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A Third Source Concerning Johann
Tetzel and the Selling of Indulgences:
Freidrich Myconius, Historia
reformationis, p. 14.
At the time, a Dominican monk named
Johann Tetzel was the great mouthpiece, commissioner, and preacher
of indulgences in Germany. His preaching raised enormous
amounts of money which were sent to Rome. This was
particularly the case in the new mining town of St. Annaberg, where
I, Friedrich Myconius, listened to him for over two years.
The claims of this uneducated and shameful monk were
unbelievable. Thus he said that even if someone had slept
with Christ’s dear Mother, the Pope had power in heaven and
on earth to forgive as long as the money was put into the
indulgences coffer. And if the Pope would forgive, God also
had to forgive. He furthermore said if they would put money
quickly into the coffer to obtain grace and indulgence, all the
mountains near St. Annaberg would turn into pure silver. He
claimed that in the very moment the coin rang in the coffer, the
soul rose up to heaven. Such a marvelous thing was his
indulgence. In sum and substance: God was no longer
God, as he had bestowed all divine power to the Pope:
‘Tu es Petrus, tibi dabo claves,
quodcunque.’ And then there were the masters of
the Inquisition, who banished and burned those saying conflicting
words.
This indulgence was highly
respected. When the commissioner [Tetzel] was welcomed to
town, the papal bull was carried on velvet or gold cloth. All
the priests, monks, councilmen, teachers, pupils, men, women,
maids, and children went to meet him singing in solemn procession
with flags and candles. The bells tolled and when he entered
the church the organ played. A red Cross was put up in the
middle of the church to which the Pope’s banner was
affixed. In short: even God himself could not have been
welcomed and received more beautifully.
[
A Fourth Source Concerning Johann
Tetzel and the Selling of Indulgences:
The Text of a Sermon on Indulgences by
Johann Tetzel. Source: W. Kohler, Dokumente zum
Ablassstreit, pp. 125-26.]
[Tetzel’s sermon:] What
are you thinking about? Why do you hesitate to convert
yourself? Why don’t you have fears about your
sins? Why don’t you confess now to the vicars of our
Most Holy Pope? Don’t you have the example of Lawrence,
who, compelled by the love of God, gave away his inheritance and
suffered his body to be burned? Why do you not take the
example of Bartholomew, Stephen, and of other saints who gladly
suffered the most gruesome deaths for the sake and salvation of
their souls? You, however, do not give up great treasures;
indeed you give not even a moderate alms. They gave their
bodies to be martyred, but you delight in living well and
joyfully. You priest, nobleman, merchant, wife, virgin, you
married people, young person, old man, enter into your church which
is for you, as I have said, St. Peter’s, and visit the most
holy Cross. It has been placed there for you, and it cries
and calls for you. Are you perhaps ashamed to visit the Cross
with a candle and yet not ashamed to visit a tavern? Are you
ashamed to go to the apostolic confessors, but not ashamed to go to
a dance? Behold, you are on the raging sea of the world in
storm and danger, not knowing if you will safely reach the harbor
of salvation. Do you not know that everything which man has
hangs on a thin thread and that all of life is but a struggle on
earth? Let us then fight, as did Lawrence and the other
saints, for the day it is well, but ill tomorrow. Today alive
and tomorrow dead.
You should know that all who confess
and in penance put alms into the coffer according to the counsel of
the confessor, will obtain complete remission of all their
sins. If they visit, after confession and after the Jubilee,
the Cross and the altar every day, they will receive that
indulgence which would be theirs upon visiting in St. Peter’s
the seven altars, where complete indulgence is offered. Why
are you then standing there? Run for the salvation of our
souls! Be as careful and concerned for the salvation of your
souls as you are for your temporal goods, which you seek both day
and night. Seek the Lord while he may be found and while he
is near. Work, as St. John says, while it is yet day, for the
night comes when no man can work.
Don’t you hear the voices of
your wailing dead parents and others who say, “Have mercy
upon me, have mercy upon me, because we are in severe punishment
and pain. From this you could redeem us with a small alms and
yet you do not want to do so.” Open your ears as the
father says to the son and the mother to the daughter…,
“We have created you, fed you, cared for you, and left you
our temporal goods. Why then are you so cruel and harsh that
you do not want to save us, though it only takes a little?
You let us lie in flames so that we only slowly come to the
promised glory.” You may have letters which let you
have, once in life and in the hour of death…full remission
of the punishment which belongs to sin. Oh, those of you with
vows, you usurers, robbers, murderers, and criminals – Now is
the time to hear the voice of God. He does not want the death
of the sinner, but that he be converted and live. Convert
yourselves, the Jerusalem, Jerusalem, to the Lord, thy God.
Oh, you blasphemers, gossipers, who hinder this work openly or
secretly, what about your affairs? You are outside the
fellowship of the Church. No masses, no sermons, prayers,
sacraments, or intercession help you. No field, vineyard,
trees, or cattle bring fruit or wine for you. Even spiritual
things vanish, as many an illustration could point out.
Convert yourself with all your heart and use the medicine of which
the Book of Wisdom says, “The Most High has made medicine out
of the earth and a wise man will not ret reject
it.”
[NOTE: The four sources
above are quoted from The Reformation, by Hans J.
Hillerbrand, published by Harper & Row, publishers, Copyright
1964 by SCM Press Ltd. and Harper and Row, Inc., Library of
Congress catalog card number 64-15480, pp. 41-46.]
[John Phillis
continues:] Well, that was some of the
“preaching” and the actions of this one, Johann
Tetzel. And it would be his actions, then,
not acting alone, although he was known as a braggart, but acting
under the authority of the pope and the Roman church to sell these
indulgences. And that would be, then, the
spark, which would ignite the Reformation,
specifically there in Germany with Martin Luther.
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