Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
Nietzsche began as an admirer of Luther and the German Reformation. The age of Luther ranked as high in his early opinion as the age of Goethe and Beethoven. From Menschliches, Allzumenschliches on, this favorable attitude toward Luther underwent a strong transformation. In the five years from 1878 to 1883, Nietzsche's second creative period, Luther emerged as a highly questionable figure, even as a most regrettable event in the history of German and European thought and civilization. But all these severe pronouncements on Luther were only a prelude to the scathing denunciations to come in Nietzsche's post-Zarathustra writings.
1 My previous articles on this general topic are: “Das Lutherbild des jungen Nietzsche,” PMLA, lviii (1943), 264–288; “Nietzsche's Idea of Luther in Menschliches, AttzumensMiches,” PMLA, lxv (1950), 1053–68; “Nietzsche's View of Luther and the Reformation in Morgenröthe and Die fröhliche Wissenschaft,” PMLA, lxviii (1953), 111–127.
2 All quotations are from Friedrich Nietzsche, Gesammelte Werke (München: Musarion Verlag, 1922 ff.).