Erasmus' personality would be best defined as enigmatic and disillusioned. Erasmus' experience in higher education planted the seed of frustration with intellectualism and he saw much of society as a source for satire and criticism. He is perhaps best known for his work De Libero Arbitrio (On the Freedom of the Will), which used Scripture and the thoughts of church fathers to prove the freedom of the will in contravention of what Martin Luther believed. Erasmus defined free will as the power of choice by which every human being can apply himself to the things which lead to everlasting safety or turns himself away from them. In contrast to the fiery oratory of Martin Luther, Erasmus' works were calmer and provided a voice for reason in the rocky period of Christianity in Europe. Erasmus' satirical side was expressed in the work "In Praise of Folly" which criticized the shame and fear inherent within the God-fearing human. Erasmus felt that man should overcome these inadequacies, abstain from politics and "commerce" and turn to nature as the sole guide for how to live. Finally, Erasmus was a strong advocate of the use of Latin instead of Greek in writing the New Testament and provided such a translation over his lifetime. His feeling was that the more natural use of Latin exposed the weaknesses and mistranslations of Greek writings.
Erasmus' importance in the grand scheme of things is multi-layered. Erasmus was a lifelong advocate for the use of Latin in Christian services and writings. The growing approach to humanism and a more open approach to intellectual endeavors was fused with Church tradition during Erasmus' life much to his credit. Erasmus was also a renowned pacifist and while he was frustrated with social mores, he was an advocate for tolerance to those outside of the Church. Erasmus' two most important contributions, however, were probably the idea of a free will within Church theology and the need to separate religious and political will in Europe. Erasmus' contributions were seen as moderate at the time but in the grand spectrum of theological thought, they were fairly activist and only eclipsed by the more vocal activism of Martin Luther.
Published by Nicholas Katers
Nicholas Katers is a graduate of University of Wisconsin-Green Bay (BA, 2003) and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (MA, 2007) in History and currently a freelance writer. You can find his work in the In... View profile
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Great piece to impel further study of this brilliant scholar! While today�s humanism is now officially recognized as belief that the universe, or nature, is all that exists or is real�-dismissing all supernatural powers, including a Christian God�-still, for truth to prevail in Desiderius� prolific writings it is vital to know that he died in calm composure with an actual trust in God. Refusing the Catholic last rite sacrament offered at his deathbed, he maintained to the end that, after Christ, Christian religion soon corrupted and its rites were invalid (read �In Praise of Folly�). One worldwide church recognizes this biblically prophesied apostasy and claims Christ restored his original church, in 1830, with divine authority and necessary prophets [see Amos 8:11-12]�-a restoration also biblically alluded to (see www. lds. org). Best wishes!