Luther uses attacks the heavenly ladder. The heavenly
ladder becomes questionable to Luther. Martin Luther believes if there was such a ladder
then it would be God in all his perfection coming to us, and not the other way around. We
cannot simply climb up to God in heaven by human actions alone. The second campaign
Luther uses attacks the "formula fides caritate formata" (also known as faith formed by
caritas). Martin Luther refuses the idea of indulgences, which spare you from purgatory.
In other words Luther can not accept paying for absolution. As if God can be bribed to
climb the fictional ladder used in the first campaign. The third and final campaign (I
will mention) Luther uses attacks the self-love of caritas. Martin Luther argues that
self-love is inherently bad. This self love is the ultimate expression of sin, in the
Luther's opinion one should "love thy neighbor" instead of yourself. This self-love 
Page 2
carries the idea of selfishness. God should be the only one to through you, love you and
others. 
Luther discusses laws for the Reformation of caritas. One must first "Hammer," which
means to breakdown our self-love. The second laws that Martin Luther discusses
Is "Mirror," which reveals our self to our sin. Luther suggests that though grace one can
enter the Kingdom of Heaven. While Luther had a well-known antipathy to mystics, it is
also true that there is the foundation of mystical life in his theology of the heart,
particularly in his early thought. Perhaps through mysticism on can gain grace to stand
with God.
Bonaventure emphasized the total dependence of all things upon God, and he wrote guides
to mystic contemplation. There are certain common fallacies current about mysticism: that
mystics are not "practical" and that they are revolutionary. On the contrary, many of the
greatest mystics have been both intensely active as well as submissive to authority of
whatever sort. Mysticism does not promote solitary thinking. Nor is the "solitary
thinker" necessarily, or even usually, a mystic. Mysticism mainly states that God is all
around us in nature in and in us. There is no need for a church and system to be close
with God or to be one with him.
There are two general tendencies in the speculation of mystics—to regard God as
outside the soul, which rises to its God by successive stages, or to regard God as
dwelling within the soul and to be found by delving deeper into one's own reality. The
idea of transcendence, as held most firmly by mystics, is the kernel of the ancient
mystical 
Page 3
system, Neoplatonism, and of Gnosticism. Their explanation of the connection between God
and humans by emanation is epoch-making in the philosophy of contemplation. 
In the plain language of old-fashioned theology man's sin is stamped upon man's universe.
One can see a false world because we live a sham life. According to mysticism the average
people do not know themselves; hence do not know the true character of their senses and
instincts; hence attribute wrong values to their suggestions and declarations concerning
our relation to the world. This lucid apprehension of the True is what mysticism means
when it speak of the Illumination, which results from a faithful acceptance of the trials
of the Purgative Way. That which we call the natural self as it exists in the natural
world--the  Adam of St. Paul--is wholly incapable of super-sensual adventure. All its
activities are grouped about a center of consciousness whose correspondences are with the
material world. In the moment of its awakening, it is abruptly made aware of this
disability. It knows itself finite. It now aspires to the infinite. It is encased in the
hard crust of individuality: it aspires to union with a larger self. It is fettered: it
longs for freedom. Its every sense is attuned to illusion: it craves for harmony with the
Absolute Truth. Some believe that God is the only Reality and a human is real only as far
as it is in His order, and He is in this person. As stated before god with Luther, God
loves through you. Whatever form the mystical adventure may take it, must begin with a
change in the attitude of the subject; a change which will introduce it into the order of
Reality, and enable it to set up permanent relations with an Object which is not normally
part of its universe. Therefore, though the end of mysticism is not adequately 
Page 4
defined as goodness, it entails the acquirement of goodness. The virtues are the
ornaments of the spiritual marriage because that marriage is union with the Good no 
less than with the Beautiful and the True. Primarily, then, the self must be purged of
all that stands between it and goodness of God: putting on the character of reality
instead of the character of illusion or sin. It longs ardently to do this from the first
moment in which it sees itself in the all-revealing radiance of the Noncreated Light.
Purgatory is devoted to the cleansing of pride and the production of humility: the
inevitable--one might almost say mechanical--result of a vision, however fleeting, of
Reality, and an undistorted sight of the earthbound self. All its life that self has been
measuring it's candlelight by other candles. Now for the first time it is out in the open
air and sees the sun. 
More recent theological understandings of mystical theology define characteristics less
precisely and seek to fit mystical theology more centrally into a celestial and
soterio-logical framework. Catholic theologians have sought to locate mystical theology
in a scriptural and liturgical context, emphasizing the believer's participation in the
mystery of God's reconciliation with his creatures in Christ, especially in the
sacraments. Many attempts have been made to describe the fundamental characteristics of
mystical experience. Traditionally it has been asserted that the experiential union of
creature and Creator is inexpressible and ineffable, although those who have experienced
it seek imagery and metaphors to describe it, however imperfectly. As noted above, it is
experienced union or vision, not abstract knowledge. It is beyond 
Page 5
the level of concepts, for reasoning, ideas, and sensory images have been transcended
(but not rejected) in an intuitive union. 
Thus it is super rational and super intellectual, not antirational or anti -
intellectual. In one sense the soul is passive, because it experiences God's grace poured
into it. Yet the union is not symbiotic, because the soul consents to and embraces the
spiritual marriage. Although some authors also stress the transient and fleeting nature
of mystical union, others describe it as lasting for a definite, even prolonged period of
time. 
Mysticism can be used with Luther's arguments based on grace as stated before. As stated
before grace, described by Luther, can be created by living the "moral life." Both Luther
and Mysticism state God as the true love and the Human body is just a vessel. Grace is a
gift from god and can not be gained by human demand. The living God cannot be reduced to
a system made by church. To gain grace just for the intention of getting God's attention
is selfish. Both Luther and Mysticism agree that one must believe in God though inside
oneself.

Use the Search box at the top to find Term Papers for Sale by keywords or browse Free Essays page by page
(sorted alphabetically by Essay Title):

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
For college-level Term Papers, Essays, Research Papers and Book Reports, please go to the Term Papers for Sale Website


This Free Essays Web Site, is Copyright © 2010, Essay Express. All rights reserved.




Partner websites: Interior Decor Art :: Immigration Lawyer Toronto :: Original Acrylic and Oil Paintings :: Learn Violin in Thornhill :: Learn to play violin in Toronto :: Cello Lessons in Toronto :: Buy used Yamaha piano in Toronto