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DAUGHTER OF THE REFORMATION


A VON BORA EXPERT HIGHLIGHTS KATHARINA’S BOLD EXAMPLE

By Cara Strickland October 11, 2017

Courtesy of the publisher



Mary Helene Rasmussen Jackson has been researching and writing about Katharina
von Bora’s life for more than 30 years. A four-part monologue about von Bora
that Jackson continuously developed and took on the road provided the foundation
for her book Daughter of the Reformation: A Historical Perspective of the Life
and Times of the Wife of Martin Luther (Huff, 2015).

As we commemorate the Reformation’s 500th anniversary, Living Lutheran spoke
with Jackson about life in the early 16th century, and the way von Bora’s bold
example continues to inspire believers today.

Living Lutheran: It’s easy to forget how different life was during the
Reformation. Could you paint a quick picture of early modern Europe in 1517?

Jackson: It was very different from what people see when they [visit today] on
these wonderful tours, where the streets are clean and there are geraniums

in the windows. It was a very dark time, and the streets weren’t clean. They
were full of trash and sometimes dead bodies.

But it wasn’t just that—it was the fact that [people’s] minds were also
entrenched for generations in ignorance and in darkness. They had a great fear
of the devil and were convinced that the devil lived in all sorts of forms right
there in their own forests, their own towns, up in the clouds.

Also, the wrath of God was so paramount at that time. It wasn’t a loving God
that they were taught about. [God’s wrath] was what they were taught by their
mothers and their grandfathers and certainly by the church, which was
overriding.

It was a frightening time to be living because the common man really had no
voice and was under the thumb of the few noble landowners, and then, of course,
of the church—and [there] was an eternal fear of what would happen to them when
they died.

It’s clear that Katharina was no ordinary woman for any time, but especially for
her own. Would you talk a bit about that?

I feel she was extraordinary for a lot of reasons. For one, she was a very
independent person because she dared to leave the convent—that was no small
thing in those days. For example, if anyone helped her do it and was caught,
they could be beheaded. Nuns who were caught leaving were often put into
solitary confinement for some time thereafter. So she dared to do that for her
own personal reasons, and then she also dared to challenge Martin Luther because
he thought he would set her up with [one of] two or three [potential] husbands,
and she wanted none of it.

I think she was a stubborn person. I don’t know, but I surmise that [Luther]
really got interested in her when she turned down these other husbands. I think
he had never met a woman who was his match before, and maybe he thought, “Well,
maybe I have something to learn after all.”

> “I don’t know, but I surmise that [Luther] really got interested in
> [Katharina] when she turned down these other husbands. I think he had never
> met a woman who was his match before.”— Mary Helene Rasmussen Jackson, author

She married him with the full knowledge that she would be shamed, that people
would point fingers at her, because here was a monk and a nun—people who had
promised to be celibate their entire lives—suddenly getting married. People were
not good to her. When you look at the Scriptures that she liked, it was often “I
have been through much travail” and that sort of thing.

So she was brave, but she had to be real. That, I think, is the thing that
people nowadays have to accept about historical figures—they were real people
who hurt and cried and laughed and had joy or otherwise. There are some poignant
quotations from Luther about her reactions and demeanor when her two daughters
died, and then, at the end, when he was gone, how she said, “He was my best
friend. There’s nobody else I can talk to.” She was a real woman, and if our
folks today can look at those people who lived and died [during the] Reformation
and know that they are just as real as we are, that we are more alike than we
are different, I guess that is the key to loving history.

How has your experience researching and writing about Katharina’s life
influenced your everyday life and faith?

What is maybe most paramount for me is that in everything I do each day—whether
it is cooking, or caring for grandchildren, or planting gardens or waking up
early in the morning and loving it—I feel a kinship with her in that way. … The
little things of life all built together to make something that really was part
of the change of not only her society, but Western civilization at that time. I
don’t think [Luther] could have done what he did without her.

I truly think if she were here today, she would understand us and we would
understand her. … You wouldn’t think of her as a name in a history book, but
someone who dared to be a forerunner for the rest of us.

Cara Strickland
Strickland writes about food and drink, singleness, faith and mental health from
her home in the Northwest (carastrickland.com).


READ MORE ABOUT:

Reformation, Voices of Faith   Martin Luther, Reformation


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