Martin Luther and antisemitism - Wikipedia
1543 on the jews and their lies by martin luther
Martin Luther (1483–1546) was a German professor of theology, priest, and seminal leader of the Reformation. His positions on Judaism continue to be controversial. These changed dramatically from his early career, where … Wikipedia
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Wikipedia
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Martin Luther and antisemitism - Wikipedia
February 16, 2026 - In the same year, the Land Synod ... of Martin Luther, to take seriously also his anti-Jewish utterances, to acknowledge their theological function, and to reflect on their consequences. It has to distance itself from every [expression of] anti-Judaism in Lutheran theology." A strong position statement was issued by The Lutheran Evangelical Protestant Church (LEPC) (GCEPC) saying, "The Jewish people are God's ...
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Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org › wiki › On_the_Jews_and_Their_Lies
On the Jews and Their Lies - Wikipedia
2 weeks ago - In his later period when he wrote On the Jews and Their Lies, he denounced them and urged their persecution. In this treatise, he argues that Jewish synagogues and schools be set on fire, prayer books be destroyed, rabbis forbidden to preach, Jewish homes burned, and property and money confiscated.
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Let's talk about Luther's Antisemitism
Thankfully, Lutherans and Reformed individuals do not treat their older founders and leaders as infallible sources of authority and nearly every Lutheran will agree that Luther’s comments on the Jews are disturbing and nearly every Reformed Christian will agree that Calvin’s views on execution of Heretics is horrific. More on reddit.com
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March 20, 2023
Did Martin Luther only become rabidly antisemitic later in life? If so, what prompted it?
Martin Luther the writer was popular. Super popular. From 1520-26 alone, Hans-Joachim Köhler has estimated that "conservatively" there were 6.6 million copies of pamphlets and longer texts by Luther avalanching off German printing presses. Luther's words, in short, were everywhere. And these words included, in 1523, the pamphlet Das Jesus Christus ein geborner Jude sey , in which Luther asserts that Jews are the true relatives of Christ: "they are blood friends, fathers, and brothers of our Lord." Christians, meanwhile, can only be "foreigners" and "brothers-in-law." In the context of late medieval hatred of Jews, contemporaries perceived this as a bold and courageous statement. The late Middle Ages into the early modern era, recent scholarship has demonstrated, witnessed the creation of anti-Semitism out of anti-Judaism--that is, a change from hatred rooted in Jewish religion to a racialized, biological hatred of Jews as a people. Notably, Christians were believing more and more that even Jews' conversion to Christianity could not truly "take"--if they weren't already doing so just for show, they would inevitably slide back into Judaism; they couldn't help it. In this passage, on the other hand, Luther follows up a strident belief and desire for the conversion of individual Jews to Christianity with the thundering statement that Jews are blood brothers and Gentiles are foreigners to Christ himself. But already in Luther's lifetime, people were making a critical interpretative mistake when reading his texts that continues to dog the man today: they failed to consider his remarks in the immediate context and purpose of the particular text he was writing. I don't want to say "more so than others," because to a historian everyone's words only make sense in context, but the issue is particularly pertinent for Luther because of how public and highly charged his writing was already treated as in his own time. You can find in Luther's writing from around 1530 beautiful words of support for women as part of the priesthood of all believers and "your sons and daughters will prophesy" from the prophet Joel; you will also find him railing against women daring to speak in public, not least about religion. The difference is that in the first, Luther is attacking the Catholic concept of a sacral priesthood; the second, evangelical women and their husbands need to learn proper Christian behavior. And so in Das Jesus Christus ein geborner Jude sey, it's absolutely vital to understand this is (1) Luther defending himself against accusations from his opponents that he has denied Mary's virginity even to the point of saying Joseph was Jesus' biological father (2) Luther evangelizing to Jews. No, really. To Luther, in this treatise, the newfound freedom of the Gospel from the clutches of Roman idolatry is also a brilliant new beginning for Jews: they can convert truly to Christianity, real Christianity, now. Their earlier failure to convert was because of the heretical trappings built up by the medieval Church. Unfortunately, Luther's contemporaries--Christians and Jews alike--got stuck on the positive notes expressed here (Jews are Christ's blood-brothers; Christians should "deal with Jews in a friendly way") and missed that the whole point was so Jews can become Christians because that's right and Judaism is wrong. So in 1536, when then-Duke of [Electoral] Saxony Johann Friedrich declared a sweeping expulsion of all Jews from his territory (standard practice cascading across Europe), Jews and their Christian practical-allies saw Luther as a powerful ally. Wolfgang Capito, the key Straburg reformer, put well-known and brilliant Jewish leader Josel von Rosheim in touch with Luther to ask for intercession with the prince. The hope and expectation on both men's parts, and obviously the community the one represented, was absolutely that Luther would want to help. But Luther said no. Capito's angle in levying the request, as a scholar of the Hebrew language (for Christian purposes, of course), was the contributions of Jews to local intellectual life and scholarship. In this time period, Christian willingness to not kick Jews out always, always, always depends on how Christians benefit. What Capito failed to recognize was that for Luther, the scales of "Christian benefit" had tipped into the negative from his famous 1523 polemic. Luther's earlier "friendliness," remember, hinged on his belief that with the shackles of popery cast off Christianity, Jews would turn towards the light of the Gospel. Throughout his life, he continued to full-heartedly accept Jewish converts to Christianity when he was convinced they were sincere about it. But what Luther's theological-biographer Heiko Oberman has called the apocalyptic "Darkness at Noon" had set in by the 1530s with the maturation of evangelical reform--in particular, realization of its limits. The early exultation of the success of das wort gottes over the land ossified into either recognition or reconstruction of pockets of Catholic resistance, lack of Christians' knowledge of basic tenets of the faith, perceived failures of local preaching and education. The entire Reformation proceeded under the purview of imminent Armageddon. For Luther, the threat only grew stronger over the course of his life and the unarguable--to everyone else--success of the movement he launched. This affected his recommendations on how to deal with Jews for two reasons. First, the hope that Jews would convert to Christianity simply because of evangelical reform had dimmed and died. Completely. Second, the late medieval mythology of Jews as the "forerunners of Antichrist" occupied a more prominent place in Luther's apocalypticism, as did the Turks creeping closer to Vienna. One pattern that scholars have pointed out is that Luther's apocalyptic polemic shifted its primary focus from the pope/Rome to peasants to Jews over the course of his life. That is, the intensity of his opprobrium darkened and lightened, while never vanishing. For Luther passing through the 1530s into the 40s, yes, his rhetoric against Jews reaches feverishness. To be clear, though, we are talking about Luther's views on how to treat Jews in the immediate present. By 1536, and spiraling further from there, Luther saw Jews as largely a failed mission ground. They had not converted; current Jews threatened Christians' own belief. As Oberman argues, Luther's actual views of Jews--his understanding of Jews and Judaism in light of Christian theology and 16th century society--had not changed. But with developing societal circumstances, his views of how to deal with Jews sure had. And devastatingly: Firstly, that their synagogues or schools should be burned down, and what will not burn should be razed adn covered with earth, that no man will ever see a stone or cinder of it again... Next, that their houses should be broken and destroyed in the same way...They can be put under a roof or stable, like the gypsies. [you read that right -sun] Third, that all their prayer books and Talmuds, in which such idolatrous lies, curses, and blasphemies are taught, should be taken from them... Fourth, that their rabbis should be forbidden, at risk of life and limb, to teach from now on... Fifth...they have no reason to be in the country. Sixth...all their cash and fortunes in silver and gold should be taken from them and put in safekeeping. Seventh, that young, strong Jewish men and women should be given flail, axe, hoe, spade, distaff, spindle, and be left to earn their bread by their sweat... For as all can see, God's wrath over them is so great that gentle mercy will only make them worse and worse, and harsh treatment little better. So away with them at all costs. Medieval and early modern rhetoric in religion and politics often seems sharp enough to cut skin on its own, it's true. But it's impossible to deny that what Luther prescribes in Von den Jüden und iren Lügen (1543) "can be safely termed a pogrom", as Oberman carefully puts it. ("Safely termed"--yeah, he's aware.) What's still evident amidst the abhorrent virulence and violence, which make no mistake would be mobilized in support of actual violence for centuries to come, is Luther's underlying belief in the hope of Jewish conversion to Christianity--and the crushing of that hope: We must exercise harsh mercy with fear and trembling, in the hope that we could save some from the flames and embers [of hell]. We must not avenge ourselves. This is worn out, worn down, but always firey Luther's apocalypticism taking over. The failure of Jews to convert is to him a sign of the devil's triumph over the earth. Luther impresses Christians to serve as God's agents against the Jews as the devil's, for the protection of Christians and in hopes of saving one, two, any Jews at all through fear and trembling if friendliness would not work. Even the 1544 Wittenberg Hymnal had a hymn reminding Christians that Christ's crucifixion was the result of Gentile sin and depravity that Christ wanted to redeem out of love--not the fault of Jews. "The guilt is ours," runs the hymn, about the Passion. Unfortunately, when it came to stoking the metaphorical and literal fires of anti-Semitism, the guilt is also that of Luther and his interpreters. More on reddit.com
🌐 r/AskHistorians
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October 22, 2017
Genuine Question: How do you reconcile Martin Luther's extreme anti-Semitism?

he continued to view women more as a hindrance to faith, rather than a blessing from God.

A view still common in modern Hippo, via Islam.

More on reddit.com
🌐 r/Reformed
97
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February 19, 2020
TIL that Protestant Reformation leader, Martin Luther, was an anti-Semite who denounced and urged the persecution of Jews
I mean it was 1507. We were barely at the end of kings burning down the Jewish district as a way to settle the kingdom's debts. More on reddit.com
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Christian History Institute
christianhistoryinstitute.org › magazine › article › was-luther-anti-semitic
Was Luther anti-Semitic? | Christian History Magazine
As a biblical theologian, Martin Luther struggled with the relationship between Jewish (Old Testament) and Christian (New Testament) Scriptures—a struggle not yet resolved. But when Luther concluded that God had rejected the people of Israel, ...
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AJC
ajc.org › news › on-luther-and-his-lies
On Luther and His Lies | AJC
October 3, 2019 - Jews and Judaism were a relatively minor detail of the Reformation, but Luther’s virulent anti-Judaism and antisemitism—a term first used in the 19th century—left a legacy that would be cynically championed by the Nazi cause and religiously heralded by some Christian leaders in the 20th century as genocide was perpetrated against the Jewish people.
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Liberty University
digitalcommons.liberty.edu › cgi › viewcontent.cgi pdf
Luther and the Jews: An Exposition Directed to Christians ...
Jewish people kindly instead of persecuting them because of their race would be the first · step in their salvation. Luther next rationally refutes contemporary Judaic theology to · demonstrate that they desperately needed the evangelical help of the Christians (Martin
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JSTOR
jstor.org › stable › j.ctt22nm6gf
Martin Luther, the Bible, and the Jewish People: A Reader on JSTOR
pThe place and significance of Martin Luther in the long history of Christian anti-Jewish polemic has been and continues to be a contested issue. It is true tha...
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WLU Scholars
scholars.wlu.ca › cgi › viewcontent.cgi pdf
Consensus Consensus Volume 41 Issue 2 Martin Luther and Antisemitism Article 4
notes that, for Luther, Jewish existence is under God’s wrath (Kaufmann 2006, 72). Why are · the Jewish people under the wrath of God in “On the Jews and their Lies” Luther writes that
Find elsewhere
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Stanford
religiousstudies.stanford.edu › events › stephen-burnett-martin-luther-devil-and-his-anti-jewish-polemics
Stephen Burnett: “Martin Luther, the Devil, and his anti-Jewish Polemics” | Religious Studies
January 10, 2024 - In them he sought to demonize Jews and to demand that the political authorities treat them harshly, by confiscating their wealth, homes, books, and synagogues, or even forcibly exiling them.
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ONE FOR ISRAEL
oneforisrael.org › home › videos & articles › martin luther, israel, and the jewish people
Martin Luther, Israel, and the Jewish People | ONE FOR ISRAEL Ministry
October 28, 2024 - He wanted to forbid Jewish practice and teaching, and considered Jewish people to be “just devils and nothing more”. He wrote, “Verily, a hopeless, wicked, venomous and devilish thing is the existence of these Jews who for fourteen hundred ...
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Lutheran Reformation
lutheranreformation.org › history › luther-and-the-jews
Luther and the Jews - Lutheran Reformation
October 26, 2015 - Resolved, That, in that light, we personally and individually adopt Luther’s final attitude toward the Jewish people, as evidenced in his last sermon: “We want to treat them with Christian love and to pray for them, so that they might become converted and would receive the Lord” (Weimar edition of Luther’s Works, Vol.
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The Gospel Coalition
thegospelcoalition.org › home › articles › luther’s jewish problem
Luther’s Jewish Problem
October 25, 2021 - In any case, there’s ample evidence that Luther’s theological opposition to Jews was paired with ethnic hatred. Why else would he repeatedly picture them smeared with pig manure? To take a people’s distinctive feature—in this case Jewish avoidance of pigs—and maliciously turn it against them is textbook racism.
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Theologian
theologian.org.uk › churchhistory › lutherandthejews.html
Luther and the Jews
Luther’s use of the image of “whore” and “slut” for the Jews is in fact a Jewish, Old Testament prophetic pejorative for the Israelites in times of waywardness. See, e.g., the book of Hosea. It is also perhaps an ironic jab at them, since they supposedly call the Virgin Mary the same. [51] Martin Luther, “Von den Juden und ihren Lügen” (“On the Jews and their Lies”) in D.
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Center for Israel
centerforisrael.com › article › was-martin-luther-antisemitic
Was Martin Luther Antisemitic? - Gateway Center for Israel
March 5, 2024 - While Luther’s theological ... antisemitism has often been overshadowed. In the early stages of his ministry, Martin Luther exhibited a sympathetic attitude toward the Jewish people....
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The Morgan Library & Museum
themorgan.org › videos › martin-luther-and-anti-semitism
Martin Luther and Anti-Semitism | The Morgan Library & Museum
A panel featuring Mark R. Silk, Trinity College, Hartford; Dean P. Bell, Spertus Institute, Chicago; and Martin Hauger, High Consistory of the Evangelical Church in Germany, discuss Martin Luther’s changing opinion on Jews as well as the impact of the Reformation on Christian-Jewish relations in the 16th century.
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Sage Journals
journals.sagepub.com › doi › 10.1177 › 0040573617721911
Martin Luther and the Jews: Context and Content* - Dean Bell, 2017
The subject of the Jews and Judaism was central to much of Martin Luther’s writings and thought. While important for and informed by his own developing theology, Luther’s treatment of the Jews and ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/lutheranism › let's talk about luther's antisemitism
r/Lutheranism on Reddit: Let's talk about Luther's Antisemitism
March 20, 2023 -

At the beginning of his career, Martin Luther was apparently sympathetic to Jewish resistance to the Catholic Church. However, he expected the Jews to convert to protestant Christianity; when they did not, he turned violently against them.

It's true that Luther often used strong language throughout his career. While we do not expect religious figures to use this sort of language in the modern world, it was not uncommon in the early 16th century.

The following are excerpts from Luther’s work titled, "The Jews & their Lies":

"I had made up my mind to write no more either about the Jews or against them. But since I learned that these miserable and accursed people do not cease to lure to themselves even us, that is, the Christians, I have published this little book (The Jews & their Lies), so that I might be found among those who opposed such poisonous activities of the Jews who warned the Christians to be on their guard against them. I would not have believed that a Christian could be duped by the Jews into taking their exile and wretchedness upon himself. However, the devil is the god of the world, and wherever God’s word is absent he has an easy task, not only with the weak but also with the strong. May God help us. Amen."


"He did not call them Abraham’s children, but a “brood of vipers” [Matt. 3:7]. Oh, that was too insulting for the noble blood and race of Israel, and they declared, “He has a demon’ [Matt 11:18]. Our Lord also calls them a “brood of vipers”; furthermore, in John 8 [:39,44] he states: “If you were Abraham’s children ye would do what Abraham did.... You are of your father the devil. It was intolerable to them to hear that they were not Abraham’s but the devil’s children, nor can they bear to hear this today."


"Therefore, the blind Jews are truly stupid fools..."


"Now just behold these miserable, blind, and senseless people ... their blindness and arrogance are as solid as an iron mountain."


"Learn from this, dear Christian, what you are doing if you permit the blind Jews to mislead you. Then the saying will truly apply, “When a blind man leads a blind man, both will fall into the pit” [cf. Luke 6:39]. You cannot learn anything from them except how to misunderstand the divine commandments..."


"Therefore be on your guard against the Jews, knowing that wherever they have their synagogues, nothing is found but a den of devils in which sheer self-glory, conceit, lies, blasphemy, and defaming of God and men are practiced most maliciously and veheming his eyes on them."


"Moreover, they are nothing but thieves and robbers who daily eat no morsel and wear no thread of clothing which they have not stolen and pilfered from us by means of their accursed usury. Thus, they live from day to day, together with wife and child, by theft and robbery, as arch thieves and robbers, in the most impenitent security."


"However, they have not acquired a perfect mastery of the art of lying; they lie so clumsily and ineptly that anyone who is just a little observant can easily detect it. But for us Christians they stand as a terrifying example of God’s wrath."


"If I had to refute all the other articles of the Jewish faith, I should be obliged to write against them as much and for as long a time as they have used for inventing their lies­­ that is, longer than two thousand years."


"...Christ and his word can hardly be recognized because of the great vermin of human ordinances. However, let this suffice for the time being on their lies against doctrine or faith."


"Did I not tell you earlier that a Jew is such a noble, precious jewel that God and all the angels dance when he farts?"


"...but then eject them forever from this country. For, as we have heard, God’s anger with them is so intense that gentle mercy will only tend to make them worse and worse, while sharp mercy will reform them but little. Therefore, in any case, away with them!"


"But what will happen even if we do burn down the Jews’ synagogues and forbid them publicly to praise God, to pray, to teach, to utter God’s name? They will still keep doing it in secret. If we know that they are doing this in secret, it is the same as if they were doing it publicly. for our knowledge of their secret doings and our toleration of them implies that they are not secret after all and thus our conscience is encumbered with it before God."


"First, that their synagogues be burned down, and that all who are able toss in sulfur and pitch; it would be good if someone could also throw in some hellfire. That would demonstrate to God our serious resolve and be evidence to all the world that it was in ignorance that we tolerated such houses, in which the Jews have reviled God, our dear Creator and Father, and his Son most shamefully up till now but that we have now given them their due reward."


This is unfortunately just the tip of the iceberg. There are many more examples of antisemitism from Martin Luther's written works.

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Evangelical Church in Germany
ekd.de › home › church › synod › martin luther and the jews
Martin Luther and the Jews - a necessary reminder on the occasion of the Reformation anniversary
April 11, 2025 - The horror at such historical and ... and inhumanity towards Jews today. "When our Lord and Master Jesus Christ said, 'Repent,' he willed the entire life of believers to be one of repentance" (Martin Luther)....
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Christianity Today
christianitytoday.com › home › was luther anti-semitic?
Was Luther Anti-Semitic? - Christianity Today
July 30, 2019 - As a biblical theologian, Martin Luther struggled with the relationship between Jewish (Old Testament) and Christian (New Testament) Scriptures—a struggle not yet resolved. But when Luther concluded that God had rejected the people of Israel, ...
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DOKUMEN.PUB
dokumen.pub › martin-luther-the-bible-and-the-jewish-people-a-reader-9780800698041-9781451424287-0800698045.html
Martin Luther, the Bible, and the Jewish People: A Reader 9780800698041, 9781451424287, 0800698045 - DOKUMEN.PUB
Table of contents : Contents Preface Introduction: Martin Luther, the Bible, and the Jewish People The Jew in Luther’s World The Text Selections Text #1: First Psalm Lectures (1513–1515) Text #2: Letter to George Spalatin (1514) Text #3: Lectures on Romans (1515–1516) Text #4: Lectures on Galatians (1519) Text #5: Second Psalms Lectures (1519–1521) Text #6: Magnificat (1521) Text #7: That Jesus Christ Was Born a Jew (1523) Text #8: Letter to the Baptized Jew, Bernard (1523) Text #9: Lectures on Deuteronomy (1525) Text #10: Sermon: How Christians Should Regard Moses (1525) Text #11: Lec