Philipp Melanchthon on Reformed Education
Sharing Reformed Christian Resources Around The World
Philipp
Melanchthon on Reformed Education
Dr.
R. Faber
Taken
With permission from Clarion
Vol. 47, No. 18 (1998)
Dr. Riemer Faber is
professor of Classics at the University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada
Introduction
Philipp
Melanchthon (1497-1560) was called the "Teacher of Germany" for a good reason.
Active in the establishment and reform of schools for more than forty years,
Melanchthon guided the development of the educational system in Germany. He
wrote the constitutions of many reformed schools, composed the ordinances
of several newly founded or restructured universities, and advised academic
administrators throughout Europe. He also wrote many textbooks, grammars,
and handbooks of education. As professor in the Arts faculty at Wittenberg
University, Melanchthon taught hundreds of students who as teachers later
implemented educational changes throughout Germany. And as the reformer most
inclined to intellectual culture, Melanchthon sought to define a theory of
education that was based on scriptural principles. It is no wonder, then,
that Melanchthon's contemporaries called him "Praeceptor Germaniae".
There were many influences
upon Melanchthon's views of education, but two should be noted especially:
Humanism and the Reformation. Melanchthon developed into a scholar of the
foremost rank from the time that he came under the tutelage of Johann Reuchlin,
one of northern Europe's leading humanists. But while the rebirth of learning
associated with the Renaissance would help all reformers in the sixteenth
century to redirect the Christian faith to its Scriptural origins, it would
also cause friction and inevitable conflict with the doctrines of justification
by faith alone, the authority of Scripture, and other Reformed tenets. For
one principle of secular Humanism is that, by means of learning, one may be
able to advance the fortunes of humanity. The "liberal arts" that were rediscovered
during the Renaissance were so called because, it was believed, they liberated
one's mind from the mastery of others. Humanist education makes the individual
capable of thinking critically and deciding what is right moral action. By
studying the societies of the past one would learn to appreciate the moral
qualities of balance, simplicity, harmony, beauty and truth - qualities whereby
the human soul could be improved. By means of eloquence, logical reasoning,
and fine writing, the humanist would convince others of this way to improvement.
Melanchthon, it should be stated, was not merely trained in the liberal arts,
he excelled in them.
Already at the earliest
beginnings of the Wittenberg Reformation, however, Melanchthon promoted theological
reform. He embraced the doctrine of justification by faith, and together with
Luther formulated the expressions of the other principles. Contrary to the
humanists and their positive view of mankind, he steadfastly professed the
depravity of fallen humanity. Melanchthon always believed that salvation comes
only by the cross of Christ, and that no creature can earn righteousness.
Also the doctrine of the priesthood of all believers affected Melanchthon's
views of education: learning was not for future clergy and church leaders
alone, but for all people, girls as well as boys, poor as well as rich, simple
as well as gifted. Education was to serve all believers in developing their
callings in God's kingdom. The newly rediscovered biblical truths, therefore,
required not merely a change in the curriculum of schools, but a completely
new expression of the principles supporting Christian education. Throughout
his life, but with varying success, Melanchthon sought to define and develop
just such a system of reformed education.
According to one modern
view, Melanchthon attempted to form the principles of Humanism and Reformed
faith into a theory of education. Certainly in his own career, Melanchthon
integrated the rebirth of learning with the reform of the church. Seeing the
difficulty, or rather impossibility, in Luther's scheme of placing humanist
education in the service of the church, Melanchthon examined the compatibility
of Renaissance values with the Christian faith. Modern critics wonder how
successful Melanchthon was in doing so, but it is clear that he constantly
subjected learning to faith. Luther himself attests to this, for, able to
smell a humanist rat at a great distance, he never accused Melanchthon of
betraying the Reformation.
Melanchthon
integrated the rebirth of learning with the reform of the church
The reasons why Luther
continued to collaborate with "Master Philipp" reveal why Melanchthon advanced
both learning and the Reformed faith. Both men despised the anti-educational
and anti-intellectual strains within Protestantism. In the famous 95 theses,
Luther stated that "Christians must be taught," meaning that faith
is a sure knowledge as well as a firm confidence. And Melanchthon made it
one of his life's goals to dispel the foolish notion that a Christian's ignorance
is bliss. The two reformers also desired to provide reformed doctrine and
life an academically credible basis, for they had observed that false teaching
and false customs arose from an ignorance of Scripture's teaching. Melanchthon
wished to fight Romanist heresy with cogent arguments, and also to raise the
level of discussion within the Protestant camp. The rebirth of the Christian
faith had to be accompanied by the rebirth of learning.
Melanchthon wrote numerous
treatises dealing with education and learning. In this article we shall consider
only two of them, namely the lecture On Improving the Studies of the Youth
and the speech In Praise of the New School. They present some of
Melanchthon's key thoughts on learning, including his views on the basis,
method, and goal of reformed education. However, we shall also consider briefly
the influential tract Instructions for the Visitors of Parish Pastors
in Electoral Saxony, composed by Luther and Melanchthon, as this work
reveals their ideas about the practical aspects of education. We shall observe
the way in which Melanchthon seeks to develop the concept of reformed education,
and shall conclude by noting a few of the differences between Luther and him.
On Improving the Studies of the Youth (1518)
Melanchthon's published
interest in education begins with his inaugural lecture at Wittenberg University
in 1518, entitled On Improving the Studies of the Youth.
(1) The speech traces the history of education from biblical times,
noting the steady decline in the knowledge of Scripture and the liberal arts.
Over time, Melanchthon says, "bad things began to be taught as if they were
good (49)", the authority of the church replaced the authority of Scripture,
and the teaching of man replaced the teaching of God. Consequently, the true
Christian religion was altered into "ceremonies, human traditions, constitutions,
decretals, chapters, extravagances, and the glosses of second-rate scholars
(50)". This decline of Scriptural knowledge affected the well-being of Church
and society. From Melanchthon's perspective, the Middle Ages were marked by
ignorance and impiety.
The University of Wittenberg,
by contrast, provides the opportunity to improve learning and spirituality.
His new colleagues, Melanchthon notes, are already promoting a new approach
to Scripture and education that serves to reverse the decline. Stating the
purpose of his speech, at the same time the purpose of his planned career
at Wittenberg, Melanchthon announces to his future students that he hopes
to help them understand "the rationale behind the revival of studies... so
that when the order and path of learning is known, you may decide how the
course of studies may be embraced with greater benefit and less danger (48)."
Casting aside the teaching methods of previous generations, Melanchthon rejects
scholasticism and its apparently obscure and irrelevant ways of argumentation.
Especially in studying Scripture, the student should not waste his time on
the "many frigid glosses, concordances, discordances, and still many other
hindrances..." (55). He should turn directly to the primary sources, as these
bear directly upon his earthly and spiritual life.
The newly appointed professor
states his intention to follow the approach already chosen by Luther and the
other colleagues at Wittenberg. In fact, Melanchthon promotes the same disciplines
later advocated in Luther's Letter to the Councilmen that they Establish
Christian Schools (1524): languages, literature, history, rhetoric. He
also provides reasons for these choices. A proper appreciation for history,
for example, is necessary because this discipline teaches "what is beautiful,
bad, useful, useless...(54)" Knowledge of God's work in history is relevant
for contemporary times, since the past informs and shapes the ideas that are
current in the present. About this discipline Melanchthon is so bold as to
state: "No aspect of life, either public or private, can do without it. It
is to this that the administration of urban and domestic affairs is indebted"
(54). To use Luther's classification, history helps one understand the position
of God's creatures in both the temporal and spiritual realms.
Melanchthon also
proposes to reveal the value of studying literature, for he believes that it
imparts a better understanding of the human experience and the way it has been
expressed. Literature deals with "things that pertain to knowledge of nature
and also to the forming of manners (54)"; furthermore, it teaches one to "speak
fittingly and fluently about morals (54)." Reading the writings of other people
helps one to understand what humans are like. Melanchthon also advocates the
skills of reasoning, eloquence and fine writing, which teach one to express
the truth most accurately and convincingly. Accepting for the moment the advantages
granted by humanist education, Melanchthon intends to move Wittenberg into the
"modern age" of learning. For the reformers this modernization means a return
to the sources, and especially to the only true source, Scripture. Of all the
works the student should read, the Bible is the central book; it is "the real
thing and not the shadow of things (54)."
...he
affirms the biblical antithesis between secular and sacred, and warns
his students "...that we not improperly contaminate the sacred with
alien literature [Titus 2:7-8]."
While it may appear that
Melanchthon promotes a kind of "baptized Hellenism" in this speech, it should
be noted that he explicitly distinguishes the study of humanity from the study
of God. To put it differently, he affirms the biblical antithesis between
secular and sacred, and warns his students "...that we not improperly contaminate
the sacred with alien literature [Titus 2:7-8]." In fact, it was one of the
lapses of the Medieval church that it failed to distinguish between the profane
and the holy, between Aristotelian philosophy and Christian theology. But
the works of God cannot be compared with the works of man, Melanchthon argues,
for "the odor of the ointments of the Lord is far sweeter than the aroma of
human disciplines (55)." While the mouths of men speak lies continually, all
truth is from God, and "His truth will be your buckler". Nevertheless, since
the "sacred things are the most powerful for the mind, work and care are necessary
(55)"; one must be educated in order to understand God's Word and His will
in our lives. Therefore, "with the Spirit as leader, and the cults of the
arts as ally, we may approach the holy (55)." In keeping with this principle,
Melanchthon proposes to his students that he begin lecturing on Homer's epic
poetry and Paul's letter to Titus.
In Praise of the New School (1526)
Another important source
for Melanchthon's thought on education is the address he delivered upon the
opening of a new school in Nuremberg in 1526, In Praise of the New School.
(2) The civic leaders and businessmen of this city had responded
to Luther's call to establish schools, and Melanchthon begins his speech by
complimenting them on their action. He also endorses the argument, made by
Luther in the Letter to the Councilmen that they Establish Christian Schools
(1524), that education benefits state as well as church.
As might be expected
of a speech for municipal leaders and supportive businessmen, In Praise
of the New School deals with the role of education in preparing good citizens.
"In the well constituted state," says Melanchthon, "the first task for schools
is to teach youth, for they are the seedbed of the city (63)." A liberal education
is crucial for this task, as without it "there could be no good men, no admiration
of virtue, no knowledge of what is honest, no harmonious agreements concerning
honest duties, no sense at all of humanity (60)." As in his inaugural lecture
at Wittenberg, so too here Melanchthon alerts his audience to the value of studying
history, literature and philosophy for the cultivation of good citizens. Countering
the prevailing attitude that youths should acquire trades and skills whereby
jobs could be acquired, Melanchthon encourages parents to look beyond the obvious
but simple goal of getting a job. Virtuous and noble citizens, who seek to promote
the wellbeing of the temporal realm in which they live, are those who have studied
the subjects that teach them about social life. Thus Melanchthon asks, how can
anyone be a good civic leader if he has never read "that literature in which
is contained all thought on the ruling of cities (63)"? Going beyond the practical
advantages granted by schooling, the "Teacher of Germany" instructs parents
to encourage their children to learn about virtues, ideas, and principles. Children
who will best contribute to the state are those who understand the higher goals
of their vocations. They must learn the virtues of their chosen professions,
and see their own tasks in the context of the larger purposes of the temporal
realm.
Moral
and intellectual developments are connected, and religious piety is
linked to civic responsibility. In short, Melanchthon applies education
to the whole person rather than to two aspects of one person.
Not drawing the distinction
between the spiritual and temporal realms as sharply as Luther does, Melanchthon
views education as integral to religious and civic life. By focussing on the
training of the individual, Melanchthon seeks to unite the religious and civic
duties of each believer. According to him, education should be seen as contributing
to the formation of the human being, rather than as performing distinct functions
in two spheres of activity. For this reason Melanchthon speaks about church
and state in one breath. Without education, he argues, there can be no knowledge
of the earthly estate and "no correct views of religion or of God's
will for mortals (60)." The civic leaders are encouraged to support reformed
education for "unless you preserve literature, religion and good laws cannot
endure (63)." Moral and intellectual developments are connected, and religious
piety is linked to civic responsibility. In short, Melanchthon applies education
to the whole person rather than to two aspects of one person. According to
Melanchthon, then, the goal of education is "learned piety".
The Instructions (1528)
The combining of religious
and intellectual reform found its expression in several works by Melanchthon,
but is most succinctly expressed in the Instructions for the Visitors
of Parish Pastors in Electoral Saxony (1528).
(3) Luther and Melanchthon penned this document in order to assist
in the reform of churches and schools. It comprises two parts: 1) a summary
of the doctrine of the reformed faith as it should be taught in the churches,
and 2) a summary of rules for reformed schools. After receiving approval from
the faculty at Wittenberg University, the Instructions were sent
to all churches in the region, in the hopes that it would effect some unity
in church and school. The second part is useful for our present purposes,
as it contains detailed advice concerning curricula and levels of instruction
at the elementary schools.
The premise for reformed
schooling is baldly stated: "because it is God's will,... parents should send
their children to school, and prepare them for the Lord God so that he may
use them for the service of others (314)." Also clearly stated is the purpose
of this part of the Instructions: to provide a "syllabus of study
so that the youth may be rightly instructed (315)." After a brief introduction,
the Instructions dealing with schools proposes that elementary education
be divided into three main sections, or divisions.
The first division in
the elementary school consists of children who are starting to read. The suggested
text is a primer containing the basics of grammar, as well as the Lord's Prayer,
the Creed, and other prayers. All this in Latin, not German. For while Luther
and Melanchthon thought it unwise that children learn many languages because
it would be too complicated for them, they strongly encourage - indeed assume
- instruction in Latin, as this language would provide students with grammatical
skills readily applicable to their own language and to Scripture. After all,
the standard edition of the Bible was still in Latin. For this reason the
goal in grade one was building up vocabulary, memorizing the rules of grammar,
and learning to write. Students should also develop their skills of memory,
and learn music.
Parents
should send their children to school, and prepare them for the Lord
God so that He may use them for the service of others.
In the second grade, besides
learning more music, students should develop their reading and writing skills.
The teacher should inculcate his charges with good morals; the ones in Erasmus'
Colloquies that "are useful and edifying for the children (317)"
may be learned. Students at this level should also memorize classical proverbs,
and read Aesop's Fables. They then go on to study advanced grammar,
etymology, and sentence structure. "The children are to recite these grammatical
rules from memory, so that they are compelled and driven to learn grammar
well (318)." On one day of the week, the class must study Scripture, for "it
is essential that the children learn the beginning of a Christian and blessed
life (318)." In teaching Scripture, the schoolmaster should avoid difficult
or contentious passages, focussing instead upon those parts which teach "what
is necessary for living a good life, namely, the fear of God, faith, good
works (318)." Sections of the Gospel of Matthew are particularly advocated,
as are those Psalms that "contain in themselves a summary of the Christian
life, and speak about the fear of God, faith and good works (318)". Mentioned
by name are Ps. 112:1, Ps. 125:1, and Ps.133:1.
Students entering the
third division have studied grammar well, and show promise of further learning.
These advanced students should continue to learn music, and to develop their
skills in translating and interpreting literature, including the poets Vergil
and Ovid, and Cicero, Roman orator, politician and philosopher. When these
skills have been developed, students may go on to acquire the ability of public
speaking, cogent arguing, and eloquent writing.
These instructions and
the three divisions of education set out in them have been much studied, and
the debate concerning the reasoning behind the proposals continues. What has
become clear, however, is that Melanchthon and Luther attempted to effect
a number of reformed principles in them. One is the priority granted to the
spiritual realm. The repeated words, "the fear of God," reveal an emphasis
upon the moral aspect of education. While the first part of the Instructions
stresses the teaching of the basics of the Christian faith in church, the
second emphasises the role of the schools in advancing knowledge of the commandments,
creeds, and prayers. Students who had learned how to read, could read the
Bible, and so fulfil their duties as prophets, priests and kings. Knowledge
of grammar, dialectic and rhetoric would help every believer to read, interpret
and explain the Bible. Memory work, musical skills, and logical thinking would
help the student to learn the value of control, self-discipline, and orderliness.
Furthermore, the students would learn, as a group, the tenets of the Christian
faith, and so form a generation of like-minded believers.
Students
who had learned how to read, could read the Bible, and so fulfil their
duties as prophets, priests and kings.
It should also be noted
here that an important educational tool developed by Luther and Melanchthon
was the catechism. Luther's Small Catechism, developed and adapted
by Melanchthon, became a widely used textbook in reformed schools of the sixteenth
century. There are several reasons for this: it presented the key elements
of the reformed faith in direct and short statements. It could also function
as a teacher's manual for instruction. And it presented a simple interpretation
of the Ten Commandments, the Lord's Prayer, the Creed, etc. And its composition
in the form of questions and answers served well in the classroom. As a means
of indoctrination, then, the catechism would help bring about harmony in the
church by uniting young students in their understanding of the faith.
Conclusions
In conclusion it will
be worthwhile to summarize the main features of Melanchthon's views on education,
and to compare them with his fellow reformer, Martin Luther. As might be expected
of a reformer with humanist training, Melanchthon held education in high regard.
He even believed that schools as such were ordained in Scripture. He sought
to support this view by pointing to the "teachers" in the Bible: Moses, the
schools of the prophets, the apostle Paul and his spiritual students, and
the Great Rabbi, our Lord Jesus Christ and His disciples. All the doctrines
of Scripture, according to Melanchthon, may be viewed as teaching that is
handed down by faithful instructors. The function of schools, then, is to
inculcate, preserve, and pass on the true teachings of the Bible. In order
for church and society to be truly reformed, Melanchthon concluded, education
must be improved continually.
Whereas Luther viewed
education more as preparatory to the understanding of the Gospel, Melanchthon
believed that learning had an end in and of itself. Languages, for example,
were viewed by Luther more as a means whereby the Spirit spreads the gospel
in this world, and not - as Melanchthon thought - as part of the rediscovery
of the human being. And for Melanchthon, learning and education perform a
more positive role in the renewal of the church and society; the revelation
in Scripture can only be appropriated via knowledge gained through learning.
To express this view in different terms: Melanchthon sought to understand
more deeply the relationship between God's revelation of salvation and mankind's
ability to understand and reason. He wished to define the relationship between
faith and knowledge, belief and learning. He desired to comprehend how the
heritage of the Western world in ancient Greece and Rome related to the true
Biblical heritage. In so doing, he did not seek to place Humanism and Christianity
on a par, but to subject all learning to the revelation of God, and to do
so for the praise of His glory. This view of education was summed up for him
in 2 Corinthians 10:5, 6: "We destroy arguments and every proud obstacle to
the knowledge of God, and take every thought captive to obey Christ."
Footnotes
1.
An English translation of the Latin text may be found in R. Keen, A
Melanchthon Reader (New York, 1988), 47-63; quotations of the speech
come from this edition.
2.
Citations of this speech come from R. Keen's translation in A Melanchthon
Reader, 59-63.
3.
Citations from Instructions are taken from the translation by
C. Bergendoff, in H.T. Lehmann, ed., Luther's Works. Vol. 40 (Philadelphia
1958), 269-320.
var IW= 0;
var IH= 0;
var PX= 0;
var PY= 0;
var ZIN= 0;
var us= null;
var IMGW= 100;
var IMGH= 89;
var LSAFETY= 20;
var TSAFETY= 17;
function branding() {
oldIW= IW;
oldIH= IH;
oldPX= PX;
oldPY= PY;
if (navigator.appName == 'Netscape') {
if ((window.innerHeight != oldIH)||(window.innerWidth != oldIW)||(window.pageXOffset != oldPX)||(window.pageYOffset != oldPY))
{
if (us == null)
{
for (i=0; i IMGH) ? us.top= (IH+PY-(IMGH+TSAFETY)) : us.top= 0;
(IW > IMGW) ? us.left= (IW+PX-(IMGW+LSAFETY)) : us.left= 0;
//alert('document.layers.length: ' + document.layers.length);
for (i=0; i ZIN)
ZIN= (templay.zIndex + 1);
}
us.zIndex= ZIN;
us.visibility= "show";
}
}
}
else{
if (navigator.appVersion.indexOf("Mac") == -1)
{
if ((document.body.clientHeight != oldIH)||(document.body.clientWidth != oldIW)||(document.body.scrollLeft != oldPX)||(document.body.scrollTop != oldPY)) {
alldivs= document.all.tags("DIV");
if (us == null){
for (i=0; i |
|