• Blog
    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest
    • RSS
    • Twitter

Michelle Ule, Author

History, Real Life and Faith

  • Home
  • Who is Michelle Ule, anyway?
    • Michelle Ule’s Genealogy Interests
    • Writing Tips
    • Speaker and Teacher
  • Contact
    • Michelle Ule Media Kit
  • Oswald & Biddy Chambers
    • Mrs. Oswald Chambers
    • Biddy, Kathleen and Oswald Chambers Blog Posts
    • Media Kit–Biddy and Oswald Chambers
  • Books
    • The Dogtrot Christmas–Outtakes and Research Details
    • Bridging Two Hearts–Backstory and Research
    • An Inconvenient Gamble–Inspiration and Research
    • The Gold Rush Christmas
    • The Yuletide Bride–Backstory and Research
    • The Sunbonnet Bride–Outtakes and Back Story
    • A Poppy in Remembrance
    • Find Michelle Ule’s Books
  • Topical Blog Posts
    • Faith
    • Traveler’s Tales
      • Traveler’s Tales by Location
    • Writing Life
    • Life’s challenges
    • Spiritual issues
    • God’s love
    • Laughter
    • Historical Research
    • Bible study
    • WW I Posts
  • Blog
    • Topical Blog Posts
      • Faith
      • Traveler’s Tales
        • Traveler’s Tales by Location
      • Writing Life
      • Life’s challenges
      • Spiritual issues
      • God’s love
      • Laughter
      • Historical Research
      • Bible study
      • WW I Posts
  • Resources

in Bible study· Books· Historical Research· Spiritual issues

Martin Luther, The Bible and Me

Luther

Luther By Lucas Cranach the Elder [(Wikipedia)

Martin Luther nailed a lengthy piece of paper to the Wittenburg church door on October 31, 499 years ago.

Luther, a monk, announced his dissatisfaction with the Catholic Church that day and sparked the Reformation of Christianity.

His 95 theses declaration changed civilization; some believe for good, some think for bad.

Certainly, my life is better because of it, and so is yours.

Here are four reasons how 499 years after Luther, my life is improved:

I can read.

Prior to Luther, church members either couldn’t read or were strongly advised against reading the Bible.

Luther and his followers encouraged literacy so people could read the Bible themselves.

By reading the Bible, they could form their own opinions about what God said.

It liberated them from reliance on someone else telling them who God is.

It also meant that if I have a question, I have a source in which to find the answer.

The Bible, and thus books, became accessible.

Luther

Luther’s Bible 1534 (Wikimedia Commons)

Prior to Luther and his focus on education, books were not readily available.

Luther spent years translating the Bible into common vernacular any German could understand.

The first book printed on Johannes Gutenberg‘s press was a Bible. (Albeit long before Luther was born).

Luther’s translation combined with the press meant the Bible could put into the hands of anyone.

My religious education prior to my teens had nothing hands-on to do with the Bible.

Attending a Lutheran Church meant I needed a Bible in my hands so I could study it myself.

Singing in four part harmony!

While I was a musician before I attended a Lutheran Church, I had never participated in singing hymns in four part harmony before.

To hear those thunderous bass and tenor notes on some of the magnificent hymns of the faith, was extraordinary.

I’d never sung Luther’s “A Mighty Fortress is Our God” before worshipping at Trinity Lutheran Church!

Luther's Ein Feste Burg

A Mighty Fortress is Our God with the composer’s signature! (Wikimedia Commons)

All those soaring hymns, thick with theology, have inspired and taught me over the years.

Singing soprano with a bass husband, is lots of fun!

Salvation, Grace and the Law

Thanks to Luther’s teaching, I came to understand my salvation was an act of grace from God.

Somehow I had missed that in prior religious teaching.

Because of reading the Bible–particularly the book of Romans which was the first book I studied–I grasped a better understanding of sin.

I discovered my sins were forgiven by Christ’s death on the cross–once and for all.

I’d missed that crucial fact as well.

Was Luther responsible for it all?

Martin Luther’s “here I stand, I can do no else,” was the catalyst for the needed Reformation in the church 500 years ago.

His insistence on the inerrancy of Scripture and willingness to sacrifice himself for God’s purposes reverberates through the centuries.

As he would agree, Martin Luther was a flawed man who stumbled over personal sins.

He was not perfect.

I don’t like everything he said nor every hymn he wrote.

But, I’m like him in the major point. Martin Luther clung to the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ to forgive his sins and lead him into life eternal.

I’m looking forward to this Reformation year–to learn more about Martin Luther, to worship with other believers and to be thankful.

Reading, the Bible, singing and grace, and like Martin and Katarina Luther– a large family–are the cornerstones of my life.

Thanks be to God!

Tweetables

How my life is better 499 years after Martin Luther. Click to Tweet

4 ways Luther improved my life. Click to Tweet

I can read, sing and know forgiveness. Thanks Martin Luther! Click to Tweet

 

 

 

 

 

Like this:

Like Loading...

Related Posts:

  • Luther
    Martin Luther and Modern Times
  • Luther, Katharina and Martin Luther, Luther and Katharina, historical fiction, biography, Michelle DeRusha, Jody Hedlund, Reformation
    Mr. & Mrs Luther in Fact and Fiction
  • Luther, Katharina and Martin Luther, Luther and Katharina, historical fiction, biography, Michelle DeRusha, Jody Hedlund, Reformation
    Mr. & Mrs Luther in Fact and Fiction

Filed Under: Bible study, Books, Historical Research, Spiritual issues Tagged With: 4 ways life is better because of Luther, 95 Theses, Bible, Catholic Church, common vernacular, Lutheranism, Martin Luther, Protestant Reformation, reading, Reformation, Wittenburg door

« Reading Dracula in Transylvania
Poldark: Past, Present and Forgiveness »

Thoughts? Reactions? Lurker?Cancel reply

Meet the Author

Michelle Ule

Michelle Ule is a bestselling author of historical novellas, an essayist, blogger and the biographer of Mrs. Oswald Chambers: The Woman Behind the World's Bestselling Devotional.

You've come to the right place to read more about her, Biddy, Oswald and My Utmost for His Highest!

Read More More About Her

Newsletter Subscription

Sign up for news and monthly updates--including a free link to Writing about Biddy and Oswald Chambers: Stories and Serendipities.


Let’s Connect

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • RSS
  • Twitter
Privacy Policy | Cookie Policy

Search

Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Market theme by Restored 316

%d