Lutheran Theology and the Faustbuch
Near the beginning of the sixteenth century, Martin Luther found new meaning in the Pauline expression justification by faith through the hermeneutic concept sola scriptura. Luther's theological discovery inspired others to articulate and invoke fundamental religious, political, and cultural changes within the European societies. At the same time, the Protestant Reformation gave rise to a tension between a religious and a humanistic outlook. Many solutions put forward to overcome this tension were informed by fear or fascination and appear to us as reactionary or progressive. Such figures as Paracelsus, Erasmus, Trithemius occupied a place between the strict confines of religion on the one hand and humanism on the other. By the end of the century, a new literary figure, Doctor Faustus, presented himself to the public in northern Europe. In a remarkable way, the protagonist of the story told in the Faustbuch encapsulated the tensions between religion and humanism. Epitomized in his demonic bargain, these interrelated and opposing tendencies confronted one another in his person. Given the complicated intersections of those two spheres at that time, the period as a whole may be described with the help of the term Faustian.
The present chapter brings key Lutheran material into dialogue with the first literary “biography” written about the learned magician Doctor Faustus who famously entered into a pact with the devil. Specifically, the aim of this analysis is to investigate elements in the original Frankfurt Faustbuch from the year 1587 that bear striking resemblances to the early Lutheran statement of faith, the Augsburg Confession of 1530, or its revised continuation, the Book of Concord of 1580.