1522
MARY JANE HAEMIG
Lutherâs BetbĂźchlein (Little Prayer Book) was first published at the end of May 1522. Luther had returned to Wittenberg from the Wartburg in early March 1522. The Reformation had advanced rapidly in Wittenberg, and not always in ways that Luther found helpful and evangelical. He clearly saw the need to reform worship and devotional practices but rejected enforced measures (such as the destruction of images or compelling people to receive both kinds), and instead desired a reformation embodying evangelical freedom based on the proclaimed word and faith. His Invocavit Sermons expressed his vision of such reform.
The events of the first half of 1522 illustrate key theological insights. Luther believed that God deals with humans first outwardly, then inwardly. The external wordâthe speaking of the gospel, baptism, and the Lordâs Supperâprecedes and causes the inward experience of the Holy Spirit and faith. God gives the inward only through the outward. Faith then produces outward expressions. Decisions on outward matters of Christian practice, matters neither commanded nor forbidden by God, follow in evangelical freedom from faith. Luther complained that Andreas Bodenstein von Karlstadt (1486â1541) and his followers had, in both cases, reversed the direction. Lutherâs BetbĂźchlein can be seen as a continuation of his message in the Invocavit Sermons and elsewhere; it provided both another proclamation of Godâs word and the resources for the life of faith and its outward expressions in practice that follow from that proclamation of the word. It did not mandate certain prayers and practices but provided resources for Christians to use in exercising their faith in freedom.
Lutherâs efforts in these months aimed at reorienting the reforming movement to its central message. In late April and early May 1522, Luther undertook a preaching tour to other cities in Electoral Saxony. He was also revising his translation of the New Testament for its publication in September. It was this flurry of activity that may have prompted his comment that he âdid not have the timeâ for a basic and thorough reformation of prayer books. Nevertheless, this work continued Lutherâs efforts to reform prayer practice. Already published were his sermons on the Lordâs Prayer and on Rogation prayer. The BetbĂźchlein reveals how profoundly Lutherâs Reformation insights affected the most ordinary aspects of Christian practice.
Medieval monastic prayer practices, patterns, and materials often set the pattern or ideal for lay prayer. The daily routine of monks and nuns included set times for prayer. Prayer was systematically taught even in mendicant orders. The Franciscans, for example, developed a rich literature to instruct novices and friars in proper prayer practice. While they considered vocal prayer, and particularly the Lordâs Prayer, as important, they also sought to reach beyond vocal prayer to mental or spiritual prayer, viewed as more advanced because it involved the human soul rising to God and attaining insights into divine secrets. Prayer was also shaped by confessional practices. It was part of the âsatisfactionâ stage in penance, in that saying prayers after proper contrition and confession to a priest helped satisfy the penitentâs remaining temporal penalty for sin. Pastoral and devotional materials made clear that prayer was an activity that gained merit for the one praying, but that such merit depended on the fulfillment of the proper conditions.
A scene from an illustrated Book of Hours printed in the fifteenth century depicts prayer and the Holy Spirit as dove.
In the late Middle Ages, Books of Hours also became popular, many being designed for and used by laity. Some are known to us today as finely bound and richly illuminated books used by nobility. With the invention of printing in the mid-fifteenth century, such books were available to a broader audience. These books centered on a cycle of prayers to the Virgin Mary (the Hours of the Virgin), designed for recitation throughout the day. The books offered materials and patterns that paralleled monastic practices but were aimed at a lay audience. Commonly, such books included calendars with feast days and commemorations of saints, Gospel lessons touching on major events in the life of Christ and often supplemented by Johnâs account of Christâs passion, the Hours of the Virgin (eight separate hours including psalms, hymns, prayers, and lessons), the Hours of the Cross, the Hours of the Holy Spirit, specialized prayers to the Virgin, the seven penitential psalms (6, 32, 38, 51, 102, 130, and 143), the office of the dead, and prayers to the saints. The books also exhibited a wide variation in other content. Some contained Masses, that is, the prayers said by the priest or sung by the choir; some contained a variety of other prayers, including the Stabat Mater and prayers to oneâs guardian angel. Some prayers were accompanied by indulgences that provided the user with extra merit.
In Germany, beginning at the end of the fifteenth century, the most popular and widely disseminated prayer books were known as the Hortulus animae (âGarden of the Soulâ or âGarden of the Spiritâ). While including the typical contents of the Books of Hours, these shifted the focus of prayer away from the monastic routine and toward the personal and devotional use of prayer. They included prayers for arising and going to bed, prayers for leaving the house and for entering the church, prayers (often from the church fathers) to gain indulgences, prayers while receiving the sacraments of penance and the Lordâs Supper, and prayers while attending Mass.
The Stabat Mater. Mary, the mother of Jesus, stands by Christâs cross along with the apostle John. Painting by Roger van der Weyden (1399/1400â1464).
Other extant works offer insight into the practice of prayer in the late medieval period. One prayer book for laity, probably dating from the late fifteenth or early sixteenth century, contained a hymn of praise to Mary, three prayers to oneâs personal angel, two prayers to an apostle chosen to be oneâs patron saint, and three prayers to Saint Erasmus.
The lines between catechism, prayer book, and breviary were not strictly drawn in the Middle Ages, nor were lines between materials meant for communal worship and those meant for private devotion. The Ten Commandments, Apostlesâ Creed, Lordâs Prayer, and Hail Mary (Ave Maria) were common elements of medieval catechisms. Typically, these catechisms also contained other materials designed to guide conduct, educate the Christian in the faith, and teach prayer. As most people were illiterate, they would have learned their prayers by hearing them spoken and repeating them.
This illustration from a Hortulus animae published in 155...