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Constitutions: Germany - 02

St Augustine : Former Augustinian convento Wittenberg, Germany
Former Augustinian convento
Wittenberg, Germany
Chapter 17 continued with directives about to handle books and vestments carefully; not to be present in the convent of the professed friars unless invited; not to dispute about the Augustinian Rule and Constitutions; not to join guests or the infirm at their meals; how to hold a cup with both hands and sitting down when taking a drink; not to walk with head high (“with neck outstretched”) but with eyes fixed on the ground; never to talk about somebody absent unless it is something good; never to praise a person to his face; not to send or receive letters without permission. A novice “shall love poverty, stay away from delights, and shatter his own will.”
 
Chapter 17 continues with the directive that the novice “is to read the Sacred Scriptures eagerly, listen to it devoutly, and learn it fervently.”

The text continues with the admonition against mentioning the social status of one’s parents, their degree of nobility, wealth or worldly reputation.
 
Even if the directive about Biblical study in surrounded by many other rules and regulations, it is nevertheless significant that Biblical study is a priority.
 
This fact is taken into account when considering the “sola scriptura” (“the Scriptures alone”) expression that is attributed to the theology of Luther, although Luther did not make explicit use of that actual phrase.
 
In the Staupitz edition of the Augustinians and elsewhere, Martin Luther was formed in the medieval concentration on the Bible.

That concentration was certainly not of Luther’s invention. What was “new” was his application of it against certain church practices such as indulgences.
 
The use of the notion of sola scriptura to debate the relative importance of Scripture and Tradition was debated at the Council of Trent that began in 1545, which was just before Luther’s death.

That debate, however, which further popularised the phrase sola scriptura, was not a question that had occupied Luther’s attention.
 
For further reading
 
Sola Scriptura – Martin Luther’s invention? By Franz Posset: Augustiniana, Annus 56 (2006), fasc, 1-2, pp. 123-127. Published by Institutum Historicum Augustinianum Lovanii, Belgium. 
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Constitutions: Germany - 02
The Augustinian century - 01
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The Augustinian century - 04
Constitutions: Germany - 01
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Honorary papal chaplaincies - 01
Honorary papal chaplaincies - 02
Black Death - 01
Black Death - 02
Great Western Schism - 01
Great Western Schism - 02
Great Western Schism - 03
14th Century: Interactions - 01
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14th Century: Interactions - 03
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