"The Bible is the cradle wherein Christ is laid"
About this Quote
Luther’s image is domestic and disarmingly tender: Scripture as a cradle, Christ as the infant placed inside. It’s a metaphor that looks like piety but works like a polemic. A cradle doesn’t generate a child; it holds, presents, and protects what is already living. In one stroke, Luther sidelines the late-medieval habit of treating the Bible as a chest of proof-texts controlled by clerical keyholders. He also pushes back against a church culture that could make the institutional “mother” (Rome, tradition, sacrament, hierarchy) feel more central than the child himself. The point is not “read more”; it’s “read toward someone.”
The subtext is Reformation strategy: re-center authority without letting it become abstract. Luther was wary of both extremes he saw emerging around him - a church that could bury the gospel under systems, and enthusiasts who claimed direct spiritual access while drifting from the text. The cradle metaphor disciplines devotion. It tells the believer where to look for Christ, and it tells the interpreter what the Bible is for: not to win arguments, not to hoard esoteric knowledge, but to bear Jesus into the room.
Context matters. Luther is a professor in an age when philology, printing, and vernacular translation were reorganizing who could touch the sacred. Calling the Bible a cradle makes that democratization feel safe rather than revolutionary. Anyone can approach a cradle. The power is in how it softens a radical claim: Scripture’s authority, yes - but as a servant that delivers the gospel, not a weapon that replaces it.
The subtext is Reformation strategy: re-center authority without letting it become abstract. Luther was wary of both extremes he saw emerging around him - a church that could bury the gospel under systems, and enthusiasts who claimed direct spiritual access while drifting from the text. The cradle metaphor disciplines devotion. It tells the believer where to look for Christ, and it tells the interpreter what the Bible is for: not to win arguments, not to hoard esoteric knowledge, but to bear Jesus into the room.
Context matters. Luther is a professor in an age when philology, printing, and vernacular translation were reorganizing who could touch the sacred. Calling the Bible a cradle makes that democratization feel safe rather than revolutionary. Anyone can approach a cradle. The power is in how it softens a radical claim: Scripture’s authority, yes - but as a servant that delivers the gospel, not a weapon that replaces it.
Quote Details
| Topic | Bible |
|---|---|
| Source | Later attribution: The Evil Behind the Law Vol Three (Tchinda Fabrice Mbuna, 2014) modern compilationISBN: 9781499027396 · ID: vIHQAwAAQBAJ
Evidence: ... Martin Luther : Pope Leo X : Martin Luther : Pope Leo X : Martin Luther : Pope Leo X : Martin Luther : Faith in the Bible , The Bible is the cradle wherein Christ is laid . Christ is the head of the church And following the apostolic ... Other candidates (1) Martin Luther (Martin Luther) compilation55.6% t up by the indulgence preachers is equal in worth to the cross of christ is bla |
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