The actual conflict began with the controversy over the Interim and the question of
Adiaphora in 1548 and the following years. In the negotiations concerning the
Leipzig Interim the Wittenberg theologians as well as
Johann Pfeffinger and the intimate of Melanchthon,
George of Anhalt, were on the side of Melanchthon, and thus drew upon themselves the violent opposition of the
strict Lutherans, under the leadership of Flacius, who now severed his connection with Wittenberg. When the Philippist
Georg Major at Wittenberg and
Justus Menius at
Gotha put forth the proposition that
good works were necessary to
salvation, or as Menius preferred to say "the new obedience, the new life, is necessary to salvation," they were not only conscious of the danger that the doctrine of
justification by faith alone would lead to
antinomianism and moral laxity but they manifested a tendency to bring into account the necessary connection of
justification and
regeneration: namely, that justification as possession of forgiving grace by faith is indeed not conditioned by obedience; but also that the new life is presupposed by obedience and works springing out of the same justification. But neither Major nor Menius was sufficiently firm in his view to stand against the charge of denying the doctrine of justification and going over to the Roman camp, and thus they were driven back to the general proposition of justification by faith alone. The
Formula of Concord closed the controversy by avoiding both extremes, but failed to offer a final solution of the question demanded by the original motive of the controversy. The
synergistic controversy, breaking out about the same time, also sprang out of the ethical interest which had induced Melanchthon to enunciate the doctrine of
free will in opposition to his previous
predestinarianism. After the clash in 1555 between Pfeffinger (who in his
Propositiones de libero arbitrio had held closely to the formula of Melanchthon) and Amsdorf and Flacius, Strigel went deeper into the matter in 1559 and insisted that grace worked upon sinful men as upon personalities, not natural objects without a will; and that in the position that there was a spontaneous cooperation of human powers released by grace there was an actual lapse into the
Roman Catholic view. The suspicions now entertained against Melanchthon and his school were quickened by the renewed outbreak of the
sacramentarian controversy in 1552.
Joachim Westphal accused Melanchthon of agreement with
John Calvin, and from this time the Philippists rested under the suspicion of
Crypto-Calvinism. The more the German
Lutherans entertained a dread of the invasion of
Calvinism, the more they mistrusted every announcement of a formula of the Lord's Supper after the form of Luther's doctrine yet obscure. The controversy on this subject, in which Melanchthon's friend
Albert Rizaeus Hardenberg of Bremen was involved with
Johann Timann and then with Heshusius, leading to his deposition in 1561, elevated the doctrine of
ubiquity to an essential of Lutheran teaching. The Wittenberg pronouncement on the subject prudently confined itself to Biblical expressions and forewarned itself against unnecessary disputations, which only strengthened the suspicion of unavowed sympathy with Calvin. == Lutheran strictures ==