Grace Seeker
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I don't know that he would lie. Indeed, I don't doubt that something similar to what he reports was part of a conversation. What I question is the interpretation that Luther is seriously suggesting that Jesus had sex with any of these women. In the context of Luther's theology, wherein Christ's takes our own sins upon himself, it is entirely consistent for Luther to say that Christ was a fornicator, or adulterer, but that doesn't mean Luther believed Jesus to have ever had sex with anyone at all. Luther believed that part of the process by which Christ made atonement for human sin was that God "heaped all the sins of all men upon Him [Jesus], and said to Him: 'Be Peter the denier; Paul the persecutor, blasphemer, and assaulter; David the adulterer; the sinner who ate the apple in Paradise; the thief on the cross. In short, be the person of all men, the one who has committed the sin of all men.' " (Martin Luther, Lectures on Galatians. 1535. In Luther's Works, vol. 26, edited by Jaroslav Pelikan. Saint Louis: Concordia, c. 1963-64, p. 280.)John Schlagenhaufen is Luther's friend, why would he lie?
Luther would even go so far as to say that Christ became "the greatest thief, murderer, adulterer, robber, desecrator, blasphemer, etc., there ever has been in the world" (see above, p. 277), but that doesn't mean that Luther believed Christ literally did any of these things, for he concludes that thought by saying, "...not in the sense that He has committed them but in the sense that He took these sins, committed by us, upon His own body" (see above, also p. 277).
It is in the light of this aspect of Luther's thinking that I think you have to read the comments about Jesus committing adultery.